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    The Crusade of 1456: Texts and Documentation in Translation

    The Crusade of 1456 by Mixson, James D.;

    Texts and Documentation in Translation

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    Estimated delivery time: In stock at the publisher, but not at Prospero's office. Delivery time approx. 3-5 weeks.
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    Product details:

    • Publisher University of Toronto Press
    • Date of Publication 1 June 2022

    • ISBN 9781487523930
    • Binding Paperback
    • No. of pages324 pages
    • Size 229x152x17 mm
    • Weight 440 g
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 1 b&w illustration, 3 b&w maps
    • 737

    Categories

    Short description:

    The Crusade of 1456 offers translations of key sources from an often overlooked yet consequential event in fifteenth-century Europe.

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    Long description:

    In July 1456, a massive Turkish army settled in before Belgrade, an ancient city at the confluence of the Danube and Sava rivers. The army&&&x2019;s leader was the twenty-four-year-old Ottoman sultan Mehmed II, "the Conqueror," who sought to take one of the most strategically important fortifications in southeastern Europe. Three weeks later, Mehmed&&&x2019;s army was driven from Belgrade by a Hungarian warlord and his army, along with a ragtag force of ill-equipped crusaders.

    In The Crusade of 1456, James D. Mixson gathers together the key primary sources for understanding the events that led to the siege of Belgrade. These newly translated sources challenge readers with their variety: papal decrees, letters, liturgies, and chronicles from Latin, Byzantine, and Ottoman perspectives. An accessible introduction, timelines, and maps help to illuminate this fascinating yet previously neglected story.



    "A description of Belgrade in 1456 is to be found in many a book on the Medieval Balkans, on the Papacy and the Levant, or on Hungarian history but never with such specificity and depth. It is as if long lost voices are heard again for the first time after the sleep of ages, with startling freshness and power."

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    Table of Contents:

    Introduction

    Historical Frames: Political and Military Developments
    Sources in Scholarly Context: The Middle Ages, the Crusades, and the Problem of ?Lateness?
    Framing the Sources: Selection, Structure, and Significance

    Part One: Preparations for Crusade, 1453?1456

    1. Pope Nicholas V, Etsi Ecclesia Christi
    2. Aeneas Silvius Piccolomini, Constantinopolitana Clades
    3. Correspondence of 1455?1456
    4. Liturgy for Taking the Cross
    5. A Pope&&&x2019;s Call to Prayer
    6. Pope Callixtus III, Omnipotentis dei misericordia

    Part Two: The Earliest Accounts

    7. John of Capistrano to Pope Callixtus III
    8. John of Capistrano to Pope Callixtus III
    9. John Hunyadi to Denis Szécsi, Archbishop of Esztergom
    10. John Hunyadi to Ladislaus Garai, Palatine of Hungary
    11. John Hunyadi to King Ladislaus Posthumous
    12. John of Tagliacozzo to James of the Marches
    13. John of Capistrano to Pope Callixtus III

    Part Three: News and Propaganda

    14. Ambassador of the Bishop of Šibenik to Callixtus III
    15. Cardinal Juan Carvajal to Francesco Sforza
    16. Letters of John Goldener
    17. Ladislaus Posthumous to Duke Francesco Sforza of Milan
    18. The City of Nuremberg to the City of Weissenburg
    19. Pope Callixtus III to Francesco Sforza, Duke of Milan
    20. Letters of Bernard of Kraiburg
    21. Callixtus III, Letter to Juan Soler
    22. Anonymous (Pseudo-John of Capistrano), to all Christians
    23. Anonymous, Letter to Henry of Eckenfelt
    24. Liturgical Commemorations of Belgrade

    Part Four: John of Tagliacozzo&&&x2019;s The Story of the Victory of Belgrade

    25. John of Tagliacozzo, The Story of the Victory of Belgrade

    Part Five: Memoir and Chronicle

    26. Thomas Ebendorfer, Chronica Austriae
    27. Laonikos Chalkokondyles, The Histories
    28. Michael Kritopuoulos (Kritovulos), History of Mehmed the Conqueror
    29. Jacopo da Promontorio, Recollecta
    30. Âş?kpaşazade, Memories and Chronicles of the House of Osman
    31. John Thurocz, Chronicle of the Hungarians
    32. Tursun Beg, History of the Conqueror
    33. The Oxford Anonymous Chronicle
    34. Konstantin Mihailović, Memoirs

    Timelines:

    General Timeline
    The Crusade of 1456

    Maps:

    Central and Southeastern Europe, c. 1450
    The Siege and Relief of Belgrade, 1456
    The City and Fortress of Belgrade, c. 1450

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