Bibliography

Robin
Frame

8 publications between 1995 and 2022 indexed
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2022

work
Frame, Robin, Plantagenet Ireland, Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2022.  
abstract:

For more than two centuries after 1199, Ireland was ruled by Plantagenet kings, lineal descendants of Henry II. The island became closely tied to the English crown not just by English law and by direct administration, but through other networks, above all the allegiance of a settler establishment led by aristocratic, ecclesiastical and civic elites that benefited from being within the orbit of royal patronage and service. This book contains fifteen interlinked studies, several of which appear here for the first time. The opening chapters trace Ireland’s changing place within a wider Plantagenet realm that itself altered geographically and institutionally during the period. In the thirteenth century Gaelic leaders were pushed to the geographical and political margins. In the fourteenth, English control and English custom retreated, posing fresh challenges to the crown and its ministers. Despite the alarmist claims of settler communities, Plantagenet Ireland was far from collapsing. Later chapters explore the altered distribution of power across the island. English chief governors, some of whom had experience of other borderlands of the Plantagenet realm, exercised power in a mixture of cultural modes, which enabled them to draw in, rather than simply confront, Gaelic lords and marcher lineages.

abstract:

For more than two centuries after 1199, Ireland was ruled by Plantagenet kings, lineal descendants of Henry II. The island became closely tied to the English crown not just by English law and by direct administration, but through other networks, above all the allegiance of a settler establishment led by aristocratic, ecclesiastical and civic elites that benefited from being within the orbit of royal patronage and service. This book contains fifteen interlinked studies, several of which appear here for the first time. The opening chapters trace Ireland’s changing place within a wider Plantagenet realm that itself altered geographically and institutionally during the period. In the thirteenth century Gaelic leaders were pushed to the geographical and political margins. In the fourteenth, English control and English custom retreated, posing fresh challenges to the crown and its ministers. Despite the alarmist claims of settler communities, Plantagenet Ireland was far from collapsing. Later chapters explore the altered distribution of power across the island. English chief governors, some of whom had experience of other borderlands of the Plantagenet realm, exercised power in a mixture of cultural modes, which enabled them to draw in, rather than simply confront, Gaelic lords and marcher lineages.

2016

article
Frame, Robin, “Rebellion and rehabilitation: the first earl of Desmond and the English scene”, in: Peter Crooks, and Seán Duffy (eds), The Geraldines and medieval Ireland: the making of a myth, Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2016. 194–222.

2013

article
Frame, Robin, “A register of lost deeds relating to the earldom of Ulster, c.1230–1376”, in: Seán Duffy (ed.), Princes, prelates and poets in medieval Ireland: essays in honour of Katharine Simms, Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2013. 85–106.

2012

work
Frame, Robin, Colonial Ireland 1169–1369, 2nd ed., Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2012.

1996

article
Frame, Robin, “Thomas de Rokeby, sheriff of Yorkshire, justiciar of Ireland”, Peritia 10 (1996): 274–296.

1995

edited work
Barry, T. B., Robin Frame, and Katharine Simms (eds), Colony and frontier in medieval Ireland: essays presented to J. F. Lydon, London, Rio Grande, Ohio: Hambledon Press, 1995.
article
Frame, Robin, “Two kings in Leinster: the Crown and the MicMhurchadha in the fourteenth century”, in: T. B. Barry, Robin Frame, and Katharine Simms (eds), Colony and frontier in medieval Ireland: essays presented to J. F. Lydon, London, Rio Grande, Ohio: Hambledon Press, 1995. 155–175.