Bartolf of Nangis
Writings
His Gesta Francorum Iherusalem expugnatium is a chronicle of the First Crusade. It draws heavily on the anonymous Gesta Francorum but includes some original details, such as information on Bohemond's crusade to the Byzantine Empire, not attested in any other chronicles.[2] Bartolf also draws in places on the original, now-lost 1106 version of Fulcher of Chartres's history (i.e. not the version we have today, extended to 1120s), making his chronicle particularly useful to scholars of Fulcher's work.[3]
gollark: I only eat something like ten different foods anyway.
gollark: Ah, I see.
gollark: How do you know that you don't know other people who consumed soy‽ What if ALL consume soy?
gollark: That is definitely* a reasonable reason to dislike people. Also, how do you know that they consumed soy?
gollark: I mean, something something... selection bias? There's probably a more specific word. But you're more likely to see ridiculous extreme things if you seek out people who go around talking about this lots.
References
- Hiram Kümper (2010). "Bartolf of Nangis". In Graeme Dunphy (ed.). Encyclopedia of the Medieval Chronicle. Leiden: Brill. p. 145. ISBN 90 04 18464 3.
- Rowe, J. G. (1966). "Paschal II, Bohemund of Antioch and the Byzantine Empire". Bulletin of the John Rylands Library. 45 (1): 165–202.
- Jay Rubinstein, 'Guibert of Nogent, Albert of Aachen, and Fulcher of Chartes: Three Crusade Chronicles Intersect', in M. Bull & D. Kempf (eds.), Writing the Early Crusades: Text Transmission and Memory (2014), p.26
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