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E-raamat: Anglo-Norman Studies XLIV: Proceedings of the Battle Conference 2021

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  • Formaat: 186 pages
  • Sari: Anglo-Norman Studies
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-Jun-2022
  • Kirjastus: The Boydell Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781800106314
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  • Formaat: 186 pages
  • Sari: Anglo-Norman Studies
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-Jun-2022
  • Kirjastus: The Boydell Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781800106314
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The essays collected here demonstrate the rich vitality of scholarship in this area. This volume has a particular focus on the interrelations between the various parts of north-western Europe. After the opening piece on Lotharingia, there are detailed studies of the relationship between Ponthieu and its Norman neighbours, and between the Norman and Angevin duke-kings and the other French nobility, followed by an investigation of the world of demons and possession in Norman Italy, with additional observations on the subject in twelfth-century England. Meanwhile, the York massacre of the Jews in 1190 is set in a wider context, showing the extent to which crusader enthusiasm led to the pogroms that so marred Anglo-Jewish relations, not just in York but elsewhere in England; and there is an exploration of poverty in London, also during the 1190s, viewed through the prism of the life and execution of William fitz Osbert. Another chapter demonstrates the power of comparative history to illuminate the norms of proprietary queenship, so often overlooked by historians of both kingship and queenship. And two essays focusing on landscape bring the physical into close association with the historical: on the equine landscape of eleventh and twelfth-century England, adding substantially to our understanding of the place of the horse in late Anglo-Saxon and early Anglo-Norman societies, and on the Brut narratives of Geoffrey of Monmouth, Wace, and La amon, arguing that they use realistic landscapes in their depiction of the action embedded in their tales, so demonstrating the authors' grasp of the practical realities of contemporary warfare and the role played by landscapes in it.

The most recent cutting-edge scholarship on the tenth, eleventh and twelfth centuries.

The essays collected here demonstrate the rich vitality of scholarship in this area. This volume has a particular focus on the interrelations between the various parts of north-western Europe. After the opening piece on Lotharingia, there are detailed studies of the relationship between Ponthieu and its Norman neighbours, and between the Norman and Angevin duke-kings and the other French nobility, followed by an investigation of the world of demons and possession in Norman Italy, with additional observations on the subject in twelfth-century England. Meanwhile, the York massacre of the Jews in 1190 is set in a wider context, showing the extent to which crusader enthusiasm led to the pogroms that so marred Anglo-Jewish relations, not just in York but elsewhere in England; and there is an exploration of poverty in London, also during the 1190s, viewed through the prism of the life and execution of William fitz Osbert. Another chapter demonstrates the power of comparative history to illuminate the norms of proprietary queenship, so often overlooked by historians of both kingship and queenship. And two essays focusing on landscape bring the physical into close association with the historical: on the equine landscape of eleventh and twelfth-century England, adding substantially to our understanding of the place of the horse in late Anglo-Saxon and early Anglo-Norman societies, and on the Brut narratives of Geoffrey of Monmouth, Wace, and La amon, arguing that they use realistic landscapes in their depiction of the action embedded in their tales, so demonstrating the authors' grasp of the practical realities of contemporary warfare and the role played by landscapes in it.
List of Illustrations And Tables
vi
Editor's Preface viii
List of Abbreviations
ix
`Avalterre' and `Amnitas Lotharingonim': Mapping Cultural Production, Cultural Connections and Political Fragmentation in the `Grand Est' (The Allen Brown Memorial Lecture)
1(18)
Lindy Grant
The Perspective from Ponthieu: Count Guy and His Norman Neighbour (The Des Seal Memorial Lecture)
19(16)
Kathleen Thompson
Wild, Wild Horses: Equine Landscapes of the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries (The Christine Mahaney Memorial Lecture)
35(20)
Robert Liddiard
Demons and Incidents of Possession in the Miracles of Norman Italy (The Marjorie Chibnall Essay Prize)
55(16)
Amy Devenney
Rulership, Authority, and Power in the Middle Ages: The Proprietary Queen as Head of Dynasty
71(34)
Ana'is Waag
Crusaders and Jews: The York Massacre of 1190 Revisited
105(16)
Christoph T. Maier
Poverty in London in the 1190s: Some Possibilities
121(16)
Alan Cooper
Landscapes of Concealment and Revelation in the Brut Narratives: Geoffrey of Monmouth, Wace, and La3amon
137(16)
Leonie V. Hicks
Michael D. J. Bintley
The Twelfth-Century Norman and Angevin Duke-Kings of England and the Northern French Nobility
153
Heather J. Tanner
Lindy Grant, `Avalterre' and `Affinitas Lotharingorum': Mapping Cultural Production, Cultural Connections and Political Fragmentation in the `Grand Est'
Fig 1 Lotharingia and its western border zones in the High Middle Ages
2(18)
Kathleen Thompson, The Perspective from Ponthieu: Count Guy and his Norman Neighbour
Fig. 1 North-eastern France showing places mentioned in the text. Copyright: Paul Stayt
20(3)
Fig. 2 Genealogy of the counts of Ponthieu c. 1000-1105. Copyright: Kathleen Thompson
23(14)
Robert Liddiard, Wild, Wild Horses: Equine Landscapes of the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries
Fig. 1 Distribution map of principal equine place-names down to the early thirteenth century. (Robert Liddiard)
37(3)
Fig. 2 View over the Risborough gap in the northern Chilterns towards Horsendon, `Horsa's hill or valley'. In the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries Risborough was also the site of a major royal horse stud. (Robert Liddiard)
40(5)
Fig. 3 Locations in which Domesday Book records horses in south-west England. (Robert Liddiard)
45(27)
Anai's Waag, Rulership, Authority, and Power in the Middle Ages: The Proprietary Queen as Head of Dynasty Table
1. Royal heiresses
72(4)
Fig. 1 Urraca of Leon: the Jimenez Dynasty (Leon)
76(9)
Fig. 2 Melisende of Jerusalem: the Rethel Dynasty
85(5)
Fig. 3 Empress Matilda: the Norman Dynasty
90(6)
Fig. 4 Petronila of Aragon: the Jimenez Dynasty (Aragon)
96
S.D. Church is Professor in Medieval Studies at the University of Lincoln. MICHAEL BINTLEY is Associate Professor in Medieval English Literature at the University of Southampton. He is author of Trees in the Religions of Early Medieval England (2015), and Settlements and Strongholds in Early Medieval England: Texts, Landscapes, and Material Culture (2020), and co-author of Landscapes and Environments of the Middle Ages (2023). LEONIE V. HICKS is Reader in Medieval Studies at Canterbury Christ Church University, Canterbury, UK.