1248-58.Characteristics of the history of these ten years.[69]
Decay of Henry's power in Gascony.[69]
1248-52.Simon de Montfort, seneschal of Gascony.[70]
Aug., 1253.Henry III. in Gascony.[72]
1254.Marriage and establishment of Edward the king's son.[73]
Edward's position in Gascony.[73]
Edward's position in Cheshire.[74]
1254.Llewelyn ap Griffith sole Prince of North Wales.[75]
Edward in the four cantreds and in West Wales.[76]
1257.Welsh campaign of Henry and Edward.[76]
Revival of the baronial opposition.[77]
1255.Candidature of Edmund, the king's son, for Sicily.[78]
1257.Richard of Cornwall elected and crowned King of the Romans.[80]
Leicester as leader of the opposition.[81]
Progress in the age of Henry III.[81]
The cosmopolitan and the national ideals.[82]
French influence.[83]
The coming of the friars.[84]
1221.Gilbert of Freynet and the first Dominicans in England.[84]
1224.Arrival of Agnellus of Pisa and the first Franciscans in England.[84]
Other mendicant orders in England.[85]
The influence of the friars.[86]
The universities.[88]
Prominent English schoolmen.[89]
Paris and Oxford.[90]
The mendicants at Oxford.[91]
Roger Bacon and Duns Scotus.[92]
Academic influence in public life.[92]
Beginnings of colleges.[93]
Intellectual characteristics of thirteenth century.[93]
Literature in Latin and French.[94]
Literature in English.[95]
Art.[90]
Gothic architecture.[90]
The towns and trade.[90]

CHAPTER V.

THE BARONS' WAR.
2 April, 1258.Parliament at London.[98]
11 June.The Mad Parliament[99]
The Provisions of Oxford.[100]
22 June.Flight of the Lusignans.[102]
Appointment of the Fifteen[103]
Working of the new Constitution[104]
4 Dec., 1259.Treaty of Paris.[104]
Its unpopularity in England and France.[106]
1259.Dissensions among the baronial leaders.[107]
1259.Provisions of Westminster.[108]
1261.Henry III.'s repudiation of the Provisions.[109]
1263.Reconstitution of parties.[110]
The changed policy of the marchers.[111]
Outbreak of civil war.[112]
The appeal to Louis IX.[112]
23 Jan., 1264.Mise of Amiens.[113]
Renewal of the struggle.[113]
4 April.Sack of Northampton.[114]
The campaign in Kent and Sussex.[115]
14 May.Battle of Lewes.[116]
Personal triumph of Montfort.[118]

CHAPTER VI.

THE RULE OF MONTFORT AND THE ROYALIST RESTORATION.
15 May.Mise of Lewes.[119]
15 Dec.Provisions of Worcester.[121]
Jan.-Mar., 1265.The Parliament of 1265.[121]
Split up of the baronial party.[123]
Quarrel of Leicester and Gloucester.[123]
28 May.Edward's escape.[124]
22 June.Treaty of Pipton.[125]
Small results of the alliance of Llewelyn and the barons.[125]
The campaign in the Severn valley.[126]
4 Aug.Battle of Evesham.[127]
The royalist restoration.[128]
1266.The revolt of the Disinherited.[129]
15 May.Battle of Chesterfield.[130]
31 Oct.The Dictum de Kenilworth.[131]
Michaelmas.The Ely rebellion.[131]
April, 1267.Gloucester's support of the Disinherited.[132]
July.End of the rebellion.[132]
25 Sept.Treaty of Shrewsbury.[133]
1267.Statute of Marlborough.[134]
1270-72.Edward's Crusade.[134]
16 Nov., 1272.Death of Henry III.[135]

CHAPTER VII.

THE EARLY FOREIGN POLICY AND LEGISLATION OF EDWARD I.
Character of Edward I.[136]
1272-74.Rule of the regency.[139]
Edward's doings in Italy and France.[139]
Edward's relations with Philip III.[140]
1273-74.Wars of Béarn and Limoges.[141]
Edward I. and Gregory X.[142]
May-July, 1274.Council of Lyons.[142]
Relations of Edward I. and Rudolf of Hapsburg.[143]
23 May, 1279.Treaty of Amiens.[145]
1281.League of Macon.[146]
1282.Sicilian vespers.[146]
1285.Deaths of Philip III., Charles of Anjou, Peter of Aragon, and Martin IV.[146]
Bishop Burnell.[147]
1275.Statute of Westminster, the first.[147]
1278.Statute of Gloucester.[148]
Hundred Rolls and placita de quo warranto.[149]
Archbishops Kilwardby and Peckham.[150]
1279.Statute of Mortmain.[151]
1285.Circumspecte agatis.[152]
1285.Statute of Westminster, the second (De Donis).[153]
1285.Statute of Winchester.[154]