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Siege Warfare in the Levant, 1097-1193

Siege Warfare in the Levant, 1097-1193

Lecture by Thomas Brosset

Held at Royal Armouries in Leeds on August 7, 2024

What did a siege look like in the 12th-century Middle East? How did people prepare for them? Which technique was the most likely to succeed?

Between the arrival of the First Crusade in Antioch and the death of Saladin (1097-1193), over 700 sieges took place in the Middle Eastern region of the Levant. Latin and Islamic commanders alike sought to capture fortified places in the strategic struggle for control of the region. However, mass market books and magazines, movies, TV series, and video games often misrepresent sieges of this period.

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In this lecture Thomas Brosset will offer an accurate depiction of sieges by answering several questions:

1. First, by exploring the main characteristics of sieges. How long were these? Did Christians or Muslims lead more sieges? Were they successful? What was the usual outcome?

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2. Secondly, which techniques were the most effective for the besieged to defend their settlements? The lecture explains how the besieged defended themselves, by looking at the fortifications as well as leaving the fortress (sallying) to attack the besiegers.

3. Thirdly, which techniques did besiegers favour to take a fortified site? The lecture explores attempts to assault settlements with siege engines, to create a breach in the fortifications with siege artillery and sapping, and, finally, to starve out the defenders.

Thomas Brosset is a PhD student at Lancaster University, where he researches siege warfare in medieval Syria and the Jazīra from 1097 to 1192.

Click here to watch more lectrues from the Royal Armouries

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