512
Views
1
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Normanising the North: The Evidence of Anglo-Saxon and Anglo-Scandinavian Sculpture

Pages 163-191 | Published online: 18 Jul 2013

BIBLIOGRAPHY

  • Aird, W M 1994, ‘St Cuthbert, the Scots and the Normans’, Anglo-Noinzan Stud 16, 1–20.
  • Aird, W M 1998, St Cuthbert and the Normans. The Church of Durham, 1071-1153, Woodbridge: Boydell.
  • Aird, W M 1998a, ‘The political context of the Libellus de Exordia’, in D Rollason (ed), Symeon of Durham: Historian of Durham and the North, Stamford: Shaun Tyas, 32-45.
  • Bailey, R N 1978, ‘The chronology of Viking Age sculpture in Northumbria’, in J T Lang (ed), Anglo-Saxon and Viking-Age Sculpture and its Context: Papers from the Collingwood Symposiunz on Insular Sculpture from 800 to 1066, Brit Archaeol Rep Brit Ser 49, 173-203.
  • Bailey, R N 1980, Viking-Age Sculpture in Northern England, London: Collins.
  • Bailey, R N 1981, ‘The hammer and the cross’, in E Roesdahl (ed), The Vikings in England, London: Anglo-Danish Viking Project, 83-94.
  • Bailey, R N, Cambridge, E and Briggs, H D 1988, Dowsing and Church Archaeology, Wimborne: Intercept.
  • Bailey, R N and Cramp, R J 1988, Corpus of Anglo-Saxon Stone Sculpture 2. Cumberland and Westmorland, Oxford: British Academy.
  • Baldwin Brown, G 1921, The Arts in Earg England V, London: John Murray.
  • Barthes, R 1957, Mythologies (repr 1993), London: Vintage Classics.
  • Biddle, M and Kjolbye-Biddle, B 1995, ‘Chapter VIII. The excavated sculptures from Win-chester’, in D Tweddle, M Biddle and B Kjolbye-Biddle, Corpus of Anglo-Saxon Stone Sculpture 4. South East England, Oxford: British Academy, 96–107.
  • Blair, J 1991, ‘The early churches at Lindisfarne’, Archaeol Aeliana, 5th ser, 19, 47-54.
  • Briggs, H D, Cambridge, E and Bailey, R N 1983, ‘A new approach to church archaeology: dowsing, excavation and documentary work at Woodhorn, Ponteland and the pre-Norman Cathedral at Durham’, Archaeol Aeliana, 5th ser, 11, 79-100.
  • Calverley, W S 1899, Notes on the Early Sculptured Crosses, Shrines and Monuments in the Present Diocese of Carlisle, Cumberland and Westmorland Antiq and Archaeol Soc Extra Series, XI.
  • Cambridge, E 1988, Lindi#ame Priog and Hoy Island, London: English Heritage.
  • Cambridge, E 1994, ‘Early Romanesque archi-tecture in North-East England: a style and its patrons’, in D Rollason, M Harvey and M Prestwich (eds), Anglo-Norman Durham 1093-119, Woodbridge: Boydell, 141-60.
  • Carver, M O H 1995, ‘Roman to Norman at York Minster’, in D Philips and B Heywood, Excavations at York Minster Vol I. From Roman Fortress to Norman Cathedral, 2 parts, London: HMSO, 177-95.
  • Carver, M O H 1995a, ‘Inventory of pre-Conquest burials’, in D Philips and B Heywood, Excavations at York Minster Vol I. From Roman Fortress to Nornzan Cathedral, 2 parts, London: HMSO, 88-92.
  • Carver, M O H 2004, ‘An Iona of the east: the early medieval monastery at Portmahomack, Tarbat Ness’, Medieval Archaeol 48, 1-30.
  • Cassidy, B 1992, ‘The later life of the Ruthwell cross: from the seventeenth century to the present’, in B Cassidy (ed), The Ruthzvell Cross, Princeton: Dept of Art and Archaeology, 3-34.
