CINXE.COM

Crusades: The Illustrated History - PDF Free Download

<!DOCTYPE html> <html lang="en"> <head> <meta charset="utf-8"> <meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge"> <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width,minimum-scale=1,initial-scale=1"> <title>Crusades: The Illustrated History - PDF Free Download</title> <meta name="description" content="CONTENTSCrusades: The Illustrated HistoryCopyright &copy; Duncan Baird Publishers 2004 Text copyright &copy; Duncan Baird Pub..."> <script type="application/ld+json"> { "@context": "http://schema.org", "@type": "NewsArticle", "mainEntityOfPage": { "@type": "WebPage", "@id": "https://epdf.tips/" }, "headline": "Crusades: The Illustrated History - PDF Free Download", "description": "CONTENTSCrusades: The Illustrated HistoryCopyright &copy; Duncan Baird Publishers 2004 Text copyright &copy; Duncan Baird Pub...", "datePublished": "2015-04-15+0705:19:21+00:00", "dateModified": "2018-04-14+0705:19:21+00:00", "author": { "@type": "Person", "name": "Guest" }, "publisher": { "@type": "Organization", "name": "EPDF.TIPS", "logo": { "@type": "ImageObject", "url": "https://epdf.tips/assets/img/epdf_logo.png", "width": 60, "height": 60 } }, "image": { "@type": "ImageObject", "url": "https://epdf.tips/assets/img/epdf_logo.png", "width": 696, "height": 696 } } </script> <link rel="canonical" href="https://epdf.tips/crusades-the-illustrated-history.html"/> <meta property="og:url" content="https://epdf.tips/crusades-the-illustrated-history.html"/> <meta property="og:title" content="Crusades: The Illustrated History - PDF Free Download"/> <meta property="og:description" content="CONTENTSCrusades: The Illustrated HistoryCopyright &copy; Duncan Baird Publishers 2004 Text copyright &copy; Duncan Baird Pub..."/> <meta property="og:image" content="https://epdf.tips/assets/img/epdf_logo.png"/> <meta property="og:site_name" content="epdf.tips"/> <meta property="og:type" content="website"/> <meta name="twitter:card" content="summary"/> <meta name="twitter:site" content="@epdf.tips"/> <meta name="twitter:title" content="Crusades: The Illustrated History - PDF Free Download"/> <meta name="twitter:description" content="CONTENTSCrusades: The Illustrated HistoryCopyright &copy; Duncan Baird Publishers 2004 Text copyright &copy; Duncan Baird Pub..."/> <meta name="twitter:image" content="https://epdf.tips/assets/img/epdf_logo.png"/> <meta name="format-detection" content="telephone=no"> <meta name="application-name" content="epdf.tips"/> <meta name="apple-mobile-web-app-status-bar-style" content="white"/> <meta name="apple-mobile-web-app-capable" content="yes"/> <meta name="mobile-web-app-capable" content="yes"/> <link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="57x57" href="https://epdf.tips/assets/img/apple-icon-57x57.png"> <link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="60x60" href="https://epdf.tips/assets/img/apple-icon-60x60.png"> <link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="72x72" href="https://epdf.tips/assets/img/apple-icon-72x72.png"> <link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="76x76" href="https://epdf.tips/assets/img/apple-icon-76x76.png"> <link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="114x114" href="https://epdf.tips/assets/img/apple-icon-114x114.png"> <link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="120x120" href="https://epdf.tips/assets/img/apple-icon-120x120.png"> <link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="144x144" href="https://epdf.tips/assets/img/apple-icon-144x144.png"> <link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="152x152" href="https://epdf.tips/assets/img/apple-icon-152x152.png"> <link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="180x180" href="https://epdf.tips/assets/img/apple-icon-180x180.png"> <link rel="icon" type="image/png" sizes="192x192" href="https://epdf.tips/assets/img/android-icon-192x192.png"> <link rel="icon" type="image/png" sizes="32x32" href="https://epdf.tips/assets/img/favicon-32x32.png"> <link rel="icon" type="image/png" sizes="96x96" href="https://epdf.tips/assets/img/favicon-96x96.png"> <link rel="icon" type="image/png" sizes="16x16" href="https://epdf.tips/assets/img/favicon-16x16.png"> <link rel="manifest" href="https://epdf.tips/assets/img/manifest.json"> <meta name="msapplication-TileColor" content="#ffffff"> <meta name="msapplication-TileImage" content="https://epdf.tips/assets/img/ms-icon-144x144.png"> <meta name="theme-color" content="#ffffff"> <link href='https://epdf.tips/assets/font-awesome/css/font-awesome.min.css' rel='stylesheet' type='text/css'> <link href="https://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Montserrat:300,400,500,600,700,900" rel="stylesheet"> <link href='https://epdf.tips/assets/css/bootstrap.min.css' rel='stylesheet' type='text/css'> <link href='https://epdf.tips/assets/css/bootstrap-social.css' rel='stylesheet' type='text/css'> <link href='https://epdf.tips/assets/css/minified.css?v=1' rel='stylesheet' type='text/css'> <script src="https://epdf.tips/assets/js/jquery-3.2.1.min.js"></script> <script src="https://epdf.tips/assets/js/bootstrap.min.js"></script> </head> <body> <div class="header"> <div class="navbar navbar-blue" role="navigation"> <div class="navbar-header"> <a class="logo" href="https://epdf.tips/"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/assets/img/epdf_logo.png" style="max-height: 60px;"/> </a> <button type="button" class="navbar-toggle" data-toggle="collapse" data-target=".navbar-collapse"> <span class="icon-bar"></span> <span class="icon-bar"></span> <span class="icon-bar"></span> </button> </div> <div class="collapse navbar-collapse"> <ul class="nav navbar-nav"> <li class="active"><a href="https://epdf.tips/"><i class="fa fa-home"></i> Home</a></li> <li><a data-toggle="modal" data-target="#login"><i class="fa fa-plus"></i> Add Document</a></li> <li><a data-toggle="modal" data-target="#login"><i class="fa fa-sign-in"></i> Sign In</a></li> <li><a href="https://epdf.tips/register"><i class="fa fa-key"></i> Register</a></li> </ul> <div class="search_box"> <form method="GET" target="_top" action="https://epdf.tips/search"> <div class="form-group"> <div class="input-group input-group-lg"> <input type="text" class="form-control" name="s" id="document_search" placeholder="Search Documents"> <div class="input-group-btn"> <button type="submit" class="btn btn-default"><i class="fa fa-search"></i></button> </div> </div> </div> </form> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="container-fluid"> <div class="row"> <div class="col-sm-12"> <h1 class="page-title"> Crusades: The Illustrated History </h1> <ul class="breadcrumb hidden-xs"> <li><a href="https://epdf.tips/">Home </a></li> <li><a href="https://epdf.tips/crusades-the-illustrated-history.html">Crusades: The Illustrated History</a></li> </ul> </div> </div> </div> <div class="container-fluid"> <div class="row"> <div class="col-lg-9 col-md-8 col-xs-12"> <div class="document-detail"> <div class="clearfix"></div> <div class="row"> <div class="col-md-12"> <div class="row"> <div class="col-md-12"> <div class="meta-info"> CONTENTS Crusades: The Illustrated History Copyright © Duncan Baird Publishers 2004 Text copyright © Duncan Baird Pub... </div> <div class="meta-info block document-meta" style="margin-top: 15px;min-height: inherit;"> <span class="pull-left">Author:&nbsp;</span> <a href="https://epdf.tips/author/Thomas+F.+Madden" class="meta-author pull-left">Thomas F. Madden</a> </div> </div> <div class="col-md-12"> <hr /> <span class="btn pull-left" style="padding-left: 0; padding-right: 0;"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> 1475 downloads</span> <span class="btn pull-left" style="padding-right: 0;"><i class="fa fa-eye"></i> 4707 Views</span> <span class="btn pull-left" style="padding-right: 0;"><i class="fa fa-file-o"></i> 51MB Size</span> <span class="btn pull-left"><a data-toggle="modal" data-target="#report" style="color: #de4a39;"><i class="fa fa-flag-o"></i> Report</a></span> </div> <div class="col-md-12"> <p> This content was uploaded by our users and we assume good faith they have the permission to share this book. If you own the copyright to this book and it is wrongfully on our website, we offer a simple DMCA procedure to remove your content from our site. Start by pressing the button below! <p><a target="_blank" class="btn btn-warning pull-left" href="https://epdf.tips/dmca-form/crusades-the-illustrated-history"><i class="fa fa-flag-o"></i> Report copyright / DMCA form</a></p> </p> </div> </div> <div class="row"> <div class="col-md-12 col-xs-12"> <div class="download-button"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/download/crusades-the-illustrated-history.html" class="btn btn-success btn-block"><i class="fa fa-file-pdf-o"></i> DOWNLOAD PDF</a> </div> </div> <div class="col-md-12 col-xs-12" style="margin-top: 10px;"> <div class="share-box pull-left"> <!-- Facebook --> <a href="https://www.facebook.com/sharer.php?u=https://epdf.tips/crusades-the-illustrated-history.html" target="_blank" class="btn btn-social-icon btn-facebook"> <i class="fa fa-facebook"></i> </a> <!-- Twitter --> <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/shareArticle?mini=true&url=https://epdf.tips/crusades-the-illustrated-history.html" target="_blank" class="btn btn-social-icon btn-twitter"> <i class="fa fa-twitter"></i> </a> </div> <div class="pull-left" style="margin-left: 5px;"> <div class="fb-like" data-href="https://epdf.tips/crusades-the-illustrated-history.html" data-layout="button_count" data-action="like" data-size="large" data-show-faces="false" data-share="false"></div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="clearfix"></div> <div id="fb-root"></div> <script> (function (d, s, id) { var js, fjs = d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0]; if (d.getElementById(id)) return; js = d.createElement(s); js.id = id; js.src = "//connect.facebook.net/en_GB/sdk.js#xfbml=1&version=v2.9&appId=1936206616631092"; fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js, fjs); }(document, 'script', 'facebook-jssdk')); </script> <div class="fb-comments" data-href="https://epdf.tips/crusades-the-illustrated-history.html" data-width="100%" data-numposts="6"></div> </div> <div class="col-md-12 hidden-xs" style="margin-top: 15px;"> CONTENTS<br /> <br /> Crusades: The Illustrated History<br /> <br /> Copyright © Duncan Baird Publishers 2004 Text copyright © Duncan Baird Publishers 2004<br /> <br /> INTRODUCTION<br /> <br /> Commissioned artwork and maps © Duncan Baird<br /> <br /> Thomas F. Madden<br /> <br /> 6<br /> <br /> Publishers 2004 -----------;;1-----------<br /> <br /> All rights reserved Published in the United States ofAmerica by<br /> <br /> CHRISTENDOM AND THE UMMA<br /> <br /> The University of Michigan Press<br /> <br /> 12<br /> <br /> Alfred J. Andrea<br /> <br /> First published in the United Kingdom and Ireland in 2004 by Duncan Baird Publishers Ltd<br /> <br /> Christian Unity and Divergence<br /> <br /> 14<br /> <br /> No part of this book may be reproduced in any<br /> <br /> The Rise of Islam<br /> <br /> 18<br /> <br /> form or by any electronic or mechanical means,<br /> <br /> Pilgrimage<br /> <br /> 22<br /> <br /> including information storage and retrieval systems,<br /> <br /> The Shared Holy Land<br /> <br /> 24<br /> <br /> Christian Holy War and Jihad<br /> <br /> 26<br /> <br /> The vvest Awakes: The Eleventh Century<br /> <br /> 28<br /> <br /> without permission in writing from the publisher. Typeset in Bembo and Trajan Color reproduction by Colourscan, Singapore<br /> <br /> -------------u-------------<br /> <br /> Printed in China by Imago 2007 2006 2005 2004<br /> <br /> 432 1<br /> <br /> 2<br /> <br /> Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication<br /> <br /> THE FIRST CRUSADE: "IMPELLED BY THE LOVE OF GOD"<br /> <br /> 32<br /> <br /> data applied for.<br /> <br /> John France<br /> <br /> ISBN 0-472-11463-8<br /> <br /> Chaos in the East<br /> <br /> 34<br /> <br /> The Armies Depart<br /> <br /> 36<br /> <br /> NOTES<br /> <br /> The abbreviations<br /> <br /> CE<br /> <br /> and<br /> <br /> BCE<br /> <br /> are used throughout<br /> <br /> this book: CE BCE<br /> <br /> Common Era (the equivalent of AD)<br /> <br /> Captions to illustrations on pages I:<br /> <br /> I<br /> <br /> and<br /> <br /> 2:<br /> <br /> A 13th-14th-century Islamic stucco ((tile/'<br /> <br /> probably from Toledo, Spain. Mudejar craftsmen inserted the arms of their Christian lords in the shield shapes which formed at the intersections, the central stars carried emblems<br /> <br /> of their own. This<br /> <br /> example has letters in Kufic<br /> <br /> script intertwined to produce a lobed arch, which is the main feature of the tile. Page<br /> <br /> 2:<br /> <br /> A 13th-century mosaic<br /> <br /> 4°<br /> <br /> The Sieges ofAntioch<br /> <br /> 42<br /> <br /> The Road to Jerusalem<br /> <br /> Before the Common Era (the equivalent of BC)<br /> <br /> Page<br /> <br /> The Campaign in Anatolia<br /> <br /> of a soldier with a sword of the basilica<br /> <br /> in Veneto-Byzantine style,from the interior of San Marco, Venice.<br /> <br /> The Fall<br /> <br /> of the Holy<br /> <br /> City<br /> <br /> The Growth of the Latin East<br /> <br /> 44 46 48<br /> <br /> The Diversity of Crusading<br /> <br /> 50<br /> <br /> ({Warrior Monks)): The Military Orders<br /> <br /> 52<br /> <br /> The Rise<br /> <br /> of Islamic<br /> <br /> Unity<br /> <br /> Crusader Castles<br /> <br /> 54 56<br /> <br /> ------------;;-----------3 THE SECOND CRUSADE: WAR CRUEL AND UNREMITTING John France<br /> <br /> Captions to the chapter opener illustrations are on page<br /> <br /> 223.<br /> <br /> Disaster in the East<br /> <br /> 60<br /> <br /> The Kingdom Recovers<br /> <br /> 64<br /> <br /> European Settlement in the East<br /> <br /> 66<br /> <br /> The Racefor Egypt<br /> <br /> 68<br /> <br /> of Saladin Horns of Hattin<br /> <br /> The Rise<br /> <br /> 70<br /> <br /> The ((Sweet Victory)): Saladin Triumphant<br /> <br /> 74<br /> <br /> 76<br /> <br /> 4 THE THIRD CRUSADE:<br /> <br /> A CAMPAIGN OF EUROPE'S ELITE<br /> <br /> 14 8<br /> <br /> The Fifth Crusade<br /> <br /> 78<br /> <br /> Prophecy<br /> <br /> Helen Nicholson<br /> <br /> IS2<br /> <br /> The Crusade<br /> <br /> of Frederick<br /> <br /> II<br /> <br /> IS4<br /> <br /> The Kings Take the Cross<br /> <br /> 80<br /> <br /> Disorder in the Crusader Kingdom<br /> <br /> The Crusade Heads East<br /> <br /> 82<br /> <br /> The First Crusade<br /> <br /> The Siege ofAcre<br /> <br /> 84 86<br /> <br /> The Mamluk Sultanate<br /> <br /> Control of the Sea<br /> <br /> 88<br /> <br /> A Kingdom Without a King<br /> <br /> Advance to Jerusalem<br /> <br /> 90<br /> <br /> The Second Crusade<br /> <br /> Discord and Rivalry<br /> <br /> 94 96<br /> <br /> The Decline of the Latin East<br /> <br /> Barbarossa ~ Crusade<br /> <br /> The End<br /> <br /> of the<br /> <br /> Enterprise<br /> <br /> The End<br /> <br /> of the<br /> <br /> of Louis<br /> <br /> IX<br /> <br /> 162<br /> <br /> Latin Empire<br /> <br /> of Louis<br /> <br /> IX<br /> <br /> 8<br /> <br /> 98<br /> <br /> THE LAST CRUSADES: THE OTTOMAN THREAT<br /> <br /> 100<br /> <br /> Crusading Projects and Dreams<br /> <br /> 102<br /> <br /> Cyprus: The<br /> <br /> 104 106<br /> <br /> The Rise<br /> <br /> The Conquest of Zara An Errand of Mercy Relations Sour<br /> <br /> ew Crusade<br /> <br /> venice Joins the Crusade Broken Promises<br /> <br /> The Sack<br /> <br /> 17 2<br /> <br /> Jonathan Harris<br /> <br /> Thomas F Madden<br /> <br /> ew Pope, a<br /> <br /> 168<br /> <br /> ;;<br /> <br /> 5 THE FOURTH CRUSADE:<br /> <br /> A<br /> <br /> 164 166 170<br /> <br /> U A TRAGIC MISFIRE<br /> <br /> IS8 160<br /> <br /> ofAcre<br /> <br /> The Fall<br /> <br /> IS6<br /> <br /> of Constantinople<br /> <br /> ew Frontline<br /> <br /> of the<br /> <br /> 174 176 17 8<br /> <br /> Ottomans<br /> <br /> The Maritime League<br /> <br /> 180<br /> <br /> 108<br /> <br /> The Conquest of the Balkans<br /> <br /> 182<br /> <br /> 110<br /> <br /> The Crusade<br /> <br /> 112<br /> <br /> Disaster at varna<br /> <br /> of Nicopolis<br /> <br /> 184 186<br /> <br /> of Constantinople of the Mediterranean<br /> <br /> The Founding of the Latin Empire<br /> <br /> 114<br /> <br /> The Fall<br /> <br /> 188<br /> <br /> The Spoils of m.r<br /> <br /> 116<br /> <br /> Knights<br /> <br /> 190<br /> <br /> 6 CRUSADES IN EUROPE: INFIDELS,<br /> <br /> PAGANS, AND HERETICS<br /> <br /> 19 2<br /> <br /> The Reformation<br /> <br /> ;; 118<br /> <br /> The Battle of Lepanto<br /> <br /> 194<br /> <br /> The Glories of the Ottomans<br /> <br /> 196<br /> <br /> The End of the Crusades<br /> <br /> 198<br /> <br /> William L. Urban<br /> <br /> U<br /> <br /> The Reconquista<br /> <br /> 120<br /> <br /> The Fruits of Three Faiths Thomas F: Madden<br /> <br /> 12 4<br /> <br /> The Wendish Crusade<br /> <br /> 126<br /> <br /> Crusades in the Eastern Baltic<br /> <br /> 128<br /> <br /> Crusading in the Western Imagination<br /> <br /> 202<br /> <br /> The Albigensian Crusade<br /> <br /> Islamic Responses to the West<br /> <br /> 206<br /> <br /> Popular Crusades<br /> <br /> 13 2 13 6<br /> <br /> Political Crusades<br /> <br /> 138<br /> <br /> The Hussite Crusade<br /> <br /> 140<br /> <br /> U 7 THE FIFTH CRUSADE TO 1291: THE LOSS OF THE HOLY LAND<br /> <br /> 142<br /> <br /> James M. Powell<br /> <br /> The Crusader States Council and Crusade<br /> <br /> 144 146<br /> <br /> 9 THE LEGACY OF THE CRUSADES Carole Hillenbrand<br /> <br /> A Clash<br /> <br /> of Civilizations?<br /> <br /> 200<br /> <br /> 210<br /> <br /> ;; Further Reading<br /> <br /> 212<br /> <br /> Chronology<br /> <br /> 21 4<br /> <br /> Index<br /> <br /> 2IS<br /> <br /> Text Acknowledgments<br /> <br /> 222<br /> <br /> Picture Credits<br /> <br /> 224<br /> <br /> INTRODUCTION Religious warfare, once thought to be an artifact of a distant past, has reemerged in recent years. A spate of Islamist terrorist attacks have reminded the western world that for many people religion is still a reason to kill and to be killed. That is a hard lesson for the West, which long ago relegated religious belief to personal preference and celebrates religious diversity; it requires westerners to look beyond modern sensibilities to a medieval world view that, for them, has largely passed away-for it has not passed away everywhere. Out of a desire to understand today's events, many commentators turned to Christianity's holy wars: the crusades. It was their legacy, some contended, that had led directly to the attacks. When President George W Bush spoke of the new war on terrorism as a "crusade" he was roundly criticized for the perceived suggestion that it was a war of Christianity against Islam. His aides apologized, saying that the president had only used the term in its sense of a campaign, but in the Middle East the remark was thought to confirm a popular -../ assessment ofAmericans and Europeans as "crusaders."<br /> <br /> The taking ofJerusalem in 1099 during the First Crusade)from a mid- 14th century edition of History ofJerusalem by William ofTyre. In 2001) just weeks after the terrorist attacks against New York and Washington) D. C. ) former us. president Bill Clinton claimed that the captur~ and sack ofJerusalem was still remembered by Muslims in the region) implying that the descendants of crusaders ought to shoulder their burden of the blame. Many other observers likewise began to see the root causes of Islamist attacks as lying in the crusades of the Middle Ages.<br /> <br /> INTRODUCTION<br /> <br /> So what were the crusades and who were the crusaders? After many decades of rigorous investigation by historians of the Middle Ages we are now much better able to answer. However, much of this research lies in academic publications aimed at specialists rather than lay readers, while many books aimed at a mass market perpetuate errors and misunderstandings that were corrected decades ago. As a result, outside the academic world the crusades remain badly understood. The purpose of Crusades: The Illustrated History is to satisfy the popular desire for answers about the crusades with the fruits of years of exacting historical research. The professional historians assembled here have each made significant contributions to our understanding of the crusades-and here they have written fascinating narratives that reflect the latest conclusions of modern scholarship. During the Middle Ages virtually all western Christians believed that the crusades to the East were divinely sanctioned wars against the enemies of Christ and his church. Even after the fall of the crusader states in 1291 the recapture of the Holy Land remained an important matter for western Christians. Then the expansion of the . Islamic Ottoman empire (see Chapter Eight) forced Europeans to put aside any ideas of reclaiming Jerusalem and instead defend Europe. In the sixteenth century, when western Europe was in the gravest danger of Muslim conquest, the crusades as an institution began to collapse utterly. As secular authority in Europe increased, religious unity crumbled. The Protestant Reformation severely undercut the crusades because doctrines were rejected that were central to crusading-in particular the secular authority of the pope and the doctrine of indulgence. Martin Luther insisted that the crusades were the tool of a corrupt papacy. However, even Luther was aware of the threat that the power of the Islamic Turks posed to Christian Europe, and the old ideal of Christian unity in the face of the Muslim threat never died entirely-in 15}1 the victory of a Catholic admiral over the Turks at Lepanto was celebrated in Protestant lands no less than in Catholic ones (see pages 194-195), and more than a century later Protestants joined the ranks of the pope's Holy League which, in the last crusades of all, began to roll back the frontier of the Ottoman empire (see pages 198-199).<br /> <br /> Writing the History of the Crusades By this time, histories of the earlier crusades had begun to appear. In his very popular Historie<br /> <br /> of the<br /> <br /> Holy Warre (1639), the English<br /> <br /> divine Thomas Fuller questioned the wisdom of the medieval crusades, which, in his view, had spent European lives and wealth for nothing more than a faraway plot of land and a few relics. His view<br /> <br /> 7<br /> <br /> 8<br /> <br /> INTRODUCTION<br /> <br /> was not untypical of Protestant writers. However, the French Jesuit historian Louis Maimbourg praised the movement and its participants in his own Histoire des croisades (History of the Crusades, 1675). The eighteenth century saw a dramatic shift in western thinking. Not only had the Ottoman threat been averted, but European states were now expanding on a global scale. With the Muslim danger passed, many Europeans belittled it and cast doubt on its former gravity. It was the age of the Enlightenment, with its emphasis on rational thought, religious toleration, and anticlericalism-in such an intellectual atmosphere the medieval crusades did not fare well, and they were denounced by Voltaire, Hume, and others as a bloody manifestation of medieval barbarism, ignorance, superstition, and fanaticism in which thousands of the foolish had set out in a pitiful attempt to save their souls. In Ober Volkerwanderung, Kreuzziige und<br /> <br /> Mittelalter (On the Migration of Peoples, Crusades, and the Middle Ages, 1791), Friedrich Schiller even suggested that the crusades could be better understood as a continuation of the barbarian migrations and invasions that had destroyed ancient Rome. However, the Romantic movement of the late eighteenth and nineteenth century embraced the chivalric piety of the medieval knight. In History of the Crusades (1820), the British historian Charles Mills criticized Enlightenment scholars such as Edward Gibbon for projecting modern values on medieval men. He judged that the crusaders were heroic, selfless, and courageous. Nationalism also changed historians' views, particularly in France, where the crusades began to be seen as an important part of the national heritage. The six-volume Histoire des croisades (1817-22) by Joseph-Fran<;ois Michaud Opposite, top: Remains of the citadel of Antioch) one of the most ancient of all cities in Christendom and a patriarchal see) conquered by the Seljuk Turks in 1085. It was restored to Christendom by the First Crusade in 10g8) until Sultan Baibars destroyed it and massacred the inhabitants in 1268.<br /> <br /> extolled the achievements of the French crusaders. Colonialism and racism were also interwoven into the fabric of crusade history in this period. By the nineteenth century the Muslim Near East had not only ceased to be a threat, but to most Europeans it appeared backward, quaint, exotic, or just barbarous. The crusades, therefore, were frequently celebrated as Europe's first colonial expansion. During the wars of the late nineteenth and early<br /> <br /> Opposite, bottom: An illustration from the<br /> <br /> 12th-century Chirurgia by Roger of Salerno) showing a doctor extracting an arrow from a man 5 back. Developments in surgery in Europe were assisted by the practical experience derived from treating battle wounds) but more fundamentally the debt was owed to the Muslim world-firstly) for the brilliance of reference works written by men such as Albucasis) a scholar and surgeon from Cordoba) and secondly because of the availability of translations of ancient Greek works on surgery.<br /> <br /> twentieth centuries-including the First World War (see page 204)the romantic image of the chivalric crusader marching off to fight a foreign nemesis was pressed into service. Even after the carnage of the First World War, Europeans and Americans continued to characterize it as a noble "crusade" and the dead as fallen martyrs.<br /> <br /> The Crusades in the Twentieth Century In the twentieth century new methodologies and sources gave a new generation of historians the tools to unlock many of the mysteries<br /> <br /> INTRODUCTION<br /> <br /> of the crusades. The starting point for modern investigations into the basic questions of definition and motivation is Carl Erdmann's groundbreaking book, Die Entstehung des Kreuzzugsgedankens (The<br /> <br /> Origin of the Idea of Crusade, 1935). He argued that the crusades were not so much the result of events in the East, but born of the eleventh-century reform movement in Europe, which had abandoned Christianity's ideal of withdrawal from the world and embraced instead the secular militaristic culture in order both to purify that culture and to use it as a tool of purification. The crusades, therefore, were neither an ad hoc reaction nor an aberration, but an organic element of the medieval world.<br /> <br /> It is unsurprising that the rise of Nazi Germany and the ensuing world war changed the way historians approached the crusades. Western scholars reflected the popular aversion to wars of conquest and campaigns of fanatical ideology; racismjoined colonialism in the West's collection of discarded doctrines. Western intellectuals began to view the crusades much as their Enlightenment predecessors had done two centuries earlier. Many historians who had observed how totalitarian leaders had covered their wars of aggression in the mantle<br /> <br /> 9<br /> <br /> 10<br /> <br /> INTRODUCTION<br /> <br /> of glorious moral crusades expressed cynIcIsm for the professed motives and purposes of medieval kings, popes, and crusaders. Rather than heroes, crusaders were described as opportunistic conquerors cloaking their true motives behind a veil of pious platitudes. The most influential proponent of this view was Sir Steven Runciman. In his three-volume work, A History<br /> <br /> The land walls of Constantinople) mammoth fortifications that defended the capital of the Byzantine empire for many centuries. Steven Runciman) a historian of Byzantium) had a natural sympathy for the subject of his studies and he accused the western crusades of weakening the empire that they had sought to sustain. More than the Turks) who would ultimately conquer Constantinople and its territories) Runciman blamed the crusaders for the fall of Byzantium.<br /> <br /> of<br /> <br /> the Crusades (1951-54), Runciman downplayed the role of piety, stressing what he saw as the base motives of rapacious men. Runciman's history, which had the benefit of being beautifully written, quickly gained a wide readership outside the academic world and remains a bestselling history of the crusading movement. It is no exaggeration to say that he almost singlehandedly crafted the modern popular view of the crusades.When one reads or hears media coverage about the crusades today it is invariably Runciman's judgment that reigns supreme. Yet Runciman was by no means the last word on the crusades. Since the 1960s there has been a boom in crusade studies. The Society for the Study ofthe Crusades and the Latin East, a professional organization of crusade scholars, has at present nearly 500 members in thirty countries and hundreds of scholarly studies are published each year. As a result of all of this research, modern scholars have<br /> <br /> INTRODUCTION<br /> <br /> 11<br /> <br /> largely rejected Runciman's conclusions, returning instead to the idea that medieval people should be understood on their own terms rather than ours.<br /> <br /> The Crusades Today One of the most exciting areas of recent crusade research is the investigation into the identity, methods, and motivations of those who took the cross. In the past, scholars have had to generalize about crusaders who were not in the ranks of the highest elite based on incomplete or impressionistic information. It is still not possible to learn very much about the poorest crusaders. However, through the use of the thousands of medieval charters held in European archives one can uncover the preparations and conduct of many thousands of otherwise unknown knightly crusaders. Charter studies have been around for a long time, but it is only relatively recently that historians have been able to employ new computer technologies in order to organize and evaluate these documents. Using these methods, scholars such as Jonathan Riley-Smith have exploded the old myth that crusaders were Europe's second sons, landless men leaving home to seek profit and wealth wherever it could be found or plundered. On the contrary, we now know that the costs of crusading were staggering. This has led many historians to the conclusion that the overriding motivation for crusaders to the East was not greed but pious idealism. Crusaders truly believed that in endeavoring to expel Muslim conquerors from formerly Christian lands, they were doing God's will. Crusading was, for them, an act of charity and love through which they sought to do penance for their sins and thereby merit eternal life. These beliefs may not seem very modern, but neither were the people who held them. Did the crusades to the East lay the foundation for modern antiwestern terrorism? It is hard to see how, since Muslim conquerors not only destroyed the European crusader kingdom but went on to occupy much of Europe itself. Attempts to view the crusades through the lens of modern ideologies, though, do play a role in present-day rhetoric (see Chapter Nine). However, to seek to force the medieval crusades into nationalist, colonialist, or racist molds is to distort their fundamental character, and as a result the crusades are today among the most misunderstood phenomena in history.<br /> <br /> Crusades: The Illustrated History seeks to dispel that misunderstanding. Thomas F: Madden Professor of History Saint Louis University.<br /> <br /> Crusaders from a 13th-century mosaic from the basilica of St. John the Evangelist in Ravenna. Medieval warriors often joined the crusades in groups-members of the same famil~ same place of origin) or same feudal arrangement would travel together, assisting each other along the way. Crusades were dangerous endeavors: almost half those who lift Europe never returned.<br /> <br /> 1<br /> <br /> CHRISTENDOM AND THE UMMA ALFRED<br /> <br /> J.<br /> <br /> ANDREA<br /> <br /> HfEROSOUI1A<br /> <br /> Christian Unity and Divergence<br /> <br /> 14<br /> <br /> The Rise of Islam<br /> <br /> 18<br /> <br /> Pilgrimage<br /> <br /> .22<br /> <br /> The Shared Holy Land<br /> <br /> 24<br /> <br /> Christian Holy Vllar and Jihad<br /> <br /> 26<br /> <br /> The rf'est Awakes: The Eleventh Century<br /> <br /> 28<br /> <br /> 14<br /> <br /> CHRISTENDOM AND THE UMMA<br /> <br /> CHRISTIAN UNITY AND DIVERGENCE Unity of faith and worship has been a Christian ideal from the beginning, but never a reality. In the early 50S St. Paul upbraided the Christians of Corinth for their factionalism, and their divisions were not unique. In the fourth century church unity was threatened when many North Africans, refusing to accept the authority of priests who had submitted to a recent Roman persecution, created the Donatist church, named for their leader Donatus (died 355). In the midst of this crisis, the emperor Constantine I ("the Great," ruled 306-37) adopted Christianity as his favored religion. In 325 he called a council of church leaders at Nicaea (present-day Iznik) in Asia Minor to resolve the even more divisive Arian controversy. Arius, a priest of Alexandria in Egypt, claimed that Jesus was God only by adoption and "not of the same substance as the Father." The council promulgated the Nicene Creed, which affirmed Jesus' full godhood and condemned the Arians as heretics, or false-believing Christians. In 330 Constantine shifted the focus of the Roman empire eastward by dedicating a new imperial capital on the Bosporus: Constantinople (present-day Istanbul). But despite Constantine's belief that he had breathed new life into the empire, deep divisions persisted within the imperial church. The council ofNicaea had not extirpated Arianism, and in the following centuries new theological controversies arose. To settle such disputes, the church held six further ecumenical councils between 381 and 787, which articulated<br /> <br /> OTHER EASTERN CHRISTIANS According to tradition, the first state to accept<br /> <br /> councils (see main text). For example, the council<br /> <br /> Christianity as its official religion was not Rome but<br /> <br /> of Chalcedon in 451 declared that two perfect and<br /> <br /> Armenia, a kingdom south of the Caucasus mountains,<br /> <br /> complete natures, divine and human, are joined in Jesus'<br /> <br /> which adopted the faith ca. 314. Sometime thereafter<br /> <br /> single, indivisible person. The Coptic church of Egypt,<br /> <br /> (traditionally in 333), the king of Ethiopia, in northeast<br /> <br /> as well as the churches of Ethiopia and Nubia (Sudan),<br /> <br /> Africa, accepted Christianity as the official state religion.<br /> <br /> rej ected this idea in favor of Monophysitism, the<br /> <br /> The Georgians of the southern Caucasus also accepted<br /> <br /> doctrine that Jesus had a single, divine nature.<br /> <br /> the faith sometime in the fourth century, probably owing to Armenian and eastern Roman influences. Some eastern Christian churches deviated from the orthodox faith as defined by the seven ecumenical<br /> <br /> Monophysites were frequently persecuted by the imperial church of Constantinople and in the seventh century they tended to welcome conquering Muslim armies as liberators.<br /> <br /> CHRISTIAN UNITY AND DIVERGENCE<br /> <br /> the core of the orthodox ("correctly taught") faith, defining what was to be believed and pros·cribing as heresy all contrary beliefs. However, these councils also divided Christians, because no doctrinal decision was accepted by every disputant. During the same centuries, two competing centers of church authority emerged: Constantinople, whose emperor claimed to be<br /> <br /> isapostolos, the peer of the apostles; and Rome, whose bishop claimed the title of pope (Latin papa, father) by virtue of the powers of St. Peter, the putative prince of the apostles and first bishop of Rome. Pope Leo I ("the Great," 440-61) was emblematic of the Roman papacy's self-image and emerging status in the West. Leo, self-styled "primate of the bishops," managed to suppress an attempt to accord Constantinople ecclesiastical parity with Rome. Moreover, as imperial authority became weaker in the West in the face of invasions by Germans and other "barbarians," popes and other western church leaders found it necessary to provide security for their people. In 452 Leo apparently persuaded Attila, leader of the Huns, not to attack Rome. Three years later he negotiated a mitigation of the sack of Rome by the Vandals. In 494 Pope Gelasius I was confident enough to upbraid the emperor for interfering in church affairs; in doing so he articulated the papacy's classic expression of the responsibility and authority of pope and emperor (see sidebar on page 16). The situation was quite different in the eastern Roman empire, where emperors were able to control church leaders effectively, and<br /> <br /> 15<br /> <br /> This detail from a Russian icon depicts the first ecumenical council of Nicaea (3 2 5), and the fifth (553) and sixth (680) ecumenical councils, both of which were held in Constantinople. The ecumenical councils (formal assemblies of church leaders that in theory represented the entire church) and other convened assemblies of experts were instrumental in defining the ((correct," or orthodox, faith. Novgorod School, 18th century.<br /> <br /> 16<br /> <br /> POPE AND EMPEROR: A QUESTION OF AUTHORITY In 494 Pope Gelasius I wrote to the emperor Anastasius I to affirm the supremacy of the church over the secular authorities. This is an extract: "Although you take precedence over all mankind in dignity; nevertheless you piously bow the neck to those who have charge of divine affairs and seek from them the means of your salvation, and hence you realize that, in the order of religion you ought to submit yourself rather than rule.... Noone can ever raise himself by purely human means to the privilege and place of him whom the voice of Christ has set before all." Charlemagne expressed the opposing view in a letter to Pope Leo III in 795: "It is our royal duty to defend the church of Christ from the attacks of pagans and infidels... and to enforce within the church acceptance of the catholic faith. It is your duty, Most Holy Father, to aid us in the good fight by raising your hands to God... so that, by your<br /> <br /> the chief prelate of the eastern church, the patriarch of Constantinople, was generally an imperial appointee. Emperor Justinian I<br /> <br /> intercession, the Christian people might<br /> <br /> ("the Great," 527-565), for example, was convinced that as God's<br /> <br /> always and everywhere be victorious....<br /> <br /> viceroy on Earth he was uniquely responsible for the well-being of<br /> <br /> Abide by the strictures of church law in all matters and always obey the teachings of the holy fathers, so that your life can serve as an example of holiness to<br /> <br /> Christendom and of the faith, and closely controlled the patriarchate. He even bent Pope Vigilius to his will in a doctrinal dispute. The sixth century was pivotal fo Roman imperial Christendom.<br /> <br /> everyone, and your holy admonitions<br /> <br /> In the East a new Christian culture and civilization arose that is<br /> <br /> might be observed by the entire world."<br /> <br /> called "Byzantine." Centered on Constantinople (site of the ancient Greek city of Byzantium) and its imperial court, the Byzantine empire was an amalgam of late-Roman autocracy, Eastern Christianity, and the Hellenistic culture of the Levant. Byzantines saw and referred to themselves as Romans, but they belonged to an essentially Greek-speaking empire that persisted until 1453. In the· West, another new culture and civilization was taking<br /> <br /> The self-image of the eastern Roman (Byzantine) emperors as universal rulers is strongly conveyed in the Barberini Ivory, an ivory panel from the early 6th century. The emperor, probably Anastasius I (491-518) orJustinian (527-565), rides in triumph as Christ (top) gives his blessing and a general ~ift) offers a winged figure of victory; in the lower register easterners (Scythians and Indians) bring tribute, including an elephant tusk.<br /> <br /> shape. Variously termed "Latin Christendom" and the "First Europe," this new western culture was an amalgam of the vestiges of Latin Roman civilization, the cultures of the West's new barbarian inhabitants, and a Christianity increasingly centered on Rome and the popes. Pope Gregory I ("the Great," 590-604) personified this transformation. Although a loyal subject of the emperor in Constantinople, he found himself guiding a western church that was drifting away from imperial control. Through his actions, personal<br /> <br /> CHRISTIAN UNITY AND DIVERGENCE<br /> <br /> example, and writings, Gregory was a key agent in the evolution of the Roman papacy as the moral and spiritual leader of the West. In the meantime, the secular rulers of the West continued to look to the rulers in Constantinople as models of imperial majesty and legitimacy. The most successful early imitator of Byzantine imperial greatness was Charlemagne (Charles the Great), king of the Franks (768-814), who carved out western Europe's first medieval empire.<br /> <br /> But his claims to unrivaled power never went unchallenged. At his coronation as "emperor of the Romans" in Rome on Christmas Day 800, Charlemagne probably expected to be acclaimed emperor by<br /> <br /> the people and venerated by the pope, in the style of the Byzantine rulers. He also probably expected to place the crown on his own head. But Pope Leo III upstaged Charlemagne by crowning him, spotlighting a basic tension running throughout medieval European history-the struggle between popes and western emperors for supremacy over Christendom. The Byzantines were outraged that a German barbarian should usurp the imperial title, but in 812, after much wrangling, their emperor Michael I agreed to accord Charlemagne the title" emperor" (but not "emperor of the Romans"). By 843 Charlemagne's empire had split into three kingdoms and it was dead before the ninth century ended. In 962 the western empire and title were revived when Pope John XII found it expedient to crown King Otto I of Germany as Roman emperor, laying the foundations for the later Holy Roman empire. John was to regret this coronation. When he realized that Otto intended to rule Italy with full imperial authority, he turned against him; Otto then engineered John's deposition. Otto and his successors saw themselves as the true heirs of the Caesars and Charlemagne, but they were also aware that to their east lay a larger, richer, and grander "Roman" empire. And they knew that these "Romans" were in fact Greeks-Christians with suspiciously different rites. They viewed Byzantium, one might say, with a mixture of envy, mistrust, and even a degree of contempt. At the turn of the millennium, popes and western emperors were not the only authorities in Latin Europe. Most of the Christian West, which by then extended from Greenland to Poland, Bohemia, and Croatia, was divided into a dizzying array of kingdoms and feudal lordships. This political pluralism, which stood in stark contrast to Byzantium's centralized autocracy, would prove to be a dynamic factor in the history of western Europe.<br /> <br /> 17<br /> <br /> A reliquary ofgold, silver, and precious stones in the form of a bust of Charlemagne, presented to the treasury ofAachen cathedral by the Holy Roman emperor Charles IV in 1349. The Holy Roman emperors saw themselves as the successors of Charlemagne, who, as the protector of the church and its people, a patron of learning and the arts, and a warrior of God against pagans, became the Utst~ archetypal Christian king and emperor.<br /> <br /> 18<br /> <br /> CHRISTENDOM AND THE UMMA<br /> <br /> THE RISE OF ISLAM Islam, which means "submission [to God]" in Arabic, is a faith, culture, and community whose members are known as Muslims ("they who are submissive"). Muslims are theoretically united in belief and practice because the will of Allah (Arabic al-Ilah, which means "the God") is unchanging, undivided, and unambiguous.That The angel Gabriel recites the word of God to Muhammad. Theface of Muhammad is veiled} in accordance with Islamic strictures against depicting the features of the Prophet. A 16thcentury Turkish painting.<br /> <br /> is the theory; historical reality presents a different picture. Islam traces its lineage back to Adam, Abraham, and a line of other prophets (including Jesus) but claims to have received the fullness of divine revelation through Muhammad (ca. 570-632), the "Seal of the Prophets," the last and greatest of God's messengers. Around 610, Muhammad ibn Abdullah, a prosperous merchant of Mecca (Makkah) in Arabia, received revelations that impelled him to preach the oneness and uniqueness of God; the imminence of the resurrection of the dead, the coming of a Day ofJudgment; an afterdeath hell fire for unbelievers and the unjust; and a paradise of bliss for all who believed and lived righteous lives according to a strict code of conduct. Most Meccans initially rejected Muhammad's message, and in 622 the Prophet, preceded by most of his small band of converts, journeyed to Yathrib (later Medina), an oasis town that invited him to serve as an arbiter among rival factions and as its de facto ruler. This migration, known as the hijra ("breaking of ties"), meant that these first Muslims abandoned their tribal bonds and became members of a new community, or umma, that was defined by a shared Islamic faith and not by blood kinship. In the eyes of Muslims, this pivotal act, which led to the creation of a theocratic community at Medina, inaugurated Year<br /> <br /> I<br /> <br /> of the Islamic Era.<br /> <br /> At Medina, Muhammad added the duties of statesman and warrior to that of prophet. After more than seven years ofjihad, or holy war (see pages 26-27), against the Meccans and others who rejected his message, Muhammad and a reputed 10,000 followers were able to enter Mecca in triumph in 630. Mecca now became Islam's premier holy city, while Medina remained the political capital of the Umma. Because of his triumph, many of the tribes ofArabia united under the leadership of the "Messenger of God."<br /> <br /> THE RISE OF ISLAM<br /> <br /> When Muhammad died in 632, many Arabs severed their ties<br /> <br /> THE FIVE PILLARS OF ISLAM<br /> <br /> with the Umma, believing that their loyalty had lain personally with<br /> <br /> The Hadith of Gabriel originates frolll the<br /> <br /> Muhammad. One of Muhammad's closest companions, Abu Bakr,<br /> <br /> Prophet's friend Ulllar, Islalll's second<br /> <br /> emerged to assume the office of "commander of the faithful," a title later changed to khalifah (caliph), or "successor" (of the Prophet). As<br /> <br /> caliph, and contains the Prophet's enunciation of the "Five Pillars," core practices enjoined on every Muslilll:<br /> <br /> commander or caliph from 632 to 634,Abu Bakr claimed not to be<br /> <br /> I.<br /> <br /> a prophet (since prophecy had ended with Muhammad) but simply<br /> <br /> Proclaillling publicly: "There is no god<br /> <br /> the head of the indivisible community of Islam. He prosecuted war against all who would cut these ties, as well as against the remaining pagan Arab tribes. By his death, just two years after Muhammad's,<br /> <br /> 19<br /> <br /> Shahadah (Bearing Witness).<br /> <br /> but Allah, and Muhallllllad is the Messenger of Allah." 2.<br /> <br /> Salat (Prayer). Praying five tillles daily<br /> <br /> facing Mecca: before dawn, at noon, lllid-<br /> <br /> Abu Bakr had welded together a vigorous community of believers<br /> <br /> afternoon, after sunset, and in the evening.<br /> <br /> that encompassed the entire Arabian peninsula.What is more, he had<br /> <br /> 3. Zakah (Purification). An annual tax of<br /> <br /> forged an Islamic army that was ready to advance against Arabia's<br /> <br /> 2.5 percent of one's incollle to support the<br /> <br /> two neighbors, the Byzantine and Sassanian (Persian) empires. Islam's second caliph, Umar (634-644), launched raids against unbelievers outside the peninsula that soon turned into wars of con-<br /> <br /> poor and for other worthy purposesincluding jihad (see pages 26-27). 4. Siyalll Rallladan (Rallladan Fast). Abstaining frolll food, drink, and sex frolll<br /> <br /> quest. Byzantium and Sassanian Persia, exhausted after more than a<br /> <br /> dawn to sunset in the lllonth of Rallladan.<br /> <br /> century of wars and suffering bitter internal divisions, were unpre-<br /> <br /> 5. Hajj (Pilgrilllage). Making a pilgrilllage,<br /> <br /> pared for the onslaught. Before Umar's death in 644, the Byzantines<br /> <br /> at least once during one's life, if possible, to Mecca during the first ten days of<br /> <br /> had lost Syria-Palestine and Egypt-Christianity's most ancient and<br /> <br /> Dhul-Hijah, the twelfth Islalllic lllonth<br /> <br /> sacred lands-to Islam, and the Arab conquest of the Sassanian<br /> <br /> (see pages 22-23).<br /> <br /> empire (essentially present-day Iraq and Iran) was almost complete.<br /> <br /> THE CliJRAN AND HADITH The Quran (Recitations), Islam's holy book, consists of the revelations given by Allah to Muhammad at Mecca and Medina between 610 and 632. Delivered to the Prophet by the angel Gabriel, and spoken by Muhammad to the Umma, they are the fullness of divine revelation and coeternal with God. Its verses, each a perfect, poetic gift from God, are both doctrine and sacred law (Sharia). Supplementing the Quran is Hadith (Tradition), collections of stories and sayings attributed to the Prophet and his Companions (the first Muslims) that provide models for behavior in every aspect of life. The individual hadiths (stories) are associated with the Prophet and so have the authority of divine inspiration, but unlike the Quran they are not God's literal word. Sunnis and Shias revere the same<br /> <br /> Quran but honor different collections of hadiths. Shias have a third source of divine inspiration: the pronouncements of their imams.<br /> <br /> An early manuscript of the Quran. Abbasid period) 8th-9th century.<br /> <br /> 20<br /> <br /> CHRISTENDOM AND THE UMMA<br /> <br /> PEOPLES OF THE BOOK<br /> <br /> Further territories were conquered with astonishing speed over<br /> <br /> Because Arab Muslims initially looked<br /> <br /> the following century. By 751, when Islamic forces defeated a Chi-<br /> <br /> upon Islam as a uniquely Arabic faith,<br /> <br /> nese army at the Talas river (in present-day Kazakhstan), lands under<br /> <br /> and because Christians and Jews were "People of the Book" (that is, God had given them their own books of divine<br /> <br /> Islamic domination stretched from Spain in the west (see page 120) to present-day Pakistan and Central Asia. The Byzantine empire was<br /> <br /> revelation), conquered monotheists were<br /> <br /> a truncated version of its former self, having lost Syria-Palestine,<br /> <br /> normally offered dhimmi status. This<br /> <br /> Egypt, and North Africa to Islam.<br /> <br /> meant that they accepted a contract, or<br /> <br /> dhimma, that obliged them to serve and to pay tribute (jizya) to their Muslim overlords in return for limited but<br /> <br /> In the mid-eighth century, the community of Islam was a vast multi-ethnic empire. Despite the influx of non-Arab converts, many subject Christians and Jews (and to a lesser extent Zoroastrians)<br /> <br /> real toleration. Even many Persian<br /> <br /> remained faithful to their ancestral religions. On the eve of the cru-<br /> <br /> Zoroastrians were offered dhimmi status.<br /> <br /> sades, ca. 1°95, Christian and Muslim populations were probably of<br /> <br /> However, despite this tolerance, many<br /> <br /> equal size in Syria-Palestine. In many Muslim-dominated regions,<br /> <br /> non-Arabs chose to convert to Islam.<br /> <br /> such as southern and eastern Anatolia (modern Asiatic Turkey) and northern Syria, Christians still greatly outnumbered Muslims. As Muslim armies were establishing an empire in the seventh century, a schism arose. Many Muslims, especially members of the Prophet's clan, the Hashim, accused the third caliph, Uthman (644-656), of favoring his own clan, the Umayya (Umayyads). The result was rebellion, Uthman's assassination, and civil war. One faction, the Party of Ali (Shiat Ali), favored the claim to the caliphate ofAli ibn Abi Talib, the Prophet's cousin and son-in-law. The other, led by Muawiyah, a kinsman ofUthman, represented the Umayyads. The war ended with Ali's assassination in 661. Most Muslims acknowledged Muawiyah as caliph, ushering in the Umayyad caliphate (661-750).The political capital of the Umma was moved from Medina to Damascus, in part in recognition of Islam's expanding horizons but also because Medina had been Shiat Ali's center of support.<br /> <br /> THE IMAMS OF THE SHIAS Shias traced the rightful succession of leadership of the<br /> <br /> this line of earthly imams came to an end. (Here various<br /> <br /> community of Islam from Muhammad and Ali through<br /> <br /> Shia groups disagree as to who was the last imam.)<br /> <br /> a number of subsequent imams (religious leaders of the<br /> <br /> But the imamate was not destroyed. Rather, the last<br /> <br /> U mma) who claimed descent from Ali. They also<br /> <br /> visible imam had, through the power and mercy of God,<br /> <br /> developed the notion of a messianic Hidden Imam, or<br /> <br /> withdrawn from human sight into a state of spiritual<br /> <br /> Mahdi ("Guided One"). According to this theological<br /> <br /> concealment, as protection against his enemies, especially<br /> <br /> vision, the imams of the family of Muhammad were<br /> <br /> false Muslims. There he would remain until some future<br /> <br /> infallible teachers, divinely appointed at birth, who<br /> <br /> tilne when he would reappear as the Mahdi to gather his<br /> <br /> spoke with the same authority as the Prophet. However,<br /> <br /> faithful, persecuted followers, usher in an Islamic holy<br /> <br /> because of enemies who martyred each imam in turn,<br /> <br /> age, and herald the Last Judgment.<br /> <br /> 21<br /> <br /> Upon Muawiyah's death in 680, war broke out again with the supporters of Ali's family, more commonly known as Shias or Shiites ("Partisans"). The Shias held that the caliph must be a blood relation of the Prophet, which meant al-Husayn, Ali's son and grandson of Muhammad. But on loth October 680, al-Husayn and most of<br /> <br /> Above: The dramatic three-phase expansion of<br /> <br /> Islam saw its armies conquer territory that in little over a century extended Islam s influence into western Europe and Central Asia.<br /> <br /> his family were massacred at Karbala in Iraq, an event still commemorated by Shias. By 692 the Umayyads had crushed their rivals, but it was a shortlived victory. In 750, supported by many Shias, nonArab converts, and other disaffected Muslims, the Abbasids, a family tracing its lineage to the Prophet's uncle, overthrew the Umayyads in a bloodbath and established the Abbasid caliphate (750-1258). Most Shias, who believed that only a descendant of Ali could be the rightful imam, or religious leader of the Umma (see box), were as hostile to the Abbasid caliphs as they had been to their predecessors. Mainstream Muslims, who accepted Umayyad and Abbasid authority, styled themselves Sunnis-followers of the path of tradition (sunna) as it evolved from the days of the Prophet. Underlying the Sunni selfimage is the belief that God's community is infallible. Consequently, the practices and institutions of mainstream Islam are always correct. The Abbasids moved their capital from Damascus to Baghdad in 762, in recognition of Iraq's geographic, economic, and cultural centrality. Muslim Spain (al-Andalus), remained outside the sphere of Abbasid authority. An Umayyad prince, Abd aI-Rahman, who had escaped the bloody coup of 750, defeated the resident governor of Cordoba and in 756 established an independent Umayyad state that ruled Muslim Spain until 1°31 (see pages 120-123).<br /> <br /> Below: The courtyard of the Great Mosque of<br /> <br /> Damascus} constructed in the early 8th century by the Umayyad caliph al- Walid I as part of his dynastys program to underscore the legitimacy of its claim to the caliphate.<br /> <br /> 22<br /> <br /> CHRISTENDOM AND THE UMMA<br /> <br /> PILGRIMAGE Opposite, above: The<br /> <br /> 11 th-century<br /> <br /> Clavijo Tympanum from the pilgrimage church of Santiago de Compostela, northwest Spain. It commemorates the battle of Clavijo in 844, when St. James (Santiago) is said to have aided in the defeat of a Muslim army. The saint is shown on horseback with sword and banner, surrounded by six women in poses of thanksgiving. (See also page 120.)<br /> <br /> Pilgrimage, the ritual of traveling to and worshipping at a sacred place, is an almost universal religious practice. Its goals include the sanctification of the worshipper, the affirmation of their place within a community of believers, and the expiation of sins through the rigors of the journey. Since the earliest days of Christianity, the primary pilgrimage destination for Christians has been the Holy Land-the region in which Jesus, the first Christians, and the biblical prophets were active. Of its many holy places, the most sacred is Jerusalem,<br /> <br /> Opposite, below: A certificate dated 1193 from<br /> <br /> and the most venerated place within the city is a small area-said to<br /> <br /> what is now eastern Turkey confirming that the owner has completed the Hajj, the pilgrimage to Mecca, one of the Five Pillars of Islam.<br /> <br /> be where Jesus was crucified and buried-encompassed by the church of the Holy Sepulcher. A pilgrimage church has stood on the site since the emperor Constantine I dedicated a basilica there in 335. Other important pilgrimage destinations for Latin (western) Christians include Rome, which claims the tombs of saints Peter and Paul and other early martyrs, and Santiago de Compostela in Spain. After the Arabs captured Jerusalem from the Byzantines in 638, Christian pilgrims continued to travel in substantial numbers to the city and nearby sites. They were usually unmolested by the region's Muslim occupiers, who allowed the Holy Sepulcher and many other churches and shrines to remain in Christian hands. However, in<br /> <br /> 1009<br /> <br /> the Fatimid caliph of Egypt ordered the destruction of the Holy<br /> <br /> THE ORIGINS OF THE HAJJ Part of the genius of Muhammad was marrying the<br /> <br /> want. Then let them complete their rituals and perform<br /> <br /> Kaaba and its pre-Islamic rituals of pilgrimage with the<br /> <br /> their vows and circumambulate the Ancient House [the<br /> <br /> monotheistic religion ofAbraham, thereby transforming<br /> <br /> Kaaba]. Such is it. Whoever honors the sacred rites of<br /> <br /> Mecca into Islam's premier holy city. The transformation<br /> <br /> God, for him it is good in the sight of his Lord."<br /> <br /> of the pagan hajj to Mecca into an Islamic pilgrimage with roots that go back to Ibrahim (Abraham) can be<br /> <br /> Three months before his death on 8th June 632, Muhammad made his Farewell Pilgrimage to Mecca.<br /> <br /> seen in the twenty-second surah (chapter) of the Quran,<br /> <br /> On Mount Arafat, outside the city, he delivered his<br /> <br /> verses 27-30, where Allah speaks to Ibrahim:<br /> <br /> Farewell Sermon, reminding the pilgrims that<br /> <br /> "Announce to the people the Pilgrimage [Hajj]. They will come to you on foot and on every lean camel,<br /> <br /> "every Muslim is a Muslim's brother." This dictum is underscored in the many rituals of the Hajj, all of<br /> <br /> coming from every deep and distant highway that they<br /> <br /> which emphasize that Muslims, regardless of status or<br /> <br /> may witness the benefits and recollect the name of God<br /> <br /> ethnicity, are equal members ofAllah's family. All<br /> <br /> in the well-known days over the sacrificial animals he<br /> <br /> Muslims are enjoined to perform the Hajj at least once,<br /> <br /> has provided for them. Eat thereof and feed the poor in<br /> <br /> if they are able (see sidebar on page 19).