The debate on the Norman Conquest is still ongoing. Because of the great
interest that has always been shown in the subject of conquest and its
aftermath, interpretations have been numerous and conflicting; students
bewildered by controversies may find this book a useful guide through
the morass of literature. In the medieval period writers were still
deeply involved in the legal and linguistic consequences of the Norman
victory. Later the issues became direcly relevant to debates about
constitutional rights; the theory of a "Norman yoke" provided first a
call for revolution and, by the 19th century, a romantic vision of a
lost Saxon paradise. When history became a subject for academic study
controversies still raged round such subjects as Saxon versus Norman
institutions. These have gradually been replaced in a broader social
setting where there is more room for consensus. Interest has now moved
to such subjects as peoples and races, frontier societies, women's
studies and
colonialism. Changing perspectives have shown the advantage of studying
a period from the late 10th to the early 13th century rather than one
beginning in 1066.