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Harlaxton Medieval Series - Harlaxton Symposium

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Copies of the <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> <strong>Series</strong> are available from:<br />

SHAUN TYAS / PAUL WATKINS PUBLISHING,<br />

1 High Street,<br />

Donington, Lincolnshire,<br />

PE11 4TA<br />

E: pwatkins@pwatkinspublishing.fsnet.co.uk<br />

T: +44 (0)1775 821 542<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies I (Old <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 1984 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>: England in<br />

the Thirteenth Century, ed. W. M. Ormrod<br />

Articles:<br />

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

Adelaide Bennett, A Late Thirteenth-Century Psalter-Hours from London, 15–30<br />

Michael Camille, Illustrations in Harley MS 3487 and the Perception of Aristotle’s Libri<br />

naturales in Thirteenth-Century England, 31–44<br />

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

E. C. Fernie, Two Aspects of Bishop Walter de Suffield’s Lady Chapel at Norwich<br />

Cathedral, 52–55<br />

John Glenn, A Note on a Syllogism of Robert Grosseteste, 56–59<br />

John Glenn, Notes on the Mappa Mundi in Hereford Cathedral, 60–63<br />

Brian Golding, Burials and Benefactions: an Aspect of Monastic Patronage in<br />

Thirteenth-Century England, 64–75<br />

George Henderson, The Imagery of St Guthlac of Crowland, 76–94<br />

Virginia Jansen, Lambeth Palace Chapel, the Temple Choir, and Southern English<br />

Gothic Architecture of c. 1215–1240, 95–99<br />

Flora Lewis, The Veronica: Image, Legend and Viewer, 100–106<br />

Suzanne Lewis, Giles de Bridport and the Abingdon Apocalypse, 107–119<br />

Michael Prestwich, The Piety of Edward I, 120–128<br />

M. E. Roberts, The Relic of the Holy Blood and the Iconography of the Thirteenth-<br />

Century North Transept Portal of Westminster Abbey, 129–142


D. A. Stocker, The Tomb and Shrine of Bishop Grosseteste in Lincoln Cathedral, 143–<br />

148<br />

Martin W. Walsh, Performing Dame Sirith: Farce and Fabliaux at the End of the<br />

Thirteenth Century, 149–165<br />

Daniel Williams, Simon de Montfort and his Adherents, 166–177<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies II (Old <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 1985 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>: England in<br />

the Fourteenth Century, ed. W. M. Ormrod<br />

Articles:<br />

Adelaide Bennett, Anthony Bek’s Copy of Statuta Angliae, 1–27<br />

Paul Binski & David Park, A Ducciesque Episode at Ely: The Mural Decorations of<br />

Prior Crauden’s Chapel, 28–41<br />

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

Anthony Goodman, John of Gaunt, 67–87<br />

George Henderson, A Royal Effigy at Arbroath, 88–98<br />

Michael Jones, Edward III’s Captains in Brittany, 99–118<br />

Phillip Lindley, The Fourteenth-Century Architectural Programme at Ely Cathedral,<br />

119–129<br />

J. R. Maddicott, Poems of Social Protest in Early Fourteenth-Century England, 130–<br />

144<br />

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

Bernard William McLane, Change in the Court of King’s Bench, 1291–1340: The<br />

Preliminary View from Lincolnshire, 152–160<br />

Richard K. Morris, The Architecture of the Earls of Warwick in the Fourteenth<br />

Century, 161–174<br />

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

J. R. S. Phillips, Edward II and the Prophets, 189–201<br />

M. E. Roberts, John Carter at St. Stephen’s Chapel: a Romantic turns Archaeologist,<br />

202–212


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

223<br />

Lucy Freeman Sandler, Face to Face with God: A Pictorial Image of the Beatific<br />

Vision, 224–235<br />

Kay Staniland, Court Style, Painters, and the Great Wardrobe, 236–246<br />

John Taylor, The French Prose Brut: Popular History in Fourteenth-Century England,<br />

247–254<br />

T. S. Tolley, Some Historical Interests at Sherborne c. 1400, 255–266<br />

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

Martin W. Walsh, Divine Cuckold/Holy Fool: The Comic Image of Joseph in the<br />

English ‘Troubles’ Play, 278–297<br />

Nigel Wilkins, En Regardant Vers Le Païs de France: the Ballade and the Rondeau, a<br />

Cross-Channel History, 298–323<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies III (Old <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 1986 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>: England in<br />

the Fifteenth Century, ed. Daniel Williams<br />

Articles:<br />

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

Janet Backhouse, Founders of the Royal Library: Edward IV and Henry VII as<br />

Collectors of Illuminated Manuscripts, 23–41<br />

Marian Campbell, English Goldsmiths in the Fifteenth Century, 43–52<br />

Christine Carpenter, The Religion of the Gentry of Fifteenth-Century England, 53–74<br />

A. S. G. Edwards, The Manuscripts and Texts of the Second Version of John<br />

Hardyng’s Chronicle, 75–84<br />

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

John Glenn, The World Map of Pierre d’Ailly, 103–110<br />

G. L. Harriss, Henry Beaufort, ‘Cardinal of England’, 111–127<br />

Michael K. Jones, Collyweston – an Early Tudor Palace, 129–141<br />

George R. Keiser, St Jerome and the Brigittines: Visions of the Afterlife in Fifteenth-<br />

Century England, 143–152


Phillip Lindley, Figure-Sculpture at Winchester in the Fifteenth Century: A New<br />

Chronology, 153–166<br />

S. J. Payling, The Widening Franchise – Parliamentary Elections in Lancastrian<br />

Nottinghamshire, 167–185<br />

Ann Payne, The Salisbury Rolls of Arms c.1463, 187–198<br />

Colin Richmond, The Sulyard Papers: The Rewards of a Small Family Archive, 199–<br />

228<br />

Nicholas J. Rogers, Fitzwilliam Museum MS 3–1979: A Bury St Edmunds Book of<br />

Hours and the Origins of the Bury Style, 229–243<br />

Lynda Rollason, English Alabasters in the Fifteenth Century, 245–254<br />

John Scattergood, Fashion and Morality in the Late Middle Ages, 255–272<br />

Pamela Sheingorn, The Bosom of Abraham Trinity: A Late <strong>Medieval</strong> All Saints Image,<br />

273–295<br />

Kay Staniland, Royal Entry into the World, 297–313<br />

R. L. Storey, The Universities During the Wars of the Roses, 315–327<br />

Jenny Stratford, The Manuscripts of John, Duke of Bedford: Library and Chapel, 329–<br />

350<br />

Pamela Tudor-Craig, The Hours of Edward V and William Lord Hastings: British<br />

Library Manuscript Additional 54782, 351–369<br />

Daniel Williams, The Crowland Chronicle 616–1500, 371–390<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies IV (Old <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 1987 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>: Early<br />

Tudor England, ed. Daniel Williams<br />

Articles:<br />

Janet Backhouse, Illuminated Manuscripts and the Early Development of the Portrait<br />

