The Art of War in Medieval England

 

Graham Turner grew up fascinated by Arthurian legend. When he became a professional artist he expressed this boyhood interest into art, painting scenes illustrating Arthurian castles and knights errant. The Arthurian legend first entered print around the era of the War of the Roses, leading Turner to study the armor and appearance of that era – and gain an equal fascination with that period.

 The War of the Roses: The Medieval Art of Graham Turner, by Graham Turner, is the end result of that interest. It compiles forty years of his War of the Roses art in this history of the conflict.

The book is a comprehensive history of the war which ran from 1455 to 1487. It was a set of civil wars in England fought between two branches of the House of Plantagenet. A fratricidal conflict, it led to the demise of both competing Lancaster and York factions and their replacement by the House of Tudor. Fought during the transition from Medieval Times to the Modern Era it was either the last Medieval war or the first Modern one.

It felt profoundly medieval, with castles and armored knights. Turner allows readers to explore the era with him. He provides accounts of the battles fought, surrounding these with the background necessary to understand their context. He looks at the events leading up to conflict and the circumstances surrounding the war’s major events. This includes England’s relation with its neighbors and how they influenced the war. He examines the weapons, armor and tactics used. He looks at the society in which it was fought, where tournaments were often as significant as battles.

The text is enhanced by numerous illustrations. Many are Turner’s art; from simple pencil sketches to gorgeous full color paintings, often filling one page or spread over two. Eye-catching and scrupulously accurate, they are buttressed with modern color photographs of relevant places as they appear today and the surviving artifacts (often taken by Turner); along with period illustrations and pertinent maps. Turner frequently pulls back the curtain on how he creates his art, showing the graphic sources he drew upon.

The artwork is such a significant part of the book it is best read in a print version. E-book editions, especially read on small e-readers in only black-and-white will likely leave readers unsatisfied. The War of the Roses is a magnificent book, one that deserves to be read in its full illustrated glory.

“The War of the Roses: The Medieval Art of Graham Turner,” by Graham Turner, Osprey Publishing, February, 2024, 288 pages $50.00 (Hardback), $35.00 (Ebook)

This review was written by Mark Lardas, who writes at Ricochet as Seawriter. Mark Lardas, an engineer, freelance writer, historian, and model-maker, lives in League City, TX. His website is marklardas.com.

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There are 6 comments.

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  1. Postmodern Hoplite Coolidge
    Postmodern Hoplite
    @PostmodernHoplite

    Thank you for sharing this with us, @seawriter – I’m eager to charge into the whole book, and I’ve only just finished your review!

    • #1
  2. Al Sparks Coolidge
    Al Sparks
    @AlSparks

    I just downloaded a Kindle version and viewed it on my OLED color tablet.

    I think I’ll be satisfied with that.

    • #2
  3. Hinch Member
    Hinch
    @Hinch

    There’s my own Christmas gift sorted.  Now I just have to find a relative or friend that’ll get it for me.  

    • #3
  4. Percival Thatcher
    Percival
    @Percival

    Seawriter: The artwork is such a significant part of the book it is best read in a print version. E-book editions, especially read on small e-readers in only black-and-white will likely leave readers unsatisfied. The War of the Roses is a magnificent book, one that deserves to be read in its full illustrated glory.

    You can get a look at some of Graham Turner’s art here.

    • #4
  5. Bryan G. Stephens Thatcher
    Bryan G. Stephens
    @BryanGStephens

    Darnit

     

    • #5
  6. ToryWarWriter Coolidge
    ToryWarWriter
    @ToryWarWriter

    My mother did the 23 and Me Kit.  

    Turns out were descended from Richard the 3rds mother.  

    I guess were a line of the Platagenets :)

    Fun facts.

    • #6
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