Julian Goodare

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Julian Goodare
Julian Goodare 2023.png
Goodare in 2023
OccupationProfessor of History
Employer University of Edinburgh

Julian Goodare is a professor of history at University of Edinburgh.

Contents

Academic career

Goodare studied at the University of Edinburgh in the 1980s, afterwards engaged as a postdoctoral fellow. He lectured at the University of Wales, and at the University of Sheffield. He returned to work at Edinburgh in 1998. He was the co-director of the Survey of Scottish Witchcraft alongside Louise Yeoman. [1] [2] [3] In 2019, he called for a memorial to Scotland's tortured and executed witches. [3]

Goodare has published articles and book chapters on crown finance in the early modern period. Subjects include the administration known as the Octavians, [4] and the annual sums of money which Elizabeth I gave James VI of Scotland, which he argues ought to be known as the English subsidy. [5] He explored the significance of the "Ainslie Bond", made in support of the Earl of Bothwell, in the light of Jenny Wormald's work on comparable bonds. [6]

Publications

References

  1. "Featured Author Julian Goodare".
  2. "About our staff".
  3. 1 2 "Calls for memorial to Scotland's tortured and executed witches". TheGuardian.com . 29 October 2019.
  4. Julian Goodare, 'The Octavians', Miles Kerr-Peterson & Steven J. Reid, James VI and Noble Power in Scotland, 1578-1603 (Routledge, 2017), pp. 176-193.
  5. Julian Goodare, 'James VI's English Subsidy', in Julian Goodare & Michael Lynch, The Reign of James VI (East Linton, Tuckwell, 2000), p. 113.
  6. Julian Goodare, 'The Ainslie Bond', Kings, Lords and Men in Scotland and Britain, 1300-1625 (Edinburgh, 2014), pp. 15, 301-319.