Bibliography

Harris, James, “Language, historical culture and the gentry of later Stuart Cornwall and south-west Wales”, Historical Research 95:269 (August, 2022): 348–369.

Citation details
Contributors
Article
“Language, historical culture and the gentry of later Stuart Cornwall and south-west Wales”
Periodical
Historical Research 95:269 (2022)
Volume
95
Pages
348–369
Description
Abstract (cited)

This article considers how gentry antiquarian communities in later Stuart Cornwall and south-west Wales constructed distinctive local identities. It focuses on four case studies: William Scawen, the West Penwith coterie, Edward Lhuyd and the Teifi Valley group. These antiquaries conceived of the Cornish and the Welsh as ‘ancient Britons’ and established them as historically and culturally distinct from the English, usually through reference to their indigenous languages. However, the reception of their work among wider landed society was shaped by the vitality of each respective language (with still-ubiquitous Welsh contrasting with near-extinct Cornish). By exploring the relationship between intellectual culture and identity formation, the article contributes to a broader understanding of the various and overlapping identities that permeated the British archipelago.

Subjects and topics
Headings
Cornwall 17th century Cornish language Welsh language
History, society and culture
Agents
Edward LhuydLhuyd (Edward)
(d. 1709)
Llwyd (Edward)
No short description available
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William ScawenScawen (William)
(1600–1689)
Cornish politician and antiquary. He is author of Antiquities Cornu-Brittanic, an unpublished work on the history and language of Cornwall (even if he did not speak Cornish).
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Contributors
Dennis Groenewegen
Page created
September 2022