William Marshal and Ireland


John Bradley, Cóilin Ó Drisceoil & Michael Potterton, editors

Paperback €26.95
Catalogue Price: €29.95
This title is currently only available for US deliveries
ISBN: 978-1-84682-961-1
May 2021. 368pp; Pbk; colour ills.

This richly illustrated collection of essays examines for the first time the important Irish career of one of the most famous personalities of medieval Europe, William Marshal (c.1146–1219). The Marshal, with his wife Isabel de Clare, transformed the lordship of Leinster by the sword but also through the establishment of castles, churches, towns and strategic infrastructure, as well as the institution of a new administrative framework that stabilised the Anglo-Norman colony. The essays in this book, by leading historians and archaeologists, present the Marshal in a new light – one that differs substantially from his better known persona as the ‘greatest knight that ever lived’ and a ‘flower of chivalry’.

Contributors: John Bradley, Miriam Clyne, Billy Colfer, David Crouch, Adrian Empey, Gillian Kenny, Ben Murtagh, Cóilín Ó Drisceoil, Daniel Tietzsch-Tyler.

Cóilín Ó Drisceoil is the director of Kilkenny Archaeology. The late John Bradley was a senior lecturer in the Department of History, Maynooth University. Michael Potterton is a lecturer in that department.