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Jonathan Sumption

Autor(a) de Trial by Battle

12+ Works 1,534 Membros 25 Críticas 1 Favorited
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About the Author

Jonathan Sumption was a history fellow at Magdalen College, Oxford, until 1975.

Séries

Obras por Jonathan Sumption

Trial by Battle (1990) 369 exemplares
Trial by Fire (1999) 258 exemplares
Divided Houses (2009) 221 exemplares
The Albigensian Crusade (1978) 200 exemplares
Cursed Kings (2015) 150 exemplares
Edward III: A Heroic Failure (2016) 57 exemplares
Law in a Time of Crisis (2021) 14 exemplares
Bill of Rights: The Origin of Britain’s Democracy (2022) — Introdução — 1 exemplar

Associated Works

Great Commanders of the Medieval World, 454–1582 (2011) — Contribuidor — 31 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Membros

Discussions

Sumption em Medieval Warfare (Abril 7)
Sumption's 3rd volume on HYW em Medieval Warfare (Abril 2023)

Críticas

The third volume of Sumption's history of the Hundred Years War, this covers the second or "Caroline" phase of the conflict. It's the least spectacular phase of the war, with few major battles, but its early years saw great French reconquests in the southwest, before the war settled into a bloody stalemate, in part because both England and France become riven by internal divisions under the inept kings Richard II and Charles VI.

Sumption's narrative remains crisp and lively. There's also an interesting thematic chapter on the lives and attitudes of men-at-arms and lesser fighting men.… (mais)
 
Assinalado
AndreasJ | 3 outras críticas | Jan 10, 2024 |
With Triumph and Illusion Jonathan Sumption has, after more than three decades’ toil and 4,000 pages, brought his epic five-volume history of the Hundred Years War to its conclusion. In this final volume he takes us from 1422 – the year in which Henry V died having achieved spectacular successes – to 1453, when his son, Henry VI, endured total loss. From a French perspective, the dates represent the ignominious death of the insane Charles VI and the ultimate victory of his son, Charles VII.

The denouement of the war is more interesting than its messy origins, when the death of Charles IV of France in 1328 marked the end of the Capetian dynasty and its replacement with the Valois one. This situation, coupled with the never-ending tensions between England and France (the former still holding Gascony, the latter probing into this territory under its aggressive new monarch, Philip) created an opportunistic moment for Edward III of England to claim the French throne through his mother, Isabella of France. That England could sustain the war, if intermittently, against a population perhaps six or seven times its size for more than a century is remarkable; but the outcome was surely inevitable (or as ‘inevitable’ as history allows). Sumption charts the English downfall, misled by delusion, and France’s triumph in enormous detail to show how this happened.

Henry V’s remarkable victory at Agincourt in 1415 seemed to usher in a new period of English dominance on the battlefield and a return to the heady days of Crécy in the 1340s. Together with his Burgundian allies Henry had conquered France down to the Loire Valley, leaving the disinherited dauphin Charles trying to claw back his land and title; the provisions of the 1420 Treaty of Troyes had seen the infant Henry VI of England also made King of France in the Dual Monarchy. Despite Henry V’s early death in 1422, England continued to do well in France for a few years under the capable command of his brother, the Duke of Bedford. In Sumption’s telling, Bedford is a rare protagonist commended for his positive qualities: ‘a capable administrator and an astute politician with an incisive mind’, the ‘beak-nosed’ Bedford ‘managed to combine an affable manner with an imposing presence and a habit of authority’. But despite his victory at the often overlooked Battle of Verneuil in 1424 (‘the bloodiest fight of the Hundred Years War’, in Sumption’s view, in a field of strong contenders) even Bedford could only hold the line for so long.

Read the rest of the review at HistoryToday.com.

Sean McGlynn teaches medieval and early modern history at the University of Plymouth at Strode College.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
HistoryToday | Nov 28, 2023 |
Like the first volume, this one took me a long time to get through. Not because Sumption doesn't write well, because he does, or because the subject matter is uninteresting, because it is not, but because there doesn't seem to be any pressing need to read it all in one go, and I keep getting distracted by other books.
 
Assinalado
AndreasJ | 5 outras críticas | Aug 4, 2023 |
Nice summary of Edward's life, and made me want to read more about it, which is what these little introductory book should do. There was a some nice suggestions for further reading at the back too.
 
Assinalado
Crokey20 | Feb 24, 2023 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
12
Also by
1
Membros
1,534
Popularidade
#16,774
Avaliação
4.2
Críticas
25
ISBN
46
Línguas
2
Marcado como favorito
1

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