Harlaxton Medieval Studies I (Old Series) Proceedings of...

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Copies of the Harlaxton Medieval Series are available from: SHAUN TYAS / PAUL WATKINS PUBLISHING, 1 High Street, Donington, Lincolnshire, PE11 4TA E: [email protected] T: +44 (0)1775 821 542 Harlaxton Medieval Studies I (Old Series) Proceedings of the 1984 Harlaxton Symposium: England in the Thirteenth Century, ed. W. M. Ormrod Articles: M. T. Clanchy, England in the Thirteenth Century: Power and Knowledge, 1–14 Adelaide Bennett, A Late Thirteenth-Century Psalter-Hours from London, 15–30 Michael Camille, Illustrations in Harley MS 3487 and the Perception of Aristotle’s Libri naturales in Thirteenth-Century England, 31–44 D. A. Carpenter, An Unknown Obituary of King Henry III from the Year 1263, 45–51 E. C. Fernie, Two Aspects of Bishop Walter de Suffield’s Lady Chapel at Norwich Cathedral, 52–55 John Glenn, A Note on a Syllogism of Robert Grosseteste, 56–59 John Glenn, Notes on the Mappa Mundi in Hereford Cathedral, 60–63 Brian Golding, Burials and Benefactions: an Aspect of Monastic Patronage in Thirteenth-Century England, 64–75 George Henderson, The Imagery of St Guthlac of Crowland, 76–94 Virginia Jansen, Lambeth Palace Chapel, the Temple Choir, and Southern English Gothic Architecture of c. 1215–1240, 95–99 Flora Lewis, The Veronica: Image, Legend and Viewer, 100–106 Suzanne Lewis, Giles de Bridport and the Abingdon Apocalypse, 107–119 Michael Prestwich, The Piety of Edward I, 120–128 M. E. Roberts, The Relic of the Holy Blood and the Iconography of the Thirteenth- Century North Transept Portal of Westminster Abbey, 129–142

Transcript of Harlaxton Medieval Studies I (Old Series) Proceedings of...

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Copies of the Harlaxton Medieval Series are available from:

SHAUN TYAS / PAUL WATKINS PUBLISHING,1 High Street,

Donington, Lincolnshire, PE11 4TA

E: [email protected]: +44 (0)1775 821 542

Harlaxton Medieval Studies I (Old Series)Proceedings of the 1984 Harlaxton Symposium: England inthe Thirteenth Century, ed. W. M. Ormrod

Articles:

M. T. Clanchy, England in the Thirteenth Century: Power and Knowledge, 1–14

Adelaide Bennett, A Late Thirteenth-Century Psalter-Hours from London, 15–30

Michael Camille, Illustrations in Harley MS 3487 and the Perception of Aristotle’s Librinaturales in Thirteenth-Century England, 31–44

D. A. Carpenter, An Unknown Obituary of King Henry III from the Year 1263, 45–51

E. C. Fernie, Two Aspects of Bishop Walter de Suffield’s Lady Chapel at NorwichCathedral, 52–55

John Glenn, A Note on a Syllogism of Robert Grosseteste, 56–59

John Glenn, Notes on the Mappa Mundi in Hereford Cathedral, 60–63

Brian Golding, Burials and Benefactions: an Aspect of Monastic Patronage inThirteenth-Century England, 64–75

George Henderson, The Imagery of St Guthlac of Crowland, 76–94

Virginia Jansen, Lambeth Palace Chapel, the Temple Choir, and Southern EnglishGothic Architecture of c. 1215–1240, 95–99

Flora Lewis, The Veronica: Image, Legend and Viewer, 100–106

Suzanne Lewis, Giles de Bridport and the Abingdon Apocalypse, 107–119

Michael Prestwich, The Piety of Edward I, 120–128

M. E. Roberts, The Relic of the Holy Blood and the Iconography of the Thirteenth-Century North Transept Portal of Westminster Abbey, 129–142

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D. A. Stocker, The Tomb and Shrine of Bishop Grosseteste in Lincoln Cathedral, 143–148

Martin W. Walsh, Performing Dame Sirith: Farce and Fabliaux at the End of theThirteenth Century, 149–165

Daniel Williams, Simon de Montfort and his Adherents, 166–177

Harlaxton Medieval Studies II (Old Series)Proceedings of the 1985 Harlaxton Symposium: England inthe Fourteenth Century, ed. W. M. Ormrod

Articles:

Adelaide Bennett, Anthony Bek’s Copy of Statuta Angliae, 1–27

Paul Binski & David Park, A Ducciesque Episode at Ely: The Mural Decorations ofPrior Crauden’s Chapel, 28–41

Lynda Dennison, ‘The Fitzwarin Psalter and its Allies’: a Reappraisal, 42–66

Anthony Goodman, John of Gaunt, 67–87

George Henderson, A Royal Effigy at Arbroath, 88–98

Michael Jones, Edward III’s Captains in Brittany, 99–118

Phillip Lindley, The Fourteenth-Century Architectural Programme at Ely Cathedral,119–129

J. R. Maddicott, Poems of Social Protest in Early Fourteenth-Century England, 130–144

A. K. McHardy, The Lincolnshire Clergy in the Later Fourteenth Century, 145–151

Bernard William McLane, Change in the Court of King’s Bench, 1291–1340: ThePreliminary View from Lincolnshire, 152–160

Richard K. Morris, The Architecture of the Earls of Warwick in the FourteenthCentury, 161–174

W. M. Ormrod, The English Government and the Black Death of 1348–49, 175–188

J. R. S. Phillips, Edward II and the Prophets, 189–201

M. E. Roberts, John Carter at St. Stephen’s Chapel: a Romantic turns Archaeologist,202–212

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Nicholas J. Rogers, The Old Proctor’s Book: A Cambridge Manuscript of c. 1390, 213–223

Lucy Freeman Sandler, Face to Face with God: A Pictorial Image of the BeatificVision, 224–235

Kay Staniland, Court Style, Painters, and the Great Wardrobe, 236–246

John Taylor, The French Prose Brut: Popular History in Fourteenth-Century England,247–254

T. S. Tolley, Some Historical Interests at Sherborne c. 1400, 255–266

D. J. Turner, Bodiam, Sussex: True Castle or Old Soldier’s Dream House?, 267–277

Martin W. Walsh, Divine Cuckold/Holy Fool: The Comic Image of Joseph in theEnglish ‘Troubles’ Play, 278–297

Nigel Wilkins, En Regardant Vers Le Païs de France: the Ballade and the Rondeau, aCross-Channel History, 298–323

Harlaxton Medieval Studies III (Old Series)Proceedings of the 1986 Harlaxton Symposium: England inthe Fifteenth Century, ed. Daniel Williams

Articles:

Ian Arthurson, The King's Voyage into Scotland: The War that Never Was, 1–22

Janet Backhouse, Founders of the Royal Library: Edward IV and Henry VII asCollectors of Illuminated Manuscripts, 23–41

Marian Campbell, English Goldsmiths in the Fifteenth Century, 43–52

Christine Carpenter, The Religion of the Gentry of Fifteenth-Century England, 53–74

