Medieval Britain and the wider world, c.400-1500

Allegory on knowledge, Men in a Scriptorium or book shop, writing manuscripts, Medieval history, German woodcut, Renaissance art, 15th Century From the Book of Fortune by Hans Burgkmair.

We explore the archaeological and textual evidence for connections and interactions between medieval Britain and the wider world, c.AD 400–1500. Challenging common assumptions about the insularity of medieval Britain, we start by examining the early medieval links between Britain and the Byzantine Empire, before looking at: trade and connections with the Islamic world; the Crusades; Viking and Scandinavian links; a 9th-century Anglo-Saxon embassy to India; long-distance migration and movement to medieval Britain, including by people of African, Muslim and Asian heritage; and, finally, the Anglo-Saxon emigrants who fled to Constantinople and the Black Sea after the Norman Conquest.

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