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The Norman Conquest

Page 50

by Marc Morris


  ——‘Normandy and Byzantium in the Eleventh Century’, Byzantion, 55 (Brussels, 1985).

  ——‘The Ship List of William the Conqueror’, ANS, 10 (1988).

  ——‘A Note on Jezebel and Semiramis, Two Latin Poems from the Early Eleventh Century’, Journal of Medieval Latin, 2 (Turnhout, 1992).

  ——‘The Norman Conquest Through European Eyes’, EHR, 110 (1995).

  ——‘Hereward and Flanders’, Anglo-Saxon England, 28 (2000).

  ——‘Edward and Normandy’, Edward the Confessor, ed. R. Mortimer (Woodbridge, 2009).

  Vaughn, S. N., ‘Lanfranc at Bec: A Reinterpretation’, Albion, 17 (1985).

  Walker, I. W., Harold: The Last Anglo-Saxon King (Stroud, 2004).

  Wareham, A., ‘The “Feudal Revolution” in Eleventh-Century East Anglia’, ANS, 22 (2000).

  Wilkinson, B., ‘Northumbrian Separatism in 1065 and 1066’, Bulletin of the John Rylands Library, 23 (1939).

  Williams, A., ‘Some Notes and Considerations on Problems Connected with the English Royal Succession, 860―1066’, ANS, 1 (1978).

  ——‘A Bell-house and a Burh-geat: Lordly Residences in England before the Norman Conquest’, Medieval Knighthood IV (Woodbridge, 1992).

  ——The English and the Norman Conquest (Woodbridge, 1995).

  ——Æthelred the Unready: The Ill-Counselled King (2003).

  Wilson, R. M., ‘English and French in England, 1100–1300’, History, 28 (1943).

  Wormald, P., ‘Engla lond: The Making of an Allegiance’, Journal of Historical Sociology, 8 (1994).

  Wyatt, D., ‘The Significance of Slavery: Alternative Approaches to Anglo-Saxon Slavery’, ANS, 23 (2001).

  Young, C. R., The Royal Forests of Medieval England (Leicester, 1979).

  Zadora-Rio, E., ‘L’enceinte fortifiée du Plessis-Grimoult, résidence seigneuriale du Xle siècle’, Chateau Gaillard, 5 (1972).

  SECONDARY WORKS (CONSULTED)

  Abels, R., ‘Bookland and Fyrd Service in Late Saxon England’, ANS, 7 (1984).

  Aird, W., St. Cuthbert and the Normans (Woodbridge, 1998).

  L’Architecture Normande au Moyen Age, ed. M. Baylé (2 vols., 2nd edn, Caen, 2001).

  Bachrach, B. S., ‘The Feigned Retreat at Hastings’, The Battle of Hastings, ed. S. Morillo (Woodbridge, 1996).

  Bates, D., ‘William the Conqueror and His Wider European World’, Haskins Society Journal, 15 (2006).

  Baxter, S., ‘The Representation of Lordship and Land Tenure in Domesday Book’, Domesday Book, ed. D. Bates and E. Hallam (2001).

  Bennett, M., ‘Violence in Eleventh-Century Normandy: Feud, Warfare and Politics’, Violence and Society in the Early Medieval West (Woodbridge, 1998).

  Bradbury, J., The Battle of Hastings (Stroud, 1998).

  Brown, R. A., ‘The Status of the Norman Knight’, Anglo-Norman Warfare, ed. M. Strickland (Woodbridge, 1992).

  The Cambridge Urban History of Britain, 600–1540, 1, ed. D. M. Palliser (Cambridge, 2000).

  Campbell, J., The Anglo-Saxon State (2000).

  A Companion to the Anglo-Norman World, ed. C. Harper-Bill and E. van Houts (Woodbridge, 2003).

  Cowdrey, H. E. J., ‘Bishop Ermenfrid of Sion and the Penitential Ordinance Following the Battle of Hastings’, Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 20 (1969).

  ——‘Towards an Interpretation of the Bayeux Tapestry’, ANS, 10 (1988).

  ——Lanfranc: Scholar, Monk and Archbishop (Oxford, 2003).

  Davis, R. H. C., The Normans and Their Myth (2nd edn, 1980).

  Dhondt, J., ‘Henri Ier, L’Empire et L’Anjou (1043–1056)’, Revue Beige de Philologie et d’Histoire, 25 (1946).