A. S. G. Edwards, The Manuscripts and Texts of the Second Version of JohnHardyng’s Chronicle, 75–84

P. W. Fleming, The Hautes and their ‘Circle’: Culture and the English Gentry, 85–102

John Glenn, The World Map of Pierre d’Ailly, 103–110

G. L. Harriss, Henry Beaufort, ‘Cardinal of England’, 111–127

Michael K. Jones, Collyweston – an Early Tudor Palace, 129–141

George R. Keiser, St Jerome and the Brigittines: Visions of the Afterlife in Fifteenth-Century England, 143–152

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Phillip Lindley, Figure-Sculpture at Winchester in the Fifteenth Century: A NewChronology, 153–166

S. J. Payling, The Widening Franchise – Parliamentary Elections in LancastrianNottinghamshire, 167–185

Ann Payne, The Salisbury Rolls of Arms c.1463, 187–198

Colin Richmond, The Sulyard Papers: The Rewards of a Small Family Archive, 199–228

Nicholas J. Rogers, Fitzwilliam Museum MS 3–1979: A Bury St Edmunds Book ofHours and the Origins of the Bury Style, 229–243

Lynda Rollason, English Alabasters in the Fifteenth Century, 245–254

John Scattergood, Fashion and Morality in the Late Middle Ages, 255–272

Pamela Sheingorn, The Bosom of Abraham Trinity: A Late Medieval All Saints Image,273–295

Kay Staniland, Royal Entry into the World, 297–313

R. L. Storey, The Universities During the Wars of the Roses, 315–327

Jenny Stratford, The Manuscripts of John, Duke of Bedford: Library and Chapel, 329–350

Pamela Tudor-Craig, The Hours of Edward V and William Lord Hastings: BritishLibrary Manuscript Additional 54782, 351–369

Daniel Williams, The Crowland Chronicle 616–1500, 371–390

Harlaxton Medieval Studies IV (Old Series)Proceedings of the 1987 Harlaxton Symposium: EarlyTudor England, ed. Daniel Williams

Articles:

Janet Backhouse, Illuminated Manuscripts and the Early Development of the PortraitMiniature, 1–17

P. W. Fleming, Household Servants of the Yorkist and Early Tudor Gentry, 19–36

J. M. Fletcher & C. A. Upton, Feasting in an Early Tudor College: The Example ofMerton College Oxford, 37–59

John Glenn, A Sixteenth-Century Library: the Francis Trigge Chained Library of StWulfram's Church, Grantham, 61–71

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Christa Grössinger, Humour and Folly in English Misericords of the First Quarter ofthe Sixteenth Century, 73–85

S. J. Gunn, The Act of Resumption of 1515, 87–106

Andrew Martindale, The Ashwellthorpe Triptych, 107–123

Richard K. Morris, Windows in Early Tudor Country Houses, 125–138

Elizabeth Porges Watson, The Denzill Holles Commonplace Book: Memoranda of aCountry Gentleman, c. 1558 Nottingham University Lib. MS PV I, 139–155

John Scattergood, Skelton and Heresy, 157–170

Pamela Sheingorn, The Te Deum Altarpiece and the Iconography of Praise, 171–182

Pamela Tudor-Craig, Henry VIII and King David, 183–205

Daniel Williams, The Catesbys 1485–1568: The Restoration of a Family to Fortune,Grace and Favour, 207–221

Janet Wilson, The Sermons of Roger Edgeworth: Reformation Preaching in Bristol,223–240

Harlaxton Medieval Studies V (Old Series)Proceedings of the 1988 Harlaxton Symposium: England inthe Twelfth Century, ed. Daniel Williams

Articles:

Adrian Ailes, Heraldry in Twelfth-Century England: the Evidence, 1–16

Jim Bradbury, The Early Years of the Reign of Stephen 1135–9, 17–30

Marsha L. Dutton, The Conversion and Vocation of Aelred of Rievaulx: a HistoricalHypothesis, 31–49

John Glenn, Adelard of Bath and the Applications of Geometry: A Note, 51–53

Antonia Gransden, Prologues in the Historiography of Twelfth-Century England, 55–81

Judith Green, Aristocratic Loyalties on the Northern Frontier of England, c.1100–1174, 83–100

P. D. A. Harvey, Non-Agrarian Activities in Twelfth-Century English Estate Surveys,101–111

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George Henderson, Sortes Biblicae in Twelfth-Century England: the List of EpiscopalPrognostics in Cambridge, Trinity College MS R.7.5, 113–135

T. A. Heslop, Romanesque Painting and Social Distinction: the Magi and theShepherds, 137–152

Henry Loyn, Epic and Romance, 153–163

John McLoughlin, Amicitia in Practice: John of Salisbury (c. 1120–1180) and hisCircle, 165–181

Lyn Rodley, The Writing on the Wall (or not): an Aspect of Byzantine Influence onWestern Art, 183–192

Jennifer M. Sheppard, The Twelfth Century Library and Scriptorium at Buildwas:Assessing the Evidence, 193–204

Pamela Tudor-Craig, St Bernard and the Canterbury Capitals, 205–217

Martin W. Walsh, Babio: Toward a Performance Reconstruction of Secular Farce inTwelfth-Century England, 219–240

Daniel Williams, The Peverils and the Essebies 1066–1166: a Study in Early FeudalRelationships, 241–259

Harlaxton Medieval Studies I (New Series)Proceedings of the 1989 Harlaxton Symposium: England inthe Thirteenth Century, ed. W. M. Ormrod

Articles:

Edmund King, Estate Management and the Reform Movement, 1–14

W. M. Ormrod, State-Building and State Finance in the Reign of Edward I, 15–35

D. A. Postles, Heads of Religious Houses as Administrators, 37–50

Daniel Williams, Matthew Paris and the Thirteenth-Century Prospect of Asia, 51–67

Nigel Morgan, Texts and Images of Marian Devotion in Thirteenth-Century England,69–103

Judith S. Neaman, Magnification as Metaphor, 105–122

J. Cherry, Heraldry as Decoration in the Thirteenth Century, 123–134

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George Henderson, The Musician in the Stocks at Higham Ferrers, Northamptonshire,135–147

Graeme Lawson, The Musician in the Stocks at Higham Ferrers, Northamptonshire:An Archaeological Postscript, 149–154

Malcolm Thurlby, The West Front of Binham Priory, Norfolk, and the Beginnings ofBar Tracery in England, 155–165

Thomas Tolley, Eleanor of Castile and the ‘Spanish’ Style in England, 167–192

D. J. Turner, An Anthropomorphic Jug from Earlswood, Surrey: A Problem in theTypology of Decoration, 193–208

Alan Vince, The Origin and Development of the Decorated Medieval Jug, 209–225

Harlaxton Medieval Studies II (New Series)Proceedings of the 1990 Harlaxton Symposium: England inthe Eleventh Century, ed. Carola Hicks

Articles:

David Bates, The Conqueror’s Charters, 1–15

Henry Loyn, De Iure Domini Regis: A Comment on Royal authority in eleventh-century England, 17–24

Cassandra Potts, The Early Norman Charters: A New Perspective on an Old Debate,25–40

Matthew Strickland, Slaughter, Slavery or Ransom: the Impact of the Conquest onConduct in Warfare, 41–59

Patrick Wormald, Domesday Lawsuits: a Provisional List and Preliminary Comment,61–102

Joyce Hill, Monastic Reform and the Secular Church: Ælfric’s Pastoral Letters inContext, 103–117

Peter Jackson, The Vitas Patrum in Eleventh-Century Worcester, 119–134

Jane Martindale, Monasteries and Castles: the Priories of St-Florent de Saumur inEngland after 1066, 135–156

