1 / 13

A New British History?

A New British History?. Gabriel Glickman. Professionalisation of history linked to rise of the nation state. First professorships in History = government appointments at Oxford and Cambridge. Irish Free State – government ministers determine school history curriculum. .

clark
Télécharger la présentation

A New British History?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A New British History? Gabriel Glickman

  2. Professionalisation of history linked to rise of the nation state • First professorships in History = government appointments at Oxford and Cambridge. • Irish Free State – government ministers determine school history curriculum.

  3. Modern meaning of ‘nationhood’ • Nation state = sovereign legal authority. • Nationhood denotes belonging: distinguishing element of human identity. • But – neither of these elements so clearcut in the nations of Early Modern Europe.

  4. Theories of nationhood • Anthony Smith – nations needs common ethno-cultural core, ‘ethnie’. • Benedict Anderson – ‘imagined communities’: nations the product of the modern world and changing patterns of communication. • Eric Hobsbawm– nations the product of power elites and state formation.

  5. The problem of British history • Linda Colley, Britons: Forging the Nation (1992) – Britain an artificial, nation, ‘forged’ by C18th imperial state. • ‘British history’ therefore a problematic concept for Early Modern period. • AJP Taylor – argues that ‘British history’ an anachronistic concept before establishment of United Kingdom.

  6. The ‘New British History’ • Key historians J.G.A. Pocock, John Morrill, Brendan Bradshaw. • Aim to find framework for writing ‘British history’ before establishment of the British state. • Argue that British history meaningful because of history of interaction and movement of people around ‘Atlantic Archipelago’. • Events in one domain influence events in another e.g. throne of England taken by a Welshman in 1485 and a Scotsman in 1603.

  7. Britain as part of a ‘Europe of composite monarchies’(J.H. Elliott) • 1453 - French absorption of old Plantagenet territories e.g. Guyenne, Brittany. • 1469 – Union of Aragon and Castile • 1500 – Holy Roman Empire divided into six ‘imperial circles’ with own parliaments. • 1514 – Union of Denmark and Norway • 1569 – Union of Lublin • 1618 – Brandenburg-Prussia

  8. Creation of a composite monarchy in Britain • Aristocratic dynasties rule Anglo-Scottish borders e.g. Neville, Percy, Douglas families. • Wales – controlled by c. 130 Anglo-Norman ‘marcher lords’ after 1282. • Ireland – government after 1177 centred on the Pale, controlled by Anglo-Norman magnates esp. Fitzgerald earls of Kildare and Desmond. • North and West of Ireland ruled by Gaelic clans e.g. O’Neill (Ulster), O’Brien (County Clare)

  9. Cultural and ethnic division in Scotland • Four separate languages still spoken in Scotland by c. 1450. • Emerging division of Lowlands (Anglophone) and Highlands (ruled by Gaelic-speaking clans). • 1521 – John Mair, History of Greater Britain: ‘Among the Scots we find two distinct tongues, so we likewise find two different ways of life and conduct’. • Highland power held especially by MacDonald Lords of the Isles.

  10. Royal centralisation in England and Scotland pre-1558 • 1496 – James IV of Scotland abolishes the Lordship of the Isles (powerbase of Clan MacDonald). • 1536-1543 – Henry VIII and Thomas Cromwell enact legal and political union of England and Wales: abolish powers of the marcher lords. • 1541 – Centralisation in Ireland: English army and administration imposed in Dublin; policy of ‘surrender and regrant’.

  11. Anglo-Scottish rivalry • English monarchs had claimed rights to throne of Scotland since reign of Edward I. • 1544-5 – ‘Rough Wooing’: Henry VIII tries to force Scottish noblemen into accepting marriage of (English) Prince Edward to (Scottish) Queen Mary. • 1559-1587 - Scottish queen Mary Stuart claims throne of England against Elizabeth I.

  12. External factors change relations within British Isles • Impact of the Reformation – division of Christian world into rival Catholic and Protestant camps. • Influence of Europe – rival kings and emperors impact on British politics; people in British Isles maintain European allegiances and identities esp. over religion. - effect seen 1689 when William of Orange takes throne of British kingdoms; 1714 when George I succeeds Queen Anne. • Growth of an American Empire – need to see American colonies as part of the British polity.

More Related