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The Oxford Illustrated History of the Crusades

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In The Oxford Illustrated History of the Crusades , the story of the Crusades is told as never before in an engrossing, authoritative, and comprehensive history that ranges from the preaching of the First Crusade in 1095 to the legacy of the crusading ideals and imagery that continues today.
Here are the ideas of apologists, propagandists, and poets about the Crusades, as well as the perceptions and motives of the crusaders themselves and the means by which they joined the movement.
The authors describe the elaborate social and civic systems that arose to support the Crusades--taxation, for example, was formalized by the Church and monarchs to raise enormous funds needed to wage war on this scale. And here are vivid descriptions of the battles themselves, frightening,
disorienting, and dangerous affairs, with keen and insightful commentary on the reactions of the Muslims to a Christian holy war. Extensively illustrated with hundreds of photographs, paintings, drawings, maps, chronologies, and a guide to further reading, The Oxford Illustrated History of the
Crusades even includes coverage of crusades outside the eastern Mediterranean region and post-medieval crusades.
From descriptions of the battles and homefront conditions, to a thorough evaluation of the clash (and coalescence) of cultures, to the legacy of the crusading movement that continues into our conflict-torn twentieth-century, to the enduring artistic and social changes that the Crusades wrought,
The Oxford Illustrated History of the Crusades offers an informative, engaging, and unsurpassed panorama of one of the great movements in western history.

448 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1995

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About the author

Jonathan Riley-Smith

43 books48 followers
Jonathan Simon Christopher Riley-Smith, Dixie Professor of Ecclesiastical History at the University of Cambridge, was educated at Eton College and Trinity College Cambridge. He received his BA (1960), MA (1964), PhD (1964) and LittD (2001) from Cambridge.

From 1964–1972 Dr. Riley-Smith taught in the Department of Medieval History at the Unversity of St Andrews, first as assistant lecturer, until 1966, then as lecturer. From 1972 until 1978, he served on the history faculty at the University of Cambridge. He was professor of history at the University of London from 1978 until 1994. Since 1994, Professor Riley-Smith has served on the faculties of history and divinity at the University of Cambridge. He is a fellow of Emmanuel College, Cambridge. From 1997 to 1999 he was chair of the faculty of history.

He was a founder member (1980), acting secretary (1980–1982) and president (1987–1995) of the Society for the Study of the Crusades and the Latin East. Other positions he has held include Knight of Grace and Devotion, Sovereign Military Order of Malta, Officer of Merit, Order Pro Merito Melitens, and Knight of Justice, Most Venerable Order of St John.

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Displaying 1 - 18 of 18 reviews
Profile Image for Jason.
52 reviews21 followers
September 19, 2012
When I started this book, I had just read two others which went chronologically through the Crusades in an overview manner, giving some details of battles, etc. So I was not necessarily looking forward to reading another book that did exactly the same on an overview level without going into any more detail on specific things I was interested in, but I really wanted to see some pictures and get an idea about the Crusades with some visual aids, so I started reading it anyway.

I was pleasantly surprised that this book took a different approach and talked about various cultural/social/political ideas and movements on the peripheries of the battles which greatly helps inform them and gives them a context. This book to me is less about the Crusades as it is about how the Crusades affected the people involved in it and the people back home, and about the culture the Crusades grew out of. An excellent book (if a bit jumpy in style, which is unavoidable when you have several authors writing different sections).
Profile Image for Kirstie.
35 reviews
August 30, 2013
a wonderful overview of what the crusades were and meant, and not just the 1st but also the crusading movement up to modern times.
Profile Image for استيفن.
32 reviews43 followers
December 9, 2022

مجموعة بحوث قيمة متنوعة مفيدة لمجموعة من المؤلفين، في تاريخ الحروب الصليبية: من حيث أصولها ومنطلقاتها، ومصادر تمويلها، ودعاتها، وآثارها في الفكر والفن والعمارة
وواقع المسلمين آنذاك وتفاعلهم معها
ثم ما أفرزته تلك الحقبة الطويلة من إمارات صليبية في الشرق، ومن منظمات عسكرية دينية ظلت تعمل عدة قرون
وحال تلك المنظمات وتطورها مع تطور التاريخ الغربي حتى نهاية القرن الثامن عشر
ثم لمحة عن ترسبات تلك الحروب في الذهنية الغربية واستدعاءاتها الجديدة في العصر الحديث
والكتاب قيم وممتع وغني بالصور واللوحات التوضيحية
Profile Image for Douglas Noakes.
267 reviews10 followers
September 14, 2021
An overview of the Crusades covers a good deal more than the two centuries when Frankish and other forces from medieval Europe gained (and lost) a foothold in Palestine and the Levant. Crusades were carried out against Muslim Spain, against the Byzantine Empire (the infamous Fourth Crusade of 1204, promoted by the Venetian Empire, and against the peoples of Russia, Livonia Poland, etc.) It is not a chapter of history that reflects well on Christian civilization, of course, but the scholarship here opened my eyes to a great deal of background that I took little note of before.

A good example of this is the detailed chapters on the development of the "military orders" the Crusades inspired (Templers, Knight Hospitallers, Teutonic Order, et al). The one thing I wished the book had is a chapter with a basic chronology of how the Crusades developed from Pope Urban's first campaign for the attack on Jerusalem and environs in 1096.

