[1]
A. WILLIAMS Anglo-Saxon. 143–172.
[2]
Abels, R.P. 1988. Lordship and Military Obligation in Anglo-Saxon England. University of California Press.
[3]
Abels, R.P. and Abels, R.P. 1998. Alfred the Great: war, kingship, and culture in Anglo-Saxon England. Longman.
[4]
Aethelweard, -998? The chronicle of Æthelweard / Edited by A. Campbell.
[5]
ALAN CARTER Anglo-Saxon. 175–204.
[6]
Asser, J. et al. 1983. Alfred the Great: Asser’s Life of King Alfred and other contemporary sources. Penguin Books.
[7]
Banham, D. 2004. Food and Drink in Anglo-Saxon England. Tempus.
[8]
Barlow, F. 1997. Edward the Confessor. Yale University Press.
[9]
Barlow, F. 1979. The English church, 1000-1066: a history of the later Anglo-Saxon church. Longman.
[10]
Barlow, F. 1979. The English Church, 1066-1154: a history of the Anglo-Norman church. Longman.
[11]
Barlow, F. 1992. The Life of King Edward who rests at Westminster. Clarendon Press.
[12]
Bassett, S. et al. 1989. The Origins of Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. Leicester University Press.
[13]
Bassett, S. and University of Oxford. Department for External Studies 1989. The Origins of Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. Leicester University Press.
[14]
Bassett, S. and University of Oxford. Department for External Studies 1989. The Origins of Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. Leicester University Press.
[15]
Bates, D. 2016. William the Conqueror. Yale University Press.
[16]
Bates, D. et al. 2006. Writing Medieval biography, 750-1250: essays in honour of Professor Frank Barlow. Boydell Press.
[17]
Baxter, Stephen David, 1969- The Earls of Mercia: Lordship and Power in Late Anglo-Saxon England / Stephen Baxter.
[18]
Bayliss, A. and Dennis, I. 2017. Anglo-Saxon graves and grave goods of the 6th and 7th centuries AD: a chronological framework. Routledge.
[19]
Bell, T. 2005. The religious reuse of Roman structures in early medieval England. Archaeopress.
[20]
Blackburn, M.A.S. 1986. Anglo-Saxon monetary history: essays in memory of Michael Dolley. Leicester University Press.
[21]
Blackburn, M.A.S. 1986. Anglo-Saxon monetary history: essays in memory of Michael Dolley. Leicester University Press.
[22]
Blackburn, M.A.S. and Dumville, D.N. 1998. Kings, currency and alliances: history and coinage of Southern England in the 9th century. Boydell.
[23]
Blair, J. et al. 1992. Pastoral care before the parish. Leicester University Press.
[24]
Blair, J. and Blair, J. 2005. The church in Anglo-Saxon society. Oxford University Press.
[25]
Blair, J. and Blair, J. 2005. The church in Anglo-Saxon society. Oxford University Press.
[26]
Blair, J. and Sharpe, R. 1992. Pastoral care before the parish. Leicester University Press.
[27]
Bolton, T. 2017. Cnut the Great. Yale University Press.
[28]
Bonner, G. et al. 1976. Famulus Christi: essays in commemoration of the thirteenth centenary of the birth of the Venerable Bede. S.P.C.K.
[29]
Bradley, S.A.J. 2003. Anglo-Saxon poetry. Dent.
[30]
Brooks, N. 1984. The Early History of the Church of Canterbury: Christ Church from 597 to 1066. Leicester University Press.
[31]
Brooks, N. and Cubitt, C. 1996. St. Oswald of Worcester: life and influence. Leicester University Press.
[32]
Brooks, N. and Cubitt, C. 1996. St. Oswald of Worcester: life and influence. Leicester University Press.
[33]
Brown, George Hardin, 1931- Bede the educator / by George Hardin Brown. 16–24.
[34]
Brown, G.H. 2009. A companion to Bede. Boydell Press.
[35]
Brown, G.H. 1987. Bede, the Venerable. Twayne.
[36]
Brown, M. and Farr, C.A. 2003. Mercia: an Anglo-Saxon kingdom in Europe. Continuum.
[37]
Brown, R.A. and Battle Conference on Anglo-Norman Studies 1979. Anglo-Norman Studies XXXIX: Proceedings of the Battle Conference 2016 (39). Boydell Press.
[38]
Bruce-Mitford, R.L.S. et al. 1968. The Sutton Hoo ship burial: a handbook. Trustees of the British Museum.
