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31 March 2018

This volume is based on two international conferences held in 2013 and 2014 at Ariano Irpino, and at Emmanuel College, Cambridge. It contains essays by leading scholars in the field. Like the conferences, the volume seeks to enhance interdisciplinary and international dialogue between those who work on the Normans and their conquests in northern and southern Europe in an original way. It has as its central theme issues related to cultural transfer, treated as being of a pan-European kind across the societies that the Normans conquered and as occurring within the distinct societies of the northern and southern conquests. These issues are also shown to be an aspect of the interaction between the Normans and the peoples they subjugated, among whom many then settled.
HISTORY / General, History and Archaeology
David Bates is a professorial fellow at the University of East Anglia and docteur honoris causa of the Université de Caen-Normandie. He has published extensively on the histories of England and Normandy during the tenth, eleventh and twelfth centuries. His two most recent books are The Normans and Empire (2013) and William the Conqueror (2016). A French translation of the second of these is in progress.
Elisabeth van Houts is honorary professor of European medieval history at the University of Cambridge and a fellow of Emmanuel College. She has published widely on Anglo-Norman history, Latin historiography and memory. Her book Married Life in the Middle Ages 900-1300 is forthcoming.
Edoardo D’Angelo is a full professor of medieval Latin philology at the University of Naples and docteur honoris causa of the Université de Caen-Normandie. He has published twenty-three monographs (studies, critical editions) and more than 120 articles on various topics, themes, authors and texts concerning medieval Latin literature, with specific attention to Norman literary production.
Introduction David Bates and Elisabeth van Houts
1. Harness pendants and the rise of armory
John Baker
2. The transmission of medical culture in the Norman worlds c.1050–c.1250
Elma Brenner
3. Towards a critical edition of Petrus de Ebulo’s De Balneis Puteolanis: new hypotheses
Teofilo De Angelis
4. A Latin school in the Norman principality of Antioch
Edoardo D’Angelo
5. Culti e agiografie d’età normanna in Italia meridionale
Amalia Galdi
6. The landscape of Anglo-Norman England: chronology and cultural transmission
Robert Liddiard
7. The medieval archives of the abbey of S. Trinità, Cava
G. A. Loud
8. Écrire la conquête: une comparaison des récits de Guillaume de Poitiers et de Geoffroi Malaterra
Marie-Agnès Lucas-Avenel
9. Bede’s legacy in William of Malmesbury and Henry of Huntingdon
Alheydis Plassmann
10. The transformation of Norman charters in the twelfth century
Daniel Power
11. Corpora and cultural transmission? Political uses of the body in Norman texts, 1050–1150
Patricia Skinner
12. Homage in the Latin chronicles of eleventh- and twelfth-century Normandy
Alice Taylor
13. Weights and measures in the Norman-Swabian kingdom of Sicily
Mario Rosario Zecchino