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Books by Thomas F Madden

Research paper thumbnail of Istanbul: City of Majesty at the Crossroads of the World

Research paper thumbnail of Venice: A New History

Research paper thumbnail of Crusades: Medieval Worlds in Conflict

Research paper thumbnail of The Fourth Crusade: Event, Aftermath, and Perceptions

Research paper thumbnail of The Concise History of the Crusades

Research paper thumbnail of Crusades: The Illustrated History

Research paper thumbnail of Enrico Dandolo and the Rise of Venice

Research paper thumbnail of The Crusades: The Essential Readings

Research paper thumbnail of Medieval and Renaissance Venice

Research paper thumbnail of The Fourth Crusade: The Conquest of Constantinople

Papers by Thomas F Madden

Research paper thumbnail of The Fourth Crusade: The Conquest of Constantinople, 1201-1204

The American Historical Review, Dec 1, 1978

... must have occurred sometime between 1176 and 11923 After the con-quest of Constantinople in 1... more ... must have occurred sometime between 1176 and 11923 After the con-quest of Constantinople in 1204 ... 17 At the agreed time Villehardouin and his companions were led to the ducal palace. ... the cross to avenge the shame done to Jesus Christ and to conquer Jerusalem, if God ...

Research paper thumbnail of Triumph Re-imagined: The Golden Gate and Popular Memory in Byzantine and Ottoman Constantinople

Shipping, Trade and Crusade in the Medieval Mediterranean, 2016

Research paper thumbnail of The Fourth Crusade: Event, Aftermath, and Perceptions

Contents: Introduction Event: Richard I and the early evolution of the 4th crusade, Vincent Ryan ... more Contents: Introduction Event: Richard I and the early evolution of the 4th crusade, Vincent Ryan Venise et son arriAre-pays au temps de la quatriAme croisade, Pierre Racine The '4 crusades' of 1204, Marco Meschini. Aftermath: The Latin empire of Constantinople's fractured foundation: the rift between Boniface of Montferrat and Baldwin of Flanders, Thomas F. Madden The Greeks of Constantinople under Latin rule 1204a "1261, David Jacoby The effects of the 4th crusade on European gold coinage, Robert D. Leonard Jr. Perceptions: The Translatio Symonensis and the 7 thieves: a Venetian 4th crusade Furta Sacra narrative and the looting of Constantinople, David M. Perry Between justification and glory: the Venetian Chronicles' view of the 4th crusade, Serban Marin Per Innocenzo III i Cristiani Latini 'peggiori degli altri': l'anno 1204. Un sintomo di nuova cultura, Guilio Cipollone Aux sources de la chronique en prose franA aise: entre dA(c)culturation et acculturation, Cyril Aslanov Arab perspectives on the 4th crusade, William J. Hamblin Index.

Research paper thumbnail of Chapter 3: Oaths Broken, Yet Fulfilled: Venice, Innocent III and the Patriarchate of Constantinople

Research paper thumbnail of Venice: A New History

Research paper thumbnail of Rivers of Blood: An Analysis of One Aspect of the Crusader Conquest of Jerusalem in 1099

Many medieval chroniclers described the Christian conquest of Jerusalem during the First Crusade ... more Many medieval chroniclers described the Christian conquest of Jerusalem during the First Crusade in 1099 and their words have been repeated ever since without much scrutiny. As horrible as the carnage was in the mosque and in the rest of the city, it could never be enough to sustain the reports of streets of blood that are heard so often today. These are fantastical descriptions, clearly impossible. Modern descriptions of crusaders wading through streets of blood turn a historical massacre into little more than a cartoon. The blood that was spilled in the massacre of Jerusalem was real; the rivers of it that course down the pages of modern newspapers and popular books are not.

Research paper thumbnail of Curia and Crusade: Pope Honorius III and the Recovery of the Holy Land, 1216–1227

Research paper thumbnail of The Fires of the Fourth Crusade in Constantinople. 1203-1204; A Damage Assessment

Byzantinische Zeitschrift, 1992

Research paper thumbnail of The siege and the fall of Constantinople in 1453: historiography, topography, and military studies