[39]
Bruce-Mitford, R.L.S. et al. 1975. The Sutton Hoo ship-burial. British Museum.
[40]
Bruce-Mitford, R.L.S. and Willumsen, J.F. 1974. Aspects of Anglo-Saxon archaeology: Sutton Hoo and other discoveries. Gollancz.
[41]
Campbell, A. et al. 1998. Encomium Emmae Reginae. Cambridge University Press.
[42]
Campbell, J. 1986. Essays in Anglo-Saxon history. Hambledon Press.
[43]
Campbell, J. 2000. The Anglo-Saxon State. Hambledon & London.
[44]
Campbell, J. et al. 1991. The Anglo-Saxons. Penguin.
[45]
Campbell, J. et al. 1991. The Anglo-Saxons. Penguin.
[46]
Carella, Kristen (ed.); Chardonnens, László Sándor (ed.) 2016. English Studies: A Journal of English Language and Literature[Journal Detail]. (2016), 1–2.
[47]
Carver, M.O.H. 1993. In search of cult: archaeological investigations in honour of Philip Rahtz. Boydell.
[48]
Carver, M.O.H. et al. 2005. Sutton Hoo: a seventh-century princely burial ground and its context. British Museum Press.
[49]
Carver, M.O.H. 1998. Sutton Hoo: burial ground of Kings?. British Museum Press.
[50]
Carver, M.O.H. 2017. The Sutton Hoo story: encounters with early England. The Boydell Press.
[51]
Carver, M.O.H. and University of York. Centre for Medieval Studies 2002. The cross goes north: processes of conversion in northern Europe, AD 300-1300. Boydell & Brewer in association with York Medieval Press.
[52]
Casey, P.J. 1979. The End of Roman Britain: papers arising from a conference, Durham, 1978. British Archaeological Reports.
[53]
Charles Insley 2016. Reti Medievali Rivista,. 2016 (2016), 231–249. DOI:https://doi.org/10.6092/1593-2214/522.
[54]
Clanchy, M.T. 2013. From memory to written record: England, 1066-1307. John Wiley & Sons.
[55]
Clarke, P.A. 1994. The English Nobility under Edward the Confessor. Clarendon.
[56]
Clemoes, Peter The Anglo-Saxons : studies in some aspects of their history and culture presented to Bruce Dickins / edited by Peter Clemoes.
[57]
Colgrave, B. et al. 1969. Bede’s ecclesiastical history of the English people. Clarendon Press.
[58]
Colgrave, B. and Bede 1985. Two lives of Saint Cuthbert: texts. Cambridge University Press.
[59]
Colgrave, B. and Eddius Stephanus 1985. The Life of Bishop Wilfrid. Cambridge University Press.
[60]
Colgrave, B. and Felix 1985. Felix’s Life of Saint Guthlac. Cambridge University Press.
[61]
Cooper, J. 1993. The Battle of Maldon: fiction and fact. Hambledon Press.
[62]
Coupland, Simon 1991. Journal of Medieval History; 17, Issue: 1 p1-12 (1991), 1–12.
[63]
Cubitt, C. 1995. Anglo-Saxon church councils c. 650-c. 850. Leicester University Press.
[64]
Damico, H. and Olsen, A.H. eds. 1990. New readings on women in Old English literature. Indiana University Press.
[65]
David G.J. Raraty Earl Godwine of Wessex : The Origins of his Power and his Political Loyalties. 74, 240, 3–19.
[66]
DeGregorio, S. ed. 2010. The Cambridge Companion to Bede. Cambridge University Press.
[67]
Dolley, Michael Anglo-Saxon coins : studies presented to F.M. Stenton on the occasion of his 80th birthday, 17 May, 1960.
[68]
Dornier, A. and Conference on Mercia 1977. Mercian studies. Leicester University Press.
[69]
Dorothy Whitelock, author The English Historical. 70, 274, 72–85.
[70]
Douglas, David Charles, 1898- The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle : a revised translation / edited by Dorothy Whitelock with David C. Douglas and Susie I. Tucker ; introduction by Dorothy Whitelock.
[71]
Douglas, D.C. and Whitelock, D. English historical documents. Eyre & Spottiswoode.
[72]
Duggan, A. and King’s College, London. Centre for Late Antique and Medieval Studies 1993. Kings and kingship in medieval Europe. King’s College London, Centre for Late Antique and Medieval Studies.
[73]
Dumville, D.N. 1992. Wessex and England from Alfred to Edgar: six essays on political, cultural, and ecclesiastical revival. Boydell Press.
