ABSTRACT

Professor Jean Richard is the doyen of crusade historians. Although also well-known as one of the most distinguished historians of Burgundy, he has through publications which have been appearing for over half a century established himself as the greatest living scholar working on crusading and the Latin East. His book on twelfth-century Tripoli, published in 1945, is still the standard work on the county. In the 1950s he, and Joshua Prawer, provided a revolutionary approach towards the constitution and institutions of the kingdom of Jerusalem. He went on to pave the way for an entirely new understanding of the kingdom of Cyprus. In the 1960s he was one of a few historians who were sign-posting a more empathetic view of the ideology of crusading and the motivation of crusaders, and he developed his ideas further in recent monographs on Saint Louis and on the crusades in general. His work on Catholic missions to Asia and the role of the papacy in those enterprises is generally regarded as setting standards which few can approach. To celebrate his eightieth birthday thirty-nine colleagues have contributed articles in fields which themselves illustrate Professor Richard’s breadth of interest: the crusades, the military orders, and the Latin settlements on the Levantine mainland and the island of Cyprus.

part |96 pages

Bella Sacra

part |158 pages

Terra Sancta

chapter |14 pages

William of Tyre and the Origin of the Turks

Observations on Possible Sources of the Gesta orientalium principum

chapter |20 pages

Some Reflections on Urban Landscapes in the Kingdom of Jerusalem

Archaeological Research in Jerusalem and Acre

part |120 pages

Cyprus

chapter |13 pages

Reflections on the Mellon Madonna as a Work of Crusader Art

Links with Crusader Art on Cyprus