Miniature, 1–17<br />

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

J. M. Fletcher & C. A. Upton, Feasting in an Early Tudor College: The Example of<br />

Merton College Oxford, 37–59<br />

John Glenn, A Sixteenth-Century Library: the Francis Trigge Chained Library of St<br />

Wulfram's Church, Grantham, 61–71


Christa Grössinger, Humour and Folly in English Misericords of the First Quarter of<br />

the Sixteenth Century, 73–85<br />

S. J. Gunn, The Act of Resumption of 1515, 87–106<br />

Andrew Martindale, The Ashwellthorpe Triptych, 107–123<br />

Richard K. Morris, Windows in Early Tudor Country Houses, 125–138<br />

Elizabeth Porges Watson, The Denzill Holles Commonplace Book: Memoranda of a<br />

Country Gentleman, c. 1558 Nottingham University Lib. MS PV I, 139–155<br />

John Scattergood, Skelton and Heresy, 157–170<br />

Pamela Sheingorn, The Te Deum Altarpiece and the Iconography of Praise, 171–182<br />

Pamela Tudor-Craig, Henry VIII and King David, 183–205<br />

Daniel Williams, The Catesbys 1485–1568: The Restoration of a Family to Fortune,<br />

Grace and Favour, 207–221<br />

Janet Wilson, The Sermons of Roger Edgeworth: Reformation Preaching in Bristol,<br />

223–240<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies V (Old <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 1988 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>: England in<br />

the Twelfth Century, ed. Daniel Williams<br />

Articles:<br />

Adrian Ailes, Heraldry in Twelfth-Century England: the Evidence, 1–16<br />

Jim Bradbury, The Early Years of the Reign of Stephen 1135–9, 17–30<br />

Marsha L. Dutton, The Conversion and Vocation of Aelred of Rievaulx: a Historical<br />

Hypothesis, 31–49<br />

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

Antonia Gransden, Prologues in the Historiography of Twelfth-Century England, 55–<br />

81<br />

Judith Green, Aristocratic Loyalties on the Northern Frontier of England, c.1100–<br />

1174, 83–100<br />

P. D. A. Harvey, Non-Agrarian Activities in Twelfth-Century English Estate Surveys,<br />

101–111


George Henderson, Sortes Biblicae in Twelfth-Century England: the List of Episcopal<br />

Prognostics in Cambridge, Trinity College MS R.7.5, 113–135<br />

T. A. Heslop, Romanesque Painting and Social Distinction: the Magi and the<br />

Shepherds, 137–152<br />

Henry Loyn, Epic and Romance, 153–163<br />

John McLoughlin, Amicitia in Practice: John of Salisbury (c. 1120–1180) and his<br />

Circle, 165–181<br />

Lyn Rodley, The Writing on the Wall (or not): an Aspect of Byzantine Influence on<br />

Western Art, 183–192<br />

Jennifer M. Sheppard, The Twelfth Century Library and Scriptorium at Buildwas:<br />

Assessing the Evidence, 193–204<br />

Pamela Tudor-Craig, St Bernard and the Canterbury Capitals, 205–217<br />

Martin W. Walsh, Babio: Toward a Performance Reconstruction of Secular Farce in<br />

Twelfth-Century England, 219–240<br />

Daniel Williams, The Peverils and the Essebies 1066–1166: a Study in Early Feudal<br />

Relationships, 241–259<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies I (New <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 1989 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>: England in<br />

the Thirteenth Century, ed. W. M. Ormrod<br />

Articles:<br />

Edmund King, Estate Management and the Reform Movement, 1–14<br />

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

D. A. Postles, Heads of Religious Houses as Administrators, 37–50<br />

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

Nigel Morgan, Texts and Images of Marian Devotion in Thirteenth-Century England,<br />

69–103<br />

Judith S. Neaman, Magnification as Metaphor, 105–122<br />

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


George Henderson, The Musician in the Stocks at Higham Ferrers, Northamptonshire,<br />

135–147<br />

Graeme Lawson, The Musician in the Stocks at Higham Ferrers, Northamptonshire:<br />

An Archaeological Postscript, 149–154<br />

Malcolm Thurlby, The West Front of Binham Priory, Norfolk, and the Beginnings of<br />

Bar Tracery in England, 155–165<br />

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

D. J. Turner, An Anthropomorphic Jug from Earlswood, Surrey: A Problem in the<br />

Typology of Decoration, 193–208<br />

Alan Vince, The Origin and Development of the Decorated <strong>Medieval</strong> Jug, 209–225<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies II (New <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 1990 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>: England in<br />

the Eleventh Century, ed. Carola Hicks<br />

Articles:<br />

David Bates, The Conqueror’s Charters, 1–15<br />

Henry Loyn, De Iure Domini Regis: A Comment on Royal authority in eleventhcentury<br />

England, 17–24<br />

Cassandra Potts, The Early Norman Charters: A New Perspective on an Old Debate,<br />

25–40<br />

Matthew Strickland, Slaughter, Slavery or Ransom: the Impact of the Conquest on<br />

Conduct in Warfare, 41–59<br />

Patrick Wormald, Domesday Lawsuits: a Provisional List and Preliminary Comment,<br />

61–102<br />

Joyce Hill, Monastic Reform and the Secular Church: Ælfric’s Pastoral Letters in<br />

Context, 103–117<br />

Peter Jackson, The Vitas Patrum in Eleventh-Century Worcester, 119–134<br />

Jane Martindale, Monasteries and Castles: the Priories of St-Florent de Saumur in<br />

England after 1066, 135–156<br />

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


David Rollason, Symeon of Durham and the Community of Durham in the Eleventh<br />

Century, 183–198<br />

Jonathan Wilcox, The Dissemination of Wulfstan’s Homilies: the Wulfstan Tradition in<br />

Eleventh-Century Vernacular Preaching, 199–217<br />

Jan Gerchow, Prayers for King Cnut: The Liturgical Commemoration of a Conqueror,<br />

219–238<br />

George Henderson, The Idiosyncrasy of Late Anglo-Saxon Religious Imagery, 239–<br />

249<br />

Carola Hicks, The Borders of the Bayeux Tapestry, 251–265<br />

Richard W. Pfaff, Eadui Basan: Scriptorum Princeps?, 267–283<br />

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

E. C. Teviotdale, The Making of the Cotton Troper, 301–316<br />

Cecily Clark, Domesday Book – a Great Red-herring: Thoughts on some Late-<br />

Eleventh-Century Orthographies, 317–331<br />

Elisabeth Okasha, The English Language in the Eleventh Century: The Evidence from<br />

Inscriptions, 333–345<br />

D. G. Scragg, Spelling Variations in Eleventh-Century English, 347–354<br />

Addenda:<br />

Shaun Tyas, The <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong> on <strong>Medieval</strong> England: A Bibliographical Note,<br />

