5,601
Views
0
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Sacred Landscapes and Deep Time: Mobility, Memory, and Monasticism on Crowland

&
Pages 280-299 | Received 29 Sep 2023, Accepted 16 Feb 2024, Published online: 26 Mar 2024

References

  • Alexander, J. 2020. “Crowland Abbey Church and St Guthlac.” In Guthlac: Crowland’s Saint, edited by J. Roberts, and A. Thacker, 298–315. Donington: Shaun Tyas.
  • Ashby, S. 2006. “Time, Trade, and Identity: Bone and Antler Combs in Northern Britain, c.AD700-1400.” York: Unpublished PhD dissertation, University of York.
  • Blair, J. 2005. The Church in Anglo-Saxon Society. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Blinkhorn, P. 2022. “Pottery from Crowland, Lincolnshire (Site CROW21).” Unpublished Archive Report.
  • Blinkhorn, P. 2023. “Pottery from Crowland, Lincolnshire (Site CROW22).” Unpublished Archive Report.
  • Bradley, R. 1987. “Time Regained: The Creation of Continuity.” Journal of the British Archaeological Association 140 (1): 1–17.
  • Bradley, R. 1993. Altering the Earth. Society of Antiquaries of Scotland Monograph 8. Edinburgh: Society of Antiquaries of Scotland.
  • Brady, L. 2018. “Crowland Abbey as Anglo-Saxon Sanctuary in the Pseudo-Ingulf Chronicle.” Traditio 73: 19–42.
  • Brink, S. 2001. “Mythologizing Landscape: Place and Space of Cult and Myth.” In Kontinuitäten und Brüche in der Religionsgeschichte, edited by M. Stausberg, 76–112. Berlin and New York: De Gruyter.
  • Broadley, R. 2020. The Glass Vessels of Anglo-Saxon England c. AD 650-1100. Oxford: Oxbow Books.
  • Browett, R. 2016. “The Fate of Anglo-Saxon Saints After the Norman Conquest of England: St Æthelwold of Winchester as a Case Study.” History 101 (345): 183–200.
  • Carver, M. 2009. “Early Scottish Monasteries and Prehistory: A Preliminary Dialogue.” The Scottish Historical Review 88: 332–351.
  • Chave, I. 2005. “Des sources comptables au service de l’archéologie: essai de reconstruction documentaire de la chapelle dite Saint-Nicolas du château de Falaise (Calvados), XIIe-XVe siècles.” Tabularia: Sources écrites des mondes normands médiévaux 2005. https://journals.openedition.org/tabularia/1219.
  • Chibnall, M. 1987. Anglo-Norman England 1066-1166. New York: Basil Blackwell.
  • Colgrave, B. 1956. Felix’s Life of St Guthlac. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Comeau, R. 2016. “Feeding the Body and Claiming the Spirit(s): Early Christian Landscapes in West Wales.” In Making Christian Landscapes in Atlantic Europe: Conversion and Consolidation in the Early Middle Ages, edited by TÓ Carragáin, and S. Turner, 205–224. Cork: Cork University Press.
  • Cope-Faulkner, P. 2004. “Assessment of the Archaeological Remains at Anchor Church Field, Crowland, Lincolnshire.” Unpublished Archaeological Project Services Report No. 173/04.
  • Cubitt, C. 2000. “Memory and Narrative in the Cult of Early Anglo-Saxon Saints.” In The Uses of the Past in the Early Middle Ages, edited by Y. Hen, and M. Innes, 29–66. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Decaëns, J., A. Dubois, and M. Allainguillaume2010. Caen Castle: A Ten Centuries’ Old Fortress Within the Town. Caen: Publications du CRAHM.
  • Everson, P., and D. Stocker. 2011. Custodians of Continuity? The Premonstratensian Abbey at Barlings and the Landscape of Ritual. Lincolnshire Archaeology and Heritage Report Series No 11. Sleaford: Heritage Trust of Lincolnshire.
  • Everson, P., and D. Stocker. 2023a. “Guthlac at Medeshamstede?” Early Medieval Europe 31 (2): 194–219.
  • Everson, P., and D. Stocker. 2023b. Corpus of Anglo-Saxon Stone Sculpture, Volume XIV: Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire. Oxford and New York: The British Academy.
  • Evison, V. 2009. “Glass Vessels.” In Life and Economy at Early Medieval Flixborough c. AD 600–1000. The Artefact Evidence. Excavations at Flixborough Volume 2, edited by D. Evans, and C. Loveluck, 103–112. Oxford: Oxbow Books.
  • Evison, V. 2014. “Glass Vessels.” In Staunch Meadow, Brandon, Suffolk: A High-Status Middle Saxon Settlement on the Fen Edge, edited by A. Tester, S. Anderson, I. Riddler and R. Carr, 170–177. East Anglian Archaeology Report 151. Bury St. Edmunds: Suffolk County Council.
  • Finucane, R. C. 1977. Miracles and Pilgrims: Popular Beliefs in Medieval England. London: JM Dent.
