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Index
Cover
Half Title
Series Information
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
List of figures
List of tables
Preface
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
List of contributors
Introduction: Current research and approaches
Archaeologies of the crusades
1. The urban environment
2. Rural settlements and domestic life
3. Castles
4. Ecclesiastical sites
5. Warfare and battlefield archaeology
6. Art
7. Architecture
8. Material culture: Ceramics, glass, and coins
9. Health, death, and cemeteries
10. Inscriptions
11. Landscape
This volume
Concluding remarks
Notes
1 The two sieges and the conquest of Montfort
The siege of May 1266 (664 H.)
The un-ratified treaty of 1268 (666 H)
The occupation of the castle in 1271
Dismantling of the castle
The psychological importance of the occupation of Montfort on the Franks
Notes
2 Revisiting the strange genesis of a technique: Radiocarbon dating of Frankish mortar
Appendix: Casal des Plains (Arabic Yazur, Hebrew Azor)
Notes
3 Convergences of interdisciplinary paths: The Hospitaller convent of San Giovanni di Prè in Genoa through historical and archaeological evidence (twelfth to fifteenth centuries)
The double church
The hospital
The later history of the complex
Notes
4 La redécouverte de deux châteaux de l’Hôpital en Haute-Provence: Manosque et Puimoisson exhumés par les sources écrites
Un château hérité et profondément réaménagé: Manosque
Aspect général: Plan et organes de défense
Organisation des espaces
Un chantier permanent
Châteaux hospitaliers et architecture castrale au xiiie siècle
Un château construit ex nihilo: Puimoisson
Un renouvellement de l’architecture fortifiée
Notes
5 A century and a half of crusader rule in the town and lordship of Arsur
Current state of research
Sources and methods
Topography and development of the town of Arsur according to historical sources
Historical foundations of the dominion
Natural landscapes
Early Islamic period
Town
Hinterland
Crusader period
Town
Hinterland
Mamluk period
Town
Hinterland
Conclusion
Notes
6 Bread for all: Double-chambered baking ovens in castles of the military orders; Le Crac des Chevaliers (Syria), Le Chastellet du gué de Jacob, Belvoir, and Arsur (Israel)
Le Crac des Chevaliers (Qalʿat al-Ḥuṣn, Syria)
Le Chastellet du Gué de Jacob (Vadum Jacob/Ateret/Bayt al-Aḥzan, Israel)
Belvoir (Coquet/Kokhav ha-Yarden/Kawkab al-Hawā, Israel)
Arsur (Apollonia-Arsuf, Israel)
The use of the upper chambers
The use of the lower chambers
A short description of bread making
Capacity of ovens and working surface
Discussion: Double-chambered baking ovens
Notes
7 Radiographie du Tombeau des Patriarches
L’invention (1119)
L’apport des récits de pèlerinages et autres témoignages postérieurs (1153–1660)
Les données archéologiques (1923–1981)
Prospection géophysique: Description des méthodes proposées
Détection radar
Mesure de la vitesse ultrasonore et de l’épaisseur dans un bloc de pierre par méthode échographique
Notes
8 Gothic for all: From macro- to microarchitecture across religious boundaries in Lusignan and Venetian Cyprus
Architecture and religious cohabitation in the urban centres of Europe and the Latin East: From synagogues and Protestant churches to Jerusalem’s Armenian cathedral
Gothic architecture for Greek cathedrals in Lusignan and Venetian Cyprus: a polyphony of approaches serving a common goal?
Building up by scaling down: Gothic microarchitecture in Latin and Greek usage in Lusignan Cyprus
The Gothic as inflected urban koine: Towards a contextual understanding of religious architecture in the Latin East
Notes
9 Villehardouin’s castle of Grand Magne (Megali Maini): A re-assessment of the evidence for its location
Introduction
The Frankish conquest of the Peloponnese: Phase I
The Byzantine Mani and the Melingoi
The Frankish conquest of the Peloponnese: Phase II
The evidence from the Chronicles of Morea for the location of Grand Magne
Geography
Other criteria
Evidence from other historical sources for the location of Grand Magne
Evidence from the castle lists for the location of Grand Magne
Evidence from the Venetian chronicles and archives for the location of Grand Magne
Evidence from travellers’ accounts for the location of Grand Magne
Summary of evidence for the location of Grand Magne
The main candidates for Grand Magne and their proponents
Porto Kayio
Kastro tis Orias
Ano Poula
Tigani
Kelepha
Assessment of candidates
Other castles built by William II
The case for Oitylo
Oitylo as a fortification: The textual evidence
Oitylo as a fortification: The archaeological evidence
Oitylo as Grand Magne: The 1336 land grant
Conclusions
Notes
10 Civitas regis regvm omnivm: Inventing a royal seal in Jerusalem, 1100–1118
Notes
11 Change or continuity? Rural settlement in Eastern Galilee at the time of the crusades: The Hospitaller estate of Belvoir
The Hospitaller estate of Belvoir in the twelfth century
Present state of the documentation
Boundaries of the Hospitaller estate (1170–1187)
A boundary stone from Danna?
A general continuity of settlement
Territorial structures and organisation
Conclusion
Appendix 1: Hospitallers casalia in the castellany of Belvoir
Notes
12 Archaeothanatology, burials, and cemeteries: Perspectives for crusader archaeology
Introduction
An “archaeoanthropological” analysis of the cemeteries in the Latin East
A demonstration of archaeothanatological analysis: The grave S2SP8 in ‘Atlit cemetery
An example of archaeoanthropological analysis: Area 2 of ‘Atlit cemetery
Future perspectives for the research on the cemetery of ‘Atlit and funerary spaces of the Latin East
Notes
13 Overlooked ordnance: Artillery projectiles of the crusader period
Component remains
Terminology and technology
Projectiles in context
Projectiles out of context
Contemporary European projectiles
Flat spots
Impact signatures
Conclusion
Notes
14 The inscriptions of the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem: New corpus and perspectives
Review and methodology for a new corpus
A case study or how to make an inscription speak
History of the transmission
Graphic description and transcription
Material and typology of inscription
The formulas
Conclusion: New perspectives
Notes
15 Ascalon,1 a landscape of conflicts: Some landscape archaeology perspectives on conflicts from the days of the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem
Introduction
Ascalon as a combat zone during the Kingdom of Jerusalem
Main methodological issues
Landscape archeology and battlefield archeology as tools for reconstructing historical events
The battlefield
The road system and the co-axial field systems
The Battle of Ascalon (1099)
Siege systems
Notes
16 The castle chapel of Arsur: New evidence for its location and architecture
Introduction
Location and geological background
Timeline of construction
The castle’s outer walls
The architectural plan of the western tower
Building materials
Sandstone
Beach rock
Limestone
Marble
Castle chapel plan
Building elements
Rib vault fragments
Oculus
Jamb capital
Conclusion
Notes
Index
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