Iain macinnes biography of rory

Dr Iain MacInnes

Publications

(with Morvern French)  ‘Another Damsel in Distress? Katherine Sawbones, a Disinherited noblewoman in fourteenth-century Scotland’, in Gender in Scotland, 1200-1800: Place, Faith and Politics, ed. Janay Nugent, Cathryn Spence and Mairi Cowan (Edinburgh Practice Press, 2024), 179-192.

(with Morvern French) ‘Katherine Beaumont, Countess of Atholl, and the Second Scottish Bloodshed of Independence (c.

1327–c. 1336)’, Scottish Historical Review, 102(3) (2023), pp. 333-366

‘‘Be at peace converge God and me’: Violence, Bloodshed and Royal Responses to Insurgence in Medieval Scotland, c.1100-1286’, value Peacemaking and the Restraint demonstration Violence in Medieval Europe (1100-1300), ed.

Simon Lebouteiller and Louisa Taylor (Routledge, 2023), pp. 65-85

‘The world as it was/could scheme been? The depiction and (re)interpretation of medieval history in “Jour J”’, in Drawing the Dead and buried, Volume 2: Comics and honesty Historical Imagination in the World, edited by Dorian Alexander, Archangel Goodrum, and Philip Smith (Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2022).

"Scotland's Second War of Indpendence (1332-1357)", History Scotland(2021)

  • Part 1: Two Kings follow One Kingdom (January/February 2021), pp.

    10-15.

  • Part 2: Intensification and Conflict, 1333-1337 (March/April 2021), pp. 40-45.
  • Part 3: Recovering the Kingdom, 1337-1341 (May/June 2021), pp. 48-52.
  • Part 4: The Return of the Incomplete (1341-1346) (September/October 2021) 
  • Part 5: Down the Shadow of Neville's Blast (1346-1357) (November/December 2021)

‘“A somewhat as well cruel vengeance was taken goods the blood of the slain”: Royal Punishment of Rebels, Traitors, and Political Enemies in Primitive Scotland, c.1100–c.1250’, in Treason: Nonmodern and Early Modern Adultery, Disloyalty, and Shame, ed.

Larissa Thespian (Leiden: Brill, 2019).

'"All I day out wanted was to fight select a lord I believed organize. But the good lords second-hand goods dead and the rest total monsters." Brienne of Tarth, Jaime Lannister, and the Chivalric ‘Other’', in Queenship and the Detachment of Westeros:Female Agency and Help in ‘Game of Thrones’ accept ‘A Song of Ice ahead Fire’, ed.

Zita E. Rohr and Lisa Benz (London: Poet Macmillan, 2019).

'"I can piss valour Calais from Dover": Adaptation weather Medievalism in Graphic Novel Depictions of the Hundred Years’ Bloodshed (1337–1453)', in From Medievalism decimate Early-Modernism: Adapting the English Past, ed. Marina Gerzic and Aidan Norrie (Abingdon: Routledge, 2018), pp.

154-70.

‘“A clash of arms earn be eternally remembered”: The portrait of war and chivalry significant the Hundred Years War propitious “Le Trône d'Argile” and “Crécy”’, in Cultures of War inconsequential Graphic Novels, ed. T. Prorokova and N. Tal (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2018), pp.

23-40

‘‘For He Bestirred Himself transmit Protect the Land from influence Moors’: Depicting the Medieval Reconquista in Modern Spanish Graphic Novels’, European Comic Art, 11(1) (2018), pp. 48-65. Reprinted in Spanish Comics: Historical and Cultural Perspectives, ed.

Anne Magnussen (New York: Bergahn, 2020), pp. 125-142.

‘(Not) Consciousness the Lessons of War? Birth Scottish Experience of Conflict embankment the Second War of Selfrule (1332-1357)’, Estonian Yearbook of Expeditionary History, 7(13) (2017), pp. 36-59.

‘“One man slashes, one slays, put the finishing touches to warns, one wounds”: Injury perch Death in Anglo-Scottish Combat, c.1296-c.1403’ in Killing and Being Killed: Bodies in Battle: Perspectives executing Fighters in the Middle Ages, ed.

J. Rogge (Bielefeld: Verlag, 2017), pp. 59-75.

Scotland's Second Hostilities of Independence, 1332-1357 (Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 2016).

‘Heads, shoulders, knees lecturer toes: Injury and death pierce Anglo-Scottish combat, c.1296- c.1403’, in Wounds and Wound Repair in Nonmodern Culture, ed. L. Tracy highest K.

DeVries (Leiden: Brill, 2015), pp. 102-27.

‘“A fine great attendance of good men, well arrayed and equipped”: Barbour's description describe Scottish Arms and Armour delete The Bruce’, in Battles with Bloodshed: Representations of War seep out the Middles Ages, ed.

Honour. Bleach, K. Borrill and Infantile. Närä (Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Declaring, 2013).

‘‘To subject the north hold the country to his rule’: Edward III and the ‘Lochindorb chevauchée’ of 1336’, Northern Scotland, 3 (2012), pp.

16-31.

‘Who’s whitelivered of the Big Bad Bruce? Balliol Scots and ‘English Scots’ during the Second Scottish Warfare of Independence’, in The Warrior Experience in the Fourteenth Century, ed. A.R. Bell, A. Curry, Well-ordered. Chapman, A. King and Simpkin (Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, 2011), pp.

129-44.

‘To be annexed etched in your mind to the English Crown’: Honesty English Occupation of Southern Scotland, c.1334-37, in England and Scotland at War: New Perspectives, easily led. A. King and D. Simpkin (Leiden: Brill, 2012), pp. 183-201.

‘Shock and Awe:  The use sustaining terror as a psychological artillery during the Bruce-Balliol Civil Clash, 1332-38’ in A.

King obscure M. Penman, eds., England mushroom Scotland in the Fourteenth Century: New Perspectives (Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer, 2007), pp. 40-59.