Huscroft | Ruling England 1042-1227 | Buch | 978-1-032-23209-6 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 312 Seiten, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 234 mm, Gewicht: 617 g

Huscroft

Ruling England 1042-1227


3rd Auflage
ISBN: 978-1-032-23209-6
Verlag: Taylor & Francis

Buch, Englisch, 312 Seiten, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 234 mm, Gewicht: 617 g

ISBN: 978-1-032-23209-6
Verlag: Taylor & Francis


Since its first publication in 2005, Ruling England has established itself as an authoritative account of English politics and the growth of royal power from 1042.

Using chronicle and administrative records, it focuses on the aims and priorities of the kings of England and on how and why the systems which established and enhanced their authority developed during this period. It explores how the machinery of government worked and grew, and how the legal system evolved to consolidate royal control over the kingdom. It also explores the contribution of the English Church to politics and how the partnership between king and clergy was crucial to the consolidation of royal power.

Now in its third edition, Ruling England is a key text for students wishing to understand the complexities of medieval kingship in England from 1042 to 1227. It has been expanded chronologically to cover the minority of King Henry III and there are more extensive treatments of the interactions between the rulers of England and their British neighbours, the role of women in English politics during this period and of the place in society occupied by England’s Jewish communities.

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Part I. Late Anglo-Saxon England, 1042–1066



1. The reigns, 1042–1066



Edward the Confessor, 1042–1066

Harold II, January–October 1066

The interregnum, 14 October–25 December 1066



2. Ruling the kingdom, 1042–1066


King and nobility

The crisis of 1051–1052

Royal government

Local government

Royal wealth

Military organisation

Women and political power

Conclusion



3. The kings and the law, 1042–1066

Codes and cases

Courts and communities

Trial and punishment

Conclusion



4. The kings and the Church, 1042–1066



The late Anglo-Saxon Church

Royal government and the Church

England and the papacy

A backward Church in need of reform?



Part II. Anglo-Norman England, 1066–1154



5. The reigns, 1066–1154



William I ‘the Conqueror’, 1066–1087

William II ‘Rufus’, 1087–1100

Henry I, 1100–1135

1109–1113

1116–1120

1123–1124

Stephen, 1135–1154



6. Ruling the kingdom, 1066–1154

King and nobility

Cross-Channel government

The royal household

Local government

Royal wealth

Military organisation

Government in writing

The reign of Stephen

Women and political power

Conclusion



7. The kings and the law, 1066–1154



Continuity and change

The principal courts

The criminal law

Civil cases

Women, land and the law

Conclusion



8. The kings and the Church, 1066–1154



The Church in Normandy

Controlling the English Church

Other reforms

Kings, archbishops and popes

Canterbury and York

The reign of Stephen

The king’s Jews

Conclusion



Part III. Angevin England, 1154–1227



9. The reigns, 1154–1227



Henry II, 1154–1189

Richard I, 1189–1199

John, 1199–1216

The minority of Henry III, 1216–1227



10. Ruling the kingdom, 1154–1227



The Angevin Empire

The restoration of royal authority

King and nobility

Royal government

Women and political power

Local government

Royal wealth

Military organisation

The road to Runnymede

The minority of Henry III



11. The kings and the law, 1154–1227



The background to the reforms

The operation of the system

The reforms

The effects of the reforms

Magna Carta and the common law

Conclusion



12. The kings and the Church, 1154–1227



The papacy and canon law

Royal expectations

Henry II and Thomas Becket

John and Innocent III

England’s Jews: Murder and massacre

The minority of Henry III



The principal narrative sources and their authors, 1042–1227

Suggestions for further reading


Richard Huscroft teaches History at Westminster School, London. He is the author of several books on British and European medieval history, including Tales from the Long Twelfth Century (2017), Making England, 796–1042 (2018), Power and Faith: Politics and Religion in Western Europe from the Tenth to the Thirteenth Century (2023) and Expulsion (2023).



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