Forking Britannia: A Love Letter Written on a Sea Fort
By Guest contributor: Joseph Mckinney, Startup Societies Foundation
I read the Memoir of SealandтАЩs Prince Michael looking for a feud with Britain. I found an outpost.
From a distance, Sealand looks like a prank that got out of hand: two concrete towers in the North Sea, a flag, a title, a story that sounds like it was invented over the third pint and then stubbornly made real out of spite.
Up close, at least as the Bates family tells it, it reads differently. Less тАЬscrew youтАЭ, and more тАЬthis mattered to meтАЭ. Less contempt, more grief with its sleeves rolled up.
Sealand isnтАЩt antiтАСBritain. ItтАЩs Britain distilled, compressed over two concrete towers.
A fork, not a feud.
1) Whitehall, With a Rope Ladder┬а
The British state has a particular way of taking itself seriously. It likes a file. It likes a queu. It likes a committee. It likes a name for the thing itтАЩs about to do, as if naming it makes it tidier, less absurd, less human.
In Michael BatesтАЩs memoir, the moment the state finally moves against Sealand arrives with the sort of theatrical sobriety you can almost smell: coded messages, stern faces, and a plan titled тАЬPlan B: Operation Gallows.тАЭ
ItтАЩs an excellent name, and it lasts about thirty seconds.
Because then the men arrive at the physical edge of the world, where plans meet wind. Their sleekness doesnтАЩt translate to salt spray. The ladder slaps against wet concrete. The sea heaves below. The fort rises like a dare.
And the wouldтАСbe agents, those trained, competent limbs of authority, have to climb. As Bates tells it, the grand entrance becomes a small slapstick: bodies hauled like awkward luggage, lifejackets bobbing, boots scraping, the kind of undignified flailing youтАЩd expect at a swimming pool, not a sovereignty dispute.
The line Bates drops is almost too British to be real: тАЬIf you canтАЩt trust a British Bobby, whom can you trust?тАЭ
I laughed when I first read it. Not because itтАЩs mean, but because itтАЩs affectionate. ItтАЩs a joke you make when youтАЩre frightened and trying not to show it. A joke that says: I can see the human inside the uniform.
Somewhere in this scene there is a thermos. (There is always a thermos.) Sea wind makes your eyes water. Your hands smell of rope and metal. You learn, with a little jolt of humility, that dignity is not guaranteed just because someone called you sir.
From the start, Sealand reads like Britain arguing with one of its own peculiar children, half comedy, half courage, all salt.
2) The Smirk I Brought With Me
I once made a Sealand joke at a dinner table, something lazy about a micronation and cosplay sovereignty, and it landed like a wet napkin. Someone across from me didnтАЩt get angry. They just looked tired, the way you look when you realise youтАЩre hearing the same shallow joke for the thousandth time. I went home slightly embarrassed and, out of sheer selfтАСdefence, started reading properly.
What I found, in the memoir and the familyтАЩs account, was not resentment but loyalty. A fierce attachment to an older British selfтАСimage: common law as shelter, not theatre; fairness as instinct; speech and property and personal dignity as constraints on power, not favours from it.
The Bates family doesnтАЩt sound like people who hate Britain. They sound like people who refuse to deal with disappointment by pretending they never loved it.
ThereтАЩs a difference between leaving a house because you despise it and leaving because you canтАЩt stand to watch it rot while everyone insists the damp is only the season.
3) Duty, Then Horizon
If Sealand were only floating cosplay, it wouldnтАЩt last. It would collapse under the first hard question.
What holds it together, in BatesтАЩs telling, is a particular kind of British life-pattern: service, then adventure; duty, then defiance; courage treated as ordinary.
Roy Bates is presented as wartime stock. He volunteers young. His war runs through faraway places with the blunt geography of old newsreels, Africa, the Middle East, Italy. He is wounded. He returns, and the returning never quite finishes the story.
