Conquest, anarchy and lordship: Yorkshire, 1066 - 1154

Focussing on Yorkshire, by far the largest English county, this book examines three of the most important themes in the period described by Sir Frank Stenton as 'the first century of English feudalism': the Norman conquest, the anarchy of Stephen's reign and the nature of lordship and...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

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Bibliographische Detailangaben
1. Verfasser: Dalton, Paul (VerfasserIn)
Format: Buch
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: Cambridge u.a. Cambridge Univ. Press 1994
Ausgabe:1. publ.
Schriftenreihe:[Cambridge studies in medieval life and thought / 4] 27
Schlagworte:
Zusammenfassung:Focussing on Yorkshire, by far the largest English county, this book examines three of the most important themes in the period described by Sir Frank Stenton as 'the first century of English feudalism': the Norman conquest, the anarchy of Stephen's reign and the nature of lordship and land tenure. In each case the book offers a strong challenge to dominant interpretations, and seeks to alter in significant ways our conception of Anglo-Norman politics and government
The first section of the book reveals that the Norman conquest of Yorkshire was a much more rapid and carefully controlled process than has hitherto been supposed; that, initially at least, it owed a great deal to the construction of castles and organisation of castleries; that during the reign of the Conqueror's youngest son, Henry I, its character changed as the king sought to bring Yorkshire under tighter central administrative control and promote monasticism there; and that its impact upon tenurial structure and terms of land tenure, although considerable, has been overestimated. The second section of the book examines the anarchy of King Stephen's reign and its consequences in Yorkshire. It challenges the view that Stephen's creation of earls was a deliberate attempt to impose an alternative conception of government, and illustrates how the greater magnates profited from, and in some cases sought to promote, a failure of royal control
The final section of the book deals with lordship, one of the most significant aspects of medieval society. It challenges Stenton's conception of twelfth-century society as a 'seignorial world' organised principally around the honour and dominated by baronial lordship. It reveals that on some (perhaps many) honours the bonds of association between the tenantry, and the powers of lords over their men, were weaker than Stenton supposed, and that royal intervention in the honour was far more regular. In doing so it undermines one of the basic premises of those legal historians who argue that the origins of the English Common Law are to be found in the legal reforms of Henry II. The book will therefore be essential reading on both 'the first century' and 'the legal framework' of English feudalism
Beschreibung:Zugl.: Sheffield, Univ., Diss., 1990
Beschreibung:XXII, 345 S. Kt.
ISBN:0521450985

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