reading lists:
HIST2030/2031 Leeds University Library
The Crusades and the Crusader States in the Twelfth Century / The Crusades and Medieval Christendom
Graham Loud
A. General Reading on the Crusades
H.E. Mayer, The Crusades (1988, 2nd. ed.)
Jean Richard, The Crusades c. 1071-c.1291 (1999)
Andrew Jotischky, Crusading and the Crusader States (2004)
Steven Runciman, A History of the Crusades (3 vols. 1951-5)
K.M. Setton et al. A History of the Crusades (5 vols. 1958-1985)
Jonathan Riley-Smith The Crusades. A Short History (1987)
Jonathan Phillips, The Crusades 1095-1197 (2002)
Nikolaus Jaspert, The Crusades (2006)
Joshua Prawer The World of the Crusaders (1972)
Jonathan Riley-Smith (ed.), The Oxford Illustrated History of the Crusades (1994)
Jonathan Riley-Smith (ed.), The Atlas of the Crusades (1991)
Two collections of essays will be widely used.
P.W. Edbury (ed.), Crusade and Settlement. Papers Presented to R.C. Smail (1985)
Thomas Maddern (ed.), The Crusades. The Essential Readings (2002)
Reference works
Peter Lock, The Routledge Companion to the Crusades (2006)
Alan V. Murray (ed.), The Crusades-an Encyclopedia (4 vols., 2006)
In addition, copies of articles denoted with an asterisk * and [HDC] are also available in the High Demand Collection in the Edward Boyle Library. Articles followed by [E] are also available electronically through the library website.
B. Introductory works on the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem
J. Prawer, The Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem (1972) - outstanding.
J. Prawer, Histoire du Royaume Latin de Jerusalem (2 vols. 1969-70)
T.S.R. Boase, Kingdoms and Strongholds of the Crusaders (1971)
R.C. Smail, The Crusaders in Syria and the Holy Land (1973)
R.C. Smail, Crusading Warfare (1956)
C. Primary Sources (in translation)
(a) Western
[First Crusade]
Gesta Francorum, ed. and trans. Rosalind Hill (1956)
Fulcher of Chartres, A History of the Expedition to Jerusalem 1095-1127, trans. F.R. Ryan and H.S. Fink (1969)
Raymond d'Aguilers, Historia Francorum, trans. J.H. and L. Hill (1968)
[Second Crusade]
Odo of Deuil, De Profectione Ludovici VII in Orientem (The Journey of Louis VII to the East), ed. and trans. V.G. Berry (1948)
De Expugnatione Lyxbonensi, trans. C.W. David (1936) [E-3.1 DAV]
[Crusader States]
William of Tyre, A History of Deeds done beyond the Sea, trans. E.A. Babcock and A.C. Krey (2 vols. 1941) [Vol. 2 is the useful one]
Walter the Chancellor’s The Antiochene Wars, trans. T.S. Asbridge and S.B. Edgington (1999)
[Third Crusade]
P. Edbury (ed.), The Conquest of Jerusalem and the Third Crusade. Sources in Translation (1996) [includes the Chronicle of Ernoul]
Ambroise The Crusade of Richard Lion-heart, trans. M.J. Hubert and J.L. La Monte (1940)
H. Nicholson (ed.), Chronicle of the Third Crusade- a translation of the Itinerarium Peregrinorum et Gesta Regis Ricardi (1997)
[Fourth Crusade]
Geoffrey de Villehardouin, 'The Capture of Constantinople', in Chronicles of the Crusades, trans. M.R.B. Shaw (Penguin Classics, 1963)
Robert of Clari, The Conquest of Constantinople, trans. E.H. McNeal (1936)
A.J. Andrea (ed.), The Capture of Constantinople of Gunther of Pairis (1995)
A.J. Andrea (ed.), Contemporary Sources for the Fourth Crusade (2000)
[The Crusade and the Crusader States in the Thirteenth Century]
Philip of Novara, The Wars of Frederick II against the Ibelins, trans. J.L. La Monte and M.J. Hubert (1936) (C-1.3)
J. Shirley (trans.), Crusader Syria in the Thirteenth Century. The Rothelin Continuation of the History of William of Tyre (1999)
Joinville, 'Life of St. Louis', in Shaw (ed.), Chronicles of the Crusades [as above], also available in trans. by R. Hague (1953)
Jacques de Vitry The History of Jerusalem, (in Palestine Pilgrim Text Society,vol. XI, 1896) (Stack Theology B-4)
(b) Byzantine
The Alexiad of Anna Comnena, trans. E.R.A. Sewter, (Penguin Classics, 1969)
John Cinnamus, Deeds of John and Manuel Comnenus, trans. C.M. Brand (1976)
Niketas Choniates, O City of Byzantium- Annals of Niketas Choniates, trans. H.P. Magoulias (1984) [M-6NIC]
(c) Muslim
F. Gabrieli, Arab Historians of the Crusades (1969) [an excellent collection]
The Damascus Chronicle of the Crusades, trans. H.A.R. Gibb (1932)
An Arab-Syrian Gentleman and Warrior in the Period of the Crusades, trans. P.K. Hitti (1929)
The Travels of Ibn Jubayr, trans. R.J.C. Broadhurst, (1951) pp. 295-325 (N-1.3)
The Rare and Excellent History of Saladin, trans. D.S. Richards (2001), also translated as The Life of Saladin, (Palestine Pilgrims Text Society, Vol. XII, 1897)
Imad-ed-Din, Conquéte de La Syrie et de la Palestine par Saladin, trad. Française, by H. Masse (1972) (C-1.3)
Ayyubids, Mamluks and Crusaders. Ibn al-Furat, trans. U. and M.C. Lyons and J. Riley Smith(1971) [Semitic V-2]
(d) Collections of Sources
J. A. Brundage, The Crusades, a Documentary Survey (1962) [Poor]
L. and J. Riley-Smith, The Crusades. Idea and Reality 1095-1274 (1981) [excellent, especially on ideas]
E. Peters (ed.) The First Crusade (1971) [a bad selection, but does contain useful extracts from otherwise untranslated Albert of Aachen and important letters].
E. Peters (ed.) Christian Society and the Crusades 1198-1229 (1971) [contains complete translation of the very valuable chronicle of Oliver of Paderborn on the Fifth Crusade].
E.M. Hallam (ed.) Chronicles of the Crusades, (1989)
S.J. Allen and E. Amt The Crusades. A Reader (2003) [a useful collection].
(e) Pilgrim's Accounts
(All in Palestine Pilgrim’s Text Society, Stack Theology, B.4) Of some, but minor, interest.
