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Recent research on the Anglo-Saxon, Anglo-Norman, Viking and
Angevin worlds of the eleventh and twelfth centuries. The latest
volume of the Haskins Society Journal presents recent research on
the Anglo-Saxon, Anglo-Norman, Viking and Angevin worlds of the
eleventh and twelfth centuries, and includes topics ranging from
emotional communities in the middle ages, English identity, and the
artistic construction of sacred space to the organization of royal
estates, Jewish credit operations, the English colonization of
Wales, and more. This volume of the Haskins Society Journal
includes papers read at the 21st Annual Conference of the Charles
Homer Haskins Society at Cornell University in October 2002 as well
as other submissions. Contributors include Barbara Rosenwein, Kate
Rambridge,Nicholas Brooks, Ryan Lavelle, Robin Mundill, Diane
Korngiebel, Ryan Crisp, Philadelphia Ricketts, Louis Hamilton, and
Brigitte Bedos-Rezak.
The so-called Investiture Conflict was a watershed moment in the
political life of the Latin West and the history of the papacy.
Occurring at a time of rapid social change and political expansion,
the eleventh-century reform movement became a debate centered on a
ritual: the investment of bishops with the signs of their sacred
and secular authority. The consecration of bishops, however, was
only one of several contemporaneous conflicts over the significance
of consecrations. Less well known is that which occurred over the
dedication of churches. This book provides an examination of the
consecration, placing the fundamental questions of the Gregorian
Reform and Investiture Conflict back into their original liturgical
framework. This context allows us to consider the symbolic richness
of the liturgy that attracted large numbers of people. -- .
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