Eagle

Availability: In stock

SLRs1,038.00

Quick Overview

Salah ad-Din, or Saladin as he is known to the Franks, was a Kurd, the son of a despised people, and yet he became Sultan of Egypt and Syria. He united the peoples of Allah, recaptured Jerusalem, and drove the Crusaders to the very edge of the sea. He battled, and in the end tamed King Richard the Lion heart, who well deserved his savage name. He was a great man, the greatest man that I ever knew, but when I first met him, he was only a skinny child.
Eagle

Details

The Chronicle of Yahya al-Dimashq But alongside the legend of Saladin there is another story. When the Crusader army is routed beneath the walls of Damascus in 1148, a young Saxon named John is captured and enslaved. He is bought by Yusuf, a slight, bookish boy, for the price of a pair of sandals. And so begins the story of two enemies brought together by fate and of a friendship that will change the face of the Holy Land. Timid Yusuf will grow up to become the warrior Saladin, nicknamed 'the Eagle'; John will first teach his young master the art of war, before returning west to serve first the King of Jerusalem and then King Richard himself. From spectacular set-piece battles to the political manoeuvrings of the corrupt Crusader court, from the brutality of single combat to the sophistication of Islamic life, this is the first in a remarkable trilogy that will chart the story of the greatest leader the Middle East has ever known.

Additional Information

ISBN-10 1848542992
ISBN-13 9781848542990
Author Jack Hight
Publisher John Murray

Be the first to review this product

You may also be interested in the following product(s)

The Final Reckoning

The Final Reckoning

SLRs973.00
Bitter Seed Of Magic

Bitter Seed Of Magic

SLRs958.00
The Roman Mysteries: The Slave-Girl From Jerusalem

The Roman Mysteries: The Slave-Girl From Jerusalem

SLRs835.00
Night World: Dark Angel, The Chosen Soulmate

Night World: Dark Angel, The Chosen Soulmate

SLRs1,038.00

Product Tags

Use spaces to separate tags. Use single quotes (') for phrases.