Biennial volumes of new research on an eventful century coloured by the Plantagenet dynasty.
The fourteenth century is one of the most turbulent and compelling periods of English history, reflected in the vitality of the current scholarship devoted to it. This new series provides a forum for the most recent research intothe political, social, and ecclesiastical history of the century, and complements earlier series from Boydell & Brewer, Anglo-Norman Studies and Thirteenth Century England, which taken together offer a complete overview of debate on the middle ages.
The substantial and significant studies in this volume have a particular focus on political history, including examinations of Edward II's charter witness lists and the consolidation of HenryIV's power in his early years; other topics include the Black Death and law-making, castle-building and memorials, war and chivalry in the Scalacronica, and architecture in the courts of Edward III and Charles V of France.
Contributors: JEFFREY HAMILTON, ANDY KING, ROY M. HAINES, ANTHONY MUSSON, GLORIA J. BETCHER, CYNTHIA J. NEVILLE, CHRISTOPHER PHILPOTTS, CHARLES COULSON, MARY WHITELEY, NICHOLAS ROGERS, LYNDA DENNISON, DOUGLAS BIGGS
NIGEL SAUL is Professor of Medieval History, Royal Holloway and Bedford New College, University of London.
Contributions by: Jeffrey S. J.S. Hamilton, Andy King, Roy M Haines, Anthony Musson, Gloria J Betcher, Cynthia J. Cynthia J. Neville, Christopher Philpotts, Charles Coulson, Mary Whiteley, Lynda Dennison, Douglas Biggs, Nicholas Rogers