  • Chibnall, M 1999, The Debate on the Nornzan Conquest, Manchester: University Press.
  • Coatsworth, E 1978, ‘The four cross heads from the chapter house, Durham’, in J T Lang (ed), Anglo-Saxon and Viking Age Sculpture and its Context: Papers from the Collingwood Symposium on Insular Sculpture from 800 to 1066, Brit Archaeol Rep Brit Ser 49, 85-96.
  • Collingwood, W G 1899, ‘Editor's preface’, in Calverley, v-x.
  • Corpus of Anglo-Saxon Stone Sculpture, www.dur.ac.uk/corpus/index [ last accessed 14 October 2010].
  • Collingwood, W G 1927, Northumbrian Crosses of the Pre-Norman Age, London: Faber and Gwyer.
  • Cramp, R J 1969, ‘Excavations at the Saxon monastic sites of Wearmouth and Jarrow, Co. Durham: an interim report’, Medieval Archaeol 13, 21–66.
  • Cramp, R J 1980, ‘The pre-Conquest sculptural tradition in Durham’, in P Draper and N Coldstream (eds), Medieval Art and Architecture at Durham Cathedral, Brit Architect Archaeol Assoc Trans (1977), 1–10.
  • Cramp, R J 1983, ‘The Anglian sculptures from Jedburgh’, in A O'Connor and D V Clarke (eds), From the Stone Age to the 'For0 Five. Studies Presented to R.B.K Stevenson, Former Keeper, National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland, Edinburgh: John Donald, 3-34.
  • Cramp, R J 1984, Corpus of Anglo-Saxon Stone Sculpture 1. Northumberland and Durham, Oxford: British Academy.
  • Cramp, R J 2005, Wearmouth and Jarrow Monastic Sites 1, London: English Heritage.
  • Cramp, R J 2006, Corpus of Anglo-Saxon Stone Sculpture 7. South-West England, Oxford: British Academy.
  • Cramp, R J 2006, Wearmouth and Jarrow Monastic Sites 2, ads.ahds.ac.uldcatalogue/archive/wearmouth_jarrow_eh_2006/ [ last accessed 20 January 2011].
  • Creighton, O H 2002, Castles and Landscapes, London: Continuum.
  • Driscoll, S T 2000, ‘Christian monumental sculp-ture and ethnic expression in Early Scotland’, in W O Frazer and A Tyrrell (eds), Social Iden-tiO in Earg Medieval Britain, London: Leicester University Press, 233-52.
  • Eaton, T 2000, Plundering the Past: Roman Stonework in Medieval Britain, Stroud: Tempus.
  • Everson, P 1999, Corpus of Anglo-Saxon Stone Sculpture 5. Lincolnshire, Oxford: British Academy.
  • Fenie, E 2000, The Architecture of Norman England, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Flynn, P 1997, ‘Excavations at St Michael, Workington’, Church Archaeol 1, 43–5.
  • Foster, M 1994, ‘Custodians of St Cuthbert: the Durham monks’ views of their predecessors', in D Rollason, M Harvey and M Prestwich (eds), Anglo-Norman Durham 1093-119, Woodbridge: Boydell, 53-65.
  • Fowler, J T 1880, ‘An account of excavations made on the site of the chapter house of Durham Cathedral in 1874’, Archaeologia 43, 385–404.
  • Fowler, J T 1880a, ‘Excavations on the site of the chapter-house of Durham Abbey’, Trans Architect Archaeol Soc Durham and Northumberland 2, 235–70.
  • Fowler, J T 1893, ‘Discoveries at Durham Cathedral’, Proc Soc Antiq Newcastle upon Tyne 5, 4–45.
  • Fraser, I 2005, “Just an ald steen” reverence, re-use, revulsion and rediscovery', in S M Foster and M Cross (eds), Able Minds and Practised Hands: Scotland's Early Medieval Sculpture in the 21st Century, Soc Medieval Archaeol Monog 23, 55-68.