[74]
Dumville, D.N. 1992. Wessex and England from Alfred to Edgar: six essays on political, cultural, and ecclesiastical revival. Boydell Press.
[75]
E. G. Stanley, author The Review of English. 39, 155, 349–364.
[76]
Esmonde Cleary, A.S. 1991. The ending of Roman Britain. Routledge.
[77]
Evans, A.C. and Reed, M.I. 1986. The Sutton Hoo ship burial. published for the Trustees of the British Museum by British Museum Publications.
[78]
F. T. Wainwright THE SUBMISSION TO EDWARD THE ELDER. 37, 130, 114–130.
[79]
Farmer, D.H. et al. 1983. The Age of Bede. Penguin.
[80]
Farmer, D.H. et al. 1983. The Age of Bede. Penguin.
[81]
Farrell, R.T. 1982. The vikings. Phillimore.
[82]
Farrell, R.T. and Bede 1978. Bede and Anglo-Saxon England: papers in honour of the 1300th anniversary of the birth of Bede, given at Cornell University in 1973 and 1974. British Archaeological Reports.
[83]
Farrell, R.T. and Bede 1978. Bede and Anglo-Saxon England: papers in honour of the 1300th anniversary of the birth of Bede, given at Cornell University in 1973 and 1974. British Archaeological Reports.
[84]
Fell, C.E. 1971. Edward: Fell: king and martyr. University of Leeds [School of English].
[85]
Fell, C.E. et al. 1984. Women in Anglo-Saxon England. British Museum Publications.
[86]
Finberg, H. P. R. Lucerna; : studies of some problems in the early history of England / by H. P. R. Finberg.
[87]
Finberg, H.P.R. 1974. The formation of England, 550-1042. Hart-Davis MacGibbon.
[88]
Fisher, D.J.V. and Fisher, D.J.V. 1973. The Anglo-Saxon age, c.400-1042. Longman.
[89]
Flanders, A. 1964. The Fawley productivity agreements: a case study of management and collective bargaining. Faber and Faber.
[90]
FLORA SPIEGEL Anglo-Saxon. 1–13.
[91]
Foot, S. 2011. Æthelstan: the first king of England. Yale University Press.
[92]
Foot, S. 2006. Monastic life in Anglo-Saxon England, c. 600-900. Cambridge University Press.
[93]
Foot, S. 2000. Veiled women. Ashgate.
[94]
Gildas ‘On the Ruin of Britain’: https://sourcebooks.fordham.edu/basis/gildas-full.asp.
[95]
Godman, P. and Alcuin 1982. The bishops, kings, and saints of York. Clarendon.
[96]
Goffart, W.A. 1988. The narrators of barbarian history (A.D. 550-800): Jordanes, Gregory of Tours, Bede, and Paul the Deacon. Princeton University Press.
[97]
Great Britain. Laws, statues, etc., 449-1066. The laws of the kings of England from Edmund to Henry I / edited and translated by A.J. Robertson, M.A.
[98]
Gretsch, M. 1999. The Intellectual Foundations of the English Benedictine Reform. Cambridge University Press.
[99]
Hadley, D. M. (Dawn M.), 1967- The Northern Danelaw: its Social Structure, c. 800-1100 / D.M. Hadley.
[100]
Hadley, D.M. 2000. The Northern Danelaw: its social structure, c. 800-1100. Leicester University Press.
[101]
Hadley, D.M. 2000. The Northern Danelaw: its social structure, c. 800-1100. Leicester University Press.
[102]
Hadley, D.M. 2006. The Vikings in England: settlement, society and culture. Manchester University Press.
[103]
Hadley, D.M. 2006. The Vikings in England: settlement, society and culture. Manchester University Press.
[104]
Hadley, D.M. and Ten Harkel, L. 2013. Everyday Life in Viking-Age Towns: social approaches to towns in England and Ireland, c. 800-1100. Oxford.
[105]
Hamerow, H. 2002. Early medieval settlements: the archaeology of rural communities in North-West Europe, 400-900. Oxford University Press.
[106]
Hamerow, H. 2012. Rural settlements and society in Anglo-Saxon England. Oxford University Press.
[107]
Hart, C.R. 1992. The Danelaw. Hambledon.
[108]
Henig, M. et al. 2010. Intersections: the archaeology and history of Christianity in England, 400-1200 : papers in honour of Martin Biddle and Birthe Kjølbye-Biddle. Archaeopress.
