|
Showing 1 - 17 of
17 matches in All Departments
The Historia Novella is a key source for the succession dispute
between King Stephen and the Empress Matilda which brought England
to civil war in the twelfth century. William of Malmesbury was the
doyen of the historians of his day. His account of the main events
of the years 1126 to 1142, to some of which he was an eyewitness,
is sympathetic to the empress's cause, but not uncritical of her.
Edmund King offers a complete revision of K. R. Potter's edition of
1955, retaining only the translation, which has been amended in
places. Not only is this a new edition but it offers a new text,
arguing that what have earlier been seen as William of Malmesbury's
final revisions are not from his hand. Rather they seem to come
from somewhere in the circle of Robert of Gloucester, the empress's
half-brother, to whom the work is dedicated. In this way the work
raises important questions concerning the transmission of medieval
texts.
Ranging from soldiers reading newspapers at the front to authors'
responses to the war, this book sheds new light on the reading
habits and preferences of men and women, combatants and civilians,
during the First World War. This is the first study of the conflict
from the perspective of readers.
The reign of King Stephen (1135-54) is famous as a period of weak
government, as Stephen and his rival the Empress Matilda contended
for power. This is a study of medieval kingship at its most
vulnerable. It also shows how individuals and institutions enabled
the monarchy to survive. A contemporary chronicler described the
reign as "nineteen long winters in which Christ and his saints were
asleep". Historians today refer to it simply as 'the Anarchy'. The
weakness of government was the result of a disputed succession.
Stephen lost control over Normandy, the Welsh marches, and much of
the North. Contemporaries noted as signs of weakness the tyranny of
the lords of castles, and the break-down of coinage. Stephen
remained king for his lifetime, but leading churchmen and laymen
negotiated a settlement whereby the crown passed to the Empress's
son the future Henry II. This volume by leading scholars gives an
original and up-to-date analysis of these major themes, and
explains how the English monarchy was able to survive the Anarchy
of King Stephen's reign.
Developments and trends in Communist education are traced in this
authoritative survey by specialists. Eight chapters deal with
particular aspects: ideology, psychology, the selective process,
the roles of teachers and parents, polytechnical education, the
universities and professional institutes. Three chapters survey the
former East Germany, Poland and China as special case-studies. A
concluding chapter examines common ground between Communist and
other systems.
This volume offers a conceptual justification and methodology for
comparative studies of education matching developments in the
social sciences and other comparative disciplines. It also relates
comparative studies of education to the practical business of
policy formulation at all levels. Thus it bridges the widening gap
between the purely academic world and the world of decision for
development. The author draws illustrations from educational
reforms, but goes further in suggesting suitable procedures or
institutions which might achieve soundly based policies and secure
their implementation. He takes account of the planning techniques
and achievements of UNESCO, OECD and other international
organizations, and examines the activities and aims of national
planning for education in a wider perspective of world
re-orientation.
The International Federation of Library Associations and
Institutions (IFLA) is the leading international body representing
the interests of library and information services and their users.
It is the global voice of the information profession. The series
IFLA Publications deals with many of the means through which
libraries, information centres, and information professionals
worldwide can formulate their goals, exert their influence as a
group, protect their interests, and find solutions to global
problems.
Expert coverage and new assessments of the reign of King Stephen,
set in social, political and European context. The turbulent reign
of King Stephen is here subjected to a full assessment by leading
scholars in the field. All of the most important aspects are fully
covered: the impact of developments under Henry I on the origins of
civil war; relations with the continent, as they affected Stephen's
overall strategy and the foundation of religious houses; the
opportunities which lured foreign mercenaries to England;
mid-twelfth century legal developments and trends
inrevenue-raising; baronial and episcopal allegiances; violent
disorder and civil unrest; and the sequence of events which
unfolded during the political crisis of July 1141. Taken together,
they provide the fruits of the most recent research into and the
most up to date interpretations of the intense political and
military activity of the reign. CONTRIBUTORS: MARJORIE CHIBNALL,
JUDITH GREEN, DAVID CROUCH, JANET BURTON, THOMAS BISSON, BRUCE
O'BRIEN, GRAEME WHITE, PAUL DALTON, STEPHEN MARRITT, HUGH THOMAS,
EDMUND KING
A survey both of medieval biographical writings, and the problems
of recovering medieval lives. Biography is one of the oldest, most
popular and most tenacious of literary forms. Perhaps the best
attested narrative form of the Middle Ages, it continues to draw
modern historians of the medieval period to its peculiar challenge
to explicate the general through the particular: the biographer's
decisions to impose or to resist the imposition of order on
biographical remnants raise issues which go to the heart of
historical method. This collection, compiled in honour of a
distinguished modern exponent of the art of biography, contains
sixteen essays by leading scholars which examine the limits and
possibilities of the genre for the period between 750AD and 1250AD.