<br /> <br /> PILGRIMAGE<br /> <br /> Sepulcher. It was reconstructed under his more tolerant successors and completed ca. 1040, with Byzantium funding much of the work. In the eleventh century, western Europe experienced a dramatic economic upswing and significant population growth, and one manifestation of this was a growing number of large-scale pilgrimages to Jerusalem. Many spurious legends also arose linking Europe's heroes, such as Charlemagne (see page 17), with the Jerusalem pilgrimage. Charlemagne never left Europe, but the fact that this great warrior of God became associated with the Jerusalem pilgrimage suggests a growing psychological readiness among eleventh-century Europeans for the idea of crusade, which combined the pilgrimage to the Holy Land with holy war. Holy war and pilgrimage (Arabic hajj) are linked in the origins of Islam's most sacred site, Mecca. In 629 Muhammad negotiated a truce in his jihad with the unbelieving leaders of Mecca that allowed him and about 2,600 followers to enter the city, where they worshipped at the pilgrimage shrine known as the Kaaba (the Cube), an ancient cultic center of pagan Arabia, which at that time contained 360 idols. The Kaaba also housed a black stone altar that Muslims<br /> <br /> believe was set there by the prophet Ibrahim (Abraham) and his son Ismail (Ishmael), the ancestors of all Arabs. After his victory over the Meccans in the following year, Muhammad cleansed the Kaaba, known also as the House of God, of its idols, and the shrine became Islam's holiest site and the focus of the Hajj (see box).<br /> <br /> 23<br /> <br /> 24<br /> <br /> CHRISTENDOM AND THE UMMA<br /> <br /> THE SHARED HOLY LAND "Glory be to Him who carried His servant by night from the<br /> <br /> When the armies of Caliph Umar captured Jerusalem in<br /> <br /> Sacred Sanctuary to the Distant Sanctuary, whose surroundings<br /> <br /> 638 they discovered heaps of refuse on the Temple Mount. The<br /> <br /> we have blessed, that We might show him some of Our signs"<br /> <br /> caliph ordered it to be cleared and a small mosque was erected<br /> <br /> (Quran, surah 17. I). According to tradition, this passage refers to<br /> <br /> on the site. Between 688 and 691 the Umayyad caliphs<br /> <br /> a mystical Night Journey in which Muhammad was transported<br /> <br /> constructed on the Temple Mount what many regard as Islam's<br /> <br /> from the Kaaba (the Sacred Sanctuary) in Mecca to Jerusalem's<br /> <br /> most beautiful place of worship-the Dome of the Rock. This<br /> <br /> Temple Mount (the Distant Sanctuary), the massive raised<br /> <br /> domed octagonal structure is not a mosque, or place of public<br /> <br /> platform on which Judaism's First and Second Temples had<br /> <br /> prayer; rather, it is a place of pilgrimage and private prayer<br /> <br /> stood and which Muslims know as al-Haram es-Sharif (the<br /> <br /> dedicated to the memory of the Prophet. Built over the tip of<br /> <br /> Noble Sanctuary). From there the Prophet was taken up to<br /> <br /> Mount Moriah, the traditional site of the Temple of Solomon's<br /> <br /> Heaven, where he encountered the prophets Abraham, Moses,<br /> <br /> Holy of Holies, the Dome of the Rock affirms Islam's<br /> <br /> and Jesus and received revelations. In 621, shortly after this<br /> <br /> Abrahamic roots but also its superiority over Judaism and<br /> <br /> mystical experience, Muhammad instructed his followers to<br /> <br /> Christianity. Arching over the spot that Muslims consider to<br /> <br /> pray daily facing Jerusalem. Another revelation in 624 changed<br /> <br /> be the center of the world, its dome exactly matches the<br /> <br /> the direction of prayer to Mecca, but for Muslims Jerusalem has<br /> <br /> dimensions of the rotunda that then covered the Holy<br /> <br /> always remained al-Quds (the Holy Place), Islam's third most<br /> <br /> Sepulcher-but its magnificence far surpassed that of the<br /> <br /> sacred city and a place to be defended against profanation by<br /> <br /> Christian shrine. Early in the eighth century the U nlayyads<br /> <br /> unbelievers, even Christian and Jewish "People of the Book."<br /> <br /> erected a second place of worship on the Temple Mount, al-Aqsa mosque. Built perhaps on the site occupied by Umar's original mosque, al-Aqsa was constructed in imitation of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher but on a much grander scale. Jews, Christians, and Muslims also equally claimed other holy sites outside Jerusalem as their own. A case in point is Hebron's Cave of Machpela (the Tomb of the Patriarchs), the supposed burial site ofAbraham, Isaac,Jacob, and their wives. A stone enclosure constructed in<br /> <br /> 6SBCE<br /> <br /> by King Herod the Great<br /> <br /> suggests that Jews in the pre-Christian era probably venerated the tombs as a site of holy pilgrimage. It later became a place of Christian pilgrimage and in the fourth century a church was constructed at the site. Evidence shows that by the sixth century Jews were also offering prayers at the site. The Muslim conquerors who swept through the region early in the seventh century allowed Jews and Christians to continue worshipping there. More significantly, sometime Above: A Roman ivory plaque of ca. 400CE depicting the tomb ofJesus<br /> <br /> before the mid-tenth century, Muslims erected their own<br /> <br /> and the rotunda built over the Holy Sepulcher in the 4th century.<br /> <br /> mosque at the cave, the Haram aI-Khalil (Sanctuary of the<br /> <br /> Opposite, above: Jerusalem)from a 6th-century Byzantine mosaic found<br /> <br /> in Madaba)Jordan showing the sacred sites of the Holy Land. Opposite, below: The interior of the Dome of the Rock. The rock (center) marks the spot where in the Jewish tradition Abraham was to sacrifice Isaac) and in Islam it isfrom where Muhammad rose to Heaven (see main text).<br /> <br /> Friend), dedicated to Ibrahim (Abraham), the Friend ofAllah. Writing in the mid-eleventh century, a Persian Muslim reports that up to<br /> <br /> 500<br /> <br /> pilgrims-probably representing all three<br /> <br /> faiths-arrived daily at the sanctuary.<br /> <br /> A place sacred to both Christians and Muslims is the Shrine of the Ascension, which stands on the Mount of Olives outside the old city ofJerusalem on the presumed spot whence Jesus ascended to Heaven. This octagonal shrine dates to the twelfthcentury Latin kingdom ofJerusalem and marks the site of an earlier fourth-century church. Muslims also believe (although it is not mentioned in the Quran) that Jesus, the Islamic prophet Isa, ascended into Heaven, and following Saladin's conquest of Jerusalem in 1187 the Shrine of the Ascension became a Muslim place of pilgrimage. Today both Christians and Muslims worship at the Shrine, which remains in Muslim hands. Muslims and Christians also venerated places in the Holy Land unique to their respective faiths. The church of the Holy Sepulcher is one such Christian shrine; another was the Cenacle, or Upper Room, on Jerusalem's Mount Zion, where twelfth-century pilgrims viewed the supposed table- of the Last Supper. The principal mosque ofAcre housed the tomb of Salih, an Islamic prophet (Quran, surah 7.73 fT.). During the Christian occupation of the city (1104-87; 1191-1291) the mosque became a church, but Muslims were allowed to worship at the small portion that contained the tomb.<br /> <br /> 26<br /> <br /> CHRISTENDOM AND THE UMMA<br /> <br /> CHRISTIAN HOLY WAR AND JIHAD All the monotheistic religions that arose in the Near East-Judaism, Christianity, and Islam-have articulated some form of holy war, in which God calls believers to be agents in a cosmic struggle against evil. Holy war may be understood metaphorically, as when Christian ascetics are called Soldiers of Christ, but also as physical combat. The Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) has many examples of God commanding the Israelites to fight heathens. St. Augustine (354-430), the early western church's foremost theologian, developed the idea of Christian Just War by defining it as warfare against sin. For him, war was both a consequence of sin and its cure. If waged by a proper authority for moral reasons and with due restraint, war is not simply an acceptable defensive action but a positive moral act benefiting both the just warrior and the sinful enemy. Augustine and later western church leaders faced barbarian invaders who were either Arian heretics (see page 14) or pagans. Pope Gregory I (590-604) instructed his officials to act as "warriors of the Lord" against the Arian Lombards, assuring Italy's civil authorities of divine aid for their act of armed resistance. The distinction between a defensive j~st war fought on Christian principles and a "holy war" directed by God and sanctifying those engaged in it had become blurred by the time of Charlemagne. His defense and extension of Christendom (notably his conquest of the<br /> <br /> THE FOUR JIHADS Islamic jurists interpreting Sharia have historically named<br /> <br /> "it is preferable not to begin hostilities with the enemy<br /> <br /> four forms ofjihad demanded by God: jihad of the hand,<br /> <br /> before they have been invited to embrace the religion of<br /> <br /> which means doing good deeds, especially acts of charity;<br /> <br /> God, unless the enemy attacks first. They have the choice<br /> <br /> jihad of the mouth, which means proclaiming the faith; jihad of the heart, which means self-transformation to the point of becoming God-centered; and jihad of the sword, which means defending Islam as a mujahid, or warrior of God. Sufis, Islam's mystics, add a fifth: jihad of the soul, or<br /> <br /> of either converting to Islam or paying the poll tax.<br /> <br /> the struggle to reach God through mystical experience. In his Treatise on Law, Ibn Abi Zayd al-Kayrawani,<br /> <br /> Failing either, war will be declared against them .... "There is no prohibition against killing white nonArabs who have been taken prisoner. But no one may be executed who has been granted the aman [promise of protection] .... Women and children must not be executed, and the killing of monks and rabbis must<br /> <br /> a distinguished tenth-century Islamic jurist of<br /> <br /> be avoided unless they have taken part in the fighting.<br /> <br /> northwestern Africa, defines jihad of the sword as "a<br /> <br /> Women who have participated in the fighting may<br /> <br /> precept ordained by God" and went on to maintain that<br /> <br /> also be executed."<br /> <br /> CHRISTIAN HOLY WAR AND JIHAD<br /> <br /> pagan Saxons) was the main reason that the pope crowned him em-<br /> <br /> THE HOUSE OF PEACE<br /> <br /> peror and, therefore, defender of the Roman church (see page 17).<br /> <br /> AND THE HOUSE OF WAR<br /> <br /> While accepting the necessity to defend Christendom and to uphold civil peace, most western church leaders continued to see war as inherently sinful, and requiring penance. This changed in the eleventh century, when the papacy began to justify military action as<br /> <br /> 27<br /> <br /> According to traditional Islamic thought, people who embrace the Faith or who accept dhimmi status within a Muslim state reside in Dar aI-Islam, the Abode of Islam, literally the House of Submission<br /> <br /> a righteous act when used to reestablish right order in the world.<br /> <br /> (or Peace). Conversely, unbelievers outside<br /> <br /> From there it was a short step to the idea of crusade, a Christian holy<br /> <br /> of these states reside in Dar al-Harb, the<br /> <br /> war seen as a penitential act that cleansed the souls of its participants. Islam has also prosecuted holy wars, or jihads, a term often mis-<br /> <br /> House of Chaos (or War). The two Houses are mutually hostile. By the late eighth century, most Islamic jurists agreed that<br /> <br /> understood simply as a bloody war against non-believers. But in fact<br /> <br /> while there might be brief strategic truces<br /> <br /> jihad means "striving" and there are various forms of spiritual jihad as well as "jihad of the sword" (see box). One hadith (story) relates that<br /> <br /> for reasons favorable to Muslims, the<br /> <br /> after a victorious military campaign Muhammad told his followers: "We have returned from the lesser jihad to the greater jihad." That "greater jihad" is a moral struggle against evil. In this sense, all true<br /> <br /> Houses could never be permanently at peace. Indeed, for the true believers of Dar aI-Islam, holy war is inevitable, necessary, and an act of piety. Consequently, Islamic legal theorists<br /> <br /> Muslims are mujahidin, holy warriors, in a lifelong struggle to follow<br /> <br /> crafted treatises on the law of jihad, in<br /> <br /> the way of God by practicing the Five Pillars (see sidebar on page 19)<br /> <br /> which they set out rules governing the<br /> <br /> and fighting their lower selves. This in no way negates the fact that<br /> <br /> calling and prosecution of a jihad of the sword (see box, opposite).<br /> <br /> the Prophet and his followers were warriors who engaged in pitched battles with their enemies. .Almost from the beginning, Islam has accepted that holy war in defense of the true faith is an obligation on all able-bodied men. What is more, those who die in defense of Islam are martyrs and assured of Paradise. The first Muslims generally tried to convert by force only Arabia's pagans. When the Muslims exploded out of Arabia in the 630s, they were driven more by their warrior traditions and a simple desire for conquest than by a mission to convert unbelievers through the sword. Conversion to Islam in lands outside of Arabia was a long process rarely accompanied by armed threats.<br /> <br /> According to medieval tradition, this fine and elaborately wrought sword belonged to the emperor Charlemagne, the poweiful Christian ruler of western Europe who reigned as the king of the Franks (768-814) and emperor of the Romans (800-814). However, it probably dates from no earlier than the 12th century.<br /> <br /> 28<br /> <br /> CHRISTENDOM AND THE UMMA<br /> <br /> THE WEST AWAKES: THE ELEVENTH CENTURY POPE GREGORY VII<br /> <br /> For much of the tenth century western Europe was on the defen-<br /> <br /> CALLS FOR HOLY WAR<br /> <br /> sive, its lands attacked by Vikings from Scandinavia, Magyars (Hun-<br /> <br /> The age of the crusades might have begun<br /> <br /> garians) from the steppes of Central Asia, and various Muslim<br /> <br /> two decades earlier-in 1074 rather than<br /> <br /> powers from North Africa. However, before the century ended the<br /> <br /> 1095. In 1073, two years after the disastrous Byzantine defeat at Manzikert (see page<br /> <br /> West's fortunes took a turn for the better. It managed to absorb the<br /> <br /> 34), the Byzantine emperor, Michael VII,<br /> <br /> Scandinavians and Magyars into the mainstream of Latin Christian<br /> <br /> appealed to Pope Gregory VII for aid<br /> <br /> culture and began to beat back Muslim attacks in the Mediterranean.<br /> <br /> against the Seljuk Turks. On 1st March<br /> <br /> Additionally, by the year<br /> <br /> 1074 Gregory dispatched a letter to the Christians of the West, appealing for them to go to the aid of their fellows in the<br /> <br /> 1000,<br /> <br /> the West was experiencing a sharp<br /> <br /> population rise and an economic revitalization that enabled it to begin to confront Byzantium and Islam as an equal. In fact, during<br /> <br /> East: "The example of our Redeemer and<br /> <br /> the eleventh century momentum shifted substantially to western<br /> <br /> the duty of brotherly love demand that we<br /> <br /> Christendom, as it became an aggressive Mediterranean force that<br /> <br /> set our hearts on delivering our siblings.<br /> <br /> threatened Byzantium and Islam on several fronts.<br /> <br /> Just as He offered His life for us, so we should offer our lives for our siblings. Let it be known that we, trusting in God's mercy and the might of His power, are preparing in every possible way to carry aid to the Christian empire as soon as possible, with God's help." The Investiture Controversy broke out soon afterward (see main text) and nothing immediately came of Gregory's plan. But his successors did not forget the dream of armed intervention to aid eastern Christians against the Muslims.<br /> <br /> THE WEST AWAKES: THE ELEVENTH CENTURY<br /> <br /> 29<br /> <br /> In Spain, the caliphate of Cordoba fragmented in 1°31 into a number of petty Islamic states, and Christian powers were quick to take advantage. In 1063 Pope Alexander II (1061-73) offered relief from all penance owed for sins to any knight planning an expedition to Spain. By this papal act, the Christian war against Islam in Spain became a holy war (see pages 121-122). Farther east, Norman adventurers-French warrIors whose Viking ancestors had settled in Normandy (Land of the Northmen)-were on the move to southern Italy, Sicily, and the Balkans. Under the leadership of the Hauteville brothers, especially Robert Guiscard, southern Italy was wrested from Byzantine control in a series of campaigns from ca. 1035 to 1071. Sicily, which North African Muslims had taken from the Byzantines in the ninth century, fell to Guiscard and his brother Roger of Hauteville in a campaign that lasted from 1061 to 1091. With eyes on other Byzantine lands, including probably Constantinople itself, Robert invaded the Balkans in 1081. His death in 1085 brought the invasion to an inglorious end, but he had set a precedent for two centuries of western designs and assaults on the lands of the Byzantine empire. When Roger invaded Sicily he bore a papal banner granted by Pope Alexander II, and when Guiscard invaded the Balkans he did so with the approval ofAlexander's successor, GregoryVII (1073-85), who mistakenly believed that Robert was trying to restore the rightful emperor of Constantinople. The papal blessing of these wars was a manifestation of a radical reorientation of the papacy and the west-<br /> <br /> Above: A gold and enamel panel depicting<br /> <br /> ern church that began ca. 1049 and continued well beyond 1100.<br /> <br /> St. Procopius ~eft) and St. George as soldiers. Byzantine) 10th century.<br /> <br /> In essence, papal reformers attempted to free the church from control by lay rulers and in the process asserted that the Roman papacy was Christendom's ultimate, God-ordained authority. Claims to spiritual preeminence that had been articulated by earlier popes, such as Gelasius I (see page 16), were now transformed into the ideology that right order could only exist when the laity was subject ~<br /> <br /> to clerical authority in all moral and religious matters and the Roman papacy was recognized as the head of all churches. In 1075 Gregory VII went so far as to declare that the pope had the right to depose emperors and absolve subjects of their loyalty to unjust lords. Such an attack on traditional notions of imperial and royal authority were ill received by the emperor at Constantinople and by western emperors and kings. The result in the West was a struggle between the papacy and some sovereigns that lasted from 1076 to 1122. Known as the Investiture Controversy (or Contest), this strug-<br /> <br /> gle ostensibly centered on the issue of whether or not lay rulers could install clerics in office and invest them with the symbols of<br /> <br /> Opposite: The interior of the cathedral of Monreale) the Norman royal citadel just south of Palermo. Under the rule of the Norman Hauteville dynasty from the late 11th century) Sicily was home to a rich culture that reflected the island$ Byzantine) Arab) and Norman heritage. The cathedral) built by King William II in the 12th century) combines romanesque and early Gothic architecture with Arabic elements and an interior covered with magnificent Byzantine-style mosaics) presided over by a huge image of Christ Pantocrator in the apse.<br /> <br /> 30<br /> <br /> CHRISTENDOM AND THE UMMA<br /> <br /> Opposite: This illumination from The Pericope<br /> <br /> Book of Henry II, made for the cathedral of Bamberg in Germany, represents the ideology of sacral kingship that was confronted by the papacy of the mid- to late 11 th century. It portrays the western emperor Henry II (1002-1024) crowned and blessed by Christ and supported by St. Peter and St. Paul. In his right hand he holds a scepter and in his left a sword, symbols of sovereign authority.<br /> <br /> their ministry. But the real issue was: who is the God-anointed head of the Christian people, the pope or a monarch? -In other words, did monarchs (especially the western emperor) rule by divine ordination and did they have certain sacral rights over the church and clergy? Both sides finally agreed to negotiated truces, with the kings of England and France reaching an accommodation with the papacy in 11°7,<br /> <br /> and the emperor in<br /> <br /> 1122.<br /> <br /> The settlements were compromises<br /> <br /> that recognized two realities: the new importance of the papacy in western European affairs and the severe weakening of the ideology of sacred kingship championed by Charlemagne and his successors. At the same time, rulers retained a good deal of real power in directing the affairs of the churches in their domains. Pope Urban II's call in 1095 for what became the First Crusade must be placed against the backdrop of an ongoing struggle that was already two decades old. In the East, the result of this assertion of papal authority was a magnification of the differences between the Byzantine and Roman churches (see box). Pope Urban II's appeal for the First Crusade must, therefore, equally be seen within the context of a radically reformed and revitalized papacy that wished to rescue fellow Christians in the East and "return" them to what it perceived as right order: subservience to papal authority.<br /> <br /> THE MYTH OF THE SCHISM OF 1054 It is a common, but mistaken, view that the Roman and<br /> <br /> Unsurprisingly, Humbert alienated Michael Cerularius,<br /> <br /> Byzantine churches entered into a state of permanent<br /> <br /> the equally uncompromising patriarch of Constantinople.<br /> <br /> and irreconcilable schism in 1054. What did happen was<br /> <br /> The ensuing row came to a head when Humbert and his<br /> <br /> a row between two churchmen that was symptomatic of<br /> <br /> colleague delivered a bull of excommunication against<br /> <br /> growing cultural and ecclesiastical differences between<br /> <br /> the patriarch and his supporters-not, as it has often been<br /> <br /> the churches. These differences became pronounced<br /> <br /> portrayed, a general excommunication of the Byzantine<br /> <br /> during the eleventh century when advocates of papal<br /> <br /> church. Byzantine church authorities countered by<br /> <br /> supremacy emphasized the need for all Christians to<br /> <br /> excommunicating the two legates-not the pope or the<br /> <br /> acknowledge the primacy of papal authority and to<br /> <br /> church of Rome-and declaring them impostors.<br /> <br /> conform to the practices of the Roman church. In 1054 Pope Leo IX dispatched Cardinal Humbert<br /> <br /> At the time these events were seen as little more than a personal matter between cardinal and patriarch. In any<br /> <br /> of Silva Candida as legate to Constantinople to establish<br /> <br /> case, Pope Leo had died before Humbert issued his bull,<br /> <br /> an alliance with the emperor against the Normans in<br /> <br /> so its legitimacy was doubtful at best. The incident was<br /> <br /> south Italy. An outspoken advocate of Roman supremacy,<br /> <br /> largely forgotten. Ironically, it would be the crusades,<br /> <br /> Humbert took the opportunity to publish a tract<br /> <br /> initiated by the pope to aid fellow Christians and draw all<br /> <br /> condemning" erroneous" Byzantine practices such as<br /> <br /> Christians together in friendship, that would dramatically<br /> <br /> using leavened rather than unleavened bread in the Mass.<br /> <br /> drive apart the churches of Rome and Constantinople.<br /> <br /> THE WEST AWAKES: THE ELEVENTH CENTURY<br /> <br /> 31<br /> <br /> 2 THE<br /> <br /> FIRST CRUSADE<br /> <br /> UIMPELLED BY THE LOVE OF GOD" J0<br /> <br /> H N<br /> <br /> F RA N C E<br /> <br /> Chaos in the East<br /> <br /> 34<br /> <br /> The Armies Depart<br /> <br /> 36<br /> <br /> The Campaign in Anatolia<br /> <br /> 40<br /> <br /> The Sieges<br /> <br /> ofAntioch<br /> <br /> 42<br /> <br /> The Road to Jerusalem The Fall<br /> <br /> of the Holy<br /> <br /> The Growth<br /> <br /> City<br /> <br /> of the Latin East<br /> <br /> The Diversity<br /> <br /> of Crusading<br /> <br /> ((Warrior Monks": The Military Orders The Rise<br /> <br /> of Islamic<br /> <br /> Crusader Castles<br /> <br /> Unity<br /> <br /> 44 46 48 50<br /> <br /> 52 54 56<br /> <br /> 34<br /> <br /> THE FIRST CRUSADE: "IMPELLED BY THE LOVE OF GOD"<br /> <br /> CHAOS I_N THE EAST As the papacy was asserting its hegemony in the West (see pages 29-30), the unity of the Islamic Near East was in decline. From the<br /> <br /> early tenth century the Abbasid caliphate of Baghdad had begun to fragment, and a rival Shia caliphate was established at Cairo by the Fatimids, who claimed descent from Fatima, the Prophet's daughter. T1?-e Fatimids soon seized large parts of Syria-Palestine from the Abbasids. In 1009 the Fatimid caliph aI-Hakim bin-Amar Allah (996-1021), moved by austere morality, destroyed the Holy Sepulcher<br /> <br /> at Jerusalem-an act that caused great indignation in the West. At first it seemed as if the vacuum created by the Abbasid collapse would be filled by Byzantium, which reconquered Antioch in 969 and pushed into Syria. But after 1025 Byzantium was riven with savage factional struggles and could not follow up those conquests.<br /> <br /> It was at this point that the Turks, a nomadic warrior people of the steppes (see box), rose to prominence. In 1055, Turks in the caliph's army helped a group of tribal Turks, recent converts to Islam led by the Seljuk family, to seize power in Baghdad, where they ruled as sultans in the caliph's name. The Grand Seljuks, as the sultans of Baghdad were called, champiC?ned Sunni orthodoxy and reconquered much territory from the Fatimids, including Jerusalem. Not all the tribes of Turks wanted to obey the Seljuk sultans and some of them took to raiding the Byzantine empire. In 1°71 the emperor Romanus IV Diogenes (1067-71) responded by invading Seljuk territory, where his armies suffered a crushing defeat at the hands of the Seljuk sultan Alp Arslan (1063-72) at Manzikert near<br /> <br /> THE TURKS The Turks were one of many nomadic peoples of the<br /> <br /> powers emerged. From the time of Caliph al-Mu'tasim<br /> <br /> Eurasian steppe who, beginning with the Huns, emerged<br /> <br /> (892-902), Turks had been enlisted in the armies of the<br /> <br /> periodically into neighboring regions. Some time before<br /> <br /> Baghdad caliphate. Their life as steppe hunters trained<br /> <br /> the tenth century, the Oghuz Turks, led by descendants<br /> <br /> them as mounted marksmen who were able to maneuver<br /> <br /> of a legendary figure called Seljuk, came to dominate<br /> <br /> together. The scholar al-Jahiz (died ca.. 868) wrote:<br /> <br /> the lands between the Black Sea and Central Asia. These<br /> <br /> "The Turk can shoot at beasts, birds, hoops, men, sitting<br /> <br /> shamanist tribes fought ghazi, zealous Islamic volunteers,<br /> <br /> quarry, dummies, and birds on the wing ... at full gallop<br /> <br /> on the northern fringes of Persia until the Turks were<br /> <br /> to fore or rear, to left or right, upward or downward."<br /> <br /> converted to Islam. In the tenth century Turkish Muslim<br /> <br /> loosing ten arrows before anyone else can nock one."<br /> <br /> CHAOS IN THE EAST<br /> <br /> Lake Van in Armenia (now Turkey). The discredited Romanus was<br /> <br /> THE COMING OF THE TURKS<br /> <br /> deposed, and Byzantium descended into civil war. Both factions<br /> <br /> In his Chronicle, the 12th-century writer<br /> <br /> invited Turks in to assist and thus Byzantium virtually handed Asia<br /> <br /> Matthew of Edessa describes the arrival<br /> <br /> Minor to them, including a branch of the Seljuks who established<br /> <br /> of raiding Turks among the Armenian<br /> <br /> themselves at Nicaea (Iznik) and Iconium (Konya) as sultans of Rum<br /> <br /> 35<br /> <br /> Christians of Asia Minor: "In the beginning of the year [1016-17]<br /> <br /> ("Rome," that is, Byzantium). The mass of the people in these areas<br /> <br /> a calamity proclaiming the fulfillment of<br /> <br /> remained Greek-speaking Christians.<br /> <br /> divine portents befell the Christian adorers<br /> <br /> When Grand Seljuk Malik Shah (I072-92) died, the sultanate fragmented. By I095 the sultan at Baghdad was preoccupied with eastern affairs, while Syria was divided between two Seljuk brothers, Duqaq of Damascus and Ridwan ofAleppo. The Byzantine emperor, Alexius I Comnenus (I081-1118) had stabilized the empire and was keen to take military advantage of the chaos in the Islamic lands, but he lacked the troops to reconquer Asia<br /> <br /> of the Holy Cross. The death-breathing dragon appeared, accompanied by a destroying fire, and struck the believers in the Holy Trinity. The apostolic and prophetic books trembled, for there arrived winged serpents corne to vomit fire upon Christ's faithfuL ... At this period there gathered the savage nation of infidels called Turks. Setting out, they entered<br /> <br /> Minor. In I095, he sent an embassy to ask Pope Urban II (I088-99)<br /> <br /> [our] province...and put the Christians<br /> <br /> to appeal for soldiers to aid the Christian empire of the East, which<br /> <br /> to the sword. Facing the enemy, the<br /> <br /> Alexius probably claimed was in grave peril. Urban's appeal was even<br /> <br /> Armenians saw these strange men, who<br /> <br /> more ambitious in scope: he called for a great expedition that would<br /> <br /> were armed with bows and had flowing<br /> <br /> not only help Alexius but also liberate the holy city ofJerusalem.<br /> <br /> hair like women."<br /> <br /> The Armenian cathedral of the Holy Cross, built by the Armenian king in the early 10th century on the island ofAghtamar (Akdama) in Lake van, which is today in eastern Turkey. A century later, in the face of the threat posed by the Turks, the Armenian ruler submitted to Byzantine authority and many Armenians fought in the imperial army at Manzikert in 1071. In the wake of this disaster the Seijuk Turks occupied Armenia, and many Armenians followed those who had already migrated to Cilicia in southeast Anatolia. The Armenians came to dominate much of Cilicia, which was to playa key role as a Christian buffer region between Byzantium, the Seijuks of Rum, and the crusader states. (See also page 40.)<br /> <br /> 36<br /> <br /> THE FIRST CRUSADE: "IMPELLED BY THE LOVE OF GOD"<br /> <br /> THE ARMIES DEPART URBAN'S APPEAL TO THE FRENCH<br /> <br /> In February 1095 at Piacenza, on his way to France, Pope Urban II<br /> <br /> In his History ofJerusalem, the French<br /> <br /> encountered the embassy sent by Emperor Alexius I Comnenus to<br /> <br /> chronicler Robert the Monk gives one of<br /> <br /> appeal for help against the Turks. Alexius was in no danger, but he<br /> <br /> tnany reports of Pope Urban II's appeal<br /> <br /> needed troops to exploit the divisions among the Seljuks. Perhaps<br /> <br /> for a crusade at the council of Clertnont in 1095. This is an extract: "Let the deeds of your ancestors tnove<br /> <br /> Urban was already thinking of a great initiative: relations with Byzantium had improved and he was taking a very keen interest in<br /> <br /> you and incite your tninds to tnanly<br /> <br /> the war against the Muslims in Spain. In France he almost certainly<br /> <br /> achievetnents; likewise the glory and<br /> <br /> visited the powerful Count Raymond of Toulouse before he<br /> <br /> greatness of King Charletnagne, and his<br /> <br /> attended the council of Clermont in November.<br /> <br /> son Louis, and of your other kings, who have destroyed the kingdotns of the<br /> <br /> At the end of the council Urban preached an inspirational sermon<br /> <br /> pagans, and have extended in these lands<br /> <br /> calling for a great expedition to the East. There survive many and<br /> <br /> the territory of the Holy Church. Let the<br /> <br /> differing accounts of this appeal (see sidebar), but the pope proba-<br /> <br /> Holy Sepulcher of the Lord, Our Savior,<br /> <br /> bly called for an army to aid the eastern Christians and to liberate<br /> <br /> which is possessed by unclean nations, especially tnove you, and likewise the<br /> <br /> Jerusalem. Those wishing to go had to take a pilgrim vow to persist<br /> <br /> holy places, which are now treated with<br /> <br /> in the way of God to the end, or until death. In return they were<br /> <br /> ignotniny and irreverently polluted with<br /> <br /> promised church protection of their lands and the remission of their<br /> <br /> filthiness. Oh, tnost valiant soldiers and<br /> <br /> sins.This appeal had obviously been carefully prepared: Adhemar, the<br /> <br /> descendants of invincible ancestors, do<br /> <br /> bishop ofLe Puy, was appointed papal legate to lead the crusade and<br /> <br /> not be degenerate, but recall the valor of your forefathers."<br /> <br /> was the first to take the cross, and the count of Toulouse's delegates came forward. A date for departure-15th August 1096-was announced immediately, and crusaders were asked to gather near Constantinople. A storm of enthusiasm greeted the appeal-the<br /> <br /> The arrival ~eft) and preaching (right) of Pope Urban II at the council of Clermont in l095} from a French manuscript of the early 14th century.<br /> <br /> crowd roared "God wills it"-and the assembled bishops dispersed to spread the word. Urban traveled through France preaching, and wrote letters to those in other lands. In Italy, Bohemond of Otranto, the son of Robert Guiscard (see page 29), gathered an army in the south and Genoa sent a fleet. But the great surprise was the support from northern Europe. Count Robert II of Flanders, Duke Robert of Normandy, Count Eustace of Boulogne, and Count Stephen of Blois all took the cross, as did Hugh ofVermandois, the brother of King Philip of France. Most striking of all was the adhesion of Eustace ofBoulogne's brother, Godfrey of Bouillon, the duke of Lorraine, who was a vassal of Urban's political enemy, the emperor Henry IV There is no record of the numbers who went on the crusade-people from all over Europe joined and probably about 100,000 took the cross, but there were losses and desertions, so that around<br /> <br /> THE ARMIES DEPART<br /> <br /> 37<br /> <br /> In his Historia Hierosolimitana) Robert the Monk described Godfrey of Bouillon as one who seemed ((a monk at prayer rather than a knightly warrior))-but the reality was that he had faced grave difficulties as duke of Lorraine and it was as a brave soldier and skilful politician that he was chosen to rule Jerusalem in 1099. This fresco by Giacomo Jaquerio depicts Godfrey as one of the Christian trio of the Nine Worthies-famous heroes in medieval European culture.<br /> <br /> THE "PEOPLE'S CRUSADE" The "People's Crusade" is the name given to a series of expeditions that preceded that of the great leaders, and which ended in disaster in Asia Minor. The expeditions have been attributed (in some cases wrongly) to a charismatic French preacher, Peter the Hermit. Clerics who wrote after 1099 were happy to dismiss Peter and his followers as a rabble.<br /> <br /> 60,000 eventually gathered at Nicaea near Constantinople in June I097, including up to 7,000 knights. This was an amazing achievement. Jerusalem was distant and the journey expensive-Godfrey sold many of his lands, but with the option of buying them back ifhe should return. Moving such masses<br /> <br /> However, northern France produced many noted religious leaders of humble origins at this time. Among those Peter inspired was a knight, Walter Sans-Avoir, whom he sent with eight other knights and some footsoldiers as a vanguard. Their<br /> <br /> of men and horses was difficult. A modern horse needs 24lbs (I I kg)<br /> <br /> arrival in the Rhineland triggered a wave<br /> <br /> of feed per day and cannot continue indefinitely on less or its con-<br /> <br /> of persecution of the Jews-a chain of<br /> <br /> dition will deteriorate. A man needed a minimum of 2lbs (90og) of bread per day, which meant a pack-horse-carts could only be used<br /> <br /> events that had already begun in France. Walter's force made its way down the Danube, arriving in Constantinople in<br /> <br /> where there were good roads-could only carry rations for I50 men<br /> <br /> July 1096 after some clashes. Peter's main<br /> <br /> per day. The main burden fell on the Byzantines, who were taken by<br /> <br /> force also encountered problem en route<br /> <br /> surprise by the "People's Crusade" (see sidebar) when it entered<br /> <br /> but was at Constantinople on 1st August.<br /> <br /> their territory in the summer of I096 long before the armies of the<br /> <br /> Instead of awaiting the main crusader<br /> <br /> great nobles, but thereafter they coped well.<br /> <br /> armies, Walter led Peter's whole force against Seljuk<br /> <br /> Nicae~.<br /> <br /> On 21st October<br /> <br /> it was all but destroyed by the Turks.<br /> <br /> Not One Artlly But Many The First Crusade was actually a gathering of armies, which took a variety of roads to Constantinople. Godfrey followed the People's Crusade, via Ratisbon (Regensburg) down the Danube valley, arriv-<br /> <br /> In its final battle Peter's army had 500 knights, and like other crusader armies it seems to have consisted of nobles, knights, infantry, and non-combatants. Its main problem was the lack of an outstanding<br /> <br /> ing by Christmas I096. Hugh ofVermandois traveled to southern<br /> <br /> leader. Peter's charismatic authority could<br /> <br /> Italy and crossed the Adriatic from Bari, only to be shipwrecked near<br /> <br /> inspire, but he could not lead in the field.<br /> <br /> 38<br /> <br /> THE FIRST CRUSADE: "IMPELLED BY THE LOVE OF GOD"<br /> <br /> Dyrrachium (present-day Durres, Albania), whence he made his way to Constantinople, arriving in November 1096. The count of Toulouse probably left Provence in December 1096, crossed Italy and passed down the Dalmatian coast, where his army was harassed by locals, arriving at Dyrrachium in February 1097. His large, undisciplined army then started to ravage, which led to skirmishes with its Byzantine escorts. Bohemond of Otranto set out with his small force on 1st November 1096 from Avlona, south ofDyrrachium, and did not reach Constantinople until early April 1097. He probably bypassed Dyrrachium, which had a Byzantine garrison, because he had earlier fought the Byzantines and wished to avoid hostilities until he was sure of a good reception. Robert of Normandy, Robert of Flanders, and Stephen of Blois left in the fall of 1096. Robert of Normandy raised 10,000 silver marks for his journey by pawning the duchy to his brother, King {-<br /> <br /> William II of England (1087-99), but this huge sum took time to<br /> <br /> MEDITERRANEAN SEA<br /> <br /> raise. Once in southern Italy only Robert of Flanders risked a winter crossing of the Adriatic, while the others delayed and did not reach Constantinople until May 1097. Many smaller, unchronicled<br /> <br /> ~<br /> <br /> Ba'albek 0<br /> <br /> ~<br /> <br /> -=;::<br /> <br /> groups also made their way east. It was a somewhat unwieldy struc-<br /> <br /> ~<br /> <br /> ture for an army facing a long journey and many enemies. In the<br /> <br /> ~.<br /> <br /> Beirut"'.o<br /> <br /> --=....<br /> <br /> /<br /> <br /> ~<br /> <br /> r'3~~~~:::·;:=::::~~:~- ~! ~...;<br /> <br /> H<br /> <br /> -<br /> <br /> ....<br /> <br /> -~~~~~~<br /> <br /> event, its first task was to deal with its ally, the emperor Alexius. Why did so many people respond to Pope Urban's appeal for an expedition to the East? No part of Europe was untouched by it and<br /> <br /> EMIRATE OF<br /> <br /> DAMASCUS<br /> <br /> such was the enthusiasm it generated that Urban forbade Spaniards from going lest they weaken the Reconquista. The crusaders' motives must have been primarily religious, but the suspicion that other factors were at work is suggested by the second canon of the council of Clermont, which declares: "If any man sets out from pure devotion, not for reputation or monetary gain, to liberate the Church of God at Jerusalem, his journey shall be reckoned in place of all penance." Urban proclaimed a fighting pilgrimage, giving a new dimension-that of salvation through slaughter-to an old and accepted idea. This pilgrimage was to the most prestigious of all goals, Jerusalem, which seems to have loomed large in the piety of western Christians. By the end of the eleventh century, wars against Islam in Spain had begun to familiarize Europeans with the idea of holy war. Pope Urban Irs determined campaigning, supported by other preachers, made an impact and occasional fragments of evidence bear witness to the pious motives of individuals: Achard of Montmerle, who died during the siege of Jerusalem in 1°99, sold land to the monastery of Cluny "because I wish, fully armed, to join in the magnificent<br /> <br /> THE ARMIES DEPART<br /> <br /> 39<br /> <br /> expedition of the Christian people seeking for God to fight their way to Jerusalem against the pagans and Saracens." What we know of the major leaders suggests a mixture of motives. The counts of Toulouse, Blois, and Flanders were already immensely rich and it is difficult to see anything other than religious reasons for having taken the cross. Godfrey of Bouillon and Robert of Normandy were men in grave political difficulties. Bohemond of Otranto was an acquisitive lord who was trying to improve his fortune. Lesser men, such as Tancred and Baldwin of Boulogne, were obviously ambitious for land, and there may have been many others like them. Perhaps the modern tendency in the secular West to be sceptical of spiritual and religious motives hinders understanding. The idea of holy war (see pages 26-27) was accepted at the time but it was popularly interpreted as attaining salvation by killing the enemy. Urban, who gave the concept a new dynamism by his indulgence of sins, did not outlaw rightful plunder and gain, he merely insisted that it should not be the prime motive. He probably recognized, too, that it would be necessary to establish states in the East and that these would have to belong to somebody. There were no contradictions for contemporaries, and worldly success could even be judged as a sign of heavenly approval. Th~s was, after all, an age when the verdict in battle was seen as the judgment of God.<br /> <br /> Above and left: Knights and inJantry heading Jor the First Crusade and (right) the ((People's Crusade)) led by Peter the Hermit (see page 37). Miniatures from the Abreviamen de las Estorias) a Provenfal account oj the crusades written at the beginning of the 14th century. The pope's appeal triggered a response by tens of thousands oj individuals across western Europe. Urban's expectation was Jor an orderlyJorce composed oj knights andJootsoldiers from among the ranks of the military-aristocratic gentry) but he stirred a reaction among the poor too) which resulted in ragtag bands of northern Europeans) such as that led by Peter the Hermit) headingJor the Holy Land. Medieval writers were dismissive of the enthusiasm of the poor andJeared that it might lead to heresy. According to the chronicler Albert ojAachen: ((There was also another abominable wickedness in this gathering of people on Joot) who were stupid and insanely irresponsible) which) it cannot be doubted) is hateful to God and unbelievable to all the JaithJul. They claimed that a certain goose was inspired by the Holy Ghost) and a she-goat filled no less with the same) and they had made these their leaders Jor this holy journey to Jerusalem; they even worshipped them excessivel~ and as the beasts directed their courses Jor them in their animal way many of the troops believed they were confirming it to be true according to the entire purpose of the spirit. ))<br /> <br /> 40<br /> <br /> THE FIRST CRUSADE: IIIMPELLED BY THE LOVE OF GOD"<br /> <br /> THE CAMPAIGN IN ANATOLIA At Constantinople the emperor Alexius insisted that the ~<br /> <br /> crusade leaders swear an oath to become "his" men<br /> <br /> and promise to restore any former lands of the empire that they conquered. Raymond of Toulouse refused to accept the vassalage this oath implied but eventually swore a simpler oath to respect the emperor's life, honor, and interests. In return, Alexius promised the crusaders military and logistical support. As the chronicler Fulcher of Chartres remarked: "It was essential that all establish friendship with the emperor, since without his aid and counsel we could not easily make the journey, nor could those who were to follow us." The ensuing Anatolian campaign opened the way for Alexius to reconquer much of western Anatolia in early I098-the alliance worked because it also relieved the crusader army from the need to garrison captured cities. By 6th May Godfrey of Bouillon, Bohemond of Otranto, Robert of Flanders, and Hugh ofVermandois had begun the siege of Nicaea (Iznik), the capital of the Seljuk sultans of Rum. The Seljuk forces were skilled but small in number, and Sultan Kilij I Arslan (1092-1107) was away fighting the Danishmend Turks to the east. On 16th May he tried to relieve Nicaea but failed, and the crusaders were free to pursue the siege. Nicaea was ringed by a 33-ft (Io-meter) high Roman wall nearly 3 miles (skm) in circumference and studded with 114 ~<br /> <br /> towers. The ancient city was D-shaped: the western part of the<br /> <br /> EDESSA: THE FIRST CRUSADER STATE In the period of Byzantine expansion, many Armenians<br /> <br /> crusaders. This would help explain why the western<br /> <br /> had settled in Cilicia and in cities stretching via Melitene<br /> <br /> armies were welcomed in Armenian Cilicia. Baldwin<br /> <br /> to Edessa, while others had populated Antioch and north<br /> <br /> ofBoulogne, the brother of Eustace ofBoulogne and<br /> <br /> Syria. Their Christianity differed from that of Rome and<br /> <br /> Godfrey of Bouillon, cultivated the Armenian leaders and<br /> <br /> of the Greek majority among whom they settled, but<br /> <br /> came to the notice of Thoros, prince of Edessa, whose<br /> <br /> while many of their leaders resented Byzantine imperial<br /> <br /> land was threatened by the Turks. Thoros probably just<br /> <br /> control, they had nothing against the western church.<br /> <br /> wanted to employ Baldwin as a mercenary, but reluctantly<br /> <br /> When Byzantium collapsed following the battle of<br /> <br /> agreed to recognize Baldwin as his heir. Baldwin<br /> <br /> Manzikert in 1°71, the Armenians in Edessa and other<br /> <br /> succeeded sooner than he expected. There were divisions<br /> <br /> places achieved a precarious autonomy. Some Armenians<br /> <br /> among the people ofEdessa and on 9th March 1098 they<br /> <br /> sought Byzantine support, and it was very likely at the<br /> <br /> overthrew Thoros and accepted Baldwin as their prince.<br /> <br /> court of Constantinople that they first encountered the<br /> <br /> Edessa thus became the first crusader state in the East.<br /> <br /> THE CAMPAIGN IN ANATOLIA<br /> <br /> wall, the straight side of the D, abuts Ascanian Lake, so unless the attack was made in boats the defenders only had to man about half the length of the wall. The crusaders, reinforced by 2,000 Byzantine infantry under Tatikios, arranged themselves around the land wall and attacked it using penthouses-wooden structures on wheels with sloping armored roofs that were rolled up to the wall so that men within could undermine it-supported by catapults and archers. In fierce assaults the crusaders suffered, but the garrison was weakening. On 17thJune the emperor, who was at Pelekanum nearby, launched a fleet on the lake. This prompted the Turks to negotiate a surrender on 19th June, but to Alexius rather than the crusaders. The Byzantines concealed these negotiations, but the crusaders were not concerned because the alliance was working. Alexius gave them compensation for missing out on the city's loot and he asked Tatikios to lead a force on the crusade; he also advised the crusade leaders to send envoys to Egypt, whose Fatimid rulers hated the Seljuks. On 26th June the army began to leave Nicaea, heading toward Dorylaeum (Eskisehir), the gateway to the Anatolian plateau. The army split, probably by accident, into a vanguard. led by Bohemond, Robert of Normandy, and Stephen of Blois, followed at a distance of several miles by the main army. Kilij Arslan, who had returned with an army of about 10,000 Turkish horse, ambushed the vanguard as it turned south down the valley leading to Dorylaeum, above present-day Boziiyiik. As Fulcher of Chartres recalled, "the Turks crept up, howling loudly and shooting a shower of arrows. Stunned, and almost dead and with many wounded, we immediately fled. And it was no wonder, for such warfare was new to us all." The sultan had achieved surprise, but he was then drawn into a close-quarter fight that gave the main crusader force time to arrive and defeat his army. The victory at Dorylaeum opened Asia Minor to the crusade. The summer's heat took a heavy toll of people and horses even though the crusaders advanced via the well-watered city of Antioch-inPisidia (Yalva«). The cities, still mainly Greek in population, opened their gates to them. After Heraclea (Eregli), the crusaders' objective was Antioch (Antakya), the greatest Syrian city after Damascus. The leaders sent a small force along the quickest route, over the mountains called the Cilician Gates into Cilicia and then over the Belen Pass into Syria. Most of the army went via Caesarea-in-Cappadocia, where they liberated the local Armenians from the Turks. In doing so they created a friendly zone to supply their attack on Antioch, where the main crusader army arrived on 20th October 1098.<br /> <br /> 41<br /> <br /> Opposite: Godfrey of Bouillon leads the siege<br /> <br /> of a city) fro m a 14th-century French manuscript. The crusaders are deploying a wheeled tower that could be rolled right up to the defensive walls-a similar structure was used during the siege of Nicaea (see main text). Below: A 13th-century English bronze<br /> <br /> aquamanile (a ewer used for washing hands at table) in the form of a mounted knight) who originally held a lance and a shield) now lost. Horses played an important role on both sides during the crusades. The journey for the mounts of the western European knights for the First Crusade was mainly overland) but later many horses were transported directly to the Holy Land by sea. Among the Islamicforces in the Near East) a significant proportion consisted ofTurk warriors steeped in traditions of nomadic horsemanship.<br /> <br /> 42<br /> <br /> THE FIRST CRUSADE: "IMPELLED BY THE LOVE OF GOD"<br /> <br /> THE SIEGES OF ANTIOCH THE HOLY LANCE<br /> <br /> The crusaders arrived at Antioch to find that an English fleet had<br /> <br /> In their desperation, besieged in Antioch<br /> <br /> already seized its port, St. Symeon.The Roman walls ofAntioch were<br /> <br /> by the enortnous forces of Kerbogah (see<br /> <br /> strong, and half their circuit of 10 miles (I6km) lay inaccessible in<br /> <br /> tnain text), the basic religious tnotivation<br /> <br /> the mountains. The crusaders dared not attack because of the city's<br /> <br /> of the crusaders etnerged to inspire thetn. On loth June a poor pilgritn announced<br /> <br /> size; similarly, they could not surround it and so chose to strangle it<br /> <br /> that St. Andrew had revealed to hitn that<br /> <br /> by blockade. This strategy took time and involved constant fighting<br /> <br /> the Holy Lance, which had pierced the<br /> <br /> with the garrison and its supporters in outlying forts such as Harim.<br /> <br /> side of Christ, was buried in the ancient church of St. Peter at Antioch. The papal legate was skeptical, but the next day a respectable priest declared that Christ had<br /> <br /> By Christmas 1097 hunger within crusader ranks had forced them to send a foraging expedition led by Bohemond into Syria. On 31st January he fought a force under Duqaq of Damascus near<br /> <br /> confirtned to hitn in a vision that a token<br /> <br /> al-Bara: a drawn affair, Duqaq retreated but the crusaders returned<br /> <br /> of victory would be revealed to the artny.<br /> <br /> without food. With the army starving and its horses dying, Tatikios<br /> <br /> Atnid great religious fervor digging<br /> <br /> returned to Constantinople to seek more aid. Ridwan of Aleppo,<br /> <br /> began in St Peter's church and on 14th June a lancehead was indeed discovered.<br /> <br /> freed from the threat of Duqaq, his brother and rival, now chose to<br /> <br /> This coincided with a startling event-a<br /> <br /> strike. But Bohemond managed to gather a small mounted force<br /> <br /> tneteorite fell into Kerbogah's catnp and<br /> <br /> with which he ambushed Ridwan's army, scattering it and seizing<br /> <br /> he withdrew his forces frotn within the<br /> <br /> Harim. Relieved of Turkish pressure, the army could forage again.<br /> <br /> city. The clergy then fanned the fires of pious fervor with a series of celebrations. Thus incited, on 28th June the artny<br /> <br /> On 4th March 1098 more English ships put into St. Symeon, and the crusaders used the equipment and skills of the new arrivals to<br /> <br /> tnarched out with the Holy Lance borne<br /> <br /> build a fort outside Antioch's vital Bridge Gate. Despite savage resist-<br /> <br /> before thetn. Their victory owed tnuch to<br /> <br /> ance they succeeded and soon had closed offall the main gates. Spring<br /> <br /> Kerbogah's unwise dispersal of his artny,<br /> <br /> meant more food became available and the crusaders were further<br /> <br /> and to Bohetnond's tactical acutnen. But<br /> <br /> encouraged by news of Baldwin's seizure ofEdessa (see page 40).<br /> <br /> without the inspiration of the lance and its "tniracles" it seetns unlikely that the<br /> <br /> At this time the crusaders made an alliance, against the Seljuks,<br /> <br /> starving artny would have challenged<br /> <br /> with the Fatimid rulers of Egypt. Antioch's ruler, Yaghi-Siyan,<br /> <br /> Kerbogah. Little wonder that after the<br /> <br /> appealed for help to Kerbogah of Mosul, who was subject to the<br /> <br /> battle the relic enjoyed enortnous prestige.<br /> <br /> Seljuk sultan at Baghdad. Kerbogah raised a huge army and from 4th to 25th May besieged Edessa, giving ample warning to the crusaders at Antioch. There, a tower-commander offered to betray the city to Bohemond, who demanded to be made ruler of the city. The other crusade leaders refused this as a breach of the oath to the emperor Alexius (see page 40), but the threat from Kerbogah was a very pressing one and in the end they agreed, but only on the condition that control of the city be ceded to Alexius if he came to claim it. On the night of 2nd June an elite crusader force entered Antioch and the next day the city fell amid scenes of massacre. But the citadel on the walls held out. On 4th June Kerbogah laid siege to the heavily outnumbered crusaders in a city that was short of food. To make matters worse, his men could enter Antioch through the citadel and were only<br /> <br /> halte~ by<br /> <br /> desperate fighting. Stephen of Blois,<br /> <br /> THE SIEGES OF ANTIOCH<br /> <br /> 43<br /> <br /> who was absent when Antioch had fallen, fled when he saw the situation. He met Alexius at Philomelium on 20th June and told him that all was lost, whereupon the emperor returned to Constantinople. In Antioch itself, sheer despair and pious zeal (see sidebar) had rallied the crusaders. Fired with enthusiasm, they appointed Bohemond as commander and on 28th June marched out of the city to defeat Kerbogah, who had unwisely let his army become dispersed. The way south to Jerusalem now lay open, but the crusaders needed to rest and may even have hoped that the Egyptian alliance would deliver Jerusalem without a fight. Taking seriously the condition of their promise to Bohemond, the leaders sent a delegation to Alexius and postponed their advance to Jerusalem until 1st November-ample time for Alexius to claim Antioch. In the meantime, Bohemond behaved as a ruler and there was tension between him and Raymond ofToulouse, the champion of the imperial alliance. By September, news ofAlexius's "desertion" at Philomelium had hardened opinion against the Byzantines and at a council in early November the quarrel between Raymond and Bohemond paralyzed the army. Ultimately, Bohemond refused to go on to Jerusalem and when the other leaders had departed he ejected Raymond's men from Antioch, thus breaking up the unity of the crusade.<br /> <br /> The crusader knights clash with Muslim troops during the First Crusade's second siege ofAntioch) from a French manuscript of ca. 1200. The regional struggle for religious dominance had affected the fortunes ofA ntioch for centuries. As far back as 638 the Syrian city) which was where the new faith of Christianity was given its name) was captured from the Byzantines by the Arabs. In 969 the Byzantines recaptured the city by treachery after a long blockade. In 1097 the Byzantine general on the crusade urged a similar blockade) but the crusaders preferred to invest the city. However; they were unable to assault its strong fortifications and in the end it was betrayed to them by a discontented officer commanding three of its towers.<br /> <br /> 44<br /> <br /> THE FIRST CRUSADE: "IMPELLED BY THE LOVE OF GOD"<br /> <br /> THE ROAD TO JERUSALEM The council of the army at Antioch in November 1098 had ended in what one participant called a "discordant peace" between Raymond of Toulouse and Bohemond, whereby each continued to hold sections ofAntioch. Raymond then led some of the army south and attacked the Syrian city of Marra on 28th November. He was joined by Bohemond, but Godfrey of Bouillon and Robert of Flanders did not join in, so it is likely that this was a stop-gap activity pending a settlement over Antioch. Marra resisted strongly but fell on<br /> <br /> II<br /> <br /> th<br /> <br /> December, and the bloodshed that followed was particularly brutal. Crusaders dismembered captives in the belief that they had swallowed money, and any citizens not killed were sold into slavery. The sacred pools at the Halil Rahmna mosque in the city <if Uifa) southeastern Turkey) and birt-hplace <ifAbraham. The mosque was built in 1211 on the site <if the Mother Mary church erected in 504 by the Byzantines. At one time Uifa was known as Edessa) the seat <if the first crusader state in the East when Baldwin of Boulogne engineered his succession to the city~ Armenian prince. Baldwin ~ seizure of Edessa and Bohemond~ effective takeover <ifAntioch showed that there were rich pickings for the ambitious and ruthless) and many crusaders seem to have stayed in north Syria rather than proceeding to Jerusalem. Edessa remained in crusader hands until 1144) when its loss to the armies of Zengi (see pages 54-55) prompted the Second Crusade.<br /> <br /> Delay in Marra resulted in the army starving-in their desperation some crusaders even dug up enemy corpses and ate them. The failure of supplies led some to abandon the crusade for cities such as Edessa. Raymond put an end to the food shortage by leading a raid into enemy territory which provided ample food. Bohemond tried but failed to trade his section of Marra for Raymond's share of Antioch, causing further quarrels. In January 1099 Raymond called another council near M.arra and offered money to those who would accept his leadership as far as Jerusalem (see sidebar). As a consequence, Bohemond refused to continue to Jerusalem and on 7th January ejected Raymond's men from Antioch. On 13th January elements of the now split crusader army left Marra under Raymond's command. Robert of Normandy and Bohemond's<br /> <br /> THE ROAD TO JERUSALEM<br /> <br /> nephew Tancred joined Raymond, while Godfrey and Robert of<br /> <br /> THE PRICE OF LEADERSHIP<br /> <br /> Flanders, apparently hostile to Raymond, remained near Antioch.<br /> <br /> At the meeting at Ruj near Marra (see<br /> <br /> Sometimes dealing with the enemy proved more profitable than fighting them. Between the crusaders and Jerusalem lay many cities whose rulers had no wish to see a large enemy army ravaging their territory and were ready to pay to ensure a peaceful passage by such<br /> <br /> main text), according to Raymond of Aguilers, Raymond ofToulouse, who was the wealthiest of the crusade leaders, "wished to give the duke [Godfrey of Bouillon] ten thousand solidi, an equal<br /> <br /> an army. This both enriched the crusaders and enabled them to pass<br /> <br /> amount to Robert of Normandy, six<br /> <br /> on quickly to their goal. Thus the rulers of Shaizar and Homs paid<br /> <br /> thousand to the count of Flanders and<br /> <br /> tribute to the crusaders as they marched through Syria. At the Homs Gap the crusaders decided not to take the inland<br /> <br /> five thousand to Tancred and to the other princes accordingly" to accept his leadership. It seems likely that the offer<br /> <br /> route south via Damascus, but to make for the coast where friendly<br /> <br /> to each leader depended on the size of<br /> <br /> fleets could support them. As they neared the principality ofTripoli<br /> <br /> his army. We know the terms, because<br /> <br /> they faced a dilemma. Tripoli was nominally subject to the Fatimids,<br /> <br /> the same source later reveals that<br /> <br /> with whom the crusaders had made an alliance against the Seljuks.