The Journal of Medieval Military History continues to consolidate its now assured position as the leading academic vehicle for scholarly publication in the field of medieval warfare. Medieval Warfare
This volume has a special focus on the topic of proxy actors and irregular forces in medieval warfare. John France and Jochen G. Schenk offer broad overviews: France addresses the military role of non-noble combatants and the significance of differences between medieval and modern ideas of the ‘legitimacy’ of war-fighters, while Schenk applies a concept originating in political science – Mary Kaldor’s idea of ‘New Wars’ – to the conflicts of the Middle Ages, showing that in some ways, what is old is new again. Alex Mallett likewise ties the past to the present, comparing Muslim responses to the Crusades with modern responses to the Western-led invasion of Iraq in 2003. Michael Lower and Mike Carr, meanwhile, examine important groups of foreign fighters employed by North African states and Byzantium.
In addition, the volume encompasses a study of Anglo-Norman siege engines (by Michael Fulton), three pieces on war and politics in fourteenth-century Iberia (by Douglas Biggs, Donald Kagay, and L.J. Andrew Villalon), and David Green’s magisterial survey of imperial policy and military practice in the Plantagenet dominions in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries.
Contributors: Douglas Biggs, Mike Carr, Michael S. Fulton, David Green, Donald Kagay, Michael Lower, Alex Mallett, Jochen Schenk, Andrew Villalon
Tabella dei contenuti
Anglo-Norman Artillery in Narrative Histories, from the Reign of William I to the Minority of Henry III – Michael S. Fulton
Imperial Policy and Military Practice in the Plantagenet Dominions, c. 1337-c. 1453 – David Green
The Parliament of the Crown of Aragon as Military Financier in the War of the Two Pedros – Donald Kagay
Chasing the Chimera in Spain: Edmund of Langley in Iberia, 1381/82 – Douglas Biggs
Note: A Medieval City under Threat Turns Its Coat, While Hedging Its Bets-Burgos Faces an Invasion in Spring, 1366 – L. J. Andrew Villalon
Medieval European Mercenaries in North Africa: The Value of Difference – Michael Lower
Medieval Irregular Warfare, c.1000-1300 – John France
Muslim Responses to Western Intervention: A Comparative Study of the Crusades and Post-2003 Iraq – Alex Mallett
‘New Wars’ and Medieval Warfare: Some Terminological Considerations – Jochen G. Schenk
Friend or Foe? The Catalan Company as Proxy Actors in the Aegean and Asia Minor Vacuum – Mike Carr
Circa l’autore
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.