  Dobson, R. B., ‘The First Norman Abbey in Northern England: The Origins of Selby’, Church and Society in the Medieval North of England (1996).

  Downham, C., ‘England and the Irish-Sea Zone in the Eleventh Century’, ANS, 26 (2004).

  English Romanesque Art, 1066–1200, ed. G. Zarnecki, J. Holt and T. Holland (1984).

  Les Évêques Normands du Xle Siècle, ed. P. Bouet and F. Neveux (Caen, 1995).

  Fernie, E., ‘Saxons, Normans and their Buildings’, ANS, 21 (1999).

  Fleming, R., ‘The New Wealth, the New Rich and the New Political Style in Late Anglo-Saxon England’, ANS, 23 (2001).

  From the Vikings to the Normans, ed. W. Davies (Oxford, 2003).

  Gade, K. E., ‘Northern Lights on the Battle of Hastings’, Viator, 28 (1997).

  Garnett, G., ‘Conquered England, 1066–1215’, The Oxford Illustrated History of Medieval England (Oxford, 1997).

  Gibson, M., Lanfranc of Bec (Oxford, 1978).

  Grassi, J. L., ‘The Vita Ædwardi Regis:The Hagiographer as Insider’, ANS, 26 (2004).

  Guillot, O., Le Comte D Anjou et son Entourage au Xle Siècle (2 vols., Paris, 1972).

  Hadley, D. M., ‘“And they proceeded to plough and to support themselves”: The Scandinavian Settlement of England’, ANS 19 (1997).

  Hart, C, ‘William Malet and his Family’, ANS, 19 (1997).

  Hollister, C. W., ‘The Feudal Revolution’, American Historical Review, 73 (1968).

  Holt, J. C., ‘Feudal Society and the Family in Early Medieval England: The Revolution of 1066’, TRHS, 33 (1983).

  Hooper, N., ‘Anglo-Saxon Warfare on the Eve of the Conquest: A Brief Survey’, ANS, 1 (1979).

  ——‘Some Observations on the Navy in Late Anglo-Saxon England’, Anglo-Norman Warfare, ed. M. Strickland (Woodbridge, 1992).

  John, E., Reassessing Anglo-Saxon England (Manchester, 1996).

  Kapelle, W. E., ‘Domesday Book: F. W Maitland and his Successors’, Speculum, 64 (1989).

  ——‘The Purpose of Domesday Book: A Quandary’, Essays in Medieval Studies, 9 (1992).

  Lawrence, H., ‘The Monastic Revival’, England in Europe, 1066―1453 (1994).

  Loud, G.A., ‘The Gens Normannorum— Myth or Reality?’, ANS, 4 (1982).

  Loyn, H. R., Anglo-Saxon England and the Norman Conquest (1962).

  ——‘William’s Bishops: Some Further Thoughts’, ANS, 10 (1988).

  —— The Vikings in Britain (Oxford, 1994).

  Moore, J.S.,’Anglo-Norman Garrisons’, ANS, 22 (2000).

  Musset, L., The Bayeux Tapestry, transl. R. Rex (new edn, Woodbridge, 2005).

  Nelson, J., ‘Anglo-Saxon England, c.500―1066’, The Oxford Illustrated History of Medieval England (Oxford, 1997).

  Neumann, J., ‘Hydrographic and Ship-Hydrodynamic Aspects of the Norman Invasion, AD 1066’, ANS, 11 (1989).

  Nip, R., ‘The Political Relations between England and Flanders (1066–1128), ANS, 21 (1999).

  La Normandie vers L’An Mil, ed. F. Beaurepaire and J.P. Chaline (Rouen, 2000).

  Oleson, T. J., ‘Edward the Confessor’s Promise of the Throne to Duke William of Normandy’, EHR, 72 (1957).

  Owen-Crocker, G. R., ‘The Interpretation of Gesture in the Bayeux Tapestry’, ANS, 29 (2007).

  Peirce, I., ‘Arms, Armour and Warfare in the Eleventh Century’, ANS, 10 (1988).

  Prestwich, J. O., ‘Anglo-Norman Feudalism and the Problem of Continuity’, Past and Present, 26 (1963).

  ——‘Mistranslations and Misinterpretations in Medieval English History’, Peritia, 10 (1996).

