Includes bibliographical references (pages [680]-739) and index
Part I. After Rome. Britain, 350-550. The Britons and their languages. Inscriptions. The Britons and the Irish, 350-800. From Pelagius to Gildas. Rome and the Britons, 400-644 -- Part II. Early Welsh society. Charters and laws. Lords, food-renders, and peasants. Kinship and status. Kingship -- Part III. The Britons and the English, 550-1064. The Britons and the Northumbrians, 547-685 : the evidence. The Britons, the Northumbrians, and the rise of Mercia, 550-685. The Britons and the neighbours under the Mercian hegemony, 685-825. Two ninth-century writers. The transformations of the ninth century. The Britons and the Empire of Britainches Wales from 950 to 1064 -- Part IV. The Welsh church and culture. The organization of the church. Latin learning in Wales, c. 400-1100. Poets and storytellers
0
"This, the first volume in the History of Wales, provides a detailed history of Wales in the period in which it was created out of the remnants of Roman Britain. It thus begins in the fourth century, with accelerating attacks from external forces, and ends shortly before the Norman Conquest of England. The narrative history is interwoven with chapters on the principal sources, the social history of Wales, the Church, the early history of the Welsh language, and its early literature, both in Welsh and in Latin. In the fourth century contemporaries knew of the Britons but not of Wales in the modern sense. Charles-Edwards, therefore, includes the history of the other Britons when it helps to illuminate the history of what we now know as Wales. Although an early form of the name Wales existed, it was a word in the Germanic languages, including English, and meant inhabitants of the former Roman Empire; it therefore covered the Gallo-Romans of what we know as France as well as the Britons."--Publisher's description