Full Description
The Crusades and Nature: Natural and Supernatural Environments in the Middle Ages explores the intersection of crusader studies and studies of nature. The volume addresses encounters with, responses to and representations of a broad variety of phenomena: celestial objects and events; familiar and unfamiliar fauna and flora; seascapes and landscapes; the elements and the seasons; etc. It introduces readers to crusaders' actual, but also largely or entirely imaginary encounters with natural phenomena, as well as literary references to nature in crusader sources more generally (such as, for example, animal metaphors). Finally, this project investigates the relationships between the natural and the supernatural and between nature and human-made environments. The volume will define "crusades" broadly, to include not only crusades to the East, but also crusades to frontier regions such as the Baltic and Iberian peninsula and extends to representations of crusades and nature in later medieval and early modern sources.
Contents
1. Introduction.- 2. A Land Flowing with Milk and Honey?: Agrarian Environments in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem.- 3. A Porous Boundary: Natural and Supernatural in the Hystoria de via.- 4. Crusaders as Microcosm: Soldiers, Pilgrims and their Intestinal Parasites in the Medieval Mediterranean.- 5. Real Animals in the Siege d'Antioche.- 6, The Wonders of Nature: Imaginary and Imagined Animals in the Fictional Universe of the First Crusade.- 7. Were Medieval Seamen Aware of Mediterranean Currents?.- 8. Estrela do mar: the Sea as a Destination of Crusade in the Cantigas de Santa Maria.- 9. An Encounter with Alterity: Western Chronicles of the Third and Fourth Crusade and the Natural Environment of South-Eastern Europe.- 10. The Comets of 1264 and 1299: A Comparative Look at the Near Eastern Sources.- 11. Ad terram Prusie . . . Quasi vinea de Egipto translata: The Role of the Natural World in the Written and Visual Culture of the Prussian Crusades, 1230-1390.- 12. 'The root of bitterness': Crusade and the eradication of heresy from the Occitanian landscape in Peter of les Vaux-de-Cernay's Historia Albigensis.- 13. Darkness Visible: Nature, Superstition, and Miracles in the Historia Albigensis of Peter of Vaux-de-Cernay.- 14. The Natural World as Book (Mis)Read by Paris Theologians and Competing Faiths.