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The Debate on the Crusades, 1099–2010

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This is the first book-length study to chart how the dramatic events of 30 generations ago have been understood, shaped and manipulated by writers in successive periods since and to show how modern...
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  • 01 May 2011
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David Hume, the eighteenth century philosopher, famously declared that ‘the crusades engrossed the attention of Europe and have ever since engaged the curiosity of man kind’. This is the first book length study of how succeeding generations from the First Crusade in 1099 to the present day have understood, refashioned, moulded and manipulated accounts of these medieval wars of religion to suit changing contemporary circumstances and interests. The crusades have attracted some of the leading historical writers, scholars and controversialists from John Foxe (of Book of Martyrs fame), to the philosophers G.W. Leibniz, Voltaire and David Hume, to historians such as William Robertson, Edward Gibbon and Leopold Ranke.

Accessibly written, a history of histories and historians, the book will be of interest to students and researchers of crusading history from sixth form to postgraduate level and beyond and to cultural historians of the use of the past and of medievalism.

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Price: £19.99
Pages: 272
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Series: Issues in Historiography
Publication Date: 01 May 2011
ISBN: 9780719073212
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

HISTORY / Europe / Medieval, Historiography, HISTORY / Military / Wars & Conflicts (Other), Specific wars and campaigns, Military history

REVIEWS Icon

[An] Engaging and extremely worthwhile book
Journal of Ecclesiastical History 63 (3) July 2012


'It is Christopher Tyerman’s great achievement to have given us a coherent narrative which spans the very beginnings of recording the First Crusade to today’s analytical approaches to a medieval movement which has fascinated different ages for different reasons.'
Christoph T. Maie, Crusades, 2012

General Editor’s foreword
Preface
Introduction
1. Medieval views on the Crusades
2. Reformation, revision, texts and nations 1500-1700
3. Reason, faith and progress: a contested Enlightenment
4. Empathy and materialism: keeping the crusade up to date
5. Scholarship, politics and the Golden Age of research
6. The end of colonial consensus
7. Erdmann and Runciman and the end of tradition
8. Definitions and directions
Epilogue
Selective guide to further reading
Index