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CHEYNE, N. R. The roads of Great Britain, with table of distances.

Edin. 1797.

CLARK, J. The state of the turnpike roads in the County of Aberdeen. Aberd. [1838].

COOPER, RICHARD.

miles.

Lond.

A map of His Majesty's roads from Edinburgh to Inverness, Fort Augustus, and Fort William, and of the country adjacent thereto. 25 × 19 inches; I inch = 3 1745. DUNCAN, J. The Scotch Itinerary; the roads thro' Scotland on a new plan, etc. Maps and plans. 8°, Glasg. 1805, and other edits. [FRAME, R.] Sketch of a plan for executing a set of roads over all the County of Lanark. 8°, [N.P.], [N.D.].

12°,

HARPER, C. G. The Manchester and Glasgow Road. 8°, Lond. 1907. 'R.A.C.' Guide to Scotland. Road maps and illus. Cheltenham, 1914.

HOLYOKE, F. The Rider's Dictionarie . . . with the names of the chief places and towns in England, Scotland, and Ireland. 4o, Lond. 1640.

HIGHLAND SOC. Notes on bridges and roads in the Highlands.
Trans. High. Soc., Introductions to vols. i-v. 8°, Edin. 1799-1820.
HOWARD, C. An itinerary and road-book of Scotland. 12°, Lond.
1887.
INGLIS, H. R. G. The Highland Road Map, from Edinburgh to
Inverness, with contour sections. 65 x 5 inches; 1 inch =2 miles.
Edin. 1900.

The John o' Groat's Road Map. Inverness to John o' Groat's, with contour sections. 58 × 47 inches; 1 inch =2 miles. Edin.

1900.

The contour road-book of Scotland. Lond. 1898, and numerous edits. JOHNSTON,

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11th edit., 12°, Edin. and

Railway and road map of the Counties of Perth and

Clackmannan. Edin. and Dundee, [c. 1860].

JOHNSTON, W. & A. K. Cyclists' Road Map of the south of Scotland and north of England. 18 × 22 inches; I inch=9 miles. Edin. and Lond. 1894.

Cyclists' Road Maps of the central and northern districts of Scotland. 22 x 17 inches; 1 inch =9 miles. Edin. and Lond. 1894.

KER, J. I. Scotland for the motorist.

maps. Lond. 1910.

Automobile Assoc. Route

LAURIE & WHITTLE (pub.). New traveller's companion, a complete and correct survey of all the direct and principal cross roads in England, Wales, and Scotland as far North as Edinburgh. 25 maps. 4°, Lond. 1806.

LEIGH, S. New pocket road-book of England, Wales, and part of Scotland. 12°, Lond. 1825, and other edits.

LENNOX, J. A road-guide to the southern Scottish counties. 8°, Dumfries, 1885.

MACKENZIE, C. Observations on the introduction of roads into the Highlands. 8°, Edin. 1801.

MACKENZIE, Sir K. S., of Gairloch. General Wade and his roads; and Later military roads. Trans. Inver. Sci. Soc. and Field Club. 8°, Inverness, 1897, and 1899.

MACQUISTEN, Cleland, GrainGER, and MILLAR. Reports on roads leading into Glasgow from the north. Plans. 1829.

MOGG, E. A survey of the high-roads of England and Wales, with part of Scotland . . with indexes topographic and descriptive. 4°, Lond. 1814; also 1817.

MURRAY, W. Reminiscences of the old coaching days. Trans. Hawick Arch. Soc. 4°, Hawick, 1904.

OWEN, W. New book of roads; or a description of the roads of Great Britain. 12°, Lond. 1805; also 1808.

PATERSON, Capt., afterwards Lieut.-Col., D. The British Itinerary, being a new and accurate delineation and description of all the direct and principal cross roads of England and Wales, and of Scotland, etc. 8°, Lond. 1771.

And many edits., some with editors such as Freeling and Mogg. 18th edit., 1826.

PATERSON, J. Letters, etc., on the highways of the Kingdom. 8°,
Montrose, 1822.

POYSER, A. T. Cyclists' Touring Club British Road Book, vol. iv.,
Scotland. 8°, Lond. 1897, and other edits.

