Conquest and colonisation : the Normans in Britain, 1066-1100

Bibliographic Information

Conquest and colonisation : the Normans in Britain, 1066-1100

Brian Golding

(British history in perspective)

Palgrave, 2001

Rev. ed

  • : hbk
  • : pbk

Available at  / 9 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The Norman Conquest of 1066 - often described as the last successful foreign invasion of England - is one of the most famous and significant events in English history. William the Conqueror's narrow victory at Hastings was the prelude to the settlement of an alien aristocracy and culutre that ulimately affected not only England, but much of Wales and Scotland. Its impact has been a matter of heated controversy since the seventeenth century: was the Conquest merely a continuation under new leadership of established patterns of government and society, or did it result in a cataclysmic change? Certainly, the close ties thus established between Normandy and England were to influence Anglo-French relations throughout the Middle Ages, while the emergence of a new dominant establishment culture was indicated not only in 'high politics' but in such areas as language and architecture. Norman colonization was a long process, hardly complete by 1100, by which time there was already strong signs of assimilation between colonists and natives, and a literature stressing a coherent and integrated Anglo-Norman state. This book, now in a revised edition, provides an analysis of the political context and realisation of the Conquest. Golding examines the dynamics of colonisation and explores the effect of the Norman settlement in a number of key areas including government, military organisation and the Church.

Table of Contents

Preface Acknowledgements Maps The Sources Prelude to the Conquest The Norman Conquest, 1066-1100 Settlement and Colonisation Governing the Conquered Military Organisation A Colonial Church? Anglo-Norman England Notes Select Bibliography Index

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