Hardback : £74.83
A series which is a model of its kind. Edmund King, History The wide-ranging articles collected here represent the cutting edge of recent Anglo-Norman scholarship. Topics include English kingship, legends of the Battle of Bouvines, ideas of empire, the practicalities of child kingship, and female rulership in Brittany. The volume continues in its proud tradition of source analysis: there are studies of northern French urban franchises, and Norman charters and a logistical take on the making of the Domesday Book, while narrative sources are represented in the vernacular by a study of Herman of Valenciennes' Bible and in Latin by the historiography of Robert of Torigni and Ralph Niger. Further contributions focus on the twelfth-century ecclesiastical officers Abbot Peter the Venerable and Archbishop Thomas Becket, and the volume is completed with an analysis of the concept of economic resources with respect to Normandy. Contributors: Mathieu Arnoux, JamesBarnaby, Dominique Barthelemy, Thomas Bisson, Scott G. Bruce, Francis Gingras, Frederique Lachaud, Anne E. Lester, C.P. Lewis, Amy Livingstone, Fanny Madeline, Nicholas Vincent, Emily Ward
A series which is a model of its kind. Edmund King, History The wide-ranging articles collected here represent the cutting edge of recent Anglo-Norman scholarship. Topics include English kingship, legends of the Battle of Bouvines, ideas of empire, the practicalities of child kingship, and female rulership in Brittany. The volume continues in its proud tradition of source analysis: there are studies of northern French urban franchises, and Norman charters and a logistical take on the making of the Domesday Book, while narrative sources are represented in the vernacular by a study of Herman of Valenciennes' Bible and in Latin by the historiography of Robert of Torigni and Ralph Niger. Further contributions focus on the twelfth-century ecclesiastical officers Abbot Peter the Venerable and Archbishop Thomas Becket, and the volume is completed with an analysis of the concept of economic resources with respect to Normandy. Contributors: Mathieu Arnoux, JamesBarnaby, Dominique Barthelemy, Thomas Bisson, Scott G. Bruce, Francis Gingras, Frederique Lachaud, Anne E. Lester, C.P. Lewis, Amy Livingstone, Fanny Madeline, Nicholas Vincent, Emily Ward
English Kingship: the View from Paris, 1066-1204 - Nicholas
Vincent
Audacity and Ambition in Early Norman England and the Big Stuff of
the Conquest - C P Lewis
Ressources et croissance dans le monde anglo-normand: sources et
hypthèses - Mathieu Arnoux
Becket vult: the Appropriation of St Thomas Becket's Image during
the Canterbury Dispute, 1184-1200 - James Barnaby
La Bataille de Bouvines reconsiderée - Dominique Barthelemy
Abbot Peter the Venerable's two Missions to England (1130 and
1155/1156) - Scott G. Bruce
La production manuscrite anglo-normande et la Bible d'Herman de
Valenciennes: usage et réception d'un livre vernaculaire (XIIe-XIVe
siècles) - Francis Gingras
Ralph Niger and the Books of Kings - Frédérique Lachaud
From Captivity to Liberation: the Ideology and Practice of
Franchise in Crusading France - Anne E. Lester
'Daughter of Fulk, Glory of Brittany': Countess Ermengarde of
Brittany, (c.1070-1147) - Amy Livingstone
The Idea of 'Empire' as Hegemonic Power under the Norman and
Plantagenet Kings (1066-1204) - Fanny Madeline
Child Kingship and Notions of (Im)maturity in North-Western Europe,
1050-1262 - Emily Ward
A Micro-Economy of Salvation: Further Thoughts on the 'Annuary' of
Robert of Torigni - Thomas Bisson
Elisabeth van Houts is Honorary Professor of European Medieval History, University of Cambridge, and Fellow of Emmanuel College. James Barnaby is an independent historian of the Central and Later Middle Ages. He has taught at the University of East Anglia, where he gained his doctorate. NICHOLAS VINCENT is Professor of Medieval History at the University of East Anglia and a Fellow of the British Academy
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