This thesis uncovers and elucidates the cultural and political significance of noble reputation in late medieval England between 1377 and 1437. Changes in the wake of the Black Death placed pressure upon the nobility and increasing emphasis upon their reputations. The late fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries witnessed the re-enactment of Scandalum Magnatum statutes to protect noble reputation under law, and the foundation of the court of chivalry, which offered the nobility an avenue by which they might defend their conduct, lineage and right to carry their family coats of arms. Focusing on both the secular and clerical nobility, the thesis uses contemporary chronicles, legal sources including depositions from the court of chivalry...
This thesis is a prosopographical study of the English baronage during the reign of Richard II. It ...
This article examines the reported speech of individuals who were accused of voicing criticism of th...
This dissertation traces the failure of the late medieval English gentry to define themselves, and t...
This thesis examines the relationship between the commemorative strategies of English noblemen in th...
This thesis examines the late medieval English royal custom of bestowing robes of the Garter to wome...
This thesis examines the political and social responses of the Anglo-Norman aristocracy between 1087...
This thesis focuses on the relationship between kingship and usurpation in the period between the de...
This thesis is a study in how the political culture of the reign of Henry III was conditioned by its...
This thesis examines how English towns and townsmen interacted with the aristocracy in the late midd...
This thesis examines the 'Long Parliament' of 1406 as an example of politics and legislation in Eng...
This research is a prosopographical study of 24 milites regis, or king's knights, aiming to investig...
Chivalry is a word which holds complex meanings. During the Middle Ages, the idea of chivalry was at...
This study examines the social, cultural and political significance and utility of the livery collar...
The thesis conceived of corruption, an inherently amorphous term, as complaint directed against offi...
In fifteenth century England, there were significant changes to the way kingship operated and was vi...
This thesis is a prosopographical study of the English baronage during the reign of Richard II. It ...
This article examines the reported speech of individuals who were accused of voicing criticism of th...
This dissertation traces the failure of the late medieval English gentry to define themselves, and t...
This thesis examines the relationship between the commemorative strategies of English noblemen in th...
This thesis examines the late medieval English royal custom of bestowing robes of the Garter to wome...
This thesis examines the political and social responses of the Anglo-Norman aristocracy between 1087...
This thesis focuses on the relationship between kingship and usurpation in the period between the de...
This thesis is a study in how the political culture of the reign of Henry III was conditioned by its...
This thesis examines how English towns and townsmen interacted with the aristocracy in the late midd...
This thesis examines the 'Long Parliament' of 1406 as an example of politics and legislation in Eng...
This research is a prosopographical study of 24 milites regis, or king's knights, aiming to investig...
Chivalry is a word which holds complex meanings. During the Middle Ages, the idea of chivalry was at...
This study examines the social, cultural and political significance and utility of the livery collar...
The thesis conceived of corruption, an inherently amorphous term, as complaint directed against offi...
In fifteenth century England, there were significant changes to the way kingship operated and was vi...
This thesis is a prosopographical study of the English baronage during the reign of Richard II. It ...
This article examines the reported speech of individuals who were accused of voicing criticism of th...
This dissertation traces the failure of the late medieval English gentry to define themselves, and t...