Simon V of Montfort and Baronial Government, 1195-1218
G.E.M. Lippiatt
Reviews and Awards
"This is, in short, a very useful monograph, packing a lot of information into a small number of pages. It will serve not only as the standard introduction, in English, to Simon the Elder, but it can also function as a timely reminder about the value of historical biography." - Guy Perry, Middlebury College and Keble College, Speculum
"Lippiatt's arguments, drawn from extensive archival research and marshalled with care, are persuasive and important, promising to set the study of the Albigensian Crusade, and of governance in the thirteenth century, on a new footing." - S.T. Ambler, The English Historical Review
"Lippiatt's arguments, drawn from extensive archival research and marshalled with care, are persuasive and important, promising to set the study of the Albigensian Crusade, and of governance in the thirteenth century, on a new footing." - St Ambler, The English Historical Review
"The book offers an invaluable survey of Montfort's governance and is a most impressive, important and meticulously researched debut." - Sean McGlynn, History
"A strong book ... a very valuable addition to our understanding of lordship and nobility in high medieval France." - The Medieval Review
"This book will be of interest to a range of scholars with interests in late twelfth- and early thirteenth-century French history. It offers a new vantage point on some crucial dynamics which shaped that period." - Simon A. John, Francia Recensio
"Lippiatt ... treats Simon of Montfort analytically, focusing on this magnate and crusader's construction and maintenance of baronial governance and administration in his hereditary lands, and his attempts to carve out a territory in Languedoc during the Albigensian Crusade. The author thoroughly goes through the various territories Simon of Montfort inherited, claimed, or acquired, and how the French baron attempted to govern them. Lippiatt has incorporated good archival work and imagination to argue that Simon's regime in southern France was neither haphazard nor completely ad hoc ... Highly recommended." - L.W. Marvin, CHOICE