Riant, P., ‘Innocent III, Philippe de Souabe et Boniface de Montferrat’, reproduced in D. E. Queller,
Latin Conquest of Constantiniple,
New York, 1971, 32-8
Riley-Smith, J. S. C.,
The First Crusade and the Idea of Crusading,
London, 1986
Riley-Smith, J. S. C., ‘Family Traditions and Participation in the Second Crusade’,
The Second Crusade and the Cistercians,
ed. M. Gervers, London, 1992, 101—8.
Riley-Smith, J. S. C.,
The First Crusaders, 1095-1131,
Cambridge, 1997
Riley-Smith, J. S. C., ‘Casualties and Knights on the First Crusade’,
Crusades
1 (2002), 13-28
Riley-Smith, J. S. C., ‘Islam and the Crusades in History and Imagination, 8 November 1898-II September 2001’,
Crusades 2
(2003), 151—67
Riley-Smith, L. & Riley-Smith, J. S. C.,
The Crusades: Idea and Reality,
1095—1274, London, 1981
Robinson, I. S.,
The Papacy, 1073-1198: Continuity and Innovation,
Cambridge, 1990
Ross, L. R.,
Relations between the Latin East and the West, 1187-1291,
unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of London, 2003
Runciman, S.,
A History of the Crusades,
3 vols, Cambridge, 1951-4
Runciman, S., ‘Blachernae Palace and Its Decoration’,
Studies in Memory of David Talbot Rice,
Edinburgh, 1975, 277-83
Sapir Abulafia, A.,
Christians and Jews in the Twelfth-Century Renaissance,
London,
1
995
Sarris, P., ‘The Eastern Empire from Constantine to Heraclius (306-641)’,
The Oxford History of Byzantium,
ed. C. Mango, Oxford, 2002, 19-59
Sayers, J. E.,
Innocent III
:
A Leader of Europe, 1198—1216,
London, 1994
Sesan, M., ‘La flotte Byzantine à l’ époque des Comnenes et des Anges (1081—1204)’,
Byzantinoslavica
21 (1960), 48—53
Setton, K. M. (ed.),
The Papacy and the Levant,
1204—1571, 4 vols, Philadelphia, I976-84
Siberry, E., ‘Images of the Crusades in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries’,
The Oxford Illustrated History of the Crusades,
ed. J. S. C. Riley-Smith, Oxford, 1995, 365—85
Siberry, E.,
The New Crusaders: Images of the Crusade in the 19th and Early 2Oth Centuries,
Aldershot, 2000
Spicher, E.,
Geschichte des
Basler Münsters,
Basel, 1999
Spufford, P.,
Power and Profit: The Merchant in Medieval Europe,
London, 2002
Stahl, A. H., ‘The Coinage of Venice in the Age of Enrico Dandolo’,
Medieval and Renaissance Venice,
ed. E. E. Kitell & T F. Madden, Urbana, 1999, 124-40
Stephenson, P., ‘Anna Comnena’s Alexiad as a Source for the Second Crusade’,
Journal of Medieval History 29
(2003), 41—54
Strickland, M.,
War and Chivalry: The Conduct and Perception of War in England and Normandy,
1066—1217, Cambridge, 1996
Van Millingen, A.,
Byzantine Constantinople: The Walls of the City and Adjoining Historical Sites,
London, 1899
Winkelmann, E., ‘Phillip von Schwaben und Otto IV von Braunschweig’, reproduced in D. E. Queller,
Latin Conquest of Constantinople,
New York, 1971, 26—9.
Wolff, R. L., ‘Baldwin of Flanders and Hainault, First Latin Emperor of Constantinople: His Life, Death and Resurrection, 1172—1225’,
Speculum
27 (1952), 281—322
Zorzi, A.,
Venice
697-1797:
A City, A Republic, An Empire,
Woodstock, NY, 1999
Index
Abydos
Achaea
Acre, siege of
Adrianople
battle of
Boniface’s siege of
revolt
adultery
Aigeline of Vaudémont
Aimery, King of Jerusalem
Alberic of Trois-Fontaines
Aleaumes of Clari
share of spoils
Alexandria
Alexius I Comnenus, Emperor
Alexius III, Emperor
capture of
character
counter-attacks
diplomatic negotiations
failure of
failure to prepare
flees amphibious landing
flees Constantinople
lack of determination
and Murtzuphlus
relations with Venetians
takes up arms
withdrawal
Alexius (Angelos), Prince (later Alexius IV, Emperor)
appeal to keep crusaders together
asks crusaders’ for help against rival
betrayed by Murtzuphlus
character
claim to Byzantine throne
on Corfu
coronation of
and crusaders’ demand for fulfilment of obligations
enters Constantinople
financial situation
on the Greek Orthodox Church
informed of Isaac’s restoration
joins the crusaders
justification for actions
lack of experience
letter to pope
meetings with Boniface of Montferrat
murder of
Niketas Choniates on
offer to crusaders
parades outside Constantinople
political situation
popularity of
promises made
protests against
relationship with Isaac
relationship with the crusaders
requests crusaders’ continued support
returns from tour
seizes ecclesiastical ornaments
support for
tours provinces
Alexius Ducas, ‘Murtzuphlus’
and Alexius III
anti-crusader stance
the assaults of 1204
attacks foraging party
attacks on crusaders
capture and execution of
character
financial situation
flees
humiliation of
military capability
and the murder of Alexius
negotiations with Dandolo
and Nicholas Kannavos
reorganises imperial administration
seizes throne
Almeria
Amalric, King of Jerusalem
Andrew of Dureboise
Andronicus Comnenus, Emperor
Andros
anti-Semitism
Antioch, siege of, 1097—8
Arnold the Old
Arsuf, Battle of, 1191
Ascalon
Baldwin I, King of Jerusalem
Baldwin II, Emperor
Baldwin IV King of Jerusalem
Baldwin of Flanders, Count
on achievement
and Adrianople
on Alexius
appeal to keep crusaders together
arrival in Venice
and the assaults of 1204
and the Byzantine counter-attack
captured
in Constantinople
on Corfu
coronation of
crusading heritage
on Dandolo
election as emperor
as emperor
exploits Byzantine withdrawal
financial situation as emperor
at first siege
impostor appears
imprisonment and death of
justification for actions
and ‘The March Pact’
on the murder of Alexius
and Murtzuphlus
and the offer from Prince Alexius
popularity of
relationship with his wife
rift with Boniface
on the sack of Constantinople
takes over imperial tent
takes the cross
threats facing
on volume of spoils
wife dies
at Zara
Bar-le-Duc, count of
Basle
Beha ad-Din
Benjamin of Tudela
Bernard of Clairvaux, Abbot
on treatment of Jews
Berthold of Katzenellenbogen
Blanche of Champagne
Bohemond, Prince of Antioch
Boniface, marquis of Montferrat
appeal to keep crusaders together
arrival in Venice
audience with the pope
avoids participating in the siege of Zara
background
and Baldwin’s election
as candidate for emperor
character
death of
enters the Bucoleon palace
at first siege
granted kingdom of Thessalonica
and ‘The March Pact’
marries Isaac’s widow
meetings with Alexius
motivation for attacking Constantinople
and the offer from Prince Alexius
offered command
parades Prince Alexius
preparations
restores cash flow