Neil Evans
Writing a Small Nation's Past
Wales in Comparative Perspective, 1850-1950
Herausgeber: Pryce, Huw
Neil Evans
Writing a Small Nation's Past
Wales in Comparative Perspective, 1850-1950
Herausgeber: Pryce, Huw
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@text: This is the first volume to examine how the history of Wales was written in a period that saw the emergence of professional historiography, largely focused on the nation, across Europe and in the United States.
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@text: This is the first volume to examine how the history of Wales was written in a period that saw the emergence of professional historiography, largely focused on the nation, across Europe and in the United States.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 406
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. Januar 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 567g
- ISBN-13: 9781138707252
- ISBN-10: 1138707252
- Artikelnr.: 50446910
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 406
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. Januar 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 567g
- ISBN-13: 9781138707252
- ISBN-10: 1138707252
- Artikelnr.: 50446910
Neil Evans, Cardiff University, UK and Huw Pryce, Bangor University, UK.
Contents: Preface; Part 1 Contexts and Backgrounds: Writing a small
nation's past: states, race and historical culture, Neil Evans and Huw
Pryce; National historiography, 1850-1950: the European context, R.J.W.
Evans; J.E. Lloyd's History of Wales (1911): publication and reception, Huw
Pryce. Part 2 Amateurs and Popularizers: Failed founding fathers and
abandoned sources: Edward Williams, Thomas Stephens and the young J.E.
Lloyd, Marion Löffler; 'An account obtained from authentic documents':
Jane Williams (Ysgafell) as a historian, Gwyneth Tyson Roberts; A nation of
nonconformists: Thomas Rees (1815-85) and nonconformist history, Prys
Morgan; Outlaw historian: Owen Rhiscomyl and popular history in Edwardian
Wales, John S. Ellis; 'A refreshingly new and challenging voice': O.M.
Edwards's interpretation of the Welsh past, Lowri Angharad Hughes Ahronson.
Part 3 Creating Academic Disciplines: From antiquarians to archaeologists
in 19th-century Wales: the question of prehistory, Nancy Edwards and John
Gould; John RhÅ·s, Celtic studies and the Welsh past, T.M. Charles-Edwards;
The institutionalization of history in the University Colleges of Wales,
1880-1939: Aberystwyth and Bangor, Peter Lambert; Venturing into the
'jungle': late medieval Wales in the Edwardian age, Ralph A. Griffiths;
Town and nation: writing urban histories in 19th- and early 20th-century
Wales, Paul O'Leary; Beyond 1282: A.H. Dodd and the problem of modern Welsh
history, Neil Evans. Part 4 Comparative Perspectives: The fall of Rome and
its aftermath from the 18th to the early 20th centuries, Ian Wood; History
and the historians of medieval Catalonia in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries, Adam J. Kosto; A forgotten anniversary: P. Hume Brown's History
of Scotland, 1911, Dauvit Broun; Robert Dudley Edwards and the uses of
Catholic nationalism, Ciaran Brady; Conclusion: Welsh national history and
its European context, Stefan Berger; Bibliography; Index.
nation's past: states, race and historical culture, Neil Evans and Huw
Pryce; National historiography, 1850-1950: the European context, R.J.W.
Evans; J.E. Lloyd's History of Wales (1911): publication and reception, Huw
Pryce. Part 2 Amateurs and Popularizers: Failed founding fathers and
abandoned sources: Edward Williams, Thomas Stephens and the young J.E.
Lloyd, Marion Löffler; 'An account obtained from authentic documents':
Jane Williams (Ysgafell) as a historian, Gwyneth Tyson Roberts; A nation of
nonconformists: Thomas Rees (1815-85) and nonconformist history, Prys
Morgan; Outlaw historian: Owen Rhiscomyl and popular history in Edwardian
Wales, John S. Ellis; 'A refreshingly new and challenging voice': O.M.
Edwards's interpretation of the Welsh past, Lowri Angharad Hughes Ahronson.
Part 3 Creating Academic Disciplines: From antiquarians to archaeologists
in 19th-century Wales: the question of prehistory, Nancy Edwards and John
Gould; John RhÅ·s, Celtic studies and the Welsh past, T.M. Charles-Edwards;
The institutionalization of history in the University Colleges of Wales,
1880-1939: Aberystwyth and Bangor, Peter Lambert; Venturing into the
'jungle': late medieval Wales in the Edwardian age, Ralph A. Griffiths;
Town and nation: writing urban histories in 19th- and early 20th-century
Wales, Paul O'Leary; Beyond 1282: A.H. Dodd and the problem of modern Welsh
history, Neil Evans. Part 4 Comparative Perspectives: The fall of Rome and
its aftermath from the 18th to the early 20th centuries, Ian Wood; History
and the historians of medieval Catalonia in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries, Adam J. Kosto; A forgotten anniversary: P. Hume Brown's History
of Scotland, 1911, Dauvit Broun; Robert Dudley Edwards and the uses of
Catholic nationalism, Ciaran Brady; Conclusion: Welsh national history and
its European context, Stefan Berger; Bibliography; Index.
