Regni Ierosolimitani brevis hystoria

[XFB] Konu Bilgileri

Konu Hakkında Merhaba, tarihinde Wiki kategorisinde News tarafından oluşturulan Regni Ierosolimitani brevis hystoria başlıklı konuyu okuyorsunuz. Bu konu şimdiye dek 1 kez görüntülenmiş, 0 yorum ve 0 tepki puanı almıştır...
Kategori Adı Wiki
Konu Başlığı Regni Ierosolimitani brevis hystoria
Konbuyu başlatan News
Başlangıç tarihi
Cevaplar
Görüntüleme
İlk mesaj tepki puanı
Son Mesaj Yazan News

News

Moderator
Top Poster Of Month
Credits
0
Srnec: /* Bibliography */ link


{{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...
 

Geri
Üst