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         Hundred Years War History:     more books (99)
  1. HUNDRED YEARS WAR CASTLES: Volume I by Stephan Gondoin, 2007-04
  2. French Armies of the Hundred Years War : 1328-1429 (Men-At-Arms Series, 337) by David Nicolle, 2000-02-15
  3. Joan of Arc and the Hundred Years War (Greenwood Guides to Historic Events of the Medieval World) by Deborah A. Fraioli, 2005-03-30
  4. The Money Men: Capitalism, Democracy, and the Hundred Years' War Over the American Dollar (Enterprise) by H. W. Brands, 2007-10-17
  5. The Hundred Years War by R. Neillands, 1991-12-06
  6. The Hundred Years' War (Penguin Classic Military History) by Alfred H. Burne, 2002-01-31
  7. The Hundred Years War, Volume 2: Trial by Fire (The Middle Ages Series) by Jonathan Sumption, 2001-09-28
  8. The Hundred Years War, Volume 3: Divided Houses (The Middle Ages Series) by Jonathan Sumption, 2009-09-02
  9. Knights and Peasants: The Hundred Years War in the French Countryside (Warfare in History) by Nicholas Wright, 2000-12-14
  10. The Hundred Years War: English in France, 1337-1453 (History & Politics) by Desmond Seward, 1982-10-04
  11. Japan Against the World 1941-2041: The One Hundred Year War for Supremacy by Russell Braddon, 1983-10
  12. Encyclopedia of the Hundred Years War by John A. Wagner, 2006-08-30
  13. One Hundred and Forty Years of Service in Peace and War History of the Second Infantry United States Army by Frederick B. Shaw, 1930-01-01
  14. The Low Countries and the Hundred Years' War, 1326-1347 (Perspectives in European History) by Henry Stephen Lucas, 1977-06

41. The Hundred Years War (1)
sources the basis of study and will have used them to write history. (d) To establisha comprehensive knowledge and understanding of The hundred years war.
http://www.wkac.ac.uk/history/HS3009.htm
The Hundred Years War 1337-89 Module Code HS 3309 Credits : 15 Level 3 History Taught module Pre-requisites : None
Co-requisites: The Hundred Years War 1389-1453 Aims/Learning Outcomes
(a) To study an area of history intensively through both primary and secondary sources.
(b) To identify the primary sources for the area of study and any problems arising from that evidence, and will have explored how such sources can be analysed and problems can be overcome.
(c) To make the primary sources the basis of study and will have used them to write History.
(d) To establish a comprehensive knowledge and understanding of The Hundred Years War Description:
Assessment

Essay
Examination Weight %
Pass Req
Comments
A three hour examination that examines both modules of the depth study Taught by Dr T B James, Prof M A Hicks Taught through : Lectures, seminars and tutorials Expected time on module: Formal contact Informal contact Student managed learning Total Hours Comments Sample Assignment Analyse the concept of Gender with reference to Salic Law. Indicative Outline Content Indicative Reading Allmand CT The Hundred Years War Curry A The Hundred Years War Sherbome J War, Politics and Culture in 14th Century England

42. The Hundred Years War: The English In France 1337-1453
The protagonists of the hundred years war are among the most colorful in Europeanhistory Edward III, the Black Prince; Henry V, who was later immortalized by
http://www.britainexpress.com/Bookstore/History/The Hundred Years War The Engli
The Hundred Years War
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The Hundred Years War : The English in France 1337-1453
by Desmond Seward List Price:
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The Hundred Years War and Agincourt 1415 Browse Books by category Accommodation Activities (includes Walking) Art, Architecture, and Literature British Monarchy Countryside Gardens ... Wales Secure ordering through Amazon.com - the most trusted name in Internet commerce Availability: Usually ships within 24 hours. Paperback - 304 pages (August 1999) Penguin USA (Paper); ISBN: 0140283617 Dimensions (in inches): 0.69 x 8.44 x 5.52 Amazon.com review:

43. The Hundred Years War
Click Here. The hundred years war Scholarly look atthe causes and effects of the hundred years war.
http://www.britainexpress.com/Bookstore/History/The Hundred Years War England a
The Hundred Years War
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The Hundred Years War : England and France at War, C.1300-C.1450 (Cambridge Medieval Textbooks)
by Christopher Allmand Our Price: $17.95 Booksearch
see also
Cambridge Atlas of Medieval Warfare and
Agincourt 1415
Browse Books by category Accommodation Activities (includes Walking) Art, Architecture, and Literature British Monarchy Countryside Gardens ... Wales Secure ordering through Amazon.com - the most trusted name in Internet commerce Availability: Usually ships within 24 hours. Paperback - 224 pages (February 1988) Cambridge Univ Pr (Pap Txt); ISBN: 0521319234 Dimensions (in inches): 0.65 x 8.51 x 5.43 Amazon.com review:

