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Previously on "Yet more salaries to be made public"

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  • voodooflux
    replied
    Originally posted by OwlHoot View Post
    You'd think an article like that would include a link, although maybe they deliberately omitted it to avoid the site being snowed under with casual visits.

    edit: According to the Labourgraph, the site is http://www.medievalsoldier.org/
    Yep, was just going to post that there's a link on the right hand side of that BBC News article pointing to http://www.medievalsoldier.org/ - although I can't seem to get on to the site at the moment.

    Leave a comment:


  • OwlHoot
    replied
    You'd think an article like that would include a link, although maybe they deliberately omitted it to avoid the site being snowed under with casual visits.

    edit: According to the Labourgraph, the site is http://www.medievalsoldier.org/

    Leave a comment:


  • voodooflux
    started a topic Yet more salaries to be made public

    Yet more salaries to be made public

    Medieval battle records go online
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8160081.stm

    The detailed service records of 250,000 medieval soldiers - including archers who served with Henry V at the Battle of Agincourt - have gone online.

    The database of those who fought in the Hundred Years War reveals salaries, sickness records and who was knighted.

    The full profiles of soldiers from 1369 to 1453 will allow researchers to piece together details of their lives.

    Thomas, Lord Despencer is the youngest soldier on the database, whose career began when he was aged just 12 in 1385.

    Elsewhere, the career of Thomas Gloucestre, who fought at Agincourt, can be traced over 43 years and includes campaigns in Prussia and Jerusalem.

    'Remarkable survival'

    The website is the product of a research project by Professor Anne Curry of the University of Southampton and Dr Adrian Bell of the University of Reading.

    Dr Bell said: "The service records survive because the English exchequer had a very modern obsession with wanting to be sure that the government's money was being spent as intended.

    "Therefore we have the remarkable survival of indentures for service detailing the forces to be raised, muster rolls showing this service and naming every soldier from duke to archer."

    He said accounts from captains showing how funds were spent and entries detailing when the exchequer requested the payments can be found.

    The free-to-use website, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, also shows which soldiers rode the furthest.

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