As far as you know.
* DUN DUN DUNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN!
I have heard that at one time all Scots were, for a brief period, Englishmen when most of Scotland was still covered in ice. My ancestors would be included in that, either among the original Britons or possibly Irish. My DNA markers have not been confirmed. Besides those of immigrant descent who have come straight to Scotland of course and have thus never been Englishmen at all - interesting. Does that make a Pakistani immigrant to Scotland more Scottish than one of those old bigots complaining about all the foreigners? A trivial matter of course and unworthy of serious debate, I just found it interesting.
I'm not English yet even before reading that I'd have said I were British.
A thousand pardons, I always thought you were. Forgive me. Not that it would be a bad thing of course. Cough.
AND THEN OWLBREAD WAS THE ENGLISH
Well, technically I am considering Scotland was annexed by England which renamed itself Great Britain and then became the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. At least that's according to British government legal advice, which is a bit contentious.
But yes - back onto the subject of British nationalism and all the rest of it. I honestly think an English parliament or assembly and more talk of an inclusive "Englishness" would help remedy the problem of stuff like the BNP, UKIP, the British Freedom Party and so forth.
I know whenever politicians discuss things like an English parliament or regional assemblies (e.g. North East of England, South-West and so forth) they always talk about how most English regions rejected the proposals for the assemblies back in the early 2000s/late 90s. I think though that was at least partly a reaction to the fact that it wasn't an English parliament rather than just a regional one. After this big independence debate I am sure the number in favour of an English parliament would have increased hugely, thereby allowing for better representation for English people and also for regional assemblies to come back to the table, seeing as they wouldn't be at the expense of a national parliament. England should, in my opinion, be a federal state. It's just too large to be unitary.