The Fourth Crusade and the Sack of Constantinople
Books / Paperback
Books › History › Europe › Medieval
ISBN: 0143035908 / Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group, March 2005
Traces the holy war of 1202 during which zealous western Christians, determined to liberate Jerusalem from Islam, rerouted to Constantinople, where over the course of two years they committed mass rape and murder, plundered churches, and burned countless buildings. 35,000 first printing.
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In 1202, zealous Western Christians gathered in Venice determined to liberate Jerusalem from the grip of Islam. But the crusaders never made it to the Holy Land. Steered forward by the shrewd Venetian doge, they descended instead on Constantinople, wreaking terrible devastation. The crusaders spared no one: They raped and massacred thousands, plundered churches, and torched the lavish city. By 1204, one of the great civilizations of history had been shattered. Here, on the eight hundredth anniversary of the sack, is the extraordinary story of this epic catastrophe, told for the first time outside of academia by Jonathan Phillips, a leading expert on the crusades. Knights and commoners, monastic chroniclers, courtly troubadours, survivors of the carnage, and even Pope Innocent III left vivid accounts detailing the events of those two fateful years. Using their remarkable letters, chronicles, and speeches, Phillips traces the way in which any region steeped in religious fanaticism, in this case Christian Europe, might succumb to holy war.
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