Adam Marks
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The Scots colleges and international politics, 1600–1750
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This chapter aims to reposition the Catholic colleges, and specifically the Scots colleges, in their political context. The early modern Scots college in Paris emerged from a set of pre-existing institutions, one of which originated in a foundation made by David Innes. Scotland's colleges did not exist in a vacuum but rather within a larger network that included the colleges of English and Irish Catholics. The outbreak of the Thirty Years' War marked a key turning point in the history of both the colleges and the Stuart dynasty. The chapter describes the development of the colleges from the ascent of James VI to the British thrones in 1603 to the end of the 1745 Jacobite uprising, with particular reference to the Thirty Years' War and the Jacobite era. The political significance of the colleges to Jacobitism needs to be recognised and placed into the wider context of diplomatic history.

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College communities abroad

Education, migration and Catholicism in early modern Europe

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