
"The Deeds of Count Roger" fills a gap in the primary literature pertaining to the earliest phase of Latin Christian expansion at the expense of Islam, since the Norman conquests in Sicily were more or less contemporary with the First Crusade and the beginnings of the Spanish "Reconquista," The account also illustrates the complexity of medieval historical writing, with Malaterra on the one hand praising the Normans for their military achievements and on the other subtly criticising the "lust for domination" that inspired them.
Kenneth Baxter Wolf is Professor of History at Pomona College.
| sophia l little c a chardenal dan nelson hutt i a lavrinenko | nazarko peter havelock nemichandra shastri angela hynes joel chandler harris |