Chapter 6

The history of the reigns of all three Edwards is dominated by the work of Michael Prestwich. For a masterly overview, see Prestwich, The Three Edwards (London 1980). For a richly insightful biography, Prestwich, Edward I (London 1988). For Edward II, Roy Martin Haines, King Edward II (London 2003), but with more exciting studies of the King’s evil counsellors and tyranny, Natalie Fryde, The Tyranny and Fall of Edward II, 1321–1326 (Cambridge 1979), and Nigel Saul, ‘The Despensers and the Downfall of Edward II’, English Historical Review, 99 (1984), 1–33, and a good selection of essays ed. Gwilym Dodd and Anthony Musson, The Reign of Edward II: New Perspectives (Woodbridge 2006). For Edward III, the best of the modern biographies are those by W. Mark Ormrod, The Reign of Edward III: Crown and Political Society, 1327–1377 (London 1990), and (admirably for a general public) Ian Mortimer, The Perfect King: The Life of Edward III, Father of the English Nation (London 2006). Just as the essays published as Anglo-Norman Studies dominate the secondary literature on the eleventh and early twelfth centuries, so two sets of annual or bi-annual essay collections now dominate the period after 1200: Thirteenth Century England, ed. Peter Coss, Simon Lloyd and others (Woodbridge 1986–), and Fourteenth Century England, ed. Nigel Saul and others (Woodbridge 2000–). For the English royal style, W. Mark Ormrod, ‘A Problem of Precedence: Edward III, the Double Monarchy, and the Royal Style’, in The Age of Edward III, ed. J.S. Bothwell (Woodbridge 2001), pp. 133–53. For Becket’s oil, T.A. Sandquist, ‘The Holy Oil of St Thomas of Canterbury’, Essays in Medieval History Presented to Bertie Wilkinson, ed. T.A. Sandquist and M.R. Powicke (Toronto 1968), pp. 330–44. For the Order of the Garter, Lisa Jefferson, ‘MS Arundel 48 and the Earliest Statutes of the Order of the Garter’, English Historical Review, 109 (1994), 356–85, whose implications are not fully explored by Hugh E.L. Collins, The Order of the Garter, 1348–1461 (Oxford 2000). For multilingualism, most of the examples cited here are borrowed from Susan Crane, ‘Social Aspects of Bilingualism in the Thirteenth Century’, Thirteenth Century England VI, ed. Michael Prestwich and others (Woodbridge 1997), pp. 103–15. For England’s imperial destiny, R.R. Davies, The First English Empire: Power and Identities in the British Isles 1093–1343 (Oxford 2000). For Higden’s maps, Kathy Lavezzo, Angels on the Edge of the World: Geography, Literature and English Community, 1000–1534 (Ithaca 2006). For the details here of Edward I’s early years, Nicholas Vincent, ‘The Politics of Church and State as Reflected in the Winchester Pipe Rolls, 1208–80’, The Winchester Pipe Roll and Medieval English Society, ed. Richard Britnell (Woodbridge 2003), pp. 157–81; John R. Maddicott, ‘Edward I and the Lessons of Baronial Reform: Local Government, 1258–80’, in Thirteenth Century England I, ed. Peter Coss and Simon Lloyd (Woodbridge 1986), pp. 1–30. For public finance, Gerald L. Harriss, King, Parliament and Public Finance in Medieval England to 1369 (Oxford 1975). For the Hundred Rolls, Sarah Raban, A Second Domesday? The Hundred Rolls of 1279–80 (Oxford 2004). For the expulsion of the Jews, Robert R. Mundill, England’s Jewish Solution, 1262–1290: Experiment and Expulsion (Cambridge 1998). For the Riccardi, Richard W. Kaeuper, Bankers to the Crown: The Riccardi of Lucca and Edward I (Princeton 1973). For the Welsh wars, John E. Morris, The Welsh Wars of Edward I (Oxford 1901) can still be read with pleasure, with a magisterial overview of the history of Wales by Rees Davies, The Age of Conquest: Wales, 1063–1415 (Oxford 2000). For Edward I’s war machine, Michael Prestwich, War, Politics and Finance under Edward I (London 1972). For war in general, there are magnificent surveys by Matthew Strickland, War and Chivalry: The Conduct and Perception of War in England and Normandy, 1066–1217 (Cambridge 1996), and Michael Prestwich, Armies and Warfare in the Middle Ages: The English Experience (New Haven 1996). For Edward’s castles, the best guide remains The History of the King’s Works, vols 1–2 (The Middle Ages), ed. H.M. Colvin