Contents: Preface; Part 1 Contexts and Backgrounds: Writing a small
nation's past: states, race and historical culture, Neil Evans and Huw
Pryce; National historiography, 1850-1950: the European context, R.J.W.
Evans; J.E. Lloyd's History of Wales (1911): publication and reception, Huw
Pryce. Part 2 Amateurs and Popularizers: Failed founding fathers and
abandoned sources: Edward Williams, Thomas Stephens and the young J.E.
Lloyd, Marion Löffler; 'An account obtained from authentic documents':
Jane Williams (Ysgafell) as a historian, Gwyneth Tyson Roberts; A nation of
nonconformists: Thomas Rees (1815-85) and nonconformist history, Prys
Morgan; Outlaw historian: Owen Rhiscomyl and popular history in Edwardian
Wales, John S. Ellis; 'A refreshingly new and challenging voice': O.M.
Edwards's interpretation of the Welsh past, Lowri Angharad Hughes Ahronson.
Part 3 Creating Academic Disciplines: From antiquarians to archaeologists
in 19th-century Wales: the question of prehistory, Nancy Edwards and John
Gould; John RhÅ·s, Celtic studies and the Welsh past, T.M. Charles-Edwards;
The institutionalization of history in the University Colleges of Wales,
1880-1939: Aberystwyth and Bangor, Peter Lambert; Venturing into the
'jungle': late medieval Wales in the Edwardian age, Ralph A. Griffiths;
Town and nation: writing urban histories in 19th- and early 20th-century
Wales, Paul O'Leary; Beyond 1282: A.H. Dodd and the problem of modern Welsh
history, Neil Evans. Part 4 Comparative Perspectives: The fall of Rome and
its aftermath from the 18th to the early 20th centuries, Ian Wood; History
and the historians of medieval Catalonia in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries, Adam J. Kosto; A forgotten anniversary: P. Hume Brown's History
of Scotland, 1911, Dauvit Broun; Robert Dudley Edwards and the uses of
Catholic nationalism, Ciaran Brady; Conclusion: Welsh national history and
its European context, Stefan Berger; Bibliography; Index.
nation's past: states, race and historical culture, Neil Evans and Huw
Pryce; National historiography, 1850-1950: the European context, R.J.W.
Evans; J.E. Lloyd's History of Wales (1911): publication and reception, Huw
Pryce. Part 2 Amateurs and Popularizers: Failed founding fathers and
abandoned sources: Edward Williams, Thomas Stephens and the young J.E.
Lloyd, Marion Löffler; 'An account obtained from authentic documents':
Jane Williams (Ysgafell) as a historian, Gwyneth Tyson Roberts; A nation of
nonconformists: Thomas Rees (1815-85) and nonconformist history, Prys
Morgan; Outlaw historian: Owen Rhiscomyl and popular history in Edwardian
Wales, John S. Ellis; 'A refreshingly new and challenging voice': O.M.
Edwards's interpretation of the Welsh past, Lowri Angharad Hughes Ahronson.
Part 3 Creating Academic Disciplines: From antiquarians to archaeologists
in 19th-century Wales: the question of prehistory, Nancy Edwards and John
Gould; John RhÅ·s, Celtic studies and the Welsh past, T.M. Charles-Edwards;
The institutionalization of history in the University Colleges of Wales,
1880-1939: Aberystwyth and Bangor, Peter Lambert; Venturing into the
'jungle': late medieval Wales in the Edwardian age, Ralph A. Griffiths;
Town and nation: writing urban histories in 19th- and early 20th-century
Wales, Paul O'Leary; Beyond 1282: A.H. Dodd and the problem of modern Welsh
history, Neil Evans. Part 4 Comparative Perspectives: The fall of Rome and
its aftermath from the 18th to the early 20th centuries, Ian Wood; History
and the historians of medieval Catalonia in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries, Adam J. Kosto; A forgotten anniversary: P. Hume Brown's History
of Scotland, 1911, Dauvit Broun; Robert Dudley Edwards and the uses of
Catholic nationalism, Ciaran Brady; Conclusion: Welsh national history and
its European context, Stefan Berger; Bibliography; Index.