TY - BOOK AU - Boardman,Stephen I. AU - Goodare,Julian AU - Wormald,Jenny TI - Kings, lords and men in Scotland and Britain, 1300-1625: essays in honour of Jenny Wormald AV - DA875 .K564 2014 PY - 2014/// CY - Edinburgh PB - Edinburgh University Press KW - Nobility KW - Scotland KW - History KW - 1057-1603 KW - Feudalism KW - Electronic Books N1 - 2; Introduction : Kings, lords and Jenny Wormald; Steve Boardman and Julian Goodare --; 1. The Stewart realm : Changing the landscape; Keith M. Brown --; 2. Lords and women, women as lords : The career of Margaret Stewart, Countess of Angus and Mar, c. 1354-c. 1418; Steve Boardman --; 3. Bastard feudalism in England in the fourteenth century; Christine Carpenter --; 4. Tame magnates? The justiciars of later medieval Scotland; Hector MacQueen --; 5. King, lords and men in Renaissance England : The poetry of John Skelton; John Watts --; 6. Rethinking the justice of the feud in sixteenth-century Scotland; A. Mark Godfrey --; 7. Bonding, religious allegiance and covenanting; Jane E. A. Dawson --; 8. "We Bund and Obleiss Us Never More to Querrell" : Bonds, private obligations and public justice in the reign of James VI; Anna Groundwater --; 9. Murder will out : Kingship, kinship and killing in medieval Scotland; Alexander Grant --; 10. The Lanark Bond; Michael Brown --; 11. James III : Kingship and contested reputation; Alasdair A. MacDonald --; 12. Beyond the Declaration of Arbroath : Kingship, counsel and consent in late medieval and early modern Scotland; Roger A. Mason --; 13. Royal gifts and gift-exchange in sixteenth-century Anglo-Scottish politics; Felicity Heal --; 14. The Ainslie Bond; Julian Goodare --; 15. "Scotland will be the Ending of all Empires" : Mr Thomas Murray and King James VI and I; Jamie Reid-Baxter; 2; b N2 - Essays by leading scholars on kingship and lordship in late medieval and early modern Scotland and Britain. Late medieval and early modern Scottish history has seen much recent work on 'kingship' and 'lordship'. But the 15th century and the 16th century are usually studied separately. This book brings them together in a fitting collection in tribute to Jenny Wormald, one of the few scholars to bridge this divide. Inspired by Jenny's work, the contributors tackle questions including: How far can medieval themes such as 'lordship' function in the late 16th-century world of Reformation and state formation? How did the Scottish realm fit into wider British and European patterns? What did it mean for Scotland to be a 'medieval' kingdom, and when did it cease to be one? The volume contains detailed studies of particular episodes alongside thematic pieces which cover longer periods, while some chapters also range beyond Scotland. It takes stock of the continuities and contrasts between medieval and early modern Scotland, and challenges traditional demarcations between these two periods UR - httpss://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&db=nlabk&AN=830671&site=eds-live&custid=s3260518 ER -