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The Templars' and Hospitallers' daily business of recruitment,
fund-raising, farming, shipping and communal life explored
alongside their commitment to crusading. The military and religious
orders of the Knights Templar (founded 1120) and Knights
Hospitaller (founded c.1099) were a driving force throughout the
long history of the crusades. This study examines the work of the
two orders closely, using original charters to analyse their
activities in their administrative heartland in south-west France,
and sets them in the context of contemporary religious life and
economic organisation. Recruitment, fund-raising, farming,
shipping, and communal life are all touched upon, and the orders'
commitment to crusading through control and supply of manpower,
money, arms and supplies is assessed. Dr Selwood shows the orders
at the centre of religious life in Occitania, highlighting their
success compared with other new orders such as the Cistercians, and
looking at their relationships with the secular and monastic
Church. Other themes addressed include the orders' relationshipto
Occitanian society and to the laiety, their involvement with
pilgrimage to Jerusalem, their innovative administrative
structures, and their logistical operations. DOMINIC SELWOOD gained
his Ph.D. at Oxford; he is now a barrister at Lincoln's Inn, and
practices from chambers in the Inner Temple.
From an obscure, misty archipelago on the fringes of the Roman
world to history's largest empire and originator of the world's
mongrel, magpie language - this is Britain's past. But, today,
Britain is experiencing an acute trauma of identity, pulled
simultaneously towards its European, Atlantic and wider heritages.
To understand the dislocation and collapse, we must look back: to
Britain's evolution, achievements, complexities and tensions. In a
ground-breaking new take on British identity, historian and
barrister Dominic Selwood explores over 950,000 years of British
history by examining 50 documents that tell the story of what makes
Britain unique. Some of these documents are well-known. Most are
not. Each reveal something important about Britain and its people.
From Anglo-Saxon poetry, medieval folk music and the first
Valentine's Day letter to the origin of computer code, Hitler's
kill list of prominent Britons, the Sex Pistols' graphic art and
the Brexit referendum ballot paper, Anatomy of a Nation reveals a
Britain we have never seen before. People are at the heart of the
story: a female charioteer queen from Wetwang, a plague surviving
graffiti artist, a drunken Bible translator, outlandish Restoration
rakehells, canting criminals, the eccentric fathers of modern
typography and the bankers who caused the finance crisis. Selwood
vividly blends human stories with the selected 50 documents to
bring out the startling variety and complexity of Britain's
achievements and failures in a fresh and incisive insight into the
British psyche. This is history the way it is supposed to be told:
a captivating and entertaining account of the people that built
Britain.
When former MI6 agent turned archaeologist Dr Ava Curzon is engaged
by American intelligence to track down an African militia claiming
to hold the Ark of the Covenant, she is plunged into a world where
nothing is what it seems.
From an obscure, misty archipelago on the fringes of the Roman
world to history's largest empire and originator of the world's
mongrel, magpie language - this is Britain's past. But, today,
Britain is experiencing an acute trauma of identity, pulled
simultaneously towards its European, Atlantic and wider heritages.
To understand the dislocation and collapse, we must look back: to
Britain's evolution, achievements, complexities and tensions. In a
ground-breaking new take on British identity, historian and
barrister Dominic Selwood explores over 950,000 years of British
history by examining 50 documents that tell the story of what makes
Britain unique. Some of these documents are well-known. Most are
not. Each reveal something important about Britain and its people.
From Anglo-Saxon poetry, medieval folk music and the first
Valentine's Day letter to the origin of computer code, Hitler's
kill list of prominent Britons, the Sex Pistols' graphic art and
the Brexit referendum ballot paper, Anatomy of a Nation reveals a
Britain we have never seen before. People are at the heart of the
story: a female charioteer queen from Wetwang, a plague surviving
graffiti artist, a drunken Bible translator, outlandish Restoration
rakehells, canting criminals, the eccentric fathers of modern
typography and the bankers who caused the finance crisis. Selwood
vividly blends human stories with the selected 50 documents to
bring out the startling variety and complexity of Britain's
achievements and failures in a fresh and incisive insight into the
British psyche. This is history the way it is supposed to be told:
a captivating and entertaining account of the people that built
Britain.
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