List of works about the archaeology, cartography and numismatics of the Crusades explained

See main article: Historians and histories of the Crusades. Historians of the Crusades: archaeology, cartography and numismatics include those authors whose work was in the auxiliary sciences of history, including the areas of archaeological exploration; historical geography and cartography; numismatics and sigillography; and document analysis techniques. Much of this work is based on the accounts of travelers to the Holy Land.

In his article in the Catholic Encyclopedia, French historian Louis R. Bréhier (1869–1951) identified archaeological, cartographical and numismatics sources as a key for historical understanding of the Crusades.[1] Principal authors and their works are identified below. Many of these overlap with historians and travelers discussed in the companion articles in Historians and histories of the Crusades, and many of the works meet multiple categories in the overall work. Related articles include Biblical archaeology, the list of Christian holy places, the study of numismatics, the cartography of Palestine and the cartography of Jerusalem. The travel accounts in the Palestine Pilgrims' Text Society (PPTS) library are also of interest.

Cartography

Early journeys to the Holy Land included pilgrimages and government surveys, and resulted in numerous documents relating to geography and archaeology.

Descriptions of the Holy Land in the 5th and 6th Centuries. Numerous works dating from 440 to 570 describe the geography, topography and buildings in the Holy Land.[2] These include: The Epitome of S. Eucherius (440); The Breviary of Jerusalem (530); Theodosius' De situ terrae sanctae, or Topography of the Holy Land (530); The Buildings of Justinian, by Procopius (500 – after 565); and The Holy Places Visited by Antoninus Martyr (c. 570), the so-called anonymous pilgrim of Piacenza. Both the Breviary and Antoninus Martyr describe the crown of thorns present in a "Basilica of Mount Zion." In PPTS II.1–II.4.

Arculf and Adomnán. Arculf (fl. late 7th century), a Frankish bishop who toured the Holy Land c. 680. Adomnán (c. 624–704) was a Scottish abbot who wrote about the sacred places based on the work of Arculf. The accounts contain the second oldest known map of Jerusalem (the oldest being the Madaba Map). In PPTS III.1.

Commemoratorium de Casis Dei vel Monasteriis is a report from 808 sent to Charlemagne tabulating all churches, monasteries and hospices in the Holy Land. Its purpose was to allow the emperor to expeditiously distribute alms. In Descriptiones Terrae Sanctae ex saeculo VIII., IX., XII. et XV (1874) by Titus Tobler.[3]

Ibn Rustah. Ahmad ibn Rustah (died after 903), a Persian explorer and geographer.[4]

Al-Balādhuri. ʾAḥmad ibn Yaḥyā ibn Jabir al-Balādhurī (fl. 9th century), one of the earliest Muslim historians who traveled widely in Syria and Mesopotamia and provided an extensive geographic information on the area.[5] [6]

Ibn Jubayr. Ibn Jubayr (1145–1217), an Arab geographer and traveler.[8] [9]

William of Rubruck. William of Rubruck (fl. 1253 – 1255), a Flemish Franciscan missionary who accompanied Louis IX of France on the Seventh Crusade and, in 1253, set out on a journey to Mongol territory.[10] [11]

Abu'l Fida. Abu'l-Fida (Abulfeda) (1273–1331), a Kurdish politician, geographer and historian from Syria who had descended from Najm ad-Din Ayyub, father of Saladin.[13] [14]

Rashid al-Din. Rashid-al-Din Hamadani (1247–1318) was a Jewish-turned-Islamic physician and historian who was vizier to the Ilkhan Ghazan.[15]

Tractatus de locis et statu sancte terre ierosolimitane. The Tractatus de locis et statu sancte terre ierosolimitane (late 12th or early 13th century) is an anonymous work concerning the geography of the Kingdom of Jerusalem prior to the fall of Jerusalem in 1187. It also discusses the ethnography of the Christian groups living there as well as the feudal structure of the kingdom. The non-Christian groups including Jews, Bedouins and Assassins are also discussed.[17]

Al-Idrisi. Muhammad al-Idrisi (1100–1165), an Arab geographer who spent time at the court of Roger II of Sicily.[18]

Yaqut al-Hamawi. Yaqut al-Hamawi (1179–1229), an Arab scholar.[19] [20]

Izz al-Din ibn Shaddad. Izz al-Din ibn Shaddad al-Halabi (1217-1285), an Aleppan geographer employed by the Ayyubids.[21]

Ibn Abd al-Zahir. Ibn Abd al-Zahir (1223–1293), also known as Muhi ad-Din ibn Abdazzahir, was an Egyptian historian who wrote extensively of the Mamluk sultans as well as a geographical study.[22]

Al-Dimashqi. Shams al-Din al-Ansari al-Dimashqi (1256–1327), an Arab geographer known as the Damascene.[23]

Hamdallah Mustawfi. Hamdallah Mustawfi Qazvini (1281–1349), a Persian historian and geographer.[24]

Marino Sanudo. Marino Sanudo (Sanuto) the Elder (1260–1338), a Venetian statesman and geographer.[25] [26] [27]

Conti, Niccolò de'. Niccolò de' Conti (c. 1395 – 1469), an Italian merchant, explorer, and writer, who traveled to India and other Asian destinations. His travels were used to help create the Fra Mauro map of 1450.[28] [29]

Jean Germain, bishop of Nevers and Châlons. Jean Germain (1400–1461), bishop of Nevers from 1430 to 1436 and bishop of Châlons from 1436 to 1461. Councilor to Philip the Good and chancellor to the Order of the Golden Fleece. (cf. French Wikipedia, Jean Germain)[35] [36]

William Wey. William Wey (c. 1407 – 1476), an English traveller and author.[37]

Mīr-Khvānd. Mohammad ibn Khwāndshāh ibn Mahmud (Mir-Khwānd) (1433–1498), a Persian-language historian from Bukhara.[41]

Johann Romberch. Johann Host von Romberch (c. 1480 – 1533), a German Dominican and writer.[44] [45]

Abraham Ortelius. Abraham Ortelius (1527–1598), a Brabantian cartographer, geographer, and cosmographer, known as the creator of the first modern atlas.[47]

Michaël Eytzinger. Michaël Eytzinger (c. 1530 – 1598), an Austrian genealogist, cartographer and historian, who invented the Ahnentafel genealogical numbering system. Also known as Michael Aitsinger.[49]

Christian van Adrichem. Christian Kruik van Adrichem (1533–1585) was a Catholic priest and theological writer.[51]