Saewulf (1102-3)
Abbot Daniel (1106-7) in vol. IV (1895-6)
John of Wurzburg (1160-70)
John Phocas (1185) in vol. V (1895-6)
Jerusalem Pilgrimage, 1099-1185, ed. J. Wilkinson, J. Hill and W.F. Ryan (1988) [Stack Geography A-0.02HAK]
(f) Module Website – Nathan Bodington ‘Building’
This contains translations of the following texts-
(1) ‘Letters concerning the Second Crusade’
(2) ‘The Capture of Almeria and Tortosa by Caffaro’
(3) ‘The lost autobiographical chapter of William of Tyre’
(4) ‘The Conquest of the Holy Land by Saladin’
(5) ‘The Expedition of Frederick Barbarossa’
(6) ‘The Tract about the Places and Conditions of the Holy Land’
(7) ‘Documents relating to the Crisis in the Holy Land, 1198’
(8) ‘A letter of Jacques de Vitry, 1216’
(9) ‘The Fourth Crusade, Selected Texts’
(10) ‘Letters of Pope Innocent III concerning the Fourth Crusade and the Latin Empire’
(11) ‘Letters relating to the Crusader States during the pontificate of Gregory IX’
HIST 2030 The Crusades and the Crusader States in the Twelfth Century
Top of pageI Crusading Ideas
C. Erdmann, The Origins of the Idea of Crusade (Eng. trans. 1977) [Old, originally published in 1935, but still fundamental]
J. Riley-Smith, What Were the Crusades? (1977)
J. Riley-Smith, The First Crusaders 1095-1131 (1997), chapters 2-3, pp. 23-80.
F.H. Russell, The Just War in the Middle Ages (1975) [Philosophy M-4.2 RUS]
J.A. Brundage, Medieval Canon Law and the Crusader (1962)
P.J. Cole, The Preaching of the Crusades to the Holy Land, 1095-1270 (1991)
I.S. Robinson, 'Gregory VII and the Soldiers of Christ', History lviii (1973)
169-192 [HDC]
*H.E.J. Cowdrey. 'Pope Urban II's Preaching of the First Crusade, History lv (1970) 177-188 [reprinted in H.E.J. Cowdrey, Popes, Monks and Crusaders (1984), and in The Crusades. The Essential Readings] [HDC]
H.E.J. Cowdrey, ‘Christianity and the morality of warfare during the first century of Crusading’, in The Experience of Crusading i Western Approaches, ed. M. Bull and N. Housley (2003), 175-92.
* E.O. Blake, 'The Formation of the Crusade Idea', Journal of Ecclesiastical History xxi (1970) 11-31 [HDC]
J.A. Brundage, 'The Army of the First Crusade and the Crusade Vow', Mediaeval Studies xxxiii (1971) 334-343
* J. Riley-Smith, 'Crusading as an act of love', History lxv (1980) 177-192 [HDC] [reprinted in The Crusades. The Essential Readings]
T.P. Murphy (ed.), The Holy War (1976), especially the essays by Cowdrey and Brundage [Cowdrey's essay is reprinted in Popes, Monks and Crusaders]
C.J. Tyerman, 'Were there any Crusades in the twelfth century?', English Historical Review cx (1995), 553-577 [reprinted in The Crusades. The Essential Readings] – a very important, if controversial, essay
M. Markowski, ‘Crucesignatus- its origins and early usage’, Journal of Medieval History x (1984), 157-65 [E].
P.J. Cole ‘”Oh God, the heathen hath come into your inheritance” (Ps. 78.1). The theme of religious pollution in Crusade documents’, in Crusaders and Muslims in Twelfth-Century Syria, ed. M. Shatzmiller (1993), 84-111.
II The Byzantine Background
The Alexiad of Anna Comnena
G. Ostrogorsky, History of the Byzantine State (Eng. trans. 1968)
R.J.H. Jenkins, Byzantium the Imperial Centuries AD 602-1071 (1966)
R.J.H. Jenkins, The Byzantine Empire on the Eve of the Crusades (Hist. Assoc. Pamphlet G-24- 1953)
P. Charanis, 'Byzantium, the West and the Origins of the First Crusade', Byzantion xix (1949) 17-36
S. Vryonis, 'Byzantium, the Social Basis for decline in the Eleventh Century', Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies ii (1959) 159-75
S. Vryonis, The Decline of Medieval Hellenism in Asia Minor (1971). chaps. 1-3.
M. Angold, The Byzantine Empire 1025-1204 –a Political History (1984)
S. Runciman, The Eastern Schism (1955)
III The Muslim Background
(a) The Islamic World at the Time of the Crusades
A History of the Crusades, ed. K. Setton, Vol. I The First Hundred Years, ed. M.W. Baldwin, chaps. 3-4, pp. 181-276
E. Ashtor, A Social and Economic History of the Near East in the Middle Ages (1976), especially chaps. 5-6
Carole Hillenbrand, The Crusades. Islamic Perspectives (1999)
Claude Cahen, Pre-Ottoman Turkey (1968)
P.K. Hitti, History of the Arabs, especially chap. 45.
P.M. Holt (ed.), The Eastern Mediterranean Lands in the period of the Crusades (1977), especially chaps. 4-5
P.M. Holt, The Age of the Crusades. The Near East from the Eleventh Century to 1517 (1986)
Bernard Lewis, The Assassins. A Radical Sect in Islam (1967)
The Muslim texts, especially the introduction to the Damascus Chronicle
(b) Attitudes to Islam
R.W. Southern, Western Views of Islam in the Middle Ages (1965)
D.C. Munro, 'Western Attitudes to Islam during the Crusades', Speculum vi (1931) 329-343
N. Daniel, Islam and the West, The Making of an Image (1960)
C.H. Haskins, Studies in the history of mediaeval science (1927)
B.Z. Kedar, Crusade and Mission - European Approaches Toward the Muslims (1984)
IV The First Crusade
Sources- Gesta Francorum, Fulcher, Raymond d'Aguilers, Anna Comnena Bks. 10-11- The Crusades. A Reader, pp. 39-53.
S.Runciman, A History of the Crusades, vol. I The First Crusade (1951)
C. Cahen, 'An Introduction to the First Crusade', Past and Present vi (1954) 6-31
* H.E.J. Cowdrey, 'Pope Urban II's preaching of the First Crusade', History lv (1970), 177-188 [HDC] [reprinted in The Crusades. The Essential Readings]
H.E.J. Cowdrey, 'The Gregorian Papacy, Byzantium and the First Crusade', in J.D. Howard-Johnston (ed). Byzantium and the West c. 850-c.1200 (1988), pp. 145-169
J. France, 'The departure of Tatikios from the Crusading Army', Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research xliv (1971), 131-47
J. France, 'The crisis of the First Crusade', from the defeat of Kerbogha to the departure from Arqa', Byzantion xxxx (1970), 276-308.
J. France, Victory in the East. A Military History of the First Crusade (1994) [excellent]
J. Riley-Smith, The First Crusade and the Idea of Crusading (1986)
Alan V. Murray, 'The Army of Godfrey of Bouillon, 1096-1099- Structure and Dynamics of a Contingent on the First Crusade', in Revue Belge de Philologie et d'Histoire lxx (1992), 301-29.
James H. Forse, 'Armenians and the First Crusade', Journal of Medieval History xvii (1991), 13-22.