  • Gallagher, D 1995, ‘Stone sculpture’, in J H Lewis and G J Ewart, jedburgh Abbey: The Archaeology and Architecture of a Border Abbey, Soc Antiq Scot Monogr 10, 105–10.
  • Gee, E 1966, ‘Discoveries in the frater at Durham’, Archaeol 123, 69–78.
  • Gem, R 1988, ‘The English parish church in the 11th and early 12th centuries: a Great Rebuilding?’, in J Blair (ed), Minsters and Parish Churches: The Local Church in Transition, 950-1200, Oxford: Oxbow Books, 21-30.
  • Gem, R 1989, ‘England and the resistance to Romanesque architecture’, in C Harper-Bill, C J Holdsworth and J L Nelson (eds), Studies in Medieval Histog Presented to R Allen Brown, Wood-bridge: Boydell, 129-39.
  • Gillingham, J 2000, The English in the Twelfth Centug. Imperialism, National Identity and Political Values, Woodbridge: Boydell.
  • Greenwell, W 1896, ‘An account of the heads of four memorial crosses found in the foundations of the chapter house, Durham’, Trans Architect Archaeol Soc Durham and Northumberland 4, 123–33.
  • Greenwell, W 1899, ‘Introduction: Anglian inscribed and sculpted stones’, in F J Haverfield and W Greenwell, A Catalogue of the Sculpted and Inscribed Stones in the Cathedral Librag, Durham, Durham: Thomas Caldcleugh, 43-50.
  • Hadley, D 2000, “Cockle among the Wheat": the Scandinavian settlement of England', in W O Frazer and A Tyrrell (eds), Social Identity in Early Medieval Britain, London: Leicester University Press, 111-35.
  • Hadley, D 2000a, The Northern Danelaw: Its Social Structure c 800-1100, London: Leicester University Press.
  • Hall, R A 1987, `St Mary's Church, Castlegate: observations and discoveries', in L P Wenham, R A Hall, C M Briden and D A Stocker, St Mag Bishophill Junior and St. Mag Castlegate, Archaeol York 8:2,147–54.
  • Harbison, P 1992, The High Crosses of Ireland: An Iconographical and Photographical Survey, 3 vols, Dublin: Royal Irish Academy.
  • Heighway, C M and Bryant, R, 1999, The Golden Minster: The Anglo-Saxon Minster and Later Medi-eval Priog of St Oswald at Gloucester, York: Counc Brit Archaeol Res Rep 117.
  • Hill, J D 1992, 'Can we recognise a different European past?', J European Archaeol 1, 57–75.
  • Hills, C 2003, The Origins of the English, London: Duckworth.
  • Hope, W H St J 1909, (Account of Durham Cathedral Excavations) Proc Soc Antiq London, 2nd ser, 22, 416-24.
  • James, H, Henderson, I, Foster, S and Jones, S 2008, A Fragmented Masterpiece: Recovering the Biography of the Hilton of Cadboll Pictish Cross-slab, Edinburgh: Society of Antiquaries of Scotland.
  • Kapelle, W 1979, The Norman Conquest of the North: The Region and its Transformation, 1000-113 5, Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.
  • Knowles, W H 1896-1905, `Sockburn church', Trans Architect Archaeol Soc Durham and Northunz-berland 5, 99–120.
  • Lang, J T 1984, ‘The hogback: a Viking colonial monument’, in S C Hawkes, J Campbell and D Brown (eds), Anglo-Saxon Stud Archaeol Hist 3, 85–176.
  • Lang, J T 1991, Corpus of Anglo-Saxon Stone Sculpture 3. York and Eastern Yorkshire, Oxford: British Academy.
  • Lang, J T 1995, ‘Pre-Conquest sculpture’, in D Philips and B Heywood, Excavations at York Minster I. From Roman Fortress to Norman Cathedral, 2 parts, London: HMSO, 433-67.