Ranging from pivotal figures such as Charlemagne, William the
Conqueror and St Bernard, to the anonymous female skeleton in an
Anglo-Saxon grave, from kings and queens to clerks and saints, and
from individual to the collective biographies,this collection
investigates both medieval biographical writings, and the issues
surrounding the writing of medieval lives. Professor DAVID BATES is
Director of the Institute of Historical Research; Dr JULIA CRICK
and DrSARAH HAMILTON teach in the Department of History at the
University of Exeter. Contributors: JANET L. NELSON, ROBIN FLEMING,
BARBARA YORKE, RICHARD ABELS, SIMON KEYNES, PAULINE STAFFORD,
ELISABETH VAN HOUTS, DAVID BATES,JANE MARTINDALE, CHRISTOPHER
HOLDSWORTH, LINDY GRANT, MARJORIE CHIBNALL, EDMUND KING, JOHN
GILLINGHAM, DAVID CROUCH, NICHOLAS VINCENT
Recent research on the Anglo-Saxon, Anglo-Norman, Viking and
Angevin worlds of the eleventh and twelfth centuries. The latest
volume presents recent research on the Anglo-Saxon, Anglo-Norman,
Viking and Angevin worlds of the eleventh and twelfth centuries.
Its ten papers includes articles on the origins of the Cistercian
order, the coronationof Mathilda of Flanders, the rebel Owain ap
Cadwgan, miracle stories and the anarchy of Stephen's reign,
miracles at Sempringham, family and inheritance in the twelfth
century, and contemporary views of secular clergy. Contributors:
CONSTANCE BERMAN, LAURA GATHAGAN, DAVID CROUCH, CLAIRE DE TRAFFORD,
K.L. MAUND, EDMUND KING, RICHARD SHERMAN, HUGH THOMAS, MARYLOU
RUUD, JOHN COTTS, RALPH TURNER.
The latest research on aspects of the Anglo-Norman world. The
contributions collected here demonstrate the full range and
vitality of current work on the Anglo-Norman period, from a variety
of different angles and disciplines. Topics include architecture
and material remains in Winchester, Kent and Hampshire; the role of
Duke Richard II and Abbot John of Fecamp in early Normandy;
political and liturgical culture at the Anglo-Norman and Angevin
courts; the lost (illustrated?) prototype of Dudo of
Saint-Quentin's early Norman history and Geoffrey of Monmouth's
motivation for his Historia Regum Britonum; twelfth-century legal
scholarship and the archaic use of vernacular vocabulary in law
texts; trade and travel; and a study of episcopal acta from the
south-western Norman dioceses. Contributors: Richard Allen, Pierre
Bauduin, Johanna Dale, Jennifer Farrell, Peter Fergusson, Sara
Harris, Nicholas Karn, Edmund King, Lauren Mancia, Eljas Oksanen,
Gesine Oppitz-Trotman, Benjamin Pohl, Katherine Weikert
This volume offers a conceptual justification and methodology
for comparative studies of education matching developments in the
social sciences and other comparative disciplines. It also relates
comparative studies of education to the practical business of
policy formulation at all levels. Thus it bridges the widening gap
between the purely academic world and the world of decision for
development. The author draws illustrations from educational
reforms, but goes further in suggesting suitable procedures or
institutions which might achieve soundly based policies and secure
their implementation. He takes account of the planning techniques
and achievements of UNESCO, OECD and other international
organizations, and examines the activities and aims of national
planning for education in a wider perspective of world
re-orientation.
