Unanimity, Anonymity and Immunity: Thomas Haxey and the Form of the Common Petition in Fourteenth-Century England
(2024)
Book Chapter
Dodd, G. (2024). Unanimity, Anonymity and Immunity: Thomas Haxey and the Form of the Common Petition in Fourteenth-Century England. In R. Huzzey, M. Janse, H. Miller, J. Oddens, & B. Waddell (Eds.), Petitions and Petitioning in Europe and North America: From the Late Medieval Period to the Present. Oxford University Press
All Outputs (6)
'Blood, brains and bay windows: the use of English in fifteenth‐century parliamentary petitions' (2018)
Book Chapter
Dodd, G. (2018). 'Blood, brains and bay windows: the use of English in fifteenth‐century parliamentary petitions'. In T. W. Smith, & H. Killick (Eds.), Petitions and strategies of persuasion in the middle ages : the English crown and the church, c.1200-c.1550York Medieval Press
Petitions from the King's Dominions: Wales, Ireland and Gascony, c. 1290-1350 (2016)
Book Chapter
Dodd, G. (2016). Petitions from the King's Dominions: Wales, Ireland and Gascony, c. 1290-1350. In P. Crooks, D. Green, & W. M. Ormrod (Eds.), The Plantagenet Empire, 1259-1453, (187-215). Shaun Tyas
Grace and Favour: the Petition and Its Mechanisms (2015)
Book Chapter
Dodd, G., & Petit-Renaud, S. (2015). Grace and Favour: the Petition and Its Mechanisms. In C. Fletcher, J.-P. Genet, & J. Watts (Eds.), Government and Political Life in England and France, c. 1300 - c. 1500 (240-278). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781316106112.010
The Clerical Chancellors of Late Medieval England (2014)
Book Chapter
Dodd, G. (2014). The Clerical Chancellors of Late Medieval England. In M. Heale (Ed.), The Prelate in England and Europe, c. 1300 - c. 1560, (17-49). York Medieval Press/Boydell and Brewer
Richard II and the Fiction of Majority Rule (2008)
Book Chapter
Dodd, G. (2008). Richard II and the Fiction of Majority Rule. In C. Beem (Ed.), The Royal Minorities of Medieval and Early Modern England (103-159). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230616189_4For Thomas Walsingham, one of the first occasions when Richard II revealed the true nature of his rule came in the Summer of 1383 when, accompanied by his new queen, he went on a “shrine-crawl” of the eastern counties, imposing himself and his househ... Read More about Richard II and the Fiction of Majority Rule.