Latest volume in the leading forum for debate on aspects of medieval warfare.
This sixth volume continues the journal’s tradition of providing a wide range of scholarly studies, covering topics as diverse as Carolingian war-horse breeding, late-medieval Spanish methods of war-finance, the interface betweenmilitary action and politics at the end of the Hundred Years War, and the tactical methods of Cuman warriors. A key feature of the journal is its commitment to fostering debate on the most significant issues in medieval military history, and that tradition too continues with the new volume, with a study of the relationships between communal horsemen and footsoldiers in High Medieval Italy having significant implications for the dispute over the importanceof infantry before the fourteenth century. There is also an important article by Richard Abels dealing with the contrasting `cultural determinist’ and `scientific’ approaches to understanding the mindset of medieval warriors, andthe existence (or not) of a `Western Way of War’.
CONTRIBUTORS: RICHARD ABELS, CARROLL GILLMOR, ALDO A. SETTIA, GREGORY D. BELL, RUSSELL MITCHELL, DONALD J. KAGAY, CHRISTOPHER ALLMAND.
विषयसूची
Cultural Representation and the Practice of War in the Middle Ages – Richard Abels
The
Brevium Exempla as a Source for Carolingian Warhorses – Carroll Gillmor
Infantry and Cavalry in Lombardy (11th-12th Centuries) – Aldo A. Settia
Unintended Consumption: The Interruption of the Fourth Crusade at Venice and its Consequences – Greg Bell
Light Cavalry, Heavy Cavalry, Horse Archers, Oh My! What Abstract Definitio ns Don’t Tell Us About 1205 Adrianople – Russ Mitchell
War, Financing in the Late-Medieval Crown of Aragon – Donald Kagay
National Reconciliation in France at the end of the Hundred Years War – Christopher Allmand
लेखक के बारे में
CLIFFORD J. ROGERS is a Professor of History at the United States Military Academy and founding director of the West Point Digital History Centre. His many books and articles on medieval warfare have been recognized with awards from the Royal Historical Society’s Alexander Prize to the Society for Military History’s Distinguished Book Award and Moncado Prize, as well as two Verbruggen Prizes and the Bachrach Medal from De Re Militari. His recent work has focused on early gunpowder and gunpowder artillery.