<br /> <br /> "He [Tancred] had received five thousand<br /> <br /> solidi and two very fine horses on the<br /> <br /> It was hoped that the Fatimids might hand over Jerusalem and the<br /> <br /> agreement that he would remain in<br /> <br /> crusaders were awaiting the return of envoys they had sent to Egypt<br /> <br /> [Raymond's] service up to Jerusalem."<br /> <br /> the previous spring. In order to occupy his men in the meantime, Raymond persuaded the army to attack the city of Arqa, which belonged to Tripoli, and he launched other raids against Tripolitan territory. He thus hoped to occupy and feed the troops, and to extort tribute from Tripoli, while retraining from outright hostilities. Godfrey and Robert of Flanders had remained at Antioch, but, under intense pressure from their followers, who wanted to complete their journey, the pair departed at the end of February. However, they could not bear to join Raymond against Arqa and instead besieged Jabala. Only when mistaken news came of an enemy threat to Raymond's army did they march south, but even then the two forces remained aloof from one another. Earlier disputes now continued: Raymond wanted to seize Arqa and perhaps await help from the emperor Alexius, but Godfrey and his friends would have none of it. The army for its part was growing restless and anxious to move on to Jerusalem. The deadlock was ended in May 1°99, when an Egyptian embassy arrived. The Fatimids refused to concede Jerusalem. The crusaders reacted by immediately heading south into Fatimid territory, taking the Egyptians by surprise. They had no army in Palestine and had destroyed Jaffa, the port ofJerusalem, because they had no troops to defend it. In these circumstances the cities of the coast, such as Beirut,Acre, and Caesarea, paid tribute to the crusaders. Aware that the Egyptians would ultimately respond to their attack, the crusaders marched rapidly south and arrived outside Jerusalem on 7 th June 1099.<br /> <br /> 45<br /> <br /> Saracens in combat against the crusaders)from the Roman de Godefroy de Bouillon et de Saladin) a 14th-century French romance about the early crusades.<br /> <br /> 46<br /> <br /> THE FIRST CRUSADE: "IMPELLED BY THE LOVE OF GOD"<br /> <br /> THE FALL OF THE HOLY CITY Jerusalem stands on a ridge with steep slopes to east and west. The city's north wall was much more vulnerable, but at that time it was reinforced with a ditch and an outer wall. Zion Gate, on the south wall, opens on to a small plateau but this too had a ditch. Before the crusaders arrived outside Jerusalem on 6th June 1099, the Egyptians A 12th-century plan if Christian-held Jerusalem and its environs. In the bottom register, crusaders are shown driving off Muslims.<br /> <br /> had strengthened the garrison in the Tower of David on the west wall, and had devastated the area about the city, destroying all timber that could be used for siege machinery and blocking wells. Knowing that the Egyptians would send a relief force, the crusaders launched an attack on 13th June, despite having only one assault ladder, built with wood found in a cave. This failed and they began to prepare a more systematic onslaught. Then, on 17th June a crusader fleet putting into Jaffa was surprised by Egyptian ships and forced to beach, but the crews salvaged the cargoes of food and ships' timbers which they took to Jerusalem. It was decided to make a two-pronged assault. The northern French built a siege tower at the northwest corner of the city, and also a ram to break down the outer wall. Raymond hired a Genoese ship's captain, William Ricau, to build a tower outside Zion Gate and fill in the ditch. Both contingents constructed catapults. Foraging parties found light wood for ladders and mantlets (shields big enough to protect a man against arrows fired from the walls), and brought water, much of it foul, from a distance.Jerusalem's defenders strengthened the walls opposite the two crusader forces and brought up fourteen catapults, of which nine were directed against Raymond. On 8th July the crusaders processed around Jerusalem like Joshua before Jericho, and the leaders were publicly reconciled. The decisive event came on the night of 9thloth July, when the French dismantled their tower, ram, and catapults and moved them east to a weak point on the north wall. This was a huge task but to counter it the defenders had to start from scratch to reinforce the walls and build new catapults-and they were, in any case, divided by the need to keep a force on the south wall. On 13th July the assault began. In the north the French ram breached the outer wall. By 14th July the tower was approaching the inner wall, where the knights<br /> <br /> THE FALL OF THE HOLY CITY<br /> <br /> 47<br /> <br /> in the tower would provide cover for an escalade (assault by ladder)<br /> <br /> "THE BLOOD OF PAGANS"<br /> <br /> and attempts to undermine the wall. But in the south, by the morn-<br /> <br /> In his exultant account of the fall of<br /> <br /> ing of 15th July, the defenders' catapults had wrecked Raymond's<br /> <br /> Jerusalem, Raymond of Aguilers celebrates<br /> <br /> tower.This and the sustained Muslim assault demoralized the crusaders. In the north, though, Godfrey of Bouillon had brought the siege<br /> <br /> the slaughter visited upon the city's Muslims, seeing it as God's vengeance on those who had defiled the Holy City:<br /> <br /> tower up to the wall and the knights inside it were able to build a bridge onto the wall itself. Godfrey's men at once poured across the bridge and into the city, followed by Tancred's men, who occupied the Temple Mount while Godfrey opened the city gates.When news of this reached the south, the city's governor fled with his entourage<br /> <br /> "It is sufficient to relate that in the Temple of Solomon [the Aqsa mosque] and the portico crusaders rode in blood to the knees and bridles of their horses. In my opinion this was poetic justice that the Temple of Solomon should receive the<br /> <br /> into the Tower of David, but agreed to surrender the citadel to Ray-<br /> <br /> blood of pagans who blasphemed God<br /> <br /> mond in return for safe passage out of the city. Most of the popula-<br /> <br /> there for many years. Jerusalem was now<br /> <br /> tion fled and those who failed to do so were massacred (see box).<br /> <br /> littered with bodies and stained with<br /> <br /> The crusaders celebrated their triumph, and completed their pil-<br /> <br /> blood.... A new day, new gladness, new and everlasting happiness, and the<br /> <br /> grimage, in the church of the Holy Sepulcher. On 22nd July God-<br /> <br /> fulfillment of our toil and love brought<br /> <br /> frey was chosen as ruler of the city with the title advocate (protector)<br /> <br /> forth new words and songs for all."<br /> <br /> of the Holy Sepulcher. On 1st August Arnulf of Chocques, Robert of Normandy's chaplain, became the city's new Latin patriarch. However, the leaders were aware of an Egyptian force building up at Ascalon on the coast. Emboldened by a sense that God was on their side, on 12th August th'e crusaders surprised and defeated the Egyptian army. For now, the crusader foothold in the Holy Land was secure, and most of the victorious army could return home.<br /> <br /> THE MASSACRE OF 1099: MYTH AND REALITY The slaughter that took place during and after the<br /> <br /> killed by other crusaders. Apart from this massacre, most<br /> <br /> capture ofJerusalem in 1099 has become notorious,<br /> <br /> of the killing took place when the crusaders broke into<br /> <br /> partly because later Muslim sources exaggerated the<br /> <br /> the city, and this must be seen in the context of the age.<br /> <br /> event in order to whip up the spirit of jihad. But the<br /> <br /> The earlier a city or castle surrendered, the better the<br /> <br /> slaughter was not total. Many Muslims escaped, taking<br /> <br /> terms for its population. The people in a stronghold that<br /> <br /> with them an important Quran, and created their<br /> <br /> held out to the bitter end were" at mercy," and in the<br /> <br /> own suburb of Damascus. The crusaders burned the<br /> <br /> heat of battle there was likely to be little of that as the<br /> <br /> synagogue over the heads of the hundreds ofJews who<br /> <br /> victors rushed through the streets in search of enemy<br /> <br /> had fled there for safety, but surviving letters from the<br /> <br /> troops and plunder.<br /> <br /> Jewish community in Cairo show that some Jews were captured and held for ransom. The worst single atrocity took place on the morning<br /> <br /> By the same token, however, the chaos of battle could allow many to escape, and the east and west walls ofJerusalem were virtually unguarded by the crusaders.<br /> <br /> after the fall. Tancred had given a group of Muslims<br /> <br /> The fall ofJerusalem was certainly accompanied by<br /> <br /> protection on the roof of the Aqsa mosque ("Solomon's<br /> <br /> terrible bloodshed, but not by all the imagined horrors<br /> <br /> Temple"), but before he could ransom them they were<br /> <br /> of later generations.<br /> <br /> 48<br /> <br /> THE FIRST CRUSADE: IIIMPELLED BY THE LOVE OF GOD"<br /> <br /> THE GROWTH OF THE LATIN EAST THE FATE OF THE PRISONERS<br /> <br /> Bohemond's seizure ofAntioch had caused hostility between Byzan-<br /> <br /> TAKEN AT THE "FIELD OF BLOOD"<br /> <br /> tium and the crusaders and wrecked the prospect of establishing a<br /> <br /> Walter, chancellor of the principality of<br /> <br /> land route from Europe to the tiny crusader footholds in the East.<br /> <br /> Antioch, who was hitllself captured, gives a<br /> <br /> Without easy access, these bridgeheads were starved of settlers, and<br /> <br /> gritll account of the execution of crusader prisoners after the disastrous defeat at the "Field of Blood" near Aleppo in<br /> <br /> a shortage of manpower from the West would always be a problem. Another consequence was dependence upon the Italian maritime<br /> <br /> 1119:<br /> <br /> "Sotlle...were hanged by ropes frotll a post, with their heads downwards, their feet upwards, and exposed to constant blows of arrows as the stuff of dreadful slaughter. Sotlle were buried up to the<br /> <br /> city-states. Although religiously inspired, they also sought trading bases in the East and to this end they helped Jerusalem to take coastal cities in return for trade privileges. In<br /> <br /> 1100<br /> <br /> Godfrey of Bouillon died<br /> <br /> and his brother became King Baldwin I of Jerusalem<br /> <br /> (1100-18).<br /> <br /> groin, sotlle up to the navel and sotlle up<br /> <br /> Genoese ships enabled him to seize Arsuf and Caesarea in<br /> <br /> to the chin in a pit in the ground, as the<br /> <br /> Acre, with Pisan support, in<br /> <br /> hands of the wicked ones brandished<br /> <br /> assisted in the capture of Beirut and the Venetians helped to take<br /> <br /> spears, and they underwent for Christ the end of a life full of sorrow. SeveraL ..were<br /> <br /> Sidon. Tyre resisted in<br /> <br /> I I 12<br /> <br /> 1104.<br /> <br /> In<br /> <br /> 1110<br /> <br /> and<br /> <br /> Genoese and Pisan ships<br /> <br /> but was taken, with Venetian aid, in<br /> <br /> The crusaders did not always call on the Italians. In<br /> <br /> thrown with every litllb cut off into<br /> <br /> 1101<br /> <br /> 1102<br /> <br /> 1124.<br /> <br /> Ray-<br /> <br /> mond of Toulouse sacked Tortosa without Italian ships, and attacked<br /> <br /> [Aleppo's] squares and districts."<br /> <br /> Tripoli in In<br /> <br /> 11°9,<br /> <br /> 11°4,<br /> <br /> establishing Chastel Pelerin (Pilgrim Castle) as a base.<br /> <br /> four years after Raymond's death, Tripoli fell to his son<br /> <br /> Bertram, who became count of Tripoli, a vassal of the crusader king.<br /> <br /> A FORGOTTEN DISASTER: THE CRUSADE OF 1101 The fall ofJerusalem in<br /> <br /> 1099<br /> <br /> was greeted with great<br /> <br /> northern Anatolia. A coalition of Islamic powers formed,<br /> <br /> enthusiasm across Europe, but there was great anxiety,<br /> <br /> and their forces surrounded the crusaders, whose army,<br /> <br /> shared by the new pope, Paschal II, that the conquests<br /> <br /> already starving, gradually became weaker and was<br /> <br /> must be protected. Many who had taken the cross but<br /> <br /> totally defeated at Mersivan in July<br /> <br /> not gone in<br /> <br /> Stephen, and some of the other leaders escaped.<br /> <br /> 1095<br /> <br /> were now pressured to fulfill their<br /> <br /> vows, and Stephen of Blois and Hugh ofVermandois,<br /> <br /> 1101.<br /> <br /> Raymond,<br /> <br /> Count William of Nevers arrived in Constantinople<br /> <br /> who had left the crusade, were obliged to return. An<br /> <br /> with a small, well-disciplined army and set off after<br /> <br /> Italian force with very poor leadership arrived at<br /> <br /> Raymond, but after failing to find his army he turned<br /> <br /> Constantinople in March<br /> <br /> south and was destroyed by the victors of Mersivan near<br /> <br /> 1101.<br /> <br /> In May they were joined<br /> <br /> by the north French led by Stephen of Blois. The<br /> <br /> Heraclea (Eregli). Shortly after the count of Nevers had<br /> <br /> emperor Alexius appointed his ally, Raymond of<br /> <br /> left, William ofAquitaine reached Constantinople with a<br /> <br /> Toulouse, as the overall leader of the crusader forces.<br /> <br /> force of Germans and French, but they were ambushed<br /> <br /> Before heading for Syria, the Italians insisted on a diversion to rescue Bohemond of Otranto, who had<br /> <br /> and defeated near Heraclea. The Turks had combined in the face of western attack, and learned to avoid the<br /> <br /> been taken prisoner by the Danishmend Turks, and<br /> <br /> close-quarter battle until their enemy was weakened.<br /> <br /> Raymond led his force into dangerous country in<br /> <br /> This set the pattern for the clash of arms in the future.<br /> <br /> Securing the coast was not Jerusalem's only priority. Egypt remained a real threat until the II20S, when its internal problems came to the fore. Even then, Egypt retained Ascalon until 1153 as a base for attacks on the kingdom. Damascus was another threat; it was relatively isolated and close to· the kingdom. In 1127-28 King Baldwin II (I I I 8-3 I) appealed for a crusade to seize the city and envoys to the West arranged the marriage of his daughter Melissende to the powerful Count Fulk of Anjou, who thus became Baldwin's desig-<br /> <br /> Above: The crusaderfort at Sidon) Lebanon.<br /> <br /> Baldwin I ofJerusalem besieged Sidon in 1110 with the aid of Norwegian ships under King Sigurd (110S-30). It surrendered after Venetian galleys drove ciff an Egyptian fleet. The aid that Venice and other Italian cities gave to the crusader kingdom helped them to establish a naval supremacy in the eastern Mediterranean that lasted until the lsth century.<br /> <br /> nated successor. Fulk raised men and money for a great expedition. No crusade was proclaimed by the pope, but in the fall of 1129 a large Christian army menaced Damascus. However, ill fortune and an ill-advised raid into southern Syria that divided the Christians enabled the Muslims to force a retreat. Thereafter the isolation of Damascus and its anxiety to remain independent led to an intermittent alliance with Jerusalem. The crusader state of Edessa effectively consisted only of the city itself and a series of fortresses, but it posed a threat to the Muslim city of Aleppo and offered the prospect of Christian expansion to the Euphrates river. Aleppo was also endangered by the proximity of the crusader city ofAntioch, only 60 miles (Iookm) away. Prince Roger of Antioch (1112-19) had advanced on Aleppo in 1119 but died in the heaviest crusader defeat so far at the "Field of Blood," just west of the city (see sidebar). Antioch's fortunes revived, but its drive into Syria was halted after 1130 by succession disputes and the rise of Zengi, Aleppo's ruler from 1126 (see pages 54-55).<br /> <br /> Below: Crusader ships embarking for the East) from the 14th-century Roman de Godefroy de Bouillon et de Saladin.<br /> <br /> 50<br /> <br /> THE FIRST CRUSADE: "IMPELLED BY THE LOVE OF GOD"<br /> <br /> THE DIVERSITY OF CRUSADING Opposite: Pilgrim rock-cut graffiti crosses at the<br /> <br /> entrance to St. Helena ~ chapel in the church Holy Sepulcher,]erusalem.<br /> <br /> of the<br /> <br /> The success of the First Crusade indelibly associated crusading with Jerusalem and even overshadowed the disasters of the "Crusade of rror" (see page 48). Crusade was a form of sanctified warfare in which those participating were offered forgiveness of all their sins. The sol-<br /> <br /> Below: A knight depicted as a Christian warrior<br /> <br /> confronting vices in the form of demonsJfrom a fragment (ca. 1260) of the Summa de Vitiis a treatise on the vices by the Dominican preacher William Peraldus (Peyraut) of Lyons. This popular work appeared at a time when the papacy saw the riform of Christian morals as crucial to the success of the wider crusade against the enemies of the church (see pages 146-147). J<br /> <br /> dier in such a war increased his chances of entering heaven by the meritorious act of killing "the enemy." This dynamic notion of salvation through slaughter drove the First Crusade. It was papal in origin and only the pope, as the keeper of keys to the "kingdom of Heaven," could offer such an "indulgence."Yet even before Urban II had launched his crusade he wrote to Count Robert of Flanders, probably in r093-94, urging him, "for the remission of your sins," to help the bishop ofArras regain lands lost to the emperor Henry IV This request embodied the essence of<br /> <br /> THE DIVERSITY OF CRUSADING<br /> <br /> 51<br /> <br /> what he preached in 1095. Earlier still, in a letter of 1089 to Catalonia, Urban suggested that all who assisted the town of Tarragona, recently taken from the Muslims, should receive the same forgiveness of sin as those who went on pilgrimage to Jerusalem; this was repeated in 1091. Urban had, therefore, developed the essence of his ideas before 1095 and it is evident that he saw the expedition to regain Jerusalem as part of a universal struggle against Islam and the enemies of the church (see sidebar). Hence there was no necessary connection between Jerusalem and the crusade. It took a long time for crusading to be absorbed into Christian thinking. The term crusade itself is derived from Latin cruciatus or cruce signatus-one signed with the cross-but crusading became<br /> <br /> sharply defined only in the reign of Pope Innocent III (1198-1216). It is difficult to understand how people a century earlier viewed the act of crusade and even whether they regarded it as distinct from pil-<br /> <br /> URBAN II AND THE UNIVERSAL<br /> <br /> grimage to the Holy Land or from fighting the infidel in Spain. But<br /> <br /> WAR AGAINST ISLAM<br /> <br /> it was clearly associated with the pope, since only he could offer the<br /> <br /> Mter the preaching of the First Crusade,<br /> <br /> indulgence that went with it. When Pope Paschal II (1099-1118) .wrote in 1103 to Robert of Flanders urging him to attack papal enemies at Liege, he virtually equated the merits of such an action with those gained from the First Crusade. Further expeditions received papal sanction on similar terms. In 1105 Bohemond returned from Syria to Europe and persuaded the<br /> <br /> pope to proclaim a new crusade that raised many troops, especially from France. Bohemond, who may have misled Paschal as to his<br /> <br /> Pope Urban II wrote to some Catalan lords who had taken the cross to suggest that rather than leave for Jerusalem they should stay to fight Islam in their own country: "If the knights of other provinces have decided with one mind to go to the aid of the Asian church and to liberate their brothers from the tyranny of the Muslims, so ought you, with one mind and without encouragement, to work with greater<br /> <br /> intentions, unsuccessfully attacked Byzantium in 1107. In 1114 Pas-<br /> <br /> endurance to help a church so near you<br /> <br /> chal proclaimed a crusade against the Muslims of the Balearic Islands<br /> <br /> resist the invasions of the Muslims. No one<br /> <br /> and eastern Spain and in 1118 Pope Gelasius II (1118-19) promoted a crusading expedition which, with French help, captured Saragossa. In 1120, following the disaster at the "Field of Blood" (see pages<br /> <br /> must doubt that if he dies on this expedition for the love of God and his brothers, his sins will surely be forgiven and he will gain a share of eternal life through the most<br /> <br /> 48-49), Pope Calixtus II (1119-24) proclaimed crusades to Spain and<br /> <br /> compassionate mercy of our God. So if any<br /> <br /> the Holy Land. This appeal produced the Venetian fleet that helped<br /> <br /> of you has made up his mind to go to Asia,<br /> <br /> to take Tyre in 1124. A further crusade to Spain was proclaimed in<br /> <br /> it is here instead that he should try to fulfill<br /> <br /> 1125 and in 1127-28 one was requested, but apparently not granted,<br /> <br /> his vow, because it is no virtue to rescue Christians from Muslims in one place, only<br /> <br /> for an attack on Damascus (see page 49). In 1127 Pope Honorius II<br /> <br /> to expose them to the tyranny and<br /> <br /> (1124-30) urged a crusade against the Normans of south Italy.<br /> <br /> oppression of the Muslims in another."<br /> <br /> In 1132 two popes were elected, Innocent II (1130-43) and Anacletus II (1130-38). Both could claim legitimacy and both had some support. Anacletus called for a crusade against his rival and his appeal was confirmed by the council of Pisa in 1135, which offered the same remission of sins as had been decreed by Urban II in 1095. In the event, no crusade took place. Anacletus died in 1138 and his successor conceded to Innocent II.<br /> <br /> 52<br /> <br /> THE FIRST CRUSADE: "IMPELLED BY THE LOVE OF GOD"<br /> <br /> IlWARRIOR MONKS": THE MILITARY ORDERS Nowadays the idea of monks pledged to spend their life in warfare seems paradoxical, yet the creation of the Knights Templar and the Knights Hospitaller was a practical solution to some of the problems of the European settlements in the East. In its early years the crusader kingdom was a precarious place. The coastal cities fell only slowly (see pages 48-49), while Ascalon remained in Muslim hands until 1153 and served as a base for those harassing Christian pilgrims. Given this situation, ca. 1120 a French knight, Hugh of Payens, and some companions established a brotherhood sworn to protect pilgrims on the roads around Jerusalem. By forming a fraternity Hugh and his fellows sought to emulate the long-lasting stability of a monastic community. Of course, the goal of monks was salvation, but that was also the objective of crusading, so contemporaries saw nothing at all paradoxical in the idea of an order dedicated to salvation through arms, while the adoption of religious oaths promised discipline for its fighting mission. King Baldwin II (1118-31) gave the order the "Temple of Solomon" (as the Christians called the Aqsa mosque) as its headquarters, hence their name: the "Poor Knighthood of Christ and of the Temple of Solomon," or the Templars. The new order remained small until 1129 when Hugh of Payens solicited support in the.West, culminating in the council of Troyes, where St. Bernard of Clairvaux threw his enormous spiritual authority behind it. As a result, a rule<br /> <br /> TEMPLAR GREED AT THE SIEGE OF ASCALON In January 1153 King Baldwin III (1143-62) laid siege to<br /> <br /> event the Templars were trapped and slain, their bodies<br /> <br /> Ascalon, the last port of Palestine in Egyptian hands. The<br /> <br /> being hung over the wall by taunting defenders. The<br /> <br /> attackers then built a great siege tower that overtopped<br /> <br /> breach was repaired and the opportunity was lost.<br /> <br /> the city walls, but one night in late July the Ascalonites<br /> <br /> Many of the crusaders were depressed by this display<br /> <br /> set it alight. A wind got up and blew the whole blazing<br /> <br /> of selfishness and greed on the part of the Templars and<br /> <br /> mass against the city wall, whereupon the intense heat<br /> <br /> wanted to abandon the siege, but the king pressed on<br /> <br /> caused the stone to shatter and opened up a breach.<br /> <br /> and Ascalon eventually surrendered on terms on 19th<br /> <br /> This happened in the Templar sector of the wall, and in the morning the Templars sent forty knights to seize the city. Members of the order then held off the rest of<br /> <br /> August 1153. The citizens were allowed to depart with such of their property as they could carry. It was not the last time that the Templars were to be<br /> <br /> the crusader army, apparently to ensure that the Templars<br /> <br /> accused of greed: this charge was to contribute to their<br /> <br /> took the lion's share of the booty from the city. In the<br /> <br /> spectacular fall a century and a half later (see page 175).<br /> <br /> "WARRIOR MONKS": THE MILITARY ORDERS<br /> <br /> 53<br /> <br /> was devised and endorsed by the pope in 1129. Almost immediately the Templars received vast gifts of land from pious patrons.<br /> <br /> Opposite: A Templar knight in armor ready for battle,from a 14th-century French manuscript.<br /> <br /> The Hospital of St. John was founded in Jerusalem before 1099 to care for Christian pilgrims. Its enormous popularity brought early<br /> <br /> Below: A 13th-century ecclesiastical stafffrom<br /> <br /> papal support and huge gifts to the monks who ran it. In 1139 the<br /> <br /> Cuenca cathedral, Spain, traditionally said to have belonged to the legendary St. Julian the Hospitaller, who was revered as a patron of the Knights Hospitaller. According to tradition, Julian founded a hospital to care for lepers.<br /> <br /> Order of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem (the Hospitallers) began its military career, taking over the castle of Bethgibelin near Ascalon at the request of King Fulk I (1131-43) and his barons. The ascendancy of the military orders in Europe was sealed by the events of the Second Crusade (see Chapter Three). When Louis VII of France (1137-80) lost control of his troops in Anatolia he restored order by placing Templars in charge of each section of the army, which thereby fought its way through to Attalia. The orders' popularity brought enormous wealth that enabled them to recover from losses in the Holy Land. Alfonso I ofAragon (1104-34) left his whole kingdom to the orders, and although this bequest was annulled, they obtained huge lands in Spain..Later, as the nobles of the embattled crusader states became impoverished, the orders took over their lands and fortresses. Among the orders' strongholds were Crac des Chevaliers and Marqab, built by the Hospital, and Chastel Pelerin and Tortosa, "which belonged to the Templars. The orders were widely imitated. In the Holy Land, the Order of St. Lazarus, founded ca. 1130, consisted of leper knights, while the Germans founded the Teutonic Order (see page 85). In Spain there was a plethora of orders, and their remarkable discipline and continuity made them vital to the Reconquista (see pages 120-123). In Jerusalem the Hospital and the Temple, with about 600 knights and a huge following of sergeants and footsol-<br /> <br /> diers, formed a powerful regular force-the indispensable core of the kingdom's army. The orders enjoyed great power and also remarkable autonomy, since they were subject only to the pope. They were inevitably involved in the politics of the crusader states. After the battle of Hattin (see pages 74-75), in a testimony to their importance, Saladin ordered the execution of all his Templar and Hospitaller prisoners, declaring, according to his secretary Imad ad-Din al-Isfahani: "I shall purify the land of these two impure races." However, the orders' resources in the West enabled them to recover and become a power in the kingdom once more. By the time of the fall ofAcre in 1291 they were its main land force,just as the Italian city-states were vital to command of the sea.<br /> <br /> 54<br /> <br /> THE FIRST CRUSADE: "IMPELLED BY THE LOVE OF GOD"<br /> <br /> THE RISE OF ISLAMIC UNITY ZENGI, CHAMPION OF ISLAM<br /> <br /> The crusaders had established themselves in the Holy Land because<br /> <br /> In Imad ad-Din Zengi the crusader states<br /> <br /> of the disunity of Islam. The Seljuks of Baghdad had been unable to<br /> <br /> faced a formidable enemy who portrayed<br /> <br /> destroy the Fatimids in Egypt, while Damascus and Aleppo had<br /> <br /> himself as a champion of Islam. A madrasa<br /> <br /> become alienated from Baghdad. After Roger of Antioch's victory<br /> <br /> (religious college) at Damascus bears an inscription of 1138 describing Zengi as<br /> <br /> at Tell Danith in 1115, the sultans of Baghdad left resistance in the<br /> <br /> "the fighter ofjihad, the defender of the<br /> <br /> north to local powers. The greatest threat to Jerusalem was Egypt,<br /> <br /> frontier, the tamer of the polytheists<br /> <br /> but by the early II20S it was crippled by internal divisions.<br /> <br /> [Christians], and destroyer of the heretics." Zengi's devotion to jihad was matched only by his legendary cruelty. One Muslim<br /> <br /> If the Islamic powers united, the weak European settlements would be at risk. But the westerners, too, were disunited. Following<br /> <br /> chronicler remarked: "He was tyrannical<br /> <br /> the disaster of the "Field of Blood" in 1119 (see pages 48-49),Anti-<br /> <br /> and he would strike with indiscriminate<br /> <br /> och recovered under Bohemond II (1119-30), but he quarreled with<br /> <br /> recklessness. He was like a leopard... , like<br /> <br /> Joscelin I of Edessa (1119-31) and as a result they failed to take<br /> <br /> a lion in fury, not renouncing any severity,<br /> <br /> advantage of a period of political turmoil in Aleppo. This ended in<br /> <br /> not knowing any kindness."<br /> <br /> 1128 when all the factions united behind Imad ad-Din Zengi, a tough Turkish captain who had served the Seljuk sultan and risen to be governor of Mosul, from where he asserted his power over Aleppo. Zengi spent much time and effort fighting fellow Muslims,<br /> <br /> THE RISE OF ISLAMIC UNITY<br /> <br /> 55<br /> <br /> THE FALL OF EDESSA When Zengi seized Edessa in 1144, hundreds died in the<br /> <br /> in miners who dug tunnels under the wall. These were<br /> <br /> frenzy to seek safety in the citadel, and thousands more<br /> <br /> supported overhead by beams which were then set on<br /> <br /> in the ensuing massacre. Zengi spared the native Syrian<br /> <br /> fire. When the props burned away, a great part of the<br /> <br /> Christians, but massacred the Europeans. Archbishop<br /> <br /> wall fell and left a breach. The enemy rushed together<br /> <br /> William of Tyre, who was born in the East ca. 1130<br /> <br /> from all directions, entered the city, and put all to the<br /> <br /> and died at Rome in 1186, chronicled the history of the<br /> <br /> sword whom they encountered. Neither age, condition,<br /> <br /> crusader states up to ca.<br /> <br /> II<br /> <br /> 84 in his monumental History<br /> <br /> of Deeds done Beyond the Sea. He gives this account of the<br /> <br /> nor sex was spared.... Thus the city was captured and delivered over to the sword of the enemy. "As soon as this happened, the more sensible and<br /> <br /> city's fall and the ensuing panic and bloodshed: "Zengi continued to attack the city [of Edessa]<br /> <br /> alert among the citizens fled with their wives and<br /> <br /> without intermission and ran through the whole gamut<br /> <br /> children to the citadel. Here they hoped their lives at<br /> <br /> of injuries. No method was left untried which might<br /> <br /> least might be safe, if only for a short time. But the<br /> <br /> tend to increase the woes of the citizens and help him<br /> <br /> inrush of such a crowd of people caused a panic, and<br /> <br /> to take the city. Through subterranean passages he sent<br /> <br /> many perished miserably in the struggling mob."<br /> <br /> notably in his many abortive efforts to seize Damascus, which as a result resorted to an alliance 'with the crusaders after 1140.<br /> <br /> Mter the death ofBohemond II in 1130, Antioch lapsed into civil war, and Zengi was able to drive its frontier back to the Orontes river. Stability returned when Raymond of Poitiers acceded to Antioch in 1136. He disliked Joscelin II of Edessa (1131-59), but they both worked to resist a bid by the Byzantine emperor John II Comnenus<br /> <br /> (I I I 8-43)<br /> <br /> to assert his overlordship of Edessa.<br /> <br /> Then events turned to Zengi's advantage. John II died in April 1143 and in November King Fulk I ofJerusalem also died, leaving Queen Melissende as regent for a child king. The Europeans were thus deprived of military leadership in the field. In November 1144 Joscelin II rr:a.arched to aid his Muslim ally, the ruler of Diyarbakir, against Zengi, and in his absence Zengi laid siege to Edessa. Raymond ofAntioch refused to help, and on Christmas Eve 1144, before any troops could arrive from Jerusalem, Edessa fell (see box). The county of Edessa had always been little more than a string of fortifications, including Edessa itself. Now Zengi set about picking off the outposts while the Europeans remained divided. Before he could complete the process, on 14th September 1146 Zengi was assassinated. Nevertheless, the capture of Edessa was the first great success of the jihad, establishing Zengi in the pantheon of Islamic warriors and providing his son, Nur ad-Din, with both prestige and a model for the future. It also brought about the Second Crusade.<br /> <br /> Opposite: This illustration to a 14th-century<br /> <br /> French manuscript depicts the overlord of the Mongol dominions) Kublai Khan) ordering the execution of two traitors. However, the khan and his executioners are depicted as stereotypical darkskinned ((Saracens)) and the illjated traitors as fair-haired Europeans. The conflicts between Christians and Muslims during the period of the crusades influenced the western view of the Orient as a place ruled by arbitrary) violent) and cruel despots) exemplified by Zengi and othersnotwithstanding the fact that the Europeans were also guilty of displaying savagery and brutality toward their enemies.<br /> <br /> 56<br /> <br /> THE FIRST CRUSADE: "IMPELLED BY THE LOVE OF GOD"<br /> <br /> CRUSADER CASTLES Some crusader castles stand out as being among the most famous fortifications of the medieval period. But most of these date from the thirteenth century, and recent examination has shown that in the twelfth century most castles were quite simple, such as the Red Tower (al-Burj al-Ahmar) in the plain of Sharon. This was a square stone tower surrounded by an enclosure wall. Internally it had two floors. The lower floor was partly below ground-level and served for storage, while the upper floor was living space. Such relatively simple structures are found all over the crusader states and are clearly based on western models. They differed from most castles in the West in that they were of stone, not earth and timber, but timber was rare in the East and cut stone from ancient ruins plentiful. These castles were very important as centers of lordly administration and agricultural exploitation, but while they could serve as refuges against raids, they could not hope to resist serious attack by an enemy army. There were some much stronger castles that were capable of real resistance to any enemy, such as Saone in the mountains of the principality of<br /> <br /> with a strong outer wall. At Belvoir, in 1168-70, the Hospitallers<br /> <br /> Antioch, a mighty fortress some 0.6 miles (lkm) long. At Saone<br /> <br /> built a real concentric castle that held out from 1187-89 against<br /> <br /> the crusaders took over and improved a Byzantine fortress.<br /> <br /> Saladin (see illustration on page 91).<br /> <br /> Most castles simply grew out of the needs of individual<br /> <br /> In the thirteenth century the city walls ofAcre, Tyre,<br /> <br /> lords or particular situations and were built only as elaborately<br /> <br /> Tripoli, and Antioch continued to be the main strength of a<br /> <br /> as the situation demanded. In the twelfth century the defense of<br /> <br /> shrunken kingdom, but complex fortresses such as Marqab,<br /> <br /> the crusader kingdom depended not on castles but on cities.<br /> <br /> AtWit, and Arsuf were also necessary. From the great concentric<br /> <br /> These were extremely difficult to capture on account both of<br /> <br /> castle of Crac des Chevaliers, close to Homs, the Hospitallers<br /> <br /> their size and their strong fortifications, which were all Roman,<br /> <br /> extracted tribute from nearby Muslim powers. But in the end<br /> <br /> though modified over time. Once the crusaders had taken an<br /> <br /> each of these fortresses fell after a month of siege by the<br /> <br /> important city it would be difficult for anyone to recapture it as<br /> <br /> increasingly efficient Egyptian armies of the Mamluk sultans.<br /> <br /> long as the crusaders had a field army, and they were further hindered by the numerous crusader castles giving refuge to the Frankish population and serving as military supply centers. By the mid-twelfth century, all over Europe, the<br /> <br /> Nineteenth and early twentieth-century scholars were deeply impressed by crusader castles, especially Crac des Chevaliers, and it was presumed that the crusaders had copied Islamic and Byzantine models, whose features were then passed on to the<br /> <br /> Mediterranean world, and beyond, field armies were becoming<br /> <br /> West. Many writers dismissed this idea, notably the student T.E.<br /> <br /> better organized and more proficient at siege warfare, in part<br /> <br /> Lawrence (Lawrence ofArabia), but it has persisted to this day.<br /> <br /> because of an improvement in the technology of catapults. Nur<br /> <br /> In fact, most crusader castles were constructed along<br /> <br /> ad-Din strengthened the fortifications of Damascus and other·<br /> <br /> familiar western lines of a tower within an enclosure. It seems<br /> <br /> places. The crusaders reinforced exposed Kerak, which defied<br /> <br /> likely that fortification techniques in both the Islamic world<br /> <br /> Saladin until the kingdom's collapse. Belmont, near Jerusalem, a<br /> <br /> and Europe were fundamentally learned from the Romans-<br /> <br /> small square fortified enclosure on top of a hill, was reinforced<br /> <br /> Roman walls were a feature of some European and almost all<br /> <br /> Near Eastern cities-with the addition of certain Byzantine techniques, such as enclosed and bent entrance-ways. By the end of the twelfth century Islamic and European traditions were diverging. In Europe and the crusader states there was an emphasis on concentric design, as at Crac des Chevaliers, while in the Islamic world massive towers, some capable of supporting catapults, were constructed, as in the citadel of Damascus, built at the end of the twelfth century. Above: Saone (Sahyun) Syria)) where the crusaders added massive<br /> <br /> square towers to the former Byzantine fortress as well as a deep stone ditch that isolated the end of the spur on which the castle stands. Opposite page and right: Exterior and interior views of Crac des Chevaliers) afamous concentric castle between Tbrtosa and Homs.<br /> <br /> 3 THE<br /> <br /> SECOND<br /> <br /> CRUSADE<br /> <br /> WAR CRUEL AND UNREMITTING JOHN<br /> <br /> FRANCE<br /> <br /> Disaster in the East<br /> <br /> 60<br /> <br /> The Kingdom Recovers<br /> <br /> 64<br /> <br /> European Settlement in<br /> <br /> ~he<br /> <br /> East<br /> <br /> 66<br /> <br /> The Race for Egypt<br /> <br /> 68<br /> <br /> The Rise of Saladin<br /> <br /> 70<br /> <br /> The Horns<br /> <br /> of Hattin<br /> <br /> ((Sweet Victory": Saladin 1riumphant<br /> <br /> 72 74<br /> <br /> 60<br /> <br /> THE SECOND CRUSADE: WAR CRUEL AND UNREMITTING<br /> <br /> DISASTER IN THE EAST BERNARD AND THE JEWS<br /> <br /> In 1145, in response to the fall ofEdessa, Pope Eugenius III (1145-53)<br /> <br /> The church opposed violence toward<br /> <br /> addressed a bull to King Louis VII of France (1137-80) calling for a<br /> <br /> Jews, because, as Pope Alexander II<br /> <br /> new crusade. Louis seems already to have resolved to go to the East,<br /> <br /> (1061-73) put it, they were "prepared to<br /> <br /> but his barons were unenthusiastic, so he called in Abbot Bernard of<br /> <br /> live in servitude." Kings and other powers taxed Jews to their profit and so disliked<br /> <br /> Clairvaux, the greatest spiritual authority of the age, to preach. On<br /> <br /> violence against them. But for zealous<br /> <br /> 31st March 1146, at Vezelay in Burgundy, thousands took the cross<br /> <br /> crusaders both Jews and Muslims were<br /> <br /> (see box), and enthusiasm soon spread across Europe. In the summer<br /> <br /> "enemies of Christ," and the launch of<br /> <br /> Bernard went to Germany to stop the anti-Jewish activities of<br /> <br /> the First and Second Crusades saw savage<br /> <br /> Radulf, a fellow Cistercian (see sidebar), and he also persuaded the<br /> <br /> persecutions in France and Germany. In the 1140S the authorities were better<br /> <br /> German emperor, Conrad III (1138-52), to join the crusade, which<br /> <br /> prepared to prevent such attacks, but there<br /> <br /> he did on 27th December. No ruling monarch had taken the cross<br /> <br /> were still figures such as the monk Radulf,<br /> <br /> before; now, momentously, two had done so.<br /> <br /> whose vitriolic preaching incited murders ofJews in northern France and the Rhineland. Responding to an appeal from<br /> <br /> Many German nobles proposed a campaign against the Wends (a pagan Slav people) rather than to the East, and in April 1147<br /> <br /> Archbishop Henry of Mainz, Bernard of<br /> <br /> Eugenius felt obliged to declare their expedition a crusade (see pages<br /> <br /> Clairvaux ordered Radulf back to his<br /> <br /> 126-127). In June, he also confirmed crusade status on an expedi-<br /> <br /> monastery and strove to end the violence.<br /> <br /> tion by Barcelona and Genoa against Almeria in Muslim Spain.<br /> <br /> In 1146 he wrote to the archbishop: "Is it not a far better triumph for the church to convince and convert the Jews than to put them all to the sword? Has that prayer which the church offers for the Jews, from the rising up of the sun to the going down thereof, that the veil may be taken from their hearts so that they may be led from the darkness of error into the light of truth, been instituted in vain? If she did not hope that they would believe and be converted, it would seem useless and vain for her to pray for them. But with the eye of mercy she considers how the Lord regards with favor him who renders good for evil and love for hatred."<br /> <br /> DISASTER IN THE EAST<br /> <br /> 61<br /> <br /> {iHEAVEN'S INSTRUMENT": BERNARD OF CLAIRVAUX It is a measure of Bernard of Clairvaux's eloquence that<br /> <br /> prepared beforehand, he was forced to tear his own<br /> <br /> it was he who persuaded the French nobility to support<br /> <br /> garments into crosses and sow them abroad."<br /> <br /> the Second Crusade, rather than their own king, Louis<br /> <br /> Bernard's style of crusade preaching can be gleaned<br /> <br /> VII. Odo of Deui! witnessed Bernard's preaching at<br /> <br /> from a letter he wrote ca. 1I50 to his uncle Andrew, a<br /> <br /> Louis's court at Vezelay on 3Ist March 1I46: "[Bernard]<br /> <br /> Templar knight fighting in the Holy Land: "Under the<br /> <br /> mounted the platform accompanied by the king, who<br /> <br /> sun you fight as a soldier, but for the sake of Him who<br /> <br /> was wearing the cross, and when heaven's instrument<br /> <br /> is above the sun. Let us who fight upon earth look to<br /> <br /> poured forth the dew of the divine word, as he was<br /> <br /> Him for largesse. Our reward for fighting comes not<br /> <br /> wont, with loud outcry people on every side began to<br /> <br /> from the earth, not from below, but is a 'rare treasure<br /> <br /> demand crosses. And when he had sowed, rather than<br /> <br /> from distant shores.' Under the sun we have no profit,<br /> <br /> distributed, the parcel of crosses which had been<br /> <br /> our reward is on high above the sun."<br /> <br /> In the event, Conrad III and his army left for the East in midMay 1147. Eugenius, Louis VII and his queen, Eleanor ofAquitaine, left in mid-June, following Conrad down the Danube valley. As the armies entered Byzantine lands, Roger II (1130-54), Norman king of Sicily and south Italy, launched an attack on the Byzantines. The Byzantine emperor Manuel I Comnenus (1143-80) responded by making peace with the Seljuk Turks of Iconium, the greatest Muslim power in Asia Minor, to enable him to deal with Roger, whose rule both he and Conrad III refused to recognize. On loth September Conrad reached Constantinople, followed on 4th October by Louis. Relations between Manuel and the two monarchs were difficult; he had never been enthusiastic about the crusade, which served no Byzantine interest. He knew, too, that many in the French army were hostile to him and favored the claims of Roger, and he feared that Conrad might be lured into a Franco-Sicilian alliance against him. Moreover, both armies were poorly disciplined and had done great damage on their march through imperial territory. Also in the force was a northern European fleet that assembled at Dartmouth in England on 19th May 1147 and en route helped to take the Muslim-held city of Lisbon in October (see page 122). By then it was winter and the fleet had to wait until the spring of 1148 to continue. Other smaller groups chose to travel independently. Anxious to get the crusaders away from Constantinople, the emperor Manuel suggested that Conrad III should travel down the western coast ofAsia Minor to the city ofAttalia. But Conrad chose to follow the inland route of the First Crusade, across the Anatolian plateau via Dorylaeum. Despite raids by Turks on the plateau, the<br /> <br /> Opposite: St. Bernard of Clairvaux}from a<br /> <br /> 13th-century English manuscript. The outstanding churchman of the age} Bernard inspired great popular enthusiasm for the Second Crusade. When some of this zeal expressed itself in attacks on Jews} he intervened to prevent them;for this reason Jews came to regard him as a Righteous Gentile.<br /> <br /> 62<br /> <br /> THE SECOND CRUSADE: WAR CRUEL AND UNREMITTING<br /> <br /> DEFEAT SOWS DISTRUST<br /> <br /> larger cities were under Byzantine control and could offer support.<br /> <br /> Bishop William ofTyre, writing in the<br /> <br /> Without waiting for Louis VII, Conrad left Constantinople. At Nicaea<br /> <br /> 118os, recorded the disillusionment toward<br /> <br /> there were disagreements in his army and it was decided to send the<br /> <br /> the Franks of the East felt by those who<br /> <br /> infantry under Otto, bishop of Freising, along the coastal route rec-<br /> <br /> had gone on the Second Crusade: "Henceforward, as long as they<br /> <br /> ommended by Manuel. On 25th October 1147 the Turks destroyed<br /> <br /> remained in the Orient, and, indeed, ever<br /> <br /> Conrad's main force at Dorylaeum. The Germans blamed their<br /> <br /> after, the crusaders looked askance on all<br /> <br /> Byzantine guides, but it is likely that their own indiscipline was the<br /> <br /> the ways of our leaders. They justly<br /> <br /> problem. Shortly afterward, the Turks also destroyed Otto's infantry.<br /> <br /> declined all their plans as treacherous and showed utter indifference to the affairs of the kingdom. Even when permitted to<br /> <br /> Louis took Manuel's advice and took the more westerly route to Attalia, but in the mountains his troops suffered terrible winter con-<br /> <br /> return to their own lands, the memory of<br /> <br /> ditions and the Turks inflicted heavy losses. Attalia gave the French<br /> <br /> the things they had suffered still rankled.<br /> <br /> shelter, but had limited food supplies. The barons argued that the<br /> <br /> ... As a result, fewer people, and those less<br /> <br /> army was no longer strong enough to force its way to Antioch, and<br /> <br /> fervent in spirit, undertook the pilgrimage thereafter. From this time on the condition of the Latins in the East became visibly worse. Our enemies saw that the labors of<br /> <br /> Louis agreed to take them by sea. But there were so few ships that he had to abandon the infantry, most of whom perished. When Louis arrived at Antioch in March 1148, Prince Raymond<br /> <br /> our most powerful kings and leaders had<br /> <br /> ofAntioch urged him to attack Aleppo, which was ruled by Zengi's<br /> <br /> been fruitless and all their effort vain."<br /> <br /> son and successor, Nur ad-Din. This might aid the recovery of Edessa-the loss of which had, after all, prompted the crusade-and secure the northern frontiers of the crusader states. But Louis<br /> <br /> DISASTER IN THE EAST<br /> <br /> 63<br /> <br /> decided to head directly to Jerusalem. En route he refused to help Count Raymond of Tripoli with his own frontier problems, and as a result an offended Count Raymond refused to join the crusade.<br /> <br /> The Failure of the Siege of Datnascus On 24th June 1148 Louis, along with Conrad III, who had landed at Acre with the remnants of his army, met the king of Jerusalem, Baldwin III (1143-63), and his barons to decide how to proceed. An attack on Egyptian-held Ascalon was rejected in favor of a move on Damascus. Although at times an ally of Jerusalem, Damascus was politically unstable and sometimes backed the kingdom's enemies; and in any case it was an obstacle to crusader expansion. Internal squabbles among the Frankish barons, who were split between the parties of Baldwin and of his mother, Melissende, probably had an effect on the siege of Damascus, which was poorly conducted. On 24th July the crusaders arrived in the well-watered orchards on the city's southern side. It was a good place for a camp, but the trees also gave good cover for Damascene sallies, and on 27th July the barons persuaded Louis and Conrad to move into the open plain to the east. This move was so unwise-a shadeless, waterless plain in the height of summer, next to the strongest part of the city wall-that it prompted accusations of treachery. No army could exist for long in such inhospitable conditions and on 28th July, with Damascene raids continuing and a relief force under Nur ad-Din on its way, the crusaders withdrew. Thus the Second Crusade ended in a humiliating retreat. From the Christian perspective the only positive results of the Second Crusade were in Iberia: Lisbon and Almeria fell in 1147, and Barcelona took Tortosa in December 1148 with the aid of crusaders returning from the East. But this was a poor return for such a great effort and in Europe there were bitter recriminations, especially against Bernard of Clairvaux. The papacy had inspired the crusade, but had done little to organize or coordinate it; Eugenius III had not even replaced the papal legate to Conrad's army, who had joined the Wendish Crusade. Byzantium was much blamed for the losses in Asia Minor, but the pope had done little to prepare Manuel for the arrival of two enormous and at times ill-disciplined western armies. However, the root cause of the failure was probably that Louis VII and Conrad III were poor and inexperienced commanders who failed to cooperate. Divisions among the Franks of the East further confused matters. The main results of the crusade were western suspicion of the settlers (see sidebar); an estrangement between Byzantium and the crusaders; and a rise in the prestige of Nur ad-Din.<br /> <br /> Above: Jesus Drives the Moneylenders from<br /> <br /> the Temple} a window (ca. 1400) in the church ofWiener Neustadt} Austria. One moneylender wears the conical hat that jews in the vvest were obliged to wear in the later Middle Ages. The persecution ofjews at the time of the first two crusades (see page 60) was fueled in part by greed for jewish wealth. In medieval Europe many jews were moneylenders} since most other trades were forbidden to them} while usury ~ending money at interest) was forbidden to Christians. Opposite: The mountains of southwestern Anatolia (modern-day Turkey)} through which the French crusaders passed on a gruelling winter march down to the coast at Attalia. Apart from the bitter weather., the French crusaders suffered when the indiscipline of their vanguard exposed them to attacks by the Turks.<br /> <br /> 64<br /> <br /> THE SECOND CRUSADE: WAR CRUEL AND UNREMITTING<br /> <br /> THE KINGDOM RECOVERS Opposite: The strategically important Syrian<br /> <br /> fortress of Shaiza~ one of Nur ad-Din 5 bases in the Orontes valley. It was besieged in 1157 by the Franks led by Baldwin III ofJerusalem) Count Thierry of Flanders (who had come to the East on crusade)) and Reynald of Ch6.tillon) the regent ofAntioch) who had married the widow of Prince Raymond. The siege was abandoned) but shortly after the allies recovered another important fortress) Harenc between Antioch and Aleppo.<br /> <br /> Nur ad-Din's rescue of Damascus had given him confidence and the city's ruler was obliged to ally with him. Emboldened by this, Nur ad-Din attacked Antioch, and on 29th June 1149 crushed its army and killed Prince Raymond at Inab. This victory convinced him that he was God's instrument and he began a systematic program of supporting mosques, schools, holy men, and scholars in the name of Sunni orthodoxy. He aimed to influence leaders of opinion in those cities, especially Damascus, whose leaders had made a truce with Jerusalem in May 1149. Nur ad-Din's propaganda made subsequent Damascene alliances with the Christians increasingly unpopular. As well as backing Damascus against Nur ad-Din, Baldwin III of Jerusalem saved Antioch in the wake of Inab and forced the northern Frankish barons to agree to a Byzantine takeover of the remnants of Edessa. In January 1153, he exploited political instability in Egypt to besiege the city ofAscalon, which surrendered in August 1153 (see page 52). It was the last great crusader triumph. Egypt reacted with a naval campaign against the crusaders. This distraction undoubtedly helped Nur ad-Din to take Damascus In<br /> <br /> STRATEGIC DILEMMAS OF THE CRUSADER KINGDOM The settlers in the Holy Land had been able to establish<br /> <br /> side. This enabled Baldwin II to plan an attack on<br /> <br /> themselves because the Muslim world was divided, and<br /> <br /> Damascus but in<br /> <br /> the settlers were anxious that this state of affairs should<br /> <br /> from this time there was usually an agreement to keep<br /> <br /> continue. The crusader kingdom stood vulnerably<br /> <br /> the frontier open, to the profit of both sides.<br /> <br /> between Syria and Egypt. Hence King Baldwin I established the castles of Shawbak and Petra, the nucleus<br /> <br /> 1129<br /> <br /> his expedition miscarried and<br /> <br /> The crusader principalities ofAntioch and Edessa looked toward Aleppo and the Euphrates for expansion,<br /> <br /> of the later lordship of Oultrejourdain centered on<br /> <br /> and were threatened by local powers and the Seljuk<br /> <br /> Kerak, which dominated the Egypt-Damascus road.<br /> <br /> sultans of Iconium-as well as Byzantium, which<br /> <br /> The First Crusade leaders had briefly considered first<br /> <br /> regarded Antioch as a vassal state and had a foothold in<br /> <br /> attacking Egypt, in order to secure not only Jerusalem,<br /> <br /> neighboring Cilicia. The kings ofJerusalem wanted to<br /> <br /> which was in Fatimid hands, but the whole region.<br /> <br /> prevent the emergence of a great Muslim power in north<br /> <br /> In the early years of the kingdom Egypt proved the<br /> <br /> Syria, hence the first two Baldwins spent much time in<br /> <br /> greatest threat, mounting expeditions almost annually. In<br /> <br /> the north. Baldwin Ill's acceptance of the Byzantine<br /> <br /> 1118<br /> <br /> Baldwin I attacked Egypt, but died before anything<br /> <br /> protectorate over the north (see main text) was a clear<br /> <br /> was achieved. From the mid- 1I20S Egypt became<br /> <br /> recognition of the weakness both ofAntioch and the<br /> <br /> distracted with internal affairs and ceased to be a threat,<br /> <br /> remnant of Edessa. However, this arrangement left Nur<br /> <br /> though it retained Ascalon as a thorn in the kingdom's<br /> <br /> ad-Din free to concentrate his forces against Jerusalem.<br /> <br /> April 1154, a victory that involved little fighting and was apparently welcomed by the Damascenes. He approached Egypt to propose a joint assault on Jerusalem, but this plan came to nothing. Nur adDin then launched a series of attacks on Jerusalem that ended in his defeat at al-Batihah, and in 1158 a truce was renewed for two years. In 1158 Baldwin married Theodora, the niece of the Byzantine emperor Manuel, and the two rulers then joined forces to attack Nur ad-Din. However, Manuel and Nur ad-Din carne to an agreement whereby Nur ad-Din would respect Byzantine frontiers in the north. Although some Franks considered the treaty a betrayal,<br /> <br /> THE CHAMPION OF JIHAD The chronicler Ibn al-Qalinisi, a senior official at Datnascus when the city fell in 1154, describes how Nur ad-Din cleverly<br /> <br /> portrayed hitnself, in contrast to Mujir ad-Din, the ruler of Datnascus, as the popular chatnpion of jihad: "Nur ad-Din sent a tnessage to Mujir ad-Din in which he said: 'It is not tny<br /> <br /> Baldwin accepted it, because it established a Byzantine protectorate<br /> <br /> purpose ...to seek to engage in warfare<br /> <br /> over north Syria, an area that Jerusalem could not defend alone.<br /> <br /> with you nor to besiege you. I have been<br /> <br /> In 1163 Baldwin III died, widely mourned as a just ruler. He had not prevented Nur ad-Din from uniting Syria, but he had retrieved<br /> <br /> protnpted solely by the frequent appeals of the Muslitns of the Hawran [south of Datnascus] and the Arab cultivators whose<br /> <br /> the fortunes of the kingdom after the Second Crusade, and there is<br /> <br /> possessions have been seized, whose<br /> <br /> no doubt of the importance of the Byzantine protectorate of the<br /> <br /> wotnen and children have been scattered<br /> <br /> north. He had rallied all the European settlers in the East and gained<br /> <br /> by the hand of the Franks, and who have<br /> <br /> the respect even of his Muslim enemies. If he had less success in his<br /> <br /> no one to assist thetn.... I atn aware of<br /> <br /> active diplomacy to secure western aid, it was because Europe was<br /> <br /> your inability to guard and protect your dotninions, and of the retnissness which<br /> <br /> preoccupied with its own affairs and still remembered bitterly the<br /> <br /> has led you to call upon the Franks for<br /> <br /> failures of the Second Crusade.<br /> <br /> assistance in fighting against tne.'"<br /> <br /> 66<br /> <br /> THE SECOND CRUSADE: WAR CRUEL AND UNREMITTING<br /> <br /> EUROPEAN SETTLEMENT IN THE EAST The dominant elements among the Europeans who settled in<br /> <br /> numbers. Jerusalem was a dangerous environment. Many adult<br /> <br /> the Holy Land after the First Crusade were nobles and knights,<br /> <br /> males died in the almost constant fighting, but disease was an<br /> <br /> but they could raise only<br /> <br /> 6,000-7,000<br /> <br /> mounted men for battle,<br /> <br /> even greater killer, particularly of children. Young men who<br /> <br /> suggesting that their total number was relatively small. The rest<br /> <br /> wanted to make their fortunes could do better fighting for<br /> <br /> of the European population could raise<br /> <br /> Christ on the Spanish and German frontiers.<br /> <br /> 5,000-7,000<br /> <br /> troops,<br /> <br /> The key to European expansion in the East was the<br /> <br /> and probably more in an emergency, so the total settler population ca.