by R.P. Howgrave Graham in Archaeologia vol. XCVIII, 1961 [describing the conservation of the funeral effigy after the war] The exequies of Edward III and the royal funeral ceremony in late medieval ...
It was while returning from the Crusade that Edward learned that his father, Henry III, had died and that he was now the King of England. Ambitious and impulsive, Edward wasted no time in ...
was one of the most iconic figures of 14th-century England. The eldest son and heir apparent of King Edward III, he never got to rule England but he certainly left his mark on the country.
On 12th July 1346, a huge English invasion fleet landed on the shores of Normandy. The King of England was here to claim the ...
Edward the First of England was used to getting his own way ... only death could loosen Edwards grip. In 1292, Alexander III, the King of Scotland, died. Scotland's nobles turned to the Edward ...
Or is it a sign of hard-nosed pragmatism opposite a superior force, much as Edward III did at the Battle of Crecy? Yet this in itself indicates that the gap remains between England and the top ...
A small bronze statuette (or weeper) of Joan, a daughter of Edward III and Philippa of Hainault ... sleeves and the coat of arms depicting Castile & Leon impaling France and England quarterly is below ...
It was while returning from the Crusade that Edward learned that his father, Henry III, had died and that he was now the King of England. Ambitious and impulsive, Edward wasted no time in ...