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005 20240726082135.0
008 140124s2014 enkab b 001 0 eng d
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016 7 _a016559347
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020 _a9781472513519
020 _a9781472512543
035 _a(OCoLC)868963024
040 _aCDX
_beng
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049 _aSBIM
050 0 4 _aD157.R573.C787 2014
050 0 4 _aD157
100 1 _aRiley-Smith, Jonathan,
_d1938-2016,
_e1
245 1 4 _aThe Crusades :
_ba history /
_cJonathan Riley-Smith.
_hPR
250 _aThird edition.
260 _aLondon ;
_aNew York :
_bBloomsbury Academic,
_c(c)2014.
300 _axix, 412 pages :
_billustrations, maps ;
_c25 cm
336 _atext
_btxt
_2rdacontent
337 _aunmediated
_bn
_2rdamedia
338 _avolume
_bnc
_2rdacarrier
504 _a1 (pages 345-368) and index.
500 _aIntroduction: The crusades and history
505 0 0 _aThe old consensus --
_tTraditionalism --
_tMaterialism --
_tA 'Golden Age' followed by doldrums --
_tEarly signs of revival: The history of the Latin East --
_tAlternatives to traditionalism --
_tThe challenge to materialism --
_tDifferent perceptions.
500 _a1. Holy and penitential warfare
505 0 0 _aHoly warfare --
_tPenitential warfare.
500 _a2. The birth of the crusading movement: The preaching of the First Crusade
505 0 0 _aThe casus belli --
_tPope Urban II --
_tA war of liberation --
_tA penitential war-pilgrimage --
_tJerusalem --
_tCrusaders as penitents --
_tThe response --
_tPogroms and anti-Judaism.
500 _a3. The course of the First Crusade
505 0 0 _aThe condition of Isalm --
_tThe first wave --
_tThe second wave: The march to Constantinople --
_tThe second wave: Constantinople to Antioch --
_tThe second wave: The siege of Antioch and its aftermath --
_tThe second wave: The liberation of Jerusalem --
_tThe achievement of the second wave --
_tThe third wave --
_tDevelopments in the idea of crusading.
500 _a4. The holy places and the patriarchates of Jerusalem and Antioch
505 0 0 _aThe founding of the settlements --
_tThe embellishment of the holy places --
_tThe establishment of the Latin Church --
_tThe Latin Church after 1111 and relations with the indigenous --
_tThe contribution of the Latin Church --
_tThe military orders.
500 _a5. Settlement, government and defence of the Latin East, 1097-1187
505 0 0 _aCountryside and town --
_tThe legal status of the indigenous --
_tAdministration --
_tThe crown and the lords --
_tBaldwin I to Baldwin IV --
_tThe defence of the settlements --
_tThe Battle of Hattin and the loss of Jerusalem.
500 _a6. Crusading in adolescence, 1102-87
505 0 0 _aCrusaders or pilgrims --
_tThe early crusades of the twelfth century --
_tThe Second Crusade --
_tLow morale --
_tThe development of traditions.
500 _a7. Crusading comes of age, 1187-1229
505 0 0 _aThe Third Crusade --
_tThe crusade of 1197 --
_tPope Innocent III --
_tThe Fourth Crusade --
_tThe Baltic crusades --
_tThe crusade against Markward of Anweiler --
_tThe Albigensian Crusade --
_tCrusading in the Iberian peninsula --
_tThe Children's Crusade --
_tThe preaching of the Fifth Crusade --
_tThe course of the Fifth Crusade --
_tThe crusade of Frederick II.
500 _a8. Crusading in maturity, 1229-c. 1291
505 0 0 _aCrusading thought, privileges and propaganda in the mid-thirteenth century --
_tTaxation --
_tThe Barons' Crusade --
_tThe first crusade of St. Louis --
_tCrusading in Prussia and Livonia --
_tThe first crusades against the Mongols --
_tCrusading in Iberia --
_tCrusades against heretics --
_tPolitical crusades --
_tReactions to the diversification of crusading --
_tThe second crusade of St. Louis --
_tPope Gregory X --
_tThe failure to launch a great crusade after 1276
500 _a9. The Latin East, 1192-c. 1291
505 0 0 _aCilician Armenia --
_tCyprus --
_tGreece --
_tThe Italians --
_tThe Ayyubids --
_tThe settlers' knowledge of Muslim politics --
_tAntioch-Tripoli --
_tConstitutional conflict in the kingdom of Jerusalem --
_tThe Mamluks --
_tChanges to the Asiatic trade routes --
_tThe conquests of Baybars --
_tThe destruction of the settlements in Palestine and Syria.