355–356<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies III (New <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 1991 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>: England in<br />

the Fourteenth Century, ed. Nicholas Rogers<br />

Articles:<br />

Michael Camille, At the Edge of the Law: An Illustrated Register of Writs in the<br />

Pierpont Morgan Library, 1–14<br />

Lynda Dennison, Some Unlocated Leaves from an English Fourteenth-Century Book<br />

of Hours now in Paris, 15–33<br />

Nigel Morgan, Texts and Images of Marian Devotion in Fourteenth-Century England,<br />

34–57


Lucy Freeman Sandler, The Image of the Book-owner in the Fourteenth Century:<br />

Three Cases of Self-definition, 58–80<br />

Wendy Scase, St Anne and the Education of the Virgin: Literary and Artistic<br />

Traditions and their Implications, 81–96<br />

Stephen Medcalf, Motives for Pilgrimage: The Tale of Beryn, 97–108<br />

James Simpson, ‘After Craftes Conseil clotheth yow and fede’: Langland and London<br />

City Politics, 109–127<br />

Thorlac Turville-Petre, The ‘Nation’ in English Writings of the Early Fourteenth<br />

Century, 128–139<br />

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

Virginia Davis, Episcopal Ordination Lists as a Source for Clerical Mobility in England<br />

in the Fourteenth Century, 152–170<br />

R. N. Swanson, Economic Change and Spiritual Profits: Receipts from the Peculiar<br />

Jurisdiction of the Peak District in the Fourteenth Century, 171–195<br />

Addenda:<br />

The <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong> on <strong>Medieval</strong> England [anonymous note], 196;<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies IV (New <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 1992 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>: England in<br />

the Fifteenth Century, ed. Nicholas Rogers<br />

Articles:<br />

Rosemary Hayes, The ‘Private Life’ of a Late <strong>Medieval</strong> Bishop: William Alnwick,<br />

Bishop of Norwich and Lincoln, 1–18<br />

Benjamin Thompson, The Laity, the Alien Priories, and the Redistribution of<br />

Ecclesiastical Property, 19–41<br />

Michael K. Jones, The Relief of Avranches (1439): An English Feat of Arms at the End<br />

of the Hundred Years War, 42–55<br />

Daniel Williams, Richard III and his Overmighty Subjects: in Defence of a King, 56–<br />

71<br />

J. I. Kermode, <strong>Medieval</strong> Indebtedness: The Regions versus London, 72–88


Jane Laughton, Women in Court: Some Evidence from Fifteenth-Century Chester,<br />

89–99<br />

Philippa Maddern, ‘Best Trusted Friends’: Concepts and Practices of Friendship<br />

among Fifteenth-Century Norfolk Gentry, 100–117<br />

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

Scot McKendrick, The Romuléon and the Manuscripts of Edward IV, 149–169<br />

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

Jenny Stratford, The Royal Library in England before the Reign of Edward IV, 187–<br />

197<br />

Jonathan Alexander, The Pulpit with the Four Doctors at St James’s, Castle Acre,<br />

Norfolk, 198–206<br />

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

Nigel Morgan, The Coronation of the Virgin by the Trinity and Other Texts and<br />

Images of the Glorification of Mary in Fifteenth-Century England, 223–241<br />

Colin Richmond, Margins and Marginality: English Devotion in the Later Middle Ages,<br />

242–252<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies V (New <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 1993 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>: The Reign<br />

of Henry VII, ed. Benjamin Thompson (out of print)<br />

Articles:<br />

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

Christine Carpenter, Henry VII and the English Polity, 11–30<br />

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

53<br />

Dominic Luckett, Henry VII and the South-Western Escheators, 54–64<br />

Malcolm Underwood, The Pope, the Queen and the King’s Mother: or, the Rise and<br />

Fall of Adriano Castellesi, 65–81<br />

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


David Thomson, Henry VII and the Uses of Italy: the Savoy Hospital and Henry VII’s<br />

Posterity, 104–116<br />

Neil Beckett, Henry VII and Sheen Charterhouse, 117–132<br />

Christopher Wilson, The Designer of Henry VII’s Chapel, Westminster Abbey, 133–<br />

156<br />

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

Janet Backhouse, Illuminated Manuscripts associated with Henry VII and Members of<br />

his Immediate Family, 175–187<br />

Roger Bowers, Early Tudor Courtly Song: An Evaluation of the Fayrfax Book (BL,<br />

Additional MS 5465), 188–212<br />

Magnus Williamson, The Eton Choirbook: Collegiate Music-Making in the Reign of<br />

Henry VII, 213–228<br />

Fiona Kisby, Courtiers in the Community: the Musicians of the Royal Household<br />

Chapel in Early Tudor Westminster, 229–260<br />

Pamela Tudor-Craig, Margaret, Queen of Scotland, in Grantham, 8–9 July 1503, 261–<br />

279<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies VI (New <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 1994 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>:<br />

Monasteries and Society in <strong>Medieval</strong> Britain, ed. Benjamin<br />

Thompson<br />

Articles:<br />

Benjamin Thompson, Introduction: Monasteries and <strong>Medieval</strong> Society, 1–33<br />

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

David Rollason, Monasteries and Society in Early <strong>Medieval</strong> Northumbria, 59–74<br />

Isabel Henderson, Monasteries and Sculpture in the Insular pre-Viking Age: the<br />

Pictish Evidence, 75–96<br />

David Postles, Defensores Astabimus: Garendon Abbey and its Early Benefactors,<br />

97–136<br />

D. F. Mackreth, Peterborough, from St Aethelwold to Martin de Bec c.970–1155,<br />

137–156


Jack Higham, The Relationship Between the Abbey and Town of Peterborough from<br />

1200 to the Reformation, 157–176<br />

Roger Bowers, The Almonry Schools of the English Monasteries c.1265–1540, 177–<br />

222<br />

Lynda Dennison, Monastic or Secular? The Artist of the Ramsey Psalter, now at<br />

Holkham Hall, Norfolk, 223–261<br />

Nicholas Rogers, Monuments to Monks and Monastic Servants, 262–276<br />

Lynda Rollason, The Liver Vitae of Durham and Lay Association with Durham<br />

Cathedral Priory in the Later Middle Ages, 277–295<br />

Marsha L. Dutton, Chaucer’s Two Nuns, 296–311<br />

Joan Greatrex, Rabbits and Eels at High Table: Monks of Ely at the University of<br />

Cambridge, c1337–1539, 312–328<br />

Janet Burton, Priory and Parish: Kirkham and its Parishioners 1496–7, 329–347<br />

Barrie Dobson, English and Welsh Monastic Bishops: the Final Century 1433–1533,<br />

348–367<br />

Addenda:<br />

Pamela Tudor-Craig, Daniel Williams 368<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies VII (New <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 1995 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>: Armies,<br />

