Author:Jonathan Phillips
In April 1204, the armies of Western Christendom wrote another bloodstained chapter in the history of holy war. Two years earlier, aflame with religious zeal, the Fourth Crusade set out to free Jerusalem from the grip of Islam. But after a dramatic series of events, the crusaders turned their weapons against the Christian city of Constantinople, the heart of the Byzantine Empire and the greatest metropolis in the known world.
The crusaders spared no one in their savagery: they murdered and raped old and young - they desecrated churches, plundered treasuries and much of the city was put to the torch. Some contemporaries were delighted: God had approved this punishment of the effeminate, treacherous Greeks; others expressed shock and disgust at this perversion of the crusading ideal. History has judged this as the crusade that went wrong.
In this remarkable new assessment of the Fourth Crusade, Jonathan Phillips follows the fortunes of the leading players and explores the conflicting motives that drove the expedition to commit the most infamous massacre of the crusading movement.
Enthralling...Nobody can read it without acquiring a better understanding of the Middle Ages and the medieval mind.
—— Allan Massie , Literary ReviewPersuasively reconstructs the imaginative world of the thirteenth century.
—— John Adamson , Sunday TelegraphBy far the best book I have read on the Fourth Crusade...learned, comprehensive...well-written...exciting.
—— Norman F. CantorStunning
—— Financial TimesA generous and sensitive road map to not-so-random acts of kindness
—— Publishers WeeklyHis Holiness speaks with wisdom and practicality on the full range of human problems
—— Pride Magazine