Nicholas Rogers, The Waltham Abbey Relic-List, 157–181

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David Rollason, Symeon of Durham and the Community of Durham in the EleventhCentury, 183–198

Jonathan Wilcox, The Dissemination of Wulfstan’s Homilies: the Wulfstan Tradition inEleventh-Century Vernacular Preaching, 199–217

Jan Gerchow, Prayers for King Cnut: The Liturgical Commemoration of a Conqueror,219–238

George Henderson, The Idiosyncrasy of Late Anglo-Saxon Religious Imagery, 239–249

Carola Hicks, The Borders of the Bayeux Tapestry, 251–265

Richard W. Pfaff, Eadui Basan: Scriptorum Princeps?, 267–283

Barbara Raw, What do we Mean by the Source of a Picture?, 285–300

E. C. Teviotdale, The Making of the Cotton Troper, 301–316

Cecily Clark, Domesday Book – a Great Red-herring: Thoughts on some Late-Eleventh-Century Orthographies, 317–331

Elisabeth Okasha, The English Language in the Eleventh Century: The Evidence fromInscriptions, 333–345

D. G. Scragg, Spelling Variations in Eleventh-Century English, 347–354

Addenda:

Shaun Tyas, The Harlaxton Symposium on Medieval England: A Bibliographical Note,355–356

Harlaxton Medieval Studies III (New Series)Proceedings of the 1991 Harlaxton Symposium: England inthe Fourteenth Century, ed. Nicholas Rogers

Articles:

Michael Camille, At the Edge of the Law: An Illustrated Register of Writs in thePierpont Morgan Library, 1–14

Lynda Dennison, Some Unlocated Leaves from an English Fourteenth-Century Bookof Hours now in Paris, 15–33

Nigel Morgan, Texts and Images of Marian Devotion in Fourteenth-Century England,34–57

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Lucy Freeman Sandler, The Image of the Book-owner in the Fourteenth Century:Three Cases of Self-definition, 58–80

Wendy Scase, St Anne and the Education of the Virgin: Literary and ArtisticTraditions and their Implications, 81–96

Stephen Medcalf, Motives for Pilgrimage: The Tale of Beryn, 97–108

James Simpson, ‘After Craftes Conseil clotheth yow and fede’: Langland and LondonCity Politics, 109–127

Thorlac Turville-Petre, The ‘Nation’ in English Writings of the Early FourteenthCentury, 128–139

P. H. Cullum, Poverty and Charity in Early Fourteenth-Century England, 140–151

Virginia Davis, Episcopal Ordination Lists as a Source for Clerical Mobility in Englandin the Fourteenth Century, 152–170

R. N. Swanson, Economic Change and Spiritual Profits: Receipts from the PeculiarJurisdiction of the Peak District in the Fourteenth Century, 171–195

Addenda:

The Harlaxton Symposium on Medieval England [anonymous note], 196;

Harlaxton Medieval Studies IV (New Series)Proceedings of the 1992 Harlaxton Symposium: England inthe Fifteenth Century, ed. Nicholas Rogers

Articles:

Rosemary Hayes, The ‘Private Life’ of a Late Medieval Bishop: William Alnwick,Bishop of Norwich and Lincoln, 1–18

Benjamin Thompson, The Laity, the Alien Priories, and the Redistribution ofEcclesiastical Property, 19–41

Michael K. Jones, The Relief of Avranches (1439): An English Feat of Arms at the Endof the Hundred Years War, 42–55

Daniel Williams, Richard III and his Overmighty Subjects: in Defence of a King, 56–71

J. I. Kermode, Medieval Indebtedness: The Regions versus London, 72–88

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Jane Laughton, Women in Court: Some Evidence from Fifteenth-Century Chester,89–99

Philippa Maddern, ‘Best Trusted Friends’: Concepts and Practices of Friendshipamong Fifteenth-Century Norfolk Gentry, 100–117

Anne F. Sutton, Caxton was a Mercer: his Social Milieu and Friends, 118–148

Scot McKendrick, The Romuléon and the Manuscripts of Edward IV, 149–169

Nicholas Rogers, The Artist of Trinity B.11.7 and his Patrons, 170–186

Jenny Stratford, The Royal Library in England before the Reign of Edward IV, 187–197

Jonathan Alexander, The Pulpit with the Four Doctors at St James’s, Castle Acre,Norfolk, 198–206

C. W. Marx, British Library Harley MS 1740 and Popular Devotion, 207–222

Nigel Morgan, The Coronation of the Virgin by the Trinity and Other Texts andImages of the Glorification of Mary in Fifteenth-Century England, 223–241

Colin Richmond, Margins and Marginality: English Devotion in the Later Middle Ages,242–252

Harlaxton Medieval Studies V (New Series)Proceedings of the 1993 Harlaxton Symposium: The Reignof Henry VII, ed. Benjamin Thompson (out of print)

Articles:

Benjamin Thompson, Introduction: the Place of Henry VII in English History, 1–10

Christine Carpenter, Henry VII and the English Polity, 11–30

John Watts, ‘A New Ffundacion of is Crowne’: Monarchy in the Age of Henry VII, 31–53

Dominic Luckett, Henry VII and the South-Western Escheators, 54–64

Malcolm Underwood, The Pope, the Queen and the King’s Mother: or, the Rise andFall of Adriano Castellesi, 65–81

Nigel Morgan, The Scala Coeli Indulgence and the Royal Chapels, 82–103

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David Thomson, Henry VII and the Uses of Italy: the Savoy Hospital and Henry VII’sPosterity, 104–116

Neil Beckett, Henry VII and Sheen Charterhouse, 117–132

Christopher Wilson, The Designer of Henry VII’s Chapel, Westminster Abbey, 133–156

Richard Marks, The Glazing of Henry VII’s Chapel, Westminster Abbey, 157–174

Janet Backhouse, Illuminated Manuscripts associated with Henry VII and Members ofhis Immediate Family, 175–187

Roger Bowers, Early Tudor Courtly Song: An Evaluation of the Fayrfax Book (BL,Additional MS 5465), 188–212

Magnus Williamson, The Eton Choirbook: Collegiate Music-Making in the Reign ofHenry VII, 213–228

Fiona Kisby, Courtiers in the Community: the Musicians of the Royal HouseholdChapel in Early Tudor Westminster, 229–260

Pamela Tudor-Craig, Margaret, Queen of Scotland, in Grantham, 8–9 July 1503, 261–279

Harlaxton Medieval Studies VI (New Series)Proceedings of the 1994 Harlaxton Symposium:Monasteries and Society in Medieval Britain, ed. BenjaminThompson

Articles:

Benjamin Thompson, Introduction: Monasteries and Medieval Society, 1–33

Sarah Foot, The Role of the Minster in Earlier Anglo-Saxon Society, 35–58

David Rollason, Monasteries and Society in Early Medieval Northumbria, 59–74

Isabel Henderson, Monasteries and Sculpture in the Insular pre-Viking Age: thePictish Evidence, 75–96

David Postles, Defensores Astabimus: Garendon Abbey and its Early Benefactors,97–136

D. F. Mackreth, Peterborough, from St Aethelwold to Martin de Bec c.970–1155,137–156

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Jack Higham, The Relationship Between the Abbey and Town of Peterborough from1200 to the Reformation, 157–176

