The New Concise History Of The Crusades

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Thomas Madden’s Crusades is an exposition of the crusades, which occurred during the Middle Ages. The Crusades were a series of military conflicts of a religious character. They remain a very important movement in human history, and are hard to understand, as they include several themes and they lasted for a long time (about two hundred years, and the author covers a period of about eight centuries in his chronological work). Religion is, of course, the most recurrent theme we think about the Crusades, but is it the only factor to explain them? How does Madden, considered as one of the most foremost historian of the Crusades, expose them in his book? Is his work effective to understand this period of History? Madden has the ambition to relate the Crusades from the Middle Ages to today events, such as the attacks on the United States on September 11, 2001. For him, it is a recall of what happened in the past, and what can still happen today: making wars for religion. Madden wants to intrigue readers with this concise book so they go further to discover more about the Crusades.

First of all, we can underline how Madden emphasizes the fact that the Crusades were driven by religious reasons: “A crusade army was a curious mix of rich and poor, saints and sinners, motivated by every kind of pious and selfish desire, yet it could not have come into being without the pious idealism that led men to risk all to liberate the lands of Christ” (Madden, 13). The First Crusade occurred after Pope Urban II preached a sermon to liberate Jerusalem and the Holy Land. Madden expresses regrets about what he calls a “mistaken view”, that says that “religion was not an impetus but a diversion” (11). He definitely assumes a point of view that is diffe...

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...it is a clear and concise history of the Crusades. Anyone who wants to be introduced to the Crusades should start by reading it. Madden is a specialist and a good writer, and he gives the reader the opportunity to assimilate all the facts with simplicity (thanks to the maps, the clear and concise chapters). Nevertheless, some simplifications could irritate some people, as he is biased towards Christians. Some aspects of theology are not totally explained, for example the strong authority of the popes who leaded the Crusades. We can also ask for more explanations to fully understand the consequences and the causes of crusading (not only in the preface and the conclusion). The way the book is presented may have been done in order to let the reader draw his own conclusion and interpretation, even if we easily understand the point of view of the author all along the book.

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