Jean de Waurin's Chronicle of England Volume 6 Books 3-6: The Wars of the Roses
Jean de Waurin was a French Chronicler, from the Artois region, who was born around 1400, and died around 1474. Waurin’s Chronicle of England, Volume 6, covering the period 1450 to 1471, from which we have selected and translated Chapters relating to the Wars of the Roses, provides a vivid, original, contemporary description of key events some of which he witnessed first-hand, some of which he was told by the key people involved with whom Waurin had a personal relationship.
Available at Amazon in eBook and Paperback format.
On 24th September 1826 George Price Boyce was born to George Boyce.
1853. George Price Boyce [aged 26]. "St Brelade's Bay, Jersey".
On 20th September 1853 [his father] George Boyce died.
1854. George Price Boyce [aged 27]. "Anstey's Cove [Map]".
1857. George Price Boyce [aged 30]. "Edward the Confessor's Chapel, Westminster Abbey [Map], with Tombs of Henry V. and Edward I".
1857. George Price Boyce [aged 30]. "A Girl by a Beech Tree in a Landscape".
On 9th December 1857 [his brother-in-law] Henry Tanworth Wells [aged 28] and [his sister] Joanna Mary Boyce [aged 26] were married.
On 15th July 1861 [his sister] Joanna Mary Boyce [aged 29] died from childbirth shortly after the birth of her third child.
1862. George Price Boyce [aged 35]. "At Binsey, near Oxford".
1864-5. George Price Boyce [aged 37]. "Landscape at Wotton, Surrey: Autumn". The house in the painting is Wotton House, Surrey, the seat of the Evelyn family. The seventeenth-century diarist, John Evelyn, was born there, so it has a special literary interest. It was given a more imposing appearance later, but the situation remains the same.
1866-7. George Price Boyce [aged 39]. "A Surrey Common In November".
Adam Murimuth's Continuation and Robert of Avesbury’s 'The Wonderful Deeds of King Edward III'
This volume brings together two of the most important contemporary chronicles for the reign of Edward III and the opening phases of the Hundred Years’ War. Written in Latin by English clerical observers, these texts provide a vivid and authoritative window into the political, diplomatic, and military history of fourteenth-century England and its continental ambitions. Adam Murimuth Continuatio's Chronicarum continues an earlier chronicle into the mid-fourteenth century, offering concise but valuable notices on royal policy, foreign relations, and ecclesiastical affairs. Its annalistic structure makes it especially useful for establishing chronology and tracing the development of events year by year. Complementing it, Robert of Avesbury’s De gestis mirabilibus regis Edwardi tertii is a rich documentary chronicle preserving letters, treaties, and official records alongside narrative passages. It is an indispensable source for understanding Edward III’s claim to the French crown, the conduct of war, and the mechanisms of medieval diplomacy. Together, these works offer scholars, students, and enthusiasts a reliable and unembellished account of a transformative period in English and European history. Essential for anyone interested in medieval chronicles, the Hundred Years’ War, or the reign of Edward III.
Available at Amazon in eBook and Paperback format.
1868. George Price Boyce [aged 41]. "The Oxford Arms [Map], Warwick Lane, City of London".
1868. George Price Boyce [aged 41]. "Pensosa d'altrui". Model Mary Leslie. Inscribed on the verso on a label 'no 6', the title and 'George P. Boyce 10 Upper Cheyne Row Chelsea' and on another label in the same hand 'Light from the left hand!'. See The Athenaeum 8th May 1869.
Mary Leslie: The Diary of George Price Boyce 1869. 9th January 1869. Mary Leslie came to sit to me. Before 6th March 1871 Mary Leslie died of consumption.
The Athenaeum 1869 May 08. [8th May 1869] We may next turn to the works of Mr. Boyce [aged 42]. First of these is, On the Skirts of Smithfield, looking West, Midsummer, 1867 (117), a strange, but very original subject, being a picture of the rubbishheaps of the place while under transformation, and the backs of miserable houses of red brick of the deepest hues, and shabby, tumble-down hoardings of wood blanched in the sun; a temporary wreck of the old in course of changing for the new. Huge lying posters in red, green, white and yellow, each coarser and falser than its neighbour, overlook the dust-heaps of two centuries. Calmly in the glare of smoky summer sunlight rises the dingy stone church tower of Wren's building, — a pathetic picture for those who can read, and for artists who can enjoy, its exquisite tones and admirable atmospheric grading; a puzzle for those who judge by the common tests of opinion. For the comfort of several of the latter who strongly resented the introduction of two gambolling cats in a similar picture by this painter — as if London cats were not frequent in the wastes of the City — we add, that there are no cats to puzzle them here.
1871. George Price Boyce [aged 44]. "The Teme from Ludlow".The view is taken from Ludlow Bridge looking up the river. The picture was exhibited at the Royal Watercolour Society's exhibition, 1872-73, No. 386
1873-4. George Price Boyce [aged 46]. "A Wooded Valley in Surrey".
1874. George Price Boyce [aged 47]. "The fortified manor house at Stokesay, Shropshire [Map]".
On 9th February 1897 George Price Boyce [aged 70] died.
The Diary of George Price Boyce. 1941. The Diary of George Price Boyce was lost in the Second World War. Fortunately a year before its destruction by bombing in Bath the diary were consigned to Randall Davies to print in the Old Water-Colour Society's Club Nineteenth Annual Volume, 1941. Although the original is lost, some content survives. The Diary was reprinted Old Water-Colour Society's Club Nineteenth Annual Volume, 1941. Copyright of Introduction and Notes Virginia Surtess, 1980.