PowerE.: “A Plea for the Middle Ages,”Economica (1922), 173–80.
2.
HaskinsC. H.: Studies in Mediæval Culture, Ch. IV.
3.
FebvreL.: A Geographical Introduction to History (1925), 311.
4.
For a general account, see HintzeHedwig: “Regionalism,” article in Encyclopædia of the Social Sciences (1934), ed. SeligmanE. R. A., XIII, 208–18.
5.
In this connexion see FawcettC. B.: “The Provinces of England” (1919), and “The Natural Divisions of England,”Geographical Journal (1917); also Fabian Society pamphlets: “New Heptarchy Series”; also GeddesP.: Cities in Evolution.
6.
American Geographical Review, XXVIII (1938), 352.
7.
SoltauR. H.: “Regionalism and Administrative Decentralization in France,”Economica (1922), 166–72.
8.
Charles-Brun: Le Régionalisme (1911), bibliography; also DesthieuxF. Jean: L'Evolution Régionaliste (1918); HennessyJ.: Régions de France 1911–16 (1916); HauserH.: Le Problème du Régionalisme (1924).
9.
DesthieuxF. Jean: op. cit., 127–31.
10.
VallauxC.: “Les Aspirations Régionalistes et la Géographie,”Mercure de France, 1, VIII (1928), 568 ff.
11.
Charles-Brun: op. cit., 239–65.
12.
de la BlacheP. V.: “Régions Françaises,”Rev. de Paris (1910), 821–49.
13.
FoncinP.: Les Pays de France (1898), 22–7.
14.
VallauxC.: art. cit.; see also GalloisL.: Régions Naturelles et Nom de Pays (1908), 230.
15.
TurnerF. J.: The Significance of Sections in American History (1933); see also MumfordL. on “Regionalism,” Sociological Review (1927), XIX, 277; (1928) XX, 18, 131; also Recent Social Trends in the U.S.A. (1933), II, 1495.
16.
KeyserlingH.: Atlantic Monthly (1929), 311.
17.
VanceR. B.: Human Geography of the South (1932), 17.
18.
GrasN. S. B.: “Regionalism and Nationalism,”Foreign Affairs, VII, 459.
MillH. R.: “A Fragment of the Geography of England: S.W. Sussex,”Geographical Journal (1900), XV, 353–73.
21.
HerbertsonA. J.: “The Major Natural Regions,”Geographical Journal (1905), XXV.
22.
RoxbyP. M.: “Historical Geography of East Anglia,”Geographical Teacher (1909–10), 128–44.
23.
UnsteadJ. F.: “A Synthetic Method of Determining Geographical Regions,”Geographical Journal (1916), XLVIII; “Geographical Regions Illustrated by Reference to the Iberian Peninsula,”Scottish Geographical Magazine (1926), XLII, 159–70. For a summary of the present position, see “Classifications of Regions of the World” (Report of a committee of the Geographical Association), Geography (1937), XXII, 253.
24.
Demangeon: Picardie (1905); Blanchard: Flandres (1906); Vallaux: La Basse Bretagne (1907); Levainville, Le Morvan (1909).
25.
BritainGreat: Essays in Regional Geography, ed. OgilvieA. (1928).
26.
SauerC. O.: “The Survey Method in Geography and its Objectives,”Annals Assoc. American Geographers (1924).
27.
BowmanI.: Geography in Relation to the Social Sciences (1934), Ch. V.
28.
LeighleyJ.: “Some Comments on Contemporary Geographic Method,”Annals Assoc. American Geographers (1937), 125–41.
29.
HerbertsonA. J.: “The Higher Units,”Scientia, 1913.
30.
DemangeonA.: La Picardie (1905), 455–6.
31.
KeyserlingH.: art. cit., 303.
32.
CreightonM.: Reviews and Addresses, 235–6 (“The Northumbrian Border”).
33.
HardyT.: Preface of 1895–1902 to Far from the Madding Crowd (1874).
34.
A curious forerunner of a regional cycle in literature is to be found in the Icelandic Sagas, in many of which the setting is a very restricted one, usually a valley, and in which the story arises out of the everyday work of the community.
35.
EloesserA.: Modem German Literature (1933), 11.
36.
British Academy Italian Lecture (1929): “Romanticism and Regionalism.”
37.
Charles-Brun: Le Roman Social en France au XIXme siècle, Ch. IV, “Le Régionalisme dans le Roman,” 304–5.
38.
BrunhesJ.: Human Geography (trans. 1920), 544.
39.
Revel: Hôtes de l'Estuaire.
40.
Quoted FebvreL.: op. cit., 63, with discussion.
41.
BellocH.: On Everything, 167.
42.
Charles-Brun: op. cit.
43.
SauerC. O.: Geography of the Pennyroyal (1927), p. x.
44.
LeighleyJ.: art. cit.
45.
de la BlacheP. V.: The Personality of France (trans. 1928), 14.