`A series which is a model of its kind.’ EDMUND KING, HISTORY
The latest volume in the series concentrates, as always, on the half century before and the century after 1066, with papers which have many interconnections and range across different kinds of history. There is a particular focuson church history, with contributions on an Anglo-Saxon archiepiscopal manual, architecture and liturgy in post-Conquest Lincolnshire, Anglo-Norman cathedral chapters, and twelfth-century views of the tenth-century monastic reform. Other topics considered include social history (the Anglo-Norman family), gender (William of Malmesbury’s representation of Bishop Wulfstan of Worcester), and politics (the sheriffs of Northumberland and Cumberland 1170-1185). The volume is completed with articles on Domesday Book and the post-Domesday Evesham Abbey surveys, and a double paper on land tenure and royal patronage. Contributors: STEPHEN BAXTER, JOHN BLAIR, HOWARD CLARKE, TRACEY-ANN COOPER, HUGH DOHERTY, PAUL EVERSON, DAVID STOCKER, KIRSTEN FENTON, VANESSA KING, JOHN MOORE, NICOLA ROBERTSON, DAVID ROFFE
Table of Content
Inside the Anglo-Norman Family: Love, Marriage, and the Family [R. Allen Brown Memorial lecture] – B. J. S. Moore
Land Tenure and Royal Patronage in the Early English Kingdom – Stephen Baxter and W J Blair
The Pragmatic Handbook of an Eleventh-Century Archbishop: Cotton Tiberius A. iii – Tracey-Anne Cooper
Robert de Vaux and Roger de Stuteville, Sheriffs of Cumberland and Northumberland, 1170-1185 – Hugh Doherty
The Common Steeple? Church, Liturgy, and Settlement in Early Medieval Lincolnshire – Paul Everson
The Common Steeple? Church, Liturgy, and Settlement in Early Medieval Lincolnshire – David Stocker
The Question of Masculinity in William of Almsbury’s Presentation of Wulfstan of Worcseter – Kirsten Fenton
Share and Share Alike? Bishops and Cathedral Chapters: The Domesday Evidence – V J King
Dunstan and Monastic Reform: Tenth-Century Fact or Twelfth-Century Fiction? – Nicola Jane Robertson
Domesday Now –