1: . Genesis: 'The Witan of the English People, c.920-1066
2: Confluence: English Council, Feudal Counsel, 1066-1189
3: Transformation: The Making of the Community of the Realm,
1189-1327
4: Establishment: The First Age of Parliamentary Politics,
1227-58
5: Consolidation: Parliament and Baronial Reform, 1258-72
6: Expansion: Parliament and Nation, 1272-1327
7: English Exceptionalism? The Peculiarities of the English
Parliament. Conclusion
Appendix: A List of Parliaments, 1235-57
Bibliography
Index
John Maddicott taught at the University of Manchester and was a
Fellow and Tutor in Medieval History at Exeter College, Oxford,
from 1969 until 2006. A Fellow of the British Academy, he was also
joint editor of the English Historical Review from 1990 to 2000. He
gave the Ford Lectures at Oxford (from which this current book has
developed) in 2004. He has published extensively on the political
and social history of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries,
with books on Thomas of Lancaster and Simon de Montfort, and has
also written a number of leading articles on the Anglo-Saxon
economy, his second area of interest.
One of the masterpieces of historical writing of our time.
*Nigel Saul, History Today*
One of the most important recent books on English history...a
magisterial account
*Michael Wood, BBC History Magazine*
Enormously impressive...a powerful and passionate piece of work
*Keith Richmond, Government Gazette*
J.R. Maddicott brings to his task a depth of analysis which is both
rare and impressive. He argues his points by reference to a far
wider range of sources than any of his predecessors. And he has a
better understanding of the European context of English politics
than any English writer on the subject since Maurice Powicke.
*Jonathan Sumption, Literary Review*
Its wide and profound scholarship has much to teach us about the
roots and functions of an institution now subjected to so much
unhistorical criticism.
*Blair Worden, The Spectator*
J.R. Maddicott has long been recognised as one of the outstanding
historians of thirteenth- and fourteenth-century English political
history... The Origins of the English Parliament 924-1327 will
stand out as a notable text for parliamentary history.
*Andrew Broertjes, LIMINA*
thorough, compelling, and persuasive ... Maddicott makes a
compelling case for English exceptionalism and in the process
frames the terms in which the medieval parliament will be discussed
and debated for generations.
*Scott L. Waugh, English Historical Review*
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