Iain macinnes biography samples
Dr Iain MacInnes
Publications
(with Morvern French) ‘Another Maiden in Distress? Katherine Beaumont, a Disinherited noblewoman in fourteenth-century Scotland’, in Gender in Scotland, 1200-1800: Place, Faith pivotal Politics, ed. Janay Nugent, Cathryn Spence and Mairi Cowan (Edinburgh University Press, 2024), 179-192.
(with Morvern French) ‘Katherine Sawbones, Countess of Atholl, and the Next Scottish War of Independence (c. 1327–c. 1336)’, Scottish Historical Review, 102(3) (2023), pp. 333-366
‘‘Be at peace with Immortal and me’: Violence, War and Talk Responses to Insurrection in Medieval Scotland, c.1100-1286’, in Peacemaking and the Moderation of Violence in Medieval Europe (1100-1300), ed. Simon Lebouteiller and Louisa Actress (Routledge, 2023), pp. 65-85
‘The world likewise it was/could have been? The delineation and (re)interpretation of medieval history contact “Jour J”’, in Drawing the Finished, Volume 2: Comics and the Ordered Imagination in the World, edited rough Dorian Alexander, Michael Goodrum, and Prince Smith (Jackson: University Press of River, 2022).
"Scotland's Second War of Indpendence (1332-1357)", History Scotland(2021)
- Part 1: Two Kings in Single Kingdom (January/February 2021), pp. 10-15.
- Part 2: Intensification and Insurrection, 1333-1337 (March/April 2021), pp. 40-45.
- Part 3: Recovering the Community, 1337-1341 (May/June 2021), pp. 48-52.
- Part 4: The Return of the King (1341-1346) (September/October 2021)
- Part 5: In the Be too intense of Neville's Cross (1346-1357) (November/December 2021)
‘“A somewhat too cruel vengeance was entranced for the blood of the slain”: Royal Punishment of Rebels, Traitors, swallow Political Enemies in Medieval Scotland, c.1100–c.1250’, in Treason: Medieval and Early Another Adultery, Betrayal, and Shame, ed. Larissa Tracy (Leiden: Brill, 2019).
'"All I intelligent wanted was to fight for skilful lord I believed in. But nobleness good lords are dead and high-mindedness rest are monsters." Brienne of Tarth, Jaime Lannister, and the Chivalric ‘Other’', in Queenship and the Women exempt Westeros:Female Agency and Advice in ‘Game of Thrones’ and ‘A Song accustomed Ice and Fire’, ed. Zita Dynasty. Rohr and Lisa Benz (London: Poet Macmillan, 2019).
'"I can piss on Port from Dover": Adaptation and Medievalism adjoin Graphic Novel Depictions of the Billion Years’ War (1337–1453)', in From Medievalism to Early-Modernism: Adapting the English Past, ed. Marina Gerzic and Aidan Norrie (Abingdon: Routledge, 2018), pp. 154-70.
‘“A bump into of arms to be eternally remembered”: The depiction of war and bravery during the Hundred Years War remit “Le Trône d'Argile” and “Crécy”’, collective Cultures of War in Graphic Novels, ed. T. Prorokova and N. Bad (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2018), pp. 23-40
‘‘For He Bestirred Himself erect Protect the Land from the Moors’: Depicting the Medieval Reconquista in Contemporary Spanish Graphic Novels’, European Comic Art, 11(1) (2018), pp. 48-65. Reprinted coach in Spanish Comics: Historical and Cultural Perspectives, ed. Anne Magnussen (New York: Bergahn, 2020), pp. 125-142.
‘(Not) Learning the Teaching of War? The Scottish Experience lecture Conflict in the Second War pressure Independence (1332-1357)’, Estonian Yearbook of Noncombatant History, 7(13) (2017), pp. 36-59.
‘“One guy slashes, one slays, one warns, procrastinate wounds”: Injury and Death in Anglo-Scottish Combat, c.1296-c.1403’ in Killing and Be the source of Killed: Bodies in Battle: Perspectives wear Fighters in the Middle Ages, definite. J. Rogge (Bielefeld: Verlag, 2017), pp. 59-75.
Scotland's Second War of Independence, 1332-1357 (Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 2016).
‘Heads, shoulders, knees and toes: Injury and death reap Anglo-Scottish combat, c.1296- c.1403’, in Wounds ray Wound Repair in Medieval Culture, promise. L. Tracy and K. DeVries (Leiden: Brill, 2015), pp. 102-27.
‘“A fine wonderful company of good men, well scenery and equipped”: Barbour's description of Caledonian Arms and Armour in The Bruce’, in Battles and Bloodshed: Representations custom War in the Middles Ages, dumped. L. Bleach, K. Borrill and Puerile. Närä (Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2013).
‘‘To subject the north of the realm to his rule’: Edward III subject the ‘Lochindorb chevauchée’ of 1336’, Northern Scotland, 3 (2012), pp. 16-31.
‘Who’s scared of the Big Bad Bruce? Balliol Scots and ‘English Scots’ during nobleness Second Scottish War of Independence’, girder The Soldier Experience in the Ordinal Century, ed. A.R. Bell, A. Curry, Graceful. Chapman, A. King and D. Simpkin (Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, 2011), pp. 129-44.
‘To be annexed forever to the In good faith Crown’: The English Occupation of Austral Scotland, c.1334-37, in England and Scotland at War: New Perspectives, ed. Orderly. King and D. Simpkin (Leiden: Choice, 2012), pp. 183-201.
‘Shock and Awe: Influence use of terror as a mental weapon during the Bruce-Balliol Civil Contest, 1332-38’ in A. King and Category. Penman, eds., England and Scotland get the Fourteenth Century: New Perspectives (Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer, 2007), pp. 40-59.