Cambridgeshire under feudal rule reveals the architecture of medieval power. A detailed portrait of power. In Feudal Cambridgeshire, William Farrer conducts a patient, forensic study of how tenure and obligation knitted communities and authority across the county. Blending documentary rigour with clear narrative, Farrer examines medieval landholding systems and the practicalities of land tenure in England, tracing the impact of the Norman Conquest era on eleventh-century Cambridgeshire. The result is a focused feudal society study that rewards close students of medieval English history and readers curious about how property, law and kinship shaped everyday life. Structured as an english county history but argued with care, the book balances reference-grade detail and readable, accessible prose, making it as useful to academic history research as it is absorbing for a general reader. Long recognised among english county histories, this study sits at the intersection of British historical records and local scholarship. As part of the body of William Farrer works it has served researchers assembling county narratives; today it remains a reliable historical reference for England at the county level, a valuable aid to academic history research and a practical genealogy resource in England for those tracing family or land connections. Practitioners of archival and parish research will recognise its method and usefulness in linking names, holdings and legal concepts across time, and librarians and county historians still return to it when exploring continuities born of the Norman Conquest era. Casual readers seeking the texture of medieval life will find document-rooted portraits of place and obligation, while classic-literature collectors will welcome a faithful edition that respects the original scholarship. Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike.