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                    <text>Heathens professing Judaism, when the fear of the Jews fell upon them. The substance of two sermons preached in the Tolbooth Church Edinburgh, on occasion of the Thanksgiving, June 23d 1746, appointed by the late General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, for the victory obtain’d over the rebels at the Battle of Culloden, April 16th 1746. By Alexander Webster one of the ministers of the said church.</text>
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                  <text>The University of Guelph Library purchased a collection of Jacobite materials for the Scottish Studies Collection in 1975 with a grant from the Macdonald Stewart Foundation of Montreal. Today, the collection includes over 450 Jacobite and anti-Jacobite works including Jacobite histories, biographies, fictional accounts, speeches, sermons, polemics, satires, chapbooks, broadsides, letters, manuscript materials, and artefacts.&#13;
&#13;
The Jacobite period spanned a number of important political, religious, and economic events in Scotland. Separate from the Jacobite Collection Archival &amp; Special Collections also holds related complementary materials such as Scottish chapbooks containing Jacobite songs, ballads, and poetry popular in the 19th century, and materials related to other contemporary political, religious, and socio-economic events including the Darien colony scheme in 1698-99, and the Act of Union with England in 1707.&#13;
&#13;
The provenance of the materials varies but bookplates represented in the collection include those of Sir Ian Zachary Malcolm, the 17th Laird of Poltalloch, a member of Parliament, and Chieftain of Clan Malcolm/MacCallum; Duncan MacNeill, the 1st Baron Colonsay; book collectors Alasdair Campbell of Kilmartin (d. 1901) and John Whitefoord Mackenzie; and the Scottish-American industrialist, Andrew Carnegie, among others.&#13;
&#13;
Digitization of the Jacobite Collection began early in 2022 and has been made possible with support from Kevin James, Scottish Studies Foundation Chair &amp; Professor of History, and Curtis Sassur, Head, Archival &amp; Special Collections.&#13;
&#13;
Acknowledgements&#13;
&#13;
Ashley Shifflett McBrayne, Special Collections Librarian (Acting) - Project Lead&#13;
Graham Burt, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Gavin Hughes, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Andrew Northey, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Wilda Thumm, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Bev Buckie, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Lara Carleton, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Gillian Manford, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Adam Doan, Systems Architect and Developer&#13;
Ali Versluis, Head, Research &amp; Scholarship (Acting)</text>
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                <text>Heathens professing Judaism, when the fear of the Jews fell upon them. The substance of two sermons preached in the Tolbooth Church Edinburgh, on occasion of the Thanksgiving, June 23d 1746, appointed by the late General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, for the victory obtain’d over the rebels at the Battle of Culloden, April 16th 1746. By Alexander Webster one of the ministers of the said church.</text>
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No. 1 of 4 in a volume with binder's title "Sermons on Rebellion 1746."&#13;
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Binding : Three quarter burgundy morocco on marbled boards. Speckled edges.</text>
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                  <text>The University of Guelph Library purchased a collection of Jacobite materials for the Scottish Studies Collection in 1975 with a grant from the Macdonald Stewart Foundation of Montreal. Today, the collection includes over 450 Jacobite and anti-Jacobite works including Jacobite histories, biographies, fictional accounts, speeches, sermons, polemics, satires, chapbooks, broadsides, letters, manuscript materials, and artefacts.&#13;
&#13;
The Jacobite period spanned a number of important political, religious, and economic events in Scotland. Separate from the Jacobite Collection Archival &amp; Special Collections also holds related complementary materials such as Scottish chapbooks containing Jacobite songs, ballads, and poetry popular in the 19th century, and materials related to other contemporary political, religious, and socio-economic events including the Darien colony scheme in 1698-99, and the Act of Union with England in 1707.&#13;
&#13;
The provenance of the materials varies but bookplates represented in the collection include those of Sir Ian Zachary Malcolm, the 17th Laird of Poltalloch, a member of Parliament, and Chieftain of Clan Malcolm/MacCallum; Duncan MacNeill, the 1st Baron Colonsay; book collectors Alasdair Campbell of Kilmartin (d. 1901) and John Whitefoord Mackenzie; and the Scottish-American industrialist, Andrew Carnegie, among others.&#13;
