On Warfare and the Threefold Path of the Jerusalem Pilgrimage

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A01=John Cotts
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Author_John Cotts
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biblical exegesis
Book III
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Category=HBJD
Category=NHD
Celestine III
Christian ethics
Confer
COP=United Kingdom
crusade criticism
Crusade Propagandists
Crusade Studies
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Earthly Jerusalem
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Exegesis
Fiery Serpents
God's Vicars
God’s Vicars
Guard Post
Heavenly Jerusalem
Holy Scripture
Jerusalem
Jerusalem Pilgrimage
Language_English
Legal history
Ludwig Schmugge
Medieval military pilgrimage
medieval theology
Military Pilgrimage
Moral Exegesis
Mystical Pilgrimage
Old Testament violence
Otia Imperialia
Overburdened
Overwhelming Sorrow
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penitential practice
Philip Augustus
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Ralph Niger
scriptural analysis of crusading motives
Shittim Wood
Siege Engines
softlaunch
Third Crusade
Venial Sins
Walter Map
Wanders
Younger Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032234977
  • Weight: 400g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Aug 2024
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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This volume will provide the first English translation of Ralph Niger’s critical reflection on military pilgrimage, written in the late 1180s in response to the calling of the Third Crusade. Long known to scholars as early and highly idiosyncratic critique of crusading, On Warfare and the Threefold Path of the Jerusalem Pilgrimage provides a sustained reflection on penance, the meaning of Jerusalem, and the challenges of military expeditions to the Levant. After the fall of Jerusalem in 1187, Ralph resisted the calls to crusade and instead exhorted Christians to look inward and build Jerusalem in their hearts. Throughout the four books of the work, Ralph looks to scripture for precedents for crusading and finds none. However, by ranging widely over examples of Old Testament violence and considering the Heavenly and Earthly Jerusalem together, On Warfare offers a unique perspective on how the Bible informed contemporary views of the Crusades. Methodically examining pilgrimage through the lens of scripture, Ralph surveys the entire semantic field of crusading, and concludes that Christian knights could do more good by staying home than going on a military adventure to the Holy Land.

John D. Cotts (PhD Berkeley, 2000) is a professor of history and the Chair of the Division of Social Sciences at Whitman College (USA). A cultural and intellectual historian of twelfth-century England and France, he has published two books: The Clerical Dilemma: Peter of Blois and Literate Culture in the Twelfth Century (2009), and Europe’s Long Twelfth Century: Oder, Anxiety and Adaptation 10951229 (2013).

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