Stigand occupied a place in or near power for at least fifty years and yet has only been studied very peripherally and in reference to others. He has been vilified or lauded by historians ever since the Conquest. His wealth and methods of acquisition of wealth as well as his political activity have been used to paint him as an ambitious prelate interested only in power and motivated by greed. His unusual advancement to the see of Canterbury and apparent disregard for papal strictures caused him to be used as representative of all of the faults of the Anglo-Saxon Church. Other commentators took the opposite approach and portrayed him as a hero and patriot who resisted the Conqueror until he could no longer put off defeat. Neither of these in...
This thesis examines the role and depiction of the body in the vitae of three Anglo-Saxon royal sain...
This first modern study of Henry the Young King, eldest son of Henry II but the least known Plantage...
Book synopsis: St Edmund, king and martyr, supposedly killed by Danes [or `Vikings'] in 869, was one...
Stigand occupied a place in or near power for at least fifty years and yet has only been studied ver...
Full metadata for this item is available in the St Andrews Digital Research Repository at
Saint Wilfrid of York was a Northumbrian bishop, abbot, and missionary. He was born in 634 and died ...
William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury (1633-1645) has gained a reputation as a figure of controvers...
William Longchamp (d. 1197), bishop of Ely, papal legate for the British Isles, chief justiciar of E...
Until now, Wulfstan, Archbishop of York’s relationship to and view of Anglo-Saxon kingship has never...
This thesis examines the identities and functions of late Anglo-Saxon royal agents (c. 950-1066), fo...
This thesis presents a detailed study of the early life and career of Sir William Fitzwilliam of Mil...
This paper clarifies the characteristics of the bishops' strategies to govern their dioceses in Medi...
This book reassesses the religious politics of Elizabethan England through a study of one of its mos...
After the Norman Conquest, Lanfranc was appointed Archbishop of Canterbury in 1070. With William the...
The tenth century Benedictine Reform of Anglo-Saxon England was led by a powerful trio of bishops wh...
This thesis examines the role and depiction of the body in the vitae of three Anglo-Saxon royal sain...
This first modern study of Henry the Young King, eldest son of Henry II but the least known Plantage...
Book synopsis: St Edmund, king and martyr, supposedly killed by Danes [or `Vikings'] in 869, was one...
Stigand occupied a place in or near power for at least fifty years and yet has only been studied ver...
Full metadata for this item is available in the St Andrews Digital Research Repository at
Saint Wilfrid of York was a Northumbrian bishop, abbot, and missionary. He was born in 634 and died ...
William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury (1633-1645) has gained a reputation as a figure of controvers...
William Longchamp (d. 1197), bishop of Ely, papal legate for the British Isles, chief justiciar of E...
Until now, Wulfstan, Archbishop of York’s relationship to and view of Anglo-Saxon kingship has never...
This thesis examines the identities and functions of late Anglo-Saxon royal agents (c. 950-1066), fo...
This thesis presents a detailed study of the early life and career of Sir William Fitzwilliam of Mil...
This paper clarifies the characteristics of the bishops' strategies to govern their dioceses in Medi...
This book reassesses the religious politics of Elizabethan England through a study of one of its mos...
After the Norman Conquest, Lanfranc was appointed Archbishop of Canterbury in 1070. With William the...
The tenth century Benedictine Reform of Anglo-Saxon England was led by a powerful trio of bishops wh...
This thesis examines the role and depiction of the body in the vitae of three Anglo-Saxon royal sain...
This first modern study of Henry the Young King, eldest son of Henry II but the least known Plantage...
Book synopsis: St Edmund, king and martyr, supposedly killed by Danes [or `Vikings'] in 869, was one...