- The
Scalacronica (1066–1363) is a
chronicle written in Anglo-Norman
French by Sir
Thomas Grey of
Heaton near
Norham in Northumberland. It was
started whilst...
-
definitively known about this incident. The best
account comes from the
Scalacronica by
Thomas Grey,
whose father, also
called Thomas Grey, was present. A...
- He was the
author of the
English chronicle, the
Scalacronica.
Thomas Grey,
author of the
Scalacronica, was the son of Sir
Thomas Grey of
Heaton (d. before...
-
hospital > A
hostel or guesthouse; a
place of
accommodation or lodging.
Scalacronica . . .from a
boundary stone, the pre-Norman
stump of
which still remains...
-
Scots were
positioned "on hard
ground ... on one side of a hillock". The
Scalacronica reported that the site was "on this side of Falkirk."
Stuart Reid has...
-
Scotorum (1385) are
sources of the
Scota legends,
alongside Thomas Grey's
Scalacronica (1362).
Hector Boece's 16th-century
Historia Gentis Scotorum ("History...
-
Manchester University Press. ISBN 0-389-03979-9. Gray,
Thomas (1907).
Scalacronica: The
Reigns of
Edward I,
Edward II and
Edward III. trans.
Herbert Maxwell...
-
being too much
disaffected by the
events of the day. — Sir
Thomas Grey,
Scalacronica,
translated by
Herbert Maxwell During the night, the
English forces crossed...
- even in the
English royal household. Sir
Thomas Grey ****erted in his
Scalacronica that in
about 1292,
Robert the Bruce, then aged eighteen, was a "young...
- This
motif then
became attached to
Bedivere (or
Yvain in the
chronicle Scalacronica),
instead of Griflet, in the
English Arthurian tradition. However, in...