In addition to the natural and political boundaries that had set it apart as a remote or unwelcoming place, what we would refer to today as West Cumbria was – as a cultural landscape – also, like Southern California or Berlin, separated from the body of land that it formed a part of, whether this was conceived of as ‘the North’, as ‘England’ or as ‘Britain’.
Read MoreA contemporary visualisation of Mackinder’s ‘British Mediterranean’ (Image: Google Maps) / 54°13'52.7"N 4°16'49.4"W