Domesday – a search for the roots of England, by Michael Wood, 1999 reprint (1986 originally), 212 pgs
Usually anything by Michael Wood is worth a read. However, I could vaguely remember reading this 15 years or so ago, but couldn't recall any of the particulars, which generally isn't a good sign. From the title you'd expect this to be a work all about the Domesday Book, with lots of interesting facts teased out. However, the sub-heading, 'a search for the roots of England' gives the game away.
This is quite a general work that is split into 3 parts: The Celtic and Saxon past, which takes you up to 600, The state before Domesday, which tootles along to 1066 and then Domesday and after, which contains the affects of the conquest and then some odds and sods.
As you'd expect with Wood, it's a very well written book and the pages fly by (helped by plenty of maps and pictures). The introduction is good on the circumstances and the broad picture derived from Domesday. However, most of two thirds of this book is a history of Anglo-Saxon record keeping, rather than a history itself or even much about Domesday. Actual history only seems to intrude where it is used to give substance to a record of some kind. This is done very well as far as it goes and Wood does give some splendid examples of boundary charters that probably demonstrate continuity back to the iron age and forwards into more recent history. His comments on the Tribal Hidage are interesting, but not particularly deep and you won't really learn much from it if you've read much else on it. His idea that the Senchus Fer n'Alban may have been compiled to satisfy the tributary demands of a Northumbrian overlord is intriguing, but not fully convincing.
The notion that the manorial economy developed in response to the viking invasions, as power was more centralised, is possible, but it would have been nice if he'd devoted more space to other possible reasons for this, such as increased demands for renders, new farming techniques (heavy plough) and estate fragmentation, etc. What Wood does make an excellent case for is the continuity of administrative capability. Even if the existing records don't fully prove it, there are enough estate records and so on to show a level of continuity of firm administration.
The final part has a chapter on the changes between 1066 and 1086 which is as enjoyable as everything that has preceded it and for the Anglo-Saxonist, this is probably the place to stop reading. The rest of the book is interesting enough, but really does feel like an assortment of essays that Wood had kept in a drawer somewhere and then decided to include them here. They include sokemen, fens and Englishness, the highland zone, the ups and downs of midland peasantry during the middle ages and then the epilogue.
Wood writes some great books, but this one isn't as good as his others. It would be nice to see him concentrate on a particular area and go into it in great depth.