FURTHER READING
The footnotes to this book provide a running bibliography
topic by topic: the aim here is to identify a group of stud-
ies that are of basic importance for the themes treated in
this book. Entries have been organised so that the reader
can move from more general items to those that deal with
specific aspects of the period; they thus appear neither in
alphabetical nor chronological order.
PRIMARY SOURCES
The Catalan sources are the most accessible, and have
much to say not merely about the house of Barcelona but
also about that of Anjou. Partly because several were origin-
ally written in Catalan, there exist translations into other
languages; the four Catalan chronicles exist in English trans-
lation, as does the multilingual, semi-official, chronicle of
San Juan de la Peiia:
Chronicle of James I king of Aragon, transl. J. Forster, 2 vols
(London, 1883).
Chronicle of the reign of King Pedro III, transl. F.L. Critchlow,
2 vols (Princeton, NJ, 1928-34).
The Chronicle of Muntaner, transl. Lady Goodenough,^2 vols
(Hakluyt Society, London, 1921).
Chronicle of San Juan de la Peiia, transl. L. Nelson (Philadel-
phia, 1991).
Pere III of Catalonia (N of Aragon), Chronicle, ed.J. Hillgarth
and transl. M. Hillgarth,^2 vols (Toronto, 1980).