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Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 December 2017

Brendan Smith
Affiliation:
University of Bristol
Thomas Bartlett
Affiliation:
University of Aberdeen
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Print publication year: 2018

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References

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Brown, M., Disunited Kingdoms: Peoples and Politics in the British Isles 1280–1460 (Harlow: Pearson, 2013).Google Scholar
Bury, J. B. (gen. ed.), The Cambridge Medieval History. 8 vols. (Cambridge University Press, 1911–36).Google Scholar
Byrne, F. J., ‘The Viking Age’, in NHI i, 609–34.Google Scholar
Byrne, F. J., ‘Ireland before the Battle of Clontarf’, in NHI i, 852–9.Google Scholar
Byrne, F. J., ‘Ireland and her Neighbours, c.1014–c.1072’, in NHI i, 862–98.Google Scholar
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Cosgrove, A., ‘Ireland’, in NCMH, vii, 496–513.Google Scholar
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Fossier, R. (ed.), The Cambridge Illustrated History of the Middle Ages. 3 vols. (Cambridge University Press, 1986–97).Google Scholar
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Hammond, M., ‘Domination and Conquest?: The Scottish Experience in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries’, in Duffy and Foran (eds.), English Isles, 68–83.Google Scholar
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Müller, A., ‘Conflicting Loyalties: The Irish Franciscans and the English Crown in the High Middle Ages’, PRIA, 107 C (2007), 87106.Google Scholar
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O’Brien, A. F., ‘Medieval Youghal: The Development of an Irish Seaport Trading Town c.1200–1500’, Peritia, 5 (1986), 346–78.Google Scholar
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Reeves, W., ‘The Seal of Hugh O’Neill’, Ulster Journal of Archaeology, 1st series, 1 (1853), 255–8.Google Scholar
Ronan, M. V., ‘Some Medieval Documents’, JRSAI, 67 (1937), 229–41.Google Scholar
Sayles, G. O., ‘The Rebellious First Earl of Desmond’, in Watt, J. A., Morrall, J. B. and Martin, F. X. (eds.), Medieval Studies Presented to Aubrey Gwynn S.J. (Dublin: The Three Candles, 1961), 203–29.Google Scholar
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Simms, K., ‘Gabh umad a Fheidhlimidh – a Fifteenth-Century Inauguration Ode?, Ériu, 31 (1980), 132–45.Google Scholar
‘“The King’s Friend”: O’Neill, the Crown and the Earldom of Ulster’, in Lydon (ed.), England and Ireland, 214–36.Google Scholar
Simms, K., ‘Bards and Barons: The Anglo-Irish Aristocracy and the Native Culture’, in Bartlett and MacKay (eds.), Medieval Frontier Societies, 177–97.Google Scholar
Simms, K., ‘Gaelic Warfare in the Middle Ages’, in Bartlett, T. and Jeffery, K. (eds.), A Military History of Ireland (Cambridge University Press, 1996), 99115.Google Scholar
Simms, K., ‘Relations with the Irish’, in Lydon (ed.), Law and Disorder, 66–86.Google Scholar
Simms, K., ‘Tír Eoghain North of the Mountain’, in O’Brien, G. (ed.), Derry and Londonderry: History and Society (Dublin: Geography Publications, 1999), 149–73.Google Scholar
Simms, K., ‘Late Medieval Tír Eoghain’, in Dillon, C. and Jefferies, H. A. (eds.), Tyrone: History and Society (Dublin: Geography Publications, 2000), 127–62.Google Scholar
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Duffy, S., ‘Ireland’s Hastings: The Anglo-Norman Conquest of Dublin’, ANS, 20 (1998), 6985.Google Scholar
Duffy, S., ‘The First Ulster Plantation: John de Courcy and the Men of Cumbria’, in Barry et al. (eds.), Colony and Frontier in Medieval Ireland, 1–27.Google Scholar
Empey, C. A., ‘The Sacred and the Secular: The Augustinian Priory of Kells in Ossory, 1193–1541’, IHS, 24 (1984), 131–51.Google Scholar
Flanagan, M. T., Irish Royal Charters: Texts and Contexts (Oxford University Press, 2005)Google Scholar
Flanagan, M.T., ‘Historia Gruffud vab Kenan and the Origins of Balrothery, Co. Dublin’, Cambrian Medieval Celtic Studies, 28 (1994), 7194.Google Scholar
Flanagan, M.T., ‘Strategies of Lordship in pre-Norman and post-Norman Leinster’, ANS, 20 (1998), 107–26.Google Scholar
Duffy, S., ‘John de Courcy, the First Ulster Plantation and Irish Church Men’, in Smith (ed.), Britain and Ireland, 154–178.Google Scholar
Frame, R., ‘Two Kings in Leinster: The Crown and the MicMhurchadha in the Fourteenth Century’, in Barry et al. (eds.), Colony and Frontier in Medieval Ireland, 155–75.Google Scholar
Frame, R., ‘Thomas Rokeby, Sheriff of Yorkshire, Justiciar of Ireland’, Peritia, 10 (1996), 274–96.Google Scholar
Frame, R., ‘Exporting State and Nation: Being English in Medieval Ireland’, in Scales, L. and Zimmer, O. (eds.), Power and the Nation in European History (Cambridge University Press, 2005), 143–65.Google Scholar
