Dear Friends of the RCH Society,
We are pleased to present to you our new website and blog! This is a truly momentous step for our Society and the work that has been put into this project by our various partners has been incredible. I will serve as the editor-in-chief for our blog and our goal is to turn this into a portal for a wide variety of intellectual content within the topic of the Crusades and medieval life in general. Among many others, we plan on this blog regularly featuring scholarly articles, book reviews, opinion editorials, visual art submissions, as well as news and updates from the Society itself.
I am very excited to announce that we are opening this portal to any followers who wish to contribute intellectual material to the Society and add your voice to the ongoing historical discussion. The instructions for contributing are on our website under the "Contribute" tab and I am very much looking forward to receiving submissions from our many members. However, I would not be doing my job as editor if I did not first establish our standards for submissions to any potential contributors:
-All written submissions must adhere to basic academic standards regarding grammar and spelling. If you need assistance in this (especially if English is not your first language), I can absolutely provide it, but the effort must be made by the author first.
-If you draw from other works in any writing, please properly cite your sources! As in any professional forum, plagiarism will not be tolerated.
-With any visual art, please ensure that all appropriate copyright regulations are observed.
-All submissions must be within the scope of the Crusades and those areas of medival history that touched upon them. While we certainly love all of medieval history, we wish to reserve this forum for those discussions that involve our Society's mission.
-Last, but not least, please ensure that all submissions abide by the universal standards of good taste and common decency. We will not tolerate any personal attacks, hateful discourse, disrepectful language, or deliberate targeting of any one particular group of people. We also extend this prohibition to any and all materials or endorsements of contemporary political agendas - please remember that we are historians here, not propagandists.
As the editor-in-chief for this new and exciting enterprise, I promise that, as long as the above standards are met in good faith, anyone is free and welcome to contribute to the discussion through this blog. We look forward to hearing from you and, most important of all, hope that you continue to enjoy the fruits of our work here!
Deus vult!
Rand II (Strider) - RCH Blog Editor-in-Chief
+ Real Crusades History +
Sunday, February 14, 2016
Saturday, February 13, 2016
The Granada War - Episode 1: The Dream of Queen Isabel, 1481
Friday, February 5, 2016
Real Crusades History Book Review: Knight of Jerusalem and Defender of Jerusalem
Even
the most casual students of medieval history, readers of historical fiction,
moviegoers, and the public have long been familiar with the heroic King Richard
I ‘The Lionhearted’ of England, and Salah ad-Din, Sultan of Egypt and Richard’s
chivalrous nemesis as commander of Islamic forces over the course of the Third
Crusade, the most enduringly famous of these fiercely fought holy wars that
began over nine hundred years ago. Indeed, until the 2005 release of the at-best
questionable Hollywood epic Kingdom of
Heaven, other persons and events of great importance in the years preceding
and during the Third Crusade remained the province of medieval scholars, their
students, and those with sufficient interest to explore beyond the
superficialities of cinema and, often as not, poorly researched novels.
With
Knight of Jerusalem and its sequel, Defender of Jerusalem, Dr. Helena
Schrader has brought academic rigor, her extensive knowledge of the Middle Ages
and the Crusades, and her previous experience as an author of historical
fiction to bear in recreating the lives and deeds of Baldwin IV, the ‘Leper
King’, and his loyal vassal Balian of Ibelin, two great heroes of the Holy Land
Crusades brought to long-overdue recognition by way of the well-played yet sadly
inaccurate portrayals in Kingdom of
Heaven.
Little
is to be gained by summarizing Knight of
Jerusalem and Defender of Jerusalem for
this review; a brief biography of Balian should suffice to introduce readers to
the principal
character of both volumes. Born in 1143, Balian was the third son of Barisan, lord
of the baronies of Ibelin and Ramla in the Kingdom of Jerusalem. In 1169, Balian
was granted lordship of Ibelin by his older brother Baldwin, giving
the initially landless young knight an entreƩ into the higher aristocracy of
Outremer. Balian had a significant role in leadership of the forces of the
‘Leper King’ Baldwin IV to victory over Salah ad-Din at the Battle of Montgisard
in 1177, and in the same year, entered into marriage with Maria Comnena, grandniece
of Byzantine Emperor Manuel I Comnenus and dowered widow of King Almaric I of
Jerusalem. These fortuitous events, and the gain of the Barony of Nablus by his
marriage, made Balian a powerful figure in the Crusader States.
Balian’s
reputation was further enhanced by his unwavering support for the dying Baldwin
IV and his opposition to the elevation of the incompetent Guy of Lusignan to
the throne of Jerusalem. Most important was his survival, free and unharmed, after
the disastrous Battle of Hattin in July 1187, which made possible his heroic
role in commanding the defense of Jerusalem against the forces of Salah el-Din
in September and October of the same year, and his hard promises that gained merciful
terms of surrender from the Sultan when the fall of the city became inevitable.
Dr.
Schrader brilliantly synthesizes the roles of academician and master
storyteller. In contrast with Kingdom
director Ridley Scott’s careless plot construction and deliberate distortions,
Dr. Schrader has meticulously constructed an accurate geographical, environmental,
political, and familial landscape using the proven historical record, as well
as created finely drawn lead characters from the relatively scant existing information
on the life of Balian, the more extensive records of Baldwin, and the numerous
but oft-conflicting accounts of Salah ad-Din. The many supporting and minor
characters, from the beautiful and wealthy Maria Comnena to the humblest
servant, are brought to life with equal assurance.
Though
‘Knight’ and ‘Defender’ are exhilarating page-turners from first page to last,
these very qualities of intricate construction make careful reading an agreeable
necessity. The essentials of successful medieval novels are firmly in place: abundantly
vivid and violent battle scenes; romantic situations entrancing for the modern
reader as well as true to the times; and a sense of time and place convincingly
evocative of the Middle Ages. But, beyond the pure pleasure of reading, ‘Knight’ and ‘Defender’ represent a
growing and significant trend: the entry of talented academic historians who
can write a rip-roaring story into the field of historical fiction; a trend
which can only raise the bars of careful research and historical accuracy for
all HF writers.
Needless
to say, I eagerly await the third volume of Dr. Schrader’s Jerusalem trilogy; for ‘Knight’
and ‘Defender’, five stars and the highest recommendation! ~ Scott Amis
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