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         Medieval England Hundred Years Wars:     more books (20)
  1. The Hundred Years War: England and France at War c.1300-c.1450 (Cambridge Medieval Textbooks) by Christopher Allmand, 1988-02-26
  2. Society at War: The Experience of England and France during the Hundred Years War (Warfare in History)
  3. The Crecy War: A Military History of the Hundred Years War from 1337 to the Peace of Bretigny, 1360 (Wordsworth Military Library) by Alfred H. Burne, 1999-09-30
  4. The Hundred Years War by Robin Neillands, 2007-03-16
  5. The Agincourt War: A Military History of the Latter Part of the Hundred Years War from 1369 To1453 (Wordsworth Military Library) by Alfred H. Burne, 1999-09-30
  6. The Origins of the Hundred Years War: The Angevin Legacy 1250-1340 by Malcolm Vale, 1996-10-31
  7. The Angevin Legacy and the Hundred Years War, 1250-1340 by M. G. A. Vale, 1990-06
  8. Encyclopedia of the Hundred Years War by John A. Wagner, 2006-08-30
  9. Knights and Peasants: The Hundred Years War in the French Countryside (Warfare in History) by Nicholas Wright, 1998-04
  10. Arms, Armies and Fortifications in the Hundred Years War
  11. The Hundred Years' War by Anne Curry, 2002-10
  12. War in medieval English society; by John Barnie, 1974
  13. The chronicles of England, France, Spain, and other places adjoining by Jean Froissart, 1959
  14. Medieval Warfare: England's Army in the Wars of the Middle Ages by Peter Reid, 2007-02-01

81. Level 3 Furthers
and a sense of national identity in england and France of political society and government, the hundred years War was a decidedly medieval conflict providing
http://www.shef.ac.uk/history/current_students/undergraduate/modules/level3_furt
Home Courses and Prospectuses Departments Research ... MUSE Search
Level 3 Furthers The whole web site
  • History Home About the Department Prospective Undergraduates Prospective Postgraduates ... Printer version
    History
    HST 3052: The Hundred Years War
    Taught
    Level 3: semester 1 Dr. David Green, Module Leader

    Pre-requisites
    A pass in at least two history modules from HST200 - HST299.

    Module Summary
    England and France were at war for much of the middle ages, but these hostilities were most intense between 1337 and 1453 in the Hundred Years War. The conflict was a dynastic struggle, a feudal dispute and a civil war bound together through an English claim to the throne of France and a French desire to exercise control over England's ancestral territories in France. The war came to include a number of other European powers and it subsumed a variety of other conflicts in Scotland, Flanders, Brittany and the Iberian kingdoms. It was fought in the context of the Avignon Papacy, the Great Schism and the Conciliar Movement and it witnessed the Black Death, the rise of the duchy of Burgundy and the beginning of the military revolution. This module will examine the origins, course and impact of the Hundred Years War through extensive use of primary sources in translation (governmental records and literature) and material evidence such as heraldry, stained glass and funerary monuments. It will consider how the conflict encouraged the development of various institutions of the nation state and a sense of national identity in England and France. As well as taking place in a period of transition that witnessed the restructuring of political society and government, the Hundred Years War was a decidedly medieval conflict providing an excellent range of sources to analyse questions regarding chivalry and kingship. Some of these will be studied through the careers of people such as the Black Prince, Philip the Good of Burgundy, Henry V and Joan of Arc.

82. Knighthood, Chivalry & Tournament Glossary Of Terms
Notable examples of medieval heresies were the teachings of John Wycliffe, the hundred years War The protracted conflict between england and France
http://www.chronique.com/Library/Glossaries/glossary-KCT/gloss_h.htm

