[150] The sack of Constantinople by the Crusaders in 1204 may be taken as a type of the treatment that the Eastern Christians met with at the hands of the Latins. Barhebræus complains that the monastery of Harran was sacked and plundered by Count Goscelin, Lord of Emessa, in 1184, just as though he had been a Saracen or a Turk. (Barhebræus (1), vol. ii. pp. 506–8.) [↑]

[151] H. H. Milman, vol. ii. p. 218. [↑]

[152] A. von Kremer (1), vol. i. p. 172. [↑]

[153] Assemani, tom. iii. Pars Prima, pp. 130–1. [↑]

[154] Ibn Saʻd, Ṭabaqāt, vol. v. p. 258. [↑]

[155] Id. p. 285. [↑]

[156] Maḥbūb al-Manbijī, p. 358 (ll. 2–3). [↑]

[157] Ibn Saʻd, Ṭabaqāt, vol. v. p. 262. [↑]

[158] August Müller, vol. i. p. 440. [↑]

[159] Migne: Patr. Gr., tom. 96, pp. 1336–48. [↑]