ROCQUE, J. The traveller's assistant, or road-book; being the most general and compleat direction to all the post, principal, and crossroads in England, Wales, Scotland, and Ireland. 8°, Lond. 1763. Ross, A. Old Highland roads. Trans. Gael. Soc., Inverness, 1889. RUTHERFORD, A. An exact plan of H.M.'s great roads through the Highlands of Scotland. 20 × 14 inches; I inch=5 miles. 1745. SMITH, C. New pocket companion to the roads of England and Wales, and part of Scotland 8°, Lond. 1826.

SPENCER, C. The bicycle road-book, compiled for the use of bicyclists and pedestrians; being a complete guide to the roads of England, Scotland, and Wales. 8°, Lond. 1880.

TAYLOR, G. The traveller's pocket-book, or an abstract of Taylor and Skinner's survey of the roads of Scotland. Map. 24°, Lond. 1776.

and SKINNER, A. Survey and maps of the roads of North Britain, [Scotland]. 61 plates. Fol., Lond. 1776; also 1790, and 1800. TELFORD, T. A survey and report of the coasts and Central Highlands of Scotland; made by command of the Rt. Hon. the Lords Commissioners of H.M. Treasury, in the autumn of 1802. 4°, Lond. 1803.

Also in Edin. Mag. and in Scots Mag., same year.

and RENNIE, J. Reports on roads between Carlisle and Port-Patrick, Dumfries to Newton Stewart, by Loch Ken, etc.; with tables of estimates of costs. Plan and illus. 1811. TYTLER, W. F., Sheriff of Inverness-shire.

Inquiry into the operation and results of the system for maintenance of the parliamentary and military roads in the Highlands of Scotland. 1829. WALLIS, J. Pocket itinerary; being a neat and accurate guide to all the principal direct and cross-roads throughout England, Wales, and Scotland. 12°, Lond. 1803.

WILLDEY, T. A map of the King's Roads made by His Excellency General Wade in the Highlands of Scotland, from Stirling to Inverness, with the adjacent countries, etc. Ded. to Gen. Hawley. 17 × 14 inches; 1 inch=c. 5 miles. Lond. Jan. 4, 1746, [but shows details of Battle of Culloden].

SHIPPING.

The London and Leith smack and steam-packet guide. 12°, Leith, 1824, and other edits.

The steam-boat companion, or stranger's guide to the Western Isles and Highlands of Scotland. Maps and illus. 3rd edit., 12°, Glasg. 1831.

The steam and inland navigation of Scotland; with descriptions of routes and scenes. 12 maps. Edin. [c. 1860].

Nautical guide to the Forth and Tay. 8°, Edin. 1894.

FRASER & CRAWFORD. The steamboat companion betwixt Perth and Dundee. 12°, Edin. 1838.

GALLOWAY (pub.). Tourists' guide to the River Forth. Map and illus. 8°, Edin. 1885, and other edits.

MCPHUN (pub.). Scottish steam-boat pocket-guide. Map and illus. 12°, Glasg. 1846.

[M'LEAN, LAUCHLAN.] The native steam-boat companion; embracing the names, etymons, and antiquities of objects of note on the routes from Glasgow [to west and north]; with historical and descriptive account of Iona. Map and illus. 8°, Edin. and Glasg. 1845.

REID (pub.). Tourists' guide-book to the Firth of Forth, from the Isle of May to Stirling. With historical and antiquarian sketches.

Map. 12°, Leith, [N.D.].

'SILVANUS URBAN, Gent.' The steamboat companion to the Firth of Forth. 8°, Edin. 1838.

TUNNELS.

Reports of Surveys made for ascertaining the practicability of making
a land-communication by a tunnel under the River Forth at or
near Queensferry. Plan. 4°, Edin. 1806.
MILLAR, J. (M.D.), and VAZIE, W. Observations on the advantage
and practicability of making tunnels under navigable rivers, par-
ticularly applicable to the proposed tunnel under the Forth; with
appendix of reports of surveys, Engineers' opinions, etc. Map and
plan. 8°, Edin. 1807.

ETHNOGRAPHY

ATKINS, T. DE C. The Kelt or Gael, his ethnography, geography, and philology. 8° Lond. 1892.

