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Nebuchadnezzar's Dream - The Crusades, Apocalyptic Prophecy, and the End of History (Hardcover)
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Nebuchadnezzar's Dream - The Crusades, Apocalyptic Prophecy, and the End of History (Hardcover)
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In 1099, the soldiers of the First Crusade, summoned by the Pope
and gathered from throughout Christendom, took Jerusalem. As the
news of this victory spread throughout Medieval Europe, it felt
nothing less than miraculous and dream-like, to such an extent that
many believed history itself had been fundamentally altered by the
event and that the Rapture was at hand. As a result of military
conquest, Christians could see themselves as agents of rather than
mere actors in their own salvation. The capture of Jerusalem
changed everything. A loosely defined geographic backwater,
comprised of petty kingdoms and shifting alliances, Medieval Europe
began now to imagine itself as the center of the world. The West
had overtaken the East not just on the world's stage but in God's
plans. To justify this, its writers and thinkers turned to ancient
prophecies, and specifically to one of the most enigmatic passages
in the Bible-the dream King Nebuchadnezzar has in the Book of
Daniel, of a statue with a golden head and feet of clay.
Conventional interpretation of the dream transformed the state into
a series of kingdoms, each less glorious than the last, leading
inexorably to the end of all earthly realms-in short, to the
Apocalypse. The First Crusade signified to Christians that the
dream of Nebuchadnezzar would be fulfilled on their terms. Such
heady reconceptions continued until the disaster of the Second
Crusade and with it the collapse of any dreams of unification or
salvation-any notion that conquering the Holy Land and defeating
the Infidel could absolve sin. In Nebuchadnezzar's Dream, Jay
Rubenstein boldly maps out the steps by which these social,
political, economic, and intellectual shifts occurred throughout
the 12th century, drawing on those who guided and explained them.
The Crusades raised the possibility of imagining the Apocalypse as
more than prophecy but actual event. Rubenstein examines how those
who confronted the conflict between prophecy and reality
transformed the meaning and memory of the Crusades as well as their
place in history.
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