[109]
Higham, N.J. 1994. The English conquest: Gildas and Britain in the fifth century. Manchester University Press.
[110]
Higham, N.J. 1993. The kingdom of Northumbria: AD 350-1100. Alan Sutton.
[111]
Higham, N.J. 1993. The kingdom of Northumbria: AD 350-1100. Alan Sutton.
[112]
Higham, N.J. 1986. The northern counties to AD 1000. Longman.
[113]
Higham, N.J. and Hill, D. 2001. Edward the Elder, 899-924. Routledge.
[114]
Higham, N.J. and Ryan, M.J. 2013. The Anglo-Saxon world. Yale University Press.
[115]
Hill, D. et al. 1996. The Defence of Wessex: the Burghal Hidage and Anglo-Saxon fortifications. Manchester University Press.
[116]
Hill, D. and Ethelred the Unready (Conference 1978. Ethelred the Unready: papers from the Millenary Conference. British Archaeological Reports.
[117]
Hill, D. and Hill, D. 1981. An atlas of Anglo-Saxon England. Blackwell.
[118]
Hoggett, R. 2010. The archaeology of the East Anglian conversion. Boydell.
[119]
Hoggett, R. 2010. The archaeology of the East Anglian conversion. Boydell.
[120]
Holdsworth, C.J. et al. 1986. The inheritance of historiography, 350-900. Exeter University Publications.
[121]
Hollis, S. 1992. Anglo-Saxon Women and the Church: sharing a common fate. Boydell Press.
[122]
Hollis, S. and Barnes, W.R. 2004. Writing the Wilton women: Goscelin’s Legend of Edith and ‘Liber confortatorius’. Brepols.
[123]
HOUTS, ELISABETH VAN 1992. Early Medieval Europe; 1, Issue 1, p53-68 (1992), 53–68.
[124]
Hunter Blair, P. et al. 1984. Anglo-Saxon Northumbria. Variorum Reprints.
[125]
Hunter Blair, P. et al. 1984. Anglo-Saxon Northumbria. Variorum Reprints.
[126]
Hyams, P.R. 2003. Rancor and Reconciliation in Medieval England. Cornell University Press.
[127]
J. R. MADDICOTT Anglo-Saxon. 7–58.
[128]
J. R. Maddicott, author Past & Present. 123, 3–51.
[129]
JOHN H. WILLIAMS Anglo-Saxon. 113–136.
[130]
Jones, G. 1984. A history of the Vikings. Oxford University Press.
[131]
Kendall, C.B. et al. 1992. Voyage to the other world: the legacy of Sutton Hoo. University of Minnesota Press.
[132]
Kendall, C.B. et al. 1992. Voyage to the other world: the legacy of Sutton Hoo. University of Minnesota Press.
[133]
KEYNES, S. 2008. The Control of Kent in the Ninth Century. Early Medieval Europe. 2, 2 (Jun. 2008), 111–131. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0254.1993.tb00013.x.
[134]
Keynes, S. and Keynes, S. 1980. The diplomas of King Æthelred ‘The Unready’ (978-1016): a study in their use as historical evidence. Cambridge University Press.
[135]
Keynes, Simon Journal of Ecclesiastical History. 47, Issue 3.
[136]
Keynes, Simon; Love, Rosalind 2010. Anglo-Saxon England[Journal Detail]. (2010), 185–223.
[137]
Kirby, D. P. 1966. Bulletin of the John Rylands University Library of Manchester (Manchester, England). (1966), 341–371.
[138]
Kirby, D.P. 1974. Saint Wilfrid at Hexham. Oriel Press.
[139]
Kirby, D.P. 2000. The earliest English kings. Routledge.
[140]
Kirby, D.P. The genesis of a cult: Cuthbert of Farne and ecclesiastical politics in Northumbria in the late... Journal of Ecclesiastical History. 46, Issue 3.
[141]
Lapidge, M. 1995. Archbishop Theodore: commemorative studies on his life and influence. Cambridge University Press.
[142]
Lapidge, M. 2001. The Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Anglo-Saxon England. Blackwell.
[143]
Lapidge, M. et al. 1991. Wulfstan of Winchester: the life of St. Aethelwold. Clarendon.
[144]
Lapidge, M. and Byrhtferth 2009. The lives of St Oswald and St Ecgwine. Clarendon.
[145]
Lapidge, M. and Dumville, D.N. 1984. Gildas: new approaches. Boydell Press.
[146]
Lavelle, R. 2002. Aethelred II: King of the English, 978-1016. Tempus.
