Archaeological manifestations of the bishops in Greater Mercia, AD 700-950

The rise of the Minster Hypothesis, put forward by John Blair (2005) and others (e.g. Foot 2006; Tinti 2005) has led to archaeological research focusing on the impact of the monasteries as institutions in the provision of pastoral care and as centres of economic centrality during Anglo-Saxon England...

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Main Author: Varley, Rose
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/67142/
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author Varley, Rose
author_facet Varley, Rose
author_sort Varley, Rose
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The rise of the Minster Hypothesis, put forward by John Blair (2005) and others (e.g. Foot 2006; Tinti 2005) has led to archaeological research focusing on the impact of the monasteries as institutions in the provision of pastoral care and as centres of economic centrality during Anglo-Saxon England. Although this model has contributed to the increasing archaeological investigations at Middle Saxon sites across Mercia, it undermines the importance of the individual bishops during this period, and has led to some academics calling out for a reassessment of the role of the bishops in the early English Church (e.g. Coates 1996). The following research, therefore, aims to highlight how the evidence can be used to explore bishops in Anglo-Saxon society, especially in regards to the geographical distributions of power and the archaeological manifestations of trade. In order to explore these themes, the following paper will have a mixed methodology of archaeological and documentary evidence and will focus on the region of Greater Mercia between the period of AD700-950.
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spelling nottingham-671422021-12-08T04:41:00Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/67142/ Archaeological manifestations of the bishops in Greater Mercia, AD 700-950 Varley, Rose The rise of the Minster Hypothesis, put forward by John Blair (2005) and others (e.g. Foot 2006; Tinti 2005) has led to archaeological research focusing on the impact of the monasteries as institutions in the provision of pastoral care and as centres of economic centrality during Anglo-Saxon England. Although this model has contributed to the increasing archaeological investigations at Middle Saxon sites across Mercia, it undermines the importance of the individual bishops during this period, and has led to some academics calling out for a reassessment of the role of the bishops in the early English Church (e.g. Coates 1996). The following research, therefore, aims to highlight how the evidence can be used to explore bishops in Anglo-Saxon society, especially in regards to the geographical distributions of power and the archaeological manifestations of trade. In order to explore these themes, the following paper will have a mixed methodology of archaeological and documentary evidence and will focus on the region of Greater Mercia between the period of AD700-950. 2021-12-08 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/67142/1/Final%20Draft%2015%3A11%3A21.pdf Varley, Rose (2021) Archaeological manifestations of the bishops in Greater Mercia, AD 700-950. MRes thesis, University of Nottingham. Minster Hypothesis monasteries Anglo-Saxon England Mercia
spellingShingle Minster Hypothesis
monasteries
Anglo-Saxon
England
Mercia
Varley, Rose
Archaeological manifestations of the bishops in Greater Mercia, AD 700-950
title Archaeological manifestations of the bishops in Greater Mercia, AD 700-950
title_full Archaeological manifestations of the bishops in Greater Mercia, AD 700-950
title_fullStr Archaeological manifestations of the bishops in Greater Mercia, AD 700-950
title_full_unstemmed Archaeological manifestations of the bishops in Greater Mercia, AD 700-950
title_short Archaeological manifestations of the bishops in Greater Mercia, AD 700-950
title_sort archaeological manifestations of the bishops in greater mercia, ad 700-950
topic Minster Hypothesis
monasteries
Anglo-Saxon
England
Mercia
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/67142/