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The Year 1000- What Life Was Like At the Turn of The First Millennium

Page 15

by Robert Lacey

Dr. Ros Faith, Wolfson College, Oxford

  Richard Falkiner, coins and medals expert

  Professor Richard Fletcher, University of York

  Dr. Simon Franklin, Clare College, Cambridge

  Dr. Richard Gameson, University of Kent

  Dr. George Garnett, St. Hugh’s College, Oxford

  Professor John Gillingham, London School of Economics

  Professor Malcolm Godden, Pembroke College, Oxford

  Professor James Graham-Campbell, University College, London

  Dr. Allan Hall, University of York

  Dr. Richard Hall, York Archaeological Trust

  Dr. David Hill, University of Manchester

  Dr. Peregrine Hordern, All Souls College, Oxford

  Dr. James Howard-Johnston, Corpus Christi College, Oxford

  Dr. Gillian Hutchinson, Maritime Museum, Greenwich

  Dr. Andrew K. G.Jones, University of Bradford and York Archaeological Trust

  Dr. Paul Joyce, St. Peters College, Oxford Dr. Simon Keynes, Trinity College, Cambridge

  Dr. Ken Lawson, St. Paul’s School, London

  Dr. Henrietta Leyser, St. Peter’s College, Oxford

  Dr. John Maddicott, Exeter College, Oxford

  Dr. Ailsa Mainman, York Archaeological Trust

  Dr. Patrick McGurk, Birkbeck College, London

  Professor Henry Mayr-Harting, Christ Church, Oxford

  Professor Rosamond McKitterick, Newnham College, Cambridge

  Dr. Patricia Morison, All Soul’s College, Oxford

  Professor Janet Nelson, King’s College, London

  Dr. Andy Orchard, Emmanuel College, Cambridge

  Dr. Christopher Page, Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge

  Steve Pollington, Da Engliscan Gesidas (the English Companions)

  Dr. Eric Poole and Georgina Poole, translators of classical documents

  J. Kim Siddorn, Regia Anglorum

  Dr. Richard Smith, Downing College, Cambridge

  Professor Alfred Smyth, St. George’s House, Windsor Castle

  Professor Pauline Stafford, University of Huddersfield

  Dr. Andrew Wathey, Royal Holloway College, London

  Dr. Leslie Webster, British Library, London

  Professor Christopher Wickham, University of Birmingham

  Mr. Patrick Wormald, Christ Church, Oxford

  All interviews were conducted by Danny Danziger, with the exception of those with Richard Falkiner, Dr. David Hill, Dr. Patrick McGurk, Dr. Patricia Morison, Steve Pollington, Dr. Eric and Georgina Poole, and J. Kim Siddorn, who were interviewed by Robert Lacey. At the British Museum, Dr. Michelle Brown was kind enough to spare time for both authors, and to let us examine the Julius Work Calendar.

  We would like to give particular acknowledgement to the work of Dr. Patrick McGurk, who has carried out the most precise academic research to date on the Julius Work Calendar, and to Dr. Eric and Georgina Poole, who executed a full translation of the calendar text into modern English. Copies of this translation are available on application to the authors, c/o the publisher.

  Regia Anglorum is a society whose five hundred members gather together to re-create the life and times of the Vikings, Anglo-Saxons, and other inhabitants of the British Isles in the century leading up to the Norman Conquest in 1066. For information on Regia Anglorum’s forty regional branches, contact J. Kim Siddorn, 9 Durleigh Close, Bristol BS13 7NQ; e-mail: membership@regia.org; Internet: http://www.regia.org. We are grateful to the society’s authenticity officer, Roland Williamson, for reviewing the manuscript.

