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|a0230235344
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|a9780230235342
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7
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|a10.1057/9780230235342|2doi
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|aUKPGM|beng|cUKPGM|dNOU
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|aAPTA
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14
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|aDA175|b.I74 2009
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082 |
04
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|a941.04|222
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|aIreland and the English world in the late Middle Ages|h[electronic resource] :|bessays in honour of Robin Frame /|cedited by Brendan Smith.
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260 |
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|aHoundmills [England] ;|aNew York :|bPalgrave Macmillan,|c2009.
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300 |
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|axii, 241 p. ;|c23 cm.
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|aIncludes bibliographical references (p. 193-227) and index.
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0
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|aRobin Frame: An Appreciation / M.Prestwich -- Introduction -- The British Isles in the Late Middle Ages: Shaping the Regions / B.Smith -- Three Thirteenth-Century Declarations of English Rule: Over Aquitaine, Ireland and Wales / J.R.S.Phillips -- A Versatile Legal Administrator and More: The Career of John of Fressingfield in England, Ireland and Beyond / P.Brand -- Galloway, the Solway Shore and the Nature of Borders /R.M.Blakely -- Gascony and the Limits of Medieval British Isles History / A.Ruddick -- Roger Mortimer and the Governance of Ireland, 1317-20 / P.Dryburgh -- The Case against Alexander Bicknor, Archbishop and Peculator / J.Lydon -- A People Divided? Language, History andAnglo-Scottish Conflict in the Work of Andrew of Wyntoun / S.Boardman -- Policies, Priorities and Principles: The King, the Anglo-Irish and English Justiciars in the Fourteenth Century / B.Hartland -- The Ulster Revolt of 1404 - an Anti-Lancastrian Dimension? / K.Simms -- Henry V and the Proposal for an Irish Crusade / E.Matthew -- Reducing their Barbarous Wildness"unto Civility": England and 'the Celtic Fringe', 1415-1625 / S.G.Ellis -- A Bibliography of the Published Writings of Robin Frame -- Works Cited -- Index.
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|aIreland remained part of the king of England's territories in the late Middle Ages, but effective royal control was reduced by native resistance and by the loosening of ties with the colonial aristocracy. As the energy and attention of the English came to focus on their war with France, within the British Isles, the Scots strengthened their independence while the colonists in Ireland tried to persuade the king that the country was on the point of being lost forever. How close to the truthwas this assertion? How deep were English roots in late medieval Ireland? As part of this wider British Isles, and of English royal territories that also included Gascony and for a time Normandy, howdid Ireland fare in centuries that saw not only plague and economic contractions, but also the hardening of national sentiments?
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|aElectronic reproduction.|bBasingstoke, England :|cPalgrave Macmillan,|d2009.|nMode of access:World Wide Web.|nSystem requirements: Web browser.|nTitle from title screen (viewed on July 24, 2009).|nAccess may be restricted to users at subscribing institutions.
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0
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|aCivilization, Medieval.
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651 |
0
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|aGreat Britain|xCivilization|y1066-1485.
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651 |
0
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|aGreat Britain|xHistory|yMedieval period, 1066-1485.
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651 |
0
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|aIreland|xCivilization.
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651 |
0
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|aIreland|xHistory|yTo 1603.
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7
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|aElectronic books.|2local
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1
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|aFrame, Robin.
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1
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|aSmith, Brendan,|d1963-
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2
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|aPalgrave Connect (Online service)
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1
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|cOriginal|z9780230542891|z0230542891|w(OCoLC)316431165
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809 |
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|pEB|dDA175|eI65|y2009
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40
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|3Palgrave Connect|uhttp://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9780230235342|zaccess to fulltext (Palgrave)
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