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Foreman: Although it is quite easy for us to characterise
the Royal line of England as a bunch of thieves, philanderers, murderers and
fratricides, the period when John O'Gaunt was alive was a time when the English
national identity was formed.
We had:
• Parliament conducted in English.
• Use of English as a poetic language (by Chaucer and the "Gawain poet" by
comparison with whom Chaucer looks pretty thin)
• Use of the red cross of Saint George as the English emblem (Richard II
ordered it to be worn by the English soldiers against "the auld enemy" the
Scots)
• Establishment of the Grand Tradition of the Travelling Hooligan going
across to the continent, getting into drunken brawls duffing up the locals and
generally making a flaming nuisance of ourselves with rowdy behaviour.
• Bringing back funny curios from holidays in Spain such as May revels, Maid
Marians and Morris dancing.
• Quite a few folkloric customs, which we now regard as being "TYPICALLY
ENGLISH", seem to have been introduced in this period of our history.
The mainspring was the celebration of Whitsuntide with a
carnival/pageant/choosing of a May Queen/holding a fair/Lamb/Youth/Whitsun
Ale. Read
more...
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