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Guillaume de Machaut, a man famous for both his poetry and his
musical compositions, wrote his Prise d'Alexandrie (or Capture of
Alexandria) just a few years after the death of his hero, King
Peter I of Cyprus (1359-69). It is a verse history of Peter's
reign, and was Machaut's last major literary work. Peter's
ancestors had ruled the island of Cyprus since the 1190s, and in
1365 Peter gained notoriety throughout western Europe as leader of
a crusading expedition which captured the Egyptian port of
Alexandria. His forces, however, were unable to retain control, and
Peter was left with a war against the Egyptian sultan. It was his
increasingly desperate measures to continue the struggle and carry
opinion with him that resulted in his murder in 1369. Machaut
relied on information relayed by French participants in Peter's
wars, but although he was not an eyewitness of these events, his
account is independent of other narratives of the reign which were
written in Cyprus apparently under the auspices of the king's
heirs.
There was a time seven centuries ago when Famagusta's wealth and
renown could be compared to that of Venice or Constantinople. The
Cathedral of St Nicholas in the main square of Famagusta, serving
as the coronation place for the Crusader Kings of Jerusalem after
the fall of Acre in 1291, symbolised both the sophistication and
permanence of the French society that built it. From the port
radiated impressive commercial activity with the major
Mediterranean trade centres, generating legendary wealth,
cosmopolitanism, and hedonism, unsurpassed in the Levant. These
halcyon days were not to last, however, and a 15th century observer
noted that, following the Genoese occupation of the city, 'a
malignant devil has become jealous of Famagusta'. When Venice
inherited the city, it reconstructed the defences and had some
success in revitalising the city's economy. But the end for
Venetian Famagusta came in dramatic fashion in 1571, following a
year long siege by the Ottomans. Three centuries of neglect
followed which, combined with earthquakes, plague and flooding,
left the city in ruins. The essays collected in this book represent
a major contribution to the study of Medieval and Renaissance
Famagusta and its surviving art and architecture and also propose a
series of strategies for preserving the city's heritage in the
future. They will be of particular interest to students and
scholars of Gothic, Byzantine and Renaissance art and architecture,
and to those of the Crusades and the Latin East, as well as the
Military Orders. After an introductory chapter surveying the
history of Famagusta and its position in the cultural mosaic that
is the Eastern Mediterranean, the opening section provides a series
of insights into the history and historiography of the city. There
follow chapters on the churches and their decoration, as well as
the military architecture, while the final section looks at the
history of conservation efforts and assesses the work that now
needs to be done.
This second collection of papers by Peter Edbury focuses primarily
on the literature either composed in the Latin East or closely
associated with it. The legal treatises from the kingdom of
Jerusalem and from Cyprus and Antioch have long been recognized as
providing insights into the juridical and social history of these
places in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and some of the
papers re-issued here reflect the author's work in re-editing two
of the most famous of these treaties, those by John of Ibelin-Jaffa
and Philip of Novara. The studies on historical literature are
chiefly concerned with vernacular texts, most notably the Old
French translation of William of Tyre and its Continuations, again
much a result of his current work on a new edition of the
Continuations and the associated text known as La Chronique
d'Ernoul. Other papers concerned with aspects of the narrative
traditions that furnish a significant part of our knowledge of
Lusignan Cyprus in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, and
with which in one way or another Peter Edbury has been engaged
since the early 1970s.
This is a complete collection in modern English of the key texts
describing Saladin's conquest of Jerusalem in October 1187 and the
Third Crusade, which was Christendom's response to the catastrophe.
The largest and most important text in the book is a translation of
the fullest version of the Old French Continuation of William Tyre
for the years 1184-97. This key medieval narrative poses problems
for the historian in that it achieved its present form in the
1240s, though it clearly incorporates much earlier material.
Professor Edbury's authoritative introduction, notes and maps help
interpretation of this and other contemporary texts which are
included in this volume, making it an invaluable resource for
teachers and students of the crusades.
A study of the career of John of Ibelin, followed by his record of
the institutions, government and resources of the kingdom of
Jerusalem in the 13c. John of Ibelin, count of Jaffa and Ascalon
(d. 1266), was one of the foremost politicians in the kingdom of
Jerusalem in the mid-thirteenth century; his family was prominent
in the Latin East, and linked by ties of marriage to theroyal
dynasties of both Jerusalem and Cyprus. John's career and his
ancestors' rise to prominence are the subject of the first half of
this book. The second concentrates on John's most lasting
achievement, his treatise on the pleading, procedures and customs
of the High Court of the kingdom of Jerusalem, which includes
descriptions of the ecclesiastical hierarchy, the juridical
structure and the military capacity of the kingdom; this material
provides invaluable insights into the kingdom's institutions,
government and resources; it is here re-edited from the best
surviving manuscripts and discussed in detail. Dr PETER W. EDBURY
is Reader in Medieval History at the University of Wales, Cardiff.
