Published 18825, this three-volume register of Archbishop John Peckham of Canterbury is an important source for thirteenth-century history.The register of Archbishop John Peckham of Canterbury (c.123092) is an important source for thirteenth-century history. Published in three volumes between 1882 and 1885, it contains much information on the conquest of Wales by Edward I and on the history of Oxford University, as well as purely ecclesiastical matters.The register of Archbishop John Peckham of Canterbury (c.123092) is an important source for thirteenth-century history. Published in three volumes between 1882 and 1885, it contains much information on the conquest of Wales by Edward I and on the history of Oxford University, as well as purely ecclesiastical matters.A Franciscan scholar and theologian, John Peckham (c.123092) was appointed archbishop of Canterbury by the pope in 1279. His register survives at Lambeth Palace and is the chief source for his archiepiscopacy. This three-volume edition, prepared by Charles Trice Martin (18421914) between 1882 and 1885, rearranges the documents from their original thematic order to a chronological one, and omits the purely formal items, published elsewhere. The text is mostly in Latin, with some Anglo-Norman documents, for which a translation is provided in Appendix 1. Volume 3 contains letters 562720, from July 1284 to July 1292. Topics include Anglo-Welsh relations and disputes between the Franciscans and other orders at Oxford. Appendix 2 contains an abstract of the entire register, describing the documents left out of this edition. Also provided is an index to the entire work.Table of contents (with summaries); Preface; Letters DLXIIDCCXX (July 1284July 1292); Appendix 1. Translation of letters in French; Appendix 2. Abstract of the register; Index.