Showing posts with label David Green. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Green. Show all posts

Friday, October 30, 2015

Conquest and Defence, David Green Recounts the Hundred Years War from Every Perspective

Paul Fischer
10/30/2015
Charles Briggs


Conquest and Defence, David Green Recounts the Hundred Years War from Every Perspective


The role of the church can be easy to overlook in the defining national conflict between England and France which became, after broken peace treaties and ransoms, kidnappings, and massive slaughter, known as the 100 Years War, but this series of battles and intrigue is convincingly portrayed in The 100 Years War: A People’s History as a critically pivotal moment for the emerging Catholic Church. David Green is elusive in his use of a thesis in his book, which is structured as a generational analysis of various themes which are intended to coalesce into a final declaration of methodology and description. In order to review the intent of the research appropriately, it will be necessary to delineate between these themes and show in a concise manner how they are interrelated and in what basic construct they cast the evolution of Christendom into the true intercontinental empires which England, France, and other onlooking nations would become. Appearance of sourced material and the basic structure of the historical context in which the writing is based should then make itself quite apparent.
This is not to summarize the entirety of the material at hand, but instead to drive at the heart of what made this war pump, and the individual liberties which it extended to others. Firstly, the war was not one framed entirely around the concept of occupation, though by “the concluding years of Henry V’s reign what had been a war of raids and sieges became a war of occupation” (Green, 154), and the leaders on both sides of the English Channel, or for much of the war, in modern-day France, came to learn of the ineffectiveness of simple blockades or chevauchĂ©e raids. “As Jean JuvĂ©nal des Ursins noted in 1435, ‘For war is only made in order to have peace; make strong war and you will have peace by subjugating your enemies’” (92), this is an ironical statement as those raids had become a war of occupation, one which resounded culturally in Shakespearean literature and in the very threads of French nationalism, immortalized in primary sources artistic, carefully chosen for this historical work, and political. Indeed the nature of the French crown would change in this war: clambering to dislodge ineffective church leadership, the centralization of power and expansion of mercenary Patis forces redefined the fundamental belief of France in nationhood as “not only was victory or defeat an indication of divine judgement, but for many it might bring one decidedly closer to divine judgement of a very personal nature” (146). That which might have demolished French belief in their military capabilities instead became a varied system of mutual struggle, allowing an early separation of military and agricultural interests, not to overlook the many who were still pressed into service.
The progression being described here is quite delicate in nature. It is important to review the sources which are utilized in the book before expounding the grandeur of the impact of this war on later conflicts, such as the War of the Roses directly afterward in England or French absolutism in monarchy which developed following religious strife as conflicts in the Netherlands and other Spanish ambitions dominated. In this case, there is little doubt as to the professionalism of the work; primary sources are frequently cited and contemporary secondary sources consulted. Intermediary, or dependent, sources are appropriately dropped or their impact marginalized.
While the similarities between the various national mindsets are drawn again and again, it can be easy to forget that of the many allies who were involved in the war, “each had their own agendas and antipathies that required resolution” (86). In trajectory at least, it cannot be forgotten that there is nothing shared between Britain and France, least of all that corner of once barbarian then British and now French farms and fishing grounds, Calais. While an entire chapter is devoted to peace, and “by the later 14th century a social climate had developed in which calls for a diplomatic solution to the Hundred Years war resounded” (85), they did so at different times which was emblematized as “a welter of propaganda proclaimed the justice of each side’s cause” (234). Fighting for this piece of land not only drew starkly these differences, but emphasized them as “conceptions of royal power differed in England and France, certainly when the war began, and these differences grew as the struggle unfolded” (114). 
Without the ideation that the reformation was somehow sparked by this series of raids and occupation, or that it would have anywhere near as great an effect on absolutism and contemporary to the time, ideals of monarchy, the soundest of conclusions drawn from many premises proffered by this work is that the 100 Years War defined Britain as an island nation, and showed that France was able to continentally defend itself without crying to the Pope for a Holy Crusade, not to say that this was not attempted at some point; France became a nation and England would follow suit in coming centuries, though the latter would certainly take a slightly more wiley route, necessitating the survival of a pseudo-invasion by Spain and significant expansion of naval prowess. In other words it took a bit more than the high walled caravels and a simple speech by King Richard II to establish England as a major imperial power.

Friday, October 23, 2015

David Green: Bibliographical Synopsis

Paul Andreas Fischer
10/21/2015
Professor Briggs


David Green: Bibliographical Synopsis


David Green has written four books, which are published through Pearson PLC or subsidiary publishing companies. These are monographs which may be considered scholarly in nature, complete with indexes, acknowledgements, and appendices. His first book, however, proved difficult to find and was co-authored with two other authors, however, as a non-fiction work published by the University of Nottingham may also be considered a scholarly monograph, though it is short and is only 40 pages in length.
With eleven articles published, David Green has also contributed in a significant manner to ten academic journals which focus on his field of study. In addition, though this is not directly pertinent, he has written 22 encyclopedic entries for three different encyclopedias and two dictionaries. Historical review of his work, however, varies somewhat from his own account of what his work actually consists of.
The International Medieval Bibliography lists only seven publications from David Green, comprising of six articles and one scholarly monograph, all of which are noted as publications on his academic website. The Iter bibliography lists seven essays which were written for the International Encyclopedia of Military History published in Routledge, New York, of which all but The Conquest of Wales are acknowledged on his website. Finally, on the Bibliography of British and Irish History, a full fourteen scholarly articles, books, and essays can be found, all of which are among those listed on his professional page, though “Medicine and Masculinity: Thomas Walsingham and the death of the Black Prince” contains a typographical error or potentially intentional change in title, possibly to avoid conflict with a similarly themed or titled book.
These resources are individually intended for different audiences, and there is the intention for historical work to be easily accessible as well as appropriately divisible. In addition, there may be certain standards for quality or quantity of work provided which factor in as various bibliographical resources decide which materials to include. In addition timing can play a large role in publication. For example, it is likely that some of these books received boosts from trends, whether as global as war in the Middle East and renewed interest in medieval warfare tactics or as local as a series of historic fairs and festivals at which the book may be presented.