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Meaning of anti-Gallicanism | Babel Free

Noun CEFR C2

Definitions

  1. Dislike of the French.
    uncountable
  2. Opposition to Gallicanism.
    uncountable

Examples

“It seems to me that we have here an insight into why francophobia was such a popular and such an acceptable radical attitude in this period. Present-day historians, embarrassed by or condescending about plebeian anti-gallicanism in the eighteenth century and after, forget that it was in large part a natural continuum of the earlier widespread acceptance of Norman yoke theories […]”
“The image of Cobbett as “Peter Porcupine,” the indefatigable advocate of Great Britain, emerged only slowly. […] Although he believed that his greatest achievement in the 1790s was to have “untied the tongue of British attachment” in America, his remarkable political influence rested on another achievement: his revival of a robust and deeply rooted tradition of American anti-Gallicanism.”
“For one, anti-French sentiment was far more changeable and circumscribed than has generally been presumed […]. Insofar as anti-Gallicanism became a feature of colonial life, it was part of a much more complex cultural politics.”
“But Lamennais’s anti-Gallicanism is throughout an unmistakable presence: the church is not the creature of the state, which, on Gallican principles – its spurious ‘liberties’ – it could easily become.”

CEFR level

C2
Mastery
This word is part of the CEFR C2 vocabulary — mastery level.

See also

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