<br /> <br /> 1187,<br /> <br /> with women, children, and other<br /> <br /> noncombatants, was perhaps about<br /> <br /> 120,000. This<br /> <br /> was<br /> <br /> settlement not merely of knights and nobles but also of peasants-however, Jerusalem was distant; the risks that applied<br /> <br /> not large, which is probably why the kings ofJerusalem<br /> <br /> to the upper classes also applied to peasants; and the costs of<br /> <br /> encouraged settlement by native eastern Christians (Greeks and<br /> <br /> sea travel were relatively high. It used to be thought that the<br /> <br /> Syrians) and pursued a policy of toleration toward Muslims.<br /> <br /> Europeans in the East lived mainly in the cities, but the presence<br /> <br /> Knights and nobles continued to leave Europe for the Holy Land throughout the twelfth century, but in small<br /> <br /> of 20,000 refugees in Jerusalem after the battle of Hattin in 1187<br /> <br /> suggests strong rural settlement. Recent archaeology has<br /> <br /> also shown that in some areas, notably around Jerusalem, there were many villages of Europeans. Most settler villages were in areas occupied by native Christians, suggesting, when taken with other evidence, close ties between the groups. This may explain how King Guy ofJerusalem was able to raise nearly 20,000<br /> <br /> troops in<br /> <br /> 1187.<br /> <br /> In areas such as Galilee, where native<br /> <br /> Christians were relatively few, there were also few westerners. By<br /> <br /> 1187<br /> <br /> the Europeans had, after nearly a century of<br /> <br /> settlement, put down deep roots in some areas of the kingdom. The crusaders inherited a system of confessional administration from the Muslims. The native peoples were grouped according to religion and lived by their own laws and customs, whether Greek Orthodox, Syrian Jacobite, or Muslim. The dominant group were the European settlers and the most subordinate the Muslims, who paid the poll-tax that their own rulers had formerly demanded from non-Muslims. Jew~<br /> <br /> were banned from entry to Jerusalem and forced to wear<br /> <br /> special dress, while European clothes were prohibited to natives. The commercial courts that settled disputes over trade were the one place where locals and Europeans came together.<br /> <br /> Left: Crusader-period buildings in a street in old Jaffa) the port of Jerusalem in the 12th century. Opposite, above: Olive oil production) using presses like this one) was an economic mainstay in the villages of the kingdom ofJerusalem. Opposite, below: The church of St. Anne)Jerusalem. Constructed ca. 1140 during the reign of King Baldwin II) it is one of the few crusader churches of this period to have survived.<br /> <br /> EUROPEAN SETTLEMENT IN THE EAST<br /> <br /> Among the Europeans, nobles and knights enjoyed high privileges, and the leading families dominated the Haute Cour (High Court), the council that advised the king and decided, when necessary, among rival claimants to the throne. A Muslim prince, Usama ibn Mundiqh (r095-rr89), wrote that "once the knights have given their judgment neither the king nor any other commander can alter or annul it." The leading families had a right to be tried in the High Court by their peers. The European settlement in the Holy Land was polyglot, but their Muslim enemies lumped all the western Christians together as "Franks" (fran)). As this term implies, most of the leading families were French in origin, and French was the dominant tongue in the kingdom ofJerusalem, with Latin used for legal and ecclesiastical purposes. The county of Tripoli used Provenyal and the Norman dialect was important in the principality Antioch.<br /> <br /> 67<br /> <br /> 68<br /> <br /> THE SECOND CRUSADE: WAR CRUEL AND UNREMITTING<br /> <br /> THE RACE FOR EGYPT Opposite: Standard bearers of the caliph of<br /> <br /> Baghdad)Jrom a manuscript produced in Baghdad in 1237. In 1171) on the death of the Fatimid caliph al-Adid) Saladin recognized the authority oj the Abbasid caliph of Baghdad-the first time the Abbasids had been recognized in Egypt since 969. Like the Abbasids) and unlike the Fatimids) Saladin was a Sunni. However, the recognition oj the caliph in Baghdad-who was the nominal leader of Islam but had little real power-was also an adroit move that consolidated Saladin 5 rule in Egypt. Below: The significant cities and distribution of<br /> <br /> power in the Near East at the time of the Second Crusade in the late 12th century.<br /> <br /> In Egypt political and religious authority was in theory united in the person of the Fatimid caliph. However, in practice successive viziers (chief ministers) had increased their own authority and isolated the caliphs. The power of the viziers grew even further after the death of Caliph aI-Hafiz in 1149, when there was a series of child caliphs of whom the last, al-Adid (1160-71), succeeded at the age of nine. Amid this turmoil, in 1155 Egypt's rulers bought peace by the payment of tribute to King Baldwin III of Jerusalem. In 1163 the vizier Shawar was ousted by the court chamberlain, Dirgham, who refused to pay the tribute. This prompted the new crusader king, Amalric I (1163-74), to launch an invasion of Egypt, but his army was repelled by the annual Nile flood. In the meantime, Shawar had sought help from Nur adDin to fight Dirgham. Nur ad-Din sent an army to Egypt to support Shawar under his Kurdish general, Shirkuh, and Shirkuh's nephew-Salah ad-Din, better known in the West as Saladin. They captured Cairo in 1164, but Shawar, seeking to playoff his enemies and retain his independence, then called in Amalric. In the event the fighting was indecisive and both the Syrian and Frankish armies withdrew. In 1167 Shirkuh and Saladin again invaded Egypt, and again Shawar called in Amalric. At the battle of al-Babyan the Franks were defeated, but not decisively. A truce was made and the crusaders agreed to evacuate Egypt, in return for an increased tribute to Amalric and the installation of a crusader garrison at Cairo. In 1168 Gilbert d'Assailly, the grand master of the Hospital (see sidebar), persuaded Amalric to break the truce. In November Bilbais fell to the Franks and this time Shawar appealed to Nur ad-Din, who again dispatched Shirkuh. The crusaders had by this time suffered substantial losses and Amalric was forced to retreat. In 1169 Shirkuh killed Shawar and became vizier himself, but died a few weeks later. Saladin now seized power. By August he had secured his position, in time to face a joint attack on Egypt by Amalric and the Byzantine emperor Manuel. The Byzantine fleet sailed in good time, but there were delays in gathering the<br /> <br /> THE RA C E FOR E GYP T<br /> <br /> 69<br /> <br /> THE MILITARIZATION OF THE HOSPITALLERS The order of the Knights Hospitaller was established to care for pilgrims (see page 52), but by the mid-twelfth century it was<br /> <br /> taking on an increasingly military role. The decisive period seems to have been the rule of Gilbert d'Assailly as grand master after 1163, when the order actively took over the defense of frontier zones and castles, and joined expeditions, including those to Egypt. Gilbert's policy seems to have strained the resources of the order, and it is possible that he pressed Amalric to attack Egypt in 1168 (see main text) because he hoped to restore the order's fortunes with booty and rich lands. The failure of the expedition altnost ruined the Hospital, and those among its leadership who were totally opposed to militarization forced Gilbert's resignation.<br /> <br /> crusader army because many men were reluctant to go to Egypt after the defeats of the previ~us year. In the event the allies besieged Damietta from October to December 1169, but then, amid mutual mistrust, the alliance broke up and the siege ended.<br /> <br /> During the crisis Pope Alexander III (1159-81) wrote to remind the knight-<br /> <br /> brothers that care of pilgrims was their primary concern (see box). In fact the order, with its vast resources in Europe,<br /> <br /> Saladin moved quickly to consolidate his regime. By 1174, how-<br /> <br /> made a rapid economic recovery.<br /> <br /> ever, he faced the possibility of invasion both by Nur ad-Din, who<br /> <br /> However, it was now decisively launched<br /> <br /> resented his independence, and by Amalric and the Byzantines, who<br /> <br /> on the military path.<br /> <br /> had renewed their alliance. But Nur ad-Din died on 15th May 1174, and before he could exploit this situation Amalric also died, of dysentery, on<br /> <br /> II<br /> <br /> th July. The advantage had now switched to Saladin.<br /> <br /> DISEASE AND MEDICINE The premature deaths of a number of prominent<br /> <br /> evidence from skeletons suggests that there were some<br /> <br /> figures-such as King Amalric I who died in 1174 from<br /> <br /> physicians who were good at setting broken bones. The<br /> <br /> dysentery-is evidence of the deadliness of disease in<br /> <br /> order's main hospital at Jerusalem reputedly held<br /> <br /> 2,000<br /> <br /> the medieval era and the need for effective medical care.<br /> <br /> patients, who were prescribed sensible diets. Eastern<br /> <br /> Battle injuries were, of course, often severe and involved<br /> <br /> physicians enjoyed a higher reputation than Europeans.<br /> <br /> traumatic wounds. But in war, disease often killed many<br /> <br /> A Christian Arab doctor put a poultice on an abscess on<br /> <br /> more than battle itself. The Knights Hospitaller had<br /> <br /> the leg of a knight, but a Frankish doctor insisted on<br /> <br /> units that accompanied the crusaders to battle and<br /> <br /> amputation by axe-the patient died from the shock.<br /> <br /> 70<br /> <br /> THE SECOND CRUSADE: WAR CRUEL AND UNREMITTING<br /> <br /> THE RISE OF SALADIN When Nur ad-Din died in 1174, Saladin's priority was to annex his inheritance. Saladin was always at pains to portray himself as the champion of Islam against the European intruders, although in fact he spent much, if not more, of his career involved in war against members of Nur ad-Din's family, the Zengids (named from his father, Zengi), and other Muslims. When he died Nur ad-Din was an atabeg, essentially a senior officer of the Baghdad caliph, commanding armies and governing territories. In practice his subservience to the caliph was nominal. He was the leader of a militarized, largely Turkish elite, and ruled a state embracing Aleppo, Damascus, and extensive lands toward the Euphrates. Other Zengids governed various parts of Nur ad-Din's domains on his behalf. The strength of dynastic feeling among the Zengids created the presumption that Nur ad-Din's son, as-Salih Ismail, would succeed him. But there was no legal requirement that an officer such as an<br /> <br /> atabeg should be succeeded by his son, and on Nur ad-Din's death Saladin acknowledged as-Salih as his overlord but claimed to be the young boy's rightful regent. In consequence Saladin was invited into Damascus and in 1175 was acknowledged as ruler by the caliph.<br /> <br /> THE TERRORS OF SIEGE Siege warfare could be a protracted business and those<br /> <br /> machine of their own. The enemy in charge of the<br /> <br /> inside a besieged city or fortress might suffer terrible<br /> <br /> engines outside, however, aimed the stone missiles with<br /> <br /> hardships. In addition to the inevitable shortages of<br /> <br /> such skill that the Christians, appalled by the constant<br /> <br /> food and other privations there was the sheer terror of<br /> <br /> blows and fear of death which every stone seemed to<br /> <br /> living under the bombardment of rocks hurled by siege<br /> <br /> threaten, abandoned the attempt. These dangers, which<br /> <br /> catapults. Writing only months after the event, Bishop<br /> <br /> caused men to shake with terror, assailed not only those<br /> <br /> William ofTyre describes Saladin's siege of the great<br /> <br /> who crept forth from their hiding places to hurl<br /> <br /> crusader fortress of Kerak (see illustration on page 72)<br /> <br /> weapons or stone missiles from the ramparts or to gaze<br /> <br /> in Oultrejourdain during his invasion of the kingdom<br /> <br /> down upon the besieging forces. Even those who had<br /> <br /> in 1183, in which he subjected the castle to a constant<br /> <br /> fled to the innermost apartments, the most retired<br /> <br /> assault from catapults arranged all around the fortress:<br /> <br /> seclusion, shrank with terror before the crash and roar<br /> <br /> "Stones of such great size were hurled that no one inside the walls dared raise a hand or look out of the<br /> <br /> of incoming missiles." In the event, William reports, after a month of siege,<br /> <br /> openings or try any method of resistance.... At one<br /> <br /> Saladin learned that the army of King Baldwin IV of<br /> <br /> time those besieged in the fortress tried to set up a<br /> <br /> Jerusalem was close by and ordered his troops to retreat.<br /> <br /> THE RISE OF SALADIN<br /> <br /> Saladin now had potentially vast resources in Egypt and Syria at his disposal, but a long series of wars to wrest Aleppo from Zengid control prevented him from devoting his full might to the cause ofjihad against the crusader kingdom (see sidebar). Jerusalem, however, was unable to take effective advantage of Saladin's conflict with Aleppo because it was in the grip of internal<br /> <br /> 71<br /> <br /> Opposite and below: Glazed tiles produced in Chertse~ England) ca. 1250-60 depict Saladin (below) being slain by Richard I of England. The popular medieval legend of Saladin 5 death in single combat with Richard was entirely fictitious but reflects his reputation for chivalric virtue.<br /> <br /> dissension. Amalric I had been succeeded by his son, Baldwin IV (1174-85), who was a leper. A regency was necessary because he<br /> <br /> was a child, and his illness, which prevented him from marrying, meant another regency was probable in the near future. Regencies inevitably unleashed tensions among the nobility, and this was immediately evident when Miles ofPlancy was displaced as regent by Raymond III of Tripoli in 1174. When Miles was assassinated, his widow blamed Raymond III and married Reynald of Chatillon, the former regent ofAntioch and now lord of Oultrejourdain. Reynald became an enemy of the regent. Gerald of Ridefort, the seneschal (administrator of the royal household) and later grand master of the Templars, was a personal enemy of Raymond III owing to an ~ld dispute. Amalric I had left two ex-queens, Agnes of Courtenay (Baldwin IV's mother, supported by her brother Joscelin III of Courtenay), and Maria Comnena, who hated one another. Out of such personal enmities factions arose and competed for control of the kingdom. Despite such tensions Raymond III assisted the Zengids against Saladin and arranged the marriage in 1176 of Sibylla, the king's sister and heiress, to William Longsword, the son of the marquis of Montferrat in Italy. As Sibylla's husband William would become<br /> <br /> SALADIN, DEVOTEE OF HOLY WAR<br /> <br /> king, but unfortunately for the kingdom (as events were to turn out)<br /> <br /> Baha ad-Din ibn Shaddad was a tnetnber<br /> <br /> William died, leaving a child, later Baldwin V (1185-86). An effort<br /> <br /> of Saladin's entourage and wrote his Life of Saladin toward the end of the 12th century.<br /> <br /> was made to find another husband for Sibylla, but the existence of<br /> <br /> He describes his tnaster's devotion to the<br /> <br /> Baldwin V made her an unattractive prospect, because if a man<br /> <br /> cause of jihad:<br /> <br /> accepted her hand and became king his own son could not succeed.<br /> <br /> "The sacred works are full of passages referring to the Holy War Uihad]. Saladin<br /> <br /> An extended regency therefore seemed likely. Moreover, in 1176 the Byzantine emperor Manuel was heavily<br /> <br /> was tnore assiduous and zealous in this than in anything else. . .. The Holy War<br /> <br /> defeated by the Seljuks of Iconium at Myriocephalum, reducing his<br /> <br /> and the suffering involved in it weighed<br /> <br /> ability to intervene in Syria. In 1177 Manuel sent his fleet to aid the<br /> <br /> heavily on his heart and his whole being<br /> <br /> Franks in another attack on Egypt, but Baldwin<br /> <br /> I~<br /> <br /> who came of age<br /> <br /> that year, was ill and nobody could be found to lead an expedition. After assuming full power, Baldwin IV generally favored his<br /> <br /> in every litnb .... For love of the Holy War and on God's path he left his fatnily and his sons, his hotneland, his house, and all his estates, and chose out of all the world<br /> <br /> mother and Reynald (whose party was strengthened when they pro-<br /> <br /> to live in the shade of his tent, where the<br /> <br /> cured the election of Heraclius as Latin patriarch of Jerusalem in<br /> <br /> winds blew on hitn frotn every side."<br /> <br /> 72<br /> <br /> THE SECOND CRUSADE: WAR CRUEL AND UNREMITTING<br /> <br /> 1180). In November 1177 Saladin invaded the kingdom. Baldwin<br /> <br /> I~<br /> <br /> now recovered, advanced to meet him, but so big was Saladin's army that Baldwin retreated into Ascalon. Saladin allowed his troops to disperse and plunder whereupon Baldwin fell upon them, gaining a great victory at Montgisard on 25th November 1177. In 1178 Baldwin built a fortress at Jacob's Ford in Galilee to guard his vulnerable northeast frontier. Despite other preoccupations, Saladin could not ignore a fortress so close to Damascus and when Baldwin refused a large sum to dismantle it Saladin started to ravage the locality. On 24th August he began a savage assault on the castle itself, which fell five days later. The fortress (which was probably incomplete) was destroyed and its garrison massacred. Remains if the crusader fortress if Kerak) the base if the lords if Oultrejourdain) the isolated crusader territories beyond the Dead Sea and Jordan river. It was built in the 1140S and dominated the southern end if the Dead Sea and the route between Egypt and Syria) withstanding a number of assaults by Saladin (see box on page 70) before finally surrendering to him after a year-long siege in 1188.<br /> <br /> The imm-ediate consequences of the loss ofJacob's Ford were not great because Saladin was intent on seizing Aleppo from the Zengids and he agreed to a truce with Baldwin in early 1180. But the raid into Galilee had demonstrated how vulnerable the north of the kingdom now was. The Seljuk defeat of Byzantium in 1176 and the death of the emperor Manuel in 1180 made matters worse, because it ended the Byzantine protectorate over the northern crusader states (see page 65) and left the crusader kingdom isolated. European<br /> <br /> rulers, meanwhile, were too preoccupied with their own affairs to lend assistance. In rr82 Reynald of Chitillon broke the new truce by raiding caravans traveling between Egypt and Syria, prompting another invasion by Saladin that was checked near Belvoir. In the same year, Reynald launched a fleet on the Red Sea, sacking the ports of Medina and threatening Mecca.The Umma was scandalized and Saladin was obliged to gather a great army, which invaded the kingdom in September rr83 (see box on page 70). Baldwin was too ill to lead his army, which was commanded by Guy of Lusignan, a knight from Aquitaine. The head of the army was Guy's elder brother, Amalric, an associate of Agnes of Courtenay. Through Amalric's agency, Guy met and quickly married Sibylla, thereby becoming Baldwin IV's heir. In due course he was proclaimed regent for the incapacitated king, replacing Raymond III. Guy refused battle, but shadowed Saladin's great army, which eventually melted away. Guy's enemies accused him of cowardice for not engaging Saladin, and Baldwin, rallying momentarily in his illness, deposed Guy as regent. Baldwin proclaimed his young nephew as his heir and, in an unprecedented move aimed at securing his succession, had him crowned as Baldwin V in November rr83, with Raymond III as his regent. Having arranged the succession, Baldwin IV finally succumbed to his illness in March rr85, aged twenty-nine. In the meantime, in rr83 Saladin had defeated the Zengids and taken Aleppo. Despite continued Zengid defiance, he was now the clear master of Egypt and Syria.<br /> <br /> Egyptian troops take part in a battle against European knights-note the helmeted figure at bottom right being unhorsed from his black charger-beneath the fortified walls of an unidentified city. A fragment of a 12th-century Egyptian drawing.<br /> <br /> 74<br /> <br /> THE SECOND CRUSADE: WAR CRUEL AND UNREMITTING<br /> <br /> THE HORNS OF HATTIN In rr86 the eight-year-old Baldwin V ofJerusalem died after barely a year as king. In such an event Baldwin IV had laid down a formula for choosing between the claims of Sibylla and Isabella, the daughters of King Amalric I by different wives. All the leading nobles had agreed to this, but in a palace coup Sibylla and her husband Guy of Lusignan were crowned. Most of the barons reluctantly accepted Guy as king, but Raymond III ofTripoli did not and retired to his lands in Galilee. When Guy threatened him Raymond concluded a treaty with Saladin, who promised to protect his lands. In early rr87 Reynald of Chitillon breached a truce with Saladin by attacking a caravan passing from Cairo to Damascus. Saladin demanded compensation, but Reynald refused to pay, despite the insistence of Guy, his overlord. War with Saladin was now likely and Guy sent envoys to Tiberias to seek a reconciliation with Raymond III. Before they got there, Raymond had granted Saladin free passage across his lands to raid the kingdom. On 30th April, at the Springs An illustration from Matthew Paris~ account of the battle of Hattin. Paris dramatizes the loss of the sacred relic of the holy cross by showing Saladin himself seizing the cross from King Guy in the thick of battle. English) 13th century.<br /> <br /> of Cresson, the raiders annihilated a small force of Hospitallers and Templars who had unwisely challenged them. This development brought Raymond III back to the fold. On rst July rr87 Saladin, with a large army perhaps 3°,000 strong, besieged<br /> <br /> THE HORNS OF HATTIN<br /> <br /> 75<br /> <br /> Tiberias, where Raymond's wife Eschiva was trapped. On 2nd July, Guy was at Saffuriyah (Sepphoris), 16 miles (26km) to the west, a strong well-watered position. Guy had stripped all city and castle garrisons to raise the biggest army the kingdom had ever fielded: 1,200 heavily-armed knights, numerous light cavalry, and nearly 12,000 footsoldiers. Elements of Saladin's army approached Saffuriyah, but Guy refused battle. That night there was a dramatic and angry council: many sources suggest that Raymond III was in favor of declining battle while his enemies, including Reynald of Chatillon, took the opposite view. There was a good case either way. The tactic of shadowing the enemy, as in 1183, was attractive. If Saladin's army did not disperse it could be lured into battle on grounds of the crusaders' choosing. On the other hand Guy's huge army gave him a chance to defeat Saladin decisively, and the prestige of victory would help him to unite the kingdom.<br /> <br /> The twin hills known as the Horns of Hattin) the scene of Saladin 5 great victory over the crusader kingdom in 1187.<br /> <br /> Guy decided to lead the army eastward from Saffuriyah on 3rd July. He clearly intended to give battle, but it seems inconceivable that he expected to march to· Tiberias in a day, exposing his army to terrible thirst in arid country.Whatever Guy's plan, it evidently went badly wrong. After the crusaders had left the springs at Turan,<br /> <br /> EUROPEAN MERCENARIES<br /> <br /> Saladin's cavalry encircled them, attacking the rearguard ferociously<br /> <br /> At Hattin a knight called John, "having<br /> <br /> as it struggled uphill to Maskana. There, on Raymond Ill's advice,<br /> <br /> long served in Turkish armies," was asked<br /> <br /> the army halted for the night, short of water and surrounded.<br /> <br /> by King Guy to give advice on how the<br /> <br /> The next morning, 4th July 1187, Saladin held back until the heat<br /> <br /> army should fight. Western mercenaries took service with anybody who would pay<br /> <br /> of day began to take its toll. It seems that the crusader infantry, their<br /> <br /> during the Middle Ages, even Muslim<br /> <br /> will sapped by thirst, deserted the cavalry and took refuge on nearby<br /> <br /> rulers. As long as they did not abjure their<br /> <br /> hills known as the Horns of Hattin. The cavalry, now exposed to<br /> <br /> religion this was regarded as perfectly<br /> <br /> Saladin's mounted archers, were prevented from breaching the<br /> <br /> respectable. When the Fatimids took over Cairo in 969 they had within their ranks<br /> <br /> encirclement by Saladin's superior numbers. Only Raymond III,<br /> <br /> European soldiers, and they were so<br /> <br /> Balian of Ibelin, and a few others escaped. After a last desperate<br /> <br /> numerous in North Africa that by 1147<br /> <br /> attempt to establish a camp on Hattin, Guy surrendered. In the hour of his greatest triumph, and the crusaders' greatest disaster, Saladin displayed both his ruthlessness and his magnanimity.<br /> <br /> they had their own priests and even a bishop. The Turkish sultans of Iconium regarded their corps of European soldiers as an elite and when one, an Italian, killed<br /> <br /> He was courteous to the defeated Guy and other nobles-but he<br /> <br /> a local man, it was impossible to punish<br /> <br /> beheaded the troublesome Reynald with his own sword. Two days<br /> <br /> him because his<br /> <br /> after Hattin, all the Templar and Hospitaller prisoners were executed<br /> <br /> to revolt. More surprisingly, the Livre au<br /> <br /> except the Templar grand master, Gerald of Ridefort. Guy and his<br /> <br /> Roi, the laws of the kingdom ofJerusalem,<br /> <br /> brother Amalric were sent to Damascus, as were Gerald, Humphrey<br /> <br /> 700<br /> <br /> comrades threatened<br /> <br /> dating from the late twelfth century, permitted vassals of the king to serve<br /> <br /> ofToron, and other noble prisoners. Eschiva, who had surrendered<br /> <br /> Muslim princes providing they entrusted<br /> <br /> Tiberias the day after Hattin, was allowed to leave for Tripoli.<br /> <br /> their fiefs to the king in their absence.<br /> <br /> 76<br /> <br /> THE SECOND CRUSADE: WAR CRUEL AND UNREMITTING<br /> <br /> ilSWEET VICTORY": SALADIN TRIUMPHANT The disaster at Hattin left the large crusader settlements almost defenseless. Saladin generally preferred to offer mercy to cities and castles in the hope of a quick surrender, and was known for keeping his word. On roth July, against the wishes of its citizens,Joscelin III of Courtenay surrendered Acre. Jaffa resisted and was stormed; its<br /> <br /> population was then sold into slavery. Tyre was prepared to surrender on terms until the end ofJuly, when Conrad of Montferrat, brother of Queen Sibylla's first husband, arrived from Europe. Conrad organized Tyre and defied Saladin, who bypassed the city. But Sidon and Beirut surrendered, as did Ascalon and Gaza. By late September rr87 virtually all of the coast except Tyre was in Saladin's possession. Saladin now moved on the greatest prize: Jerusalem. The population was defiant and swollen with refugees ready to fight, but they had no leader. However, the arrival of Balian oflbelin (see box) provided strong and competent leadership. When Saladin arrived on Saladin ravaging the Holy Land,Jrom a manuscript ojWilliam ofTyre's history oj the crusades. At the top a city is in flames, while beneath troops drive bound prisoners and livestock before them. French, 125cr59.<br /> <br /> 20th September the citizens made it clear they would fight. Saladin seems to have wanted a bloodbath to avenge the events of r099 (see page 47), perhaps to satisfy the many religious zealots with his army. He refused a surrender on terms proposed by Balian and attacked, but his troops were repulsed. Balian now threatened to kill all Muslim prisoners and destroy the Dome of the Rock and the Aqsa mosque. Saladin now suggested terms. He would allow all Christians to leave Jerusalem on payment of ten dinars for a man, five for a woman,<br /> <br /> SALADIN'S GALLANTRY One of the few survivors of Hattin was Balian of Ibelin (Balian the Old), the head of a family that had amassed<br /> <br /> However, once Balian was in the city the population clamored for him to lead their defense and he<br /> <br /> vast lands in the kingdom. Together with Reynald of<br /> <br /> reluctantly agreed. Balian wrote to Saladin to explain<br /> <br /> Sidon, Balian was able to break out of the Muslim<br /> <br /> why he had to break his word, and for this courtesy<br /> <br /> encirclement in the later stages of the battle. He took<br /> <br /> Saladin sent his own troops to escort Maria and her<br /> <br /> refuge in Tyre, but his wife Maria Comnena (formerly<br /> <br /> family to safety. This was an extraordinary act of<br /> <br /> the second wife of King Amalric I), remained in<br /> <br /> generosity on Saladin's part, and a reminder of the<br /> <br /> Jerusalem with their children. When Saladin threatened<br /> <br /> commonality between the non-native ruling elites<br /> <br /> the holy city, Balian asked him for a safe conduct to the<br /> <br /> who were contending to rule the Near East. It was also<br /> <br /> city to allow him to take his family back to Tyre. Saladin<br /> <br /> one of several episodes that contributed to the later<br /> <br /> courteously agreed, as long as Balian traveled unarmed<br /> <br /> European legends of Saladin as an outstanding figure<br /> <br /> and did not spend more than one night in Jerusalem.<br /> <br /> of chivalry (see page 93).<br /> <br /> "SWEET VICTORY": SALADIN TRIUMPHANT<br /> <br /> and one for a child. Balian pointed out that many thousands of poor<br /> <br /> CONRAD TRAPS SALADIN'S FLEET<br /> <br /> people would not be able to afford these sums, and Saladin granted<br /> <br /> Conrad of Montferrat's defense ofTyre<br /> <br /> a period of grace for money to be raised. In the end, perhaps 15,000<br /> <br /> rallied crusader morale in the aftermath<br /> <br /> were left behind and taken into slavery, but the remainder were<br /> <br /> 77<br /> <br /> of Hattin. The Old French Estoire d'Eracles, partly based on eyewitness accounts, tells<br /> <br /> escorted to the coast.<br /> <br /> how Conrad outwitted Saladin's fleet:<br /> <br /> "How sweet was it for him to be victorious," wrote Imad ad-Din<br /> <br /> "The Saracens saw that the chain<br /> <br /> of Saladin's capture ofJerusalem. The holy city's recovery for Islam<br /> <br /> [across the harbor entrance] was down<br /> <br /> was a great success, but it also allowed time for Tyre to organize its<br /> <br /> and decided to enter the port. In fact five<br /> <br /> defense under Conrad. Saladin arrived at Tyre in November, but<br /> <br /> galleys came in. When the marquis<br /> <br /> withdrew on I st January<br /> <br /> I I<br /> <br /> 88. It was his first defeat since his great<br /> <br /> victory at Hattin (see sidebar). In May 1188 Saladin gathered an enormous army with which to attack the northern crusader cities. A Sicilian fleet prevented an assault on Tripoli. He seized Tortosa, but not its citadel. In the principality ofAntioch he enjoyed much success. On IsthJuly Jabala fell,<br /> <br /> [Conrad] saw that the galleys had entered the port, he ordered the chain to be raised. As soon as the chain was up, the Christians [seized the galleys], together with two he had found at Tyre. He stationed plenty of well-armed knights and men on board. At dawn the following day they sailed out silently and attacked<br /> <br /> followed on 22ndJuly by Laodicea (Lattakiyeh).The fortress of Saone<br /> <br /> the [remaining] Saracen galleys.... When<br /> <br /> (Sahyun) surrendered on 29th July, as did Bourzey on 23rd August.<br /> <br /> they could no longer<br /> <br /> When Baghras fell Saladin had virtually surrounded Antioch itself.<br /> <br /> they ran five of their galleys onto the<br /> <br /> However, his own considerable losses forced him to make a truce.<br /> <br /> endur~<br /> <br /> the fighting,<br /> <br /> shore, and two others went off to Beirut."<br /> <br /> Elsewhere Saladin's lieutenants mopped up the remnants of the kingdom. Kerak in Oultrejourdain surrendered in November 1188 and Safad fell in December, while Belvoir held out until January 1189. Effectively, the kingdom ofJerusalem had ceased to exist, the county ofTripoli had been savaged, and Antioch was no more than a remnant. But the flow of reinforcements to Tyre was growing, and in Europe a new crusade was already underway.<br /> <br /> Two ships engaged in battle)from a manuscript of ca. 1340. Conrad of Montferrats defeat of Saladins fleet was crucial to the revival of crusader fortunes after the losses of 1187.<br /> <br /> .4 THE THIRD CRUSADE<br /> <br /> A CAMPAIGN OF EUROPE'S ELITE ~<br /> <br /> HELEN<br /> <br /> NICHOLSON<br /> <br /> The Kings Take the Cross<br /> <br /> 80<br /> <br /> The Crusade Heads East<br /> <br /> 82<br /> <br /> Barbarossas Crusade<br /> <br /> 84<br /> <br /> The Siege ofAcre<br /> <br /> 86<br /> <br /> Control of the Sea<br /> <br /> 88<br /> <br /> Advance to Jerusalem<br /> <br /> 9°<br /> <br /> Discord and Rivalry<br /> <br /> 94<br /> <br /> The End of the Enterprise<br /> <br /> 96<br /> <br /> 80<br /> <br /> THE THIRD CRUSADE; A CAMPAIGN OF EUROPE'S ELITE<br /> <br /> THE KINGS TAKE THE CROSS THE AUDITA TREMENDI<br /> <br /> In the fall of 1187 Archbishop Joscius of Tyre sailed from the East to<br /> <br /> Like all papal letters, Gregory VIII's appeal<br /> <br /> Europe with the news of Saladin's victories (see ChapterThree) and<br /> <br /> for Christians to aid the Holy Land is<br /> <br /> to appeal for help. Christians in the West were horrified at what they<br /> <br /> known by its opening Latin words, in this case Audita tremendi ("We have heard things that make us tremble"). This is an extract:<br /> <br /> heard. At the end of October, Pope Gregory VIII responded with Audita tremendi, an encyclical, or papal announcement, urging all<br /> <br /> "We have heard things that Olake us<br /> <br /> Christians to go to the aid of their fellows in the East (see sidebar).<br /> <br /> treOlble at the severity of the judgOlent<br /> <br /> One of the first to take the cross was Count Richard of Poitou, the<br /> <br /> that the Divine hand has executed over the<br /> <br /> rebellious eldest son of King Henry II of England. King William II<br /> <br /> land ofJerusalem.... We must be aware not only that the inhabitants [ofJerusaleOl] have sinned but also that we have sinned, as have all the Christian people ....<br /> <br /> of Sicily was the first western ruler to dispatch military aid, sending an armed fleet to harass the coasts conquered by Saladin. The pope authorized Archbishop Joscius and Cardinal Legate<br /> <br /> Everyone must think about this and act on<br /> <br /> Henry ofAlbano, a Cistercian monk, to travel north of the Alps rais-<br /> <br /> it, so that by voluntarily correcting our<br /> <br /> ing recruits for the crusade. The kings ofEngland and France (Henry<br /> <br /> sins we Olay turn to Our Lord God. First we should put right the evil we do, and<br /> <br /> II and Philip II Augustus) were at war, but in response to Joscius's<br /> <br /> then we Olay turn our attention to the<br /> <br /> preaching in January 1188 they agreed to make peace and go to the<br /> <br /> eneOlY's ferocity and Olalice.... We proOlise<br /> <br /> Holy Land. Henry planned to travel overland across Europe and sent<br /> <br /> that those who take up this journey with<br /> <br /> letters to the rulers of the lands that he would need to pass through,<br /> <br /> contrite heart and humble spirit and<br /> <br /> asking for safe passage for his army.<br /> <br /> depart in penance of their sins and in right faith will have full indulgence for their criOles and will receive eternal life."<br /> <br /> In March 1188 the elderly emperor Frederick I Barbarossa, the ruler (1152-90) of Germany and northern Italy, took the cross in a great ceremony before the assembled German nobility at Metz in Lorraine. Frederick issued instructions that only experienced war-<br /> <br /> The gisant (supine effigy) of King Richard I of England (118g-99),jrom his tomb in the abbey oj Fontevrault in Anjou, northern France-one oj eight English Plantagenet royal tombs there, including those of his parents, Henry II oj England and Eleanor ofAquitaine. Owing to his involvement in the Third Crusade and his wars in France, Richard spent barely six months in his own kingdom.<br /> <br /> riors who could equip and support themselves properly in a two-<br /> <br /> THE KINGS TAKE THE CROSS<br /> <br /> 81<br /> <br /> year campaign should join his crusade. Although the last leader in the West to declare his intention to join the crusade, in May 1189 Frederick was the first to set out (see pages 84-85). In the meantime, war broke out again between the French and English kings. Then, in July<br /> <br /> II<br /> <br /> 89, Henry II died with his crusade vow<br /> <br /> unfulfilled, to the great disappointment of the Franks of the East, who had expected great things of him. In the past Henry had sent money to help the Holy Land, and he was closely related to the rulers of Jerusalem: he and Queen Sibylla were cousins, grandchildren of Count FulkV ofAnjou, king ofJerusalem (1131-43). However, Henry II's successor, Richard of Poitou (Richard I), immediately began preparations to fulfill his own crusade vow. On 4th July 1190, Richard and Philip II finally set out on crusade from Vezelay in Burgundy, where they made an alliance and agreed to evenly divide everything won on the crusade. The agreement was made as between equals, but Philip regarded Richard as his subordinate because he was overlord of Richard's vast French estates. Richard, however, saw himself as at least as great a monarch as Philip, with greater domains, resources, and military skills. Their relationship was not to be an easy one (see pages 87 and 95). Although the two kings set out together from France, their large forces traveled separately. The armies were so big that if they had traveled together they would have placed an unbearable burden on the people whose lands they were transiting, who would not have been able to feed and supply so many. Richard assembled a fleet in England to transport his army to the East, while Philip hired ships<br /> <br /> The emperor Frederick I enthroned)flanked by his sons Henry (later the emperor Henry VI) and Duke Frederick of Swabia. The emperor is shown with his familys characteristic red hair and beard from which he derived the nickname ((Barbarossa. (Redbeard). From a chronicle produced at the German monastery of Weingarten) 117g-81.<br /> <br /> at Genoa to carry his own troops.<br /> <br /> THE SALADIN TITHE War was very expensive. Many crusaders paid their own<br /> <br /> France it provoked so much resistance that Philip had to<br /> <br /> way, but when they ran out of money they looked to the<br /> <br /> abandon its collection. In England, however, everyone<br /> <br /> crusading leaders to support them. When they took the<br /> <br /> eligible had to pay the tithe, and it raised a large sum.<br /> <br /> cross in rr88, King Henry II of England and King Philip<br /> <br /> Following Henry II's death, his son Richard I raised<br /> <br /> II of France agreed to impose a new tax in order to<br /> <br /> even more money by selling offices and rights to anyone<br /> <br /> finance the forthcoming crusade. Anyone in their<br /> <br /> who could afford them. He disposed of government<br /> <br /> kingdoms who did not take the vow to go on crusade<br /> <br /> posts, titles, castles, and land, and sold towns the right to<br /> <br /> would have to pay a tenth of the value of their revenues<br /> <br /> govern their own affairs. One contemporary writer<br /> <br /> and moveable property. The tax, dubbed "the Saladin<br /> <br /> quoted the king as saying that he would even have sold<br /> <br /> tithe" (tithe == "tenth"), was very unpopular, and in<br /> <br /> London if he could have found a buyer.<br /> <br /> JJ<br /> <br /> 82<br /> <br /> THE THIRD CRUSADE: A CAMPAIGN OF EUROPE'S ELITE<br /> <br /> THE CRUSADE HEADS EAST RICHARD I CAPTURES CYPRUS<br /> <br /> Crusaders set out on the Third Crusade from all over Europe, espe-<br /> <br /> On their voyage to the East, some of King<br /> <br /> cially from Italy, France, Germany, and England, but also from<br /> <br /> Richard I's contingent were shipwrecked<br /> <br /> regions farther afield, such as Denmark, Frisia, and eastern Europe.<br /> <br /> on Cyprus, a Greek Christian island ruled<br /> <br /> People from all sectors of European society joined the crusade: men<br /> <br /> by the usurping Byzantine "emperor" Isaac Comnenus. Isaac's mistreatment of<br /> <br /> and women, young and old, peasants and merchants, as well as the<br /> <br /> the shipwrecked crusaders prompted<br /> <br /> nobility. Those who could not fight were expected to help the cru-<br /> <br /> Richard to attack the island, which he also<br /> <br /> sading armies by laboring, trading, carrying on a craft or simply by<br /> <br /> wanted as a supply base for the crusade. Richard's attack was successful, but to save the expense of defending the island himself, he sold it to the Templars.<br /> <br /> praying. Many clergy and monks went on the crusade, despite the fact that priests were not permitted to shed blood and monks were supposed to stay in their monasteries.<br /> <br /> Mter a local revolt against their rule, the<br /> <br /> Some crusaders, especially the northern Europeans, completed<br /> <br /> Templars returned the island to Richard,<br /> <br /> the whole journey to the East by sea, while others went overland,<br /> <br /> who subsequently sold it to Guy of Lusignan, the ex-king ofJerusalem. Guy successfully established himself as king and Cyprus was ruled by the Lusignans<br /> <br /> such as the army of the emperor Frederick. Crusaders from France went by land as far as ports such as Marseilles or Genoa, then hired ships to the East. These were the routes taken by kings Philip II of<br /> <br /> and other western Europeans until it was<br /> <br /> France and Richard I of England when they set out in July<br /> <br /> conquered by the Ottoman Turks in 1571<br /> <br /> the Mediterranean the crusader fleets usually stopped to take on<br /> <br /> (see also pages 164-165, 176-177).<br /> <br /> water and food at Sicily and Crete, as well as at Rhodes or Cyprus,<br /> <br /> 1190.<br /> <br /> In<br /> <br /> or both. A winter crossing was risky because of the stormy conditions, so Richard and Philip overwintered in Sicily. Philip reached the East in April A fleet departs for the crusades)from the Cantigas de Santa Maria) an illuminated manuscript in Galician commissioned by King Alfonso X of Leon and Castile (reigned 1252-84).<br /> <br /> 1191, followed<br /> <br /> at the start of June<br /> <br /> by Richard, who had captured Cyprus from the Byzantines en route (see sidebar). This was several months after the first of their followers, who had reached Acre by the end of September<br /> <br /> 1190.<br /> <br /> The crusaders encountered many challenges on their way to the East. The Scandinavians, English, Frisians, and Flemish who sailed in summer<br /> <br /> 1189<br /> <br /> stopped en<br /> <br /> route in Portugal, where they helped King Sancho to ravage Muslim territory and temporarily capture some fortresses and towns. The English crusaders who arrived with Richard I in Sicily in early autumn<br /> <br /> 1190<br /> <br /> were less<br /> <br /> well received by the local Greeks, Muslims, and Italians. The Sicilians resented a large body of foreigners who behaved with arrogance and could not speak the local language. The bad feelings were aggravated by a dispute between Richard and King Tancred of Sicily, who refused to hand over property belonging to Joanna, the dowager queen of Sicily, who was Richard's sister. Joanna's<br /> <br /> THE CRUSADE HEADS EAST<br /> <br /> husband, King William II of Sicily, had planned to join the crusade, but died in November rr89 before he could set out. One of the reasons Richard went to Sicily was to collect both Joanna and her dowry, which he was hoping to use to help finance the crusade. The quarrel escalated into open battle, Richard besieged and captured the city of Messina, and careful diplomacy was needed to restore peace. The episode showed how the large crusader armies, with their huge need for food, water, and lodging, could pose a considerable threat to the stability of the areas through which they traveled. The crusade faced other difficulties. Some crusaders never set out at all or else returned home early when they ran out of money or fell ill. But the most serious loss to the crusade was the great army that had left with Frederick I, which arrived in the East having lost its leader and most of its troops along the way (see pages 84-85). All this did not bode well for the success of the crusade. Nevertheless, the English and French kings arrived in the East to find the vital port ofAcre, captured by Saladin shortly after the battle of Hattin (see page 76), already under siege from the Franks of the East and their recently arrived western allies. The crusader counteroffensive against Saladin had begun.<br /> <br /> 83<br /> <br /> To reach the Holy Land a variety of routes) both at sea and on land) were used by the major elements of the multinational force. Scandinavian and Flemish contingents sailed across the North Sea to England) where they linked up with the English and set sail from several south coast ports in spring and summer of 118g. Richard I set out from his ancestral possessions in western France) traveling up the Loire and then across land to Vezelay) while separately his fleet sailed from Nantes and headed for Sicily) where he planned to meet up with it for the onward journey. Philip 5 forces moved southward through France and either sailed direct for Sicily from Genoa or port-hopped along the coast of Italy) reuniting in Sicily for the journey east. Meanwhile Frederick 15 army moved down the mighty Danube and various minor rivers then marched through Anatolia and the Kingdom of Armenia to converge on Acre.<br /> <br /> 84<br /> <br /> THE THIRD CRUSADE: A CAMPAIGN OF EUROPE'S ELITE<br /> <br /> BARBAROSSA'S CRUSADE THE DEATH OF BARBAROSSA<br /> <br /> Setting out from Ratisbon (present-day Regensburg) in Bavaria early<br /> <br /> An anonymous German cleric recorded<br /> <br /> in May 1189, the emperor Frederick I and his army traveled down<br /> <br /> Frederick I's death at first hand:<br /> <br /> the Danube through southern Germany, into Hungary and beyond.<br /> <br /> "The emperor, undaunted by every danger and wishing to cool himself and avoid the mountain peaks, tried to swim<br /> <br /> The army marched on the south bank of the river while supplies were carried by boat. South of Belgrade, Frederick headed up the<br /> <br /> across the depths of the swift Selef river.<br /> <br /> Morava, a tributary of the Danube, then crossed Bulgaria and headed<br /> <br /> Although everyone told him not to ... , that<br /> <br /> for Constantinople, the Byzantine capital.<br /> <br /> man-who was so wise in other thingsunwisely exercised his strength against the flow and current of the river, entered the<br /> <br /> The Byzantine empire had assisted the first two crusades, but since the death of the emperor Manuel I Comnenus (1143-80) rela-<br /> <br /> water and was swallowed by a whirlpooL ...<br /> <br /> tions between it and the West had soured. Such was the mistrust that<br /> <br /> All the nobles around him hurried to help<br /> <br /> the emperor Isaac II Angelus (1185-95,1203-04) had even made an<br /> <br /> him, although they were too late, and they<br /> <br /> alliance with Saladin, seeing in Frederick a serious military threat to<br /> <br /> carried him to the shore. Everyone was so<br /> <br /> his own position. When Frederick sent envoys to negotiate his pas-<br /> <br /> distressed and struck with such terrible grief at his death that some, torn between<br /> <br /> sage through the Byzantine empire, Isaac had them imprisoned.<br /> <br /> fear and hope, died there with him; others<br /> <br /> Frederick arrived in the Byzantine city of Adrianople (Edirne)<br /> <br /> despaired, as if they thought that God did<br /> <br /> in late November 1189 and established camp there for the winter.<br /> <br /> not care about them, renounced the<br /> <br /> Over the following months his forces mounted raids in the sur-<br /> <br /> Christian faith, and joined the heathen."<br /> <br /> rounding countryside both to secure food for the army and to force Isaac to make peace. Isaac finally agreed to negotiate and in Febru-<br /> <br /> Frederick I Barbarossa drowns in the Selef rive~ from a manuscript of the 13th-century Saxon World Chronicle) a history of the world from the Creation written in Low German dialect.<br /> <br /> ary 1190 the two emperors made a peace treaty that allowed Frederick and his army to continue toward the Holy Land. The Turkish sultan of Iconium (Konya), in Asia Minor, had already promised Frederick free passage through his lands, but when<br /> <br /> BARBAROSSA'S CRUSADE<br /> <br /> 85<br /> <br /> THE TEUTONIC ORDER During the siege ofAcre, German crusaders from the merchant cities of Bremen and Lubeck founded a hospital to care for their sick and wounded compatriots. As in western European hospitals at this time, the staff of religious men and women would have offered only limited medical care beyond alleviating their patients' physical sufferings and looking after their immortal souls. Duke Frederick of Swabia (see main text) took the hospital under the protection of his family, the Hohenstaufen, and it went on to acquire extensive properties and rights in Germany. In March 1198 the institution was officially reestablished as a military religious order, its rule based on those of the Templars and the Hospitallers. The Order of the Hospital of St. Mary of the Teutons (Teutonic Order), never had great landholdings in the East. However, in the 123°5 it became involved in the crusades against the pagans of northeast Europe and subsequently established an independent military-religious state in Prussia, which it ruled until the sixteenth century (see Chapter Six).<br /> <br /> Frederick's forces came under Turkish attack in the sultan's territory, the emperor blamed him for breaking their agreement. In May 1190 Frederick captured and sacked Iconium before heading south into Cilician Armenia, a Christian land that was friendly to the crusaders. Then, on 10thJune 1190, disaster struck the expedition when the emperor was drowned in the Selef (Goksu) river. What exactly happened remains unclear, since the many contemporary accounts do not concur; some claim that he was fording or trying to swim across the river, and others that he was swimming for relaxation (see sidebar, opposite). Whatever its cause, the emperor's death was a heavy blow to his followers and the other crusader armies, and was greeted with great rejoicing by the armies of Saladin. The crusaders had hoped that Frederick and his huge army would lead them to a rapid victory. Instead, his crusade achieved little, although it led to the creation of a new military order, the Teutonic knights (see box, above). Frederick's son, Duke Frederick of Swabia, took over command of the imperial army and led it to Antioch, where the emperor's body was buried. Some of the German crusaders died there of an epidemic, and many others simply decided to return home. It was with a much depleted army that the duke arrived in early September 1190 at the port of Tripoli (in present-day Lebanon) to take ship to Acre. The duke arrived at Acre in October 1190 to find the city already besieged by the crusaders.<br /> <br /> The Cappenburg Head, a gilded bronze reliquiary (container for holy relics) made ca. 1160. It takes the form of the head of Frederick I Barbarossa, German king and Holy Roman emperor 1152-90.<br /> <br /> 86<br /> <br /> THE THIRD CRUSADE: A CAMPAIGN OF EUROPE'S ELITE<br /> <br /> THE SIEGE OF ACRE King Guy ofJerusalem had been taken prisoner after the battle of Hattin (see page 75). Saladin freed him in July rr88 on condition that he cross the sea at once-that is, leave for Europe; but Guy simply sailed to Arwad off the Syrian coast before returning to the mainland. At Tripoli he was joined by the first crusaders from the West. He attempted to ally with Conrad of Montferrat, who took over the defense of Tyre in the late summer of rr88, but Conrad had ambitions to be king and refused to cooperate. So, late in August rr89, Guy marched to Acre, which Saladin had taken in July rr87, and despite his small forces began a siege. Saladin moved his troops inland, trapping the crusaders between the city and his army. The crusaders' initial assaults failed, so they concentrated on blockading the city. By November rr89 the blockade was complete and Acre was running short of food. Saladin tried to send in supplies by sea, but after many naval clashes his fleet was defeated in March rr90 by Conrad of Montferrat, who had now been persuaded to<br /> <br /> help the crusaders. Yet still Acre did not fall, and on 25th July another<br /> <br /> Philip II receives the surrender ofAcre in 1191} from the Chroniques de France} ca. 1325-50. An English cleric who went on the Third Crusade and gave an account of events in the Itinerarium Peregrinorum et Gesta Regis Ricardi (The Journey of the Pilgrims and Deeds of King Richard)} describes the Muslim defenders ofAcre as ((outstanding and memorable warriors) who were men of admirable prowess} exceptional valo~ very energetic in the practice of wa~ and renowned for their great deeds. No less} as they came out of the city almost empty-handed} the Christians were stunned at their fine bearing and appearance} which remained unaltered by adversity. }}<br /> <br /> attack on Saladin's camp was repulsed. But more crusaders were now arriving by sea from Europe and Saladin's army was growing demoralized.The duke ofSwabia landed early in October 1190, but he died in January 1191 of a plague that swept the crusader camp, exacerbated by a food shortage. Conrad had promised food supplies if the crusade leaders allowed him to marry the heiress to the throne of Jerusalem (see pages 94-95). Once married, however, he had for-<br /> <br /> The port ofAcre) (present-day Akko) Israel) stands on a promontory on Haifa Bay. Few remains of the crusader city are visible today above ground) but the breakwater built to create an outer harbor after the city's initial capture by the crusaders in 1104 can be seen. According to literary sources and maps) the crusader port also once included an inner harbor.<br /> <br /> gotten his promises and left for Tyre at the end of November 1190. At last, on 20th April 1191, Philip II of France arrived to assume overall command, and Richard I of England landed on 8thJune with more ships and siege equipment (see sidebar). As the siege engines took their toll the Muslims asked for peace, but Richard refused their terms. On 3rdJuly the wall was breached and within a few days Saladin<br /> <br /> CRUSADER SIEGE ENGINES When the crusaders blockaded Acre they filled in the ditch around the city to allow siege engines to be brought up to the<br /> <br /> agreed terms for the city's surrender. On 12th July Acre was given up<br /> <br /> walls, and dug defensive ditches around<br /> <br /> to the crusaders, who kept around 3,000 hostages as a guarantee that<br /> <br /> their catnp. The Muslitns were itnpressed<br /> <br /> Saladin would free his own prisoners and return the relic of the True<br /> <br /> by the elaborate siege equiptnent<br /> <br /> Cross captured at Hattin. The kings divided the booty and negotiated<br /> <br /> constructed by Duke Frederick of Swabia, Philip II, and Richard I to assail the city's<br /> <br /> a settlement between Guy and Conrad (see page 95). Philip then<br /> <br /> defenses. Philip had a catapult for hurling<br /> <br /> returned to France. He perhaps resented the prominence of Richard<br /> <br /> stone tnissiles that his troops called the<br /> <br /> (see page 95), but he may simply have felt unable to continue: he had<br /> <br /> "Evil Neighbor," and the crusaders built<br /> <br /> been very ill and his son was dangerously sick at home.<br /> <br /> a great siege tower that was probably like<br /> <br /> On 16th August Richard ordered the massacre of the hostages, an<br /> <br /> the one described by Saladin's secretary Itnad aI-Din al-Isfahani: "The Franks<br /> <br /> atrocity condemned by Muslim and Christian writers alike. He<br /> <br /> began to construct a terrifying tower on<br /> <br /> claimed that Saladin had not kept to the treaty; Saladin denied this,<br /> <br /> wheels, a tnachine heavy with tnenace that<br /> <br /> but each side gave a different version of the treaty and blamed the<br /> <br /> was topped with an object called a ratn.<br /> <br /> other for breaking it, so it is difficult to determine the truth. It is likely that Richard's motives were a desire to terrify the Muslims, and<br /> <br /> This tnachine carried two long horns like lances, as fat as two thick pillars. The padlocks of closed walls opened before it<br /> <br /> to avoid the expense of maintaining so many prisoners on the next<br /> <br /> without a key, for walls struck by its horns<br /> <br /> stage of his campaign: the recapture of Jerusalem.<br /> <br /> were reduced to dust!"<br /> <br /> 88<br /> <br /> THE THIRD CRUSADE: A CAMPAIGN OF EUROPE'S ELITE<br /> <br /> CONTROL OF THE SEA Maritime power played a vital part in the Third Crusade because of the transportation of both men and supplies to the East. In addition, control of the sea was crucial in the fall of Acre in July 1191, and it enabled Richard I to recapture part of the Palestinian coast. The Arabs only began to build warships after early Muslim rulers saw that they were needed to make conquests in the Mediterranean. They employed local experts to build and crew the fleets that defeated the Byzantines off Egypt in 654, and attacked islands such as Cyprus, Crete, Rhodes, and Sicily. In the late seventh century the Muslim governor of North Africa established shipyards at Tunis and built more than 100 ships. In the 840S a North African and Spanish Muslim fleet captured most of Sicily from Byzantium. In 904 an Arab fleet sacked Thessalonica, and throughout the tenth century Muslim ships<br /> <br /> ports of the Christian East. He imported timber from Europe<br /> <br /> dominated the Mediterranean. Although Muslim-owned<br /> <br /> and tried to recruit suitable crews. (In 1179 the church banned<br /> <br /> warships were large, heavy, and slow, they were also stable and<br /> <br /> Christians from serving as captains or pilots in Muslim vessels.)<br /> <br /> all-season vessels, unlike the Christian-owned types, which did<br /> <br /> Saladin's improvements alarmed the Franks, who feared he<br /> <br /> not sail the Mediterranean in the winter. Most ships from<br /> <br /> would attack pilgrim ships and the crusader states-as he did in<br /> <br /> Muslim territory operated as traders when they were not acting<br /> <br /> 1182, when at least thirty galleys unsuccessfully attacked Beirut.<br /> <br /> as warships and were hired by rulers on a freelance basis. By the twelfth century improved western European ships,<br /> <br /> After his victories of 1187 Saladin used his fleet to control the Syria-Palestine coastline. Only Admiral Margarit of Sicily<br /> <br /> especially those of traders from the Italian cities ofVenice,<br /> <br /> resisted him in the north, while Conrad of Montferrat's fleet at<br /> <br /> Genoa, and Pisa, were competing to control the Mediterranean.<br /> <br /> Tyre defeated him in the south. In his attempt to evade the<br /> <br /> The most common warship was the long, narrow galley that sat<br /> <br /> crusader blockade ofAcre during the siege of 1189-91, Saladin<br /> <br /> low in the water and had the flexibility of oar- or sail-power,<br /> <br /> even disguised vessels as Christian ships (by putting pigs on<br /> <br /> depending on the weather. The galley could be used for trade.<br /> <br /> board). The crusaders used ships to transport troops and supplies<br /> <br /> From 1177 Saladin began to improve the Egyptian fleet in order to defend his coasts from Christian ships and to attack<br /> <br /> and to attack Muslim fortresses, erecting siege towers on ships to create mobile fighting platforms. Conrad defeated the<br /> <br /> CONTROL OF THE SEA<br /> <br /> 89<br /> <br /> Egypt captured the island ofArwad from the Templars.<br /> <br /> Muslim fleet at Acre and Saladin's naval supremacy finally ended<br /> <br /> 1302<br /> <br /> inJune<br /> <br /> Further north, Turkish ships raided the Greek islands, and in the<br /> <br /> 1191<br /> <br /> when King Richard I arrived with a large fleet of<br /> <br /> warships and transports. They carried supplies up and down the<br /> <br /> fifteenth century the Ottoman Turks emerged as the greatest<br /> <br /> coast, protected the crusaders marching along it, kept Richard<br /> <br /> naval power in the Mediterranean (see Chapter Eight).