44. Discussion Of 100 Years War
history AND FILM THE ONE hundred years war (13371453). Suggested SubjectHeadings and Key Phrases to Search on the BSL Computer Catalogue
http://www.arts.adelaide.edu.au/personal/DHart/ResponsesToWar/Seminar/ReadingGui
HISTORY AND FILM: THE ONE HUNDRED YEARS WAR (1337-1453)
Suggested Subject Headings and Key Phrases to Search on the BSL Computer Catalogue:
  • Agincourt, Battle of, 1415
  • Hundred Years' War - 1339-1453 - (public opinion)
  • Joan, of Arc, Saint, 1412-1431
    • a search for "Joan Arc" produced subject headings "Joan, of Arc, Saint, 1412-1431" and ""Joan, of Arc, Saint, 1412-1431 - in fiction, drama, poetry"
  • Great Britain - History - Henry V
  • Henry V, King of England
  • a search for "Shakespeare war" produced books such as Henry's Wars and Shakespeare's Laws (1993) and Shakespeare's Military World
CORE FILMS
Click on the highlighted text to go to the film handout:
IMAGES
See the images of Joan of Arc
READING
Click on the highlighted text to go to the main subject bibliography:
1. Historical Background to the War
Christopher Allmand, The Hundred Years War: England and France at War c.1300-c.1450 (Cambridge University Press, 1989). Introduction, pp. 1-5; Chap. 1 "The Causes and Progress of the Hundred Years War," pp. 6-36.

45. History Bookshop.com: Hundred Years' War
Place All The hundred years war 10% off Sumption, Jonathan — Hardback £27.00 (normalprice
http://www.historybookshop.com/articles/commentary/hundred-years-war.asp
KEYWORD SEARCH Departments
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46. Miami: One Hundred Years Of History
into a severe economic depression three years before the who had trained here duringthe war had acquired One hundred fiftythousand of them are Cuban; other
http://www.historical-museum.org/history/sfhm242.htm
Historical Museum of Southern Florida
Miami: One Hundred Years of History Paul S. George, Ph.D. F ew cities of such youth can claim a history as eventful, significant, and tumultuous as that of Miami. From its beginnings as a tiny settlement along the Miami River to the robust international city of today, Miami has represented for multitudes of new residents a place to begin anew, a gateway to a better tomorrow. And at no time has this been more true than the present. The Beginning The story of Miami begins more than 10,000 years ago with a settlement of Paleo-Indians along the edge of south Biscayne Bay near today’s Charles Deering Estate. Many millennia later, Tequesta Indians entered the lush, subtropical area and built settlements stretching from the Florida Keys to Broward County, with the largest concentrations along the north bank of the Miami River and on Key Biscayne. Like Florida’s other native inhabitants, who numbered more than 350,000 at the time of the Spanish entrada in 1513, the lifestyle of the Tequestas changed radically, and for the worse, following the Spanish arrival. Victims of disease, war and other dislocations, the Tequestas, along with Florida’s other native populations, had virtually vanished 250 years after the entry of the Spanish. Beginning in 1565, Spain exercised control over Florida for nearly 250 years. Spain’s colonization effort is divided into two eras separated by a twenty-year British interregnum in the late eighteenth century.

47. Battles That Changed History
This battle marked the downfall of Hannibal, one of history's most famous and Thisfamous battle was part of the hundred years' war between the French and the
http://www.factmonster.com/ipka/A0769941.html

