
See in addition individual staff pages for more info.
The Maclagan Manuscripts, 1893-1902
Giving an answer to a telephone call through the Folklore community, made at their particular yearly meeting in 1889, to collect items of folkloric interest from differing of the United Kingdom, Dr Robert Craig Maclagan (1839-1919), a physician based in Edinburgh, embarked on a project which was to run for pretty much a decade, and which, inside fullness of the time, would come to be one of the most significant and interesting assortment of manuscripts accessible to scholars associated with folklore of Scotland.

Through a team of committed enthusiasts, employed in the West Highlands, Maclagan amassed a phenomenal assortment of material and during their lifetime he published a number of articles and publications which reflected the diversity of product that were collected. The manuscripts, consisting of some 9, 200 pages, with a since however uncalculated range individual things, addresses product because diverse as folk medicine, customs and opinions, hero reports, material tradition, rhymes and kids's games, recipes and climate lore, place-name legends, the normal world and far, a whole lot more.
Through this material it is possible to glimpse a new globe also to get to know how men and women, residing at the conclusion of the 19th century, had negotiated and made sense of the world around them: a global which, within therefore couple of decades could be so utterly changed.
The dimensions of the collection, as well as the nature associated with organisation of product contained within it, has actually, until now, managed to make it a slightly cumbersome resource for academics to explore, but this might be set to alter as staff inside archive are actually taking care of a database that will index the manuscript material, which makes it more easily available.
Place-names
Dr Doreen Waugh, Celtic & Scottish Studies' first Basil Megaw Fellow, who's a distinguished record of publication in onomastics, works alongside Ian Fraser, whom continues to maintain his desire for, and share into area, as an Honorary Fellow.
Medieval Scottish Songs
Dr Greta-Mary Hair features produced several important researches of Scottish music at the center Ages, with particular emphases on chant, notation, and performance. These include researches regarding the 'Office of St Andrew', as recorded within the Sprouston Breviary; an edition of this Office, jointly created with Betty I. Knott, University of Glasgow; and edition associated with the Vespers, Matins and Lauds for St Kentigern, also with Betty Knott. With Dr Margaret Mackay and others, she has edited a volume in honour of Kenneth Elliott.
Early Scottish Melodies On Line (ESMO)
(Previously known as Melody and Algorithm, Early Scottish sourced elements of Music on line, and Early Scottish Music on line)
This is certainly a continuous task on the basis of the research work of visiting scholar Dr Evelyn Stell. It's a database containing information on seventeenth-century Scottish manuscript types of music, including illustrations and audio files of incipit (first couple of bars) of each and every melody. At this time, the database includes seven major sources comprising 700 tunes. More sources are going to be added, with a final total because of approximately 2000 tunes.
Various other recommended developments:
- Dr Stell is working on full versions of selected pieces.
- A couple of major eighteenth-century sources could be included for comparison reasons.
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