ANDREW LAURIE (Letters, June 19) would be well advised to check his facts before venturing into print to assert that Sir Tom Devine is not the first scholar to be knighted for services to Scottish history.

He cites predecessors Sir William Fraser and Principal Robert Rait.

Fraser was a lawyer and antiquar-ian, not an academic historian.

Rait was, indeed, a historian of Scotland but his knighthood came in 1933 as a result of his position as Principal and Vice Chancellor of the University of Glasgow between 1929 to 1936. Then as now, it was customary for the Principal of that institution to receive the accolade.

Calum Hunter,

1 Sandyvale,

Stonehouse,

Lanarkshire.