The most revealing parts arenтАЩt the grand ones. TheyтАЩre the understatements. Bates recounts an Italian barber whose garlic breath was, apparently, the worst part of the whole affair. ItтАЩs funny, and itтАЩs also a moral temperament: misery gets reported like weather. You donтАЩt dramatise; you carry on.
Even RoyтАЩs adventures abroad (gunfire somewhere in Spain, everyone ducking, Roy staying seated) carry that oddly British blend of bravado and denial. The kind of man who half believes, irrationally, that being an Englishman is armour.
Behind Roy is lineage. The memoir reaches back to a grandfatherтАЩs First World War citationтАФdevotion to duty, calm under fireтАФthe language of an island that once made a virtue out of not flinching.
However you feel about war, that inheritance matters. It explains why SealandтАЩs story doesnтАЩt smell like grievance. It smells like duty, plus the itch for the horizon.
4) The Better Angels, Turning Up Unannounced
One of the strangest pleasures of the Sealand story is how often BritainтАЩs better angels wander into it, uninvited.
In the memoirтАЩs telling, the government considers a violent solution and then doesnтАЩt take it. Not because it canтАЩt, but because it chooses not to. The calculation isnтАЩt only legal; itтАЩs moral, practical, and reputational. DonтАЩt make a mess youтАЩll be ashamed of later.
ThereтАЩs etiquette, too. Taking the fort when only a woman is present would be, without anyone needing to say so, bad form.
Then the Navy appears, not as a threat but as a chain of small decencies. Sealanders are warned about weather. Newspapers arrive. A crewman presses a mug into someoneтАЩs hand. Bates notes the shipboard tradition: a guest doesnтАЩt buy the drink or the cigarette. ItтАЩs a tiny rule, but it contains a whole moral universe: hospitality as duty; generosity as habit, not performance.
There is navy rum, too, because of course there is. The British can be incredibly stern, but they will also feed you, warm you, and then pretend they didnтАЩt notice you needed it.
If you love Britain, scenes like that ache. They show the country as it likes to imagine itself: restrained, fair, quietly competent, capable of humour and mercy at the same time.
5) An Island, a Flag, a Lawyer
The origin story that sticks isnтАЩt the titles. ItтАЩs a line tossed into a marriage like a joke.
тАЬWell darling, you now have your own island.тАЭ
In the memoir, the response is not a proclamation but practical disappointment: no palm trees, no sunshineтАУperhaps at least a flag. The romance of empire reduced to weather.
And then, because Britain cannot help itself, the lawyer enters.
Roy Bates, as the family tells it, asks a retired City solicitor a question that only someone who half worships the rules would dare to ask: if I make it my own country, who can stop me?
The answer is not a speech. ItтАЩs a paradox. тАЬI donтАЩt think anyone can stop youтАж but of course, you canтАЩt do it.тАЭ
There it is: the strange British love of edge cases. The belief that law is real, and also the suspicion that law contains hidden doors for the audacious.
Sealand blooms in that thin space between you canтАЩt and, apparently, nobody will. ItтАЩs the English home-is-his-castle instinct taken offshore and made literal: if the castle is yours, and itтАЩs beyond the line, then perhaps it is yours in a deeper way.
A fork, not a feud.
6) DonтАЩt Look Down
You can talk about sovereignty until you fall asleep. SealandтАЩs real argument is physical.
ItтАЩs the taste of salt on your lips. The way wind makes you blink hard. The rope ladder slapping wet concrete like itтАЩs trying to leave. The small, private panic of height.
In the memoir, a father brings his son to the ladder and gives guidance the way fathers do when theyтАЩre trying to pass on courage without calling it that: тАЬWhatever you do, son, donтАЩt look down!тАЭ
Of course the boy looks down.
The sea is a moving sheet of iron. Your knees have an opinion about it. Your fingers tighten until they ache. You learn, very quickly, that bravery isnтАЩt a speech. ItтАЩs deciding to keep your eyes on the next rung.
