"[I]t may be doubted whether any work of comparable importance in English historical literature has ever been more easy to criticize than Freeman's Norman Conquest. It was in Green's phrase "far too rhetorical and diffuse", and yet despite its excessive length, it concentrated too exclusively upon strictly political events. Nor was the treatment of the authorities itself comprehensive, so that a generation which has been taught to value the record sources of history, and which pays perhaps even an excessive reverence to material which has not yet been printed, is inevitably sceptical of an historian who neglected records, who misinterpreted Domesday Book, and who positively boasted his contempt for manuscripts. Freeman was, in fact, more erudite than critical, and even the narrative sources which were the sure foundation of his work were sometimes by him mishandled. Generally, as J. R. Green remarked, he tended to be unjust to the Norman writers, but otherwise he often gives the impression of giving equal credence to all his authorities and of blending together their contradictory accounts into an unreal synthesis. In this way his account of the crisis of 1051–2 is, for instance, incomprehensibly confused. It must, moreover, be added that, having made up his mind, he could show most obstinate bias towards his sources, selecting only those which could best illustrate his point of view... Freeman's Norman Conquest was, in short, magisterial without being definitive."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Historians from EnglandLiberal Party (UK) politiciansPeople from BirminghamUniversity of Oxford facultyUniversity of Oxford alumni
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Edward Augustus Freeman
(2 August 1823 – 16 March 1892) was an English historian, architectural artist, and Liberal politician during the late-19th-century heyday of Prime Minister of the United Kingdom William Ewart Gladstone, as well as a one-time candidate for Parliament. He held the position of Regius Professor of Modern History at Oxford, where he tutored Arthur Evans; later he and Evans would be activists in the Balkan uprising of Bosnia and Herzegovina (1874–1878) against the Ottoman Empire. After the marriage o
32 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Edward Augustus Freeman →
Related Quotes
"We must recognize the spirit which dictated the Petition of Right as the same which gathered all England around the b…"
"I must confess that I have never read W. Malmsb. de Pont. His Kings are enough to make me thoroughly despise him as a…"
"I have actually sat down to make a distinct History of the Norman Conquest, which I can do easier than anybody else, …"
"It seems to me that an age of belief sowed the good seed of which an age of unbelief, an age at least of less fervent…"
"Now the position for which I have always striven is this, that history is past politics, that politics are present hi…"
"I have no doubt that, if I had stood on the hill of Senlac, I should have felt a strong satisfaction in cleaving the …"
"Can any modern fox-hunter honestly say that his hunting is done with the legitimate object of getting rid of a noxiou…"
"I say then without hesitation that fox-hunting, which ages back may have been a praiseworthy means of ridding the cou…"
"[T]he risk of these sports, and the supposed manliness of facing that risk, is generally put forth as one of their me…"
"I cannot but think that the indulgence in cruelty in any form and in any degree must more or less harden the heart. I…"