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Domination and Lordship - Scotland, 1070-1230 (Paperback)
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Domination and Lordship - Scotland, 1070-1230 (Paperback)
Series: New Edinburgh History of Scotland, v. 3
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This volume centres upon the era conventionally labelled the
'Making of the kingdom', or the 'Anglo-Norman' era in Scottish
history. It seeks a balance between traditional historiographical
concentration on the 'feudalisation' of Scottish society as part of
the wholesale importation of alien cultural traditions by a
'modernising' monarchy and more recent emphasis on the continuing
vitality and centrality of Gaelic culture and traditions within the
twelfth- and early thirteenth-century kingdom. Part I explores the
transition from the Gaelic kingship of Alba into the hybridised
medieval state and traces Scotland's role as both dominated and
dominator. It examines the redefinition of relationships with
England, Gaelic magnates within Scotland's traditional territorial
heartland and with autonomous/independent mainland and insular
powers. These interrelationships form the central theme of an
exploration of the struggle for political domination of the
northern mainland of Britain and the adjacent islands, the
mechanisms through which that domination was projected and
expressed, and the manner of its expression. Part II is a thematic
exploration of central aspects of the society and culture of late
eleventh- to early thirteenth-century Scotland which gave character
and substance to the emerging kingdom. It considers the
evolutionary growth of Scottish economic structures, changes in the
management of land-based resources, and the manner in which secular
power and authority were acquired and exercised. These themes are
developed in discussions of the emergence of urban communities and
in the creation of a new noble class in the twelfth century.
Religion is examined both in terms of the development of the Church
as an institution and through the religious experience of the lay
population.
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