Gerald of Wales, Giraldis Cambrensis, Gerald the Welshman, Gerald the
Marcher - his many names reflect the long and multi-faceted career of
one of the most fascinating figures of the Middle Ages. Descended from
Norman Marcher barons and Welsh princes, Gerald was by turns scholar,
churchman and reformer, courtier, diplomat and would-be crusader;
Marcher propagandist, agent of English kings, champion of the Welsh
church, hunted outlaw and cathedral theologian. He was also a
naturalist, gossip and indefatigable traveller, but above all, a most
prolific writer and a tireless self-publicist. We know more about Gerald
than about any other inhabitant of early medieval Wales. In this
fascinating study of Gerald's attitudes and intellectual outlook, Robert
Bartlett discusses the delicate political path Gerald had to tread
between Norman conquerors, native Celtic society and the English Crown.
He analyses Gerald's clear voice in the time in which he lives, and
portrays him as a vivid example of the medieval world.