Chronicling Warfare in the Thirteenth-Century German Empire

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Battle of Ane
Battle of Hausbergen
Battle of Steppes
Bishop Hugh of Liege
Bishop Otto II of Utrecht
Bishop Walter of Strasbourg
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Category=NHA
Category=NHD
Category=NHW
Episcopal states
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forthcoming
Historiography
Liege
Medieval Europe
Military history
Military households
Primary sources
Strasbourg
Utrecht

Product details

  • ISBN 9781041222057
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 24 Aug 2026
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This volume offers an annotated translation and commentary on five thirteenth-century narrative accounts of the battles of Steppes (1213), Ane (1227), and Hausbergen (1262) as well as the overall political and military circumstances in which they occurred. These battles have received some scholarly attention, but the broader military organization of the German kingdom as well as the conduct of war require considerable further work. The commentary provided in this translation in both the introduction and notes will help orient readers toward these matters and explain their significance.

The volume makes accessible to an English reading audience five narrative works that are very important for understanding the nature of warfare within the German Empire of the thirteenth century. The introduction brings together the most up to date scholarship regarding the origin, authorship and purpose of these texts, which is largely in German, French, and Dutch. The commentary provided in the introduction regarding military affairs and the annotations for the translation enables readers to situate these texts in their proper political and military contexts.

This work will be of value both to specialists in medieval history who wish to gain a more thorough understanding of military affairs and also to teachers, who would like to provide their students with an opportunity to read narrative works from the German kingdom that offer insights to a wide range of social, political, and military phenomena. In this context, although a great many of the main narrative sources for the earlier medieval period in Germany have been translated, this is not the case for texts produced after c. 1200.

David Stewart Bachrach is a professor of medieval history at the University of New Hampshire, USA. His research focuses on the administrative and military history of Carolingian and German Empires as well as the kingdom of England in the thirteenth and early fourteenth century. His recent publications include Armies and Warfare in Carolingian East Francia and Ottonian Germany (2026), Warfare in the Global Middle Ages with Bernard S. Bachrach (2025), and The Foundations of Royal Power in Early Medieval Germany: Material Resources and Governmental Administration in a Carolingian Successor State (2022)