Chivalry and Warfare in <strong>Medieval</strong> Britain and France, ed.<br />

Matthew Strickland<br />

Articles:<br />

Maurice Keen, Chaucer and Chivalry Re-visited, 1–12<br />

Sonja Cameron, Chivalry and Warefare in Barbour’s Bruce, 13–29<br />

Christopher Allmand, The Fifteenth-Century English Versions of Vegetius’ De Re<br />

Militari, 30–45<br />

Carol Edington, The Tournament in <strong>Medieval</strong> Scotland, 46–62<br />

Richard K. Morris, The Architecture of Arthurian Enthusiasm: Castle Symbolism in<br />

the Reigns of Edward I and His Successors, 63–81


Jennie Hooper, The ‘Rows of the Battle-Swan’: The Aftermath of Battle in Anglo-<br />

Saxon Art, 82–99<br />

Pamela Porter, The Ways of War in <strong>Medieval</strong> Manuscript Illumination: Tracing and<br />

Assessing the Evidence, 100–114<br />

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

Toby Purser, William FitzOsbern, Earl of Hereford: Personality and Power on the<br />

Welsh Frontier 1066–1071, 133–146<br />

Charles Coulson, Valois Powers over Fortresses on the Eve of the Hundred Years<br />

War, 147–160<br />

Anthony Goodman, The Defence of Northumberland: a Preliminary Survey, 161–172<br />

Andrew Ayton, Edward III and the English Aristocracy at the Beginning of the<br />

Hundred Years War, 173–206<br />

Anne Curry, The Organisation of Field Armies in Lancastrian Normandy, 207–233<br />

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

John Palmer, War and Domesday Waste, 256–275<br />

Michael Prestwich, Military Logistics: the Case of 1322, 276–288<br />

Kelly DeVries, The Forgotten Battle of Bevershoutsveld, 3 May 1382: Technological<br />

Innovation and Military Significance, 289–303<br />

Matthew Bennett, The Myth of the Military Supremacy of Knightly Cavalry, 304–316<br />

Matthew Strickland, Provoking or Avoiding Battle? Challenge, Duel and Single<br />

Combat in Warfare of the High Middle Ages, 317–343<br />

Frédérique Lachaud, Armour and Military Dress in Thirteenth- and Early Fourteenth-<br />

Century England, 344–369<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies VIII (New <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 1996 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>: England<br />

and the Continent in the Middle Ages: Studies in Memory<br />

of Andrew Martindale, ed. John Mitchell<br />

Articles:<br />

Philip Dixon, The Proto-history of Cluny: Town Planning in the Tenth and Eleventh<br />

Centuries, 1–14


Peter Lasko, Anthropomorthic Evangelist Symbols: Lower Saxony, Roger of<br />

Helmarshausen and Insular Iconographic Tradition, 15–27<br />

George Zarnecki, Romanesque Sculpture of Lincoln Cathedral and the Continent, 28–<br />

34<br />

Malcolm Thurlby, Roger of Pont L’Evêque, Archbishop of York (1154–81) and French<br />

Sources for the Beginning of Gothic in Northern Britain, 35–47<br />

Ruth Harvey, Cross-Channel Gossip in the Twelfth Century, 48–59<br />

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

Christopher Harper-Bill, The Diocese of Norwich and the Italian Connection, 1198–<br />

1261, 75–89<br />

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

Diana Wood, Rule from Europe? Four English Views of Papal Authority in the<br />

Fourteenth Century, 97–112<br />

Steffani Becker-Hounslow and Paul Crossley, England and the Baltic: New Thoughts<br />

on Old Problems, 113–128<br />

Gerhard Schmidt, England and the Emergence of a New Figure Style on the<br />

Continent during the 1340s, 129–136<br />

Nigel Morgan, The French Interpretations of the English Illustrated Apocalypses,<br />

137–156<br />

Veronica Sekules, Dynasty and Patrimony in the Self-Construction of an English<br />

Queen: Philippa of Hainault and her Images, 157–174<br />

Robert Gibbs, The Three-Bay (or Five-Bay) Interior and the Apsidal Interior from<br />

Giotto to Van Eyck: A Westminster Episode, 175–188<br />

Brigitte Corley, Historical Links and Artistic Reflections: England and Northern<br />

Germany in the Late Middle Ages, 189–202<br />

Michael Jones, A Prince and his Biographer: John IV, Duke of Brittany (1364–99) and<br />

Guillaume de Saint-André, 203–217<br />

Jenny Stratford, Gold and Diplomacy: England and France in the Reign of Richard II,<br />

218–237<br />

Pamela Tudor-Craig and Lisa Monnas, A Seal Bag of 1400 at Burghley House, 238–<br />

248<br />

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


Thomas Tolley, Jan Van Eyck and the English, 267–297<br />

Cecil H. Clough, Late Fifteenth-Century English Monarchs Subject to Italian<br />

Renaissance Influence, 298–317<br />

Caroline Barron and Mary Erler, The Making of Syon Abbey’s Altar Table of Our Lady<br />

c.1490–96, 318–335<br />

Janet Backhouse, The Lady Margaret Beaufort Hours at Alnwick Castle, 336–348<br />

Xenia Muratova, The Tomb of Bishop Thomas James in the Cathedral of Dol: A<br />

Monument of the Early Italian Renaissance in Gothic Brittany, 349–364<br />

John Mitchell, Painting in East Anglia around 1500: the Continental Connection, 365–<br />

380<br />

Eric Fernie, Andrew Martindale – an Oration, Norwich Cathedral, 5 July 1995, 381–<br />

384<br />

Addenda:<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies (list of), 385; blank pages [386–390]; followed by 128<br />

pages of plates containing 13 plates in full colour and 187 in monochrome. The<br />

plates are not consecutively numbered except by each author.<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies IX (New <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 1997 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>: Family<br />

and Dynasty in Late <strong>Medieval</strong> England, ed. Richard Eales<br />

and Shaun Tyas<br />

Articles:<br />

Nick Barratt, Financial Pressures and Dynastic Problems in Angevin England, 1–20<br />

Rhoda Bucknill, An Elusive Clan: the Wayte Family of Hampshire and Their Place in<br />

Local Society, 21–37<br />

Mario Fernandes, The Northamptonshire Assize Jurors: the Role of the Family as a<br />

Motivating Force during the Barons’ War, 38–55<br />

Thorlac Turville-Petre, Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Digby 86: a Thirteenth-century<br />

Commonplace Book in its Social Context, 56–66<br />

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

Gudrun Tscherpel, The Political Function of History: the Past and Future of Noble<br />

Families, 87–104


Caroline Shenton, Philippa of Hainault’s Churchings: the Politics of Motherhood at the<br />

Court of Edward III, 105–121<br />

Lynda Dennison, British Library, Egerton MS 3277: a Fourteenth-Century Psalter-<br />

Hours and the Question of Bohun Family Ownership, 122–155<br />

John A. A. Goodall, The Architecture of Ancestry at the Collegiate Church of St<br />

Andrew’s Wingfield, Suffolk, 156–171<br />

Sophie Oosterwijk, ‘A Swithe Feire Graue’: the Appearance of Children on <strong>Medieval</strong><br />

