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16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent and Valuable Account from Military Perspective, May 8, 2000
By 
Elyon (Mesilla, New Mexico) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Victory in the East: A Military History of the First Crusade (Paperback)
While this is certainly one of the best and most accurate works written about the First Crusade, I am unsure I can go so far as to agree with the previous reviewer that it is the best. It is certainly thorough: the author has visited many of the sites and, where possible, reconstructed the battles in situ. While dedicated to a military perspective, he incorporates many elements, such as the religious and political antecedents, that provide the background necessary to any meaningful understanding of the crusaders' march into Syria and Palestine. As the author has made the effort to include many of the primary sources that to date remain untranslated, the Crusade chroniclers' accounts are more fully represented, allowing both the author and the reader to arrive at conclusions based upon a greater comparison and analysis of contemporary sources than is present in many other texts. Further, this is the first work I have come across that points out the significance of contribution made by Byzantine naval support, at least up to and including the seige of Antioch.

As a military history this work is outstanding, marred only by the author's at times inelegant and unclear sentence structure. For some, this work may be long on military tactics. Also, the casual reader should be aware that this is primarily a military history, and does not consider comprehensively all the religious and political events that led up and in part inform the First Crusade.

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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Military History of the 1st Crusade, March 30, 2005
By 
France's work is certainly the best military history of the 1st Crusade in print. Contrary to popular belief, many nobles of the First Crusade did indeed have experience leading and/or fighting in organized, well led military ventures in Europe. Robert of Normandy and Robert of Flanders were both experienced campaigners. Duke Godfrey of Boullion was at the great Siege of Rome, and Bohemond of Taranto (clearly the Crusade's most able tactician) had long experience fighting against his Guiscard relatives and the Byzantines in the Balkans. France admirably refutes any idea that the 1st Crusade was simply a horde of fanatical barbarians. He does a fine job of explaining how relatively large-scale logistics and planning were skills that a number of nobles brought with them to the East. In fact, the ultimate success of the venture could not have happened without such expertise. Understanding this fact helps the student realize that the 1st Crusade's success cannot be entirely attributed to (a) religious fanaticism, (b) Islamic divisions, or (c) luck (all of which many past historians have subscribed). Certainly, all 3 of the above were factors, but none of them can fully explain the amazing success of the late 11th century European knights in Turkey, Syia, and Palestine. As France explains, martial skills conquered the Holy Land. Other considerations, from a military perspective, are peripheral. The religious fanaticism of the crusaders certainly helped them in their conquests (defeat of Kerbogha, especially), but such fanaticism couldn't defeat an enemy alone. After all, the People's Crusade (1096) of Peter the Hermit had equal fanaticism, and it was cut to pieces almost as soon as it stepped on Turkish soil. By the same token, Islamic political divisions after the death of Malik Shah certainly contributed to the Crusade's success. However, even with such divisions, the Crusaders were at huge numerical and/or resource disadvantages against their Islamic opponents. After all, the Crusaders were often outnumbered, were fighting thousands of miles from home on unfamiliar terrain, and had virtually no supply line. It took leadership and force of arms for such wondrous military achievements to take place.

France does about as good a job of analyzing the military decisions and actions of the Crusaders as I have read. He covers in detail all of the major clashes (along with many minor ones) with Islamic powers: Nicea, Dorylaem, Antioch, Jerusalem, and Ascalon. Battle tactics and strategy are well covered, maps are understandable and relevant, and results are clearly explained. France, like other historians, recognizes that the European's greatest asset was the heavily mailed charge. The Crusaders were rather more heavily armoured than their Islamic adversaries, and the charge was a devastating weapon. However, the heavily armoured charge was in somewhat of an embryonic stage in the late 11th century and certainly wasn't yet what it would be come in the 12th and 13th centuries. Because it was a relatively new innovation, it took quite exquisite leadership and martial ability to use it effectively. It took even better generalship to coordinate the cavalry with the infantry. One of the greatest strengths of France's work is his coverage of how these skilled soldiers (Bohemond in particular) were able to link cavalry actions with infantry actions and how the Crusaders quickly and continually learned these lessons after encountering the Turks' alien fighting style. The lightly armed Turks presented the Crusaders with an opponent that they had not seen before. They were highly mobile and fought primarily from the saddle with a composite bow. Their tactics frequently involved encirclement and feigned retreat. These were tactics, in fact, that troubled European knights for 200 years in the Holy Land. Still, the 1st Crusaders were able to modify their own tactics enough to clear the way of Turks on their way to Jerusalem. Again, such adaptation shows just how militarily sophisticated and skilled these Western "barbarians" really were. Again, a strength of France's work.

