The expulsion of the Christians from the Holy land in 1291 was far from being the end of the crusading movement. Crusades continued for three centuries over a vast area stretching from Morocco to Russia, and played an important role in the politics and society of late medieval Europe.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
The loss of the Holy Land 1274-1370; Greeks, Turks, and Latins - the crusade in Romania 1274-1396; the Ottoman threat 1396-1502; the anti-Turkish crusade and the European politics 1502-1580; Latin rule in Greece and the Aegean 1274-1580; the kingdoms of Cilician Armenia and Cyprus 1274-1573; the Templars and the Hospitallers 1274-1565: disaster and adaptation; the enemy within - crusading against Christians; the Iberian Peninsula - the rewards and problems of conquest 1274-1415; the end of the Reconquista - Granada and beyond 1415-1580; the crusade in north-eastern Europe 1274-1382; the end of the Baltic crusade 1382-1562; Catholic society and the crusade 1274-1580; government and the crusade 1274-1580.