Vestiges of the supremacy of Mercia in the south of England during the eighth century
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About This Book
A survey of archaeological, toponymic, and documentary evidence arguing for Mercian political and ecclesiastical influence across southern England in the eighth century. The author examines church foundations, saint dedications, charters, synod locations, and place-name identifications, analyzing contested sites such as Clovesho/Cliffe, Abingdon, and Bristol, and tracing patterns in Bath, Devon, Cornwall, Kent, Sussex, Middlesex and London. Close reading of surviving monuments, parish boundaries, and medieval chronicles is combined with critique of earlier antiquarian interpretations to reconstruct regional power, episcopal organization, and cultural traces left by Mercian supremacy.
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