Essays throwing fresh light on what it was like to be a medieval soldier, drawing on archival research.
Adrian R. Bell, Anne Curry, Adam Chapman Andy King David Simpkin
Introduction
Military Service and the Dynamics of Recruitment in Fourteenth-Century England - Dr Andrew Ayton
Total War in the Middle Ages?: The Contribution of English Landed Society to the Wars of Edward I and Edward II - David Simpkin
A Warlike People? Gentry Enthusiasm for Edward I's Scottish Campaigns, 1296-1307 - Andrew Spencer
Edward I's Centurions: Professional Soldiers in an Era of Militia Armies - David S. Bachrach
Who's afraid of the Big Bad Bruce? Balliol Scots and 'English Scots' during the second Scottish War of Independence - Iain A. MacInnes
Rebels, Uchelwyr and Parvenus: Welsh Knights in the Fourteenth Century - Adam Chapman
Breton Soldiers from the Battle of the Thirty [26 March 1351] to Nicopolis [25 September 1396] - Michael Jones
Towards a Rehabilitation of Froissart's Credibility: the non fictitious Bascot de Mauléon - Guilhem Pepin
The English Reversal of Fortunes in the 1370s and the Experience of Prisoners of War - Remy Ambuhl
The Soldier, 'hadde he riden, no man ferre' - Adrian R. Bell