[147]
Lawson, M.K. 1993. Cnut: the Danes in England in the early eleventh century. Longman.
[148]
Lawson, M.K. 2002. The Battle of Hastings, 1066. Tempus.
[149]
Lawson, M.K. 2007. The Battle of Hastings, 1066. Tempus.
[150]
LESLIE ALCOCK The Scottish Historical. 75, 200, 130–142.
[151]
Leyser, K. and Reuter, T. 1994. Communications and Power in Medieval Europe. Hambledon Press.
[152]
Licence, T. ed. 2014. Bury St Edmunds and the Norman Conquest. The Boydell Press.
[153]
Licence, T. 2013. Hermits and Recluses in English society, 950-1200. Oxford University Press.
[154]
Licence, T. 2013. Hermits and Recluses in English society, 950-1200. Oxford University Press.
[155]
Licence, T. et al. 2014. Miracles of St Edmund. Oxford University Press.
[156]
Licence, Tom 2015. Anglo-Saxon England[Journal Detail]. (2015), 259–285.
[157]
Livingston, M. ed. 2011. The Battle of Brunanburh: a casebook. University of Exeter Press.
[158]
Logan, F.D. 2005. The Vikings in history. Routledge.
[159]
Loyn, H.R. 1984. The Governance of Anglo-Saxon England 500-1087. Edward Arnold.
[160]
Loyn, H.R. 1977. The Vikings in Britain. Batsford.
[161]
Manchester Centre for Anglo-Saxon Studies 2013. Kingship, legislation and power in Anglo-Saxon England. Boydell & Brewer.
[162]
Margaret Clunies Ross, author Past & Present. 108, 3–34.
[163]
Mayr-Harting, H. and Mayr-Harting, H. 1991. The coming of Christianity to Anglo-Saxon England. Pennsylvania State University Press.
[164]
McClure, J. et al. 1994. The ecclesiastical history of the English people: The greater chronicle ; Bede’s letter to Egbert. Oxford University Press.
[165]
MICHAEL HUNTER Anglo-Saxon. 29–50.
[166]
MICHAEL LAPIDGE Anglo-Saxon. 61–98.
[167]
MICHAEL PARKER PEARSONROBERT VAN DE NOORTALEX WOOLF Anglo-Saxon. 27–50.
[168]
Miles Warren Campbell Queen Emma and AElfgifu of Northampton: Canute the Great’s Women - Miles Warren Campbell - Google Books: p 66-79. Mediaeval Scandinavia, 1971.
[169]
MOLLY MILLER Anglo-Saxon. 35–61.
[170]
Molyneaux, G. 2015. The Formation of the English Kingdom in the Tenth Century. Oxford University Press.
[171]
Moore, J. and Scott, E. 1997. Invisible people and processes: writing gender and childhood into European archaeology. Leicester University Press.
[172]
Morillo, S. and Morillo, S. 1996. The Battle of Hastings: sources and interpretations. Boydell Press.
[173]
Morris, J. and Nennius 1980. British history and the Welsh annals. Phillimore.
[174]
Mortimer, R. 2009. Edward the Confessor: the man and the legend. Boydell Press.
[175]
Mortimer, R. 2009. Edward the Confessor: the man and the legend. Boydell Press.
[176]
Myres, J.N.L. 1989. The English settlements. Oxford University Press.
[177]
Naismith, R. 2011. Money and Power in Anglo-Saxon England: the southern English kingdoms, 757-865. Cambridge University Press.
[178]
Nelson, J.L. 1986. ‘A King across the Sea’: Alfred in Continental Perspective. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. 36, (1986). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/3679059.
[179]
NIELS LUND Anglo-Saxon. 105–118.
[180]
Okasha, E. 2011. Women’s names in Old English. Ashgate.
[181]
Owen-Crocker, G.R. 1986. Dress in Anglo-Saxon England. Manchester University Press.
[182]
P. D. A. Harvey, author The English Historical. 108, 426, 1–22.
[183]
Panhuysen, T.A.S.M. and Internationales Sachsensymposion 2011. Transformations in North-Western Europe (AD 300-1000): proceedings of the 60th Sachsensymposion 19.-23, September 2009 Maastricht. Theiss.
[184]
Panhuysen, T.A.S.M. and Internationales Sachsensymposion 2011. Transformations in North-Western Europe (AD 300-1000): proceedings of the 60th Sachsensymposion 19.-23, September 2009 Maastricht. Theiss.