Top of pageBackground
J. Riley-Smith, The First Crusaders, 1095-1131 (1997)
M. Bull, Knightly Piety and the Lay Response to the First Crusade. The Limousin and Gascony c.970-1130 (1993)
M. Bull, 'The roots of lay enthusiasm for the First Crusade', History lxxviii (1993) 353-372 [reprinted in The Crusades. The Essential Readings]
V The Aftermath of the First Crusade
Anna Comnena, Bks. 11-13
J.G. Rowe, 'Paschal II, Bohemond of Antioch and the Byzantine Empire', Bulletin of the John Rylands Library xlix (1966-7), 165-202
E. Joranson, 'The problem of the spurious letter of the Emperor Alexius to the Count of Flanders', American Historical Review lv (1949- 50) [E]
A.C. Krey, 'A neglected passage in the Gesta', The Crusades and other Historical Essays presented to D.C. Munro (1928), pp. 57 ff.
J. Riley-Smith, 'The title of Godfrey of Bouillon', Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research lii (1979), 83-7
* J. Riley-Smith, 'The motives of the earliest Crusaders and the settlement of Latin Palestine, English Historical Review xcviii (1983) 721-736 [HDC]
Alan V. Murray, 'The Title of Godfrey of Bouillon as Ruler of Jerusalem', Collegium Medievale 3 (1990), pp 163-78 [offprint in Brotherton Library]
Top of pageVI The Second Crusade
Sources- Cinnamus, Odo of Deuil, William of Tyre, Bk. 16, De Expugnatione Lyxboniensi, ‘Letters concerning the Second Crusade’, ‘The capture of Almeria and Tortosa’ [website].
G. Constable, 'The Second Crusade as seen by Contemporaries', Traditio ix (1953), 213 ff.
*A.J. Forey, 'The Second Crusade- Scope and Objectives', Durham University Journal lxxxvi (1994), 165-175 [HDC]
M. Gervers (ed.), The Second Crusade and the Cistercians (1995), esp. pp. 79-128.
J. Phillips, Defenders of the Holy Land. Relations between the Latin East and the West (1996)
J. Phillips and M. Hoch (eds.), The Second Crusade. Scope and Consequences (2001)
J.J. Norwich, The Kingdom in the Sun (1970) chaps. 6-7, pp. 106-142.
A. Grabois, 'The Crusade of King Louis VII- a reconsideration', Crusade and Settlement, ed. P.W. Edbury [See Section A], pp. 94-105.
H. Mayr-Harting, ‘Odo of Deuil, the Second Crusade and the monastery of St. Denis’, in The Culture of Christendom. Essays in Medieval History in Memory of Denis Bethel, ed. M.A. Meyer (1993), 225-41.
P. Stephenson, ‘Anna Comnena’s Alexiad as a source for the Second Crusade?’, Journal of Medieval History xxix (2003), 41-54.
A.J. Forey, 'The failure of the siege of Damascus in 1148', Journal of Medieval History x (1984), 13-23 [E- via the De Re Militari website]
M. Hoch, ‘The choice of Damascus as the objective of the Second Crusade’, in Autour de la Première Croisade, ed. M. Balard (1996), 359-69.
A.V. Murray, 'Galilee and Damascus in the period of the Crusades', Nottingham Medieval Studies xl (1996), 190-3.
G.A. Loud, ‘Some reflections on the failure of the Second Crusade’, Crusades iv (2005), 1-14.
Top of pageExtra sources on the Second Crusade
The Historia Pontificalis of John of Salisbury, trans. M. Chibnall (1956), pp. 11-12, 52-62
The Letters of St. Bernard of Clairvaux, trans. B. Scott-James (1953), especially nos. 320, 323, 391-4, 398-400, 408, 410.
Otto of Freising, The Deeds of Frederick Barbarossa, trans. C.C. Mierow, (1953), Bk. 1 Chaps. 34-47, 62-65, pp. 69-81, 101-6.
Top of pageVII The Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem
(a) General
J. Prawer, The Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem (1972) – [outstanding and essential]
J. Richard, The Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem (Eng. trans. 2 vols. 1979)
J. Prawer, Crusader Institutions (1980) – [outstanding]
Zacour, N.P. and H.W. Hazard (eds.), A History of the Crusades V The Impact of the Crusades on the Near East (1985)
R.J. Lilie, Byzantium and the Crusader States 1096-1204 (1993)
J. Phillips, Defenders of the Holy Land. Relations between the Latin East and the West 1119-87 (1996)
(b) Settlement and Social Structure
Sources- Ibn Jubayr, The Autobiography of Usamah, ‘A letter of Jacques de Vitry’ [website]
J. Prawer, 'The Settlement of Latins in Jerusalem', Speculum xxvii (1952) [E]
J. Prawer, 'Colonization activities in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem', Revue Belge de Philologie et d'Histoire xxix (1951)
J. Prawer, 'The Assise de Teneure and the Assise de Vente', Economic History Review Ser. II.iv (1951-2), 77-87
(All three reprinted in Crusader Institutions, chaps. 4-5, 14)
J. Prawer, Palestinian Agriculture and the Crusader Rural System', Crusader Institutions, chap. 6- a revised version of the essay first published (in French) in Byzantion xxii (1952) and xxiii (1953)
J. Riley-Smith, 'Some lesser officials in Latin Syria', English Historical Review lxxxvii (1972), 1-26
J. Riley-Smith, 'Government in Latin Syria and the Commercial Privileges of Foreign Merchants', Relations between East and West in the Middle Ages, ed. D. Baker (Edinburgh 1973)
* H.E. Mayer, 'Latins, Muslims and Greeks in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem', History lxiii (1978), 175-192 [reprinted in his Probleme des lateinischen Königreichs Jerusalem (1983)] [HDC]
B.Z. Kedar, 'The subjected Muslims of the Frankish Levant', in Muslims under Latin Rule 1100-1300, ed. James M. Powell (1990), pp. 135-74 [reprinted in The Crusades. The Essential Readings]
Alan V. Murray, 'Ethnic Identity in the Crusader States- The Frankish Race and the Settlement of Outremer', in Concepts of National Identity in the Middle Ages, ed. S. Forde, L. Johnson and A.V. Murray (1995), 59-73
(c) The Early Kingdom (to the 1130s)
Sources- Fulcher of Chartres, Bks. 2-3, William of Tyre.
H.E. Mayer, 'The Origins of the County of Jaffa', Israel Exploration Journal (1985), 35-85 [reprinted in his Kings and Lords in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem (1994)]
H.E. Mayer, 'The Origins of the lordship of Ramla and Lydda in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem' Speculum lx (1985), 537-52 [E] [reprinted in his Kings and Lords in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem (1994)].
Alan V. Murray, 'The Origins of the Frankish nobility of the Kingdom of Jerusalem', Mediterranean Historical Review iv (1989), 281-300
Alan V. Murray, 'Dynastic Continuity or Dynastic Change?- The Accession of Baldwin II and the Nobility of the Kingdom of Jerusalem', Medieval Prosopography xiii (1992), 1-27.
*Alan V. Murray, 'Baldwin II and his Nobles- Baronial Factionalism and Dissent in the Kingdom of Jerusalem, 1118-1134', Nottingham Medieval Studies xxxviii (1994), 60-85. [HDC]
Alan V. Murray, The Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem. A Dynastic History 1099-1125 (2000)
Jean Richard, 'Frankish Power in the Eastern Mediterranean', Mediterranean Historical Review ii (1987), 168-87
J. Riley-Smith, ‘King Fulk of Jerusalem and the “Sultan of Babylon”, in Montjoie. Studies in Crusade History in Honour of Hans Eberhard Mayer, ed. B.Z. Kedar, J. Riley-Smith and R. Hiestand (1997), 55-66.
