Michael Bennett (1) (1949–)
Autor(a) de Richard II and the Revolution of 1399
Para outros autores com o nome Michael Bennett, ver a página de desambiguação.
Michael Bennett (1) foi considerado como pseudónimo de Michael J. Bennett.
Obras por Michael Bennett
Foram atribuídas obras ao autor também conhecido como Michael J. Bennett.
The Age of Revolution and Empire 1780-1820 2 exemplares
Medieval Britain: Myth, Power and Identity 2 exemplares
Late Medieval Europe: A Reader 1 exemplar
Etiquetado
Conhecimento Comum
- Nome legal
- Bennett, Michael John
- Data de nascimento
- 1949
- Sexo
- male
- Local de nascimento
- United Kingdom
- Locais de residência
- Tasmania, Australia
- Educação
- University of Lancaster, PhD History (1976)
- Ocupações
- Historian, Author, Professor
- Organizações
- Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, Life Member of Clare Hall, University of Cambridge and Fellow of the Australian Academy of Humanities.
Fatal error: Call to undefined function isLitsy() in /var/www/html/inc_magicDB.php on line 425- Educated at the University of Liverpool and the University of Lancaster, Dr. Bennett was a lecturer at the University of Sydney prior to moving to Tasmania in 1977, and was appointed Professor of History in 1993.
Membros
Críticas
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Associated Authors
Estatísticas
- Obras
- 8
- Membros
- 202
- Popularidade
- #109,082
- Avaliação
- 3.9
- Críticas
- 2
- ISBN
- 136
- Línguas
- 9
Well written, and what’s known about the pre-battle, battle, and post battle is very well documented and analyzed, with detailed explanations about where the data comes from and what it might mean. The illustrations are kind of sparse and often not terribly relevant to the text, but there’s really not much to illustrate – there are quite a few pictures of random medieval weapons, some effigy bronzes, and some maps that can’t really show much because there isn’t much to show other than vague lines about how the forces might possibly converged to the battlefield and equally vague lines about how they might have moved around tactically.
The actual battle was pretty mysterious – Henry Tudor was seemingly overmatched in troop strength (perhaps by as much as 5:1) and commitment (most of his force was foreign mercenaries). As near as anybody can tell from what’s recorded, more than half of Richard III’s force just decided to wait and see how things were going and found excuses to hang back. Richard decided on a death-or-glory charge against Henry (the Shakespeare contention that Henry had several people scattered around the field dressed as him is apparently false, or didn’t fool Richard a minute). Richard and the small force that charged with him got close enough to kill Henry’s standard bearer, but somebody hit Richard with a poleaxe and that was that. Richard had always been a pretty good military leader so his decision here might seem foolish, but with his force wavering he might have felt that it was best to set an example. The remaining Ricardians drifted off – casualties may have been as few as 15 out of as many as 15000. (Henry did have some of the more prominent Ricardian lords executed later).
Contemporary and near-contemporary sources almost unanimously agree that Henry’s handling of Richard’s corpse after the battle – dragging it to a nearby church, exposing it to view, then abandoning it without burial – was reprehensible. It’s not even know if it ever got buried – author Michael Bennet goes with the general opinion that Richard is buried at Leicester but other sources claim other locations or just thrown in handy river.
A pretty good history – although not really military despite the “battle” in the title.
(Added later: in 2011, archaeologists found a skeleton under a parking lot (car park for people who speak English) in Leicester; various lines of evidence confirmed this was Richard III. In 2015 the remains were formally reburied in Leicester Cathedral).… (mais)