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The Crusades: Two Centuries of Holy War Between Christendom and Islam

Par : Shane Larson
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8233464454
  • EAN9798233464454
  • Date de parution07/07/2026
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurLinda Balsamo

Résumé

For two hundred years, armies marched east in the name of God-and the world has never stopped arguing about why. In 1095, Pope Urban II stood before a crowd at Clermont and called on the knights of Christendom to take back Jerusalem. What followed was one of the longest, strangest, and bloodiest enterprises in medieval history: a chain of expeditions that toppled cities, built kingdoms in the sand, and ended-two centuries later-in total failure.
This is the full arc of the Crusades, told straight. From the slaughter at Jerusalem in 1099 to the desperate last stand at Acre in 1291, Shane Larson traces how a divided Muslim world first lost the Holy Land, then united under leaders like Zengi, Nur al-Din, and the towering Saladin to take it back. Here are the Crusader states clinging to the coast, the rise and fall of the military orders, the Third Crusade and the duel of wits between Saladin and Richard the Lionheart, and the moment the whole project curdled-when a crusade meant to free Jerusalem instead sacked Christian Constantinople in 1204.
No heroes, no villains, no modern axe to grind. Just the men, the marches, the sieges, and the long, grinding collapse of an idea-told with the clarity and pace of narrative history at its best. What you'll discover: Why the First Crusade succeeded-and how Muslim disunity made the impossible possible How the Crusader states actually functioned, and why they were always living on borrowed time The real Saladin: the Kurdish commander who built an empire and reshaped the war The Third Crusade and the famous, frustrating standoff between Richard and Saladin How the Fourth Crusade ended in the sack of Constantinople-and crippled both sides for good The Fatimids, Seljuks, Zengids, Ayyubids, and Mamluks as serious powers, not background scenery Why Acre fell in 1291-and what its loss really meant This book is for you if: You want the whole story of the Crusades in one clear, fast-moving volume You prefer honest history that treats every side as fully human You loved the work of Thomas Asbridge, Christopher Tyerman, Steven Runciman, or Dan Jones You enjoyed Shane Larson's The Fall of Rome, The Viking Expansion, or Sparta Two centuries of holy war, from the first call to the final fall.
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