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 84 "Knight Service in Normandy in the Eleventh Century," in English Historical Review,, pp. 636-49; "The Norman 'Consuetudines et lusticie' of William the Conqueror," ibid, , pp. 502-08; and "Normandy under William the Conqueror," in American Historical Review, , pp. 453-76 (1909); also L. Valin, Le duc de Normandie et sa cour, 912-1204 (Paris, 1910). For church and state, see H. Böhmer, Kirche und Staat in England und in der Normandie (Leipzig, 1899). The dealings of the Norman dukes with their continental neighbors are narrated by A. Fliche, Le règne de Philippe I$er$ roi de France (Paris, 1912); L. Halphen, Le comté d'Anjou au XI$e$ siecle (Paris, 1906); R. Latouche, Histoire du comte du Maine pendant le X$e$ et le XI$e$ siècle (Paris, 1910); F. Lot, Fidèles ou vassaux (Paris, 1904), ch. 6 (on the feudal relations of the Norman dukes and the French kings). There is a good sketch of France in the eleventh century by Luchaire in the Histoire de France of Lavisse,, part 2; a fuller work on this period is expected from Maurice Prou. For the literature of the battle of Hastings, see Gross, Sources and Literature, nos. 707a, 2812, 2998-3000; the most important works are those of Round, Spatz, and Delbrück, Geschichte der Kriegskunst,, pp. 147-62 (1907). The Bayeux Tapestry is most conveniently accessible in the small edition of F. R. Fowke (reprinted, London, 1913); see also Gross, no. 2139, and Ph. Lauer, in Mélanges Charles Bémont (Paris, 1913), pp. 43-58. Freeman discusses the results of the Conquest in his fifth volume; see also Gaston Paris, L' esprit normand en Anglterre, in La poésie du moyen âge, second series (Paris, 1895), pp. 45-74.