Almanac
World and News The Wide World of War
Battles That Changed History
Battle Where/When Opponents Zama Zama, an ancient town in N. Africa southwest of Carthage / 202 B.C. Romans/Carthaginians Battle Where/When Opponents Marathon Greece / 490 b.c. Persia / Greece The battle of Marathon is famous, not only because the underdog won, but also because of a legend of courage and sacrifice. Darius, the leader of Persia, Egypt, Babylon, and India, decided to become the ruler of Greece as well. But the Greeks, armed only with javelins and swords, defeated the much larger and better armed Persian army. What we remember today is the story of the messenger who brought the good news to Athens, the capital of Greece. Upon completing his 26-mile run, legend says he delivered his message, collapsed, and died. Today, the word marathon means a footrace of exactly 26 miles, 385 yards.
The Trojan horse won the war for Greece against Troy in classical mythology. The horse was a wooden decoy filled with soldiers, who used it to enter the city of Troy. Bettmann Archive Battle Where/When Opponents Hastings England / 1066 British / Normans (French from Normandy) This battle resulted in the Norman conquest of England. Edward the Confessor, the king of England, had no sons and promised that when he died his throne would go to his cousin William, duke of Normandy. On his deathbed, however, the king chose Harold, the powerful earl of Wessex, as king. An enraged William rushed into battle to claim the English throne. At the battle's height, the Normans pretended to flee. When the English ran after them, the Normans turned and attacked them again. Harold was shot in the face with an arrow and died on the battlefield, leaving the throne to William. To this day, the English royal family can be traced back to William the Conqueror.

48. Hundred Years War
encyclopediaEncyclopedia hundred years war. hundred years war, 1337–1453,conflict between England and France. Sections in this
http://www.factmonster.com/ce6/history/A0824538.html

Encyclopedia

Hundred Years War Hundred Years War, Sections in this article:
Hundred Days
Hunedoara AD AD AD AD AD
Print this page Cite this page Awards and Press Link to Fact Monster Add Fact Monster search ... Privacy

49. ME3405
This Option covers the history of the hundred years war (c.13371453)primarily from the point of view of the two main protagonists, England and......
http://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/academic/history/medhist/hons/3405.html
The Hundred Years War
Lecturer
Professor Chris J Given-Wilson (71 South Street, room 15)
Module number
Credits
30 (Honours Option)
Availability
2000-2001 - semester 1
Class Hour
Tuesday and Thursday 10-11
Description
This Option covers the history of the Hundred Years War (c.1337-1453) primarily from the point of view of the two main protagonists, England and France, but also examines the involvement of other European powers such as Scotland, Flanders, the Iberian kingdoms and the papacy. The emphasis is on the diplomatic and military history of the war, and its effect upon politics, society and economy in France and England.
Basic Reading
  • A Curry, The Hundred Years War
  • C Allmand, The Hundred Years War
  • E Perroy, The Hundred Years War (English translation, 1951)
Course Structure
Two one-hour meetings per week as follows:
Assessment
60% examination - 3-hour paper
40% coursework - 2 essays and one oral assesment
Learning Outcomes
  • Understanding of causes of war and peace over an extended period
  • Analysis of primary sources from opposed perspectives
Restrictions
None
Return to Mediaeval History Home Page

50. World History -- Hundred Years War Notes
hundred years war Stage Two Taking advantage of even more division within France(Duchy of Burgundy) Henry V could easily take France - 1420 treaty of Troyes
http://www.blueladder.com/education/whistch16notes2.html
HUNDRED YEARS WAR
Stage Two
- Taking advantage of even more division within France (Duchy of Burgundy) Henry V could easily take France
JOAN OF ARC (and the end of the war)
- French people ignored the treaty of 1420, nationalism prevailed, Charles VII retreated
- Peasant girl, Joan of Arc presented herself to Charles VII and said the King of Heaven called her to deliver the city of Orleans from the English
- Charles VII, desperation overcame reason, and allowed Joan to move on Orleans with fresh troops
- After the liberation of Orleans (+ a few months) Charles VII was crowned king
- 1453 English gone from France except Calais
- 1456 Charles re-opened her case, found her innocent
- 1920 she was declared a saint

51. Watercolour Painting Holiday History
towns and castles destroyed during the hundred years war were rebuilt In the southwest war was declared, with home to Aquitaine a brief history All paintings
http://home.btconnect.com/bj-associates/history.html
In AD 16 the Romans created the new province of Aquitania spanning almost the entire south west of France from the Loire river to the Pyrénées. They were responsible for introducing walnuts, chestnuts and wine grapes into the region. In the Middle Ages the most notable development was the appearance of bastides , fortified towns built by rich feudal lords anxious to protect their fiefdoms. The increasingly powerful Church also began to express its power in mortar and stone; fabulous churches and abbeys in Romanesque style appeared all over the region often funded by the Cistercian order or by local lords - especially the powerful lords of Toulouse and Dukes of Aquitaine. The granddaughter of Guillaume IX, Duke of Aquitaine, was the sole heir to the vast lands and wealth of Aquitaine. she was Eleanor of Aquitaine. She was married for 15 years to Louis VII, King of France. This marriage ended in annulment in 1152. Eleanor then married Henry Plantagenet, Count of Anjou. Eleanor's dowry of Aquitaine and Gascony (a third of France), fell under English rule when Henry became Henry II, King of England.

