A Fife Parish: Dalgety in the 17th Century
Robin G K Arnott
A Fife Parish: Dalgety in the 17th Century
Robin G K Arnott
Wars, witches and worship were key elements in the nation of Scotland and the local life of Dalgety Parish during the 17th Century. It was a period when Scotland was moving from medieval feudalism into the early modern era. Post-Reformation and people were still trying to get to grips with the new order of life.
The National Covenant, signed in Greyfriars Kirk, was a catalyst in uniting the country but the start of a period of bloodshed and persecution. The Wars of the Three Kingdoms erupted, civil war in England saw a king executed and the struggle for ecclesiastical supremacy lasted until the end of the century.
Caught up in all this were the villagers of Dalgety, a small parish in Fife. Eking out a living, by farming, coal-mining or salt-making, they did not escape the frenzy of the witch-hunt or the clutches of the militia. Into the milieu came Andrew Donaldson, a Presbyterian minister, whose aim was to see people living a Godly life, with a focus on educating children and caring for the poor.
Donaldson paid the price by being deposed, declared an outlaw and subsequently imprisoned. Restored to his post when William ascended the throne, he saw the parish suffer through the impact of the Darien Scheme. His successor was faced with restoring the parish, and a future in which the Act of Union and Jacobite rebellions were to play a significant part.
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