This book pays homage to the work of a scholar who has substantially advanced knowledge and understanding of the medieval military-religious orders. Alan J. Forey has published over seventy meticulously researched articles on every aspect of the military-religious orders, two books on the Templars in the Corona de Aragón, and a wide-ranging survey of the military-religious orders from the twelfth to the early fourteenth centuries. His archival research has been especially significant in opening up the history of the military orders in the Iberian Peninsula. This volume comprises an…mehr
This book pays homage to the work of a scholar who has substantially advanced knowledge and understanding of the medieval military-religious orders. Alan J. Forey has published over seventy meticulously researched articles on every aspect of the military-religious orders, two books on the Templars in the Corona de Aragón, and a wide-ranging survey of the military-religious orders from the twelfth to the early fourteenth centuries. His archival research has been especially significant in opening up the history of the military orders in the Iberian Peninsula. This volume comprises an appreciation of Forey's work and a range of research that has been inspired by his scholarship or develops themes that run through his work. Articles reflect Forey's detailed research into and analysis of primary sources, as well as his work on the military orders, the crusades, the eastern Mediterranean, and the trial of the Templars. Further papers move beyond the geographical and chronological bounds of Forey's research, while still exploring his themes of the military-religious orders' relations with the Church and State.
Helen J. Nicholson is Professor of Medieval History at Cardiff University, UK. She has published extensively on the military orders, crusades, and various related subjects, including an edition of the Templar trial proceedings in Britain and Ireland. She is currently studying the inventory and estate accounts from the Templars' estates in England and Wales during the years 1308-1313 and is also writing a history of Queen Sybil of Jerusalem (1186-1190). Jochen Burgtorf is Professor of Medieval World History at California State University, Fullerton, US. His work encompasses the crusades, military orders, papacy, refugees, law, the Vikings, and world history. His publications include The Central Convent of Hospitallers and Templars (2008), as well as numerous articles in academic collections and journals.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction
PART I The Iberian Peninsula, archives, and documents
1 The Iberian military-religious orders in the earliest papal registers of supplications, 1342-1362
2 Pelayo Pérez Correa and the international ambitions of the Order of Santiago
3 The identity of Hospitallers in the Crown of Aragon and economics (XII-XIII centuries)
4 Hospitallers, Templars, and the papacy in the twelfth century: the issue of historical agency
PART II The Eastern Mediterranean
5 Descriptions of fighting, captivity, and ransom in the writings of Robert of Nantes, Patriarch of Jerusalem, in the mid-thirteenth century
6 Continuing the Continuation: Eracles 1248-1277
7 Some observations on Hospitaller agricultural activities in the Latin East prior to the fall of Acre in 1291
8 Sergeants in the Rule of the Templars
9 Shared worship at Filerimos on Hospitaller Rhodes: 1306-1421
PART III The trial of the Templars and its after-history
10 The beard and the habit in the Templars' trial: membership, rupture, resistance
11 The Templar Order in public and cultural debate in France during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries
PART IV Beyond Forey's foundations: the fourteenth, fifteenth, and sixteenth centuries
12 Cooking the books: the report of Philip de Thame and financial crisis in fourteenth-century Britain
13 Military order castles in the Holy Land and Prussia: a case for cultural history
14 A crusade against the Poles? Johannes Falkenberg's 'Satira' (1412)
15 Die welt ist kranck. The Teutonic Order and the Prussian Union at the court of Frederick III (1452/53)