This thesis contributes to the debate on the nature of Anglo-Saxon minsters and regional variation in the Anglo-Saxon and Norman Church by relating form, setting and endowment of churches to origin and function, examining the relationship between Minster parochiae and estates in contrasting landscapes, and assessing the effects of the Norman Conquest at a local level. Extensive survival of Saxo-Norman churches in western Sussex allows a classification and chronology to be developed, while a systematic approach to topography and records of glebes defines settings, enclosures and endowments. Anglo-Saxon charters, episcopal, capitular and monastic records, manorial documents and state papers are the basis for analysing rights and dues between...
This thesis offers the first dedicated study of each of the three crown-wearing abbeys of Westminste...
This thesis addresses the phenomenon of multiple lordship in Leicestershire, Derbyshire, and Staffor...
Anglo-Saxon church councils or synods were the fora where much ecclesiastical business was conducted...
This thesis identifies how the early medieval Church developed in Somerset; the relevant date range ...
The primary objective of; this thesis is to catalogue the salient elements of the Anglo-Saxon parish...
This study explores aspects of the organisation of the church in the eleventh century, and where pos...
This thesis is a study of landholders named in Domesday Book in 1066 and 1086 in Hampshire, from the...
This project aims to incorporate urban settlement data within a framework of landscape archaeology a...
The last two decades have witnessed a marked rise in middle Anglo-Saxon settlement research, as arch...
The thesis examines conceptions and experiences of space in later medieval and early modern England ...
The aim of this thesis is to explain why the early Anglo-Saxon great hall complexes were built, why ...
There was a high concentration of royal free chapels in south Staffordshire during the later medieva...
The aim of the thesis was to take a relatively small area of the Norfolk countryside and to discover...
This thesis is a study of the religious culture of the market-town parish of Wimborne Minster, Dorse...
This work is concerned with the comparative study of three minster churches, those of Beverley, Ripo...
This thesis offers the first dedicated study of each of the three crown-wearing abbeys of Westminste...
This thesis addresses the phenomenon of multiple lordship in Leicestershire, Derbyshire, and Staffor...
Anglo-Saxon church councils or synods were the fora where much ecclesiastical business was conducted...
This thesis identifies how the early medieval Church developed in Somerset; the relevant date range ...
The primary objective of; this thesis is to catalogue the salient elements of the Anglo-Saxon parish...
This study explores aspects of the organisation of the church in the eleventh century, and where pos...
This thesis is a study of landholders named in Domesday Book in 1066 and 1086 in Hampshire, from the...
This project aims to incorporate urban settlement data within a framework of landscape archaeology a...
The last two decades have witnessed a marked rise in middle Anglo-Saxon settlement research, as arch...
The thesis examines conceptions and experiences of space in later medieval and early modern England ...
The aim of this thesis is to explain why the early Anglo-Saxon great hall complexes were built, why ...
There was a high concentration of royal free chapels in south Staffordshire during the later medieva...
The aim of the thesis was to take a relatively small area of the Norfolk countryside and to discover...
This thesis is a study of the religious culture of the market-town parish of Wimborne Minster, Dorse...
This work is concerned with the comparative study of three minster churches, those of Beverley, Ripo...
This thesis offers the first dedicated study of each of the three crown-wearing abbeys of Westminste...
This thesis addresses the phenomenon of multiple lordship in Leicestershire, Derbyshire, and Staffor...
Anglo-Saxon church councils or synods were the fora where much ecclesiastical business was conducted...