Boydell Press imprint: 128 books

Music in the West Country

Social and Cultural History across an English Region

by Stephen Banfield
Language: English
Release Date: February 16, 2018

Music in the West Country is the first regional history of music in England. Ranging over seven hundred years, from the minstrels, waits, and cathedral choristers of the fourteenth century to the Bristol Sound of the late twentieth, the book explores the region's soundscape, from its gateway cities...

The Other Classical Musics

Fifteen Great Traditions

by
Language: English
Release Date: March 17, 2016

Winner of the Royal Philharmonic Society Music Award for Creative Communication 2015 There is a treasure trove of underappreciated music out there; this book will convince many to explore it. The Economist What is classical music? This book answers the question in a manner never before attempted,...

Balfour's World

Aristocracy and Political Culture at the Fin de Siècle

by Nancy W. Ellenberger
Language: English
Release Date: September 17, 2015

Arthur James Balfour (1848-1930) was born toward the beginning of Queen Victoria's long reign. At her death in 1901, he was a year away from becoming the first prime minister of the Edwardian era. In the quarter century after his entry into political life in the 1870s, Britain experienced material...

Roger Morrice and the Puritan Whigs

The Entring Book, 1677-1691

by Mark Goldie
Language: English
Release Date: April 21, 2016

'An exceptionally significant monograph, and without doubt one of the most important to appear in the field of Restoration history in the last twenty years. Mark Goldie has done more than anyone else to illuminate the political and religious assumptions of late seventeenth-century Englishmen.' Dr...

Abandoning America

Life-stories from early New England

by Susan Hardman Moore
Language: English
Release Date: June 20, 2013

CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title Abandoning America brings together the biographies of hundreds of people who crossed over to New England in the 1630s but later braved the Atlantic again to return home. Some went back quickly, disenchanted or discouraged. Many invested everything to make New England...
by William J. Purkis
Language: English
Release Date: August 21, 2008

For much of the twelfth century the ideals and activities of crusaders were often described in language more normally associated with a monastic rather than a military vocation; like those who took religious vows, crusaders were repeatedly depicted as being driven by a desire to imitate Christ and...

The Spy Who Came In From the Co-op

Melita Norwood and the Ending of Cold War Espionage

by David Burke
Language: English
Release Date: June 18, 2009

On September 11th 1999 The Times newspaper carried the front page article "Revealed: the quiet woman who betrayed Britain for 40 years. The spy who came in from the Co-op." Melita Norwood, the last of the atomic spies, had finally been run to ground, but at 87 she was deemed too old to prosecute....
by Ramon Llull, Noel Fallows
Language: English
Release Date: October 5, 2017

Ramon Llull (1232-1316) composed The Book of the Order of Chivalry between 1274 and 1276 as both an instrument of reform and an agent for change. His aim was to create and codify the rules for a unilateral Order of Chivalry. Loyalty to the Order, coupled with common sense, religious faith, education,...

The Other Friars

The Carmelite, Augustinian, Sack and Pied Friars in the Middle Ages

by Frances Andrews
Language: English
Release Date: October 19, 2006

In 1274 the Council of Lyons decreed the end of various 'new orders' of Mendicants which had emerged during the great push for evangelism and poverty in the thirteenth-century Latin Church. The Franciscans and Dominicans were explicitly excluded, while the Carmelites and Austin friars were allowed...
by Helen Nicholson
Language: English
Release Date: February 15, 2016

This short study of the history of the Order of St John of Jerusalem, Rhodes and Malta, also known as the Knights Hospitaller, is intended as an introduction to the Order for academics working in other fields, as well as the interested general reader. Beginning with a consideration of the origins...
by Michael Robson
Language: English
Release Date: July 20, 2006

St Francis of Assisi is one of the most admired figures of the Middle Ages - and one of the most important in the Christian church, modelling his life on the literal observance of the Gospel and recovering an emphasis on the poverty experienced by Jesus Christ. From 1217 Francis sent communities of...
by Janet Burton, Julie Kerr
Language: English
Release Date: August 16, 2011

The Cistercians (White Monks) were the most successful monastic experiment to emerge from the tumultuous intellectual and religious fervour of the eleventh and twelfth centuries. By around 1150 they had established houses the length and breadth of Western Christendom and were internationally renowned....
by David S. Bachrach
Language: English
Release Date: October 18, 2012

Over the course of half a century, the first two kings of the Saxon dynasty, Henry I (919-936) and Otto I (936-973), waged war across the length and breadth of Europe. Ottonian armies campaigned from the banks of the Oder in the east to the Seine in the west, and from the shores of the Baltic Sea...
by Ryan Lavelle
Language: English
Release Date: October 21, 2010

Selected by Choice for the 2011 list of Outstanding Academic Titles. The warfare of the late Anglo-Saxon period had momentous consequences for the development of the English state following Alfred the Great's reign. This book provides a comprehensive guide, with extracts in translation from the principal...
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