[The] Jubilee Book will be of interest to anyone studying medieval local governance as well as those studying medieval London.

- LOCAL HISTORIAN,

The Jubilee Book will be valuable to historians and students of medieval politics and institutional structures both within and beyond London [...] This book will prove a highly important source that is sure to be widely used.

- PARLIAMENTARY HISTORY,

Histories of medieval London can no longer be written without referencing the Jubilee Book, and Barron and Wright have made it effortless for future scholars to do so.

JOURNAL OF BRITISH STUDIES

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Barron and Wright's edition will permit a hands-on experience in the classroom for advanced students eager to understand how medieval people navigated relationships with one another.

SPECULUM

Edition and translation of a copy of a vastly significant document for our understanding of fourteenth-century England, long believed lost. In the summer of 1376 a spirit of reform was abroad in the city of London. A number of measures were taken to make those who were elected to govern the city more responsible to its citizens as a whole. A committee was set up to examine the ordinances at the Guildhall and present to the Commonalty those that were "profitables" and those that were not. Two years later, the committee produced a volume known officially as the Liber de Ordinancionibus, but popularly as "The Jubilee book", because it had been initiated in the jubilee year of Edward III's reign. But the reforming measures introduced in the book caused so many controversies and disputes that eventually, in a bid to restore order in the city, in March 1387 the "Jubilee Book" was taken outside the Guildhall and publicly burnt. Historians have long debated the possible contents of this contentious but hugely significant volume, widely believed to be lost. However, recently a fifteenth-century copy of the "Jubilee Book", possibly of an earlier draft put together in the course of the two years, but superseded by the final version, was discovered in a manuscript held at Trinity College Cambridge (Ms O.3.11).
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Edition and translation of a copy of a vastly significant document for our understanding of fourteenth-century England, long believed lost.
List of Tables Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations INTRODUCTION by Caroline M. Barron The manuscript The making and unmaking of the Jubilee Book The contents of the Jubilee Book The dating of this version of the Jubilee Book The compiler or scribe of the Jubilee Book The end of the Jubilee Book? ON THE LANGUAGE OF FOLIOS 133-157 OF TRINITY COLLEGE CAMBRIDGE MS O.3.11 by Laura Wright About the manuscript, paper-stocks and scribe About the language On English negator particle ne On Anglo-Norman negator particle ne On finite-verb position in the extra clauses Conclusion Appendices Editorial Method THE TEXTS Trinity College Cambridge MS O.3.11 Annotated Translation General Index
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780900952616
Publisert
2021-10-29
Utgiver
London Record Society; London Record Society
Vekt
432 gr
Høyde
244 mm
Bredde
150 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
150

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Caroline M. Barron is Emeritus Professor of Medieval History, Royal Holloway, University of London. Laura Wright is a Reader in English Language at the University of Cambridge, where she works on the history of English. Caroline M. Barron is Emeritus Professor of Medieval History, Royal Holloway, University of London.