Royal Writs addressed to John Buckingham, Bishop of Lincoln 1363-1398
Royal Writs to John Buckingham Bishop of Lincoln 1363-1398
Edited by A.K. McHardy, senior lecturer in medieval history, University of Nottingham
The many commands which the crown addressed to bishops represent a rich source of information about the history of government, law, and lay society, as well as about the church itself. The material previously neglected, offers rich rewards to scholars in a variety of disciplines, and the writs collected here touch on many aspects of life in the later fourteenth century, including tax gathering, political upheaval, property disputes, Lollardy, and foreign warfare.
The bishop is seen swearing in local officials, setting up commissions of enquiry, organising the attendance of the clergy in parliament and the saying of patriotic prayers, and consulting episcopal archives to answer queries from the lay courts. There is also a vivid series of vignettes of family life among the gentry class from Yorkshire to Hampshire.
An extensive introduction places the writs in their historical and archival contexts, and suggests further lines of research.
Contents
- Contents, 1 page
- Dedication: To PAT CRIMMIN for twenty years of supportive friendship
- Abbreviations, 2 pages
- Introduction, 19 pages
- Royal Writs, 158 pages
- Appendix A: Some writs addressed to John Buckingham now in the Public Record Office, 13 pages
- Appendix B: Select writs addressed to Bishop Buckingham which were copied into his other registers, 2 pages
- Appendix C: Attesting Judges, 4 pages
- Index of Persons and Places, 17 pages
- Index of Subjects, 2 pages
Language: English, Latin, Medieval French
ISBN: Lincoln Record Society 0 901503 63 0 Canterbury and York Society 0 907239 58 7 Volume LXXXVI
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