The Crusader States in Twenty Images

Dublin Core

Title

The Crusader States in Twenty Images

Description

The built environment in the Eastern Mediterranean under crusader rule consisted of
New public and private buildings
Covered and open markets
Hospices, hospitals, bathhouses, pools, aqueducts, sewers and cemeteries.
Urban industries and crafts such as mints, goldsmiths, silversmiths, bakeries, tanners, sugar refineries and soap making.
Castles as fortified administrative centers and places of refuge for the local population during troubled times

Source

https://media-management-api.tlt.harvard.edu/api/iiif/manifest/396

Collection Items

The Athlit Cemetery, the largest known Crusader resting place in the Middle East, lies outside the 13th-century Knights Templar's Athlit Castle.
Potsherds and coin finds date the numerous graves to the short period between 1218 and 1291. The deceased…

The Crusader castle of Belvoir is located on a hill of the Naphtali plateau, about 500 meters above the Jordan Valley and a few miles south of Lake Tiberias (the Sea of Galilee). It is surrounded by a moat, and built with an outer and inner…

Upon its foundation in 1142, the Kerak or Karak of Moab Castle became the stronghold of the Latin Lordship of Transjordan, which was part of the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem. The fortress surrendered to Saladin in 1188.
Why was the particular location…

St Sergius on horseback, carrying a crusader banner. The donor of the icon appears kneeling and kissing the right red boot of the saint in a gesture of reverence.
Icon, 13th century
St Catherine Monastery, Mount Sinai, Icon Collection

Saints Sergius and Bacchus on horseback.
Icon, 13th century
St Catherine Monastery, Mount Sinai, Egypt, Icon Collection
Who were Saints Sergius and Bacchus?

The Siege of Acre by Napoleon's army in May 1799. Scene from Napoleon's failed attempt to take the city of Acre from the Ottomans and British during his campaign in the Holy Land in 1799.

From J. Jenkins, The Martial Achievements of Great Britain…

The Siege of Acre, 1189-1191. Part of the Third Crusade. Illumination from the Chroniques de France or de Saint Denis (from 1108 to 1270)
Soldiers in armor surround a walled town with one climbing up the walls on a ladder, and defending soldiers on…

The Old City of Acre, UNESCO World Heritage Site. Why?
To find out more about the significance of Acre please visit
https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/1042/
View all 20 items

IIIF Manifest

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