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                    <text>The female rebels: being some remarkable incidents of the lives, characters, and families of the titular Duke and Dutchess of Perth, the Lord and Lady Ogilvie, and of Miss Florence M’donald. Containing Several Particulars of these Remarkable Persons not hitherto published.</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 female rebels: being some remarkable incidents of the lives, characters, and families of the titular Duke and Dutchess of Perth, the Lord and Lady Ogilvie, and of Miss Florence M’donald. Containing Several Particulars of these Remarkable Persons not hitherto published.</text>
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                <text>Dublin : printed for G. Faulkner in Essex-Street, and R. James, in Dame-Street, opposite Sycamorealley</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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                    <text>Female fortitude, exemplify’d, in an impartial narrative, of the seizure, escape and marriage of the Princess Clementina Sobiesky, as it was particulary set down by Mr. Charles Wogan (formerly one of the Preston Prisoners) who was a chief manager in that whole affair. Now published for the entertainment of the curious.</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>Female fortitude, exemplify’d, in an impartial narrative, of the seizure, escape and marriage of the Princess Clementina Sobiesky, as it was particulary set down by Mr. Charles Wogan (formerly one of the Preston Prisoners) who was a chief manager in that whole affair. Now published for the entertainment of the curious.</text>
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