Glossary of Terms
H The glossary is meant as a growing resource for students, re-enactors, and anyone interested in knighthood, chivalry, or the medieval tournament. The current page is but a brief listing of what we would like to have on the page; if you would be interested in helping with a given area, such as in heraldry, transcribing tournament accounts, translations, or research, drop the author an email at brion@chronique.com . Additionally, we would like to expand many of the definitions here; if you want to try one or more of them send your submissions to the email address abovewe can use the help! Halidon Hill, Battle of : 1333. Edward III’s battle against David Bruce, where his forces, outnumbered, dismounted and held the top of the hill, flanked by archers hidden in bramble and marsh. As the Scots, following their French advisors and experience, charged up the hill, they were destroyed both by the archers and the dismounted English infantry . In this single battle, Edward was able to destroy the bulk of the Scots army and secure for himself both his northern border an the title ‘king of Scotland’, which enabled him to turn his attention to France. It is often called the first battle in the Hundred Years War . The tactics he tried and used with great success at Halidon hill he and his son the Black Prince used again and again with success at Crècy and Poitiers ; Henry V used them yet again at Agincourt Hastilude : Literally a ‘ spear game’. Often used as a generic form for

83. Medieval - 1066-1453 AD
1337 commencement of the hundred years War. 1378-81 - War of Chioggia - Venetians destroy naval Oxford Illustrated History of medieval england (Saul, Oxford
http://homepage.mac.com/jeremybaker/towerhills/medieval.html
Medieval Return to Tower Hills Return to Timelines 1066-1453 AD From the Norman Conquest to the fall of Constantinople (Byzantium). Other timelines:
  • Ancient World - Pre 509 BC
  • Classical World - 509-27 BC
  • Roman Empire - 27 BC-324 AD
  • Late Antiquity - 324-633 AD ...
  • Early Medieval - 633-1066 AD
  • 1066 - Battle of Hastings, William I conquers England.
  • 1073-85 - Pontificate of Gregory VII
  • 1076 - execution of Earl Waltheof of Northumbria.
  • 1086 - Domesday survey.
  • 1096-99 First Crusade, capture of Jerusalem.
  • 1098 - foundation of Cistercian Order.
  • 1100 - death of William Rufus, in a hunting accident.
  • 1122 - Concordat of Worms
  • 1135-1153 - 'the Anarchy'; ending with the Treaty of Winchester.
  • 1152 - Election of Holy Roman Emperor Frederick I Barbarossa; marriage of Eleanor of Aquitane to Henry Plantagenet.
  • 1167 - formation of the Lombard League.
  • 1168 - discovery of silver at Freiberg, providing bullion for increased coinage.
  • 1177 - construction of bridge of Avignon.
  • 1187 - battle of Hattin, Saladin overruns Kingdom of Jerusalem.
  • 1189-92 - Third Crusade; death of Frederick Barbarossa (1190).

84. Iter: News And Announcements
kdevries@loyola.edu) The Effect on the hundred years’ War of Philip the Clerical Justification of Temporal Violence in Late medieval england Helen Maurer
http://community.itergateway.org/index.php?module=calendar&calendar[view]=day&mo

85. Timeline Items To Research
Online Reference book for medieval Studies. About.com. Outline History of the hundred years War. Medievil History. Norman Conquest of england 1066.
http://www.lincnet.org/timeline.html
Time Line Items to Research Peasants Revolt The Black Death Magna Carta ... Mongol Empire in China begins
The Peasants Revolt- 1381
Peasant revolt- Wikipedia
English Peasants’ Revolt 1381
The History learning site
Wat Tyler, English Rebel
The Black Death starts -1347 Black Death The great Mortality Bubonic Plague Magna carta – 1215
Medievil Sourcebook

Britanica

The Full Text of the Magna Carta

The History Channel
The Crusades
The First Crusade History Learning Site Online Reference book for Medieval Studies
About.com
The Second Crusade
About.com
The Third Crusade The third Crusade About.com

The Fourth Crusade
About.com
The Children’s Crusade The Children’s Crusade
General Crusade
Information
Who were the crusades? Map of the Europe at the time of the First Crusade Political Crusade Crusaders Song ... A view from a classroom in Jordan The Hundred Years War Begins 1337 Battles of the War Electric Renaissance – causes, maps, consequences

86. Medieval & Renaissance Europe
for King Henry III of england, during the der Bibliotheca Palatina Late medieval illustrated manuscripts Excerpted accounts of the hundred years War (13691410
http://library.byu.edu/~rdh/eurodocs/medren.html

