Notes
1 Edward Corp, Sir David Nairne: The Life of a Scottish Jacobite at the Court of the Exiled Stuarts (Oxford, 2018).
2 Ana Maria Seabra de Almeida Rodrigues, Manuela Santos Silva and Jonathan Spangler (eds), Dynastic Change: Legitimacy and Gender in Medieval and Early Modern Monarchy (London, 2020); Christopher H. Johnson, David Warren Sabean, Simon Teuscher and Francesca Trivellato (eds), Transregional and Transnational Families in Europe and Beyond: Experiences Since the Middle Ages (New York, 2011).
3 John Watkins, ‘Toward a New Diplomatic History of Medieval and Early Modern Europe’, Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 38, no 1 (2008), pp. 1-14; Tracey A. Sowerby, ‘Early Modern Diplomatic History’, History Compass 14, no 9 (2016), pp. 441-56; Toby Osborne, ‘Whither Diplomatic History? An Early-Modern Historian’s Perspective’, Diplomatica 1, no. 1 (2019), pp. 40-5.
4 Bernard Capp, The Ties That Bind: Siblings, Family, and Society in Early Modern England (Oxford, 2018).
5 Daniel Szechi, ‘Jacobite Politics in the Age of Anne’, Parliamentary History 28 (2009), pp. 41-58; Geoffrey Holmes, British Politics in the Age of Queen Anne (London, 2003).
6 Steve Pincus, 1688: The First Modern Revolution (New Haven, 2011); Tim Harris and Stephen Taylor (eds), The Final Crisis of the Stuart Monarchy: The Revolutions of 1688–91 in their British, Atlantic and European Contexts (Woodbridge, 2015).
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Jérémy Filet
Jérémy Filet
Jérémy Filet is a teaching fellow at Manchester Metropolitan University and Associate Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. He has published on Jacobitism for Eighteenth-Century Ireland (2021), History Today (2023), and the European History Quarterly (2024). His first monograph The Jacobites and the Grand Tour: Educational Travel and Small States Diplomacy is forthcoming in the Jacobite Studies Collection at Manchester University Press.