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James Logan (writer): Difference between revisions


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*Introduction and letterpress to ”A Collection of Ancient Piobaireachd or Highland Pipe Music” (1838) by [[Angus MacKay (bagpipe music)|Angus MacKay]] (anonymous, an influential publication though not now considered reliable on family history){{cite ODNB|id=55422|first=William|last=Donaldson|title=MacKay, Angus}}{{cite ODNB|id=69888|first=John|last=Purser|title=MacCrimmon family}}

*Introduction and letterpress to ”A Collection of Ancient Piobaireachd or Highland Pipe Music” (1838) by [[Angus MacKay (bagpipe music)|Angus MacKay]] (anonymous, an influential publication though not now considered reliable on family history){{cite ODNB|id=55422|first=William|last=Donaldson|title=MacKay, Angus}}{{cite ODNB|id=69888|first=John|last=Purser|title=MacCrimmon family}}

*Introduction to [[John Mackenzie (1806–1848)|John Mackenzie]]’s ”Sar-obair nam Bard Gaelach: or Beauties of Gaelic Poetry” (2 vols., 1841, new edition 1877)

*Introduction to [[John Mackenzie (1806–1848)|John Mackenzie]]’s ”Sar-obair nam Bard Gaelach: or Beauties of Gaelic Poetry” (2 vols., 1841, new edition 1877)

*Letterpress to [[Robert Ronald McIan]]’s ”Clans of the Scottish Highlands” (1845)

*Letterpress to [[Robert Ronald McIan]]’s ”Clans of the Scottish Highlands” ()

*”Highland Costumes”, 2 vols., illustrated (1843–49), new edition 1857

*”Highland Costumes”, 2 vols., illustrated (1843–49), new edition 1857


Latest revision as of 19:28, 9 July 2023

Scottish writer

James Logan (1797–1872) was a Scottish author on Gaelic culture, best known for his 1831 book The Scottish Gael.[1]

Logan was born in Aberdeen, where his father was a merchant; he was educated at Aberdeen grammar school and Marischal College. A sports injury made him give up a potential career as a lawyer.[2]

In London with the support of Lord Aberdeen, Logan studied at the Royal Academy. He became a journalist, and then a clerk in an architect’s office. He was employed for a time by the Highland Society of London, but never settled to a career. A brother of the London Charterhouse, he was expelled in 1866. With Scottish patrons, he sustained a fair standard of living, and died in London in April 1872.[2]

Highland Chiefs, illustration by James Logan from The Scottish Gael (1831)

Logan’s major work was The Scottish Gaël, or Celtic Manners as preserved among the Highlanders (2 vols.), published in 1831. It was based on walking tours he had made in the Scottish highlands and islands during the previous decade, during which he collected Gaelic antiquities. The work was dedicated to William IV, illustrated by the author, and sold well on good reviews. In 1876, Alexander Stewart published a second edition.[2] From a modern scholarly view, its value is largely in the Highland customs observed, with the historical material regarded as obsolete.[1] Other works were:[2]

  • Introduction and letterpress to A Collection of Ancient Piobaireachd or Highland Pipe Music (1838) by Angus MacKay (anonymous, an influential publication though not now considered reliable on family history)[3][4]
  • Introduction to John Mackenzie‘s Sar-obair nam Bard Gaelach: or Beauties of Gaelic Poetry (2 vols., 1841, new edition 1877)
  • Letterpress to Robert Ronald McIan‘s Clans of the Scottish Highlands (1845–47)
  • Highland Costumes, 2 vols., illustrated (1843–49), new edition 1857

He also contributed to the Gentleman’s Magazine.[2]

External links[edit]

Attribution

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainLee, Sidney, ed. (1893). “Logan, James (1794?-1872)“. Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 34. London: Smith, Elder & Co.



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