and others (London 1963), with the relevant sections abstracted as A.J. Taylor, The Welsh Castles of Edward I (London 1986). For overviews of the history of Scotland, see both Geoffrey W.S. Barrow, The Kingdom of the Scots (London 1973) and A.A.M. Duncan, Scotland: The Making of the Kingdom (Edinburgh 1975). For Robert Bruce, the classic study remains that by Geoffrey Barrow, Robert Bruce and the Community of the Realm of Scotland, 3rd edn (Edinburgh 1988). For the crisis of 1297, Michael Prestwich, Documents Illustrating the Crisis of 1297–8 (Camden Society, London 1980). For the English clergy, Jeffrey H. Denton, Robert Winchelsey and the Crown, 1294–1313 (Cambridge 1980). For the mounting sense of crisis in the fourteenth century, Barbara W. Tuchman, A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century (New York 1978) remains highly readable, and see also William Chester Jordan, The Great Famine: Northern Europe in the Early Fourteenth Century (Princeton 1996), here using some of the ecological data from Robert S. Gottfried, The Black Death: Natural and Human Disaster in Medieval Europe (London 1983). For the English experience of famine, see John R. Maddicott, The English Peasantry and the Demands of the Crown, 1294–1341, Past and Present Supplement 1 (1975). For yields, I depend upon figures supplied to me by Bruce Campbell, and compare the website at <http://www.cropyields.ac.uk>. For the death penalty, Henry Summerson, ‘Attitudes to Capital Punishment in England, 1200–1350’, Thirteenth Century England VIII, ed. Michael Prestwich and others (Woodbridge 2001), pp. 123–33; Summerson, ‘Suicide and the Fear of the Gallows’, Journal of Legal History, 21 (2007), 49–56; J.G. Edwards, ‘The Treason of Thomas Turberville, 1295’, Studies in Medieval History Presented to Frederick Maurice Powicke, ed. R.W. Hunt and others (Oxford 1948), pp. 296–309. For the mounting violence precipitated by Edward I, Matthew Strickland, ‘Treason, Feud and the Growth of State Violence: Edward I and the “War of the Earl of Carrick”, 1306–7’, in War, Government and Aristocracy in the British Isles c.1150–1500, ed. Chris Given-Wilson and others (Woodbridge 2008), pp. 84–113. For the baronial politics of Edward II’s reign, John R. Maddicott, Thomas of Lancaster, 1307–1322 (Oxford 1970); J.R.S. Phillips, Aymer de Valence, Earl of Pembroke, 1307–1324 (Oxford 1972). Pending the appearance of a full-scale biography of Gaveston, see Pierre Chaplais, Piers Gaveston: Edward II’s Adoptive Brother (Oxford 1994). For Edward’s supposed homosexuality, see the essays by W. Mark Ormrod and Ian Mortimer in The Reign of Edward II, ed. Dodd and Musson (Woodbridge 2006), pp. 22–60. For one of the principal primary sources, see the Vita Edwardi Secundi: The Life of Edward the Second, ed. Wendy R. Childs (Oxford 2005). For the medical history here, I depend upon discussion and assistance supplied by Carole Rawcliffe, and see Rawcliffe, Medicine and Society in Late Medieval England (Stroud 1995). For Mortimer and Isabella, Ian Mortimer, The Greatest Traitor: The Life of Sir Roger Mortimer, 1st Earl of March, Ruler of England, 1327–1330 (London 2003). For Edward II after 1327, Roy Martin Haines, ‘The “Afterlife” of Edward of Caernarvon’, Transactions of the Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society, 114 (1996), 65–86. For horse lists, Andrew Ayton, Knights and Warhorses: Military Service and the English Aristocracy under Edward III (Woodbridge 1994). For the Countess of Salisbury, Antonia Gransden, ‘The Alleged Rape by Edward III of the Countess of Salisbury’, English Historical Review, 87 (1972), 333–44. There is a modern biography of Wykeham by Virginia Davis, William Wykeham: A Life (London 2007). For the Church, the best overview remains that by W.A. Pantin, The English Church in the Fourteenth Century (Cambridge 1955). For English sanctity, and revealing comparisons with Italy, see Robert Brentano, Two Churches: England and Italy in the Thirteenth Century, 2nd edn (Berkeley 1988). For the most notorious of the bishops, John Aberth, Criminal Churchmen in the Age of Edward III: The Case of Bishop Thomas de Lisle (Philadelphia 1996). For monastic diet, see the