Seems like most of England is named like a map for a shitty D&D campaign.
Naw.. It's that even Tolkien couldn't out-Fantasy some of the actual Shire names, thus hamstringing the derivative works...
(Good morning, all.)
ETA:
More Jórvík than Northumbria. Northumbria extended further north to Hadrian's Wall.
Also, as being "North of the Humber", it excludes significant parts of Yorkshire, including The Peoples Republic Of South Yorkshire (as previously ruled by King Arthur. Scargill, that is).
I have been wikipediing up my memory and decided that the old British kingdoms of Elmet and Ebrauc might do, as well as Rheged. Or why not go full out Hen Ogledd?
Most fitting is, of course, The Kingdom of Northern England, the realm of John Uskglass, immortal king of York, Faerie, and a tiny piece of Hell itself.
But still, you don't see Cornwall or Essex or Norfolk calling for such a thing, and they were all proto-English kingdoms as well.
Neither Essex nor Norfolk is proto-English unless by that you mean proto-England - the difference is pretty significant.
As for Cornwall,
well:
a Cornish nationalist, centre-left political party in Cornwall, United Kingdom. It primarily campaigns for devolution to Cornwall in the form of a Cornish Assembly, as well as social democracy and environmental protection.
If anything the reason they want a Geordie Assembly has more to do with the north/south England split than anything else. They want to keep our from under the loaferne soles of those posh bastards down south.
Yeah, the best news for Corbyn is that his position as leader (and his brand of leftist) in now entrenched. I'm sure there were a lot of Laor MPs who would have like for Laor to take a beating everywhere except their constituency to habe an excuse to oust Corbyn.
Nah, 40 years of rot don't wash easily. If anything it is much more likely to corrupt Corbyn instead. Can't stop the trend train, neoliberalism knows no brakes.