Tomb Monuments, 172–192<br />

Vivienne Rock, Shadow Royals? The Political Use of the Extended Family of Lady<br />

Margaret Beaufort, 193–210<br />

Index, 211-37<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies X (New <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 1998 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>: The<br />

<strong>Medieval</strong> English Cathedral: Papers in Honour of Pamela<br />

Tudor-Craig, ed. Janet Backhouse<br />

Articles:<br />

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

Daniel Williams, Trouble in the Cathedral Close: Archbishop Boniface’s 1259<br />

Visitation of the Priory of Christ Church, Canterbury, 15–22<br />

Barrie Dobson, ‘The clergy are well lodged’: the Transformation of the Cathedral<br />

Precinct at Late <strong>Medieval</strong> Durham, 23–40<br />

Paul Binski, The Painted Nave Ceiling of Peterborough Abbey, 41–62<br />

Richard Foster, Feet on the Ground; Eyes on the Heavens: Some Aspects of Porphyry<br />

Opus Sectile Pavements in England, 63–75<br />

Peter Draper, Enclosures and Entrances in <strong>Medieval</strong> Cathedrals: Access and Security,<br />

76–88<br />

Nigel Morgan, Marian Liturgy in Salisbury Cathedral, 89–111<br />

Janet Backhouse, The Lovel Lectionary: a Memorial offering to Salisbury, 112–125<br />

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

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


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

Ncholas Rogers, The Origins of English Diocesan Coats-of-Arms, 191–207<br />

John Cherry, The <strong>Medieval</strong> Episcopal Ring, 208–217<br />

George Henderson, Tabula Eliensis: a Monastic U-turn?, 218–230<br />

Eric Fernie, The Cathedral Monograph: a History and Assessment, 231–239<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies XI (New <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 1999 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>: The<br />

Church and Learning in Later <strong>Medieval</strong> Society: Essays in<br />

Honour of R.B. Dobson, ed. Caroline M. Barron and Jenny<br />

Stratford<br />

Articles:<br />

Benjamin Thompson, The Academic and Active Vocations in the <strong>Medieval</strong> Church:<br />

Archbishop John Pecham, 1–24<br />

James G. Clark, Monastic Education in Late <strong>Medieval</strong> England, 25–40<br />

David Crook, Churches and Chapels on a Fifteenth-Century Monastic Map of the<br />

Lincolnshire Fenland, 41–50<br />

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

Martin Heale, Books and Learning in the Dependent Priories of the Monasteries of<br />

<strong>Medieval</strong> England, 64–79<br />

Lynda Dennison & Nicholas Rogers, A <strong>Medieval</strong> Best-Seller: Some Examples of<br />

Decorated Copies of Higden’s Polychronicon, 80–99<br />

Andrew R. Wines, The University of Life and the London Charter-house: Practical<br />

Experience versus Scholarly Attainment within the Carthusian Leadership, 100–109<br />

Pamela Tudor-Craig, The Iconography of Wisdom and the Frontispiece to the Bible<br />

Historiale, British Library, Additional Manuscript 18856, 110–127<br />

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

Compton Reeves, Creative Scholarship in the Cathedrals, 1300–1500, 160–169<br />

Joan Greatrex, Horoscopes and Healing at Norwich Cathedral Priory in the Later<br />

Middle Ages, 170–177


David Lepine, ‘A Long Way from University’: Cathedral Canons and Learning at<br />

Hereford in the Fifteenth Century, 178–195<br />

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

Patrick Zutshi, The Mendicant Orders and the University of Cambridge in the<br />

Fourteenth and Early Fifteenth Centuries, 210–227<br />

John Barron, The Augustinian Canons and the University of Oxford: the Lost College<br />

of St George, 228–254<br />

Virginia Davis, The Contribution of University-Educated Secular Clerics to the<br />

Pastoral Life of the English Church, 255–272<br />

Jeffrey H. Denton, The Competence of the Parish Clergy in Thirteenth-Century<br />

England, 273–285<br />

Clive Burgess, Educated Parishioners in London and Bristol on the Eve of the<br />

Reformation, 286–304<br />

Fiona Kisby, Books in London Parish Churches before 1603: Some Preliminary<br />

Observations, 305–326<br />

Joel T. Rosenthal, Clerical Book Bequests: a Vade Mecum, but Whence and Whither?,<br />

327–343<br />

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

Alexandra F. Johnston, The York Cycle and the Libraries of York, 355–370<br />

Carole Rawcliffe, The Eighth Comfortable Work: Education and the <strong>Medieval</strong> English<br />

Hospital, 371–398<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies XII (New <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 2000 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>: Prophecy,<br />

Apocalypse and the Day of Doom, ed. Nigel Morgan<br />

Articles:<br />

Michael J. Bennett, Prophecy, Providence and the Revolution of 1399, 1–18<br />

Hilary Carey, Astrology and the Last Things, 19–38<br />

Lesley Coote, The Crusading Bishop: Henry Despenser and his Manuscript, 39–51<br />

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


Robert Easting, Personal Apocalypse: Judgement in Some Other-World Visions, 68–<br />

85<br />

Rosalind Field, Apocalyptic Consolation in the Middle-English Pearl, 86–96<br />

Richard Foster, The Perfect Three: A Numerological Context for the Calculation of the<br />

Lifespan of the Universe According to the Westminster Abbey Sanctuary Pavement,<br />

97–117<br />

Anke Holdenried, Aspects of the English Reception of the Sibylla Tiburtina: Prophecy<br />

and Devotion, 118–138<br />

Steven Justice, Prophecy and the Explanation of Social Disorder, 139–159<br />

Kathryn Kerby-Fulton, Magda Hayton and Kenna Olsen Pseudo-Hildegardian,<br />

Prophecy and Antimendicant Propaganda in Late-<strong>Medieval</strong> England: An Edition of the<br />

Most Popular Insular Text of ‘Insurgent gentes’, 160–194<br />

John Lowden, The Apocalypse in the Early-Thirteenth- Century Bibles Moralisées: A<br />

Re-Assessment, 195–219<br />

Margaret Manion, The Angers Tapestries of the Apocalypse and Valois Patronage,<br />

220-238<br />

M. A. Michael, Matthew Paris, Brother William and St. Marcella: Comments on the<br />

Apocalyptic Man in British Library MS Cotton Nero.D.1, 239-249<br />

Nigel Morgan, The Torments of the Damned in Hell in Texts and Images in England<br />

in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries, 250-260<br />

Rosemary Muir Wright, Living in the Final Countdown: the Angevin Apocalypse<br />

Panels in Stuttgart, 261-276<br />

Veronica O’Mara, ‘Go le curselynges, to euerelasting fier’: Doomsday in Middle<br />

English Prose Sermons, 277-291<br />

Sue Powell, All Saints’ Church, North Street, York: Text and Image in the Pricke of<br />

