Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Anglo-Saxon charters are catalogued in Peter Sawyer's Annotated List (1968), [1] revised and extended online. They are usually referred to in the specialist literature by their Sawyer number (e.g. S 407).
Between 741 and 809 pincernae attested charters of Kent, the Hwicce and Mercia, and in 785 Eatta attested a charter of Offa of Mercia as "dux et regis discifer" (ealdorman and king's dish-bearer), but all later attestations of dish-bearers and butlers are in West Saxon and English charters. [22]
Cartularium Saxonicum is a three-volume collection of Anglo-Saxon charters published from 1885 to 1893 [2] by Walter de Gray Birch (1842–1924), then working in the Department of Manuscripts at the British Library. The most recent edition was released on May 24, 2012, by Cambridge University Press. [3]
Anglo-saxon charters : an annotated list and bibliography. Guides and handbooks. Vol. 8. Royal Historical Society. xiii–538 pages. OCLC 460956. (Subsequently digitised and revised as The Electronic Sawyer: Online Catalogue of Anglo-Saxon Charters, first published 2010) Sawyer, Peter H (1978). From Roman Britain to Norman England (1998 2nd ed.).
The Saxons in England: A History of the English Commonwealth till the Period of the Norman Conquest. Vol. (2 vols). Walter de Gray Birch (ed.). Cartularium Saxonicum: A Collection of Charters Relating to Anglo-Saxon History. Vol. (3 vols). Walter de Gray Birch (1902). A History of Neath Abbey. Walter de Gray Birch. History of the Scottish Seals ...
The Electronic Sawyer: Online Catalogue of Anglo-Saxon Charters. London, UK: King's College London "Charter S 367a". The Electronic Sawyer: Online Catalogue of Anglo-Saxon Charters. London, UK: King's College London; Clarkson, Tim (2014). Strathclyde and the Anglo-Saxons in the Viking Age. Edinburgh, UK: John Donald.
The New Minster Charter is an Anglo-Saxon illuminated manuscript that was likely composed by Bishop Æthelwold [2] and presented to the New Minster in Winchester by King Edgar in the year 966 AD to commemorate the Benedictine Reform. [3] [4] It is now part of the British Library's collection.
The Codex Diplomaticus Aevi Saxonici is a collection of documents from the Anglo-Saxon period preserved in manuscripts held by various libraries in England. [1] Published in six volumes between 1839 and 1848, this was the first collected edition of the surviving corpus of Anglo-Saxon charters.