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Medieval Reporter
Covering history’s most marvelous millennium
Simon has a master’s degree in History and has written tens of articles on the Middle Ages. Next to building his blog at MedievalReporter.com, he has been published on WorldHistory.org, Ancient-Origins.net & TheFreelanceHistoryWriter.com. Baibars killed two of his sovereigns and defeated Mongols as well as Crusaders. Eventually, he became the Sultan of Egypt. Not bad for someone who started his career as a slave. Read MoreFrom Slave to Sultan: Bloody Baibars Did It! William of Guelders was a five-time crusader, the first continental Knight of the Garter, and pilgrim to the Holy Land. He befriended the Teutonic Grand Master and the Holy Roman Emperor. Read MoreThe Crazy Crusader: William I of Guelders and Jülich
- Frankish, Viking, Architecture, Holy Roman, Saxon
The Vikings spent a lot of time overseas. To prevent enemy retaliation overland, they built a huge wall across Denmark. Read MoreKeep Out! The Viking Wall Against The Empire It fell upon Prithviraj Chauhan to keep India’s gates closed to surging Afghan attacks. But the stubborn sultan of the northern invaders turned out to be a major problem for the prince. Read MoreHow India Fell To Islam: Prince Prithviraj’s Problem Urraca of León had to deal with an overbearing father and an abusive husband. Contrary to their will, she became the first (and last) Empress of Spain. Read MoreHow The Last Empress of Spain Dealt With Misogynists The famous poet Poeun was forced to choose between aggressive revolutionaries and loyalty to the old regime. A bridge now in North Korea still commemorates his fate. Read MoreThe Bridge That Bleeds: The Poet vs. The Prince The Vikings buried their dead in a spectacularly shocking fashion. An Arab traveler was invited to a ship burial and wrote down every detail he witnessed. Read MoreSex, Feast & Fire: A Viking Ship Burial At Smyrna, the Knights Hospitaller were confronted with an attack by Timur. They had beaten the Turks back for decades, but this enemy was something else. Read MoreThe Siege of Smyrna: That Time the Hospitallers Met Timur The Great Seljuq Empire was rocked by rebellion during the late 11th century CE. Especially the Order of Assassins proved a thorn in the sultan’s side. Read MoreAssassin’s Creed: Hassan-i Sabbah’s Struggle Against Seljuqs PrevNext
©2024 Medieval Reporter | Powered by Creative Themes
Simon Duits, Author at MedievalReporter.com
Skip to content
Medieval Reporter
Covering history’s most marvelous millennium
Simon has a master’s degree in History and has written tens of articles on the Middle Ages. Next to building his blog at MedievalReporter.com, he has been published on WorldHistory.org, Ancient-Origins.net & TheFreelanceHistoryWriter.com. Baibars killed two of his sovereigns and defeated Mongols as well as Crusaders. Eventually, he became the Sultan of Egypt. Not bad for someone who started his career as a slave. Read MoreFrom Slave to Sultan: Bloody Baibars Did It! William of Guelders was a five-time crusader, the first continental Knight of the Garter, and pilgrim to the Holy Land. He befriended the Teutonic Grand Master and the Holy Roman Emperor. Read MoreThe Crazy Crusader: William I of Guelders and Jülich
The Vikings spent a lot of time overseas. To prevent enemy retaliation overland, they built a huge wall across Denmark. Read MoreKeep Out! The Viking Wall Against The Empire It fell upon Prithviraj Chauhan to keep India’s gates closed to surging Afghan attacks. But the stubborn sultan of the northern invaders turned out to be a major problem for the prince. Read MoreHow India Fell To Islam: Prince Prithviraj’s Problem Urraca of León had to deal with an overbearing father and an abusive husband. Contrary to their will, she became the first (and last) Empress of Spain. Read MoreHow The Last Empress of Spain Dealt With Misogynists The famous poet Poeun was forced to choose between aggressive revolutionaries and loyalty to the old regime. A bridge now in North Korea still commemorates his fate. Read MoreThe Bridge That Bleeds: The Poet vs. The Prince The Vikings buried their dead in a spectacularly shocking fashion. An Arab traveler was invited to a ship burial and wrote down every detail he witnessed. Read MoreSex, Feast & Fire: A Viking Ship Burial At Smyrna, the Knights Hospitaller were confronted with an attack by Timur. They had beaten the Turks back for decades, but this enemy was something else. Read MoreThe Siege of Smyrna: That Time the Hospitallers Met Timur The Great Seljuq Empire was rocked by rebellion during the late 11th century CE. Especially the Order of Assassins proved a thorn in the sultan’s side. Read MoreAssassin’s Creed: Hassan-i Sabbah’s Struggle Against Seljuqs PrevNext
©2024 Medieval Reporter | Powered by Creative Themes