Âé¶¹´«Ã½AV

Article

Interdependence day and Magna Charta: James Hamilton's public diplomacy in the Anglo-world, 1907¨C1940s

Details

Citation

MacRaild DM, Ellis S & Bowman S (2014) Interdependence day and Magna Charta: James Hamilton's public diplomacy in the Anglo-world, 1907¨C1940s. Journal of Transatlantic Studies, 12 (2), pp. 140-162. https://doi.org/10.1080/14794012.2014.900967

Abstract
This article discusses the use of the Magna Charta as a universal symbol of democracy in the Anglo-world in the early twentieth century. It focuses on the role played by one group, the International Magna Charta Day Association (IMCDA), in a global movement to unite and educate the English-speaking peoples through the promotion of the great charter. In searching for a worldwide Anglo-Saxon patriotism, this society promoted strong connections and the laudation of what it called ¡®Interdependence Day¡¯. This article concludes that although the IMCDA may have been only one element in the widening and strengthening of Anglo-world connections, it was an important one that has been previously neglected.

Keywords
Magna Charta; Magna Charta Day; English-speaking peoples: Anglo-Saxonism; Anglo-American relations; Anglo-world; J.W. Hamilton; public diplomacy

Journal
Journal of Transatlantic Studies: Volume 12, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date31/12/2014
Publication date online30/04/2014
Date accepted by journal30/04/2014
URL
ISSN1479-4012
eISSN1754-1018

People (1)

Dr Stephen Bowman

Dr Stephen Bowman

Lecturer in British Political History, History

Files (1)