&#13;
Digitization of the Jacobite Collection began early in 2022 and has been made possible with support from Kevin James, Scottish Studies Foundation Chair &amp; Professor of History, and Curtis Sassur, Head, Archival &amp; Special Collections.&#13;
&#13;
Acknowledgements&#13;
&#13;
Ashley Shifflett McBrayne, Special Collections Librarian (Acting) - Project Lead&#13;
Graham Burt, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Gavin Hughes, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Andrew Northey, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Wilda Thumm, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Bev Buckie, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Lara Carleton, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Gillian Manford, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Adam Doan, Systems Architect and Developer&#13;
Ali Versluis, Head, Research &amp; Scholarship (Acting)</text>
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&#13;
19th September 1715&#13;
A gentleman, who held one of the highest positions in the court of the late Queen, and who is a zealous Jacobite, has assured me positively that three months ago, M. de Marlborough held a secret correspondence with the Pretender. He confirmed this to me this morning and when I affected doubt, he repeated it several times in the affirmative to the point of telling me through which channels the letters passed and which he received. He added finally that he had run a great risk of being sent to the Tower in the beginnings of the Pretender's campaign.&#13;
He came to ask me whether the friends of the Pretender could count on the assistance of M. le Duc d'Orleans. I tried to content them with my answer. With regard to similar questions, know that I do not have any instructions on this matter, and thus could not produce anything but my own ideas. I would deserve to be chastised if I gave to the Jacobites without an express order, any hopes, which although trivial, would be capable of bringing discord between the King of England and the King, and on the other hand the only pity I have for them compells me to spare them the disappointment into which I would hurl them in destroying the hopes with which they flatter themselves.&#13;
I often feel, Monseigneur, the trouble there is in keeping up with the different persons as I am obliged to do in speaking successively to Whigs, Torys, Jacobites, ladies, priests and other people of whom the larger part would be capable of misusing that of which I speak, some through infidelity, others through indiscretions.&#13;
If the Scottish stand firm and if the leaders of the party who are distributed throughout England, ready to lift their disguises, receive the news that the Pretender is determined to risk everything and comes to put himself to their test, there is every indication that fires will alight all of a sudden in diverse parts of England and throughout the court, little served by the fidelity of troops, will find itself quite at a loss for means to make peace in so many places at once.&#13;
I will carry out, Monseigneur, with the punctuality which it deserves, the order you give me on the part of M. le Duc d'Orleans to continue to separate in these letters the matters which require the most secrecy.</text>
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                  <text>The University of Guelph Library purchased a collection of Jacobite materials for the Scottish Studies Collection in 1975 with a grant from the Macdonald Stewart Foundation of Montreal. Today, the collection includes over 450 Jacobite and anti-Jacobite works including Jacobite histories, biographies, fictional accounts, speeches, sermons, polemics, satires, chapbooks, broadsides, letters, manuscript materials, and artefacts.&#13;
&#13;
The Jacobite period spanned a number of important political, religious, and economic events in Scotland. Separate from the Jacobite Collection Archival &amp; Special Collections also holds related complementary materials such as Scottish chapbooks containing Jacobite songs, ballads, and poetry popular in the 19th century, and materials related to other contemporary political, religious, and socio-economic events including the Darien colony scheme in 1698-99, and the Act of Union with England in 1707.&#13;
&#13;
The provenance of the materials varies but bookplates represented in the collection include those of Sir Ian Zachary Malcolm, the 17th Laird of Poltalloch, a member of Parliament, and Chieftain of Clan Malcolm/MacCallum; Duncan MacNeill, the 1st Baron Colonsay; book collectors Alasdair Campbell of Kilmartin (d. 1901) and John Whitefoord Mackenzie; and the Scottish-American industrialist, Andrew Carnegie, among others.&#13;