  • Gilchrist, R. 2020. Sacred Heritage: Monastic Archaeology, Identities, Beliefs. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Gittos, H. 2013. Liturgy, Architecture, and Sacred Places in Anglo-Saxon England. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Gough, R. 1783. The History and Antiquities of Croyland-Abbey, in the County of Lincoln. London: Society of Antiquaries of London.
  • Grenville, J. 1997. Medieval Housing. Leicester: Leicester University Press.
  • Gresley, J. M. 1856. Some Account of Croyland Abbey, Lincolnshire. Ashby de la Zouche: W. & J. Hextall.
  • Hall, D. 1987. The Fenland Project, Number 2: Fenland Landscapes and Settlement Between Peterborough and March, East Anglian Archaeology Report 35. Cambridge Archaeological Committee: Cambridge.
  • Hall, A. 2007. “Constructing Anglo-Saxon Sanctity: Tradition, Innovation and Saint Guthlac.” In Images of Medieval Sanctity: Essays in Honour of Gary Dickson, edited by D. H. Strickland, 207–235. Leiden: Brill.
  • Hall, D., and J. Coles. 1994. Fenland Survey: An Essay in Landscape and Persistence. London: English Heritage.
  • Harris, R., and E. Impey. 2002. “Boothby Pagnell Revisited.” In The Seigneurial Residence in Western Europe AD c800-1600, edited by G. Meirion-Jones, E. Impey, and M. Jones, 246–269. BAR International Series 1088. Oxford: Archaeopress.
  • Hart, C. R. 1994. “The Foundation of Ramsey Abbey.” Revue Bénédictine 104 (3-4): 295–327.
  • Hayes, P. P., and T. W. Lane. 1992. The Fenland Project Number 5: Lincolnshire Survey. Sleaford: Heritage Trust of Lincolnshire.
  • Heale, M. 2004. The Dependent Priories of Medieval English Monasteries. Woodbridge: Boydell and Brewer.
  • Heslop, T. A. 2000. “Weeting ‘Castle’, A Twelfth-Century Hall House in Norfolk.” Architectural History 43: 42–57.
  • Higham, N. J. 2005. “Guthlac's Vita, Mercia and East Anglia in the First Half of the Eighth Century.” In Æthelbald and Offa: Two Eighth-Century Kings of Mercia. Papers from a Conference Held in Manchester in 2000, edited by D. Hill and M. Worthington, 85–90. British Archaeological Reports, British Series 383. Oxford: Archaeopress.
  • Hill, N., and M. Gardiner. 2018a. “The English Medieval First-Floor Hall: Part 1 – Scolland’s Hall, Richmond, North Yorkshire.” The Archaeological Journal 175 (1): 157–183.
  • Hill, N., and M. Gardiner. 2018b. “The English Medieval First-Floor Hall: Part 2 – The Evidence from the Eleventh to Early Thirteenth Century.” The Archaeological Journal 175 (2): 315–361.
  • Impey, E. 1991. “The Origins and Development of non-conventual Monastic Dependencies in England and Normandy, 1050-1350.” Oxford: Unpublished D.Phil Dissertation, University of Oxford.
  • Kipps, P. K. 1929. “Minster Court, Thanet.” The Archaeological Journal 86: 213–223.
  • Lane, T. W. 1988. “Some Cropmarks in Crowland.” In Archaeology in Lincolnshire 1987-1988: Fourth Annual Report of The Trust for Lincolnshire Archaeology. Lincoln: The Trust for Lincolnshire Archaeology.
  • Lesser, S. 2020. “On the Edge and in the Middle: The Dynastic and Territorial Context of St Guthlac’s Early Cult.” In Guthlac: Crowland’s Saint, edited by J. Roberts, and A. Thacker, 138–156. Donington: Shaun Tyas.
  • Licence, T. 2020. “The Cult of St Guthlac After the Norman Conquest.” In Guthlac: Crowland’s Saint, edited by J. Roberts, and A. Thacker, 385–407. Donington: Shaun Tyas.
  • Lincolnshire HER No: MLI23230. n.d. “Possible Round Barrow beneath the Medieval Building at Anchor Church Field.” https://heritage-explorer.lincolnshire.gov.uk/Monument/MLI23230.
  • Linford, N., and P. Linford. 2002. Anchor Church Field, Crowland, Lincs. Report on Geophysical Survey, August 2002. Portsmouth: English Heritage Centre for Archaeology Report, Fort Cumberland.
  • McIntire, R. T. 2019. “In the Footsteps of the Holy: Sacred Landscapes and the Cult of Saints in the Anglo-Norman World, 1066-1220.” York: Unpublished PhD Dissertation, University of York.
  • Meaney, A. 2001. “Felix's Life of St Guthlac: Hagiography and/or Truth.” Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society 90: 29–48.
  • Mees, K. 2019. Burial, Landscape and Identity in Early Medieval Wessex. Woodbridge: Boydell Press.
  • Moore, C. 1879. “St. Guthlac and Croyland.” Journal of the British Archaeological Association 35 (2): 132–134.
