Transcripts.
Found in 618 Collections and/or Records:
Autograph letters of Charles I and Charles II, with transcripts., [1643], 1663.
Autograph poem “An Eala Bhàn” by Iain Crichton Smith, with typed transcript and English translation.
BBC scripts and related papers of David Thomson., Circa 1945-1975.
'Brief sketch of a correspondence with Sir Walter Scott, commencing in the year 1814', by Joseph Train.
Carbon copies of typed transcripts of poems of Sydney Goodsir Smith., 1941-1952, undated.
A few of the poems were intended for publication in 'Figs and thistles' (Edinburgh, 1959).
Chartulary of Paisley Abbey, 16th century, containing material covering the years 1163-1530.
Chartulary of the bishopric of Moray, 16th century.
Chronicon Angliæ, 400-1327, being a nineteenth century transcript of Barberini MS.2689, which was written at Sempryngham in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries., 13th century-14th century.
According to a note (folio iv), dated 1823, by Luigi Maria Rezzi, Librarian of the Barberini Library, the transcript was made by him for Benjamin Heywood Bright.
Collection entitled 'Glengarry notes' compiled probably in the late nineteenth century consisting chiefly of extracts from printed sources together with some transcripts of documents in the Public Record Office, illustrating the history of Glengarry and some other parts of the Highlands from early times until the mid-nineteenth century., 1st half of 19th century.
Almost all of the material is typewritten, with numerous manuscript additions and corrections.
‘Collection of charters, evidents and antiquities collected by E. Hadinton’, the title in the hand of Sir James Balfour prefaced to the collection from original charters, public records & chartularies made by Sir Thomas Hamilton, Clerk of Register and First Lord of Haddington.
There is no method preserved in the arrangement of the charters nor any index to the contents of the volumes but along the margins, especially of the first volume are notes in the hand of Sir James Balfour, which though imperfect are convenient.
The description of the manuscript in the folio catalogue (F.R.186) includes the reference: A.4.16.
‘Collection of charters, evidents and antiquities collected by E. Hadinton, vol. I’., ?Early 17th century.
‘Collection of charters, evidents and antiquities collected by E. Hadinton, vol. II’, ?Early 17th century.
Collection of manuscripts, apparently belonging to William Edmondstoune Aytoun., 1653-1746.
Collection of papers of the Warden family.
The collection comprises correspondence of the Warden family, with transcripts of most of the correspondence, a travel journal written by Alexander Warden and a publication, 'Letters from St. Helena' (1816), by William Warden.
Collection of thirty-nine seventeenth-century sermons, many of them transcribed in 1624., 17th century.
Common-place book containing a collection of verse transcripts and reminiscences relating chiefly to Frasers and Roses, with some of the writings or compositions of Forbes and Culloden and John Roy Stewart, written by Peter Rose.
Commonplace book of James Gray, priest of the diocese of Dunblane.
Commonplace book of Mrs C E R Drummond-Hay, of Seggieden, containing religious verses and transcripts of letters from her son, Lieutenant (later Lieutenant-Colonel) James Adam Gordon Richardson Drummond-Hay while on active service.
The thirteen letters, written between February and April 1885, are addressed by James Drummond-Hay to his parents and other members of his family, and recount in diary form his experiences as a member of the Coldstream Guards contingent both on the voyage to the Sudan and on arrival there. There is much detailed description of military activity in the Suakin region.
Commonplace book of Robina Chisholm, containing newspaper cuttings and transcripts of poems, chiefly of her brother Walter (1856-1877), a Berwickshire shepherd.
Contemporary transcript of ‘The Ancient Method and Manner of holding of Parliaments in England’, attributed to Henry Elsynge, Younger, Clerk of the House of Lords., [1660, or before.]
Copies, 1707, from manuscripts in the British Museum of state papers and letters concerning Scotch affairs and the interference of the English government in them from about the period of Queen Mary’s arrival in Scotland to the time of her execution.
The description of the manuscript in the folio catalogue (F.R.186) includes the reference: A.3.28-30.
The manuscript is in a neat hand, with a few unimportant notes by the transcriber.