This paper seeks to question the assumption that the outbreak of prolonged Anglo-Scottish war in 1296 brought an abrupt decline in Scottish interest in St Thomas, his shrine at Canterbury and the great abbey dedicated to him in Scotland at Arbroath. A survey of Scottish devotion to Becket after 1296 reveals that in fact the interest of the monarchy and certain sections of Scottish society intensified. For the two Bruce kings, devotion to Becket developed a double importance although in very different political contexts. For Robert I (1306-29) St Thomas, Canterbury and Arbroath served as both a focus of personal faith and of strategic observances in the struggle against England. However, for David II (1329-71), captured in battle against Eng...
By the fifteenth century St Andrew had been firmly established as the formal patron saint of Scotlan...
This thesis is an examination of the most important Scottish saints’ cults and pilgrimage centres in...
By the fifteenth century St Andrew had been firmly established as the formal patron saint of Scotlan...
In July 1220, the boy king Henry III attended the translation of St Thomas Becket at Canterbury, whe...
A survey of relations between the MacDonald lordship of the Isles and the Bruce kings of Scotland, R...
This paper will explore the sources and extant evidence relevant to the development and management o...
The Anglo-Scottish wars of the later middle ages cannot be adequately explained by a catalogue of ba...
The Anglo-Scottish wars of the later middle ages cannot be adequately explained by a catalogue of ba...
This paper will explore the sources and extant evidence relevant to the development and management o...
A survey of relations between the MacDonald lordship of the Isles and the Bruce kings of Scotland, R...
This article surveys the development of the religious devotions and court life of David II of Scotla...
In 1170 the murder of Archbishop Thomas Becket in his own Cathedral sent shockwaves through Europe, ...
This paper explores for the first time the use of liturgy and ceremonial as part of Robert I/Bruce's...
This paper explores for the first time the use of liturgy and ceremonial as part of Robert I/Bruce's...
English interest in the great Cistercian abbey of Pontigny was stimulated by the exiles there of two...
By the fifteenth century St Andrew had been firmly established as the formal patron saint of Scotlan...
This thesis is an examination of the most important Scottish saints’ cults and pilgrimage centres in...
By the fifteenth century St Andrew had been firmly established as the formal patron saint of Scotlan...
In July 1220, the boy king Henry III attended the translation of St Thomas Becket at Canterbury, whe...
A survey of relations between the MacDonald lordship of the Isles and the Bruce kings of Scotland, R...
This paper will explore the sources and extant evidence relevant to the development and management o...
The Anglo-Scottish wars of the later middle ages cannot be adequately explained by a catalogue of ba...
The Anglo-Scottish wars of the later middle ages cannot be adequately explained by a catalogue of ba...
This paper will explore the sources and extant evidence relevant to the development and management o...
A survey of relations between the MacDonald lordship of the Isles and the Bruce kings of Scotland, R...
This article surveys the development of the religious devotions and court life of David II of Scotla...
In 1170 the murder of Archbishop Thomas Becket in his own Cathedral sent shockwaves through Europe, ...
This paper explores for the first time the use of liturgy and ceremonial as part of Robert I/Bruce's...
This paper explores for the first time the use of liturgy and ceremonial as part of Robert I/Bruce's...
English interest in the great Cistercian abbey of Pontigny was stimulated by the exiles there of two...
By the fifteenth century St Andrew had been firmly established as the formal patron saint of Scotlan...
This thesis is an examination of the most important Scottish saints’ cults and pilgrimage centres in...
By the fifteenth century St Andrew had been firmly established as the formal patron saint of Scotlan...