The Third Crusade: Triumphs And Failures
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Narrated by:
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Virtual Voice
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By:
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Gerry Hartwell
This title uses virtual voice narration
Virtual voice is computer-generated narration for audiobooks.
What followed was not a simple clash of faiths but a collision of extraordinary personalities pursuing conflicting agendas. Richard the Lionheart and Saladin never met face to face, yet their confrontation became the defining contest of the age, marked by brilliant tactics, calculated brutality, and unexpected gestures of mutual respect. Meanwhile, the crusade tore itself apart from within, poisoned by the rivalry between Richard and Philip of France and a succession dispute that ended in assassination.
The Third Crusade came agonizingly close to its objective. Twice Richard's army marched within sight of Jerusalem's walls, and twice he ordered the retreat, his strategic judgment overruling the religious fervor that had brought his soldiers thousands of miles. The decision haunted the crusade and has fascinated historians ever since, raising questions about whether the holy city was truly beyond reach or whether different choices might have changed everything.
This book traces the full arc of the Third Crusade, from the rise of Saladin and the kingdom's slow collapse through the grueling siege of Acre and the legendary march down the coast to the negotiated peace that satisfied no one. It examines how personal ambition, political calculation, and military reality shaped an enterprise launched in the name of faith. The crusaders who survived returned to a Europe already forgetting their sacrifices, while the holy city they had crossed the world to liberate remained forever beyond their grasp.
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