The Early Norman Castles of the British IslesJ. Murray, 1912 - 408 pages |
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Page 12
... certainly regarded as such , and was large enough to protect a considerable body of invaders . Strange to say , this is the only record which we have of any fortress - building by the invading Saxons . Until we come to the time of ...
... certainly regarded as such , and was large enough to protect a considerable body of invaders . Strange to say , this is the only record which we have of any fortress - building by the invading Saxons . Until we come to the time of ...
Page 23
... certainly have used it in 1051 . And as the Norman favourites of Edward the Confessor had already begun to build castles in England , we can imagine no reason why Godwin did not do the same , except that such a step was impossible to a ...
... certainly have used it in 1051 . And as the Norman favourites of Edward the Confessor had already begun to build castles in England , we can imagine no reason why Godwin did not do the same , except that such a step was impossible to a ...
Page 36
... certainly to the Edwardian period of the masonry buildings . " WARWICK Castle has a motte which has been confidently attributed to Ethelfleda , only because Dugdale copied the assertion of Thomas Rous , a very imaginative writer of the ...
... certainly to the Edwardian period of the masonry buildings . " WARWICK Castle has a motte which has been confidently attributed to Ethelfleda , only because Dugdale copied the assertion of Thomas Rous , a very imaginative writer of the ...
Page 38
... certainly have expected to find it within . As the Norman earls of Chester established a ferry at Runcorn in the 12th century , and as a castle at Runcorn is spoken of in a mediæval document , it seems not impossible that there may have ...
... certainly have expected to find it within . As the Norman earls of Chester established a ferry at Runcorn in the 12th century , and as a castle at Runcorn is spoken of in a mediæval document , it seems not impossible that there may have ...
Page 47
... certainly have enclosed the church ; for though the present church contains no Saxon architecture , the ancient cross in the graveyard shows that it stands on a Saxon site . It is more reasonable to suppose that Edward's borough , if it ...
... certainly have enclosed the church ; for though the present church contains no Saxon architecture , the ancient cross in the graveyard shows that it stands on a Saxon site . It is more reasonable to suppose that Edward's borough , if it ...
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Common terms and phrases
12th century acres ancient Anglo-Saxon Chronicle Annals appears Arch borough bretasche Brut building built Burghal Hidage burgus burh called camp Cardigan castelli castellum castrum certainly chapel charter Chester church Close Rolls Colchester Conquest Corfe Danes Danish defended ditch Domesday Book doubt Earl early Norman earthworks Edward Edward the Elder enclosed enclosure England English Ethelfleda evidence existence feet feudal Fitz fortifications Fulk Nerra Giraldus Gwynedd Henry II Henry II.'s hillock History houses III.'s reign Journ king land manor masonry mediæval mentioned moated Montgomerie mote motte and bailey motte-and-bailey motte-castle mound mural towers Norman castle Norwich Ordericus original Orpen outer Pipe Rolls private castle probably Quatford remains remarks Risen river Robert Rochester Roger Roman round ruins Saxon says Scotland shows side Stafford stands stockade stone castle stone keep town trace turris Wales wall ward Welsh William wooden castle word writer