Lords and Communities in Early Medieval East Anglia

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Boydell Press, 2005 - History - 185 pages
Investigation of the growing regional power of the English aristocracy in the central middle ages.

The period between the late tenth and late twelfth centuries saw many changes in the structure and composition of the European and English aristocracy. One of the most important is the growth in local power bases and patrimonies at the expense of wider property and kinship ties. In this volume, the author uses the organisation of aristocracy in East Anglia as a case-study to explore the issue as a whole, considering the extent to which local families adopted national and European values, and investigating the role of local circumstances in the formulation of regional patterns and frameworks. The book is interdisciplinary in approach, using anthropological, economic and prosopographical research to analyse themes such as marriage and kinship, social mobility, relations between secular and ecclesiastical lords, ethnic groups, and patterns of economic growth amongst social groupings; there is a particular focus too on how different landscapes - fenland, upland, coastal and urban - affected the pattern of aristocratic experience.

Dr ANDREW WAREHAM is a Research Associate at the Centre for Computing in the Humanities at King'sCollege London.

 

Contents

East Anglia and the Feudal Transformation
1
The Kindred of Wulfstan of Dalham and TenthCentury Society 29
29
The Daughters of Ealdorman Ælfgar and the Localization of Power
46
Ealdorman Byrhtnoths Kindred and the Formation of Lineage 61 2
61
The Social Order Reshaped and the Emergence of the Gentry in
78
The Formation of Lordships and Economic Transformations during
95
Landscapes of Lordship and Political Transformations during the
112
The Regional Aristocracy and Social Mobility before the
125
The Regional Aristocracy and Social Mobility during and after
139
Epilogue
155
Index
175
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Page 163 - Monastic Reform and the Unification of Tenth-Century England', Religion and National Identity: Papers Read at the Nineteenth Summer Meeting and the Twentieth Winter Meeting of the Ecclesiastical History Society, ed.
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