The Norman Conquest in 1066 was the last time England was successfully invaded, and proved to be the most cataclysmic event in English history.How did the duke of an outlying, backward French principality manage such a feat? How was the invasion viewed at the time, and subsequently? How was it justified? Whilst the Normans professed to maintain continuity with the English past, in reality they transformed the kingdom. George Garnett looks at the massive changes wrought through the rapid redistribution of land, the rebuilding of churches, and the refashioning of the kingdom's history.
The Norman Conquest in 1066 was one of the most profound turning points in English history, dramatically transforming a disparate collection of small nations into a powerful European state. But what actually happened? How was the invasion viewed by those who witnessed it? And how has its legacy been seen by generations since? In this fascinating Very Short Introduction, George Garnett--a leading expert on the Norman Conquest and its aftermath--reveals how dramatically English life was changed, transforming everything from its language to its law, and introducing a more sophisticated form of government as well as an enduring and intense dislike of the French. He sheds light on the differing ways the conquest has been viewed by historians and in folklore over nearly a millennium, revealing how much of what we understand today about the Norman Conquest was colored by the values of the Victorian Age, and showing how historians have pieced together the events of 1066, including the invasion by William the Conqueror and its climactic moment at the Battle of Hastings.