
Contents
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Antiquaries Antiquaries
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Progressing around Wales: Early Modern Writers and the Experience of Travel Progressing around Wales: Early Modern Writers and the Experience of Travel
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Tours before 1760: Swift and after Tours before 1760: Swift and after
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‘Pererin wyf’: Itinerancy and Journeys of the Spirit ‘Pererin wyf’: Itinerancy and Journeys of the Spirit
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Conclusion Conclusion
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1 Travel Writing in Wales, 1188–1700
Get accessProfessor of Celtic Studies
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Published:May 2024
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Abstract
This chapter looks at writing about Wales before the middle of the eighteenth century, beginning with the ‘Itinerary’ of Gerald of Wales, on a mission to raise troops for the Third Crusade in 1188. Building on work by John Cramsie and Daniel Woolf, it discusses works by John Leland, William Camden, Edward Lhuyd, and other early antiquarians to demonstrate the intensely intertextual nature of tour writing from Gerald’s work onwards. Borrowings, citations, and critiques of previous writers are a distinctive feature of the genre, and this has implications for what Woolf has called the ‘social circulation of the past’. Information and ideas seed and re-seed themselves with each new iteration of a journey, forming a body of ‘general knowledge’ in later tourist encounters with key sites. The chapter ends with a discussion of satirical ‘Welsh Tours’ and the accounts of early Methodist itinerants.
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