Help support TMP


"The Military Legacy of Richard the Lionheart" Topic


4 Posts

All members in good standing are free to post here. Opinions expressed here are solely those of the posters, and have not been cleared with nor are they endorsed by The Miniatures Page.

For more information, see the TMP FAQ.


Back to the Medieval Media Message Board


Areas of Interest

Medieval

Featured Hobby News Article


Featured Link


Featured Ruleset


Featured Showcase Article

Oddzial Osmy's 15mm Teutonic Crossbowmen 1410

The next Teutonic Knights unit - Crossbowmen!


894 hits since 16 May 2015
©1994-2024 Bill Armintrout
Comments or corrections?


TMP logo

Membership

Please sign in to your membership account, or, if you are not yet a member, please sign up for your free membership account.
Tango0116 May 2015 10:08 p.m. PST

"There is a well-known legend in the mid-thirteenth century text Romance of Richard Coeur de Lion about the English king winning a joust with the Kurdish general Saladin. The force of the Richard's charge was unstoppable: after piercing Saladin's shoulder and driving him to the ground, he pushed forward to slay a host of Muslims with his battle-axe. His attack was so severe that it inspired his knights to join the charge, and as a result no less than sixty thousand of the enemy were killed. Although the story has no basis in fact, it gives a sense of the long-celebrated reputation of Richard, one of England's great medieval warrior-kings, and his individual combat prowess.

I am currently in the midst of writing a book about one of Richard's more-famous victories, the Siege of Acre during the Third Crusade, and have found myself confronted with a massive literature on that stretches back centuries. The process of unwinding the historiography has been…longer than I anticipated. My purpose today is to examine a slice of the pie, so to speak, by comparing and contrasting some historical assessments of Richard's military career from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This paper is not exhaustive and is intended only as a window into the copious historiography. In particular, I have relegated myself to British authors and English-language texts, partially for brevity's sake but also in order to get a sense of native memory. I will suggest that, while modern interpretations of Richard's career appear initially to break sharply with the older views, our reliance upon them is tangible and important to recognize.

Over the course of the long nineteenth century, British historians confirmed Richard's legendary reputation as the quintessential medieval general. Most of the histories from that period proceed by narrating Richard's reign from his coronation in 1189 to his death from gangrene ten years later. The historians tally his military exploits one by one, which — since he seems to have always been at war — results in an impressive list of campaigns, victories, and conquests. Upon reaching the point of his demise, the authors look back at the entirety of the reign and reach two common conclusions: 1) he was a neglectful and mostly-absent ruler of England, but 2) he attained spectacular success in war, which was, after all, his primary interest…"
From here
link

Amicalement
Armand

Puster Sponsoring Member of TMP17 May 2015 2:23 a.m. PST

The most important legacy of Richard may be the fact that he was captured and ransomed (thanks to his arrogance at Accron), and Leopold fortified Vienna with his part of this fortune.
In 1529 these walls still stood and defied the Ottomans first (and imho more dangerous) attempt to conquer Vienna. Under Suleyman the Ottoman empire was at the peak of its power, and the fall of Vienna (after Belgrad and Budapest) would have changed history considerably

GarrisonMiniatures17 May 2015 12:27 p.m. PST

'Richard's more-famous victories, the Siege of Acre'

Wonder what he would be saying if he had just used French rather than English sources?

Tango0117 May 2015 2:41 p.m. PST

(smile)

Amicalement
Armand

Sorry - only verified members can post on the forums.