Акра и её падения. Исследования об истории города крестоносцев / Под ред. Дж. Франса (2018):
In the crusader period Acre was in many ways a remarkable place, but the most striking thing about its history is the number of times it fell to enemies. The present volume "Acre and Its Falls" is unusual in that it analyses a wide range of aspects of the history of Acre across the crusader period, combining political, military and cultural history, with a notable emphasis on the memory of the city in Europe. This may have been a city famous for its falls, but most certainly not for them alone.
Contents
Introduction 1
John France
1 The Capture of Acre, 1104, and the Importance of Sea Power in the Conquest of the Littoral 13
Susan B. Edgington
2 Clausewitz’s Wounded Lion: a Fighting Retreat at the Siege of Acre, November 1190 30
John D. Hosler
3 Martyrs for the Faith: Denmark, the Third Crusade and the Fall of Acre in 1191 49
Janus Møller Jensen
4 New Evidence for Identifying the Site of the Teutonic Compound in Acre 69
Adrian J. Boas and Georg Philipp Melloni
5 John of Antioch and the Perceptions of Language and Translation in Thirteenth-Century Acre 90
J. Rubin
6 Did the Templars Lose the Holy Land? The Military Orders and the Defense of Acre, 1291 105
Paul F. Crawford
7 The Fall of Acre, 1291, and Its Effect on Cyprus 116
Anne Gilmour-Bryson
8 The Fall of Acre in 1291 in the Court of Medieval Public Opinion 130
Charles W. Connell
9 Thadeus of Naples on the Fall of Acre 148
Iris Shagrir
10 The Fall of Acre (1291): Considerations of Annalists in Genoa, Pisa, and Venice (13th/14th–16th Centuries) 166
Marie-Luise Favreau-Lilie
Bibliography 183
Index 207
Рецензия: http://deremilitari.org/2018/09/acre-and-its-fallsstudies-in-the-history-of-a-crusader-city-edited-by-john-france-brian-ditcham/