(d) Government
J.L. La Monte, Feudal Monarchy in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem (Cambridge, Mass. 1932) [to be used with care, good on details, esp. chaps. 4-8, conclusions rather dated].
J. Riley-Smith, The Feudal Nobility and the Kingdom of Jerusalem (1971), especially chapters 5 and 7.
S. Tibble, Monarchy and Lordships in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem (1989)
* J. Prawer, 'The Nobility and the feudal regime in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem', Lordship and Community in Medieval Europe, ed. F.L. Cheyette (1968) pp.156-172 [reprinted in Crusader Institutions, chap. 2, pp 20-45] [HDC]
P.W. Edbury, 'Feudal Obligations in the Latin East', Byzantion xlvii (1977) 328-356
S. Reynolds, ‘Fiefs and vassals in twelfth-century Jerusalem- a view from the west’, Crusades i (2002), 29-48.
P.W. Edbury, ‘Fiefs and vassals in twelfth and thirteenth century Jerusalem’, Crusades i (2002), 49-62.
B.Z. Kedar, 'The general tax of 1183 in the Crusading Kingdom- innovation or adaptation', English Historical Review lxxxix (1974), 339- 345
H.E. Mayer, 'Studies in the history of Queen Melisende', Dumbarton Oaks Papers xxvi (1972), 95-182 – very important [reprinted in H.E. Mayer, Probleme des lateinischen Königreichs Jerusalem (1983)]
H.E. Mayer, 'The Beginnings of King Amalric of Jerusalem', in The Horns of Hattin, ed. B.Z. Kedar (1992), pp 121-135
H.E. Mayer, 'The Wheel of Fortune- Seignorial Vicissitudes under Kings Fulk and Baldwin III of Jerusalem', Speculum lxv (1990), 860-7 [E] [reprinted in his Kings and Lords in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem (1994)].
M. Barber, ‘The career of Philip of Nablus in the kingdom of Jerusalem’, in The Experience of Crusading ii Defining the Crusader Kingdom, ed. P.W. Edbury and J. Phillips (2003), 60-75.
[see also section XIX for further works on the nobility, concerning both the twelfth and thirteenth centuries]
Top of pageVIII The Principality of Antioch
Walter the Chancellor [see primary sources]
T.S. Asbridge, ‘The “Crusader” community at Antioch- the impact of interaction with Byzantium and Islam’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, Ser. VI.ix (1999), 305-25.
T.S. Asbridge, The Creation of the Principality of Antioch 1098-1130 (2000)
T.S. Asbridge, ‘Alice of Antioch- a case study of female power in the twelfth century’, in The Experience of Crusading ii Defining the Crusader Kingdom, ed. P.W. Edbury and J. Phillips (2003), 29-47.
C. Cahen, La Syrie du Nord à l’Epoque des Croisades (1940)
Top of pageIX The Collapse of the First Kingdom of Jerusalem 1174-87
Sources- William of Tyre, Bks. 19-23, Ernoul and contemporary letters, in Edbury (ed.), The Conquest of Jerusalem and the Third Crusade [above], ‘The Conquest of the Holy Land by Saladin’ [on module website].
M.W. Baldwin, Raymond III of Tripolis and the Fall of Jerusalem (1936) [to be used with care, now rather dated].
B. Hamilton, The Leper King and his Heirs- Baldwin IV and the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem (2000) [excellent]
* R.C. Smail, 'Latin Syria and the West 1149-1187', Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, ser. V.xix (1969) 1-20 [HDC]
R.C. Smail, ‘The international status of the Latin kingdom of Jerusalem 1150-1197’, The Eastern Mediterranean Lands in the Period of the Crusades, ed. P.M. Holt (1977), pp. 23-43.
B. Hamilton, ' "The Elephant of Christ", Reynald of Chatillon', Studies in Church History xv (1978) 97-108
* B. Hamilton, 'Miles of Plancy and the fief of Beirut', in The Horns of Hattin, ed. B.Z. Kedar (1992) pp 136-146 [HDC]
R.L. Nicolson, Jocelyn III and the Fall of the Crusader States 1134-99 (1973)
[rather disappointing]. Not held in Library.
H.E. Mayer, 'Henry II of England and the Holy Land', English Historical Review xcvii (1982), 721-739
R.C. Smail, 'The Predicaments of Guy de Lusignan 1183-87', Outremer : studies in the history of the crusading kingdom of Jerusalem presented to Joshua Prawer, ed. B.Z. Kedar, H.E. Mayer and R.C. Smail (1982), pp.159-176
*Peter Edbury, 'Propaganda and faction in the Kingdom of Jerusalem- The Background to Hattin', in Crusaders and Muslims in Twelfth-Century Syria, ed. Maya Shatzmiller (1993), 173-189 [HDC]
Top of pageX The Church in the Crusader States
(a) The Secular Church
J.L. La Monte, Feudal Monarchy [as in (VII(d) above], chapter 10 pp.203-216
Bernard Hamilton, The Latin Church in the Crusader States (1980)
Bernard Hamilton, 'A Medieval Urban Church, the case of the Crusader States', Studies in Church History xvi (1979) 159-170 [reprinted in B. Hamilton, Crusaders, Cathars and Holy Places (1999)]
B. Hamilton, ‘Ralph of Domfront, Patriarch of Antioch (1135-40)’, Nottingham Medieval Studies xxviii (1984), 1-21 [reprinted in B. Hamilton, Crusaders, Cathars and Holy Places (1999)]
B. Hamilton, ‘Aimery of Limoges. Latin Patriarch of Antioch (c. 1142-96) and the unity of the Churches’, in East and West in the Crusader States. Context-Contacts-Confrontations, ed. K. Ciggaar and H. Teule (1999), 1-12 [also useful for the native communities].
A History of the Crusades v The Impact of the Crusades on the Near East [above section VII(a)], chapter 5.
J. Riley-Smith, 'The Latin Clergy and the settlement in Palestine and Syria, 1098-1100', The Catholic Historical Review (lxxiv (1988) 539- 557
J.G. Rowe, 'Paschal II and the relations between the spiritual and temporal powers in the Kingdom of Jerusalem', Speculum xxxii (1957), 470-501 [E]
J.G. Rowe, 'The Papacy and the Ecclesiastical Province of Tyre', Bulletin of the John Rylands Library xliii (1960)
H.E. Mayer, 'The Concordat of Nablus', Journal of Ecclesiastical History xxxiii (1982), 531-543
Y. Katzir, 'The Patriarch of Jerusalem. Primate of the Latin Kingdom', Crusade and Settlement, ed. P.W. Edbury (1985), pp. 169-175
*P.W. Edbury and William of Tyre and the patriarchal Election of 1180'
J.G. Rowe, English Historical Review xciii (1978), 1-25 [HDC]
B.Z. Kedar, 'The Patriarch Eraclius', Outremer [as above], pp. 177-204
S. Schein, 'The Patriarchs of Jerusalem in the late Thirteenth Century' Outremer [as above], pp.297-305
(b) Monasticism
B. Hamilton, ‘Rebuilding Zion- the Holy Places of Jerusalem in the twelfth century’, Studies in Church History xiv (1977), 105-116.