  The authors would like to thank for their help: the staffs of the Manuscript Room and the Reading Room of the British Library, and the photographic reproduction staff; Fionnuala Jervis, who visited the Viking Adventure in Dublin and the National Museum of Ireland on our behalf; Leonard Lewis; the staff of the London Library; Andrew and Malini Maxwell-Hyslop; the endlessly helpful staff and partners of the John Sandoe bookshop, who tracked down recondite Anglo-Saxon treatises; pruning expert Gordon Taylor; Dr. John Taylor; Dr. Penny Wallis; the staff of the Anglo-Saxon village at West Stow in Suffolk; the Jorvik Viking Centre, Coppergate, York, and the York Archaeological Trust; the Shaftesbury Museum, Dorset; Shaftesbury Abbey Museum, Dorset; the Abbey House, Malmesbury; Dorothy White.

  We would also like to thank our literary agents, Jonathan Lloyd and Michael Shaw of Curtis Brown; our inspired editors at Little, Brown - Philippa Harrison in London and Bill Phillips in New York - and also Betty Power, our immensely efficient copyeditor in Boston. Thanks to Ruth Cross for her subtle and satisfying index.

  It was Nina Drummond who suggested that this book be cast in the form of a calendar in order to reflect the rhythm of life in the year 1000. She has typed the manuscript, has excavated obscure books and articles, and, in the company of Osric, her faithful Anglo-Saxon springer spaniel, has visited Anglo-Saxon villages and abbeys, and got her feet wet tramping the causeway that the Vikings crossed to fight the Battle of Maldon. This book would not have been possible without her - nor without Sandi Lacey. Her contribution to the design and human concepts of the writing is stamped on every chapter.

  Our other great debt is to our partners and colleagues at Cover, the little magazine of big words and pictures which we founded together in 1997. We started research for this book at the same moment that we started work on our first dummy issue, and the enjoyment and success of both projects owes much to the editorial and management teams who have kept producing brilliant new issues while we have been delving into the mysteries of millennial Viagra, how to charm a swarm of bees, or how to cure an Anglo-Saxon headache. This book is dedicated to them - and through them, to our loyal subscribers and readers.

  Danny Danziger and Robert Lacey

  November 1998

  Bibliography

  This bibliography lists the books and articles on which the text is based, in addition to material supplied by the interviews listed above. Readers stimulated to further research are warmly recommended to the most easily available paperback sourcebooks: The Anglo-Saxon World (Oxford University Press, 1982), translated and edited by Kevin Crossley-Holland, and Michael Swanton’s Anglo-Saxon Prose (Everyman, 1993).

  Attwater, Donald. A New Dictionary of Saints. Tonbridge Wells: Burns Oates, 1993.

  Baker, Peter S., and Lapidge, Michael. Byrbtferth’s Enchiridion, London: Early English Text Society, 1995.

  Banham, Debby. Monasteriales Indicia. Hockwold-cum-Wilton: Anglo-Saxon Books, 1991.

  Banks, E R. English Villages. London: Batsford, 1963.

  Barber, Richard. The Penguin Guide to Medieval Europe. London: Penguin, 1984.

  Barnes, W. Early England and the Saxon-English. London: John Russell Smith, 1859.

  Barraclough, Geoffrey. Tfce Crucible of Europe. London: Thames Hudson, 1976.

  ---------. ed. Social Life in Early England. Historical Association Essays. London: Routledge Kegan Paul, 1960.

  Beckwith, John. Early Medieval Art. London: Thames Hudson, 1969.

  Bede. Ecclesiastical History of the English People. Edited by D. H. Farmer. Translated by Leo Sherley-Price. London: Viking Penguin, 1955.

  Brent, Peter. The Viking Saga. London: Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1975.

  Britnell, Richard H. The Commercialisation ojEnglish Society. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1996.

  Brooke, Christopher. Europe in the Central Middle Ages, 962-1154. London: Longmans, 1964.

  ---------. The Structure of Medieval Society. London: Thames Hudson, 1971.

  Brooke, Christopher, and Brooke, Rosalind. Popular Religion in the Middle Ages. London: Thames and Hudson, 1984.

  Brown, Michelle P. Anglo-Saxon Manuscripts. London: British Library, 1991.

  Brown, Ron. Beekeeping - A Seasonal Guide. London: Batsford, 1992.

  Cahill, Thomas. How the Irish Saved Civilisation, New York: Nan A. Talese/Doubleday, 1996.

