[The series is] a necessary addition for any scholar working in this field. NOTTINGHAM MEDIEVAL STUDIES
The articles collected here bear witness to the wide interest in England and its neighbours in the ’long’ thirteenth century; topics include the high politics of the thirteenth century, international relations, the administrativeand governmental structures of medieval England and aspects of the wider societal and political context of the period.
Contributors: MAX LIEBERMAN, MICHAEL PENMAN, NICK BARRATT, LEIDULF MELVE, ADRIAN JOBSON, XAVIER HELARY, ANDREW SPENCER, HENRY SUMMERSON, CAROLINE BURT, ANDREW ABRAM, SUSAN STEWART, MICHAEL RAY, INGO SCHWAB, BETH HARTLAND, PAUL DRYBURGH
Innehållsförteckning
Preface
The English and the Welsh in
Fouke le Fitz Waryn – Max Lieberman
Royal Piety in thirteenth-century Scotland: the religion and religiosity of Alexander II [1214-49] and Alexander III [1249-86] – Michael A Penman
The 1213 Pipe Roll and Exchequer authority at the end of John’s reign – Nick Barratt
The public debate during the Baronial Rebellion – Leidulf Melve
Richard of Cornwall and the Baronial Opposition in 1263 – Adrian L Jobson
Les liens personnels entre les cours de France et d’Angleterre sous le règne de Philippe III, 1270-1285 – Xavier Helary
The Lay Opposition to Edward I in 1297: its composition and character – Andrew Spencer
Peacekeepers and lawbreakers in London, 1276-1321 – Henry Summerson
’The peace less kept’? The Origins, Revelations and Impact of Edward I’s ’Trailbaston’ Commissions of 1305-7 – Caroline Burt
Knightly Society and the Augustinian Canons in the Northwest of England – Andrew Abram
A Year in the Life of a Royal Justice. Gilbert de Preston’s Itinerary, July 1264-June 1265 – Susan Stewart
Living with father’s reputation; the careers of two thirteenth-century Oxfordshire knights of alien origin, Thomas de Bréauté and Hugh de Plessis – Michael Ray
The Charters of Richard of Cornwall for the Empire – Ingo Schwab
The Development of the Fine Rolls – Beth Hartland and Paul Dryburgh
Om författaren
PAUL DRYBURGH is Principal Records Specialist (Medieval) at The National Archives, UK.