B. Hamilton, 'Ideals of Holiness- Crusaders, Contemplatives and Mendicants', The International History Review xvii (1995), 693-712
A. Jotischky, The Perfection of Solitude- Hermits and Monks in the Crusader States (1995)
H.E. Mayer, Bistümer, Klöster und Stifte im Königreich Jerusalem (1977) [an important study for anyone who can read German]
Top of pageXI The Native Communities in the Crusader States
Sources- ‘The Tract about the places and conditions of the Holy Land’, ‘A letter of Jacques de Vitry 1216’ [website]
Conversion and Continuity. Indigenous Christian Communities in Islamic Lands, Eighth to Eighteenth Centuries, ed. Michael Gervers and Ramzi Jibran Bikhazi (Toronto, 1990)
Hadia Dajani-Shakeel, 'Natives and Franks in Palestine- Perceptions and Interactions', in Conversion and Continuity, pp 161-84
Elias El-Hayek 'Struggle for Survival- The Maronites of the Middle Ages', in Conversion and Continuity, pp 407-21
B.Z. Kedar Crusade and Mission- European Approaches toward the Muslims (Princeton, 1984)
B.Z. Kedar 'The Subjected Muslims of the Frankish Levant', in Muslims Under Latin Rule, 1100-1300, ed. James M. Powell (Princeton, 1990), pp 135-74 [reprinted in The Crusades. The Essential Readings]
Top of pageXII William of Tyre. The Great Crusader Historian
‘The lost autobiographical chapter of William of Tyre’ [website]
P.W. Edbury/J.G. Rowe, William of Tyre- Historian of the Latin East (1988)
* P.W. Edbury/J.G. Rowe, 'William of Tyre and the Patriarchal Election of 1180', English Historical Review xliii (1978), 1-25 [HDC]
Relations between East and West in the Middle Ages, ed. D. Baker (1973)
D.W.T.C. Vesey, 'William of Tyre and the Art of Historiography', Mediaeval Studies xxxv (1973), 433-455
M.R. Tessera, ‘Prudentes homines ... qui habebant magis exercitatos’- a preliminary inquiry into William of Tyre’s vocabulary of power’, Crusades i (2002), 63-72.
R.W. Crawford, 'William of Tyre and the Maronites', Speculum xxx (1955) [E]
M.R. Morgan, The Chronicle of Ernoul and the Continuations of William of Tyre (1973) [rather technical]
Top of pageXIII Saladin and the Third Crusade
Sources- Ambroise- A Chronicle of the Third Crusade- Edbury, The Fall of Jerusalem and the Third Crusade- The Rare and Excellent History of Saladin- ‘The Expedition of Frederick Barbarossa’ [website],
A. Ehrenkreutz, Saladin (1972) (See review of this by H.E. Mayer, Speculum (1974) 724-7)
M.C. Lyons and D. Jackson Saladin the Politics of the Holy War (1982) [the best study on the subject]
H.A.R. Gibb, 'The Achievement of Saladin', Bulletin of the John Rylands Library xxv (1952)
D.S. Richards, 'The Early History of Saladin', Islamic Quarterly xvii (1973),
140-159
R. Stephen Humphreys, From Saladin to the Mongols (1977)
C.M. Brand, 'The Byzantines and Saladin- opponents of the Third Crusade', Speculum xxxvii (1962) 167-181 [E]
J. Gillingham, 'Roger of Howden on Crusade', Medieval Historical Writing in the Christian and Islamic Worlds, ed D.O. Morgan (1982) pp 60-75
J. Gillingham, Richard the Lionheart (2nd ed., London 1989)
M. Markowski, ‘Richard Lionheart- bad king, bad crusader?’, Journal of Medieval History 22 (1997), 351-65.
D. Jacoby, ‘Conrad, Marquis of Montferrat and the kingdom of Jerusalem (1187-92)’, in D. Jacoby, Trade, Commodities and Shipping in the Medieval Mediterranean (1997)
Top of pageXIV The Fourth Crusade
Sources- Villehardouin, Robert of Clari, Gunther of Pairis, Niketas Choniates, and Andrea, Contemporary Sources, ‘The Fourth Crusade, selected sources’ and ‘Letters concerning the Fourth Crusade’ [website]
M. Angold, The Fourth Crusade. Event and Context (2003)
C.M. Brand, Byzantium Confronts the West 1180-1204 (1968) [still probably the best book on the subject]
D.E. Queller, The Fourth Crusade. The Conquest of Constantinople (1978- 2nd ed. with T.F. Madden, 1997) [useful on the Venetians]
J. Godfrey, 1204. The Unholy Crusade (1980)
* C. Morris, 'Geoffrey de Villehardouin and the Conquest of Constantinople', History xliii (1968), 24-34 (HDC)
M. Angold, The Byzantine Empire 1025-1204. A Political History (1984), especially chaps 11 and 14
D.E. Queller and S.J Stratton'A Century of Controversy on the Fourth Crusade', Studies in Medieval and Renaissance History vi (1969) 235-277
D.E. Queller and G.W.Day, ‘Some arguments in defence of the Venetians on the Fourth Crusade’, American Historical Review lxxxi (1976), 717-37 [E]
D.E. Queller and T.F. Madden, 'Some Further Arguments in Defence of the Venetians on the Fourth Crusade', Byzantion lxii (1993, for 1992), 433-73
A. Andrea, ‘Cistercian Accounts of the Fourth Crusade. Were they anti-Venetian’, Analecta Cisterciensia xli (1985), 3-41.
J.H. Pryor, ‘The Venetian fleet for the Fourth Crusade and the diversion of the crusade to Constantinople’, in The Experience of Crusading i Western Approaches, ed. M. Bull and N. Housley (2003), 103-23 [HDC].
T.F. Madden, Enrico Dandolo and the Rise of Venice (2003)
J. Herrin, 'The Collapse of the Byzantine Empire in the Twelfth Century', Birmingham Historical Journal xii (1970), 188-203. Not currently held in Library.
R.L. Wolff, 'The Second Bulgarian Empire. Its Origin and History to 1204', Speculum xxiv (1949), 167-206 [E]
A. Bryer, 'Cultural relations between East and West in the Middle Ages', in Relations between East and West in the Middle Ages, ed. Derek Baker (1973), pp. 77-94.