Conscience Window, 292-316<br />

Andrew Prescott, ‘The Hand of God’: the Suppression of the Peasants’ Revolt of<br />

1381, 317-341<br />

Nicholas Rogers, ‘Et expecto resurrectionem mortuorum’: Images and Texts Relating<br />

to the Resurrection of the Dead and the Last Judgement on English Brasses and<br />

Incised Slabs, 342-355<br />

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

Meg Twycross and Pamela King, Doomsday as Hypertext: Contexts of Doomsday in<br />

Fifteenth-Century Northern Manuscripts, 377-403


<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies XIII (New <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 2001 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>: The<br />

Lancastrian Court, ed. Jenny Stratford<br />

Articles:<br />

G. L. Harriss, The Court of the Lancastrian Kings, 1–18<br />

John Cherry, Some Lancastrian Seals, 19–28<br />

Anne Curry, The ‘Coronation Expedition’ and Henry VI’s Court in France, 1430 to<br />

1432, 29–52<br />

Barrie Dobson, Henry VI and the University of Cambridge, 53–67<br />

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

Alfred Hiatt, Beyond a Border: The Maps of Scotland in John Hardyng’s Chronicle,<br />

78–94<br />

Margaret L. Kekewich, The Lancastrian Court in Exile, 95–110<br />

Richard Marks, Images of Henry VI, 111–124<br />

Lisa Monnas, Textiles from the Funerary Achievement of Henry V, 125–146<br />

Nigel Morgan, An SS Collar in the Devotional Context of the Shield of the Five<br />

Wounds, 147–162<br />

Derek Pearsall, Crowned King: War and Peace in 1415, 163–172<br />

Nicholas Perkins, Representing Advice in Lydgate, 173–191<br />

Carole Rawcliffe, Master Surgeons at the Lancastrian Court, 192–210<br />

Nicholas Rogers, Henry VI and the Proposed Canonisation of King Alfred, 211–220<br />

Lucy Freeman Sandler, Lancastrian Heraldry in the Bohun Manuscripts, 221–232<br />

Linda Ehrsam Voigts, The Master of the King’s Stillatories, 233–252<br />

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


<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies XIV (New <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 2002 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>: The Parish<br />

in Late <strong>Medieval</strong> England, ed. Clive Burgess and Eamon<br />

Duffy<br />

Articles:<br />

Clive Burgess, Time and Place: The Late <strong>Medieval</strong> English Parish in Perspective, 1–28<br />

David Lepine, ‘And alle oure paresshens’: Secular Cathedrals and Parish Churches in<br />

Late <strong>Medieval</strong> England, 29–53<br />

Martin Heale, Monastic-Parochial Churches in Late <strong>Medieval</strong> England, 54–77<br />

Nicholas Orme, The Other Parish Churches: Chapels in Late <strong>Medieval</strong> England, 78–94<br />

Beat Kümin, The Secular Legacy of the Late <strong>Medieval</strong> English Parish, 95–111<br />

Elizabeth New, Signs of Community or Marks of the Exclusive? Parish and Guild Seals<br />

in Later <strong>Medieval</strong> England, 112–128<br />

Ken Farnhill, The Guild of the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary and the Priory<br />

of St Mary in Walsingham, 129–145<br />

Robert Swanson, Profits, Priests and People, 146–159<br />

Susan Powell, The Festial: The Priest and His Parish, 160–176<br />

Magnus Williamson, Liturgical Music in the Late <strong>Medieval</strong> English Parish: Organs and<br />

Voices, Ways and Means, 177–242<br />

Nigel Saul, The Gentry and the Parish, 243–260<br />

Nicholas Rogers, Hic Iacet ...: The Location of Monuments in Late <strong>Medieval</strong> Parish<br />

Churches, 261–281<br />

Judith Middleton-Stewart, Parish Activity in Late <strong>Medieval</strong> Fenland: Accounts and<br />

Wills from Tilney All Saints and St Mary’s, Mildenhall, 1443–1520, 282–301<br />

Katherine French, Women Churchwardens in Late <strong>Medieval</strong> England, 302–321<br />

Alexandra F. Johnston, Parish Playmaking before the Reformation, 322–338<br />

Peregrine Horden, Small Beer? The Parish and the Poor and Sick in Late <strong>Medieval</strong><br />

England, 339–364


Peter Marshall, Anticlericalism Revested? Expressions of Discontent in Early Tudor<br />

England, 365–380<br />

Eamon Duffy, The End of it All: The Material Culture of the <strong>Medieval</strong> English Parish<br />

and the 1552 Inventories of Church Goods, 381–399<br />

Index, 400-20<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies XV (New <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 2003 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>: Freedom<br />

of Movement in the Middle Ages, ed. Peregrine Horden<br />

Articles:<br />

Peregrine Horden, Towards a History of <strong>Medieval</strong> Mobility,<br />

Cultural Migration<br />

Christopher Page, Freedom of Movement and the Rise of European Music in the Early<br />

Middle Ages, 1-18<br />

Jane Hawkes, Anglo-Saxon Romanitas: The Transmission and Use of Early Christian<br />

Art in Anglo-Saxon England, 19-36<br />

Sophie Oosterwijk, Money, Morality, Mortality: The Migration of the Danse Macabre<br />

from Murals to Misericords, 37-56<br />

Wendy Scase, ‘Let him be kept in most strait prison’: Lollards and the Epistola<br />

luciferi, 57-72<br />

Long Journeys<br />

Ian Wei, Scholars and Travel in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries, 73-85<br />

Peter Biller, Heretics and Long Journeys, 86-103<br />

David Lepine, ‘Loose Canons’: The Mobility of the Higher Clergy in the Later Middle<br />

Ages, 104-22<br />

Itinerants<br />

R. N. Swanson, Tales to Tug at Purse-Strings: Publicizing Indulgences in Pre-<br />

Reformation England, 123-36<br />

James Davis, ‘Men as march with fote packes’: Pedlars and Freedom of Movement in<br />

Late <strong>Medieval</strong> England, 137-156


Women<br />

Christopher Baswell, Albyne Sails for Albion: Gender, Motion, and Foundation in the<br />

English Imperial Imagination, 157-168<br />

Richard Smith, Moving to Marry among the Customary tenants of Late Thirteenthand<br />

Early Fourteenth-century England, 169-85<br />

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

Obstacles<br />

Jennifer Neville, ‘None shall pass’: Mental Barriers to Travel in Old English Poetry,<br />

203-14<br />

Paul Brand, The Travails of Travel: The Difficulties of Getting to Court in Later<br />

<strong>Medieval</strong> England, 215-28<br />

Carole Rawcliffe, Isolating the <strong>Medieval</strong> Leper: Ideas – and Misconceptions – about<br />

Segregation in the Middle Ages, 229-48<br />

Control<br />

Dave Postles, Movers and Prayers: The <strong>Medieval</strong> English Church and Movement of<br />

