England's Northern Frontier

£38.00

England's Northern Frontier

Conflict and Local Society in the Fifteenth-Century Scottish Marches

History History General and world history General and world history European history European history History

Author: Jackson W. Armstrong

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Collection: Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series

Language: English

Published by: Cambridge University Press

Published on: 12th November 2020

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 11 Mb

ISBN: 9781108663823


Introduction

The three counties of England's northern borderlands have long had a reputation as an exceptional and peripheral region within the medieval kingdom, preoccupied with local turbulence as a result of the proximity of a hostile frontier with Scotland. Yet, in the fifteenth century, open war was an infrequent occurrence in a region which is much better understood by historians of fourteenth-century Anglo-Scottish conflict, or of Tudor responses to the so-called border reivers.

About the Book

This first book-length study of England's far north in the fifteenth century addresses conflict, kinship, lordship, law, justice, and governance in this dynamic region. It traces the norms and behaviours by which local society sought to manage conflict, arguing that common law and march law were only parts of a mixed framework which included aspects of feud as it is understood in a wider European context.

Regional Focus and Significance

Addressing the counties of Northumberland, Cumberland and Westmorland together, Jackson W. Armstrong transcends an east-west division in the region's historiography and challenges the prevailing understanding of conflict in late medieval England, setting the region within a wider comparative framework.

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