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Bookplates.

 Subject
Subject Source: Art & Architecture Thesaurus
Scope Note: Labels, usually printed or engraved, frequently with a distinctive design, pasted or tipped into books to mark their ownership or presentation, and sometimes to indicate their location in a library. They are usually attached to the inside of the upper cover.

Found in 46 Collections and/or Records:

Accounts of the early oriental and classical mythical gods and heroes and Roman Emperors and Empresses, followed by notes on some classical fables.

 File
Identifier: MS.3861
Scope and Contents

The author's name appears as Dominicus Tagliaboscus on folio 142 verso, with the date 1702, and on folio 305.

Dates: 1702.

'Book of verses’ by W E Henley (London, 1888), inscribed on the flyleaf and presented to Frederick Locker-Lampson by the author.

 File
Identifier: MS.9047
Scope and Contents

W E Henley's letter accompanying the volume, together with a later letter, 1890, to Frederick Locker-Lampson, are enclosed in an envelope that has been tipped in inside the front cover.

Dates: 1888, 1890.

Commonplace book in verse and prose.

 Item
Identifier: Acc.6824
Scope and Contents

701 pages, with Aberdeen connections, bookplate of Charles Gordon of Beldornie and Wardhouse, and ownership inscription of Thomas Mercer.

Dates: late 17th century.

Copies, in an eighteenth-century hand, of Jacobite tracts, in a book containing Thomas Ruddiman's bookplate and a list of contents in his autograph.

 File
Identifier: MS.2258
Scope and Contents The contents are as follows.(i) 'A Letter to the Author of a Sermon entituled, "A Sermon preach'd at the Funerall of Her Late Majesty Queen Mary . . ." By Dr. Cane [Ken], late Bp. of Bath and Wells', 29 March 1695 (published, London, 1695). (Folio 1.)(ii) 'A Letter from Mr. Lesly [Charles Leslie] to a Member of Parliament in London', Bar-le-Duc, 23 April 1714 (published, [publisher not identified], 1714). (Folio 7.)(iii) Proclamation of Prince James Edward...
Dates: 1648-[circa 1719].

Correspondence of James Maidment with and concerning John Riddell, with some other papers of Riddell.

 File
Identifier: MS.5312
Scope and Contents

The letters chiefly concern genealogical matters and the disposal after his death of John Riddell's manuscripts (the Riddell Collection), which were arranged by James Maidment and chiefly purchased by Lord Lindsay for ultimate preservation in the Advocates' Library.

Dates: 1805-1867.

Decisions of the Court of Session (practicks) collected anonymously.

 File
Identifier: Adv.MS.22.3.5
Scope and Contents

The first two leaves seem to belong to the end.

Dates: 1606-1624.

Further papers of the Douglas of Cavers family.

 Series
Identifier: Acc.13845
Content Description

Annotated envelopes containing hair of members of the Douglas and Malcolm families and book plates of William Elphinstone Malcolm of Burnfoot.

Dates: 1775-1834.

Journal of a tour to Scotland by Clement Mansfield Ingleby.

 File
Identifier: MS.8926
Scope and Contents The journal is made up from transcripts of letters to his mother written on the journey between 26 August and 8 September 1842. Among the main places visited are Glasgow, Inveraray, Oban, Glencoe, Callander and Edinburgh. The text is ornamented with thirty-three engraved views, several dried plant specimens, and a few pencil sketches. The journal is followed by a 'Dissertation on the Gael and their language' (folio 49), dealing with regional variations in language, intonation,...
Dates: 1842.

Lady Louisa Stuart's ballad, "Ugly Meg, or, The Robber's Wedding" ('Muckle-mouthed Meg'), in Sir Walter Scott's hand.

 Item
Identifier: MS.3531
Scope and Contents

The ballad is undated, but is written on paper watermarked 1805.

There are some words and phrases in another hand in places where the original writing has been deleted.

With a frontispiece in watercolour and a tailpiece in pencil.

Dates: [1805, or after.]

Letters addressed to or collected by members of the Bliss family (Dr J Bliss, Hampstead and Bath; Reverend William Bliss, Newnton and Bath; Reverend James Bliss, editor of Laud; William H Bliss).

 File
Identifier: MS.962
Scope and Contents

The correspondents of the Blisses are literary, antiquarian, and clerical celebrities, chiefly English, of the early 19th century. In addition, at least one of the family collected autographs and several of his own time and of the 18th century are included. A number of letters are addressed to Thomas Park, the antiquary, and others are written by members of the Athenaeum to the Secretary, Edward Magrath.

Dates: 18th century-19th century.

Letters of Thomas Carlyle to his family.

 Series
Identifier: MSS.511-518
Scope and Contents

There are no letters of Thomas Carlyle to his father. Several letters of Jane Welsh Carlyle (sometimes added to Carlyle’s letters as postscripts) and of various members of Carlyle’s family are included. Other writers are Daniel Corrie, Bishop of Madras, 1836; W H Wills, ‘Editor and factotum‘ of Charles Dickens, 1855; and Rudolf Sonnenburg, who brought out a German edition of ‘Frederick’, 1867. There are also letters of Carlyle to Whewell, 1861, Emerson, 1869, and others.

Dates: 1821-1870, undated.

Manuscript containing various legal works, compiled in 1704.

 File
Identifier: MS.9248
Scope and Contents The contents are as follows.(i) Abridgement of ‘Jus Feudale’ by Sir Thomas Craig of Riccarton. The text is in a considerably shorter form than the usual epitomes (for which see MS.1950 and Adv.MSS.25.6.1-2, 28.3.14), and omits book i, 11 and 13, book ii, 5 and 15, and book iii, 4 and 7. (Folio 1.)(ii) "Inventory of ane Burges's airship moveables". (Folio 88.) (iii) Latin mottoes. (Folio 90.)(iv) Notes on land measures in Scotland and weights...
Dates: [1704, or before.]

Manuscript of Francesco Marcaldi's work on Mary, Queen of Scots.

 Item
Identifier: MS.8890
Scope and Contents Other copies of this work are entitled 'Dello Stato della Regina di Scozia', or 'Narratione del stato della Regina di Scotia'. This is one of about thirty copies of the work, each written in Francesco Marcaldi's hand, but each with a different date and a different dedication. The preface in this copy is dated at Venice, 14 March 1580, and is addressed to Domenico Barbarigo.Marcaldi seems to have written it as propaganda in Mary's favour. See S. Rossi, 'Tre Narrazioni...
Dates: 1580.

Manuscript of ‘The life of God in the soul of man’ by Henry Scougal, Professor of Divinity at King's College, Aberdeen.

 Item
Identifier: MS.5405
Scope and Contents

The manuscript is dedicated on a title-page (folio 2), 'to The most virtuous Lady and The most generous friend My Lady Gilmoir, August 21 1676’.

Dates: 1676.

Manuscript of the 'Memoirs of Sir Henry Slingsby From 1638 to 1648', which was used by Sir Walter Scott in his edition of 'Original memoirs, written during the Great Civil War: being the life of Sir Henry Slingsby, and memoirs of Capt. Hodgson. With notes. &c'.

 Item
Identifier: MS.23621
Scope and Contents The text is carefully written in a late eighteenth-century hand (evidence of pricking survives in the outer margins of most of the leaves) and bears marks of Sir Walter Scott's editorial work. The chief alteration to the text is the replacement by Scott of Sir Henry Slingsby's last sentence; otherwise the amendments consist mostly of expansions of contracted words and the introduction of consistency in the use of capitals; the additions are in the form of footnotes, a few of which were not...
Dates: Late 18th century-[1806 or before.]