The Crusades: The Authoritative History of the War for the Holy Land

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The Crusades: The Authoritative History of the War for the Holy Land Page 80

by Thomas Asbridge


  Barin, 193

  Barons’ Crusade, 573–4, 580

  Bartholomew, Peter, 77–8, 83–4

  trial by fire of, 87

  visionary ravings of, 86–7

  Basel, 209

  Basil of Ani, 422

  Basilius, 174

  Baybars, 2, 606, 612–13, 618, 620–39, 641–7, 665, 670

  Antioch sacked by, 636–7

  appointed commander, 619

  becomes sultan, 621

  illness and death of, 646

  war against Franks by, 630–7

  Beatrice of Edessa, 237

  Beaufort, 397, 398

  Beaulieu, Fulk’s monastery at, 12

  Bedouins, 23

  Beirut, 125, 319, 320, 354, 412, 416, 433, 448, 538, 649, 656

  Jean of Ibelin awarded lordship of, 539

  remarkable prosperity in 13th century enjoyed by, 547

  Beit Nuba, 481, 488

  Third Crusade’s first retreat from, 489–91, 499

  Third Crusade’s second retreat from, 507–9

  Belen Pass, 64

  Belgium, 672

  Belus Hills, 152, 163, 240, 243

  Belus River, 404, 408, 461, 549

  Belvoir, 396

  Berengaria, Princess, 389, 390, 429, 435

  Richard I marries, 429

  Berke Khan, 574–5, 627

  Bernard of Clairvaux, 168–9, 196, 200–1, 206–9, 212–4 passim, 215, 217, 368

  Bernard, patriarch of Antioch, 138, 147

  Berry, 377

  Bertrand of Moncontour, 47

  Bertrand of Toulouse, 148, 149–50

  death of, 154

  bestiality, 412

  Bethlehem, 121

  al-Kamil surrenders, 569

  Church of the Nativity in, 120

  Bethsan, 318–19, 326

  Bible:

  Commandments, 14

  New Testament, 14, 110

  Old Testament, 14–15, 110

  Revelation, 111

  Bilbais, 268, 270, 271–2

  bin Laden, Osama, 668, 677, 679

  Biqa valley, 304, 309

  al-Bira, 628, 629, 631

  Blachernae, Palace of, 50

  Black Mountain, 187

  Blanche of Castile, 578, 582, 607

  Blondel, 516

  Bohemond II of Antioch, 166, 167

  Bohemond III of Antioch, 245, 256, 259, 323, 344–5

  Nur al-din releases, 260

  Saladin’s truce with, 322

  surrender of, 259

  Bohemond IV of Antioch, 539

  Bohemond VI of Antioch, 616, 618, 635, 636, 642–3

  Bohemond VII of Antioch, 649, 650

  Bohemond of Taranto, 44–5, 46, 48, 50, 52, 57–9, 63, 69, 70, 73–4, 75–6, 80–1, 82–4 passim, 85–6, 116–17, 137, 142, 146, 147

