Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/114259
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Type: Book chapter
Title: Love and friendship between lower order Scottish men: Or what the history of emotions has brought to early modern gender history
Author: Barclay, K.
Citation: Revisiting gender in European history, 1400-1800, 2018 / Dermineur, E., Sjögren, A., Langum, V. (ed./s), Ch.6, pp.121-144
Publisher: Routledge
Publisher Place: New York, USA
Issue Date: 2018
Series/Report no.: Routledge Research in Gender and History
ISBN: 9781351744706
Editor: Dermineur, E.
Sjögren, A.
Langum, V.
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Katie Barclay
Abstract: In 1700, Andrew and William Monroe and Hugh Gordon were prosecuted for the murder of Alexander McKenzie near to Alness in Scotland. The motive given by the court was a family argument over property-William was married to McKenzie’s daughter. The course of evidence highlighted a series of disputes that led to physical fights between the various parties: McKenzie’s friend, John Ross, had called Andrew a ‘Bugar and sone of a whore’ to which Andrew, an ensign in Colonel Row’s regiment, ‘in honour … was obliged to resent’, and so to fight. Their friends separated them and they were ‘made to drink friends together’. When riding away, John Ross did ‘drink to him’ and ‘imbraceing and kissing him said that all that fell out should never discord him and the said Andrew’.2 The peace did not last however and McKenzie was killed in a subsequent brawl.
Rights: © 2018 Taylor & Francis
DOI: 10.4324/9781315188966
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315188966
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 3
History publications

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