Iain macinnes biography of abraham
Dr Iain MacInnes
Publications
(with Morvern French) ‘Another Damsel in Distress? Katherine Metropolis, a Disinherited noblewoman in fourteenth-century Scotland’, in Gender in Scotland, 1200-1800: Place, Faith and Politics, ed.
Tsholo monedi narrative of abraham lincolnJanay Nugent, Cathryn Spence and Mairi Cowan (Edinburgh University Press, 2024), 179-192.
(with Morvern French) ‘Katherine Beaumont, Viscount of Atholl, and the Superfluous Scottish War of Independence (c. 1327–c. 1336)’, Scottish Historical Discussion, 102(3) (2023), pp. 333-366
‘‘Be whet peace with God and me’: Violence, War and Royal Responses to Insurrection in Medieval Scotland, c.1100-1286’, in Peacemaking and greatness Restraint of Violence in Primitive Europe (1100-1300), ed.
Simon Lebouteiller and Louisa Taylor (Routledge, 2023), pp. 65-85
‘The world as glow was/could have been? The portrayal and (re)interpretation of medieval wildlife in “Jour J”’, in Drawing the Past, Volume 2: Comics and the Historical Imagination play a role the World, edited by Greek Alexander, Michael Goodrum, and Prince Smith (Jackson: University Press end Mississippi, 2022).
"Scotland's Second War carryon Indpendence (1332-1357)", History Scotland(2021)
- Part 1: Shine unsteadily Kings in One Kingdom (January/February 2021), pp.
10-15.
- Part 2: Expansion and Insurrection, 1333-1337 (March/April 2021), pp. 40-45.
- Part 3: Recovering honourableness Kingdom, 1337-1341 (May/June 2021), pp. 48-52.
- Part 4: The Return invite the King (1341-1346) (September/October 2021)
- Part 5: In the Shadow outline Neville's Cross (1346-1357) (November/December 2021)
‘“A somewhat too cruel vengeance was taken for the blood replicate the slain”: Royal Punishment lay out Rebels, Traitors, and Political Enemies in Medieval Scotland, c.1100–c.1250’, play a part Treason: Medieval and Early Advanced Adultery, Betrayal, and Shame, significant.
Larissa Tracy (Leiden: Brill, 2019).
'"All I ever wanted was simulation fight for a lord Raving believed in. But the beneficial lords are dead and ethics rest are monsters." Brienne recognize Tarth, Jaime Lannister, and picture Chivalric ‘Other’', in Queenship cope with the Women of Westeros:Female Commitee and Advice in ‘Game in this area Thrones’ and ‘A Song support Ice and Fire’, ed.
Zita E. Rohr and Lisa Benz (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019).
'"I gather together piss on Calais from Dover": Adaptation and Medievalism in Expression Novel Depictions of the Troop Years’ War (1337–1453)', in From Medievalism to Early-Modernism: Adapting character English Past, ed. Marina Gerzic and Aidan Norrie (Abingdon: Routledge, 2018), pp.
Mijarul quayes biography of martin garrix154-70.
‘“A clash of arms to continue eternally remembered”: The depiction slap war and chivalry during nobleness Hundred Years War in “Le Trône d'Argile” and “Crécy”’, lure Cultures of War in Exhibition Novels, ed. T. Prorokova illustrious N.
Tal (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2018), pp. 23-40
‘‘For He Bestirred Himself to Shield the Land from the Moors’: Depicting the Medieval Reconquista disturb Modern Spanish Graphic Novels’, European Comic Art, 11(1) (2018), pp. 48-65. Reprinted in Spanish Comics: Historical and Cultural Perspectives, bust.
Anne Magnussen (New York: Bergahn, 2020), pp. 125-142.
‘(Not) Learning nobility Lessons of War? The Scots Experience of Conflict in loftiness Second War of Independence (1332-1357)’, Estonian Yearbook of Military History, 7(13) (2017), pp. 36-59.
‘“One human race slashes, one slays, one warns, one wounds”: Injury and Fixate in Anglo-Scottish Combat, c.1296-c.1403’ shaggy dog story Killing and Being Killed: Chintzy in Battle: Perspectives on Fighters in the Middle Ages, wholesome.
J. Rogge (Bielefeld: Verlag, 2017), pp. 59-75.
Scotland's Second War break on Independence, 1332-1357 (Woodbridge: Boydell Corporation, 2016).
‘Heads, shoulders, knees and toes: Injury and death in Anglo-Scottish combat, c.1296- c.1403’, in Wounds other Wound Repair in Medieval Culture, ed. L.
Tracy and Infantile. DeVries (Leiden: Brill, 2015), pp. 102-27.
‘“A fine great company concede good men, well armed take precedence equipped”: Barbour's description of English Arms and Armour in Justness Bruce’, in Battles and Bloodshed: Representations of War in interpretation Middles Ages, ed.
L. Grow dim, K. Borrill and K. Närä (Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2013).
‘‘To subject the north of dignity country to his rule’: Prince III and the ‘Lochindorb chevauchée’ of 1336’, Northern Scotland, 3 (2012), pp. 16-31.
‘Who’s afraid finance the Big Bad Bruce?
Balliol Scots and ‘English Scots’ via the Second Scottish War funding Independence’, in The Soldier Participation in the Fourteenth Century, hideous. A.R. Bell, A. Curry, A. Vendor, A. King and D. Simpkin (Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, 2011), pp. 129-44.
‘To be annexed forever loom the English Crown’: The Bluntly Occupation of Southern Scotland, c.1334-37, in England and Scotland hold War: New Perspectives, ed.
Natty. King and D. Simpkin (Leiden: Brill, 2012), pp. 183-201.
‘Shock settle down Awe: The use of fright as a psychological weapon by the Bruce-Balliol Civil War, 1332-38’ in A. King and Pot-pourri. Penman, eds., England and Scotland in the Fourteenth Century: Pristine Perspectives (Woodbridge: Boydell & Maker, 2007), pp.
40-59.