Property and piety in early medieval Winchester : documents relating to the topography of the Anglo-Saxon and Norman city and its minsters
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Bibliographic Information
Property and piety in early medieval Winchester : documents relating to the topography of the Anglo-Saxon and Norman city and its minsters
(Winchester studies / general editor, Martin Biddle, 4. Anglo-Saxon minsters of Winchester ; 3)
Clarendon Press, 2002
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Note
Text includes modern English translations along with the original Old English and Latin documents
Includes bibliographical references and indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Property and Piety comprises an edition and translation, with extensive commentary, of thirty-three Anglo-Saxon and Norman documents relating to the topography and minsters of early medieval Winchester. These texts record the physical effects on the city of the foundation and expansion of the three neighbouring minsters, and also of the removal of the New Minster to Hyde in about 1110. They record political, religious, and cultural aspects of the tenth-century reform of Benedictine monasticism, of which Winchester was a leading centre. The splendid New Minster refoundation charter, composed by Bishop AEthelwold and granted by King Edgar in 966, is here translated for the first time. A full examination is also made of the old minster confirmation charter, probably fabricated in the reign of AEthelred. The volume also includes all Anglo-Saxon grants of land within Winchester and a reappraisal of the evidence for the beneficial hidation of the surrounding estate of Chilcomb. This volume is part of a three-book study in the Winchester Studies series of the Anglo-Saxon Minsters of Winchester, including 4.i, The Anglo-Saxon Minsters by Martin Biddle and Birthe Kjolbye-Biddle, and 4.ii, The Cult of St Swithun by Michael Lapidge.
Table of Contents
- 1. CRITERIA FOR INCLUSION OF DOCUMENTS IN THE PRESENT VOLUME
- 2. The Manuscript Sources: General Character
- List of Manuscripts
- 3. The Authenticity of the Documents
- Typology
- Degrees of authenticity
- Monastic propaganda
- 4. The Documents as Evidence for Historical Topography: Chronological Survey
- Recurrent references to topographical features of the Anglo-Saxon and Norman city
- Street names
- Topography outside the city
- 5. The Documents as a Reflection of the History of the City c.900-c.1150: Winchester as a royal city
- Winchester as an ecclesiastical centre
- Winchester as a national and regional centre
- 1. EDITORIAL PRINCIPLES
- 2. List of Documents
- 3. Documents I - XXXIII: Text, Translation, and Notes
- Latin word-list
- Old English word-list
- Index of biblical references
- Index of persons named in the documents
- Index of places named in the documents
- Index of Sawyer references
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