&#13;
Digitization of the Jacobite Collection began early in 2022 and has been made possible with support from Kevin James, Scottish Studies Foundation Chair &amp; Professor of History, and Curtis Sassur, Head, Archival &amp; Special Collections.&#13;
&#13;
Acknowledgements&#13;
&#13;
Ashley Shifflett McBrayne, Special Collections Librarian (Acting) - Project Lead&#13;
Graham Burt, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Gavin Hughes, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Andrew Northey, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Wilda Thumm, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Bev Buckie, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Lara Carleton, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Gillian Manford, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Adam Doan, Systems Architect and Developer&#13;
Ali Versluis, Head, Research &amp; Scholarship (Acting)</text>
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              <text>19th September 1715&#13;
A gentleman, who held one of the highest positions in the court of the late Queen, and who is a zealous Jacobite, has assured me positively that three months ago, M. de Marlborough held a secret correspondence with the Pretender. He confirmed this to me this morning and when I affected doubt, he repeated it several times in the affirmative to the point of telling me through which channels the letters passed and which he received. He added finally that he had run a great risk of being sent to the Tower in the beginnings of the Pretender's campaign.&#13;
He came to ask me whether the friends of the Pretender could count on the assistance of M. le Duc d'Orleans. I tried to content them with my answer. With regard to similar questions, know that I do not have any instructions on this matter, and thus could not produce anything but my own ideas. I would deserve to be chastised if I gave to the Jacobites without an express order, any hopes, which although trivial, would be capable of bringing discord between the King of England and the King, and on the other hand the only pity I have for them compells me to spare them the disappointment into which I would hurl them in destroying the hopes with which they flatter themselves.&#13;
I often feel, Monseigneur, the trouble there is in keeping up with the different persons as I am obliged to do in speaking successively to Whigs, Torys, Jacobites, ladies, priests and other people of whom the larger part would be capable of misusing that of which I speak, some through infidelity, others through indiscretions.&#13;
If the Scottish stand firm and if the leaders of the party who are distributed throughout England, ready to lift their disguises, receive the news that the Pretender is determined to risk everything and comes to put himself to their test, there is every indication that fires will alight all of a sudden in diverse parts of England and throughout the court, little served by the fidelity of troops, will find itself quite at a loss for means to make peace in so many places at once.&#13;
I will carry out, Monseigneur, with the punctuality which it deserves, the order you give me on the part of M. le Duc d'Orleans to continue to separate in these letters the matters which require the most secrecy.</text>
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                  <text>The University of Guelph Library purchased a collection of Jacobite materials for the Scottish Studies Collection in 1975 with a grant from the Macdonald Stewart Foundation of Montreal. Today, the collection includes over 450 Jacobite and anti-Jacobite works including Jacobite histories, biographies, fictional accounts, speeches, sermons, polemics, satires, chapbooks, broadsides, letters, manuscript materials, and artefacts.&#13;
&#13;
The Jacobite period spanned a number of important political, religious, and economic events in Scotland. Separate from the Jacobite Collection Archival &amp; Special Collections also holds related complementary materials such as Scottish chapbooks containing Jacobite songs, ballads, and poetry popular in the 19th century, and materials related to other contemporary political, religious, and socio-economic events including the Darien colony scheme in 1698-99, and the Act of Union with England in 1707.&#13;
&#13;
The provenance of the materials varies but bookplates represented in the collection include those of Sir Ian Zachary Malcolm, the 17th Laird of Poltalloch, a member of Parliament, and Chieftain of Clan Malcolm/MacCallum; Duncan MacNeill, the 1st Baron Colonsay; book collectors Alasdair Campbell of Kilmartin (d. 1901) and John Whitefoord Mackenzie; and the Scottish-American industrialist, Andrew Carnegie, among others.&#13;
&#13;
