ANGLO-NORMAN STUDIES

formerly
PROCEEDINGS OF THE BATTLE CONFERENCE

 

Art/Archaeology

  1. J.J.G. Alexander, ‘Ideological Representation of Military Combat in Anglo-Norman Art’, Anglo-Norman Studies 15 (1992): 1-24.
  2. Maylis Baylé, R. Allen Brown Memorial Lecture: Norman Architecture around the Year 1000: its Place in the Art of North-Western Europe, Anglo-Norman Studies 22 (1999): 1-28.
  3. Mark Blackburn, ‘Coinage and Currency under Henry I: a Review’, Anglo-Norman Studies 13 (1990): 49-82.
  4. Joan Counihan, ‘Mrs. Ella Armitage and Irish Archaeology’, Anglo-Norman Studies 20 (1997): 59-68.
  5. Eric Fernie, ‘R. Allen Brown Memorial Lecture: Saxons, Normans and their Buildings’, Anglo-Norman Studies 21 (1998): 1-10.
  6. James Graham-Campbell. ‘Anglo-Saxon Equestrian Equipment in Eleventh-Century England, Anglo-Norman Studies 14 (1991): 77-90.
  7. Jane Martindale, ‘The Sword on the Stone: Some resonances of a medieval symbol of power (The Tomb of King John in Worcester Cathedral)’, Anglo-Norman Studies 15 (1992):  199-242.
  8. John Moore, ‘Anglo-Norman Garrisons’, Anglo-Norman Studies 22 (1999): 205-260.
  9. Ian Peirce, ‘The Knight, his Arms and Armour: 1150-1250’, Anglo-Norman Studies 15 (1992):  251-274.
  10. Lisa Reilly, ‘The Emergence of Anglo-Norman Architecture: Durham Cathedral’, Anglo-Norman Studies 19 (1996): 335-352.

 

 

Aristocracy/ Lordship/ Kingship

  1. R.E. Barton, ‘Lordship in Maine: Transformation, Service and Anger’, Anglo-Norman Studies 17 (1994): 41-64.
  2. Robert Bearman, ‘Baldwin de Redvers: Some aspects of a Baronial Career in the Reign of King Stephen’, Anglo-Norman Studies 18 (1995): 19-46.
  3. Vicenzo d’Alessandro, ‘Nobiltà e Parentela nell’Italia Normana’, Anglo-Norman Studies 15 (1992).
  4. John Reuben Davies, The Book of Llandaf: a Twelfth-Century Perspective, Anglo-Norman Studies 21 (1998): 31-46.
  5. RaGena C. DeAragon, ‘Dowager Countesses 1069-1230’, Anglo-Norman Studies 17 (1994): 87-100.
  6. Marie Therese Flanagan, ‘Strategies of Lordship in pre-Norman and post-Norman Leinster, Anglo-Norman Studies 20 (1997): 107-126.
  7. Judith A. Green, ‘Robert Curthose Reassessed’, Anglo-Norman Studies 22 (1999): 95-116.
  8. C.P. Lewis, ‘The Early Earls of Norman England’, Anglo-Norman Studies 13 (1990): 207-224.
  9. Karly Leyser, ‘The Anglo-Norman Succession 1120-1125’, Anglo-Norman Studies 13 (1990): 225-242.
  10. Robert Liddiard, ‘Catle Rising, Norfolk: a Landscape of Lordship?’, Anglo-Norman Studies 22 (1999): 169-186.
  11. J.F.A. Mason, ‘Barons and their Officials in the later Eleventh Century’, Anglo-Norman Studies 13 (1990): 243-262.
  12. John Meddings, ‘Friendship among the Aristocracy in Anglo-Norman England, Anglo-Norman Studies 22 (1999): 187-204.
  13. J.J.N. Palmer, ‘The Wealth of the Secular Aristocracy in 1086’, Anglo-Norman Studies 22 (1999): 279-292.
  14.  ‘Rhys ap Tewdwr, king of Deheubarth’, Anglo-Norman Studies 16 (1993): 21-36.
  15. John Bryan Williams, ‘Judhael of Totnes: the life and times of a post-conquest baron’, Anglo-Norman Studies 16 (1993): 271-289.

