Covering the years between AD 1,000 to 1,500, an illustrated volume includes information on the Norman Conquest, the Crusades, the Black Death, the Hundred Years' War, and the spread of Islam. By the author of Medieval England. Reprint. PW.
I love such books as these. In The Atlas of Medieval Man, Colin Platt, Reader in History at Southampton University, has compiled a wonderful reference for the history of the world from 1000-1500 AD. Dividing the world into eight areas (I would have combined the subcontinent of India into another region, but that's nitpicking), Platt examined what was happening in each area in each century, looking at events and developments, significant people, developments in technology, religious movements, architecture, art and music, and literature and music. Replete with pictures, maps and graphs, I believe my favorite parts of this reference were the maps of architecture and art and the summery charts of each century.
I suggested that I had read this book, although one does not really "read" an atlas any more than he reads an encyclopedia, but I will maintain this book for the purpose for which I believe it was intended - it will serve as a snapshot of this "medieval" period of history, a touchstone which will serve as a reference to promote understanding of further study.