All Stories

  1. TEN Another Damsel in Distress? Katherine Beaumont, a Disinherited Noblewoman in Fourteenth-century Scotland
  2. Katherine Beaumont, Countess of Atholl, and the Second Scottish War of Independence (c. 1327–c. 1336)
  3. ‘Be at Peace With God and Me’
  4. Chapter 6 ‘For He Bestirred Himself to Protect the Land from the Moors’ Depicting the Medieval Reconquista in Modern Spanish Graphic Novels
  5. THE WORLD AS IT WAS/COULD HAVE BEEN?
  6. “All I Ever Wanted Was to Fight for a Lord I Believed in. But the Good Lords Are Dead and the Rest Are Monsters”: Brienne of Tarth, Jaime Lannister, and the Chivalric “Other”
  7. 5 “A somewhat too cruel vengeance was taken for the blood of the slain”: Royal Punishment of Rebels, Traitors, and Political Enemies in Medieval Scotland, c. 1100–c. 1250 119
  8. “I can piss on Calais from Dover”
  9. “A Clash of Arms to Be Eternally Remembered”:
  10. ‘For He Bestirred Himself to Protect the Land from the Moors’
  11. "One man slashes, one slays, one warns, one wounds: Injury and Death in Anglo-Scottish Combat, c.1296-c.1403
  12. 4 Heads, Shoulders, Knees and Toes: Injury and Death in Anglo-Scottish Combat, c. 1296–c.1403
  13. Richard Oram,Domination and Lordship. Scotland: 1070–1230, The New Edinburgh History of Scotland, Volume 3. (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2011. Pp. xviii+430. Pbk ISBN 9780748614974, £24.99).
  14. ‘To subject the north of the country to his rule’: Edward III and the ‘Lochindorb Chevauchée’ of 1336
  15. ‘To be Annexed Forever to the English Crown’: The English Occupation of Southern Scotland, c.1334–1337
  16. Land, Law and People in Medieval Scotland. By Cynthia J. Neville. Pp. viii, 256. ISBN 9780748639588 (hbk). Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2010. £60.00.