Primary Historical Documents
Corpus Iuris Iustiniani and Ius Commune
Roman law: Justinian texts hyperlinked to commentary glosses of the medieval ius commune
(Latin transcriptions) Christian Classics Ethereal Library
(Translations and transcriptions) The Early Church Online Encyclopaedia Document Page
(comprehensive index of Western religious literature, 1st-15th Centuries) Monastic Matrix
A scholarly resource for the study of women's religious communities.
See especially Cartularium for primary source documents
and Figurae for digital images.
(5th - 15th Centuries; facsimiles and commentary) Guide to Early Church Documents The St. Pachomius Library
(Original and reprinted translations of patristic texts and liturgical documents) Dr. H. Grotefend, Zeitrechnung des Deutschen Mittelalters und der Neuzeit
Standard and comprehensive source for questions of chronology, time reckonings and calendars.
Extends beyond the German border; includes calendars of saints by city, diocese and order.
Digitized by Dr. Horst Ruth.
(Annotated Latin and German transcriptions) The Salic Law
(ca. 500; English translation)

87. English Hundred Year's War -- DBA 168
Opponents of the hundredyears War (HYW) English are Scots Common ( 140), medieval French ( 170), medieval Spanish ( 171 The young Henry V of england (later to
http://www.umiacs.umd.edu/~kuijt/dba168/dba168.html
Medieval Armies DBA Page
English Hundred-Year's War DBA 168
By David Kuijt Note: all images are thumbnails, and are clickable to see the larger original.
Composition of DBA Army #168 Hundred Year's War English (1322-1455 AD)
The DBA options: 3x 3Kn/4Bd, 1x 3Cv or 4Bd, 6x 4Lb, 1x 3Aux, 1x4Lb or Arty
Enemies
Opponents of the Hundred-Years War (HYW) English are Scots Common (#140), Medieval French (#170), Medieval Spanish (#171), and Early Burgundian (#173). One glaring omission to the Enemies List above is army #93, the Welsh. The Welsh were largely crushed in the late 13th century by the military might and castle-building of Edward I (who didn't restrict his depredations to the Welsh he was also known as "the Hammer of the Scots" for his campaigns in the North). Nonetheless there was a notable rebellion against English rule in the first decade of the 15th century under Owen Glendower. The young Henry V of England (later to be victor at Agincourt against the French) earned his spurs in warfare against the Welsh.
Army Notes
The Cv option reflects the use of hobilars before 1350. English knights commonly fought dismounted, although a mounted reserve was often kept.

88. University Of York - Dept. Of History
He works on political thought and public discourse in late medieval France and england, the hundred years War, Joan of Arc and chivalry. Research Interests.
http://www.york.ac.uk/depts/hist/textonly/staff/taylor.htm
The Department of History, University of York
Craig Taylor MA, DPhil (Oxon)
Office: King’s Manor K/281
Tel: Internal 4976, External (01904) 43-4976
Fax: (01904) 433918 or 432986
Email: cdt1@york.ac.uk
Craig Taylor is a Lecturer in Medieval History. He works on political thought and public discourse in late medieval France and England, the Hundred Years War, Joan of Arc and chivalry.
Research Interests
am principally principally interested in political thought, propaganda and public discourse in late medieval France and England. I have written articles on the polemical texts of the Hundred Years War, Sir John Fortescue's use of French sources, the Salic Law, French queenship, Edward III's claim to the French throne and the end of the Hundred Years War. I am currently preparing a sourcebook for the study of Joan of Arc together with an edition of perhaps the most important French polemical text of the war, Pour ce que plusieurs (1464), together with a previously unknown English reponse to it composed by a Tudor customs official. My major project is a monograph entitled Chivalry and warfare: French and English intellectual attitudes during the Hundred Years War . This period marked a crucial transition point in which the boundaries between private and public warfare were increasingly coming into focus. The social composition of armies was changing as was the very nature of recruitment, moving from feudal to contract and permanent service; military ordinances became a tangible expression of the increasing attempt to impose royal control over the military classes and a public monopoly on violence. It is not surprising then that contemporaries were redefining the intellectual framework for warfare. The book is an attempt to explore these changes, and in the process take forward the debate on chivalry, particularly in response to the overly-romantic notions of Raymond Kilgour (

