This article examines the reported speech of individuals who were accused of voicing criticism of the monarch or of royal government in fourteenth-century England. These words were attributed to individuals outside of the social elite, who were then drawn into political discourses shaped by the ideologies and institutional structures of the royal courts. This process might influence relations between neighbours and local communities, as well as between individuals and the officials who represented the Crown. When we think about how this affects our understanding of late medieval political culture, we need to think about the whole context of the accusation: the role of ‘informers’, witnesses and local juries. Political news sometimes emanate...
Edward I of England (1272-1307), best known to modern audiences as ‘the Hammer of the Scots’ and the...
This dissertation explores the formation of the English parliament in the fourteenth century and tra...
My dissertation tells the story of how the separation of voice and meaning in discursive structures ...
This article examines the reported speech of individuals who were accused of voicing criticism of th...
This thesis uncovers and elucidates the cultural and political significance of noble reputation in l...
The thesis conceived of corruption, an inherently amorphous term, as complaint directed against offi...
In the second half of the fourteenth century, petitioners hoping to secure royal grace began address...
The summaries of chancellors' sermons contained in the parliament rolls are invaluable but underused...
This paper looks at popular political speech during the civil conflicts in fifteenth-century England...
Although the traditional divide between the late medieval and the early modern periods has increasin...
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...
The significance of war in the development of the medieval English parliament is well known. The ori...
The York House Books provide much-cited evidence of Richard III's relationship with the City of York...
This dissertation argues that kings were central to the formation of vernacular literary culture in ...
Edward I of England (1272-1307), best known to modern audiences as ‘the Hammer of the Scots’ and the...
This dissertation explores the formation of the English parliament in the fourteenth century and tra...
My dissertation tells the story of how the separation of voice and meaning in discursive structures ...
This article examines the reported speech of individuals who were accused of voicing criticism of th...
This thesis uncovers and elucidates the cultural and political significance of noble reputation in l...
The thesis conceived of corruption, an inherently amorphous term, as complaint directed against offi...
In the second half of the fourteenth century, petitioners hoping to secure royal grace began address...
The summaries of chancellors' sermons contained in the parliament rolls are invaluable but underused...
This paper looks at popular political speech during the civil conflicts in fifteenth-century England...
Although the traditional divide between the late medieval and the early modern periods has increasin...
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...
The significance of war in the development of the medieval English parliament is well known. The ori...
The York House Books provide much-cited evidence of Richard III's relationship with the City of York...
This dissertation argues that kings were central to the formation of vernacular literary culture in ...
Edward I of England (1272-1307), best known to modern audiences as ‘the Hammer of the Scots’ and the...
This dissertation explores the formation of the English parliament in the fourteenth century and tra...
My dissertation tells the story of how the separation of voice and meaning in discursive structures ...