Annie Isabella Cameron OBE (10 May 1897 – 23 March 1973), later Annie Dunlop, was a Scottish historian, editor, and university lecturer, but primarily "an Scholar whose sole inspiration was the love of her subject."
Early life and education
Cameron was born in Glasgow, the daughter of Mary Sinclair, and James Cameron, a Glasgow engineer. After attending school at
Strathaven she studied history at the University of Glasgow, being awarded a first class honours in 1919.
[ ] She then wrote a doctoral thesis on Bishop Kennedy of St Andrews at the University of Edinburgh; her degree was awarded on 17 July 1924.
[Edinburgh Research Archive listing: Cameron Annie I., 'James Kennedy, Bishop of St. Andrews', thesis, 1924 ] In 1927, she took a diploma in
Palaeography at the British School at Rome.
Career
Cameron worked at the Scottish Record Office.
[Elizabeth Ewan, 'Dunlop, Annie Isabella', Elizabeth L. Ewan, Sue Innes, Siân Reynolds, Rose Pipes, Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women (Edinburgh, 2018), p. 127.] In 1944 she is recorded as being a part-time lecturer in Scottish History at the University of Edinburgh.
[Letter from Alan Grant Ogilvie to O G S Crawford held in the Kenneth St Joseph archive at Historic Environment Scotland] She became an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 1942. At the end of her life, she received the papal Benemerenti medal, for her research in the Vatican archives.
Marcus Merriman, a historian of the Rough Wooing, acknowledged Annie Cameron, Marguerite Wood, and Gladys Dickinson for their work publishing 16th-century primary sources. He praised Cameron for her "stunning" edition of the Scottish correspondence of Mary of Guise, "placing in the hands of the researcher something formidably useful."[Marcus Merriman, The Rough Wooings (Tuckwell: East Linton, 2000), pp. xix, 102.] "Mrs Dunlop's most singular gift to medieval studies was her connecting Scotland and its scholars with Rome and its archives," wrote American historian Robert Brentano.
Personal life
In 1938, Cameron married George Dunlop, proprietor of the
Kilmarnock Standard.
She died in 1973.
"Annie Cameron Dunlop was a remarkable, a unique medievalist," Robert Brentano recalled in 1974, comparing her to "an
Alfred Hitchcock super-spy in the guise of a quiet, elderly woman sitting unobtrusively and Britishly in the corner of a compartment of a continental train."
Selected publications
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Scottish Correspondence of Mary of Lorraine (1927, editor)
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(1927, with Robert Rait)
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Warrender Papers, 2 vols (1931)
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The Apostolic Camera and Scottish Benefices, 1418-1488 (1934)
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Calendar State Papers Scotland: 1593-1595, vol. 11 (1936)
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"Scottish Student Life in the Fifteenth Century" (1947)
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The Life and Times of James Kennedy, Bishop of St Andrews (1950)
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"The Date of the Birth of James III" (1951, with William Angus)
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The Royal Burgh of Ayr (1953)
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Acta Facultatis Artium Universitatis Sanctiandree 1413-1588 (1964, editor)
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Calendar of Scottish Supplications to Rome, 1428-1432 (1970, co-editor, with Ian B. Cowan)