J. D. Mackie

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John Duncan Mackie OBE MC Hon. LLD (Edinburgh, 18871978) was a distinguished Scottish historian who wrote the one-volume A History of Scotland.

Mackie was educated at Middlesborough High School and Jesus College, Oxford where he obtained a first-class degree in History. He was appointed as a Lecturer in History at the University of St Andrews in 1909, aged only twenty-two.

During the First World War, he served in the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders and was awarded a Military Cross. He was wounded in both the hand and stomach, and these injuries caused him considerable pain for the remainder of his life. He returned to St Andrews after the war, before being appointed Professor of Modern History at Bedford College, University of London, in 1926.

He was Professor of Scottish History and Literature at the University of Glasgow from 1930 to 1957. It was during these years that he wrote The Early Tudors 1485-1558 (Oxford University Press). An influential volume, The Early Tudors was a new analysis of Tudor administration - the business of government. In 1957 he retired, and was appointed Historiographer Royal in Scotland.

[edit] Bibliography

  • A History of Scotland, 1964
  • A History of the Scottish Reformation, 1960
  • The Earlier Tudors, 1485-1558, 1952
  • The University of Glasgow, 1451-1951: a short history
  • Andrew Lang and the House of Stuart, 1935
  • Cavalier and Puritan, 1930
  • Negotiations Between James VI and I and Ferdinand I of Tuscany, 1927