In January we will be launching a new season of Thursday evening talks on history at the Signet Library. The talks are free to members and guests and places will be reserved on a first come first served basis. Please book your ticket via the links below or contact library@wssociety.co.uk if you have any questions.
Thursday 9th January, 6pm for 7pm
The Bibliotheca Polonica: Poland and the Signet Library
Speaker: Dr. Kit Baston
When refugees and exiles turned to the Signet Library to save a great European culture from destruction.
In the years after Napoleon, Polish culture found itself under threat from enemies east and west. The effort to save it began here at the Signet Library in Edinburgh when a group of exiled Polish nobles and intellectuals donated a collection of rare and important books to the Library, creating a unique oasis of Polish culture out of reach of the Prussians and the Czar. Later collections would be established in Paris and London, but the Signet Library’s Bibliotheca Polonica was the very first and marked the beginning of a long and fruitful relationship between the WS Society and the Polish nation. Dr. Kit Baston’s talk is based on her research into and survey of the collection which is now in the care of the National Library of Scotland.
Accompanied by an exhibition in the Upper West Library.
Thursday 16th January, 6pm for 7pm
Sugar, Slaves and High Society: the Grants of Kilgraston 1750-1860.
Speaker: Richard Blake WS
The fortunes of the Grants of Kilgraston in Perthshire were interlinked with the rise and subsequent decline of the British Empire and the Caribbean slave economy. The men and women are a wonderfully varied cast of characters who were colourful, idiosyncratic, wayward and talented. As the British Empire extended its dominion, the Grants cemented their position in high society and left their mark on history as they encountered royalty and the White Rajahs of Sarawak. Drawing from his new book, Richard Blake WS explores the links between the men and women of the Grants of Kilgraston and Sarawak in south east Asia, Nova Scotia, Jamaica and Edinburgh, illuminating a crucial period in colonial history with a wonderfully varied cast of characters from an important and influential Scottish family who left a deep mark upon their times. It is hoped to have copies of the book available for purchase on the night.
Thursday 30th January, 6pm for 7pm
Inducing Intimacy: Deception, Consent and the Law
Speaker: Dr. Chloe Kennedy
Based in part on research conducted at the Signet Library and based upon her new book, Dr. Chloe Kennedy considers the law's response to deceptively induced intimacy across both civil and criminal law over more than two centuries. Encompassing both criminal and civil law responses within a fresh model of socio-legal history, Dr. Kennedy takes a long-term historical view which has important implications for law's treatment of induced intimacy today.