  • Lang, J T 2001, Corpus of Anglo-Saxon Stone Sculpture 6, Northern Yorkshire, Oxford: British Academy.
  • Lewis, J H and Ewart, G J 1995, jedburgh Abbey: The Archaeology and Architecture of a Border Abbey, Soc Antiq Scot Monogr 10.
  • Mc Aleer, J P 1986, ‘The upper nave elevation and high vaults of Lindisfarne Priory’, Durham Archaeol 2, 43–73.
  • Mc Aleer, J P 1994, ‘Encore Lindisfarne Priory and the problem of its vaults’, Antiq J 74, 169–210.
  • Moreland, J 1999, ‘The world(s) of the cross’, World Archaeol 31: 2, 194–213.
  • Moreland, J 2000, ‘Ethnicity, power and the English’, in W O Frazer and A Tyrell (eds), Social Identity in Early Medieval Britain, London: Leicester University Press 23-51.
  • Morris, C D 1978, ‘Aycliffe and its pre-Norman sculpture’, in J T Lang (ed), Anglo-Saxon and Viking Age Sculpture and its Context: Papers from the Collingwood Symposium on Insular Sculpture from 800 to 1066, Brit Archaeol Rep Brit Ser 49, 97-114.
  • Morris, R 1988, 'Churches in York and its hinterland: building patterns and stone sources in the 11th and 12th centuries', in J Blair (ed), Minsters and Parish Churches: 77ze Local Church in Transition, 950-1200, Oxford: Oxbow, 191-200.
  • Morris, R 1989, Churches in the Landscape, London: J M Dent.
  • Norton, C 1998, ‘The Anglo-Saxon Cathedral at York and the Topography of the Anglian City’, Brit Archaeol Assoc 151, 1–42.
  • Norton, C 2001, Archbishop Thomas of Bayeux and the Norman Cathedral at York, York: Borthwick Institute of Historical Research, University of York.
  • O'Sullivan, D M 1988, ‘The plan of the Early Christian monastery on Lindisfarne: a fresh look at the evidence’, in G Bonner, D Rollason and C Stanncliffe (eds), St Cuthbert, his Cult and his Community to AD 1100, Woodbridge: Boydell, 125-42.
  • O'Sullivan, D M and Young, R 1995, Lindisfarne: Holy Island, London: Batsford/English Heritage.
  • Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, press.oxforddnb.com/ [ last accessed 20 January 2011].
  • Page, W 1888, ‘Some remarks on the Northum-brian palatinates and regalities’, Archaeologia 51, 143–55.
  • Page, R I 1959, 'An early drawing of the Ruthwell Cross', Medieval Archaeol 3, 285–88.
  • Parker, C A 1896, The Ancient Crosses at Gosforth, Cumberland, London: Elliot Stock.
  • Peers, C 1925, ‘The inscribed and sculptured stones of Lindisfarne’, Archaeologia 74, 255–70.
  • Philips, A D 1985, The Cathedral of Archbishop Thomas of Bayeux. Excavations at York Minster 2, London: RCHME/HMSO.
  • Philips, A D 1995, ‘The excavations’, in A D Philips and B Heywood, Excavations at York Minster 1, 2 parts, London: HMSO, 33-169.
  • Philips, A D and Heywood, B 1995, Excavations at York Minster 1, 2 parts, London: HMSO.
  • Piper, A 1989, ‘The first generation of Durham monks and the cult of St Cuthbert’, in G Bonner, D Rollason and C Stanncliffe (eds), St Cuthbert, his Cult and his Communig to AD 1100, Woodbridge: Boydell, 437-46.
  • Potter, T W and Andrews, D A 1994, ‘Excavation and survey at St Patrick's Chapel and St Peter's Church, Heysham, Lancashire, 1977-8’, Antiqj 74, 55–134.
