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1066 is still one of the most memorable dates in British history.
In this accessible text, Brian Golding explores the background to
the Norman invasion, the process of colonisation, and the impact of
the Normans on English society.
Thoroughly revised and updated in light of the latest scholarship,
the Second Edition of this established text features entirely new
sections on:
- the colonisation of towns
- women and the Conquest
- the impact of the Conquest on the peasantry.
Ideal for students, scholars and general readers alike, "Conquest
and Colonisation" is an essential introduction to this pivotal
period in British history.
This book is about making weather warnings more effective in saving
lives, property, infrastructure and livelihoods, but the underlying
theme of the book is partnership. The book represents the warning
process as a pathway linking observations to weather forecasts to
hazard forecasts to socio-economic impact forecasts to warning
messages to the protective decision, via a set of five bridges that
cross the divides between the relevant organisations and areas of
expertise. Each bridge represents the communication, translation
and interpretation of information as it passes from one area of
expertise to another and ultimately to the decision maker, who may
be a professional or a member of the public. The authors explore
the partnerships upon which each bridge is built, assess the
expertise and skills that each partner brings and the challenges of
communication between them, and discuss the structures and methods
of working that build effective partnerships. The book is ordered
according to the "first mile" paradigm in which the decision maker
comes first, and then the production chain through the warning and
forecast to the observations is considered second. This approach
emphasizes the importance of co-design and co-production throughout
the warning process. The book is targeted at professionals and
trainee professionals with a role in the warning chain, i.e. in
weather services, emergency management agencies, disaster risk
reduction agencies, risk management sections of infrastructure
agencies. This is an open access book.
The latest volume of the Haskins Society Journal, presenting recent
research on the Anglo-Saxon, Anglo-Norman, Viking and Angevin
worlds of the eleventh and twelfth centuries, includes topics
ranging from examinations of the cultures of power and peacemaking
to analyses of patterns of religious patronage, ethnic
stereotyping, law and theology, the Renaissance of the Twelfth
Century, and politics in the Ireland of Lionel of Antwerp.
Contributors: THOMAS N. BISSON, PAUL DALTON, BRIAN GOLDING,
TRACEY-ANNE COOPER, FLORIN CURTA, JASON TALIADOROS, GILBERT STACK,
ALEX NOVIKOFF, PETER CROOKS
Anglo-Norman Studies is nothing if not wide-ranging. One opens each
new volume expecting to find the unexpected - new light on old
arguments, new material, new angles. MEDIUM AEVUM This year's
volume continues to demonstrate the vitality of scholarship in this
area, across a variety of disciplines. Topics include the forging
of the Battle Abbey Chronicle; warring schoolmasters in
eleventh-century Rouen; theimpact of the Conquest on England; the
circulation of manuscripts between England and Normandy; and Earl
Harold and the Foundation of Waltham Holy Cross. Contributors:
Julie Barrau, Christopher Clark, Laura Cleaver, Stefan de Jong,
Simon Keynes, Tom Licence, Brigitte Meijns, Thomas O'Donnell,
Alheydis Plassman, Elisabeth Ridel, Chris Whittick, Ann Williams
New essays on the burgeoning of pastoral and devotional literature
in medieval England. Pastoral and devotional literature flourished
throughout the middle ages, and its growth and transmutations form
the focus of this collection. Ranging historically from the
difficulties of localizing Anglo-Saxon pastoral texts tothe reading
of women in late-medieval England, the individual essays survey its
development and its transformation into the literature of
vernacular spirituality. They offer both close examinations of
particular manuscripts, and of individual texts, including an
anonymous Speculum iuniroum, the Speculum religiosorum of Edmund of
Abingdon and later vernacular compositions and translations, such
as Handlyng Synne and Bonaventure's Lignum Vitae. The reading and
devotional use of texts by women and solitaries is also considered.
They therefore form an appropriate tribute to the work of Bella
Millett, whose research has done so much to advance our knowledge
of the field. Contributors: Alexandra Barratt, Mishtooni Bose,
Joseph Goering, Brian Golding, C. Annette Grise, Cate Gunn, Ralph
Hanna, Bob Hasenfratz, Catherine Innes-Parker, E. A. Jones, Derek
Pearsall, Elaine Treharne, Nicholas Watson, Jocelyn Wogan-Browne
All organisms--from the AIDS virus, to bacteria, to fish, to
humans--must evolve to survive. Despite the central place of
evolution within biology, there are many things that are still
poorly understood. For Charles Darwin, the driving force behind all
evolution was natural selection. More recently, evolutionary
biologists have considered that many mutations are essentially
neutral with respect to natural selection. Many questions remain.
Are molecular differences between species adaptive? Are differences
within species adaptive? Modern biotechnology has enabled us to
identify precisely the actual DNA structure from many individuals
within a population, and thus to see how these DNA sequences have
changed over time and to answer some of these questions. At the
same time, this knowledge poses new challenges to our ability to
understand the observed patterns. This exciting volume outlines the
biological problems, provides new perspectives on theoretical
treatments of the consequences of natural selection, examines the
consequences of molecular data, and relates molecular events to
speciation. Every evolutionary biologist will find it of interest.