<br /> <br /> in contact with coastal bases even when Saladin blocked the road, and enabled him to relieve Jaffa quickly in August After Saladin's death in<br /> <br /> 1193<br /> <br /> 1192.<br /> <br /> Egypt's rulers paid less<br /> <br /> attention to naval power, but still needed a fleet both for defense and to attack Christian settlements. Later, the Mamluk sultan Baibars I built up a fleet and in<br /> <br /> 1271<br /> <br /> attacked Cyprus. In<br /> <br /> of ca. 1425-50 from Malaga} Spain} decorated with what appears to be a type of vessel know as a carrack. Opposite, above: A northern European cog with high sides} a straight pro~ aflat keel} and a single square sail. From a manuscript of ca. 1270. Opposite, below: Venice} a trading city whose networks and influence extended to the Black Sea. Galleys were suited to both trade and war. Above: An Islamic tin-glazed bowl<br /> <br /> 90<br /> <br /> THE THIRD CRUSADE: A CAMPAIGN OF EUROPE'S ELITE<br /> <br /> ADVANCE TO JERUSALEM Almost immediately after executing the Muslim hostages, King Richard I began arrangements for the march south to Jerusalem. Determined to enforce discipline, he decided that the women of the army would be left in safety at Acre, except for those performing Opposite: Belvoir (((Fair View}})} standing high<br /> <br /> above the Jordan river valle~ 12 miles (2okm) south <if the Sea of Galilee} was one ofseveral fortresses that guarded the eastern frontier <if the crusader kingdom. Rebuilt by the Hospitallers in 1168-70} it was a concentric castle} with a great deep moat} partly stone-lined} enclosing a mighty curtain-wall 425ft by 330ft (130m by 100m) long. The wall had projecting square towers on heavily splayed bases at each corner and in the middle of each wall. Within the wall was an almost identical enclosure. Belvoir held out against Saladin for a year and a half before capitulating in 1189.<br /> <br /> essential services that would not be performed by men, such as the laundry. He arranged for his supply ships to sail down the coast parallel to the army on the coast road. The army set out in late August. Initially there were problems in keeping the crusader army together as it moved in such a long column, constantly harassed by Saladin's forces. Richard solved this to some degree by putting the military orders, the Templars and Hospitallers, in command of the vanguard and rearguard. Yet the march south, in the heat of late summer, was still very difficult. Many of the rivers had dried up and fresh water was hard to find. The infantry and ordinary pilgrims had to carryall their own possessions and some died on the road, unable to bear the harsh conditions. Food too was short: after one battle Richard arranged for the horses that had been killed to be sold for food. The road itself had become overgrown and was almost impassable. On 7th September<br /> <br /> 1191,<br /> <br /> on tpe road to the town ofArsuf,<br /> <br /> LEGENDS OF THE LIONHEART As a close relative of the queens Sibylla and Isabella<br /> <br /> waded ashore to attack Saladin's forces, followed by his<br /> <br /> ofJerusalem and arguably the closest heir to the throne<br /> <br /> men. These stories were essentially true, and inspired his<br /> <br /> ofJerusalem after them, Richard could claim to be a<br /> <br /> famous nickname, Lionheart. Later writers went so far as<br /> <br /> natural leader of the Third Crusade. His great skill as<br /> <br /> to claim that Richard had killed and eaten a lion, and<br /> <br /> a military strategist and tactician was matched by his<br /> <br /> even that he had devoured the flesh of dead Muslims.<br /> <br /> ability to inspire warriors to follow him, and the image of the king that comes through the contemporary<br /> <br /> Richard's Muslim contemporaries saw him as their greatest enemy. The historian Ibn al-Athir called him<br /> <br /> sources-a figure of reckless courage and great military<br /> <br /> "the most remarkable man of his time for his bravery,<br /> <br /> ability-was certainly one that the king encouraged.<br /> <br /> cunning, activity, and prudence. Because of him the<br /> <br /> Even his notorious fits of rage-such as that which led<br /> <br /> Muslims experienced an unparalleled calamity." Baha<br /> <br /> to the execution of the Muslim hostages-were part of<br /> <br /> ad-Din ibn Shaddad called Richard "accursed," because<br /> <br /> the "superhuman" image that the king created around<br /> <br /> he was such a great enemy of Islam, and emphasized<br /> <br /> himself. Richard's own subjects described exceptional<br /> <br /> his cunning and treachery as well as his judgment and<br /> <br /> deeds: he was the first in every attack and the last to<br /> <br /> military experience. Baha ad-Din's colleague, Imad<br /> <br /> withdraw; he was attacked by a huge wild boar that he<br /> <br /> ad-Din al-Isfahani, declared that Richard could never<br /> <br /> killed singlehandedly; at Jaffa he leapt into the sea and<br /> <br /> be trusted and that his troops were" demonic."<br /> <br /> Saladin's forces attacked Richard's rearguard, but the crusaders drove off the Muslims and kept control of the field. After this, Saladin withdrew and destroyed several key fortifications. The crusaders marched on to Jaffa, from where Richard organized repairs to fortifications controlling the road to Jerusalem. At the same time, he entered into negotiations with Saladin (see<br /> <br /> DIPLOMACY AND NEGOTIATION The conflict between the crusaders and Saladin was partly conducted through diplotnatic channels. Christian sources<br /> <br /> sidebar), but the talks failed because neither side trusted the other,<br /> <br /> are discreet about such negotiations, but<br /> <br /> and because Saladin was also negotiating with Conrad of Montferrat.<br /> <br /> Muslitn writers record that Richard I<br /> <br /> In late November<br /> <br /> 1191<br /> <br /> the army continued its advance toward<br /> <br /> Jerusalem. The crusaders spent Christmas encamped in various castles on the road to the holy city, from which they launched raids across the countryside. The weather was very poor, with heavy rain.<br /> <br /> was in contact with Saladin frotn his first arrival in the East in June<br /> <br /> 1191.<br /> <br /> Local<br /> <br /> nobles, notably Hutnphrey IV ofToron, often acted as his atnbassadors, and Saladin sent his brother, al-Adil, as envoy<br /> <br /> a council of crusader leaders concluded that<br /> <br /> to Richard. The leaders becatne fairly<br /> <br /> even if they captured Jerusalem they would not be able to hold it,<br /> <br /> friendly, although-in spite of legends<br /> <br /> Early in January<br /> <br /> 1192<br /> <br /> since Saladin could easily bring an army up from Egypt to recapture the city. But the crusaders could cut his supply lines by refortifying<br /> <br /> to the contrary-they never tnet. However, the followers of Richard and Saladin feared that their leaders were<br /> <br /> Ascalon, on the coast road from Egypt to Jerusalem. Richard and the<br /> <br /> betraying their principles by negotiating<br /> <br /> other leaders therefore decided to withdraw to Ascalon, a move that<br /> <br /> with the enetny. Each side also suspected<br /> <br /> so distressed many of their followers that they left the crusade. With the crusader threat to Jerusalem withdrawn, Saladin dis-<br /> <br /> the other of tnerely playing for titne. Yet it cannot be denied that Richard's negotiations with Saladin over a long<br /> <br /> missed his army and abandoned his aggressive strategy to concentrate<br /> <br /> period helped hitn to gain a relatively<br /> <br /> on improving the city's defenses. His Muslim enemies within his<br /> <br /> favorable peace treaty in Septetnber<br /> <br /> 1192.<br /> <br /> 92<br /> <br /> THE THIRD CRUSADE: A CAMPAIGN OF EUROPE'S ELITE<br /> <br /> empire were close to revolt, but he could not fight them while the crusaders remained a danger. He could, however, encourage the quarrels between the crusaders, urging Conrad to attack Richard. At Ascalon, meanwhile, Richard supervised the restoration of the city's defenses. But with their immediate goal of Jerusalem removed, the crusaders divided into quarreling factions. Then in April<br /> <br /> 1192<br /> <br /> Richard received alarming news<br /> <br /> from England: his younger brother John, count of Mortain, was plotting to take over his kingdom. Urgently needing to reach a settlement in the East, Richard agreed to set aside Guy of Lusignan's claim to the kingdom of Jerusalem in favor of Conrad. He compensated Guy by selling him Cyprus, where Guy became the first of a long line of Lusignan rulers (see page 168). In the event, however, the marquis was never to be crowned. At the end of April<br /> <br /> 1192<br /> <br /> Conrad<br /> <br /> was returning alone to his quarters in Tyre one night after supper when he was murdered by two Assassins (see sidebar). The French blamed Richard, on the grounds that he wanted to remove a rival. Duke Leopold V of Austria, a cousin of both Conrad and Richard, also blamed the English king. The Muslim historian Ibn alAthir claimed to have heard that Saladin had paid Rashid ad-Din Sinan, the leader of the Assassins' sect, to kill either Richard or Conrad; according to Ibn al-Athir, Scenes from the Maciejowski Bible of ca. 1250) illuminated in Paris and presented to Shah Abbas the Great of Persia by a papal mission. The upper register depicts a battle from the Old Testament) but the combatants are represented as mounted knights of the time the manuscript was produced. Their weapons would have been familiar to combatants of the Third Crusade and include a crossbow being aimed by the soldier in the tower at top right) which in 1139 at the Second Lateran council the Roman Catholic church had outlawed the use of against Christians) calling it ((hatiful to God))-but there was no objection to its use against non- Christians.<br /> <br /> Sinan realized that if Richard died, Saladin would then be free to attack the Assassins, so he arranged the murder of Conrad. However, the true motivation for the assassination remains a mystery. After the marquis's death, Count Henry of Champagne was elected king by the French with the approval of Richard, his uncle. Conrad's widow Isabella, the heiress to the kingdom (see page 94), accepted Henry as her husband and they were married, thereby resolving the succession problem.<br /> <br /> The Crusade Runs Out of MOlnentuln In the meantime, Richard continued to campaign, capturing important fortresses, and in June<br /> <br /> 1192<br /> <br /> the crusaders began a second<br /> <br /> advance on Jerusalem. However, Richard was reluctant to lay siege to the city because there was little water in the area for the besiegers,<br /> <br /> ADVANCE TO JERUSALEM<br /> <br /> Saladin would be able to cut off their supply lines easily, and the<br /> <br /> THE ASSASSINS<br /> <br /> crusader army was too small to be sure of defeating him. Instead<br /> <br /> Metnbers of an extretnist Istnaili Shi'ite<br /> <br /> Richard advised an attack on Egypt, the heart of Saladin's power, but<br /> <br /> sect, the Assassins broke away frotn the<br /> <br /> the French did not agree. The matter was still undecided when the crusaders heard that some of Saladin's supply caravans were<br /> <br /> 93<br /> <br /> dotnination of Fatitnid Egypt in the late eleventh century, under the leadership of aI-Hasan ibn al-Sabbah (died 1124). In 1091<br /> <br /> approaching from Egypt. Richard captured one and distributed the<br /> <br /> they captured the fortress of Alatnut in<br /> <br /> booty, but he then withdrew from the advance on Jerusalem.<br /> <br /> Iran, which becatne their power base, and<br /> <br /> In the city, Saladin and his advisers rejoiced at this reprieve, but the crusaders were despondent at this second disappointment. Many set off for home, and the remaining French crusaders refused any further cooperation with Richard as leader. while Saladin attacked and captured Jaffa, but Richard arrived by ship just in time to prevent Saladin's troops from capturing the citadel. In 1192,<br /> <br /> believed that if they served their leader without question they would be rewarded in paradise, and to this end tnetnbers of<br /> <br /> Richard withdrew to Acre to plan an attack on Beirut. Mean-<br /> <br /> the ensuing battle, on 5th August<br /> <br /> early in the twelfth century sotne settled in the tnountains of north Syria. They<br /> <br /> Richard had only a small<br /> <br /> the sect would seek out and tnurder anyone that their leader cotntnanded. Outsiders called thetn Assassins after hashish, which they were rutnored (falsely) to use in their religious practices. The<br /> <br /> force, but deployed his archers and cavalry so skillfully that Saladin<br /> <br /> Assassins of northern Iran were destroyed<br /> <br /> was unable to dislodge the crusaders and was forced to withdraw.<br /> <br /> in 1256 by the Mongols, and in r272-73<br /> <br /> The battle ofJaffa turned out to be the final engagement of the crusade. After it Richard fell ill, offering his enemy a perfect<br /> <br /> Sultan Baibars of Egypt visited a sitnilar fate on the Assassins in Syria.<br /> <br /> opportunity to attack. But Saladin could not rely on his own hungry and demoralized army to fight, and instead he agreed to make a truce.<br /> <br /> LEGENDS OF SALADIN As a non-Arab (he was a Kurd, from Tikrit in<br /> <br /> had become a Christian on his deathbed.<br /> <br /> Iraq) and an upstart, Saladin was not well<br /> <br /> Later writers added a love affair between<br /> <br /> respected by later Muslim historians until<br /> <br /> Saladin and the queen of France on the<br /> <br /> the twentieth century (see page 209), but his<br /> <br /> Second or Third Crusade.<br /> <br /> reputation in the Christian West was great. He was honored as a just and merciful ruler, kind to the weak, trustworthy, pious, and an excellent warrior. In his own lifetime it was reported that he had been knighted by one of the Frankish nobles of the East, just as if he were a Christian warrior. The next<br /> <br /> Although these stories were inventions they show the respect in which medieval western writers held the Muslim leader, who came to be regarded as the epitome of the chivalrous, cultured, and pious ruler-in implied contrast to the Christian rulers of the West.<br /> <br /> g~neration of Western<br /> <br /> writers claimed that<br /> <br /> Saladin, Sultan of Egypt.<br /> <br /> Saladin was descended<br /> <br /> A detail of a miniature from<br /> <br /> from a French<br /> <br /> an Egyptian manuscript of ca. 1180.<br /> <br /> noblewoman, and that he<br /> <br /> 94<br /> <br /> THE THIRD CRUSADE: A CAMPAIGN OF EUROPE'S ELITE<br /> <br /> DISCORD AND RIVALRY The effectiveness of the Third Crusade was seriously undermined by the personal rivalries between Philip II of France and Richard I of England (see sidebar) and between the local leaders, Guy of Lusignan and Conrad of Montferrat. But these rivalries simply provided a focus for deep rifts that existed within the entire crusading army. To begin with, the crusaders were never united under a single leader. Individual nobles made their own way to the East with their own warriors, and once there they tended to ally with crusaders from their own area, simply because they shared a common language. When Philip II returned to France in August<br /> <br /> 1191,<br /> <br /> Richard I<br /> <br /> became the commander-in-chief of the crusade. However, he could only really rely on his own subjects-the English, Normans, On his return to France) King Philip II invaded Richard I's extensive lands there) and the two former allies remained at warfor the rest of Richard's reign. This scene from a French manuscript of ca. 1325-50) Chronique de St. Denis) depicts Richard attacking Philip's army at Gisors in 11g8.<br /> <br /> Angevins, and Poitevins-to support him. The other groups acknowledged Richard's command only for as long as he could pay them, and when his funds ran low they deserted him. The Italian cities of Genoa and Pisa were fierce competitors in maritime trade and they brought their rivalry to the crusade, supporting opposite sides in any dispute. Chief among these disputes was the rivalry between Guy of Lusignan and Conrad of Montferrat for the kingdom ofJerusalem. Guy had become king only because he had married Sibylla, the heiress to the kingdom. After Sibylla and her<br /> <br /> THE FOUR HUSBANDS OF CliJEEN ISABELLA The youngest child of King Amalric ofJerusalem (died<br /> <br /> 1174)<br /> <br /> and four times married, Isabella or Isabel<br /> <br /> ofJerusalem<br /> <br /> (1172-1205)<br /> <br /> was depicted by Saladin's<br /> <br /> secretary Imad ad-Din as a beautiful, idealized woman, mistreated by the barbarous Christians. With the death of her elder sister, Queen Sibylla, in summer<br /> <br /> 1190,<br /> <br /> Isabella became heiress to the kingdom of<br /> <br /> Jerusalem. In November, crusade leaders opposed to King Guy forced the eighteen-year-old Isabella to divorce her husband Humphrey IV, lord ofToron, and marry<br /> <br /> Bad luck dogged all Isabella's later husbands. Conrad was assassinated before being crowned. Imad ad-Din reported that Henry, count of Champagne, then compelled her to marry him so that he could claim the throne. Five years later Henry died in a fall from a high window. Then Isabella had to marry Amalric of Lusignan, king of Cyprus, who was chosen as king. He died in 1205<br /> <br /> of food poisoning. Isabella died a few months later.<br /> <br /> In<br /> <br /> 1213<br /> <br /> a judicial inquiry into the rights of Isabella<br /> <br /> and Henry's children to inherit Champagne heard<br /> <br /> Marquis Conrad of Montferrat, so that Conrad could<br /> <br /> evidence that she had married Conrad against her will.<br /> <br /> become king. Because Conrad already had two wives<br /> <br /> This meant that her last three marriages were arguably<br /> <br /> and there were no good grounds for Isabella's divorce,<br /> <br /> illegal, and that none of her descendants on the throne<br /> <br /> the clergy and many others condemned the marriage.<br /> <br /> ofJerusalem was truly legitimate.<br /> <br /> DISCORD AND RIVALRY<br /> <br /> 95<br /> <br /> daughters died in the summer of 1190, Conrad controversially<br /> <br /> AN UNEASY ALLIANCE<br /> <br /> married Sibylla's younger half-sister Isabella (see box) and claimed the<br /> <br /> Richard and King Philip II had been allies<br /> <br /> crown. He was supported by Philip II, the powerful dukes of Swabia<br /> <br /> against Richard's father, King Henry II of<br /> <br /> and Austria (successive leaders of the German contingent after the<br /> <br /> England, in an attetnpt to force Henry to<br /> <br /> death of Frederick I), and the Genoese. Guy was supported by<br /> <br /> acknowledge Richard as his heir. Richard had been betrothed to Philip's elder sister<br /> <br /> Richard I (the liege lord of the Lusignans and a cousin of Sibylla) , and<br /> <br /> Alice, but Henry had never allowed the<br /> <br /> the Pisans. Both men had their supporters among the Frankish nobles.<br /> <br /> tnarriage to take place. When Richard<br /> <br /> The dispute seriously hindered the crusade. Almost from his first arrival in the East in 1187, Conrad refused to cooperate with Guy (whom many Franks blamed for the disasters of that year) and negotiated on his own behalf with Saladin. Even when leading crusaders<br /> <br /> becatne king, he and Philip agreed to go on crusade as allies, working together and sharing all their gains. But they quarreled in Sicily when Richard decided to abandon Alice and tnarry Berengaria,<br /> <br /> thought they had persuaded Conrad to assist the crusading effort, he<br /> <br /> daughter of the king of Navarre, whose<br /> <br /> continued to act in his own interests, and not to aid Guy. The dispute<br /> <br /> lands adjoined Richard's territory in<br /> <br /> was eventually decided in Conrad's favor, but he did not live to be crowned (see page 92). Meanwhile, Saladin had his own problems. He usually relied on members of his own family as administrators, but quarreled with his nephew Taqi ad-Din, who left the war. He ran short of money and food for his troops, and at Jaffa on 5th August 1192 his army refused<br /> <br /> Aquitaine. Richard tnarried Berengaria at Cyprus, thereby breaking the alliance with Philip. He then cotnpounded the rift by refusing to give his ally any<br /> <br /> sh~re<br /> <br /> in his<br /> <br /> conquest of Cyprus. According to the contetnporary French writer Rigord, Philip even feared that Richard would try to tnurder hitn. He returned to Paris<br /> <br /> to fight. He could play the crusader factions off against each other,<br /> <br /> soon after Acre fell (see page 87) and then<br /> <br /> but he was not able to defeat them and had to settle for a stalemate.<br /> <br /> invaded Richard's Nortnan lands.<br /> <br /> 96<br /> <br /> THE THIRD CRUSADE: A CAMPAIGN OF EUROPE'S ELITE<br /> <br /> THE END OF THE ENTERPRISE On 2nd September 1192 Richard I and Saladin concluded the treaty ofJaffa. Under its terms, the Franks held the coastline from Jaffa to Tyre, but Saladin retained some towns. The fortifications ofAscalon would be demolished. Christian pilgrims could travel to Jerusalem, and trade could be conducted freely. There would be a truce, on land A disguised Richard I is taken captive (top) and is led before the emperor Henry VI to answerfor the murder oj' Conrad of Moniferrat (bottom); according to the accompanying Latin text, Richard begs Henry for mercy and is released. An illustration from the Liber ad Honorem Augusti (Book in Honor of the Emperor [Henry VI]) by Peter of Eboli, written 1195-9 6.<br /> <br /> and at sea, for eight months and three days that covered the kingdom of Jerusalem, Tripoli, and Antioch. The Franks of the East, including Count Henry of Champagne, the king-elect ofJerusalem following the murder of Conrad, also agreed to this treaty. Many of the crusaders took advantage of the truce to travel to Jerusalem to visit the Holy Sepulcher, the object of their pilgrimage. For security reasons Richard himself did not go, but he sent his friend Hubert Walter, bishop of Salisbury, as his representative. Instead, Richard prepared to depart for home, hoping to return to the East after the truce ended. That same Septem"ber and into October, many crusaders sailed for home. At the end of September, Richard sent his wife Berengaria, his sister Joanna, and their households on ahead of him. He took ship ten days later, but already the winter storms were coming on. Although Berengaria and Joanna reached Italy safely, Richard's ship was forced ashore by bad weather in the Ionian islands. He decided to continue his journey across central Europe by land. Some contemporary accounts state that Richard knew he had enemies in the area and that he duly disguised himself as an ordinary knight. But on reaching Vienna around Christmas 1192 he was recognized and became a prisoner of Duke Leopold V of Austria, who had not forgotten Richard's refusal to give him a share in the booty of Acre. He also blamed Richard for capturing his relatives, the "emperor" Isaac of Cyprus and his wife, and for the murder of Marquis Conrad. Leopold sold Richard to the emperor Henry VI, a political rival to Richard in Europe, and for some months the king's whereabouts were unknown. Then, in spring 1193, he was located near Worms in Germany by two English envoys (not, as legend states, by a minstrel; see box), who received an exorbitant ransom demand of 100,000 marks, roughly 65,000 lbs (29,500kg) of pure silver. The emperor had tried to set a sum that could not be paid, but the English raised it and in February 1194 Richard was freed (see sidebar). It is a tribute to the strong administration bequeathed by his father, King Henry II, that Richard I's government in England continued to operate throughout his long absence and his authority was never<br /> <br /> THE END OF THE ENTERPRISE<br /> <br /> 97<br /> <br /> MINSTRELS According to legend, King Richard I was discovered in an Austrian prison by a minstrel called Blonde!. The story is not true, but it does illustrate Richard's interest in singing and the importance in this period of the minstrel (called a troubadour in<br /> <br /> "They think that they've avoided death<br /> <br /> southern France, a trouvere in northern France, and a<br /> <br /> Who cheat God of their journey.<br /> <br /> minnesinger or minnesdnger in Germany). Most rulers and<br /> <br /> But it is my belief<br /> <br /> prominent nobles had their own court minstrels<br /> <br /> That they are acting against their own interests.<br /> <br /> (minstrel itself is from the Latin ministerialis, "attendant"),<br /> <br /> Whoever takes the cross and does not set out,<br /> <br /> and also composed their own songs. Richard's only<br /> <br /> Will see God appear to him at last<br /> <br /> surviving song complains about the length of his<br /> <br /> When to him the door [of Heaven] is closed,<br /> <br /> captivity and Philip II's invasion of his lands. Most<br /> <br /> Which He opens to His chosen ones."<br /> <br /> familiar to us are the wandering minstrels who traveled from court to court. Friedrich von Hausen, who died on the Third Crusade, wrote a song about those who vowed to go on crusade but did not go:<br /> <br /> A 14th-century English citole) an instrument popular with troubadours and similar to a lute. This example was later converted into a violin.<br /> <br /> In real danger, despite his brother John's plotting. However, King Philip II of France had invaded Richard's lands in Normandy, and a campaign to recover them occupied the rest of Richard's reign until his death in 1199. He was never to return to the East (see page 100). After the departure of the crusaders, Saladin intended to go on<br /> <br /> RANSOM It was a convention of warfare at the<br /> <br /> pilgrimage to Mecca, but then had to postpone his plans because of<br /> <br /> tim.e of the Third Crusade that im.portant<br /> <br /> the need to rebuild Jerusalem and to keep an eye on the Franks of<br /> <br /> prisoners would be held until their<br /> <br /> the East. However, in February 1193 he fell mortally ill and on 4th March 1193 he died. His sons succeeded him in Aleppo, Damascus,<br /> <br /> relatives or vassals paid for their releasethe size of any ransom. being set to reflect the im.portance of the prisoner. Money<br /> <br /> and Cairo, but between 1193 and 1202 Saladin's brother al-Adil over-<br /> <br /> had to be raised by selling property, raising<br /> <br /> threw them and seized power himself (see page 145).<br /> <br /> loans, or taxing tenants. Large ransom.s<br /> <br /> As for the emperor Henry VI, he had not participated In the Third Crusade but in 1195 he began planning a new venture to ful-<br /> <br /> were often paid in instalm.ents, with the prisoner being released after the first paym.ent provided he left hostages as a<br /> <br /> fill the ambitions of his father, Frederick I Barbarossa (see pages 84-<br /> <br /> guarantee. This happened when Richard I<br /> <br /> 85). He pressured the Byzantine emperor Alexius III, brother and<br /> <br /> was released from. captivity by Henry VI<br /> <br /> successor of Isaac II Angelus, into contributing mercenary troops<br /> <br /> in 1194. His hostages included two of his<br /> <br /> that were paid for by a tax that made Alexius highly unpopular-<br /> <br /> nephews and his brother-in-law, as well<br /> <br /> but his regime was saved by the death of Henry on 28th September<br /> <br /> as the archbishop of Coutances and the bishop of Bath. In Novem.ber 1195 Henry<br /> <br /> 1197, before he could set out on crusade. Fellow German crusaders,<br /> <br /> VI let Richard off the sm.all balance of<br /> <br /> though, did reach the East where they recaptured Beirut and Sidon.<br /> <br /> his ransom. and freed the hostages.<br /> <br /> 5 THE<br /> <br /> FOURTH<br /> <br /> CRUSADE<br /> <br /> A TRAGIC MISFIRE THOMAS<br /> <br /> F.<br /> <br /> MADDEN<br /> <br /> A New Pope) a New Crusade<br /> <br /> 100<br /> <br /> venice Joins the Crusade<br /> <br /> 102<br /> <br /> Broken Promises<br /> <br /> 104<br /> <br /> The Conquest An Errand<br /> <br /> of Zara<br /> <br /> of Mercy<br /> <br /> Relations Sour The Sack<br /> <br /> 108<br /> <br /> 110<br /> <br /> of Constantinople<br /> <br /> The Founding<br /> <br /> 106<br /> <br /> of the Latin Empire<br /> <br /> The Spoils of mtr<br /> <br /> 112<br /> <br /> 114 116<br /> <br /> 10 0<br /> <br /> THE F 0 U R THe R USA 0 E: A T RA G I C MIS FIR E<br /> <br /> A NEW POPE, A NEW CRUSADE The failure of the Third Crusade to recapture Jerusalem and recover the relic of the True Cross (see Chapter Four) was a bitter disappointment to European Christians. However, in 1198 a young and energetic pope was elected, and almost immediately he called a new crusade. Pope Innocent III (1198-1216) was convinced that all of Christendom would need to be mobilized for the effort and that those who could not fight should instead fast and pray. The pope also ordered collections for the sake of the crusade to be taken up in A 13th-century fresco of Pope Innocent III in the Sacro Speco monastery at Subiaco near Rome. One of the strongest and most iffective of medieval popes) he intervened throughout Europe to assert papal authority. Innocent's most cherished goal was the restoration ofJerusalem and the True Cross to Christendom.<br /> <br /> every church, and even the clergy and monasteries were instructed to donate a portion of their income. He intended his new crusade to overshadow all others-to succeed where they had failed. Two papal legates were appointed to make the crusade a reality. Cardinal Peter Capuano was sent to France to broker peace between<br /> <br /> King Richard I ("the Lionheart") of England and King Philip II Augustus of France. The task was far from easy: Richard had cut short his involvement in the Third Crusade in part because of Philip's attacks on his dynastic lands in France (see page 95). Now the pope wanted a truce struck despite the fact that Philip still held some of those territories. Richard was so furious when he heard the pope's request that the cardinal fled, fearing the king would carry out his threat to castrate him. In time, though, Richard and Philip agreed to the pope's request and signed a five-year truce. However, in spring 1199 hopes for a new crusade were dealt a blow when Richard died from a crossbow wound during the siege of a castle in France (see box). The other crusade legate, Cardinal Soffredo, was sent to Venice, which indicated that Innocent expected his crusade to follow the example of the previous one and sail directly to the East rather than make the long and dangerous march overland. A large crusade would need a large fleet and the Venetians could supply one. The city's elderly but still capable leader, Doge Enrico Dandolo, suggested that his people might be willing to .';""~ t'. ; ..' help-provided that an army ever materialized. ~f1' ~- >fi(jt€HTiVS'~PS·S€:R.VVS Se.RVORVDl.~l1eCI]S}l.IU .' . . ;r-:PRlc " ~tV lleJ\.il :B~N€inCnl\eG'fJ.m€ VITA ~eRVAHTIBVS··~n.:3~n. 1M1. That, indeed, was the problem. Richard I's death had .:vOO'VW#-!IVLLV ~lb €.S!··ReD~lJ\r1, QYA --riD OP~1tf.v:R ~t~~I~ cast a long shadow over the plan. To dispel it, the pope tAK1TA1I$.J~Q(: I~iI A'TTeND~RTe-~:C.V 011.·CAV~ ~vot~O~I% A~§l~~~:N vJiJ~ ; .M1\1V~]me)1~ S-W-OOHV~RblOmS rRlllOlIDIO rouSecMVI!..ellVe'~U~ sent preachers, such as the German abbot Martin of . 'm ~tI't\r.TlOHe lPm LA.~T@\,.DNO~}{VlJUIm:H€ PR<aei'Q~I!J~'1 rc;"pmlrnrJ.\1~l~ O"R~~.RVA"N"~1)I~ClPLl:NA'TOp~t!Jlet" MOS10LIC'l VOlllS $V:B' Pairis (see sidebar) across Europe to stir up the faithful. ,,'.' rel="nofollow"><br /> <br /> ,',<br /> <br /> "".'-<br /> <br /> ",.. ' .. ' . " . '<br /> <br /> -.<br /> <br /> --';'<br /> <br /> A NEW POPE, A NEW CRUSADE<br /> <br /> 101<br /> <br /> THE DEATH OF THE LIONHEART King Richard I (1189-99), the great champion of the Third Crusade, made no secret of his desire to return to the East, but whether or not he would have joined the next crusade we shall never know. Shortly after making his truce with King Philip II Augustus of France (see main text), Richard made his way to Chalus-Chabrol in the Limousin region, where he besieged a castle held by the rebellious viscount of Limoges. On 26th March 1199, Richard came out of his tent to survey the situation and noticed a defender using a frying pan<br /> <br /> A CRUSADE SERMON<br /> <br /> for a shield, who would occasionally pop his head up to fire off a<br /> <br /> Abbot Martin of the Cistercian abbey<br /> <br /> crossbow shot. Richard applauded the bravery of the man, who<br /> <br /> of Pairis in Alsace not only preached the<br /> <br /> responded by hitting him in the left shoulder. Not wishing to alarm<br /> <br /> Fourth Crusade at the behest of the pope,<br /> <br /> his men, Richard ignored the wound and returned to his tent. A<br /> <br /> but joined it as well. One of his fellow<br /> <br /> surgeon removed the bolt, but the wound became gangrenous and<br /> <br /> tnonks, Gunther, heard Martin's sertnon<br /> <br /> within two weeks the Lionheart was dead. It was a blow to the<br /> <br /> and later wrote it down:<br /> <br /> morale of the burgeoning crusade, as expressed by Gaucelm Faidit in the only surviving lament (planh) by a troubadour for his patron:<br /> <br /> "Today Christ addresses you in his words through tny tnouth. It is he who grieves before you over his wounds. Christ<br /> <br /> "Saracens, Turks, Pagans, and Persians,<br /> <br /> has been expelled frotn his holy place-his<br /> <br /> Who dreaded you more than any man born of woman<br /> <br /> seat of power. He has been exiled frotn<br /> <br /> Will so greatly increase their arrogant attitude<br /> <br /> that city which he consecrated to hitnself<br /> <br /> That the Holy Sepulcher will [only] be conquered much later.<br /> <br /> with his own blood. Oh, the pain! ...The<br /> <br /> But God wills it; for, if he had not wanted this, And if you, Lord, had lived, without fail They would have had to flee Syria. Henceforth there is no hope that they will go there, Kings and princes who might know how to recover it!"<br /> <br /> Holy Land, which Christ itnpressed with his footprints, in which he cured the latne, caused the blind to see, cleansed lepers, raised the dead-that land, I say-has been given over into the hands of the itnpious. Its churches have been destroyed, its shrine polluted, its royal throne and dignity transferred to the gentiles. That tnost sacred and venerable Cross of wood, which<br /> <br /> Their efforts successfully spread pious zeal among commoners and nobility alike. One of those who answered the pope's call was the powerful Count Thibaut (Theobald) of Champagne, whose brother<br /> <br /> was drenched with the blood of Christ, is locked and hidden away by persons to whotn the word of the Cross is foolishness, so that no Christian tnight know what was<br /> <br /> Henry had ruled the kingdom ofJerusalem until 1197 (see page 92).<br /> <br /> done with it or where to look for it.<br /> <br /> On 28th November 1199, Theobald hosted a tournament at his cas-<br /> <br /> Virtually all of our people who used to<br /> <br /> tle at Ecry-sur-Aisne near Rheims. During the knightly revelry, he<br /> <br /> inhabit that frontier have been elitninated,<br /> <br /> announced that he would henceforth place his weapons in the serv-<br /> <br /> either by the enetny's sword or an already prolonged captivity.<br /> <br /> ice of the Lord. He was joined immediately by his cousin, Count<br /> <br /> "And so now, true warriors, hasten to<br /> <br /> Louis of Blois, and the pledge of these two influential men fired the<br /> <br /> help Christ. Enlist in his Christian artny.<br /> <br /> enthusiasm of the nobility. In February 1200 the illustrious Count<br /> <br /> Rush to join the happy ranks. Today I<br /> <br /> Baldwin of Flanders took the cross, together with his wife, Marie, Theobald's sister. The three most powerful lords in France, all still in<br /> <br /> cotntnit you to the cause of Christ. I give hitn into your hands, so to speak, so that you tnight labor to restore hitn to his<br /> <br /> their twenties, were eager to finish the work of the Lionheart in the<br /> <br /> patritnony, frotn which he has been<br /> <br /> East. At last the crusade was coming to life.<br /> <br /> so untnercifully expelled."<br /> <br /> 10 2<br /> <br /> THE F 0 U RTHe R USA 0 E: A T RA G I C MIS FIR E<br /> <br /> VENICE JOINS THE CRUSADE THE SEEDS OF RUIN<br /> <br /> At a meeting at Soissons in Champagne in early<br /> <br /> Noone could see it at the tiOle, but the<br /> <br /> the crusade agreed to follow a strategy proposed earlier by Richard<br /> <br /> contract that was sealed with the Venetians<br /> <br /> I of England (see page 93). The crusaders would sail directly to<br /> <br /> would have disastrous consequences. By<br /> <br /> Egypt, the source of Muslim power in the region: only once Egypt<br /> <br /> greatly overestinlating the size of their forces, the crusade envoys had ordered<br /> <br /> 1200,<br /> <br /> the barons of<br /> <br /> was in Christian hands, they believed, could Jerusalem be made per-<br /> <br /> a fleet that they siOlply could not afford.<br /> <br /> manently safe. Because none of the barons possessed a fleet it would<br /> <br /> This Oliscalculation drove all subsequent<br /> <br /> be necessary to hire vessels. Counts Theobald of Champagne, Louis<br /> <br /> events in the crusade. The crucial portion of the treaty states: "And so the aforesaid envoys requested that we [the doge] provide for you [the<br /> <br /> of Blois, and Baldwin of Flanders each appointed two men and gave them full powers to make contracts in their names with whatever port seemed best. One of these men was Geoffrey ofVillehardouin,<br /> <br /> Frankish crusaders] vessels to transport<br /> <br /> the marshal of Champagne, whose memoirs provide one of the most<br /> <br /> 4,500 well-arnled knights and as Olany<br /> <br /> valuable sources for the crusade.<br /> <br /> horses, and 9,000 squires ...and 20,000 infantry well arOled, with provisions for up to one year, which we pronlised to give to thenl. "Provisions for each and every Olan will be thus: for each Olan six sextaria [110 gallons/soo liters] of bread, flour, grain, and legunles and a half aOlphora [75 gallons/340 liters] of wine. For each horse three Olodia [35 cubic feet/I cubic Oleter] [of grain] according to the Oleasure of Venice, and of water there will be sufficient anlounts. To transport the aforesaid horses we will provide enough horse transport galleys so that they will be sufficiently comfortable. Also we will provide enough vessels to transport the Olen according to our discretion and that of our barons in good faith. "And this aforesaid fleet will be handed over on the next feast of the holy apostles Peter and Paul [29th June 1202] for the h,onor of God and St. Mark the Evangelist and ChristendoOl for up to one year...."<br /> <br /> The envoys selected Venice because it was a great maritime city and had long experience trading in the East. Also, perhaps, there was the fact that the Venetians had already expressed to the pope an interest in joining the enterprise (see page<br /> <br /> 100).<br /> <br /> In Venice the six<br /> <br /> men were welcomed personally by Doge Enrico Dandolo, a man who made up for his complete blindness and extreme old age-he was probably in his nineties-with extraordinary intelligence and energy (see box). The envoys told the doge about the great crusade that was forming across Europe and they begged the Venetians to help avenge the<br /> <br /> VENICE JOINS THE CRUSADE<br /> <br /> injuries of Christ. After negotiations, the Republic of Venice agreed to provide provisions and transport-see sidebar-for one year for 33,500 knights, squires, and footsoldiers in return for 85,000 marks of Cologne, roughly 55,000 lbs (25,000kg) of pure silver. The Venetians further promised to supply fifty manned war galleys at no cost, provided that they received an equal share of the booty. The fleet would be ready to sail on 29thJune 1202.The envoys enthusiastically signed the treaty and the pope ratified it. The fleet that the crusaders had ordered was one of the largest assembled in the period and the citizens ofVenice put enormous resources into the effort-they purchased thousands of tons of provisions, suspended all overseas trade, and built and fitted out war vessels at an amazing rate. Venice met its obligations to the letter; unfortunately, the northern crusaders did not do the same.<br /> <br /> DOGE DANDOLO: HERO OR VILLAIN? Few participants in the Fourth Crusade are as controversial as Doge Enrico Dandolo. A Byzantine s nator, Nicetas Choniates, describes him as "a sly cheat. .. madly thirsting after glory as no other," who diverted the crusade for his own evil ends. For a long time historians tended to accept this judgment, casting Dandolo as a beguiling trickster with no religion save greed. However, modern research has caused historians to revise that view. To begin with, Choniates never met Dandolo and his description is based on little more than conjecture, doubtless colored by his experience of seeing his beloved city of Constantinople sacked (and his own palace destroyed); and most Byzantines were suspicious of Catholics and loathed Italians in general and Venetians in particular. Those who did know the doge spoke very differently. Geoffrey of Villehardouin described him as "very wise, brave, and vigorous," while Robert of Clari judged him "most worthy" and "wise." The Cistercian abbot Martin of Pairis (see page<br /> <br /> 101)<br /> <br /> called Dandolo "perceptive of mind;"<br /> <br /> one who" compensated for physical blindness with a lively intellect ...." The powerful baron Hugh of St. Pol praised the doge, describing him as "prudent, discreet, and skilled in hard decision-making." New research has also shown that Dandolo came from a family known for its piety and commitment to crusading. There is no reason, therefore, to accept Choniates description of the doge's character and motives. Emperor Alexius IVAngelus asks Doge Enrico Dandolo for help to free his father, Isaac II. Andrea Vicentino's painting of 1578 shows the doge as a relatively young man.<br /> <br /> 103<br /> <br /> Opposite: The Bacino San Marco in venice) showing a highly stylized representation of the doge's church if San Marco) visible to the top lift with the four bronze horses that Enrico Dandolo would acquire in Constantinople after the conquest. To the right is the ducal palace. venetian wealth was acquired through trade and commerce at a time when agricultural feudalism dominated. From a French manuscript of The Travels of Marco Polo) ca. 1399.<br /> <br /> 1 04<br /> <br /> THE F 0 U R THe R USA 0 E: A T RA G I C MIS FIR E<br /> <br /> BROKEN PROMISES One of the crusade leaders, Theobald of Champagne, died shortly The crusade sailed out ojVenice in early October 1202) arriving at Zara in late November. The fleet spent the winter there and in spring 1203 they sailed via Dyrrachium (modern-day Durres) to Coifu) where they remained for several weeks. In May the crusaders rounded Cape Malea and entered the Aegean Sea) heading toward the Dardanelles. They finally cast anchor before Constantinople in late June 1203.<br /> <br /> after the treaty with Venice was signed in 1201. Nevertheless, enthusiasm for the crusade remained high in France and Germany. The crusade barons successfully recruited a commander-in-chief for the enterprise in the shape of the powerful Italian magnate Marquis Boniface of Montferrat, whose family had close connections with the crusader states and the Byzantine empire. In June 1202 crusaders began arriving in Venice and setting up camp on the Lido-at the time a largely uninhabited sand bar not far from the city. Exactly as promised by the treaty, on 29th June the Venetians had everything in readiness. Hundreds of manned vessels stood at anchor prepared for departure and tons of provisions were dockside. However, on the Lido only about 11,000 crusaders had arrived-fewer than a third of the projected number. The gap between the size of the army and the size of the fleet spelled trouble. Hoping for late arrivals, the crusaders waited a month. A few more troops came, but not many. By the end ofJuly Doge Dandolo could delay no 10nger.Venice was no place to contain a large feudal army and he insisted that the crusaders pay what they owed so that the fleet could get underway. Yet with only a third of the expected forces, even when the crusaders gave over all the money they had they were still short by 34,000 marks-almost nine tons of pure silver. They simply could not afford the fleet they had ordered. The situation grew increasingly tense, with the crusaders resentful at having to pay for ships and provisions that they did not need while the Venetians were equally upset because the broken promises of the crusaders had cost them dearly in terms of effort and resources. Dandolo diffused the tension by crafting a compromise. Zara (modern Zadar) on the Dalmatian coast had years earlier rebelled against Venice. If the crusaders would help the Venetians to restore the city to obedience, the people of Venice would loan the crusaders 34,000 marks until they could acquire it in booty from the conquest of Egypt. Since it was already too late in the year to sail to Egypt, the crusaders would be able to spend the winter at Zara before departing the following spring. There was only one problem with this idea: Zara was under the protection of King Emeric of Hungary, who had taken the crusader vow himself some years earlier. While Emeric had no intention of joining this particular crusade, he insisted that his lands enjoyed church protection so long as he wore the cross. The pope agreed.<br /> <br /> BROKEN PROMISES<br /> <br /> However, the crusaders only had the Zara option, which offered<br /> <br /> THE FALSE TREATY WITH EGYPT<br /> <br /> both a loan and a place to spend the winter. The alternative was the<br /> <br /> It was a great disappointment to the<br /> <br /> dissolution of the crusade. The barons accepted the compromise.<br /> <br /> Christians of the Holy Land that the<br /> <br /> The papal legate, Cardinal Peter Capuano who had joined the crusade at Venice in late July, was placed in a dilemma. He was aware<br /> <br /> 105<br /> <br /> crusade never arrived to help them. Because Venetians were concerned with commerce, which was generally distrusted at the time,<br /> <br /> that Zara was under papal protection, but he also knew that unless<br /> <br /> they were in some quarters suspected of<br /> <br /> he let the crusaders proceed the compromise would collapse and<br /> <br /> treachery. A late chronicle written in the<br /> <br /> with it the crusade-it called for a little subterfuge. When several churchmen asked him what they should do, Capuano ordered them to remain with the crusade and only when the army was safely at<br /> <br /> crusader kingdom suggested the Venetians had previously made a treaty with the sultan of Egypt to divert the crusade away from his lands. However, no contemporary source<br /> <br /> Zara should they speak out against the plan. By then the Venetians<br /> <br /> mentioned such a treaty and in 1877 the<br /> <br /> would no longer be in a position to refuse the crusaders anything.<br /> <br /> French scholar Gabriel Hanotaux<br /> <br /> Only Dandolo and Capuano knew that the pope had forbidden an attack on Zara, and the legate's silence must have raised the doge's<br /> <br /> demonstrated conclusively that it simply did not exist. Although historians have long ago rejected it, many popular authors continue<br /> <br /> suspicions. Dandolo would not allow any more broken promises and<br /> <br /> to include the fictitious "false treaty" in their<br /> <br /> he informed Capuano that he would be permitted to accompany<br /> <br /> histories of the Fourth Crusade.<br /> <br /> the crusade only if he renounced his legatine authority. Unwilling to do that, and equally unwilling to forbid the attack on Zara while the fleet was still being prepared, Capuano left for Rome. In September<br /> <br /> 1202<br /> <br /> the aged and blind Dandolo took the cross<br /> <br /> himself, vowing to lead the Venetians on their holy mission. The magnificent fleet, consisting of approximately fifty large transport ships, 100<br /> <br /> horse transport galleys, and sixty war galleys, sailed out of the<br /> <br /> Venetian lagoon in early October. At last the crusade was underway.<br /> <br /> venice was a city of merchants. Its wealth derived from a lucrative trade with numerous cities in the eastern Mediterranean and this affiuence resulted in opulent buildings and decoration. This late 16thcentury Flemish view shows St. Mark's square and the two columns representing the city's patron saints} Theodore and Mark (symbolized by the lion).<br /> <br /> 106<br /> <br /> THE F 0 U R THe R USA 0 E: A T RA G I C MIS FIR E<br /> <br /> THE CONQ!JEST OF ZARA On 11th November 1202 the crusaders landed at Zara on the Adriatic and quickly made camp. The citizens saw the large army and its siege engines and knew that resistance was impossible, so they promptly sent out a delegation offering to surrender the city if their lives were spared. This was agreeable to Dandolo, who asked the delegates to remain in his tent while he went to confer with the barons. Doge Enrico Dandolo and his crusaders storming the city of Zara in 1202) a painting by Andrea Vicentino (1542-1617). Prior to the assault) the inhabitants had draped crosses on the walls to signify that theirs was a Christian city) protected by the pope-but it made no difference to the attackers. Within a week the crusaders had stormed Zara and helped themselves to anything of value. Although the Franks were remorseful) the Venetians were not and continued to believe that they had acted within their rights.<br /> <br /> In Dandolo's absence, Simon de Montfort the Elder (1160-1218), the leader of a small faction of crusaders opposed to the detour to Zara, informed the Zarans that the crusade leaders had a letter from Pope Innocent III threatening to excommunicate anyone who raised a sword against Zara. Simon insisted that if the citizens could defend themselves against the Venetians they would be safe from the Frankish (non-Venetian) crusaders, who would not disobey the pope. The delegates thanked Simon and returned to their city. When Dandolo and the crusader barons returned they were outraged by these actions. A peaceful surrender had been thwarted. The pope's stern letter forced the crusade's leaders to choose between excommunication, for attacking a city under church protection, and the end of the crusade. Believing that God could not desire the latter, most chose to keep their word to the Venetians as a matter of honor. Simon and his men withdrew from the<br /> <br /> ~rmy,<br /> <br /> but<br /> <br /> the majority of the crusaders attacked Zara, capturing it on 24th November-as a result, the Fourth Crusade was excommunicated. The Frankish leaders sent a delegation to Innocent III, begging forgiveness. He granted them the absolution they sought, but reaffirmed the excommunication of the Venetians. The pope was now convinced that the Venetians had deliberately taken over the crusade for their own ends. In a letter to the crusade leaders he said that once the Franks had been delivered to the Holy Land, they should have nothing more to do with the Venetians. The crusade had other problems too, with huge debts, no money, and a shortage of provisions. According to the contract (see page 103), Venice supplied each man with enough to sustain him at low activity levels for about nine months. Since they had begun eating their provisions in late June 1202 the crusaders would have been out of food by late March 1203, when the fleet was again ready to sail from Zara. There were insufficient resources to keep the army and fleet together, let alone support it on its mission to fight in Egypt. It was at this moment that a group of envoys arrived at Zara led by a Byzantine prince, Alexius Angelus, who had recently fled to the<br /> <br /> THE CON QU EST 0 F Z A RA<br /> <br /> West. His father, the emperor Isaac II Angelus, had been blinded and deposed by his own brother, Alexius III, in<br /> <br /> 1195.<br /> <br /> The young man<br /> <br /> asserted that he, not his usurping uncle, was the rightful emperor of Constantinople. If the crusaders would help him to his throne he would provide them with food, pay them their crusade with<br /> <br /> 10,000<br /> <br /> 200,000<br /> <br /> silver marks, join<br /> <br /> soldiers, place a permanent garrison in the<br /> <br /> Holy Land, and restore the obedience of the Greek church to Rome. For the crusaders this offer was extremely attractive. But it would, of course, necessitate a further diversion of the troubled crusade.<br /> <br /> VENICE AND THE PAPACY The excommunication of Venice on the Fourth Crusade marked the end of an exceptionally close relationship with the papacy. Venetians did most of their business in the East, but remained devoted to the church of Rome, supporting it during various disputes. In<br /> <br /> 1°77,<br /> <br /> Pope Gregory VII spoke of the "uniquely close<br /> <br /> relationship" between Venice and Rome, and in<br /> <br /> 1177<br /> <br /> the republic<br /> <br /> helped to end a struggle between the pope and the German emperor. Venetians were also strong supporters of the crusades-indeed, no state in Europe so often and so vigorously took up the cross.Venice's fleet was the largest single contribution to the First Crusade, and in 1122<br /> <br /> the doge in person led thousands of Venetians to the Holy Land,<br /> <br /> where they crushed the Fatimid navy and helped to conquer Tyre. That Innocent III should turn to Venice for help with the Fourth Crusade was unsurprising, but circumstances outside anyone's control made him regret that choice.<br /> <br /> 10 7<br /> <br /> These mosaics in the basilica of St. John the Evangelist in Ravenna) Italy) depict the conquest of Zara ~eft} and a Venetian galley with a seaman blowing a horn (above). They are the only surviving artistic representations of the Fourth Crusade from the Middle Ages. The crusade is depicted in the mosaics from a decidedly Venetian point of vie~ closely following the story told by the Venetian Martino da Canal in the 13th century.<br /> <br /> 108<br /> <br /> THE F 0 U RTHe R USA 0 E: A T RA G I C MIS FIR E<br /> <br /> AN ERRAND OF MERCY There was considerable debate among the crusaders concerning the offer made by Alexius Angelus. The majority of the troops wanted no more detours or delays. They had made vows to fight for Christ, not a Byzantine pretender. However, the crusade leaders favored helping the young man. They saw that with only a few months left on the fleet's lease, no food, and crushing debt, the crusade simply could not survive without replenishing its resources. It would have made little sense to transport an impoverished army directly to the East. They also saw the detour to Constantinople as an errand of mercy to free the Byzantine people from the oppression of a tyrant. Alexius Angelus assured them that his uncle, the emperor, was so hated in the city that he would be overthrown as soon as the cruCrusaders arriving at the lqnd and sea walls of Constantinople,from a Venetian manuscript (ca. 1330) if La Conquete de Constantinople by Geoffrey ifVillehardouin, who took part in the Fourth Crusade. When the Venetian force's entry into the city was pushed back by the imperial bodyguard, they set fire to a number of buildings and burned a large section if an aJfiuent suburb. It was a harbinger if worse destruction to come.<br /> <br /> saders arrived with the rightful heir. The crusade leaders accepted, informing the pope shortly afterward: "lacking all foodstuffs and supplies, we appeared to be bearing a burden to the Holy Land ... rather than bringing some sort of aid; nor did we believe that, given such extreme poverty, we could effectively land in the territory of the Saracens."When the rank-and-file soldiers learned of the leaders' action, many of them abandoned the crusade, making their own way to the East to fulfill their vows. Only<br /> <br /> AN ERRAND OF MERCY<br /> <br /> by swearing that the stop in Constantinople would be brief were the leaders able to win the grudging acceptance of the other crusaders. The crusade left Zara in April 12°3, made its way through the Aegean and arrived at Constantinople in late June. Mismanagement had reduced Byzantium's once proud navy to a few worm-eaten vessels incapable of challenging the enormous crusade fleet. In several dramatic displays, the crusaders let the people of Constantinople know that they came as friends, having brought them their rightful lord. The Byzantines responded with insults, rocks, and bare backsides. They wanted nothing to do with the Westerners' pretender. Reluctantly, the crusaders at last accepted that they would have to attack. The massive city had enormous fortifications that no enemy had ever breached before and a garrison three times the size ofthe crusader force. Nevertheless, on 17 th July the crusaders attacked the northeastern area of the city, the Franks assaulting the land wall and the Venetians the seawall. After fierce fighting the Venetians captured a portion of the wall and entered a short distance before being pushed back by the elite imperial bodyguard. Discontent at Alexius Ill's ineffectiveness made him fearful of a coup and he fled. His brother, Isaac II Angelus, was freed and restored to the throne. He ordered the gates to be opened so that Prince Alexius could enter. The crusaders were dutifully acclaimed as heroes and within days the young man was crowned co-emperor Alexius IV<br /> <br /> THE MAJESTY OF CONSTANTINOPLE Few of the Frankish crusaders had any experience<br /> <br /> eyes-and the height and the length of that city which<br /> <br /> of a city like Constantinople. The ten largest cities<br /> <br /> above all others was sovereign." The poor knight Robert<br /> <br /> of western Europe could have fitted easily within its<br /> <br /> of Clari was no less impressed:" It was reckoned that<br /> <br /> walls. The enormous fortifications, massive churches,<br /> <br /> there were in the city a good thirty thousand priests,<br /> <br /> and magnificent palaces were an awe-inspiring sight.<br /> <br /> both monks and others. Now about the rest of the<br /> <br /> Some of the crusaders remembered their first<br /> <br /> Greeks, high and low, rich and poor, about the size<br /> <br /> impressions of the great city and have left a record.<br /> <br /> of the city, about the palaces and the other marvels that<br /> <br /> Geoffrey de Villehardouin, the marshal of Champagne,<br /> <br /> are there, we shall leave off telling you. For no man on<br /> <br /> wrote: "Those who had never before seen<br /> <br /> earth, however long he might have lived in the city,<br /> <br /> Constantinople looked upon it very earnestly, for they<br /> <br /> could number them or recount them to you. And if<br /> <br /> never thought there could be in all the world so rich a<br /> <br /> anyone should recount to you the hundredth part of<br /> <br /> city; and they marked the high walls and strong towers<br /> <br /> the richness and the beauty and the nobility that was<br /> <br /> that enclosed it round about, and the rich palaces, and<br /> <br /> found in the abbeys and in the churches and in the<br /> <br /> mighty churches-of which there were so many that no<br /> <br /> palaces and in the city, it would seem like a lie and<br /> <br /> one would have believed it who had not seen it with his<br /> <br /> you would not believe it."<br /> <br /> 109<br /> <br /> 11 0<br /> <br /> THE F 0 U RTHe R USA 0 E: A T RA G I C MIS FIR E<br /> <br /> RELATIONS SOUR All seemed to be going well as the newly crowned emperor Alexius<br /> <br /> CONSTANTINOPLE: A TOURISTS' VIEW<br /> <br /> IV began fulfilling his promises to the crusaders. He ordered the<br /> <br /> Before moving to Galata, the men of the<br /> <br /> patriarch of Constantinople to submit to the authority of the pope<br /> <br /> Fourth Crusade had the opportunity to tour Constantinople. Escorted by Greek guides, they were s-hown exotic wonders<br /> <br /> in Rome and he paid the crusaders half of the<br /> <br /> 200,000<br /> <br /> marks he had<br /> <br /> promised. This in turn allowed the crusaders to pay their debt to the<br /> <br /> and told tall tales. Here are just a few of<br /> <br /> Venetians and even have a little money left over. But Alexius began<br /> <br /> the "marvels" recorded by the knight<br /> <br /> to experience difficulty in coming up with the other half. Among<br /> <br /> Robert of Clari:<br /> <br /> the ordinary people of Constantinople anti-Western hatred was<br /> <br /> "Now there was elsewhere in the city a gate which was called the Golden Mantle.