  • RCHMS 1956, An Inventog of the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Roxburghshire, 2 vols, Edinburgh: HMSO.
  • Rodwell, W 2004, ‘Revealing the history of the cathedral: 4. Archaeology of the nave sanctu-ary’, Friends of Lichfield Cathedral 67th Ann Rep, 19–35.
  • Rollason, D 1998, Sources for York Histog to AD 1100, York: York Archaeological Trust.
  • Rollason, D (ed and trans) 2000, Libellus de exordio atque procursu istius, hoc est Dunhelnzensis, ecclesie. Tract on the origins and progress of this the Church of Durhanz/ Synzeon of Durham, Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Rowe, Revd G 1877, ‘Remarks on some monu-mental stones found at Brompton, Northaller-ton, Yorkshire’, Assoc Architect Soc Rep and Pap 14, pt 1,61-5.
  • Sauer, E 2003, The Archaeology of Religious Hatred in the Roman and Early Medieval Period, Stroud: Tempus.
  • Saul, N 2009, English Church Monuments in the Middle Ages, Oxford: University Press.
  • Sidebottom, P 2000, ‘Viking-Age stone monu-ments and social identity in Derbyshire’, in DN Hadley and J D Richards (eds), Cultures in Contact: Scandinavian Settlement in England in the Ninth and Tenth Centuries, Turnhout: Brepols, 213-35.
  • Short, 11995, 'Tam Angli quanz Franci: Self defini-tion in Anglo-Norman England', Anglo-Norman Stud 18, 153–75.
  • Snape, M 1980, ‘Documentary evidence for the building of Durham Cathedral and its monas-tic buildings’, in P Draper and N Coldstream (eds), Medieval Art and Architecture at Durham Cathedral, Brit Architect Archaeol Assoc Trans (1977), 20–36.
  • Stocker, D A 1987, ‘Discussion: the form and date of the pre-12th century church’, in Wenham et al, 141–6.
  • Stocker, D A and Everson, P 1990, ‘Rubbish recycled: a study of the reuse of stone in Lin-colnshire’, in D Parsons (ed), Stone Quarging and Building in England AD 43-1525, Chichester: Phillimore, 83-101.
  • Stocker, D A and Everson, P 2001, ‘Five towns funerals: decoding diversity in Danelaw funer-als’, in J Graham Campbell, J Jesch and D NParsons (eds), Vikings and the Danelaw: Select Papers from the Proceedings of the Thirteenth Viking Congress, Nottingham and York, 21-30 August 1997, Oxford: Oxbow, 3-43.
  • Stuart, J 1867, Sculptured Stones of Scotland 2, Edinburgh: Spalding Club.
  • Taylor, H M and Taylor, J 1965, Anglo-Saxon Architecture, 2 vols, Cambridge: University Press.
  • Thompson, A H 1949, Lindisfarne Priog, Northum-berland, London: HMSO.
  • Tweddle, D, Biddle, M and Kjolbye-Biddle, B 1995, Corpus of Anglo-Saxon Stone Sculpture 4. South East England, Oxford: British Academy.
  • Yorke, B 2000, ‘Political and ethnic identity: a case study of Anglo-Saxon practice’, in W O Frazer and A Tyrell (eds), Social Identity in Early Medieval Britain, London: Leicester University Press, 69-89.
  • Watts, L, Rahtz, P, Olcasha, E Bradley, S A J and Higgitt, J 1997, `Kirkdale the inscriptions',Medieval Archaeol 41, 51-99.
  • Williams, A 1995, The English and the Norman Conquest, Woodbridge: Boydell.
  • Wenham, L P, Hall, R A and Briden, C M et al 1987, St Mag Bishophill Junior and St Mag Castlegate, Archaeol York 8:2.
  • Winterbottom, M and Thomson, R M (eds and trans) 2002, William of Malnzesbug: Saints Lives. Lives of SS Wulfstan, Dunstan, Patrick, Beni gnus and Indract, Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.