Gabriel Sionita. Gabriel Sionita (1577–1648), a Lebanese Maronite orientalist and author.[53] [54]

Yūḥannā al-Ḥaṣrūnī. Yūḥannā al-Ḥaṣrūnī (Joannes Hesronita) (died 1626), an Arab author.[56] [57]

Philippe Labbe. Philippe Labbe (1607–1667), a French Jesuit who wrote on historical, geographical and philological topics, including those of the Byzantine empire.[59] [60]

Thomas Fuller. Thomas Fuller (1608–1661), an English churchman and historian.[62] [63]

Giovanni Careri. Giovanni Francesco Gemelli Careri (1651–1725), an Italian adventurer and traveler, among the first Europeans to tour the world by securing passage on merchant ships. Generally referred to as Gemelli. His travels may have inspired the character Phileas Fogg in Jules Verne's Around the World in Eighty Days. He was suspected of spying for the Vatican on his journey.[65]

Joseph Pitts. Joseph Pitts (c. 1662 – c. 1735?), an English author and geographer, taken into slavery by Barbary pirates in Algiers in 1678.[67]

Raffaele Savonarola. Innocenzo Raffaele Savonarola (1646–1730), an Italian a monk and cartographer who worked in the monastery library in Padua, also known by the alias of Alphonsus Lasor a Verea.[68]

Claude Buffier. Claude Buffier (1661–1737), French philosopher and historian.[69] [70]

Richard Pococke. Richard Pococke (1704–1765), an English prelate and anthropologist.[72] [73]

Frederic Norden. Frederic Louis Norden (1708–1742), a Danish naval captain, cartographer, and archaeological explorer.[75] [76]

Carsten Niebuhr. Carsten Niebuhr (1733–1815), a German mathematician, cartographer, and explorer in the service of Denmark. Participant in the Danish Arabia Expedition of 1761–1767.[77]

Jean-Baptiste Bourguignon d'Anville. Jean Baptiste Bourguignon d'Anville (1697–1782), a French geographer and cartographer who greatly improved the standards of map-making. His maps of ancient geography have been characterized by careful, accurate work and based on original research. Over 1600 cartographic works are attributed to him. The cited reference below includes a partial bibliography.[81] [82]

Bibliography of Topography of Palestine. An extensive bibliography of works on the topography of Palestine from 333 to 1764 can be found in The Land of Promise: Notes of a Spring-journey from Beersheba to Sidon (1858) by Scottish churchman Horatius Bonar (1808–1889).[84]

Wilhelm Bachiene. Wilhelm Albert Bachiene (1712–1783), a German cartographer.[85]

Gottlieb Stuck. Gottlieb Heinrich Stuck (1716–1787), a German geographer.[87]

Johann Bellermann. Johann Joachim Bellermann (1754–1842), a German Hebraist and one of the experts in of Hebrew epigraphy.[89] [90]

Carl Ritter. Carl Ritter (1779–1859), a German geographer who was referenced by Swiss orientalist Titus Tobler (1806–1877) in his Bibliographia Geographica Palestinæ (1867).[91]

Titus Tobler. Titus Tobler (1806–1877), a Swiss oriental scholar.[93]

M. J. de Goeje. Michael Jan de Goeje (1836–1909), a Dutch orientalist focusing on Arabia and Islam.[96] [97]

Guy Le Strange. Guy Le Strange (1854–1933), a British orientalist specializing in historical geography of the Middle East and editing of Persian geographical texts.[101] [102]

Reinhold Röhricht. Gustav Reinhold Röhricht (1842–1905), a German historian of the Crusades, regarded as a pioneer with fellow German historian Heinrich Hagenmeyer (1834-1915) in the history of the kingdom of Jerusalem, laying the foundation for modern Crusader research.[106] [107]

The Atlas of the Crusades (1999)[112] by Jonathan Riley-Smith (1938–2016), a British historian of the Crusades.[113]

Archaeology

The topic of archaeology as it pertains to the study of the Crusades includes archaeology per se as well as archaeoseismology, diplomatics, epigraphy, palaeography and sigillography. Other areas include Egyptology, Palestinology, botany, herpetology, geology, art history and architectural studies. Historians and scientists in this category are listed below.

George Sandys. George Sandys (1578–1644), an English traveler, colonist, poet, and translator. Sandys' writings influenced contemporary literature and other disciplines including art, archaeology and geography. Sandys is considered to be the first English Egyptologist.[114] [115] [116]

Jan van Cootwijk. Jan van Cootwijk (died 1629), a Flemish antiquary, also known as Johannes Cotovicus.[120]

