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WALTER OF See also: English See also: monk and chronicler, who was apparently connected with a religious
See also: house in the province of See also: York, is known to us only through the See also: historical compilation which bears his name, the Memoriale fratris Walteri de Coventria
.
The word Memoriale is usually taken to mean " See also: commonplace See also: book." Some critics interpret it in the sense of " a souvenir," and argue that Walter was not the author but merely the donor of the book; but the See also: weight of authority is against this view
.
The author of the Memoriale lived in the reign of See also: Edward I., and mentions the homage done to Edward as overlord of Scotland (1291)
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Since the See also: main narrative extends only to 1225, the Memoriale is emphatically a second-See also: hand production
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But for the years 1201-1225 it is a faithful transcript of a contemporary See also: chronicle, the See also: work of a Barnwell See also: canon
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A See also: complete text of the Barnwell work is preserved in the See also: College of Arms (Heralds' College, MS
.
1o) but has never yet been printed, though it was collated by See also: Bishop Stubbs for his edition of the Memoriale
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The Barnwell annalist, living in See also: Cambridgeshire, was well situated to observe the events of the barons' war, and is our most valuable authority for that import-See also: ant crisis
.
He is less hostile to See also: John than are
See also: Ralph of Coggeshall, See also: Roger of See also: Wendover and See also: Matthew See also: Paris
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He praises the See also: king's management of the Welsh and Scotch
See also: wars; he is critical in his attitude towards the See also: pope and the English opposition; he regards the submission of John to See also: Rome as a skilful stroke of policy, although he notes the fact that some men called it a humiliation
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The constitutional agitation of 1215 does not arouse his See also: enthusiasm; he passes curtly over the Runnymede See also: conference, barely mentions Magna Carta, and blames the barons for the resumption of war
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It may be from timidity that the annalist avoids attacking John, but it is more probable that the See also: middle classes, whom he represents, regarded the designs of the feudal baronage with suspicion
.
See W . Stubbs's edition of Walter of See also: Coventry (" Rolls " series, 2 vols., 1872-1873); R
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See also: Pauli, in Geschichte von See also: England (See also: Hamburg, 1853), iii
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872
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W
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