On the negative side, there was not enough comparative study of the weapons available to Christian and Islamic armies. We are told that the Europeans were rather more heavily armoured than their Islamic opponents and that they typically carried far heavier lances. However, there is no detailed discussion of these issues. Short mention is made of mail and lamellar, and very little comment is made about relative hand weapon size/construction/type/etc. That said, France certainly does not believe that military technology was a decisive factor in the Crusade's success. Hence, he can't be faulted too much for not including information not relevant to his thesis especially when he considers technological differences to be either non-decisive or negligible. France also tends to get ahead of himself in parts of the work which may cause some to question its focus. The work reads fairly chronologically but will at times go into tangents covering events which are not yet put into context. The problem is not serious, though, and does not affect the quality of the work.

This is the premier military history of the First Crusade, and its value cannot be overestimated. It certainly deserves to be on the shelf with R.C. Smail's classic "Crusading Warfare: 1097-1193" and Christopher Marshall's "Warfare in the Latin East: 1192-1291). Other valuable works, while not about the Crusades specifically, are France's other great work "Western Warfare in the Age of the Crusades", Maurice Keen's "Medieval Warfare: A History", Charles Oman's "The Art of Warfare in the Middle Ages", and especially J.F. Verbruggen's "The Art of Warfare in Western Europe during the Middle Ages from the Eighth Century". A number of other works about the First Crusade specifically are extremely valuable in that they cover far more than just the military aspect. See, for example, Thomas Asbridge's new "The First Crusade: A New History", Runciman's dated but still valuable "The First Crusade", and Jonathon Riley-Smith's "The Crusade and the Idea of Crusading". I don't agree with some of his ideas, but David Nicolle has written some valuable works such as "The First Crusade 1096-1099: Conquest of the Holy Land". There exists a large number of quality general histories of the Crusades as a whole. Anything by Riley-Smith is excellent. Without naming too many, Jean Richard's "The Crusades c. 1071-1291", Hans Eberhard Mayer's "The Crusades", and Robert Payne's "The Dream and the Tomb: A History of the Crusades" are all valuable resources as well.
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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Not just military history, but lucid exposition, May 25, 2000
By 
Susan Shwartz (Forest Hills, NY United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Victory in the East: A Military History of the First Crusade (Paperback)
I first encountered this book at the Byzantine Center at Dumbarton Oaks. Six pages into it, I realized I had to own it. It is not just an invaluable account of a complicated time, but a superb military history, as effective to the novice as to the expert.

Dr. French shows himself to have a gift for explaining strategy and tactics clearly and for setting them within a context of politics (war by other means, if I may invert Clausewitz's dictum) and religion.

His diagrams are easy to understand, and his exposition of the siege of Antioch makes it readily comprehensible.

A very valuable work for the specialist, scholar, writer, or serious reader.

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent - but not for everyone, August 8, 2005
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This review is from: Victory in the East: A Military History of the First Crusade (Paperback)
For its time, the First Crusade was breathtaking in scope and stunning in its success. Nearly 100,000 people (knights, servants, women and children) departed from all over Western Europe and marched thousands of miles overland to Constantinople and then across the forbidding terrain of Asia Minor to the gates of Jerusalem. In the process, they swept the fearsome Seljuk Turks from Anatolia, captured the major city of Antioch, took the Holy City in a fierce siege and annihilated several Moslem relief forces from Syria and Egypt along the way. By comparison, the Norman invasion of England and the Battle of Hastings in 1066 was a sideshow.

