Charles Insley's 'Kings and Lords in Tenth-Century Cornwall' has just appeared in (2012) 98 History 2:
The cementing of English political control over
Cornwall and the British of the south-west in the tenth century falls
between the creation of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms between the sixth and
seventh centuries, and the burst of English expansionism at the expense
of the Welsh, Scots and Irish that occupied the two centuries following
the Norman Conquest of England. Consequently, the absorption of Cornwall
into the English state tends to be a rather neglected subject. This
article provides some redress of this neglect and examines, through a
consideration of not just the historical narratives but also charters
and manumissions, the way in which the kings of the English and their
agents extended royal control over Cornwall between the late ninth
century and the mid-eleventh. These processes, while making Cornwall
part of the new kingdom of the English, also allowed the maintenance of a
highly distinctive local identity well into the later medieval period
and beyond.
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