  Campbell, James (with Eric John and Patrick Wormald). The Anglo-Saxons. Oxford: Phaidon, 1982.

&
nbsp; Camporesi, Piero, “Bread of Dreams,” History Today, Vol. 39, April 1989.

  Cheney, C. R., ed. Handbook of Dates for Students of English History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991.

  Claiborne, Robert. Climate, Man and History. London: Angus Robertson, 1973.

  Crook, John, ed. Winchester Cathedral: Nine Hundred Years, 1093-1993. Chichester: Dean Chapter of Winchester Cathedral in conjunction with Phillimore, 1993.

  Crossley-Holland, Kevin, ed. The Anglo-Saxon World - An Anthology. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1982.

  Daumas, Maurice. A History of Technology Invention, Vol. 1. London: John Murray, 1980.

  Davis, Ralph H. C. The Normans and Their Myth. London: Thames Hudson, 1976.

  ---------. The Medieval Warhorse. London: Thames Hudson, 1989.

  Deegan, Marilyn, and Scragg, D. G., eds. Medicine in Early Medieval England. Manchester: Centre for Anglo-Saxon Studies, 1987.

  Derry, T. K., and Williams, Trevor. A Short History of Technology from the Earliest Times to a.d. 1000. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1960.

  Diamond, Jared. Guns, Germs and Steel. London: Vintage, 1998.

  Drummond, J. C, and Wilbraham, Anne. The Englishman’s Food. London: Pimlico, 1991.

  Duby, Georges. L’An Mil. Paris: Editions Gallimard/Julliard, 1980.

  Edson, Evelyn. Mapping Time and Space: How Medieval Mapmakers Viewed Their World. London: British Library, 1997.

  Erdoes, Richard, a.d. 1000: Living on the Brink of Apocalypse. San Francisco: Harper Row, 1988.

  Faith, Rosamond. The English Peasantry and the Growth of Lordship. London: Leicester University Press, 1997.

  Farmer, David. Oxford Dictionary of Saints. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997.

  Fell, Christine. Women in Anglo-Saxon England. London: British Museum, 1984.

  Fichtenau, Heinrich. Living in the Tenth Century. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991.

  Finberg, H. P. R. The Formation of England 550-1042. London: Hart-Davis, MacGibbon, 1974.

  Fletcher, Richard. The Conversion of Europe. London: HarperCollins, 1997.

  Flint, Valerie I. J. The Rise of Magic in Early Medieval Europe. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1991.

  Focillon, Henri. The Year 1000. Evanston, New York: Harper Torch-books, 1971.

  France, John, ed. and trans. Rodulfus Glaber Opera. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989.

  Gilbert, Martin. Atlas of British History. London: J. M. Dent, 1993.

  Griffiths, Bill. Aspects of Anglo-Saxon Magic. Hockwold-cum-Wilton: Anglo-Saxon Books, 1996.

  -------. The Battle of Maldon. Hockwold-cum-Wilton: Anglo-Saxon Books, 1991.

  -------. An Introduction to Early English Law. Hockwold-cum-Wilton: Anglo-Saxon Books, 1995.

  Hagen, Anne. A Handbook of Anglo-Saxon Food: Processing and Consumption. Pinner: Anglo-Saxon Books, 1992.

  --------. A Second Handbook of Anglo-Saxon Food and Drink: Production and Distribution. Hockwold-cum-Wilton: Anglo-Saxon Books, 1995.

  de Hamel, Christopher. Medieval Craftsmen - Scribes and Illuminators. London: British Museum Press, 1992.

  Heaney, Seamus, trans.”Beowulf,” Books Section, Sunday Times, London, 26 July 1998.

  Henson, Donald. A Guide to Late Anglo-Saxon England from Alfred to Eadgar II. Hockwold-cum-Wilton: Anglo-Saxon Books, 1998.

  Herbert, Kathleen. Lookingfor the Lost Gods of England. Hockwold-cum-Wilton: Anglo-Saxon Books, 1994.

  --------. Peace-Weavers and Shield-Maidens: Women in Early English Society.

