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Discover the names that built early modern Edinburgh. Every name tells a life.The Scottish Record Society Register of Edinburgh Apprentices 1666-1700, compiled by Charles B. Boog Watson, brings together the city’s surviving apprenticeship entries across a formative generation. As a meticulous historical apprenticeship register it serves as a core scottish genealogy records source and an occupational history resource, equally useful to someone following a single surname as to scholars mapping trades and mobility in seventeenth-century Scotland. The Edinburgh apprentices list here supplies the connective detail often missing from parish records in Scotland: apprenticeships, master-pupil links, and the civic ties that shaped urban careers.Historically significant and meticulously sourced, this volume is a scottish heritage reference for local history researchers and an invaluable ancestry research tool for family historians exploring urban Scotland. Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. Its documentary weight makes it indispensable alongside parish records in Scotland and other civic registers; the list is a practical Edinburgh apprentices list for genealogists tracing lineages, an occupational history resource for scholars of craftsmanship and commerce, and a compact family history collection for anyone building a domestic archive. For anyone engaged in ancestry research or compiling a family history collection, the Register functions as a practical ancestry research tool that surfaces apprenticeship links, urban migration and the mechanics of vocational training across seventeenth-century Scotland. Casual readers will find vivid human traces in the names and professions; classic-literature collectors and institutional libraries will value the register’s status as a primary source published under the auspices of the scottish record society. Concise but dense with evidence, the Register of Edinburgh Apprentices 1666-1700 rewards both quick reference and in-depth study, and it restores a central string of civic memory to those reconstructing social networks in early modern Scotland.