A Cumulative Bibliography of Medieval Military History and TechnologyBrill Academic Publishers Kelly DeVries ISBN: 9004122273 price: $210.00
There is perhaps no other more lively area for study in
medieval history than medieval military history, with its
attendant and complementary field, the history of medieval
military technology. In the past twenty years, it seems that more
major scholarly inroads have been made in this field than in any
other historical genre of medieval studies or chronological
period of military history. What this has meant is that it is now
more difficult to keep up with all of the trends and sources in
the field than ever before. Hence the need for a reference work
which covers what has previously been written and which, in turn,
can assist the scholar, both the more experienced academic and
the beginner, to improve his or her work in medieval military
history or the history of medieval military technology.
Utilizing library catalogues, bibliographies, and footnotes, this
bibliography has compiled the most complete list of secondary
references to works in medieval military history and the history
of military technology. It keeps fairly strictly to a geography
which centers on conventional medieval boundaries-Europe,
Byzantium, and the Middle East. However, the chronology does
differ from the conventional medieval dates. Because of its
influence on the early Middle Ages, references to Late Antiquity,
especially to the military history and technology of the third-
and fourth-century Roman Empire have been included. For the
opposite reason, the influence of the Middle Ages on the
sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, references to military
history and technology up to 1648 have been included as well.
This is especially important in the study of the Ottoman Turkish
Wars and Arms and Armor, where the end of the fifteenth century
as a chronological terminus makes little sense.
Readership: This work will appeal to anyone researching medieval
military history and the history of medieval military technology,
but especially to undergraduate and graduate students, and also
to established medieval and military historians.
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