Much of the secondary research on the First Crusade focuses on what motivated the mass expedition to reclaim the Holy Land in 1095 and how the rivalries between the leading princes on campaign led to the establishment of Christian city-states in the Levant. Little energy has been devoted to explaining precisely how those remarkable achievements were attained, which is exactly what John France sets out to do in this book.

The first three chapters review the basic nature of warfare in the eleventh century and demonstrate how the experience of fighting feudal wars in Western Europe directly shaped the military actions of the Crusaders in the East. Above all, the author stresses that warfare in this period focused on the control of strategic strongholds and the ravaging of an enemy's land as a way to simultaneously support the invading army, destroy the enemy's economic base and alienate the local population from their supposed feudal protector. Major set piece battles (such as Hastings) were a rarity and only fought under highly favorable conditions and for the greatest stakes possible. These topics are covered in the first quarter of the book and are "generalist" in nature.

The rest of the book offers a highly detailed analysis of the various military actions that made up the First Crusade. France does an impressive job of primary research (including fieldwork) to present a comprehensive review of how, when, where and why the Crusaders engaged their various Moslem adversaries. Every Crusading chronicle or memoir that had anything to say about a given battle is examined and assessed for accuracy. His work is exhaustive and at times overwhelming in detail. For instance, he devotes a hundred pages of dense analysis to the siege of Antioch alone. If you're only looking for the "big picture," the last three hundred pages of this book will be tough going.

A couple final points on "Victory in the East." The author has included twenty-three maps and diagrams that greatly facilitate understanding of the various sieges and ambushes. On the other hand, he writes paragraphs of Brobdingnagian dimensions. It isn't uncommon for single paragraphs to span several pages, with the text just rolling on in one monolithic block as France goes from one subject to the next. Needless to say, this style doesn't add to the readability of the rather arcane content.

In closing, for those with a keen interest in Medieval Warfare and a strong pre-existing understanding of the First Crusade "Victory in the East" offers an impressive blend of research and analysis on a remarkable event in the annals of military history. If your five favorite books on military history were written by authors with names like Clancy, Ambrose or Keegan, then this book most definitely isn't for you.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars as good as it gets, July 8, 2002
This review is from: Victory in the East: A Military History of the First Crusade (Paperback)
I was prompted to say something about this book after viewing various reader lists concerning the crusades and medieval war and finding this title absent; omissions due to ignorance, surely. Victory in the East is, simply, the best book on the First Crusade that you are likely to ever read. Trust me.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Exciting and innovative, September 5, 2004
This review is from: Victory in the East: A Military History of the First Crusade (Paperback)
This step by step account of the first crusade by John France is an excellent piece of military history dealing with a complicated subject which can be explored from many different angles. Truly, the innovation of this book is looking at the crusade as a single campaign consisting of aspects like supplies, different possible marching routs, pitched battles as well as smaller expeditions, economy, alliances and much more. John France's writing is remarkable. I can recall many nights at which I simply couldn't let go of the book and often had to read until the end of the chapter just to know what happened to the crusader army. The battle descriptions are very interesting (especially if you have an understanding of the period's way of waging war) and together with the illustrations make for a complete understanding of the situation.

If you are looking for an exciting book about history - this is it !
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5.0 out of 5 stars An Excellent Book, August 1, 2011
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If you are at all interested in the Crusades, and in particular the First Crusade, then this book is for you. I have studied the First Crusade in depth. Most books just rehash verbatim what previous writers have said, but this author covered details I have not seen elsewhere, and gives the reader a much clearer picture of what transpired. This book is a keeper!
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1 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A splendid work of military history and the best on Crusade1, September 11, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Victory in the East: A Military History of the First Crusade (Paperback)
This work will be regarded as a classic. It is the best work to date on the First Crusade.
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Victory in the East: A Military History of the First Crusade
Victory in the East: A Military History of the First Crusade by John France (Paperback - January 28, 1997)
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