  Hockwold-cum-Wilton: Anglo-Saxon Books, 1997.

  Herzfeld, George. An Old English Martyrology. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner for the Early English Text Society, reprinted 1997.

  Hill, David. An Atlas of Anglo-Saxon England. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1981.

  ---.”A Handful of Grit - Anglo-Saxon BeeKeeping,” Beekeeper’s Quarterly, Summer 1994, p. 28.

  ---.”The Crane and the Gyrfalcon in Anglo-Saxon England,” Medieval Life, 1994.

  Hooke, Delia, ed. Anglo-Saxon Settlements. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1988.

  Hoskins, W. G. The Making of the English Landscape. London: Pelican, 1970.

  Howarth, David. 1066: The Year of the Conquest. London: Penguin, 1981.

  Hyland, Ann. The Medieval Warhorse from Byzantium to the Crusades. Dover, New Hampshire: Allan Sutton Publishing, 1994.

  Johnson, Hugh. The World Atlas of Wine. London: Mitchell Beazley, 1971.

  Jones, Gwyn. The Vikings. London: Folio Society, 1997.

  Jones, Peter Murray. Medieval Medicine in Illuminated Manuscripts. London: British Library, 1998.

  Kemble, John. Anglo-Saxon Runes. Pinner: Anglo-Saxon Books, 1991.

  Landes, David. The Wealth and Poverty of Nations. London: Little,

  Brown, 1998.

  Lang, James. Anglo-Saxon Sculpture. Aylesbury: Shire Publications, 1988. Langland, William. Piers the Ploughman. Translated by J. F. Goodridge.

  London: Viking Penguin, 1959.

  Lash, Jennifer. On Pilgrimage. London: Bloomsbury, 1998. Latouche, Robert. The Birth of Western Economy. London: Methuen,

  1961. Leyser, Henrietta. Medieval Women: A Social History of Women in England

  450-1500. London: Phoenix, 1996. Leyser, Karl. Communications and Power in Medieval Europe. London and

  Rio Grande, Ohio: Hambledon Press, 1994. Manchester, William. A World Lit Only by Fire. Boston: Little, Brown,

  1992. Mays, Simon. The Archaeology of Human Bones. London: Routledge,

  1998. McCrum, Robert, MacNeil, Robert, and Cran, William. The Story of

  English. London: Faber Faber, 1992.

  McGurk, Patrick, et al. An Eleventh Century Anglo-Saxon Illustrated Miscellany: British Library Cotton Tiberius B. V. Part I. Copenhagen: Early

  English Manuscripts in Facsimile, 1983. McGurk, Patrick. “The Metrical Calendar of Hampson,” Analecta Bol-

  landia, 1986, Tome 104, Fasc. 1-2, pp. 79-125.

  Morant, G. M.”A First Study of the Craniology of England and Scotland from Neolithic to Early Historic Times, with Special Reference

  to the Anglo-Saxon Skulls in London Museums,” Biometrika, Vol. 18,

  1926. Moss, H. St. L. B. The Birth of the Middle Ages, 395-814. Oxford: Oxford

  University Press, 1961. Murray, Alexander. Reason and Society in the Middle Ages. Oxford:

  Clarendon Press, 1978. Ohler, Norbert. The Medieval Traveller. Woodbridge: Boydell Press,

  1989.

  Paor, Liam de. Ireland and Early Europe. Dublin: Four Courts Press, 1997. Pearson, Karl, and Davin, Adelaide. “On the Biometric Constants of

  the Human Skull,” Biometrika, Vol. 16,1924.

  Phillips, Fr. Andrew. The Hallowing of England. Hockwold-cum-Wilton:

  Anglo-Saxon Books, 1994. Pollington, Stephen. The English Warrior from Earliest Times to 1066.

  Hockwold-cum-Wilton: Anglo-Saxon Books, 1996. ---------. An Introduction to the Old-English Language and Its Literature.

  Hockwold-cum-Wilton: Anglo-Saxon Books, 1994.