 

Normans

  1. Richard Abels, ‘Sheriffs, Lord-Seeking and the Norman Settlement of the Southeast Midlands’, Anglo-Norman Studies 19 (1996): 19-50.
  2. Mathieu Arnoux, ‘Before the Gesta Normannorum and beyond Dudo: Some Evidence on Early Norman Historiography, Anglo-Norman Studies 22 (1999): 29-48.
  3. Lynn Barker, ‘Ivo of Chartres and the Anglo-Norman Cultural Tradition’, Anglo-Norman Studies 13 (1990): 15-34.
  4. Matthew Bennett, ‘Norman Naval Activity in the Mediterranean: 1060-1108’, Anglo-Norman Studies 15 (1992): 41-58.
  5. Emma Cownie, ‘The Normans as Patrons of English Religious Houses 1066-1135’, Anglo-Norman Studies 18 (1995): 47-62.
  6. Paula de Fougerolles, ‘Pope Gregory VII, the Archbishopric of Dol and the Normans’, Anglo-Norman Studies 21 (1998): 47-66.
  7. K.S.B. Keats-Rohan, ‘William I and the Breton Contingent in the non-Norman Conquest 1060-1087’, Anglo-Norman Studies 13 (1990): 157-172.
  8. Simon Keynes, ‘The Æthelings in Normandy’, Anglo-Norman Studies 13 (1990): 173-205.
  9. C.P. Lewis, ‘The French in England Before the Norman Conquest’, Anglo-Norman Studies 17 (1994): 123-144.
  10. David Spear, ‘Power, Patronage and Personality in the Norman Cathedral Chapters, 911-1204, Anglo-Norman Studies 20 (1997): 205-222.
  11. Kathleen Thompson, ‘The Lords of Laigle: Ambition and Insecurity on the Borders of Normandy’, Anglo-Norman Studies 18 (1995).

 

 

Paleography

  1. Cyril Hart, ‘The Bayeux Tapestry and Schools of Illumination at Canterbury, Anglo-Norman Studies 22 (1999): 117-168.
  2. K.S.B. Keats-Rohan, ‚Bibliothèque municipale d’Avranches, 210: Catrulary of Mont-Saint-Michel, Anglo-Norman Studies 21 (1998): 95-112.

 

Church, Monks Etc.

  1. W.M. Aird, ‘St. Cuthbert, the Scots and the Normans’, Anglo-Norman Studies 16 (1993): 1-20.
  2. Lesley Abrams, ‘The Conversions of the Scandinavians of Dublin’, Anglo-Norman Studies 20 (1997): 1-30.
  3. Lindy Grant, ‘Suger and the Anglo-Norman World’, Anglo-Norman Studies 19 (1996): 51-68.
  4. Patricia Halpin, ‘Anglo-Saxon Women and Pilgrimage’, Anglo-Norman Studies 19 (1996): 97-122.
  5. John Hudson, ‘The Abbey of Abingdon, its Chronicle and the Norman Conquest’, Anglo-Norman Studies 19 (1996): 181-202.
  6. B.R. Kemp, ‘Towards Admission and Institution: English Episcopal formulae for the appointment of parochial incumbents in the twelfth-century’, Anglo-Norman Studies 16 (1993):  155-176.
  7. Vanessa King, ‘Ealdred, Archbishop of York: the Worcester Years’, Anglo-Norman Studies 18 (1995): 123-138.
  8. Emma Mason, ‘William Rufus and the Benedictine Order’, Anglo-Norman Studies 21 (1998): 113-144.
  9. Stephanie Mooers Christelow, ‘Chancellors and Curial Bishops: Ecclesiastical Promotions and Power in Anglo-Norman England, Anglo-Norman Studies 22 (1999): 49-70.
  10. Mark Philpott, ‘Some Interactions between the English and Irish Churches’, 187-204.
  11. Janet Pope, ‘Monks and Nobles in the Anglo-Saxon Monastic Reform’, Anglo-Norman Studies 17 (1994): 165-180.
  12. Julie Potter, “The Benefactors of Bec and the Politics of Priories’, Anglo-Norman Studies 21 (1998): 175-192.
  13. Pamela Taylor, ‘The Endowment and Military Obligations of the See of London: A Reassessment of Three Sources’, Anglo-Norman Studies 14 (1991):  287-312.
  14. Benjamin Thompson, ‘Free Alms Tenure in the 12th Century’, Anglo-Norman Studies 16 (1993):, 221-244.

 

Political Relations

  1. D.M. Hadley, ‘And they proceeded to plough and to support themselves : the Scandinavian Settlement of England’, Anglo-Norman Studies 19 (1996): 69-96.
  2. Renée Nip, ‘The Political Relations between England and Flanders (1066-1128)’, Anglo-Norman Studies 21 (1998): 145-168.
  3. Michael Staunton, ‘Thomas Becket’s Conversion’, Anglo-Norman Studies 21 (1998): 193-212.
  4. Elisabeth van Houts, ‘The Anglo-Flemish Treaty of 1101’, Anglo-Norman Studies 21 (1998): 169-174.
  5. ‘Paris, un Rouen Capétian? (Développements comparés de Rouen et Paris sous les règnes he Henri II et Philippe-Auguste)’, Anglo-Norman Studies 16 (1993): 117-136.
  6. Andrew Wareham, “The ‘Feudal Revolution’ in Eleventh-Century East Anglia”, Anglo-Norman Studies 22 (1999): 293-322.

