england's central province (i.e. manorialized zone). https://www.geos.ed.ac.uk/~gisteac/proceedingsonline/GISRUK2012/Papers/presentation-54.pdf …pic.twitter.com/EwKHgncHxr
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Core England is Da Norf and if you don't believe me, take a visit.
lived in sheffield for a time. and durham. (^_^)
Anything south of Durham might as well be France.
Hmm. The "Southeastern Province" is basically the Home Counties https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Home_counties … plus a largely irrelevant chunk from the Wash to the Humber. So it could be London influence is the main difference
I don't think you could define "Core England" to exclude the south-east.
i think i'm going to go for it. (~_^) altho some of the home counties are prolly fairly core. but the coastal ones - essex, kent, and sussex - are definitely not. i'm as surprised as anyone, but these areas had less manorialism/more (small) extended families.
Here's a view of the boundary, BTW. The Bedfordshire Plain ("Central province"), taken from the Barton Hills ("Southeast province")pic.twitter.com/Ixh5g8P5JH
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