  -. Wordcraft: Wordhoard and Wordlists. Hockwold-cum-Wilton:

  Anglo-Saxon Books, 1993.

  Porter, John, Anglo-Saxon Riddles. Hockwold-cum-Wilton: Anglo-Saxon Books, 1995.

  Porter, Roy. The Greatest Benefit to Mankind. London: HarperCollins, 1997.

  Postan, Michael M. Essays on Medieval Agriculture and General Problems of the Medieval Economy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1973.

  Power, Eileen. Medieval People: A Study of Communal Psychology. London: Penguin, 1937.

  Pulsiano, Phillip, and Treharne, Elaine. Anglo-Saxon Manuscripts and Their Heritage. Aldershot and Brookfield, Vermont: Ashgate, 1998.

  Rodger, N. A. M. The Safeguard of the Sea - A Naval History of Britain. London: HarperCollins, 1997.

  Rodrigues, Louis J. Anglo-Saxon Verse Charms, Maxims and Heroic Legends. Pinner: Anglo-Saxon Books, 1993.

  Rollason, David. Saints and Relics in Anglo-Saxon England. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1989.

&nb
sp; Rosener, Werner. Peasants in the Middle Ages. Cambridge: Polity Press, 1992.

  Sawyer, Peter H., ed. Anglo-Saxon Charters: An Annotated List and Bibliography. London: Royal Historical Society, 1968.

  Smith, Alan. Sixty Saxon Saints. Hockwold-cum-Wilton: Anglo-Saxon Books, 1994.

  Southern, R. W The Making of the Middle Ages. London: Arrow Books,

  1959-Stafford, Pauline. Queen Emma and Queen Edith. Oxford: Blackwell,

  1997. Staniland, Kay. Medieval Craftsmen - Embroiderers. London: British

  Museum Press, 1991.

  BIBLIOGRAPHY • 213

  Stratton, John M. Agricultural Records, a.d. 220-1968. London: John Baker, 1969.

  Swanton, Michael, trans, and ed. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. London: J.M. Dent, 1997.

  ---------. Anglo-Saxon Prose. London: J. M. Dent, 1993.

  Sweeney, Del, ed. Agriculture in the Middle Ages. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1995.

  Thompson, Damian. The End of Time. London: Minerva, 1997.

  Thorndike, Lynn. A History of Magic and Experimental Science. New York: Macmillan, 1923.

  Tite, Colin. The Manuscript Library of Sir Robert Cotton: The Panizzi Lectures. London: British Library, 1993.

  Walsh, Michael. A Dictionary of Devotions. Tonbridge Wells: Burns Oates, 1993.

  Werner, Alex, ed. London Bodies: The Changing Shape of Londoners from Prehistoric Times to the Present Day, London: Museum of London, 1998.

  Wheeler, A., and Jones, A. K. G. Fishes. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989.

  Whitelock, Dorothy. Anglo-Saxon Wills. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1930.

  ----------. The Beginnings of English Society. London: Penguin, 1952.

  ----------. English Historical Documents, c. 500-1042. London: Eyre Spot—

  tiswoode, 1955.

  Wormald, Francis, ed. English Kalendars before a.d. 1100. London: Henry Bradshaw Society, 1934.

  Wormald, Patrick, ed. (with D. Bullough and R. Collins). Ideal and Reality in Frankish and Anglo-Saxon Society. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1983.

  Source Notes

  The Julius Work Calendar can be studied at the British Library in London, subject to the rules and conditions of access to the Manuscript Room. It is catalogued as Cotton MS Julius A. VI. See the works of Patrick McGurk listed in the bibliography on page 207 for the latest published academic transcript and analysis of the document, and also Baker and Lapidge for a transcription and translation of the text at the head of the calendar page. Dr. David Hill of the University of Manchester has prepared a most important illustrated, but as yet unpublished, analysis of the calendar from the point of view of Anglo-Saxon farming techniques, The Turning Year. In addition to the ideas and themes suggested by our interviews with the experts listed on pages 203-205, important details in the text come from the following sources, whose full details can be found in the bibliography:

 

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