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The acclaimed biography of the eldest son of William the Conqueror,
whose failure to secure the kingdom of England has overshadowed his
role in capturing Jerusalem during the First Crusade. This detailed
biography offers a reappraisal of the career of Robert Curthose,
William the Conqueror's eldest son and duke of Normandy from 1087
to 1106, locating the duke's career in the social, cultural and
political context ofthe period. Robert's relationship with members
of his family shaped the political landscape of England and
Normandy for much of the late eleventh and early twelfth centuries:
indeed, even after his incarceration, from 1106 to 1134, his son
William Clito (d. 1128) continued the fight against Robert's
brother, Henry I. Twice driven into exile, Robert defeated his
father in battle and eventually succeeded to the duchy of Normandy,
although the throne of England was seized by William Rufus and then
Henry I. For twenty years Robert successfully defended Normandy,
developing policies to counter the vastly superior English
resources at the disposal of his brothers. Robert's leading role in
the success of the First Crusade [1095-99] also made him one of the
most famous warriors of his age. He returned to Western Europe in
1100, a chivalric hero with a reputation that stretched from
Scotland to Palestine. This bookreturns Robert Curthose to centre
stage in the bloody drama of this period, a drama so often
dominated by accounts from a royal and English perspective. Dr
William M. Aird is Lecturer in History, School of History, Classics
and Archaeology, University of Edinburgh.
An alternative view of the Conquest and settlement from north-east
England, charting relations between the monastic community and the
invading Normans. North-east England experienced the Norman
Conquest rather differently from the south of the country. This
account of events in Northumbria gives an important alternative
view of the Conquest and settlement, distinct from the moreusual
southern and court-centred evidence. A key factor in events was the
monastic community of St Cuthbert in Durham, which had survived the
political upheavals following the collapse of the Northumbrian
kingdom under Scandinavian pressure in the ninth century. Its
position thus strengthened, it occupied an influential place in the
factors ranged against the Normans, who recognised in the community
a powerful force for resistance. The history of the community
during the Anglo-Norman period is closely examined, particularly
the relationship between the new Norman bishops and the monastic
cathedral chapter and their respective rights and privileges. From
this detailed study, Dr Airdargues that conquest, in the north-east
at least, took a different, less traumatic form from that generally
assumed from the early twelfth-century description of the
reformation of the church in 1083. Throughout this account of
events in Durham in the years following the conquest, Dr Aird is
careful also to give due emphasis to relations with the Scots kings
of the later eleventh and twelfth centuries, and to the distinctive
nature of medieval Northumbriaand the Haliwerfolc in particular,
that region subject to the bishops of the Church. Dr WILLIAM M.
AIRD is Lecturer in History, School of History, Classics and
Archaeology, University of Edinburgh.
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