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Using the theme of prophecy to give you a deeper understaing of the crusading ethos, First Crusade offers insight into the religious, political, and personal motivations of those involved, from Chrisitan, Muslim, and Jewish viewpoints. Illuminating the Crusades extensive impact and legacy, the text situates the First Crusade in context before delving into the ways in which this period changed the direction of warfare, religion, and perhaps history itself.
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PART ONEIntroduction: Christianity, Islam, and the Beginning of the Crusades Holy War Jerusalem The Call to Crusade The Crusade and ConstantinopleAntioch: Where the Crusade Became a Holy WarJerusalem: The Battle for Heaven Aftermath PART TWOThe Documents Holy War 1. Deuteronomy 20, An Old Testament Theory of Holy War 2. 1 Samuel 15, Holy War in Action 3. Surah 8, Holy War in the Qur’an Jerusalem 4. Ibn Ishaq, Jerusalem in Islamic Tradition: The Night Journey of Muhammad, Eighth Century 5. A View of Jerusalem from the Mount of Olives 6. Nas.er-e Khosraw, A Muslim Pilgrim’s Description of Jerusalem, ca. 1046–1052 7. A Latin Christian Travel Guide to Jerusalem, ca. 1100 8. A Map of Jerusalem from the Time of the Crusades, Twelfth Century 9. Pseudo-Methodius, The Revelation of Pseudo-Methodius: Christian Prophecy about Jerusalem and the Apocalypse, ca. 700 10. Rodulfus Glaber, A French Monk’s Account of the Destruction of the Holy Sepulcher, 1009 11. al-Maqrizi, A Muslim Historian’s Account of the Destruction of the Holy Sepulcher, Fourteenth Century 12. The Departure of the Great German Pilgrimage of1064, ca. 1125 13. Lambert of Hersfeld, The Crisis of the German Pilgrimage, March 27, 1065, Twelfth Century 14. A Replica in Bologna of the Holy Sepulcher, Late Eleventh Century The Call to Crusade 15. Bishop Lambert of Arras, Urban II’s Crusading Indulgence, 1095 16. Robert the Monk, Urban II’s Sermon at Clermont: The Version of Robert the Monk, ca. 1107 17. Guibert of Nogent, Urban II’s Sermon at Clermont: An Excerpt from Guibert of Nogent’s Version, ca. 1107 18. Albert of Aachen, Peter the Hermit as Inventor of the Crusade, ca. 1107 19. The Rosenfeld Annals, The Message of Peter the Hermit, Twelfth Century 20. Bohemond, a Norman Leader, Takes the Cross, ca. 1100 21. Ralph of Caen, Tancred Takes the Cross, ca. 1118 22. Ekkehard of Aura, Ekkehard of Aura on the Public Reaction to the Call to Crusade, ca. 1116 23. Solomon ben Simson, The Massacre of the Jews of Mainz, Recounted in the Hebrew Chronicle,Mid-Twelfth Century The Crusade and Constantinople24. Anna Comnena, Anna Comnena Describes Peter the Hermit’s Crusade, ca. 1148 25. The Crusaders at Constantinople: A Latin Perspective, ca. 1100 26. An Eleventh-Century Mosaic Depicting a Byzantine, Imperial Christ, Eleventh Century 27. Anna Comnena, Anna Comnena Describes the Crusaders at Constantinople, ca. 1148 28. Count Stephen of Blois, From Constantinople to Nicaea: A Letter from Count Stephen of Blois,June 24, 1097 29. Fulcher of Chartres, Fulcher of Chartres on the Battle of Dorylaeum, ca. 1106 30. Raymond of Aguilers, Raymond of Aguilers on the Battle of Dorylaeum, ca. 1100 31. Bishop Adhémar of Le Puy and Patriarch Simeon of Jerusalem, The Road to Antioch, October 1097 Antioch: Where the Crusade Became a Holy War 32. Count Stephen of Blois, The Siege of Antioch: A Letter from Count Stephen of Blois, March 1098 33. The Fall of Antioch, ca. 1100 34. Ibn al-Athir, An Arab Historian’s Account of the Fall of Antioch, Early Thirteenth Century 35. The New Enemy: Kerbogah, ca. 1100 36. Fulcher of Chartres, Two Visions Preceding the Battle with Kerbogah, ca. 1106 37. Raymond of Aguilers, The Discovery of the Holy Lance of Antioch, ca. 1100 38. A Final Parley with Kerbogah, ca. 1100 39. Raymond of Aguilers, The Battle with Kerbogah, ca. 1100 40. Ibn al-Athir, An Arab Historian’s Explanation for Kerbogah’s Loss, Early Thirteenth Century 41. Raymond of Aguilers, The Holy Lance on Trial, ca. 1100 Jerusalem: The Battle for Heaven 42. Ralph of Caen, The Armies Arrive at Jerusalem, ca. 1118 43. An Imagined Battle outside the Holy City, 1250 44. Raymond of Aguilers, The Main Army Arrives at Jerusalem, ca. 1100 45. Albert of Aachen, The Procession before the Final Battle, ca. 1107 46. Baudry of Bourgueil, An Imagined Sermon Delivered to Crusaders at Jerusalem, 1107 47. Raymond of Aguilers, The Battle for Jerusalem, ca. 1100 48. Ralph of Caen, Tancred Confronts Antichrist, 1118 49. Ibn al-Athir, An Arab Historian on the Fall of Jerusalem, Early Thirteenth Century 50. Albert of Aachen, The Treatment of Prisoners, ca. 1107 51. Christ Leads Crusading Knights into Armageddon, Early Fourteenth Century Aftermath 52. Archbishop Manasses of Reims, Latin Christian Reaction to the Crusade, 1099 53. Ali ibn Tahir al-Sulami, Muslim Reaction to the Crusade, 1105 APPENDIXESA Chronology of the First Crusade from Its Roots to Its Chroniclers (325–1108) Questions for Consideration Selected Bibliography Index