Choice Reviews Online, 2012

Marios, and Walter K. Hanak. The Siege and the Fall of Constantinople in 1453: Historiography, To... more Marios, and Walter K. Hanak. The Siege and the Fall of Constantinople in 1453: Historiography, Topography, and Military Studies. Burlington: Ashgate Publishing, 2011. Pp. 759.This is an unusual book in many respects. Despite its title, the publication is not a historical narrative of a specific event. Indeed, the book assumes a fairly extensive familiarity with fifteenth-century Constantinople from the start. At nearly eight hundred pages, it also cannot be called a handbook. Perhaps the text is best described as a work in the "toward a history" gerne, this one regarding the conquest of Constantinople in 1453. Whatever one calls the volume, though, there is no doubt that this opus represents an extraordinary effort. Any scholar with an interest in the Ottoman conquest of Constantinople will find this work very useful.The book is divided into two main parts, the first evaluating the sources for the siege and fall and the second analyzing the military operations themselves. The first chapter provides an excellent overview and evaluation of the major sources for the event as well as the production of later memory as it manifested itself in subsequent historiography. The next two chapters discuss specific historiographical problems. Chapter 2 examines a few works that are not often used for inquiries into the events of 1453, namely Riccherio, Tetaldi, Pius H, and Nestor-Iskander. The last, the authors argue, is especially important as an eyewitness source. Chapter 3 follows this up with an extended discussion of the relationship between Georgios Sphrantzes' Chronicon Minns and the elaborated Chronicon Mains. The last chapter of the first part is a bit surprising, for it opens the vast subject of the subsequent myths and legends surrounding the fall of Constantinople. The authors reference the enormity of the subject several times yet are content to focus their examination on prophecies and the final resting place of Constantine XI.The book's second part examines various aspects of the military siege itself. Chapter 5 provides an analysis and many pictures of the city's fortifications. The authors maintain that previous efforts to understand the siege "even by the most eminent scholars and respected authors" are deficient because of their "unfamiliarity with the ancient remains" (xiv). The authors, therefore, assure the reader that they have themselves "spent a great deal of time surveying the walls, gates, and adjacent structures, even in neighborhoods such as Sulu Kale, which are seldom if ever visited by scholars" (xiv). Chapter 6 examines some of the imperial court's diplomatic efforts, while Chapter 7 explores the Ottoman preparations for the siege. Chapter 8 turns to Constantinople's secure harbor, the Golden Horn. The authors maintain that the extraordinary effort that Sultan Mehmed II put into carrying his ships overland and into the harbor has blinded historians to its true significance. They insist that the naval threat to the city was, in fact, minimal. Instead, they surmise that the Ottomans used their vessels as a diversionary tactic, which forced the defenders to move precious forces away from the land walls, where the siege would ultimately be decided. …

Research paper thumbnail of Crusades: the illustrated history

Choice Reviews Online, 2005

Research paper thumbnail of The Fourth Crusade: The Conquest of Constantinople, 1201-1204

The American Historical Review, Dec 1, 1978

... must have occurred sometime between 1176 and 11923 After the con-quest of Constantinople in 1... more ... must have occurred sometime between 1176 and 11923 After the con-quest of Constantinople in 1204 ... 17 At the agreed time Villehardouin and his companions were led to the ducal palace. ... the cross to avenge the shame done to Jesus Christ and to conquer Jerusalem, if God ...

Research paper thumbnail of Triumph Re-imagined: The Golden Gate and Popular Memory in Byzantine and Ottoman Constantinople

Shipping, Trade and Crusade in the Medieval Mediterranean, 2016

Research paper thumbnail of The Fourth Crusade: Event, Aftermath, and Perceptions

Contents: Introduction Event: Richard I and the early evolution of the 4th crusade, Vincent Ryan ... more Contents: Introduction Event: Richard I and the early evolution of the 4th crusade, Vincent Ryan Venise et son arriAre-pays au temps de la quatriAme croisade, Pierre Racine The '4 crusades' of 1204, Marco Meschini. Aftermath: The Latin empire of Constantinople's fractured foundation: the rift between Boniface of Montferrat and Baldwin of Flanders, Thomas F. Madden The Greeks of Constantinople under Latin rule 1204a "1261, David Jacoby The effects of the 4th crusade on European gold coinage, Robert D. Leonard Jr. Perceptions: The Translatio Symonensis and the 7 thieves: a Venetian 4th crusade Furta Sacra narrative and the looting of Constantinople, David M. Perry Between justification and glory: the Venetian Chronicles' view of the 4th crusade, Serban Marin Per Innocenzo III i Cristiani Latini 'peggiori degli altri': l'anno 1204. Un sintomo di nuova cultura, Guilio Cipollone Aux sources de la chronique en prose franA aise: entre dA(c)culturation et acculturation, Cyril Aslanov Arab perspectives on the 4th crusade, William J. Hamblin Index.