Notes and References

  1. Bréhier, Louis René (1908). "Crusades (Sources and Bibliography)". In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. 4. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  2. Runciman, Steven (1969). "Chapter II.D. The Pilgrimages to Palestine before 1091." In Setton, Kenneth M.; Baldwin, Marshall W. (eds.). A History of the Crusades: I. The First Hundred Years. Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 68-80.
  3. Tobler, T. (1874). Descriptiones Terrae Sanctae ex saeculo VIII., IX., XII. et XV. Leipzig: J.C. Hinrichs.
  4. [Clifford Edmund Bosworth|Bosworth, C. Edmund]
  5. C. E. Bosworth, "Balādori"," Encyclopædia Iranica, online edition, 2016 (accessed on 20 September 2016).
  6. Thatcher, Griffithes Wheeler (1911). "Balādhurī". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. 3 (11th ed.), Cambridge University Press. p. 233.
  7. Balādhurī, A. ibn Yaḥyá., Hitti, P. K. (Philip Khuri). (191624). The origins of the Islamic state: being a translation from the Arabic accompanied with annotations, geographic and historic notes of the Kitâbfutûḥ al-buldân of al-Imâm abu l'Abbâs Aḥmad ibn-Jâbir al-Balâdhuri. New York.
  8. Encyclopedia: Ibn Jubayr (1145–1217). The Crusades - An Encyclopedia. Talmon-Heller. Daniella. 625–626.
  9. Encyclopedia: Pellat. Ch.. Encyclopaedia of Islam. 2nd. Ibn Djubayr. 19 July 2020.
  10. Schlager, Patricius (1912). "William Rubruck" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. 13. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  11. Yule, Henry, and Beazley, Charles Raymond (1911). "Rubruquis, William of " . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. 23 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 810-812.
  12. Ruysbroeck, W. van., Rockhill, W. Woodville., Giovanni di Piano Carpini, a. of Antivari. (1900). The journey of William of Rubruck to the eastern parts of the world, 1253-55. London: Printed for the Hakluyt Society.
  13. Thatcher, Griffithes Wheeler (1911). "Abulfeda". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. 1 (11th ed.), Cambridge University Press. p. 80.
  14. Encyclopedia: Reza. Enayatollah. Negahban. Farzin. Encyclopaedia Islamica. 2008. Abū al-Fidā'. 2020-07-01. 2020-07-02. https://web.archive.org/web/20200702002115/https://referenceworks.brillonline.com/entries/encyclopaedia-islamica/abu-al-fida-COM_0065.
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  285. Web site: Greenburg, Raphael (2021). Israeli Archaeological Activity in the West Bank, 1967–2007: A Sourcebook. Academia.
  286. http://worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no2003076958/ Luynes, Honoré d'Albert de (1802-1867).
  287. Luynes, H. Théodoric Paul Joseph d'Albert. (1846). Essai sur la numismatique des satrapies et de la Phénicie sous les rois Achæménides. Paris: Typ. de Firmin Didot frères.
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  293. Saulcy, L. Félicien Joseph Caignart de. (1847). Numismatique des croisades. Paris: Rollin [etc.].
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  295. Schlumberger, G. Léon. (1875). Numismatique des croisades: Monnaie inédite des seigneurs du Toron en Syrie.Paris.
  296. Schlumberger, G. Léon. (1943). Sigillographie de l'Orient latin ... Paris: P. Geuthner.
  297. Schlumberger, G. Léon. (1954). Numismatique de l'Orient Latin. Graz: Akademische Druck- U. Verlagsanstalt.
  298. Schlumberger, G. Léon. (1883). La Vierge, le Christ, les saints sur les sceaux byzantins des Xe, XIe et XIIe siècles. Paris.
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  300. Schlumberger, G. Léon. (1898). Renaud de Chatillon: prince d'Antioche, seigneur de la Terre d'Outre-Jourdain. Paris: Plon
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  307. Bibliothèque nationale de France . "Charles Farcinet (1824-1903)".
  308. Farcinet, C. (1895). Mélanges de numismatique & d'histoire et Recherche en Poitou. Nouvelle edition. Paris: Ch. Rolin et Feuardent.
  309. Web site: Balog. Pauland. Yvon. Jacques. Monnaies à lé genres arabes de l'Orient latin. 19 July 2020. Persée, Parcourir les Collections.
  310. Web site: Balog. Paul. The Coinage of the Mamluk Sultans of Egypt and Syria. 19 July 2020. American Numismatics Society (ANS) Digital Library.
  311. Balog, P. (1976). Umayyad, ʻĀbbasid, and Ṭūlūnid glass weights and vessel stamps. New York: American Numismatic Society.
  312. Norman D. Nicol . The Numismatic Chronicle . 146 . 1986 . 119-154 . Paul Balog's The Coinage of the Ayyubids: Additions and Corrections. 42667460.
  313. http://worldcat.org/identities/viaf-1978149719105711130002/ Robbert, Louise Buenger
  314. Robbert, Louise Buenger (1985). "Chapter IX. Venice and the Crusades". In Zacour, Norman P., and Hazard, Harry W. (eds.). A History of the Crusades: Volume V. The Impact of the Crusades on the Near East. Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 379-451
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  316. Porteous, John (1989). "Chapter X. Crusader Coinage with Greek or Latin Inscriptions". In Zacour, N. P., and Hazard, H. W. (ed.). A History of the Crusades: Volume VI. The Impact of the Crusades on Europe. Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 354-387.
  317. Porteous, John (1989). "Corpus of Coins". In Zacour, N. P., and Hazard, H. W. (ed.). A History of the Crusades: Volume VI. The Impact of the Crusades on Europe. Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 388-420.
  318. Brown, Michael J., and Metcalf, D. M. (1989). "Crusader Coins with Arabic Inscriptions". In Zacour, N. P., and Hazard, H. W. (ed.). A History of the Crusades: Volume VI. The Impact of the Crusades on Europe. Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 421-473.
  319. Brown, Michael J., and Metcalf, D. M. (1989). "List of Coins Illustrated". In Zacour, N. P., and Hazard, H. W. (ed.). A History of the Crusades: Volume VI. The Impact of the Crusades on Europe. Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 474-482.
  320. Lekson, S. H., Millon, R., I͡Anin, V. L. (Valentin Lavrentʹevich)., Addyman, P. V., Mercer, R. J. (Roger J.)., McCann, A. Marguerite., Watts, C. Martin., Watts, D. J., Maiuri, A., Bernard, P., Makaronas, C. (Charalampos)., Warren, P. (Peter M.)., Mellink, M. J. (Machteld Johanna)., Parr, P. (Peter J.)., Kenyon, K. Mary., Adams, R. McCormick., Hammond, N., Scientific American, I. (1994). Ancient Cities. [New York: Scientific American, Inc..</ref> '''Hugh N. Kennedy.''' [[Hugh N. Kennedy]] (born 1947), a British medieval historian.[265]
    • The Prophet and the Age of the Caliphates, 600–1050 (1986).
    • Crusader Castles (1994). An account of the history and architecture of Crusader castles in the Kingdom of Jerusalem, County of Tripoli and Principality of Antioch between 1099 and 1291. Work summarized in The Crusades - An Encyclopedia.[266]
    • The Historiography of Islamic Egypt, c. 950-1800 (2000).[267]

    Moshe Sharon. Moshe Sharon (born 1937), an Israeli historian of Islam. Referred to as "Israel's greatest Middle East scholar."[268]

    • Corpus Inscriptionum Arabicarum Palaestinae, 6 volumes to date; 7th projected (1997–2021). An extensive work that provides the epigraphy of the Holy Land relating to construction, dedication, religious endowments, epitaphs, Quranic texts, prayers and invocations. His work has been instrumental in the continued analysis of original texts of the Crusades. Current volumes cover A through J, Part 1. Seventh volume partially covers Jerusalem.[269]

    Sheila Blair. Sheila Blair (born 1948), an American scholar of Islamic art.[270]

    A. H. S. Megaw. Arthur Hubert Stanley Megaw (1910–2006), an Irish architectural historian and archaeologist, specializing in Byzantine churches.[274]

    • The Arts in Cyprus: B. Military Architecture (1979). In the Wisconsin Collaborative History of the Crusades, Volume IV. The Art and Architecture of the Crusader States.

