Stats. Copies.
Found in 186 Collections and/or Records:
Photostats of manuscripts in Paris, of reports on two missions of Jacques de la Brosse or la Brousse in Scotland., 1543, 1560.
The two reports are as follows:
'Discours des affaires du royaume descosse' by Jacques de la Brosse and Jacques Ménage, 1543, from Bibliothèque Nationale, manuscripts fonds français, number 17890, folios 29-34 (folio 1);
Journal of the Siege of Leith, by an unidentified writer, 1560, from the French Foreign Office, Mémoires et documents, Angleterre, rég. 15, folios 154-182 (folio 15).
Photostats of manuscripts of Edmund Castell, the Semitic scholar.
Photostats of notes and maps from the Universitet-Bibliotheket, Copenhagen., [1310, or after]-early 17th century.
Photostats of notes concerning the revenues from various church lands.
Photostats of part of original survey plan, and of part of Ordnance Survey plans for 1870 - Survey plans for use in process Argyll Lochnell Campbell - Awe River, Argyll - surveyed by D and T Stevenson., 1891.
Photostats of parts of 'Adversaria', a commonplace-book of Sir Walter Scott., 1796.
Photostats of poems of James VI.
Photostats of portions of a manuscript, possibly written circa 1799, of Sir Walter Scott's tragedy 'House of Aspen' (not in Scott's hand) at Yale University, formerly in the possession of the Marquess of Lothian., [Circa 1799.]
Photostats of portions of the original manuscripts of the Waverley Novels by Sir Walter Scott, in the Pierpont Morgan Library, New York.
Photostats of Scottish music made from the originals in the British Museum., 17th century.
Photostats of Sir Walter Scott's Journal.
The original manuscript is in two volumes. Opposite the title page of the first volume are the signatures of Queen Victoria and others of her party who visited Abbotsford on 22 August 1867 (see the Queen's 'More leaves from the journal of a life in the Highlands', 1884, page 81).
Photostats of Sir Walter Scott's Journal: volume I., 1825-1827.
Photostats of Sir Walter Scott's Journal: volume I., 1825-1826.
Photostats of Sir Walter Scott's Journal: volume II., 1828-1832.
Photostats of Sir Walter Scott's Journal: volume II., 1828-1829.
Photostats of Sir Walter Scott's Journal: volume II., 1829-1832.
Photostats of some Latin verses, together with a letter, 1574, of Nicholas Langlois, master of the French School in Edinburgh, to David Lindsay, minister of South Leith, later Bishop of Ross., 1574.
The letters and verses alike were transcribed by Marie Presot, wife of Nicholas Langlois and mother of Esther Inglis, the calligrapher. They are interesting for the quality and variety of the hands used.
Photostats of the correspondence of Cardinal York, regarding the relations of Prince Charles Edward and Pope Clement XIII., 1765.
There are two letters of Prince Charles Edward, one of Cardinal Gian Francesco Albani, and two of Cardinal York.
Photostats of ‘The Kings Quair’, the unique fifteenth-century manuscript in the Bodleian Library (MS. Arch. Selden B.24) prepared for William Mackay Mackenzie's edition of the poem, 1939.
The copies consist of folios 191 verso-211, 231 verso of the original manuscript. There are also photostats of the Gaelic quatrain of Donald Gorm (probably Donald Gormsson, sixth chief of Sleat), sixteenth century, in the same volume.
Photostats of the whole portion of ‘Waverley’ by Sir Walter Scott, in the Pierpont Morgan Library, partly completing the portion in the National Library (Adv.MS.1.1.0)., [1814, or before.]
The leaves reproduced correspond to the following pages of the first edition (1814): volume i, pages 62-64; volume ii, pages 361-370; volume iii, pages 333-339.
Photostats of three sermons delivered by Thomas Livingstone, Abbot of Dundrennan, before the Council of Basle., [?1433], 1435.
The manuscript of the third sermon has the heading '... per reverendum patrem dominum Nicolaum, Abbatem de Scocia, sacre theologie professorem'.
Photostats of twenty four letters, 1761-1763, of James Boswell to Andrew Erskine, and a fragment of diary, 1763, of Boswell., 1761-1763.
Photostats of twenty-four letters of Sir Walter Scott, chiefly to Charles Robert Maturin.
Twenty-two of the letters are to Charles Robert Maturin and his wife. The other two letters are addressed to Archibald Campbell-Colquhoun and to James Ballantyne.