Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- Maps
- Introduction
- 1 The M 9 chronicle and its authors
- 2 The format and content of the M 9 chronicle
- 3 The portrayal of war in the M 9 chronicle
- 4 French in fifteenth-century England: what linguistic choices?
- 5 The post-medieval history of the chronicle and its use by the heralds
- 6 The M 9 chronicle and the histories of the mid-Tudor period
- 7 ‘In the Mids of his Glory’: the M 9 chronicle, ‘A Mirror for Magistrates’, and the tragedy of English imperialism
- The Edition of College of Arms MS M 9 folios 31r–66r
- Appendix: Additional material by William Worcester bound into College of Arms MS M 9
- Bibliography
- Index to chapters and translation footnotes
- Index to text and translation
1 - The M 9 chronicle and its authors
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 May 2022
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- Maps
- Introduction
- 1 The M 9 chronicle and its authors
- 2 The format and content of the M 9 chronicle
- 3 The portrayal of war in the M 9 chronicle
- 4 French in fifteenth-century England: what linguistic choices?
- 5 The post-medieval history of the chronicle and its use by the heralds
- 6 The M 9 chronicle and the histories of the mid-Tudor period
- 7 ‘In the Mids of his Glory’: the M 9 chronicle, ‘A Mirror for Magistrates’, and the tragedy of English imperialism
- The Edition of College of Arms MS M 9 folios 31r–66r
- Appendix: Additional material by William Worcester bound into College of Arms MS M 9
- Bibliography
- Index to chapters and translation footnotes
- Index to text and translation
Summary
The incipit to the M 9 chronicle names four men as involved in its production, Peter Basset, Christopher Hanson, Luket Nantron and William Worcester. Each has a fascinating career which can be reconstructed to greater or lesser degree, but it is also relevant to discuss after each biographical study how they might have worked as a team in the creation of the chronicle. The manuscript of the chronicle itself is an important source in this study and therefore offers a useful starting point in discussion of the authors.
THE CHRONICLE MANUSCRIPT AND ITS SCRIBE, LUKET NANTRON (DEBORAH ELLEN THORPE)
College of Arms MS M 9 is a compilation of fifteenth- and sixteenth-century texts which includes the chronicle which is the focus of this book. The compilation was in its current form from at least the early seventeenth century; this is evidenced by the style of its binding as well as by its inclusion in the first catalogue of the collections of the College made by Samson Lennard in 1619. The provenance and format of College of Arms MS M 9 as a whole will be explored in Chapter 5. Here we shall concentrate only on the chronicle, which is only known to survive in this single manuscript.
The first folio is marked in a mid-fifteenth-century hand in small roman numerals as ‘xxxj’. This style of numbering continues on all recto folios until the last folio of the chronicle ‘lxvj’. Such original foliation indicates that the chronicle was previously part of another compilation, probably put together by William Worcester, but we cannot now know what else was originally bound with it. The first page of the chronicle is darkened, suggesting that it enjoyed a separate existence for some time before being grouped with later materials into College of Arms MS M 9. There is evidence of water damage to the head and fore-edge of the folios of the chronicle text, damage which is not seen elsewhere in MS M 9, which also confirms its separate existence for an extended period.
In addition, it would seem that the chronicle has at some point been folded as a whole, rather like a newspaper might be.
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- Information
- A Soldiers' Chronicle of the Hundred Years WarCollege of Arms Manuscript M9, pp. 9 - 44Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2022