Military communities in late Medieval England : essays in honour of Andrew Ayton

Author(s)

    • Baker, Gary P.
    • Lambert, Craig L.
    • Simpkin, David

Bibliographic Information

Military communities in late Medieval England : essays in honour of Andrew Ayton

edited by Gary P. Baker, Craig L. Lambert and David Simpkin

(Warfare in history)

Boydell Press, 2018

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. [271]-273

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The theme of warfare as a collective enterprise investigated in the theatres of both land and sea. From warhorses to the men-at-arms who rode them; armies that were raised to the lords who recruited, led, administered, and financed them; and ships to the mariners who crewed them; few aspects of the organisation and logistics ofwar in late medieval England have escaped the scholarly attention, or failed to benefit from the insights, of Dr Andrew Ayton. The concept of the military community, with its emphasis on warfare as a collective social enterprise, has always lain at the heart of his work; he has shown in particular how this age of warfare is characterised by related but intersecting military communities, marked not only by the social and political relationships within armies and navies, but by communities of mind, experience, and enterprise. The essays in this volume, ranging from the late thirteenth to the early fifteenth century, address various aspects of this idea. They offer investigations of soldiers' and mariners' equipment; their obligations, functions, status, and recruitment; and the range and duration of their service. Gary P. Baker is a Research Associate at the University of East Angliaand a Researcher in History at the University of Groningen; Craig L. Lambert is Lecturer in Maritime History at the University of Southampton; David Simpkin teaches history at Birkenhead Sixth-Form College. Contributors: Gary P. Baker, Adrian R. Bell, Peter Coss, Anne Curry, Robert W. Jones, Andy King, Craig L. Lambert, Tony K. Moore, J.J.N. Palmer, Philip Preston, Michael Prestwich, Matthew Raven, Clifford J. Rogers, Nigel Saul, David Simpkin.

Table of Contents

Andrew Ayton: A Recognition of his Work Foreword by Nigel Saul Adrew Ayton: A Brief Tribute 'Big and Beautiful'. Destriers in Edward I's Armies - Michael C Prestwich Cum Equis Discoopertis: The 'Irish' Hobelar in the English Armies of the Fourteenth Century - Robert W. Jones Andrew Ayton, the Military Community and the Evolution of the Gentry in Fourteenth-Century England - Peter Coss Knights Banneret, Military Recruitment and Social Status, c.1270-c.1420: A View from the Reign of Edward I - David Simpkin Sir Henry of Beaumont and his Retainers: The Dynamics of a Lord's Military Retinues and Affinity in Early Fourteenth-Century England - Andy King Financing the Dynamics of Recruitment: King, Earls and Government in Edwardian England, 1330-60 - Matt Raven The Symbolic Meaning of Edward III's Garter Badge - Clifford J. Rogers Sir Robert Knolles' Expedition to France in 1370: New Perspectives - Gary Baker The Organisation and Financing of English Expeditions to the Baltic during the Later Middle Ages - Tony K. Moore The Organisation and Financing of English Expeditions to the Baltic during the Later Middle Ages - Adrian R. Bell Naval Service and the Cinque Ports, 1322-1453 - Craig Lambert The Garrison Establishment in Lancastrian Normandy in 1436 according to Surviving Lists in Bibliotheque Nationale de France manuscrit francais 25773 - Anne Curry Bibliography of the Writings of Andrew Ayton

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