Edinburgh: A New History

September 29, 2024
This article is from Current Archaeology issue 416


Subscribe now for full access and no adverts

REVIEW BY CH

The earliest surviving written reference to Edinburgh is found in a charter of 17 July 1124 – and, to celebrate the city’s 900th ‘birthday’, Alistair Moffat has written an engaging biography of the Scottish capital. He begins with a loving description of Edinburgh’s distinctive skyline, ‘forged in fire and ice’ and owing as much to geology as to history, before charting its human story from the end of the last Ice Age to the present day.

The chapters are short and snappy, and Moffat has a real talent for description, ably conjuring vivid images of landscapes and historical events through his words. He moves briskly through the centuries, weaving together diverse topics that include urbanisation, the evolution of golf, religious turbulence, witch-burnings, Jacobites, gentrification, and the city’s rich literary and artistic legacy (something that, as a former Director of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, Moffat clearly understands). A very enjoyable book to dip into or to read in one sitting.

Edinburgh: A New History
Alistair Moffat
Birlinn, £14.99
ISBN 978-1780279053

Just Out and Coming Soon

The Anglo-Saxon Settlement at Eye Kettleby, Leicestershire
Gavin Speed and Neil Finn
University of Leicester School of Archaeology and Ancient History, £25
ISBN 978-0957479289

Cotton ‘Henge’ to Craft: Neolithic to Anglo-Saxon Remains at Warth Park, Raunds, Northamptonshire
Louise Moan and Lawrence Billington
Oxford Archaeology East, £25
ISBN 978-1907588167

Animating the Dead: an archaeology of Bronze Age burial practices in Orkney
Jane Downes and Colin Richards
Oxbow, £40
ISBN 979-8888571439

Irish and Scottish Art, c.900-1900: survivals and revivals
Rachel Moss and Heather Pulliam (eds)
Edinburgh University Press, £95
ISBN 978-1399517379

Guildford Fire Station: excavation of a Late Upper Palaeolithic campsite in the valley of the River Wey, Surrey
Nick Barton et al.
Oxford Archaeology, £20
ISBN 978-0904220926

Community, Technology and Tradition: a social prehistory of the Great Orme Mine
Emma C Wager
Sidestone Press, £95
ISBN 978-9464270914

By Country

Popular
UKItalyGreeceEgyptTurkeyFrance

Africa
BotswanaEgyptEthiopiaGhanaKenyaLibyaMadagascarMaliMoroccoNamibiaSomaliaSouth AfricaSudanTanzaniaTunisiaZimbabwe

Asia
IranIraqIsraelJapanJavaJordanKazakhstanKodiak IslandKoreaKyrgyzstan
LaosLebanonMalaysiaMongoliaOmanPakistanQatarRussiaPapua New GuineaSaudi ArabiaSingaporeSouth KoreaSumatraSyriaThailandTurkmenistanUAEUzbekistanVanuatuVietnamYemen

Australasia
AustraliaFijiMicronesiaPolynesiaTasmania

Europe
AlbaniaAndorraAustriaBulgariaCroatiaCyprusCzech RepublicDenmarkEnglandEstoniaFinlandFranceGermanyGibraltarGreeceHollandHungaryIcelandIrelandItalyMaltaNorwayPolandPortugalRomaniaScotlandSerbiaSlovakiaSloveniaSpainSwedenSwitzerlandTurkeySicilyUK

South America
ArgentinaBelizeBrazilChileColombiaEaster IslandMexicoPeru

North America
CanadaCaribbeanCarriacouDominican RepublicGreenlandGuatemalaHondurasUSA

Discover more from The Past

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading