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A series which is a model of its kind. Edmund King, History The
wide-ranging articles collected here represent the cutting edge of
recent Anglo-Norman scholarship. Topics include English kingship,
legends of the Battle of Bouvines, ideas of empire, the
practicalities of child kingship, and female rulership in Brittany.
The volume continues in its proud tradition of source analysis:
there are studies of northern French urban franchises, and Norman
charters and a logistical take on the making of the Domesday Book,
while narrative sources are represented in the vernacular by a
study of Herman of Valenciennes' Bible and in Latin by the
historiography of Robert of Torigni and Ralph Niger. Further
contributions focus on the twelfth-century ecclesiastical officers
Abbot Peter the Venerable and Archbishop Thomas Becket, and the
volume is completed with an analysis of the concept of economic
resources with respect to Normandy. Contributors: Mathieu Arnoux,
JamesBarnaby, Dominique Barthelemy, Thomas Bisson, Scott G. Bruce,
Francis Gingras, Frederique Lachaud, Anne E. Lester, C.P. Lewis,
Amy Livingstone, Fanny Madeline, Nicholas Vincent, Emily Ward
[The series is] a necessary addition for any scholar working in
this field. NOTTINGHAM MEDIEVAL STUDIES Editors: Janet Burton,
Bjoern Weiler, Philipp Schofield, Karen Stoeber The thirteenth
century brought the British Isles into ever closer contact with one
another, and with medieval Europe as a whole. This international
dimensionforms a dominant theme of this collection: it features
essays on England's relations with the papal court; the adoption of
European cultural norms in Scotland; Welsh society and crusading;
English landholding in Ireland; and dealings between the kings of
England and Navarre. Other papers, on ritual crucifixion, concepts
of office and ethcis, and the English royal itinerary, show that
the thirteenth century was also a period of profound political and
cultural change, witnessing the transformation of legal and
economic structures [represented here by case studies of noblewomen
and their burial customs; and a prolonged inheritance dispute in
Laxton]. This volume testifies to the continuing vitality and [with
contributors from three continents and six countries] international
nature of scholarship on medieval Britain; and moves beyond the
Channel to make an important contribution to the history of
medieval Europes. Contributors: ROBERT STACEY, FREDERIQUE LACHAUD,
STEPHEN CHURCH, CHRISTIAN HILLEN, JESSICA NELSON, MATTHEW HAMMOND,
KATHRYN HURLOCK, NICHOLAS VINCENT, ADAM DAVIES, HUI LIU, EMMA
CAVELL, DAVID CROOK, BETH HARTLAND
The complexity of the interplay and relationships over various
borders in medieval Europe is here fully teased out. The processes
by which ideas, objects, texts and political thought and experience
moved across boundaries in the Middle Ages form the focus of this
book, which also seeks to reassess the nature of the boundaries
themselves; it thus appropriately reflects a major theme of Dr
Malcolm Vale's work, which the essays collected here honour. They
suggest ways of breaking down established historiographical
paradigms of Europe as a set of distinct polities, achieving a more
nuanced picture in which people and objects were constantly moving,
and challenging previous conceptions of units and borders. The
first section examines the construction of boundaries and units in
the later Middle Ages, via topics ranging from linguistic units to
social stratifications, and geographically from the Netherlands and
Scotland to Gascony and the Iberian peninsula; it reveals how much
the relationship between exchange and boundaries was reciprocal.
The second section considers the mechanisms by which it took place,
from West Africa to Italy and Flanders, and discusses the actual
exchange of people, texts, and unusual artefacts. Overall, the
essays bear witness to the constant interplay and interconnections
throughout medieval Europe and beyond. Contributors: Paul Booth,
Maria Joao Violante Branco, Rita Costa-Gomes, Mario Damen, Jan
Dumolyn, Jean Dunbabin, Jean-PhilippeGenet, Michael Jones, Maurice
Keen, Frederique Lachaud, Patrick Lantschner, Guilhem Pepin, R.L.J.
Shaw, Hannah Skoda, Erik Spindler, John Watts.
Essays reflecting the most recent research on the thirteenth
century, with a timely focus on the Treaty of Paris. Additional
editors: Karen Stoeber, Bjoern Weiler The articles collected here
bear witness to the continued and wide interest in England and its
neighbours in the "long" thirteenth century. The volume includes
papers on the high politics of the thirteenth century,
international relations, the administrative and governmental
structures of medieval England and aspects of the wider societal
and political context of the period. A particular theme of the
papers is Anglo-French political history, and especially the ways
in which that relationship was reflected in the diplomatic and
dynastic arrangements associated with the Treaty of Paris, the
750th anniversary of which fell during 2009, a fact celebrated in
this collection of essays and the Paris conference at which the
original papers were first delivered. Contributors: Caroline Burt,
Julie E. Kanter, Julia Barrow, Benjamin L. Wild, WilliamMarx,
Caroline Dunn, Adrian Jobson, Adrian R. Bell, Chris Brooks, Tony K.
Moore, David A. Trotter, William Chester Jordan, Daniel Power,
Florent Lenegre
An interdisciplinary approach to a crucial part of the systems of
medieval authority and governance. In the medieval world, what
happened when a figure of recognised authority was absent? What
terminology, principles and solutions of proxy authority were
developed and adopted? Did these solutions differ and change over
time depending on whether the absence was short or long and caused
by issues of incapacity, minority, disputed succession, geography
or elective absenteeism? Did the models of proxy authority adopted
by ruling dynasties and large institutions influence the proxy
choices of lesser authority? The circumstances and consequences of
absentee authority, a major aspect of the systems of medieval
power, are the focus of this volume. Ranging across the realms of
medieval Europe (but with a focus upon the British Isles and
France), its essays embrace a wide variety of experience - royal,
parliamentary, conciliar, magnatial, military, ecclesiastical
(papal to parochial), burghal, household, minoror major, male or
female, exiled, captive or infirm - and explore not merely
political developments, but the dynastic, diplomatic, financial,
ideological, religious and cultural ramifications of such episodes.
Frederique Lachaud is Professor of medieval history at the
Universite de Lorraine, France; Michael Penman is Senior Lecturer
in history at the University of Stirling, Scotland. Contributors:
James Bothwell Michelle Bubenicek, Leonard Dauphant , Bruno
Dumezil, Laurent Hablot, Torsten Hiltmann, Tom Horler-Underwood,
Robert Houghton, Olivier de Laborderie, Frederique Lachaud, Hans
Jacob Orning, Michael Penman. Norman Reid
Discussion of display through a range of artefacts and in a variety
of contexts: family and lineage, social distinction and aspiration,
ceremony and social bonding, and the expression of power and
authority. Medieval culture was intensely visual. Although this has
long been recognised by art historians and by enthusiasts for
particular media, there has been little attempt to study social
display as a subject in its own right. And yet,display takes us
directly into the values, aspirations and, indeed, anxieties of
past societies. In this illustrated volume a group of experts
address a series of interrelated themes around the issue of display
and do so in a waywhich avoids jargon and overly technical
language. Among the themes are family and lineage, social
distinction and aspiration, ceremony and social bonding, and the
expression of power and authority. The media include monumental
effigies, brasses, stained glass, rolls of arms, manuscripts,
jewels, plate, seals and coins. Contributors: MAURICE KEEN, DAVID
CROUCH, PETER COSS, CAROLINE SHENTON, ADRIAN AILES, FREDERIQUE
LACHAUD, MARIAN CAMPBELL, BRIAN and MOIRA GITTOS, NIGEL SAUL, FIONN
PILBROW, CAROLINE BARRON and JOHN WATTS.
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