An exploration of how power and political society were imagined, represented and reflected on in medieval English art
Murphy, James. Plans, Elevations, Sections and Views of the Church of Batalha. London, 1795. Murphy, Paul. “Body Talk: Gestures of Emotion in Late Medieval England.” Literature Compass 13, no. 6 (2016): 412–22.
Gildas, Gildae de Excidio Britanniae; Gildas: The Ruin of Britain, ed. and trans. Hugh Williams (Cymmrodorion Record Series, 1899). ... Slater, Laura, Art and Political Thought in Medieval England, c.1150–1350 (Boydell Press, 2018).
32 On Irish reliquaries, see Ó Floínn, Irish Shrines; Overbey, Sacral Geographies. 33 +HÁC CRUCE CRÚX TEGITUR QUÁ PASUS CONDITOR ORBIS. See Murray, Cross of Cong, p. 42. 34 Murray, Cross of Cong, pp.
Stafford, P, La Mutation Familiale: A Suitable Case for Caution, in J. Hill and M. Swan (eds), The Community, the Family and the Saint: Patterns of Power in Early Medieval Europe (Turnhout, 1998), 103-25. Stenton, F. M., Norman London, ...
There is no originality here, the mathematical deconstruction having been done already by Augustine.25 Alcuin's purpose is indoctrination. ... Available at [accessed 1 February 2018].
Jane Gilbert, Simon Gaunt, William Burgwinkle. Wace, Roman de Brut 36, 44–45, 86–7, 115m.37 Wace, Roman de Rou 95n.19 Wales, the Welsh 14, 41, 97–8, 200–1 Wallace, David 217n.43 Wallonia (Walloon) 133–4 Wathey, Andrew 234n.64, ...
... 288 as the son of a priest 175 Roger of Rolleston 203 Roger of Tanton 352 Roger of Salisbury 94, 120, 135, 163, ... cleric of William de Redvers 222–3 Samson d'Aubigny 65, 163 Savaric, bishop of Bath and Wells 69 schools 77, 204, ...
"This volume is about ways of studying medieval money, and especially the most direct manifestation of money: coinage.
Laura Slater, Art and Political Thought in England, c.1150–1350 (Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 2018), pp. 8–10, 75 (quotation at p. 8). Michael Bennett, 'Henry Bolingbroke and the Revolution of 1399', in Gwilym Dodd and Douglas Biggs, eds, ...
The future of the United Kingdom is an increasingly vexed question. This book traces the roots of the issue to the middle ages, when English power and control came to extend to the whole of the British Isles.