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Online publication date:
September 2012
Print publication year:
2008
Online ISBN:
9781846156120

Book description

This new study sets the medieval palatinate of Durham firmly in the context of a community built round the cult of St Cuthbert. North-East England contained some distinctive power structures during the late middle ages, notably the palatinate of Durham, where writs were issued in the name of the bishop of Durham rather than of the king and the bishop exercised secular authority as earl palatine. The core of the palatinate was the bishopric of Durham, an area bounded by the rivers Tyne and Tees and distinguished by an illustrious tradition, focusing upon Durham cathedral and the cult of St Cuthbert. Here resided the ‘Haliwerfolc’, the 'people of the saint'. This book, unlike previous interpretations which have tended to approach Durham primarily as a form of devolved royal power whose autonomy was gradually circumscribed by the crown, reviews the operation of palatine government in the light of more recent paradigms about the nature of power and identity in medieval England. In particular, it sees the concept of the county community as critical to a new understanding of the social and political history of the bishopric. In Durham this was a community built not upon patterns of landholding, social interaction or office-holding; it was in the concept of the ‘Haliwerfolc’ and in the cult of St Cuthbert that the inhabitants of the bishopric possessed their own distinctive culture of community and identity. CHRISTIAN D. LIDDY is Lecturer in History at the University of Durham.

Reviews

An extremely learned and thoughtful study. [.] Liddy has made an absolutely major contribution to our understanding of the longest lived and most curious political and constitutional structure ever to have evolved in the medieval North. NORTHERN HISTORY

Source: Nottingham Medieval Studies LIII

All historians of the period should be grateful for Christian Liddy's book.'

Source: Journal of Ecclesiastical History

An extremely learned and thoughtful study. [.] Liddy has made an absolutely major contribution to our understanding of the longest lived and most curious political and constitutional structure ever to have evolved in the medieval North.

Source: Northern History

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