Excerpt The period considered here begins with the death in 1063 or 1064 of Gruffudd ap Llywelyn, a prince of Gwynedd (northwest Wales), who had unified much of the country, but was killed by his own troops during a campaign against Earl Harold (later Harold II of England). This was, of course, almost immediately followed by the Norman Conquest of England, which reached into Gwent and Morgannwg (southeast Wales) by 1072. As Roger Turvey points out, though, unlike William\u27s invasion of England in 1066, the \u27invasion\u27 of Wales was neither planned nor coordinated either by a king preoccupied in consolidating his victory over the Saxon-English or by Norman adventurers selfishly engaged in carving out for themselves pockets of Welsh te...
This article explores the striking links and parallels which existed between the frontiers of Norman...
This is the first study of the Anglo-Welsh border region in the period before the Norman arrival in ...
A review article on Thomas M. Charles-Edwards, Wales and the Britons 350–1064 (Oxford, 2013)
Llywelyn ab Iorwerth (1173-1140) has long been considered one of the leading heroes of Wales. The l...
Wales in the Middle Ages was a region both divided by war and united by culture. Frequent raids from...
The change with the coming of the Normans to the Welsh Marches was not as encompassing as scholarshi...
Wales’s development as a post-Roman successor state is established in this groundbreaking study of m...
This article investigates the motivations behind royal pilgrimage to Rome in the early Middle Ages b...
From the defeat of Llewelyn by Mortimer in 1284 until the union with England in 1536 the Welsh had c...
This study focusses on the writing of history in medieval Wales. Its starting-point is a series of h...
Simple, land which would come to bear their name, Normandy.1 A century and a half later, the leader ...
This article examines how political relations between England and Wales evolved during the tenth and...
Dr Richard Marsden from The Open University discusses the installation of a statue of Henry VII at h...
The present thesis is a study of the reality – and the myth – of the ‘Welsh soldier’ in the later mi...
This PhD dissertation investigates the construction of identities in the early Middle Ages, focusing...
This article explores the striking links and parallels which existed between the frontiers of Norman...
This is the first study of the Anglo-Welsh border region in the period before the Norman arrival in ...
A review article on Thomas M. Charles-Edwards, Wales and the Britons 350–1064 (Oxford, 2013)
Llywelyn ab Iorwerth (1173-1140) has long been considered one of the leading heroes of Wales. The l...
Wales in the Middle Ages was a region both divided by war and united by culture. Frequent raids from...
The change with the coming of the Normans to the Welsh Marches was not as encompassing as scholarshi...
Wales’s development as a post-Roman successor state is established in this groundbreaking study of m...
This article investigates the motivations behind royal pilgrimage to Rome in the early Middle Ages b...
From the defeat of Llewelyn by Mortimer in 1284 until the union with England in 1536 the Welsh had c...
This study focusses on the writing of history in medieval Wales. Its starting-point is a series of h...
Simple, land which would come to bear their name, Normandy.1 A century and a half later, the leader ...
This article examines how political relations between England and Wales evolved during the tenth and...
Dr Richard Marsden from The Open University discusses the installation of a statue of Henry VII at h...
The present thesis is a study of the reality – and the myth – of the ‘Welsh soldier’ in the later mi...
This PhD dissertation investigates the construction of identities in the early Middle Ages, focusing...
This article explores the striking links and parallels which existed between the frontiers of Norman...
This is the first study of the Anglo-Welsh border region in the period before the Norman arrival in ...
A review article on Thomas M. Charles-Edwards, Wales and the Britons 350–1064 (Oxford, 2013)