  Prestwich, M., Armies and Warfare in the Middle Ages: The English Experience (Yale, 1996).

  Shopkow, L., History and Community: Norman Historical Writing in the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries (Washington, 1997).

  Short, I., ‘The Language of the Bayeux Tapestry Inscription’, ANS, 23 (2001).

  Strickland, M., ‘Slaughter, Slavery or Ransom: The Impact of the Conquest on Conduct in Warfare’, England in the Eleventh Century, ed. C. Hicks (Stamford, 1992).

  —— ‘Military Technology and Conquest: The Anomaly of Anglo-Saxon England’, ANS, 19 (1997).

  van Houts, E. M. C., ‘Historiography and Hagiography at SaintWandriller: The Inventio et Miracula Sancti Vulfranni’, ANS, 12 (1990).

  —�
�‘The Trauma of 1066’, History Today, 46:10 (1996).

  ——‘Wace as Historian’, Family Trees and the Roots of Politics, ed. K. Keats-Rohan (Woodbridge, 1997).

  West, F. J., ‘The Colonial History of the Norman Conquest’, History, 84 (1999).

  Williams, A., The World Before Domesday: The English Aristocracy, 900–1066 (2008).

  Index

  Abbreviations: abp (archbishop); abt (abbot); bp (bishop); dau. (daughter); ETC (Edward the Confessor); WTC (William the Conqueror)

  Abernethy (Perths), 252, 289

  Abingdon, abbey (Oxon), 215, 235, 239, 242, 249, 260, 277, 281; abt of, see Adelelm; Ealdred

  Adam of Bremen, chronicler, 155, 225

  Adela, dau. of Robert the Frisian, wife of Cnut IV, 305

  Adela, mother of Matilda, 67

  Adelelm, abt of Abingdon, 242, 260, 262, 277, 281

  Agatha, wife of Edward the Exile, 103, 106

  L’Aigle (Orne), 205, 274–5

  Ailnoth of Canterbury, 345

  Ailred of Rievaulx (d. 1167), 350–3

  Aire, river, 228

  Alan, count of Brittany (1008–40) 51–2

  Alençon (Orne), 81–2, 187

  Alexander, bp of Lincoln (1123–48) 347

  Alexander II, pope (1061–73) 142–3, 145, 173, 187, 201, 236, 239, 256, 263, 266, 300

  Alfred (d. 1037), ætheling, brother of ETC, 16, 100, 144, 294; exile in Normandy, 15, 19–21, 34, 51; return to England, 35, 361; murder of, 36–9, 62, 64, 71–3, 263

  Alfred the Great, king of Wessex (871–99) 12–13, 138, 341

  Amatus of Montecassino, chronicler, 186

  Ambrières (Mayenne), 93

  Amiens (Somme), 167; bp of, see Guy

  Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (selected references): importance, 5; frustrating silences or brevity, 5, 38, 109, 115, 120, 217, 252, 300; begun in Alfred’s day, 13; different versions of, 36, 78, 102; used by John of Worcester, 39; used by Henry of Huntingdon, 322; E version pro-Godwine, 78, 104, 133; D version compiled in Ealdred’s circle, 102, 104; C version pro-Mercian, anti-Godwine, 104, 123, 162; obituary of WTC, 333–4; discontinued after Conquest, 341

  Anglo-Saxons see English

  Anjou, 80–2, 85, 90, 110–11, 234, 254, 273, 304, 351; count of, see Fulk Nerra; Fulk Réchin; Geoffrey Martel; Geoffrey Plantagenet

  Anna of Kiev (d. 1075), queen of France, mother of Philip I, 110, 255

  Anselm of Bec, abp of Canterbury (1093–1109) 259

  Ansgar the Staller, 278

  Aquitaine, 151, 303; count of, 84; see also Eleanor

  archdeacons, 257, 339

  archers, 179–80, 183, 237, 305

  architecture, 257–8, 296–8, 334, 353

  arms, armour see weapons

  Arnulf, count of Flanders (1070–1) 254

  Arques (Seine-Mar.), castle of, 83, 85, 183; count of, see William

  Arundel (Sussex), castle and rape, 215

  Arwystli (Powys), 294

  Asbjorn, brother of Swein Estrithson, 226, 229, 242–3, 245

  Assandun (Essex), battle of, 18, 24, 99

  Atcham (Salop), 205, 379; St Eata’s church, 205

  Athelstan, king of England (924–39), 138, 252

  Aubrey de Grandmesnil, 275

  Aversa (Italy), 287; bp of, see Guitmund

  Avon, river, 220

  Axholme, isle of (Lincs), 227

  Ælfflæd, granddau. of Earl Uhtred, wife of Earl Siward, 127, 253

  Ælfgar, earl of East Anglia and Mercia (d. c. 1062), 75, 101, 104–5, 128, 157, 321

