The Dream And The Tomb: A History Of The Crusades

Home > Other > The Dream And The Tomb: A History Of The Crusades > Page 51
The Dream And The Tomb: A History Of The Crusades Page 51

by Robert Payne


  Wright, Thomas. Early Travels in Palestine. New York: KTAV Publishing House, 1968.

  Yewdale, R. B. Bohemond I, Prince of Antioch. Ann Arbor: University Microfilms, 1974.

  Index

  The index that appeared in the print version of this title was intentionally removed from the eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below

  Accursed Tower (Acre)

  Acre. See also James, Bishop of

  Adana

  Adela of Normandy, Countess of Blois

  Adhémar of Monteil, Bishop of Le Puy

  al-Adid, Caliph

  al-Adil (Saphadin)

  al-Adil II, Sultan

  al-Adiliya

  Adrianople

  Adriatic Sea

  al-Afdal, son of Saladin

  Agnes of Courtenay

  Agnes, Princess of France

  Ahmed ibn-Tulun, governor of Egypt

  Aigues-Mortes

  Aila

  Aimery of Limoges, Patriarch of Antioch

  Aisne, river

  Aix. See Albert

  Aix-la-Chapelle

  Akhenaton, Pharaoh

  Akka. See Acre

  Aksungur al-Bursuqi (the White Falcon), Emir of Mosul

  Albara

  Albara, Bishop of. See Peter of Narbonne

  Alberic Clements

  Albert of Aix, historian

  Albert of Bethlehem

  Albigenses

  Aleaumes of Clari

  Aleppo

  Alexander the Great

  Alexandretta

  Alexandria

  Alexius I, Comnenus, Emperor

  Alexius II, Comnenus, Emperor

  Alexius III, Emperor

  Alexius IV, Angelus, Emperor of Byzantium

  Alexius V, Ducas, Murzuphlus, Emperor

  Alfonso, Count of Poitou

  Alfonso VI, King of Leon and Castile

  Alice, Princess of Antioch

  Alix, Queen of Lusignan

  Aljighidai, Mongol viceroy of Persia

  Almodis, Princess of Barcelona

  Almoravides

  Aloysia

  Alp Arslan, Sultan

  Altuntash, Armenian nobleman

  Amadeus of Savoy

  Amalfi

  Amathus

  Amaury, King

  Amaury of Montfort

  Amaury Barlais, bailli of Cyprus

  Ambrose, poet

  Amiens

  Amr ibn-al-As

  Anatolia

  Andrew II, King of Hungary

  Andrew of Dureboise

  Andrew of Longjumeau, friar

  Andrew, Saint

  Andronicus Comnenus

  Angevins

  Anjou. See also Charles; Fulk; Sibylla

  Anna Comnena, historian

  Antioch, Antiochenes See also Chanson; Raymond, Prince of

  Anti-Taurus mountains

  Aphrodite, Roman Temple of

  Apulia

  Aqaba

  al-Aqsa Mosque

  Aquino. See Thomas

  Aquitaine. See also Eleanor

  Ardennes

  al-Arish (Egypt)