89. Bibliography
Chivalry and Society in medieval France Constance Oxford University Press, 1970 england, France and French Armies of the hundred years War - David Nicholle
http://www.maisonstclaire.org/timeline/bibliography.html
Contributors: My thanks to the following for helping with information for my website Jos Geerdink for some valuable information on the Counts of Flanders, Hainault and the Dukes of Burgundy, amongst other things.
Written Reference - General The Autumn of the Middle Ages - Johan Huizinga, University of Chicago Press, 1996
Chivalry and Violence in Medieval Europe - Richard W. Kaeuper, Oxford University Press, 1999
Dictionary of Wars (Revised Edition) - George Childs Kohn, Checkmark Books, 1999
A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century - Barbara Tuchman, Ballentine Books, 1978
English Longbowmen 1330-1515 - Clive Bartlett, Osprey Publishing Ltd., 1995
A History of Private Life: Revelations of the Medieval World
The Plantaganet Encyclopedia
- Elizabeth Hallam, General Editor, Viking/Penguin Group, 1990
"Strong of Body, Brave and Noble": Chivalry and Society in Medieval France - Constance Britain Bouchard, Cornell University Press, 1998
Written Reference - Hundred Years War specific The Agincourt War : A Military History of the Latter Part of the Hundred Years War from 1369 To1453 - Arthur H. Burne, Wordsworth Military Library, 1956

90. Program In Medieval Studies @ The University Of Illinois At Urbana-Champaign
of Maryland (kdevries@loyola.edu) The Effect on the hundred years’ War of Philip the Clerical Justification of Temporal Violence in Late medieval england.
http://www.medieval.uiuc.edu/news/15thCenturySchedule.html

Calendar
Newsletter Special Programs
Fifteenth-Century Studies Conference
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, May 2-5, 2004
Keynote Speaker:  Jean-Philippe Genet
University of Paris I and the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
“Cultural History and the Development of the Modern State: the English Case”
Home Call For Papers Registration Saturday, May 1
Informal reception for early arrivals Sunday, May 2
Welcome: Stephen Jaeger, Director, Medieval Studies Program, UIUC
Introductory Remarks: Sharon Michalove
Session One Literature and Politics Roger Nicholson, Department of English, University of Auckland ( r.nicholson@auckland.ac.nz
"Battle Lines: The Poetry of Partisanship in Mid-Fifteenth-Century England." M. Addison Amos, Department of English, Southern Illinois University (

91. Medieval Sourcebook: Hundred Years War: Treaty Of Troyes, 1420 And Conditions In
medieval Sourcebook hundred years War Treaty of Troyes, 1420 and Conditions in France in 1422. The Treaty of Troyes, 1420. 6.
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/1420troyes.html
Back to Medieval Source Book ORB Main Page Links to Other Medieval Sites
Medieval Sourcebook:
Hundred Years War: Treaty of Troyes, 1420 and Conditions in France in 1422
The Treaty of Troyes, 1420 6. After our death [Charles VI], and from that time forward, the crown and kingdom of France, with all their rights and appurtenances, shall be vested permanently in our son [son-inlaw], King Henry [of England], and his heirs. 7.....The power and authority to govern and to control the public affairs of the said kingdom shall, during our lifetime, be vested in our son, King Henry, with the advice of the nobles and wise men who are obedient to us, and who have consideration for the advancement and honor of the said kingdom.... 24.....[It is agreed] that the two kingdoms shall be governed from the time that our said son, or any of his heirs shall assume the crown, not divided between different kings at the same time, but under one person who shall be king and sovereign lord of both kingdoms; observing all pledges and all other things to each kingdom its rights, liberties or custons, usages and laws, not submitting in any manner one kingdom to the other. 29. In consideration of the frightful and astounding crimes and misdeeds committed against the kingdom of France by Charles, the said Dauphin, it is agreed that we, our son Henry, and also our very dear son Philip, duke of Burgundy, will never treat for peace or amity with the said Charles.

