
Bain, Robert. 1938 [1900]. The Clans and Tartans of Scotland, London. Glasgow, New York: Collins.
Black, George Fraser. 1946. The Surnames of Scotland: Their Origin, Meaning and History. New York: New York Public Library.
Brown, John. 1784. A compendious history of the British churches in England, Scotland, Ireland and America, part 2. Glasgow: John Bryce printer.
Defoe, Daniel. 1707. An historical account of the bitter sufferings, and melancholly circumstances of the episcopal church in Scotland: under the barbarous useage and bloody persecution of the Presbyterian church government. Edinburgh: Privately published.
Defoe, Daniel. 1712. A collection of original papers and material transactions, concerning the late great affair of the union between England and Scotland, etc. London: J. Knapton, N. Cliffe and J. Baker.
Dickinson, William (ed.). 1957. Early Records of the Burgh of Aberdeen: 1317, 1398–1407, Edinburgh: Scottish History Society.
Douglas, Robert. 1764. The Peerage of Scotland, containing an historical and genealogical account of the nobility of that kingdom, from their origin to the present generation, collected from the public records and ancient chartularies of this nation, the charters and other writings of the nobility, and the works of our best historians, illustrated with copper-plates. Edinburgh: Privately published.
Douglas, Sir Robert of Glenbervie, Baronet. 1798. The Baronage of Scotland; containing an historical and genealogical account of the gentry of that kingdom: Collected from the public records and chartularies of this country; the records and private writings of families; and the works of our best historians. Edinburgh: Privately published.
Irving, Joseph. 1882. The Book of Scotsmen, Eminent for achievements in arms and arts, church and state, law, legislation and literature, commerce, science, travel and philanthropy. Paisley: Alexander Gardner.
Lewis, Samuel. 1851. A Topological Dictionary of Scotland. London: S. Lewis and Co.
Lyndsay, Sir David of the Mount. 1822 [1542]. Facsimile of an Ancient Heraldic Manuscript Emblazoned by Sir David Lyndsay of the Mount, Lyon King of Armes 1542. Edinburgh: W. & D. Laing.
Lyndsay, David. c. 1580. The Historie of ane Nobil and Wailzeand Squyer Wiliam Meldrum (etc.). Edinburgh: Henry Charteris. [In Douglas Hamer (ed.), 1938, The Works of Sir David Lindsay of the Mount 1490–1555: Volume 1 Text of the Poems. Edinburgh and London: The Scottish Text Society, pp. 145–188; notes in vol. 3, pp. 176–225; bibliography in vol. 4.]
Lyndsay, David. c. 1580. The Testament of the nobill and vailzeand Squyer Williame Meldrum of the Bynnis (etc.). Edinburgh: Henry Charteris. [In Douglas Hamer (ed.), 1938, The Works of Sir David Lindsay of the Mount 1490–1555: Volume 1 Text of the Poems. Edinburgh and London: The Scottish Text Society, pp. 188–196; notes in vol. 3, pp. 225–231; bibliography in vol. 4.]
Dowden, John (J. Maitland Thomson, ed.), 1912, The Bishops of Scotland, being notes on the lives of all the bishops, under each of the Sees prior to the Reformation. Glasgow: James Maclehose and Sons.
Keith, Robert. 1755. A Large New Catalogue of the Bishops of the several Sees within the kingdom of Scotland down to the year 1688 [etc.]. Edinburgh: Privately published.
MacFarlane, Walter (trans. Toshach Clark). 1750. Genealogical collections concerning families in Scotland, made by Walter MacFarlane, 1750-175, vol. 1 and vol. 2. Edinburgh: Scottish History Society, online.
MacGibbon, David and Thomas Ross. 1887. The Castellated and Domestic Architecture of Scotland From the Twelfth to the Eighteenth Century, vol. 1. Edinburgh: David Douglas.
MacGibbon, David and Thomas Ross. 1887. The Castellated and Domestic Architecture of Scotland: From the Twelfth to the Eighteenth Century, vol. 2. Edinburgh: David Douglas. [See Earlshall, pp 282-290; Eden Castle, pp. 272-273; Fyvie Castle, pp. 348-355; Farnell Castle, pp 501-502.]
MacGibbon, David and Thomas Ross. 1889. The Castellated and Domestic Architecture of Scotland From the Twelfth to the Eighteenth Century, vol. 3. Edinburgh: David Douglas.
MacGibbon, David and Thomas Ross. 1892. The Castellated and Domestic Architecture of Scotland From the Twelfth to the Eighteenth Century, vol. 4. Edinburgh: David Douglas.
MacGibbon, David and Thomas Ross. 1892. The Castellated and Domestic Architecture of Scotland From the Twelfth to the Eighteenth Century, vol. 5. Edinburgh: David Douglas.
MacGregor, Gordon. The Red Books of Scotland. Edinburgh: Tanner Ritchie.
Meikle, Maureen M. 2013. The Scottish People 1490–1625. Lulu.com ebook.
Motte, Philip de la. 1803. The Principal, Historical, and Allusive Arms borne by families of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, with their respective authorities, collected by an Annquary, with a representation of the arms on copper plates. London: Privately published.
Nisbet, Alexander. 1722. A System of Heraldry, Speculative and Practical; with the true art of the Blazon, according to the most approved heralds in Europe: Illustrated with suitable examples of armorial figures and achievements of the most considerable sirnames and families in Scotland etc, together with historical and genealogical memorials relative thereto. Edinburgh: J. MackEuen.
Paul, Sir James Balfour (Lord Lyon King of Arms). 1893. An Ordinary of Arms Contained in the Public Register of all Arms and Bearings in Scotland. Edinburgh: William Green and Sons.
Paul, Sir James Balfour. 1904-1914. The Scots Peerage: Founded on Wood’s Edition of Sir Robert Douglas’s Peerage of Scotland, containing an historical and genealogical account of the nobility of that kingdom, (9 vols.) Edinburgh: David Douglas.
Purdie, Rhiannon, ‘Secreitis that I did not knaw …’ 23 May 2017, Arc Humanities Press website.
Purdie, Rhiannon and Emily Wingfield (eds.), 2018, ‘Introduction to the Squyer Meldrum Poems’, Robbins Library Digital Projects, TEAMS Middle English Texts Series, University of Rochester website.
Scottish History Society, 1893, Miscellany of the Scottish History Society, vol. 1. Edinburgh: Scottish History Society.
Smith, Alexander, (ed.). 1875. A New History of Aberdeenshire, (part 1 of 2). Aberdeen: Lewis Smith and Edinburgh and London: William Blackwood and Sons.
Stirling, Anna Maria Wilhelmina. 1928. Fyvie Castle: Its Lairds and Their Times: A history of the five families who lived in this castle in its 800-year history. London: John Murray.
Temple, William. 1894. The Thanage of Fermartyn, including the district commonly called Formartine, its proprietors, with genealogical deductions; its parishes, ministers, churches, churchyards, antiquities, &c. Aberdeen: D. Wyllie & Son.
