- The
Carmen de
Hastingae Proelio (Song of the
Battle of Hastings) is a 20th-century name for the
Carmen Widonis, the
earliest history of the
Norman invasion...
- Hugh{{efn|(whose name is
inferred by
evidence contained within The
Carmen de
Hastingae Proelio)
Waleran (d.1054)
Beatrice of
Ponthieu (1022–1054) was married...
- de
Hastingae Proelio of Guy
Bishop of Amiens,
edited by
Catherine Morton and Hope Muntz,
Oxford at the
Clarendon Press, 1972. The
Carmen de
Hastingae Proelio...
- hillock. This may mean that the two
brothers led the pursuit. The
Carmen de
Hastingae Proelio relates a
different story for the
death of Gyrth,
stating that...
-
subject of much
scholarly debate. A
Norman account of the battle,
Carmen de
Hastingae Proelio ("Song of the
Battle of Hastings"), said to have been written...
- the north-east of
France and a
Latin poet. He
composed the
Carmen de
Hastingae Proelio, a
celebration of the
Norman victory at the
Battle of Hastings...
- Paris, 1866 Morton, Catherine, and Muntz, Hope (editors). The
Carmen de
Hastingae Proelio of
Bishop Guy of Amiens,
Oxford at the
Clarendon Press, 1972 v...
- Gaimar,
Henry of Huntingdon,
William of
Malmesbury and in the
Carmen de
Hastingae Proelio. The
accounts differ, some
mentioning only the juggling, some...
-
ceremony by Guy,
bishop of
Amiens in the
finale of his epic poem,
Carmen de
Hastingae Proelio ("Song of the
Battle of Hastings"),
which was
probably written...
- the
phrase "at
Hestenga ceastra",
which in
proper Latin would be "ad
Hastingae castra"). Some
French names are
either archaic ("Rednes") or anglicised...