Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Illustrations and Tables
- Editor's Preface
- Abbreviations
- Horses, Knights and Tactics (The R. Allen Brown Memorial Lecture, 2018)
- Baldwin of Forde, Bartholomew of Exeter and the Authorship of the Liber de sectis hereticorum et orthodoxe fidei dogmata
- Evidence of the Ordinary: Wives and Children of the Clergy in Normandy and England, 1050–1150
- Anthropology, Feud and De obsessione Dunelmi
- New Archaeologies of the Norman Conquest
- An Angevin Imperial Context for the Amboise–Anjou Narrative Programme
- The Noble Leper: Responses to Leprosy in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
- Royal Taxation and Written Record in Eleventh-Century England and Ninth-Century West Francia
- Early Royal Rights in the Liberty of St Edmund (The Marjorie Chibnall Memorial Essay, 2018)
- Castle Construction, Conquest and Compensation (The Christine Mahany Memorial Lecture)
- Four Scenes from the Chanson de Roland on the Façade of Barletta Cathedral (Southern Italy)
- ‘The Jews are our Donkeys’: Anti-Jewish Polemic in Twelfth-Century French Vernacular Exegesis
- Miscellaneous Endmatter
Castle Construction, Conquest and Compensation (The Christine Mahany Memorial Lecture)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 March 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Illustrations and Tables
- Editor's Preface
- Abbreviations
- Horses, Knights and Tactics (The R. Allen Brown Memorial Lecture, 2018)
- Baldwin of Forde, Bartholomew of Exeter and the Authorship of the Liber de sectis hereticorum et orthodoxe fidei dogmata
- Evidence of the Ordinary: Wives and Children of the Clergy in Normandy and England, 1050–1150
- Anthropology, Feud and De obsessione Dunelmi
- New Archaeologies of the Norman Conquest
- An Angevin Imperial Context for the Amboise–Anjou Narrative Programme
- The Noble Leper: Responses to Leprosy in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
- Royal Taxation and Written Record in Eleventh-Century England and Ninth-Century West Francia
- Early Royal Rights in the Liberty of St Edmund (The Marjorie Chibnall Memorial Essay, 2018)
- Castle Construction, Conquest and Compensation (The Christine Mahany Memorial Lecture)
- Four Scenes from the Chanson de Roland on the Façade of Barletta Cathedral (Southern Italy)
- ‘The Jews are our Donkeys’: Anti-Jewish Polemic in Twelfth-Century French Vernacular Exegesis
- Miscellaneous Endmatter
Summary
For older members of the Battle Conference the most abiding memory of Christine Mahany (15 January 1939–13 July 2016) (Fig. 1) will almost certainly be of her sitting at the bar in The Chequers, pint in hand, deep in conversation with Allen Brown, while George, her beloved labrador, patiently languished at her feet. Dogs were a frequent subject of passionate discussion. It was, after all, a time when canine delegates Matilda and Offa were cast in the crucial role of celebrity judges who voiced their opinion of tendentious arguments and windy papers with a yawn or a howl. As often as not, though, the chat was about archaeology or history, or, more precisely, archaeology and history. As odd as it may seem today, the relationship between the two subjects was something of an issue in the 1970s and 1980s. Archaeology as the handmaiden to history was still a cheap put-down that was bandied about in historical circles. Chris came to Battle as an advocate of equality and common interest.
After something of a false start, her background was copper-bottomed archaeology. She studied zoology as a student but spent much of her time in Leicester's New Walk Museum sorting pottery sherds and the like, and so after graduation she was drawn to archaeology as a career. She cut her teeth under the tutelage of Philip Rahtz, the great exponent of open-area excavation, digging on seminal early medieval sites such as Cheddar and Cannington. Thereafter she became an itinerant archaeologist for the Ministry of Public Buildings and Works in her own right, supervising a wide range of sites. Her excavation of the small Roman town of Alcester in Warwickshire was a particular achievement. Temperamentally, however, her interests had always gravitated towards medieval archaeology, and her appointment as director of the Stamford Archaeological Research Committee in 1966 gave her the opportunity to indulge them. She was to stay in Stamford for the rest of her career.
Her appointment came at an opportune time. After a decade of inappropriate post-war development – vandalism is probably a more appropriate term – the historic core of Stamford was designated as the first conservation area in Britain. Chris's brief was to recover its archaeology and produce a coherent account of its origins and growth. Twenty or so excavations and numerous watching briefs followed, covering the full range of medieval life.
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- Anglo-Norman Studies XLIProceedings of the Battle Conference 2018, pp. 175 - 192Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2019