    Jaroslav T. Folda III. Jaroslav T. Folda III (born 1940), an American art historian.[275]

    • Painting and Sculpture in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem, 1099–1291 (1979). In the Wisconsin Collaborative History of the Crusades, Volume IV. The Art and Architecture of the Crusader States.[276]
    • Crusader Art and Architecture: A Photographic Survey (1979). In the Wisconsin Collaborative History of the Crusades, Volume IV. The Art and Architecture of the Crusader States.[277]
    • Art in the Latin East, 1098–1291(1995). In The Oxford History of the Crusades.

    Denys Pringle. Denys Pringle (born 1951), a British archaeologist and medievalist.[278]

    • Architecture in the Latin East, 1098–1571 (1995). In the Oxford History of the Crusades.
    • Secular Buildings in the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem: An Archaeological Gazeteer (1997). A descriptive gazetteer of secular buildings (to include industrial sites) known to have existed within the Kingdom of Jerusalem.

    Nasser Khalili. Sir Nasser David Khalili (born 1945), a British-Iranian scholar, collector, and philanthropist.

    Nicholas Ambraseys. Nicholas Ambraseys (1929–2012), a Greek archaeoseismologist who was a pioneer in the study of medieval earthquakes in the Middle East.

    • The 12th century seismic paroxysm in the Middle East: a historical perspective (2004).[280]

    David Nicolle. David Nicolle (born 1944) is a British historian specializing in the military history of the Middle East.

    • Crusader Castles in the Holy Land, 1192–1302 (2004). Examines the early fortifications erected by the Crusaders in Israel, the Palestinian territories, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria and Turkey.

    Micaela Sinibaldi. Micaela Sinibaldi is a British medieval archaeologist.[281]

    • The historical earthquakes of Syria: an analysis of large and moderate earthquakes from 1365 B.C. to 1900 A.D. (2005).[282]
    • Settlement in Crusader Transjordan (1100–1189): a Historical and Archaeological Study (2014).[283]
    • Crusader Landscapes in the Medieval Levant: The Archaeology and History of the Latin East (2016).[284] A collection of articles written to celebrated the career of Denys Pringle.

    Raphael Greenberg. Raphael (Rafi) Greenberg, an Israeli archaeologist.

    • Israeli Archaeological Activity in the West Bank, 1967–2007: A Sourcebook (2021).[285]

    Numismatics

    Mīr-Khvānd. Mīr-Khvānd (1433–1498), a Persian-language historian from Bukhara.

    • The History of the Atábeks of Syria and Persia. Translation of portions of Volume 4 of Rawżat aṣ-ṣafāʾ, edited by English orientalist William H. Morley, with a section on the Coins Struck by the Atábeks of Irak by English antiquary and numismatist William S. W. Vaux (1818 –1885).

    Honoré Théodoric d'Albert de Luynes. Honoré Théodoric d'Albert de Luynes (1802–1867), a French nobleman, archaeologist and numismatist.[286]

    • Essai sur la numismatique des Satrapies et de la Phénicie sous les rois Achæménides (1846).[287]
    • Numismatique et inscriptions cypriotes (1852).[288]
    • Voyage d'exploration à la mer Morte, à Petra et sur la rive gauche du Jordan (published posthumously).
    • Catalogue de la Collection de Luynes, 3 volumes (1924).[289]

    William S. W. Vaux. William Sandys Wright Vaux (1818 –1885), an English antiquary and numismatist.[290] [291]

    • The Numismatic Chronicle (1839). By W. S. W. Vaux, et al.[292]
    • Coins Struck by the Atábeks of Irak (1848). In The History of the Atábeks of Syria and Persia, by Mīr-Khvānd, translated by English orientalist William H. Morley.

    Louis Félicien de Saulcy. Louis Félicien de Saulcy (1807–1880), a French historian, numismatist and archaeologist.

    • Numismatique des croisades (1847). A pioneering work on the coins of the Crusader era.[293]

    Gustave Schlumberger. Gustave Schlumberger (1844-1929), a French historian and numismatist who specialized on the Crusades and the Byzantine Empire.[294]

    • Numismatique des croisades. Monnaie inédite des seigneurs du Toron en Syrie (1875).[295]
    • Sigillographie de l'Orient latin (1877). Continued by French Byzantinist Ferdinand Chalandon (1875–1921).[296]
    • Numismatique de l'Orient Latin, 2 volumes (1878–1882). The principal work on the coinage of the Crusades.[297]
    • La Vierge, le Christ, les saints sur les sceaux byzantins des Xe, XIe et XIIe siècles (1883).[298]
    • Sigillographie de l'empire byzantin (1884). A compendium of Byzantine seals.[299]
    • Renaud de Châtillon, prince d'Antioche, seigneur de la terre d'Outre-Jourdain (1898). A biography of Raynald of Châtillon.[300]
    • Expédition des "Almugavares" ou routiers Catalans en Orient de l'an 1302 à l'an 1311 (1902). A history of the Catalan Company during the expedition of the Almogavars from 1301 to 1311.[301]
    • Campagnes du roi Amaury Ier de Jérusalem en Egypte, au XIIe siècle (1906).[302]
    • Prise de Saint-Jean-d'Acre, en l'an 1291 (1914).[303]
    • Le siege, la prise et le sac de Constantinople par les Turcs en 1453 (1914).[304]
    • Récits des Byzance et des Croisades, 2 volumes (1922–1923).[305]
    • Byzance et les croisades, pages médiévales (1927).[306]

    Charles Farcinet. Charles Farcinet (1824-1903), a French historian and numismatist.[307]

    • Mélanges de numismatique et d'histoire (1895). Mixtures of numismatics and history. The feudal coins of Poitou.[308]
    • Les anciens sires de Lusignan (1897). The former lords of Lusignan, Geoffroy la Grand'Dent (Geoffrey II of Lusignan) and the counts of La Marche: historical research on the Middle Ages in Poitou. Includes the Testament on Geoffrey II of Lusignan (1198–1247), by Jean Besly.

    Paul Balog. Paul Balog (1900–1982), an Italian Islamic numismatist and archaeologist.