wonderfully detailed portrait built up by Barbara F. Harvey, Living and Dying in England, 1100–1540: The Monastic Experience (Oxford 1993). For the origins of the schools of Oxford, see the official History of the University of Oxford, vol.1: The Early Schools, ed. Jeremy Catto (Oxford 1984), especially the essay by Richard Southern, and also the more provocative suggestions of R.H.C. Davis, ‘The Ford, the River and the City’, in Davis, From Alfred the Great to Stephen (London 1991), pp. 281–91. For Cambridge, I depend upon my own essay on the thirteenth-century bishops of Ely, in Ely: Bishops and Diocese, 1109–2009, ed. Peter Meadows (Woodbridge 2010). For discussion of founders’ kin, I am indebted to Scott Mandelbrote and Christopher Brooke. No student of fourteenth-century bureaucracy can avoid the massive endeavours of T.F. Tout, Chapters in the Administrative History of Medieval England, 6 vols (Manchester 1920–33), which incidentally offer a far from negligible broader history of the period. For archery, Matthew Strickland and Robert Hardy, The Great Warbow: From Hastings to the Mary Rose (Stroud 2005). Amongst the many histories of the Hundred Years War, for a short summary, Christopher Allmand, The Hundred Years War (Cambridge 1988); for something a great deal longer and still ongoing, Jonathan Sumption’s massive history has thus far reached 1399 in three volumes: Trial By Battle; Trial by Fire, and Divided Houses (London and Philadelphia 1990–2009). For Crécy, The Battle of Crécy, 1346, ed. Andrew Ayton and Philip Preston (Woodbridge 2005). For St George’s, St George’s Chapel Windsor in the Fourteenth Century, ed. Nigel Saul (Woodbridge 2005). For chivalry, the outstanding study by Maurice Keen, Chivalry (London 1984), and more recently, Keen, Origins of the English Gentleman: Heraldry, Chivalry and Gentility in Medieval England, c.1300-c.1500 (Stroud 2002), with its counterpoint in Peter R. Coss, The Lady in Medieval England, 1100–1500 (Stroud 1998). For Calais in the English Parliament, H.F. Chettle, ‘The Burgesses for Calais, 1536–58’, English Historical Review, 50 (1935), 492–501. For contemporary accounts of the Black Prince’s campaigns, see The Life and Campaigns of the Black Prince, ed. Richard Barber (London 1979), and the selections from Froissart’s Chronicles, trans. and ed. Geoffrey Brereton (Penguin Classics, first published 1968). Amongst a host of books on the Black Death, see most recently, and in starkest contrast, Ole J. Benedictow, The Black Death, 1346–1353: The Complete History (Woodbridge 2004) (arguing the traditional ‘Bubonic’ option) and Samuel K. Cohn, The Black Death Transformed: Disease and Culture in Early Renaissance Europe (London 2001) (arguing from a revisionist standpoint). Hard going, but underpinning the remarks here on the legal consequences, is Robert C. Palmer, English Law in the Age of the Black Death, 1348–1381 (Chapel Hill 1993), with a response from Anthony Musson, ‘New Labour Laws, New Remedies? Legal Reaction to the Black Death “Crisis”’, in Fourteenth Century England I, ed. Nigel Saul (Woodbridge 2000), pp. 73–88, and with other consequences considered by Paul Binski, Medieval Death: Ritual and Representation (London 1996); Jacques Rossiaud (trans. Lydia G. Cochrane), Medieval Prostitution (Oxford 1988), and always, in the background, the classic study by Johan Huizinga, The Waning of the Middle Ages (first English translation 1924). For Edward III, building and display after 1350, James Sherborne, ‘Aspects of Court Culture in the Later Fourteenth Century’, in Sherborne, War, Politics and Culture in Fourteenth-Century England, ed. Anthony Tuck (London 1994), pp. 171–94. For the return of plague, Robert Gottfried, The Black Death (London 1983), already cited. For diet and living standards, Christopher Dyer, Standards of Living in the Later Middle Ages, 2nd edn (Cambridge 1998), and Dyer’s collected essays, Everyday Life in Medieval England (London 1994). For 1376, George Holmes, The Good Parliament (Oxford 1975), with a particularly insightful recent study by Gwilym Dodd, ‘A Parliament Full of Rats? Piers Plowman and the Good Parliament of 1376’, Historical Research, 79 (2006), 21–49.

