Harlaxton Medieval Studies XIX (New Series)
Proceedings of the 2007 Harlaxton Symposium: The Friars in Medieval Britain, edited by Nicholas Rogers
Articles:
Preachers and Theologians
Michael F. Robson, OFM, The Franciscan Custody of York in the Thirteenth Century, 1-24
William H. Campbell, Franciscan Preaching in Thirteenth-Century England: Sources, Problems, Possibilities, 25-40
Maura O’Carroll, SND, Mid-Thirteenth-Century English Dominican Preaching and Catechesis: Bodleian MS Laud. Misc. 511 and Other Sermons and Pastoral Texts, 41-72
Relationships
Clive Burgess, Friars and the Parish in Late Medieval Bristol: Observations and Possibilities, 73-96
Joan Greatrex, Monks and Mendicants in English Cathedral Cities: Signs of a Mutual Benefit Society, 97-106
Jens Röhrkasten, Friars and the Laity in the Franciscan Custody of Cambridge, 107-24
Barry Windeatt, Margery Kempe and the Friars, 125-41
Texts and Writers
James G. Clark, The Friars and the Classics in Late Medieval England, 142-51
Linda E. Voigts, The Medical Astrology of Ralph Hoby, a Fifteenth-Century Franciscan, 152-68
Art and Iconography
David J. King, Mendicant Glass in East Anglia, 169-84
Nicholas J. Rogers, The Provenance of the Thornham Parva Retable, 185-93
Donald S. Prudlo, The Cult of St Peter of Verona in the British Isles, 194-207
The Image of the Friar
Henry Summerson, A “nest of freres”: the Mendicants, Their Friends and Enemies in the Oxford DNB, 208-17
Ralph Hanna and Sarah Wood, Mendicants and the Economies of Piers Plowman, 218-37
Wendy Scase, Antifraternal Traditions in Reformation Pamphlets, 238-64
Local Studies
Bruce Watson and Chris Thomas, The Mendicant Houses of Medieval London: An Archaeological and Architectural Review, 265-97
G. M. Draper, Failing Friars? The Mendicants in the Cinque Ports, 298-318
Anna A. Anisimova, Mendicants in the Monastic Towns of South-Eastern England, 319-30
Hubert Pragnell, New Uses for Old Friaries: the Greyfriars and Blackfriars in Canterbury, 331-39
Index, 340-72