[185]
Parsons, D. and Council of Winchester 1975. Tenth-Century Studies: essays in commemoration of the millennium of the Council of Winchester and Regularis concordia. Phillimore.
[186]
Parsons, D. and Council of Winchester 1975. Tenth-Century Studies: essays in commemoration of the millennium of the Council of Winchester and Regularis concordia. Phillimore.
[187]
PAULINE STAFFORD Anglo-Saxon. 173–190.
[188]
Pauline Stafford, author Past & Present. 163, 3–35.
[189]
Pelteret, D.A.E. 1995. Slavery in Early Mediaeval England: from the reign of Alfred until the twelfth century. Boydell.
[190]
Pestell, T. 2004. Landscapes of monastic foundation: the establishment of religious houses in East Anglia c. 650-1200. Boydell & Brewer.
[191]
Pestell, T. and Ulmschneider, K. 2003. Markets in early medieval Europe: trading and productive sites, 650-850. Windgather Press.
[192]
Poole, R. 1987. Skaldic Verse and Anglo-Saxon History: Some Aspects of the Period 1009-1016. Speculum. 62, 2 (Apr. 1987), 265–298. DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2855227.
[193]
Pratt, D. 2007. The Political Thought of King Alfred the Great. Cambridge University Press.
[194]
R. H. C. DAVIS ALFRED THE GREAT: PROPAGANDA AND TRUTH. 56, 187, 169–182.
[195]
Ramsay, N. et al. 1992. St Dunstan: his life, times, and cult. Boydell.
[196]
Ramsay, N. et al. 1992. St Dunstan: his life, times, and cult. Boydell.
[197]
Ray, K. and Bapty, I. 2016. Offa’s Dyke: landscape and Hegemony in eighth-century Britain. Windgather Press.
[198]
Reuter, T. ed. 1999. The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 3: C.900 -c.1024. Cambridge University Press.
[199]
Reuter, T. and Eleventh Centenary Conference on Alfred the Great 2003. Alfred the Great: papers from the eleventh-centenary conferences. Ashgate.
[200]
Reynolds, A. 1999. Later Anglo-Saxon England: life & landscape. Tempus.
[201]
Richard Abels, author Journal of British. 23, 1, 1–25.
[202]
Ridyard, S.J. 1988. The royal saints of Anglo-Saxon England: a study of West Saxon and East Anglian cults. Cambridge University Press.
[203]
Ridyard, S.J. 1988. The Royal Saints of Anglo-Saxon England: a study of West Saxon and East Anglian cults. Cambridge University Press.
[204]
Roach, L. 2016. Ethelred the Unready. Yale University Press.
[205]
Roach, L. 2013. Kingship and Consent in Anglo-Saxon England, 871-978: assemblies and the state in the early Middle Ages. Cambridge University Press.
[206]
ROACH, L. 2013. Penitential Discourse in the Diplomas of King Æthelred ‘the Unready’. The Journal of Ecclesiastical History. 64, 02 (Apr. 2013), 258–276. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022046912003685.
[207]
ROB MEENS Anglo-Saxon. 5–17.
[208]
Roberta Frank, author The English Historical. 99, 391, 332–343.
[209]
Roberts, J. et al. 1997. Alfred the Wise: studies in honour of Janet Bately on the occasion of her sixty-fifth birthday. D.S. Brewer.
[210]
Robin Fleming, author Past & Present. 141, 3–37.
[211]
Rodger, N.A.M. 1995. The English Historical Review. 110, Issue 436, p392 (1995).
[212]
Rory Naismith Gold Coinage and Its Use in the Post-Roman West. 89, 2, 273–306.
[213]
Rumble, A.R. 1994. ‘Cnut’s earls’. Reign of Cnut: King of England, Denmark & Norway. Leicester University Press. 43–88.
[214]
Rumble, A.R. 1994. Reign of Cnut: King of England, Denmark & Norway. Leicester University Press.
[215]
Sawyer, P.H. 1994. Kings and Vikings: Scandinavia and Europe, AD 700-1100. Barnes & Noble.
[216]
Schneider, Dagmar Beate Anglo-Saxon women in the religious life : a study of the status and position of women in an early mediaeval society.
[217]
Scragg, D.G. 2008. Edgar, King of the English, 959-975: new interpretations. Boydell Press.
[218]
Scragg, D.G. 1981. The battle of Maldon. Manchester University Press.
[219]
Scull, ChristopherMinter, FayePlouviez, Judith 2016. ANTIQUITY. (2016).
[220]
Scull, ChristopherMinter, FayePlouviez, Judith 2016. ANTIQUITY. (2016).
