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"...the Cornish had retained many of the marks of a separate `people'...."pic.twitter.com/KaPKI1bcma
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"Unlike most of the Welsh counties, Cornwall contained a vigorous and well-organized parliamentarian faction. Parliament's Cornish supporters were mainly gentlemen and clerics, however, and their influence was largely confined to the far east of the county...."
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"outlandish" here means foreign soldiers/military forces (from cornwall, wales, scotland, and ireland, but also from the continent).pic.twitter.com/KfkoajcmaS
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cornwall never manorialized, btw. certainly not bipartite manorialism anyway. Non-Manorialism in Medieval Cornwall http://www.bahs.org.uk/AGHR/ARTICLES/18n1a1.pdf …pic.twitter.com/kv1EFxrPv1
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is the author suggestion anything has changed since then?
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¯\_(ツ)_/¯
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I should also mention that it was only 100 years after Wales had been incorporated into England by various acts of Union. The idea of difference was still strong.
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The language boundaries didn't change much until large scale anglo-irish immigration and the 1880 Education act both kicking off about the same. Earlier immigrants had been absorbed.
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John Cale’s Welsh...
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