Helen Nicholson (1)
Author of The Knights Templar
For other authors named Helen Nicholson, see the disambiguation page.
Helen Nicholson (1) has been aliased into Helen J. Nicholson.
About the Author
Helen J. Nicholson is Professor of Medieval History at Cardiff University and has published widely on the Knights Templar and Hospitaller, the Crusades, and medieval warfare.
Image credit: Dr Nicholson (Cardiff) at Skenfrith Castle
Works by Helen Nicholson
Works have been aliased into Helen J. Nicholson.
Associated Works
Works have been aliased into Helen J. Nicholson.
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- female
- Organizations
- Cardiff Center for the Crusades
- Map Location
- United Kingdom
Members
Reviews
Sybil, Queen of Jerusalem, 1186–1190: Queen of Jerusalem, 1186–1190 (Rulers of the Latin East) by Helen Nicholson
If the name of Sybil of Jerusalem is known to people at all today, it's thanks to the (highly fictionalized) version of her played by Eva Green in Ridley Scott's dubious 2005 historical epic Kingdom of Heaven. Here, Helen Nicholson tries to recover as much as we can about the life and career of the historic Sybil, a woman who for a brief time was the queen-regnant of Jerusalem.
There is, truthfully, very little we can say for certain. Sybil's reign was short, took place during a troubled show more period, and much of the documentation of it was destroyed along with the rest of the chancery holdings when the Crusader kingdom finally fell. This means that Nicholson has to try to provide a kind of photo-negative account of Sybil's life, tracing the actions and movements of those (mostly men) around her, and then trying to logically deduce where that meant Sybil probably was during such-and-such period. Nicholson is to be applauded for gathering together all the surviving crumbs about Sybil's short life—she was maybe 30 years old when she died—and for unpicking the legends which have grown up around Sybil over the centuries. Barring the highly unlikely discovery of some new cache of documentary evidence, Sybil of Jerusalem will probably be the go-to reference on this queen—but it's not particularly satisfying as a biography. show less
There is, truthfully, very little we can say for certain. Sybil's reign was short, took place during a troubled show more period, and much of the documentation of it was destroyed along with the rest of the chancery holdings when the Crusader kingdom finally fell. This means that Nicholson has to try to provide a kind of photo-negative account of Sybil's life, tracing the actions and movements of those (mostly men) around her, and then trying to logically deduce where that meant Sybil probably was during such-and-such period. Nicholson is to be applauded for gathering together all the surviving crumbs about Sybil's short life—she was maybe 30 years old when she died—and for unpicking the legends which have grown up around Sybil over the centuries. Barring the highly unlikely discovery of some new cache of documentary evidence, Sybil of Jerusalem will probably be the go-to reference on this queen—but it's not particularly satisfying as a biography. show less
Not a narrative history of the religious order, but a wide-ranging description of what their lives must have been like, how their organisation was structured, and how they were viewed by their contemporaries (marred only by excessive and pedantic debunking of the legal charges that led to their downfall). 4/5
Libro histórico objetivo. Le dan un buen valor añadido tanto las ilustraciones como las fotos respectivas. Quizá demasiado general, pero suficiente para hacerse una idea básica de su organización y vida. Interesante para neófitos en el tema.
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Statistics
- Works
- 8
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 422
- Popularity
- #57,803
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 5
- ISBNs
- 51
- Languages
- 1













