Cat Jarman
Autor(a) de River Kings: A New History of Vikings from Scandinavia to the Silk Road
3 Works 400 Membros 13 Reviews
About the Author
Inclui os nomes: Cat Jarman, Cat Jarman PhD, Cat Jarman PhD
Obras de Cat Jarman
Kongenes knokler hvordan vikingene formet England 1 exemplar(es)
Etiquetado
10th century (1)
2021 (2)
2022 (2)
Anglo-Saxon (3)
Anglo-Saxon Archaeology (1)
archaeology (20)
Asia (2)
bead (2)
Britain (6)
carnelian (2)
Dark Ages (2)
ebook (4)
Europe (3)
European (2)
European History (10)
globalization (2)
goodreads import (2)
history (83)
House of Wessex (1)
Kindle (7)
medieval (10)
medieval history (7)
non-fiction (37)
Norse (2)
own (3)
read (5)
Scandinavia (10)
Scandinavian History (4)
Silk Road (5)
to-read (21)
totp-w (1)
trade (3)
travel (2)
unread (2)
Viking Age (2)
Viking History (2)
Vikingos (2)
Vikings (62)
xmas 23 (1)
zzz123271227 (1)
Conhecimento Comum
- Data de nascimento
- 1982
- Sexo
- female
- Nacionalidade
- Norway
- Ocupação
- archaeologist (bioarchaeologist)
Membros
Resenhas
River Kings: A Times Book of the Year 2021 de Cat Jarman
An interesting way of interpreting Viking history, by tracing the route a traded item likely took to reach its found location. The analysis of the trading posts it would’ve transited along the way reads like a murder mystery. I enjoyed going along as the puzzle was unraveled.
Marcado
BBrookes | outras 9 resenhas | Nov 29, 2023 | An interesting way of interpreting Viking history, by tracing the route a traded item likely took to reach its final location. The analysis of the trading posts it would’ve transited along the way reads like a murder mystery. I enjoyed going along as the puzzle was unraveled.
½Marcado
BBrookes | outras 9 resenhas | Nov 17, 2023 | Marcado
mrsnickleby | outras 2 resenhas | Nov 12, 2023 | Beneath Winchester Cathedral, a faceless human figure silently oversees the rising waters that flood the crypt each winter. Installed in 1986 by the sculptor Antony Gormley, the statue invites the viewer to reflect on the contrast between the passing seasons and the permanence of a structure built nearly 1,000 years ago. ‘How’, Gormley asked, ‘do you make the timelessness of inert, silent objects count for something?’
The same question might well be asked of the six ornate mortuary chests resting on tall limestone screens on either side of the cathedral’s altar, far above the statue in the crypt below. The chests were traditionally believed to hold the remains of between nine and 11 people, all elite members of Anglo-Saxon or Anglo-Norman society. These range from Cynegils, the first Christian king of Wessex who died in the late seventh century, to William Rufus, king of England and son of William the Conqueror, who was killed by an ill-shot arrow some 450 years later. The Danish conqueror Cnut is thought to be in one of the chests, as is his influential wife Emma. Æthelwulf, father of King Alfred, may be also, as might Stigand, the deposed archbishop of Canterbury. In 2012, after sifting through approximately 1,300 bone fragments, researchers from the University of Bristol determined that there may in fact be as many as 23 people interred in the chests, not all of whom can be firmly identified. Perhaps most puzzling are the remains of two children between the ages of 10 and 15, of whom no record remains. In an age of carbon dating and DNA analysis, the very fact of the bones’ existence makes the early Middle Ages seem nearly within our grasp, yet the countless mysteries surrounding the chests remind us of how little we truly know of the world these people inhabited.
Bioarchaeologist Cat Jarman’s new book aims to bring at least a few of those interred in the Winchester Cathedral mortuary chests back to life. She does so via a multilayered narrative that traces both the history of the chests themselves and, more broadly, the evolution of Anglo-Saxon Wessex into the unified kingdom of England. As those familiar with this period know, she has rich material with which to work. In the words of the tenth-century chronicler Æthelweard, the story of early medieval England is one of ‘many wars and slayings of men and no small wreck of navies on the waves of the ocean’. Jarman’s book is not short on wars, slayings and shipwrecks, but it is equally a tale of political manoeuverings, clashes of culture, conflicts over gender and status – the larger trends that shaped early English society. Perhaps most of all, Jarman’s book is about the persistence of historical memory. The remains’ survival was by no means a foregone conclusion, particularly given the destructive consequences of the Norman Conquest, the Reformation and the English Civil War. The Winchester chests serve as a powerful testimony to how fragile history can be.