  Anatolian Turks capture, 117

  appearance of, 44

  Battle of Harran and, 138–40, 166

  Constance marries, 143

  Crusade (1106–8) of, 142–5

  death of, 145

  elected army commander-in-chief, 79

  Firuz’s betrayal and, 72–3

  fleeting later historical records of, 145

  Godfrey’s wishes concerning, 118

  Boniface of Montferrat, 528, 529

  Book of Contemplation (Usama ibn Munqidh), 179–

  Book of Holy War (Kitab al-Jihad), 113

  Bosphorus Strait, 50, 52, 219, 530

  Bosra, 232

  Bouqia, 171, 257, 259, 545

  Bourzey, 396

  Brindisi, 565

  British Library, 174

  Bursuq of Hamadan, 157–8, 159

  Bush, George W., 668, 679

  Byzantium, 6, 16, 26, 34, 36, 103, 117, 143

  Antioch’s reconquest secured by, 63

  crusade failed by, 74–5

  First Crusade and, 47–56

  focus of civilisation, 48

  Islam’s quarrelsome respect for, 27

  Jerusalem captured from, 19

  Manuel takes control of, 216

  re-emerged force in Near East, 254

  Roger of Sicily’s expansionist policies threaten, 216

  Sicily’s tension with, 216

  see also Constantinople

  Caesarea, 90, 117, 127, 354, 464, 632, 633, 643

  Baldwin I’s 1101

  attack on, 123–4

  Louis IX’s refortification of, 607

  Saladin orders demolition of, 423

  Cairo, 21, 251, 266, 267, 271, 273, 618, 278, 279, 559, 594

  al-Azhar mosque in, 624

  hostility between Damascus and, 283

  Mamluks in, see Mamluk dynasty

  military garrison in, 277

  Saladin extends authority over, 339

  union of Damascus and, 298

  Calixtus II, Pope, 172, 199, 200

  Capetian dynasty, 198, 369–70, 377

  Richard I’s post-Crusade campaigns against, 516

  see also France; Philip II Augustus of France

  Carolingians, 6–7

  conquest campaigns sponsored by, 15

  decline of, 9

  Carpinel, Geldemar, 118, 127, 129

  carrier pigeons, 297, 416, 625

  Castile, 564

  catapults, see siege engines, projectile-launching

  Cathars, 521

  Albigensian Crusade launched against, 532

  Cave de Sueth, 318, 324

  Cecilia of France, 143, 154

  Chahine, Youseff, 678

  Châlons-sur-Marne, 215, 218

  Chalus, 516

  Chanson d’Antioche, 110–11

  Charlemagne, 6, 8, 376

  Godfrey’s lineage to, 45

  Charles of Anjou, 581, 606, 627, 640, 641

  Charles the Hammer, 19

  Chastel Neuf, 260

  Chavli of Mosul, 146, 147

  Children’s Crusade, 533, 534, 536

  China:

  Islam reaches, 19

  northern, Mongols subjugate, 614

  Christendom:

  continued unabated commerce between Islam and, 331

  drive to rejuvenate, 10

  Fourth Lateran Council discussion of, 535

  Latin, establishment of, 8

  secular world’s influence on, 10

  see also Christianity

  Christianity:

  all-embracing nature of, 10–11

  challenges to, around 1200, 520

  coexistence of Muslims and followers of, see Outremer: life in

  Constantine’s conversion to, 6, 8

  Dominicans within, 521

  Europe converted to, 8

  European, Islam and, on eve of Crusades, 26–9

  Franciscans within, 521

  heresy within, 520–1

  horrors of damnation evoked by, 11

  Islam’s poll tax on, 18

  Islam seen as ‘refinement’ of, 18

  Nestorian, 614

  paganism in Roman empire displaced by, 8

  punishments for sex between Muslims and followers of, 178

  Urban’s dire warning concerning, 33

  warrior saints celebrated by, 15

  weapons come to be blessed by, 15

  see also Christendom

  Cilicia, 60, 69, 137, 138, 139, 142, 145, 167, 317, 539, 633

  Cistercian order, 206

  Cîteaux, 206

  Clement IV, Pope, 639, 640

  Clermont, 33, 35, 110

  Cluniac movement, 11

  Cluny, 11, 206

  Cologne, 381

  Conon de Béthune, 373

  Conrad III of Germany, 208–9, 214–17, 218–21 passim, 233, 235–6, 303

  crusading precedent set by, 214

  wounding of, 220

  Conrad, constable of Germany, 131, 134

  Conrad of Montferrat, 393–4, 395, 398, 403, 407, 410, 412, 430, 449, 451, 484, 492–3, 528

