Charters of St Augustine's Abbey, Canterbury and Minster-in-Thanet

Charters of St Augustine's Abbey, Canterbury and Minster-in-Thanet
Author: S. E. Kelly
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Total Pages: 380
Release: 1995-09-14
Genre: History
ISBN:

This critical edition publishes an important collection of charters, some of them from the seventh and eighth centuries, providing crucial evidence about the history of the Anglo-Saxon church in Kent and the development of the documentary process.

The Anglo-Saxon Chancery

The Anglo-Saxon Chancery
Author: Ben Snook
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd
Total Pages: 254
Release: 2015
Genre: Foreign Language Study
ISBN: 1783270063

An exploration of Anglo-Saxon charters, bringing out their complexity and highlighting a range of broad implications.

Liturgy, Architecture, and Sacred Places in Anglo-Saxon England

Liturgy, Architecture, and Sacred Places in Anglo-Saxon England
Author: Helen Gittos
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 372
Release: 2013-02-07
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 0199270902

One of the first studies to consider how church rituals were performed in Anglo-Saxon England. Brings together evidence from written, archaeological, and architectural sources. It will be of particular interest to architectural specialists keen to know more about liturgy, and church historians who would like to learn more about architecture.

After Alfred

After Alfred
Author: Pauline Stafford
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 401
Release: 2020
Genre: History
ISBN: 0198859643

After Alfred deals with the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, tracing the development of this group of texts, linking them to a southern court elite who were deeply engaged in kingdom-building, and offering both a detailed study of each chronicle and a broad contribution to the history of a critical period in the making of England and the English story.

Heaven and Earth in Anglo-Saxon England

Heaven and Earth in Anglo-Saxon England
Author: Helen Foxhall Forbes
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 462
Release: 2016-04-22
Genre: History
ISBN: 1317123069

Christian theology and religious belief were crucially important to Anglo-Saxon society, and are manifest in the surviving textual, visual and material evidence. This is the first full-length study investigating how Christian theology and religious beliefs permeated society and underpinned social values in early medieval England. The influence of the early medieval Church as an institution is widely acknowledged, but Christian theology itself is generally considered to have been accessible only to a small educated elite. This book shows that theology had a much greater and more significant impact than has been recognised. An examination of theology in its social context, and how it was bound up with local authorities and powers, reveals a much more subtle interpretation of secular processes, and shows how theological debate affected the ways that religious and lay individuals lived and died. This was not a one-way flow, however: this book also examines how social and cultural practices and interests affected the development of theology in Anglo-Saxon England, and how ’popular’ belief interacted with literary and academic traditions. Through case-studies, this book explores how theological debate and discussion affected the personal perspectives of Christian Anglo-Saxons, including where possible those who could not read. In all of these, it is clear that theology was not detached from society or from the experiences of lay people, but formed an essential constituent part.

The Ancient Ways of Wessex

The Ancient Ways of Wessex
Author: Alexander Langlands
Publisher: Windgather Press
Total Pages: 409
Release: 2019-11-30
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1911188526

The Ancient Ways of Wessex tells the story of Wessex’s roads in the early medieval period, at the point at which they first emerge in the historical record. This is the age of the Anglo-Saxons and an era that witnessed the rise of a kingdom that was taken to the very brink of defeat by the Viking invasions of the ninth century. It is a period that goes on to become one within which we can trace the beginnings of the political entity we have come to know today as England. In a series of ten detailed case studies the reader is invited to consider historical and archaeological evidence, alongside topographic information and ancient place-names, in the reconstruction of the networks of routeways and communications that served the people and places of the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Wessex. Whether you were a peasant, pilgrim, drover, trader, warrior, bishop, king or queen, travel would have been fundamental to life in the early middle ages and this book explores the physical means by which the landscape was constituted to facilitate and improve the movement of people, goods and ideas from the seventh through to the eleventh centuries. What emerges is a dynamic web of interconnecting routeways serving multiple functions and one, perhaps, even busier than that in our own working countryside. A narrative of transition, one of both of continuity and change, provides a fresh and alternative window into the everyday workings of an early medieval landscape through the pathways trodden over a millennium ago.

Land and Book

Land and Book
Author: Scott Thompson Smith
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Total Pages: 305
Release: 2012-01-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1442644869

Land and Book places a variety of texts in a dynamic conversation with the procedures and documents of land tenure, showing how its social practice led to innovation across written genres in both Latin and Old English.

The Norman Conquest in English History

The Norman Conquest in English History
Author: George Garnett
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 491
Release: 2021-01-21
Genre: History
ISBN: 0198726163

At a time when the Battle of Hastings and Magna Carta have become common currency in political debate, this study of the role played by the Norman Conquest in English history between the eleventh and the seventeenth centuries is both timely and relevant.

The Church in Anglo-Saxon Society

The Church in Anglo-Saxon Society
Author: John Blair
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 625
Release: 2005-01-20
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0198226950

From the impact of the first monasteries in the seventh century, to the emergence of the local parochial system five hundred years later, the Church was a force for change in Anglo-Saxon society. It shaped culture and ideas, social and economic behaviour, and the organization of landscape and settlement. This book traces how the widespread foundation of monastic sites ('minsters') during c.670-730 gave the recently pagan English new ways of living, of exploiting their resources, andof absorbing European culture, as well as opening new spiritual and intellectual horizons. Through the era of Viking wars, and the tenth-century reconstruction of political and economic life, the minsters gradually lost their wealth, their independence, and their role as sites of high culture, butgrew in stature as foci of local society and eventually towns. After 950, with the increasing prominence of manors, manor-houses, and village communities, a new and much larger category of small churches were founded, endowed, and rebuilt: the parish churches of the emergent eleventh- and twelfth-century local parochial system. In this innovative study, John Blair brings together written, topographical, and archaeological evidence to build a multi-dimensional picture of what local churches andlocal communities meant to each other in early England.

Veiled Women

Veiled Women
Author: Sarah Foot
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 249
Release: 2019-06-04
Genre: History
ISBN: 1351963317

There is no published account of the history of religious women in England before the Norman Conquest. Yet, female saints and abbesses, such as Hild of Whitby or Edith of Wilton, are among the most celebrated women recorded in Anglo-Saxon sources and their stories are of popular interest. This book offers the first general and critical assessment of female religious communities in early medieval England. It transforms our understanding of the different modes of religious vocation and institutional provision and thereby gives early medieval women’s history a new foundation.