Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Writing Techniques in Thirteenth- and Fourteenth-Century England: The Role of the Sicilian and Papal Letter Collections as Practical Models for the Shaping of Royal Propaganda
- The Great Bardney Abbey Scandal, 1303–18
- A Reassessment of the Loyalty of the Household Knights of Edward II
- Ramon Durand of Toulouse: A Lawyer Turned Knight in the Service of the Kings of England
- Urban Identity and Political Rebellion: London and Henry of Lancaster's Revolt, 1328–29
- ‘The Obscure Lives of Obscure Men’: The Parliamentary Knights of the Shires in the Early Fourteenth Century
- The Five Giants: Institutional Hierarchy and Social Provision in Later Medieval Leicestershire
- The Mariner in Fourteenth-Century England
- Dying beyond the Seas: Testamentary Preparation for Campaigning during the Hundred Years War
- Richard II and the Monasteries of London
- Index
- FOURTEENTH CENTURY ENGLAND
Dying beyond the Seas: Testamentary Preparation for Campaigning during the Hundred Years War
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Writing Techniques in Thirteenth- and Fourteenth-Century England: The Role of the Sicilian and Papal Letter Collections as Practical Models for the Shaping of Royal Propaganda
- The Great Bardney Abbey Scandal, 1303–18
- A Reassessment of the Loyalty of the Household Knights of Edward II
- Ramon Durand of Toulouse: A Lawyer Turned Knight in the Service of the Kings of England
- Urban Identity and Political Rebellion: London and Henry of Lancaster's Revolt, 1328–29
- ‘The Obscure Lives of Obscure Men’: The Parliamentary Knights of the Shires in the Early Fourteenth Century
- The Five Giants: Institutional Hierarchy and Social Provision in Later Medieval Leicestershire
- The Mariner in Fourteenth-Century England
- Dying beyond the Seas: Testamentary Preparation for Campaigning during the Hundred Years War
- Richard II and the Monasteries of London
- Index
- FOURTEENTH CENTURY ENGLAND
Summary
Historiography on testamentary practices in later medieval history has highlighted the contemporary fear of mors improvisa: dying intestate suddenly and without shrift and housel. Historians have also emphasized the importance of death rites, in which the production of a will looms large. In addition, it has been discussed recently that, along with the well-known military preparations soldiers made before going on campaign, many made spiritual arrangements, including petitioning for the right to choose confessors, have a portable altar, hear mass before daybreak or abstain from fasting while on campaign. Considering all of these preparations, one might presume that men-at-arms would prepare for the possibility of their death while on campaign by composing their testaments before they departed, in order to arrange prayers for their souls and the distribution of their movable property. However, an extensive examination of the available testamentary evidence reveals almost the opposite. While episcopal registers and administrations, along with chancery and exchequer documents, do yield examples of soldiers making wills before going on campaign, we also find many instances of English knights and men-at-arms from throughout the Hundred Years War going on campaign and dying without having made any official testamentary provision for their souls.
This study will seek to highlight what is a considerably underemphasized feature of previous examinations of both military preparations and testamentary practice during the Hundred Years War. It will question not only the relationship of warfare, religious practice and the fear of intestacy, but also our understanding of death rites in general.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Fourteenth Century England VII , pp. 177 - 196Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2012