 

Literature/Chronicles

  1. Peter Damian-Grint, ‘Truth, Trust and Evidence in the Anglo-Norman Estoire’, Anglo-Norman Studies 18 (1995): 63-78.
  2. David Dumville, ‘Anglo-Saxon Books: Treasure in Norman Hands?’, Anglo-Norman Studies 16 (1993): 83-100.
  3. Robin Fleming, ‘Oral Testimony and the Domesday Inquest’, Anglo-Norman Studies 17 (1994): 101-122.
  4. John Gillingham, ‘The Context and Purposes of Geoffrey of Monmouth’s History of the Kings of Britain’, Anglo-Norman Studies 13 (1990): 99-108.
  5. Diana Greenway, ‘Authority, Convention and Observation in Henry Huntington’s Historia Anglorum’, 105-122.
  6. John Gillingham, ‘The Travels of Roger of Howden and his Views of the Irish, Scots and Welsh, Anglo-Norman Studies 20 (1997): 151-170.
  7. Paul Antony Hayward, ‘Translation-Narratives in Post-Conquest Hagiography and English Resistance to the Norman Conquest, Anglo-Norman Studies 21 (1998): 67-94.
  8. Patrizia Lendinara, “The ‘Oratio de Utensilibus ad domum regendum pertinentibus’ by Adam of Balsham”, Anglo-Norman Studies 15 (1992): 161-176.
  9. Pàdraig Ó Néill, ‘The Impact of the Norman Invasion on Irish Literature, Anglo-Norman Studies 20 (1997): 171-186.
  10. Cassandra Potts, ‘Atque unum ex diversis gentibus populum effecit: Historical Tradition and the Norman Identity’, Anglo-Norman Studies 18 (1995): 139-152.
  11. Susan Reynolds, ‘Patrons and Polyglots: French Literature in Twelfth-Century England’, Anglo-Norman Studies 14 (1991): 229-250.
  12. Ian Short, ‘Tam Angli quam Franci: Self-definition in Anglo-Norman England’, Anglo-Norman Studies 18 (1995): 153-176.
  13. Hugh M. Thomas, ‘The Gesta Herwardi, the English and their Conquerors’, Anglo-Norman Studies 21 (1998): 213-232.
  14. Elisabeth van Houts, ‘The Memory of 1066 in Written and Oral Traditions’, Anglo-Norman Studies 19 (1996): 167-180.
  15. Yoko Wada, ‘Gerald on Gerald: Self-Presentation by Giraldus Cambrensis’, Anglo-Norman Studies 20 (1997): 223- 246.
  16. Michelle R. Warren, ‘Roger of Howden Strikes Back: Investing Arthur of Brittany with the Anglo-Saxon Future, Anglo-Norman Studies 21 (1998): 261-272.

 

 

Law

  1. G.W.S. Barrow, ‘The Charters of David I’, Anglo-Norman Studies 14 (1991): 25-38.
  2. Paul Brand, “’Time out of Mind’: the knowledge and use of the eleventh- and twelfth- century past in thirteenth-century litigation’, Anglo-Norman Studies 16 (1993): 37-54.
  3. Marjorie Chibnall, “’Clio’s Legal Cosmetics’: Law and Custom in the Work of Medieval Historians, Anglo-Norman Studies 20 (1997): 31-44.
  4. Judith Everard, “The ‘Justiciarship’ in Brittany and Ireland under Henry II”, Anglo-Norman Studies 20 (1997): 87-106.
  5. Christopher Holdsworth, ‘Peacemaking in the Twelfth Century’, Anglo-Norman Studies 19 (1996): 1-18.
  6. Edmund King. ‘Dispute Settlement in Anglo-Norman England’, Anglo-Norman Studies 14 (1991): 115-130.
  7. P.R. Newman, “The Yorkshire Domesday Clamores and the ‘Lost Fee’ of William Malet”, Anglo-Norman Studies 22 (1999): 261-278.
  8. Patrick Wormald, ‘Laga Eadwardi: the Textus Roffensis and its Context’, Anglo-Norman Studies 17 (1994): 243-266.

 

Conquest/ Trade

  1. Seán Duffy, ‘Ireland’s Hastings: the Anglo-Norman Conquest of Dublin’, Anglo-Norman Studies 20 (1997): 69-86.
  2. Mark Gardiner, ‘Shipping and Trade between England and the Continent during the Eleventh Century’, Anglo-Norman Studies 22 (1999): 71-94.
  3. Matthew Strickland, ‘Military Technology and Conquest: the Anomaly of Anglo-Saxon England’, Anglo-Norman Studies 19 (1996): 353-382.

 

Social

  1. John S. Moore, “’Quot Homines?’: the Population of Domesday England”, Anglo-Norman Studies 19 (1996): 307-334.
  2. John S. Moore, ‘The Anglo-Norman Family: Size and Structure’, Anglo-Norman Studies 14 (1991): 153-196.
  3. Susan Reynolds, ‘Bookland, Folkland and Fiefs’, Anglo-Norman Studies 14 (1991): 211-228.