The Hundred Years War
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Recent papers in The Hundred Years War
The aim of this paper is to highlight the interregional consequences of the Battle of Brignais and how the authorities handled the problem of the routiers after having been exposed to Petit Meschin and Seguin du Badefol, the leaders of... more
"By Fire and Sword: Bellum Hostile and 'Civilians' in the Hundred Years War,” in Civilians in the Path of War, ed. Mark Grimsley and Clifford J. Rogers (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2002): 33-78. Examines the nature of and... more
This article offers the first analysis of Anglo-Scottish tension at the general ecclesiastical council of Pavia-Siena (1423-4), where Thomas Murray, Abbot of Paisley, spearheaded attacks on the English delegation in the name of the French... more
The Jacquerie of 1358 is one of the most famous and mysterious peasant uprisings of the Middle Ages. Beginning in a small village but eventually overrunning most of northern France, the Jacquerie rebels destroyed noble castles and killed... more
Old maps convey messages about early spatial arrangements. In some cases, they also tell a story, and hence can be qualified as 'history maps'. The interpretation of such maps is not easy, because they are witnesses to a strong dichotomy... more
Studia z Dziejów Średniowiecza 22 (2018), pp. 41-55.
The Hundred Years War (1337-1453) dominated life in England and France for well over a century. It became the defining feature of existence for generations. This sweeping book is the first to tell the human story of the longest military... more
Co-authored with Anne Curry, Peter Hoskins and Thom Richardson The Battle of Agincourt on October, 25, 1415, remains one of the most glorious victories in British history, with a legacy that endures today. A pivotal moment in the Hundred... more
An atlas of maps to accompany primary source readings in Ancient and Medieval Warfare, including the siege of Syracuse during the Peloponnesian War, the battle of Cynoscephalae, the Granicus, the Jugurthan War, Caesar's Gallic and Civil... more
Individual strand designed and taught for HIST1300: Primary Sources for the Historian on 'The Chronicles of Froissart and the Fourteenth Century'.
The overt mercantilism of The Libelle of Englyshe Polycye has overshadowed important questions surrounding the poem’s purpose and literary form. As the work attempts to justify economic protectionism, its preoccupation with legal and... more
Discusses the strong advantage of the tactical defense for late-medieval infantry forces and the implications for strategy, especially offensive strategy.
Randolph Jones explores the penultimate document in the Textus Roffensis: a list for the defence of the Kentish coast in 1337. To read, see https://www.rochestercathedral.org/research/textus/232v-234r
Résumé : Si l’histoire de la guerre au Moyen-Âge font l’objet d’une place reconnue dans le champ de la recherche universitaire, il faut bien reconnaître que rares sont les tentatives de braquer la focale sur le guerrier et ses armes en... more
La guerra forse più lunga della storia, durata oltre 100 anni, che la cronologia anglosassone suddivide in più fasi intervallate da periodi di interruzione se non di pace: dalla Guerra Edoardiana, alla Pace di Bretigny, alla Guerra... more
The impact and legacy of Scottish raiding of Northern England during the First Scottish War of Independence has been the subject of significant study. English evidence in particular provides quite detailed accounts of the extent of the... more
La guerra forse più lunga della storia, durata oltre 100 anni, che la cronologia anglosassone suddivide in più fasi intervallate da periodi di interruzione se non di pace: dalla Guerra Edoardiana, alla Pace di Bretigny, alla Guerra... more
This is the only English translation based on the recent critical edition by Daniel Hobbins. Another reliable translation (though based on an earlier edition) can be found in Craig Taylor's source volume "Joan of Arc: La Pucelle"... more
Bedford was a crucial player in the Hundred Years War. The brother of Henry V and nemesis of Joan of Arc, Bedford also won a great victory in 1424 at the Battle of Verneuil that became known as the "Second Agincourt"
Published in the "Revue Historique de Bordeaux et du département de la Gironde", no. 20, 2014. Several unpublished documents permit to know the paid truces (the "patis") made between places of Aquitaine-Gascony, particularly... more
Chapter 5: Henry V and the Tower of London, by Malcolm Mercer
Chapter 12: The English Army at the Battle and its Commanders, by Anne Curry and Malcolm Mercer
Chapter 12: The English Army at the Battle and its Commanders, by Anne Curry and Malcolm Mercer
This article offers a study and edition of a collection of Middle English recipes for gunpowder from the early fifteenth century in London, Society of Antiquaries, MS 101. These are entirely unknown outside of their descriptions in a few... more
"This article explores the politics of owning, or taking ownership, of Bible historiale manuscripts during the Hundred Years’ War. As theft and capture disrupted predictable patterns of patronage and exchange, new owners’ additions,... more
This piece describes the recruitment of Henry V's army in 1415 for a special edition of the popular journal, Medieval Warfare
Published in "Les Cahiers du Bazadais", no. 152 (2006). This article is about the political song written by the late troubadour Pey de Ladils of the town of Bazas (now in département Gironde, France) about the conflict in Gascony between... more
Published in "Nottingham Medieval Studies", L, 2006, pp. 59-114. Contrary to assumed ideas, the support of inhabitants of the principality of Aquitaine to its prince Edward of Woodstock (nicknamed "the Black Prince" from the 16th century... more
Was Joan of Arc mentally unstable? Did she fabricate her visions and voices? Or, was Joan of Arc really visited by the saints - as she claimed - who delivered a message from God, sending her on a mission that would ultimately save... more
Book review of: Michael Livingston and Kelly DeVries, eds, 'The Battle of Crécy: A Casebook' (Liverpool University Press, 2015), in De re militari, published online 18 May 2016... more
This paper was submitted as my undergraduate dissertation in April 2014. The paper examines the armies raised by John of Gaunt, first duke of Lancaster, in 1373 and 1378. In particular, this work looks at the identifiable individuals who... more
"""Bodiam Castle, one of the most visually striking medieval castles in England, is situated in East Sussex on the river Rother, near Robertsbridge. In 1385 Sir Edward Dallingridge (c.1364-1393) was licensed to ‘strengthen with a wall of... more
Que sait-on vraiment de l'art de la guerre dans la première moitié du XVe siècle? Cet article propose d'étudier 3 opérations militaires impliquant la ville de Bordeaux entre 1406 et 1450. Il s'interroge sur la tactique, sur la... more
Encyclopedia entry: Summary of the Hundred Years War in six thousand words.
Published in "Les Cahiers du Bazadais", no. 187, December 2014. This paper is about the family of Preissac whose elder members where nicknamed Soudan of la Trau. They were issued from a nephew of Pope Clement V and its most famous... more
Argues that despite some historians' claims to the contrary, the English longbow in the fourteenth and early fifteenth century was a highly effective weapon, able to wound and kill even armored men-at-arms
Abstract The Hundred Years War has had a profound impact on the history of France and England. Yet its impact and importance on the history of other European countries and of Europe in general has been overlooked and much less studied.... more
There was nothing second-rate about the English way of war in the Late Middle Ages, argues Tobias Capwell, Curator of Arms and Armour at London’s Wallace Collection, in a major new study published late last year. The early 15th-century... more