J. E. Lloyd and the Creation of Welsh History

Renewing a Nation's Past

Author(s) Huw Pryce

Language: English

Genre(s): Welsh Interest

  • May 2011 · 277 pages ·216x138mm

  • · Hardback - 9780708323885
  • · Paperback - 9780708323892
  • · eBook - pdf - 9780708323908
  • · eBook - epub - 9781783162970

About The Book

This is the first book on John Edward Lloyd (1861-1947), widely regarded as the founder of the modern academic study of Welsh history. Published to mark the centenary of Lloyd's most important achievement, "A History of Wales from the Earliest Times to the Edwardian Conquest" (1911), this intellectual biography reassesses Lloyd's significance by setting his work in the context of his life and of the ideas and scholarship of his time. It thus provides a case study of how the past of a small, stateless nation was reconfigured to provide a new narrative of national origins.

Endorsements

"In this remarkable book Huw Pryce does for Welsh autobiography what Sir John Lloyd did for Welsh history--establishes it as a subdiscipline of distinction. Lloyd's work is set against earlier Welsh historiography in a manner that could only be achieved by a medievalist as well as being firmly and subtly placed in the context of Victorian intellectual history. This is an unusual, if not unique, combination of skills, and along with its elegant style they make it a landmark in Welsh historical writing. Historiography is a burgeoning field and this fine book cultivates a place for Wales within it. It will undoubtedly become a classic."--Neil Evans, Cardiff University All nations need an awareness of their history. This is even more true of what Marx called the 'unhistoric' nations, like the Slovaks or Slovenes (not to mention the Bretons), and it certainly applies to Wales. Huw Pryce's fascinating and powerfully-researched study of J.E. Lloyd, the great medieval historian, is therefore especially welcome since, before Lloyd's two volumes on the history of Wales from the earliest times down to the conquest by Edward I in 1283 appeared in 1911, the written history of Wales in any serious sense cannot be said to have existed. Professor Lord Kenneth Morgan -Cercles

Contents

Part One: A Historian's Life 1 Welsh Liverpool, 1861-77 2 Expanding Horizons: Aberystwyth and Oxford, 1877-85 3 Towards A History of Wales, 1885-1911 4 Historian of Wales, 1911-47 Part Two: The Making of a Nation 5 A Nation Revived: Lloyd and Modern Wales 6 Assumptions and Methods 7 Origins: From Prehistoric to Post-Roman Wales 8 Tribal Wales: Society and the Church 9 Princely Wales: Rulers as Nation Builders Conclusion: Creating Welsh History?

About the Author(s)

Author(s): Huw Pryce

Huw Pryce is Professor of Welsh History at Bangor University.

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