Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Illustrations and Tables
- Editor's Preface
- Abbreviations
- Horses, Knights and Tactics (The R. Allen Brown Memorial Lecture, 2018)
- Baldwin of Forde, Bartholomew of Exeter and the Authorship of the Liber de sectis hereticorum et orthodoxe fidei dogmata
- Evidence of the Ordinary: Wives and Children of the Clergy in Normandy and England, 1050–1150
- Anthropology, Feud and De obsessione Dunelmi
- New Archaeologies of the Norman Conquest
- An Angevin Imperial Context for the Amboise–Anjou Narrative Programme
- The Noble Leper: Responses to Leprosy in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
- Royal Taxation and Written Record in Eleventh-Century England and Ninth-Century West Francia
- Early Royal Rights in the Liberty of St Edmund (The Marjorie Chibnall Memorial Essay, 2018)
- Castle Construction, Conquest and Compensation (The Christine Mahany Memorial Lecture)
- Four Scenes from the Chanson de Roland on the Façade of Barletta Cathedral (Southern Italy)
- ‘The Jews are our Donkeys’: Anti-Jewish Polemic in Twelfth-Century French Vernacular Exegesis
- Miscellaneous Endmatter
New Archaeologies of the Norman Conquest
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 March 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Illustrations and Tables
- Editor's Preface
- Abbreviations
- Horses, Knights and Tactics (The R. Allen Brown Memorial Lecture, 2018)
- Baldwin of Forde, Bartholomew of Exeter and the Authorship of the Liber de sectis hereticorum et orthodoxe fidei dogmata
- Evidence of the Ordinary: Wives and Children of the Clergy in Normandy and England, 1050–1150
- Anthropology, Feud and De obsessione Dunelmi
- New Archaeologies of the Norman Conquest
- An Angevin Imperial Context for the Amboise–Anjou Narrative Programme
- The Noble Leper: Responses to Leprosy in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
- Royal Taxation and Written Record in Eleventh-Century England and Ninth-Century West Francia
- Early Royal Rights in the Liberty of St Edmund (The Marjorie Chibnall Memorial Essay, 2018)
- Castle Construction, Conquest and Compensation (The Christine Mahany Memorial Lecture)
- Four Scenes from the Chanson de Roland on the Façade of Barletta Cathedral (Southern Italy)
- ‘The Jews are our Donkeys’: Anti-Jewish Polemic in Twelfth-Century French Vernacular Exegesis
- Miscellaneous Endmatter
Summary
It is becoming clear that the Norman Conquest both initiated and intensified farreaching changes at all levels of society, including culture and identity, social structure, economy, diet, art and architecture, portable material culture, rural and urban settlement, manorial and community landscapes, religion and mortuary practice, and the management of the environment. Many of these elements are either inaccessible from documentary evidence alone or have distinct material implications, and recent archaeological research is beginning to show that they have the potential to complicate traditional historical narratives of the Conquest, or take our understanding of the period in new directions. Nevertheless, the vast majority of academic scholarship on the Conquest has been carried out without reference to the abundant archaeological evidence from the eleventh and twelfth centuries that has been recovered in excavation and still survives above ground. As a result, both academic and public understanding of the Conquest has been predicated primarily on its impact on the elite social classes, and on narratives that have been derived almost entirely from the wealth of documentary history available for the period. The comprehensive archaeology of the Norman Conquest and Anglo-Norman transition is therefore a story that is yet to be told.
This paper articulates key themes, research directions, and a new case study emerging from the project ‘Archaeologies of the Norman Conquest’, an AHRC research network led jointly by the authors. The chief objective of the project has been to create and sustain a research community linked by an interest in revitalizing archaeological research in the eleventh and twelfth centuries, in order to examine the cultural, social, and political implications of the Norman Conquest and its aftermath through an explicit focus on material culture. The network has brought together the humanistic, scientific, academic, professional and public-engagement arms of archaeology, as well as key participants from cognate disciplines, in a range of workshops focusing on themes of interpretative agendas, methodologies, international perspectives and public outreach. The central aim has been to create a materially focused research framework for the period which can be engaged with and taken forward by both archaeological and interdisciplinary audiences. This article is a first step in that direction.
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- Anglo-Norman Studies XLIProceedings of the Battle Conference 2018, pp. 83 - 102Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2019