A Brief History of Britain 1066-1485
titlepage.xhtml
index_split_000.html
index_split_001.html
index_split_002.html
index_split_003.html
index_split_004.html
index_split_005.html
index_split_006.html
index_split_007.html
index_split_008.html
index_split_009.html
index_split_010.html
index_split_011.html
index_split_012.html
index_split_013.html
index_split_014.html
index_split_015.html
index_split_016.html
index_split_017.html
index_split_018.html
index_split_019.html
index_split_020.html
index_split_021.html
index_split_022.html
index_split_023.html
index_split_024.html
index_split_025.html
index_split_026.html
index_split_027.html
index_split_028.html
index_split_029.html
index_split_030.html
index_split_031.html
index_split_032.html
index_split_033.html
index_split_034.html
index_split_035.html
index_split_036.html
index_split_037.html
index_split_038.html
index_split_039.html
index_split_040.html
index_split_041.html
index_split_042.html
index_split_043.html
index_split_044.html
index_split_045.html
index_split_046.html
index_split_047.html
index_split_048.html
index_split_049.html
index_split_050.html
index_split_051.html
index_split_052.html
index_split_053.html
index_split_054.html
index_split_055.html
index_split_056.html
index_split_057.html
index_split_058.html
index_split_059.html
index_split_060.html
index_split_061.html
index_split_062.html
index_split_063.html
index_split_064.html
index_split_065.html
index_split_066.html
index_split_067.html
index_split_068.html
index_split_069.html
index_split_070.html
index_split_071.html
index_split_072.html
index_split_073.html
index_split_074.html
index_split_075.html
index_split_076.html
index_split_077.html
index_split_078.html
index_split_079.html
index_split_080.html
index_split_081.html
index_split_082.html
index_split_083.html
index_split_084.html
index_split_085.html
index_split_086.html
index_split_087.html
index_split_088.html
index_split_089.html
index_split_090.html
index_split_091.html
index_split_092.html
index_split_093.html
index_split_094.html
index_split_095.html
index_split_096.html
index_split_097.html
index_split_098.html
index_split_099.html
index_split_100.html
index_split_101.html
index_split_102.html
index_split_103.html
index_split_104.html
index_split_105.html
index_split_106.html
index_split_107.html
index_split_108.html
index_split_109.html
index_split_110.html
index_split_111.html
index_split_112.html
index_split_113.html
index_split_114.html
index_split_115.html
index_split_116.html
index_split_117.html
index_split_118.html
index_split_119.html
index_split_120.html
index_split_121.html
index_split_122.html
index_split_123.html
index_split_124.html
index_split_125.html
index_split_126.html
index_split_127.html
index_split_128.html
index_split_129.html
index_split_130.html
index_split_131.html
index_split_132.html
index_split_133.html
index_split_134.html
index_split_135.html
index_split_136.html
index_split_137.html
index_split_138.html
index_split_139.html
index_split_140.html
index_split_141.html
index_split_142.html
index_split_143.html
index_split_144.html
index_split_145.html
index_split_146.html
index_split_147.html
index_split_148.html
index_split_149.html
index_split_150.html
index_split_151.html
index_split_152.html
index_split_153.html
index_split_154.html
index_split_155.html
index_split_156.html
index_split_157.html
index_split_158.html
index_split_159.html
index_split_160.html
index_split_161.html
index_split_162.html
index_split_163.html
index_split_164.html
index_split_165.html
index_split_166.html
index_split_167.html
index_split_168.html
index_split_169.html
index_split_170.html
index_split_171.html
index_split_172.html
index_split_173.html
index_split_174.html
index_split_175.html
index_split_176.html
index_split_177.html
index_split_178.html
index_split_179.html
index_split_180.html
index_split_181.html
index_split_182.html
index_split_183.html
index_split_184.html
index_split_185.html
index_split_186.html
index_split_187.html
index_split_188.html
index_split_189.html
index_split_190.html
index_split_191.html
index_split_192.html
index_split_193.html
index_split_194.html
index_split_195.html
index_split_196.html
index_split_197.html
index_split_198.html
index_split_199.html
index_split_200.html
index_split_201.html
index_split_202.html
index_split_203.html
index_split_204.html
index_split_205.html
index_split_206.html
index_split_207.html
index_split_208.html
index_split_209.html
index_split_210.html
index_split_211.html
index_split_212.html
index_split_213.html
index_split_214.html
index_split_215.html
index_split_216.html
index_split_217.html
index_split_218.html
index_split_219.html
index_split_220.html
index_split_221.html
index_split_222.html
index_split_223.html
index_split_224.html
index_split_225.html
index_split_226.html
index_split_227.html
index_split_228.html
index_split_229.html
index_split_230.html
index_split_231.html
index_split_232.html
index_split_233.html
index_split_234.html
index_split_235.html
index_split_236.html
index_split_237.html
index_split_238.html
index_split_239.html
index_split_240.html
index_split_241.html
index_split_242.html