A Point of View: Taking England back to the Dark Ages
What
would happen if England started to break up into its seven Anglo-Saxon
kingdoms? Tom Shakespeare lets his imagination run riot.
Anyway, bear with me, because a serious point is going to emerge from these memories of the mead hall. You see, for me, the issue of Scottish independence is not about what happens to what might become "the nation again" of Scotland, but about how those of us who are left behind, manage to cope in our new disunited kingdom.
Scotland would end up a nice size, about five and a quarter million people. As Mr Salmond wishfully dreams, that's about the same population as those prosperous egalitarian Nordic countries across the North Sea which once ravaged our shores with swords and axes, rather than sombre detective stories and traditional knit pullovers.
Meanwhile, setting Wales aside, England would be left with a cumbersome 53 million plus. Which represents a bit of a problem.
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"What happens if we put away again the swords and spears, and think in terms of England as heptarchy? ”
Because size does matter. It
seems to me that progressive, reasonable, pacific and prosperous states -
like the Nordic countries, or Switzerland or New Zealand - tend to be
less than 10 million people. That's almost intimate, for a nation.
Citizens of smaller countries feel pride and connection. The population
is small enough to have deliberative public policy, which takes account
of local needs. The health service and the education service seem less
distant from everyday lives. Folk feel more involved and valued. I can
imagine how Scotland might achieve that, with only five million. But
what about the rest of us?
Alfred the Great united the English in resistance to the Danes
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From barbarian invaders to devout Christian missionaries, the Anglo-Saxons brought 400 years of religious evolution and shifting political power to the British Isles.
The Anglo-Saxons
From barbarian invaders to devout Christian missionaries, the Anglo-Saxons brought 400 years of religious evolution and shifting political power to the British Isles.
Mercia would be the Midlands and
up as far as Manchester, home of manufacturing, with heavy metal and
indie music as important exports. Northumbria has the rest of the North.
East Anglia could take over Leicestershire, Lincolnshire and
Cambridgeshire as well as Norfolk, Suffolk and Essex. That leaves Kent
and Sussex to fight over the South East, with London as a new statelet
on its own. I haven't done the maths yet, but I imagine you could do
something neat to balance it all out. So then you would have Scotland,
Wales and seven English territories on the island of Britain, all of
approximately the same scale, and all with a chance of building a sense
of identity for themselves. It's no coincidence, that these statelets
would be about the same size as the average American state or a Nordic
country.
Newcastle - "Northumbrians already fly their flag with pride"
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In September voters in Scotland will go to the polls to decide whether or not to become independent. Campaigners and commentators have made much of the implications for people north of the border - but how would an independent Scotland impact on the rest of the UK and Europe?
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In September voters in Scotland will go to the polls to decide whether or not to become independent. Campaigners and commentators have made much of the implications for people north of the border - but how would an independent Scotland impact on the rest of the UK and Europe?
Each of these new seven states,
together with the other countries of the Disunited Kingdom, could set
its own policies. People could decide which type of regime they wanted
to be a citizen of, and move house to somewhere they felt they belonged.
These new states would compete with each other economically, as well as
in terms of sports and culture, and this competition would drive up
standards for everyone. Forget the Dark Ages, it could be a new Golden
Age, thanks to the re-thinking which Scottish independence would surely
force on the rest of us who were left behind.
Then I remembered that another drawback of localism might be nimby-ism (Not In My Back Yard).
When citizens think at the level of their immediate community, they fail to see the common interest that they share with others in their wider society, so they reject that hostel for recovering drug addicts. They tend to be more short term than long term in their analysis, so they reject those wind turbines. They can end up being selfish and defensive and competitive with others. After all, the word parochial literally means "relating to a parish" but it has become a synonym for having a narrow outlook. I am not sure that it's just a coincidence that Switzerland is one of the more reactionary and anti-immigrant nations in Europe.
My view is that we need fewer borders, not more. That's why the European Union makes sense to me. I worry that if we were to go back to historical precedent for the basis of our political units, we would end up fighting medieval battles, not with bows and arrows, but with immigration rules and tax regimes. In the 21st Century, surely it's time to celebrate what unites us, not what divides us. If we are ever to overcome the problem of climate change, we think globally and act globally. I do love the idea of bringing back the heptarchy, both because I think smaller countries work better, but also because I love traditions. But, proud as I am to be an East Anglian, I think I am first and foremost a human being.
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