Expectations and dissensions - the First Crusade and Byzantium (1096-1098); the antagonisms sharpen - Alexius I Comnenus and the Crusader states (1098-1119); the height of confrontation - John Comnenus (1118-1143); the "policy of detente" - Manuel I Comnenus (1143-1180); Byzantine weakness and the relapse into the policy of confrontation - from Alexius II Comnenus to Alexius V Murtzuphlus (1180-1204); Byzantium and the Crusader states from 1096 to 1204 - summary. Appendices: Laodicea, Antioch and Byzantium between 1098 and 1105; objectivity and bias in John Cinnamus, Nicetas Choniates and William of Tyre; the Treaty of 1137 between Byzantium and the Princedom of Antioch according to Ordericus Vitalis and William of Tyre; the alliance of the Franks with Byzantium for the conquest of Egypt (1165-1177).
`Lilie's book is an important one, not only because the course of
relations between Greeks and Latins in the eastern Mediterranean
region is discussed in a refreshingly original way, but also
because all historians of the Latin East will want to consult it on
points of detail.' Jonathan Riley-Smith, English Historical
Review
`this is a scholarly work filling a sinificant gap in our
knowledge.'
Review of Books
`this is the first detailed book to focus on the relations between
those states and the empire...he has based his work solidly on
historical facts and, in places, has devoted considerable energy to
the clarification of some factual problems...it is clear that any
further discussion of the relations between Byzantium and the
Crusader states must begin with this book.'
The Catholic Historical Review
`fully documented...This is the best sort of old-fashioned
diplomatic history, investigating high politics by meticulous close
readings of the sources and imaginative speculation about the
character and motives.'
History Today
`Specialists will find this an important study that offers a
significant thesis. It may cause medieval historians to reconsider
some common notions.'
E. Randolph Daniel, University of Kentucky, The Historian
`This important book does much to advance our understanding of
these events and this readable translation will open the subject to
a far wider audience. It is a detailed and largely convincing work
that does much to help us understand the Byzantine attitude towards
the Crusader States and for this reason it deserves a positive
reception.'
Jonathan P. Phillips, Royal Holloway College, Journal of
Ecclesiastical History, vol.47, no. 1 Jan 1996
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