Foreword.
Editorial Note by Stephen Baxter.
Acknowledgements.
Abbreviations.
Part I An Early Christian Culture and its Critic.
1 Bede and Benedict Biscop.
2 Bede, Beowulf and the Conversion of the Anglo Saxon Aristocracy.
3 Bede, the Bretwaldas and the origins of the Gens Anglorum.
4 Bede and the conversion of England: the charter evidence.
Part II The Impact of Bede's Critique.
5 Æthelwold and his Continental Counterparts: Contact, Comparison, Contrast.
6 Bede and the 'Church of the English'.
7 How do we know so much about Anglo Saxon Deerhurst?
8 Aristocrats as Abbots: a context for the making of Brixworth.
Appendix: Hilda, Saint and Scholar (614-680).
Index.
The author
Before his death in 2004, Patrick Wormald was a Fellow of Wolfson College, Oxford. He was previously a Fellow of All Souls, Oxford, a Lecturer in Medieval History at the University of Glasgow, and a Student of Christ Church, Oxford. He lectured widely in Europe, Scandinavia and North America and had an international reputation as an early-medieval scholar secured by many impressive and meticulously researched articles and by his most magisterial achievement, The Making of English Law.
The Editor
Stephen Baxter was one of Patrick Wormald's students, and is a Lecturer in Medieval History at King's College, London.
"The untimely death of Patrick Wormald in 2004 deprived the
scholarly community of a brilliant historian best known for his
magisterial study of the development of English law during the
Anglo-Saxon period. As the volume under review here clearly shows,
Worrnald was also a leading figure in revising our understanding of
Bede and his early medieval English cultural milieu." (CHURCH
HISTORY, March 2008)
“On display throughout … is Wormald’s considerable intellect and
erudition and in the earlier essays in particular an enviable
familiarity with Continental scholarship. There are also occasional
flashes of the theater that was a Wormald lecture.” (Catholic
Historical Review, October 2008)
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