Top of pageXV The Latin Empire of Constantinople
‘Letters concerning the Fourth Crusade and the Latin Empire’ [website]
A History of the Crusades, ed. K. Setton, vol. II, chaps. 6-7
Peter Lock, The Franks in the Aegean, 1204-1500 (1995) [excellent]
M. Angold, The Fourth Crusade. Event and Context (2003), chapters 6-9.
R.L. Wolff, 'The Organization of the Latin Patriarchate of Constantinople 1204-1261- Social and Administrative Consequences of the Latin Conquest', Traditio vi (1948), 33-60
R.L. Wolff, 'Politics in the Latin Patriarchate of Constantinople', Dumbarton Oaks Papers viii (1954), 225-303
R.L. Wolff, 'Mortgage and Redemption of an Emperor's Son- Castile and
the Latin Empire of Constantinople', Speculum xxix (1954), 45- 84 [E]
D.J. Geanakoplos, 'Greco-Latin relations on the eve of the Byzantine restoration-
the Battle of Pelagonia - 1259', Dumbarton Oaks Papers vii (1953) 99-135
B.M. Bolton, 'A Mission to the Orthodox? The Cistercians in Romania'. Studies in Church History xiii (1976), 169-181
D. Jacoby, 'The encounter of two societies- western conquerors and Byzantines in the Peleponnesus after the Fourth Crusade', American Historical Review lxxviii (1973), 873-906 [E]
B. Arbel, B. Hamilton and D. Jacoby, (eds.), Latins and Greeks in the Eastern Mediterranean after 1204 (1989)
M. Angold, A Byzantine Government in Exile. Government and Society under the Laskarids of Nicea (1975)
P. Lock, 'The Latin secular church in Crusader Greece', Medieval History i (1991) pp 93-107
J. Doran, ‘Rites and wrongs- the Latin mission to Nicea, 1234’, Studies in Church History xxxii (1996), 131-144.
Top of pageXVI The Military Monastic Orders
Sources
M. Barber and K. Bate, The Templars. Selected Sources (2002)
J. Upton-Ward (trans.), The Rule of the Templars (1992)
Secondary
J. Prawer, The Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem, chapter 14, pp. 252-79.
A.J. Forey, The Military Orders from the Twelfth to the Early Fourteenth Centuries (1991)
M. Barber, The New Knighthood. A History of the Order of the Temple (1994)
J. Riley-Smith, The Knights of St. John and Jerusalem and Cyprus 1050-1310 (1967)
H. Nicholson, Templars, Hospitallers and Teutonic Knights. Images of the Military Orders (1993)
H. Nicholson, The Knights Templar. A New History (2001)
* A.J. Forey, 'The Emergence of the Military Order in the Twelfth Century', Journal of Ecclesiastical History xxxvi (1985) 175-195 [HDC]
M. Barber, 'The Origins of the Order of the Temple', Studia Monastica xii (1970)
A. Luttrell, ‘The earliest Hospitallers’, in Montjoie. Studies in Crusade History in Honour of Hans Eberhard Mayer, ed. B.Z. Kedar, J. Riley-Smith and R. Hiestand (1997), 37-54.
M. Barber (ed.), The Military Orders. Fighting for the Faith and Caring for the Sick (1994) [a miscellaneous collection- there are useful essays on the Templars by Phillips and Pringle, on the Teutonic Knights, and on the suppression of the Templars].
E. Christiansen, The Northern Crusades (1980), chapter 3 [on the Teutonic Knights]
I. Sterns, 'The Teutonic Knights in the Crusader States', in A History of the Crusades V The Impact of the Crusades on the Near East (1985), pp. 315-378
A.J. Forey, Military Orders and Crusades (1994) [an excellent collection which includes the following reprinted essays]
A.J. Forey, 'The Militarisation of the Hospital of St. John', Studia Monastica xxvi (1984), 75-89
A.J. Forey, 'The Military Order of St. Thomas of Acre', English Historical Review xcii (1977), 481-503.
A.J. Forey, 'The Military Orders and holy war against Christians in the thirteenth century', English Historical Review civ (1989), 1-24
M. Barber, ‘The Order of St. Lazarus and the Crusades’, Catholic Historical Review lxxx (1994), 439-56.
* J. Prawer 'Military Orders and Crusader Politics in the Second Half of the Thirteenth Century', Die Geistlichen Ritterorden Europas, ed. J. Fleckenstein und M. Hellmann (Vorträge und Forschungen xxvi, 1980), pp 217-229 [HDC]
J.Riley-Smith, 'The Templars and the Castle of Tortosa in Syria', English Historical Review lxxxiv (1969) 278-288
J.F. O'Callaghan, The Spanish Military Order of Calatrava and its Associates (1975)
The Fall of the Templars
M. Barber, The Trial of the Templars (1978)
P. Partner, The Murdered Magicians. The Templars and their Myth (1982)
A.J. Forey, 'The Military Orders in the Crusading Proposals of the late-thirteenth century', Traditio xxxvi (1980) 317-345 [reprinted in his Military Orders and Crusades (1994)]
A.J. Forey, The Fall of the Templars in the Crown of Aragon (2001)
S. Menache, ‘The Templar Order- a failed ideal?’, in Catholic Historical Review lxxix (1993), 1-21.
M. Barber, 'The Social context of the Templars, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society Ser. IV.xxxiv (1984), 27-46
M-L. Favreau-Lilie, ‘The Military orders and the escape of the Christian population of the Holy Land in 1291’, Journal of Medieval History xix (1993), 201-27 [E].
M. Barber, ‘Lepers, Jews and Moslems. The plot to overthrow Christendom in 1321’, History lxvi (1981), 1-17
J.R. Strayer, The Reign of Philip the Fair (1980), chapter 4, ‘The king and the church’.
Top of pageXVII The Islamic World in the Thirteenth Century
A History of the Crusades, ed. Setton, Vol. II The Later Crusades 1189-1311, ed. R.L. Wolff and H.W. Hazard, chaps. 19-22, pp. 661-758
R.S. Humphreys From Saladin to the Mongols. The Ayyubids of Damascus 1193-1260 (1977)
Robert Irwin, The Middle East in the Middle Ages- The Early Mamluk Sultanate (1986)
Peter Thorau, The Lion of Egypt. Sultan Baybars I and the Near East in the Thirteenth Century (1992)
Bernard Lewis, The Assassins. A Radical Sect in Islam (1967)
Bernard Lewis, 'The Mongols, the Turks and the Muslim Polity', Transactions of the Royal Historical Society Ser. V.xviii (1968), 49ff.
Peter Jackson, The Mongols and the West 1221-1410 (2005)
Top of pageXVIII The Crusader States in the Thirteenth Century
(a) The Kingdom of Jerusalem
Sources- Philip of Novara, Rothelin Continuation, ‘Letters relating to the Crusader states during the pontificate of Gregory IX’ [website]
Richard, Latin Kingdom [as in part VII(a)], especially vol. II.
