|
Browse our Categories!
Arms and Armor
Celtic Lore
Historical Fiction
Historical Non-Fiction (A-H)
Historical Non-Fiction (I-R)
Historical Non-Fiction (S-Z)
King Arthur Legends
Miscellaneous Fiction
Miscellaneous Non-Fiction
|
Historical The Debate on the Norman Conquest
by Marjorie Chibnall
$79.95 / Manchester Univ.
Press / 1999
The Norman Conquest of England in 1066 has often been called
the great turning-point in the history of England; certainly
the date is as readily identifiable to English schoolchilren
as 1492 is to Americans. In this concise but thorough book, Marjorie
Chibnall reviews the scholarship and thinking on this event over
the past millennium, from the sources of the history of the Norman
Conquest to the way these sources have been interpreted. Chibnall
closely exemines 20th-century thinking concerning the impat of
the Norman Conquest on political, economic, social, and religious
structures, succinctly describing influences on the modern dialectic
and trends in current scholarship.
In the first four chapters, Chibnall reviews the historiography
of the Norman Conquest, from the Middle Ages through the 19th
century. At first, the Conquest was interpreted according to
which side you were on and involved the theory of legitimacy.
But during the period from the Reformation to the 1660s the Norman
Conquest was viewed in more brutal terms while 19th-century historians
saw the Coquest as the establishment of an oppressive feudal
system on freedom-loving Saxons. (Indeed, it was only during
this period that the term "feudalism" cam into being.)
The final six chapters are devoted to treds and revisions of
20th-century histories of the Norman Conquest. She provides clear
explanations of the issues involved in modern and contemporary
scholarship, from the new thoughts on feudalism and lordship
to law, empire, the church, and the economy. If nothing else,
The Debate on the Norman Conquest gives a strong sense
of how hisory is not merely something that occured long ago.
—Charles Rammelkamp
|
Click here to order: The
Debate on the Norman Conquest
To order Renaissance
Magazine, click here.
To order medieval
tapestries and other period products, click here.
|