The most recent research into aspects of the early middle ages.
The latest volume of the Haskins Society Journal presents recent research on the Anglo-Saxon, Anglo-Norman, Viking and Angevin worlds of the eleventh and twelfth centuries, broadly conceived, and includes topics ranging from analysis of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles for the early construction of English identity, to the exercise of Norman naval power in the Mediterranean, to several studies of churchmen and church organization in Rouen, Aquitaine and Florence, and more.
CONTRIBUTORS: RICHARD SHARPE, JANET L. NELSON, JORG PETLZER, MAUREEN C. MILLER, ANNA TRUMBORE JONES, ALICE TAYLOR, CHARLES D. STANTON, CHARITY URBANSKI, PAULINE STAFFORD.
Cuprins
King Harold’s Daughter – Richard Sharpe
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, Identity and the Making of England – Pauline Stafford
Master Anulf, Archdeacon of Rouen, Unlicensed Pluralism, and
Idoneitas. Defining Eligibility in the Early Thirteenth Century – Jörg Peltzer
The Saint Zenobius Dossal by the Master of the Bigallo and the Cathedral Chapter of Florence – Maureen C. Miller
Discovering the Aquitanian Church in the Corpus of Ademar of Chabannes – Anna Trumbore Jones
Robert de Londres, Illegitimate Son of William, King of Scots,
c
The Use of Naval Power in the Norman Conquest of Southern Italy and Sicily –
Apology, Protest, and Suppression: Interpreting the Surrender of Caen [1105] – Charity Urbanski
Henry Loyn and the Context of Anglo-Saxon England – Janet L Nelson
Despre autor
Richard Sharpe FBA (1954-2020) Professor of Diplomatic in the University of Oxford, and President of the Surtees Society from 2002, was one of Britain’s most eminent manuscript scholars with over 200 publications before he died. He left unfinished his study of the early deeds of the great Benedictine abbey of St Mary in York, which has been completed in his memory by the society.