[221]
SIMON KEYNES Anglo-Saxon. 151–220.
[222]
Simon Keynes, author 1109. The English Historical. 109, 434 (1109), 1109–1149.
[223]
Sims-Williams, P. 1990. Religion and literature in western England, 600-800. Cambridge University Press.
[224]
Smyth, A.P. 1995. King Alfred the Great. Oxford University Press.
[225]
Smyth, A.P. and Smyth, A.P. 1977. Scandinavian Kings in the British Isles, 850-880. Oxford University Press.
[226]
Stafford, P. 2001. Queen Emma and Queen Edith: queenship and women’s power in eleventh-century England. Blackwell.
[227]
Stafford, P. 2001. Queen Emma and Queen Edith: queenship and women’s power in eleventh-century England. Blackwell.
[228]
Stafford, P. 1989. Unification and conquest: a political and social history of England in the tenth and eleventh centuries. Edward Arnold.
[229]
Stanley, E.G. and British Academy 1990. British Academy papers on Anglo-Saxon England. Published for the British Academy by the Oxford University Press.
[230]
Stenton, F.M. 1971. Anglo-Saxon England. Clarendon Press.
[231]
Stenton, F.M. and Stenton, D.M. 1970. Preparatory to Anglo-Saxon England: being the collected papers of Frank Merry Stenton. Clarendon P.
[232]
Stenton, F.M. and Stenton, D.M.P. 1970. Preparatory to Anglo-Saxon England: being the collected papers of Frank Merry Stenton. Clarendon P.
[233]
Stoodley, N. 1999. The spindle and the spear: a critical enquiry into the construction and meaning of gender in the early Anglo-Saxon burial rite. Archeopress.
[234]
Strickland, M. 1992. Anglo-Norman Warfare: studies in late Anglo-Saxon and Anglo-Norman military organization and warfare. Boydell Press.
[235]
Swanton, M. 2000. The Anglo-Saxon chronicles. Phoenix.
[236]
Swanton, M. and Swanton, M. 1993. Anglo-Saxon prose. Dent.
[237]
Swanton, M.J. 1997. Beowulf. Manchester University Press.
[238]
Symons, Thomas The monastic agreement of the monks and nuns of the English nation / translated from the Latin with introd. and notes by Thomas Symons.
[239]
Szarmach, P.E. ed. 2013. Writing Women Saints in Anglo-Saxon England. University of Toronto Press.
[240]
Thacker, A. and Sharpe, R. 2002. Local saints and local churches in the early Medieval West. Oxford University Press.
[241]
Thompson, A. Hamilton (Alexander Hamilton), 1873-1952 Bede, his life, times, and writings; : essays in commemoration of the twelfth centenary of his death / edited by A. Hamilton Thompson. With an introduction by the Lord Bishop of Durham.
[242]
Thompson, E.A. 1984. Saint Germanus of Auxerre and the end of Roman Britain. Boydell Press.
[243]
Tollerton, L. and University of York. Centre for Medieval Studies 2011. Wills and Will-Making in Anglo-Saxon England. Boydell & Brewer.
[244]
Tollerton, L. and University of York. Centre for Medieval Studies 2011. Wills and Will-Making in Anglo-Saxon England. Boydell & Brewer.
[245]
Townend, M. et al. 2004. Wulfstan, Archbishop of York: the proceedings of the second Alcuin Conference. Brepols.
[246]
Treharne, E. 2014. The Performance of Piety: Cnut, Rome, and England. England and Rome in the early Middle Ages: pilgrimage, art, and politics. F. Tinti, ed. Brepols. 343–364.
[247]
Tyler, E.M. 2017. England in Europe: English royal women and literary patronage, c.1000-c.1150. University of Toronto Press.
[248]
Tyler, E.M. 2017. England in Europe: English royal women and literary patronage, c.1000-c.1150. University of Toronto Press.
[249]
Vince, A.G. 1990. Saxon London: an archaeological investigation. Seaby.
[250]
W. H. Stevenson, author The English Historical. 28, 109, 112–117.
[251]
Wainwright, F.T. and Finberg, H.P.R. 1975. Scandinavian England: collected papers. Phillimore.
[252]
Wallace-Hadrill, J.M. 1971. Early Germanic kingship in England and on the continent: the Ford lectures delivered in the University of Oxford in Hilary Term 1970. Clarendon Press.
[253]
WALTER GOFFART Anglo-Saxon. 111–116.
