Barsetshire

Barsetshire is a fictional English county created by Anthony Trollope in the series of novels known as the Chronicles of Barsetshire. The county town and cathedral city is Barchester. Other towns in the novels include Silverbridge, Hogglestock and Greshamsbury.

Barsetshire
'Chronicles of Barsetshire' location
1953 map by Maurice Weightman published as endpapers for Thirkell's Jutland Cottage
Created byAnthony Trollope
GenreNovels
Information
TypeFictional county
Notable locationsBarchester, Silverbridge, Hogglestock
Notable charactersMr Septimus Harding, Bishop and Mrs Proudie, Dr Thomas Thorne, Archdeacon Theophilus Grantly

Origins

According to E. A. Freeman, Trollope conceded to him that Barset was in origin Somerset, although Barchester itself was primarily Winchester.[1] Other West Country counties like Dorset also contributed, and Gatherum Castle for example was imported from elsewhere, but such important elements as Plumstead Episcopi were drawn directly from Somerset life, in this case Huish Episcopi.[2] In sum, Barset was (in Trollope's own words) "a little bit of England which I have myself created".[3]

Political structure

In Doctor Thorne Trollope describes how the county, formerly represented by a single parliamentary constituency, was split into two constituencies, the more rural East Barsetshire, which includes Barchester, and the more commercial West Barsetshire, by the Reform Act 1832.[4] The borough of Silverbridge, according to the Palliser novels, also elects a Member of Parliament.

Interpretation

Adam Gopnik wrote in The New Yorker, "The six Barsetshire novels... are as much a triumph of the sympathetic imagination as Tolkien's books: it is an entirely invented world, which Trollope entered by transposing his broader knowledge of how the world works onto the inner workings of a cathedral town. The beauty of the idea, though, was that it gave him a way to condense into comedy the crisis of his time: in an age of reform, what would happen to the most conservative and settled institution in England when reform arrived for it, too?"[5]

Later fictional usage

The novel Barchester Pilgrimage (1935), and some of the episodes in Let Dons Delight (1939), both by Ronald Knox, refer to Barsetshire and its inhabitants.

Barsetshire was also used as the setting for a series of 29 novels by Angela Thirkell, written from 1930 to 1961. Thirkell's stories blend social satire with romance.[6] Her 1946 novel, Private Enterprise, explored discontent with the bureaucracy of the Attlee government – something echoed by Orville Prescott in his poem-review beginning "In Barchester all is not well".[7] Thirkell's final Barsetshire book, Three Score and Ten, was completed posthumously, and published in 1961.[8]

Barsetshire is also used in some of the Pullein-Thompson sisters books, usually referring to rival teams or as a nearby county.

Barchester and Barset were used as names for the fictional county in which St Trinians School was supposedly located in the original films.

The county is also mentioned in Michael Innes's Appleby and Honeybath where it is suggested that "the shifting of county boundaries has pretty well done away with Barsetshire" (p 27).

Kevin Kwan's novel Rich People Problems names Barsetshire and the village of Barchester as the family home of Lucien Montagu-Scott and his wife, Colette Bing.

Barchester

Barchester is used as a railway station and location for some of the 1942 Ealing Studios film The Black Sheep of Whitehall.

Barchester Cathedral was used as the setting for the ghost story The Stalls of Barchester Cathedral by M. R. James in his 1911 collection More Ghost Stories. It is also the setting for Charlie Lovett's 2017 literary mystery The Lost Book of the Grail; or, A Visitor's Guide to Barchester Cathedral.

William Golding refers to Barchester and its cathedral in passing in his 1967 novel The Pyramid, set in the small fictional market town of Stilbourne.

HMS Barsetshire, an obsolete County class cruiser, is the training ship for officer candidates in John Winton's We Joined The Navy(1959).

See also

References

  1. Sadleir, Michael (1945). Trollope: A Commentary. Constable & Co. p. 159. ISBN 978-0192810090.
  2. Sadleir, Michael (1945). Trollope: A Commentary. Constable & Co. pp. 159–164. ISBN 978-0192810090.
  3. Sadleir, Michael (1945). Trollope: A Commentary. Constable & Co. p. 417. ISBN 978-0192810090.
  4. A. Trollope, Doctor Thorne (London, 1947) p. 2
  5. Gopnik, Adam (May 4, 2015). "Trollope Trending". The New Yorker. 91 (11). ProQuest 1680967745.
  6. Klinkenborg, Verlyn (January 4, 2008). "Life, love and the pleasures of literature in Barsetshire". The New York Times. ProQuest 2222784880.
  7. J. Bew, Citizen Clemm (London 2016) p. 449-51
  8. Pippett, Aileen (May 20, 1962). "Back to Barsetshire". The New York Times. ProQuest 116038318.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.