This is a good read for anyone who knows the outline of this important part of the Christian-Muslim "clash of civilizations" and wants to get a stronger background. You may well be surprised on what has constituted a Papal-sanctioned Crusade.
269 reviews1 follower
April 7, 2020
While the book is comprehensive in a wide variety of aspects surrounding the Crusades, it disappointed me in that it actually didn't discuss in any detail the actual battles that occurred. Instead, it provides a wealth of information regarding the Crusades' orgins, artwork, organization, politics, military orders and more. Sadly -- and inexplicably -- the actual battles are rarely even mentioned, let along discussed in detail.

So, while I learned quite a bit, I was left wanting in terms of the actual battles and outcomes. Sad.
Profile Image for Naperdog.
161 reviews
April 20, 2023
An academic history book from Oxford University Press, very informative, but kind of dense and hard to read. (But then again, maybe I am just a bad reader.). It was hard to follow, but that is probably due to it covering such a broad expanse of time and geography. Lots of details, and it turns out that the Crusades were mostly due to internal politics of the Catholic Church and the various kingdoms. Not much on the battles really. A crazy period of history. This book is only for those who are really interested in this topic.
Profile Image for David Cooper.
82 reviews
October 2, 2024
Good book on the culture of the crusades. It talks of the knights and soldiers and their importance on the battlefield-this book does not go into the battles, but tries to show the politics behind the wars. It covers the military orders from inception to modern times. Shows how the Popes were able to use the crusade system against a lot of people beyond the Muslims (Protestants, any heretic).
It is a little choppy because it is written by a lot of different authors. Good read, dense, lots of information.
Profile Image for Andrew Wehrheim.
40 reviews
December 23, 2023
This History provides a collection of articles written by various crusade Historians about different eras and topics of crusading. I enjoyed some authors and articles more than others as most readers probably do. This is a valuable resource for those seeking an introduction to the history and defining topics of the crusades. It's also a good starting point as the reader can follow up on topics and authors of interest.
38 reviews1 follower
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May 24, 2012
"[The Church] had inherited from Roman Law, the Old and the New Testament, and the Early Christian Fathers, pre-eminently St. Augustine of Hippo (354 - 430) various terms of reference by which to analyze instances of violence and pronounce upon their quality." p. 16

"It is important to note a distinction between the senior clerical policy-makers who would one day devise theFirst Crusade and the lay people who would volunteer to go on it. The perspective of a Mediterranean wide struggle was visible only to those institutions, in particular the papacy, which had the intelligence networks, grasp of geography, and sense of long historical tradition to take a broad overview of Christendom and its threatened predicament, real or supposed." p. 16

"It was supposed that Muslims were idolatrous polytheists, and fabulous stories circulated about the life of the Prophet Muhammad. But such ideas fell far short of amounting to a coherent set of prejudices which could motivate people to uproot themselves from their homes and families in the dangerous and costly pursuit of enemies in distant places." 18

"This cast of mind was particularly evident at the thousands of saints' shrines which were dotted across western Christendom: there Christianity made anthropomorphic and accessible, could be seen, smelt, heard, and touched. Saints were a central element in eleventh-century devotion and performed many useful functions. They enabled the Church to walk the tightrope of holding out the possibility of salvation to the sinful populace while asserting Heavens' rigorous entry requirements." p. 26-27

"The Crusades message cut the Gordian Knot." p. 33
Profile Image for Bibliomantic.
116 reviews36 followers
Currently reading
June 15, 2012
A very promising collection of scholarly essays on the subject.

*Review in progress*

First essay by Jonathan Riley-Smith, "The Crusading Movement and Historians," centers on the evolution of crusade historiography. Brief, but good, giving an outline of major points of transition, from traditionalists (those who are strict about which events could be considered 'crusades') and pluralists (more inclusive in same) division, to the issue of ideology. Riley-Smith touches on the misconception of the crusades having been conducted for profit. He charges those who claim that with unwillingness to study the difficult area of ideology, and with ignoring evidence, especially that of how arduous and ruinously expensive the crusades were to the crusaders. Both are good points. There is a chapter on crusaders' state of mind by R-S further in the book, and I expect it to be a good follow-up to this essay.
...
Profile Image for Dan.
18 reviews3 followers
July 24, 2011
Interesting and illuminating. This has ignited my interest in learning more about the Teutonic order in particular, and generally about central European history in general, as I feel like it's an area I'm not really that familiar with.
Profile Image for Charles Murray-Todd.
10 reviews1 follower
February 7, 2008
Nice... Used this one as a secondary and tertiary source. Again, states what has already been written. Not much new, but an easier read than some others.
Profile Image for Beatrice Canales.
11 reviews2 followers
October 19, 2012
This is a very technical book, even with the few illustrations. I love it, I do have to stop and reread portions of what I just read because of the many dates involved!
Profile Image for Philip Athans.
Author 55 books245 followers
March 11, 2011
A robust, valuable resource for my crusades research. Will keep this one close at hand.
Profile Image for Andre.
1,267 reviews11 followers
July 6, 2012
The Oxford illustrated histories are very well made and interesting (if a bit dry). Shows a more balanced history of the period, touching more on the daily affairs and less on the wars.
Displaying 1 - 18 of 18 reviews

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