    • Monnaies à lé genres arabes de l'Orient latin (1958). By Paul Balog and Jacques Yvon (1923–1983). The standard reference for the classifications of coins in Arabic from the Crusader era.[309]
    • The Coinage of the Mamluk Sultans of Egypt and Syria (1964), both regarded as classic studies in Islamic numismatics.[310]
    • Umayyad, ʻĀbbasid, and Ṭūlūnid glass weights and vessel stamps (1976).[311]
    • The Coinage of the Ayyubids (1980).[312]

    Louise Buenger Robbert. Louise Buenger Robbert, an American historian and numismatist, with an emphasis on medieval Venice.[313]

    • The Venetian money market, 1150-1229 (1971).
    • Reorganization of the Venetian coinage by Doge Enrico Dandolo (1974).
    • Venice and the Crusades (1985). In the Wisconsin Collaborative History of the Crusades, Volume V, The Impact of the Crusades on the Near East.[314]

    John Porteous. John Porteous (20th century), a British numismatist.[315]

    • Crusader Coinage with Greek or Latin Inscriptions (1989). In the Wisconsin Collaborative History of the Crusades, Volume VI. The Impact of the Crusades on Europe.[316]
    • Corpus of Coins (1989). In the Wisconsin Collaborative History of the Crusades, Volume VI. The Impact of the Crusades on Europe.[317]

    Michael L. Brown. Michael L. Brown (20th century), an American numismatist.

    • Crusader Coinage with Arabic Inscriptions (1989). With British numismatist D. M. Metcalf. In the Wisconsin Collaborative History of the Crusades, Volume VI. The Impact of the Crusades on Europe.[318]
    • List of Coins Illustrated (1989). With British numismatist D. M. Metcalf. In the Wisconsin Collaborative History of the Crusades, Volume VI. The Impact of the Crusades on Europe.[319]

    See also

    References

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    • Les Monuments des Croisés dans le Royaume de Jérusalem, 2 volumes (1925–1929). Crusader monuments of the kingdom of Jerusalem. Published by the Haut Commissariat Français en Syrie et au Liban Bibliothèque Archéologique.[246]

    Charles Diehl. Charles Diehl (1859–1944), a French historian specializing in Byzantine art and history.[247]

    • The Byzantine Empire and the Crusades (1902). The Byzantine empire from 1095 to 1189. In Essays on the Crusades, edited by Dale C. Munro.[248]
    • Byzance. Grandeur et décadence (1919). English translation, Byzantium: Greatness and Decline, published in 1957. Translated by Semantic scholar Naomi Walford with an introduction and bibliography by Byzantine scholar Peter Charanis (1908–1985).[249] [250]
    • Jérusalem (1921). A survey of historical sites in Jerusalem in the early twentieth century.[251]

    Harry Luke. Sir Harry Charles Luke (1884–1969), an official in the British Colonial Office, serving in Cyprus and Palestine among others, and was the author of books on several of these countries.[252]

    • The Handbook of Cyprus (1913).[253]
    • The Handbook of Palestine (1922).[254]

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    • Boniface VIII (1933). A biography of pope Boniface VIII.[256]
    • Recent Developments in Crusading Historiography (1937). In History, Volume 22.[257]
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    • Ecclesiastical Art in the Crusader States in Palestine and Syria: A. Architecture and Sculpture. B. Mosaic, Painting and Minor Arts (1979). In the Wisconsin Collaborative History of the Crusades, Volume IV. The Art and Architecture of the Crusader States.[259]
    • Military Architecture in the Crusader States in Palestine and Syria (1979). In the Wisconsin Collaborative History of the Crusades, Volume IV. The Art and Architecture of the Crusader States.[260]
    • The Arts in Cyprus: A. Ecclesiastical Art (1979). In the Wisconsin Collaborative History of the Crusades, Volume IV. The Art and Architecture of the Crusader States.[261]
    • The Arts in Frankish Greece and Rhodes: A. Frankish Greece (with David J. Wallace). B. Rhodes (1979). In the Wisconsin Collaborative History of the Crusades, Volume IV. The Art and Architecture of the Crusader States.[262]

    Kathleen Kenyon. Dame Kathleen Mary Kenyon (1906–1978), a British archaeologist of Neolithic culture in the Fertile Crescent. One of the most influential archeologists of the 20th century.[263]

    • Archaeology in the Holy Land (1960).[264]
    • Ancient Cities (1994). Contribuiions by Kenyon, among a host of others.[265]
  322. Berchem, M. van. (1906). Monuments et inscriptions de lʾatābek Luʾluʾ de Mossoul. [Gieszen.</ref> * ''Épigraphie des Atabeks de Damas'' (1909). Epigraphs of the [[List of rulers of Damascus#Seljuq emirs|atabegs of Damascus]] from Atsiz ibn Abaq through Toghtekin (1076–1128).[230]

    Ernst Emil Herzfeld. Ernst Emil Herzfeld (1879–1948), a German archaeologist and Iranologist.[231] [232]

    • Matériaux pour un Corpus Inscriptionum Arabicarum (1894). A reference work on Arabic inscriptions. With Swiss epigraphist Max van Berchem (1863–1921) and French orientalist Gaston Wiet (1887–1971).
    • Archaeological History of Iran (1937).[233]

    Gaston Wiet. Gaston Wiet (1887–1971), a French orientalist.[234]

    • Matériaux pour un Corpus Inscriptionum Arabicarum (1894). A reference work on Arabic inscriptions. With Swiss epigraphist Max van Berchem (1863–1921) and German Iranologist Ernst Emil Herzfeld (1879–1948).
    • Répertoire chronologique d'épigraphie arabe (1931).[235]

    Urbain Bouriant. Urbain Bouriant (1849–1903), a French Egyptologist, who discovered the Gospel of Peter in a tomb at Akhmim.[236]

    • Description topographique et historique de l'Égypte, 2 volumes (1895–1900). French translation of the Al-Mawāʻiẓ wa-al-Iʻtibār bi-Dhikr al-Khiṭaṭ wa-al-āthār written by Egyptian historian al-Makrizi (1364–1442).[237]

    Fernand de Mély. Fernand Marie Charles Dusaussay de Mély (1851–1935), a French archaeologist, writer, art critic and collector. (cf. French Wikipedia, Fernand de Mély)[238]

    • Les lapidaires de l'antiquité et du moyen âge (1896).[239]
    • La croix des premiers croisés; la sainte lance; la sainte couronne (1904). A collection of documents relating to the status of relics at Constantinople before 1204 and their disposition after the Fourth Crusade. A follow-on to Exuviae Sacrae Constantinoploitanae (1877–1888), edited by French historian Paul E. D. Riant (1836-1888).[240]

    Charles Simon Clermont-Ganneau. Charles Simon Clermont-Ganneau (1846–1923), a French orientalist and archaeologist.[241]

    Camile Enlart. Camille Enlart (1862–1927), a French archaeologist and art historian, with an emphasis on the Middle Ages. (cf. French Wikipedia, Camille Enlart)[245]