92. Hundred - Triparate Struggle During The Hundred Years War
Edward III of england s refusal to pay liege homage started the hundred years War. Under Edward III, england enjoyed tremendous early success through 1360.
http://www.stupendousgames.com/hundred/history.htm

Players
Map Rules History If appropriate, purchase special shipping The Hundred Years' War History Page
The English capture Caen from
the French (Normandy 1346).
The French attempt to capture
Calais (1349).
Some notes on the real history of the Hundred Years' War
Links to Good Historical Reference Sites
What follows is a more scholarly take on the real Hundred Years' War, lifted almost entirely from published sources, expecially the French National Library. I recommend reading the original at http://www .bnf.fr/enluminures/texte/atx2_02.htm and also check out the gallery of cool war art at http://www.bnf.fr/enluminures/themes/t_1/st_1_02/a102_002.ht m Furthermore, these interesting sites also provide a wealth of information on the late middle ages in England and France, or History web sites in general.
  • Detailed Maps of the Hundred Years' War (many of which also appear here)
  • History 309 An on-line college course in Late Medieval and Renaissance History from the Univeristy of Idaho
  • Gail Dedrick's Guide to the Monarchs of England and Great Britain
  • HISTORY 108: Introduction to Medieval History from the University of Kansas ...
  • The World Lecture Hall, a Guide to On-Line classes of all sorts However, there are still some reasons to read my page before heading off to explore, especially a nice portrait gallery of the rulers of 13th and 14th century France, England, and Burgundy, so read on!
  • 93. Hundred Years' War - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
    The hundred years War, a conflict between england and France, is generally considered to have lasted 116 years, beginning in 1337 and ending in 1453.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hundred_Years'_War
    Hundred Years' War
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
    The Hundred Years' War , a conflict between England and France , is generally considered to have lasted 116 years, beginning in and ending in The effective beginning of the war was the decision of King Edward III of England to make a claim on the throne of France following the death of King Charles IV of France in . Edward's claim was through his mother, Isabella of France , Charles's sister. However, the French quoted the Salic law in order to bypass female heirs. Edward refused to do homage to Philip VI of France in 1337 and war began soon afterward. Edward's campaigns against the French knights were mostly successful. He was far less successful against their castles. He defeated the French at the Battle of Crecy in and was defeated in turn at the Battle of the Thirty in during which 30 French knights from Chateau Josselin called out and defeated 30 English knights. Unfortunately the French, observing chivalric tradition, sold Knollys ( Canolles ) and Cavely . This was good for the individual knights but damaged the country. Again, at the

    94. Hundred Years' War
    The hundred years War, a conflict between england and France, is generally considered to have lasted 116 years, beginning in 1337 and ending in 1453.
    http://www.fact-index.com/h/hu/hundred_years__war.html
    Main Page See live article Alphabetical index
    Hundred Years' War
    The Hundred Years' War , a conflict between England and France , is generally considered to have lasted 116 years, beginning in and ending in The effective beginning of the war was the decision of King Edward III of England to make a claim on the throne of France following the death of King Charles IV of France in . Edward's claim was through his mother, Isabella of France , Charles's sister. However, the French quoted the Salic law in order to bypass female heirs. Edward refused to do homage to Philip VI of France in 1337 and war began soon afterward. Edward's campaigns against the French knights were mostly successful. He was far less successful against the castles. He defeated the French at the Battle of Crecy in and was defeated in turn at the Battle of the Thirty in during which 30 French Knights from Chateau Josselin called out and defeated 30 English knights. Unfortunately the French, observing chivalric tradition, sold Knollys (Canolles) and Cavely. This was good for the individual knights but damaged the country. Again, at the battle of Poitiers in John II of France was poorly served by the disloyal French noble, Captal de Buch, who led an outflanking movement which cost the French the battle, and led to the imprisonment of the king in England. At that time the English forces were under the command of the king's eldest son