  Ælfgifu of Northampton, wife of King Cnut, 30–1, 33

  Ælfheah, abp of Canterbury (d. 1012), 15, 24, 259

  Ælfhelm, ealdorman of York (d. 1006), 123

  Ælfcic, abt of Eynsham, 25

  Ælfric Puttoc, abp of York (d. 1051), 39

  Ælfwine, bp of Winchester (d. 1047), 42

  Æthelmaer, bp of East Anglia, 239

  Æthelred the Unready, king of England 14–19, 24, 28, 30, 39, 72, 75–6, 263–4, 284

  Æthelric, bp of Durham (1041–56) 123, 238, 247

  Æthelric, bp of Sussex (1058–70) 239

  Æthelric, proposed abp of Canterbury, 69

  Æthelric of Marsh Gibbon, 314, 320

  Æthelwig, abt of Evesham (d. 1078), 269, 285

  Æthelwine, bp of Durham (1056–70) 123, 125, 219–20, 223, 238, 246–7

  ÆEthelwold, abt of Abingdon, 260

  Æthelwulf bp of Carlisle, 349

  Bachrach, Bernard, 153

  Baldwin, abt of Bury St Edmunds, ETC’s physician, 140–1

  Baldwin V, count of Flanders (1035–67) 37, 82, 105, 110, 123, 130, 147, 254

  Baldwin VI, count of Flanders (1067–70) 254

  Bamburgh (Northumb.), 121; house of, 122–3, 126–7, 210, 216, 253; see also Gospatric; Waltheof

  Baring, Francis, 194–5

  Barking (Essex), 201–2, 297, 378–9

  Barnstaple (Devon), 224

  Battle (Sussex), 176; abbey, 178, 237, 333, 382; chronicler, 189

  Baudri of Bourgeuil, 179, 183, 186

  Bayeux (Calvados), 1, 3, 56, 94, 370; cathedral, 3, 276, 367

  Bayeux Tapestry, 1–5, 10, 11, 49, 112–15, 118–19, 133–5, 139, 146–7, 150, 169–71, 174, 177, 179–86, 190, 207, 277, 370, 377–8

  Beaurain (Pas-de-Calais), castle, 113

  Le Bec-Hellouin (Eure), abbey, 87–8

  Bedfordshire, 315

  Bellême (Orne), 81; lords of, 81; see also Robert of Bellême

  Benedict X, antipope, 108

  Beorn Estrithson (d. 1049), 63, 65, 75–6

  Berengar de Tosny, 278

  Berkhamsted, 196, 199, 378–9; castle, 196, 207

  Berkshire, 76, 195

  Berlin, 3

  Bertha, queen of France (d. 1093), 255

  Bevere, island, 40

  Beverstone (Glos), 71

  Birhtnoth, ealdorman (d. 991), 27–8

  Blæcmann, priest, 215

  Bleddyn ap Cynfyn (d. 1075), Welsh king, 209, 218

  Blois-Chartres, count of, 80, 84; see also Stephen

  Bonneville-Aptot, 88

  Bonneville-sur-Touques (Calvados), 114

  Bosham (Sussex), 72, 109, 113

  Boulogne, 210; count of, see Eustace

  Brian, count, 215, 224, 227

  Brionne (Eure), castle, 57, 66, 365

  Bristol (Somerset), 220, 222, 294

  Britford (Wilts), 129

  Brittany, 22, 57, 114–15, 151, 234, 267, 270, 272, 305, 370; count of, see Alan

  Brown, Prof. R. Allen, 186

  Bruges, 37–8, 68

  Brussels, 167

  Buckinghamshire, 195, 314

  Bulgaria, 156

  Burgundy, 87, 98, 151

  burhgeats, 208

  burhs, boroughs, 12, 122, 208, 266, 296, 310, 353

  Bury St Edmunds (Suffolk), 312, 344; abt of, 202

  Byzantium, 92, 155–7, 201, 360

  Caen (Calvados), 56, 58, 94, 112, 149, 204, 256, 258, 273, 303, 330–1, 349, 365; castle, 112; Holy Trinity, 112, 149, 303; St Stephen’s, 112, 204, 256, 258, 273–4, 298, 330–1, 370

