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ST ALBANS CHRONICLE V1 OMT C
By Taylor
0 - Default Title
Description
Volume I of The St Albans Chronicle (1376-1394) contains that part of Walsingham's chronicle which can with some confidence be said to have been written by 14. With the exception of a brief contemporary continuation (1393-4) the text is taken from BL MS Royal 13 E IX which, although known to the Rolls Series editors, was not used by them as a principal source. During the 139s the Royal manuscript was extensively revised at St Albans in order to remove criticisms of John of Gaunt.This revision is perhaps the best example of the contemporary rewriting of history in late medieval England.
Although Walsingham has traditionally been regarded as the chronicler of the Lancastrian revolution, this part of his chronicle reveals his work as a major source for the Peasants' Revolt, the emergence of John Wyclif, and the political struggles of Richard II's reign. In everything that he wrote, Walsingham was as much a commentator as a recorder, and his absorbing chronicle reveals the manner in which one interested contemporary viewed current events.
Product details
Edition:
illustrated
Number of Pages:
1152
Release Date:
2003-12-11
Publication Date:
2014-09-04
Publisher:
Oxford University Press (UK)
Languages:
Original:
English
ISBN10:
019820471X
ISBN13:
9780198204718
Weight:
1780 g
Height:
157 cm
Width:
235 cm
Thickness:
65 cm
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