BEDDOE, Dr. J. A contribution to Scottish ethnology.
Ancient and modern ethnography of Scotland.
Scot. i. 243. 4°, Edin. 1854.

8° Lond. 1853. Proc. Soc. Ant.

Stature and bulk of man in the British Isles. Map. 8°, Lond. 1870. The anthropological history of Europe. (Rhind Lectures for 1891.) 2nd edit., 8°, Paisley, 1912.

BETHAM, Sir W. The Gael and Cymbri: an enquiry into the origin and history of the Irish Scots. 8°, Dublin, 1834.

CAMPBELL, D. The Caledonians and Scots; or the Highlanders and Lowlanders of Scotland. 12°, Edin. 1861.

CHARLESTON, M. M. Some anthropological notes from Orkney. Proc. Viking Club, iv, 82. 8°, Lond. 1903.

CLARKE, H. The Picts and pre-Celtic Britain. Trans. Roy. Hist. Soc. iii, 243. 8°, Lond. 1886.

EARLE, J. On the ethnography of Scotland. Journ. Anthrop. Inst. Lond. vi, 9. 4°, Lond. 1877.

FRASER, G. M. The Aberdonians and other Lowland Scots. 8°, Aberd. 1914. GARSON, J. G. On the osteology of the ancient inhabitants of the Orkney

Islands. Journ. Anthrop. Inst. Lond. xiii, 54. Illus. Lond. 1883-84. GRANT, JAS., of Corrimony. Thoughts on the origin and descent of the Gael; with an account of the Picts, Caledonians, and Scots, etc. 8°, Edin. 1813; also 1814, and 1828.

VOL. II.

E

GRAY, J. The ethnology of Buchan: report on preliminary ethnographical observations by the Buchan Field Club; embodying a paper on the ethnographical survey of Buchan. Trans. Buchan Field Club, iii, 216. 4°, Peterhead, 1895.

Anthropological evidence of the relations between the races of Britain and Scandinavia. Proc. Viking Club, iii, 217. 8°, Lond. 1902. and TOCHER, J. F. Frequency and pigmentation value of surnames in East Aberdeenshire. Trans. Buchan Field Club, vi, 226. 4°, Peterhead, 1901.

The physical characteristics of adults and school children in East Aberdeenshire. Journ. Roy. Anthrop. Inst., xxx and xxxvii, Lond. 1900, 1907. Also, Trans. Buchan Field Club, vi, 37. 4°, Peterhead, 1901.

INNES, T. Critical essay on the ancient inhabitants of Scotland. 8°, Lond. 1729.

2 vols. Repr., ed. G. GRUB. Historians of Scotland, viii. 8°, Edin. 1879. JOHNSTON, J. W. Orkney and Shetland Folk, 872-1350. Viking Club Misc., vii, 84, 131, 183. 8°, Lond. 1914.

LESLIE, Lieut.-Col. FORBES.

The early races of Scotland and their monuments. Illus. 2 vols. 8°, Edin. [c. 1866]. MACKENZIE, W. C.

MACLAGAN, R. C.

The races of Ireland and Scotland. 8°, Paisley, 1916. Our ancestors, Scots, Picts, and Cymry, and what their 8°, Lond. and Edin. 1913.

traditions tell us.

MACPHERSON, Dr. JOHN, of Sleat.

Dissertations on the origin, antiquities, language, etc., of the ancient Caledonians, the Picts, and British and Irish Scots. 4°, Lond. 1768.

MOORE, Dr. G. Ancient pillar stones of Scotland; their significance and bearing on ethnology. Illus. 8°, Edin. 1865.

NICHOLSON, E. W. B. Keltic researches; studies in the history and distribution of the ancient Goidelic language and peoples. 8°, Lond. 1904.

RHYS, Prof. J. The early ethnology of the British Isles. Rhind Lectures for 1889. In Scottish Review for 1890. ROBERTSON, Col. J. A. Concise historical proof concerning the Gael of Alban; or, Highlanders of Scotland as descended of the Caledonian Picts. With explanatory notes, maps, illustrations, and descriptions of the country of the Gael. 8°, Edin. 1865, and 1866.

