Medieval Wales
The sources for the history of medieval Wales are scanty, sporadic and physically scattered. Neither in archival, narrative nor archaeological remains is Wales comparable to England, and what survives is less accessible, for there has been a notable reluctance among Welsh scholars to produce guides and surveys for this difficult corpus of material. The purpose of Medieval Wales is to examine the history and survival of records produced by administrations inside what is now Wales, princely, seigneurial, ecclesiastical, municipal; to indicate the relevance of English official records to students of Welsh history; to give an introduction to the main narrative sources; to put the work of the Welsh antiquaries into a wider context; to re-examine the whole question of independent Welsh coinage; and to bring together discussion of Welsh archaeological remains, place-name studies and early cartography.
Product details
November 2008Paperback
9780521089463
256 pages
216 × 140 × 15 mm
0.33kg
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Literary Sources
- 2. The Official Records of Wales and Their Preservation
- 3. The Records of the English Government
- 4. Archives of Individuals and Corporations
- 5. Ecclesiastical Records
- 6. The Antiquaries
- 7. Archaeology and Numismatics
- 8. Cartography and Place-Names
- 9. Conclusion.