500 _a10. The variety of crusading, c. 1291-1523
505 0 0 _aThe range of options --
_tCrusade theoreticians --
_tThe fall of the Templars --
_tThe Teutonic Knights in Prussia and Livonia --
_tThe Hospitallers of St. John on Rhodes --
_tFeatures of hte order-states --
_tCyrpus --
_tGreece --
_tCrusading in Iberia, 1302-54 --
_tCrusading in Italy, 1302-78 --
_tCrusading to the East in the aftermath of the fall of Acre --
_tCrusading to the East, 1323-60, and the emergence of leagues --
_tPeter I of Cyprus --
_tConcern about the Turks --
_tCrusades engendered by the Great Schism --
_tThe crusades of Mahdia and Nicopolis --
_tCrusading against the Turks, 1397-1413 --
_tThe Hussite crusades --
_tThe crusade of Varna --
_tReactions to the loss of Constantinople, the modernization of crusading and the reappearance of peasant armies --
_tThe conquest of Granada and the invasion of North Africa --
_tCrusade plans, 1484-1522.
500 _a11. The lingering death of the crusading movement, 1523-1892
505 0 0 _aThe Reformation --
_tReligio-military orders --
_tNorth Africa --
_tThe eastern theatre --
_tThe Hospitallers of St. John and Malta --
_tPara-crusading and pseudo-crusading in the age of Imperialism --
_tThe last crusaders --
_tThe modern Islamic counter-crusade --
_tObliteration.
500 _aModern Biographical Essay
500 _aThemes
505 0 0 _aDefinition --
_tCrusade ideas --
_tPreaching crusades --
_tLiturgy --
_tCrusade literature --
_tRecruitment and motivation --
_tWomen --
_tFinance --
_tWarfare by land and sea (including warfare in the crusade settlements) --
_tThe Byzantine Greeks --
_tThe Jews --
_tThe Muslims --
_tThe Mongols --
_tThe Crusades to the East --
_tThe First Crusade --
_tThe Second Crusade --
_tThe Third Crusade --
_tThe Fourth Crusade --
_tThe Children's Crusade --
_tThe Fifth Crusade --
_tThe Barons' Crusade --
_tThe crusades of St. Louis (Louis IX of France) --
_tPope Gregory X and the crusades --
_tThe later crusades, 1274 onwards --
_tCrusading in other Theatres of War --
_tIberia --
_tThe Baltic and the northeastern Crusades --
_tCrusades against heretics and opponents of the Church --
_tThe nineteenth century --
_tThe Latin settlements on the Levantine mainland --
_tEdessa --
_tCilician Armenia --
_tAntioch-Tripoli --
_tJerusalem --
_tTrade --
_tThe Latin patriarchates of Jerusalem and Antioch --
_tArt and architecture --
_tCyprus --
_tGreece --
_tThe military orders --
_tGeneral --
_tThe Knights Templar --
_tThe Knights Hospitaller of St. John --
_tThe Teutonic Order --
_tThe Iberian Orders --
_tLesser military orders --
_tSources in English translation --
_tWestern sources for the Crusades --
_tThe Latin East: Antioch, Tripoli, Jerusalem --
_tCyprus and Greece --
_tThe military orders --
_tGreek sources --
_tArab sources --
_tHebrew sources.
500 _aMaps
505 0 0 _aTheatres of war --
_tEurope and the Near East, 1094-1291 --
_tPalestine, Syria, Cilicia, Cyprus and Egypt --
_tJerusalem in the twelfth century --
_tSouth west France and the Iberian Peninsula --
_tThe Mediterranean sea lanes --
_tGreece, Thrace and Western Asia Minor --
_tEurope and the Near East, 1292-1798 --
_tThe Baltic region --
_tItaly --
_tNorth Africa.
520 3 _a"The Crusades: A History is the definitive account of a key topic in medieval and religious history. Jonathan Riley-Smith, a world authority on the subject, explores the organisation of a crusade, the experience of crusading and the crusaders themselves, producing a textbook that is as accessible as it is comprehensive. This exciting new third edition includes: - Substantial new material on crusade theory, historiography and translated texts - An expanded scope that extends the text to cover the decline of crusading in the nineteenth century - Valuable pedagogical features, such as a revised bibliography, maps, illustrations and a brand new chronology This book is essential reading for all students and scholars seeking to understand the Crusades and their significance in world history."--Publisher description.
530 _a2
650 0 _aCrusades.
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