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Regional Identities in North-East England, 1300-2000 [Hardback]

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  • Format: Hardback, 258 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 1 g, 2 line illus.
  • Series: Regions and Regionalism in History
  • Pub. Date: 16-Nov-2007
  • Publisher: The Boydell Press
  • ISBN-10: 1843833352
  • ISBN-13: 9781843833352
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  • Format: Hardback, 258 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 1 g, 2 line illus.
  • Series: Regions and Regionalism in History
  • Pub. Date: 16-Nov-2007
  • Publisher: The Boydell Press
  • ISBN-10: 1843833352
  • ISBN-13: 9781843833352
Other books in subject:
Is North East England really a coherent and self-conscious region? The essays collected here address this topical issue, from the middle ages to the present day.

`Required reading for all those interested in the history of North-East England'. ANTHONY FLETCHER.

In November 2004 the people of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, the historic counties of Durham and Northumberland, along with Middlesbrough, Redcar and Cleveland in North Yorkshire, decisively rejected a regional assembly. The referendum came as the culmination of a long campaign for regional devolution, which asked a number of searching questions. What sort of a region is and was the North East of England? How deep-rooted is the identity of the North East as a region? How can one find a regional identity in the more distant past?

This collection of essays, the product of aresearch project undertaken collaboratively by the five north-eastern Universities, looks for the elusive self-conscious region over many centuries. It suggests that the notion of a single regional identity is a recent phenomenonoverlaying a kaleidoscope of sub-regional associations and connections. Today's region appears to be more fissured and fragile than we like to imagine. The approach and conclusions reached are of significance not only for the history of the old counties of north-eastern England, but also for the wider history of England, and hold significant implications for the history of regions and regionalism in general.

ADRIAN GREEN is Lecturer in History atDurham University; Professor A.J. POLLARD is University Fellow at the University of Teesside.

Reviews

The North-East may often have lacked coherence, but this important work does not. It deserves the attention of all interested in the history of regions and regional identity, wherever those regions might be. * ENGLISH HISTORICAL REVIEW *

Foreword: The AHRC Centre for North-East England History vii
Anthony Fletcher
Contributors xi
Preface xv
Abbreviations xvii
Introduction Identifying Regions 1(26)
Adrian Green
A.J. Pollard
North-East England in the Late Middle Ages: Rivers, Boundaries and Identities, 1296-1461
27(22)
Matthew Holford
Andy King
Christian D. Liddy
Borders and Bishopric: Regional Identities in the Pre-Modern North East, 1559-1620
49(22)
Diana Newton
Law in North-East England: Community, County and Region, 1550-1850
71(22)
Peter Rushton
A Shock for Bishop Pudsey: Social Change and Regional Identity in the Diocese of Durham, 1820-1920
93(20)
Robert Lee
Business Regionalism: Defining and Owning the Industrial North East, 1850-1914
113(20)
Graeme J. Milne
Competing Identities: Irish and Welsh Migration and the North East of England, 1851-1980
133(28)
Joan Allen
Richard C.Allen
Immigrant Politics and North-East Identity, 1907-1973
161(20)
D.A.J. MacPherson
David Renton
Regionalism and Cultural History: The Case of North-Eastern England, 1918-1976
181(28)
Natasha Vall
Conclusion: Finding North-East England 209(18)
Adrian Green
A.J. Pollard
Index 227


ANDY KING is Lecturer in Medieval History at the University of Southampton, UK.