Digitization of the Jacobite Collection began early in 2022 and has been made possible with support from Kevin James, Scottish Studies Foundation Chair &amp; Professor of History, and Curtis Sassur, Head, Archival &amp; Special Collections.&#13;
&#13;
Acknowledgements&#13;
&#13;
Ashley Shifflett McBrayne, Special Collections Librarian (Acting) - Project Lead&#13;
Graham Burt, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Gavin Hughes, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Andrew Northey, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Wilda Thumm, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Bev Buckie, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Lara Carleton, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Gillian Manford, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Adam Doan, Systems Architect and Developer&#13;
Ali Versluis, Head, Research &amp; Scholarship (Acting)</text>
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                  <text>The University of Guelph Library purchased a collection of Jacobite materials for the Scottish Studies Collection in 1975 with a grant from the Macdonald Stewart Foundation of Montreal. Today, the collection includes over 450 Jacobite and anti-Jacobite works including Jacobite histories, biographies, fictional accounts, speeches, sermons, polemics, satires, chapbooks, broadsides, letters, manuscript materials, and artefacts.&#13;
&#13;
The Jacobite period spanned a number of important political, religious, and economic events in Scotland. Separate from the Jacobite Collection Archival &amp; Special Collections also holds related complementary materials such as Scottish chapbooks containing Jacobite songs, ballads, and poetry popular in the 19th century, and materials related to other contemporary political, religious, and socio-economic events including the Darien colony scheme in 1698-99, and the Act of Union with England in 1707.&#13;
&#13;
The provenance of the materials varies but bookplates represented in the collection include those of Sir Ian Zachary Malcolm, the 17th Laird of Poltalloch, a member of Parliament, and Chieftain of Clan Malcolm/MacCallum; Duncan MacNeill, the 1st Baron Colonsay; book collectors Alasdair Campbell of Kilmartin (d. 1901) and John Whitefoord Mackenzie; and the Scottish-American industrialist, Andrew Carnegie, among others.&#13;
&#13;
Digitization of the Jacobite Collection began early in 2022 and has been made possible with support from Kevin James, Scottish Studies Foundation Chair &amp; Professor of History, and Curtis Sassur, Head, Archival &amp; Special Collections.&#13;
&#13;
Acknowledgements&#13;
&#13;
Ashley Shifflett McBrayne, Special Collections Librarian (Acting) - Project Lead&#13;
Graham Burt, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Gavin Hughes, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Andrew Northey, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Wilda Thumm, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Bev Buckie, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Lara Carleton, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Gillian Manford, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Adam Doan, Systems Architect and Developer&#13;
Ali Versluis, Head, Research &amp; Scholarship (Acting)</text>
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&#13;
The Jacobite period spanned a number of important political, religious, and economic events in Scotland. Separate from the Jacobite Collection Archival &amp; Special Collections also holds related complementary materials such as Scottish chapbooks containing Jacobite songs, ballads, and poetry popular in the 19th century, and materials related to other contemporary political, religious, and socio-economic events including the Darien colony scheme in 1698-99, and the Act of Union with England in 1707.&#13;
&#13;
The provenance of the materials varies but bookplates represented in the collection include those of Sir Ian Zachary Malcolm, the 17th Laird of Poltalloch, a member of Parliament, and Chieftain of Clan Malcolm/MacCallum; Duncan MacNeill, the 1st Baron Colonsay; book collectors Alasdair Campbell of Kilmartin (d. 1901) and John Whitefoord Mackenzie; and the Scottish-American industrialist, Andrew Carnegie, among others.&#13;
&#13;
Digitization of the Jacobite Collection began early in 2022 and has been made possible with support from Kevin James, Scottish Studies Foundation Chair &amp; Professor of History, and Curtis Sassur, Head, Archival &amp; Special Collections.&#13;
&#13;
Acknowledgements&#13;
&#13;
Ashley Shifflett McBrayne, Special Collections Librarian (Acting) - Project Lead&#13;
Graham Burt, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Gavin Hughes, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Andrew Northey, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Wilda Thumm, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Bev Buckie, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Lara Carleton, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Gillian Manford, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Adam Doan, Systems Architect and Developer&#13;
