List of maps; List of genealogical tables; Note on terminology;
Part I. Irish Kinship: The structure of Irish kinship; Irish ruling
kindreds; Part II. Welsh Kinship: The shape of Welsh kinship; The
Gwely and the Gafael; Part III. Claims to Land by Virtue of
Kinship: Irish Tellach; Welsh Dadannudd; Part IV. Kin and Lord; The
half-free in Ireland; Irish clientship; Kinship and lordship in
Wales; Part V. Kinsman and Neighbour: Kinship and
neighbourhood in Ireland; Kinship and neighbourhood in Wales;
Conclusion and further reflections; Appendices; Bibliography;
Glossary; Index.
'Charles-Edwards's erudition is formidable and constantly
illuminating ... his vindication of the pioneering scholarly
achievement of Eoin MacNeill is striking ... Charles-Edwards's work
raises questions and offers insights that should command the
attention of students of early medieval societies less well
documented than Ireland and Wales.'
Times Literary Supplement
'The fruit of many years of labour, this is undoubtedly a
substantial contribution to early medieval studies.'
Colmán Etchingham, St Patrick's College, Maynooth, EHR Jun. 94
'authoritative study'
Matthew Stout, History Ireland, Winter 1994
`this erudite book is the fruit of painstaking study, over manyu
years, of the relevant legal texts of the two countries ...it makes
an important contribution to the study of the laws of the Irish and
the Welsh, and it will be a standard work of reference for years to
come on the many topics with which it deals'
Tomás Ó Cathasaigh, Harvard University, Cambrian Medieval Celtic
Studies, Number 33 Summer 1997
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