Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- King John and Gerald of Wales
- Why did the Number of Knights in France and England Fall in the Thirteenth Century?
- Provinces, Policies, and Popes: Comparing Polish and English Episcopal Elections Over the Long Thirteenth Century
- Magnate Counsel and Parliament in the Late-Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries: English Exceptionalism or a Common Theme?
- Ugolino of the Gherardesca and the ‘Enigma’ of Simon de Montfort
- Breaking the Ties: The Cross-Channel Baronage and the Separation of England and Normandy in 1204
- A Typical Periphery: England in Late Twelfth- and Thirteenth-century Cistercian Texts from the Continent
- ‘A Star Lit by God’: Boy Kings, Childish Innocence, and English Exceptionalism during Henry III’s Minority, c. 1216–c. 1227
- Twilight of the Overkings: Edward I’s Superior Lordship of Scotland as Paradox
- Exceptional Flanders? The First Strikes and Collective Actions of Craftsmen in North-Western Europe around the Middle of the Thirteenth Century
- Social Hierarchies and Networks in the Thirteenth-Century London Jewry
- Albion Adrift: The English Presence in Paris and its Environs after 1204
Twilight of the Overkings: Edward I’s Superior Lordship of Scotland as Paradox
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 January 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- King John and Gerald of Wales
- Why did the Number of Knights in France and England Fall in the Thirteenth Century?
- Provinces, Policies, and Popes: Comparing Polish and English Episcopal Elections Over the Long Thirteenth Century
- Magnate Counsel and Parliament in the Late-Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries: English Exceptionalism or a Common Theme?
- Ugolino of the Gherardesca and the ‘Enigma’ of Simon de Montfort
- Breaking the Ties: The Cross-Channel Baronage and the Separation of England and Normandy in 1204
- A Typical Periphery: England in Late Twelfth- and Thirteenth-century Cistercian Texts from the Continent
- ‘A Star Lit by God’: Boy Kings, Childish Innocence, and English Exceptionalism during Henry III’s Minority, c. 1216–c. 1227
- Twilight of the Overkings: Edward I’s Superior Lordship of Scotland as Paradox
- Exceptional Flanders? The First Strikes and Collective Actions of Craftsmen in North-Western Europe around the Middle of the Thirteenth Century
- Social Hierarchies and Networks in the Thirteenth-Century London Jewry
- Albion Adrift: The English Presence in Paris and its Environs after 1204
Summary
During the summer of 1301, a Scottish lawyer by the name of Baldred Bisset was tasked with responding to a royal letter which had recently been sent by Edward I to Boniface VIII. The English epistle had been written, in part, to justify the Plantagenet monarch's decision to impose himself on Scotland as its superior lord (superior dominus regni Scocie) nearly a decade earlier. In the preliminary version of his reply, known to posterity as the Instructiones, Bisset denounced Edward's short-lived and ill-fated experiment in overkingship, declaring that ‘an equal should not possess authority over an equal, by reason of which a king is not subject to a king, nor a kingdom to a kingdom’. Evidently, this was a learned jurist's appeal to theory (and not a statement of fact), but it was one which was well adapted to the political environment of the contemporary Latin West. During the early and early High Middle Ages, the sub-continent had been replete with petty kingdoms, many – if not most – of them organised hierarchically. Indeed, long before the emergence of the idea that there was something inherently unnatural or contradictory in a rex owing his regnum to another, greater and more powerful rex, Western Europe had proved to be immensely fertile ground for vassal-monarchy. Some regions had even comprised multi-tiered systems of overkingship, with overkings themselves having been subject to supra-overkings – in the case of Gaelic Ireland, such supra-overkings had in turn been subordinate to a supreme overking of the island (ard rí). However, by the turn of the fourteenth century, largely through the process of territorial consolidation, vassal-monarchy had all but vanished from the political landscape. Excluding claims of universal imperial sovereignty and cases of papal overlordship on the grounds of dissimilarity, there remained only a handful of historical anomalies: the kingdom of Bohemia, which, by virtue of the Golden Bull of Sicily (Bulla Aurea Siciliae) (1212), enjoyed a uniquely regalian status among the states of the Holy Roman Empire; the kingdom of Majorca, a secundogeniture of the Barcelona dynasty, which was subject to the corona d‘Aragón; and, arguably, the emirate or kingdom (reino) of Granada, the last vestige of Muslim rule on the Iberian peninsula, which was subject to the corona de Castilla.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Thirteenth Century England XVIIIProceedings of the Cambridge Conference, 2019, pp. 147 - 166Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2023