Roger Bowers, The Almonry Schools of the English Monasteries c.1265–1540, 177–222

Lynda Dennison, Monastic or Secular? The Artist of the Ramsey Psalter, now atHolkham Hall, Norfolk, 223–261

Nicholas Rogers, Monuments to Monks and Monastic Servants, 262–276

Lynda Rollason, The Liver Vitae of Durham and Lay Association with DurhamCathedral Priory in the Later Middle Ages, 277–295

Marsha L. Dutton, Chaucer’s Two Nuns, 296–311

Joan Greatrex, Rabbits and Eels at High Table: Monks of Ely at the University ofCambridge, c1337–1539, 312–328

Janet Burton, Priory and Parish: Kirkham and its Parishioners 1496–7, 329–347

Barrie Dobson, English and Welsh Monastic Bishops: the Final Century 1433–1533,348–367

Addenda:

Pamela Tudor-Craig, Daniel Williams 368

Harlaxton Medieval Studies VII (New Series)Proceedings of the 1995 Harlaxton Symposium: Armies,Chivalry and Warfare in Medieval Britain and France, ed.Matthew Strickland

Articles:

Maurice Keen, Chaucer and Chivalry Re-visited, 1–12

Sonja Cameron, Chivalry and Warefare in Barbour’s Bruce, 13–29

Christopher Allmand, The Fifteenth-Century English Versions of Vegetius’ De ReMilitari, 30–45

Carol Edington, The Tournament in Medieval Scotland, 46–62

Richard K. Morris, The Architecture of Arthurian Enthusiasm: Castle Symbolism inthe Reigns of Edward I and His Successors, 63–81

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Jennie Hooper, The ‘Rows of the Battle-Swan’: The Aftermath of Battle in Anglo-Saxon Art, 82–99

Pamela Porter, The Ways of War in Medieval Manuscript Illumination: Tracing andAssessing the Evidence, 100–114

Jim Bradbury, The Civil War of Stephen’s Reign: Winners and Losers, 115–132

Toby Purser, William FitzOsbern, Earl of Hereford: Personality and Power on theWelsh Frontier 1066–1071, 133–146

Charles Coulson, Valois Powers over Fortresses on the Eve of the Hundred YearsWar, 147–160

Anthony Goodman, The Defence of Northumberland: a Preliminary Survey, 161–172

Andrew Ayton, Edward III and the English Aristocracy at the Beginning of theHundred Years War, 173–206

Anne Curry, The Organisation of Field Armies in Lancastrian Normandy, 207–233

Kay E. Lacey, The Military Organisation of the Reign of Henry VII, 234–255

John Palmer, War and Domesday Waste, 256–275

Michael Prestwich, Military Logistics: the Case of 1322, 276–288

Kelly DeVries, The Forgotten Battle of Bevershoutsveld, 3 May 1382: TechnologicalInnovation and Military Significance, 289–303

Matthew Bennett, The Myth of the Military Supremacy of Knightly Cavalry, 304–316

Matthew Strickland, Provoking or Avoiding Battle? Challenge, Duel and SingleCombat in Warfare of the High Middle Ages, 317–343

Frédérique Lachaud, Armour and Military Dress in Thirteenth- and Early Fourteenth-Century England, 344–369

Harlaxton Medieval Studies VIII (New Series)Proceedings of the 1996 Harlaxton Symposium: Englandand the Continent in the Middle Ages: Studies in Memoryof Andrew Martindale, ed. John Mitchell

Articles:

Philip Dixon, The Proto-history of Cluny: Town Planning in the Tenth and EleventhCenturies, 1–14

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Peter Lasko, Anthropomorthic Evangelist Symbols: Lower Saxony, Roger ofHelmarshausen and Insular Iconographic Tradition, 15–27

George Zarnecki, Romanesque Sculpture of Lincoln Cathedral and the Continent, 28–34

Malcolm Thurlby, Roger of Pont L’Evêque, Archbishop of York (1154–81) and FrenchSources for the Beginning of Gothic in Northern Britain, 35–47

Ruth Harvey, Cross-Channel Gossip in the Twelfth Century, 48–59

T. A. Heslop, Art, Nature and St. Hugh’s Choir at Lincoln, 60–74

Christopher Harper-Bill, The Diocese of Norwich and the Italian Connection, 1198–1261, 75–89

Malcolm Vale, Courts and Culture: Europe and her Neighbours, c.1270–1350, 90–96

Diana Wood, Rule from Europe? Four English Views of Papal Authority in theFourteenth Century, 97–112

Steffani Becker-Hounslow and Paul Crossley, England and the Baltic: New Thoughtson Old Problems, 113–128

Gerhard Schmidt, England and the Emergence of a New Figure Style on theContinent during the 1340s, 129–136

Nigel Morgan, The French Interpretations of the English Illustrated Apocalypses,137–156

Veronica Sekules, Dynasty and Patrimony in the Self-Construction of an EnglishQueen: Philippa of Hainault and her Images, 157–174

Robert Gibbs, The Three-Bay (or Five-Bay) Interior and the Apsidal Interior fromGiotto to Van Eyck: A Westminster Episode, 175–188

Brigitte Corley, Historical Links and Artistic Reflections: England and NorthernGermany in the Late Middle Ages, 189–202

Michael Jones, A Prince and his Biographer: John IV, Duke of Brittany (1364–99) andGuillaume de Saint-André, 203–217

Jenny Stratford, Gold and Diplomacy: England and France in the Reign of Richard II,218–237

Pamela Tudor-Craig and Lisa Monnas, A Seal Bag of 1400 at Burghley House, 238–248

R. B. Dobson, Aliens in the City of York during the Fifteenth Century, 249–266

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Thomas Tolley, Jan Van Eyck and the English, 267–297

Cecil H. Clough, Late Fifteenth-Century English Monarchs Subject to ItalianRenaissance Influence, 298–317

Caroline Barron and Mary Erler, The Making of Syon Abbey’s Altar Table of Our Ladyc.1490–96, 318–335

Janet Backhouse, The Lady Margaret Beaufort Hours at Alnwick Castle, 336–348

Xenia Muratova, The Tomb of Bishop Thomas James in the Cathedral of Dol: AMonument of the Early Italian Renaissance in Gothic Brittany, 349–364

John Mitchell, Painting in East Anglia around 1500: the Continental Connection, 365–380

Eric Fernie, Andrew Martindale – an Oration, Norwich Cathedral, 5 July 1995, 381–384

Addenda:

Harlaxton Medieval Studies (list of), 385; blank pages [386–390]; followed by 128pages of plates containing 13 plates in full colour and 187 in monochrome. Theplates are not consecutively numbered except by each author.

