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Piperoll 111
Piperoll 111










piperoll 111

The volume concludes with a bibliography of short titles, and of abbreviations, arranged topographically. Each entry contains what the editor has been able to determine about an individual's feudal and personal relationships, followed by a list of references to the sources from which the relevant information came. 199) and " Filius Almari" among the unidentified persons without forenames (p. It is unclear to this reviewer, however, why "Filius Willelmi De Taon" should appear in the list of individuals alphabetized by first name (p. 499, unfortunately without a physical division, by unnamed (although not unidentified) abbots ("Abbas De"), by abbeys ("Abbatia De") and churches ("Ecclesia"), and alphabetically by unidentified persons without forenames and miscellaneous groups. After "Wluuius Piscator", the list is followed on p. Entries are arranged in alphabetical order by an individual's first name names with attributes (occupational, topographic or other) precede those without.

piperoll 111

121-541) is devoted to the DB prosopography.

PIPEROLL 111 FULL

Unlike the Lindsey Survey, a full Latin transcription has never before been published. The second appendix consists of the Northamptonshire Survey from BL Cotton MS Vespasian E 22, thought to have been drawn up shortly before 1120 in association with the assessment of Danegeld. Longley in 1924, it is included here with an independent index of persons and places because of its "prosopographical importance". Although previously published from BL Cotton Claudius C v by Thomas Hearne in the Black Book of the Exchequer (1728), in translation by Chester Waters (1883), in facsimile by James Harris Greenstreet (1884), and again in translation by C.W. The first is a Latin transcription of the Lindsey Survey (1115-18), minus the "very late" additions. Two appendices complete the introductory material. (75) In the continuing debate over what might have been, had Duke William of Normandy remained on his side of the Channel, and what was, Keats-Rohan finds a clearly positive consequence of the invasion: "certainly the conquest of the most sophisticated state of its time by the most ruthlessly efficient entrepreneurs of the time ensured the future of England as the home of innovation in the science of government." Concluding remarks submit that DB prosopography is both "a history of the conquest and settlement of England" and "the history in microcosm of Normandy and the Normans". In addition to the overall majority who derive from Normandy, attention is paid to the Breton contribution to the Conquest, and to the Continental origins of DB landholders in general. These represent approximately forty percent of the 2,172 landholders occurring in DB which the editor has been able to identify. 1-117) considers Domesday Book (DB) largely in terms of the personal names which occur in it, with particular attention being paid to toponymics, and regional or "territorial descriptors". iii) covering the period 1066-1166 and based upon the "principal English administrative sources" for the period, that is, Domesday Book, the Pipe Rolls and the Cartae Baronum.Ī lengthy Introduction (pp. Finally it consider sthe impact of these alien marriages on English political, social and cultural life.Domesday People.Domesday Book is the first volume of "an authoritative and complete prosopography of post-Conquest England" (p. This Part also searches for evidence as to the success or failure of alien marriages particularly in relation to where the partners chose to be buried, their gifts of piety in favour of their partners and displays of shared allegiance on their armorial seals and documents. Resistance to proposed marriage partners is set out as well as a consideration of the problems associated with the re-marriage of widows. It considers the context of alien marriages before and after Magna Carta which brought, in theory, more protection to potential spouses. Part Two looks at the mechanisms by which these alien marriages were achieved. Where it is possible, an assessment of who promoted the marriages over the century has been made. It also looks at the areas from whence came the alien marriage partners. It considers both alien brides and grooms. Part One sets out who these alien husbands and wives were and the impetus for the various waves of marriages. This paper looks at over one hundred marriages between the upper echelons of English society and those born abroad the so-called aliens during the thirteenth century.












Piperoll 111