Research paper thumbnail of Chapter 3: Oaths Broken, Yet Fulfilled: Venice, Innocent III and the Patriarchate of Constantinople

Research paper thumbnail of Venice: A New History

Research paper thumbnail of Rivers of Blood: An Analysis of One Aspect of the Crusader Conquest of Jerusalem in 1099

Many medieval chroniclers described the Christian conquest of Jerusalem during the First Crusade ... more Many medieval chroniclers described the Christian conquest of Jerusalem during the First Crusade in 1099 and their words have been repeated ever since without much scrutiny. As horrible as the carnage was in the mosque and in the rest of the city, it could never be enough to sustain the reports of streets of blood that are heard so often today. These are fantastical descriptions, clearly impossible. Modern descriptions of crusaders wading through streets of blood turn a historical massacre into little more than a cartoon. The blood that was spilled in the massacre of Jerusalem was real; the rivers of it that course down the pages of modern newspapers and popular books are not.

Research paper thumbnail of Curia and Crusade: Pope Honorius III and the Recovery of the Holy Land, 1216–1227

Research paper thumbnail of The Fires of the Fourth Crusade in Constantinople. 1203-1204; A Damage Assessment

Byzantinische Zeitschrift, 1992

Research paper thumbnail of The siege and the fall of Constantinople in 1453: historiography, topography, and military studies

Choice Reviews Online, 2012

Marios, and Walter K. Hanak. The Siege and the Fall of Constantinople in 1453: Historiography, To... more Marios, and Walter K. Hanak. The Siege and the Fall of Constantinople in 1453: Historiography, Topography, and Military Studies. Burlington: Ashgate Publishing, 2011. Pp. 759.This is an unusual book in many respects. Despite its title, the publication is not a historical narrative of a specific event. Indeed, the book assumes a fairly extensive familiarity with fifteenth-century Constantinople from the start. At nearly eight hundred pages, it also cannot be called a handbook. Perhaps the text is best described as a work in the "toward a history" gerne, this one regarding the conquest of Constantinople in 1453. Whatever one calls the volume, though, there is no doubt that this opus represents an extraordinary effort. Any scholar with an interest in the Ottoman conquest of Constantinople will find this work very useful.The book is divided into two main parts, the first evaluating the sources for the siege and fall and the second analyzing the military operations themselves. The first chapter provides an excellent overview and evaluation of the major sources for the event as well as the production of later memory as it manifested itself in subsequent historiography. The next two chapters discuss specific historiographical problems. Chapter 2 examines a few works that are not often used for inquiries into the events of 1453, namely Riccherio, Tetaldi, Pius H, and Nestor-Iskander. The last, the authors argue, is especially important as an eyewitness source. Chapter 3 follows this up with an extended discussion of the relationship between Georgios Sphrantzes' Chronicon Minns and the elaborated Chronicon Mains. The last chapter of the first part is a bit surprising, for it opens the vast subject of the subsequent myths and legends surrounding the fall of Constantinople. The authors reference the enormity of the subject several times yet are content to focus their examination on prophecies and the final resting place of Constantine XI.The book's second part examines various aspects of the military siege itself. Chapter 5 provides an analysis and many pictures of the city's fortifications. The authors maintain that previous efforts to understand the siege "even by the most eminent scholars and respected authors" are deficient because of their "unfamiliarity with the ancient remains" (xiv). The authors, therefore, assure the reader that they have themselves "spent a great deal of time surveying the walls, gates, and adjacent structures, even in neighborhoods such as Sulu Kale, which are seldom if ever visited by scholars" (xiv). Chapter 6 examines some of the imperial court's diplomatic efforts, while Chapter 7 explores the Ottoman preparations for the siege. Chapter 8 turns to Constantinople's secure harbor, the Golden Horn. The authors maintain that the extraordinary effort that Sultan Mehmed II put into carrying his ships overland and into the harbor has blinded historians to its true significance. They insist that the naval threat to the city was, in fact, minimal. Instead, they surmise that the Ottomans used their vessels as a diversionary tactic, which forced the defenders to move precious forces away from the land walls, where the siege would ultimately be decided. …

Research paper thumbnail of Crusades: the illustrated history

Choice Reviews Online, 2005

Research paper thumbnail of The Knights Templars: God's Warriors, the Devil's Bankers.(Book Review)

The Historian, Jun 22, 2005

Research paper thumbnail of Some further arguments in defense of the Venetians on the Fourth Crusade

Research paper thumbnail of Eine Stadt lernt schreiben: Venedig vom 10. biz zum 12. Jahrhundert

Speculum a Journal of Medieval Studies, 2005

Research paper thumbnail of Historia de Las Cruzadas: Cristiandad, Islam, peregrinaje, guerra

Research paper thumbnail of Nicholas Edward Morton, The Teutonic Knights in the Holy Land, 1190–1291. Woodbridge, Eng., and Rochester, N.Y.: Boydell and Brewer, 2009. Pp. xiv, 228; 3 black-and-white plates, 1 black-and-white figure, tables, and 1 map. $105

