Citadel of the Saxons: The Rise of Early London
Autor Rory Naismithen Limba Engleză Hardback – 10 iul 2019
Preț: 174.12 lei
Preț vechi: 274.28 lei
-37% Nou
Puncte Express: 261
Preț estimativ în valută:
33.33€ • 34.73$ • 27.74£
33.33€ • 34.73$ • 27.74£
Carte tipărită la comandă
Livrare economică 06-20 ianuarie 25
Livrare express 29 noiembrie-05 decembrie pentru 134.58 lei
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350135680
ISBN-10: 1350135682
Pagini: 290
Ilustrații: 28 bw integrated, 5 maps
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350135682
Pagini: 290
Ilustrații: 28 bw integrated, 5 maps
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Peter Ackroyd meets Alfred the Great: brings to life the great metropolis as it fought off the Vikings.
Notă biografică
A Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, Rory Naismith is Lecturer in Medieval British History at King's College London, UK. His earlier books include Money and Power in Anglo-Saxon England (2012), which in 2013 won the Best First Book Prize of the International Society of Anglo-Saxonists.
Cuprins
PrefaceList of Maps and FiguresAbbreviationsTimelineIntroduction1. Roman London and its End: First to Fifth Centuries AD2. Among the Ruins: Post-Roman London 3. London between Kingdoms: c.600-8004. Lundenwic: 'An Emporium for Many Nations'5. Alfred the Great and the Vikings6. London in the Tenth Century: c.900-757. Late Anglo-Saxon London8. London in 1066: The Battle of Hastings and AfterNotesSelect BibliographyWhere to See Anglo-Saxon LondonIndex
Recenzii
Excellent history. Among the most fascinating aspects of this work are Naismith's careful and cogent explanations on the interpretation of findings and artifacts.
Naismith's service to old London is heroic. In carefully sorting and untangling its post-Roman rebirth he allows a crucial phase in its long life to take its rightful place in the annals of the great and monstrous city.
Impeccably researched, engagingly written and handsomely presented ... this is a timely reminder that the prominence of London was historically contingent rather than inevitable.
With his deft use of archaeology, the tenuous literary sources and numismatic evidence ... Naismith manages to weave together a very effective account of London's political and economic development.
Written with an evocative turn of phrase and a sharp eye for interesting detail, Citadel of the Saxons is packed full of information, and impressive in its scope.
An essential, impressively informative, and core addition to personal reading lists, as well as community, college, and university library Medieval Studies collections, "Citadel of the Saxons" is a non-fiction history that reads as smoothly as the most well crafted novel.
[The book] give[s] us a strong sense of the richness of early medieval urbanism.
'Citadel of the Saxons is the first comprehensive treatment of Anglo- Saxon London. Rory Naismith ranges widely across archaeology, coinage and written sources - showing an impressive command of multiple sub-disciplines in the process - to piece together a fresh picture of the early medieval metropolis. Engagingly written yet authoritative, this is everything a history book should be!'
'No one can know yet to what degree Brexit will affect the fortunes of England's capital. But Rory Naismith's riveting history of Anglo-Saxon London is a reminder of how - despite all that the city suffered during its first millennium, and the rivalries with which it had to contend - it survived such that possession of it emerged as the key to power during the Norman Conquest. Sacked by Boudicca in the first century, deserted by the Romans in the fifth, economically outdone by Ipswich in the seventh, and overshadowed both by the metropolitan status of Canterbury and York and by the royal glamour King Alfred and his successors bestowed on Winchester, London nonetheless emerged in 1066 as the place where Duke William needed to be accepted and where it was essential for him to stage his coronation. The strength of Rory Naismith's narrative derives from his mastery of the disparate sources needed to understand London's developing success. The author's deep knowledge of the complexities of Anglo-Saxon coinage is matched in this book by an acute sense of the importance of the recent archaeological discoveries that have revealed how the city took shape within, and beyond, and then again within its ancient Roman walls. Anyone who loves London - that "place of the overflowing river" (which is probably the ancient meaning of its name) - will want to buy this superb book.'
'Rory Naismith in his new book displays remarkable control of an extraordinarily diverse range of evidence and constructs a narrative with many unfamiliar details and dimensions. His story begins in Roman Britain, and extends here to the Norman Conquest of England in 1066. By virtue of its position on the river Thames, and at the hub of a network of roads, London continued to prosper throughout the Anglo-Saxon period. It was always, the author shows, at the centre of events and was renowned too as a significant centre of commerce. From the foundation of St Paul's to the building of Westminster Abbey, Dr Naismith ably and authoritatively guides the reader through all the city's twists and turns, while at the same time bringing to life a rich supporting cast of Mercians and West Saxons, English and Danes. This is an original and compelling account of early London.'
Naismith's service to old London is heroic. In carefully sorting and untangling its post-Roman rebirth he allows a crucial phase in its long life to take its rightful place in the annals of the great and monstrous city.
Impeccably researched, engagingly written and handsomely presented ... this is a timely reminder that the prominence of London was historically contingent rather than inevitable.
With his deft use of archaeology, the tenuous literary sources and numismatic evidence ... Naismith manages to weave together a very effective account of London's political and economic development.
Written with an evocative turn of phrase and a sharp eye for interesting detail, Citadel of the Saxons is packed full of information, and impressive in its scope.
An essential, impressively informative, and core addition to personal reading lists, as well as community, college, and university library Medieval Studies collections, "Citadel of the Saxons" is a non-fiction history that reads as smoothly as the most well crafted novel.
[The book] give[s] us a strong sense of the richness of early medieval urbanism.
'Citadel of the Saxons is the first comprehensive treatment of Anglo- Saxon London. Rory Naismith ranges widely across archaeology, coinage and written sources - showing an impressive command of multiple sub-disciplines in the process - to piece together a fresh picture of the early medieval metropolis. Engagingly written yet authoritative, this is everything a history book should be!'
'No one can know yet to what degree Brexit will affect the fortunes of England's capital. But Rory Naismith's riveting history of Anglo-Saxon London is a reminder of how - despite all that the city suffered during its first millennium, and the rivalries with which it had to contend - it survived such that possession of it emerged as the key to power during the Norman Conquest. Sacked by Boudicca in the first century, deserted by the Romans in the fifth, economically outdone by Ipswich in the seventh, and overshadowed both by the metropolitan status of Canterbury and York and by the royal glamour King Alfred and his successors bestowed on Winchester, London nonetheless emerged in 1066 as the place where Duke William needed to be accepted and where it was essential for him to stage his coronation. The strength of Rory Naismith's narrative derives from his mastery of the disparate sources needed to understand London's developing success. The author's deep knowledge of the complexities of Anglo-Saxon coinage is matched in this book by an acute sense of the importance of the recent archaeological discoveries that have revealed how the city took shape within, and beyond, and then again within its ancient Roman walls. Anyone who loves London - that "place of the overflowing river" (which is probably the ancient meaning of its name) - will want to buy this superb book.'
'Rory Naismith in his new book displays remarkable control of an extraordinarily diverse range of evidence and constructs a narrative with many unfamiliar details and dimensions. His story begins in Roman Britain, and extends here to the Norman Conquest of England in 1066. By virtue of its position on the river Thames, and at the hub of a network of roads, London continued to prosper throughout the Anglo-Saxon period. It was always, the author shows, at the centre of events and was renowned too as a significant centre of commerce. From the foundation of St Paul's to the building of Westminster Abbey, Dr Naismith ably and authoritatively guides the reader through all the city's twists and turns, while at the same time bringing to life a rich supporting cast of Mercians and West Saxons, English and Danes. This is an original and compelling account of early London.'