“The difficulties of a (four-county) regional study: Since this regional survey spans four counties, it is, clearly, impossible to provide the depth and detail expected of a single-shire study–to undertake a four-county investigation with the same intensity and intricacy as a single-county survey would presumably take four times as long to complete. Instead, this study intends to give an overview of shire societies thereby examining how ‘regional’ was the political community of the south-west… This study aims to contribute to discourse on fifteenth-century governance not only because it investigates Edward IV’s regional policy (which, as mentioned, requires further research at a provincial level), but because a regional approach has not previously been attempted for south-west England during the late Middle Ages, and moreover because the duchy of Cornwall’s place in contemporaneous regional politics has never been thoroughly examined before (p. 21). …While there are obviously certain limitations to a study with such a regional breadth, these restrictions do not inhibit the worth or originality of this work as a whole–this investigation cannot claim to provide definitive answers but offers an alternative way of looking at the existing perceptions and perspectives of late-medieval English politics and governance (p. 22). …the problem of studying four shires presented difficulties over the arrangement of these analyses. Would an account of the south-western region as a whole give equal weighting to each constituent county? …the most appropriate arrangement seemed to be one which gave, as far as possible, each shire an analysis on an equal basis. Consequently, in each chronological chapter, accounts of local governance and politics are structured on a county-by-county model (p. 25). …The consequence of this equality of approach to the counties, and of the requirement to draw regional and national evaluations, is a certain amount of repetition… Yet, it is only by recognising the frequency with which particular individuals, connections, and structures reappear–across shires, and throughout the period–that it is possible to summarise the extent to which there was a ‘regional’ element to the western political elites (p. 26).”
Quote by Robert E. Stansfield-Cudworth
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Political Elites in South-West England, 1450–1500: Politics, Governance, and the Wars of the Roses
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Source: Political Elites in South-West England, 1450–1500: Politics, Governance, and the Wars of the Roses
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Source: Political Elites in South-West England, 1450–1500: Politics, Governance, and the Wars of the Roses
Source: Political Elites in South-West England, 1450–1500: Politics, Governance, and the Wars of the Roses
Source: Political Elites in South-West England, 1450–1500: Politics, Governance, and the Wars of the Roses
Source: Political Elites in South-West England, 1450–1500: Politics, Governance, and the Wars of the Roses
Source: Political Elites in South-West England, 1450–1500: Politics, Governance, and the Wars of the Roses
Source: Political Elites in South-West England, 1450–1500: Politics, Governance, and the Wars of the Roses
Source: Political Elites in South-West England, 1450–1500: Politics, Governance, and the Wars of the Roses
Source: Political Elites in South-West England, 1450–1500: Politics, Governance, and the Wars of the Roses