Fourteenth Century England II
Title Details

190 Pages

23.4 x 15.6 cm

18 b/w, 2 line illus.

Series: Fourteenth Century England

Series Vol. Number: 2

Imprint: Boydell Press

Fourteenth Century England II

Edited by Christopher Given-Wilson

  • Description
  • Contents
  • Reviews
This new series is to be published in alternate years with Thirteenth Century England, providing a forum for the most recent research into the political, social, economic, ecclesiastical and cultural history of the fourteenth century, one of the most turbulent and compelling periods of English history - reflected in the vitality of the current scholarship.

The fourteenth century was, for the English, a century which witnessed dramatic and not always easily explicable changes of fortune. In 1300, England's population was around seven million, and Edward I seemed to be on the verge ofturning the British Isles into an English Empire. By 1400, its population was between three and four million (due mainly to the Black Death), dreams of a 'British' empire had all but crumbled, and instead England had become embroiled in a war - the Hundred Years' War - which was not only ultimately disastrous, but which also established the French as the 'national enemy' for many centuries to come. In addition, despite the fact that before 1300 no reigning English monarch had ever been deposed, by 1400 two had: Edward II in 1327, and Richard II in 1399. Sandwiched between these two turbulent reigns, however, came that of Edward III, one of the most successful, both politically andmilitarily, in English history. It is against the background of these remarkable fluctuations that the articles in this volume, the second in the Fourteenth Century England series, have been written. The range of subjectswhich they cover is wide: from princely education to popular heresy, from national propaganda to the familial and territorial power politics which occasioned the downfall of kings. Taken together, they reinforce the view that, whether viewed as calamitous or heroic, the fourteenth century was never less than interesting.CHRIS GIVEN-WILSON is Professor of Late Medieval History, University of St Andrews. Contributors: MARTIN ALLEN, JOHN ARNOLD, PAULETTEBARTON, TOM BEAUMONT-JAMES, ALASTAIR DUNN, JEFFREY HAMILTON, JILL C. HAVENS, ANDY KING, CARLA LORD, SHELAGH MITCHELL, MICHAEL PRESTWICH, ARND REITMEIER, NIGEL SAUL.
'Pur Salvation du Roiaume': Military Service and Obligation in Fourteenth-Century Northumberland - Andy King
Some Notes on 'Royal' Medicine in the Reign of Edward II - Jeffrey S Hamilton
Queen Isabella at the Court of France - Carla Lord
Italians in English Mints and Exchanges - Martin Allen
John of Eltham, History and Story: Abusive International Discourse in Late Medieval England, France and Scotland - T B James
Lollard Trials and Inquisitorial Discourse - John Arnold
A Curious Erasure in Walsingham's Short Chronicle and the Politics of Heresy - Jill C Havens
Sacred Space and the Profane Image - Paulette Barton
A Farewell to Arms? Criticism of Warfare in Late Fourteenth- Century England - Nigel Saul
Born to by a Tyrant? The Childhood and Education of Richard II - Arnd Reitemeier
Richard II and the Mortimer Inheritance - Alastair Dunn
Richard II and the Broomcod Collar: New Evidence from the Issue Rolls - Shelagh Mitchell
"Fourteenth Century England has quickly established for itself a deserved reputation for its scope and scholarship and for admirably filling a gap in the publication of medieval studies....A lively, stimulating and rewarding volume." HISTORY

Hardcover

9780851158914

October 2002

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Ebook (EPDF)

9781846150746

October 2002

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Title Details

190 Pages

2.34 x 1.56 cm

18 b/w, 2 line illus.

Series: Fourteenth Century England

Series Vol. Number: 2

Imprint: Boydell Press