Edward Augustus Freeman (1823 1892) was Regius Professor of Modern
History at Oxford, and one of the pre-eminent historians of his
generation. Politics was a constant interest for Freeman, who was
also a regular contributor to the Saturday Review. While he wrote
on a variety of historical topics, from ancient Greece to the
German Federation, and had a great interest in architecture, this
six-volume work, published between 1867 and 1879, was his magnum
opus. Freeman reconsiders how the history of the Conquest is
understood and examines its causes and results. Volume 5 considers
the effects of the Conquest, examining the reigns of William Rufus,
Henry I, and Stephen in the light of those effects, rather than
providing a narrative history of these reigns. Language and
architecture also come under analysis in this volume.
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