England has been the same kingdom since the early 10th century.
It hasn’t, though. The modern UK is a union of England, Scotland and Ireland and was created by the Act of Union in 1800, and if you don’t count that then you go back to the Treaty of Union in 1707. That’s definitely older than the US so good point there, but either way modern Britain is hardly the same political entity as Norman England.
England is England. They have laws going back until before any of that. There’s continuity all the way. Joining a union does not mean your country stops existing.
That is… Fair enough. I guess I don’t understand the UK political system. Anyway that pushes us back to the mid-17th century when they tried their hand at being a Republic for a while.
It hasn’t, though. The modern UK is a union of England, Scotland and Ireland and was created by the Act of Union in 1800, and if you don’t count that then you go back to the Treaty of Union in 1707. That’s definitely older than the US so good point there, but either way modern Britain is hardly the same political entity as Norman England.
England is England. They have laws going back until before any of that. There’s continuity all the way. Joining a union does not mean your country stops existing.
It does in the sense that it stops being a country and becomes a part of a country. There’s no country called England today.
According to Wikipedia, anyway. I’m not sure what you think England is.
That is… Fair enough. I guess I don’t understand the UK political system. Anyway that pushes us back to the mid-17th century when they tried their hand at being a Republic for a while.