Resources
This site is part of a wider ecosystem of Manx heritage resources. Rather than duplicate what others do well, we link to them here with gratitude.
Manx Language and Culture
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Culture Vannin
The centre for Manx language and culture. Free resources for learning Manx, information about traditions, folklore, music, and the island's living heritage. If you want to learn Manx, start here.
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Learn Manx
Online Manx language lessons. Pronunciation guides, vocabulary, grammar — structured learning for beginners through to advanced speakers.
Museums and Archives
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Manx National Heritage
The Manx Museum, Castle Rushen, Peel Castle, the Grove, Cregneash — the custodians of Manx history. Their collections include the Atholl Papers and other primary sources referenced throughout the book.
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Manx Notebook
Frances Coakley's extraordinary digital archive of Manx historical documents. Transcriptions of the 1792 Commissioners' Report, Lib Scacc documents, Train's histories, Moore's works, and much more. An invaluable resource for anyone researching Manx history.
Parliament and Government
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Tynwald
The official website of the Isle of Man Parliament. Current proceedings, historical information, and details of Tynwald Day — the annual ceremony that has continued for over a thousand years.
Further Reading
The following works are recommended for readers who want to go deeper into Manx history:
A.W. Moore — A History of the Isle of Man (1900). The foundational modern history, comprehensive and still valuable despite its age.
Joseph Train — An Historical and Statistical Account of the Isle of Man (1845). Victorian in perspective but invaluable for its documentary coverage and access to sources that were closer to the events.
R.H. Kinvig — The Isle of Man: A Social, Cultural and Political History (1975). The standard academic history of the twentieth century.
Frances Coakley (ed.) — Various transcriptions on Manx Notebook. Not a single work but an indispensable collection of primary sources made accessible.
About This Site
Revestment1765.com is the companion website to Revestment: The Crime of Crown Dependence by Steve Babb.
The site provides:
- Endnotes — the scholarly apparatus behind the book
- Primary sources — transcriptions and links to documentary evidence
- Teaching materials — resources for Manx schools and families
- Gallery — photographs from Tynwald Day
All teaching materials are free to use for educational purposes. The site is built on GitHub Pages and will remain freely accessible.
Acknowledgements
This project would not be possible without:
- Frances Coakley and the Manx Notebook, whose transcription work has made vast quantities of primary sources accessible
- Manx National Heritage, custodians of the archives
- Culture Vannin, guardians of the living language and culture
- The staff of The National Archives at Kew, where the Treasury and Home Office papers are held
- The many scholars whose work on Manx history has laid the groundwork for this book
Gura mie eu — thank you.