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  1. Thirteenth Century England XIV. Proceedings of the Aberystwyth and Lampeter Conference, 2011. Edited by Janet Burton, Phillipp Schofield and Björn Weiler. Fruits of the most recent research on the thirteenth century in both England and Europe. The articles collected here reflect the continued and wide interest in England and its neighbours in ...

  2. Thirteenth Century England VIII: Proceedings of the Durham Conference 1999. Michael Prestwich, R. H. Britnell, Robin Frame. Boydell & Brewer, 2001 - History - 218 pages. This series is home to scholarship of the highest order covering a wide range of themes: from politics and warfare to administration, justice and society.

  3. concentrated in the thirteenth century; the coroners' rolls span the years 1228 1426, with the bulk deriving from the fourteenth century. This produced 638 cases of self-killings from thirteenth- and fourteenth-century England. An impor tant note concerning terminology: in this article, I will use the term "self-killing"

  4. Thirteenth Century England XVIII. Proceedings of the Cambridge Conference, 2019. Edited by: Andrew Spencer and Carl Watkins. With contributions by: Robert Bartlett , Leen Bervoets , Peter Coss , S. W. Dempsey , Antoni Grabowski , Xavier Hélary , Dean A. Irwin , Matt Raven , Emily Ward , Nicholas Vincent and Agata Zielinska. Volume 18 in the ...

  5. Selwyn College, Cambridge 12-13 September 2022. The Thirteenth Century Conference – formerly Thirteenth Century England - has been running every two years for over thirty years. In 2015 the Conference moved from Aberystwyth to Cambridge, and we are back (after a delay due to the pandemic) for the XIXth edition in September 2022.

  6. The Conflictus inter Deum et Diabolum and the Emergence of the Literature of Law in Thirteenth-Century England; Prosecuting Ravishment in Thirteenth-Century England; John of Crakehall: The ‘Forgotten’ Baronial Treasurer, 1258–60; Credit Finance in Thirteenth-Century England: The Ricciardi of Lucca and Edward I, 1272–94

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