A plethora of the most important aspects of late medieval England are covered here, with a focus on Edward I.
Crown-magnate relations, the Anglo-Scottish, Anglo-French and Anglo-Irish wars, national and local finance and administration and the nature of late medieval kingship are among the principal themes explored in this volume, along with aristocratic consumption, historical writing, chivalric culture and a review of recent work on crusading history. All newly commissioned from distinguished scholars, they shed new light on late medieval British political, military and governmental history.
CONTRIBUTORS: NICHOLAS VINCENT, DAVID CARPENTER, M. L. HOLFORD, ARCHIE DUNCAN, MATTHEW STRICKLAND, BJORN WEILER, ROBIN FRAME, ANDY KING, W. MARK ORMROD, G. L. HARRISS, NORMAN HOUSLEY, ANNE CURRY, MAURICE KEEN, WENDY CHILDS
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Introduction
Did Henry III have a policy towards the earls? – Nicholas Vincent
The Career of Godfrey of Crowcombe: Household Knight of King John and Steward of King Henry III – David Carpenter
Under-Sheriffs, the State and Local Society c. 1300-1340: A Preliminary Survey – Matthew Holford
Revisiting Norham, May-June 1291 – Archibald A M Duncan
Treason, Feud and the Growth of State Violence: Edward I and the `War of the Earl of Carrick‘, 1306-7 – Matthew J Strickland
The
Commendatio Lamentabilis for Edward I and Plantagenet Kingship – Björn Weiler
Historians, Aristocrats and Plantagenet Ireland, 1200-1360 – Robin Frame
War and Peace: A Knight’s Tale. The Ethics of War in Sir Thomas Gray’s
Scalacronica – Andy King
The King’s Secrets: Richard de Bury and the Monarchy of Edward III – W. Mark Ormrod
Budgeting at the Medieval Exchequer –
Recent Scholarship on Crusading and Medieval Warfare, 1095-1291: Convergence and Divergence – Norman Housley
The Military Ordinances of Henry V: Texts and Contexts – Anne Curry
Chivalry and English Kingship in the Later Middle Ages – Maurice H Keen
Cloth of Gold and Gold Thread: Luxury Imports to England in the Fourteenth Century – Wendy Childs
Über den Autor
The late W. MARK ORMROD was Professor Emeritus of History at the University of York; he published extensively on later medieval history.