    • L'Art Gothique et la Renaissance en Chypre: illustré de 34 planches et de 421 figures, 2 volumes (1899).[246]
  323. Vogüé, M. (1864). Monnaies inedites des Croisades. [n.p..</ref> * The Recovery of Jerusalem: A narrative of exploration and discovery in the city and the Holy Land (1871). With Richard Phené Spiers, Charles W. Wilson, Arthur Penrhyn Stanley, Charles Warren and others.<ref name=":1902">Wilson, C. William., Holland, F. Whitmore., Chester, G. John., Anderson, S., Spiers, R. Phené., Vogüé, M., Stanley, A. Penrhyn., Morrison, W., Warren, C., Palestine Exploration Fund. (1871). [https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/001242214/Home The recovery of Jerusalem.: A narrative of exploration and discovery in the city and the Holy Land]. London: R. Bentley.
    • Jérusalem hier et aujourd'hui: notes de voyage (1912).[212]

    Charles W. Wilson. Sir Charles William Wilson (1836–1905), a British Army officer, geographer and archaeologist. Wilson served as director of the Palestine Pilgrims' Text Society and was chairman of the Palestine Exploration Fund.[213]

    • The Recovery of Jerusalem: A narrative of exploration and discovery in the city and the Holy Land (1871). With Richard Phené Spiers, Melchior Vogüé, Arthur Penrhyn Stanley, Charles Warren and others.
    • Picturesque Palestine, Sinai, and Egypt, 4 volumes (1880–1884).[214]
    • The Masonry of the Haram Wall, in the Quarterly statement of The Palestine Exploration Fund (1880). See also The Gates of the Haram Area, in Volume IV of the Library of the Palestine Pilgrims' Text Society[215]
    • Library of the Palestine Pilgrims' Text Society (1897). Editor of numerous volumes of the series.
    • Names and Places in the Old and New Testament and Apocrypha: with their modern identifications (1889). With Claude R. Conder and George Armstrong.[216]
    • Ancient Jerusalem: a lecture delivered for the Palestine Exploration Fund (1892).[217]

    Richard Phené Spiers. Richard Phené Spiers (1838–1916), an English architect and author.[218]

    • The Recovery of Jerusalem: A narrative of exploration and discovery in the city and the Holy Land (1871). With Charles W. Wilson, Melchior Vogüé, Arthur Penrhyn Stanley, Charles Warren and others.
    • A History of Ancient and Medieval Architecture, 2 volumes (1893).[219]

    Charles Warren. Sir Charles Warren (1840–1927), an officer in the British Royal Engineers. An early European archaeologist in the Holy Land, and particularly the Temple Mount. He was head of the London Metropolitan Police during the Jack the Ripper murders.[220]

    • The Recovery of Jerusalem: A narrative of exploration and discovery in the city and the Holy Land (1871). With Richard Phené Spiers, Melchior Vogüé, Charles W. Wilson, Arthur P. Stanley and others.
    • The Temple or the Tomb (1880). Giving further evidence in favour of the authenticity of the present site of the Holy Sepulchre, and pointing out some of the principal misconceptions contained in Notes on the Site of the Holy Sepulchre at Jerusalem (1860) and The Temples of the Jews and the other Buildings in the Haram Area at Jerusalem (1878), by Scottish architectural historian James Fergusson (1808–1886).[221]

    Charles Clermont-Ganneau. Charles Simon Clermont-Ganneau (1846–1923), a French orientalist and archaeologist.[222]

    • Les fraudes archéologíques en Palestine (1885). Suivies de quelques monuments phéniciens apocryphes, avee 20 gravures et fae-similes.[223]
    • Etudes d'Archéologie Orientale, 2 volumes (1895–1897).[224]

    Max van Berchem. Max van Berchem (1863–1921), a Swiss epigraphist and historian, and a pioneer in the use of Arabic epigraphs and inscriptions in historical analysis.[225] [226]

    • Matériaux pour un Corpus Inscriptionum Arabicarum (1894). A reference work on Arabic inscriptions. With French orientalist Gaston Wiet (1887–1971) and German Iranologist Ernst Emil Herzfeld (1879–1948).[227]
    • Epigraphie des Assassins de Syrie (1897). The epigraphs of the Assassins of Syria during the time of Louis IX of France and the Seventh Crusade (1248–1254).[228]
    • Notes sur les croisades. Le royaume de Jérusalem et le livre de m. Röhricht (1902). Notes on the Crusades, in particular the royalty of Jerusalem, based on the work of German historian Reinhold Röhricht (1842-1905).[229]
    • Monuments et inscriptions de lʾatābek Luʾluʾ de Mossoul (1906). Monuments and inscriptions of the Armenian ruler of Mosul Badr al-Din Lu'lu' (died 1259).[230]
  324. Vogüé, M. (1864). Monnaies inedites des Croisades. [n.p..</ref> '''Thomas Wright.''' [[Thomas Wright (antiquarian)|Thomas Wright]] (1810–1877), an English antiquarian and writer. Additional works listed in Chapter 6 above.[196] [197] [198]
    • Essays on Archaeological Subjects: and on various questions connected with the history of art, science and literature in the Middle Ages (1861).[199]

    Emmanuel Guillaume-Rey. Emmanuel Guillaume-Rey (1837–1913), a French archaeologist, topographer and orientalist who wrote seminal works on the archaeology of the Holy Land.[200] [201]

    • Voyage dans le Haouran et aux bords de la Mer Morte exécuté pendant les années 1857 et 1858 (1861). An account of a voyage on the Dead Sea and to the Hauran.[202]
    • Étude historique et topographique de la tribu de Juda (1862). A historical and topographical study of the tribe of Judah.
    • Essai sur la domination française en Syrie durant le moyen âge (1866). An essay on French domination in Syria during the Middle Ages[203]
    • Etude sur les monuments de l'architecture militaire des croisés en Syrie et dans l'île de Chypre (1871). A study on the monuments of the military architecture of the Crusaders in Syria and on Cyprus[204]
    • Les familles d'Outremer (1869). Original work by French historian Charles du Cange (1610–1688), extended by Guillaume-Rey. Genealogy of the royal families of the Kingdom of Jerusalem through 1244.[205]
    • Etudes sur les monuments de l'architecture militaire des croisés (1871). A study of Crusader fortifications in the Holy Land.
    • Recherches géographiques et historiques sur la domination des latins en Orient, accompagnées de textes inédits ou peu connus du XIIe au XIVe siècle (1877).[206]
    • Étude sur la topographie de la ville d'Acre au XIIIe siècle (1879). A study of the topography of Acre in the thirteenth century.[207]

