1. C. A. Bloss, Heroines of the Crusades (Muscatine, Iowa, 1853).
2. S. Geldsetzer, Frauen auf Kreuzzugen, 1096–1291 (Darmstadt, 2003). This book appeared after this chapter had been written.
3. M. Billings, The Crusades, 2nd edn (Stroud, 2000); B. Hamilton, The Crusades (Stroud, 1998); H. E. Mayer, The Crusades, trans. J. Gillingham, 2nd edn (Oxford, 1988); J. Phillips, The Crusades, 1095–1197 (Harlow, 2002); J. Richard, The Crusades, c. 1071-c. 1291 (Cambridge, 1999); J. Riley-Smith, The Crusades: A Short History (New Haven, 1987); J. Riley-Smith, ed., The Oxford Illustrated History of the Crusades (Oxford, 1995); S. Runciman, A History of the Crusades, 3 vols (Cambridge, 1951–54).
4. R. C. Finucane, Soldiers of the Faith: Crusaders and Moslems at War (New York, 1983); R. Pernoud, The Crusaders (Edinburgh, 1963).
5. T. F. Madden, The Crusades: The Essential Readings (Oxford, 2002), does not consider gender or women at all. Hans Eberhard Mayer’s seminal bibliographies predated the entry of gender studies into the academy and do not include sections on either women or gender: Bibliographie zur Geschichte derKreuzzuge (Hanover, 1960) and ‘Literaturbericht tiber die Geschichte der Kreuzziige’, Historische Zeitschrift, 3 (1969), 641–736. James F. McEaney, Crusades: A Bibliography with Indexes (Hauppage, NY, 2002), includes ‘women’ as a category in his subject index but offers only two article citations.