<br /> <br /> already commonplace, and the emperor's attempts to raise the large<br /> <br /> On this gate there was a golden globe<br /> <br /> sum of money to pay the crusaders only inflamed that hatred and<br /> <br /> which was made by such enchantment<br /> <br /> made him increasingly unpopular.<br /> <br /> that the Greeks said as long as it was there no thunderbolt would fall in the city.... There was an open place Games of the Emperor<br /> <br /> called the Around this<br /> <br /> To give himself sufficient time to raise the additional funds and help safeguard against a palace coup, Alexius asked the crusaders to spend the winter at Constantinople. To compensate them for the lost<br /> <br /> place there were fully thirty rows of seats<br /> <br /> time, the emperor agreed to extend the lease on the Venetian fleet<br /> <br /> or forty, on which the Greeks used to<br /> <br /> for an additional year at his own expense.<br /> <br /> mount to watch the games ... Along this open place there was a wall which was a good fifteen feet [4.6m] high and ten feet [3m] wide. Upon this wall there were<br /> <br /> Reluctantly, the crusaders agreed to stay. The emperor moved them out of the main city to the suburb of Galata just across the harbor. However, as the months passed, Alexius realized that further<br /> <br /> figures of men and women, and of horses<br /> <br /> payments to the crusaders would make him so hated by his own<br /> <br /> and oxen and camels and bears and lions<br /> <br /> people that he would certainly be overthrown. The anti-Western<br /> <br /> and many other kinds of animals, all made<br /> <br /> feeling was now at a fever pitch, particularly after a devastating fire<br /> <br /> of copper, and all so well made and<br /> <br /> set by Westerners in the main city in the summer of 1203 (see box).<br /> <br /> formed so naturally that there is no master workman in heathendom or Christendom so skillful as to be able to make figures as good as these. And formerly they used to play by enchantment, but they do not play any longer."<br /> <br /> The size and magnificence of Constantinople was beyond the conception of most western Europeans. This illustration from the Luttrell Psalter of ca. 1340 depicts Constantinople as an English walled city) with church-complete with weathercock-in the center, thatched houses) inns) and alehouses. At each end is a towered gateway and portcullis. On the left) musicians and garlanded dancers emerge from the gates) watched from the battlements by a lady and four men.<br /> <br /> RELATIONS SOUR<br /> <br /> THE GREAT FIRE On 19th August 1203 Flemish, Pisan, and Venetian renegades crossed the Golden Horn and set fire to a mosque. A strong wind whipped the blaze into a massively destructive fire that cut a wide path across the great city's most populated and opulent areas, making thousands homeless and inflicting staggering material losses. Nicetas Choniates, whose own palace was destroyed in the inferno, wrote that "while in the past many conflagrations had taken place in the City ... the fires ignited at this time proved all the others to be but sparks." Looking at it from across the harbor, the crusade leaders were horrified. Geoffrey de Villehardouin recorded that they were" extremely grieved and filled with pity, seeing the great churches and the rich palaces melting and collapsing, the great streets filled with merchandise burning in the flames, but they could do nothing." A view of ConstantinopleJjrom an Ottoman manuscript of 1537·<br /> <br /> Realizing that they would· never be paid their due, the crusaders formally defied the emperor and began pillaging his lands to "pay ourselves," as Robert of Clari put it. With no support either from his own people or the crusaders, in January<br /> <br /> 1204<br /> <br /> Alexius was over-<br /> <br /> thrown, imprisoned, and killed by a palace functionary, who took the crown himself as Alexius V Mourtzouphlus.<br /> <br /> 111<br /> <br /> 11 2<br /> <br /> THE F 0 U R THe R USA 0 E: A T RA G 1C MIS FIR E<br /> <br /> THE SACK OF CONSTANTINOPLE "SACRED SACRILEGE"<br /> <br /> The death ofAlexius IV put the crusaders in a difficult situation. In<br /> <br /> Constantinople suffered the loss of countless<br /> <br /> addition to their food and money problems they now had no fleet<br /> <br /> relics during the sack of 1204. Most writers<br /> <br /> (the lease having long since expired) and were in hostile land. In short,<br /> <br /> either ignored the theft or explained it<br /> <br /> they could not go forward, backward, or stay where they were.<br /> <br /> away. One exception is the account of the actions of Abbot Martin of Pairis (see page<br /> <br /> The knights were informed by their clergy that the sins of the<br /> <br /> during the sack, as recorded by<br /> <br /> Greeks against the arn1.Y of Christ and His Church had made them<br /> <br /> Gunther, a monk in Martin's abbey:<br /> <br /> a legitimate target of a crusade. Although this ruling was at variance<br /> <br /> 101)<br /> <br /> "While the victors were rapidly<br /> <br /> with the pope's instructions, the clergy saw no other option. The<br /> <br /> plundering the conquered city, which<br /> <br /> rank-and-file crusaders were told that they would not be leaving for<br /> <br /> they had made their own by right of battle, Abbot Martin began to think about his own booty and, lest he remain empty-<br /> <br /> the Holy Land in the spring. Their mission was now at Byzantium. On 9th April 1204 the crusaders launched a seaborne attack on<br /> <br /> handed while everyone else got rich, he<br /> <br /> the harbor walls, which was repulsed. They tried again on 12thApril,<br /> <br /> resolved to use his own consecrated hands<br /> <br /> this time with more success. The fall of the city was the direct result<br /> <br /> for pillage. But because he thought it improper to touch secular spoils with<br /> <br /> of the actions of one man. During the assault a small group of men<br /> <br /> those same hands, he began to plan how<br /> <br /> managed to land on the shore below the seawalls and dig out a small<br /> <br /> he might scrape together for himself some<br /> <br /> hole in a walled-up gate. Despite the presence of a large number of<br /> <br /> portion of those relics of the saints, which<br /> <br /> Greek soldiers on the other side, one of the men, a priest named<br /> <br /> he knew to be in great quantity there....<br /> <br /> Aleaumes of Clari, demanded to squeeze through the hole and be<br /> <br /> Martin, thinking it improper to commit sacrilege except in a holy cause, sought out a more remote spot, where the very sanctity of the place seemed to promise that it was possible to find there those objects he so greatly desired. [Martin then threatened an old priest, who showed him a chest filled with relics.] On seeing it, the abbot hurriedly and greedily thrust in both hands, and, as he was girded for action, both he and the chaplain filled the folds of their habits with sacred sacrilege."<br /> <br /> Right: The conquest of Constantinople; a mosaic<br /> <br /> in the basilica of St. John the Evangelist) Ravenna) Italy. Feelings were running high on either side by the time hostilities erupted. The crusaders were disgusted with the Byzantines) who they believed had failed to keep their promises and had murdered their righiful lord. Nicetas Choniates tells of the bands of Greek captives whose hands were bound before they were led out of the city. Opposite: A crusader wields a spear; a mosaic in the basilica of St.John the Evangelist) Ravenna.<br /> <br /> THE SACK OF CONSTANTINOPLE<br /> <br /> the first to enter the city. His brother, the chronicler Robert of Clari, tried to stop him but he wriggled through, drew his sword and ran, roaring, toward the Greeks-who panicked and fled, triggering a chain reaction of abandonment across the city's fortifications. Soon the city's defenses had collapsed utterly. That night, Alexius V Mourtzouphlus did his best to convince his people to fight. But the Greeks could not accept the idea of warfare inside the walls of the great city. They preferred to offer the crown to the chief of the crusaders, Boniface of Montferrat. Mourtzouphlus fled and on the morning of 13th April 1204 the city was formally offered to Boniface, He wanted nothing more than to accept it, but he could not, because in March the crusade leaders had agreed to elect a new emperor after the city had been taken and secured. The Byzantines, it seems, had miscalculated.What they had read as a coup by the crusaders was, in fact, an outright war of conquest. Presented with one of the richest cities in the world, now completely defenseless, the crusaders embarked upon three days of looting and destruction. By medieval standards, it was acceptable to sack a city that had resisted capture. The crusaders had previously sworn to leave Byzantine churches, monasteries, and women unmolested, but very few of them kept their oaths. The sack of Constantinople, a city crammed with ancient treasures and holy relics, was one of the most destructive and profitable in history. In time, a feeling of betrayal would manifest itself among the Greeks, thus slamming shut a door between the Catholic west and the Orthodox east that still remains closed today.<br /> <br /> THE DECLINE OF CONSTANTINOPLE Beautiful, wealthy, and populous, Constantinople was<br /> <br /> becoming in stature; now your luxurious garments and<br /> <br /> by far the greatest city in Christendom. It is ironic that<br /> <br /> elegant royal veils are rent and torn; your flashing eye has<br /> <br /> its ruin was caused by an army of Christians who had set<br /> <br /> grown dark and you are like an aged furnace-woman all<br /> <br /> out to save it. The city endured great physical damage at<br /> <br /> covered with soot."<br /> <br /> the hands of the crusaders. Three fires had raged across<br /> <br /> In the decades that followed the decline of the<br /> <br /> one-sixth of the city's area and destroyed approximately<br /> <br /> city continued. The Latin emperors (see pages<br /> <br /> one in three of its dwellings. During the chaos of the<br /> <br /> had no funds to repair or maintain the city's amenities,<br /> <br /> sack, great works of ancient art were destroyed or melted<br /> <br /> which fell into disuse and decay. In<br /> <br /> down for coin. The Byzantine senator Nicetas Choniates<br /> <br /> of Constantinople stood at more than<br /> <br /> lamented, "0 City, formerly enthroned on high, striding<br /> <br /> the Byzantines reclaimed the city in<br /> <br /> far and wide, magnificent in comeliness and more<br /> <br /> only about<br /> <br /> 35,000<br /> <br /> inhabitants left.<br /> <br /> 1203<br /> <br /> 114-115)<br /> <br /> the population<br /> <br /> 500,000;<br /> <br /> 1261<br /> <br /> when<br /> <br /> there were<br /> <br /> 113<br /> <br /> 114<br /> <br /> THE FOURTH CRUSADE: A TRAGIC MISFIRE<br /> <br /> THE FOUNDING OF THE LATIN EMPIRE The conquest of Constantinople shattered the Byzantine empire, which the crusades had originally been designed to save. Imperial claimants quickly arose in various parts of Greece and Asia Minor, carving out for themselves their own governments-in-exile. The crusaders in Constantinople fashioned themselves as heirs of the empire, having seized control of its capital city. The crusade leaders had agreed in March 1204 that a committee of Venetians and Franks would elect a new emperor after the city's fall. In addition, the rank-and-file crusaders agreed to remain to defend the new Latin empire for one year in order to fulfill their crusade vows. Contentiously, the electoral committee passed over the official leader of the crusade, Marquis Boniface of Montferrat, in favor of Count Baldwin of Flanders. In May 1204 the count was crowned emperor in the church of Hagia Sophia (see box). Constantinople<br /> <br /> ====.111~<br /> <br /> and the empire were then divided up, with one-quarter (twoeighths) going directly to the emperor, three-eighths to the Franks,<br /> <br /> and three-eighths to the Venetians (who also bought the island of Crete from Boniface). The final division, made on 1st October, was a paper exercise because the territories still had to be conquered. The crusaders then set out in all directions to seize Greek lands. The departure of most of the crusade's forces left Constantinople in a vulnerable position that did not go unnoticed by its enemies.<br /> <br /> AN IMPERIAL CORONATION On 16th May 1204 Baldwin of Flanders was crowned<br /> <br /> serve as a clasp they hung about his neck a very<br /> <br /> the first emperor of the Latin empire of Constantinople.<br /> <br /> rich jewel which the emperor Manuel had once bought<br /> <br /> The ceremony in Hagia Sophia, the great church built<br /> <br /> for 62,000 marks. When they had crowned him, they<br /> <br /> by the emperor Justinian in the sIxth century (see<br /> <br /> seated him on a high throne, and he was there while<br /> <br /> illustration), was a mixture of both western and eastern<br /> <br /> the mass was sung, and he held in one hand his scepter<br /> <br /> practices that combined the magnificent pomp and<br /> <br /> and in the other hand a golden globe with a cross on<br /> <br /> splendor of a traditional Byzantine coronation with<br /> <br /> it. And the jewels which he was wearing were worth<br /> <br /> Latin rites. Robert of Clari, who was in attendance,<br /> <br /> more than the treasure of a rich king would make.<br /> <br /> described the spectacle:<br /> <br /> When the mass was heard, they brought him a white<br /> <br /> "When the emperor was come before the altar, he<br /> <br /> horse on which he mounted. Then the barons took<br /> <br /> knelt down ... then all the bishops went and took hold of<br /> <br /> him back to his palace of Boukoleon and seated him<br /> <br /> the crown all together and blessed it and made the sign<br /> <br /> on the throne of [the Roman emperor] Constantine<br /> <br /> of the cross on it and put it on his head. And then to<br /> <br /> [the Great]."<br /> <br /> Ioannitsa, king of the Vlachs and Bulgarians, made an alliance with Byzantine lords in Thrace aimed at overthrowing the crusaders.<br /> <br /> Mter Ioannitsa captured Adrianople (present-day Edirne), Emperor Baldwin I rode out with Hugh of St. Pol and about 140 other knights to take it back. But in a rout of the Westerners, Hugh was killed and Baldwin taken prisoner and later killed. Baldwin's brother Henry was named regent and he later took the imperial crown. In April<br /> <br /> 1205<br /> <br /> the Fourth Crusade finally ended and most of the<br /> <br /> ordinary crusaders went horne, leaving the leaders with a mere skeleton force to hold on to Constantinople. The following month Doge Enrico Dandolo died and was buried in Hagia Sophia. Pope Innocent III had opposed the diversion of the crusade to Constantinople, but he accepted its conquest in the hope that the Latin empire would bring together eastern and western Christians against a cornmon Muslim foe. But it was not to be, because the creation of the Latin empire on the ruins of the Byzantine world only drove Greeks and Latins further apart. Always teetering on the brink of destruction, the new empire merely siphoned off European crusade energy that would otherwise have been used in the Holy Land.<br /> <br /> Above: The great domed church of Hagia Sophia<br /> <br /> (Holy Wisdom) was designed by its architects) Isidorus of Miletus and Anthemius ofTralles) to allow a mystical quality of light to illuminate its interior. The church was built from 532 to 537 by the Byzantine emperorJustinian (527-65) on the site of a church that had twice burnt down. The former seat of the patriarch of Constantinople) the Hagia Sophia once had a personnel of 600) including 80 priests. Following the conquest of Constantinople by the Ottoman Turks in 1453 the church became a mosque) and today it is a museum. Opposite: Baldwin of Flanders (1171- 1205)<br /> <br /> is crowned Baldwin I) the first Latin emperor, in 1204 (top). This historiated initial UR shows both his coronation and his generosity toward a woman sending her child off to the crusades. From a 13thcentury French manuscript of the history of the crusades by William ofTyre (ca. 1130-86). JJ<br /> <br /> 116<br /> <br /> THE FOURTH CRUSADE: A TRAGIC MISFIRE<br /> <br /> THE SPOILS OF WAR "The booty gained [from Constantinople] was so great that<br /> <br /> famous item carried back to Venice is the Quadriga, a group of<br /> <br /> none could tell you the end of it: gold and silver, and vessels<br /> <br /> four bronze horses originally mounted over the starting gates of<br /> <br /> and precious stones, and samite, and cloth of silk, and robes vair<br /> <br /> the hippodrome, where chariot races were held. It is ironic that<br /> <br /> and grey, and ermine, and every choicest thing found upon the<br /> <br /> in a city without horses these gilded steeds became the symbol<br /> <br /> earth. And well does Geoffrey of Villehardouin, the marshal of<br /> <br /> of Venetian power for centuries.<br /> <br /> Champagne, bear witness, that never,<br /> <br /> Material riches were not the only loot; as Abbot Martin of<br /> <br /> since the world was created, had so<br /> <br /> Pairis makes clear (see page 112), the crusaders also took count-<br /> <br /> much booty been won in any city."<br /> <br /> less religious relics. Although, from a medieval perspective, relic<br /> <br /> Villehardouin's assessment was no exaggeration. Constantinople was a wealthy place and within its walls were the riches of an empire. However, few of the crusaders had much interest in the artistry of exquisite chalices and other ecclesiastical items, preferring the monetary value of their gold and precious gems. Nicetas Choniates, a Byzantine senator heartbroken at the destruction, left depictions of items<br /> <br /> theft was not necessarily wrong, since it was generally believed that relics could only be stolen if the holy figure wished them to be, many of Europe's most famous relics were looted in 1204. The supposed head ofJohn the Baptist, pieces of the True Cross, hair of the Virgin, and innumerable body parts of various saints went westward. Other relics were later sold by the Latin emperors of Constantinople-in 1240 King Louis IX of France purchased the Crown ofThorns in this manner and built the Sainte-Chapelle in Paris to house it. The Shroud ofTurin was<br /> <br /> such as a monumental statue of the Greek goddess Hera,<br /> <br /> also almost certainly taken during the sack of Constantinople.<br /> <br /> whose "head could barely be carted off by four yokes of oxen."<br /> <br /> Robert of Clari recorded that there was a church" called My<br /> <br /> The Venetians had a greater appreciation for Byzantine<br /> <br /> Lady Saint Mary of Blachernae, where was kept the shroud in<br /> <br /> culture. Greek artists and sculptors had probably worked on<br /> <br /> which Our Lord had been wrapped, which stood up straight<br /> <br /> Venice's great church of San Marco (completed in 1071),<br /> <br /> every Friday so that the features of Our Lord could be plainly<br /> <br /> which, with its five domes, rich mosaics, and Greek-cross plan,<br /> <br /> seen there. And no one, either Greek or French, ever knew<br /> <br /> is notably Byzantine in style-and in San Marco's treasury one<br /> <br /> what became of this shroud after the city was taken." It<br /> <br /> can view the rich chalices, icons, crowns, and other items<br /> <br /> reappeared, in the West, in 1357.<br /> <br /> looted from Constantinople. However, these are but a small part of the treasures that Doge Enrico Dandolo acquired. The entire church of San Marco was decorated inside and out with Byzantine spoils, including most of the marbles and relief sculptures now found in the basilica. On a corner of the church fayade stand four stone figures of emperors that once adorned the great Philadelphion Square in Constantinople, symbols of the imperial tetrarchy instituted by Emperor Diocletian. But the most Top: A Byzantine chalice adorned with pearls and jewels) now in the church of San Marco. Right: A detail showing two of the Four Horses of San Marco) magnificent gilded bronze statuary dating from the 2nd or jrd century CE. Opposite: A 10th-century Byzantine plaque with gold) enamel) and precious stones) depicting the Crucifixion.<br /> <br /> THE SPOILS OF WAR<br /> <br /> 117<br /> <br /> 6 CRUSADES<br /> <br /> IN<br /> <br /> EUROPE<br /> <br /> INFIDELS, PAGANS, AND<br /> <br /> HERETICS WILLIAM L. URBAN<br /> <br /> The Reconquista The Fruits of Three Faiths<br /> <br /> 120<br /> <br /> Thomas E Madden<br /> <br /> 124<br /> <br /> The Wendish Crusade<br /> <br /> 126<br /> <br /> Crusades in the Eastern Baltic<br /> <br /> 128<br /> <br /> The Albigensian Crusade<br /> <br /> 132<br /> <br /> Popular Crusades Political Crusades The Hussite Crusade<br /> <br /> 138<br /> <br /> 120<br /> <br /> CRUSADES IN EUROPE: INFIDELS, PAGANS, AND HERETICS<br /> <br /> THE RECONQlJISTA Before the First Crusade to the East, the church had lent its support to Christian rulers who fought wars of conquest and conversion against non-Christians in Europe. The oldest of these conflicts was against the Muslim rulers of Spain and Portugal and is known by the Spanish term Reconquista (Reconquest). It began nearly three centuries before the First Crusade and ended in 1492 with the fall of Granada. If the name suggests a systematic advance against the Iberian Muslims, or Moors, in reality it was a piecemeal, intermittent process of wars and frontier skirmishes. At times, the personal ambitions of individual rulers were more important than religion. In 711 Tariq ibn Ziyad, the Muslim governor ofTangiers, landed at Gibraltar Oabal aI-Tariq, Tariq's Mountain) and overthrew the Christian kingdom established by the Visigoths in the fifth century. By 716 all of the peninsula was in Muslim hands except for parts of This painted ceiling in the Hall of the Kings in the 14th-century Alhambra palace) Granada) depicts scenes of chivalry and romance) perhaps legends of the Muslim kings of Granada. The scenes were painted by Christian (possibly Italian) artists) probably owing to Islamic strictures against depicting living beings. The small kingdom of Granada was the last Muslim territory in Spain) falling to the Christians in 1492.<br /> <br /> the far north and northwest. Muslim forces crossed the Pyrenees into Gaul (France), and in 732 a raiding party reached Poitiers on the Loire, but it was repelled by the Franks under Charles Martel. After the bloody overthrow of the Umayyad caliphs in Damascus in 750 (see page 21), the last surviving Umayyad prince,Abd alRahman, fled to Spain and.in 756 established his own caliphate at Cordoba. In 759 Charles Martel's son, King Pepin I (741-768), finally drove the Muslims back across the Pyrenees into Spain.<br /> <br /> THE RECONQUISTA<br /> <br /> Pepin's successor, Charlemagne (768-814), was renowned as a<br /> <br /> THE CID<br /> <br /> great enemy of the Moors, and legends such as the twelfth-century<br /> <br /> The great Spanish literary classic of<br /> <br /> French epic Song oj Roland certainly encouraged the practice of<br /> <br /> the Reconquista age is the anonymous<br /> <br /> assisting Spanish Christians against the Muslims. However, Charle-<br /> <br /> twelfth-century epic poem Cantar del<br /> <br /> magne's involvement in Spain was more complex. In 778 he intervened in Christian Asturias as an ally of Muslim Barcelona, and<br /> <br /> 121<br /> <br /> mio Cid (Song of my Cid). It centers on the heroic exploits of an eleventh-century warrior, Roderigo Diaz, called the Cid<br /> <br /> attacked the Christian Basque city ofPamplona. Charlemagne never<br /> <br /> ("Lord"), who was among the foremost<br /> <br /> returned to Spain, but from 788 his forces carved out the Spanish<br /> <br /> vassals of King Alfonso VI of Leon-Castile<br /> <br /> March, a Spanish enclave that included Barcelona (which fell in 800). It was from Christian Asturias and Barcelona that the Recon-<br /> <br /> (1°72-11°9). In an era of shifting loyalties, he fought not only for his lord, but also for the Muslims. In 1094 Roderigo<br /> <br /> quista began. A key moment came in 844, when Ramiro I ofAsturias<br /> <br /> conquered the city ofValencia for himself<br /> <br /> (842-50) defeated a Muslim army at Clavijo (see box on page 123).<br /> <br /> and subsequently extended his holdings at<br /> <br /> In 1031 the caliphate of Cordoba broke up into twenty or so petty states, and there was little resistance to Christian advances in this period. Also in the eleventh century, an expanded Asturias<br /> <br /> the expense of the Almoravids. Following his death in 1099 in Valencia, his widow was forced to abandon the city. In the poem, the Cid's enemies at<br /> <br /> became the kingdoms of Leon and Navarre, and Barcelona became<br /> <br /> court turn Alfonso against him, and in<br /> <br /> Aragon. However, the fall ofToledo in 1085 to Alfonso VI of Leon-<br /> <br /> many lines he endeavors to make the king<br /> <br /> Castile (1072-1109) brought Castile, a powerful state in the center of the peninsula, to preeminence among the Christian kingdoms. In Muslim Spain, al-Andalus, Christians and Jews were generally tolerated, some achieving high status. In the early centuries of the<br /> <br /> understand the concepts of loyalty and fidelity. In real life, the Cid was unable to reform Alfonso or his court. Today Alfonso's success in the Reconquista is attributed to Muslim weakness at a<br /> <br /> reconquest, Christian rulers similarly allowed conquered Muslims to<br /> <br /> time of general Islamic decline after the<br /> <br /> worship freely and manage their own affairs, even to raise their own<br /> <br /> incursions by Turks into the Arab world.<br /> <br /> taxes and military units. They also found it more convenient to accept tribute from neighboring Muslim rulers than to fight them.<br /> <br /> 122<br /> <br /> CRUSADES IN EUROPE: INFIDELS, PAGANS, AND HERETICS<br /> <br /> This changed in the mid-twelfth century when the Almohads, fundamentalist Berbers, conquered al-Andalus and transformed the Muslims' defensive wars against the Christians into a jihad. The Almohads ended Muslim disunity, but also the era of tolerance and cultural exchange; there was even persecution of non-Muslims. The newcomers' fanaticism alienated local Muslims and made Christian rulers determined to eliminate the threat of jihad once and for all. Meanwhile, French pilgrims to the tomb of St. James at Compostela had occasionally joined Spanish expeditions against the Muslims.After 1095 the popes approved the perception of these wars as crusades, conferring remission of sins on participants. The military orders founded in the twelfth century were important in these intermittent conflicts, since only they could provide garrisons for exposed castles. In general, Spanish orders (see sidebar) were based on the frontier, while the Templars, Hospitallers, and even the Teutonic Knights occupied neutral areas between the Christian states. Portugal, separated by mountains from Spain and difficult to reach overland, received crusader assistance only occasionally, and Above: A natural defensive citadel protected to<br /> <br /> usually by sea. In the summer of 1147, a fleet en route to the Sec-<br /> <br /> the north by the Sierra Nevada range) Granadadominated by its Alhambra palace (seen here)held out for two and a half centuries after the rest of Muslim Spain had been conquered.<br /> <br /> helped the count (later king) of Portugal, Alfonso-Henry I (1128-<br /> <br /> ond Crusade from Germany, Flanders, England, and Normandy 85), to capture Lisbon. In 1189, en route to the Third Crusade, two<br /> <br /> fleets from Denmark, Frisia, Flanders, Germany, and England assisted Below: Symbols<br /> <br /> of royalty and death<br /> <br /> in the 13th-century Knights) Cloister of the Cistercian monastery of Santa Maria de Huerta) Castile. Cistercians played a central role in establishing the influential Order of Calatrava. The monastery also contains the tomb ofArchbishop Jimenez) who fought at the great battle of Las Navas de Tolosa.<br /> <br /> the Portuguese against the revived Almohad forces (see page 82). The Reconquista made its greatest advances in the thirteenth century, when Christian Spain experienced economic and population growth, while Muslim Spain stagnated and military reinforcements from North Africa became sporadic and insufficient. Backed by the papacy, crusading enthusiasm reached a peak.<br /> <br /> THE RECONQJJISTA<br /> <br /> 123<br /> <br /> THE IBERIAN MILITARY ORDERS<br /> <br /> SAINT JAMES THE MOOR SLAYER<br /> <br /> In the early twelfth century the Christian monarchs of Spain endowed the Templars<br /> <br /> The shrine of Santiago de Compostela in northwest Spain has<br /> <br /> and Hospitallers with estates and castles<br /> <br /> supposedly held the body of the apostle St. James (Santiago in<br /> <br /> in the peninsula. Both military orders<br /> <br /> Spanish) the Greater, the elder brother of St. John the Evangelist,<br /> <br /> participated in the Reconquista, but their<br /> <br /> since the early ninth century. As the Reconquista began to get underway in the same century, Santiago metamorphosed into a warrior saint, Santiago Matamoros, "St. James the Moor Slayer." Tradition records that the transformed saint first appeared in 844 at the battle of Clavijo, where he killed thousands of Muslims. In combining penitential pilgrimage with a holy war (see pages 22-23) against Islamic enemies, the cult of Santiago anticipated by<br /> <br /> primary focus on the Holy Land meant that they could not be the force that their royal patrons had envisioned. In the face of the Almohad invasion (see main text), from 1146 Christian Spaniards found it desirable to create their own military orders, most of them modeled on the Templars. The three most important were<br /> <br /> two and a half centuries the First Crusade, or armed pilgrimage,<br /> <br /> the Order of Calatrava, founded in 1158,<br /> <br /> called by Pope Urban II. Those who prayed at St. James's shrine<br /> <br /> the Order of Santiago (1170), and the<br /> <br /> were entitled to wear the pilgrim's seashell insignia. From the twelfth<br /> <br /> Order of Alcantara (1176). Santiago was<br /> <br /> century the journey to Santiago became the third most popular<br /> <br /> the largest and most widely diffused.<br /> <br /> Christian pilgrimage, ranking closely behind Jerusalem and Rome.<br /> <br /> Around 1166 Portugal created the Order of Evora, later known as the Order of Aviz. It was Portugal's sole military order until 1319, when the Order of Christ was established with confiscated Templar<br /> <br /> The greatest battle of the Reconquista was fought on 12th July 1212 at Las Navas de Tolosa In southern Spain, ~hen the Almohads were defeated by a huge Christian force including the kings of Aragon, Castile, and Navarre, the military orders, and as many as 70, 000 French crusaders. This battle was decisive, but did not appear so at first because few of the heavily-fortified Muslim cities in the<br /> <br /> properties. A number of smaller Iberian orders, such as the Aragonese Order of Monte Gaudio (Mount Joy), founded in 1173, were absorbed by one or other of<br /> <br /> the four great orders: Santiago, Calatrava, the Templars, and the Hospitallers. Spain's native military orders provided<br /> <br /> south were taken immediately. James I of Aragon (1213-76) con-<br /> <br /> the core of the victorious army at Las<br /> <br /> queredValencia between 1229 and 1245, and Ferdinand III of Castile<br /> <br /> Navas de Tolosa in 1212, and the fall of<br /> <br /> (1217-52) took Cordoba in 1236 and Seville in 1248, pushing the Muslims back to Granada in the far south. As Castile and Aragon advanced, they gradually imposed tighter controls over their growing Muslim populations, responding to insurrections by seizing Muslim lands and resettling them with Christians. The reconquest of Portugal ended in 1249. Thereafter, its military orders led attacks on Muslim Africa, and Prince Henry the Navigator (1394-1460) used the resources of the Order of Christ for voyages that were to lead Portuguese explorers around Africa to India and the Far East. In 1469 the marriage of Ferdinand of Aragon and Isabella of Castile created a united Spanish kingdom and made possible the conquest of Granada, the last Muslim state, in 1492. In that same year, Jews were ordered to convert to Christianity or leave Spain, and heavy strictures were imposed on Muslims. Ten years later, the remaining Muslims were forcibly converted.<br /> <br /> Granada in 1492 was facilitated by the border castles of the orders of Santiago, Calatrava, and Alcantara, which strangled this last Muslim outpost in Iberia.<br /> <br /> 124<br /> <br /> CRUSADES IN EUROPE: INFIDELS, PAGANS, AND HERETICS<br /> <br /> THE FRUITS OF THREE FAITHS Muslim Spain, or al-Andalus as it was known in Arabic (hence<br /> <br /> great libraries and scholars, and boasted architectural marvels<br /> <br /> the name of the modern region ofAndalusia), was for some<br /> <br /> such as the Great Mosque (see illustration pages 118-19) as well<br /> <br /> time the core of an independent Muslim state, the Umayyad<br /> <br /> as public baths and indoor plumbing. The urban sophistication<br /> <br /> caliphate of Cordoba, that stood, until its break-up in 1031, in<br /> <br /> of al-Andalus existed nowhere else in western Europe.<br /> <br /> opposition to the rest of the Muslim world. Established in 756,<br /> <br /> Many of Spain's Muslim rulers surrounded themselves with<br /> <br /> the caliphate became a center of Muslim culture, a place where<br /> <br /> poets and scholars who wrote on every imaginable topic.<br /> <br /> the great cultures of the East-Arabic, Persian, and Greek-<br /> <br /> (Paper, unknown in the rest of Europe at this period, was<br /> <br /> were planted, absorbed, and altered in the far west of Europe.<br /> <br /> produced and widely available in Spain.) Ibn Hazm (died<br /> <br /> The Andalusians were Spaniards,Visigoths, Arabs, Berbers,<br /> <br /> 1064), for example, wrote numerous works, including a famous<br /> <br /> of the Dove and a monumental<br /> <br /> and Syrians; and they were Christians, Muslims, and Jews. The<br /> <br /> tract on love entitled The Ring<br /> <br /> mutual toleration of such ethnic and religious diversity, known<br /> <br /> history of religions. The poet-king al-Mu'tamid (1078-95)<br /> <br /> as convivencia (living together), was unprecedented in medieval<br /> <br /> established an academy of arts in Cordoba that attracted the<br /> <br /> Europe and fostered a rich cultural and intellectual exchange<br /> <br /> best minds in the West. Lesser rulers did the same, thus further<br /> <br /> that was possible nowhere else. For centuries Cordoba had<br /> <br /> promoting the cultural development of Spain. Scientific and philosophical thought also flowered in al-Andalus, and it was the principal channel through which many important ideas and concepts passed into Christendom in the fields of mathematics, science, medicine, and philosophy. It is through Spain, for example, that the use of arabic numerals (which are actually of Indian origin) caught on in Europe. Scholars in al-Andalus were particularly interested in astronomy, and worked on a simpler and more elegant description of the solar system than the ancient Ptolemaic one prevalent in Christian Europe. This. had practical applications, as when az-Zarqali (died 1100) invented the azaJea (astrolabe), a navigational instrument used by sailors for centuries. He also maintained-six centuries before Kepler demonstrated it-that planetary orbits were elliptical rather than circular. Medicine was another interest ofAndalusian scholars, who contributed to the Materia Medica, an enormous compendium of medical knowledge that remained a work-in-progress for centuries. Originally an Arabic translation of an ancient Greek work by Pedanius Dioscorides, it was revised and augmented<br /> <br /> Left: The<br /> <br /> 11 th- or 12th-century hammam in Jaen is the largest surviving !lrab bathhouse in Spain. Opposite, above: An azafea} or astrolabe} made in Muslim Spain ca. 1430. Invented by az-Zarqali (see main text)} this ingenious device was widely used throughout Europe Jor navigation and surveying. Opposite, below: A page from a 14th-century manuscript of Maimonides} great work Guide for the Perplexed} written in 1190.<br /> <br /> THE FRUITS OF THREE FAITHS<br /> <br /> by numerous Muslim, Jewish, and Christian scholars, and by the thirteenth century it described more than 1,4°0 medicinal plants and their uses. The greatest Andalusian-born philosopher was Moses ben Maimon (Maimonides, 1135-12°4), a Jewish<br /> <br /> 125<br /> <br /> profound impact on Christian scholars such as St. Thomas Aquinas (1227-74), laying the ground for medieval scholasticism. Spain's lasting cultural impact was as a window for Europe onto the intellectual fruits of the Arabic,<br /> <br /> physician and rabbi who was born in<br /> <br /> Persian, and Greek civilizations.<br /> <br /> Cordoba. Maimonides was greatly<br /> <br /> Because of Spain's ethnic diversity,<br /> <br /> influenced by Arab philosophers, who<br /> <br /> translation was an important activity.<br /> <br /> were in turn influenced above all by the ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle. Maimonides, author of the Guide for the<br /> <br /> Perplexed, maintained that there can be no contradiction between the logical truths of the physical<br /> <br /> Arabic versions of Greek philosophers were in turn translated into Latin, and it was by this path that western Christendom rediscovered the majority ofAristotle's works. This would have far-reaching effects on western<br /> <br /> world and the spiritual truths of God. Reason and the study of<br /> <br /> thought and culture, influencing the establishment of Europe's<br /> <br /> nature could help humankind come closer to understanding<br /> <br /> first universities in the thirteenth century, and ultimately the<br /> <br /> the eternal. These ideas, like those of Aristotle himself, had a<br /> <br /> great revival of Classical culture in the Renaissance.<br /> <br /> 126<br /> <br /> CRUSADES IN EUROPE: INFIDELS, PAGANS, AND HERETICS<br /> <br /> THE WENDISH CRUSADE The Germanic tribes who migrated southward and westward in the early centuries<br /> <br /> CE<br /> <br /> left areas of northern Germany largely unoccu-<br /> <br /> pied. Into these regions came Slavic migrants from further south and east, who by the eighth century had settled in villages and towns close to the Baltic between the Elbe and Oder rivers. There were various groups, speaking similar dialects, who were known collectively as the Wends by their Saxon and Danish neighbors. Like the Saxons and Danes at this period, the Wends were pagans (see sidebar). Conflict among these peoples did not have any expressly religious motive until after the Saxons had been conquered and converted to Christianity in a series of wars waged (772-8°4) by Charlemagne. In the tenth and eleventh centuries there were terrible wars between Saxons and Wends along the Elbe river, which served as a natural frontier; the Saxons won peace by paying tribute. In the eleventh century Scandinavia underwent conversion to Christianity, increasing the pressure on the pagan Wends. As the balance of power continued to shift in favor of their Christian neighbors, the Wends were no longer able to collect tribute from the Saxons or keep them west of the Elbe: From forced to pay tribute to the Saxons, and in<br /> <br /> 1110<br /> <br /> IIII<br /> <br /> the Wends were<br /> <br /> their rulers had to<br /> <br /> THE uEASTWARD URGE" Nineteenth-century German nationalists coined the phrase Drang<br /> <br /> nach Osten (Eastward Urge) to describe what they saw as an inexorable eastward expansion of the Germans in the Middle Ages. The Nazis used the term to justify the Third Reich's own eastward expansion, linking it to Nazi theories of the "superior" German race that naturally needed greater Lebensraum ("living space"). However, the so-called Drang nach Osten in the Middle Ages was less military than economic, and less German than international. German rulers of newly conquered lands attracted immigrants with promises of lower taxes and fewer feudal services; and once they had demonstrated that the frontier lands were safe, settlers came in great numbers. But Polish dukes and churchmen also invited German knights, peasants, and merchants, as well as many Jews, to their own sparsely populated eastern lands. Reality in medieval east-central Europe was a colorful mixture of ethnicities and languages.<br /> <br /> THE WENDISH CRUSADE<br /> <br /> 127<br /> <br /> BALTIC PAGANISM Baltic paganism, with its pantheon of powerful deities and lesser supernatural beings, was sufficiently similar to Viking beliefs and practices to be both easily grasped and easily misunderstood. The most important deity was Perkunas, the god of lightning and thunder, who was worshipped in forests under the open sky. At the other end of the scale were the household gods and deities of the fields, forests, and waters; these were called upon daily, and especially at the times of birth and death. The role of the pagan priests was informal but powerful. On military campaigns they would listen to bird calls, observe the weather, and cast bones to determine the will of the gods. Otherwise promising campaigns would be called off<br /> <br /> assist German lords in attacking pagan Vikings on the island of Rugen. In the following decades Saxon migrants moved into Wendish Holstein and the missionary Vicelin (died 1154) made some con-<br /> <br /> if the omens predicted misfortune. What is known of pagan rites and practices is limited because the pagans were illiterate, and only scant information survives through<br /> <br /> verts among the Wends. In 1143 Saxony, Denmark, Brandenburg,<br /> <br /> old oral tradition and the biased accounts<br /> <br /> Holstein, and other states seized lightly populated Wendish lands.<br /> <br /> of Christian chroniclers. Even this has been<br /> <br /> Despite this encroachment, the Wends continued to be fiercely independent and to practice paganism. Bernard of Clairvaux, in Germany preaching the Second Crusade (see pages 60-61), saw the<br /> <br /> distorted in modern times by efforts to tie this religion to ancient ones predating the Greeks and Romans, and to nineteenthcentury folklore, and to modern nationalism.<br /> <br /> Wends as ripe for conversion by arms. In 1147 he easily persuaded north German and Danish nobles to launch a campaign against them, and convinced Pope Eugenius III to declare it a crusade. In that year, a Saxon-Danish force besieged the Wendish fortress at Dobin and German and Czech prelates led an attack on Demrnin, while Danish ships harassed the coast. The Wends saved themselves by a combination of fierce fighting and accepting baptism. Although the Wends relapsed into paganism almost as soon as the crusaders had left, the new monasteries established in their lands became centers for immigrants and missionaries, and there were further Danish and German invasions that ended only in 1185. The Wendish princes then agreed to become Christian vassals of their more powerful neighbors. With the help of new bishops and abbots they gradually converted the rural population, transformed their lands along western feudal lines, and attracted more immigrants. This eventually made the Wends as prosperous as the northern sandy soils would allow, and they were able to regain considerable independence. Soon they would be participating in crusades themselves, in Prussia, Livonia, and the Holy Land.<br /> <br /> of Rugen off the north German coast was one of the last outposts of Wendish and Viking paganism in the Baltic. Rugen was a major center of the cult of Svantovit) recorded by western chroniclers) such as Helmold of Bosau and Saxo Grammaticus) as the god of gods uJhose prophecies were much sought after.<br /> <br /> Above: The island<br /> <br /> of an unknown Baltic deity on Rugen survived the destruction of the island~ pagan shrines) which included the important center of worship at Arkona. The wooden idol of Svantovit) whose temple at Arkona survived until 1168) is known to have been multiheaded and to have held a drinking horn filled with wine-but other pagan gods are known to have been depicted in this manner so this deity~ actual identity remains unknown. Opposite: This image<br /> <br /> 128<br /> <br /> CRUSADES IN EUROPE: INFIDELS, PAGANS, AND HERETICS<br /> <br /> CRUSADES IN THE EASTERN BALTIC The crusade against the Wends set a precedent for later attacks on Baltic pagan peoples by Christian rulers such as Waldemar I of Denmark (1157-82). The Poles also strove to impose their influence in the area, while further east the Swedes moved into pagan Finland. In 1171 Pope Alexander III declared all wars against the pagans of the north equal to crusades to the Holy Land. Later popes attempted to control these wars by sending legates, but even then legates and bishops could call crusades without obtaining specific papal approval in advance. This enabled Danish kings to create a Baltic empire and supported Polish expansion into Prussia and Russia, while the Teutonic knights exploited it for their ongoing crusading operations.<br /> <br /> Prussia and the Teutonic Order In the twelfth century the Baltic coast was sparsely populated and Poland's rulers assumed that they could easily conquer and convert the pagan tribes of Prussia. King Boleslaw IV's (1146-73) campaign in 1173 began well, but support for it among the Polish nobles ebbed away after his death. Furthermore, the Polish church lacked misTHE BATTLE ON THE ICE:<br /> <br /> sionaries to proselytize among the Prussians, and it was not until<br /> <br /> THE NOVGOROD CRUSADE<br /> <br /> after 1215 that the newly appointed bishop of Prussia-supported by<br /> <br /> In the thirteenth century, in the wake<br /> <br /> Conrad of Masovia, Poland's most powerful duke-began a mission<br /> <br /> of the Fourth Crusade (see Chapter Five)<br /> <br /> that it was hoped could convert the entire region. Such an approach<br /> <br /> the Catholic polities of the Baltic became involved in conflicts with the Russian principalities, which were both Orthodox Christians as well as military and commercial rivals. In<br /> <br /> 1240,<br /> <br /> following the devastation of<br /> <br /> Russia by the Mongols, a papal legate organized a crusade against the last important independent Russian state, N ovgorod. Although the crusaders had<br /> <br /> had succeeded in Pomerania, but it failed in Prussia, probably because there was no single local ruler to work through. In the 1220S Prussians overran Culm, the one Prussian province Conrad had been able to conquer, and attacked Polish villages and abbeys, seizing people to be sold as slaves or put to work on the warriors' farms. Conrad approached several military orders for aid, offering them lands if they would build castles, provide garrisons, and bring in farmers to produce food. He would help as much as he could, espe-<br /> <br /> some initial successes, the Russian prince<br /> <br /> cially in raising crusader forces to assist them. The Templars, Hospit-<br /> <br /> Alexander destroyed the Swedish prong<br /> <br /> allers, and even the Spanish order of Calatrava sent small units, and<br /> <br /> of the attack on the banks of the frozen Neva river, earning him the title Nevsky. In<br /> <br /> 1242<br /> <br /> he recovered Pskov and defeated<br /> <br /> Conrad founded a military order of his own-but they were all ineffective. The Prussians could be pacified only by larger and better<br /> <br /> crusaders from Danish-occupied parts of<br /> <br /> organized armies, and then held down by permanent garrisons. To<br /> <br /> Estonia, the bishopric of Dorpat, the<br /> <br /> this end, in 1225 Conrad invited in the Teutonic Order, which had<br /> <br /> former Swordbrothers, and some Teutonic knights. Alexander N evsky's victories did not end the ambitions of Swedish and<br /> <br /> close ties to the emperor Frederick II. When the order was invited to Prussia, Frederick gave it generous grants of rights and all the<br /> <br /> German rulers, but they did effectively<br /> <br /> lands its knights could conquer. The church encouraged them as<br /> <br /> set a limit on their eastward expansion.<br /> <br /> well and attempted to protect the rights of Prussian converts.<br /> <br /> CRUSADES IN THE EASTERN BALTIC<br /> <br /> 129<br /> <br /> The first units deployed, in 123 I, were small, and had to raIse additional forces in Poland, Germany, and Pomerelia (West Prussia). By the end of the thirteenth century the Teutonic Order had conquered all of East Prussia. Polish and German migrants eventually outnumbered the Prussian converts, and behind the dense wilderness that divided Prussia and Poland an autonomous state was set up. The order subsequently defended its independence from both Polish and papal efforts to influence its military and political decisions. The Teutonic Order relied largely on Germans for its crusading armies, but Poles and even Russians aided the order in crusades against pagan Lithuania. This cooperation ended in 13°9, after a dispute over the order's occupation of Pomerelia and Danzig (Gdansk), which the Poles claimed. The ensuing conflict with Poland dis-<br /> <br /> Opposite: The German troubadour Tannhduser<br /> <br /> (ca. 122Cf-Ca. 1270) is depicted in this 14th-century manuscript as a Teutonic knight) wearing the order$ uniform of a white cloak with a black cross. The knights of the Order of the Hospital of St. Mary of the Teutons (Teutonic Order) were essentially tough warriors) but even those who hated and feared them respected their skill) piety) dedication) and discipline. The order$ Prussian masters and grand masters practiced power politics) but backed their diplomacy with fasts) processions) and continual prayer, and made periodic inspections of the spiritual life of their convents. When not on campaign the order devoted much time to peaciful business) encouraging agriculture and trade.<br /> <br /> rupted the Lithuanian crusade until the Peace of Kalish in 1343. Around this time the Polish kings and the archbishops of Riga called for the Teutonic Order to be suppressed. However, unlike the Templars, who were subject only to the pope, the Teutonic knights were subject to both the pope and the emperor. By skillfully playing off one overlord against the other, the order succeeded in avoiding a similar fate to the Templars (see page 175). The refusal of the<br /> <br /> Below: Central and east-central Europe were<br /> <br /> the scene of much crusading activity: the Wendish Crusade along the west Baltic coast; crusades in Prussia) Livonia) and Lithuania; the Hussite Crusade in Bohemia; and the march of the Children $ Crusade up the Rhine river and over the Alps into Italy.<br /> <br /> Prussian regional masters of the order to deal with papal legates meant that subsequent generations heard only one side of the order's quarrels with the Poles and the archbishops of Riga. As a result, the order acquired an exaggerated reputation for brutality. Under grand master Winrich von Kniprode (1352-82), the crusade against the Lithuanians became a spectacle of chivalry that attracted nobles from all parts of the Holy Roman empire, as well as from France, England, and Scotland. The climax of every campaign, apart from raids and sieges (there were very few battles), was the celebration of the Round Table, a magnificent - chivalric display involving the most important knights. They compared themselves to the Arthurian knights and heaped praise upon the noble chosen to bear<br /> <br /> o Smolensk<br /> <br /> the banner of St. George into battle. Climate and practical considerations determined the seasons for campaigning. High summer and fall were the best times for crusaders to travel overland and by sea. But in December<br /> <br /> POLAND<br /> <br /> Dnieper river<br /> <br /> Cracow<br /> <br /> o Kievi<br /> <br /> and January crusader armies could also UKRAINE Dniester river<br /> <br /> __"';'_S:arpathians~ ~-<br /> <br /> -"<br /> <br /> TRANSYLVANIA _~<br /> <br /> N'~<br /> <br /> \<br /> <br /> ~, ~<br /> <br /> 130<br /> <br /> CRUSADES IN EUROPE: INFIDELS, PAGANS, AND HERETICS<br /> <br /> march across the frozen rivers, lakes, and swamps of the uninhabited frontiers; consequently, winter became the favorite time of year for expeditions up the N emunas (Memel) river into Lithuania, despite short days, unpredictable storms, and dangerous thaws. In 1386-87, following the marriage of Duke Jogaila Oagiello) of<br /> <br /> Lithuania to Jadwiga of Poland, Lithuania underwent conversion, bringing this "eternal" crusade to an end. In 1399 the Poles and Lithuanians joined the Teutonic Order in pacifying the Samogitians, the last Lithuanian pagans. But eleven years later relations between these regional rivals had deteriorated into war. The conflict reached a climax at the battle ofTannenberg (Grunwald) in 1410, where the Poles and Lithuanians crushed a seemingly invincible crusader army led by the Teutonic knights. The order soon recovered its lost territories, but its power was severely dented (see sidebar). The Teutonic Order's architecture was designed to impress. The great headquarters of the order at Marienburg in Vliest Prussia (below; present-day Malbork) Poland))founded in 1274) was a combination of military fortress) monaster'YJ and walled town) and was described in terms of both admiration and envy. From 1309) amid fears that the Teutonic knights would suffer the same fate as the Templars) the fortress became the seat of the 1-::.~~~~====~~~ff'fdFide--gifGlH~J=nFm:~er;)TwJ-h7 Ji'61d=hce!·e J rua.)1771':c-ill-t-!-i-·' Holy Land until the fall of Acre in 1291.<br /> <br /> Livonia and the Swordbrothers Further north, Livonia, roughly the region occupied by modern Latvia and Estonia, was ethnically diverse and had no single powerful ruler who could lead its Christianization. By the end of the twelfth century Russians were moving in from the east and Lithuanians raiding from the south, while pirate ships of pagan Estonians and Kurs were plaguing the villages and shipping of Germany and Scandinavia. . _-_=L.ll. 1--T~q<br /> <br /> elder1;T<br /> <br /> Gp:rnJ~~lJ~. P=F1@~t,_MJ~~1f=)-hc;~hF~~","",,~1J.l..l~=Q~t1<br /> <br /> a=ffi~c==·==--=--"<br /> <br /> sion of conversion to Livonia's Daugava (Duna, Dvina) river. He was<br /> <br /> CRUSADES IN THE EASTERN BALTIC<br /> <br /> 131<br /> <br /> subsequently made the first bishop of the region (his successors became archbishops of Riga), but conversion was slow and in 1195 Pope Celestine III authorized a crusade, reaffirmed in 1198 by Innocent III. The first crusaders to Livonia, led by the second bishop, Bertholt, were merchants from the Baltic island of Gotland. They returned home before ice closed the Baltic Sea, and the third bishop, Albert, despite having a good base in Riga, was unable to garrison his castles properly. By establishing a military order, the Swordbrothers, in 1202, he made possible a rapid expansion of his domains. The bishop was supported by native peoples seeking revenge on traditional enemies, and by crusaders from Germany and Denmark. They crushed the pagans in Estonia, warded off Russian and Lithuanian attacks, then made a peaceful conquest of Kurland. In time the Swordbrothers saw that the bishop intended to cast<br /> <br /> Statutes if the Teutonic Orde~ dated sometime after 26th August 1442) a period when the order was still recovering from the disaster at Tannenberg.<br /> <br /> them aside once their task was accomplished and they ceased to cooperate with him. Albert appealed to the pope, and a compromise in 1227 divided Livonia between the bishops and the Swordbrothers-but left the key issue of the order's sovereignty unresolved. After the Swordbrothers were defeated in Samogitia in 1236, they were absorbed into the Teutonic Order as the semiautonomous<br /> <br /> THE LATER HISTORY OF THE TEUTONIC ORDER Following the disaster at Tannenberg (see<br /> <br /> Livonian Order. Albert's successors sought to assert their authority<br /> <br /> tnain text) in 1410 there were proposals to<br /> <br /> over the order. The pope upheld the verdicts against it, but did not<br /> <br /> relocate the Teutonic Order to the Ukraine<br /> <br /> enforce them, seeing the order as Livonia's only effective defense against Orthodox Russians or pagan Lithuanians. In effect, Rome treated the order as de facto rulers of Livonia. The Livonian Order assisted the campaigns of the Teutonic<br /> <br /> or along the Danube river, but the grand tnasters found it itnpossible to support garrisons at such a distance frotn their Prussian and Gertnan bases. In 1525 the last grand tnaster in Prussia, Albrecht von<br /> <br /> Knights in Prussia by striking into Lithuania and Samogitia from<br /> <br /> Hohenzollern, tnargrave of Brandenburg-<br /> <br /> castles along the Daugava and in Kurland. There were also conflicts<br /> <br /> Anhalt and duke of Prussia (1525-68),<br /> <br /> with the Russian cities of Novgorod and Pskov, including a crusade<br /> <br /> becatne a Protestant and secularized the Prussian lands. He tnade sotne knights<br /> <br /> (see sidebar on page 128), especially after 1300, when these com-<br /> <br /> and prelates into vassals, let others leave<br /> <br /> mercial states were usually governed by hostile Lithuanian princes.<br /> <br /> for Gertnan convents, and pensioned off<br /> <br /> After the battle ofTannenberg (see above), the Livonian Order invaded Lithuania repeatedly, but in 1435 the order's army ofLithuanians, Germans, Russians, and Tatars was routed by its Polish and<br /> <br /> the rest. This was the end of the Teutonic Order in Prussia. When Prussia becatne a Protestant state the Livonian knights lost their tnost<br /> <br /> Lithuanian opponents. Afterward power in Livonia was exercised by<br /> <br /> valuable ally and source of recruits.<br /> <br /> the Livonian Confederation, an assembly composed of the master of<br /> <br /> Dependent on tnercenaries, the order<br /> <br /> the Livonian Order, the bishops, three abbots, and delegates of the<br /> <br /> declined in nutnbers and vigor. In 1557<br /> <br /> cities of Riga, porpat (Tartu), and Reval (Tallinn).<br /> <br /> the Russian artnies of Ivan the Terrible<br /> <br /> In 1500 the Livonian Order won a tough victory at Pskov over<br /> <br /> invaded Livonia and in 1559 the order's stnall artny was defeated. When Sweden,<br /> <br /> Ivan the Great of Russia (1462-1505). But with the coming of the<br /> <br /> Dentnark, and Poland entered the war,<br /> <br /> Reformation the order's days were numbered (see sidebar).<br /> <br /> Livonia was divided atnong thetn.<br /> <br /> 132<br /> <br /> CRUSADES IN EUROPE: INFIDELS, PAGANS, AND HERETICS<br /> <br /> THE ALBIGENSIAN CRUSADE In the twelfth century, the Languedoc (Provenc;al-speaking southern France) was the home of a vibrant and prosperous culture. Its pleasant climate produced abundant crops which provided the nobles of the region with the wealth and leisure to cultivate love poetry (see page 97) and courtly manners. The region's rugged hills, meanwhile, made it easy for nobles and burghers to defend their independence. This region was also home to an ascetic sect known as the Cathars (literally "pure ones" from Greek katharos, "pure"), whose beliefs (see box) linked them with a wider movement that flourished in parts of France and Italy from the eleventh to thirteenth centuries. The origins of this movement are not entirely clear, but some THE WALDENSIANS<br /> <br /> of its beliefs resemble those of the Manichaeans, a Near Eastern sect<br /> <br /> The wealth, ntoral laxity, and poor<br /> <br /> condemned as heretical by the early church. The French Cathars<br /> <br /> education of ntuch of the clergy in southern France sowed the seeds for<br /> <br /> were commonly referred to as Albigensians (Albigenses), from the<br /> <br /> the growth of the Albigensian heresy.<br /> <br /> Languedoc town of Albi, although the biggest center of the heresy<br /> <br /> Toward the end of the twelfth century it<br /> <br /> was the city ofToulouse. How many followers the sect had among<br /> <br /> also prontpted the rise of another group:<br /> <br /> the general population is unclear, but it enjoyed wide support among<br /> <br /> the Waldensians, nanted for Peter Valdes<br /> <br /> the fiercely independent Languedoc nobility. The Albigensians prob-<br /> <br /> (Waldo), a wealthy nterchant of Lyons. In ca.