@inbook{10.7722/j.ctt5vj7zd.13, ISBN = {9781843839316}, URL = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.7722/j.ctt5vj7zd.13}, abstract = {An accurate picture of the architectural history of Abbot Baldwin’s church began to emerge already in the middle of the nineteenth century, as for example with Graham Hills’s study of 1865. The first person to make sense of the remains on the site as a whole was Arthur Whittingham, with the research he published in the early 1950s, and many aspects of the subject were investigated further at the conference of the British Archaeological Association of 1994, organized by Antonia Gransden. In the present essay I want to examine three things: the contrast between the Norman church and its Anglo-Saxon}, author = {Eric Fernie}, booktitle = {Bury St Edmunds and the Norman Conquest}, edition = {NED - New edition}, pages = {74--93}, publisher = {Boydell and Brewer}, title = {ABBOT BALDWIN’S CHURCH AND THE EFFECTS OF THE CONQUEST}, year = {2014} }