Harlaxton Medieval Studies IX (New Series)Proceedings of the 1997 Harlaxton Symposium: Familyand Dynasty in Late Medieval England, ed. Richard Ealesand Shaun Tyas

Articles:

Nick Barratt, Financial Pressures and Dynastic Problems in Angevin England, 1–20

Rhoda Bucknill, An Elusive Clan: the Wayte Family of Hampshire and Their Place inLocal Society, 21–37

Mario Fernandes, The Northamptonshire Assize Jurors: the Role of the Family as aMotivating Force during the Barons’ War, 38–55

Thorlac Turville-Petre, Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Digby 86: a Thirteenth-centuryCommonplace Book in its Social Context, 56–66

Chris Given-Wilson, Chronicles of the Mortimer Family, c.1250–1450, 67–86

Gudrun Tscherpel, The Political Function of History: the Past and Future of NobleFamilies, 87–104

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Caroline Shenton, Philippa of Hainault’s Churchings: the Politics of Motherhood at theCourt of Edward III, 105–121

Lynda Dennison, British Library, Egerton MS 3277: a Fourteenth-Century Psalter-Hours and the Question of Bohun Family Ownership, 122–155

John A. A. Goodall, The Architecture of Ancestry at the Collegiate Church of StAndrew’s Wingfield, Suffolk, 156–171

Sophie Oosterwijk, ‘A Swithe Feire Graue’: the Appearance of Children on MedievalTomb Monuments, 172–192

Vivienne Rock, Shadow Royals? The Political Use of the Extended Family of LadyMargaret Beaufort, 193–210

Index, 211-37

Harlaxton Medieval Studies X (New Series)Proceedings of the 1998 Harlaxton Symposium: TheMedieval English Cathedral: Papers in Honour of PamelaTudor-Craig, ed. Janet Backhouse

Articles:

P. D. A. Harvey, English Cathedral Estates in the Twelfth Century, 1–14

Daniel Williams, Trouble in the Cathedral Close: Archbishop Boniface’s 1259Visitation of the Priory of Christ Church, Canterbury, 15–22

Barrie Dobson, ‘The clergy are well lodged’: the Transformation of the CathedralPrecinct at Late Medieval Durham, 23–40

Paul Binski, The Painted Nave Ceiling of Peterborough Abbey, 41–62

Richard Foster, Feet on the Ground; Eyes on the Heavens: Some Aspects of PorphyryOpus Sectile Pavements in England, 63–75

Peter Draper, Enclosures and Entrances in Medieval Cathedrals: Access and Security,76–88

Nigel Morgan, Marian Liturgy in Salisbury Cathedral, 89–111

Janet Backhouse, The Lovel Lectionary: a Memorial offering to Salisbury, 112–125

Caroline Barron, London and St Paul’s Cathedral in the Later Middle Ages, 126–149

Eamon Duffy, St Erkenwald: London’s Cathedral Saint and His Legend, 150–167

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Lucy Freeman Sandler, The Chantry of Roger of Waltham in Old St Paul’s, 168–190

Ncholas Rogers, The Origins of English Diocesan Coats-of-Arms, 191–207

John Cherry, The Medieval Episcopal Ring, 208–217

George Henderson, Tabula Eliensis: a Monastic U-turn?, 218–230

Eric Fernie, The Cathedral Monograph: a History and Assessment, 231–239

Harlaxton Medieval Studies XI (New Series)Proceedings of the 1999 Harlaxton Symposium: TheChurch and Learning in Later Medieval Society: Essays inHonour of R.B. Dobson, ed. Caroline M. Barron and JennyStratford

Articles:

Benjamin Thompson, The Academic and Active Vocations in the Medieval Church:Archbishop John Pecham, 1–24

James G. Clark, Monastic Education in Late Medieval England, 25–40

David Crook, Churches and Chapels on a Fifteenth-Century Monastic Map of theLincolnshire Fenland, 41–50

A. J. Piper, The Monks of Durham and Patterns of Activity in Old Age, 51–63

Martin Heale, Books and Learning in the Dependent Priories of the Monasteries ofMedieval England, 64–79

Lynda Dennison & Nicholas Rogers, A Medieval Best-Seller: Some Examples ofDecorated Copies of Higden’s Polychronicon, 80–99

Andrew R. Wines, The University of Life and the London Charter-house: PracticalExperience versus Scholarly Attainment within the Carthusian Leadership, 100–109

Pamela Tudor-Craig, The Iconography of Wisdom and the Frontispiece to the BibleHistoriale, British Library, Additional Manuscript 18856, 110–127

Nicholas Vincent, Master Elias of Dereham (d. 1245): A Reassessment, 128–159

Compton Reeves, Creative Scholarship in the Cathedrals, 1300–1500, 160–169

Joan Greatrex, Horoscopes and Healing at Norwich Cathedral Priory in the LaterMiddle Ages, 170–177

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David Lepine, ‘A Long Way from University’: Cathedral Canons and Learning atHereford in the Fifteenth Century, 178–195

Pamela M. King, The Treasurer’s Cadaver in York Minster Reconsidered, 196–209

Patrick Zutshi, The Mendicant Orders and the University of Cambridge in theFourteenth and Early Fifteenth Centuries, 210–227

John Barron, The Augustinian Canons and the University of Oxford: the Lost Collegeof St George, 228–254

Virginia Davis, The Contribution of University-Educated Secular Clerics to thePastoral Life of the English Church, 255–272

Jeffrey H. Denton, The Competence of the Parish Clergy in Thirteenth-CenturyEngland, 273–285

Clive Burgess, Educated Parishioners in London and Bristol on the Eve of theReformation, 286–304

Fiona Kisby, Books in London Parish Churches before 1603: Some PreliminaryObservations, 305–326

Joel T. Rosenthal, Clerical Book Bequests: a Vade Mecum, but Whence and Whither?,327–343

Claire Cross, York Clergy and Their Books in the Early Sixteenth Century, 344–354

Alexandra F. Johnston, The York Cycle and the Libraries of York, 355–370

Carole Rawcliffe, The Eighth Comfortable Work: Education and the Medieval EnglishHospital, 371–398

Harlaxton Medieval Studies XII (New Series)Proceedings of the 2000 Harlaxton Symposium: Prophecy,Apocalypse and the Day of Doom, ed. Nigel Morgan

Articles:

Michael J. Bennett, Prophecy, Providence and the Revolution of 1399, 1–18

Hilary Carey, Astrology and the Last Things, 19–38

Lesley Coote, The Crusading Bishop: Henry Despenser and his Manuscript, 39–51

Martha Driver, Picturing the Apocalypse in the Printed Book of Hours, 52–67

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Robert Easting, Personal Apocalypse: Judgement in Some Other-World Visions, 68–85

Rosalind Field, Apocalyptic Consolation in the Middle-English Pearl, 86–96

Richard Foster, The Perfect Three: A Numerological Context for the Calculation of theLifespan of the Universe According to the Westminster Abbey Sanctuary Pavement,97–117

Anke Holdenried, Aspects of the English Reception of the Sibylla Tiburtina: Prophecyand Devotion, 118–138

Steven Justice, Prophecy and the Explanation of Social Disorder, 139–159

Kathryn Kerby-Fulton, Magda Hayton and Kenna Olsen Pseudo-Hildegardian,Prophecy and Antimendicant Propaganda in Late-Medieval England: An Edition of theMost Popular Insular Text of ‘Insurgent gentes’, 160–194

John Lowden, The Apocalypse in the Early-Thirteenth- Century Bibles Moralisées: ARe-Assessment, 195–219

Margaret Manion, The Angers Tapestries of the Apocalypse and Valois Patronage,220-238

M. A. Michael, Matthew Paris, Brother William and St. Marcella: Comments on theApocalyptic Man in British Library MS Cotton Nero.D.1, 239-249

Nigel Morgan, The Torments of the Damned in Hell in Texts and Images in Englandin the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries, 250-260

Rosemary Muir Wright, Living in the Final Countdown: the Angevin ApocalypsePanels in Stuttgart, 261-276