  Armenia, Armenians

  Arnulf of Chocques, Patriarch of Jerusalem

  Arslan. See Alp; Kilij

  Arsuf, seaport

  Arthur, Duke of Brittany

  Artois. See Robert

  Ascalon

  Ascanian lake

  Ashmun-Tannah, town

  al-Ashraf Khalil, Sultan

  Assassins

  Assir

  Athlit

  Athos, Mount

  Attalia, plain of

  Austria. See Leopold

  Ayati

  Ayyadieh

  Azaz

  Azerbaijan

  Baalbek

  “Bad Neighbor,” siege engine

  Baghdad. See also Harun

  Baha ad-Din, chronicler

  Baibars al-Bundukdari, Sultan

  Balak

  Baldwin I, Count of Edessa, King of Jerusalem

  Baldwin II, of Le Bourg

  Baldwin III, King of Jerusalem

  Baldwin IV, King of Jerusalem

  Baldwin V, King

  Baldwin, Count of Flanders and Hainault

  Baldwin of Carron

  Baldwin of Mons, Count of Hainault

  Baldwin of Ramleh

  Balian of Ibelin

  Balian, Lord of Sidon

  Banyas, fortress of

  Bar-le-Duc. See Thibault

  Barre. See Everard

  Beaufort, castle of

  Beaujeu. See William

  Beauvais, Bishop of

  Beben

  Beirut

  Beisan

  Beit Nuba

  Bek’aa, valley of

  Belfort, castle of

  Belgium

  Belgrade

  Berengaria, Princess of Navarre, Queen of England

  Bernard, Bishop of Tripoli

  Bernard of Clairvaux

  Bethlehem. See also Albert

  Béthune. See Robert

  Bilbeis

  Blachernae Palace

  Black Sea

  Blanche, Queen of Castile

  Blois. See Louis

  Bohemond I, Prince of Otranto and Antioch

  Bohemond II

  Bohemond IV, Prince of Antioch and Count of Tripoli

  Bohemond V, Prince of Antioch and Count of Tripoli

  Bohemond VI, Prince of Antioch and Count of Tripoli

  Bohemond VII

  Boniface VIII, Pope

  Boniface, Marquis of Montferrat

  Bosphorus

  Bosra

  Botrun. See also Lucia

  Bougie

  Bretons

  Bridge, Gate of the

  Brienne. See also Gauthier IV; John

  Brindisi

  Bruges

  Bucoleon Palace

  Buffavento, fortress of

  Bulgaria, Bulgarians

  Burgundy; Duke of. See also Hugh IV; Odo

  Buri of Damascus

  Butumites, Manuel

  Caesarea. See also Hugh

  Cafran. See William

  Cagliari

  Cairo

  Calycadmus River

  Canopic Way

  Capchik, governor of Damascus

  Cappadocia

  Carmel, Mount

  Carpenel, Count Geldemar

  Carron. See Baldwin

  Carthage

  Caspian Sea

  Catalans

  Cecilia, Countess of Tripoli

  Cefalù, seaport

  Chalcedon

  Châlus, castle of

  Champagne. See also Henry; Mary; Thibault

  Chanson d’Antioche

  Charlemagne

  Charles of Anjou, King of Sicily

  Charles of Heristal. See Martel, Charles

  Chartres. See Fulcher; Louis; William

  Chastel Pèlerin

  Châtillion-sur-Marne

  Chinon

  Chocques. See Arnulf

  Chronicle of the Crusade of St. Louis

  Cibotos. See Civetot

  Cilicia

  Citadel Rock

  Cîteaux, abbey at

  Civetot

  Clairvaux, Abbot of

  Clari. See Aleaumes; Robert

  Clement IV, Pope

  Clermont. See also Matthew

  Cloyes. See also Stephen

  Cluny

  Cologne

  Coloman, King of Hungary

  Comnena. See Anna; Maria; Theodora

  Comnenus. See Alexius; Isaac; John; Manuel

  Compiègne

  Conon de Montaigue

  Conrad III, King of Germany

  Conrad IV

  Conrad of Montferrat, King of Jerusalem

  Conradin of Hohenstaufen

  Constance, Princess of Antioch, daughter of Bohemond II


  Constantine, Emperor

  Constantine Lascara, Byzantine general

  Constantinople

  Corazzo, monastery of

  Corfu

  Cotulossa, Mongol chieftain

  Courtenay. See Agnes; Joscelin I, II

  Coxon

  Cresson, Springs of

  Crete

  Cyprus, Cypriots. See also Hugh

  Cyrus, Patriarch of Alexandria

  Daimbert, Archbishop of Pisa

  Dalmatia

  Damascus, Damascenes. See also Duqaq

  Damascus Gate

  Damietta, Damiettans

  Danes

  Danishmend

  Danube, river

  Dardanelles

  Daron

  Dartmouth

  David, Gate of

  David, King

  David, Tower of

  Dead Sea

  Decapolis

  De Nangis, historian

  Desiderius. See Peter