52. Timeline Items To Research
What was the hundred years war? history of the hundred years war. Outline historyof the hundred years war. Medievil history. war of the Roses 1455.
http://www.lincnet.org/timeline.html
Time Line Items to Research Peasants Revolt The Black Death Magna Carta ... Mongol Empire in China begins
The Peasants Revolt- 1381
Peasant revolt- Wikipedia
English Peasants’ Revolt 1381
The History learning site
Wat Tyler, English Rebel
The Black Death starts -1347 Black Death The great Mortality Bubonic Plague Magna carta – 1215
Medievil Sourcebook

Britanica

The Full Text of the Magna Carta

The History Channel
The Crusades
The First Crusade History Learning Site Online Reference book for Medieval Studies
About.com
The Second Crusade
About.com
The Third Crusade The third Crusade About.com

The Fourth Crusade
About.com
The Children’s Crusade The Children’s Crusade
General Crusade
Information
Who were the crusades? Map of the Europe at the time of the First Crusade Political Crusade Crusaders Song ... A view from a classroom in Jordan The Hundred Years War Begins 1337 Battles of the War Electric Renaissance – causes, maps, consequences

53. "The Jewish War Veteran , The Issues And History
One hundred years of Service A written history of Jewish war VeteransPlease check back frequently as we will update this page with
http://www.jwv.org/communication/vol11.html
military archives,jewish americans,military academies,active duty,museum,united states history,memorial,jewish memorial,vet,veteran lobby,jewish, military archives,jewish americans,military academies,active duty,museum,united states history,memorial,jewish memorial,vet,veteran lobby,jewish
One Hundred Years of Service
A written history of Jewish War Veterans Please check back frequently as we will update this page with two new JWVers stories from The Jewish War Veterans of the U.S.A. One Hundred Years of Service Vol. II each week. This week's Featured Excerpts: Harold O Aaronson , born April 10, 1921, in Brooklyn, NY. Joined the U.S. Army September 14, 1943. He Served with the 20th Air Force and was discharged as corporal from the USAAF in December 1945. Aaronson served in the Pacific Theater at Tinian (atomic bomb launch site). He was awarded the Good Conduct Medal, WWII Victory Medal, American Service Medal and Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal. His father served with the Army-Cavalry in France during WWI. He passed away April 6, 1998 at the age 103.5 years.

54. Joan Of Arc, Bibliography
Translation of Perroy's classic history of the hundred years war, written whilea member of the French Underground during World war II (in the preface he
http://members.aol.com/hywwebsite/private/joanofarc_bibliography.html
Bibliography We are all indebted to the many scholars whose labors have lain the groundwork for our present knowledge. Here are some of the sources I've used:
  • Primary Source Documents - Reproductions or Printed Transcriptions
    • The Trial Transcripts
      • Le Procès de Condamnation de Jeanne d'Arc. Reproduction en fac-similé du manuscrit authentique, sur vélin, no. 1119 de la Bibliothèque de l'Assemblée Nationale. Intro by Jean Marchand; Plon [1955], Paris.
        Comments: This is a reproduction of MS BAN Lat. 1119, the copy of the transcript of the Condemnation trial which was written by the notary Guillaume Manchon for Judge Cauchon. Manchon's handwriting (in Latin and medieval French) is reasonably legible.
      • DuParc, Pierre, ed.; Procès en Nullité de la Condamnation de Jeanne d'Arc (5 Volumes). Société de l'Histoire de France, 1977, 1979, 1983, 1986, 1988; Paris.
        Comments: The complete transcription of the Rehabilitation Trial documents, original Latin and medieval French. Volume 1 contains sections I - VI (mostly witness testimony); Vol. 2 contains VII - IX (mostly various theological opinions and Inquisitor Bréhal's "Recollectio" in which the charges against Joan were debunked). At the very end is a Latin version of the final declaration of innocence in which the verdict of the original trial was overturned. Volumes 3 and 4 contain a modern French translation of the documents; Volume 5 has the author's own views on the trials.
      • Quicherat, Jules, ed.;