<br /> <br /> 1173<br /> <br /> gospel passages in which Jesus<br /> <br /> tells a rich young ntan to give his wealth to the PQor and follow hint (Matthew 19.21,<br /> <br /> Mark<br /> <br /> 10.21-22)<br /> <br /> inspired Peter to<br /> <br /> give away all his own wealth, ntostly to the poor, and adopt a life of poverty and preaching. So that he could contntunicate<br /> <br /> ably owed their popularity to a widespread contempt (see sidebar) for the often worldly, corrupt, and poorly educated Catholic clergy. The council of Tours in 1163 was one of a series of attempts by the church to stamp out the heresy. These had included dispatching a papal legate, Cardinal Alberic of Ostia, to Languedoc to preach against the Cathars in 1145, followed by the indefatigable Bernard of<br /> <br /> the gospel directly he had part of it<br /> <br /> Clairvaux (1090-1153). The collaboration of these forceful church-<br /> <br /> translated into the vernacular.<br /> <br /> men proved to no avail and they were soon turning their attention<br /> <br /> Peter collected a following, the "Poor Men of Lyons," who were devoted to ascetic piety as the nteans to salvation. In<br /> <br /> 1179<br /> <br /> Pope Alexander III confirnted<br /> <br /> to preaching the Second Crusade (see pages 60-61). In 1148, at the council of Rheims, the church excommunicated all protectors "of the heretics of Gascony and Provence," and in 1163 the council<br /> <br /> Peter's vow of poverty but forbade hint to<br /> <br /> of Tours decreed that Albigensians should be imprisoned and<br /> <br /> preach, an activity reserved for the clergy.<br /> <br /> stripped of their property. In 1179 the third Lateran council called<br /> <br /> But Peter clainted that his duty was to God not nten, and continued his preaching. In<br /> <br /> 1184<br /> <br /> Pope Lucius III<br /> <br /> excontntunicated the Waldensians,<br /> <br /> on secular rulers to use force against the heretics, but this was made difficult by the fact that many of the nobles who were being asked to implement the decree were Albigensian supporters. The Albigen-<br /> <br /> condentning thent as heretics. What<br /> <br /> sians received a further boost when the Catholic count of Toulouse,<br /> <br /> becante of Peter hintself is unknown, but<br /> <br /> Raymond V, was succeeded by the Albigensian-friendly Raymond<br /> <br /> the Waldensians were greatly persecuted<br /> <br /> VI (1194-1222). It has been estimated that the sect had followers in<br /> <br /> and their itinerant preachers forced to teach in secret. During the Reforntation they reenterged as a Calvinist Protestant church and survive as such to this day.<br /> <br /> as many as 1,000 Languedoc towns and cities at this time. Almost as soon as Innocent III became pope in 1198 he authorized the Fourth Crusade to the Holy Land (see Chapter Five) and<br /> <br /> THE ALBIGENSIAN CRUSADE<br /> <br /> CATHAR BELIEFS AND RITUALS While they professed to be Christians, the Cathars or<br /> <br /> with minimum food and comfort and to abstain from<br /> <br /> Albigensians adhered to a theology that differed radically<br /> <br /> sex were eligible for the consolamentum (consolation),<br /> <br /> from Catholic orthodoxy. They were dualistic, believing<br /> <br /> a special sacrament that designated them as peifecti<br /> <br /> that there were two Gods, one a spiritual being associated<br /> <br /> (Latin, "complete" or "perfect"). Ordinary believers<br /> <br /> with good and the other a material creature associated<br /> <br /> (credentes) were not held to such strict standards, but<br /> <br /> with evil. In the world, indeed inside every human being,<br /> <br /> they were assured either that reincarnation would<br /> <br /> these two forces wrestled for domination, and good would<br /> <br /> ultimately place them in a position to become perfecti,<br /> <br /> triumph only when the spirit vanquished the flesh. Cathars also taught that Jesus was a pure spirit and<br /> <br /> or that taking the consolamentum just before death would transform them immediately.<br /> <br /> therefore could not have been crucified or resurrected, and they therefore followed an ascetic lifestyle, disdaining<br /> <br /> Above: The castle of Peyrepertuse was the largest Cathar<br /> <br /> the inferior material world. Those who learned to live<br /> <br /> stronghold and one of the last to fall) holding out until<br /> <br /> another to the Baltic (see pages<br /> <br /> 130-131).<br /> <br /> Also, he did not hesitate<br /> <br /> to act against internal threats to the church and took up the task of either converting or repressing the Albigensians. In<br /> <br /> 1204<br /> <br /> he sent<br /> <br /> Abbot Arnaud-Amaury, the head of the Cistercians, as legate to the Languedoc. He also sent a request to the French king, Philip II, asking him to compel the regional lords, especially RaymondVI, to disown and suppress the heresy. But Philip was preoccupied trying to dispossess England's King John of his lands in France, and the pope himself soon became distracted by the Fourth Crusade. Innocent<br /> <br /> 1240.<br /> <br /> 133<br /> <br /> 134<br /> <br /> CRUSADES IN EUROPE: INFIDELS, PAGANS, AND HERETICS<br /> <br /> later dispatched the Spanish friar Domingo (Dominic) Guzman (St. Dominic, the founder of the Dominican Order, ca. 1170-1221) to employ his friars in public debates against the Languedoc heretics.<br /> <br /> The Church Adopts Force Such peaceful methods as Dominic's had been tried unsuccessfully before-and yet again they failed, although Dominic did institute reforms aimed at ridding the local Catholic church of abuses. In 12°7, the pope called upon Philip II, as feudal overlord of the county of Toulouse, to suppress the heresy by force. In 1208 another papal legate, Peter of Castelnau, formally excommunicated Raymond VI and the two exchanged bitter words. As Peter rode from Raymond's castle he was attacked and murdered.Whether Raymond was directly to blame or not, the legate's death was the final straw. On hearing the news, Innocent proclaimed a crusade against the Albigensians. Two legates were charged with raising an army, and up to 20,000 took the cross, including nobles from Germany and England as well as France. Among them was Raymond VI, who had submitted to the church in the hope of saving his lands. The crusade was launched in 1209 and the first towns besieged and captured were Beziers and Carcassonne, which fell in July that year to the Norman knight Simon de Montfort the Elder, who had been involved in the Fourth THE INQUISITION<br /> <br /> Crusade (see page 106). Simon's sack of Beziers and the accompa-<br /> <br /> In order to bring order and justice to the<br /> <br /> nying brutal massacre of its inhabitants-in which many more<br /> <br /> treatment of heretics, in 1184 Pope Lucius<br /> <br /> Catholics than Albigensians died-shocked contemporaries.<br /> <br /> III (1181-85) defined two heresies, the Cathars and Waldensians (see page 132),<br /> <br /> Led by Simon de Montfort, the crusade took town after town,<br /> <br /> and established many of the principles,<br /> <br /> usually against fierce resistance from the local population, both<br /> <br /> based on Roman law, by which individuals<br /> <br /> Catholic and Cathar, who considered this a patriotic war against for-<br /> <br /> could be identified, tried, and sentenced.<br /> <br /> eign aggression rather than a religious matter. Meanwhile, Raymond<br /> <br /> In 1227-31, in the wake of the Albigensian<br /> <br /> VI had again been excommunicated for not meeting the terms of<br /> <br /> Crusade, a papal Inquisition was formally established specifically to deal with heresy.<br /> <br /> his reconciliation, and in 1211 he was declared an enemy of the<br /> <br /> Most inquisitional tribunals were run<br /> <br /> church, his lands granted to anyone who could seize them. King<br /> <br /> by friars of the Dominican and Franciscan<br /> <br /> Peter II of Aragon, Raymond's brother-in-law and the hero of Las<br /> <br /> orders. Both orders had recently been<br /> <br /> Navas de Tolosa (see page 123), tried to intervene with the pope.<br /> <br /> created to preach to a public that in some<br /> <br /> When he failed he took up arms on Raymond's behalf. At the bat-<br /> <br /> areas, such as southern France, was being subverted by heretics who were usually<br /> <br /> tle ofMuret on 12th September 1213, Peter was killed and Raymond<br /> <br /> more than a match for the local clergy.<br /> <br /> VI fled to England. In 1215 he was once more reconciled with the<br /> <br /> Modern research suggests that the<br /> <br /> church, but his lands were given to Simon de Montfort. King Philip<br /> <br /> Inquisition's popular reputation for harshness derives largely from Protestant (specifically Dutch and English) propaganda. In fact the Inquisition, which<br /> <br /> II sent his son, Louis, with an army to assist Simon to seize Toulouse. When Raymond and his son arrived in Provence in 1217, they were welcomed joyfully. He and his son, Raymond VII, immediately<br /> <br /> still exists, was probably the most humane<br /> <br /> made plans to renew the war against Simon de Montfort. In 1218 it<br /> <br /> and merciful tribunal in medieval Europe.<br /> <br /> seemed that the war might finally end when Simon died besieging<br /> <br /> THE ALBIGENSIAN CRUSADE<br /> <br /> 135<br /> <br /> Toulouse, but the new pope, Honorius III, persuaded the French king to accept leadership of the crusade. Philip II again sent his son south with an army, but that brief effort brought no end to the war. After Honorius III called for another crusade in 1225, Philip Irs son and successor, Louis VIII, made some gains before he fell ill and died. In 1229 Louis's widow, Blanche of Castile, at last negotiated an end to the conflict which effectively saw the Languedoc incorporated into the French kingdom. Indeed, the chief beneficiary of the crusade was France's ruling dynasty; next came the papacy, which had doggedly pursued its goal of rooting out the Cathar heresy. This insistence on Catholic orthodoxy went hand in hand with reform:<br /> <br /> Opposite: The burning of heretical books}<br /> <br /> in 1215 the fourth Lateran council (see pages 146-147) instituted<br /> <br /> a detail of The Entombment of Christ and<br /> <br /> measures aimed at improving the education and probity of the clergy.<br /> <br /> Scenes of St. Dominic by the Dominican friar<br /> <br /> The losers were not only the Albigensians, but the entire Languedoc, which had been devastated and impoverished by the protracted conflict. When the final revolts had been suppressed, the once prosperous and flourishing Provenyal culture lay in ruins. The heresy had not disappeared either (the last Cathar outpost fell in 1255), but after 1231 the suppression was entrusted to a new papal institution: the<br /> <br /> Inquisition (see sidebar). Most of those it tried recanted and did penance in return for their freedom, but a few were burned at the stake. The last Cathar burning was in 1321, and the Albigensians had probably ceased to exist as a sect by the end of the fourteenth century.<br /> <br /> and painter Pra Angelico (1387-1455). Dominic~ experiences in the Languedoc inspired his foundation of a new order of well-educated friars to combat heresy and spread the word of God. The first Dominican convent was established in 1215 at TOulouse} the seat of the Albigensian heresy} a year before the pope officially confirmed the order. Below: The death of Simon de Montfort the<br /> <br /> Elder on 25th June 1218 while besieging Toulouse during the Albigensian Crusade. Prom a 13thcentury manuscript.<br /> <br /> 136<br /> <br /> CRUSADES IN EUROPE: INFIDELS, PAGANS, AND HERETICS<br /> <br /> POPULAR CRUSADES Nothing illustrates the widespread popularity of crusades better than the various efforts of common people to participate in the defeat of the enemies of Christ. There were no papal summons for these mass movements, which are distinct from the so-called People's Crusade (see page 37) and from the mass followings of ordinary folk who accompanied the armies on "official" crusades. In the spring of 1212, a crowd of youths gathered near Cologne in Germany and started south, gathering followers along the way. Soon Nicholas, a boy who said that he had been told by an angel to liberate the Holy Sepulcher from the Saracens, emerged as their leader. As he and his youthful supporters made their way up the Rhine valley, an unprecedented hot spell caused many to die or return home. A difficult crossing of the Alps reduced their numbers farther, and only about<br /> <br /> 7,000<br /> <br /> made it to Genoa in the late summer.<br /> <br /> Disappointed that the Mediterranean did not part as they had expected, the "children" dispersed. Some may have gone to Rome to try to meet the pope; there is a tradition that others went to Marseilles, where they were enticed onto ships supposedly sailing for<br /> <br /> The ((Children's Crusades)) of 1212 do not appear to have attacked Jews) but this was not the case in the ((Shepherds) Crusades)) of 1251 and 1]20. This scene from a 14th-century French manuscript depicts peasants burning down a tower in Verdunsur-Garonne in the Languedoc) where around 500 Jews committed suicide rather than be massacred. In their desperation) they are said to have thrown their children from the tower. The victims are identifiable by the red and white badge that all Jews were obliged to wear. In general churchmen and rulers tried to protect the Jews) from whom they derived important tax revenue (see page 60).<br /> <br /> POPULAR CRUSADES<br /> <br /> 137<br /> <br /> Jerusalem, only to be sold into slavery. Most probably found work wherever they could and remained in Italy. Few returned home. A second group sprang up in north-central France in the early summer of 1212. A shepherd boy, Stephen, displayed a letter claiming to be from Christ to the king of France, Philip II (1180-1223). Stephen led perhaps 3°,000 persons to Paris to speak with the king, a former crusader (see Chapter Four), and presumably to ask him to return to the Holy Land-some of the crowds were heard to chant "Lord God, restore to us the True Cross." It seems that after scholars had confirmed the letter's inauthenticity, the king told the crowd to go home. Most did so and the "crusade" dispersed, though there is evidence that a few joined the Albigensian Crusade. Movements like this were born in a time and in a culture in which crusade sermons, religious enthusiasm, and predictions of the end of the world abounded. Innocent III seems to have been greatly impressed by the popular response. Until this time, popes had discouraged the poor from taking crusading vows-poor, hungry, illclad, and untrained people were merely a hindrance to an effective army of well-equipped knights. But in 1213 Innocent III openly invited the general population to participate, a move that may have reflected the previous year's demonstration of popular enthusiasm. Another popular crusading movement that arose in France was the so-called "Shepherds' Crusade" of 1251. It was inspired by a mys-<br /> <br /> Carcassonlle in southern France) where rampaging peasants were destroyed during the second Shepherds Crusade of 1]20. Another group was crushed in Aragon) yet another at Avignon (where they had terrorized the pope)) and some at Genoa.<br /> <br /> terious preacher called the "Master of Hungary" to go to the aid of King Louis IX of France in the East (see pages 158-159). Queen Blanche of Castile, Louis's mother and regent in his absence, was initially impressed with the fervor of the" crusade," but as anticlerical riots and massacres of Jews became commonplace, she ordered its<br /> <br /> THE "CHILDREN" OF 1212<br /> <br /> suppression. This was accomplished with some difficulty, because the<br /> <br /> Each of the popular crusades of 1212 has<br /> <br /> mobs had dispersed in various directions. The Master of Hungary<br /> <br /> been called a "children's" crusade because<br /> <br /> died in a riot with the citizens of Villeneuve-sur-Seine. A similar "crusade" began in Normandy in 1320 when "shep-<br /> <br /> contetnporary and later chroniclers described the participants as pueri ("youths" in Latin). They do not appear to<br /> <br /> herds and simple men" claimed to have seen visions ordering them<br /> <br /> have been artned, and did not persecute<br /> <br /> to help the Holy Land. Marching behind the banner of the cross,<br /> <br /> Jews, unlike tnass followers of other<br /> <br /> they reached Paris and demanded that King Philip V (1314-28) lead them against the infidels. Philip, who had taken the cross in 1313 but<br /> <br /> crusades. The tertn puer cotntnonly tneant a boy who was untnarried or below the age of tnaturity (14), but there is sotne<br /> <br /> had not yet fulfilled his vow, failed to appear. The throngs then<br /> <br /> debate as to whether the participants were<br /> <br /> wandered southward, and it soon became clear that this was less a<br /> <br /> really so young. It has been claitned that<br /> <br /> crusade than an uprising by disaffected peasants, who took the<br /> <br /> puer was also used to denote sotneone of<br /> <br /> opportunity to attack wealthy clergy and Jews and to burn town<br /> <br /> low social status, such as a shepherd,<br /> <br /> halls and taxation records. Pope John XXII (1316-34) threatened to<br /> <br /> irrespective of age. Many of the pueri were indeed shepherds, but boys as young as<br /> <br /> excommunicate anyone who supplied the participants with food,<br /> <br /> seven tnight be given charge of the flocks,<br /> <br /> and authorized the secular authorities to disperse them by force.<br /> <br /> so this argutnent is inconclusive.<br /> <br /> 138<br /> <br /> CRUSADES IN EUROPE: INFIDELS, PAGANS, AND HERETICS<br /> <br /> POLITICAL CRUSADES Even before the crusades popes had blessed armies that purported to be serving the church. Alexander II (1061-73) sent William the Conqueror (1066-87) a consecrated banner to carryon his invasion of England in 1066. Still, there were no crusades against Christian rulers until 1199, when Pope Innocent III (1198-1216) declared crusades against a minor German noble in order to recover church lands in Italy. This and a similar action were precedents used by all Innocent's successors to justify their own use of force for political goals. As well as being Holy Roman emperor, Frederick II (emperor 1220-45) had inherited the kingdom of Sicily, which included Naples and southern Italy. His enormous domains formed a ring of territories around the Papal States, and clashes with the pope were inevitable. Gregory IX (1227-41) preached the crusade against Frederick II in 1239, ostensibly on the grounds of his supposed atheism and heresy, but mostly because his recent victories threatened the independence of the papacy. Gregory called a council for 1241 to discuss more extreme actions, but Frederick captured many of the prelates traveling by sea to the meeting. After Gregory died that same year, Frederick prevented the election of a successor for two years. But the papacy proved more resilient than Frederick expected. With the support of Frederick's German opponents, Innocent IV (1243-54) issued a decree at the council of Lyons in 1245 deposing Frederick as emperor and king of Sicily. Frederick did not abandon his conflict, but by the time he died in 1250 he was confined to<br /> <br /> CALLS FOR CHURCH REFORM The political crusades of the papacy were to have far-reaching consequences. Through the turbulent years of the fourteenth century, discontent with the church grew until many Catholics became persuaded that it should be divested of its enormous wealth and excluded from politics. Those advocating that the church return to its roots and practice apostolic poverty included Marsiglio of Padua (see sidebar), William of Occam, and other critics associated with the emperor Louis IV, but also some of the papacy's own devout supporters. The question came to the fore in the period of the Great Schism (see page 141), and was to be a central issue of the Reformation of the sixteenth century (see pages 192-193).<br /> <br /> POLITICAL CRUSADES<br /> <br /> 139<br /> <br /> A mosaic with the coat of arms of Frederick II of Hohenstaufen, Holy Roman emperor and king of Sicily, in the Palatine Chapel, Palermo. Frederick:Sterritories constituted the largest area of Europe under a single ruler since Roman times. The Catalan bars are derived from one of Frederick:Sgranddaughters, Constance, who was married to Peter, king ofAragon and Valencia and count of Barcelona in the 13th century.<br /> <br /> southern Italy and parts of Lombardy. Innocent IV tried to eliminate Frederick's descendants from power, but was unsuccessful, and the struggle with Frederick's dynasty, the Hohenstaufens, ended only in the reign of Urban IV (1261-64). Urban backed Charles ofAnjou<br /> <br /> MARSIGLIO OF PADUA<br /> <br /> (see Chapter Seven) against Conradin, the Hohenstaufen claimant<br /> <br /> Marsiglio (Marsilius) of Padua (1270-1342)<br /> <br /> to Sicily, whom Charles captured and executed in 1268.<br /> <br /> took Aristotle's precept that a state is<br /> <br /> Pope ClementV (1305-14) raised the use of the crusade as a political weapon to a new height in his conflict with Venice (1308-09),<br /> <br /> composed of its citizens, not its rulers, to argue for popular representation in both church and state. Mter Pope John XXII<br /> <br /> granting Catalan mercenaries and other supporters the spiritual<br /> <br /> (1316-34) and the Holy ROlllan elllperor<br /> <br /> rewards of crusaders. As the escalating disorder in Italy required him<br /> <br /> Louis IV quarreled in the 1320S (see main<br /> <br /> to seek safety in Avignon, the pope found himself increasingly reliant<br /> <br /> text), Marsiglio wrote the Defensor Pads<br /> <br /> on French protection; this was one reason he was unable to protect the Knights Templar from arrest (see page 175). Pope John XXII (1316-34), who lived in exile in Avignon but still<br /> <br /> (Defender of Peace), in which he argued that the state lllUSt be superior to the church: "The whole body of citizens, or its majority, alone is the human 'legislator'."<br /> <br /> hoped to reassert papal leadership in Italy, refused to recognize the<br /> <br /> He argued that no bishop, council or even<br /> <br /> election of Louis IV of Bavaria (1314-47) as Holy Roman emperor<br /> <br /> pope could coerce or punish any secular<br /> <br /> in 1314. In 1324 John excommunicated Louis, who in 1327 invaded<br /> <br /> person except when so authorized by<br /> <br /> Italy, had himself crowned emperor by the people of Rome, and briefly established a rival pope, Nicholas V (1328-30). John coun-<br /> <br /> the people or their representatives. Marsiglio won the friendship and protection of the elllperor and an<br /> <br /> tered in 1328 by declaring a crusade against Louis. The dispute was<br /> <br /> excollllllunication frOlll the pope, who<br /> <br /> ended only in 1346, when ClementVI (1342-52) persuaded the elec-<br /> <br /> said that he had never read a worse<br /> <br /> tors (the group of rulers who chose the emperor) to depose Louis<br /> <br /> heretic. In 1328 the pope declared a<br /> <br /> and elect Charles IV of Luxemburg (1355-78) as his successor. In the<br /> <br /> crusade against Louis IV (see main text) and thereafter Marsiglio's influence<br /> <br /> Golden Bull (1356), Charles carefully defined the imperial election<br /> <br /> declined, but he relllained under<br /> <br /> process in such a way that future papal interference was impossible.<br /> <br /> illlperial protection until his death.<br /> <br /> 140<br /> <br /> CRUSADES IN EUROPE: INFIDELS, PAGANS, AND HERETICS<br /> <br /> THE HUSSITE CRUSADE In the fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries Bohemia was the most powerful state in the Holy Roman empire, especially under the Luxemburg kings Charles IV (1347-78), Wenceslas IV (1378-1419), and Sigismund (1419-37), who were also emperors.As the kingdom's economy and culture bloomed, so too did the rivalry between the country's Czech and German populations. The Luxemburg rulers preferred to appoint Germans to senior church positions, and the A battle between the Hussites and the crusaders} from an early 16th-century Bohemian manuscript. The Hussites fight under a red banner bearing a chalice} a symbol if the core Hussite belief that worshippers should receive communion in both kinds} that is} the wine (which the Catholic clergy reserved for themselves) as well as the bread. The Hussites also called for the church to give up its property} its wealth} and its monopoly on preaching.<br /> <br /> Czechs' complaints led them to advocate church reform, an important issue at a time of the Great Schism of 1378 to 1417 (see box). The foremost Czech spokesman for reform was Jan Hus, a scholar and chancellor of the Charles University of Prague. Hus wanted a simpler and more understandable faith, and church services conducted in Czech. The German majority in the church hierarchy, reacted predictably, eventually obtaining papal instructions to destroy heretical writings at Charles University. In 1411 Wenceslas resigned his claim to the imperial crown in favor of his half-brother, Sigismund of Hungary. Following a failed attempt to end the papal schism in 1409 there were now three popes, and Sigismund was determined to resolve the issue. To this end he persuaded one of the popes,John XXIII (1410-15), to call a council at Constance in southern Germany. The council (1414-18), which eventually won the support of all the major European powers, succeeded in deposing all three popes and electing a new pontiff, Martin V (1417-3 I), in their place. The council also acted to suppress the views ofJohn Wycliff (see box), Hus, and others. In 1415 Hus went to Constance to defend his beliefs with the promise from Sigismund of an imperial safe-conduct. However, Sigismund was advised that Hus must be condemned as a heretic or the council might dissolve, and reluctantly allowed him to be tried and burned at the stake. Hus's followers, the Hussites, were outraged, and the most radical of them began to organize new communities, the most important being at Tabor, where a military genius, Zizka (1370-1424), began to train peasants and artisans to fight. In Prague in the summer of 1419 a Hussite mob threw city magistrates to their deaths out of the city hall windows. This was followed by violence against the Catholic clergy and church buildings, and Catholic miners and nobles then carried out acts of revenge. In 1420, as civil war engulfed Bohemia, Pope Martin V ?eclared a crusade against the Hussites. Sigismund had now succeeded Wenceslas as king of Bohemia and went to Prague for a hasty coronation. He then fled the kingdom,<br /> <br /> THE HUSSITE CRUSADE<br /> <br /> 141<br /> <br /> promising to pay his mercenaries with lands confiscated from the rebels. In 1421 and 1422 crusaders from Germany and Hungary entered the Czech lands; one army alone contained as many as 125,000 troops. But the effectiveness of these forces was hindered by<br /> <br /> the steep Bohemian hills and forests, stoutly defended fortifications, and Hussite military ingenuity. Between 1428 and 1431 a Hussite offensive ravaged Silesia, Saxony, the Upper Palatinate, and Hungary.The Hussites' most resolute enemy was the Teutonic Order, based in West Prussia; in 1433 a Hussite force raided West Prussia with the tacit agreement of King Jagiello of Poland (a Catholic but a lifelong enemy of the order), and reached the Baltic Sea. So completely did the Hussites rule the battlefield that they called these raids "beautiful rides." At length the ageing Sigismund tired of the struggle and the churchmen who had been most vocal in denouncing all reforms admitted that they had failed. At the council of Basel (143 1-49) the church came to an understanding with moderate Hussite representatives, permitting them to conduct church services in their own language and to receive communion in both kinds (see illustration, opposite). These were essentially the same concessions made to the Greek Orthodox church at this time in an effort to achieve Chris-<br /> <br /> A Hussite war camp)Jrom a manuscript oj ca. 1450. The tents are surrounded and protected by a Hussite military innovation-wagons chained together and bearing light cannons. In battle) after the crusaders had exhausted themselves attempting to break through this barrier and had been decimated by the gunners) the Hussite cavalry would make a devastating charge into their ranks.<br /> <br /> tian unity in the face of the growing Ottoman threat. In 1436, after the moderate Hussites had prevailed against the radical Taborites in a brief civil war, Bohemia reentered the Catholic community.<br /> <br /> THE GREAT SCHISM AND REFORM The election of Pope Urban VI (1378-89) proved to<br /> <br /> his own cardinals, naturally brought the whole issue<br /> <br /> be unfortunate on account of his unpredictable and<br /> <br /> of papal power and patronage to the fore. Some radical<br /> <br /> sometimes violent behavior: he once publicly struck a<br /> <br /> reformers, such as the Oxford scholar John Wycliff<br /> <br /> cardinal who had annoyed him. A group of disaffected<br /> <br /> (1320-82), had even questioned the very legitimacy of<br /> <br /> cardinals thereupon elected a new pope, Clement VII<br /> <br /> the papacy's leadership of the church. Wycliff declared,<br /> <br /> (1378-94), who took up residence at Avignon, a city<br /> <br /> for example, that the supreme authority for<br /> <br /> owned by the papacy in the south of France. Two rival<br /> <br /> must always be the Bible, which should be translated<br /> <br /> papal courts came into being, each with its own pope<br /> <br /> into the language of the people and thereby be made<br /> <br /> C~ristians<br /> <br /> and college of cardinals. European states were split in<br /> <br /> available to all, not just the priesthood. To this end,<br /> <br /> their allegiance: France, Scotland, and the Spanish<br /> <br /> Wycliff made an English translation of the Bible.<br /> <br /> kingdoms supported Avignon; England and the Italian<br /> <br /> Wycliff's ideas and those of his followers, the Lollards,<br /> <br /> and German states supported Rome.<br /> <br /> were condemned but not entirely suppressed. They<br /> <br /> The existence of two men claiming the apostolic<br /> <br /> spread from England as far as Prague, where they<br /> <br /> crown, each having his own supporters and appointing<br /> <br /> were a key influence on Hus and his supporters.<br /> <br /> 7 THE<br /> <br /> FIFTH<br /> <br /> CRUSADE TO<br /> <br /> 1291<br /> <br /> THE LOSS OF THE HOLY LAND JAMES<br /> <br /> M.<br /> <br /> POWELL<br /> <br /> The Crusader States<br /> <br /> 144<br /> <br /> Council and Crusade<br /> <br /> 14 6<br /> <br /> The Fifth Crusade<br /> <br /> 14 8<br /> <br /> Prophecy<br /> <br /> 15 2<br /> <br /> The Crusade<br /> <br /> of Frederick<br /> <br /> II<br /> <br /> Disorder in the Crusader Kingdom The First Crusade<br /> <br /> of Louis IX<br /> <br /> The Mamluk Sultanate The End<br /> <br /> of the Latin Empire<br /> <br /> A Kingdom Without a King The Second Crusade The Decline The Fall<br /> <br /> of Louis IX<br /> <br /> of the Latin East<br /> <br /> ofAcre<br /> <br /> 154 15 6 158 160<br /> <br /> 162 164 166 168 170<br /> <br /> 144<br /> <br /> THE FIFTH CRUSADE TO 1291: THE LOSS OF THE HOLY LAND<br /> <br /> THE CRUSADER STATES In the early thirteenth century, the major crusader powers consisted of the kingdom of Cyprus, the principality ofAntioch, and the Latin kingdom ofJerusalem. The Latin kingdom chiefly controlled some coastal cities, the most important being Acre and Tyre; Jerusalem itself remained in Muslim hands. The death of Saladin in 1193 had focused the attention of his heirs on internal affairs (see box), but the diversion of the Fourth Crusade against Constantinople and the foundation of the Latin empire of Constantinople in 1204-05 (see Chapter Five) had divided western European interests and weakened support for the crusader states. The kingdom ofAcre, as the Latin kingdom ofJerusalem became in fact if not in name, lacked the resources to support the monarchy and the nobility, yet it remained relatively stable due largely to the respite it enjoyed from external attack during these years. However, the tradition of strong royal leadership, which was so important in the twelfth century, entered a long decline following the rule of such figures as Henry of Champagne and Amalric of Lusignan, both of whom were king only by virtue of being married to Queen Isabella ofJerusalem (see page 94), and John of Erienne, who became king by marrying Isabella's daughter and heiress, Maria. Following the Fifth Crusade of 1217-21 (see pages 148-151), the papacy encouraged the emperor Frederick II to marry the daughter of John and Maria, also named Isabella, in order to persuade him to fulfill his crusade vow. As ruler of the Latin kingdom, Frederick attempted to centralize and strengthen royal authority, but he was an absentee monarch who faced strong opposition from the barons of the kingdom, led by John of Ibelin and other members of his family. Consequently, much of Frederick's effort merely exacerbated the growing tensions in the kingdom and ultimately contributed to a weakening of the crown in the second half of the thirteenth century. However, until that time the situation for the crusaders in the region was actually better than it had been following the victorious campaigns of Saladin, due largely to the Third Crusade and the recapture of Acre. King Richard I had also taken most of the coast as far south as Jaffa, while to the north Tyre had held. Moreover,<br /> <br /> THE CRUSADER STATES<br /> <br /> THE AYYUB I DS AFTER SALADIN The death of Saladin in 1193 influenced the<br /> <br /> players that meant a stronger government, which, under<br /> <br /> development of all the lands that extended from Egypt<br /> <br /> al-Adil and al-Kamil, lasted for more than fifty years.<br /> <br /> to the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. Saladin's successors were his sons and other members of the Ayyubid<br /> <br /> Yet the Ayyubid regime never attained full stability. Its relations with the crusader states and the way in<br /> <br /> family: al-Afdal Ali ruled in Damascus, al-Zahir Ghazi<br /> <br /> which it met the challenges of the Fifth Crusade (see<br /> <br /> in Aleppo, and al-Aziz Uthman in Cairo. The northern<br /> <br /> pages 148-151), the crusade of the emperor Frederick II<br /> <br /> territories, including the Kurdish homeland of the<br /> <br /> (see pages 154-155), and the first crusade of King Louis<br /> <br /> Ayyubids, were left to Saladin's brother, al-Adil Sayf<br /> <br /> IX of France (see pages 158-159), were entirely<br /> <br /> ad-Din, while al-Adil's son, al-Muazzam, controlled<br /> <br /> defensive, aimed at protecting its position. The<br /> <br /> Transjordan. Family members also governed less<br /> <br /> achievement of al-Adil and al-I{amillay in their<br /> <br /> important areas. Other clans, such as the Artukids,<br /> <br /> preservation of the legacy of Saladin. Twice they turned<br /> <br /> Zengids, and Seljuks, ruled neighboring territories.<br /> <br /> back crusader attacks on Egypt at al-Mansurah. Al-<br /> <br /> Clan rule by its nature encouraged divisions. Within<br /> <br /> Kamil made a treaty with Frederick II in 1229 that cost<br /> <br /> a decade of Saladin's death, al-Adil emerged as the<br /> <br /> him little and gave him a free hand to consolidate his<br /> <br /> dominant figure in Egypt and southern Syria. He<br /> <br /> power in Transjordan and Syria.<br /> <br /> deprived Saladin's remaining sons of power and put his<br /> <br /> The days of the Ayyubids came to an end in 1250<br /> <br /> own sons in their places, making his son al-Kamil his<br /> <br /> at the hands of the Mamluk ("slave") troops who had<br /> <br /> deputy in Egypt and entrusting Syria to al-Muazzam.<br /> <br /> been recruited by the Turkish sultan as-Salih, al-Kamil's<br /> <br /> This was not an end to clan rule, but a shuffiing of the<br /> <br /> son (see pages 160-161).<br /> <br /> under Henry of Champagne and Amalric of Lusignan, truces with the successors of Saladin (see box) provided the crusaders with a measure of security and time for rebuilding their defenses. Meanwhile, in the West, Pope Innocent III was preparing to summon another crusade, aimed at accomplishing the goals that the Fourth Crusade had failed to achieve. The diversion of that crusade and the Frankish conquest of the Byzantine empire had seriously jeopardized his plans for church unity, but he remained committed to the fundamental aims of his pontificate: the summoning of a general council of the church to promote church reform, and a new expedition to the East. Innocent's ambitious agenda for the Fourth Crusade was now scaled down to meet reality.<br /> <br /> of Brienne (ca. 1148-1237). An illustrious French knight) Count John oj Brienne was chosen by King Louis VII of France to marry the heiress of the kingdom ofJerusalem) therby becoming king in 1210. He played a key role in the Fifth Crusade and ended his remarkable career as Latin emperor if Constantinople (1228-37).<br /> <br /> Opposite: The tomb ojJohn<br /> <br /> Right: A Turkish steel helmet inlaid with gold) with Arabic inscriptions. From the 11 th<br /> <br /> century the Islamic Near East was dominated by non-Arab dynasties. The hegemony the Turks) in the Jorm oj the Seijuks) Mamluks) and Ottomans) endured until 1918.<br /> <br /> if<br /> <br /> 145<br /> <br /> 146<br /> <br /> THE FlFTH CRUSADE TO 1291: THE LOSS OF THE HOLY LAND<br /> <br /> COUNCIL AND CRUSADE In April<br /> <br /> 1213<br /> <br /> Pope Innocent III announced his intention to sum-<br /> <br /> mon a general council of the church in<br /> <br /> 1215<br /> <br /> to deal with the reform<br /> <br /> of the church and also the planned crusade. In the fifteen years of his papacy, Innocent had experienced the many problems that had confronted the church as well as the debacle of the Fourth Crusade. It is not surprising, therefore, that he laid out detailed plans both for the organization of the crusade and for preaching. His plans were contained in three letters, usually known by the first words of their Latin text, Quia maior, Pium et sanctum, and Vineam Domini. Taken together, these letters constitute the most complete<br /> <br /> plan for a crusade and church council undertaken by any pope up Below: The valley ojJezreel) looking toward<br /> <br /> Mount Tabofy traditionally the site oj the Transfiguration ofJesus. Pope Innocent IITs call Jor a new crusade was prompted by the capture and Jortification oj Tabor by the Ayyubids) although this action did not immediately pose a threat to the Latin position in the East.<br /> <br /> to this time. Quia maior, the call for a new crusade, opens with a sense of urgency that can only reflect the pope's frustration at the failure of previous efforts. He seems obsessed by the evil of the times, and points to the recent Muslim capture of Mount Tabor. He promises full forgiveness of sins not only to those who go on crusade, but also those who provide support. Indeed, one of the more notable<br /> <br /> COUNCIL AND CRUSADE<br /> <br /> 147<br /> <br /> THE REFORM OF CHRISTIAN LIFE On the surface, there was little to link the seventy main decrees of the Fourth Lateran council with the planned new crusade to the East. But from Pope Innocent Ill's point of view, the reform of Christian society was essential to the success of any crusade, and this connection had been developing with increasing force ever since the failure of the Second Crusade. The majority of the council's decrees dealt with the regulation of the clergy. Among the most notable measures were those aimed at raising educational and moral standards among the priesthood and at promoting preaching by competent clerics. While the faithful were required to confess their sins to their parish priest at least once a year, any priest who revealed a sin heard in confession would be stripped of office and confined to a monastery.<br /> <br /> characteristics of Quia malar<br /> <br /> IS<br /> <br /> its emphasis on the importance of<br /> <br /> money and material assistance. In Pium et sanctum, Innocent spells out in detail the requirements of those selected to preach the crusade. Finally, in Vineam Domini, Innocent announces his plans for a general council of the church. Thus, for the first time, the crusade was fully integrated into the program of the reform papacy. The general council that assembled at the Lateran basilica in Rome in November<br /> <br /> 1215<br /> <br /> was the largest gathering of its kind in the<br /> <br /> history of the church to that time. Attending the Fourth Lateran council were more than<br /> <br /> 412<br /> <br /> bishops and archbishops and<br /> <br /> 800<br /> <br /> abbots, as well as envoys from many European monarchs. The council promulgated seventy decrees touching on almost all aspects of church life (see box). The new crusade is dealt with specif-<br /> <br /> A CALL FOR PEACE IN THE WEST The Fourth Lateran council took up various disputes that involved secular rulers, such as the attelllpt by RaYlllond of Toulouse to recover lands lost in the Albigensian Crusade. The settlelllent of such disputes forllled part of Innocent Ill's extensive efforts to secure an unprecedented general peace throughout<br /> <br /> ically in the text Ad liberandum, which makes clear that preachers<br /> <br /> Christendolll in advance of a new<br /> <br /> were to link the act of going on crusade with personal reform. With<br /> <br /> crusade. The peace is specifically called<br /> <br /> the events of the Fourth Crusade in mind, it stresses the obligation<br /> <br /> for in the council decree Ad liberandum:<br /> <br /> of crusaders to fulfill their vows unless there is a valid impediment. Recalling how disputes among western rulers had hampered earlier crusades, Ad liberandum calls for a general peace (see sidebar) and<br /> <br /> "Since, llloreover, in order to carry on this lllatter it is 1ll0St necessary that Princes and the people of Christ should lllutually observe peace, the holy universal<br /> <br /> emphasizes the degree to which the church was prepared to provide<br /> <br /> synod urging us: we do establish that, at<br /> <br /> support for the crusaders. Ad liberandum also forbids all Christians,<br /> <br /> least for four years, throughout the whole<br /> <br /> on pain of excommunication, to trade in war materials with<br /> <br /> Christian world, a general peace should be<br /> <br /> Muslims. Finally, the pope promises a full pardon of all sins that cru-<br /> <br /> observed, so that, through the prelates of the churches, the contending parties lllay<br /> <br /> saders have confessed-a promise clearly linked to the council<br /> <br /> be brought back to observe inviolably a<br /> <br /> decree on confession (see box).<br /> <br /> full peace or a firlll truce."<br /> <br /> 148<br /> <br /> THE FIFTH CRUSADE TO 1291: THE LOSS OF THE HOLY LAND<br /> <br /> THE FIFTH CRUSADE THE FALL OF DAMIETTA<br /> <br /> On 16th July 1216, shortly after the Fourth Lateran council, Pope<br /> <br /> The Iraqi historian Izz ad-Din ibn-al-<br /> <br /> Innocent III died in Perugia. However, preparations for the new<br /> <br /> Athir (1160-1233) produced a fantous<br /> <br /> crusade were continued by his successor, Honorius III. By the fol-<br /> <br /> account of the crusades in which he<br /> <br /> lowing spring the first crusaders were ready to set out, and on 29th<br /> <br /> reports on the fall of Dantietta to the Fifth Crusade in 1219:<br /> <br /> May 1217 a Frisian and Rhineland contingent leftVlerdingen in the<br /> <br /> "The Franks laid siege to Dantietta<br /> <br /> Netherlands. At Dartmouth in England they elected leaders and<br /> <br /> and attacked it by land and by sea. After<br /> <br /> were joined by some English crusaders before making their way<br /> <br /> a prolonged struggle the defenders<br /> <br /> along the coasts of France and Spain. They stopped at the pilgrim-<br /> <br /> reached the end of their resources. They were alntost without food, and exhausted by unending battle. The Franks were sufficiently nunterous to take turns at the<br /> <br /> age shrine of Santiago de Compostela and again in Portugal, where they aided the bishop of Lisbon to capture the Muslim fortress of al-Qasr. They finally landed in Acre in April and May 1218.<br /> <br /> fighting, but Dantietta lacked the soldiers<br /> <br /> In the meantime, contingents led by King Andrew II of Hungary<br /> <br /> to ntake this possible. In spite of this they<br /> <br /> and Duke LeopoldVI ofAustria had sailed to Acre from the Venetian<br /> <br /> held out antazingly and suffered great losses front death in battle, wounds, and<br /> <br /> port of Spalato (Split), arriving respectively in August and Septem-<br /> <br /> sickness. The siege lasted until [5th<br /> <br /> ber 1217. They scouted around Mount Tabor, recently fortified by<br /> <br /> Noventber], when the survivors, so few in<br /> <br /> al-Adil, crossed the Jordan, and traveled up the east side of the Sea<br /> <br /> nuntber and without provisions, were<br /> <br /> of Galilee before returning to Acre. They besieged Tabor in early<br /> <br /> unable any longer to defend their city.<br /> <br /> December, but for reasons that are unclear soon gave up. After King<br /> <br /> Sonte left, sonte stayed, unable to ntove; the city's inhabitants were scattered."<br /> <br /> Andrew had returned home in January 1218, the crusaders focused on restoring the fortifications at Chastel Pelerin and Caesarea. The spring of 1218 brought the Rhenish, Frisian, and English contingents. The crusade leadership (comprising contingent leaders,<br /> <br /> FINANCING THE CRUSADES The First Crusade relied almost entirely on financing by<br /> <br /> England did likewise (see page 81). The church became<br /> <br /> the crusaders themselves, who were expected to support<br /> <br /> directly involved in crusade financing under Pope<br /> <br /> themselves in much the same way as vassals serving their<br /> <br /> Innocent III, who in 1199 called upon the clergy to pay<br /> <br /> lord. The cost to a knight of maintaining himself for<br /> <br /> one-fortieth of their incomes for this purpose, pledging<br /> <br /> even a relatively short period was very high, and the<br /> <br /> a larger proportion from himself and his cardinals. This<br /> <br /> cost of crusading forced most to borrow money by<br /> <br /> met with only limited success, and in 1215 the Fourth<br /> <br /> mortgaging lands or borrowing from monasteries or<br /> <br /> Lateran council decreed a tax of one-twentieth of clergy<br /> <br /> Jewish moneylenders, with a negative effect on<br /> <br /> income for three years to finance the Fifth Crusade.<br /> <br /> Christian-Jewish relations (see page 60) Greater royal involvement in the Second and Third<br /> <br /> Reports produced for Pope Gregory X (1272-76) reveal an increasing concern about the misuse of the<br /> <br /> crusades brought systematic taxation. Louis VII of<br /> <br /> various crusading taxes that by that time had become<br /> <br /> France imposed the first royal tax in support of a<br /> <br /> a fact of life. Such criticisms grew in the fourteenth<br /> <br /> crusade, and Philip II of France and Richard I of<br /> <br /> century, despite the increasing Ottoman threat.<br /> <br /> THE FIFTH CRUSADE<br /> <br /> 149<br /> <br /> bishops, and others) now made plans for the coming campaign in Egypt, which had been decided, following an existing strategy, at the Fourth Lateran council. The first objective was to be Damietta in the eastern Nile Delta. On 27th May 1218, the crusaders landed near the city and elected the king ofJerusalem, John of Brienne, as their overall leader when he arrived from Acre. Damietta commanded the most direct route to Cairo and was easily reached from ports in Palestine. However, it was protected by the Nile river and three walls with numerous towers; in addition a chain stretched across the river from the city to a tower on an island near the west bank. A bridge of ships in turn protected the chain. The channel between the bank and the tower was unprotected, but<br /> <br /> The crusaders attack the ((Turris Damiate)}<br /> <br /> too shallow for ships and too wide for effective attack from land.<br /> <br /> (Tower of Damietta) from a contemporary account in Latin by the English chronicler Matthew Paris. The tower is probably the one that stood near the west bank of the Nile and was linked to the city on the east bank by a protective chain and a pontoon bridge. To take the tower the crusaders built a siege machine mounted on two ships.<br /> <br /> In August the crusaders seized the tower and destroyed the chain, but their army was too small to move against Damietta itself. Many German and Frisian crusaders made plans to return home, but then a large contingent of English, French, and Italians arrived, as well as the papal legate, the Portuguese cardinal Pelagius ofAlbano.<br /> <br /> J<br /> <br /> 150<br /> <br /> THE FIFTH CRUSADE TO 1291: THE LOSS OF THE HOLY LAND<br /> <br /> )<br /> <br /> Before the crusaders could advance, the sultan of Egypt, al-Kamil (the son of al-Adil, who had died a few weeks earlier), attacked their camp, but was forced back. In order to surround Damietta, the crusaders now enlarged a canal that entered the Nile south of the city. However, their work was almost destroyed by a heavy storm. Sometime before January 1219, al-Kamil learned of a plot to overthrow him and abandoned his camp at al-Adiliya. The crusaders crossed the Nile to take it over, and subsequently resisted al-Kamil's attempt to retake it with the help of al-Muazzam, the ruler of Syria and Palestine. Damietta was now cut off, but the crusaders were unable to follow up this success by seizing the city. The summer of 1219 saw a stalemate. Al-Kamil had @<br /> <br /> superior forces, but chose to remain in his new camp at Fariskur rather than take risks. The crusaders were expecting the arrival of the emperor Frederick II and<br /> <br /> they maintained a defensive position. Frederick had taken the crusade vow in 1215, but had so far been delayed by matters in Germany. At the end of August-when Francis of Assisi was in the camp (see box)-a crusader attack on the Egyptians ended in failure. The stalemate dragged on and living conditions in the crusader camp deteriorated. But on 5th November 1219 Damietta finally fell (see sidebar on page 148). Out of a population of 60,000, only 10,000 remained. The city was put to the sack. Al-Kamil withdrew to al-Mansurah. His main aim was for the crusaders to leave Egypt so that he could pursue his Syrian ambitions. He proposed a truce, offering to exchange Jerusalem and other holy sites for Damietta. But his terms did not include fortifications "-beyond the Jordan, without which Jerusalem would be vulnerable. Besides, the crusaders were confident that once the emperor arrived they would be able to complete the conquest of Egypt. On behalf of pope and emperor, Pelagius rejected al-Kamil's offer. The em.peror renewed his crusade vow in 1220, but a rebellion in Sicily delayed his departure yet again. The pope and some of the Above: Crusading monarchs: the coronations<br /> <br /> of<br /> <br /> the emperor Frederick II in 1220 ~ift) and King Louis IX of France in 1224,Jrom an early 15thcentury French Psalter by Pierre Lombard. Opposite: A gold and enamel reliquary depicting<br /> <br /> St. Francis ofAssisi, made shortly after his death in 1226. Francis preached to the crusaders and the sultan at Damietta during the Egyptian crusade.<br /> <br /> crusade leaders were growing anxious about his continued delay, but their immediate concern was keeping the crusader army together. In early 1220 al-Muazzam had attacked Caesarea and Chastel Pelerin in Palestine, and partly in response to this threat John of Brienne had returned to Acre with a large number of troops. Cardinal Pelagius was left in charge in Egypt, where some crusaders sought to move at once against al-Kamil, although others wanted to wait for the emperor. By the spring of 1221 Frederick was<br /> <br /> THE FIFTH CRUSADE<br /> <br /> FRANCIS OF ASSISI ON CRUSADE The reputation of Francis ofAssisi (ca. 1180-1226),<br /> <br /> on the following day, 29th August, when they launched<br /> <br /> the founder of the Franciscan order (ca. 1210), is largely<br /> <br /> an attack on the Egyptian camp It was probably during the ensuing truce that<br /> <br /> based on his charismatic personal appeal. His life is surrounded by myth and legend, a process that began<br /> <br /> Francis gained permission to cross to the Muslim side-<br /> <br /> while he was still alive and continues even today. In<br /> <br /> the Muslims perhaps regarded him as an envoy. He was<br /> <br /> August 1219, at the height of the Fifth Crusade, as the<br /> <br /> well received by al-Kamil, but refused his gifts. The<br /> <br /> crusaders were encamped outside Damietta, Francis<br /> <br /> sultan listened to his message, which seems to have<br /> <br /> arrived with a single companion. He received<br /> <br /> called for a peaceful solution through conversion to<br /> <br /> permission to preach, and his sermon warned the<br /> <br /> Christianity. The basic message of self-reform was<br /> <br /> crusaders that they would lose the battle they were<br /> <br /> probably in essence the same as he addressed to the<br /> <br /> about to fight. Francis may well have gone further<br /> <br /> crusaders. The episode captured the imagination of<br /> <br /> and warned them that they would lose the war, but<br /> <br /> artists and those seeking alternatives to war. Although<br /> <br /> contemporary accounts preferred not to stress this.<br /> <br /> its immediate impact was not obvious, it may have<br /> <br /> At any rate, the crusaders suffered a significant defeat<br /> <br /> encouraged al-Kamil to continue- ~rl:l~e negotiations.<br /> <br /> still not ready to come, but in May he sent Duke Louis of Bavaria with<br /> <br /> 500<br /> <br /> knights. Pelagius 'urged him to act immediately; the duke,<br /> <br /> however, insisted on a proper reconnaissance and the army was not prepared to move against al-Kamil until July 9th. The annual Nile flood was nearly due and al-Kamil, knowing that his brothers were bringing troops from Syria, had renewed his offer of truce. Pelagius again rej ected the offer and pressed the crusaders to attack. Leaving a large force to defend Darnietta, the crusaders advanced by land and water. On 18th July they reached Sharamshah, where mounted Turkish archers employed their usual harassing tactic of shooting without engaging the knights. John of Brienne, who had returned, advised withdrawal, but Pelagius refused. At the end ofJuly, the crusaders had reached the triangle of land opposite al-Mansurah. Al-Kamil was ready for them. He sent ships down the al-Mahallah canal behind the crusader fleet to block their escape by river and, with the support of his brothers, closed the route to the northeast. On 26th August the crusade army was forced to retreat. The Nile flood had begun, and that year the river was high. Al-Kamil opened irrigation sluices to flood the fields. The crusaders were completely cut off and retreat became a rout. Their only choice was surrender, which they negotiated in exchange for Damietta. There was bitterness in the city, especially since reinforcements sent by the emperor Frederick had arrived under Count Henry of Malta. Victory had slipped away; only recriminations remained.<br /> <br /> 151<br /> <br /> 152<br /> <br /> THE FIFTH CRUSADE TO 1291: THE LOSS OF THE HOLY LAND<br /> <br /> PROPHECY During the Fifth Crusade, Francis ofAssisi may well have<br /> <br /> already come true, and it detailed how a mighty ruler from the<br /> <br /> prophesied defeat for the crusaders in the coming battle, if<br /> <br /> East, "King David" (who was interpreted as the Mongol leader<br /> <br /> not in the entire war (see page 151). Moreover, in the months<br /> <br /> Genghis Khan, ruled 1206-27), would unite in Jerusalem with<br /> <br /> following the crusader capture of Damietta, various apocryphal<br /> <br /> a king from the West (clearly intended to be the emperor<br /> <br /> prophetic accounts began to circulate in the crusader camp,<br /> <br /> Frederick II). The Book<br /> <br /> most notably The Revelations<br /> <br /> of the Apostle Peter edited in<br /> <br /> one<br /> <br /> of Clement also<br /> <br /> prophesied the fall of a<br /> <br /> "watery city" (possibly Tanis, east of Damietta) to the crusaders<br /> <br /> volume by his disciple Clement, or The Book of Clement. According<br /> <br /> as well as Damietta and Alexandria. The prophecies were taken<br /> <br /> to Oliver of Paderborn, who ~Tent on the Fifth Crusade, this<br /> <br /> seriously by the crusade leaders, and the bishop ofAcre<br /> <br /> book (which purported to be ancient but was certainly a near-<br /> <br /> included an account of them in a letter to Pope Honorius III.<br /> <br /> contemporary writing) contained many prophecies that had<br /> <br /> In an age in which the belief in prophecy was common, the popularity of The Book<br /> <br /> of Clement was<br /> <br /> not exceptional.<br /> <br /> Throughout the crusades there were prophetic incidents. Perhaps the first was the vision that led to the discovery of the supposed Holy Lance in Antioch on the First Crusade, which inspired a demoralized army to victory (see page 42). To elicit support for the Second Crusade, Bernard of Clairvaux (St. Bernard) had quoted the biblical prophetic phrase "Now is the acceptable time" (2 Corinthians 6, echoing Isaiah 49.8). Around the time of the Fourth Crusade, Pope Innocent III would quote St. Bernard to the Byzantine emperor Alexius III, who argued that God would free the holy places when he was ready, not at man's behest. In the thirteenth century, the prophecies attributed to the twelfth-century Italian abbot Joachim of Fiore aroused great controversy, but also touched the crusade. While King Richard I was in Sicily during the winter of 1190-91, he had met Joachim, who had interpreted the Bible to predict the future of the world. Joachim believed that the beast with seven heads in chapter 13 of the Book<br /> <br /> of Revelation referred<br /> <br /> to seven kings<br /> <br /> who would persecute the church: five were dead, one (Saladin) was living, and the seventh (Antichrist) was to come. Joachim foretold that Richard would defeat Saladin, but that his victory would be followed by the coming of the Antichrist, who would try to destroy all Christians and the church. Eventually he would be defeated and a golden age would dawn. King Richard disagreed with some ofJoachim's calculations, and the interview ended with the parties still arguing. Although Joachim's predictions of victory turned out to be optimistic and some of his work was later condemned as heretical, his ideas were influential. His belief that the<br /> <br /> Antichrist's coming was imminent and that his downfall would be followed by a new age of the Holy Spirit, when God would reign, was very attractive to pious Christians of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, when the church was challenged from within by heretics and from outside by Islam. The coming of the Mongols also lay behind the popularity of the "Cedar of Lebanon" prophecy that circulated from ca.<br /> <br /> 1250<br /> <br /> and presented a vision of the fall ofTripoli and Acre,<br /> <br /> and predicted dire happenings for the West. Interestingly, despite the continued importance of prophetic thought generally, there is no evidence that prophecy played any particular role in the actual events surrounding the fall ofAcre in 170-171). The<br /> <br /> period after<br /> <br /> 1291<br /> <br /> 1291<br /> <br /> (see pages<br /> <br /> was more notable for various<br /> <br /> practical proposals aimed at mounting more effective crusades.<br /> <br /> Opposite: St. Francis, with Scenes from his Life) attributed to<br /> <br /> Bonaventura Berlinghieri (active<br /> <br /> 122~74).<br /> <br /> Above: Men prostrate themselves before the beast of the Apocalypse<br /> <br /> (Revelation<br /> <br /> 13)<br /> <br /> 11-14))jrom a 13th-century English manuscript.<br /> <br /> Right: The discovery of the Holy Lance at Antioch during the First<br /> <br /> Crusade)jrom a 15th-century French version oj William of 1Yre~ History of Deeds done Beyond the Sea.