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Rare insights into the chivalric age through the eyewitness
accounts of two French knights
Chronicle of the Fourth Crusade and The Conquest of
Constantinople
by Geoffrey de Villehardouin
Chronicle of the Crusade of St. Louis
by Jean de Joinville
Geoffrey de Villehardouin was an eminent French knight, who set out
on the Fourth Crusade in 1199. Pivotally involved in events,
including the routing the campaign via Constantinople, his
important chronicle was written when his experiences were still
fresh in his mind. After the conquest of Byzantium he became a
military leader and earned the city of Messinopolis in Thrace and
the title Marshal of Champagne. Jean de Joinville embarked upon his
crusade-remembered by history as the Seventh Crusade-as a young man
in 1248. This Crusade was launched only seven years after the
previous one failed and actually managed to briefly occupy
Jerusalem. De Joinville was away upon campaign for six years,
returning home from Palestine in 1254, though he did not pen his
memoir until old age. This is a very 'human ' reporter full of
fears, misgivings and able to provide the reader with minute detail
of events.
This book contains two essential, first hand accounts from the
time of the crusades, and gives the reader the rare opportunity to
look into the lives of medieval knights on campaign and on the
battlefield; both accounts are regarded as important documents of
the period.
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Memoirs; (Paperback)
Jean De Joinville, Ethel Kate Wedgwood
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R760
Discovery Miles 7 600
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The individual narratives brought together here reveal insight into
the two hundred year struggle for possession of Jerusalem, in the
words of two soldiers who participated first-hand in the bloody
campaigns. Geffroy de Villehardouin (1150-1212?) was an appointed
marshal of Champagne, France, whose "Conquest of Constantinople"
recounts the controversial Fourth Crusade of 1204, against Eastern
Christians in the Latin empire of Constantinople. Jean de Joinville
(1224-1317) inherited the office of seneschal of Champagne at a
young age, and wrote "Life of Saint Louis" after having accompanied
King Louis IX on his first crusade and later living as a friend in
his court. These accounts, originally composed in Old French, are
considered to be some of the most accurate portrayals of the
Crusades, and give fascinating insight into the religious and
political fervor that sparked centuries of brutal battles and the
struggle for holy conquest.
Rare insights into the chivalric age through the eyewitness
accounts of two French knights
Chronicle of the Fourth Crusade and The Conquest of
Constantinople
by Geoffrey de Villehardouin
Chronicle of the Crusade of St. Louis
by Jean de Joinville
Geoffrey de Villehardouin was an eminent French knight, who set out
on the Fourth Crusade in 1199. Pivotally involved in events,
including the routing the campaign via Constantinople, his
important chronicle was written when his experiences were still
fresh in his mind. After the conquest of Byzantium he became a
military leader and earned the city of Messinopolis in Thrace and
the title Marshal of Champagne. Jean de Joinville embarked upon his
crusade-remembered by history as the Seventh Crusade-as a young man
in 1248. This Crusade was launched only seven years after the
previous one failed and actually managed to briefly occupy
Jerusalem. De Joinville was away upon campaign for six years,
returning home from Palestine in 1254, though he did not pen his
memoir until old age. This is a very 'human ' reporter full of
fears, misgivings and able to provide the reader with minute detail
of events.
This book contains two essential, first hand accounts from the time
of the crusades, and gives the reader the rare opportunity to look
into the lives of medieval knights on campaign and on the
battlefield; both accounts are regarded as important documents of
the period.
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