Annie Isabella Cameron (1897–1973), later Annie Dunlop, was a Scottish historian.
Annie Dunlop | |
---|---|
Born | Annie Isabella Cameron |
Alma mater | St Andrews |
Occupation | Historian |
She was the daughter of Mary Sinclair, and James Cameron, a Glasgow engineer. She studied history at the University of Glasgow and the University of St Andrews. She wrote a doctoral thesis on Bishop Kennedy of St Andrews. She died in 1973.
Career
editCameron worked at the Scottish Record Office and in 1938 married George Dunlop, proprietor of the Kilmarnock Standard.[1]
Marcus Merriman, a historian of the Rough Wooing, acknowledged Annie Cameron, Marguerite Wood, and Gladys Dickinson for their work publishing 16th-century primary sources. He praised Cameron for her "stunning" edition of the Scottish correspondence of Mary of Guise, "placing in the hands of the researcher something formidably useful."[2]
Selected publications
edit- Annie I. Cameron, Scottish Correspondence of Mary of Lorraine (SHS: Edinburgh, 1927)
- Robert S. Rait & Annie I. Cameron, King James's Secret: Negotiations between Elizabeth and James VI relating to the Execution of Mary Queen of Scots, from the Warrender Papers (London, 1927)
- Annie I. Cameron, Warrender Papers, 2 vols (Edinburgh, 1931)
- Annie I. Cameron, Calendar State Papers Scotland: 1593-1595, vol. 11 (Edinburgh, 1936)
- Annie Dunlop, "Scottish Student Life in the Fifteenth Century" (1947)[3]
- Annie Dunlop, The Life and Times of James Kennedy, Bishop of St Andrews (St Andrews, 1950).
- Annie Dunlop, The Royal Burgh of Ayr (Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd, 1953).
References
edit- ^ Elizabeth Ewan, 'Dunlop, Annie Isabella', Elizabeth L. Ewan, Sue Innes, Siân Reynolds, Rose Pipes, Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women (Edinburgh, 2018), p. 127.
- ^ Marcus Merriman, The Rough Wooings (Tuckwell: East Linton, 2000), pp. xix, 102.
- ^ Dunlop, Annie I. (1947). "Scottish Student Life in the Fifteenth Century". The Scottish Historical Review. 26 (101): 47–63. ISSN 0036-9241. JSTOR 25525914.