Languages of Power in the Age of Richard II

Languages of Power in the Age of Richard II
Author:
Publisher: Penn State Press
Total Pages: 414
Release:
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780271046761

In this book the distinguished medievalist Lynn Staley turns her attention to one of the most dramatic periods in English history, the reign of Richard II, as seen through a range of texts including literary, political, chronicle, and pictorial. Richard II, who ruled from 1377 to 1399, succeeded to the throne as a child after the fifty-year reign of Edward III, and found himself beset throughout his reign by military, political, religious, economic, and social problems that would have tried even the most skilled of statesmen. At the same time, these years saw some of England's most gifted courtly writers, among them Chaucer and Gower, who were keenly attuned to the political machinations erupting around them. I n Languages of Power in the Age of Richard II Staley does not so much "read" literature through history as offer a way of "reading" history through its refractions in literature. In essence, the text both isolates and traces what is an actual search for a language of power during the reign of Richard II and scrutinizes the ways in which Chaucer and other courtly writers participated in these attempts to articulate the concept of princely power. As one who took it upon himself to comment on the various means by which history is made, Chaucer emerges from Staley's narrative as a poet without peer.

Richard II

Richard II
Author: Anthony Goodman
Publisher: Clarendon Press
Total Pages: 316
Release: 2003
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780199262205

Richard II had a dramatic kingship. This text, written by leading historians, aims to re-evaluate the much-maligned figure.

Official Correspondence of Thomas Bekynton

Official Correspondence of Thomas Bekynton
Author: Thomas Beckington
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 477
Release: 2012-11-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 1108048978

Published in 1872, this two-volume work presents an edited collection of letters and documents from the reign of Henry VI.

Richard II

Richard II
Author: Christopher Fletcher
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Total Pages: 338
Release: 2010-10-07
Genre: History
ISBN: 0191615730

Richard II (1377-99) has long suffered from an unusually unmanly reputation. Over the centuries, he has been habitually associated with lavish courtly expenditure, absolutist ideas, Francophile tendencies, and a love of peace, all of which have been linked to the king's physical effeminacy. Even sympathetic accounts have essentially retained this picture, merely dismissing particular facets of it, or representing Richard's reputation as evidence of praiseworthy dissent from accepted norms of masculinity. Christopher Fletcher takes a radically different approach, setting the politics of Richard II's reign firmly in the context of late medieval assumptions about the nature of manhood and youth. This makes it possible not only to understand the agenda of the king's critics, but also to suggest a new account of his actions. Far from being the effeminate tyrant of historical imagination, Richard was a typical young nobleman, trying to establish his manhood, and hence his authority to rule, by thoroughly conventional means; first through a military campaign, and then, fatally, through violent revenge against those who attempted to restrain him. The failure of Richard's subjects to support this aspiration produced a sequence of conflicts with the king, in which his opponents found it convenient to ascribe to him the conventional faults of youth. These critiques derived their force not from the king's real personality, but from the fit between certain contemporary assumptions about youth, effeminacy, and masculinity on the one hand, and the actions of Richard's government, constrained by difficult and complex circumstances, on the other.

The Deposition of Richard II

The Deposition of Richard II
Author: David Richard Carlson
Publisher: PIMS
Total Pages: 118
Release: 2007
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780888444790

This book is an edition of eight late-fourteenth- and early-fifteenth-century Latin texts that chronicle and/or comment upon events that led, in 1399, to the deposition of King Richard II.

Lionheart

Lionheart
Author: Richard I
Publisher: Spiffing Covers
Total Pages: 410
Release: 2014-10-02
Genre: Great Britain
ISBN: 9781910256565

The diary of the second king of the Plantagenet dynasty who lived in England only six months during his ten year reign.