Veronica O’Mara, ‘Go le curselynges, to euerelasting fier’: Doomsday in MiddleEnglish Prose Sermons, 277-291

Sue Powell, All Saints’ Church, North Street, York: Text and Image in the Pricke ofConscience Window, 292-316

Andrew Prescott, ‘The Hand of God’: the Suppression of the Peasants’ Revolt of1381, 317-341

Nicholas Rogers, ‘Et expecto resurrectionem mortuorum’: Images and Texts Relatingto the Resurrection of the Dead and the Last Judgement on English Brasses andIncised Slabs, 342-355

Pamela Tudor-Craig, Wells Cathedral West Front and the City of God, 356-376

Meg Twycross and Pamela King, Doomsday as Hypertext: Contexts of Doomsday inFifteenth-Century Northern Manuscripts, 377-403

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Harlaxton Medieval Studies XIII (New Series)Proceedings of the 2001 Harlaxton Symposium: TheLancastrian Court, ed. Jenny Stratford

Articles:

G. L. Harriss, The Court of the Lancastrian Kings, 1–18

John Cherry, Some Lancastrian Seals, 19–28

Anne Curry, The ‘Coronation Expedition’ and Henry VI’s Court in France, 1430 to1432, 29–52

Barrie Dobson, Henry VI and the University of Cambridge, 53–67

A. S. G. Edwards, Duke Humfrey’s Middle English Palladius Manuscript, 68–77

Alfred Hiatt, Beyond a Border: The Maps of Scotland in John Hardyng’s Chronicle,78–94

Margaret L. Kekewich, The Lancastrian Court in Exile, 95–110

Richard Marks, Images of Henry VI, 111–124

Lisa Monnas, Textiles from the Funerary Achievement of Henry V, 125–146

Nigel Morgan, An SS Collar in the Devotional Context of the Shield of the FiveWounds, 147–162

Derek Pearsall, Crowned King: War and Peace in 1415, 163–172

Nicholas Perkins, Representing Advice in Lydgate, 173–191

Carole Rawcliffe, Master Surgeons at the Lancastrian Court, 192–210

Nicholas Rogers, Henry VI and the Proposed Canonisation of King Alfred, 211–220

Lucy Freeman Sandler, Lancastrian Heraldry in the Bohun Manuscripts, 221–232

Linda Ehrsam Voigts, The Master of the King’s Stillatories, 233–252

John Watts, Was there a Lancastrian Court?, 253–271

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Harlaxton Medieval Studies XIV (New Series)Proceedings of the 2002 Harlaxton Symposium: The Parishin Late Medieval England, ed. Clive Burgess and EamonDuffy

Articles:

Clive Burgess, Time and Place: The Late Medieval English Parish in Perspective, 1–28

David Lepine, ‘And alle oure paresshens’: Secular Cathedrals and Parish Churches inLate Medieval England, 29–53

Martin Heale, Monastic-Parochial Churches in Late Medieval England, 54–77

Nicholas Orme, The Other Parish Churches: Chapels in Late Medieval England, 78–94

Beat Kümin, The Secular Legacy of the Late Medieval English Parish, 95–111

Elizabeth New, Signs of Community or Marks of the Exclusive? Parish and Guild Sealsin Later Medieval England, 112–128

Ken Farnhill, The Guild of the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary and the Prioryof St Mary in Walsingham, 129–145

Robert Swanson, Profits, Priests and People, 146–159

Susan Powell, The Festial: The Priest and His Parish, 160–176

Magnus Williamson, Liturgical Music in the Late Medieval English Parish: Organs andVoices, Ways and Means, 177–242

Nigel Saul, The Gentry and the Parish, 243–260

Nicholas Rogers, Hic Iacet ...: The Location of Monuments in Late Medieval ParishChurches, 261–281

Judith Middleton-Stewart, Parish Activity in Late Medieval Fenland: Accounts andWills from Tilney All Saints and St Mary’s, Mildenhall, 1443–1520, 282–301

Katherine French, Women Churchwardens in Late Medieval England, 302–321

Alexandra F. Johnston, Parish Playmaking before the Reformation, 322–338

Peregrine Horden, Small Beer? The Parish and the Poor and Sick in Late MedievalEngland, 339–364

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Peter Marshall, Anticlericalism Revested? Expressions of Discontent in Early TudorEngland, 365–380

Eamon Duffy, The End of it All: The Material Culture of the Medieval English Parishand the 1552 Inventories of Church Goods, 381–399

Index, 400-20

Harlaxton Medieval Studies XV (New Series)Proceedings of the 2003 Harlaxton Symposium: Freedomof Movement in the Middle Ages, ed. Peregrine Horden

Articles:

Peregrine Horden, Towards a History of Medieval Mobility,

Cultural Migration

Christopher Page, Freedom of Movement and the Rise of European Music in the EarlyMiddle Ages, 1-18

Jane Hawkes, Anglo-Saxon Romanitas: The Transmission and Use of Early ChristianArt in Anglo-Saxon England, 19-36

Sophie Oosterwijk, Money, Morality, Mortality: The Migration of the Danse Macabrefrom Murals to Misericords, 37-56

Wendy Scase, ‘Let him be kept in most strait prison’: Lollards and the Epistolaluciferi, 57-72

Long Journeys

Ian Wei, Scholars and Travel in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries, 73-85

Peter Biller, Heretics and Long Journeys, 86-103

David Lepine, ‘Loose Canons’: The Mobility of the Higher Clergy in the Later MiddleAges, 104-22

Itinerants

R. N. Swanson, Tales to Tug at Purse-Strings: Publicizing Indulgences in Pre-Reformation England, 123-36

James Davis, ‘Men as march with fote packes’: Pedlars and Freedom of Movement inLate Medieval England, 137-156

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Women

Christopher Baswell, Albyne Sails for Albion: Gender, Motion, and Foundation in theEnglish Imperial Imagination, 157-168

Richard Smith, Moving to Marry among the Customary tenants of Late Thirteenth-and Early Fourteenth-century England, 169-85

Caroline M. Barron, The Travelling Saint: Zita of Lucca and England, 186-202

Obstacles

Jennifer Neville, ‘None shall pass’: Mental Barriers to Travel in Old English Poetry,203-14

Paul Brand, The Travails of Travel: The Difficulties of Getting to Court in LaterMedieval England, 215-28

Carole Rawcliffe, Isolating the Medieval Leper: Ideas – and Misconceptions – aboutSegregation in the Middle Ages, 229-48

Control

Dave Postles, Movers and Prayers: The Medieval English Church and Movement ofPeople, 249-66

Nicholas Orme, Access and Exclusion: Exeter Cathedral, 1300-1540, 267-86

Jessica Freeman, ‘And He Abjured the Realm of England, Never to Return’, 287-304

Image and Metaphor

M. A. Michael, Towards a Hermeneutics of the Manuscript: the Physical andMetaphysical Journeys of Paris, BNF, MS Fr 571, 305-17

Christa Grössinger, The Road to Hell, 318-30

Ad Putter, Moving Towards God: The Possibilities and Limitations of MetaphoricalJourneys in Hilton’s Scale of Perfection, 331-45

Index, 346-66

Harlaxton Medieval Studies XVI (New Series)Proceedings of the 2004 Harlaxton Symposium: Londonand the Kingdom: Essays in Honour of Caroline M. Barron,ed. Matthew Davies and Andrew Prescott

