From introduction: It is perhaps inevitable that both the public and personal piety of Scotland’s thirteenth-century kings should appear, at first, unremarkable in contrast to that of the long-reigning Henry III of England and Louis IX of France. Henry’s consuming spiritual and material investment at Westminster Abbey in the cult of his ancestor, Edward the Confessor, and, from 1247, the associated veneration at that house of a Holy Blood relic, were but the most outward signs of a deep personal faith wedded tightly to Plantagenet political ends. The studies of David Carpenter, Paul Binski, Nicholas Vincent, Sarah Dixon-Smith and others have revealed in Henry a commitment to a wide, varied and costly round of religious building as well as d...
Charles the Bold claimed sovereignty resided in his personal body and was legitimised by his virtues...
The Anglo-Scottish wars of the later middle ages cannot be adequately explained by a catalogue of ba...
PhDThis study takes as its theme the relationship of the English and French kings and the religious...
From introduction: It is perhaps inevitable that both the public and personal piety of Scotland’s th...
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...
This article surveys the development of the religious devotions and court life of David II of Scotla...
This paper seeks to question the assumption that the outbreak of prolonged Anglo-Scottish war in 129...
Two notable late‐medieval images depicting St Edmund King and Martyr, or his shrine, associate his c...
In its first half, this paper presents an overview of recent research on the popular experience of r...
In its first half, this paper presents an overview of recent research on the popular experience of r...
The personal reign of Alexander III of Scotland saw a dramatic reversal of the weak monarchy, divid...
In July 1220, the boy king Henry III attended the translation of St Thomas Becket at Canterbury, whe...
The personal piety and devotions to saints and their relics of Scotland's most famous medieval monar...
Henry’s piety has received much attention from historians. They have particularly focused on the cul...
Charles the Bold claimed sovereignty resided in his personal body and was legitimised by his virtues...
The Anglo-Scottish wars of the later middle ages cannot be adequately explained by a catalogue of ba...
PhDThis study takes as its theme the relationship of the English and French kings and the religious...
From introduction: It is perhaps inevitable that both the public and personal piety of Scotland’s th...
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...
This article surveys the development of the religious devotions and court life of David II of Scotla...
This paper seeks to question the assumption that the outbreak of prolonged Anglo-Scottish war in 129...
Two notable late‐medieval images depicting St Edmund King and Martyr, or his shrine, associate his c...
In its first half, this paper presents an overview of recent research on the popular experience of r...
In its first half, this paper presents an overview of recent research on the popular experience of r...
The personal reign of Alexander III of Scotland saw a dramatic reversal of the weak monarchy, divid...
In July 1220, the boy king Henry III attended the translation of St Thomas Becket at Canterbury, whe...
The personal piety and devotions to saints and their relics of Scotland's most famous medieval monar...
Henry’s piety has received much attention from historians. They have particularly focused on the cul...
Charles the Bold claimed sovereignty resided in his personal body and was legitimised by his virtues...
The Anglo-Scottish wars of the later middle ages cannot be adequately explained by a catalogue of ba...
PhDThis study takes as its theme the relationship of the English and French kings and the religious...