The Kingdom of Wessex was born sometime in the two centuries following the collapse of the Roman Empire, though the precise circumstances of its birth remain a mystery. Written sources for the period provide little in the way of detail, and it can be difficult to separate fact from myth and folk memory. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that the first group of West Saxons arrived in Britain along with other tribes migrating from continental Europe in 449. In its entry for 519, the Chronicle first mentions that the West Saxons had established a kingdom for themselves, and by the time Cynegils assumed the throne in 611, the Chronicle had begun to refer to ‘the kingdom in Wessex’. A migratory tribe had become a place, a sovereign state with its own lands and borders.
Read the rest of the review at HistoryToday.com.
Andrew Rabin is Professor and Vice Chair in the Department of English at the University of Louisville, Kentucky.… (mais)
The same question might well be asked of the six ornate mortuary chests resting on tall limestone screens on either side of the cathedral’s altar, far above the statue in the crypt below. The chests were traditionally believed to hold the remains of between nine and 11 people, all elite members of Anglo-Saxon or Anglo-Norman society. These range from Cynegils, the first Christian king of Wessex who died in the late seventh century, to William Rufus, king of England and son of William the Conqueror, who was killed by an ill-shot arrow some 450 years later. The Danish conqueror Cnut is thought to be in one of the chests, as is his influential wife Emma. Æthelwulf, father of King Alfred, may be also, as might Stigand, the deposed archbishop of Canterbury. In 2012, after sifting through approximately 1,300 bone fragments, researchers from the University of Bristol determined that there may in fact be as many as 23 people interred in the chests, not all of whom can be firmly identified. Perhaps most puzzling are the remains of two children between the ages of 10 and 15, of whom no record remains. In an age of carbon dating and DNA analysis, the very fact of the bones’ existence makes the early Middle Ages seem nearly within our grasp, yet the countless mysteries surrounding the chests remind us of how little we truly know of the world these people inhabited.
Bioarchaeologist Cat Jarman’s new book aims to bring at least a few of those interred in the Winchester Cathedral mortuary chests back to life. She does so via a multilayered narrative that traces both the history of the chests themselves and, more broadly, the evolution of Anglo-Saxon Wessex into the unified kingdom of England. As those familiar with this period know, she has rich material with which to work. In the words of the tenth-century chronicler Æthelweard, the story of early medieval England is one of ‘many wars and slayings of men and no small wreck of navies on the waves of the ocean’. Jarman’s book is not short on wars, slayings and shipwrecks, but it is equally a tale of political manoeuverings, clashes of culture, conflicts over gender and status – the larger trends that shaped early English society. Perhaps most of all, Jarman’s book is about the persistence of historical memory. The remains’ survival was by no means a foregone conclusion, particularly given the destructive consequences of the Norman Conquest, the Reformation and the English Civil War. The Winchester chests serve as a powerful testimony to how fragile history can be.
The Kingdom of Wessex was born sometime in the two centuries following the collapse of the Roman Empire, though the precise circumstances of its birth remain a mystery. Written sources for the period provide little in the way of detail, and it can be difficult to separate fact from myth and folk memory. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that the first group of West Saxons arrived in Britain along with other tribes migrating from continental Europe in 449. In its entry for 519, the Chronicle first mentions that the West Saxons had established a kingdom for themselves, and by the time Cynegils assumed the throne in 611, the Chronicle had begun to refer to ‘the kingdom in Wessex’. A migratory tribe had become a place, a sovereign state with its own lands and borders.
Read the rest of the review at HistoryToday.com.
Andrew Rabin is Professor and Vice Chair in the Department of English at the University of Louisville, Kentucky.… (mais)
Marcado
HistoryToday | outras 2 resenhas | Oct 31, 2023 | You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Christian Rugstad Translator
Richard Osgood Illustrator
Estatísticas
- Obras
- 3
- Membros
- 400
- Popularidade
- #60,685
- Avaliação
- 4.1
- Resenhas
- 13
- ISBNs
- 19
- Idiomas
- 3