id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 6358 Pollard, A. F. (Albert Frederick) The History of England - a Study in Political Evolution .txt text/plain 44935 1979 59 possibility of a national state in Anglo-Saxon-Celtic-Danish England, these things were no more English than the government of India to-day One great stride had been taken in the making of the English nation, their French and English sovereigns; and those who preferred England share in national government which the development of taxation made By thus increasing the national control over the church in England, he The nationalism of the English church was the result rather than the the national church depends upon the common subjection of both its had made England a really national state passed away. National independence and popular self-government, although they were House, and by means of the Commons' financial powers, of the crown. Great Britain that the grant of self-government to colonies was the The modern national state is the most powerful political organism ever a common national government, in place of the individualistic forces ./cache/6358.txt ./txt/6358.txt