Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Crusades
Crusades | Mike Paine
1 post | 1 read
Now in paperback, a concise guide to one of the bloodiest periods of medieval ChristendomThe first crusade was set in motion by Pope Urban II in 1095 and culminated in the capture of Jerusalem from the Muslims four years later. In 1291 the fall of Acre marked the loss of the last Christian enclave in the Holy Land. This guide traces the chronology of the Crusades between these two dates and highlights the most important figures on all sides of the conflict. It covers the creation of the kingdom of Jerusalem and the other crusader states and their struggle to survive. It looks at the successes and failures of the Third Crusade and at the legendary figures of Richard the Lionheart and Saladin, explores the truth and the myths behind the orders of military monks like the Hospitallers, and examines such strange historical events as the Children's Crusade and the crusader sacking of Byzantium in 1204. It also looks at the struggles of the Teutonic Knights against paganism in the Baltic. The book provides the essential information about one of the great unifying, and disunifying, forces of medieval Christendom.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
Debiw781
Crusades | Mike Paine
post image
Pickpick

This #nonfiction book was fascinating and my #firstbook to #usherinthenewyear 2018. I particularly liked the various images throughout the book. I didn't realize the Greek Fire mentioned in Rachel Caine's Great Library series was a real thing but here it is in this book.
@Booksandcooks are you doing #nonfictionchallenge2018
#startingnewjanuary @writerlibrarian #nonfiction2018

Megabooks Yes I am! It‘s the only challenge I‘m doing in 2018. 7y
Debiw781 @Booksandcooks yay! Did I use the right hashtag? I didn't manage to read one a month but I read more nonfiction as a result of it. 😊 7y
Reviewsbylola Wow, beautiful illustration! 7y
Debiw781 @Reviewsbylola The illustrations were what made the book worth it. 7y
48 likes4 comments