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Ireland
and Britain 1170-1450
Robin Frame
In this collection of essays Robin Frame
concentrates upon two main themes: the place of the Lordship of Ireland
within the Plantagenet state; and the interaction of settler society and
English government in the culturally hybrid frontier world of later medieval
Ireland itself. As a preludeto both these themes, Ireland and Britain,
1170-1450 begins with a hitherto unpublished discussion of why 'the first
English conquest of Ireland' has been viewed as a failure, and has rarely
received the attention it deserves.
The first group of essays addresses such topics
as the changing character of the aristocratic networks that bound Ireland
to britain; the impact of the Scottish invasion led by Edward and Robert
Bruce in the early fourteenth centruy; the identity of the 'English' political
community that emerged in Ireland by the reign of Edward III; and the case
for a broadly conceived British history, incorporating rather than excluding
the English of Ireland. The subsequent group explore the character of Irish
warfare, the adaptation of English institutions to a marcher environment;
the exercise of power by regional magnates; and the complex practical interactions
between royal government and Gaelic Irish Leaders.
288 pages September 1997
1 85285 149 X Cased £45.00
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