Papers by Hannes Kleineke
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, 2018
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, 2018
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, 2018
Creativity, Contradictions and Commemoration in the Reign of Richard II, 2022
The Fifteenth Century XVIII: Rulers, Regions and Retinues. Essays Presented to A.J. Pollard, ed. Linda Clark, 2020
At the end of almost two years of civil war, England was on its knees. A young and vigorous king ... more At the end of almost two years of civil war, England was on its knees. A young and vigorous king had assumed the throne, but were ordinary men and women really filled with as much optimism at the prospect of a new beginning as some chroniclers would have use believe?
The History of Parliament: The House of Commons 1422-1461 ed. Linda Clark, 2020
The Ricardian, 2020
In contrast to some other late medieval battles, few of those who fought in either army at the ba... more In contrast to some other late medieval battles, few of those who fought in either army at the battle of Bosworth in 1485 have been identified. This note examines the evidence for the contingent provided by the city of Exeter for Richard III's army and asks whether the men concerned arrived in time to participate in the engagement.
The History of Parliament: The House of Commons 1422-1461 ed. Linda Clark, 2020
The History of Parliament: The House of Commons 1422-1461 ed. Linda Clark, 2020
The History of Parliament: The House of Commons 1422-1461 ed. Linda Clark, 2020
The History of Parliament: The House of Commons 1422-1461 ed. Linda Clark, 2020
The History of Parliament: The Commons 1422-1461 ed. Linda Clark, 2020
The History of Parliament: The House of Commons 1422-1461 ed. Linda Clark, 2020
The History of Parliament: The House of Commons 1422-1461 ed. Linda Clark, 2020
The Ricardian, 2019
A recurring theme during the Wars of the Roses was the ability of a threatened ruler or his oppon... more A recurring theme during the Wars of the Roses was the ability of a threatened ruler or his opponents to take ship into exile, in order to return and fight another day. This paper examines the experience of Richard Neville, earl of Warwick, and his son in law, George, duke of Clarence, in April 1470, when they hastily had to find a vessel on the southern coast of Devon to take them to safety from the pursuing Edward IV. It discusses the mechanics of finding and equipping a ship, and identifies the individuals involved in facilitating the earl's escape.
'A Verray Parfit Praktisour': Essays presented to Carole Rawcliffe ed. Linda Clark and Elizabeth Danbury (Woodbridge, 2017)
Social History of Medicine, 2017
Although extensively mined by political, legal and even economic historians, the records of the c... more Although extensively mined by political, legal and even economic historians, the records of the common law courts of medieval England have still to be used to their full potential by students of other branches of history. Focusing primarily on the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries, this article seeks to demonstrate the types of information which medical historians might glean from these sources, and in an appendix offers a list of named practitioners to supplement the standard listings by Talbot and Hammond, and by Getz.
The Library, 2016
This article discusses the library of John Veysy (d.1492), an Oxford-educated rector of the Londo... more This article discusses the library of John Veysy (d.1492), an Oxford-educated rector of the London parish church of St. James Garlickhythe, documented for its date unusually fully in the owner's will and probate inventory (printed in an appendix). It uses the second folios cited in these documents, in their detail an unusual survival from this period, to identify the likely imprints of the incunabula in the collection, and to suggest a possible chronology for the library's acquisition.
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Papers by Hannes Kleineke
and compiled into a separate Pardon roll. This volume calendars the general pardons issued by Edward IV during his second reign up to his unexpected death in the spring of 1483. The pardons provide interesting
information on individuals of all ranks of society, their social status and places of residence, and offers, inter alia, fascinating evidence for the study of social and geographic mobility.
- Michael Hicks, The Yorkist Age? 1-17
- Jennifer Scott, Painting from life? Comments on the Date and Function of the Early Portraits of Elizabeth Woodville and Elizabeth of York in the Royal Collection, 18-26
- J.L. Laynesmith, The Piety of Cecily, Duchess of York: A Reputation Reconsidered, 27-43
- Charles Farris, The New Edwardians? Royal Piety in the Yorkist Age, 44-63
- Maria Hayward, Clothed by the Tudors: Yorkist prisoners in the Tower 1485–1547, 64-80
- S.J. Payling, Edward IV and the Politics of Conciliation in the Early 1460s, 81-94
- James Ross, A Governing Elite? The Higher Nobility in the Yorkist and Early Tudor Period, 95-115
- Anne F. Sutton, ‘Peace, love and unity’: Richard III’s Charters to His Towns, 116-141
- Nigel Ramsay, Richard III and the Office of Arms, 142-163
- Oliver Hounslow, Scattered Skeletons – An Introduction to the Bioarchaeology of Towton, 164-174
- Sean Cunningham, The Yorkists at War: Military leadership in the English war with Scotland 1480–82, 175-194
- Jelle Haemers and Frederik Buylaert, War, Politics, and Diplomacy in England, France and the Low Countries, 1475–1500. An Entangled History, 195-220
- Derek Pearsall, Was there a Yorkist Literature? 221-236
- Meg Twycross, Organising theatricals in York between 1461 and 1478: seventeen years of change, 237-255
- †Lister M. Matheson, National and Civic Chronicles in Late Fifteenth-Century London, 256-274
- M.T.W. Payne, Robert Fabyan’s Civic Identity, 275-286
- Livia Visser-Fuchs and Carol M. Meale, The Meeting of the Duke and the Emperor: The English Survival of a Lost Text by Olivier de La Marche, 287-346
- Clive Burgess, Fotheringhay Church: Conceiving a College and its Community, 347-366
- Nigel Saul, Fotheringhay Church, Northamptonshire: Architecture and Fittings, 367-379
- David Harry, Learning to Die in Yorkist England: Earl Rivers’ Cordyal, 380-398
- Alexandra Buckle, ‘Entumbid Right Princely’: The re-interment of Richard Beauchamp, earl of Warwick, and a lost rite, 399-415
- Bibliography, 416-449
- Index, 450-484
- Index of Manuscripts, 485-488