TY - JOUR AU - Lee, Maurice AB - Ancient and Medieval tional struggles of the Edwardian Age. One suspects that Denholm-Young is correct in at least some instances and that with more care he could have made his case, but it will be necessary to establish the connections more carefully and conclusively than is done here. Much of what he writes incidentally, especially on the Edwardian armies, is highly significant and will be of interest to specialists in the period. It is necessary to say, however, that the book is marred by a number of minor errors. University of Connecticut FRED A. CAZEL, JR. ROBERT BRUCE AND THE COMMUNITY OF THE REALM IN SCOT­ LAND. By G. W. S. Barrow. (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of Cali­ fornia Press. 1965. Pp. xxiv, 502. $7.50') IN this splendid book Professor Barrow has undertaken not so much to write a biography of Robert Bruce as to re-examine the period of the Scottish wars of in­ dependence. The author begins his narrative with the accidental death of King Alexander III in 1286 and ends it with the Treaty of Edinburgh in 1328, in which England finally admitted its failure to conquer its northern neighbor, four­ teen years after that failure TI - Robert Bruce and the Community of the Realm in Scotland. By G. W. S. Barrow. (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. 1965. Pp. xxiv, 502. $7.50.) JF - The American Historical Review DO - 10.1086/ahr/71.2.537 DA - 1966-01-01 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/oxford-university-press/robert-bruce-and-the-community-of-the-realm-in-scotland-by-g-w-s-8Xmg5WRJap SP - 537 EP - 538 VL - 71 IS - 2 DP - DeepDyve ER -