Oxford University Hyde Abbey Charter, item 12091

The Anglo-Saxon Chancery

The Anglo-Saxon Chancery: The History, Language and Production of Anglo-Saxon Charters from Alfred to Edgar

By Ben Snook
Series: Anglo-Saxon Studies
Boydell Press (March 19, 2015)
ISBN-10: 1783270063
ISBN-13: 978-1783270064

ABSTRACT:

The Anglo-Saxon Chancery CoverMore charters survive from Anglo-Saxon England than texts of any other type. In a society in which the ownership of land was fundamental to status, wealth and power, the charters which gifted and guaranteed landholdings were crucial not only as legal documents but also as instruments of political power. As responsibility for their production was increasingly centralised at the royal court in the ninth and tenth centuries, charters also became vehicles for royal and religious propaganda, reflecting the dynamic and creative culture of tenth-century England.
Through an analysis of the extraordinarily sophisticated Latin in which these documents were written, this book demonstrates the literary ambitions of their draughtsmen (who may certainly be considered as Anglo-Latin literary authors in their own right), and also sheds light on the political ideologies of Anglo-Saxon England’s most powerful and enigmatic kings and churchmen. Most tantalising of all, perhaps, is the fact that the language of royal charters, which may preserve some of the very words uttered by the king, provides an unparalleled view of the mechanisms by which the developing kingdom of England was governed. Not only does it indicate the increasingly sophisticated bureaucracy of an administratively advanced state, but it also reveals an atmosphere of literary and cultural attainment, emanating directly from the king’s court, as rich as any in the early medieval Insular world.

CONTENTS:

  • 1  Introduction
  • 2  Brave New World: the Charters of Alfred and Edward
  • 3  Æthelstan
  • 4  ‘Æthelstan A’
  • 5  Turbulent Priests: Dunstan, Cenwald and Oda
  • 6  Back to the Future: Edgar and ‘Edgar A’
  • 7  Conclusion
  • 8  Appendices
  • 9  Bibliography

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Ben Snook teaches History at the Godolphin and Latymer School, London. He is the author of several articles on Anglo-Saxon history and literature.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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