55. French History: Middle Ages - France . Com (tm)
the French Throne and started the hundred years war in 1337. Charles VIII emergedvictorious in the war and drove FRENCH history, 2 Mil 200 BC Prehistory, 200 BC
http://www.france.com/culture/history/middleages.html
French History
Middle Ages DATELINE
Dagobert I, last Mervingian king
Charles Martel stops Arab invasion
Charlemagne crowned Holy Roman Emperor
Foundation of the monastery of Cluny
Hugue Capet start Capetian dynasty
1st Crusade
William of Normandy starts invading England
St Denis Cathedral is rebuilt: birth of Gothic architecture.
English out of France, end of Hundred Years' War The Medieval city of Carcassone Charles Martel, the first leader of the Carolingian dynasty, initiated the expansion of the Franks' kingdom and stopped the Muslim advance from Spain in 732. Charlemagne (742-814) continued this expansion and conquered most of Germany and Italy to reunite most of the former Roman Empire. Shortly after his death, however, his kingdom was divided under the pressure of invaders such as the Normans (Vikings) and the Magyars (Hungarians). Hugues Capet Towards the end of the first millenium, France consisted of numerous feudal Lordships. The Carolingian dynasty died out in 987 when Hugues Capet was elected to the throne of France by the Lords, starting the Capetian Dynasty. The early Capetian kings had very limited power over the independent Lords. In 1066, William, Duke of Normandy invaded England while the first Crusades started in 1095. Eleanor of Aquitaine Despite the mariage of Eleanor of Aquitaine to Henry II of England which yielded most of the western part of France to the British Crown, the Capetians continued to centralize the Lordships under their control. Philippe IV (the Fair), even pressured sucessors of Pope Boniface VIII to move the papal court to Avignon in 1309. After the death of the last Capetian king Charles IV, Edward III of England claimed the French Throne and started the Hundred Years War in 1337. Thanks to the courage of a French peasant girl, Joan of Arc, Charles VIII emerged victorious in the war and drove the English back to Calais.

56. General History Links
as the battles of this, the crucial phase of the hundred years war, as England's fororiginal texts of significant documents of English history, courtesy of
http://www.britannia.com/history/hlinks.html
Search Britannia
BRITANNIA GATEWAYS
Home
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British History Links
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Ancient Scotland
Megaliths, Burials, Picts, Romans, Castles and the Isles. You'll never be short of stuff to read about Scotland's fascinating past. Ceremonial Centre of Orkney Detailed account of the ancient standing stones of the Isles of Orkney. Stone Pages Roman Britain
Patterned and figured Roman tesselated pavements. Find out more about these fscinating objects and the schools of artists who made them. Encyclopaedia of the Celts Lots of Celtic personalities to be found here including Kings, Gods and Arthurian characters. Most entries are extensive in detail. Well worth a lengthy browse. Only up to H so far though. Hadrian's Wall World Heritage Site The Official World Heritage Site website. Everything you ever wanted to know about the great wall that the Emperor Hadrian built to keep out the Picts. History, places to explore, getting around, accommodation and the latest research. Online Encyclopedia of Roman Emperors A marvellous resource from which to discover the biographies of these great men of a lost age. Many Emperors visited Britain and were closely connected with it in other ways. Find out more on this extensive site.

57. Britannia: Sources Of British History
an episodic struggle lasting well over a hundred years, with much Oftentimes the adventureof amours and of war are more Return to Sources of British history.
http://www.britannia.com/history/docs/froissrt.html
JEAN FROISSART
Chronicles of the Hundred Years War, (1337-1453) The "Hundred Years' War" between France and England (1337-1453) was an episodic struggle lasting well over a hundred years, with much of the time free of any conflict at all. The battles were violent, but also occasions for the display of chivalric ideals. Crecy and Poitiers were the battlefields upon which the legends of the Black Prince were made. The Battle of Crecy (1346)
The Englishmen, who were in three battles lying on the ground to rest them, as soon as they saw the Frenchmen approach, they rose upon their feet fair and easily without any haste and arranged their battles. The first, which was the prince's battle, the archers there stood in manner of a herse and the men of arms in the bottom of the battle. The earl of Northampton and the earl of Arundel with the second battle were on a wing in good order, ready to comfort the prince's battle, if need were. The Battle of Poitiers 1356
English Ravages in the 1370s
Return to: Sources of British History
Reproduced by kind permission of The Medieval Source Book CONTENTS DIRECTORY
History
Monarchs ... Links Comments: e-mail us at history@britannia.com

