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Tour
Ely
Liber
Eliensis: A History of the Isle of Ely from the Seventh Century
to the Twelfth, Compiled by a Monk of Ely in the Twelfth Century
This is the first ever translation from Latin into English of
an important source for both English and ecclesiastical history.
"The Liber Eliensis" is an account of the history
of the Isle of Ely compiled by a monk of Ely monastery in the
later twelfth century. He uses evidence from the monastery's
Latin and Old English archives, combined with chronicle data
and biographies of saints and heroes, to tell the story of Ely
in three parts. The first book, chiefly concerned with the abbesses
of Ely (St Aethelthryth founded the house as a double house
under female leadership), extends from the conversion of East
Anglia to Christianity to the aftermath of the Danish sack;
the second book covers 970-1109, when the Benedictine monastery
was ruled by abbots, and includes an account of Hereward's resistance
to William the Conqueror; the third book begins at the point
when Ely first became the seat of a bishop, and extends to the
compiler's own times, ending with the martyrdom of Thomas Becket.
The translation does full justice to the compiler's gift for
story-telling and his wide range of source material; it gives
priority to the readings of the oldest manuscript of the Liber
Eliensis, but covers all the material in the later but fuller
recension of the Latin text presented in E.O. Blake's 1962 edition.
The volume is completed with notes on the text and sources and
an introductory essay. Janet Fairweather is a freelance researcher
and translator, and a member of the classics faculty, Cambridge
University.
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