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IMC 2021: Sessions

Session 1710: Status, Rank, or Office?: Social Boundaries in England, 900-1100, II - Minor Officials

Thursday 8 July 2021, 14.15-15.45

Sponsor:Haskins Society / Department of History & Philosophy, State University of New York, Old Westbury
Organisers:Mary Blanchard, Department of History, Ave Maria University, Florida
Chelsea Shields-Más, Department of History, University of York
Moderator/Chair:Katherine Weikert, Department of Archaeology / Department of History, University of Winchester
Paper 1710-aHow Did Late Anglo-Saxon Coinage Actually Work?: Mints, Moneyers, and Social Networks
(Language: English)
Rory Naismith, Department of History, King's College London
Index terms: Economics - General, Language and Literature - Old English, Numismatics, Social History
Paper 1710-bOutside the Norm: Moneyer Status in Pre-Conquest England
(Language: English)
Jeremy Piercy, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of Edinburgh
Index terms: Charters and Diplomatics, Economics - General, Numismatics, Social History
Paper 1710-cThe Status of the Domesday taini regis
(Language: English)
Richard Purkiss, Lincoln College, University of Oxford
Index terms: Administration, Charters and Diplomatics, Politics and Diplomacy, Social History
Abstract

These sessions seek to encourage a dialogue among those working on different aspects of early medieval English society. The research examining the lower levels of society does not always agree with the findings of those studying the highest social status. Robin Fleming has observed that status and the social order were becoming more important in the 10th and 11th centuries, signaled by increasing conspicuous consumption and an ecclesiastical interest in tracts on status. These sessions ask where did status end and office begin in pre-Conquest England? In a world where the secular and spiritual were often so closely intertwined, what can those who gained status and office in the ecclesiastical sphere tell us about those who obtained the same thing in the secular world? Among the laity, what can a discussion of the lowest thegns contribute to our understanding of the men who held the office of reeve or ealdorman? What about the status of women? In both spheres, what insights can be revealed on social and political regional variation in England in the 10th and 11th centuries through research on status, rank and office? By asking and attempting to answer these and other questions, these sessions aim to start a discussion and further a multifaceted understanding of the period and its people through addressing the many questions that arise.