The Cornish Family

The Cornish Family
Author: Bernard Deacon
Publisher: Cornwall Editions Ltd
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2004-06
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781904880011

In the best of times and in darker days, the strong family unit is one of the most valuable building blocks of our societies. The Cornish family, in its individuality, in its far-flung breadth and with its sense of worldwide community, is a vigorous example of this truth. In this magnificent book, Dr Bernard Deacon explores who we are, our forefathers and our descendants, where we come from and where we are headed and how these major themes are expressed in the meaning of our names.

The Military Orders Volume V

The Military Orders Volume V
Author: Peter #N/A
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 464
Release: 2017-07-05
Genre: History
ISBN: 1351542494

Scholarly interest and popular interest in the military orders show no sign of abating. Their history stretches from the early twelfth century to the present. They were among the richest and most powerful religious corporations in pre-Reformation Europe, and they founded their own states on Rhodes and Malta and also on the Baltic coast. Historians of the Church, of art and architecture, of agriculture and banking, of medicine and warfare and of European expansion can all benefit from investigating the orders and their archives. The conferences on their history that have been organized in London every four years have attracted scholars from all over the world. The present volume records the proceedings of the Fifth Conference in 2009 (held in Cardiff as the London venue was in the process of refurbishment), and, like the earlier volumes in the series, will prove essential for anyone interested in the current state of research into these powerful institutions. The thirty-eight papers published here represent a selection of those delivered at the conference. Three papers deal with the recent archaeological investigations at the Hospitaller castle at al-Marqab (Syria); others examine aspects of the history of the military orders in the Latin East and the Mediterranean lands, in Spain and Portugal, in the British Isles and in northern and eastern Europe. The final two papers address the question of present-day perceptions of the Templars as moulded by the sort of popular literature that most of the other contributors would normally keep at arm's length.

Pardon Rolls of Edward IV, 1462-67

Pardon Rolls of Edward IV, 1462-67
Author: Hannes Kleineke
Publisher:
Total Pages: 171
Release: 2021
Genre: Great Britain
ISBN: 9781906875589

Throughout the later middle ages and beyond the Kings of England periodically issued general pardons covering a wide range of offences. So numerous were the resultant letters patent that their record was from an early date separated from the Chancery’s Patent roll, and compiled into a separate Pardon roll. This volume calendars the general pardons issued by Edward IV during his first reign from 1462 to 1467. The pardons provide interesting information on individuals of all ranks of society, their social status and places of residence, and offers, inter alia, fascinating evidence for the study of social and geographic mobility.

Elizabeth Woodville

Elizabeth Woodville
Author: David Baldwin
Publisher: The History Press
Total Pages: 185
Release: 2011-08-26
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0752468979

Elizabeth Woodville is undoubtedly a historical character whose life no novelist would ever have dared invent. She has been portrayed as an enchantress; as an unprincipled advancer of her family's fortunes and a plucky but pitiful queen in Shakespeare's histories. She has been alternatively championed and vilified by her contemporaries and five centuries of historians, dramatists and novelists, but what was she really life? In this revealing account of Elizabeth's life David Baldwin sets out to tell the story of this complex and intriguing woman. Was she the malign influence many of her critics held her to be? Was she a sorceress who bewitched Edward IV? What was the fate of her two sons, the 'Princes in the Tower'? What did she, of all people, think had become of them, and why did Richard III mount a campaign of vilification against her? David Baldwin traces Elizabeth's career and her influence on the major events of her husband Edward IV's reign, and in doing so he brings to life the personal and domestic politics of Yorkist England and the elaborate ritual of court life.