Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations and Tables
- Editor’S Preface
- Dedication
- Abbreviations
- Henry of Winchester: the Bishop, the City, and the Wider World (The R. Allen Brown Memorial Lecture, 2014)
- Episcopal acta in Normandy, 911–1204: the Charters of the Bishops of Avranches, Coutances and Sées
- Richard II de Normandie: figure princière et transferts culturels (fin dixième–début onzième siècle)
- Royal Inauguration and the Liturgical Calendar in England, France, and the Empire c. 1050–c. 1250
- History, Prophecy and the Arthur of the Normans: the question of audience and motivation behind Geoffrey of Monmouth’s Historia regum Britanniae
- Canterbury Cathedral Priory’s Bath House and Fish Pond
- Tam Anglis quam Danis: ‘Old Norse’ Terminology in the Constitutiones de foresta (The Marjorie Chibnall Memorial Essay, 2014)
- Quadripartitus, Leges Henrici Primi and the Scholarship of English Law in the Early Twelfth Century
- John of Fécamp and Affective Reform in Eleventh-Century Normandy
- Trade and Travel in England during the Long Twelfth Century
- The Emperor’s Robe: Thomas Becket and Angevin Political Culture
- The Illustrated Archetype of the Historia Normannorum: Did Dudo of Saint-Quentin write a ‘chronicon pictum’?
- The Biography of a Place: Faccombe Netherton, Hampshire, c. 900–1200
- Contents Of Volumes 1–36
Episcopal acta in Normandy, 911–1204: the Charters of the Bishops of Avranches, Coutances and Sées
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 February 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations and Tables
- Editor’S Preface
- Dedication
- Abbreviations
- Henry of Winchester: the Bishop, the City, and the Wider World (The R. Allen Brown Memorial Lecture, 2014)
- Episcopal acta in Normandy, 911–1204: the Charters of the Bishops of Avranches, Coutances and Sées
- Richard II de Normandie: figure princière et transferts culturels (fin dixième–début onzième siècle)
- Royal Inauguration and the Liturgical Calendar in England, France, and the Empire c. 1050–c. 1250
- History, Prophecy and the Arthur of the Normans: the question of audience and motivation behind Geoffrey of Monmouth’s Historia regum Britanniae
- Canterbury Cathedral Priory’s Bath House and Fish Pond
- Tam Anglis quam Danis: ‘Old Norse’ Terminology in the Constitutiones de foresta (The Marjorie Chibnall Memorial Essay, 2014)
- Quadripartitus, Leges Henrici Primi and the Scholarship of English Law in the Early Twelfth Century
- John of Fécamp and Affective Reform in Eleventh-Century Normandy
- Trade and Travel in England during the Long Twelfth Century
- The Emperor’s Robe: Thomas Becket and Angevin Political Culture
- The Illustrated Archetype of the Historia Normannorum: Did Dudo of Saint-Quentin write a ‘chronicon pictum’?
- The Biography of a Place: Faccombe Netherton, Hampshire, c. 900–1200
- Contents Of Volumes 1–36
Summary
The launch of the British Academy’s English Episcopal Acta (EEA) project in 1973, and the publication of its first volume in 1980, along with the further forty-one that have since come to press, have helped to revolutionize our understanding of the English Church in the High Middle Ages. Whereas previous generations of scholars interested in such documents had been forced to rely upon scattered, outdated and very often difficult-to-access published and unpublished material, those working today can depend upon a body of meticulously edited texts collected together in a single series that, upon its completion, will answer the call famously made for such an undertaking by Sir Frank Stenton in 1929. Although similar rallying cries have been made elsewhere in Europe, including France, where the charge has been led most notably by Michel Parisse, the response has unfortunately not always been quite as systematic as that in England. Of those regions whose acta have been frequently consulted but comparatively neglected, that of Normandy stands out. Its episcopate was home to some of the most important figures in the Anglo-Norman world (Odo of Bayeux, Arnulf of Lisieux, Walter of Coutances, etc.), while its archives, despite the upheavals of the French Revolution and the Second World War, often boast collections as rich as any of those across the Channel. Yet, until the beginning of the twenty-first century, the acta of only one of the duchy’s seven dioceses, that of Bayeux, along with those of one particular prelate, namely Hugh of Amiens, archbishop of Rouen (1130–64), had been the subject of a critical edition, with both works remaining so far unpublished.
Recent years, however, have witnessed a resurgence of scholarly interest in the acta of the bishops of Normandy. Not only are editions currently under way for the three dioceses that are the subject of this article, but colleagues in France and the United States are also working to collect and edit the acta of the other bishops of Normandy active during this period, with the Presses universitaires de Caen having committed, in principle at least, to publish the resulting volumes both in print and online.
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- Anglo-Norman Studies 37Proceedings of the Battle Conference 2014, pp. 25 - 52Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2015