Ali Versluis, Head, Research &amp; Scholarship (Acting)</text>
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                <text>Memorial anent signing the Oath of Alledgeance</text>
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                  <text>The University of Guelph Library purchased a collection of Jacobite materials for the Scottish Studies Collection in 1975 with a grant from the Macdonald Stewart Foundation of Montreal. Today, the collection includes over 450 Jacobite and anti-Jacobite works including Jacobite histories, biographies, fictional accounts, speeches, sermons, polemics, satires, chapbooks, broadsides, letters, manuscript materials, and artefacts.&#13;
&#13;
The Jacobite period spanned a number of important political, religious, and economic events in Scotland. Separate from the Jacobite Collection Archival &amp; Special Collections also holds related complementary materials such as Scottish chapbooks containing Jacobite songs, ballads, and poetry popular in the 19th century, and materials related to other contemporary political, religious, and socio-economic events including the Darien colony scheme in 1698-99, and the Act of Union with England in 1707.&#13;
&#13;
The provenance of the materials varies but bookplates represented in the collection include those of Sir Ian Zachary Malcolm, the 17th Laird of Poltalloch, a member of Parliament, and Chieftain of Clan Malcolm/MacCallum; Duncan MacNeill, the 1st Baron Colonsay; book collectors Alasdair Campbell of Kilmartin (d. 1901) and John Whitefoord Mackenzie; and the Scottish-American industrialist, Andrew Carnegie, among others.&#13;
&#13;
Digitization of the Jacobite Collection began early in 2022 and has been made possible with support from Kevin James, Scottish Studies Foundation Chair &amp; Professor of History, and Curtis Sassur, Head, Archival &amp; Special Collections.&#13;
&#13;
Acknowledgements&#13;
&#13;
Ashley Shifflett McBrayne, Special Collections Librarian (Acting) - Project Lead&#13;
Graham Burt, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Gavin Hughes, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Andrew Northey, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Wilda Thumm, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Bev Buckie, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Lara Carleton, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Gillian Manford, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Adam Doan, Systems Architect and Developer&#13;
Ali Versluis, Head, Research &amp; Scholarship (Acting)</text>
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                <text>Chevalier St. George = James Francis Edward, Prince of Wales.&#13;
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                <text>In the public domain; For high quality reproductions, contact Archival &amp; Special Collections, University of Guelph. libaspc@uoguelph.ca, 519-824-4120, Ext. 53413</text>
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                <text>[Edinburgh : printed by John Moncur]</text>
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                  <text>The University of Guelph Library purchased a collection of Jacobite materials for the Scottish Studies Collection in 1975 with a grant from the Macdonald Stewart Foundation of Montreal. Today, the collection includes over 450 Jacobite and anti-Jacobite works including Jacobite histories, biographies, fictional accounts, speeches, sermons, polemics, satires, chapbooks, broadsides, letters, manuscript materials, and artefacts.&#13;
&#13;
The Jacobite period spanned a number of important political, religious, and economic events in Scotland. Separate from the Jacobite Collection Archival &amp; Special Collections also holds related complementary materials such as Scottish chapbooks containing Jacobite songs, ballads, and poetry popular in the 19th century, and materials related to other contemporary political, religious, and socio-economic events including the Darien colony scheme in 1698-99, and the Act of Union with England in 1707.&#13;
&#13;
The provenance of the materials varies but bookplates represented in the collection include those of Sir Ian Zachary Malcolm, the 17th Laird of Poltalloch, a member of Parliament, and Chieftain of Clan Malcolm/MacCallum; Duncan MacNeill, the 1st Baron Colonsay; book collectors Alasdair Campbell of Kilmartin (d. 1901) and John Whitefoord Mackenzie; and the Scottish-American industrialist, Andrew Carnegie, among others.&#13;
&#13;
Digitization of the Jacobite Collection began early in 2022 and has been made possible with support from Kevin James, Scottish Studies Foundation Chair &amp; Professor of History, and Curtis Sassur, Head, Archival &amp; Special Collections.&#13;
