This volume contains papers from the fifth conference on the military orders held in London. It deals with the archaeological investigations at the Hospitaller castle at al-Marqab and examines aspects of the history of the military orders in the Latin East and the Mediterranean lands.
目次
Introduction
1: The Military-Religious Orders: A Medieval 'School for Administrators'?
1: The Latin East
2: Archaeological and Fresco Research in the Castle Chapel at al-Marqab: A Preliminary Report on the Results of the First Seasons
3: The Two Hospitaller Chapter Houses at al-Marqab: A Study in Architectural Reconstruction
4: Meat Consumption and Animal Keeping in the Citadel at al-Marqab: A Preliminary Report 1
5: The Order of St Thomas of Canterbury in Acre
6: Templars, Franks, Syrians and the Double Pact of 1244
7: Royal and Papal Interference in the Dispatch of Supplies to the East by the Military Orders in the Later Thirteenth Century
8: The Hospitallers and Charles I of Anjou: Political and Economic Relations between the Kingdom of Sicily and the Holy Land 1
9: King James II of Cyprus and the Hospitallers: Evidence from the Livre des Remembrances
2: Hospitaller Rhodes and Malta
10: Smoke and Fire Signals at Rhodes: 1449
11: Success and Failure in the Practice of Power by Pere Ramon Sacosta, Master of the Hospital (1461-67)
12: Battlefield Tourism: A Description of the 1480 Siege of Rhodes
13: Woven Tapestries: Manifestations of Grandeur, Politics and Power as well as Pictorial Sources for Hospitaller History: A Re-identification
14: Politics and Power in Grand Master Verdalle's Statuta Hospitalis Hierusalem (1588)
15: Towards the End of the Order of the Hospital: Reflections on the Views of Two Venetian Brethren, Antonio Miari and Ottavio Benvenuti
3: The British Isles
16: The Military Orders in Wales and the Welsh March in the Middle Ages 1
17: The Military Orders at the Court of King John
18: Walking a Thin Line: Hospitaller Priors, Politics and Power in Late Medieval England
19: Procedure, Political Influence and Preceptorial Appointments in the Hospitaller Priory of England: The Templecombe Disputes of 1463-79
4: Italy
20: Sta Maria in Carbonara in Viterbo: History and Architecture of a Templar Preceptory in Northern Lazio
21: The Spanish Military Orders in Italy: Initial Remarks on Patronage and Properties (Twelfth-Fourteenth Centuries)
22: The Hospitallers in Southern Italy: Families and Power
23: The Teutonic Order in Italy: An Example of the Diplomatic Ability of the Military Orders
5: Northern and Eastern Europe
24: The Counts of Brienne and the Military Orders in the Thirteenth Century 1
25: A Geography of Power: The Hospitallers in the Territorial Policies of the Bishops of Strasbourg in Lower Alsace in the Thirteenth Century
26: The Priors of the Knights Hospitaller from the Piast Dynasty in the Province of Bohemia: Hereditary Princes or Ecclesiastical Dignitaries?
27: Royal Power and the Hungarian-Slavonian Hospitaller Priors before the Mid-fifteenth Century
28: Politics, Diplomacy and the Recruitment of Mercenaries before the Battle of Tannenberg-Grunwald-Zalgiris in 1410
29: Power to the Educated? Priest-brethren and their Education, using Data from the Utrecht Bailiwick of the Teutonic Order (1350-1600)
30: Hidden in the Bushes: The Teutonic Order of the Bailiwick of Utrecht in the 1780-1806 Revolutionary Period
6: The Iberian Peninsula
31: Troubles and Tensions before the Trial: The Last Years of the Castilian Templar Province
32: The Relationship between the Crown and the Monastery of Santos during the Middle Ages
33: The Recruitment of the Portuguese Military Orders: A Sociological Profile (1385-1521)
34: The Portuguese Military Orders, the Royal Power and the Maritime Expansion (Fifteenth Century)
35: The Port City of Setubal (Portugal) under the Control of the Order of Santiago (1400-1550)
36: Inquiring about Honour in the Portuguese Military Orders (Sixteenth to Eighteenth Centuries) 1
7: Templar Mythology
37: 'From the Holy Grail and the Ark of the Covenant to Freemasonry and the Priory of Sion': An Introduction to the 'After-History' of the Templars
38: The Myth of Secret History, or 'It's not just the Templars involved in absolutely everything'