J. Prawer, Crusader Institutions [as in part VII (a)], especially chap. 3
C Marshall, Warfare in the Latin East 1192-1291 (1992)
J. Riley-Smith, The Feudal Nobility and the Kingdom of Jerusalem 1174-1277 (1973)
J. Riley-Smith, 'A Note on Confraternities in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem', Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research xliv (1971), 301-8
J. Riley-Smith 'The Assise sur la Ligèce and the Commune of Acre', Traditio xxvii (1971), 179-204
G.A. Loud, 'The Assise sur La Ligèce and Ralph of Tiberias', Crusade and Settlement, ed. P.W. Edbury (1985), pp. 204-212
H.E. Mayer, 'On the beginning of the Communal Movement in the Holy Land, the Commune of Tyre', Traditio xxiv (1968), 443-457
H.E. Mayer 'Ibelin versus Ibelin- the struggle for the regency of Jerusalem 1253-1258', in his Probleme des lateinischen Königreichs Jerusalem (1983)
D. Jacoby, 'Crusader Acre in the thirteenth century- urban layout and topography', Studi Medievali, Ser. III.xx (1979), 1-45 [reprinted in D. Jacoby, Studies on the Crusader States and on Venetian Expansion (1989)]
D. Jacoby 'The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the collapse of Hohenstaufen power in the Levant', Dumbarton Oaks Papers xl (1986) 83-101 [reprinted in D. Jacoby, Studies on the Crusader States and on Venetian Expansion (1989)]
P. Jackson, 'The End of Hohenstaufen rule in Syria, Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research lix (1986), 20-36
P. Jackson, 'The Crisis in the Holy Land 1260', English Historical Review xcv (1980) 480-513
(b) The Other Crusader States in the Levant
P.W. Edbury, The Kingdom of Cyprus and the Crusades 1191-1374 (1991)
N. Coureas, The Latin Church in Cyprus 1195-1312 (1997)
T.S.R. Boase (ed.), The Cilician Kingdom of Armenia (1978)
K. Molin, Unknown Crusader Castles (2001)
Top of pageXIX The Noble Families of Jerusalem
* [See also Section VII(d)]
Tibble, Monarchy and Lordships [see above, section VII (d)]
J.L. La Monte, 'John d'Ibelin. The Old Lord of Beirut 1177-1236', Byzantion xii (1937) 417 ff.
J.L. La Monte, 'The Lords of Le Puiset on the Crusades', Speculum xvii (1942), 100 ff.
J.L. La Monte, 'The Lords of Sidon in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries', Byzantion xvii (1944/5), 183 ff.
J.L. La Monte, The Lords of Caesarea in the period of the Crusades', Speculum xxii (1947), 145 ff.
M. E. Nickerson, 'The Seigneurie of Beirut in the twelfth century and the Brisebarre family of Beirut-Blanchegarde', Byzantion xix (1949), 141-85.
J.M. Buckley, 'The Probable Octogenarianism of John of Brienne', Speculum xxxii (1957), 315 ff [E]
P.W. Edbury, 'John of Jaffa's Title to the county of Jaffa and Ascalon', English Historical Review xcviii (1983), 115-133
H.E. Mayer, 'The Double County of Jaffa and Ascalon. One Fief or Two?' Crusade and Settlement (1985), pp. 181-7
H.E. Mayer, Kings and Lords in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem (1994)
Top of pageXX The Crusades of the Thirteenth Century
Sources- Oliver of Paderborn, Joinville
A History of the Crusades, ed. Setton, vol. ii (1962), chapters 11-14
H. Tillmann, Pope Innocent III (Eng. trans. 1980)
J.M. Powell, Anatomy of a Crusade 1213-1221 (1986)
T.C. Van Cleve, The Emperor Frederick II of Hohenstaufen (1972), pp. 128-38, 159-75.
W.C. Jordan, Louis IX and the Challenge of the Crusade (1979)
J. Richard, Saint Louis. Crusader King of France (1992), especially chapters 5-8, pp. 85-152, and chapters 15-16, pp. 293-329.
J. Richard, 'La politique orientale de Saint Louis. La Croisade de 1248', in his Les Relations entre l'Orient et l'Incident en Môyen Age (1977), chapter 10
J. Richard, La Papauté et les Missions d'Orient au Môyen Age (xiiie-xive siècles) (1977)
P. Jackson, 'The Crusade against the Mongols (1241)', Journal of Ecclesiastical History xlii (1991),1-18
S.D. Lloyd, 'The Lord Edward's Crusade, 1270-2- its setting and significance'- War and Government in the Middle Ages. Essays in Honour of J.O. Prestwich (1984) 120-133
S. Schein, Fideles Crucis- the Papacy, the West and the Recovery of the Holy Land 1274-1314 (1991)
Top of pageXXI England and the Crusades
C.J. Tyerman, England and the Crusades 1095-1588 (1988)
S.D. Lloyd, English Society and the Crusade 1216-1307 (1988)
S.D. Lloyd, 'The Lord Edward's Crusade, 1270-2’ [as in previous section]
P.J. Cole, 'Purgatory and Crusade in St Gregory's Trental', The International History Review xvii (1995), 713-725
Gerald of Wales, The Journey through Wales, trans. L. Thorpe (Penguin Classics 1978)
XXII Crusades Against Christians
Sources
J. Shirley (trans.), The Song of the Cathar Wars. A History of the Albigensian Crusade (1996)
W.A. and M.D. Sibley (trans.), The History of the Albigensian Crusade. Peter of Les Vaux-de- Cernay (1998)
Secondary
N. Housley, 'Crusades against Christians. Their Origins and Early Development, c.1000-1216', Crusade and Settlement, ed. P.W. Edbury (1985), pp. 17-36 [reprinted in The Crusades. The Essential Readings]
E. Kennan, 'Innocent III and the First Political Crusade', Traditio xxvii (1971), 231-249
W.L. Wakefield. Heresy, Crusade and Inquisition in Southern France 1100-1250 (1974)
J.R. Strayer, The Albigensian Crusade (1971)
Jonathan Sumption, The Albigensian Crusade (1978- 2nd. ed. 1999)
J.R. Strayer, 'The Political Crusades of the Thirteenth Century', A History of the Crusades, ed. K. Setton, vol. ii (1962), pp. 343-378
R. Rist, ‘Papal policy and the Albigensian Crusades- continuity or change?’, Crusades ii (2003), 99-108.
G.A. Loud, ‘The case of the missing martyrs- Frederick II’s war with the Church 1239-50’, Studies in Church History xxx (1993), 141-52 [reprinted in G.A. Loud, Montecassino and Benevento in the Middle Ages (2000)].
P.A. Throop, Criticism of the Crusade. A Study of Public Opinion and Crusade Propaganda (1940)
E. Siberry, Criticism of Crusading 1095-1274 (1985)
N. Housley, The Italian Crusades. The Papal-Angevin Alliance against Christian Lay Powers, 1254-1343 (1982)
Top of pageXXIII The Crusade in the Baltic
Sources
The Chronicle of Henry of Livonia, trans. J.A. Brundage (1961- 2nd ed. 2003)
The Livonian Rhymed Chronicle, trans. W. Urban and J.C. Smith (2nd. ed. 2001)
Secondary
E. Christiansen, The Northern Crusades- The Baltic and the Catholic Frontier 1100-1525 (London 1980) [excellent].
A.V. Murray (ed.), Crusade and Conversion on the Baltic Frontier 1150-1500 (2001), [especially the essays by Ellers, Urban, Jensen, Nielsen and Mazeika].
F. Lotter 'The Crusading Idea and the Conquest of the Region East of the Elbe', in Medieval Frontier Societies, ed. Robert Bartlett and Angus MacKay (Oxford, 1989), pp 267-306
Karl Jordan, Henry the Lion (1986), chapter 4, pp. 66-88.
