The Bayeux Tapestry is examined for its underlying political motivations; the study of Old English literature is extended to such works as laws, charters, apocryphal literature, saints’ lives and mythologies, and many of these are studied for the insight they provide into the social structures of the Anglo-Saxons. Other essays examine both the institution of slavery and the use of Germanic warrior terminology in Old Saxon as a contribution towards the descriptive analysis of that society’s social groupings. The book also presents a perspective on the Christian church that is usually overlooked by historians: that its existence was continuous and influential from Roman times, and that it was greatly affected by the Celtic Christian church long after the latter was thought to have disintegrated.
J. Douglas Woods is an Associate Professor of Linguistics at Scarborough College in the University of Toronto.
David A.E. Pelteret is Senior Research Fellow in the Department of History at King’s College London. He is also the author of Slavery in Early Mediaeval England from the Reign of Alfred until the Twelfth Century and Anglo–Saxon History: Basic Readings.