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Graham Turner (Illustrateur)
EAN : 9781841769622
64 pages
Osprey (10/03/2006)

Note moyenne : /5 (sur 0 notes)
Résumé :
With the exception of the key royal sites, such as Stirling and Edinburgh, few Scottish castles were located at strategic points, or were intended to house garrisons required to defend or subjugate towns. Instead they were primarily fortified dwelling houses, erected in an environment of weak Royal authority and endemic feuding between rival clans and groups, in both Highland and Lowland areas. Although some enceinte castles were developed during the 16th and 17th c... >Voir plus
Que lire après Castles and Tower Houses of the Scottish Clans 1450–1650Voir plus
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A typical day in the life of a Scottish nobleman appears in an account of the Earl of Huntly’s death in May 1576, where after waving off his sister and her husband, the Earl of Sutherland, he went off hunting, killed three hares and a fox and then came home to dinner. So far so good, but he then had a furious
row when he decided to have a kick-about and no-one could find a football.
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