Bibliography
“Introduction”
ix
Llandaff studies:
[I] “St Mary’s Worcester and the Liber Landavensis
Taken from: Wendy Davies, ‘St Mary’s Worcester and the Liber Landavensis’, Journal of the Society of Archivists 4 (1972)
[II] Liber Landavensis: its construction and credibility”
Taken from: Wendy Davies, ‘Liber Landavensis: its construction and credibility’, The English Historical Review 88 (1973)
[III] Braint Teilo
Taken from: Wendy Davies, ‘Braint Teilo’, Bulletin of the Board of Celtic Studies 26 (1974–1976)
[IV] “The consecration of bishops of Llandaff in the tenth and eleventh centuries”
Taken from: Wendy Davies, ‘The consecration of the bishops of Llandaff in the tenth and eleventh centuries’, Bulletin of the Board of Celtic Studies 26 (1974–1976)
[V] “Note on a transcript of the Life of Dubricius”
[VI] “The orthography of personal names in the charters of the Liber Landavensis
[VII] “Roman settlements and post-Roman estates in south-east Wales”
[VIII] Unciae: land measurement in the Liber Landavensis
[IX] “Land and power in early medieval Wales”
[X] “Adding insult to injury: power, property and immunities in early medieval Wales”
Wales in the Celtic world:
[XI] “The Latin charter tradition in western Britain, Brittany and Ireland in the early medieval period”
Taken from: Wendy Davies, ‘The Latin charter-tradition in western Britain, Brittany and Ireland in the early mediaeval period’ in Ireland in early medieval Europe... (1982)
[XII] “Charter-writing and its uses in early medieval Celtic societies”
Taken from: Wendy Davies, ‘Charter-writing and its uses in early medieval Celtic societies’ in Literacy in medieval Celtic societies... (1998)
[XIII] “The myth of the Celtic Church”
[XIV] “Property rights and property claims in Welsh Vitae of the eleventh century”
[XV] “Anger and the Celtic saint”
Taken from: Wendy Davies, ‘Anger and the Celtic saint’ in Anger’s past... (1998)
[XVI] “Celtic women in the early Middle Ages”
[XVII] “Thinking about the Welsh environment a thousand years ago”
[XVIII] “Looking backwards to the early medieval past: Wales and England, a contrast in approaches”
Index (4 pp)