Norman Heritage

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A01=Trevor Rowley
Alhambra Palace
Anglo-Saxon Landscape
Anglo-Saxon landscape change
Author_Trevor Rowley
Bailey Castle
Baldwin De Redvers
Bayeux Tapestry
Bishop's Castle
Bishop’s Castle
castle architecture
Castles
Category=N
Category=NHD
Category=NHDJ
Church Reform
Conquest
Deer Park
Domesday Book
Early Norman Castles
ecclesiastical reform
English Conquest
English Landscape
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eq_history
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
feudal administration
feudalism
Fulk Nerra
Henry III
Henry Plan Tagenet
Late Saxon
Late Saxon Church
Late Saxon England
Late Saxon Period
Live Deer
Medieval Churches
Medieval Deer Park
medieval English society
Medieval Monasteries
Medieval Villages
Medieval Woodland
Middle Ages
Monasteries
monastic expansion
Monasticism
Norman conquest
Norman conquest impact on Britain
Norman Wales
Normans
Ouse Burn
Religion in the Medieval Period
Religon in the Middle Ages
Richard Coeur De Lion
Richard's Castle
Richard’s Castle
Roman Britain
Saxon Burh
Stone Castles
Th Medieval Church
The Church
The High Middle Ages
The Norman Conquest
The Norman Heritage
Trade
Trevor Rowley
Welsh Borderlands
West Field
Windsor Area
Woodland

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367180942
  • Weight: 580g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Jul 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Originally published in 1983, The Norman Heritage looks at the Norman Conquest as a turning point in English history. The book argues that not only was this the last time that England was successfully invaded, but it followed a complete change in the ruling dynasty, the introduction of military feudalism, the reform of the church and the rapid spread of monasticism. The book suggests that such social and political changes were accompanied by dramatic architectural and topographical developments. Frenzied building activity resulted in the construction of cathedrals, churches, monasteries and castles and stone was used on a scale unknown since the end of the Roman Empire. The Norman desire to exercise regional political control and to simulate trade resulted in a rash of newly planned towns across the country. In many more subtle ways, Anglo-Saxon landscape was altered and modified by Norman coercion and influence. Through their energy and administrative ability, the Normans transformed the face of town and country alike, and this book traces the impact of the Norman Conquest upon the British scene, through both a historical narrative, surviving structural remains of buildings and the patterns of settlements, communications and land use that developed during this period.

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