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Résumé
The kings of twelfth- and thirteenth- century Scotland faced prolonged opposition from families and individuals who fought either to assert their independence from centralising authority, or for the throne itself. The insurrections that arose as a result were all successfully defeated by an increasingly confident Scottish monarchy. Current historiography describes such royal victories as bloodthirsty affairs, with Scotland’s kings exacting excessively violent revenge on the bodies of their enemies. Historians of medieval England have drawn parallels between such acts and the political violence of contemporary Wales and Ireland, with England alone providing an example of a more civilised royal response to rebellion. This chapter reconsiders the actions of Scotland’s kings and reassesses the violent paradigm that has been accepted to date, examining cases of non-violent response as balance. It suggests that, instead of being violent avengers, Scottish kings behaved in a more acceptable and accepted contemporary manner than previously understood.
| langue originale | English |
|---|---|
| titre | Treason |
| Sous-titre | Medieval and Early Modern Adultery, Betrayal and Shame |
| rédacteurs en chef | Larissa Tracy |
| Lieu de publication | Leiden |
| Editeur | Brill |
| Chapitre | 5 |
| Pages | 119-146 |
| Nombre de pages | 28 |
| ISBN (Electronique) | 9789004400245 |
| Les DOIs | |
| état | Published - mai 2019 |
Série de publications
| Nom | Explorations in Medieval Culture |
|---|---|
| Editeur | Brill |
| ISSN (imprimé) | 2352-0299 |