  Caerwent (Gwent), 297

  Cambridge, 270; castle, 220

  Cambridgeshire, 36, 309, 311, 315

  Canterbury, 2, 15, 24, 69, 104, 119, 193, 238, 262, 285–6; cathedral, 70, 257–9, 298, 333; castle, 207; St Augustine’s Abbey, 258, 262; abt of, 239–40, 258, 262

  Capetians, 46

  Caradog ap Gruffudd (d. 1081), 292–4

  Cardiff (Glamorgan), 294

  Carl, northern magnate, 265; his sons and grandsons, 265

  Carmen de Hastingae Proelio [select], 167

  Carolingian Empire, 45–6, 48; see also France

  Cassel (Nord), battle of, 254

  castles, 111, 233, 259, 269, 281–2, 292, 306; Continental origins and purpose, 46–9, 282, 337–8; constructed during WTC’s minority, 51, 54; destroyed after Val-ès-Dunes, 57, 66; on the Bayeux Tapestry, 1–2, 171, 207; introduced to England by No
rmans, 7–8, 207–9, 219–21, 334, 353; castle-guard, garrisons, 242, 247, 281; destruction and suffering caused by, 313, 333; numbers, 334; see also individual castles by name

  Catton (Yorks), 375

  Cecilia (d. 1127), dau. of WTC, 149

  ceorls, 26

  Cerisy-la-Forêt, abbey, 87, 89

  Charford (Hants), 311

  Charlemagne, king of the Franks, emperor (d. 814), 45

  Charles the Fat, king of the Franks, emperor (d. 888), 45

  Chartres, bp of, 24

  Chepstow (Gwent), 120, 296; castle, 296; priory, 296

  Cheshire, 122

  Chester, 192, 227, 234, 247, 258, 268, 313; bp of, 263, 319; castle, 233; earl of, see Gerbod; Hugh

  Chichester (Sussex), castle and rape, 215; cathedral, 258

  chivalry, 264, 267, 270, 295, 339

  Church, English: 14, 69, 98–100, 107–8, 123, 143; reform of, 237–40, 256–61, 339; military service imposed on, 240–2, 323; losses of land, 284–6

  Church, Norman, 50–1, 86–93, 236

  Clavering (Essex), castle, 208

  Cluny (Saône-et-Loire), abbey, 87

  Cnut, king of England (1016–35) Denmark (1018–35) and Norway birth and baptism, 23; Christianity, 23–4, 368; visit to Rome, 37; and the waves, 18, 23; conquers England, 18, 102; Scandinavian empire, 60–1; brutality, 18; killings at the start of his reign, 19, 126, 263–5, 336; marriages, 19–20, 30–2; death, 22–3, 30–5, 43; buried in Winchester, 23, 42, 97, 100; changes during his rule, 27–30, 103, 122–3, 253; laws of, 41, 130, 385; his children, see Gunhilda; Harold; Harthacnut; Swein

  Cnut IV, king of Denmark 6), 304–6, 326, 345

  coins and coinage, 13, 31, 33, 46, 48, 122, 208; sterling, 298

  Colchester (Essex), castle, 297, 334

  Cologne, 103, 247

  Comines (Nord), 222

  commendation, 107, 248, 283

  Compiègne (Oise), 50

  Constance, patron of Geoffrey Gaimar, 348

  Constantine, emperor, 298

  Constantinople, 95, 155–6, 360

  Conwy, river, 292

  Copsig, earl of Northumbria (d. 1067), 211, 216, 222

  Cornwall, 214, 220, 227

  coronation, 10, 34, 59, 131, 139–40, 195, 197–201, 216, 219, 236–7, 319–20, 331, 335, 344, 350; see also crown-wearing

  councils: Church, 58, 86, 91–2, 98, 103–4, 129, 238–9, 242, 257–8, 306, 338–9, 365; secular, 31, 69–70, 75, 78, 114, 143, 305

  courts: national and secular, 27, 208, 257, 286, 318, 338, 351; Church, 257, 339; baronial, 338, 351; see also law

 

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