Dr james a naismith biography of rory
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Dr james a naismith life of rory
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Recent Posts
Friday 6th May, pm
Rampton Village Hall
‘Late Anglo-Saxon Ely: A Monastery and Its World‘
By Rory Naismith
The monastery at Ely was re-founded around , and rapidly grew to become one of the richest and most revered religious houses in England. This talk will look at how Ely established itself, and particularly at how it interacted with the society and landscape of the region in the late tenth and eleventh centuries. To do so, Rory Naismith will consider a range of unusual sources kept at Ely (including lists of peasants, agricultural records and guilt statutes) which shed light on how the monastery ran its lands and dealt with locals.
Dr Rory Naismith is a Lecturer in the History of England before the Norman Conquest, at the University of Cambridge. He is also a Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. He focuses on the economic and social history of England and its neighbours in the early Middle Ages. Books include Early Medieval Britain c. (), Citadel of the Saxons: the Rise of Early London (), and Money and Power in Anglo-Saxon England: the Southern English Kingdoms ().
*The hall is at 4 Church End, Rampton, Cambridge CB24 8QA. There is ample car parking.
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The Shindig - An Archaeology Podcast
Remarkable Journeys of Early Medieval Silver – with Dr. Jane Kershaw and Prof. Rory Naismith
Season 3, Ep. 7
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In this episode, Dr. Jane Kershaw and Prof. Rory Naismith discuss the origins, sources, and circulation of a revolutionary silver coin currency during the ‘long 8th century’ in early medieval northwestern Europe.
Jane and Rory are co-authors of a transformative new study, which can be read about in the Antiquity Open Access paper, ‘Byzantine plate and Frankish mines: the provenance of silver in north-west European coinage during the Long Eighth Century (c. –)’ – Jane Kershaw, Stephen W. Merkel, Paolo D’Imporzano and Rory Naismith ().
Jane and Rory explore the remarkable provenance of this silver, its composition, and sources, including the initial use of recycled Byzantine metal from the Eastern Roman Empire and the subsequent dominance of Frankish mined silver. Speaking with Dr. Tom Horne and Luke Barry, Jane and Rory highlight the importance of their research in shedding light on this fascinating period of northwestern European history, with its huge characters like Charlemagne and Offa and its vital economic and exchange developments, and the potential of their new, minimally-destructive, analytical methodol