W. Urban 'The Organization of the Defence of the Livonian Frontier in the Thirteenth Century', Speculum lviii (1973), 525-32 [E]
W. Urban 'The Wendish Princes and the "Drang nach dem Osten"', Journal of Baltic Studies ix (1978), 225-44
W. Urban 'The Diplomacy of the Teutonic Knights at the Curia', Journal of Baltic Studies ix (1978), 116-28
W. Urban 'Roger Bacon and the Teutonic Knights', Journal of Baltic Studies xix (1988), 363-70
M. Giedroyc 'The Arrival of Christianity in Lithuania- Baptism and Survival (1341-1387)', Oxford Slavonic Papers xxii (1989), 34-57
Top of pageXXIV The Crusades in Spain
Sources
S. Barton and E. Fletcher, The World of El Cid. Chronicles of the Spanish Reconquest (2000), especially the ‘Chronica Adefonsi Imperatoris’ and the ‘Poem of Almeria’, pp. 148-249, 250-63 respectively.
R. Hamilton and J. Perry, The Poem of the Cid (Penguin Classics 1984)
Secondary
A. Mackay Spain in the Middle Ages. From Frontier to Empire 1000-1500 (1977), chaps. 1-3.
D. Lomax The Reconquest of Spain (1978)
J. O’Callaghan Reconquest and Crusade in Medieval Spain (2002)
R.A. Fletcher 'Reconquest and crusade in Spain c.1050-1150', Transactions of the Royal Historical Society Ser. V.xxxvii (1987), 31-47 [reprinted in The Crusades. The Essential Readings] [a very important essay]
F. Fernandez-Armesto 'The survival of a notion of reconquista in late tenth and eleventh-century Leon', Warriors and Churchmen in the High Middle Ages. Essays Presented to Karl Leyser, ed. T. Reuter (1992), pp.123-143
*E. Lourie, 'A society organised for war- medieval Spain', Past and Present xxxv (1966) 54-76 [HDC]
A.J. Forey ‘The Military Orders and the Spanish Reconquest in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries’, Traditio xl (1984), 197-234 [reprinted in his Military Orders and Crusades (1994)]
R.I. Burns, 'Immigrants from Islam. The use of Muslims as settlers in thirteenth-century Aragon', American Historical Review lxxx (1975) [E]
J.F. O'Callaghan, The Spanish Military Order of Calatrava and its Associates (1975)
Top of pageXXV Warfare and Fortifications
(a) Warfare
R.C. Smail, Crusading Warfare (1956) [fundamental]
C. Marshall, Warfare in the Latin East 1192-1291 (1992)
J. Prawer, The Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem, chapter 15
J. Prawer, 'The Battle of Hattin', Crusader Institutions, chapter 19, pp. 484-500
D. Ayalon, 'Studies on the structure of the Mamluk army', Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies xv (1953) 203 ff., 448 ff., xvi (1954) 133 ff.
(b) Fortifications
Hugh Kennedy, Crusader Castles (1994) [excellent, the best book on the subject]
P. Deschamps, Les Chateaux des Croisés en Terre Sainte i Le Crac des Chevaliers (1934), ii La Defence du Royaume de Jerusalem (1939), iii La Defence du Comté de Tripoli et de la principauté d'Antioch (1973) (each volume has a vol. of plates attached - Architecture E DES)
T.E. Lawrence, Crusader Castles (2 vols., 1936) - (Special Collections, English P-40LAW). (2nd ed., ed by D. Pringle, 1988)
K. Molin, Unknown Crusader Castles (2001)
A History of the Crusades, IV The Art and Architecture of the Crusader States, ed. H.W. Hazard (1976), chapter 4.
Top of pageXXVI Crusader Art
A History of the Crusades, IV The Art and Architecture of the Crusader States, ed. H.W. Hazard (1977)
H. Buchtal, Miniature Painting in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem (1957)
J. Folda, Crusader Manuscript Illumination at Saint. Jean d'Acre 1275-1291 (1976)
K. Weitzmann, 'Icon Painting in the Crusader Kingdom', Dumbarton Oaks Papers xx (1966), 49-83
L.A. Hunt, 'Art and colonialism- the mosaics of the church of the Nativity in Bethlehem (1169) and the problem of "Crusader" art', Dumbarton Oaks Papers xlv (1991)
Top of pageXXVII The Trade of the Holy Land
R.S. Lopez, 'The Trade of Medieval Europe- the South', Cambridge Economic History of Europe II (2nd edn., 1987), pp.306-379
E.H. Byrne, 'Genoese Trade with Syria in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Century', American Historical Review xxv (1919-20), 191-219
E.H. Byrne, Genoese Shipping in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries (1930) - (Economics H-4)
L.B. Robbert, 'Venice and the Crusaders'. A History of the Crusades V (1985) [see section VII(a) above] pp. 379-451)
F.C. Lane, Venice. A Maritime Republic (1973), chaps. 4-5, and especially 7
D. Jacoby, Studies on the Crusader States and on Venetian Expansion (1989)
D. Jacoby, ‘New Venetian evidence on Crusader Acre’, in The Experience of Crusading ii Defining the Crusader Kingdom, ed. P.W. Edbury and J. Phillips (2003), 240-56.
D. Jacoby, ‘Aspects of everyday life in Frankish Acre’, Crusades iv (2005), 73-105.
J. Prawer, The Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem [see section VII(a)], chapter 16
J. Prawer, Crusader Institutions [see section VII(a)], chapter 8
Top of pageXXVIII The Crusade after 1291
N. Housley The Later Crusades 1274-1580 from Lyons to Alcazar (1992)
A History of the Crusades, ed. Setton, Vol. III The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries (1975)-[but see also the review of this by P.W. Edbury, English Historical Review xci (1976) 603-6].
A.S. Atiya, The Crusade in the Later Middle Ages (1938) [to be used with care]
S. Schein, Fideles Crucis- the Papacy, the West and the Recovery of the Holy Land 1274-1314 (1991)
N. Housley, The Avignon Papacy and the Crusades 1305-1378 (1986)
N. Housley, ‘Costing the Crusade- budgeting for Crusader activity in the fourteenth century’, in The Experience of Crusading i Western Approaches, ed. M. Bull and N. Housley (2003), 45-59.
A.T. Luttrell, 'The Crusade in the Fourteenth Century', Europe in the Late Middle Ages , ed. J. Hale, J.R.L. Highfield and B. Smalley (1965), pp. 122-154
A.T. Luttrell, 'Venice and the Knights Hospitallers of Rhodes in the Fourteenth Century', Papers of the British School at Rome xxvi (1958)
N. Housley 'The Franco-papal Crusade negotiations of 1322-3', Papers of the British School of Rome xlviii (1980) pp 166-185
C.J. Tyerman, 'Marino Sanudo Torsello and the Lost Crusade- Lobbying in the Fourteenth Century'. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society Ser. V.xxxii (1982) 57-74
C.J. Tyerman, Sed Nihil fecit? The last Capetians and the discovery of the Holy land', War and Government in the Middle Ages. Essays in Honour of J.O. Prestwich, ed. J. Gillingham and J.C. Holt (1984) pp. 170-181. (C-1.09 GIL)
C.J. Tyerman, 'Philip VI and the Recovery of the Holy Land', English Historical Review c. (1985), 25-52
In all seriousness, you do not know what you are talking about in any real historical sense.