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Military Institutions on the Welsh Marches: Shropshire, A.D. 1066-1300

Publish Date: Tuesday, March 01, 1994

Between 1066 and 1282 two quite different societies were juxtaposedalong the Welsh Marches: a feudally-based Anglo-Norman one, and aCeltic Welsh one. It has been conventional to consider the formerto have been more sophisticated and developed than the latter but, in fact, the situation was more complex, and during more than two centuries of attacks and campaigns each society borrowed from the other. This book is the first comparative study of the two military systems. It considers issues pertinent to the entire border region, and, indeed, to other medieval marches. Specific topics examined include: the nature of Welsh military service, Welsh tactics and the English response,the development and functioning of Clun (a representative border castlery), the local command in Shropshire and the so-called `wardens' of the March, and the extent to which Welsh military customs influenced those of the Marchesand of England.

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