
The Norman Conquest in English History, Volume 1: A Broken Chain? pursues a central theme in English historical thinking over seven centuries. Covering more than half a millennium, this first volume explains how and why the experience of the Norman Conquest prompted both an unprecedented campaign in the early twelfth century to write (or create) the history of England, and to excavate (and fabricate) pre-Conquest English law. Garnett traces the treatment of the Conquest in English historiography, legal theory and practice, and political argument through the middle ages and early modern period, examining the dispersal of these materials from libraries afer the dissolution of the monasteries, and the attempts made to rescue, edit, and print many of them in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. These preservation efforts enabled the Conquest to become still more contested in the constitutional cataclysms of the seventeenth century than it had been in the eleventh and twelfth. The seventeenth-century resurrection of the Conquest will be the subject of a second volume.
This volume investigates how the Norman Conquest functioned as a central, contested theme in English historical, legal, and political thought over seven centuries. George Garnett, a scholar of medieval history, utilizes a wide array of primary sources, including legal texts, historical chronicles, and early modern political treatises, to argue that the Conquest necessitated the fabrication and excavation of pre-Conquest law. By examining the evolution of these narratives from the twelfth through the seventeenth centuries, Garnett demonstrates how the memory of 1066 was continuously reshaped to serve shifting constitutional agendas.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars recognize this work as a rigorous examination of how historical memory is constructed and manipulated for political ends. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the depth of the archival research presented throughout the text.
Page Count:
490
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191039152
ISBN-13:
9780191039157
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