A good overview of England before and after the Conquest of 1066, but the book seemed oddly oldfashioned - written in 1973. The book is copiously illustrated with manuscript illustrations of people mentioned in the text, with pictures from the Bayeux Tapestry, and photographs of castles. There is not a lot of personal information.
To some extent, the book is something of a condemnation of William as a corpulent tyrant who did little good for England. The text frequently compares his war-torn reign with the final ten years of the reign of Edward the Confessor - ignoring the strife of Harold's time, or the warfare and privation of the previous decades. Ashley refers to Harold as having "royal blood in his veins" - but as far as I know, Harold had no royal English blood, and a connection with Swein Forkbeard was to be descended from one of England's conquerors. If William was descended from Viking warlords, so was Harold.
An interesting read, though, with an interesting overview of the blurred question of feudalism and the compare-and-contrast of Anglo-Saxon life compared with the Norman customs.