Articles:

Producers and Consumers: City, Abbey and Court

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Vanessa Harding, Caroline Barron and the Study of Medieval London, 1-11

Barbara Harvey, Westminster Abbey and Londoners, 1440-1540, 12-37

Ian W. Archer, Conspicuous Consumption Revisited: City and Court in the Reign ofElizabeth I, 37-57

Martha Carlin, Putting Dinner on the Table in Medieval London, 58-77

Religious Life

Carole Rawcliffe, Christ the Physician Walks the Wards: Celestial Therapeutics in theMedieval Hospital, 78-97

Clive Burgess, London, the Church and the Kingdom, 98-117

Gervase Rosser, Party List: Making Friends in English Medieval Guilds, 118-34

Mary Erler, Religious Women after the Dissolution: Continuing Community, 135-45

Merchants, Trades and Learning

Hannes Kleineke, The Schoolboy’s Tale: A Fifteenth-Century Voice from St. Paul’sSchool’, 146-59

Anne F. Sutton, The Women of the Mercery: Wives, Widows and Maidens, 160-78

Stephanie R. Hovland, Girls as Apprentices in Later Medieval London, 179-94

John R. Oldland, The Wealth of Early Tudor Craftsmen in London based on the LaySubsidies, 195-211

Art, Commemoration and the City

Jenny Stratford, Richard II’s Treasure and London, 212-29

Christian Steer, Commemoration and Women in Medieval London, 230-45

Elizabeth New, Representation and Identity in Medieval London: the Evidence ofSeals, 246-58

Jessica Freeman, Simon Seman, Citizen and Vintner of London, 259-64

Nigel Saul, The Medieval Monuments of St. Mary’s, Barton on Humber, 265-71

Lawyers and the Law in London

Derek Keene, Out of the Inferno: an Italian Lawyer in the Service of Odovardo re deAnglia and his London Connections, 272-92

Stephen O’Connor, A Nest of Smugglers? Customs Evasion in London at the Outbreakof the Hundred Years’ War, 293-304

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Penny Tucker, London and “The Making of the Common Law, 305-15

London, Literature and the Kingdom

Stephen H. Rigby, Ideology and Utopia: Prudence and Magnificence, Kingship andTyranny in Chaucer’s Knight’s Tale, 316-34

Paul Strohm, Interpreting a Chronicle Tex: Henry VI’s Blue Gown, 335-45

Literacies

Mary-Rose McLaren, Reading, Writing and Recording. Literacy and the LondonChronicles in the Fifteenth Century, 346-65

Laura Wright, The Playground Language of London Schoolchildren: Southern VoicingRevisited, 366-83

Sheila Lindenbaum, Literate Londoners and Liturgical Change: Sarum Books in CityParishes after 1414, 384-99

AddendaHeather Creaton, A Bibliography of the Published Writings of Caroline M. Barron,400-04

Index, 405-36

Harlaxton Medieval Studies XVII (New Series)Proceedings of the 2005 Harlaxton Symposium: RecordingMedieval Lives, edited by Julia Boffey and Virginia Davis

Articles:

Rethinking Medieval People

Henry Summerson, Rethinking Medieval People: the Experience of the DNB, 1-13

Collective Biography and Evidence

Janet Burton, Documenting the Lives of Medieval Nuns, 14-24

David Lepine, “The Noiseless Tenor of Their Way”? The Lives of the Late MedievalHigher Clergy, 25-41

Anne F. Sutton, Fifteenth-Century Mercers and the Written Word: Mercers and theirScribes and Scriveners, 42-58

History, Biography and Autobiography

Mishtooni Bose, Thomas Gascoigne’s Biographies, 59-73

A.S.G. Edwards, Recording a Dynasty: Verse Chronicles of the House of Percy, 74-84

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Christopher Fletcher, Charles VI and Richard II: Inconstant Youths, 85-101

William Marx, Latin Chronicles and Medieval Lives in the Middle English Prose Brut,102-11

Susan Powell, John to John: The Manuale Sacerdotis and the Daily Life of a ParishPriest, 112-29

Pamela Robinson, The Manuscript of The Book of Margery Kempe, 130-40

Wills

Caroline M. Barron, The Will as Autobiography: the Case of Thomas Salter, Priest,Died November 1558, 141-81

Pamela M. King, Memorials of Ralph Woodford (d.1498), Ashby Folville,Leicestershire: the Death of the Author, 182-88

Carol M. Meale, The World and the Soul: the Will of Lady Isabel Morley (d. 1467),189-203

Visual and Material Evidence

David J. King, Anne Harling Reconsidered, 204-22

Richard A. Linenthal, Ordinary Lives: Medieval Personal Seal Matrices, 223-32

Nicholas J. Rogers, The Biographical Brass, 233-42

Pamela Tudor-Craig, The Image of the Writer in Medieval English Manuscripts, 243-56

Livia Viser-Fuchs, Richard of York: Books and the Man, 257-72

Into the Future

Shaun Tyas, ‘Historical Novels and Medieval Lives, 273-99

Index, 300-24

Harlaxton Medieval Studies XVIII (New Series)Proceedings of the 2006 Harlaxton Symposium, Signs andSymbols, edited John Cherry and Ann Payne

Articles:

Mary Carruthers, “Thinking in Images”: the Spatial and Visual Requirements ofCognition and Recollection in Medieval Psychology, 1-17

Adrian Ailes, Powerful Impressions: Symbols of Office and Authority on SecularSeals, 18-28

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Elizabeth Danbury, Security and Safeguard: Signs and Symbols on Boxes andChests, 29-41

P.D.A. Harvey, Colour in Medieval Maps, 42-52

Nigel Morgan, The Monograms, Arms and Badges of the Virgin Mary in Late MedievalEngland, 53-63

Nicholas J. Rogers, Dieu y voye: Some Late Medieval and Early Modern Instances ofDivine Vision, 64-72

Elizabeth New, Symbols of Devotion and Identity in The Shaftesbury Hours(Cambridge, Fitzwilliam Museum, MS 2-1957), 73-84

Phillipa Hardman, Sign Language: Seeing Things in Middle English Poems, 85-99

Andrew Prescott, Inventing Symbols and Traditions: The Case of the Stonemasons,100-118

Julian M. Luxford, Symbolism in East Anglian Flushwork, 119-132

Pamela Tudor-Craig, Effigies with Attitude, 133-42

John Cherry, La Chantepleure: a Symbol of Mourning, 143-49

Alison Stones, Signs and Symbols in the Estoire del saint Graal and the Queste delsaint Graal, 150-67

Lucy Freeman Sandler, Gone Fishing: Angling in the Fitzwilliam Bohun Psalter, 168-79

Christa Grössinger, Questioning Signs and Symbols: Their Meaning andInterpretation, 180-91

The Published Writings of Janet Backhouse (1938-2004), 192-204

Index, 205-23

Harlaxton Medieval Studies XIX (New Series)Proceedings of the 2007 Harlaxton Symposium, The Friarsin Medieval Britain, edited by Nicholas Rogers

Articles:

Preachers and Theologians

Michael F. Robson, OFM, The Franciscan Custody of York in the Thirteenth Century,1-24

William H. Campbell, Franciscan Preaching in Thirteenth-Century England: Sources,Problems, Possibilities, 25-40