  Deuil. See Odo

  Develtos

  Dieu d’Amour, fortress of

  Doge of Venice

  Dog, Gate of the

  Dog River

  Domenico. See Michiel

  Dome of the Rock

  Domfrom. See Radulph

  Dorylaeum

  Dreux. See Peter

  Duke, Gate of the

  Duqaq, Sultan of Damascus

  Durazzo

  Dureboise. See Andrew

  Dyrrhachium

  Eastern Gate

  Ecry, Castle of

  Edessa. See also Matthew

  Edmund Allenby, Sir, General

  Edward I, King of England

  Egypt, Egyptians

  Eleanor of Aquitaine, Queen of France

  Elvira

  England, English

  Enrico Dandolo, Doge of Venice

  Enseignements, document

  Ernoul, chronicler

  Esdraelon, Plain of

  Estanor

  Ethiopia, Ethiopians

  Eudes de Lagery. See Urban II

  Eugenius III, Pope

  Euphrates, river

  Eusebius

  Eustace II, Count of Boulogne

  Eustace III

  Everard of Barre, Master of the Temple

  “Evil Kinsman,” siege engine

  Excalibur

  Exeter

  Fakhr ad-Din

  Famagusta

  Faris ad-Din Octai, Mameluke general

  Faro River

  Fatimid dynasty

  Fauvel, a bay horse

  Ferentino, Italy

  Flanders. See also Baldwin; Henry; Philip; Robert; Thierry

  Flor. See Peter

  Floris. See Joachim

  Forster, E. M., novelist

  France, French, Franks

  Francis-Lambert of Monteil

  Frederick I, Barbarossa, Emperor of Germany

  Frederick II, of Hohenstaufen, Roman Emperor

  Fréteval

  Frisian Islands

  Friso the Norwegian

  Fulcher, Geoffrey, a Templar knight

  Fulcher of Chartres, historian

  Fulk, Count of Anjou, King of Jerusalem

  Fulk of Neuilly

  Gadara

  Galata

  Galilee, the

  Galilee, Sea of

  Garnier of Nablus, Master of the Hospitallers

  Gaston, Viscount of Béarn

  Gauthier IV of Brienne, Count of Jaffa

  Gaza

  Geldemar. See Carpenel

  Genèvre, Col de

  Genghis Khan, Mongol leader

  Genoa, Genoese

  Geoffrey of Joinville

  Geoffrey of Lusignan

  Geoffrey of Rancogne

  Geoffrey of Sargines

  Geoffrey of Villehardouin. See Villehardouin

  Geoffrey Burel

  Geoffrey Plantagenet

  George, King of Georgia

  Gerard, Master of the Hospital

  Gerard of Ridfort, Master of the Temple

  Gerard of Sidon

  Germany, Germans

  Gerold, Patriarch of Jerusalem

  Gesta Francorum

  Ghazan, Ilkhan

  Gilbert of Tournai, Flemish knight

  Gisors (France)

  Godehilde (wife of Baldwin I)

  Goderic, English adventurer

  Godfrey d’Esch

  Godfrey of Bouillon and Lorraine

  Golden Gate (Jerusalem)

  Golden Horn

  Golgotha

  Goliath, Pools of

  Grailly. See John

  Graindor of Douai, poet

  Grandson. See Otto

  Graye, Island of

  Great Mosque in Damascus

  Greece, Greeks

  Gregorio dei Guidone. See Innocent II

  Gregory VII, Pope

  Gregory IX, Pope

  Guibert de Nogent, chronicler

  Guillaume Dorel, Lord of Botrun

  Guiscard, House of. See also Robert

  Guy II, Embriaco, Lord of Jebail

  Guy of Lusignan, Count of Jaffa, King of Jerusalem

  Guy of Melun

  Guyuk Khan

  Haifa

  Hainault. See Baldwin

  Haiton, the monk. See Hethum I, King of Armenia

  Hakim, Caliph

  Hama. See also Muzaffar

  Haram as-Sharif

  Harim, fortress of

  Harun al-Rashid, Caliph of Baghdad

  Hashishiyun. See Assassins

  Hattin, Horns of, battle of

  Hauran, plain

  Hebron

  Helena, Empress

  Helenonpolis

  Heliopolis

  Henry I, King of England

  Henry II, King of England

  Henry III, King of England

  Henry IV, King of Germany

  Henry II, of Lusignan, King of Cyprus

  Henry, Count of Bar

  Henry, Count of Flanders

  Henry, Duke of Lemburg

  Henry of Champagne, Count of Troyes

  Henry d’Esch

  Heraclea

  Heraclius of Jerusalem, Patriarch

  Hermann of Salza, Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights

  Hermon, Mount

  Herod, Gate of

  Hethum I, King of Armenia

  Hildebrand. See Gregory VII

  Hims (Homs)

  Hippodrome (Constantinople)

