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ISBN: PB: 9780300181579

Yale University Press

February 2012

352 pp.

23.4x15.6 cm

24 black&white illus.

PB:
£14,99
QTY:

Categories:

Wars of the Roses

The Wars of the Roses (1455-85) were a major turning point in English history. But the underlying causes for the successive upheavals have been hotly contested by historians ever since. In this original and stimulating new synthesis, distinguished historian Michael Hicks examines the difficult economic, military, and financial crises and explains, for the first time, the real reasons why the Wars of the Roses began, why they kept recurring, and why, eventually, they ceased.

Alongside fresh assessments of key personalities, Hicks sheds new light on the significance of the involvement of the people in politics, the intervention of foreign powers in English affairs, and a fifteenth-century credit crunch. Combining a meticulous dissection of competing dynamics with a clear account of the course of events, this is a definitive and indispensable history of a compelling, complex period.

About the Author

Michael Hicks is professor of medieval history and head of the Department of History, University of Winchester, and a specialist on late medieval England. He lives in Winchester, UK.

Reviews

"An important and valuable contribution to the canon of literature on the middle years of the 15th century, which will surely take its rightful place on student reading lists everywher" – Hannes Kleineke, History Review

"A handsome book – produced to Yale University Press's customarily beautiful standards – seeks not to trace a single thread but to sketch the whole historical tapestry of the complex and bloody conflicts that convulsed England in the second half of the fifteenth century" – Helen Castor, Times Literary Supplement

"This book will be required reading for all serious students of the late-medieval English polity" – David Grummitt, English Historical Review

"In this impressive book Hicks reinterprets the wars between York and Lancaster and rejects Tudor inevitability" – Desmond Seward, The Tablet