  assassination of, 495–6

  Guy’s riv
alry with, 435–6, 448, 493

  Jerusalem crown offered to, 494

  Jerusalem throne and, 435–6, 448, 493

  ‘king elect’, 436

  Richard I’s parley with, 492

  Richard I’s right to command acknowledged by, 456

  Saladin’s attempt to exploit rift between

  Richard I and, 487

  Saladin’s contact with, 487

  Saladin seeks diplomatic re-engagement with, 501

  telling advantages of, over Richard, 492

  ultimatum of, to Saladin, 495

  Constance of Antioch, 167–8, 173, 245, 252

  death of, 304,

  Constance of France, 143, 145

  Constantine the Great, 5–6, 8, 48, 90

  Constantinople, 5, 19, 26, 48–9, 52, 107, 382, 546

  exorbitant taxation in, 34

  exposed to attack, 216

  Fourth Crusade’s offensive against, 529–32

  massacre in, 317

  patriarch in, 9

  see also Byzantium

  Convent of Our Lady, Saidnaya, 187

  Copts, 23, 104, 266

  Coxon, 60

  Cresson, 344

  Crusade of 1101, 107–8

  Asia Minor crossed by, 107

  crusade, etymology of, 372

  crusader castles, 544–6

  Crusader States, 161, 537

  creation of, 115–62

  discussion of crisis facing, 172

  in early 13th century, 537; see also Outremer: in 13th century

  instability in, following Field of Blood, 167

  martial expertise provided by, 170

  Military Orders focus on protection of, 170

  northern, watershed in history of, 142

  see also Antioch; Edessa; Jerusalem; Outremer; Tripoli

  Crusades:

  bias in scholars’ interpretations of, 3n

  causes and outcomes of, 658–64

  chronology of, 685–7

  consequences of, in medieval world, 664–8

  in eastern Mediterranean, 665–6

  in Western Europe, 667–8

  debate fuelled by, 2

  etymology concerning, 40, 669

  in history, 680–1

  indulgences for participation in, 40, 199, 204, 211, 524, 525, 534, 579

  justification for, 15

  legacy of, 657–81

  longer shadow cast by, 668–80

  Arab Nationalism and Islamism, 677–9

  later medieval and early-modern perceptions, 670–1

  modern Islam and, 674–5

  modern parallelism and, 675–80

  in Western history and memory, 671–4

  modern conflicts equated with, 2

  overview of, 1–2

  prayer-book treasure from, 174–5, 185

  salvation offered by participation in, 10, 38, 40, 42–3, 200, 520, 523, 659, 661

  see also Albigensian Crusade; Barons’ Crusade; Crusade of 1101; Crusader States; Damascus expedition; First Crusade; Second Crusade; Third Crusade; Fourth Crusade; Fifth Crusade; Frederick II of Germany and Sicily: Crusade of; Louis IX of France: first crusade of; Louis IX of France: second crusade of; Venetian crusade

  Cumans, 612

  Cursat, 636

  Cyprus, 69, 103, 252, 255, 304, 429–30, 436, 494, 513, 531, 568, 576, 657

  imperial rights asserted over, 572

  Jerusalem’s crown shifts to, 574

  Louis IX’s staging post, 581, 584

  Daimbert of Pisa, Archbishop, 116–17, 118, 120

  Baldwin of Boulogne outmanoeuvres, 119

  deposing of, 120

  Damascus, 19, 21, 22, 66, 71, 114, 134–6, 183, 231–2, 233–5, 244–51, 288, 500, 451, 558, 574, 568, 589, 613, 624, 648

  al-Adil seizes power in, 540

  Aleppo forms new relationship with, 231

  Baybars’ regional governor in, 622

  building programme in, 261

  cave shrines near, 250

  Court of Justice in, 261

  Duqaq takes, 22

  Galilee the greatest threat to, 330

  Grand Umayyad Mosque in, 113, 250, 291, 514

  hostility between Cairo and, 283

  kings march on, 234–5

  al-Mu‘azzam installed as regional emir in, 540

  Nasir al-Din’s target, 334

  new suburb of, 261

  Nur al-Din’s target, 244, 246

  Qutuz takes control of, 620

  Saladin extends authority over, 339

  Saladin’s occupation of, 290–2

 

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