Conquests in Eleventh-Century England: 1016, 1066
β Scribed by Laura Ashe (editor)
- Publisher
- Boydell Press
- Year
- 2020
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 444
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Eleventh-century England suffered two devastating conquests, each bringing the rule of a foreign king and the imposition of a new regime. Yet only the second event, the Norman Conquest of 1066, has been credited with the impact and influence of a permanent transformation. Half a century earlier, the Danish conquest of 1016 had nonetheless marked the painful culmination of decades of raiding and invasion - and more importantly, of centuries of England's conflict and cooperation with the Scandinavian world - and the Normans themselves were a part of that world. Without 1016, the conquest of 1066 could never have happened as it did: and yet disciplinary fragmentation in the study of eleventh-century England has ensured that a gulf separates the conquests in modern scholarship. The essays in this volume offer multidisciplinary perspectives on a century of conquest: in politics, law, governance, and religion; in art, literature, economics, and culture; and in the lives and experiences of peoples in a changing, febrile, and hybrid society. Crucially, it moves beyond an insular perspective, placing England within its British, Scandinavian, and European contexts; and in reaching across conquests connects the tenth century and earlier with the twelfth century and beyond, seeing the continuities in England's Anglo-Saxon, Danish, Norman, and Angevin elite cultureand rulership. The chapters break new ground in the documentary evidence and give fresh insights into the whole historical landscape, whilst fully engaging with the importance, influence, and effects of England's eleventh-centuryconquests, both separately and together. LAURA ASHE is Professor of English Literature and Fellow and Tutor in English, Worcester College, Oxford; EMILY JOAN WARD is Moses and Mary Finley Research Fellow, Darwin College, Cambridge. Contributors: Timothy Bolton, Stephanie Mooers Christelow, Julia Crick, Sarah Foot, John Gillingham, Charles Insley, Catherine Karkov, Lois Lane, Benjamin Savill, Peter Sigurdson Lunga, Niels Lund, Rory Naismith, Bruce O'Brien, Rebecca Thomas, Elizabeth M. Tyler, Elisabeth van Houts, Emily Joan Ward.
β¦ Table of Contents
Frontcover
Contents
Preface
List of Illustrations
Abbreviations
I CONQUESTS, KINGS AND GOVERNMENT
1 Why 1016 Matters; or, The Politics of Memory and Identity in
Cnutβs Kingdom
2 Why Did Cnut Conquer England?
3 Conquest and the Law
4 Cnut and William: A Comparison
5 Currency and Conquest in Eleventh-Century England
6 Episcopal Exon? Exeter, Cathedral Library, MS 3500 and the Role
of Bishops in the Domesday Survey
II CONQUESTS, SOCIETY AND CULTURE
7 Conquest and Manuscript Culture
8 Kings, Saints and Conquests
9 Cultures of Conquest: Warfare and Enslavement in Britain Before
and After 1066
10 Conquest and Material Culture
11 Remapping Literary History: The Patronage of English Queens across
the Norman Conquest
12 Queens and Demons: Women in English Royal Genealogies,
c. 1100βc. 1223
13 French Women in Early Norman England: The Case of Hawise
of Bacqueville
III CONQUESTS: PERSPECTIVES FROM BEYOND ENGLAND
14 English Contact with the European Mainland Throughout the
Eleventh Century
15 The View from Wales: Anglo-Welsh Relations in the Time of
Englandβs Conquests
16 England and the Papacy Between Two Conquests: The Shadow of
βReformβ
17 Child Kings and the Norman Conquest: Representations of
Association and Succession
Bibliography
Index
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
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The Viking Conquest of England in 1016 β a far tougher and more brutal campaign than the Norman Conquest exactly half a century later β saw two great warriors, the Danish prince Cnut and his equally ruthless English opponent King Edmund Ironside, fight an epic campaign. Cnut sailed in two hundred lo
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