Guillaume de Machaut, a man famous for both his poetry and his
musical compositions, wrote his Prise d'Alexandrie (or Capture of
Alexandria) just a few years after the death of his hero, King
Peter I of Cyprus (1359-69). It is a verse history of Peter's
reign, and was Machaut's last major literary work. Peter's
ancestors had ruled the island of Cyprus since the 1190s, and in
1365 Peter gained notoriety throughout western Europe as leader of
a crusading expedition which captured the Egyptian port of
Alexandria. His forces, however, were unable to retain control, and
Peter was left with a war against the Egyptian sultan. It was his
increasingly desperate measures to continue the struggle and carry
opinion with him that resulted in his murder in 1369. Machaut
relied on information relayed by French participants in Peter's
wars, but although he was not an eyewitness of these events, his
account is independent of other narratives of the reign which were
written in Cyprus apparently under the auspices of the king's
heirs.
This is a complete collection in modern English of the key texts
describing Saladin's conquest of Jerusalem in October 1187 and the
Third Crusade, which was Christendom's response to the catastrophe.
The largest and most important text in the book is a translation of
the fullest version of the Old French Continuation of William Tyre
for the years 1184-97. This key medieval narrative poses problems
for the historian in that it achieved its present form in the
1240s, though it clearly incorporates much earlier material.
Professor Edbury's authoritative introduction, notes and maps help
interpretation of this and other contemporary texts which are
included in this volume, making it an invaluable resource for
teachers and students of the crusades.
The island of Cyprus was conquered from its Byzantine ruler by
Richard I of England in 1191 during the Third Crusade, and remained
under western rule until the Ottoman conquest of 1570-1. From the
1190s until the 1470s the island was a kingdom governed by the
members of the Lusignan family. The Lusignans, who hailed from
Poitou in western France, imposed a new European landowning class
and a Catholic ecclesiastical hierarchy upon the indigenous Greek
population. Nevertheless, their regime provided long periods of
political stability and, until the late fourteenth century, a
considerable period of prosperity. In the thirteenth century the
island was closely linked to the Latin states in Syria and the Holy
Land by political, social and economic ties and, with the fall of
the last Christian strongholds to the Muslims in 1291, it became
the most easterly outpost of Latin Christendom in the
Mediterranean. This new study, which is based on original research,
traces the fortunes of Cyprus under its royal dynasty and its role
in the Crusades and in the confrontation of Christian and Muslim in
the Near East until the 1370s. It is both a major contribution to
the history of the Crusades in the Levant and the only scholarly
study of medieval Cyprus currently available.
William, archbishop of Tyre from 1175 to c.1184, was a churchman,
royal servant and scholar who lived in the Latin Kingdom of
Jerusalem. Born in Jerusalem around 1130, he studied in western
Europe for almost twenty years until 1165, when he returned to the
East to begin his career in public life. He left to posterity a
monumental history in which he described the events of the First
Crusade (1095 9) and recorded the fortunes of the western rulers of
the states subsequently founded in Syria and the Holy Land down to
his own day. The value of his work as an example of twelfth-century
historiography and as a source of information for the events
described has long been recognized. In this study the authors
consider William as a public figure and historian, and examine the
influences which bore upon his writing and the way in which he
fashioned his material. They then go on to examine what he had to
say about certain topics - the monarchy in Jerusalem, the Church,
the papacy, the Byzantine empire and the Crusade - and why he wrote
as he did.
This second collection of papers by Peter Edbury focuses primarily
on the literature either composed in the Latin East or closely
associated with it. The legal treatises from the kingdom of
Jerusalem and from Cyprus and Antioch have long been recognized as
providing insights into the juridical and social history of these
places in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and some of the
papers re-issued here reflect the author's work in re-editing two
of the most famous of these treaties, those by John of Ibelin-Jaffa
and Philip of Novara. The studies on historical literature are
chiefly concerned with vernacular texts, most notably the Old
French translation of William of Tyre and its Continuations, again
much a result of his current work on a new edition of the
Continuations and the associated text known as La Chronique
d'Ernoul. Other papers concerned with aspects of the narrative
traditions that furnish a significant part of our knowledge of
Lusignan Cyprus in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, and
with which in one way or another Peter Edbury has been engaged
since the early 1970s.
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