58. Hundred Years' War
hundred years' war. Historians have long considered the hundred years' war amilestone in the development of national consciousness in western Europe.
http://www.kfki.hu/~arthp/tours/gothic/history/hundred.html
Hundred Years' War
The Hundred Years' War was an intermittent struggle between England and France in the 14th-15th century over a series of disputes, including the question of the legitimate succession to the French crown. The struggle involved several generations of English and French claimants to the crown and actually occupied a period of more than 100 years. By convention it is said to have started in 1337 and ended in 1453, but there had been periodic fighting over the question of English fiefs in France going back to the 12th century. Medieval legalities were such that one king could be the vassal of another king if the first had inherited titles outside his own kingdom. Such was the case with the English kings since William I, who, as the duke of Normandy, had conquered England in 1066. Marriage alliances and wars had altered the nature of the English titles in France, but, at the death of the French king Charles IV in 1328, Edward III of England was also duke of Guyenne (part of Aquitaine in southwestern France) and count of Ponthieu (on the English Channel). Furthermore, because his mother was Charles IV's sister and because Charles IV had no sons, Edward III considered himself a legitimate claimant to the French throne. The other major claimant was the Count of Valois, a grandson of Philip III of France through a younger branch of the family. A French assembly called to settle the question chose the Valois claimant as Philip VI. Edward III appeared to accept the decision, but when Philip VI, afraid of another king's power in his realm, maneuvered to confiscate Guyenne in 1337, Edward III renewed his claim to the French throne and brought an army to Flanders.

59. Featured Books: European History, World History
Saunders, The history of the Mongol Conquests. Sharpe, Instruments of Darkness.Stroud, The Emperor of Nature. Sumption, The hundred years war, Volume 1.
http://www.upenn.edu/pennpress/features/europe.html
The 1921 seal of the Penn Press:
a tribute to Benjamin Franklin,
publisher, statesman, inventor,
and founder of the University.
European History, World History
Bestsellers and classic titles from the Penn Press backlist. Alter, Amritsar to Lahore Ankarloo, Witchcraft and Magic in Europe, Volume 2 Ankarloo, Witchcraft and Magic in Europe, Volume 5 Ankarloo, Witchcraft and Magic in Europe, Volume 6 Ankarloo, Witchcraft and Magic in Europe, Volume 1 Ankarloo, Witchcraft and Magic in Europe, Volume 3 Ankarloo, Witchcraft and Magic in Europe, Volume 4 Barroll, Anna of Denmark, Queen of England Berman, The Cistercian Evolution Besteman, Unraveling Somalia Bienkowski, Dictionary of the Ancient Near East Bondeson, The London Monster Breasted, Development of Religion and Thought in Ancient Egypt Bynum, Last Things Carver, Sutton Hoo Constable, Medieval Iberia Daunton, Empire and Others DuBois, Nordic Religions in the Viking Age DuBois, The Negro Duby, Rural Economy and Country Life in the Medieval West Evelyn, Elysium Britannicum, or the Royal Gardens Evergates, Aristocratic Women in Medieval France Fernandez-Armesto

60. The Hundred Years War Started Today: An Exploration Of Electronic Peer Review
The joke being, of course, that you can look back on the hundred years war and see Thereis a sense of history in these early explorations of what modemlinked
http://www.press.umich.edu/jep/works/PeterHundr.html
The Hundred Years War Started Today: An exploration of electronic peer review
by John Peters
Introduction
The Internet has been described variously as "the grandest revolution in the capture and dissemination of emerging academic and professional knowledge and information since Caxton developed his printing press," "the most significant advance since the penny stamp," and (paraphrased) "the end of the need to print to paper....the harbinger of an economic, social, and cultural revolution as significant as industrialization and urbanization in the 18th and 19th Centuries....people will not just work differently; they will think differently." One of the problems with being at the start of a revolution is that one can hardly reflect on it adequately. It is a little like the schoolboy joke of the letter saying "Dear Mum, All is well over here in the Holy Roman Empire, except that the Hundred Years War started today". The joke being, of course, that you can look back on the Hundred Years War and see what its shapes and patterns were, how long it lasted, and who won; indeed, you can give it a name. But looking forward, you can't make a lot of sense of it. There is a sense of history in these early explorations of what modem-linked computers can do and a sense of typical early phase revolution behavior taking place too; the zealots, the reactionaries, the contras, the indifferent, the opportunists. Those involved so far in trying to make sense of the capabilities of the Internet, and in playing a part in the crafting of its future shape, are what Everett Rogers would describe as "innovators," or at least "early adopters;"

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