If the medieval king was the helmsman of the ship of state, the royal household was the ship's engine. It comprised men from most ranks of society, from the great magnates of the realm to simple servants who looked after the day-to-day needs of the king and his court. This is the first full-length study of the most important group of the court household, the king's knights: socially elite, militarily preeminent, and indispensable for the workings of English medieval government.
If the medieval king was the helmsman of the ship of state, the royal household was the ship's engine. It comprised men from most ranks of society, fr...
Studies treating a wide variety of aspects of knighthood. Topics include the way in which the word -knight- has been used, studying the terminology and ritual concerned with -making a knight-; the circumstances and implications of the knighting of the social elite of England between 1066 and 1272; the difficulties of distinguishing between knight and clerk, as exemplified by Abelard's multi-faceted image; the debt which Geoffrey de Charny's treatise on chivalry owes to the ideas and ideals of knighthood in Arthurian prose romances; and the linguistic competence of the twelfth-century knightly...
Studies treating a wide variety of aspects of knighthood. Topics include the way in which the word -knight- has been used, studying the terminology an...