
| Contents | ||||
| 1 | Kin networks | 13 | ||
| 2 | Networks of place, region and nation | 49 | ||
| 3 | Confessional networks | 84 | ||
| 4 | Pedlars, merchant and consular networks | 127 | ||
| 5 | Manufacturing networks | 170 | ||
| 6 | Covert commercial networks | 207 | ||
| 7 | Espionage and the 'subversive network' | 251 | ||
| 8 | Subverting confessionalism : the network of John Durie, 1628-1654 | 280 | ||
| 9 | Jacobite networks in the north 1715-1750 | 313 | ||
| Appendix | The Fruchtbringende Gesellschaft | |||
Reviews
“[This study] is a deep and path-breaking achievement that essentially improves our understanding of the Scottish role in the shift of European economy and politics in the Atlantic in the course of the seventeenth century. Moreover, the book is an important contribution to the study of early modern identities, Scottish and others”
Leos Muller, Scottish Historical Review, LXXXVII, no.223, April 2008
“A recent trickle of books linked to the 1707 Union will doubtless
become a flood next year when the tercentenary is marked. Despite much over-hyping,
however, none of those so far published can match Steve Murdoch’s Network
North: Scottish Kin, Commercial and Covert Associations in Northern Europe
1603-1746 (Brill £100), a truly path-breaking study of Scotland’s
long-standing forgotten links with the continent and a wonderful example
of what can be achieved by several years of sustained research in home and
overseas archives”
Tom Devine, The Herald, 2 December 2006. Review of the books of
the year.
"Through his extensive research, Murdoch has shown how the Scots were able
to achieve success in commerce and industry, and to advance their political
and religious agendas wherever the moved across northern Europe. In this
book, Murdoch makes a significant contribution to our understanding of how
social networks were developed and cultivated in the early modern period"
Donald J. Harreld, American Historical Review, vol. III, no. 5,
December 2006
“This is a good book, especially on religious and political aspects
of the Scottish diaspora. It has interesting things to say about a wide range
of topics, including identity, espionage, and ‘credit’ (in all
senses of the word). The international perspective in both archival sources
and secondary reading is exemplary. Written in a livlier and more informal
style [...] Murdoch’s book is a readable and thoroughly worthwhile
contribution to Scottish, British and Scandinavian History.”
R. A. Houston, Economic History Review, LIX, 2 (2006)
“This is clearly an impressive, far-reaching volume that adds much
to our understanding of Scottish migrant communities in the early modern
period.”
Derek J. Patrick, Journal of Early Modern History, 10:3, 2006
“This book is more ambitious than the title suggests. It comprises
the most extensive monograph survey of Scottish expatriate activity in post-Reformation
Europe that has been attempted to date and, more generally. A significant
reassessment of religious, economic and political aspects of the country’s
history during the early modern period. [...] This is a very impressive,
groundbreaking book, enjoyable to read, and one which should be a required
text for undergraduate and postgraduate students of early modern Scottish
history, and for those concerned with the web of connections linking the
Stuart and early Hanovarian kingdoms to the Baltic and North Sea regions.”
David Worthington, English Historical Review, cxxi, 491, April
2006
“There are no doubts that Steve Murdoch’s book is a real milestone
in research in Scottish, British and European history. Our knowledge of the
inner workings of both the emigration from Scotland and Scottish commercial
activity has been significantly enriched. … In short, the author has
done excellent work to explain how a small nation from the outskirts of Europe
so significantly influenced its early modern epoch. Last but not least, the
book is not only insightful, but well written and entertaining to read.”
Waldemar Kowalski, Odrodzenie i Reformacja w Polsce, 2006 and also
History Scotland, vol. 6, no.1, Jan/Feb 2006