tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19833734.post4900269286052086842..comments2024-02-22T19:21:40.330-05:00Comments on Muhlberger's World History: Rethinking the Crusade environment in the light of the Arab SpringUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19833734.post-41541103790691655002011-06-09T06:37:08.522-04:002011-06-09T06:37:08.522-04:00it is just wrong, wrong, wrong to attempt to expla...<i>it is just wrong, wrong, wrong to attempt to explain the developments of the era merely by casting it as two religiously homogenous societies battling it out</i><br /><br />I have certainly seen this done and agree with you that it's wrong, but I have also seen (perhaps especially in Jonathan Phillips's work on the Latin East) a portrayal of the wars in the Holy Land as being two relatively religiously homogenous <i>subsections</i> of the Christian and Muslim societies battling it out, which given the marginal rôle of Eastern Christians in the politics of the Crusader States, and the lack of anything other than a reactive rôle for groups like Druze and Shi'a in the Islamic world, Assassins (arguably playing a very long defensive game where attack was a primary form of play) excepted perhaps, has always seemed to me fairer. Especially on the Western side, the weirdest thing about Crusader warfare a while ago started to seem to me to be the very very small number of people involved in it in such a populous and hotching society.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19833734.post-86781577285733583532011-06-05T00:20:00.628-04:002011-06-05T00:20:00.628-04:00I was struck by this autobiographical passage in &...I was struck by this autobiographical passage in "The Black Swan", a book on statisical theory by Nassim Nicholas Taleb, who was born in the Lebanese village of Amioun. Taleb describes his homeland before the civil war: "People felt connected to everything that was worth connecting to; the place was exceedingly open to the world, with a vastly sophisticated lifestyle, a prosperous economy, and temperate weather just like California, with snow-covered mountains jutting above the Mediterranean. It attracted a collection of spies (both Soviet and Western), prostitutes (blondes), writers, poets, drug dealers, adventurers, compulsive gamblers, tennis players, apres-skiers, and merchants --- all professions that complement one another. Many people acted as if they were in an old James Bond movie, or the days when playboys smoked, drank, and, instead of going to the gym, cultivated relationships with good taylors." He remarks that most of the exiles during the early days of the civil war kept bags packed to return, as they assumed it could only last a few weeks. He also remarks that few people had considered the possibility of conflict between Muslims and Christians, because the bulk of disputes had always been been between and among different sects of either, rather than between to two religions.Phil Painehttp://www.philpaine.comnoreply@blogger.com