I recently started reading Stewart Binn's 4-parter series of historical novels.
In the first installment - Conquest - deals with the lead-up to and fall-out from the events at Stamford Bridge and Senlac Ridge in 1066. It got me thinking what England and/or the British Isles would have been like now had William not won the Battle of Senlac Ridge (aka the Battle of Hastings).
Would an Anglo-Saxon kingdom of England been as 'successful' in encompassing the surrounding nations? Would it have grown an Empire as has happened? Would it have been a fairer society without the strict societal divisions introduced by the Normans?
I then decided to have a bit of fun with the names of the 4 Labour leadership candidates. If you look at sites that dal with the origins of surnames (I used
www.surnamedb.com), you will find that Ms's Cooper and Kendall have good, solid Anglo-Saxon ancestry; Andy Burnham is likely Anglos-Saxon by descent as well, though the first written form of his name is in the 'de ...' format, suggesting a French/Norman link. Jeremy Corbyn, on the other hand, comes from a family with strong ties to the French and/or Normans. The name likely comes from the French word for a raven, and it is first recorded north of the Channel (or 'Sleeve') in the late 11th century -
The personal name was recorded as "Corbin(us)" in the Domesday Book of 1086 in Warwickshire and Kent. The surname itself is first recorded in the late 11th Century. Hugo de Corbun was mentioned in the Domesday Book of Norfolk and Suffolk. One Roger Corbin was listed in the Assize Court Rolls of Somerset in 1201, while Walter Corbyn is recorded in the Assize Court Rolls of Yorkshire in 1219.
http://www.surnamedb.com/Surname/Corbyn#ixzz3k6iXgB8zPlease do not read into this anything about who I believe ought to be elected!!