Developments and trends in Communist education are traced in
this authoritative survey by specialists. Eight chapters deal with
particular aspects: ideology, psychology, the selective process,
the roles of teachers and parents, polytechnical education, the
universities and professional institutes. Three chapters survey the
former East Germany, Poland and China as special case-studies. A
concluding chapter examines common ground between Communist and
other systems.
|
Henry II: New Interpretations (Hardcover)
Christopher Harper-Bill, Nicholas Vincent; Contributions by Anne J. Duggan, Daniel Power, Edmund King, …
|
R3,084
Discovery Miles 30 840
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
Survey of the reign of Henry II, offering a range of new
evaluations and interpretations. Henry II is the most imposing
figure among the medieval kings of England. His fiefs and domains
extended from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean, and his court was
frequented by the greatest thinkers and men of letters of his
time,besides ambassadors from all over Europe. Yet his is a reign
of paradoxes: best known for his dramatic conflicts with his own
wife and sons and with Thomas Becket, it was also a crucial period
in the evolution of legal and governmental institutions. Here
experts in the field provide significant reevaluations of its most
important aspects. Topics include Henry's accession and his
relations with the papacy, the French king, other rulers in the
British Islesand the Norman baronage; the development of the common
law and the coinage; the court and its literary milieu; the use of
Arthurian legend for political purposes; and the career of the
Young King Henry, while the introduction examines the
historiography of the reign. CONTRIBUTORS: MARTIN ALLEN, MARTIN
AURELL, NICK BARRATT, PAUL BRAND, SEAN DUFFY, ANNE DUGGAN, JEAN
DUBABIN, JOHN GILLINGHAM, EDMUND KING, DANIEL POWER, IAN SHORT,
MATTHEW STRICKLAND CHRISTOPHER HARPER-BILL and NICHOLAS VINCENT are
Professors of Medieval History at the University of East Anglia.
'To be a medieval king was a job of work ... This was a man who
knew how to run a complex organization. He was England's CEO' The
youngest of William the Conqueror's sons, Henry I came to
unchallenged power only after two of his brothers died in strange
hunting accidents and he had imprisoned the other. He was destined
to become one of the greatest of all medieval monarchs, both
through his own ruthlessness, and through his dynastic legacy.
Edmund King's engrossing portrait shows a strikingly charismatic,
intelligent and fortunate man, whose rule was looked back on as the
real post-conquest founding of England as a new realm: wealthy,
stable, bureaucratised and self-confident.
From Yale's English Monarchs series, the most authoritative picture
yet of King Stephen "King has written a masterpiece that reveals
how a medieval political community can both consume and then
reconstitute itself and offers readers a king emblematic of his
truncated, troubled age."-Choice King Stephen's reign (1135-1154),
with its "nineteen long winters" of civil war, made his name
synonymous with failed leadership. After years of work on the
sources, Edmund King shows with rare clarity the strengths and
weaknesses of the monarch. Keeping Stephen at the forefront of his
account, the author also chronicles the activities of key family
members and associates whose loyal support sustained Stephen's
kingship. In 1135 the popular Stephen was elected king against the
claims of the empress Matilda and her sons. But by 1153, Stephen
had lost control over Normandy and other important regions, England
had lost prestige, and the weakened king was forced to cede his
family's right to succession. A rich narrative covering the drama
of a tumultuous reign, this book focuses well-deserved attention on
a king who lost control of his destiny.
The youngest of William the Conqueror's sons, Henry I (1100-35) was
never meant to be king, but he was destined to become one of the
greatest of all medieval monarchs, both through his own
ruthlessness and intelligence and through the dynastic legacy of
his daughter Matilda, who began the Plantagenet line that would
rule England until 1485. A self-consciously diligent and thoughtful
king, his rule was looked back on as the real post-invasion
re-founding of England as a new realm, integrated into the
continent, wealthy and stable. Edmund King's wonderful portrait of
Henry shows him as a strikingly charismatic and thoughtful man. His
life was dogged by a single great disaster, the death of his
teenage heir William in the White Ship disaster. Despite
astonishing numbers of illegitimate sons, Henry was now left with
only a daughter. This fact would shape the rest of the 12th century
and beyond.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R375
R347
Discovery Miles 3 470
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R375
R347
Discovery Miles 3 470
Promises
Floating Points, Pharoah Sanders, …
CD
R431
Discovery Miles 4 310
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R375
R347
Discovery Miles 3 470
|