    Theodor Mommsen. Christian Matthias Theodor Mommsen (1817–1903), a German classical scholar, historian and archaeologist.[208] [209]

    Melchior Vogüé. Melchior, Marquis de Vogüé (1829–1916), a French archaeologist, orientalist, epigraphist, historian and diplomat. Served as ambassador to Constantinople.[211]

    • Monnaies inedites des Croisades (1864).[212]
  325. Drechsler, W., Romain, A., Gottfried, J. Ludwig., Richer, C., Cootwijk, J. van., Hesronita, J., Gabriel Sionita, 1., Jansson, J. (1633). Arabia, seu, Arabum vicinarumq[ue gentium Orientalium leges], ritus, sacri et profani mores, instituta et historia: accedunt praeterea varia per Arabiam itinera, in quibus multa notatu digna enarrantur. Amstelodami: Apud I. Ianssonium.

    Giovanni Biagio Amico. Giovanni Biagio Amico (1684–1754), an Italian architect, theologian and priest. (cf. Italian Wikipedia, Giovanni Biagio Amico)

    • Trattato delle piante et immagini de Sacri edifizi di Terre Santa (1620). A treatise on the plants and images of the sacred buildings of the Holy Land. Of particular value are the many drawings and plans of Jerusalem and Bethlehem.

    Eugène Roger. Eugène Roger (17th century), French missionary in the Holy Land (1630–1635). Roger served as the physician of the Druze leader Fakhr ad-Din II.

    • La Terra Sainte ou description topographique tres particuliere des saints Lieux, et de La Terra de Promission (1664). Describes the differing societies (Turks, Druze, Jews, Greeks) in Palestine under Ottoman rule. The chapter Des Iuifs que habitent en la Terre Sainte (Of the Jews that inhabit the Holy Land) includes a sketch of Jewish figures performing religious rituals.

    Jacob Spon. Jacob Spon (1647–1685), a French physician and archaeologist. Spon was a pioneer in the exploration of the monuments of Greece.[122] [123]

    • Voyage d'Italie, de Dalmatie, de Grece, et du Levant: fait aux années 1675 & 1676, 2 volumes (1676). With travel writer George Wheler (1651–1724).[124]
    • Recherche des antiquités et curiosités de la ville de Lyon (1857).[125]
    • Voyage d'Italie curieux et nouveau (1681).[126]

    Bernard Randolph. Bernard Randolph (1643–1690?), an English cartographer and traveler, specializing in Greece.[127]

    • The Present State of the Morea (1680). Called anciently Peloponnesus: together with a description of the city of Athens, islands of Zant, Strafades, and Serigo. With the maps of Morea and Greece, and several cities. Also a true prospect of the grand serraglio, or imperial palace of Constantinople, as it appears from Galata: curiously engraved on copper plates.[128]
    • The Present State of the Islands of the Archipelago (1687).

    Jean Mabillon. Jean Mabillon (1632–1707), a French Benedictine monk and scholar of the Congregation of Saint Maur. One of the greatest historical scholar of the 17th century, he is considered to be the founder of the disciplines of palaeography and diplomatics.[129] [130]

    • De re diplomatica (1681). An analysis of medieval documents and manuscripts back to the early 7th century. (cf. French Wikipedia, De re diplomatica)[131]

    Bernard de Montfaucon. Bernard de Montfaucon (1655–1741), a Benedictine monk and scholar who is considered one of the founders of archaeology and palaeography.[132] [133] [134]

    • Bibliotheca Coisliniana (1705). An examination of ancient and medieval Greek writings.[135]
    • L'antiquité expliquée et représentée en figures (Antiquity Explained and Represented in Diagrams), 15 volumes (1719–1724).[136]

    Fedinand Delamonce. Ferdinand-Sigismond Delamonce (1678–1753), a German-French architect. (cf. French Wikipedia, Ferdinand-Sigismond Delamonce)[137]

    • De tabernaculo foederis, de sancta civitate Jerusalem, et de templo ejus, libri septem (1720). A Latin treatise on the Ark of the Covenant by Bernard Lamy (1640–1715). Edited by French historian Pierre Nicolas Desmolets (1678–1760) who added Vita auctoris (a biography of the author) and De templo Salomonis historico (history of Solomon's Temple). Engraved plates by F. Delamonce and Pierre Giffart (1638–1723).[138]

    Robert Wood. Robert Wood (1717–1771), an Irish traveler, classical scholar, civil servant and politician. Wood travelled with James Dawkins (1722–1757), who funded his work, and artist Giovanni Battista Borra (1713–1770).[139] [140]

    • Les Ruines de Palmyre, autrement dite Tedmor au désert (1753). Engravings by Pierre Fourdrinier (1698–1758) based on drawings of G. B. Borra.[141]
    • The Ruins of Palmyra, otherwise Tedmor, in the desart (1753). English edition of Les Ruines de Palmyre.[142]
    • Les Ruines de Balbec, autrement dite Heliopolis dans la Coelosyrie (1757). Engravings by P. Fourdrinier based on drawings of G. B. Borra[143]
    • The Ruins of Balbec, otherwise Heliopolis in Cœlosyria (1757). English edition of Les Ruines de Balbec.[144]

    Alexander Russell. Alexander Russell (1715–1768), a Scottish physician and naturalist.[145]

    • The Natural History of Aleppo, and parts adjacent (1756). Revised and expanded by herpetologist Patrick Russell (1727–1805) in the 2nd edition (1794). Containing a description of the city, and the principal natural productions in its neighbourhood. Together with an account of the climate, inhabitants, and diseases; particularly of the plague.[146]

    Ernst Friedrich Karl Rosenmüller. Ernst Friedrich Karl Rosenmüller (1768–1835), a German orientalist and theologian.[147] [148]

    • Reis in Palestina: Syrië en Egypte, gedaan in het jaar 1817 (1822). Journey in Palestine: Syria and Egypt, done in the year 1817.[149]
    • Handbuch der Biblischen Alterthumskunde, 4 volumes (1823–1831). Handbook of biblical antiquity, concerning the geography, flora, fauna and mineralogy of the Holy Land, Arabia and Central Asia. Used as a source for Tobler's Bibliographia Geographica Palestinæ (1867).[150]
    • Biblical Geography of Asia Minor, Phoenicia, and Arabia (1836). Volume 1 of Handbuch der Biblischen Alterthumskunde.
    • The Biblical Geography of Central Asia, 2 volumes (1836–1837). Volumes 2 and 3 of Handbuch der Biblischen Alterthumskunde. With a general introduction to the study of sacred geography, including the antediluvian period. Translated by Scottish historian Nathaniel Morren (1798–1847).[151]
    • Mineralogy and Botany of the Bible (1840). Volume 4 of Handbuch der Biblischen Alterthumskunde.

