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{{italic title}}
The '''''Regni Ierosolimitani brevis hystoria''''' ('A Short History of the Kingdom of Jerusalem'), called '''''Brevis historia''''' for short, is an anonymous [[Latin]] history of the [[Kingdom of Jerusalem]] from its founding until about 1193 with a short continuation by {{ill|Jacopo Doria|it}} that brings the story down to [[fall of Acre|the kingdom's fall]] in 1291. At Doria's request, a copy of the work was placed in the [[Republic of Genoa]]'s archives in 1294. This copy survives, as does a 15th-century copy of it.{{sfn|Hall|Phillips|2013|pp=41–42}} There is an English translation based on the Latin edition of {{ill|Luigi Tommaso Belgrano|it}}.<ref>At pp. 151–167 in {{harvnb|Hall|Phillips|2013}}, but also retaining the pagination from {{harvnb|Belgrano|1890}}.</ref>
The author of the ''Brevis historia'' cites the ''[[Annals of Genoa|Annals]]'' and the ''De liberatione civitatum orientis'' of [[Caffaro di Rustico da Caschifellone|Caffaro]], to which he seems to regard his work as a supplement. Some of his material seems to be derived from [[William of Tyre]] and he shares details with the continuation of William known as the [[Lyon Eracles|Lyon ''Eracles'']]. Other material is unique and may come from oral sources, such as Genoese travellers to the Holy Land, or from reports or letters sent by Genoese in the Holy Land.{{sfn|Hall|Phillips|2013|pp=41–42}}
The early part of the history, as well as Doria's continuation, is concerned mainly with genealogies and marriages. The reigns of [[Amalric of Jerusalem|Amalric]] (1163–1174) and [[Baldwin IV of Jerusalem|Baldwin IV]] (1174–1185) form the central part of the narrative and are more detailed.{{sfn|Hall|Phillips|2013|pp=41–42}} The original chronicle begins by describing how [[Godfrey of Bouillon]] "was chosen as king and lord" after the [[Siege of Jerusalem (1099)|fall of Jerusalem]] in 1099.{{sfn|Hall|Phillips|2013|p=151}} It ends by describing how Prince [[Bohemond III of Antioch]] inherited the [[County of Tripoli]] and passed it onto his son, [[Bohemond IV]], in 1189. Then the continuator declares that "[w]hat follows was not written in the book, but I, [J]acopo Doria, have briefly reproduced it in written form as I have discovered it from reliable sources."{{sfn|Hall|Phillips|2013|p=166}} He ends his short continuation by noting how the claimants of the Kingdom of Jerusalem "pointlessly hung on to just the title for the future". A notary, Guglielmo de Caponibus, then records how the chronicle was placed in the archive in 1294.{{sfn|Hall|Phillips|2013|p=167}}
==Notes==
{{reflist}}
==Bibliography==
*{{cite book |first=Luigi Tommaso |last=Belgrano |chapter=Annali Genovesi di Caffaro e de suoi continuatori |title=Fonti per la storia d'Italia |volume=11 |year=1890 |pages=127–149 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GVIq_EJ1HtcC&pg=PA127 |location=Rome}}
*{{cite book |last1=Hall |first1=Martin |last2=Phillips |first2=Jonathan |title=Caffaro, Genoa and the Twelfth-Century Crusades |publisher=Ashgate |year=2013}}
*{{cite journal |title=A Genoese Perspective of the Third Crusade |first=Merav |last=Mack |pages=45–62 |journal=Crusades |year=2011 |volume=10 |doi=10.1080/28327861.2011.12220447}}
[[Category:1190s books]]
[[Category:Chronicles about the Crusades in Latin]]
Okumaya devam et...
{{italic title}}
The '''''Regni Ierosolimitani brevis hystoria''''' ('A Short History of the Kingdom of Jerusalem'), called '''''Brevis historia''''' for short, is an anonymous [[Latin]] history of the [[Kingdom of Jerusalem]] from its founding until about 1193 with a short continuation by {{ill|Jacopo Doria|it}} that brings the story down to [[fall of Acre|the kingdom's fall]] in 1291. At Doria's request, a copy of the work was placed in the [[Republic of Genoa]]'s archives in 1294. This copy survives, as does a 15th-century copy of it.{{sfn|Hall|Phillips|2013|pp=41–42}} There is an English translation based on the Latin edition of {{ill|Luigi Tommaso Belgrano|it}}.<ref>At pp. 151–167 in {{harvnb|Hall|Phillips|2013}}, but also retaining the pagination from {{harvnb|Belgrano|1890}}.</ref>
The author of the ''Brevis historia'' cites the ''[[Annals of Genoa|Annals]]'' and the ''De liberatione civitatum orientis'' of [[Caffaro di Rustico da Caschifellone|Caffaro]], to which he seems to regard his work as a supplement. Some of his material seems to be derived from [[William of Tyre]] and he shares details with the continuation of William known as the [[Lyon Eracles|Lyon ''Eracles'']]. Other material is unique and may come from oral sources, such as Genoese travellers to the Holy Land, or from reports or letters sent by Genoese in the Holy Land.{{sfn|Hall|Phillips|2013|pp=41–42}}
The early part of the history, as well as Doria's continuation, is concerned mainly with genealogies and marriages. The reigns of [[Amalric of Jerusalem|Amalric]] (1163–1174) and [[Baldwin IV of Jerusalem|Baldwin IV]] (1174–1185) form the central part of the narrative and are more detailed.{{sfn|Hall|Phillips|2013|pp=41–42}} The original chronicle begins by describing how [[Godfrey of Bouillon]] "was chosen as king and lord" after the [[Siege of Jerusalem (1099)|fall of Jerusalem]] in 1099.{{sfn|Hall|Phillips|2013|p=151}} It ends by describing how Prince [[Bohemond III of Antioch]] inherited the [[County of Tripoli]] and passed it onto his son, [[Bohemond IV]], in 1189. Then the continuator declares that "[w]hat follows was not written in the book, but I, [J]acopo Doria, have briefly reproduced it in written form as I have discovered it from reliable sources."{{sfn|Hall|Phillips|2013|p=166}} He ends his short continuation by noting how the claimants of the Kingdom of Jerusalem "pointlessly hung on to just the title for the future". A notary, Guglielmo de Caponibus, then records how the chronicle was placed in the archive in 1294.{{sfn|Hall|Phillips|2013|p=167}}
==Notes==
{{reflist}}
==Bibliography==
*{{cite book |first=Luigi Tommaso |last=Belgrano |chapter=Annali Genovesi di Caffaro e de suoi continuatori |title=Fonti per la storia d'Italia |volume=11 |year=1890 |pages=127–149 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GVIq_EJ1HtcC&pg=PA127 |location=Rome}}
*{{cite book |last1=Hall |first1=Martin |last2=Phillips |first2=Jonathan |title=Caffaro, Genoa and the Twelfth-Century Crusades |publisher=Ashgate |year=2013}}
*{{cite journal |title=A Genoese Perspective of the Third Crusade |first=Merav |last=Mack |pages=45–62 |journal=Crusades |year=2011 |volume=10 |doi=10.1080/28327861.2011.12220447}}
[[Category:1190s books]]
[[Category:Chronicles about the Crusades in Latin]]
Okumaya devam et...