, Brepols, 2020 Hardback, 263 pages, Size:156 x 234 mm, Illustrations:2 b/w, Languages: English, French. ISBN 9782503586847.
Summary The Crown and the Cross examines the heretofore-unstudied role of the French province of Burgundy in the 'traditional' era of the crusades, from 1095-c.1220. Covering the First, Second, Third, Fourth, and Albigensian Crusades in detail, it focuses primarily on the Capetian dukes, a cadet branch of the French royal family, but uncovers substantial lay participation and some crusading traditions among Burgundian noble families as well. The book additionally uses the crusading institution to explore the development of the medieval French monarchy, and makes accessible a corpus of scholarship and documents that until now have mostly existed in French or Latin. It concludes that while piety and religion did play a central role in the experience of many everyday Burgundian crusaders, the greater political ramifications of the crusading project functioned in subtle and long-lasting ways, and had consequences for the entire institution, not just Burgundy or France. Of interest to scholars of the crusades, French history, and the formation of medieval Europe, The Crown and the Cross nuances, challenges, and expands our understanding of the intellectual genealogy of the crusades and their real-world consequences, fills a critical gap in the historiography, and poses a set of important conclusions and questions for continued study. TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter 1: Burgundy at the Dawn of the Crusades: Familial, Political, and Religious Histories -?Geography, territory, and polity: from Carolingians to Capetians, 843-1032 -?Politics, family, and power in Burgundy, 1032-95 -?Cluny and the prehistory of the Crusades: 910-c.1050 -?Battling the Muslims and Cluniac Reform: Burgundians in Iberia, 1063-87 Chapter 2: Considering Contrasts: Burgundian Participation on the First Crusade, 1095-1101 -?France and the First Crusade: Clermont, recruitment, and resistance -?Doing Christian duty: Burgundian first crusaders, 1096-99 -?Making amends: Burgundy goes on Crusade, 1101 -?Cluny and the crown of France: Odo of Burgundy and the Crusade Chapter 3: Transforming Traditions: The Burgundian Second Crusade, 1102-49 -?Dukes, counts, and kings: political change and context, 1102-45 -?Canon law and crusader-kings: creating a new political paradigm -?The Folly of Christendom? Participation and penance in the Second Crusade Chapter 4: Between King and Emperor: The Evolving Burgundies, 1143-87 -?Power struggles and dynastic development: the dukes, 1143-65 -?Burgundy and the Holy Land: marriages and expeditions, 1162-79 -?Challenges to the crown: France and Burgundy, 1180-87 Chapter 5: Intimate Enemies: Burgundy on the Third Crusade, 1187-92 - The fall of Jerusalem and initial response, 1185-88 - Burgundy Prepares for the crusade, 1188-90 - The Third Crusade, 1190-92 Chapter 6: The Early Thirteenth Century: Burgundy, France, and Rome, 1193-1223 - Marriages, politics, and papal reprisals, 1193-1200 -?The Fourth Crusade: from C teaux to Constantinople, 1200-04 -?The Crown of France, the Cistercians, and the Albigensian Crusade, 1203-09 -?Aftermath: nation building and crusading memory Conclusion Appendix: A List of Burgundian Crusaders Bibliography Index