The Times of Bede: Studies in Early English Christian Society and its HistorianISBN: 978-0-631-16655-9
Hardcover
310 pages
September 2006, Wiley-Blackwell
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"The untimely death of Patrick Wormald in 2004 deprived the
scholarly community of a brilliant historian best known for his
magisterial study of the development of English law during the
Anglo-Saxon period. As the volume under review here clearly shows,
Worrnald was also a leading figure in revising our understanding of
Bede and his early medieval English cultural milieu." (CHURCH
HISTORY, March 2008)
“On display throughout … is Wormald’s considerable intellect and erudition and in the earlier essays in particular an enviable familiarity with Continental scholarship. There are also occasional flashes of the theater that was a Wormald lecture.” (Catholic Historical Review, October 2008) "This collection exemplifies the high qualities of scholarship, originality and forceful expression which characterized its lamented author. All serious work on Bede and his age has to reckon with these papers!"
–James Campbell, University of Oxford
“On display throughout … is Wormald’s considerable intellect and erudition and in the earlier essays in particular an enviable familiarity with Continental scholarship. There are also occasional flashes of the theater that was a Wormald lecture.” (Catholic Historical Review, October 2008) "This collection exemplifies the high qualities of scholarship, originality and forceful expression which characterized its lamented author. All serious work on Bede and his age has to reckon with these papers!"
–James Campbell, University of Oxford
"Patrick Wormald’s research, driven for over more than
thirty years by the quest to understand and assess Bede, produced
work of a profound coherence and consistency. Here, then, is more
than a collection of classic papers. From two parts, on Bede as a
thinker who didn’t so much reflect as reinflect his world,
and on the afterlife of Bede’s critique in later Anglo-Saxon
England, is constructed something wondrously balanced and whole: a
masterpiece of a book."
–Janet Nelson, Kings College London