Steve Boardman (historian)
Stephen I. Boardman, FRHistS, is a Scottish medieval historian. A graduate of the University of St Andrews, he held the Glenfiddich Research Fellowship and a Post-Doctoral Fellowship of the British Academy at St Andrews before being appointed Mackie Lecturer in History at the University of Aberdeen in 1995.[1] He subsequently moved to the University of Edinburgh, where he is now Professor of Medieval Scottish History.[2] Boardman's work focuses on kingship and the nobility in the later Middle Ages, and he has completed work on Kings Robert II and Robert III of Scotland, as well as Clan Campbell. The former is the only work to deal specifically with those monarchs.
Select bibliography
- The Early Stewart Kings: Robert II and Robert III, 1371-1406. Tuckwell Press. 1996
- Editor. The Exercise of Power in Scotland, 1250-1500. Four Courts Press. 2003
- ‘Survival and revival: late medieval Scotland’ - J. Wormald (editor), The Oxford Illustrated History of Scotland. Oxford University Press. 2005
- The Campbells, 1250-1500. Birlinn Press. 2005
- ‘The Gaelic world and the early Stewart court’ - D. Broun and M. MacGregor (editors), Miorun Mor nan Gall, The Great Ill-Will of the Lowlander: Lowland Perceptions of the Scottish Highlands. Stornoway. 2006
gollark: It does seem like the governments responding to this have two states: completely ignoring the problem and wildly implementing over-the-top restrictions too late.
gollark: They do have other non-coronavirus stuff to compute too, don't they?
gollark: FTL: Faster than Light, a spaaaaaace roguelike thing, has players able to do all kinds of cool tricks because of interesting interactions between things, but the AI is dumb and can't do those. It can't even do prioritization right.
gollark: Which would be fun and interesting!
gollark: Some games would be a lot harder with competent enemy AI.
References
- "Steve Boardman". Edinburgh University Press Books. Retrieved 19 August 2018.
- "Staff profiles". The University of Edinburgh. Retrieved 19 August 2018.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.