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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
A series which is a model of its kind EDMUND KING, HISTORY The
latest volume of Battle Conference proceedings emphasizes the
European range and interdisciplinarity of the series. It opens with
Anne Duggan's R. Allen Brown Memorial Lecture for 2010, on the
effects of Pope Alexander III's so-called "marriage legislation" in
England. Norman history is covered by chapters on the detailed
account of Robert de Torigni's deeds as abbot of Mont Saint-Michel
which he added to the monastic cartulary, and on religious life in
Rouen in the late eleventh century, covering the rivalries but also
the common outlook of the cathedral canons and the monks of St
Ouen. Close readings of the work of two of the Anglo-Norman
historians of the earlier twelfth century provide many new insights
into their working methods and views of the world, specifically
Willam of Malmesbury's use of ambiguity and innuendo, and Orderic
Vitalis's treatment of the nexus between power and the display of
emotions. There are also two papers on art history, giving
sophisticated readings of the architecture shown in the Bayeux
Tapestry and the politically charged glazing scheme that Archbishop
Anselm installed at Canterbury cathedral. Contributors: Anne
Duggan, Alison Alexander, Richard E. Barton, Thomas N. Bisson, Paul
Hayward, T.A. Heslop, Elizabeth Carson Pastan C.P. LEWIS is a
Research Fellow in the History Department at King's College,
London, and a Senior Fellow of the Institute of Historical Research
in the University of London.
The most up-to-date research in the period from the Anglo-Saxons to
Angevins. This volume of the Haskins Society Journal continues its
tradition of publishing the best historical and interdisciplinary
research on the early and central middle ages in the Anglo-Saxon,
Anglo-Norman, and Angevin worlds. The topics of the essays range
from legal influences on Alfred's Mosaic Prologue, judicial
processes in tenth-century Iberia, and the ecclesiology of the
Norman Anonymous to the nature and implications of comital
authority in the eleventh- and twelfth-century Anglo-Norman realm
and conceptions of servitude in legal thinking in
thirteenth-century Catalonia. The volume also embraces art history,
with contributions on the medieval object as subject; the banquet
scene in the Bayeux Tapestry; and there is a synoptic archeological
exploration of early medieval Britain. Finally, an edition and
translation of the De Abbatibus of Mont Saint-Michel makes
available in complete and reliable form an important witness to
this Norman monastery's medieval past. Contributors: Thomas Bisson,
Charlotte Cartwright, Martin Carver, Kerrith Davies, Wendy Davies,
Paul Freedman, James Ginther, Stefan Jurasinski, Elizabeth Carson
Pastan.
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