Normans

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Norman Romanesque Church of the Abbaye-aux-Dames at Caen, Normandy, founded in 1062.
The 1131 Norman cathedral at Cefalù, Sicily.

The Normans (men of the north) were people from North Germania, largely Denmark and Frisia, who initially conquered and settled part of north-western France, which became the province named after them, Normandy, in the 10th century.

History

In 911, Charles the Simple, King of France, granted the invading Norsemen the small lower Seine area, which expanded over time to become the Duchy of Normandy. The invaders were under the leadership of Rollo, who swore nominal fealty to Charles for his territories.

Gradually the Germanic descendants of Rollo and his followers adopted the local French language ("Norman-French") and intermarried with the area’s previous inhabitants who also became 'Normans' – a Norman French-speaking mixture of Vikings, Hiberno-Norse, Orcadians, Anglo-Danish, and indigenous West Franks and Gauls (Gallo-Romans). Rollo's descendant William the Conqueror, Duke of Normandy, became king of England in 1066, following the Norman Conquest and the Battle of Hastings, while retaining the Duchy of Normandy for himself and his descendants.

The Norman people adopted Christianity and, gradually, a form of the French language (Norman-French) and created a new cultural identity separate from that of their Germanic forebears and French neighbours.

They played a major political, military and cultural role in the northern and the Mediterranean parts of medieval Europe and the Near East, i.e: Normandy, the Norman Conquest of England and Ireland, their absorption of Scotland where they largely replaced the native aristocracy, the establishment of states in Sicily and southern Italy, and the crusades.

By the time of the invasion of England against the Anglo-Saxon rulers, many "Normans" were becoming assimilated with Bretons and Flemings, but their lords retained their Viking traditions. The Normans, who remained in Britain and came to form the core aristocracy for 1000 years, were called Anglo-Normans, especially as during the first centuries they had estates and lands in Normandy as well as Britain and only married other Anglo-Normans.

Russia

In Russian historiography the term "Norman" is often used for the Varangians.

See also

Further reading

  • [Author unknown], The Norman People, London, 1874, facsimile reprint 1999, ISBN: 0-8063-0636-X
  • Earl of Onslow, The Dukes of Normandy and their origin, Hutchinson, London, 1945.
  • Loyd, Lewis C., The Origins of some Anglo-Norman Families, London, 1951; reprint 1999: eds. C.T.Clay & D.C.Douglas. ISBN: 0-8063-0649-1
  • Loyn, Henry R., The Norman Conquest, Hutchinson, London, 1965/1967.
  • Brown, R. Allen, The Normans, Guild Publishing, London, 1984.
  • Gravett, Chistopher, Norman Knight 950-1204AD, Osprey, London, 1996 reprint, ISBN: 1-85532-287-0
  • Douglas, David C., The Normans, Folio Society, London, 2002 (combining in a single volume two previous books).
  • Norwich, John Julius, The Normans in Sicily, U.K. 1970.