Through a comprehensive case study of the twelfth-century Crusaders'
Kingdom of Jerusalem, the author shows how a changing international
system encourages or retards the development of social structures,
thereby relating the Crusaders' experience to contemporary affairs. The
Kingdom's social structure was influenced by intensive lslamic pressure
on all sides, and its eventual collapse was due almost entirely to its
failure to adapt its suddenly irrelevant feudal institutions to the
demands of its new situation. Professor Ben-Ami suggests that the
patterns exemplified in this conflict enable the exploration of the
general idea that societies interlocked in a prolonged conflict tend to
affect one another's social organization as they respond to developing
needs implicated in the international system.
Originally published in 1969.
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