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Maura O’Carroll, SND, Mid-Thirteenth-Century English Dominican Preaching andCatechesis: Bodleian MS Laud. Misc. 511 and Other Sermons and Pastoral Texts, 41-72

Relationships

Clive Burgess, Friars and the Parish in Late Medieval Bristol: Observations andPossibilities, 73-96

Joan Greatrex, Monks and Mendicants in English Cathedral Cities: Signs of a MutualBenefit Society, 97-106

Jens Röhrkasten, Friars and the Laity in the Franciscan Custody of Cambridge, 107-24

Barry Windeatt, Margery Kempe and the Friars, 125-41

Texts and Writers

James G. Clark, The Friars and the Classics in Late Medieval England, 142-51Linda E. Voigts, The Medical Astrology of Ralph Hoby, a Fifteenth-Century Franciscan,152-68

Art and Iconography

David J. King, Mendicant Glass in East Anglia, 169-84

Nicholas J. Rogers, The Provenance of the Thornham Parva Retable, 185-93

Donald S. Prudlo, The Cult of St Peter of Verona in the British Isles, 194-207

The Image of the Friar

Henry Summerson, A “nest of freres”: the Mendicants, Their Friends and Enemies inthe Oxford DNB, 208-17

Ralph Hanna and Sarah Wood, Mendicants and the Economies of Piers Plowman,218-37

Wendy Scase, Antifraternal Traditions in Reformation Pamphlets, 238-64

Local Studies

Bruce Watson and Chris Thomas, The Mendicant Houses of Medieval London: AnArchaeological and Architectural Review, 265-97

G. M. Draper, Failing Friars? The Mendicants in the Cinque Ports, 298-318

Anna A. Anisimova, Mendicants in the Monastic Towns of South-Eastern England,319-30

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Hubert Pragnell, New Uses for Old Friaries: the Greyfriars and Blackfriars inCanterbury, 331-39

Index, 340-72

Harlaxton Medieval Studies XX (New Series)Proceedings of the 2008 Harlaxton Symposium, Memoryand Commemoration in Medieval England, edited byCaroline M. Barron and Clive Burgess

Articles

Pamela Tudor-Craig, The Origins of the Harlaxton Symposium in 1983, 1-5

Nick Holder, Medieval Foundation Stones and Foundation Ceremonies, 6-23

Claire Gobbi Daunton, Contrasting Patrons and their Glass: the Church of St John theBaptist, Milcham, Norfolk, 24-39

Robert Kinsey, The Location of Commemoration in Late Medieval England: the Caseof the Thorpes of Northamptonshire, 40-57David Lepine, “Their Name Liveth for Evermore”? Obits at Exeter Cathedral in theLater Middle Ages, 58-74

David J. King, Henry Scrope’s Window at Heydour, 75-86

W.M. Ormrod, Queenship, Death and Agency: the Commemoration of Isabella ofFrance and Philippa of Hainault, 87-103

Jennifer Ward, Who to Commemorate and Why? The Commemoration of the Nobilityin Eastern England in the Fourteenth Century, 104-16

Christian Steer, Royal and Noble Commemoration in the Mendicant Houses ofMedieval London, 117-42

Meriel Connor, Fifteenth-Century Monastic Obituaries: the Evidence of Christ ChurchPriory, Canterbury, 143-58

Richard Marks, “Entumbed right princely”: the Beauchamp Chapel at Warwick andthe Politics of Internment, 159-80

Sophie Oosterwijk, Death, Memory and Commemoration: John Lydgate and“Macabrees daunce” at Old St Paul’s Cathedral, London, 181-97

Sally Badham, The Robertsons Remembered: the Generations of Calais Staplers atAlgarkirk, Lincolnshire, 198-213

Mellie Naydenova-Slade, Late Medieval Holy Kinship Images and FamilyCommemoration: the Evidence from Thornhill, West Yorkshire and Latten, Essex,214-29

Cindy Wood, The Cage Chantries of Christchurch Priory, 230-46

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David Griffith, English Commemorative Inscriptions: Some Literary Dimensions, 247-66

Nicholas Orme, The Commemoration of Places in Medieval England, 267-87

Peregrine Horden, Origins of “All Souls” and its Significance for Henry Chichele, 288-305

Paul Binski, Developments in the Study of Medieval Art since 1983, 306-17

Derek Pearsall, Developments in the Study of Middle English Literature since 1983,318-27

Joel T. Rosenthal, Developments in the Study of Medieval History since 1983, 328-48

Index. 349-86

Harlaxton Medieval Studies Supplementary VolumeAn Index to the First Twenty-Five Years of the HarlaxtonSymposium Proceedings, edited by Hannes Kleineke

Preface, vi-vii

Chronological List of Published Volumes, viii-ix

Introduction, x-xi

General Index, 1-726

Index of Manuscripts, 727-821

Eponymous Manuscripts, 822-827

Alphabetical List of Authors and Articles, 828-841

Harlaxton Medieval Studies XXI (New Series)Proceedings of the 2009 Harlaxton Symposium, Ritual andSpace in the Middle Ages, edited by Frances Andrews

Articles

Frances Andrews, Ritual and Space: Definitions and Ways Forward, 1-29

Sible de Blaauw, The Church Atrium as a Ritual Space: the Cathedral of Tyre and StPeter’s in Rome, 30-43

Andrew Jotischky, Holy Fire and Holy Sepulchre: Ritual and Space in Jerusalem fromthe Ninth to the Fourteenth Centuries, 44-60

Page 31: Harlaxton Medieval Studies I (Old Series) Proceedings of ...harlaxton.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/... · D. A. Stocker, The Tomb and Shrine of Bishop Grosseteste in Lincoln

Lucy-Anne Hunt, Marking Presence: Art, Ritual and Pilgrimage in the EasternMediterranean in the Crusader Period, 61-70

Rob Meens, Violence at the Altar: the Sacred Space around the Grave of St Martin ofTours and the Practice of Sanctuary in the Early Middle Ages, 71-89

Donal Cooper, Access all Areas? Spatial Divides in the Mendicant Churches of LateMedieval Tuscany, 90-107

Jill Caskey, The Look of Liturgy: Identity and ars sacra in Southern Italy, 108-129

Uri Smilansky, A Labyrinth of Space: Page, Performance and Music in Late MedievalFrench Culture, 130-147

Helen Carrel, The Rituals of Town-Crown Relations in post-Black-Death England,148-164

Hannes Kleineke, Civic Ritual, Space and Conflict in Fifteenth Century Exeter, 165-178

David Ditchburn, Rituals, Space and the Marriage of James II and Mary Guelders,1449, 179-196

James Stokes, Staging Wonders: Ritual and Space in Drama and Ceremony ofLincoln Cathedral and its Environs, 197-212

John McKinnell, For the People/By the People. Public and Private Spaces in theDurham Sequence of the Sacrament, 213-231

Catherine Lawless, Representation, Religion, Gender and Space in Medieval Florence,232-258

Julian M. Luxford, The Space of the Tomb in Carthusian Consciousness, 259-281

Philip Morgan, The Medieval Battlefield War Memorial, 282-297

Nicholas Rogers, The Location and Iconography of Confession in Late MedievalEurope, 298-307

Maurizio Campanelli, Ritual and Space in the Mirror of Texts: the Case of LateMedieval and Humanist Rome, 308-338

Index, 339-370