List of Contributors
Acknowledgements
Preface
George Nobbs
Introducing Norman Connections
John A. Davies, Angela Riley, Jean-Marie Levesque and Charlotte
Lapiche
Foreword: Living in the Twelfth-Century Cross-Channel Empire
David Bates
The Norman Connections Castles
Norwich Castle
Elizabeth Popescu
‘…traces of the original disposition of the whole’. Excavated
Evidence for the Construction of Norwich Castle Keep
Brian Ayers
The Shifting Structure of Norwich Castle Keep, 1066 to c.1230
T. A. Heslop
Colchester Castle: ‘Some tyme stronge and statelye, as the ruynes
do shewe’
Peter Berridge
Rochester Castle
Marc Morris
Le château de Falaise : bilan de 150 ans de restaurations dans plus
de 1000 ans d’histoire
Charlotte Lapiche et Benoît Panozzo
Le château de Caen
Jean-Marie Levesque et Pascal Leroux
The Great Hall of the Dukes of Normandy in the Castle at Caen
Edward Impey and John McNeill
The Castles in Context
Châteaux et residences princières dans la Tapisserie de Bayeux
Pierre Bouet
Visible from Afar? The Setting of the Anglo-Norman Donjon
Jon Gregory and Robert Liddiard
Some Thoughts on the Use of the Anglo-Norman Donjon
Pamela Marshall
Recent Archaeological Research
Recent Research on the White Tower: Reconstructing and Dating the
Norman Building
Roland Harris
Castle Heritage (Tenth to Thirteenth Centuries) in Lower Normandy
and the Current State of Archaeological Research
François Fichet de Clairfontaine
Recent Excavations at Caen Castle (2005 to 2014): Medieval Forges
and Renaissance Stable
Bénédicte Guillot
Presenting the Sites
Le château de Falaise (Calvados) : état des connaissances sur
l’évolution du site castral du dixième siècle au treizième
siècle
François Fichet de Clairfontaine, Joseph Mastrolorenzo et Richard
Brown
The Question of Site Enhancement in Rural Contexts: Examples of
Projects Managed by the Calvados Departmental Council (Conseil
Général du Calvados), Lower Normandy
Nicola Coulthard
Sculpture and Objects
The Evolution of Capitals in Early Post-Conquest Architecture as
Evidence for the Completion Date of the White Tower
John Crook
Anglo-Norman Elite Objects from Castle and Countryside
Steven Ashley
Index
John A. Davies is Chief Curator and Keeper of Archaeology for Norfolk Museums Service. He has worked as an archaeologist in Norfolk since 1984, specialising in the late prehistoric and Roman periods, as well as numismatics. His current interests include Norwich Castle and the Norman period. Angela Riley is Norman Connections Project Officer for Norfolk Museums Service. She coordinated Norwich Castle's involvement in the European partnership project from 2011-4, notably organising the Castles Conference in 2012. She is currently working on the Norwich Castle Keep development project. Jean-Marie Levesque is Director of the Musee de Normandie, City of Caen. Historian by training, he has covered many topics within the museum on the history of Normandy and its relationship with the 'Norman world' from England to Sicily. He has a particular interest in the question of regional identity and how it is represented, ranging from the history of the Vikings... to the history of the Norman cow! He has contributed to the development of Caen Castle through the application of archaeological and architectural studies undertaken at the site. Since 2000, he has been directly involved in developing a restoration and management plan for Caen Castle. Charlotte Lapiche is Estate and Curatorial Manager for Chateau Guillaume-Le-Conquerant, City of Falaise. Archaeologist and art historian by training, she has been responsible for restoration work on the castle ramparts since 2008. Interested in the way in which a site, a historic monument or natural space, can tell its story, she has initiated interpretation and animations aimed at highlighting the diversity of regional heritage.
This is a great book. The editors, contributors, and the publisher,
should take a bow.
*Archaeological Journal*
In sum, I find myself pleasantly intrigued and intellectually
stimulated by several of the well-presented and vividly illustrated
arguments gathered in this book…
*The Medieval Review*
Nicely produced, with effective use of colour, and with abstracts
in English for French papers and vice versa, this is an accessible
as well as agenda-setting volume… makes big strides in the right
direction and is to be warmly welcomed.
*Medieval Archaeology*
Many of the essays are site specific, but throughout there are
thoughtful insights: on Norman monuments, Romanesque architecture
and artefacts, the Bayeux tapestry and the presentation of sites to
the public.
*British Archaeology Magazine*
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