In an attempt to connect legal, cultural, and intellectual approaches to the history of late medieval England, this article expands upon and complements the reflections of J. W. Gough on the expression ‘flowers of the crown’, first presented in the Notes and Documents of the English Historical Review in 1962. After the Angevin kings endorsed floriated crown designs, a number of poets, clerics, and common lawyers worked flowers into their appraisals of royal power, it is revealed. Up to the Stuarts, this metaphor was especially helpful for suggesting that prerogative donations and delegations, like flowers, eventually die once plucked from their source. This is a finding that prompts consideration of the circumstances compelling jurists and ...
This study highlights late Middle English Arthurian texts in light of the mirrors for princes genre,...
This dissertation asks to what end were so many Ovidian poems written during the last fifteen years ...
In the second half of the fourteenth century, petitioners hoping to secure royal grace began address...
This article connects legal history with cultural and intellectual approaches to the history of late...
This paper is about how the image of Elizabethan monarch was constructed as a sacred figure and how ...
The paper represents the structured reflection on the images/conceptions of a crown interwoven with ...
Trees of Thought demonstrates how late medieval English poets used the properties of trees, from the...
This dissertation examines three crucial texts written and translated from Latin into Old English be...
This book explores the nature of the Crown in its legal and political context. Here the term The Cro...
During the XIIth century the court of Henry II had a leading role in the construction of the idea o...
Through an analysis of three masques presented at the Inns of Court between 1561 and 1613, this arti...
The Tudor dynasty of Early Modern England has long-fascinated historians. They collectively represen...
The introduction of the angel and later the Tudor sovereign gold coins in the late 1400s became part...
The luxury and scandal; the pleasures and pains of royalty have continually constructed and reconstr...
As the English people were relieved from the threat of war, the castles lost their importance as the...
This study highlights late Middle English Arthurian texts in light of the mirrors for princes genre,...
This dissertation asks to what end were so many Ovidian poems written during the last fifteen years ...
In the second half of the fourteenth century, petitioners hoping to secure royal grace began address...
This article connects legal history with cultural and intellectual approaches to the history of late...
This paper is about how the image of Elizabethan monarch was constructed as a sacred figure and how ...
The paper represents the structured reflection on the images/conceptions of a crown interwoven with ...
Trees of Thought demonstrates how late medieval English poets used the properties of trees, from the...
This dissertation examines three crucial texts written and translated from Latin into Old English be...
This book explores the nature of the Crown in its legal and political context. Here the term The Cro...
During the XIIth century the court of Henry II had a leading role in the construction of the idea o...
Through an analysis of three masques presented at the Inns of Court between 1561 and 1613, this arti...
The Tudor dynasty of Early Modern England has long-fascinated historians. They collectively represen...
The introduction of the angel and later the Tudor sovereign gold coins in the late 1400s became part...
The luxury and scandal; the pleasures and pains of royalty have continually constructed and reconstr...
As the English people were relieved from the threat of war, the castles lost their importance as the...
This study highlights late Middle English Arthurian texts in light of the mirrors for princes genre,...
This dissertation asks to what end were so many Ovidian poems written during the last fifteen years ...
In the second half of the fourteenth century, petitioners hoping to secure royal grace began address...