The Norman Legacy in England
Conditions d’achèvement
3. What did the Norman bring to England?
The consequences of the Norman Conquest were many and varied. Further, some effects were much longer-lasting than others. Still, the following list which summarizes what most historians agree on as some of the most important changes the Norman Conquest brought in England:
- Norman landlords took place of the majority of Anglo-Saxon landowning elite.
- Power and wealth were held by a minority.
- Even bishops were replaced with Norman ones and many archdioceses’ headquarters were relocated to other cities.
- The Feudal system was introduced to England and developed as William gave out lands in return for military service (either in person or a force of knights paid for by the landowner).
- The rise of Manors and Manorialism
- William took control of North England by force leading to severe damages circa 1069-70 CE.
- The reduction of Domesday Book which was” a detailed and systematic catalogue of the land and wealth in England was compiled in 1086-7 CE”.
- Foreign affairs and trade between England and Europe greatly increased.
- France and England became historically intertwined, initially due to the crossover of land ownership, i.e. “Norman nobles holding lands in both countries” Fiefs and families.
- The French language was used as a prestigious court language which led to a significant change in the syntax and vocabulary of the Anglo-Saxon Germanic language.
- They built Abbeys and Cathedrals. It is thanks to the Normans that the Architecture of castles had developed.