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CAMERONIANS , the name given to that section of the ScottishSee also: Covenanters (q.v.) who followed See also: Richard See also: Cameron (q.v.), and who were chiefly found among those who signed the See also: Sanquhar Declaration in r680
.
Known also as " Society Men," " Sanquharians " and " Hillmen," they became a See also: separate See also: church after the religious
See also: settlement of 169o, taking the official title of Reformed Presbyterians in 1743
.
See also: Societies of Cameronians for the maintenance of the Presbyterian See also: form of worship were formed about 1681; their testimony, " The Informatory Vindication," is dated 1687; and they quickly became the most pronounced and active adherents of the covenanting faith
.
Holding fast to the two covenants, the See also: National See also: Covenant of 158o and the Solemn See also: League and Covenant of 1643, they wished to restore the ecclesiastical See also: order which had existed between 1638 and 1649, and were dissatisfied with the moderate character of the religious settlement of 169o
.
Refusing to take the oaths of allegiance to an " uncovenanted " ruler, or to exercise any See also: civil See also: function, they passed through a See also: period of trial and found some difficulty in maintaining a See also: regular See also: ministry; but in 1706 they were reinforced by some converts from the established church
.
They objected strongly to the proposal for the union of See also: England and Scotland, and were suspected of abetting a rising which took place in the west of Scotland in 1706; but there appears to be no foundation for the statement that they intrigued with the See also: Jacobites, and they gave no trouble to the See also: government either in 1715 or in 1745
.
In 1712 they publicly renewed the covenants at Auchensauch See also: Hill in
See also: Lanarkshire, and in 1743 their first See also: presbytery was constituted at Braehead, while a presbytery was formed in See also: North See also: America in 1774
.
In 1863 the Cameronians, or Reformed Presbyterians, decided to inflict no penalties upon those members who had taken the oaths, or had exercised civil functions, and
consequently a few congregations seceded
.
In 1876 the general See also: body of the Reformed Presbyterians See also: united with the See also: Free Church of Scotland, leaving the few seceding congregations as the representatives of the principles of the Cameronians
.
In the See also: British army the first See also: battalion of the Cameronians (Scottish Rifles) is directly descended from the " Cameronian guard," which, composed of Cameronians, was embodied by the See also: convention parliament in 1689, and was afterwards employed to restore order in the See also: Highlands
.
See J
.
H
.
See also: Burton, See also: History of Scotland, vols. vii. and viii
.
(See also: Edinburgh, 1905) ; and A
.
Lang, History of Scotland, vol. iv
.
(Edinburgh, 1907)
.
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