This paper considers the portrayal of the Orcades and the North Atlantic in a range of seventh- to eleventh-century insular sources. It is argued that the content of early medieval insular written sources suggests that Orcades should not necessarily be translated as ‘Orkney’ in every case, and that it is plausible that on many occasions, a territory encompassing a wider range of the island groups of Scotland is intended. Consideration of the depiction of the Orcades on the mappa mundi within British Library Cotton MS Tiberius B.v/1 bolsters this conclusion. New multi-spectral images of the map suggest that, despite apparent adjustments to the extent of the Orcades during the process of the map’s production, a very large archipelago covering an extensive territory off northern Britain was intended from the time of the map’s initial creation.
About this Journal
The Innes Review is a fully peer-reviewed journal promoting the study of the history of Catholic Scotland. It covers all aspects of Scottish history and culture, especially ones related to religious history.
Published continuously by the Scottish Catholic Historical Association since 1950, it contains articles and book reviews on a wide field of ecclesiastical, cultural, liturgical, architectural, literary and political history from earliest times to the present day. It is named after Thomas Innes (1662-1744), a missionary priest, historian, and archivist of the Scots College in Paris whose impartial scholarship stood out amongst the denominational prejudices of the time.
Editors and Editorial Board
Editor
Dr John Reuben Davies (University of Glasgow)
Assistant Editor
Dr Linden Bicket (University of Edinburgh)
Reviews Editor
Dr Paul Goatman (University of Glasgow)
Please send books for review to Dr Paul Goatman, 2/3, 84 Firhill Road, Glasgow, G20 7AL
Editorial Board
Dr A. D. M. Barrell (University of York)
Professor Dauvit Broun (University of Glasgow)
Professor S. J. Brown (University of Edinburgh)
Professor Thomas Owen Clancy (University of Glasgow)
Professor Clare Downham (University of Liverpool)
Professor Mary Heimann (Cardiff University)
Dr S. Karly Kehoe (Saint Mary's University, Canada)
Professor Graeme Morton (University of Dundee)
Professor Clotilde Prunier (Université Paris Nanterre)
Dr Steven Reid (University of Glasgow)
Professor Daniel Szechi (University of Manchester)
Dr Eila Williamson (University of Glasgow)
Society
The Scottish Catholic Historical Association promotes the study of Scotland's religious past in all its facets. It does this primarily through its journal The Innes Review which has been published continuously since 1950.
The Innes Review is dedicated to the study of the part played by the Catholic Church in the history of the Scottish nation. It is named after Thomas Innes (1662-1744), a missionary priest, historian and archivist of the Scots College in Paris whose impartial scholarship and helpful cooperation did much to overcome the denominational prejudices of his age.
The Scottish Catholic Historical Association holds annual conferences. Please click here for further information on the Association conferences. Previous conferences have focused on 'Glasgow - a story worth telling' (2008), 'Diaspora' (2009) and 'Liturgy and the Nation' (2010).'
Individual subscriptions to The Innes Review include membership of the Association. Click here to become a member of the Association.
Please click here for further information about the Scottish Catholic Historical Association.
Indexing
The Innes Review is abstracted and indexed in the following:
- Academic Search Alumni Edition
- Academic Search Complete
- Academic Search Elite
- Academic Search Premier
- Academic Search Ultimate
- Advanced Placement Source
- ArticleFirst
- Atlas PLUS®
- Australian Research Council ERA 2012 Journal List
- British Library Zetoc
- BrowZine
- CNKI (China National Knowledge Infrastructure)
- cnpLINKer
- EBSCO A-to-Z
- EBSCO Discovery Service
- European Reference Index for the Humanities (ERIH PLUS)
- Genamics JournalSeek
- Historical Abstracts
- Historical Abstracts with Full Text
- Historical Abstracts with Full Text Alumni Edition
- Index Theologicus (IxTheo)
- International Medieval Bibliography (IMB)
- J-Gate
- JournalTOCs
- Norwegian Register for Scientific Journals, Series and Publishers
- Publication Forum (JuFo)
- ReadCube Discover
- Religious and Theological Abstracts
- Researcher
- Scilit
- SCImago Journal Ranking
- Scopus
- Summon
- TDNet
- TOC Premier
- Web of Science/Emerging Sources Citation Index
- WorldCat Discovery
Innes Review
Sample Issue
Recommended Articles
- May 2012 Northern Scotland
- Apr 2024 Scottish Historical Review
- Mar 2000 History and Computing
- May 2015 Northern Scotland
- Oct 1994 Scottish Historical Review
- May 2024 Innes Review
- May 2024 Innes Review
- May 2024 Northern Scotland