Highlights ‘the range and richness of scholarship on medieval warfare, military institutions, and cultures of conflict that characterize the field’. History 95 (2010)
The latest collection of the most up-to-date research on matters of medieval military history contains a remarkable geographical range, extending from Spain and Britain to the southern steppe lands, by way of Scandinavia, Byzantium, and the Crusader States. At one end of the timescale is a study of population in the later Roman Empire and at the other the Hundred Years War, touching on every century in between. Topics include the hardware of war, the social origins of soldiers, considerations of individual battles, and words for weapons in Old Norse literature.
Contributors: Bernard S. Bachrach, Gary Baker, Michael Ehrlich, Nicholas A. Gribit, Nicolaos S. Kanellopoulos, Mollie M. Madden, Kenneth J. Mc Mullen, Craig M. Nakashian, Mamuka Tsurtsumia, Andrew L.J. Villalon
Tabla de materias
Some Observations Regarding Barbarian Military Demography: Gaiseric’s Census of 429 and Its Implications – Bernard S Bachrach
War Words and Battle Spears: The
kesja and
kesjulag in Old Norse Literature – K. James Mc Mullen
The Political and Military Agency of Ecclesiastical Leaders in Anglo-Norman England: 1066 – 1154 – Craig M. Nakashian
Couched Lance and Mounted Shock Combat in the East: The Georgian Experience – Mamuka Tsurtsumia
The Battle of Arsur: A Short Time Victory – Michael Ehrlich
Prelude to Kephissos (1311): An Analysis of the Battle of Apros (1305) – Nicholas S. Kanellopoulos and Joanne K. Lekea
Horse Restoration (
Restaurum Equorum) in the Army of Henry of Grosmont, 1345: A Benefit of Military Service in the Hundred Years’ War – Nicholas A. Gribit
The Indenture between Edward III and the Black Prince for the Prince’s Expedition to Gascony, 10 July 1355 – Mollie M. Madden
Investigating the Socio-Economic Origins of English Archers in the Second Half of the Fourteenth Century – Gary Baker
War and the Great Schism: Military Factors Determining Allegiances in Iberia – Andrew Villalon
Sobre el autor
NICHOLAS A. GRIBIT gained his Ph D from the University of Leeds.