William Elphinstone and the Kingdom of Scotland, 1431 - 1514 Quotes
William Elphinstone and the Kingdom of Scotland, 1431 - 1514: The Struggle for Order
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Leslie J. MacFarlane1 rating, 4.00 average rating, 2 reviews
William Elphinstone and the Kingdom of Scotland, 1431 - 1514 Quotes
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“To observe the kingdom of Scotland in 1513 in terms of the strength of the Crown, its relations with its magnates, the quality and administration of its justice, its economy, foreign relations, culture and religious life, is to see a community at some remove from the leaderless country inherited by James I in 1424; yet it is also to see a country still strongly tied to its ancient traditions, customs and ethnic divisions which it either could not, or would not, abandon. By 1513 the Crown was strong, popular, its position in society unassailable. It had both sought and obtained the co-operation of its nobility who were themselves closely bound together by bonds of alliance, and whose status in society was recognised by the strength and closeness its kin groups. It had introduced some useful, constructive statutes and had strengthened its legal procedures. It had sought to inform its legal officers of the body of the law. New and more efficient methods of land registration and of royal revenue collection had been the direct result of the reorganisation of the Chancery, the Exchequer, and of the Secretariat of the Privy Seal. Its economy was buoyant enough to enable a protected merchant class to trade modestly with the Baltic states through Denmark, with Southern Europe through its Staple in Flanders, with England and France. Through its many embassies abroad it pursued, as far as possible, constructive peace treaties with the major European powers.”
― William Elphinstone and the Kingdom of Scotland, 1431 - 1514: The Struggle for Order
― William Elphinstone and the Kingdom of Scotland, 1431 - 1514: The Struggle for Order
