-
neighbouring cities of Santarém and others. Also
reported by the De
expugnatione Lyxbonensi is that the
citadel was
holding 154,000 men, not counting...
- De
expugnatione Lyxbonensi ('On the
Conquest of Lisbon') is an
eyewitness account of the
Siege of
Lisbon at the
start of the
Second Crusade, and covers...
- De
expugnatione Scalabis is an
anonymous Latin account of the
Portuguese conquest of Santarém on 15
March 1147. It is the
earliest and most
detailed source...
- The
Carmen de
expugnatione Salaciae ('Song of the
Conquest of Alcácer do Sal') is a
Latin epic poem in 115
elegiac couplets describing the
siege of Alcácer...
- The
Libellus de
expugnatione Terrae Sanctae per
Saladinum (Latin for "Little Book
about the
Conquest of the Holy Land by Saladin"), also
called the Chronicon...
- the
Apostle James the
Greater at
Santiago de
Compostela on foot. De
expugnatione Lyxbonensi and De
itinere Frisunum helped to
perpetuate the
legend that...
- most
significant events in Lisbon's history,
described in the
chronicle Expugnatione Lyxbonensi,
which describes,
among other incidents, how the
local bishop...
-
according to a
brief reference in the Anglo-Norman text
known as De
expugnatione Lyxbonensi and the
Portuguese text
known as the
Chronica Gothorum, a...
- at his fief of Nablus, and
Reginald took an
alternate route. The De
expugnatione Terrae Sanctae libellus (hereafter "the Libellus"), a
contemporary Latin...
- 5th - 6th centuries. The pre-Romanesque
church is
mentioned in the De
Expugnatione Lyxbonensi as
still extant in 1147, so
construction of the
present building...