Description
This imaginative collection of essays reappraises the place of medieval battles in British, Irish and Scandinavian historical and literary traditions. It will be sure to find a place on the reading lists of students and scholars in Medieval Studies and War Studies alike.
This imaginative collection of essays reappraises the place of medieval battles in British, Irish and Scandinavian historical and literary traditions. It will be sure to find a place on the reading lists of students and scholars in Medieval Studies and War Studies alike.
This wide-ranging volume of essays is an outstanding contribution to the cultural, political, and social military history of the Middle Ages. Although the focus is on how medieval battles were understood and commemorated as key cultural and political markers in the British Isles and Scandinavia, the essays range much further, demonstrating how warfare was critical in the making of London, the complex relationship between war and peace, and the continuities and discontinuities between medieval and modern understanding of the meaning of battle. Those who dismiss military history as mere battlefield narratives will find this volume a revelation.
The volume's concentration on the memory of medieval warfare in Northern Europe makes it essential reading for all scholars of European conflict in time and place. It also poses wider questions about the relations of past and present that will interest all students of conflict commemoration and memory.
Rory Naismith is Lecturer in Medieval British History at King's College London, UK. He is the author of Citadel of the Saxons (I.B. Tauris, 2018). Máire Ní Mhaonaigh is Professor in Celtic and Medieval Studies at the University of Cambridge, UK. Elizabeth Ashman Rowe is Reader in Scandinavian History at the University of Cambridge, UK.