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Domesday: A Search for the Roots of England
Domesday: A Search for the Roots of England | Michael Wood
2 posts | 1 read | 4 to read
Using The Domesday Book, the extensive 11th-century survey of English land holding and population, as his starting point, Michael Wood vividly and entertainingly explores the roots of English society, from its Roman occupation to the 14th century. 133 illustrations, 30 in color.
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review
Libby1
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Pickpick

“Where will I discover the meaning of this book?”

“Over there!”

“WHERE?”

“OVER THERE! KEEP GOING!”

This is what I imagine these two chaps on the cover of this book are saying to each other.

This was a hard slog of a book, mostly because it was so well researched and completely outside of any area of knowledge I have.

I must have listened to the advice of the clever chap on the cover to keep going until the Epilogue, which was fascinating.

Lreads 😂😊 6y
rwmg Michael Wood is fantastic. I remember his TV documentary series from the early 1980s. My sister and I used to watch them both of us quietly lusting after him as well as learning something 6y
Libby1 @QuietlyLaura and @rwmg - yes, Michael Wood is fantastic! 😂 6y
60 likes2 stack adds3 comments
blurb
rockpools
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Anyone at school in the UK in the early 1980s remember the Domesday project? It was an attempt to build a new Domesday survey of Britain, using shiney new technology (giant CD-ROM things, before actual cd-rom things existed).

Aah, well - it was exciting at the time (if you happened to be a geo-geeky child!) https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/BBC_Domesday_Project

Anyhow, this was published about the same time - 1000 yrs after the Domesday Book.

34 likes1 comment