&#13;
Acknowledgements&#13;
&#13;
Ashley Shifflett McBrayne, Special Collections Librarian (Acting) - Project Lead&#13;
Graham Burt, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Gavin Hughes, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Andrew Northey, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Wilda Thumm, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Bev Buckie, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Lara Carleton, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Gillian Manford, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Adam Doan, Systems Architect and Developer&#13;
Ali Versluis, Head, Research &amp; Scholarship (Acting)</text>
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                    <text>His Majesty’s most gracious declaration. James R. James the eight, by the grace of God, King of Scotland, England, France, and Ireland, desender of the faith &amp;c. To all our loving subjects of what degree or quality soever: greeting, having always born the most constant affection to our ancient kingdom of Scotland, from whence we derive our royal origin, and where our progenitors have swayed the sceptre with glory through a longer succession of Kings, ...</text>
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                  <text>The University of Guelph Library purchased a collection of Jacobite materials for the Scottish Studies Collection in 1975 with a grant from the Macdonald Stewart Foundation of Montreal. Today, the collection includes over 450 Jacobite and anti-Jacobite works including Jacobite histories, biographies, fictional accounts, speeches, sermons, polemics, satires, chapbooks, broadsides, letters, manuscript materials, and artefacts.&#13;
&#13;
The Jacobite period spanned a number of important political, religious, and economic events in Scotland. Separate from the Jacobite Collection Archival &amp; Special Collections also holds related complementary materials such as Scottish chapbooks containing Jacobite songs, ballads, and poetry popular in the 19th century, and materials related to other contemporary political, religious, and socio-economic events including the Darien colony scheme in 1698-99, and the Act of Union with England in 1707.&#13;
&#13;
The provenance of the materials varies but bookplates represented in the collection include those of Sir Ian Zachary Malcolm, the 17th Laird of Poltalloch, a member of Parliament, and Chieftain of Clan Malcolm/MacCallum; Duncan MacNeill, the 1st Baron Colonsay; book collectors Alasdair Campbell of Kilmartin (d. 1901) and John Whitefoord Mackenzie; and the Scottish-American industrialist, Andrew Carnegie, among others.&#13;
&#13;
Digitization of the Jacobite Collection began early in 2022 and has been made possible with support from Kevin James, Scottish Studies Foundation Chair &amp; Professor of History, and Curtis Sassur, Head, Archival &amp; Special Collections.&#13;
&#13;
Acknowledgements&#13;
&#13;
Ashley Shifflett McBrayne, Special Collections Librarian (Acting) - Project Lead&#13;
Graham Burt, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Gavin Hughes, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Andrew Northey, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Wilda Thumm, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Bev Buckie, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Lara Carleton, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Gillian Manford, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Adam Doan, Systems Architect and Developer&#13;
Ali Versluis, Head, Research &amp; Scholarship (Acting)</text>
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                <text>His Majesty’s most gracious declaration. James R. James the eight, by the grace of God, King of Scotland, England, France, and Ireland, desender of the faith &amp;c. To all our loving subjects of what degree or quality soever: greeting, having always born the most constant affection to our ancient kingdom of Scotland, from whence we derive our royal origin, and where our progenitors have swayed the sceptre with glory through a longer succession of Kings, ...</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://archives-catalogue.lib.uoguelph.ca/f695"&gt;XS1 MS A081011&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>[Edinburgh? : Publisher not given] per ESTC</text>
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                <text>Dated at end: "Given at our court at Rome, the 23d day of December 1743".&#13;
A promise to govern constitutionally and to introduce reforms.</text>
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                <text>ESTC T36251</text>
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                <text>James, Prince of Wales, 1688-1766&#13;