This book is about making weather warnings more effective in saving
lives, property, infrastructure and livelihoods, but the underlying
theme of the book is partnership. The book represents the warning
process as a pathway linking observations to weather forecasts to
hazard forecasts to socio-economic impact forecasts to warning
messages to the protective decision, via a set of five bridges that
cross the divides between the relevant organisations and areas of
expertise. Each bridge represents the communication, translation
and interpretation of information as it passes from one area of
expertise to another and ultimately to the decision maker, who may
be a professional or a member of the public. The authors explore
the partnerships upon which each bridge is built, assess the
expertise and skills that each partner brings and the challenges of
communication between them, and discuss the structures and methods
of working that build effective partnerships. The book is ordered
according to the "first mile" paradigm in which the decision maker
comes first, and then the production chain through the warning and
forecast to the observations is considered second. This approach
emphasizes the importance of co-design and co-production throughout
the warning process. The book is targeted at professionals and
trainee professionals with a role in the warning chain, i.e. in
weather services, emergency management agencies, disaster risk
reduction agencies, risk management sections of infrastructure
agencies. This is an open access book.
This outstanding collection of essays honour a distinguished
scholar best known for her work on late medieval economy,
demography, and estate management, and on the monastic community at
Westminster. The uniting theme is the imprint of the church,
especially the monastic church, upon society at large.
Contributions range from the eighth to sixteenth centuries, with an
emphasis on the later middle ages, looking at urban religion,
monastic education, and the role of religious communities in
stimulating economic growth. Westminster Abbey figures prominently,
alongside essays on the effects of the Dissolution on nunneries,
the role of sanctuary in local communities, and on individuals such
as Matthew Paris and Robert of Knaresborough whose lives reveal
much about medieval England. In a worthy tribute to a great
medievalist, the contributors show us a world where the influence
of the cloister reached into almost every aspect of daily life.
One of the most striking features of the twelfth-century Church was
the growing desire of women for a greater role in the monastic
life. Contemporary monastic reformers responded to his demand in
various ways: some focused their appeal on women, others actively
discouraged all contact; but all were agreed on the need to
regularise religious life for women. In England this phenomenon is
most clearly seen in the emergence of the Gilbertine order, founded
by the Lincolnshire priest, Gilbert of Sempringham. The Gilbertines
were the only native monastic order in medieval England, and were
highly unusual in their provision for both nuns and canons. In the
first full-scale study since 1902, Brian Golding provides a
comprehensive account of the history of the order from its
mid-twelfth century origins up to the early fourteenth century. His
detailed analysis of the economy of the Gilbertines reveals much
about monastic revenue and organization, and about the order's
relations with their lay patrons and benefactors. Dr Golding goes
on to show that by 1300 the Gilbertine experiment was largely dead.
The founding ideals of a structure in which men and women could
live in harmony and order had given way to male domination and the
marginalization of the nuns. This stimulating and informative study
will be essential reading for all historians of medieval
monasticism.
From Patter-Paws the Fox and Sharp-Claws the Lobster to Lusty-Lion
and Trusty Mouse, young children will find the animated animal
characters in these stories enjoyable and inspiring. Together with
the lively detailed and expressive illustrations of Brian Gold, the
narrative content offers stimulus to the young child's imagination
and an encouragement to read. For the early reader in particular,
great care has been taken in crafting the structure and style of
the stories. The language, letter-patterns, progressions of word
structures and sound sequences have all been moulded with the
intention of building up the child's confidence - leading to the
more disciplined work further on in the book. The stories have been
graded according to these principles, together with others such as
repetition, rhyming devices, and the use of common words that form
the foundation of 'sight vocabulary'. The visual element has also
been considered in the layout, with larger typeface and smaller
paragraphs moving to more condensed print as the child's reading
ability gains strength.
Studies in economic, political and social history in 13c England.
This latest volume in the series of selected proceedings of the
conferences on thirteenth-century England, held biennially at
Newcastle upon Tyne since 1985, contains fourteen papers given at
the 1993 conference, most of them modified and expanded from their
oral versions. As previously, they range widely over a variety of
topics, embracing aspects of the political, legal, administrative,
economic, religious and social history of the period, from
merchantsand trade in medieval England to hagiographical writings
and the role of the household knights of Edward I; there is also an
important historiographical introductory essay considering past and
present approaches to the study of thirteenth-century England, and
indicating possible trends in the future. Contributors: M.T.
CLANCHY, PHILIP MORGAN, RUTH INGAMELLS, ROBERT BARTLETT, BRIAN
GOLDING, ANDREW H. HERSHEY, SCOTT L. WAUGH, JAMES MASSCHAELE,
R.H.BRITNELL, W.M. ORMROD, ANDREW F.McGUINNESS, R. MALCOLM HOGG,
MICHAEL BURGER, A.A.M. DUNCAN
Latest research on the chivalric ethos of western Europe,10c-15c,
from the practical (houses, armour) to the intellectual [conceptof
holy war, loyalty, etc.]. The Strawberry Hill conferences on
medieval knighthood, from which these volumes spring, aim to bring
together historians and literary scholars whose interests focus on
medieval chivalry, to bridge the gulf between the two areas of
specialisation and explore matters of common interest. Eight papers
cover a wide area, both territorially and chronologically,but
common themes emerge. One group of essays deals with the
embellishments of lordship, both architectural and heraldic,
studying residences and also developments in armour. A second group
concerns ideals which motivated the aristocracy of western Europe,
from the late 10th to the 15th centuries: romances, the Peace
movement ofAquitaine, holy war, and loyalty; concentration on
rationalism and free will in thewritings of the cultural circle
which revolved around Sir John Fastolfis identified as an important
element in the development of the EnglishRenaissance. Professor
CHRISTOPHER HARPER-BILL teaches in the Department of History,
University of East Anglia; Dr RUTH HARVEY is lecturer in French at
Royal Holloway, University of London. Contributors: ADRIAN AILES,
JEFFREY ASHCROFT, CHARLES COULSON,JONATHAN HUGHES, JANE MARTINDALE,
PETER NOBLE, MATTHEW STRICKLAND,ANN WILLIAMS.
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