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The Lion The Lily And The Leopard The Crown And Nobility Of Scotland France And England And The Struggle For Power 11001204 Melissa Pollock

  • SKU: BELL-34093672
The Lion The Lily And The Leopard The Crown And Nobility Of Scotland France And England And The Struggle For Power 11001204 Melissa Pollock
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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The Lion The Lily And The Leopard The Crown And Nobility Of Scotland France And England And The Struggle For Power 11001204 Melissa Pollock instant download after payment.

Publisher: Brepols Publishers
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.83 MB
Author: Melissa Pollock
ISBN: 9782503540405, 2503540406
Language: English
Year: 2014

Product desciption

The Lion The Lily And The Leopard The Crown And Nobility Of Scotland France And England And The Struggle For Power 11001204 Melissa Pollock by Melissa Pollock 9782503540405, 2503540406 instant download after payment.

This study explores the powerful bonds between the nobility of France, Scotland, and England and the evolving nature of a shared Anglo-French identity.
This book examines the relationship between and identities within the three kingdoms of Scotland, France, and England from c. 1100 until the crown of England lost Normandy, Anjou, Maine, and Touraine in 1204. Diplomatic and political relations were unique in the twelfth century because the three kingdoms were united by a ruling class that spanned the Channel. This aristocratic, Anglo-French structure beginning with the Norman invasion in 1066 disrupted and delayed the development of a unitary national identity within each of the three kingdoms. Men and women identified themselves with more than one royal overlord as long as they held fees of multiple kings and, as such, national identity was a moveable feast. This situation created a complex political web that often damaged consistent loyalty to any one king or overlord, as each member of a kin group changed alliances based on territorial threats and on the interests of their familial networks. Furthermore, alliances formed between families in the Anglo-French realm had a significant impact on political decision-making in Scotland because the Anglo-French Scots were intimately bound to this structure through their own kin networks and land bases. Significantly, this work dispels the prevailing myth that the Anglo-French who settled in Scotland did not see themselves as part of the cross-Channel world but as ‘Scots’ by the end of the twelfth century.

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