The Monks of War : The Military Religious Orders
Desmond Seward

The Monks of War : The Military Religious Orders

The military orders emerged during the Crusades as Christendom’s storm troopers in the conflict with Islam. Some of them still exist today, devoted to charitable works. The Monks of War is the first general history of these orders to appear since the eighteenth century. Templars, Hospitallers (later Knights of Malta), Teutonic Knights, and Knights of the Spanish and Portugese orders were noblemen who took religious vows and, as the first properly disciplined Western troops since Roman times, played a major role in defending the crusader kingdom of Jerusalem, in the ‘Baltic Crusades’ which created Prussia, in the reconquest of Spain from the Moors, and in fighting the ‘Infidel’ up to Napoleonic times. This book tells the whole enthralling story, recreating such epics as the sieges of Rhodes and Malta and the destruction of the Templars by the Inquisition.

Book Details:

  • Author: Desmond Seward
  • On Submission
  • Rights Sold
    • UK: Thistle
    • US: Penguin
    • China: Gingko
Desmond Seward

Desmond Seward

Desmond Seward was born in Paris and educated at Ampleforth and St Catharine's College, Cambridge. He is the author of many books including The Monks of War: The Military Religious Orders, The Hundred Years War, The Wars of the Roses, Eleanor of Aquitaine and Henry V as Warlord, Josephus, Masada and the Fall of Judaea (da Capo, US, April 2009), Wings over the Desert: in action with an RFC pilot in Palestine 1916-18 (Haynes Military, July 2009) and Old Puglia: A Portrait of South Eastern Italy (Haus August 2009). Forthcoming is The Last White Rose: the Spectre at the Tudor Court 1485-1547 (C...
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Book Reviews

  • "Undenbiably the work of someone who knows and accepts the standards of critical history, but … who sees the past also as an epic or a colourful spectacle."
    Professor David Knowles, The Times Literary Supplement
  • "His scholarship is great, his theme both interesting and largely unexplored, and his judgement sound."
    The Economist