Frame, R., ‘Lordship beyond the Pale: Munster in the Later Middle Ages’, in Stalley, R. (ed.), Limerick and South-West Ireland: Medieval Art and Architecture (Leeds: BAACT, 2011), 518.Google Scholar
Frame, R., ‘Ireland after 1169: Barriers to Acculturation on an “English” Edge’, in Stringer, K. J. and Jotischky, A. (eds.), Norman Expansion: Connections, Continuities and Contrasts (Farnham: Ashgate, 2013), 115–41.Google Scholar
Hand, G. J., English Law in Ireland, 1290–1324 (Cambridge University Press, 1967).Google Scholar
Harbison, S., ‘William of Windsor and the Wars of Thomond’, JRSAI, 119 (1989), 98112.Google Scholar
McNeill, T. E., Anglo-Norman Ulster: The History and Archaeology of an Irish Barony (Edinburgh: John Donald, 1980).Google Scholar
MacQueen, H. L., ‘The Kin of Kennedy, “kenkynnol” and the Common Law’, in Grant, A. and Stringer, K. J. (eds.), Medieval Scotland, Crown, Lordship and Community: Essays Presented to G.W.S. Barrow (Edinburgh University Press, 1993), 274–96.Google Scholar
Maginn, C., ‘English Marcher Lineages of South Dublin in the Later Middle Ages’, IHS, 34 (2004), 113–37.Google Scholar
Matthew, E., ‘Henry V and the Proposal for an Irish Crusade’, in Smith (ed.), Ireland and the English World, 161–75.Google Scholar
Nic Ghiollamhaith, A., ‘Kings and Vassals in Later Medieval Ireland: The Uí Bhriain and the MicConmara in the Fourteenth Century’, in Barry et al. (eds.), Colony and Frontier in Medieval Ireland, 201–16.Google Scholar
O’Brien, A. F., ‘Commercial Relations between Aquitaine and Ireland, c.1000 to c.1550’, in Picard, J.-M. (ed.), Aquitaine and Ireland in the Middle Ages (Dublin: Four Courts Press, 1995), 3180.Google Scholar
Ó Cléirigh, C., ‘The O’Connor Faly Lordship of Offaly, 1395–1513’, PRIA, 96 C (1996), 87102.Google Scholar
Richardson, H. G. and Sayles, G. O., The Irish Parliament in the Middle Ages (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1952).Google Scholar
Simms, K., ‘The Concordat between Primate John Mey and Henry O’Neill, 1455’, Archivium Hibernicum, 34 (1977), 7182.Google Scholar
Simms, K., ‘Niall Garbh II O Donnell, King of Tír Conaill, 1422–39’, The Donegal Annual, 12 (1977–9), 721.Google Scholar
Simms, K., ‘The O Hanlons, the O Neills and the Anglo-Normans in Thirteenth-Century Armagh’, Seanchas Ardmhacha, 9 (1978), 7094.Google Scholar
Simms, K., ‘“The King’s Friend”: O’Neill, the Crown and the Earldom of Ulster’, in Lydon (ed.), England and Ireland, 214–36.Google Scholar
Smith, B., Colonisation and Conquest in Medieval Ireland: The English in Louth 1170–1330 (Cambridge University Press, 1999).Google Scholar
Smith, B., ‘The Armagh–Clogher Dispute and the “Mellifont Conspiracy”: Diocesan Politics and Monastic Reform in early Thirteenth-Century Ireland’, Seanchas Ardmhacha, 14 (1991), 2637.Google Scholar
Smith, L. B., ‘The Statute of Wales, 1284’, Welsh History Review, 10 (1980–1), 127–54.Google Scholar
Smyly, J. G., ‘Old Latin Deeds in the Library of Trinity College’, part II, Hermathena, 67 (1946).Google Scholar
Verstraten, F., ‘Images of Gaelic Lordship in Ireland c.1200–1400’, in Doran and Lyttleton (eds.), Lordship in Medieval Ireland, 47–71.Google Scholar
Walsh, K., A Fourteenth-Century Scholar and Primate: Richard FitzRalph in Oxford, Avignon and Armagh (Oxford University Press, 1981).Google Scholar
Smith, B., ‘The Roman Career of John Swayne, Archbishop of Armagh, 1418–39’, Seanchas Ardmhacha, 11 (1983–4), 121.Google Scholar
Watt, J. A., ‘John Colton, Justiciar of Ireland (1382) and Archbishop of Armagh (1383–1404)’, in Lydon (ed.), England and Ireland, 196–213.Google Scholar
Watt, J. A., ‘Gaelic Polity and Cultural Identity’, in NHI ii, 314–51.Google Scholar
Wormald, J., Lords and Men in Scotland: Bonds of Manrent, 1442–1603 (Edinburgh: John Donald, 1985).Google Scholar

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  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Brendan Smith, University of Bristol
  • General editor Thomas Bartlett, University of Aberdeen
  • Book: The Cambridge History of Ireland
  • Online publication: 17 December 2017
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316275399.024
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  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Brendan Smith, University of Bristol
  • General editor Thomas Bartlett, University of Aberdeen
  • Book: The Cambridge History of Ireland
  • Online publication: 17 December 2017
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316275399.024
Available formats
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  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Brendan Smith, University of Bristol
  • General editor Thomas Bartlett, University of Aberdeen
  • Book: The Cambridge History of Ireland
  • Online publication: 17 December 2017
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316275399.024
Available formats
×