Manorial farmsteads may be treated as an expression of lordship, and their study allows changes in self-presentation to be traced in the period between the mid-10th and mid-12th centuries. A relatively uniform design of farmstead is identified from the 10th century, but increasing diversity appears in plans during the course of the 11th century. The plan with the manor house at the rear of the courtyard was replaced in the 12th century by one with the hall at the front in what is identified as an increasingly assertive display of lordship. This change reflects the growing competition between lords and a need to demonstrate status in a more prominent manner. Manorial farmsteads provide an insight into long-term changing social attitudes. © ...
In the early middle ages, the conversion of the early English kingdoms acted as a catalyst for signi...
In order to reveal the functioning and development of lordship and law within society, this thesis e...
The lives of medieval English peasants were influenced more by the manor than any other secular inst...
Manorial farmsteads may be treated as an expression of lordship, and their study allows changes in s...
The last two decades have witnessed a marked rise in middle Anglo-Saxon settlement research, as arch...
First study of the origins of the lordship courts that dominated the lives of the peasantry of medie...
The plan of the late medieval hall in England is well known from the evidence of buildings of the th...
Manor courts held by landlords for their tenants and other local people existed in their thousands a...
Recent revisionist scholarship has challenged the view that the relationship between lords and tenan...
The thesis examines conceptions and experiences of space in later medieval and early modern England ...
The High Weald in south-east England forms a pays with a distinctive landscape and settlement histor...
The agricultural history of the well-documented manor of Rimpton in south-east Somerset provides an ...
This thesis is an examination of the archaeological, historical and landscape contexts of the Norman...
This thesis is a study of landholders named in Domesday Book in 1066 and 1086 in Hampshire, from the...
Research for this thesis draws on evidence from manorial surveys of 1189, 1239, 1260, 1317 and 1325 ...
In the early middle ages, the conversion of the early English kingdoms acted as a catalyst for signi...
In order to reveal the functioning and development of lordship and law within society, this thesis e...
The lives of medieval English peasants were influenced more by the manor than any other secular inst...
Manorial farmsteads may be treated as an expression of lordship, and their study allows changes in s...
The last two decades have witnessed a marked rise in middle Anglo-Saxon settlement research, as arch...
First study of the origins of the lordship courts that dominated the lives of the peasantry of medie...
The plan of the late medieval hall in England is well known from the evidence of buildings of the th...
Manor courts held by landlords for their tenants and other local people existed in their thousands a...
Recent revisionist scholarship has challenged the view that the relationship between lords and tenan...
The thesis examines conceptions and experiences of space in later medieval and early modern England ...
The High Weald in south-east England forms a pays with a distinctive landscape and settlement histor...
The agricultural history of the well-documented manor of Rimpton in south-east Somerset provides an ...
This thesis is an examination of the archaeological, historical and landscape contexts of the Norman...
This thesis is a study of landholders named in Domesday Book in 1066 and 1086 in Hampshire, from the...
Research for this thesis draws on evidence from manorial surveys of 1189, 1239, 1260, 1317 and 1325 ...
In the early middle ages, the conversion of the early English kingdoms acted as a catalyst for signi...
In order to reveal the functioning and development of lordship and law within society, this thesis e...
The lives of medieval English peasants were influenced more by the manor than any other secular inst...