    Heinrich Berghaus. Heinrich Karl Wilhelm Berghaus (1797–1884), a German geographer and cartographer.[152] [153]

    • Dr. Berghaus' Physikalischer Atlas, 2 volumes (1838–1848). Used as a source for Bibliographia Geographica Palestinæ (1867) by Swiss orientalist Titus Tobler (1806–1877).[154]

    Karl Georg von Raumer. Karl Georg von Raumer (1783–1865), a German geologist and educator.[155]

    • Kreuzzüge (1840–1864).[156]
    • Beiträge zur Biblischen Geographie: Nebst einer Höhendurchnitte (1843).[157]
    • Palästina (1850).[158]

    Edward Robinson. Edward (Eduard) Robinson (1794–1863), an American Biblical scholar whose work in geography and archaeology earned him the epithets "Father of Biblical Geography" and "Founder of Modern Palestinology." Referenced in Tobler's Bibliographia Geographica Palestinæ.[159]

    • Biblical Researches in Palestine, 3 volumes (1841). Based on a 1838 exploration trip to Palestine. With American missionary Eli Smith (1801–1857).[160]
    • Biblical Researches in Palestine: First Supplement (1842).[161]
    • Notes on Biblical Geography (1849).[162]
    • Later Biblical Researches in Palestine, and in the Adjacent Regions (1856). A journal of travels in the year 1852. Drawn up from the original diaries, with historical illustrations, with new maps and plans.[163]

    Salomon Munk. Salomon Munk (1803–1867), a French orientalist.[164]

    • Palestine: description géographique, historique, et archéologique (1845). Used as a source for Bibliographia Geographica Palestinæ (1867) by Swiss orientalist Titus Tobler (1806–1877)[165]

    Joseph Ignatius Ritter. Joseph Ignatius Ritter (1787–1857), a German historian.[166]

    • Ueber die Verehrung der Reliquien und besonders des heil (1845). About the veneration of relics and especially of the Holy Coat.[167]

    Friedrich August Arnold. Friedrich August Arnold (1812–1869), a German orientalist. (cf. German Wikipedia, Friedrich August Arnold)[168] [169]

    • Palästina: historisch-geographisch mit besonderer berüksichtigung der Helmuthschen karte für theologen und gebildete bibelleser (1845). Palestine: historically and geographically with special consideration of the Helmuth map for theologians and educated Biblical readers. Used as a source for Bibliographia Geographica Palestinæ (1867) by Swiss orientalist Titus Tobler (1806–1877).[170]

    Jean Alexandre Buchon. Jean Alexandre Buchon (1791–1849). a French historian.[171] [172]

    • Atlas des nouvelles recherches historiques sur la principauté française de Morée et ses hautes baronies fondées à la suite de la quatrième croisade (1845). Forming the second part of this work and serving as a complement to the historical, genealogical and numismatic clarification of the French principality of the Morea and to the journey in Morea, mainland Greece, the Cyclades and the Ionian Island.[173]

    Carl Benedict Hase. Carl Benedict (Charles-Benoît) Hase (1780–1864), a French Hellenist.[174] [175] [176]

    Lorenz Clemens Gratz. Lorenz Clemens Gratz (1805–1884), a German Biblical scholar.[178]

    • Erd- und Länderkunde der heiligen Schrift (1848). Geography and regional studies of the Holy Scriptures for Catholic schools and families to explain the sacred history of the Old and New Covenants.

    Vivien de Saint-Martin. Louis Vivien de Saint-Martin (1802 –1896), a French historian and geographer.[179]

    • Description historique et géographique de l'Asie Mineure, 2 volumes (1852). Historical and geographical description of Asia Minor, including ancient times, the Middle Ages and modern times, with a detailed account of the journeys that have been made in the peninsula, from the time of the Crusades to the most recent times. Preceded by a table of the geographical history of Asia, from the most ancient times to the present day. Used as a source for Bibliographia Geographica Palestinæ (1867) by Swiss orientalist Titus Tobler (1806–1877).[180]

    Wilhelm Engelmann. Wilhelm Engelmann (1808–1878), a German publisher and bookseller.[181] [182]

    • Bibliotheca geographica (1858). In Tobler's Bibliographia Geographica Palestinæ.[183]

    Heimann Jolowicz. Heimann Jolowicz (1816–1875), a German historian mentioned in Bibliographia Geographica Palestinæ.[184]

    • Bibliotheca Ægyptiaca (1858). Bibliography on Egypt up to 1857, its geography, natural history, monuments, language, script, religion, mythology, history, art and science.[185]

    C. M. W. van de Velde. Charles William Meredith van de Velde (1818–1898), a Dutch painter, cartographer and missionary.[186]

    • Narrative of a Journey through Syria and Palestine in 1851 and 1852, 2 volumes (1854).[187]
    • Van de Velde maps of Palestine and Jerusalem (1858). An important scientific mapping of Palestine and Jerusalem.
    • Memoir to Accompany the Map of the Holy Land (1858).[188]
    • Planography of Jerusalem (1858). With Titus Tobler. Memoir to accompany the new-ground-plan of the city of Jerusalem and the environs, constructed anew by C. W. M. van de Velde.[189]

    James Fergusson. James Fergusson (1808–1886), a Scottish architectural historian.[190] [191]

    • Notes on the Site of the Holy Sepulchre at Jerusalem (1860).
    • A History of Architecture in all Countries, from the earliest times to the present day, 4 volumes (1865).[192]
    • The Holy Sepulchre and the Temple at Jerusalem: the substance of two lectures delivered in the Royal Institution (1865).[193]
    • The Temples of the Jews and the other Buildings in the Haram Area at Jerusalem (1878).[194]

    Melchior Vogüé. Melchior, Marquis de Vogüé (1829–1916), a French archaeologist, orientalist, epigraphist, historian and diplomat. Served as ambassador to Constantinople.[195]

    • Monnaies inedites des Croisades (1864). A treatise on the churches of the Holy Land.[196]