[254]
Ward, B. 1990. The Venerable Bede. Geoffrey Chapman.
[255]
Whitelock, D. 2011. Anglo-Saxon Wills. Cambridge University Press.
[256]
Whitelock, D. 2011. Anglo-Saxon wills. Cambridge University Press.
[257]
Williams, A. 2003. Æthelred the Unready: the ill-counselled king. Hambledon and London.
[258]
Williams, A. 1999. Kingship and government in pre-conquest England c.500-c1066. Macmillan.
[259]
Williams, A. 1995. The English and the Norman Conquest. Boydell.
[260]
Williams, A. 2008. The World before Domesday: the English Aristocracy 900-1066. Continuum.
[261]
Wilson, D.M. 1976. The Archaeology of Anglo-Saxon England. Methuen.
[262]
Winroth, A. 2014. The Age of the Vikings. Princeton University Press.
[263]
Winterbottom, M. et al. 2012. The early lives of St Dunstan. Clarendon Press.
[264]
Winterbottom, M. and Gildas 1978. The ruin of Britain and other works. Phillimore.
[265]
Wood, I. 1994. The Mission of Augustine of Canterbury to the English. Speculum. 69, 1 (Jan. 1994), 1–17. DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2864782.
[266]
Woolf, Rosemary 1976. The ideal of men dying with their lord in the Germania and in The Battle of Maldon. Anglo-Saxon. 5, Issue 1, p63-81 (1976), 63–81.
[267]
WORMALD, P. 1994. Engla Lond: the Making of an Allegiance. Journal of Historical Sociology. 7, 1 (Mar. 1994), 1–24. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-6443.1994.tb00060.x.
[268]
Wormald, P. et al. 1983. Ideal and reality in Frankish and Anglo-Saxon society: studies presented to J.M. Wallace-Hadrill. Blackwell.
[269]
Wormald, P. et al. 1983. Ideal and reality in Frankish and Anglo-Saxon society: studies presented to J.M. Wallace-Hadrill. Blackwell.
[270]
Wormald, P. 1999. The making of English law: King Alfred to the twelfth century. Blackwell.
[271]
Wormald, P. and Baxter, S.D. 2008. The times of Bede: studies in early English Christian society and its historian. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
[272]
Wormald, P. and Nelson, J.L. 2007. Lay intellectuals in the Carolingian world. Cambridge University Press.
[273]
Wulfstan 2015. The political writings of Archbishop Wulfstan of York. Manchester University Press.
[274]
Wulfstan 2015. The Political Writings of Archbishop Wulfstan of York. Manchester University Press.
[275]
Wulfstan, Archbishop of York, -1023 Sermo Lupi ad Anglos / edited by Dorothy Whitelock. 68–72.
[276]
Wyatt, D. 2009. Slaves and Warriors in Medieval Britain and Ireland, 800-1200. Brill.
[277]
Yorke, B. 1990. Kings and kingdoms of early Anglo-Saxon England. Seaby.
[278]
Yorke, B. 2003. Nunneries and the Anglo-Saxon royal houses. Continuum.
[279]
Yorke, B. 1995. Wessex in the early Middle Ages. Leicester University Press.
[280]
Yorke, B. 1995. Wessex in the Early Middle Ages. Leicester University Press.
[281]
Yorke, B. and Aethelwold 1988. Bishop Aethelwold: his career and influence. Boydell.
[282]
Yorke, B. and Aethelwold 1988. Bishop Aethelwold: his career and influence. Boydell.
[283]
Yorke, Barbara 1985. Anglo-Saxon. 14, Issue 1, p1-36 (1985), 1–36.
[284]
2007. Acquiring, flaunting and destroying silk in late Anglo-Saxon England. Early Medieval Europe. (2007).
[285]
2005. Current Archaeology; 198 (2005), 298–301.
[286]
2007. Current Archaeology; 207 (2007), 8–11.
[287]
2016. Furnished female burial in seventh-century England: gender and sacral autho... Early Medieval Europe. (2016).
[288]
1990. Offa King of Mercia. History Today. (1990).
[289]
2005. The Anglo-Saxon Prince. Archaeology. (2005).
[290]
1995. The Making of England. History Today. (1995).
[291]
2012. The politics of remorse: penance and royal piety in the reign of Æthelred t... Historical Research. (2012).
[292]
1986. THE SCANDINAVIAN IMPACT: THE DANES & THE ‘DANELAW’. History Today. (1986).
[293]
2003. The Vikings on the Continent in Myth and History. History. (2003).