Reading list, MAS 4541 Scandinavia and the Crusades
Norman Housley, Contesting the Crusades (Malden, Mass: Blackwell, 2006), ca. 160 pp.
Any Bysted et al., Jerusalem in the North: Denmark and the Baltic Crusades, 1100-1522 (Turnhout: Brepols, 2009), ca. 300 pp.
Janus M?ller Jensen, Denmark and the Crusades, 1400-1650 (Leiden: Brill, 2007), pp. 1-205, ca. 200 pp.
Medieval History Writing and Crusading Ideology, ed. Tuomas Lehtonen & Kurt Villads Jensen (Helsinki: Finnish Literature Society, 2006), pp. 16-33, 37-50, 175-184, 242-256, 257-263, 264-283 – ca. 90 pp.
Kurt Villads Jensen, “Denmark and the Second Crusade: The Formation of a Crusader State?”, in The second crusade : scope and consequences, edited by Jonathan Phillips and Martin Hoch (Manchester : Manchester University Press, 2001), pp. 164-179, 16 pp.
Thomas Lindkvist, “Crusades and Crusading Ideology in the Political History of Sweden, 1140-1500”, in Crusade and conversion on the Baltic frontier 1150-1500, edited by Alan V. Murray (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2001), pp. 119- 130, 12 pp.
Torben K. Nielsen, “The Missionary Man: Archbishop Anders Sunesen and the Baltic Crusade, 1206-21”, in Crusade and conversion on the Baltic frontier 1150-1500, edited by Alan V. Murray (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2001), pp. 95-117, 23 pp.
Janus M?ller Jensen, “Sclavorum expugnator: Conquest, Crusade, and Danish Royal Ideology in the Twelfth Century”, Crusades, 2 (2003), ca. 20 pp.
Christer Carlsson, “The religious orders of knighthood in Medieval Scandinavia: historical and archaeological approaches”, 5 (2006), ca. 20 pp.
Karen Skovgaard-Petersen, A Journey to the Promised Land: Crusading Theology in the Historia de profectione Danorum in Hierosolymam (Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum, 2001), c. 70 pp.
Sources: 100-120 pp.
Ca. 1000 pp.