Scotland -- History -- 1689-1745 -- Sources</text>
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                <text>In the public domain; For high quality reproductions, contact Archival &amp; Special Collections, University of Guelph. libaspc@uoguelph.ca, 519-824-4120, Ext. 53413</text>
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        <src>https://scottishresearchcollections.lib.uoguelph.ca/files/original/d4acf8878f47c7416899104aa1eb1c49.pdf</src>
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                    <text>By the King, a proclamation requiring all His Majesty's subjects to repair His camp / James R.</text>
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            <element elementId="50">
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                  <text>Jacobite Collection </text>
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                  <text>The University of Guelph Library purchased a collection of Jacobite materials for the Scottish Studies Collection in 1975 with a grant from the Macdonald Stewart Foundation of Montreal. Today, the collection includes over 450 Jacobite and anti-Jacobite works including Jacobite histories, biographies, fictional accounts, speeches, sermons, polemics, satires, chapbooks, broadsides, letters, manuscript materials, and artefacts.&#13;
&#13;
The Jacobite period spanned a number of important political, religious, and economic events in Scotland. Separate from the Jacobite Collection Archival &amp; Special Collections also holds related complementary materials such as Scottish chapbooks containing Jacobite songs, ballads, and poetry popular in the 19th century, and materials related to other contemporary political, religious, and socio-economic events including the Darien colony scheme in 1698-99, and the Act of Union with England in 1707.&#13;
&#13;
The provenance of the materials varies but bookplates represented in the collection include those of Sir Ian Zachary Malcolm, the 17th Laird of Poltalloch, a member of Parliament, and Chieftain of Clan Malcolm/MacCallum; Duncan MacNeill, the 1st Baron Colonsay; book collectors Alasdair Campbell of Kilmartin (d. 1901) and John Whitefoord Mackenzie; and the Scottish-American industrialist, Andrew Carnegie, among others.&#13;
&#13;
Digitization of the Jacobite Collection began early in 2022 and has been made possible with support from Kevin James, Scottish Studies Foundation Chair &amp; Professor of History, and Curtis Sassur, Head, Archival &amp; Special Collections.&#13;
&#13;
Acknowledgements&#13;
&#13;
Ashley Shifflett McBrayne, Special Collections Librarian (Acting) - Project Lead&#13;
Graham Burt, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Gavin Hughes, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Andrew Northey, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Wilda Thumm, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Bev Buckie, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Lara Carleton, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Gillian Manford, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Adam Doan, Systems Architect and Developer&#13;
Ali Versluis, Head, Research &amp; Scholarship (Acting)</text>
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                  <text>1688 to approximately 1923</text>
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                <text>James, Prince of Wales, 1688-1766.</text>
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                <text>Perth : printed by Mr. Robert Freebairn</text>
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                <text>1716</text>
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                <text>ESTC T90504</text>
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                <text>Archival &amp; Special Collections, University of Guelph Library, Guelph, Ontario, Canada.</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://archives-catalogue.lib.uoguelph.ca/f695"&gt;XS1 MS A081010&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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            <name>Subject</name>
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                <text>Jacobite Rebellion, 1715 -- Sources</text>
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            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="2280">
                <text>In the public domain; For high quality reproductions, contact Archival &amp; Special Collections, University of Guelph. libaspc@uoguelph.ca, 519-824-4120, Ext. 53413</text>
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            <name>Title</name>
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                <text>By the king, a proclamation, requiring all His Majesty’s subjects to repair to his camp.</text>
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