People, 249-66<br />

Nicholas Orme, Access and Exclusion: Exeter Cathedral, 1300-1540, 267-86<br />

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

Image and Metaphor<br />

M. A. Michael, Towards a Hermeneutics of the Manuscript: the Physical and<br />

Metaphysical Journeys of Paris, BNF, MS Fr 571, 305-17<br />

Christa Grössinger, The Road to Hell, 318-30<br />

Ad Putter, Moving Towards God: The Possibilities and Limitations of Metaphorical<br />

Journeys in Hilton’s Scale of Perfection, 331-45<br />

Index, 346-66<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies XVI (New <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 2004 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>: London<br />

and the Kingdom: Essays in Honour of Caroline M. Barron,<br />

ed. Matthew Davies and Andrew Prescott<br />

Articles:<br />

Producers and Consumers: City, Abbey and Court


Vanessa Harding, Caroline Barron and the Study of <strong>Medieval</strong> London, 1-11<br />

Barbara Harvey, Westminster Abbey and Londoners, 1440-1540, 12-37<br />

Ian W. Archer, Conspicuous Consumption Revisited: City and Court in the Reign of<br />

Elizabeth I, 37-57<br />

Martha Carlin, Putting Dinner on the Table in <strong>Medieval</strong> London, 58-77<br />

Religious Life<br />

Carole Rawcliffe, Christ the Physician Walks the Wards: Celestial Therapeutics in the<br />

<strong>Medieval</strong> Hospital, 78-97<br />

Clive Burgess, London, the Church and the Kingdom, 98-117<br />

Gervase Rosser, Party List: Making Friends in English <strong>Medieval</strong> Guilds, 118-34<br />

Mary Erler, Religious Women after the Dissolution: Continuing Community, 135-45<br />

Merchants, Trades and Learning<br />

Hannes Kleineke, The Schoolboy’s Tale: A Fifteenth-Century Voice from St. Paul’s<br />

School’, 146-59<br />

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

Stephanie R. Hovland, Girls as Apprentices in Later <strong>Medieval</strong> London, 179-94<br />

John R. Oldland, The Wealth of Early Tudor Craftsmen in London based on the Lay<br />

Subsidies, 195-211<br />

Art, Commemoration and the City<br />

Jenny Stratford, Richard II’s Treasure and London, 212-29<br />

Christian Steer, Commemoration and Women in <strong>Medieval</strong> London, 230-45<br />

Elizabeth New, Representation and Identity in <strong>Medieval</strong> London: the Evidence of<br />

Seals, 246-58<br />

Jessica Freeman, Simon Seman, Citizen and Vintner of London, 259-64<br />

Nigel Saul, The <strong>Medieval</strong> Monuments of St. Mary’s, Barton on Humber, 265-71<br />

Lawyers and the Law in London<br />

Derek Keene, Out of the Inferno: an Italian Lawyer in the Service of Odovardo re de<br />

Anglia and his London Connections, 272-92<br />

Stephen O’Connor, A Nest of Smugglers? Customs Evasion in London at the Outbreak<br />

of the Hundred Years’ War, 293-304


Penny Tucker, London and “The Making of the Common Law, 305-15<br />

London, Literature and the Kingdom<br />

Stephen H. Rigby, Ideology and Utopia: Prudence and Magnificence, Kingship and<br />

Tyranny in Chaucer’s Knight’s Tale, 316-34<br />

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

Literacies<br />

Mary-Rose McLaren, Reading, Writing and Recording. Literacy and the London<br />

Chronicles in the Fifteenth Century, 346-65<br />

Laura Wright, The Playground Language of London Schoolchildren: Southern Voicing<br />

Revisited, 366-83<br />

Sheila Lindenbaum, Literate Londoners and Liturgical Change: Sarum Books in City<br />

Parishes after 1414, 384-99<br />

Addenda<br />

Heather Creaton, A Bibliography of the Published Writings of Caroline M. Barron,<br />

400-04<br />

Index, 405-36<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies XVII (New <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 2005 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>: Recording<br />

<strong>Medieval</strong> Lives, edited by Julia Boffey and Virginia Davis<br />

Articles:<br />

Rethinking <strong>Medieval</strong> People<br />

Henry Summerson, Rethinking <strong>Medieval</strong> People: the Experience of the DNB, 1-13<br />

Collective Biography and Evidence<br />

Janet Burton, Documenting the Lives of <strong>Medieval</strong> Nuns, 14-24<br />

David Lepine, “The Noiseless Tenor of Their Way”? The Lives of the Late <strong>Medieval</strong><br />

Higher Clergy, 25-41<br />

Anne F. Sutton, Fifteenth-Century Mercers and the Written Word: Mercers and their<br />

Scribes and Scriveners, 42-58<br />

History, Biography and Autobiography<br />

Mishtooni Bose, Thomas Gascoigne’s Biographies, 59-73<br />

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


Christopher Fletcher, Charles VI and Richard II: Inconstant Youths, 85-101<br />

William Marx, Latin Chronicles and <strong>Medieval</strong> Lives in the Middle English Prose Brut,<br />

102-11<br />

Susan Powell, John to John: The Manuale Sacerdotis and the Daily Life of a Parish<br />

Priest, 112-29<br />

Pamela Robinson, The Manuscript of The Book of Margery Kempe, 130-40<br />

Wills<br />

Caroline M. Barron, The Will as Autobiography: the Case of Thomas Salter, Priest,<br />

Died November 1558, 141-81<br />

Pamela M. King, Memorials of Ralph Woodford (d.1498), Ashby Folville,<br />

Leicestershire: the Death of the Author, 182-88<br />

Carol M. Meale, The World and the Soul: the Will of Lady Isabel Morley (d. 1467),<br />

189-203<br />

Visual and Material Evidence<br />

David J. King, Anne Harling Reconsidered, 204-22<br />

Richard A. Linenthal, Ordinary Lives: <strong>Medieval</strong> Personal Seal Matrices, 223-32<br />

Nicholas J. Rogers, The Biographical Brass, 233-42<br />

Pamela Tudor-Craig, The Image of the Writer in <strong>Medieval</strong> English Manuscripts, 243-<br />

56<br />

Livia Viser-Fuchs, Richard of York: Books and the Man, 257-72<br />

Into the Future<br />

Shaun Tyas, ‘Historical Novels and <strong>Medieval</strong> Lives, 273-99<br />

Index, 300-24<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies XVIII (New <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 2006 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>, Signs and<br />

Symbols, edited John Cherry and Ann Payne<br />

Articles:<br />

Mary Carruthers, “Thinking in Images”: the Spatial and Visual Requirements of<br />

Cognition and Recollection in <strong>Medieval</strong> Psychology, 1-17<br />

Adrian Ailes, Powerful Impressions: Symbols of Office and Authority on Secular<br />

Seals, 18-28


Elizabeth Danbury, Security and Safeguard: Signs and Symbols on Boxes and<br />

Chests, 29-41<br />

P.D.A. Harvey, Colour in <strong>Medieval</strong> Maps, 42-52<br />

Nigel Morgan, The Monograms, Arms and Badges of the Virgin Mary in Late <strong>Medieval</strong><br />

