Social Sciences, asked by sushreenibedita, 1 year ago

describe the strange case of Britain? Hint: refer to nationalism in Europe

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Answered by LakshmikanthP
15
Here it is , it is the strange case of Britain , it is a short note only ,

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Answered by dackpower
18

The strange case of Britain:

The transmutation of Great Britain into a nation-state was not an immediate method. There was no British government before the eighteenth century. People continuing in the British Isles were essentially Scots,  English, Welsh, and Irish. These ethnic organizations had separated governmental and cultural opinions.

In 1688, the English Parliament grabbed power from sovereignty. The Parliament established the Act of Union, 1707, by which England and Scotland were consolidated followings in the development of the ‘United Kingdom of Great Britain’.

This is an unfamiliar case because the establishment of nation-states in Great Britain was not a consequence of an immediate outbreak or substitution. It was preferably a consequence of the long-drawn-out method.

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