During the fellowship, we have been able to collect reproductions of 95% of the William Burn collection of drawings, and therefore been able to prepare the first full length monograph on the career of the architect. The pandemic context has meant that accessing material in the National Records of Scotland (NRS), Edinburgh, was more difficult than anticipated. We have, however, been able to access the entire volume of archival material from the following repositories: National Record of the Historic Environment (NRHE), Edinburgh, and Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA), London. This study is therefore primarily a study of the architectural projects of William Burn, analysed in the context of nation identity formation. We have prepared individual essays (WP1, WP2, WP3, WP4) which form the individual chapters of a monograph on Burn, to be sent to Edinburgh University Press. This research has been presented at seminars (including at the University of Bamberg, Germany, in May 2023) and at international conferences such as the Congress of the French Society for Scottish Studies, Sorbonne-Université, 17-19 November 2022 and the Eighteenth-Century Scottish Studies Society Conference, University of St Andrews, 18-21 July 2023. I have also received an invitation from the Institute of Irish and Scottish Studies at the University of Aberdeen, where I will be presenting my research on 9 April 2024. Efforts have been made to disseminate this research to a wider public, beyond the UK and France. I was invited to give seminars to students in France, the UK and Germany. I also gave a 30-minute interview on myths and legends in Scotland, and their relation to national identity, to the Radio Télévision Suisse (RTS) on 20 April 2023: www.rts.ch/audio-podcast/2023/audio/mythes-legendes-et-identites-nationales-4-5-ecosse-un-loch-d-idees-recues-26119666.html