England, 53-63<br />

Nicholas J. Rogers, Dieu y voye: Some Late <strong>Medieval</strong> and Early Modern Instances of<br />

Divine Vision, 64-72<br />

Elizabeth New, Symbols of Devotion and Identity in The Shaftesbury Hours<br />

(Cambridge, Fitzwilliam Museum, MS 2-1957), 73-84<br />

Phillipa Hardman, Sign Language: Seeing Things in Middle English Poems, 85-99<br />

Andrew Prescott, Inventing Symbols and Traditions: The Case of the Stonemasons,<br />

100-118<br />

Julian M. Luxford, Symbolism in East Anglian Flushwork, 119-132<br />

Pamela Tudor-Craig, Effigies with Attitude, 133-42<br />

John Cherry, La Chantepleure: a Symbol of Mourning, 143-49<br />

Alison Stones, Signs and Symbols in the Estoire del saint Graal and the Queste del<br />

saint Graal, 150-67<br />

Lucy Freeman Sandler, Gone Fishing: Angling in the Fitzwilliam Bohun Psalter, 168-<br />

79<br />

Christa Grössinger, Questioning Signs and Symbols: Their Meaning and<br />

Interpretation, 180-91<br />

The Published Writings of Janet Backhouse (1938-2004), 192-204<br />

Index, 205-23<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies XIX (New <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 2007 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>, The Friars<br />

in <strong>Medieval</strong> Britain, edited by Nicholas Rogers<br />

Articles:<br />

Preachers and Theologians<br />

Michael F. Robson, OFM, The Franciscan Custody of York in the Thirteenth Century,<br />

1-24<br />

William H. Campbell, Franciscan Preaching in Thirteenth-Century England: Sources,<br />

Problems, Possibilities, 25-40


Maura O’Carroll, SND, Mid-Thirteenth-Century English Dominican Preaching and<br />

Catechesis: Bodleian MS Laud. Misc. 511 and Other Sermons and Pastoral Texts, 41-<br />

72<br />

Relationships<br />

Clive Burgess, Friars and the Parish in Late <strong>Medieval</strong> Bristol: Observations and<br />

Possibilities, 73-96<br />

Joan Greatrex, Monks and Mendicants in English Cathedral Cities: Signs of a Mutual<br />

Benefit Society, 97-106<br />

Jens Röhrkasten, Friars and the Laity in the Franciscan Custody of Cambridge, 107-<br />

24<br />

Barry Windeatt, Margery Kempe and the Friars, 125-41<br />

Texts and Writers<br />

James G. Clark, The Friars and the Classics in Late <strong>Medieval</strong> England, 142-51<br />

Linda E. Voigts, The Medical Astrology of Ralph Hoby, a Fifteenth-Century Franciscan,<br />

152-68<br />

Art and Iconography<br />

David J. King, Mendicant Glass in East Anglia, 169-84<br />

Nicholas J. Rogers, The Provenance of the Thornham Parva Retable, 185-93<br />

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

The Image of the Friar<br />

Henry Summerson, A “nest of freres”: the Mendicants, Their Friends and Enemies in<br />

the Oxford DNB, 208-17<br />

Ralph Hanna and Sarah Wood, Mendicants and the Economies of Piers Plowman,<br />

218-37<br />

Wendy Scase, Antifraternal Traditions in Reformation Pamphlets, 238-64<br />

Local Studies<br />

Bruce Watson and Chris Thomas, The Mendicant Houses of <strong>Medieval</strong> London: An<br />

Archaeological and Architectural Review, 265-97<br />

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

Anna A. Anisimova, Mendicants in the Monastic Towns of South-Eastern England,<br />

319-30


Hubert Pragnell, New Uses for Old Friaries: the Greyfriars and Blackfriars in<br />

Canterbury, 331-39<br />

Index, 340-72<br />

<strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Studies XX (New <strong>Series</strong>)<br />

Proceedings of the 2008 <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong>, Memory<br />

and Commemoration in <strong>Medieval</strong> England, edited by<br />

Caroline M. Barron and Clive Burgess<br />

Articles<br />

Pamela Tudor-Craig, The Origins of the <strong>Harlaxton</strong> <strong>Symposium</strong> in 1983, 1-5<br />

Nick Holder, <strong>Medieval</strong> Foundation Stones and Foundation Ceremonies, 6-23<br />

Claire Gobbi Daunton, Contrasting Patrons and their Glass: the Church of St John the<br />

Baptist, Milcham, Norfolk, 24-39<br />

Robert Kinsey, The Location of Commemoration in Late <strong>Medieval</strong> England: the Case<br />

of the Thorpes of Northamptonshire, 40-57<br />

David Lepine, “Their Name Liveth for Evermore”? Obits at Exeter Cathedral in the<br />

Later Middle Ages, 58-74<br />

David J. King, Henry Scrope’s Window at Heydour, 75-86<br />

W.M. Ormrod, Queenship, Death and Agency: the Commemoration of Isabella of<br />

France and Philippa of Hainault, 87-103<br />

Jennifer Ward, Who to Commemorate and Why? The Commemoration of the Nobility<br />

in Eastern England in the Fourteenth Century, 104-16<br />

Christian Steer, Royal and Noble Commemoration in the Mendicant Houses of<br />

<strong>Medieval</strong> London, 117-42<br />

Meriel Connor, Fifteenth-Century Monastic Obituaries: the Evidence of Christ Church<br />

Priory, Canterbury, 143-58<br />

Richard Marks, “Entumbed right princely”: the Beauchamp Chapel at Warwick and<br />

the Politics of Internment, 159-80<br />

Sophie Oosterwijk, Death, Memory and Commemoration: John Lydgate and<br />

“Macabrees daunce” at Old St Paul’s Cathedral, London, 181-97<br />

Sally Badham, The Robertsons Remembered: the Generations of Calais Staplers at<br />

Algarkirk, Lincolnshire, 198-213<br />

Mellie Naydenova-Slade, Late <strong>Medieval</strong> Holy Kinship Images and Family<br />

Commemoration: the Evidence from Thornhill, West Yorkshire and Latten, Essex,<br />

214-29<br />

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


David Griffith, English Commemorative Inscriptions: Some Literary Dimensions, 247-<br />

66<br />

Nicholas Orme, The Commemoration of Places in <strong>Medieval</strong> England, 267-87<br />

Peregrine Horden, Origins of “All Souls” and its Significance for Henry Chichele, 288-<br />

305<br />

Paul Binski, Developments in the Study of <strong>Medieval</strong> Art since 1983, 306-17<br />

Derek Pearsall, Developments in the Study of Middle English Literature since 1983,<br />

318-27<br />

Joel T. Rosenthal, Developments in the Study of <strong>Medieval</strong> History since 1983, 328-48<br />

Index. 349-86

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