    95. BBC - History - The Hundred Years War (Part 2) 1369 - 96
    Post WW11 1945 2002. The High Middle Ages. The hundred years War (Part 2) 1369 - 96. england and France were again at war. Aquitaine rapidly fell to the French.
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/timelines/england/emid_100_years_war_p2.shtml
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    The Hundred Years War (Part 2) 1369 - 96 Aquitaine rapidly fell to the French. English tactics continued to centre on the mounted raid, now conducted mainly from Calais; for several years England also held Cherbourg and Brest. Several expeditions were dispatched from England, with little success. When Edward died in 1377 the war was stalemated, while England's southern holdings were again confined to Gascony. Edward's successor, Richard II, agreed what was intended as a 28-year truce in 1396. The treaty recognised the territorial status quo, granting England sovereignty solely over Gascony and Calais; however, English kings were allowed to use the title of 'King of France' and to claim rights to the former English possessions in Aquitaine. It was small reward for nearly 50 years of war.

    96. Cumulative Bibliography Of Medieval Military History And Technology - Subject He
    MedievalHundred years WarEngland. MedievalHundred years WarEnglandEdward III. MedievalHundred years WarEnglandJohn of Gaunt.
    http://www.deremilitari.org/biblio/brill2.htm
    Cumulative Bibliography of Medieval Military History and Technology By Kelly DeVries From Brill Academic Publishers List of Subject Headings General Methodology Late Antiquity MedievalGeneral MedievalBarbarian Invasions MedievalBattle Orations MedievalBooty MedievalBouvines (battle of) MedievalByzantium MedievalCarolingian MedievalCavalry MedievalChivalry MedievalChivalryChivalric Orders MedievalChivalryHeraldry MedievalChivalryKnights and Knighthood MedievalChivalryMonumental Effigies MedievalChivalryTournaments MedievalChurch (also Just War) MedievalCrusadesGeneral MedievalCrusadesOrigins MedievalCrusadesFirst MedievalCrusadesSecond MedievalCrusadesThird MedievalCrusadesFourth and the Latin Kingdom of Constantinople MedievalCrusadesAlbigensian MedievalCrusadesChildren's MedievalCrusadesHussites MedievalCrusadesMongols MedievalCrusadesLivonian MedievalCrusadesLater MedievalCrusadesCrusader Kingdoms MedievalDeclarations of War MedievalDiplomacy MedievalEastern Europe (including Russia) MedievalEngland MedievalEnglandAnglo-Saxon England Medieval–EnglandAnglo-Saxon1066 MedievalEnglandAnglo-Norman MedievalEnglandAngevin Kings MedievalEnglandEdward I and II MedievalEnglish/Scottish Conflicts MedievalEnglish/Scottish ConflictsBannockburn (battle of) MedievalEnglish/Scottish ConflictsNeville’s Cross (battle of) MedievalEnglish/Scottish ConflictsOtterburn (battle of) MedievalEnglish/Welsh Conflicts MedievalEnglandWars of the Roses MedievalEspionage MedievalFinancing MedievalFrance

    97. History - Medieval Realms
    It is known as the medieval Period or the Middle Ages. You will learn about crazy kings and queens, bloody battles and wars, horrible diseases and huge castles
    http://pages.zdnet.com/stanleytech/humanities/history/medieval.htm
    History Year Groups Seven Eight Nine Ten ... Eleven Medieval Realms Britain 1066-1500 This topic is about Britain after the Norman invasion of 1066. It is known as the Medieval Period or the Middle Ages. You will learn about crazy kings and queens, bloody battles and wars, horrible diseases and huge castles and cathedrals. We will visit Lewes Castle in the Summer term. Flagellants during the Black Death - they believed that the disease was punishment from god - and by whipping themselves they would be saved. Contents Pupils Parents Teachers Pupil Honours ... Pupils' Work Coursework Homework Research Projects History Club Whats in the News? People in the News History Detective History Heroes Links Great History Sites Fun and Games Quizzes, Games and other Historical Entertainment Local History Museums Sites
    Topics Romans Medieval Indians Making of UK ... Football Know Your Stuff! From the amazing History Learning Site by C.Trueman at Sackville College, West Sussex

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