The media of today is full of items relating
to property and the financial world has this at its centre. We think this is
the modern age but it is not. A thousand years ago it was much the same.
Quote:
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Historian tells new story about England's venerated
"Domesday" book. Journal
Reference: Carol Symes. Doing Things
beside Domesday Book. Speculum, 2018; 93 (4): 1048
DOI: 10.1086/699010.
Nearly a thousand years ago, a famous king created a famous book, later
given the title 'Domesday' (pronounced 'doomsday'). It's among the most famous
documents in English history, but its origins had not been thoroughly
investigated.
At least that's been the common story: William the Conqueror, 20 years
after his 1066 invasion of England from Normandy, ordered a massive survey of
his new realm. One year later, he got a book with the results -- a record of
the nation's wealth and resources, everything from property to sheep to
servants.
The "Great Domesday Book," as it was later named, is perhaps
the most famous document in English history after the Magna Carta. The book's
origin story, however, had not been thoroughly investigated until University of
Illinois history professor Carol Symes took up the task.
"What had never been
resolved is how this massive text was really created," Symes said,
"and in this incredibly narrow timeframe." Now, after years of
research, Symes makes the case in the journal Speculum that
the final "Great Domesday Book" came years and perhaps decades later
than the 1087 date to which it's attributed, also the year of William's death.
It also was not the orderly bureaucratic enterprise that's often
assumed, but instead "enabled hundreds of thousands of individuals and
communities to air grievances and to make their own ideas of law and justice a
matter of public record," Symes wrote.
"This is documentation of the trauma of conquest. We're watching
people pushing back, or at least letting their voices be heard because they're
fed up," she said. In one example, the text records townspeople bitterly
complaining about the leveling of houses to build a castle.
"We need to rethink what has seemed to be a rather straight forward,
top-down royal project, but is revealed to be the tip of a big, monstrous
iceberg that involves the agency of many historical actors and often preserves
their voices.
This helps to tell a very different story about one of the landmark
events of England -- the Norman conquest and its aftermath -- that is not just
a story about 'the great man.'"
The universe of the "Domesday Book" is complicated, to say the
least. The name is attached to two different bodies of text, "Great
Domesday" and "Little Domesday" -- the first covering all of the
country's shires except three in the southeast, the second covering those
three, but in more detail, suggesting it was an earlier draft.
There's also "Exeter Domesday," a collection of 103 booklets
that appears to be an even earlier draft of survey results, mostly covering
three shires in the southwest. Curiously, London does not appear in any of
these records, which likely is a sign its citizens either ignored the inquest
or overwhelmed it with grievances, Symes said.
The Exeter collection is just one of many "satellite"
documents that have some connection with the survey or book but have received
little scholarly attention, Symes said. For many who focus their research on
"Great Domesday," the book has been "the sun around which
everything else spins."
Among Symes' contributions is to suggest ways that the different texts
relate to each other, since that hasn't been clear. "I think I have
figured out the workings behind how this book ("Great Domesday") was
made," she said.
Most of Symes' research focused on the Exeter collection and another
satellite document, a small fragment of parchment roll, perhaps the oldest in
England, from an abbey at Burton-on-Trent in the northwest of the country. In
both cases, she examined the original documents.
The Exeter documents provide numerous clues on how "Great
Domesday" was assembled, but also serve as a window on the people and the
process. A bishop can be seen intervening with the king's advisers when his
property is not recorded. Teenage scribes make drinking plans in the marginal
notes of manuscripts.
The abbey's parchment fragment, however, is key to Symes' contention
that the final book came years and even decades later. She ties its contents to
the comings and goings of a man who served at one time as its abbot, who had
access to the survey data that went into "Domesday" and may even have
been involved in the survey.
"It plugs a huge hole that we had in our evidence. It suggests that
the process of creating the thing we call 'Great Domesday' actually took a lot
longer than people had thought."
Symes said she was attracted to this particular book as part of her
interest in medieval manuscripts, especially the complex ways in which they
were "mediated" -- i.e., written, handled, copied, recopied, added
to, edited, interpreted and heard by audiences, all in an age before the
printing press.
Historians need to take a text's complex mediation into account, she
said, even considering the parchment on which it was written, to fully
understand and not misinterpret it.
Symes also likes messiness -- finding out "how the sausage gets
made." She was attracted to Domesday, in part, "because it's a messy
document that people pretend is not messy. It's taken to be this pristine,
transparent thing when it's not."
One value in the Domesday research, she said, is in "realizing that
the people of almost a thousand years ago were real people with real human
emotions and needs. We're putting on a different set of glasses to look at
these sources, and what we see is all those people who were written out of the
record. We're getting to see and hear them again."
The "wonderful irony," Symes said, is that we can do that
through one of the most famous books created in the Middle Ages, by a king.
Unquote.
Perhaps not by a king but for a king and telling him what he would like
to hear.
"Perhaps not by a king but for a king and telling him what he would like to hear."
ReplyDeleteGood point. Who would care to tell him something he didn't want to hear? Not many I guess.