At 16, Edward `the Black Prince' played a leading part in the battle of Crecy; at 26 he captured the king of France at Poitiers; and eleven years later he restored Pedro of Castile to his throne at the battle of Najera. Such a heroic career has an air of unreality about it, heightened by the chivalric attitudes of contemporary writers. This selection aims to correct the traditional view of Edward as far as the materials allow, by using reports sent home by the prince's companions-in-arms, and by looking at the semi-official campaign diaries.
Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the GoodReads database with this name.
Richard William Barber is a prominent British historian who has been writing and publishing in the field of medieval history and literature ever since his student days. He has specialised in the Arthurian legend, beginning with a general survey, Arthur of Albion, in 1961, which is still in print in a revised edition. His other major interest is historical biography; he has published on Henry Plantagenet (1964) and among his other books is the standard biography of Edward the Black Prince, Edward Prince of Wales and Aquitaine. The interplay between history and literature was the theme of The Knight and Chivalry, for which he won the Somerset Maugham Prize in 1971 and he returned to this in The Holy Grail: Imagination and Belief (2004); this was widely praised in the UK press, and had major reviews in The New York Times and The Washington Post.
His other career has been as a publisher. In 1969 he helped to found The Boydell Press, which later became Boydell & Brewer Ltd, one of the leading publishers in medieval studies, and he is currently group managing director. In 1989, Boydell & Brewer Ltd, in association with the University of Rochester, started the University of Rochester Press in upstate New York. The group currently publishes over 200 titles a year.
This book is basically a collection of primary sources edited down to spotlight mainly the military career aspects of the life of Edward, The Black Prince. These are the voices of the distant past: partisan and pious. It requires no modern historian to inform the reader of these medieval chronicles that chivalry, for all its glorious trappings, was a dark and destructive business and that horrors were perpetrated for the honour of kings and the glory of God. It's sometimes very useful to hear these echoes of another age. They remind us how far we've come and sometimes how far we still have to go.
Not overly fun, honestly. I found this at a second hand bookstore and thought it might be interesting. Its too chronological, too many facts, too many dates, nothing really painting a decent picture of whats going on. A technical historians book about someone I know nothing about. Probably just not the book for me.
Wonderful insight into the illustrious military campaign of Prince Edward of Woodstock. Although Chandos seems to glaze over some atrocities committed by the English, he portrays the emotion and lament of a bygone era of a golden age of chivalry and honour.
This book is a solid compendium of primary sources on the life of the Black Prince. The letters from the prince himself and Chandos' Herald's Life of the Black Prince are the standout offerings.