TOCHER, J. F. Pigmentation survey of school-children in Scotland. In Biometrika, Sept. 1908, and Aberd. Univ. Studies, no. 36. 4°, Aberd. 1908.

(See also GRAY, J.)

WALKER, Rev. Dr. J. Essays on Natural History and rural economy: one on the natural history of the inhabitants of the Highlands. 8", Lond. 1812.

FOLKLORE, MANNERS, CUSTOMS, ANA.

Trialls of witchcraft at Perth in 1623, copied from the church records. MS. fol., no. 23, Lib. Perth Lit. and Ant. Soc.

The trial, confession, and execution of the Irvine witches. 8°, Ardrossan,

[N.D.].

Christmas: Yule-time in Shetland. Chambers's Journ., Ixiii, 817.

Traditionary tales of Tweed-dale: the Maid of Neidpath. Chamb. Misc., no. 52.

Shetlanders' manners, traditions, and superstitions. Fraser's Mag., xxxiii, 631; xxxiv, 147, 323, 480.

Scotland a century ago. Leisure Hour, xi, 166.

A true narrative of the sufferings and relief of a young girl, [Christina Shaw, daughter of the Laird of Bargarran], strangely molested by evil spirits and their instruments in the west; collected from authentick testimonies thereanent; with reflections on the history or triall of the seven witches condemned to be executed in that country. 8°, Edin. 1698; repr. Paisley, 1775.

A true and full relation of the Witches of Pittenweem; to which is added by way of preface, An Essay for proving the existence of good and evil spirits, relating to the witches at Pittenweem, now in custody, with arguments against the Sadducism of the present age. 8°, Edin. 1704. An answer of a letter from a gentleman in Fife to a nobleman, containing a brief account of the barbarous and illegal treatment these poor women, accused of witchcraft, met with from the Baillies of Pittenweem; with some observations thereon. To which is added an account of the horrid and barbarous murder, in a letter from a gentleman in Fife to a friend. 4°, [Edin.], 1705.

The second-sighted; or predictions and foretold events, especially about the peace. [The Treaty of Utrecht.] 8°, Lond. 1713.

The whole prophecies of Scotland, England, France, Ireland, and Denmark, prophesied by Thos. Rymer, Marvellous Merlin, etc. 8°, Edin. 1718. Account of apparitions and prodigies. 8°, Glasg. 1721.

An account of some strange apparitions had by a godly man in Kintyre, etc. 1730.

The Highlanders delineated, or the character, customs, and manners of the Highlanders. Lond. 1745.

Remarks on the people and government of Scotland, particularly the Highlanders; their original customs, manners, etc.; with a genuine account of the Highland Regiment that was decoyed to London. 4°, Edin. 1747.

A voyage to Shetland, the Orkneys, and the Western Isles of Scotland; giving an account of the laws, customs, antiquities, natural curiosities, fisheries, inhabitants, religious ceremonies, superstitions, charms, apparitions, second-sight. 8°, Lond. 1751.

Trial for witchcraft of Jean Maxwell, the Galloway sorceress.

cudbright, 1805.

12°, Kirk

A collection of rare and curious tracts on witchcraft and the second-sight; with an original essay on witchcraft. 12°, Edin. 1820.

A legend of Argyle, or 'tis a hundred years since. 3 vols. 8°, Lond. 1821. Witchcraft detected and prevented, or school of black art opened.

8°, Peterhead, 1823.

Illus.

Legends of Strathisla and Strathbogie. Keith, 1851; 3rd edit., 12°, Elgin,

1862.

The Register of the Synod of Galloway, October 1664 to April 1671; with appendix on charmers and necromancers. 8°, Kirkcudbright, 1856. Extracts from the Kirk Session Records of Kinghorn 1581-1659, with curious cases of witchcraft, blasphemy, harlotry, sabbath-breaking, etc., with notes. 8°, Kirkcaldy, 1863.

The book of Scottish story; The book of Scottish anecdote. 2 vols. 4°, Edin. 1874-75.

Montrosiana: a collection of local anecdotes, and sketches of the lives of prominent Montrosians. 8°, Montrose, 1882.

Fighting-cocks in schools. Chambers's Journ., Jan. 1889.

Scottish customs and folklore. Glasgow Herald, 1st Aug. 1891.

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