cover image Crusades (CL)

Crusades (CL)

Geoffrey Hindley. Carroll & Graf Publishers, $25 (320pp) ISBN 978-0-7867-1105-5

Although the Crusades constitute an inglorious chapter of medieval history, as historian Hindley (Saladin: A Biography) demonstrates in this balanced and instructive history, they were the paradigms by which later generations (including our own) measured their crusades. Chock-full of social, political and military history, Hindley's account examines the details of each of the four Crusades and the cast of characters involved. For example, with the skill of a good storyteller, Hindley chronicles the disputes between German king Conrad III and French king Louis VII, and Saladin's perspicacious leadership of the Muslims during the second Crusade (1147-1149), which resulted in Saladin's capture of Jerusalem from the Christians. Hindley ably shows that the European forces gathered for the Crusades included not only knights but also hundreds of religious pilgrims making their way to their holy city. In addition, he narrates the establishment of such associations as the Knights Templar, a group from the elite classes of society that took monastic vows of chastity and poverty as they opened a hospital for sick pilgrims. Hindley provides a helpful chronology of the Crusades and Jihad (including Arab and Turkish conquests of Christian lands), as well as appendices that list the medieval popes, rulers of the kingdom of Jerusalem, Ottoman princes and sultans and more. Hindley's valuable history offers a detailed portrait of medieval events and will show readers how the fervor for crusading is still with us today. Illustrations not seen by PW.