Nicholas Edward Morton, The Teutonic Knights in the Holy Land, 1190–1291. Woodbridge, Eng., and Rochester, N.Y.: Boydell and Brewer, 2009. Pp. xiv, 228; 3 black-and-white plates, 1 black-and-white figure, tables, and 1 map. $105

Speculum, 2010

Research paper thumbnail of Thomas F. Madden - Pilgrims to Jerusalem in the Middle Ages (review) - The Catholic Historical Review 93:1

Research paper thumbnail of Luigi Andrea Berto, The Political and Social Vocabulary of John the Deacon's “Istoria Veneticorum”, trans. Antony Shugaar. (Cursor Mundi 12.) Turnhout: Brepols, 2013. Pp. xvi, 264. €70. ISBN: 978-2-503-53159-5

Research paper thumbnail of Review Throop, Crusading as an Act of Vengeance, 1095–1216. Farnham, Surrey, UK: Ashgate, 2011. Pp. viii, 232. $119.95. ISBN: 9780754665823

Speculum, 2012

There is no doubt that Pope Urban II’s sermon at Clermont that launched the First Crusade in 1095... more There is no doubt that Pope Urban II’s sermon at Clermont that launched the First Crusade in 1095 struck a chord with Europe’s nobility. Just what chord it struck, though, remains an open question. The headstrong warriors, it is sometimes said, responded to reports of Muslim attacks on Eastern Christians with a burning desire to exact vengeance through what amounted to a vendetta. Susanna A. Throop’s analysis suggests that things were not that simple. The book begins with a survey of the five main eyewitness accounts of the First Crusade—the Gesta Francorum, Fulcher of Chartres, Peter Tudebode, Ekkehard of Aura, and Raymond of Aguilers—revealing that references to vengeance were rare. Indeed, of the five only Raymond of Aguilers refers to crusading as an act of vengeance and does so only twice. Instead, eyewitnesses overwhelmingly describe the crusade as a religious pilgrimage and the crusaders as pious men devoting their lives to God, like monks in their cells. This, Throop argues, confirms Jonathan Riley-Smith’s famous description of the crusade as a monastery on the march. It was not the eyewitness sources (and by extension the participants) that characterized the First Crusade as an act of vengeance, but the first generation of nonparticipant authors who reworked and enhanced the story before 1138. Writers like Robert of Rheims and Guibert of Nogent made much of the righteous vengeance that the crusaders had visited upon wrongdoers. Throop classifies into three categories the rationales expressed by these authors to justify crusading vengeance. First, and most intuitively, was that Muslims had made God their enemy by rejecting his faith, persecuting his people, and defiling his holy places. Interestingly, though, Throop finds that Muslims were not characterized as a foreign “other.” On the contrary, they were described as a people not unlike Europeans, yet who had chosen the way of sin and evil. Vengeance, therefore, belonged to God, and the crusade was the tool of that vengeance. Throop’s second category fits closely with Riley-Smith’s characterization of crusading as “an act of love” (History 65 [1980]: 185– 9). Well-understood concepts like caritas and auxilium, which Christians owed to their family and friends, were extended to the wider family of all Christians joined in brotherhood with Christ, with God as their father and Jerusalem as their mother. Thus, Muslim attacks on Christians necessarily demanded vengeance. Finally, there was the vengeance for the crucifixion of Christ, which Throop examines in relationship to the anti-Jewish pogroms in Germany. She finds little evidence for this rationale in the early sources. The Anonymous Mainz refers to vengeance rarely, and it is but one of many explanations for the violence. First-generation Latin sources are silent on the subject. Indeed, when they refer to the pogroms at all it is with disapproval. These same categories of vengeance are then followed chronologically forward, first between 1138 and 1197 and then during the pontificate of Innocent III (1198–1216). Although the papacy refrained from equating crusade with vengeance during this first period, the concept blossomed almost everywhere else. Crusade narratives, chronicles, and songs routinely use the words of vengeance—which Throop defines for this study as vindicta, ultio, and venjance—to describe crusade activities. It may be, as Throop sensibly 928 Reviews

Research paper thumbnail of Ermanno Orlando, Altre Venezie: Il dogado veneziano nei secoli XIII e XIV (giurisdizione, territorio, giustizia e amministrazione). Venice: Istituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti, 2008. Paper. Pp. x, 484; 4 color plates and 11 color figures. €45

Research paper thumbnail of Holly S. Hurlburt, The Dogaressa of Venice, 1200–1500: Wife and Icon. (The New Middle Ages.) New York and Basingstoke, Eng.: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. Pp. viii, 304; black-and-white figures. $69.95