|
Colonial
England, 1066-1215
J.C. Holt FBA
The process of colonisation that followed
the Norman Conquest defined much of the history of England over the next
150 years, structurally altering the distribution of land and power in
society. This theme is defined in a previously unpublished lecture on Colonial
England, given in 1994, but it runs through all the sixteen essays in this
collection. J.C. Holt's subjects include Domesday Book, the establishment
of knight-service, aristocratic structures and nomenclature, the relation
of family to property, security of title and inheritance, among other matters.
He comments on the work of Maitland, Round and Stenton and ends with studies
of the treaty of Winchester (1153), the rasus regis, and Magna Carta.
Contents: ColonialEngland, 1066-1215; Domesday
Book, 1086-1986; 1086; Domesday Book and Beyond; Feudalism Retvisited;
The Introduction of Knight-Service in England; The Carta of Riahard de
La Haye; Politics and Property in Medieval England; Feudal Society and
the Famiy in Early Medieval England: I. The Revolution of 1066; II. Notions
of Patrimony; III. Politics and Patronage; IV The Heiress and the Alien;
What's in a Name? Family Nomenclature and the Norman Conquest; The Treaty
of Winchester, 1153; Magna Carta, 1215-1217: The Legal and Social Context;
The Casus Regis: The Law and Politics of Succession in the Plantagenet
Dominions, 1185- 1247; Index.
288 pages April 1997
1 85285140 6 Cased £45.00
|
|