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A New British History? Naomi Pullin [email protected] The British Problem: Empire, Conflict and National Identities, 1558-1714
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A New British History? Naomi Pullin [email protected] The British Problem: Empire, Conflict and National Identities, 1558-1714.

Jan 18, 2016

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Page 1: A New British History? Naomi Pullin naomi.wood@warwick.ac.uk The British Problem: Empire, Conflict and National Identities, 1558-1714.

A New British History?

Naomi [email protected]

The British Problem: Empire, Conflict and National Identities, 1558-1714

Page 2: A New British History? Naomi Pullin naomi.wood@warwick.ac.uk The British Problem: Empire, Conflict and National Identities, 1558-1714.

Focus of this lectureIn two parts: 1. Practical introduction to the course

2. Conceptual themes and theories:• What constitutes British identity and nationhood?• ‘British history’ • Background to England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales

at start of period• Key themes underpinning this course

Page 4: A New British History? Naomi Pullin naomi.wood@warwick.ac.uk The British Problem: Empire, Conflict and National Identities, 1558-1714.

British Identity and Nationhood

Teapot and cover C.1765, manufactured in Worcester, England, attributed to James Giles. Victoria and Albert Museum London.

Page 5: A New British History? Naomi Pullin naomi.wood@warwick.ac.uk The British Problem: Empire, Conflict and National Identities, 1558-1714.

British Isles 1558-1714

Sometimes called an ‘Atlantic Archipelago’

Covers 150 years: From coronation of Elizabeth I in 1558

To death of Queen Anne in 1714

Page 6: A New British History? Naomi Pullin naomi.wood@warwick.ac.uk The British Problem: Empire, Conflict and National Identities, 1558-1714.

Writing a history of the nation

• Linked to the ‘professionalization’ of history as a discipline.

• Two ideas underpin modern idea of nationhood:

1. As a cultural identifier: denotes belonging; distinguishing element of human identity

2. As a legal entity: a nation state = sovereign legal authority

Page 7: A New British History? Naomi Pullin naomi.wood@warwick.ac.uk The British Problem: Empire, Conflict and National Identities, 1558-1714.
Page 8: A New British History? Naomi Pullin naomi.wood@warwick.ac.uk The British Problem: Empire, Conflict and National Identities, 1558-1714.

Theories of nationhood

• Is nation principally a phenomenon of the modern world?

• What is the relationship between nationhood and ethnicity?

• Can a nation be artificially put together, or does it need to rest on ancient social and cultural foundations?

Page 9: A New British History? Naomi Pullin naomi.wood@warwick.ac.uk The British Problem: Empire, Conflict and National Identities, 1558-1714.

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.

Page 10: A New British History? Naomi Pullin naomi.wood@warwick.ac.uk The British Problem: Empire, Conflict and National Identities, 1558-1714.

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.

Page 11: A New British History? Naomi Pullin naomi.wood@warwick.ac.uk The British Problem: Empire, Conflict and National Identities, 1558-1714.

The ‘New British History’• Key historians J.G.A. Pocock, John Morrill, Brendan

Bradshaw.• Pockock aimed to ‘reinvest with meaning’ the concept

of a shared British history; to find framework for writing ‘British history’ before establishment of the British state in 1707.

• 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.

Page 12: A New British History? Naomi Pullin naomi.wood@warwick.ac.uk The British Problem: Empire, Conflict and National Identities, 1558-1714.

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)

Page 13: A New British History? Naomi Pullin naomi.wood@warwick.ac.uk The British Problem: Empire, Conflict and National Identities, 1558-1714.

Highland and Lowland Scotland

Page 14: A New British History? Naomi Pullin naomi.wood@warwick.ac.uk The British Problem: Empire, Conflict and National Identities, 1558-1714.

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.

Page 15: A New British History? Naomi Pullin naomi.wood@warwick.ac.uk The British Problem: Empire, Conflict and National Identities, 1558-1714.

1. Royal centralisation in England and Scotland pre-1558

• 1496 – James IV of Scotland abolishes the Lordship of the Isles

• 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’.

Page 16: A New British History? Naomi Pullin naomi.wood@warwick.ac.uk The British Problem: Empire, Conflict and National Identities, 1558-1714.

2. A Game of Thrones: Anglo-Scottish rivalry

• English monarchs had claimed rights to throne of Scotland since reign of Edward I in 13th century.

• 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 (Mary Queen of Scots) claims throne of England against Elizabeth I.

Page 17: A New British History? Naomi Pullin naomi.wood@warwick.ac.uk The British Problem: Empire, Conflict and National Identities, 1558-1714.

3. Religious Divisions

• Impact of the European Reformations from 1517 – division of Christian world into rival Catholic and Protestant camps.

• Religious divisions reflect old cultural and ethnic dividing lines.

• BUT also create the opportunities for new alliances to be formed.

• Greatly influenced by developments in Europe.

Page 18: A New British History? Naomi Pullin naomi.wood@warwick.ac.uk The British Problem: Empire, Conflict and National Identities, 1558-1714.

4. Influence of Europe

• Must also acknowledge the influence of rival kings and emperors on British politics.

• People in British Isles maintain European allegiances and identities esp. over religion.

• Effect seen in 1689 when William of Orange takes throne of British kingdoms; 1714 when George I succeeds Queen Anne.

Page 19: A New British History? Naomi Pullin naomi.wood@warwick.ac.uk The British Problem: Empire, Conflict and National Identities, 1558-1714.

5. Growth of an American Empire

• Britain part of a vast and expanding imperial dominion

• British pursue policy of Atlantic expansion from c.1585 in competition with Spain

• Need to see American colonies as part of the British polity.

Page 20: A New British History? Naomi Pullin naomi.wood@warwick.ac.uk The British Problem: Empire, Conflict and National Identities, 1558-1714.

Conclusions

• Events in history of Early Modern England, Scotland, Ireland, Wales and North America can only be fully understood when placed within wider ‘British’ context.

• A history of the interaction between peoples customs and traditions.

• Not just a history of English domination, nor a history of four (even five) separate ‘nations’.