Crusader Criminals: The Knights Who Went Rogue in the Holy Land
Steve Tibble

Crusader Criminals: The Knights Who Went Rogue in the Holy Land

The religious wars of the crusades are renowned for their military engagements. But the period was witness to brutality beyond the battlefield. More so than any other medieval war zone, the Holy Land was rife with unprecedented levels of criminality and violence.
 
In the first history of its kind, Steve Tibble explores the criminal underbelly of the crusades. From gangsters and bandits to muggers and pirates, Tibble presents extraordinary evidence of an illicit underworld. He shows how the real problem in the region stemmed not from religion but from young men. Dislocated, disinhibited, and present in disturbingly large numbers, they were the propellant that stoked two centuries of unceasing warfare and shocking levels of criminality.
 
Crusader Criminals charts the downward spiral of desensitisation that grew out of the horrors of incessant warfare―and in doing so uncovers some of the most surprising stories of the time.

Book Details:

  • Author: Steve Tibble
  • Published Year: 2024
  • Rights Sold
    • UK: Yale
Steve Tibble

Steve Tibble

Dr Steve Tibble is a graduate of Cambridge and London Universities, and is a research associate at Royal Holloway College, University of London. He is one of the foremost academics currently working in the field of the crusades.   His latest book, 'Templars - The Knights Who Made Britain' (2023) was published by Yale University Press to wide acclaim. Other recent publications have been similarly highly praised and include 'The Crusader Armies' (Yale, 2018) and 'The Crusader Strategy' (Yale, 2020, short-listed for the Duke of Wellington's Military History Prize). He is...
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Book Reviews

  • "In a bravura account of the diffuse criminal mayhem surrounding the crusades, Steve Tibble's widely researched, lively, detailed and accessible new study adds a fresh sociological dimension to insights on the chronic civilian disruption produced by the wars of the cross."
    Christopher Tyerman, author of God's War
  • "This is a fascinating survey of knights failing--often spectacularly--to live up their crusading ideals in the Holy Land (and beyond), and instead resorting to illicit behaviour. . . . Tibble, with his deep knowledge of the primary sources, covers these areas both authoritatively and accessibly, adopting an engaging style that holds the reader's attention throughout this wholly absorbing book, which will both shock and entertain in equal turn."
    Sean McGlynn, author of By Sword and Fire
  • "A dark and gripping story of how many of the men signed with the cross as crusaders in the Middle Ages were at once holy warriors and hardened criminals. Tibble's history is a Hogarthian cavalcade of the murderers, thieves, pirates, rogues, and highwaymen who fought for Christ in the medieval Middle East. Entertaining and enlightening about a dangerous past with unexpected lessons for the present."
    Mark Gregory Pegg, author of Beatrice's Last Smile
  • "Tibble manages to entertain as well as instruct, presenting his scholarly findings in a good-humoured, at times almost irreverent style that reminds us there need be nothing boring about medieval history...striking and original."
    Financial Times.