The Meetings of Kings Henry III and Louis IX - David Carpenter
Counting the Cost: The Financial Implications of the Loss of
Normandy - Nick Barratt
Networks of Markets and Networks of Patronage in Thirteenth-
Century England - Emilia Jamroziak
Three Alien Royal Stewards in Thirteenth-Century England: The
Careers and Legacy of Matthias Bezill, Imbert Pugeys and Peter de
ChampventChampvent - Michael Ray
The Eyre de terris datis, 1267-1272 - Susan Stewart
Joan, Wife of Llywelyn the Great - Louise J. Wilkinson
Town and Crown: The Kings of England and their City of Dublin -
Sean Duffy
English Landholding in Ireland - Beth Hartland
The Reception of the Matter of Britain in Thirteenth-Century
England: a Study of Some Anglo-Norman Manuscripts of Wace's Roman
de BrutRoman de Brut - Francoise H M Le Saux
Fearing God, Honouring the King: The Career of Robert de Chaury,
Bishop of Carlisle, 1267-1278 - Henry Summerson
Cloistered Women and Male Authority: Power and Authority in
Yorkshire Nunneries in the Later Middle Ages - Janet Burton
Taxation and Settlement in Medieval Devon - H S A Fox
Clipstone Peel: Fortification and Politics from Bannockburn to the
Treaty of Leake, 1314-1318 - David Crook
Royal Patronage and Political Allegiance: The Household Knights of
Edward II, 1314-1321 - Margo Todd
`Edward II' in Italy: English and Welsh Political Exiles and
Fugitives in Continental Europe, 1322-1364 - Seymour Phillips
Michael Prestwich is Professor of History at the University of Durham. DAVID CROOK, now retired, spent his working life in The National Archives, where he became immersed in the extensive surviving early records of the English royal administration and common law. From those sources have emerged important findings which may identify a real criminal as the original of the legendary English outlaw Robin Hood. HENRY SUMMERSON was awarded his Ph.D. by Cambridge University for a thesis on crime and law enforcement in England, 1227-1263. He has continued to work in this field, publishing numerous articles on aspects of medieval criminality, and editions, alone or in collaboration, of three crown pleas rolls, for Devon in 1238, Wiltshire in 1268 and Lancashire in 1292. Janet Burton is Professor of Medieval History at University of Wales Trinity Saint David, Lampeter and the author of many books and articles on monastic history. LOUISE J. WILKINSON is Professor of Medieval Studies, University of Lincoln.
Specialists in various aspects of the history of thirteenth century
England will be grateful for the excellent contributions contained
in this fine volume.
*THE MEDIEVAL REVIEW*
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