Description
Deconstructing the intricate administrative systems, cross-cultural adaptations, and shifting military frontiers of medieval Ireland requires a rigorous, data-driven institutional analysis. In The Lordship of Ireland in the Middle Ages, legendary historian J.F. Lydon delivers a thorough, authoritative audit tracking the development of the English colony, the authority of Dublin Castle, and the powerful resurgence of Gaelic lordships from the twelfth to the early sixteenth centuries.
Lydon looks deeply into medieval exchequer rolls, royal charters, parliament records, and monastic chronicles to evaluate the practical functional operations of feudal land tenure, colonial taxation, and military defense measures. The text systematically guides advanced researchers through complex interactions between the Anglo-Irish earldoms, the Gaelic kingdoms of the west, and the crown administration, avoiding rhetorical fluff for high-impact historical analysis. This milestone volume stands as a mandatory reference asset for university libraries, advanced medieval studies tracks, and research historians globally.
Critical administrative and political frameworks evaluated within this study:
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Feudal and Fiscal Analytics: Breaks down specific land grant structures, crown revenue metrics, and military levy requirements across the historic liberties.
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Socio-Cultural Context Mapping: Documents the intense structural friction, cultural synthesis, and legal boundaries between English common law and traditional Gaelic Brehon law.
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Gold-Standard Scholarly Quality: Meticulously annotated with extensive primary text citations, historical lineage maps, and deep peer-reviewed footnotes.






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