Dividing England along the Severn-Wash line
In the past I’ve been writing about ways to split up England for the purpose of making federalism work in the UK (see this and this and this).
For some bizarre reason one split I never suggested in these blog posts was in many ways the most obvious one.
As a linguist, I’ve been aware for years that English dialects split into two main groups: Southern English south of a line roughly from the Severn to the Wash, and Northern English north of this line. (Scottish dialects are a completely different story.) Three of the most important isoglosses are shown on the map on the right.
However, this line turns up in lots of other contexts, e.g.:
- Economics: “The current government’s attempts to bridge the north-south divide look doomed to failure. All but one of the 20 worst districts for hidden unemployment lie north of a line from the Severn to the Wash […]”
- Politics: “South of a line drawn from the Wash to the Severn estuary, Labour has just 10 seats outside of London.”
- Geology: “The line links the mouth of the River Tees between Redcar and Hartlepool in the north east of England with the mouth of the River Exe in Devon, the south west. The lowlands (sedimentary rocks) are predominant to the east of the line and higher land (igneous and metamorphic rocks) dominates to the west. As well as geology, those areas to the north and west of the line are generally wetter in climate than those to the east and south. Similar lines are commonly drawn, for similar purposes, between the Severn Estuary and the Wash, and between the Severn and the mouth of the River Trent.”
- Ornithology: “[The nightingale is] a secretive bird which likes nothing better than hiding in the middle of an impenetrable bush or thicket. In the UK they breed mostly south of the Severn-Wash line […]”
- Medicine: “Although the 1916 and 1917 waves of meningitis in the civil population were less intense than the primary wave of 1915 […], the underlying pattern of heightened disease activity in counties to the south of the Severn-Wash line persisted.”
I’m sure there are many more examples, but these should suffice to show that the Severn-Wash line is the most obvious border. North England and South England would be different in so many ways that they would quickly develop separate identities.
Obviously I don’t think England will ever be divided, but the consequence is that an undivided England will always dominate the UK to such a great extent that Scottish independence becomes a necessity.
(Crossposted from my personal blog.)
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The ‘Severn-Wash’ line also featured in Roman administrative boundaries up until 412 AD.
It was noted for many years that ‘Fosse Way’ the Roman road linking Lincoln to Exeter, did not ‘fit’ the pattern of radial roads centred on London which still define the A1, A2, A3, A4 and A5 routes.
Later archaeological opinion suggests Fosse Way was a boundary between the civil administration of the South East and the military occupation of the North West in the early Roman period.