  Hira, Mount

  Historia Francorum Qui Ceperunt Iherusalem

  Historia Rerum in Partibus Transmarinis Gestarum

  History of the Crusades

  Hohenstaufen dynasty. See also Frederick I, II; Conradin

  Holy Cross. See True Cross

  Holy Cross, Church of the

  Holy Lance, relic

  Holy Sepulchre, Church of the

  Homs. See Hims

  Honorius III, Pope

  Hospital, Hospitallers, Order of the Knights of St. John

  Hugh I, King of Cyprus

  Hugh III, King of Cyprus and Jerusalem

  Hugh IV, Duke of Burgundy

  Hugh, Count of Saint-Pol

  Hugh of Caesarea

  Hugh of Le Puiset, Count of Jaffa

  Hugh of Lusignan, Prince of the Galilee

  Hugh of Payens

  Hugh of Revel, Master of the Hospital

  Hugh of Saint-Omer

  Hugh the Great, Count of Vermandois

  Hugh Ferreus

  Hughes of Jebail

  Huleh, Lake

  Humphrey of Toron

  Hungary, Hungarians. See also Andrew

  Hyères

  Ibelin. See Balian; John; Philip

  Ibn-Ammar, ruler of Tripoli

  Ibn al-Athir, historian

  Ibn Khaldun, historian

  Ibn al-Qalanisi, historian

  Iconium. See Konya

  Ida of Lorraine

  Iftikhar ad-Daula, governor of Jerusalem
>
  Ilghazi, Emir of Mardin

  Imad ed-Din of Isfahan, chronicler

  Innocent II, Pope

  Innocent III, Pope

  Iron Bridge (Antioch)

  Isaac II, Comnenus, Emperor of Cyprus

  Isabelle

  Isabelle, Que.n of Jerusalem

  Isabelle, Queen of Jerusalem, daughter of John of Brienne

  Isabelle of Angoulême

  Isabelle, sister of Earl of Cornwall, 3rd wife of Frederick II

  Istria

  Italy, Italians

  Itinerarium

  Jabala

  Jacob’s Ford

  Jacques de Molay, Master of the Templars

  Jaffa See also. Guy of Lusignan

  Jaffa Gate (Jerusalem)

  James I, King of Aragon

  James, Bishop of Patti

  James of Vitry, chronicler, Bishop of Acre

  al-Jawad

  Jebail. See also Hughes

  Jenin

  Jericho

  Jerusalem

  Jerome, Saint

  Jews

  Jezireh, the

  Jezreel, plain of

  Joachim of Floris

  Joanna, Queen of Sicily

  John of Brienne, King of Jerusalem

  John of Cyprus

  John of Grailly

  John of Ibelin, Lord of Beirut

  John of Joinville, chronicler

  John of Montfort, Lord of Tyre

  John Comnenus (Kalojohn) Emperor of Byzantium

  John Comnenus, envoy

  John Tristan, Prince of France

  Joinville. See Geoffrey; John

  Joppa. See Jaffa

  Jordan, River

  Joscelin I, of Courtenay, Prince of Tiberias, Count of Edessa

  Joscelin II, Count of Edessa

  Judaea

  Juniye

  Justinian

  Kaaba, the

  Kafartab, fortress

  al-Kahira, fortress-palace

  al-Kamil, Sultan of Egypt

  Kantara, castle of

  Karakorum

  Kerak. See also Stephanie

  Kerak of Moab, castle

  Kerbogha, atabeg of Mosul

  Khadija

  Khalil. See al-Ashraf

  Kharput, Castle of

  Khorassan

  Khwarismians

  Kilij Arslan, Seljuk Sultan

  Konya

  Koran

  Krak des Chevaliers, castle

  Kurdistan mountains

  Kurds

  Kyrenia

  La Bagnara, castle of

  La Conquête de Constantinople

  La Fève, castle of

  La Forbie, village

  Languedoc

  Laodicea

  La Roche-Glun, castle of

  Latrun

  Lattakieh

  Lebanon, mountains of

  Le Bourg. See Baldwin

  Legate, Tower of the (Acre)

  Leicester, Earl of

  Lemburg. See Henry

  Leo, King of Armenia

  Leopold VI, Duke of Austria

  Le Puy. See Adhémar; Raymond

  Lesser Armenia. See also Cilicia

  Leuce

  Lido, island of

  Liège

  Limassol (Cyprus)

  Limoges. See Aimery

  Litold, Flemish knight

  Lombardy, Lombards

  Lorraine (France)

  Lotharingians

  Louis VII, King of France

  Louis IX, King of France, Saint

 

‹ Prev