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This book discusses the development of the English Church during a
rich and turbulent two centuries of European history. It provides a
comprehensive survey covering the late Anglo-Saxon period through
the Norman Conquest and right across the Anglo-Norman period.
Professor Loyn addresses major themes in medieval history. He
begins with the pre-1066 period looking at the great Benedictine
monastic revival; he looks at the role of the Church in the
Conquest itself; the evidence of the Domesday Book and then
considers the activities of the Church in the turbulent years of
the Conqueror's successors. The book concludes with a discussion of
doctrine, belief and ritual.
This celebrated account of society and economy in England from the
first Anglo-Saxon settlements in the fifth century to the immediate
aftermath of the Norman Conquest has been a standard text since it
first appeared in 1962. This long-awaited second edition
incorporates the fruits of 30 years of subsequent scholarship. It
has been revised expanded and entirely reset.
This book discusses the development of the English Church
during a rich and turbulent two centuries of European history. It
provides a comprehensive survey covering the late Anglo-Saxon
period through the Norman Conquest and right across the
Anglo-Norman period. Professor Loyn addresses major themes in
medieval history. He begins with the pre-1066 period looking at the
great Benedictine monastic revival; he looks at the role of the
Church in the Conquest itself; the evidence of the Domesday Book
and then considers the activities of the Church in the turbulent
years of the Conqueror's successors. The book concludes with a
discussion of doctrine, belief and ritual.
This book gives an account of the social and economic developments
in Anglo-Saxon England from the first settlements in the fifth and
sixth centuries to the immediate aftermath of the Norman conquest.
The basic structure of analysis rests on the surviving legal and
literary evidence, buttressed by the latest findings of
archaeologists, numismatists, and art historians. In nearly 30
years since the first edition there has been great advance in
knowledge, notably on the numismatic side, but the main themes
remain constant and deal with a steady development from tribal
institutions where the social power of the kindred is dominant
towards the creation of a territorial kingdom where the chief bonds
that keep a community together concern lordship in all its
attributes.
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