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IMC 2024: Sessions

Session 624: Crises and Turning Points in the Crusades and the Latin East, 12th-13th Centuries, II: Rulership in Outremer

Tuesday 2 July 2024, 11:15-12:45

Sponsor:Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Organiser:Alan V. Murray, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Moderator/Chair:Joanna Phillips, School of History, University of Leeds
Paper 624-aA Prince in Crisis?: Roger of Salerno in Antioch
(Language: English)
Francesca Petrizzo, School of Humanities, University of Glasgow / Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Index terms: Crusades and Politics and Diplomacy
Paper 624-bA Kingdom in Crisis: The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Crusading Movement between the Fall of Edessa and the Arrival of the Second Crusade, 1144-1148
(Language: English)
Adam Aaron, Department of History, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Index terms: Crusades and Politics and Diplomacy
Paper 624-cThe Marriage of Isabella of Jerusalem and Conrad de Montferrat: A Response to, or Cause of, Crisis?
(Language: English)
Tricia Jackson, Department of Archaeology, Classics & History, University of New England, Armidale, New South Wales
Index terms: Crusades, Politics and Diplomacy and Women's Studies
Abstract

The history of the crusades shows many different aspects of crisis and transition. Crisis phenomena show up again and again in different constellations: the mobilisation and recruitment of crusaders could run into unforeseen difficulties; financial problems could delay departure; participation in crusading might be delayed or prevented by the need to secure land holdings, or by political objectives. A crusade could also trigger crises in the crusaders‘ region of origin: rights and lands might be claimed by rivals; episcopal property could be contested during a bishop‘s absence; the death of a crusader could plunge his family‘s rule into crisis. The course and aims of entire crusades might be also be threatened by internal disputes, unexpected defeats or setbacks, as with the defeat of the popular expeditions of 1096 or the diversion of the Fourth Crusade to Constantinople. Finally, the very character of the crusade movement could be affected by wider political and religious events, such as the fall of Acre in 1291, the suppression of the Templars, the Ottoman invasion of the Balkans, or the Protestant Reformation. In this series of sessions we wish to discuss the phenomena of crisis and significant turning points in the organisation, planning, recruitment and execution of crusades, as well as major phases of transition and change in the wider character of crusading.