1st Edition

Robert of Nantes, Patriarch of Jerusalem (1240-1254)

By Adam M. Bishop Copyright 2024
210 Pages 22 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

210 Pages 22 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

210 Pages 22 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Robert of Nantes was Latin patriarch of Jerusalem from 1240 to 1254, and, according to Bernard Hamilton, was “the most important single person” in the Frankish Kingdom of Jerusalem after the Battle of Forbie in 1244. Despite this importance, he was a rather obscure figure: almost nothing is known about him before he became bishop of Nantes in 1236. How did he rise to such a prominent position in... Read more

Introduction

 

Chapter 1 – Origins

 

Chapter 2 – “A bishop in Apulia”

 

Chapter 3 – Bishop of Nantes

 

Chapter 4 – Patriarchal election in Jerusalem

 

Chapter 5 – Patriarch and papal legate in the east

 

Chapter 6 – The Crusade of Louis IX

 

Chapter 7 – Seignor temporel and seignor espirituel

 

Chapter 8 – Epilogue

 

Conclusion

 

Bibliography

Biography

Adam M. Bishop holds a PhD from the University of Toronto (2011). His thesis was on the development of the legal system of the Frankish Kingdom of Jerusalem, and he has published research on the legal treatises of Jerusalem and Cyprus. In 2011–2012, he was a post-doctoral researcher at the Université de Nantes, working on the European Research Council project “Religious Minorities in the Euro-Mediterranean world, 5th–15th Centuries.” He is currently an independent scholar living in London, Ontario, Canada.