On a gusty March day in 1016, Earl Uhtred of Northumbria, the most powerful lord in northern England, arrived at a place called Wiheal, probably near Tadcaster in Yorkshire. Uhtred had come with forty... This description may be from another edition of this product.
"Life is full of quarrels as an egg is full of meat"
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 18 years ago
the cycles of murder and revenge in the Anglo-Saxon period didn't seem any different than the same in continental Europe at the same time,after all at this period it is families vying for power and advantage.there are no powerful nation-states since the breakup of the Roman Empire and even in Rome there was always the same violence within the empire as families sought out advantage.Like the american old west gunfights were never the romanticized "showdown" at high noon,but overwhelming ambushes delivered with maximum surprise and force,much like the anglo-saxon feuds in this book.Did this chaotic feuding make the anglo-saxon/viking culture more susceptible to be taken over by a more organized power such as the Normans.Like 2 dogs fighting over a bone growling at each other then a third comes in and takes it from both.From reading this book i got the feeling that the feud was a thing in itself beyond any idea of trying to cooperate between the anglo-saxons/vikings and make a nation-state.This is one of the few books i've read where the Scottish king Macbeth is given some time.I wondered after reading the book if Macbeth's murder of Duncan might have been a relic from an old feud of times past. Maybe Macbeth besides being greedy for Duncan's throne,was settling an old score.That could have been even more of a coercian than his nagging wife.Maybe Shakespeare missed something.
Brilliant
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
Fletcher's 'Bloodfeud' is a little keyhole through which we can look clearly at the world of eleventh century England. Moderns tend to view all people of the past as the same as they, in funny clothes, perhaps a trifle more violent, and with poor table manners, all of this informed more by Hollywood than by research. We have so little real, hard information about these times, and almost no record of what these people thought. Fletcher begins with one recorded event--a brutal, politically motivated murder-- and using that as his focus, examines how Anglo Saxon culture worked. He ties together dozens of hints and suggestions from the fragmented records of the time, cross referencing brilliantly, showing where the power was, how it worked, how men and women strove to be masters of their world, and along the way revealing the true nature of these people. A fascinating and truly original work, and one of my favourite books.
Fine, but...
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
This book is well-written and factual. However, I thought I was buying a novel. I was sadly mistaken. Also, much of the book does not actually revolve around the events of Uhtred and Cnut in 1016. It's still worth reading, though.
GREAT TO HEAR HOW THE REAL PEOPLE INTERACTED!!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
It's nice to have a history professor who can bring an obscure part of history alive with real characters and how their machinations developed at least a little part of our history. And, of course, I may be biased, because several of them mentioned are our ancestors, but, as such, knowing their role in the history brings life into what is often a boring subject for many people. Here, it also helps to have a greater historical background on some of these families thru authors such as Dr. Karen Ralls, Michael Baigent, Henry Lincoln, etc. Thanks for bringing the players in a little developed part of history alive around York, Northumbria, England and the Battle of Stamford bridge.
Top Anglo-Saxon History for Non-Specialists
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 21 years ago
Fletcher takes a fascinating incident from a fascinating period and expands on it to depict an entire age, and in the process produces what is probably the single best book on this period for the layman. Most texts on this brutal, vital, mesmerizing era are magically drained of life by academic writers with pens full of dust. Fletcher is scholarly and meticulous, yet also readable, even compelling.If more history were written like this, more history would be read.
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