Knight Crusader
Cover of first edition | |
Author | Ronald Welch |
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Illustrator | William Stobbs |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Series | Carey family |
Subject | Crusader states, Third Crusade, Anglo-Norman England |
Genre | Children's historical novel |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Publication date | 1954 |
Media type | Print (hardcover) |
Pages | 272 pp (first edition) |
ISBN | 0192770861 (1979) |
OCLC | 315242056 |
LC Class | PZ7.W4489 Kn[1] |
Knight Crusader, "the story of Philip d'Aubigny", is a children's historical novel by Ronald Welch (Ronald Oliver Fenton), first published by Oxford in 1954 with illustrations by William Stobbs. It is set primarily in the Crusader states of Outremer in the twelfth century and features the Battle of Hattin and the Third Crusade. Welch won the annual Carnegie Medal from the Library Association, recognising the year's best children's book by a British subject.[2]
Plot summary
The novel is divided into three parts: the first part leads up to the Battle of Hattin; the second part, set four years later, shows Philip d'Aubigny's escape from captivity at the time of the Third Crusade, and the final part deals with Philip's reclaiming his ancestral lands in the Welsh Marches.
At the beginning of the novel, Outremer has been in existence for nearly one hundred years since the capture of Jerusalem in 1099. However, the Emir Saladin is uniting the Islamic forces against the Crusader states. The great military orders of the Knights Templar and Knights Hospitaller are eager for the fray, but others are concerned that there are not enough Christian knights in Outremer to form a field army while continuing to garrison the castles that protect the Kingdom. Saladin invades Outremer and besieges Tiberias. The weak-willed King of Jerusalem is swayed by advisers to march to the relief of the besieged city across a waterless plain at the height of summer. Debilitated by the desert conditions before the battle even begins, the Christian army suffers a devastating defeat at Hattin. Most of the Christian held fortresses of Outremer fall to Saladin and Jerusalem falls to the Muslim armies.
These events are shown through the experiences of Philip d'Aubigny, a young English nobleman who was born in Outremer. He befriends a Turk, Jusuf, whom he rescues from robbers, and later impresses the king by his superior swordsmanship in a duel, gaining his knighthood. Philip overhears much discussion about the political and military situation. He suffers on the desert march, sees his father die in battle and is taken prisoner.
Philip has a relatively easy captivity in the household of Jusuf's father Usamah in Damascus, but chafes to be free. With Hospitaller help he and his friend Gilbert escape over the walls. They make their way to Krak, the great Hospitaller fortress, after an encounter with the Assassins. Philip commits himself to the service of Richard of England and during the campaigns of the Third Crusade becomes one of the most celebrated knights of Christendom.
In the final chapters of the novel, Philip and his company of Crusaders arrive in Britain, where he takes part in a jousting tournament at Cardiff Castle. He learns from his squire's father that his family's castle at Llanstephan has been taken by an ally of Prince John's and leads a raiding party to win it back.
A notable aspect of the book is the bringing into contrast of the refinements of the medieval Islamic civilization, which had been adopted by the Outremer noblemen, with the comparatively stark and crude European living conditions of the time, and the suggestion that the returning Crusaders brought Eastern standards of culture to the West.
Characters
- Philip d'Aubigny of Blanche Garde, a squire, later knight, of Outremer
- Sir Hugo d'Aubigny of Blanche Garde, a Baron of the High Court of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, Philip's father
- Llewellyn, Philip's manservant
- Sir Fulk de Grandmesnil, Philip's uncle
- Sir Joscelin de Grandmesnil, Philip's cousin
- Sir Walter de Nogent, a newcomer to Outremer, who challenges Philip to a duel
- Sir Gilbert d'Assailly, Philip's friend, a young knight from Normandy
- Jusuf Al-Hafiz, a Muslim nobleman
- Peter de Chaworth, a young squire, taken on by Philip in Part Two
- Sir Geoffrey de Chaworth of Kidwelly Castle, Peter's father
- Richard de Clare, son of the Earl of Gloucester, Philip's page in Part Three
- Sir Walter de Braose, a cousin of the d'Aubignys who holds Llanstephan
Historical characters
- Guy of Lusignan, King of Jerusalem
- Sir Balian d'Ibelin, a Baron of the High Court of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, here Philip's godfather
- Raynald of Châtillon, Lord of Oultrejordain
- Raymond of Tripoli
- Saladin, leader of the Saracens
- Usamah Ibn-Menquidh, a diplomat and scholar of Damascus, here Jusuf's father
- The Old Man of the Mountains, leader of the Assassins
- King Richard of England, a leader of the Third Crusade
- Conrad of Montferrat, a contender for the kingship of Jerusalem
- Roger de Moulins, Grand Master of the Knights Hospitaller
Literary significance and reception
Knight Crusader is the author's first fully historical novel. (The Gauntlet, three years earlier, was a timeslip story set partly in the Middle Ages.) It is generally considered the first of his Carey series; although the surname does not appear in this novel, the Careys were Earls of Aubigny. The novel was awarded the Carnegie Medal as the most outstanding children's book of 1954.[2]
In The Nesbit Tradition, Marcus Crouch describes Knight Crusader as Welch's finest book: "a highly competent piece of writing, the historical detail tightly integrated with the subject matter, the narrative economical and very brisk. The battle scenes are magnificently done". However, he criticizes its lack of selectivity: "Welch was so keen to put all he knew and felt about the Crusades into his book that he dissipated his effects and left a string of loose ends." [3]
References
- ↑ "Knight crusader" (first edition). Library of Congress Catalog Record. Retrieved 2012-09-06.
- 1 2 (Carnegie Winner 1954). Living Archive: Celebrating the Carnegie and Greenaway Winners. CILIP. Retrieved 2012-07-23.
- ↑ Marcus Crouch, The Nesbit Tradition: The Children's Novel in England 1945-1970, Ernest Benn, 1972, pp. 72-74.
External links
- Knight Crusader in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
Awards | ||
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Preceded by A Valley Grows Up |
Carnegie Medal recipient 1954 |
Succeeded by The Little Bookroom |