Richard Mortimer
Angevin England
Angevin England
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This is not only a history of the politics of the period but of society and culture, and the interactions of the three. The author seeks to capture the energy of the time, exploring and describing lifestyles, literacy, learning, saints, knights, peasants, pilgrims, and the landscape itself, with its thick woodlands and forests and largely unpaved roads. This was a formative and a creative age: written records largely replaced oral traditions, English re-emerged as a literary language, a distinctive style of gothic architecture evolved, and the sense of Englishness, submerged by the troubles of the Norman conquest, became once more apparent among all ranks of the people.
The book is appropriately illustrated with maps, genealogies and photographs, is fully referenced and contains an extensive guide to primary and secondary sources divided by subject.
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