Cornwall was not absorbed in one clean act of conquest. It was worn down, managed, and folded into England piece by piece - through frontier war, imposed administration, economic extraction, and the slow erosion of a people's language, institutions, and political memory. That is the argument at the heart of The Cornish Colony.
In this gripping work of narrative history, Edward J. Penrose traces Cornwall's path from the Celtic kingdom of Kernow to its uneasy place inside the modern United Kingdom. He follows the old frontier at the Tamar, the Saxon advance, the Duchy and the Stannaries, the great risings of 1497 and 1549, the death of Kernewek as a community language, the mining boom and collapse that scattered Cornish people across the world, and the modern revival that won recognition without restoring power.
This is not a book of romantic myth or easy nationalist slogans. It is a clear, evidence-based account of how a distinct Celtic people became, in administrative practice, simply the far end of England - and why the constitutional question never entirely went away.
For readers of British history, Celtic studies, constitutional history, and books that challenge the official story, The Cornish Colony offers a provocative and deeply researched history of a nation that was never fully named, and never fully forgotten.
Related Subjects
History