The Normans were a product of history rather than a natural ethnic or regional group. This book explores what they believed made them a distinct people and how they constructed their identity. Marjorie Chibnall examines the enigma of the Northmen who first settled around the Seine estuary and built a principality that took their name and became the springboard for wider expansion and the conquest of England. The book moves on to study the rise of Normandy, and the integration and influence of other groups including the Saxons, the Franks and new Scandinavian leaders. The Normans' remarkable warfare and maritime successes are revealed in detail including their conquest of England, infiltration of Wales and Scotland, and assimilation in Ireland; and their campaigns in the South of Europe including southern Italy and the Mediterranean region. The book also examines the development of Norman culture; the writing of their own history; Norman myth; and their achievements in bringing together various racial and cultural elements to form a single people.
Author(s): Marjorie Chibnall
Series: The Peoples of Europe
Publisher: Blackwell Publishing
Year: 2006
Language: English
Pages: 208
City: Oxford
Contents
List of Plates
List of Maps
List of Genealogical Tables
Preface
Abbreviations
PART I. People and Duchy
1. The Emergence of a Norman People
2. The Rise of Normandy
PART II. Conquest and Settlement in the North
3. The Kingdom of England
4. Wales, Scotland, Ireland
PART III. The Normans in the South
5. Southern Italy
6. The Kingdom of Sicily
7. Mediterranean Expansion
PART IV. Myth and Tradition
8. The Norman Myth
9. The Norman World
10. The Normans after 1204
Select Bibliography
Index