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Anatomy of an army : the campaigns of 1387-1388Bell, Adrian R. January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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Papal efforts for peace under Benedict XII, 1334-1342Jenkins, Helen, January 1933 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Pennsylvania, 1933. / Bibliography: p. 84-88.
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War, government and politics in English Gascony, 1399-1453Vale, Malcolm Graham Allan January 1967 (has links)
No description available.
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The usages of war in the period of the Hundred Years WarKeen, Maurice January 1963 (has links)
No description available.
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La représentation des pouvoirs et des hiérarchies dans les Chroniques de Jean FroissartNejedlý, Martin. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Ecole des hautes études en sciences sociales, 1995. / Cover title. Includes bibliographical references (p. 527-554) and index.
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The financing of the hundred years' war, 1337-1360Terry, Schuyler B. January 1914 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago, 1910. / Published also as Studies in economics and political science ... no. 35 in the series of monographs by writers connected with the London school of economics and political science. Bibliography: p. 189-191.
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The financing of the hundred years' war, 1337-1360 ...Terry, Schuyler B. January 1914 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago, 1910. / Published also as Studies in economics and political science ... no. 35 in the series of monographs by writers connected with the London school of economics and political science. Bibliography: p. 189-191.
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Prisoners of war in the Hundred Years War : the golden age of private ransomsAmbuhl, Rémy January 2009 (has links)
If the issue of prisoners of war has given rise to numerous studies in recent years, nevertheless, this topic is far from exhausted. Built on a large corpus of archival sources, this study fuels the debate on ransoms and prisoners with new material. Its originality lies in its broad chronological framework, i.e. the duration of the Hundred Years War, as well as its perspective – that of lower ranking as well as higher-ranking prisoners on both side of the Channel. What does it mean for those men to live in the once coined ‘golden age of private ransoms’? My investigations hinge around three different themes: the status of prisoners of war, the ransoming process and the networks of assistance. I argue that the widespread practice of ransoming becomes increasingly systematic in the late Middle Ages. More importantly, I show how this evolution comes ‘from below’; from the individual masters and prisoners who faced the multiple obstacles raised by the lack of official structure. Indeed, the ransoming of prisoners remained the preserve of private individuals throughout the war and no sovereign could afford that this became otherwise. It is specifically the non-interventionism of the crown and the large freedom of action of individuals which shaped the ransom system.
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'La querelle Anglaise' : diplomatic and legal debate during the Hundred Years War, with an edition of the polemical treatise 'Pour ce que plusieurs' (1464)Taylor, Craig David January 1998 (has links)
This dissertation offers a study of the fifteenth century French polemical treatises written by authors such as Jean de Montreuil, Jean Juvénal des Ursins, Noël de Fribois and Robert Blondel, together with an edition of perhaps the most important of these works, Pour ce que plusieurs (1464). This treatise may have been written by Guillaume Cousinot II, who had been personally involved in the events surrounding the attack upon Fougères in 1449, a subject addressed in highly partial terms by this text; moreover, Cousinot had visited the Lancastrians in exile in Scotland, which might explain how Sir John Fortescue was able to learn of Jean Juvénal's Tres crestien, tres hault, tres puissant roy (1446), and how Pource que plusieurs in turn drew upon the pamphlets of Fortescue. The polemical texts went beyond moral and chivalric discussion of the war, to address the complex legal and historical issues underpinning the conflict. In response to the English claim to the French throne, Jean de Montreuil adopted the Salic Law, a highly dubious and problematic authority, but one that achieved great fame particularly through the influence of Pour ce que plusieurs. Similarly, the polemical writers rejected English demands for Aquitaine and Normandy in full sovereignty by arguing that no French king could alienate the sovereign rights of the crown. In the sixteenth century, both of these principles were elevated to the status of Fundamental Laws. These texts were not intended to serve as propaganda, but were generally produced by royal officials to serve as manuals for their fellow administrators and diplomats, and perhaps also for the king and other members of the court involved in negotiations with the English. Only in exceptional circumstances were such works disseminated beyond the narrow circles of the government and court, though royal officials did draw upon them when speaking at public assemblies.
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La représentation des pouvoirs et des hiérarchies dans les Chroniques de Jean FroissartNejedlý, Martin. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Ecole des hautes études en sciences sociales, 1995. / Cover title. Includes bibliographical references (p. 527-554) and index.
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