When the boy finally steps onto the fort, it doesnтАЩt feel like a country. It feels like a relic; an abandoned wartime throat of corridors and riveted doors, a place with the stale air of men who once lived there and left. Bates describes the interior like a haunted house that still carries human traces: an empty mess, scattered remnants, the sense of a ship whose crew vanished between one meal and the next.
Outside, the birds sit and watch, cormorants lined up like black-clad jurors. The fort is stubborn enough to pretend it can bargain with the sea.
This is where the Bilbo Baggins comparison stops being cute and becomes accurate. The archetypal Briton is not only the conqueror; itтАЩs the reluctant adventurer. The person who loves home but canтАЩt resist the call to go out, risk it, come back changed, and then quietly insist that the world has rules worth defending.
There and back again, but with rust under your fingernails.
7) A Loyalty You Can Put Your Hands On
The memoir doesnтАЩt spend much time making a point. It mostly tells stories, sometimes boastful, sometimes funny, sometimes melancholy, and lets the reader feel the ache in the gaps.
One of those gaps is patriotism.
Not the performative kind, not the kind that needs an enemy to stay warm. The quieter kind: the sense that Britain stands for something worth being proud of, even when Britain doesnтАЩt always live up to it.
Bates is explicit, in his own way, that the familyтАЩs project was never hatred. His father, he insists, was no traitor to the homeland; if Roy had been young and fit enough, heтАЩd have fought again for Queen and country. ThatтАЩs the tone: disappointed, yes, but not disloyal.
It is possible to love a place and still say: something has gone wrong. ItтАЩs possible to feel homesick while still living in the house.
You see that homesickness in small objects. In the shipboard mug pressed into a hand. In the stubborn insistence on a flag even when there are no palm trees. In the mockтАСLatin motto people repeat with a grin that doesnтАЩt quite hide the grit behind it, nil illigitimi carborundum, because humour is how you carry stubbornness without calling it righteousness.
And yes, you notice the empire sitting in the room. In the Bates generation thereтАЩs admiration for imperial confidence: bravery, institutionтАСbuilding, an island that once believed it could make the world legible. You can acknowledge that without pretending empire was only noble. It did harm, too; it extracted and coerced; it left scars that outlast the flags. Love grows up when it stops needing the past to be spotless.
Sealand, in that grown-up register, reads as a place to put loyalty when the mainline feels confusing. Not a replacement for Britain, but a stripped-down symbol of Britishness: liberty, property, decency, courage, humour. Less about power, more about character.
8) The Shadow
Every family story becomes a handingтАСover.
Not a title. A weight.
In BatesтАЩs telling, Roy says to his son: тАЬOne day, when I am gone, you will be my shadow walking the earth.тАЭ
It lands because it isnтАЩt sentimental. ItтАЩs practical. A father admitting, in his own way, that the thing he built is fragile. It will only survive if someone chooses, again and again, to carry it.
A fork, not a feud.
The last image I canтАЩt shake isnтАЩt a proclamation. ItтАЩs smaller.
A mug on a naval ship, held out without ceremony.
A ladder in wind, ropes wet, your palms salty, your pride misbehaving.
Concrete underfoot. Rust in the air.
And below it all, the sea, grey, moving, indifferent, making the rope creak against the fortтАЩs skin as if to say you can call this a country if you like. Then the ladder slapped the concrete again, impatient and alive.
E Mare Libertas!
Sealand was never kept alive by spectators. It has endured because people chose to climb the ladder, steady themselves in the wind, and build where others saw only rust and open water. If something in this story speaks to you, bring your unique skills and become a Sealand Builder so you can shape SealandтАЩs next chapter through ideas, craft, enterprise, and civic spirit. The sea fortress stands. Its next chapter belongs to those willing to climb.

1 рд╡рд┐рдЪрд╛рд░ рдкрд░ тАЬForking Britannia: A Love Letter Written on a Sea FortтАЭ
Citizen
I am acting as a representative for a multi-jurisdictional strategic asset management protocol. My current inquiry pertains to the viability of extraterritorial registry for sovereign-level data assets, currently under review by various international observers, including diplomatic missions in Ankara.
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