
The Fifteenth Century XIX
Enmity and Amity
Linda Clark(Editor)
Boydell Press
Published on 27. September 2022
Book
Hardback
188 pages
978-1-78327-742-1 (ISBN)
Description
"This series [pushes] the boundaries of knowledge and [develops] new trends in approach and understanding." ENGLISH HISTORICAL REVIEW
The essays in this volume explore relationships in all their different guises and expressions. Hostility between England and France cast a long shadow over the fifteenth century and beyond. While warfare at sea and the composition of the army which invaded Normandy in 1417 left extensive administrative records, sources of a different nature highlight the experiences of the French and Burgundians. The experience of the incursion of Henry VIII's forces in 1513 found expression in widely-distributed poems; while verses celebrating the births of heirs to the Hapsburg duke of Burgundy sought to allay fears over a change of regime by stressing the benefits of their multinational heritage. Portraits of rulers of Italian states emphasised the emergence of a shared courtly culture between England and Italy by commemorating their election as Knights of the Garter, while the records of Bishop's Lynn testify to the harmonious integration of immigrants from the Low Countries and Baltic regions. The Magna Carta of 1215 - intended to place the relationship between ruler and ruled on a new footing - had a long after-life, providing a blue-print for practices adopted by the Appellants of 1388 and being cited at the deposition of Richard II, only to be eclipsed in the late fifteenth century when depositions focused instead on challenges to the monarch's title. Poor records of the meetings of convocations have led to undue emphasis on their role in granting subsidies, but a register at Canterbury presents a different picture by revealing business of the southern convocation of 1462.
The essays in this volume explore relationships in all their different guises and expressions. Hostility between England and France cast a long shadow over the fifteenth century and beyond. While warfare at sea and the composition of the army which invaded Normandy in 1417 left extensive administrative records, sources of a different nature highlight the experiences of the French and Burgundians. The experience of the incursion of Henry VIII's forces in 1513 found expression in widely-distributed poems; while verses celebrating the births of heirs to the Hapsburg duke of Burgundy sought to allay fears over a change of regime by stressing the benefits of their multinational heritage. Portraits of rulers of Italian states emphasised the emergence of a shared courtly culture between England and Italy by commemorating their election as Knights of the Garter, while the records of Bishop's Lynn testify to the harmonious integration of immigrants from the Low Countries and Baltic regions. The Magna Carta of 1215 - intended to place the relationship between ruler and ruled on a new footing - had a long after-life, providing a blue-print for practices adopted by the Appellants of 1388 and being cited at the deposition of Richard II, only to be eclipsed in the late fifteenth century when depositions focused instead on challenges to the monarch's title. Poor records of the meetings of convocations have led to undue emphasis on their role in granting subsidies, but a register at Canterbury presents a different picture by revealing business of the southern convocation of 1462.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Woodbridge
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Boydell & Brewer Ltd
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Cloth over boards
Illustrations
1 Karte
1 Maps
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 161 mm
Thickness: 15 mm
Weight
452 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-78327-742-1 (9781783277421)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
09/2022
1st Edition
De Gruyter
€48.99
Available for download
Persons
LINDA CLARK is Editor Emeritus at the History of Parliament. LINDA CLARK is Editor Emeritus at the History of Parliament. Anne Curry is Emeritus Professor of Medieval History at the University of Southampton, and author of many works on the Hundred Years War, particularly on the battle of Agincourt. She also edited the 1422-53 section of the Parliament Rolls of Medieval England. NIGEL SAUL is Emeritus Professor of Medieval History at Royal Holloway, University of London
Editor
Contributions
Royalty Account
Content
England and Europe, c.1450-1520: Nostalgia or New Opportunities? - MALCOLM VALE
Mariners and Marauders: A Case Study of Fowey during the Hundred Years' War, c.1400-c.1453 - S.J. DRAKE
Henry V's Army of 1417 - ANNE CURRY and DAVID CLEVERLY
'Get out of our land, Englishmen'. French Reactions to the English Invasion of 1512-13 - CHARLES GIRY-DELOISON
Encountering the 'Duche' in Margery Kempe's Lynn - SUSAN MADDOCK
'C'est le Beaulte de Castille et d'Espaigne, qui le Soleil cler d'Austrice accompaigne': Jean Molinet makes the Habsburgs Burgundian - CATHERINE EMERSON
Magna Carta in the Late Middle Ages, c.1320-c.1520 - NIGEL SAUL
The Business of the Southern Convocation in 1462 - PAUL CAVILL
Mariners and Marauders: A Case Study of Fowey during the Hundred Years' War, c.1400-c.1453 - S.J. DRAKE
Henry V's Army of 1417 - ANNE CURRY and DAVID CLEVERLY
'Get out of our land, Englishmen'. French Reactions to the English Invasion of 1512-13 - CHARLES GIRY-DELOISON
Encountering the 'Duche' in Margery Kempe's Lynn - SUSAN MADDOCK
'C'est le Beaulte de Castille et d'Espaigne, qui le Soleil cler d'Austrice accompaigne': Jean Molinet makes the Habsburgs Burgundian - CATHERINE EMERSON
Magna Carta in the Late Middle Ages, c.1320-c.1520 - NIGEL SAUL
The Business of the Southern Convocation in 1462 - PAUL CAVILL