
The failure of the Lancastrian dynasty, after its early struggles and its apparent consolidation, tends here to be attributed, in large measure, to improvident commitments abroad and a financial and administrative technique inadequate for its responsibilities; and the contest--at least in its earlier stages--between Lancaster and York is viewed not so much as a unique struggle between defined parties, as typical of the efforts of noble houses to maintain and improve their position by the exercise of patronage and influence in a society that was rapidly undergoing change. At the center of, and integral to, the story are chapters on the orders of men, upon economic life and governmental administration. There are revised portraits of Henry V and Edward IV, the latter regarded as a more practical administrator than his royal predecessors. A special feature is the sections devoted to Anglo-French relations, with the damnosa hereditas of the Treaty of Troyes particularly emphasized. The last chapter, a pacific epilogue to the tale of violence preceding it, deals with notable English achievements in the life of the spirit.
This volume investigates the collapse of the Lancastrian dynasty and the subsequent transition of power to the House of York within the context of fifteenth-century English political and social structures. Ernest F. Jacob, a noted historian of the period, utilizes administrative records and contemporary accounts to argue that the failure of the Lancastrian kings stemmed from unsustainable foreign commitments and an administrative apparatus unable to manage the fiscal demands of the era. The text posits that the conflict between Lancaster and York was less a clash of rigid ideologies and more a manifestation of noble competition for influence and patronage in a shifting social landscape.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a foundational academic text within the Oxford History of England series, noted for its rigorous focus on administrative and diplomatic detail. Readers frequently observe that the prose is dense and scholarly, reflecting the traditional historiographical approach of the mid-twentieth century.
Page Count:
798
Publication Date:
1993-09-16
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192852868
ISBN-13:
9780192852861
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