  • Nichols, J. 1793. A Second Appendix to the History of Croyland. London: J. Nichols and Son.
  • Oosthuizen, S. 2016. “Culture and Identity in the Early Medieval Fenland Landscape.” Landscape History 37: 5–24.
  • Pestell, T. 2004. Landscapes of Monastic Foundation: The Establishment of Religious Houses in East Anglia c. 650-1200. Woodbridge: The Boydell Press.
  • Price, N. 2002. The Viking Way: Religion and War in Late Iron Age Scandinavia. Uppsala: Department of Archaeology and Ancient History, Uppsala.
  • Prior, A. 2020. “Pegeland Revisited: St Pega in the Post-Guthlac Fenland.” In Guthlac: Crowland’s Saint, edited by J. Roberts, and A. Thacker, 326–341. Donington: Shaun Tyas.
  • Pryor, F. M. M., and C. A. I. French. 1985. Archaeology and Environment in the Lower Welland Valley. Cambridge: Cambridgeshire Archaeological Committee.
  • Richards, C. 1996. “Henges and Water: Towards an Elemental Understanding of Monumentality and Landscape in Late Neolithic Britain.” Journal of Material Culture 1 (3): 313–336.
  • Ridyard, S. 1987. “‘Condigna Veneratio’: Post-Conquest Attitudes to the Saints of the Anglo-Saxons.” Anglo-Norman Studies 9: 179–206.
  • Roberts, J. 2005. “Hagiography and Literature: The Case of Guthlac of Crowland.” In Mercia: An Anglo-Saxon Kingdom in Europe, edited by M. P. Brown, and C. Farr, 69–88. London and New York: Bloomsbury.
  • Roberts, J. (ed. and trans.). 1979. The Guthlac Poems of the Exeter Book. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Roberts, J., and A. Thacker. 2020. “Introduction to Guthlac’s Life and Cult.” In Guthlac: Crowland’s Saint, edited by J. Roberts, and A. Thacker, xiv–xlvi. Donington: Shaun Tyas.
  • Roffe, D. 1995. “The Historia Croylandensis: A Plea for Reassessment.” The English Historical Review 110 (435): 93–108.
  • Rollason, D. 1986. “Goscelin of Canterbury's Account of the Translation and Miracles of St. Mildrith (BHL 5961/4): An Edition with Notes.” Mediaeval Studies 48: 139–210.
  • Rosenwein, B. H. 1999. Negotiating Space: Power, Restraint, and Privileges of Immunity in Early Medieval Europe. New York: Cornell University Press.
  • Sánchez-Pardo, J. C. 2016. “The Creation of Ecclesiastical Landscapes in Early Medieval Galicia (Northwest Spain, Fifth to Seventh Centuries.” In Making Christian Landscapes in Atlantic Europe: Conversion and Consolidation in the Early Middle Ages, edited by TÓ Carragáin, and S. Turner, 367–381. Cork: Cork University Press.
  • Semple, S. 2013. Perceptions of the Prehistoric in Anglo-Saxon England: Religion, Ritual, and Rulership in the Landscape. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Shook, L. K. 1960. “The Burial Mound in Guthlac A.” Modern Philology 58 (1): 1–10.
  • Stocker, D. 1993. “The Early Church in Lincolnshire.” In Pre-Viking Lindsey, edited by A. Vince, 101–122. Lincoln: The City of Lincoln Archaeological Unit.
  • Stukeley, W. 1776. Itinerarium Curiosum, Centuria I. 2nd ed. London: Baker & Leigh.
  • Thacker, A. 1978. The Social and Hagiographic Background to Anglo-Saxon Hagiography. Oxford: Unpublished DPhil Dissertation, University of Oxford.
  • Thacker, A. 2020. “Guthlac and His Life: Felix Shapes the Saint.” In Guthlac: Crowland’s Saint, edited by J. Roberts, and A. Thacker, 1–24. Donington: Shaun Tyas.
  • Thomas, G. 2018. “Mead-Halls of the Oiscingas: A New Kentish Perspective on the Anglo-Saxon Great Hall Complex Phenomenon.” Medieval Archaeology 62 (2): 262–303.
  • Thompson, A. H. 1913. “Notes on the History of the Abbey of St Peter and St Oswald, Bardney.” Associated Architectural Societies’ Reports and Papers 32 (1): 35–96.
  • Turner, S. 2006. Making a Christian Landscape: The Countryside in Early Medieval Cornwall, Devon, and Wessex. Exeter: University of Exeter Press.
  • Williams, H. 2006. Death and Memory in Early Medieval Britain. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Willmott, H., and K. Welham. 2015. “The Saxon Glass Furnaces.” In Glastonbury Abbey: Archaeological Investigations 1904–79, edited by R. Gilchrist, and C. Green, 218–238. London: Society of Antiquaries of London.
  • Wright, D. W. 2015. “Shaping Rural Settlements: The Early Medieval Legacy to the English Village.” Landscapes 16 (2): 105–25.