Apprentices,Goldsmiths, and the North in Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century England |
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Abstract: | AbstractThe story of King Edgar being rowed on the River Dee at Chester in 973 by eight subordinate kings was once well known. This article examines how it was used in popular history writing from the eighteenth century onwards, with greatest development in the mid nineteenth century, and subsequent decline into its present obscurity. It served English political and cultural ends, being used to demonstrate the natural superiority of that race over the others in the Union, particularly the Scots. Decline of imperial sentiment and ignorance of pre-Conquest history have relegated it to incidental mention in county histories. |
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Keywords: | KING EDGAR CHESTER ACT OF UNION POPULAR EDUCATION |
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