<br /> <br /> 154<br /> <br /> THE FIFTH CRUSADE TO 1291: THE LOSS OF THE HOLY LAND<br /> <br /> THE CRUSADE OF FREDERICK II The Fifth Crusade probably failed owing to the lack of effective leadership. As Pope Honorius III wrote to Frederick II, they shared responsibility for the failure, but the remedy lay in a new expedition. Frederick's treaty with the pope at San Germano in 1225 set out a plan for this crusade. The emperor agreed to leave for the East by the end ofAugust 1227 or face excommunication. He would also marry Isabella II, the heiress to the throne ofJerusalem through her mother Maria, the late wife ofJohn of Brienne. The pope believed the marriage would bind Frederick more closely to the crusade, Detail of a relief on the marble pulpit made in 1229 for the great cathedral of Bitonto) Apulia (built 1198-1250)) during the reign of Frederick II as king of Sicily. The figure on the right holding a scepter is the emperor himself. The kingdom of Sicily embraced not just the island of Sicily but all of southern Italy) including Apulia. Frederick was the grandson of King Roger II) the founder of the kingdom) and the emperor Frederick 1.<br /> <br /> while Frederick, already emperor and king of Sicily, gained another kingdom. John reluctantly surrendered his claim to the kingship. But conditions were hardly conducive to a new crusade so soon after the last one. Experienced manpower was a problem, and Frederick had to rely chiefly on crusaders from Germany and the kingdom of Sicily. He left Italy on 8th September 1227, but was forced by illness to turn back. The new pope, Gregory IX, who had succeeded Honorius in March 1227, was determined to exercise papal authority over the emperor and excommunicated him at once. This meant Frederick was forbidden to crusade, but he was committed to going to the East and to his interests as king of Jerusalem. Success in the East was, he believed, the course most likely to restore him to papal favor. To prepare the ground he had already opened negotiations with the sultan al-Kamil, who was keen to avoid another conflict that would further disrupt his ambitions in Syria and the northern Levant. On 28th June 1228 Frederick set sail once more with about forty ships. In September he landed in Acre, joining those who had reached the East exactly a year earlier. The death of his brother and rival al-Muazzam had removed the main<br /> <br /> THE CRUSADE OF FREDERICK II<br /> <br /> European travelers arriving in the Holy Land, from an early 15th-century Bohemian manuscript of the travels of Sir John Mandeville. In the upper scene, a boat nears Jaffa, the port used by Christian pilgrims to Jerusalem. One of the sights of medieval Jaffa was the ((rib of a giant," here seen hanging from the walls. The bottom scene shows travelers paying duty to enter 7j;re.<br /> <br /> WINNING THE PEACE AI-Kamil and Frederick II both faced a difficult task in justifying the treaty of Jaffa to their supporters. Their propaganda<br /> <br /> obstacle to al-Kamil's Syrian ambitions, but the presence of Frederick<br /> <br /> played a key role in establishing the truce called for in the treaty, which was to<br /> <br /> put them in jeopardy. Frederick moved with all the forces he could<br /> <br /> remain in force for the next decade.<br /> <br /> muster from Acre to Jaffa, clearly signaling his intention to attack<br /> <br /> AI-Kamil argued that the return of an<br /> <br /> Jerusalem itself, which was not fortified. Al-Kamil quickly offered<br /> <br /> unfortified Jerusalem to the crusaders<br /> <br /> terms and Frederick had little choice but to accept them. Under<br /> <br /> was better than risking an all-out war<br /> <br /> the treaty of Jaffa of 1229 Frederick gained Jerusalem, Bethlehem,<br /> <br /> with Frederick. The Islamic holy places remained in Muslim hands, and at some<br /> <br /> Nazareth, some other sites, and a pilgrim route to Jaffa. Jerusalem<br /> <br /> future date the city could be recovered.<br /> <br /> would remain unfortified, while the Muslims kept control of the<br /> <br /> AI-Kamil portrayed Frederick<br /> <br /> Temple area with its mosques. There was to be a ten-year truce. Frederick quickly went to Jerusalem to affirm himself as king,<br /> <br /> sympathetically, both to keep him on his side and to justify making the treaty. For his part, Frederick worked to shore<br /> <br /> although a coronation by a priest was impossible since Frederick was<br /> <br /> up his support among the secular rulers of<br /> <br /> still an excommunicate. Shortly afterward, Frederick learned that the<br /> <br /> Europe. In a letter of 1229 to Henry III of<br /> <br /> pope had invaded the kingdom of Sicily. Frederick returned to Acre<br /> <br /> England, he expresses the depth of his<br /> <br /> and on 1st May 1229 left for the West, leaving imperial officials to try to impose his rule on the kingdom's Frankish barons. The results of Frederick II's crusade make it clear that it was really<br /> <br /> religious motivation and details his success in securing the treaty with al-Kamil. But, he assures the English king, this was due to divine intervention rather than his own<br /> <br /> the continuation of the Fifth Crusade. He was aware that the treaty<br /> <br /> efforts. Frederick stresses the limits that<br /> <br /> ofJaffa gave the crusaders somewhat less than al-Kamil had offered<br /> <br /> the treaty placed on the sultan's right to<br /> <br /> during the earlier crusade (see sidebar), but it still meant that the Holy Sepulcher was in Christian hands for the first time in forty<br /> <br /> build fortifications, but omits to discuss his own similar constraints; in fact, he gives the impression that Jerusalem will<br /> <br /> years. And in 1230 Frederick reached an agreement with Gregory<br /> <br /> indeed be fortified. Nor does he mention<br /> <br /> IX that brought him the acceptance he had set out to regain.<br /> <br /> his excommunication.<br /> <br /> 155<br /> <br /> 156<br /> <br /> THE FIFTH CRUSADE TO 1291: THE LOSS OF THE HOLY LAND<br /> <br /> DISORDER IN THE CRUSADER KINGDOM The truce provided by the treaty ofJaffa offered the opportunity for both sides to pursue their interests in relative security until the treaty expired in<br /> <br /> 1239.<br /> <br /> After defeating the papal invasion of his Sicilian<br /> <br /> kingdom, the emperor Frederick II embarked on a period of cooperation with Pope Gregory IX that was to last for most of this time. Frederick's wife Isabella had died in childbirth in<br /> <br /> 1228<br /> <br /> and he acted<br /> <br /> as regent for their son Conrad, the new king of Jerusalem. He remained in the West, leaving the administration of the kingdom to imperial officials who acted as baillis (deputies) for Conrad. The determination of Frederick's men to govern the kingdom effectively brought about an internal conflict that consumed virtually the whole decade. Behind it lay the ambitions of John Ibelin, the powerful lord of Beirut, and his relatives and allies, to ensure their dominance of the kingdom, if not to secure the crown itself<br /> <br /> A crusader kneeling in prayer.,from the Westminster Psalter., an English manuscript of the first half of the 13th century. The crowned helmet indicates the figure~ royal or aristocratic status.<br /> <br /> DISORDER IN THE CRUSADER KINGDOM<br /> <br /> 157<br /> <br /> for one of their own, Queen Alice of Cyprus. Indeed, since many of these barons derived a large part of their incomes and military support from Cyprus, it is unlikely that they could have sustained themselves in any other way. Owing to their opposition, the efforts of pope and emperor to take advantage of the treaty of Jaffa to strengthen the kingdom were largely squandered. In<br /> <br /> 1234<br /> <br /> Gregory IX approached Count Theobald<br /> <br /> IV of Champagne, who was from one of the most distinguished crusading families, to lead a new crusade. Theobald, who was also king of Navarre, arrived at Acre in September<br /> <br /> 1239<br /> <br /> at the head of many of the<br /> <br /> greatest nobles of France. They considered how best to exploit the disunity among the Ayyubids that had followed the death of al-Kamil in<br /> <br /> 1238.<br /> <br /> An attempt to take Tripoli came to nothing. Theobald returned to Acre and began negotiations with the sultan of Damascus, who agreed to an alliance against Egypt, offering in return Jerusalem (which had been occupied by Muslim troops following the expiry of the treaty of Jaffa), Sidon, Tiberias, Galilee, and Inost of southern Palestine. Theobald advanced on Jaffa with his new allies, but many of them deserted when word came of an Egyptian advance. Still, Theobald was in a sufficiently powerful position to negotiate with the Egyptians in order to secure what Damascus had failed to deliver. Jerusalem was in Christian hands once more. After visiting the city to fulfill his pilgrim vow,Theobald left for home in September<br /> <br /> 1240.<br /> <br /> Most likely, the concessions gained by Theobald would have melted quickly away had not Richard of Cornwall, the brother of Henry III of England, arrived with a large force in October<br /> <br /> 1240.<br /> <br /> Against baronial opposition, Richard upheld the agreement with Egypt and moved to fortify Ascalon. Richard concluded a treaty and crusader prisoners were released, but he returned home in May<br /> <br /> 1241.<br /> <br /> Had he spent more time in the East, Richard's support for the imperial representatives in the crusader kingdom against the barons might have prevented the loss ofJerusalem in<br /> <br /> 1244<br /> <br /> to the Kwaris-<br /> <br /> mians, Turkish mercenaries in Egyptian service. Never again was the city to be in Christian hands. There can be little doubt that the internal conflict in the crusader kingdom was an obstacle to any serious military effort in this period. The victory in the internal struggle went to the Frankish barons, led by the Ibelins. Acting on tenuous legal grounds, they suceeded in establishing Alice of Cyprus as regent in<br /> <br /> 1243.<br /> <br /> From that point the kingdom ofJerusalem was little<br /> <br /> more than an appendage to the kingdom of Cyprus.<br /> <br /> The seal of Richard, earl of Cornwall and count of Poitou (120g-72). The crusading son of England's King John (and nephew of Richard the Lionheart) and younger brother of King Henry III is depicted on horseback as a knight in full armor.<br /> <br /> 158<br /> <br /> THE FIFTH CRUSADE TO 1291: THE LOSS OF THE HOLY LAND<br /> <br /> THE FIRST CRUSADE OF LOUIS IX The loss of Jerusalem in 1244 provoked no immediate response in Europe. Although Pope Innocent IV proclaimed a new crusade at the council of Lyons in 1245, the chief business of the council was an attempt to depose the emperor Frederick II, who was embroiled in a struggle with the pope for dominance in northern Italy. Henry III of England was preoccupied with baronial opposition. Only in France was there a powerful, unchallenged ruler, King Louis IX. Against the opposition of his mother and former regent, Blanche of Castile, and of his chief advisors, Louis took the cross in 1244. Louis combined religious idealism with a hard-headed practicality. There was no contradiction in his commitment to the crusade and to the French monarchy, as his mother claimed. He was also one of the wealthiest rulers of the time, although very careful when spending money. To fund his crusade, Louis secured from the council of Lyons the grant of one-twentieth of church revenues for three years, with the French clergy increasing this to one-tenth. This grant, subsequently extended for two further years, meant that about twothirds of the total cost of Louis's crusade was born by the church, with barely anything coming out of his regular royal revenues. King Louis IX embarks on crusade, from a 15 thcentury French manuscript.<br /> <br /> In preparation for the crusade, the French king also built up huge stores of foodstuffs, which he sent to Cyprus as provisions for his army. His forces consisted of some 1,500 knights and their retinues, suggesting a total of more than 25,000, including about 5,000<br /> <br /> THE CAPTURE OF LOUIS IX<br /> <br /> crossbowmen. The crusaders were almost entirely French, with a<br /> <br /> The Muslim historian Ibn al-Furat (1334-<br /> <br /> sprinkling of English, Scots, Germans, and Norwegians.<br /> <br /> 1405) wrote an account of the capture of<br /> <br /> Louis IX. The following is an extract: " [The Franks] set off with their horse and foot toward Damietta, while their<br /> <br /> In late August 1248 Louis and his army sailed from France and reached Cyprus in September, where the king decided to await more troops. He set off again in May 1249 and landed in Egypt near<br /> <br /> ships began to go down the river opposite<br /> <br /> Damietta on 5th June. The crusaders overran the Egyptian position,<br /> <br /> them. The Muslims crossed over to their<br /> <br /> forcing their retreat, and soon afterward the ailing sultan as-Salih<br /> <br /> bank and followed them in close pursuit.<br /> <br /> died. The Egyptians moved to al-Mansurah to await the arrival of<br /> <br /> As dawn broke on the Wednesday [7th<br /> <br /> the sultan's successor, Turanshah, and his elite Mamluk (slave) troops.<br /> <br /> April], the Muslims had surrounded them... . [Louis] and the leaders from<br /> <br /> The crusaders seized Damietta, but it was late November before<br /> <br /> among the Frankish kings, may God<br /> <br /> the army left the city to begin a slow advance by land and water<br /> <br /> Almighty curse them, withdrew to a hill<br /> <br /> toward Cairo. Near the end ofJanuary 1250 they finally entered the<br /> <br /> where they halted, offering to surrender<br /> <br /> triangular territory between the Nile and the al-Bahr as-Saghir<br /> <br /> and seeking quarter. This was granted... and, relying on this, they came down and were surrounded. Louis was taken to al-<br /> <br /> canal, perhaps 50 miles (80km) south of Damietta. They crossed the canal to the al-Mansurah side on 7th February. The king's brother,<br /> <br /> Mansurah with the others, and there he<br /> <br /> Robert of Artois, quickly advanced into al-Mansurah itself, but the<br /> <br /> was fettered by the leg and confined."<br /> <br /> narrow streets favored the defenders and he was defeated and killed.<br /> <br /> THE FIRST CRUSADE OF LOUIS IX<br /> <br /> 159<br /> <br /> Louis, who had remained near the crossing point, drove off the Egyptians, but it was a brief victory, since with the arrival of Turanshah the crusaders now faced a stronger force than they had anticipated. In a tactic reminiscent of the Fifth Crusade, the sultan moved ships to a position on the Nile behind the crusaders, barring their retreat by water. They were forced to surrender and Louis was taken prisoner (see sidebar). Thanks in part to his queen, Margaret, who vigorously defended Damietta, he was able to negotiate terms for 4°0,000 livres tournois-his annual revenues were around 25°,000 livres tournoiswas paid at once to secure his release. The rest was never paid. Louis refused to return to France immediately but instead sailed to Acre. There, for nearly four years, he worked to strengthen the<br /> <br /> himself and his nobles. Half of Louis's ransom of<br /> <br /> defenses of the kingdom ofJerusalem and to provide it with effective government. When Louis finally departed in<br /> <br /> 1254,<br /> <br /> he left a<br /> <br /> garrison of 100 knights as defenders of Acre.<br /> <br /> THE MONGOLS: THREAT OR ALLY? In the early 13 th century Christendom and the Islamic world both faced a new threat on their eastern flanks: the Mongols. A nomadic northeast Asian people known as superb warriors and horsemen, the Mongols had conquered northern China before sweeping westward. By the late 1230S they were ravaging southern Russia and moving on<br /> <br /> to Poland and Hungary. Pope Gregory IX proclaimed a crusade against them in 1241, as did Innocent IV in 1243. In 1243 the Mongols defeated the Seljuks of Rum (Asia Minor), creating even greater instability in the Near East. Some Christian leaders, such as Louis IX of France, began to consider allying with these formidable newcomers against the Muslims. During his years in the East in the early 1250S (see main text), Louis entered into negotiations with the Mongols and promoted missionary efforts aimed at converting them to Christianity. The key to conversion lay in the fact that their leader, the Great Khan Mongka (1251-59), had numerous Nestorian Christians at his court.<br /> <br /> Mongka agreed to an alliance as long as Louis became his vassal, a condition the French king naturally rejected. Still, as the Mongol advances on Islam continued, the potential for a Christian-Mongol alliance remained and was later pursued by Lord Edward of England (see page 167).<br /> <br /> The fall of Baghdad in 1258 to the Mongols under Hulagu} the grandson of Genghis Khan}from a 14th-century Persian miniature. The brutal destruction of the city stunned Muslims and Christians alike and ended the Abbasid caliphate} although the caliphs of Baghdad had long been rulers of Islam in name only.<br /> <br /> 160<br /> <br /> THE FIFTH CRUSADE TO 1291: THE LOSS OF THE HOLY LAND<br /> <br /> THE MAMLUK SULTANATE Turanshah's victory over King Louis IX at al-Mansurah in 1250 was one of the greatest achievements by a Muslim leader against the crusaders. Why then was the sultan murdered that same year (see sidebar)? ~hile western historians have tended to emphasize the role of the crusades in shaping the direction of Muslim societies, internal dynamics were much more important. Turanshah was an Ayyubid, with strong roots among the Kurds of Mesopotamia. Ayyubid rulers had long relied for their security on Mamluk (slave) troops forcibly recruited among the Kipchak Turks of the steppes. Captured young and reared as Muslims, these elite troops were the bodyguard of the sultan of Egypt. Under as-Salih (1238-49) their importance grew, especially of the regiment stationed on the island of Bahriya in the Nile, which effectively controlled the capital, Cairo. The Mamluks were chiefly responsible for the victory over Louis THE MURDER OF TURANSHAH<br /> <br /> IX. However, they felt threatened by Turanshah's policy of bringing<br /> <br /> The pro-Mamluk historian Ibn al-Furat's<br /> <br /> large numbers of his supporters from Mesopotamia to Egypt to play<br /> <br /> account ofTuranshah's murder masterfully<br /> <br /> key roles in government. Although the Mamluks formed a military<br /> <br /> exposes the conspiracies that formed an important part of politics in Egypt. Writing<br /> <br /> aristocracy, their sons could not inherit their status, since only for-<br /> <br /> more than a century after the event, Ibn<br /> <br /> mer slaves could be Mamluks, and their sons, as Muslims, could not<br /> <br /> al-Furat offers three versions of the<br /> <br /> be enslaved. Their power rested on their relationship to the sultan,<br /> <br /> murder. This is an extract from the first:<br /> <br /> and his power in turn rested on their support. When these mutual<br /> <br /> "When the fighting against the Franks was ended and they had been beaten...the Bahriya Mamluks heard such menaces and<br /> <br /> ties broke, it meant the end of the Ayyubid sultanate. Turanshah was murdered on 2nd May 1250 (see sidebar) by a<br /> <br /> threats [from Turanshah] as led to<br /> <br /> Bahriya Mamluk conspiracy that included al-Zahir Baibars Bun-<br /> <br /> estrangement and revulsion. As a result,<br /> <br /> duqdari (Baibars), who was later to prove devastatingly effective<br /> <br /> these Mamluks united against him, and<br /> <br /> against the crusader states. Under Aibek, the first Mamluk sultan<br /> <br /> decided to kill him.... in the year 648 [1250] ...he sat on his throne, and the table was spread in the customary way. Then<br /> <br /> (1250-59), the Kurds were largely forced from power in Egypt and their place was taken by Turks. A war between the Mamluks and the<br /> <br /> one of the Bahriya Mamluks came up<br /> <br /> Syrian Ayyubids ended in 1253 when both sides agreed terms, under<br /> <br /> and struck him with his sword. He met<br /> <br /> which the Mamluks retained southern Palestine and Egypt and the<br /> <br /> the blow with his hand and some of his<br /> <br /> Ayyubids northern Palestine and Syria.<br /> <br /> fingers were severed. He got up to flee and went into his tower, where he shouted: 'Who wounded me?' They said<br /> <br /> In September 1260 the Mamluk sultan Quduz and his general Baibars defeated the Mongols at Ain Jalud in Syria. It was a stunning<br /> <br /> 'The Assassins.' He said: 'No, by God, it<br /> <br /> victory, ending the myth of Mongol invincibility. That same year,<br /> <br /> was the Bahriya. By God, I shall not spare<br /> <br /> Baibars himself became sultan following the murder of Quduz.<br /> <br /> any of them.' Then he called the barbersurgeon, who sewed up his hand, while he went on threatening the Bahriya. So they said to one another: 'Finish him off, or he<br /> <br /> The rise of the Mamluk sultans could not have come at a worse time for the crusader states. Following the departure of King Louis IX in 1254, their continued internal power struggles left them ever<br /> <br /> will destroy you.' Then they went in<br /> <br /> more dangerously weak and disunited. With the Mongol threat<br /> <br /> against him with their swords."<br /> <br /> diminished, Baibars had one principal ambition: to drive the<br /> <br /> THE MAMLUK SULTANATE<br /> <br /> 161<br /> <br /> crusaders into the sea. His motive seems to have been strictly a military one, to reinforce his personal hold over his domains, and there is no indication that Baibars or his successors were committed to the Muslim idea of jihad. In 1263 Baibars took the poorly defended town of Nazareth and<br /> <br /> threatened Acre. The crusaders were able to offer very little resistance when, in 1265, the sultan launched a devastating full-scale campaign against their positions. Baibars' offensive culminated in<br /> <br /> Four Mamluk horsemen)from the Treatise on<br /> <br /> 1268 with the fall of Antioch, the greatest Christian city in Syria,<br /> <br /> the Art o[War by Muhammad ibn-Isa ibn-Ismail<br /> <br /> which had been held by the crusaders since 1098.<br /> <br /> al-Hanafi al-Aqsarai) 14th century.<br /> <br /> 162<br /> <br /> THE FIFTH CRUSADE TO 1291: THE LOSS OF THE HOLY LAND<br /> <br /> THE END OF THE LATIN EMPIRE While the Fourth Crusade (see Chapter Five) was a traumatic experience for the Byzantines, its impact has perhaps been exaggerated. However, the creation of the Latin empire of Constantinople was certainly very damaging to the crusades. Had it been successful, it might have benefited the position of the Latins throughout the East. But the Latin empire proved to be every bit as much of a drain on crusading resources as Pope Innocent III and others had warned. At the very time when King Louis IX was attempting to raise funds for his first crusade (see pages 158-159), for example, the Latin emperor Baldwin II was persuading the pope to divert support to his own<br /> <br /> of influence between different Christian and Muslim powers in the Near East in the mid-13th century.<br /> <br /> Below: Map showing the division<br /> <br /> D<br /> <br /> o<br /> <br /> Byzantine<br /> <br /> rather futile effort to prop up the Latin empire. From its inception, the Latin empire was an anomaly. Elected emperor in 12°4, Baldwin I immediately began to seek aid in the West and enticed people from the Holy Land with the promise of generous fiefs. Many of these lands, however, remained in Greek<br /> <br /> Latin [Frankish Influence]<br /> <br /> Latin [Venetian Influence] Sultanate<br /> <br /> of Rum<br /> <br /> D<br /> <br /> Kingdom of Armenia<br /> <br /> []<br /> <br /> Ayyubid Sultanate<br /> <br /> hands and would have to be conquered. In fact, the emperor controlled only Constantinople and a small area around it. Boniface of Montferrat was building a power base in Thessaly, having sold Crete to the Venetians. Baldwin was also con.fronted by opposition from King Ioannitsa of the Vlachs and Bulgars, who had recently promoted the union of the Bulgarian church with Rome and received a crown from Pope Innocent III. In 1205 Ioannitsa and Byzantine<br /> <br /> THE END OF THE LATIN EMPIRE<br /> <br /> 163<br /> <br /> rebels defeated Baldwin near Adrianople (Edirne); the emperor was captured and died shortly afterward. It was an inauspicious start. Baldwin was succeeded by his energetic and talented brother Henry, who pushed the Bulgarians back and secured a treaty with Theodore Lascaris, the Byzantine ruler of Nicaea. But these gains scarcely outlasted Henry's death in 1216. There followed a period of ineffective Latin rulers, while various Byzantine warlords built up rival power bases and established their own claims to be emperor. In the face of the weakness of Peter of Courtenay (1216-19) and his sons Robert (1218-28) and Baldwin II (1228-61), the Latin barons turned in 1231 to the elderly ex-king ofJerusalem, John of Brienne, who had lost his throne to Frederick II (see page 154). John was made co-emperor with the fifteen-year-old Baldwin II. He brought 500<br /> <br /> knights and a large contingent of infantry, as well as the support<br /> <br /> of Pope Gregory IX. John was able to defeat an alliance of Bulgaria and Nicaea before his death in 1237, but the Latin empire by this time consisted of little more than Constantinople itself and stumbled on chiefly because of new support from the West. Baldwin II<br /> <br /> The Arimondi Fountain in Rethymnon) Crete) built during the island5 occupation by the Venetians) which lasted Jrom the time oj the Latin empire until its capture by the Ottomans in 1669.<br /> <br /> canvassed Europe for funds and aid. He even pawned the relic of Christ's crown of thorns to the Venetians; they then sold it to Louis IX, who built the Sainte Chapelle in Paris to house it. Meanwhile, the death ofJohn III Ducas Vatatzes (1222-54), the ruler of Nicaea, opened the way for Michael Palaeologus to come to power there. In 1261 he overthrew Baldwin II in Constantinople and assumed the restored Byzantine throne as MichaelVIII (see box).<br /> <br /> THE RESTORATION OF BYZANTIUM Among the fragments of the Byzantine empire that<br /> <br /> his considerable wealth to consolidate his power. He<br /> <br /> opposed the Latin emperors, Epirus and Nicaea played<br /> <br /> crushed a coalition led by William of Villehardouin,<br /> <br /> the leading role. Under John III Ducas Vatatzes, the<br /> <br /> prince ofAchaia, a Latin state in southern Greece, and<br /> <br /> empire of Nicaea gradually asserted its dominance in<br /> <br /> defended the empire against Epirus and the Bulgarians.<br /> <br /> opposition to the Latins. His most successful general,<br /> <br /> However, these efforts seem to have exhausted his<br /> <br /> Michael Palaeologus, became regent in 1258 for the<br /> <br /> treasury and forced him to take a more conservative<br /> <br /> seven-year-old John Lascaris and within a year had<br /> <br /> stance. Nevertheless he successfully thwarted the<br /> <br /> proclaimed himself emperor. In 1261 Michael's general,<br /> <br /> ambitions of the new king of Sicily, Charles of Anjou,<br /> <br /> Alexius Strategopulos, seized an unexpected chance to<br /> <br /> to restore the Latin empire (see pages 166-169). Michael<br /> <br /> break into the weakly-defended Constantinople.<br /> <br /> died in 1282. The reign of his son, Andronicus II, began<br /> <br /> Baldwin II fled and Venetian resistance crumbled.<br /> <br /> a long decline in Byzantine fortunes that saw successive<br /> <br /> As ruler of a restored Byzantine empire, Michael employed his military and administrative skills as well as<br /> <br /> Palaeologus emperors chiefly interested in preserving their dynasty's hold on the throne.<br /> <br /> 164<br /> <br /> THE FIFTH CRUSADE TO 1291: THE LOSS OF THE HOLY LAND<br /> <br /> A KINGDOM WITHOUT A KING LOSING TOUCH WITH REALITY<br /> <br /> When King Louis IX left Acre in 1254 the kingdom of Jerusalem<br /> <br /> There is ample evidence that many of the<br /> <br /> was, for all practical purposes, leaderless. In that year the absentee<br /> <br /> Frankish leaders did not fully grasp the<br /> <br /> king Conrad II (Conrad IV of Germany, 1250-54), the son of the<br /> <br /> seriousness of their situation in the wake<br /> <br /> emperor Frederick II and Isabella of Brienne, had been succeeded<br /> <br /> of the devastating conquests of Baibars. One incident illustrates this. Following the loss of Antioch in 1268, Baibars sent envoys to Tripoli to discuss a truce with<br /> <br /> by his two-year-old son Conrad III (1254-68). The Mongols were now the dominant force in the region and the Mongol threat actually created a brief period in which the crusader<br /> <br /> Bohemond VI, prince of Antioch and<br /> <br /> states enjoyed relative peace with their neighbors. Unfortunately, the<br /> <br /> count of Tripoli. Baibars himself, traveling<br /> <br /> internal political situation prevented them from taking advantage of<br /> <br /> incognito, was among the delegation. In a dramatic scene, the sultan's envoys<br /> <br /> this to strengthen their position. The absence of royal authority and<br /> <br /> addressed Bohemond as "count" but he<br /> <br /> the relative freedom from external threat allowed the various fac-<br /> <br /> insisted that they use his title of "prince."<br /> <br /> tions within the kingdom to give full vent to their grievances.<br /> <br /> The envoys refused, on the grounds that he no longer ruled Antioch, but Baibars surreptitiously kicked one of the envoys and told him to do as Bohemond wished.<br /> <br /> These included the Venetians and Genoese, who were vying for dominance in the eastern Mediterranean. More crippling, however, was the contest for control of the regency for Conrad II between<br /> <br /> When he returned to his camp, the sultan<br /> <br /> two factions of the Ibelin family. Their machinations finally led to a<br /> <br /> jokingly declared "To the Devil with the<br /> <br /> state of affairs in which one child, King Hugh II of Cyprus, became<br /> <br /> prince and the count!"<br /> <br /> regent for another, Conrad III. Hugh's mother, Plaisance, acted as the regent's regent. Clearly, in these years, the seat of real power in the crusader kingdom was no longer on the mainland, but in Cyprus.<br /> <br /> A KINGDOM WITHOUT A KING<br /> <br /> 165<br /> <br /> SLAUGHTER AT ANTIOCH On the fall of Antioch to the sultan Baibars in 1268<br /> <br /> orders for the advance. The troops surrounded the<br /> <br /> the city's inhabitants were either slaughtered or granted<br /> <br /> whole city and the citadel. The people of Antioch<br /> <br /> to Muslim commanders as slaves. Some leading figures<br /> <br /> fought fiercely, but the Muslims scaled the walls by<br /> <br /> simply disappeared in the chaos; a few were later<br /> <br /> the mountain [Mt. Silpius] near the citadel and came<br /> <br /> ransomed. The amount of booty was enormous. Ibn<br /> <br /> down into the city. The people fled to the citadel, and<br /> <br /> al-Furat provides a vivid account of the city's capture: " [The sultan] waited until the priests and the monks [a peace mission] had entered the city and then he gave<br /> <br /> the Muslim troops began to plunder, kill, and take prisoners. Every man in the city was put to the swordand they numbered more than one hundred thousand."<br /> <br /> The five years from 1265 to 1270 witnessed serious losses by the crusader states at the hands of the Mamluk sultan Baibars (see page 161). In the West, however, attention was focused on internal matters, especially the struggle between the Hohenstaufens and Charles ofAnjou. In the critical period of Mamluk expansion, therefore, the crusader states lacked the new infusions of western manpower and money upon which they depended. The internal conflict in the crusader states was partly, or perhaps even mostly, due to the inability of the various factions to find security in a deteriorating situation. In the mid-1260s another dispute arose over the regency for Hugh II of Cyprus between Hugh of Brienne and Hugh of Antioch-Lusignan. The Frankish barons favored Antioch-Lusignan,<br /> <br /> Opposite: Remains of the ancient city walls of Antioch (now Antakya) Turkey). The sack of the city by Baibars in 1268 was particularly brutal.<br /> <br /> one of the most powerful men in Cyprus. They were already looking to Cyprus as the most likely source of their future security. This was the situation when, in 1265, Baibars launched an offensive against crusader territories of the interior. One by one castles and towns fell, including Caesarea, Haifa, Toron, Arsuf, and, in July 1266, the great Templar fortress of Safad, the key to control of the lands around Acre. In that same year, a second Egyptian army devastated Cilician Armenia. In 1268, Baibars again moved north from Egypt, seizing Jaffa and Beaufort castle. He bypassed Tyre, which was well fortified, and on 14th May besieged Antioch. The city fell on 18th May and was put to the sack (see box). Antioch, which had been in Christian hands since 1098, was one of the major centers of Christendom and its loss was a disaster for Christianity, removing a key base of support for the Armenians, and an ally ofBaibars' Muslim enemies in the north. The loss alerted the West to the danger that confronted the crusader states. In France, King Louis IX had already taken the cross once more. Lord Edward of England, the future King Edward I, prepared to join him.<br /> <br /> Below: Monifort (Starkenberg) castle in Upper<br /> <br /> Galilee) the stronghold of the Teutonic Knights and one of the few inland fortresses to remain in crusader hands by 1268. However, it fell to Baibars in 1271 after a week-long siege.<br /> <br /> 166<br /> <br /> THE FIFTH CRUSADE TO 1291: THE LOSS OF THE HOLY LAND<br /> <br /> THE SECOND CRUSADE OF LOUIS IX Having devoted the thirteen years since his return from Acre (see pages 158-159) to rebuilding his kingdom, King Louis IX of France renewed his crusader vow in 1267, when the Mamluk sultan Baibars was making swift advances against crusader positions. Louis was now the head of a family with wide interests in the Mediterranean. His brother, Charles of Anjou, had conquered the kingdom of Sicily from the Hohenstaufens, with papal support. Louis secretly decided that before beginning his crusade he would sail first to Tunis in North Africa, where he believed the sultan was prepared to embrace Christianity. Although this possibility may seem far-fetched, rumors of conversion among both Muslims and Mongols were commonplace (see box on page 159). Moreover, seen against the context of the failure of Louis's first crusade, his decision to stop in Tunis makes a certain amount of sense: an alliance with the sultan of Tunis against Egypt would substantially increase the chances for success of the new expedition. Louis's decision to go to Tunis was probably influenced by the The crusaders under King Louis IX landing at Tunis. From the Chroniques de France ou de Saint Denis) produced in France sometime between 1]25 and 1]50.<br /> <br /> missionary enthusiasm of the Dominicans rather than the political ambitions of his brother Charles. In fact as late as mid- 1269 Charles had no knowledge of the king's decision, and no plans to join the crusade. It was almost a year later, in July 1270, on the very eve of the crusade, that Charles learned of the plan and pledged his<br /> <br /> THE SECOND CRUSADE OF LOUIS IX<br /> <br /> THE WEST REJECTS A NEW CRUSADE Soon after his election, Pope Gregory X (1271-76)<br /> <br /> secular rulers and the military orders were unwilling to<br /> <br /> began preparations for a church council scheduled for<br /> <br /> commit themselves to a new crusade, and although the<br /> <br /> Lyons, France, in 1274 to deal with pressing problems<br /> <br /> council discussed plans for a crusade tax on church<br /> <br /> for the church. The crusade was of central importance<br /> <br /> rents, no real progress was made.<br /> <br /> to the new pope, but in the event the issue of church unity consumed most of his time. In order to head off<br /> <br /> Despite Gregory's labors, the climate for a crusade was quite unfavorable. Some scholars have stressed the<br /> <br /> the ambitions of Charles ofAnjou, the Byzantine<br /> <br /> unwillingness of anyone to take the lead in a new<br /> <br /> emperor Michael VIII Palaeologus (see page 163)<br /> <br /> venture, but a more important factor is perhaps the<br /> <br /> initiated negotiations for the reunion of the Greek and<br /> <br /> simple lack of suitable leaders in the period following<br /> <br /> Roman churches. This move, backed by Gregory and<br /> <br /> the failure of Louis IX's second crusade. It would be<br /> <br /> confirmed by the council, aroused great opposition in<br /> <br /> mistaken, therefore, to assume that there was any<br /> <br /> Greece. But it was a clever step that removed Charles's<br /> <br /> permanent alteration in the attitude of the West toward<br /> <br /> main pretext for a planned crusade to restore the Latin<br /> <br /> the idea of crusading. Nevertheless, the failure in<br /> <br /> empire of Constantinople with himself as its head.<br /> <br /> support for a new crusade certainly played a part in<br /> <br /> The pope's plan to win the council's support for a new crusade proved a thornier issue. Representatives of<br /> <br /> the continued weakness of the crusader states in the period up to the fall ofAcre in 1291.<br /> <br /> support. He ordered supplies to be moved from Syracuse to the western Sicilian port of Trapani to support the Tunisian expedition. Shortly after landing at Tunis, Louis IX became ill, and on 25th August 1270 he died. Charles ofAnjou carried out a brief campaign, but withdrew in November. The crusade had come to nothing. Louis IX, canonized around thirty years later as St. Louis, was to be the last reigning western monarch to embark on crusade to the East. A follower of Louis IX's second crusade was Lord Edward, the thirty-one-year-old son of Henry III of England (1216-72) and his eventual successor as Edward I (1272-13°7). Edward arrived at Tunis too late but decided to continue to the East. He journeyed to Acre in 1271, just as Baibars was completing his capture of the northern crusader fortresses from the military orders. There was little he could do. He stayed in the East for more than a year, providing some stability for the remnant of the crusader kingdom and arranging a tenyear truce with Baibars that gave Acre a breathing space. In Edward's retinue was the archdeacon of Liege, Theobald Visconti, who in 1271 was elected pope as Gregory X while in the East. Like his predecessors, Gregory championed the crusade, but his bid to secure a new expedition in 1274 was a failure (see box). However, the French monarchy provided the crusader kingdom with financial support until 1286 and maintained its garrison In Acre. Edward also continued to send aid after he became king.<br /> <br /> 167<br /> <br /> 168<br /> <br /> THE FIFTH CRUSADE TO 1291: THE LOSS OF THE HOLY LAND<br /> <br /> THE DECLINE OF THE LATIN EAST On Easter eve, Saturday 30th March 1282, at the time of Vespers, a French soldier insulted a Sicilian lady outside a church in Palermo. ARAGON AND THE CRUSADES<br /> <br /> The incident sparked a riot and a massacre of the French, and the<br /> <br /> The Aragonese takeover of Sicily<br /> <br /> ensuing "Sicilian Vespers" rising throughout the island led to the<br /> <br /> (see main text) had a profound impact<br /> <br /> overthrow of Charles of Anjou as king of Sicily. While the riot was<br /> <br /> on the crusades by diverting attention to<br /> <br /> unplanned, the rising was not. The Byzantines had encouraged<br /> <br /> the western Mediterranean. The next two decades were consumed in a struggle by the Angevins against Peter III and his<br /> <br /> opposition to Angevin rule in the kingdom in order to frustrate Charles's expansionist ambitions. The surprising player in the uprising, and its chief beneficiary,<br /> <br /> successor, James II (1291-1327), to retake Sicily. In 1302 Charles of Anjou was taken captive by the Aragonese, and the settlement achieved in the treaty of Caltabellotta that year led to the election<br /> <br /> was King Peter III of Aragon (1276-85). In 1262 Peter had married Constance, the granddaughter of the Hohenstaufen emperor Frederick II. With papal support, Charles of Anjou had wrested<br /> <br /> ofJames II's younger brother Frederick<br /> <br /> Sicily from the Hohenstaufens, but Peter gave no assurances that he<br /> <br /> as king of Sicily for life. On Frederick's<br /> <br /> would accept the new status quo.When the Vespers revolt broke out,<br /> <br /> death in 1322, the Sicilians defied the<br /> <br /> Peter was already pressing against the Tunisian coast with his fleet.<br /> <br /> papacy and the Angevins and chose his son Peter as their king.<br /> <br /> Within a few months, he had landed at Trapani in Sicily to a hero's welcome from Hohenstaufen sympathizers, and by 4th December he had been proclaimed king in Palermo. Aragon was now a serious force in the western and central Mediterranean.<br /> <br /> THE KINGDOM OF CYPRUS In the declining years of the Latin kingdom, the kingdom of Cyprus took on a special significance.<br /> <br /> Hugh was succeeded by his son John in 1284, but he ruled for only a year and was succeeded by his brother<br /> <br /> The last two kings ofJerusalem were members of the<br /> <br /> Henry II of Cyprus (I ofJerusalem, 1285-1324). It is a<br /> <br /> Lusignan family, Hugh I and Henry I, both of whom<br /> <br /> kind of historical irony that the Latin kingdom gained<br /> <br /> were also kings of Cyprus (Hugh III and Henry II).<br /> <br /> one of its more capable rulers at the time when it faced<br /> <br /> If Hugh seems always to have placed the interests<br /> <br /> its final hour. Henry worked to resolve the conflict<br /> <br /> of Cyprus ahead of those ofJerusalem, that is not<br /> <br /> between the maritime Italian cities, which prevented<br /> <br /> surprising, since the barons of Cyprus were reluctant to<br /> <br /> them from providing support to the monarchy. He<br /> <br /> fight on the mainland. Moreover, he faced considerable<br /> <br /> installed his brother Amalric (Amaury) as lord ofTyre<br /> <br /> opposition on the mainland, not merely from the<br /> <br /> and later sent him with a force to relieve Tripoli. He<br /> <br /> representatives of his rival, Charles of Anjou, but also<br /> <br /> himself arranged a truce to protect Acre and issued an<br /> <br /> from various baronial families. He arrived in Tyre in<br /> <br /> appeal to the West. These energetic efforts were mostly<br /> <br /> 1283 with 250 knights, but in the circumstances they<br /> <br /> inadequate and did nothing to stave off the final chapter<br /> <br /> were of little help. His most important initiative, a move<br /> <br /> in the history of the kingdom. But Cyprus proved to be<br /> <br /> to secure Tyre, failed because he lacked resources and<br /> <br /> an important key to maintaining a western presence in<br /> <br /> the support of the barons and the military orders.<br /> <br /> the East and keeping alive the idea of the crusade.<br /> <br /> THE DECLINE OF THE LATIN EAST<br /> <br /> 169<br /> <br /> Meanwhile, in 1277 Maria ofAntioch (granddaughter of Isabella I and Amalric of Lusignan; see page 94) had sold her strong claim to the crusader kingdom to Charles of Anjou. This had created a situation in which there were two kings. Hugh I (King Hugh III of Cyprus) ruled in Tyre and Beirut, while Charles, represented by Roger of San Severino, was recognized by Acre, Sidon, and Chastel Pelerin. Hugh's position depended on the Monfort family; when they withdrew support in 1283 he returned to Cyprus (see box). However, the Sicilian Vespers fatally undermined Charles's ability to support Roger's government. Roger's main achievement was a ten-year truce with the sultan Qalawun of Egypt (1277-90), the successor of Baibars. The treaty applied only to Acre, Sidon, and Chastel Pelerin. Tyre concluded a truce in 1285, but with the fall of the Hospitaller fortress of Marqab that same year and the encroachment of Muslim power to the suburbs of the crusader cities, it was obvious that the Mamluk advance was not to be stopped by truces. Charles ofAnjou died in 1285 and in 1286 Henry I (II of Cyprus) was crowned king in Tyre. The lavish coronation festivities held in Acre were to be the last. In 1287 Qalawun took Laodicea (Lattakieh) and in 1289 Tripoli. While it would be rash to blame this string of misfortunes entirely on the Sicilian Vespers, it is clear that it was an important factor in the events leading up to the final disaster of 1291.<br /> <br /> ifAnjou (1226-85)) portrayed on his own seal as a mounted knight.<br /> <br /> Above: Charles<br /> <br /> Left: Marqab (Margat) castle in Syria) the principal fortress if the Hospitallers. It was considered impregnable until its fall in 1285 to the Mamluk sultan Qalawun.<br /> <br /> 170<br /> <br /> THE FIFTH CRUSADE TO 1291: THE LOSS OF THE HOLY LAND<br /> <br /> THE FALL OF ACRE After the fall of Tripoli King Henry I ofJerusalem renewed the tenyear truce with Qalawun. However, knowing that the sultan was unlikely to observe the truce for long, Henry also sent out envoys to seek help for Acre, the last important city in crusader hands. The crusade still had powerful supporters, such as King Edward I ofEngland, but not even the pope was willing to devote much effort to a new one. Indeed, the force eventually sent by Pope Nicholas IV was illdisciplined, and its bad behavior in Acre (including attacks on Muslim merchants) simply gave Qalawun grounds for breaking the truce. The situation was so dire that some sought to buy the sultan off. But the citizens of the city refused; Acre was, after all, well fortified and even well defended. Qalawun's death in November 1290 seemed to justify this position, because the city expected the transition of power to give them a respite. But the quick succession of his son, alAshraf Khalil, spelled the end for the Christian kingdom. On 6th April 1291 the new sultan placed Acre under siege. The defenders were no match for the Muslim forces and on 18th May the city fell. Many, including women and children of the upper classes, had already been sent to Cyprus and some of the defenders now escaped, but thousands were massacred (see box).Within a short time the entire coast of Palestine and Syria was under Mamluk rule.<br /> <br /> THE FALL OF ACRE<br /> <br /> 171<br /> <br /> PANIC AT ACRE When Baibars embarked on the conquest of Palestine,<br /> <br /> with terror, they went running through the street, their<br /> <br /> he never attempted to besiege Acre. Undoubtedly its<br /> <br /> children in their arms ...when the Saracens caught them<br /> <br /> importance as a commercial center where Muslim<br /> <br /> one would take the mother and the other the child,<br /> <br /> merchants traded with Europeans was a factor, as were<br /> <br /> they would drag them from place to place and pull<br /> <br /> the city's strong garrison and fortifications. In 1291 Acre<br /> <br /> them apart."<br /> <br /> had good reason to think that it would again be spared,<br /> <br /> A Muslim writer, Abu al-Fida, relates how, when the<br /> <br /> and was unprepared for the disaster that overtook it<br /> <br /> city was nearly in aI-Ashraf Khalil's hands, the sultan<br /> <br /> between King Henry's attempt to make a truce on 8th<br /> <br /> ordered those still resisting to come out. When they did<br /> <br /> May and the collapse of its defenses on 18th May. It appears that Acre's various defenders sought refuge in their own castles and did not help one another,<br /> <br /> so, he had them killed. The implication is that he had promised to spare them but did not. In the harbor, there were too few vessels for all<br /> <br /> confirming that there was a breakdown in discipline,<br /> <br /> those trying to flee. But the king, his brother, and other<br /> <br /> except among the military orders. One chronicler, the<br /> <br /> leaders were among those who succeeded in escaping<br /> <br /> Templar of Tyre, describes people running to the port<br /> <br /> by ship. The Latin patriarch was drowned when he<br /> <br /> ahead of the Muslims: "Women and girls were frantic<br /> <br /> allowed too many aboard his boat, causing it to sink.<br /> <br /> The story of the fall ofAcre, which ended the crusader presence on the mainland of Palestine and Syria, is anticlimactic. In the West, almost nothing had been done to stave off its final demise. Why, after two centuries of Christian commitment to the crusade, did the final act ring down with such small clamor? The answer probably lies in the fact that most westerners had already adjusted to the loss of the Holy Land, seemingly accepting it as inevitable. For many, the reason for its loss lay in the sins of Christians and conflicts within the Christian ranks. The defenders ofAcre were isolated and some commentators were quick to label them as lazy and cowardly. Writing in Parma at the end of the thirteenth century (perhaps after 1291), the Franciscan Salimbene of Adam even suggested that the recovery of the holy places was not God's will, since all efforts had failed. However, it is also likely that many in the West did not view the fall of Acre as an ending. In the later thirteenth century there was an increasing realization that the huge investments of people and wealth in the crusades of Louis IX, for example, did not produce significant results. Some historians have perceived a lessening of support for the very idea of crusade, and there no doubt was in some quarters. There is also considerable evidence that, for the crusade to be successful, there would have to be important changes in strategy. While it was not clearly perceived by contemporaries, the fall of Acre therefore marks the end of the traditional approach to the crusades and the beginning of a quest for new approaches.<br /> <br /> Opposite: The end section of an itinerary from London to Jerusalem) produced in England ca. 125cr59 by the monk and chronicler Matthew Paris) consists of a map centered on the walled city ofAcre. Jerusalem is at the top right and coastal cities are nJarked by castles and towers. Among the buildings shown within the walls of Acre are the royal palace (top lift) and the headquarters of the Hospitallers (far lift)) the Templars (bottom)) and the Teutonic Knights (top right).<br /> <br /> 8 THE<br /> <br /> LAST<br /> <br /> CRUSADES<br /> <br /> THE OTTOMAN THREAT JONATHAN<br /> <br /> HARRIS<br /> <br /> Crusading Projects and Dreams<br /> <br /> 174<br /> <br /> Cyprus: The New Frontline<br /> <br /> 176<br /> <br /> The Rise of the Ottomans<br /> <br /> 178<br /> <br /> The Maritime League<br /> <br /> 180<br /> <br /> The Conquest The Crusade<br /> <br /> of the<br /> <br /> Balkans<br /> <br /> of Nicopolis<br /> <br /> Disaster at varna<br /> <br /> 184 186<br /> <br /> of Constantinople<br /> <br /> 188<br /> <br /> of the Mediterranean<br /> <br /> 19 0<br /> <br /> The Fall Knights<br /> <br /> 182<br /> <br /> The Reformation The Battle<br /> <br /> of Lepanto<br /> <br /> The Glories of the Ottomans<br /> <br /> The End<br /> <br /> of the<br /> <br /> Crusades<br /> <br /> 192 194 196 198<br /> <br /> 174<br /> <br /> THE LAST CRUSADES: THE OTTOMAN THREAT<br /> <br /> CRUSADING PROJECTS AND DREAMS For centuries after the loss of the Holy Land in 1291 Christians continued to dream of recapturing Jerusalem and there was no shortage of schemes to accomplish that feat. In 1306 the Norman lawyer Pierre Dubois argued that future crusades should be led not by the The burning ojJacques de Molay, grand master of the Knights Templar, and Geoffrey de Charnay, one of his senior officers in 1314,from a 14th-century French manuscript. Following the suppression of the crusading order (see box), its leaders were ordered to make a public confession of their guilt; instead de Molay and de Charnay dramatically recanted their confessions. Both men were burnt at the stake, denying their guilt to the last.<br /> <br /> pope, a cleric who should stick to the administration of the church, but by the king of France, who could recruit and equip a disciplined regular army. The Catalan scholar and mystic Ramon Lull had said much the same in 13°5, but stressed that the crusade leader could be any man of royal blood, elected by the pope and the cardinals. While the vision of royal leadership of the crusade to recover Jerusalem seemed practical and sensible, in the end it proved illusory. It is true that many monarchs and nobles professed great enthusiasm<br /> <br /> CRUSADING PROJECTS AND DREAMS<br /> <br /> 175<br /> <br /> THE FALL OF THE TEMPLARS On<br /> <br /> 13 th<br /> <br /> October<br /> <br /> 13°7,<br /> <br /> without warning, all the Knights<br /> <br /> Templar in France were arrested on the secret orders of King Philip IV and charged with heresy, worshipping idols, and practicing magic. In trials marked by irregular<br /> <br /> Templars had come to occupy in France, particularly after the loss of the Holy Land in<br /> <br /> 1291.<br /> <br /> The ensuing papal inquiry found the order innocent of the accusations in Germany, Italy, and most other<br /> <br /> procedures and torture, many Templars confessed to<br /> <br /> countries. In England, members of the order escaped<br /> <br /> these and more bizarre crimes and in<br /> <br /> severe penalties when they freely acknowledged that<br /> <br /> 1310<br /> <br /> fifty-four<br /> <br /> who had recanted their confessions were burned as<br /> <br /> they had mistakenly held a heretical belief-that the<br /> <br /> heretics. Most of those declared innocent were<br /> <br /> grand master could grant absolution.<br /> <br /> secularized or permitted to join other monastic orders. The accusations had been prompted by the<br /> <br /> In<br /> <br /> 1312<br /> <br /> Pope Clement V abolished the order, but did<br /> <br /> not condemn it owing to the lack of evidence of heresy<br /> <br /> allegations of a few witnesses before a royal commission<br /> <br /> in most states. The secular powers confiscated the huge<br /> <br /> into the order's future. The commission itself was<br /> <br /> Templars estates, retaining some and redistributing the<br /> <br /> probably motivated by the powerful position that the<br /> <br /> rest among other orders, in particular the Hospitallers.<br /> <br /> for the idea and greatly admired the crusading heroes of the past. But in the end no ruler was prepared to leave his realm unprotected and march east with his army. King Philip IV of France (1285-1314), who initiated the spectacula~ fall of the Templars (see box), did take the cross in 1313, but he died before fulfilling his vow. Henry V of<br /> <br /> PILGRIMAGE TO JERUSALEM<br /> <br /> England (1413-22) is said to have longed to retake Jerusalem, but he<br /> <br /> IN THE LATER MIDDLE AGES<br /> <br /> spent his short reign fighting his Christian neighbors, the French.<br /> <br /> In spite of the loss ofJerusalem, the flow<br /> <br /> The problem is encapsulated in the detailed plan for a crusade proposed in 1332 by Philip VI of France (1328-50). The pope was impressed and authorized Philip to levy a ten percent tax on the<br /> <br /> of pilgrims from western Europe continued unabated. The Mamluk authorities by no means discouraged the traffic, which brought them revenues from tolls and<br /> <br /> clergy for six years, and in 1333 Philip took the cross at an elaborate<br /> <br /> customs duties. Nevertheless there could<br /> <br /> ceremony. The tax was gathered, but the expedition never material-<br /> <br /> be tension between pilgrims and local<br /> <br /> ized. Many contemporaries saw Philip's catastrophic defeat by the English at Crecy in 1346 as divine retribution for his breach of a crusading vow and misappropriation of crusading funds. The possibility of organizing a crusade to recapture Jerusalem<br /> <br /> Muslims. A German monk, Felix Fabri, who visited Jerusalem twice in the late 15th century, recalled an ugly confrontation in Bethany when a Muslim youth stole a pilgrim's haversack, containing his precious<br /> <br /> became even more remote during the Great Schism of 1378 to 1417,<br /> <br /> supplies of food. Peace was only restored<br /> <br /> when there were rival popes in Rome and Avignon (see pages 140-<br /> <br /> after strenuous efforts by the pilgrim's<br /> <br /> 141) and no prospect of European unity. Slowly the truth dawned. In the 1480s a German monk Felix Fabri of VIm wrote sadly: "The<br /> <br /> guide and interpreter. In spite of such annoyances, the sight of the Holy Places was an intensely emotional<br /> <br /> Holy Land has been so utterly lost to us that now no one so much<br /> <br /> one for most pilgrims. An English pilgrim,<br /> <br /> as thinks about recovering it, and there is no longer any way to<br /> <br /> Margery Kempe, was overwhelmed by the<br /> <br /> recover it, unless it shall please God to work some miracle." By this<br /> <br /> sight of Calvary and "had such great<br /> <br /> time, the crusading agenda had changed rapidly as Christians real-<br /> <br /> compassion and such great pain at seeing Our Lord's pain that she could not keep<br /> <br /> ized that the pressing problem was no longer one of recovering what<br /> <br /> herself from crying and roaring though<br /> <br /> they had lost-but of retaining what they still had.<br /> <br /> she could have died for it."<br /> <br /> 176<br /> <br /> THE LAST CRUSADES: THE OTTOMAN THREAT<br /> <br /> CYPRUS: THE NEW FRONTLINE The Latin presence in the East was not extinguished completely when Acre fell in 1291. The Lusignan kings of Cyprus, who had ruled the island since Richard the Lionheart sold it to Guy ofLusignan in 1192, presided over a wealthy and flourishing kingdom. Its chief port of Famagusta became one of the richest cities in Chris.tendom, largely owing to a papal ban on direct Christian trade with the Mamluks, which meant that commerce had to pass through Cyprus. The Lusignans, who still claimed the title of king ofJerusalem and underwent two such coronations, regularly sent ships to raid the coasts of Egypt, Syria, and Asia Minor, and urged the pope to use Cyprus as a staging post for a crusade to retake the Holy Land. The Mamluk sultans planned to conquer Cyprus, but civil strife within Egypt prevented them from mounting an attack and allowed the Lusignans to take the initiative during the reign of Peter I (1359-69). He toured the courts of western Europe to gather money CRUSADE INDULGENCES Raising the tnoney to finance crusading expeditions was a constant probletn throughout the later Middle Ages. One tnethod adopted by the papacy was to sell letters of indulgence in parish churches; the letters protnised retnission of sins and a reduction of the titne that the buyer would spend in Purgatory after death. The advent of printing in the fifteenth century tneant that letters of indulgence could be tnass-produced and circulated far tnore widely. However, the "pardoners" who sold the indulgences skitntned off tnuch of the proceeds for thetnselves. The English poet Geoffrey Chaucer (died 1399) was atnong the critics of such practices. In his Canterbury Tales he has the pardoner declare: "But let tne briefly tnake tny purpose plain; I preach for nothing but for greed of gain."<br /> <br /> CYPRUS: THE NEW FRONTLINE<br /> <br /> 177<br /> <br /> and men, and the pope declared his planned expedition a crusade. Peter sailed from Cyprus with his fleet in October 1365 and launched an assault on the Egyptian port of Alexandria. The city's governor was absent on a pilgrimage to Mecca and the attack came as a devastating surprise to the Mamluks. The crusaders broke into the city and subjected it to a merciless sack. At first sight, the capture ofAlexandria was a triumph for Christendom. One of the greatest cities of the Islamic world had fallen into Christian hands and seventy ships were filled with the booty. Unfortunately, Peter and his army had made no plans as to what to do after taking the city and had no resources to face the relief army that would soon be upon them. So, on 16th October, the crusaders evacuated Alexandria and sailed back to Cyprus. The conquest had proved ephemeral, but it was to have one enduring consequence: the Mamluks were not to forget the humiliation of 1365 and thereafter were determined to take vengeance on the rulers of Cyprus. The opportunity came in the 1420S, by which time the kingdom of Cyprus had declined in both wealth and power thanks to a disastrous war with Genoa in 1373-74. A pretext for an attack was offered to the Mamluks in 1424, when King Janus of Lusignan (1398-1432) raided the Syrian coast. Over the next two years, the Mamluks responded with a series of powerful attacks on Cyprus. On 3rd July 1426 they captured Limassol and a few days later won a complete victory over the Lusignan army at Khirokitia. Janus was taken prisoner and there was nothing that could be done to prevent the Mamluk army from entering Nicosia and rounding up 6,000 captives to be transported back to Egypt. Janus himself was only released in May 1427 when a ransom of 200,000 ducats had been paid. He returned to a bankrupt and ravaged island, which henceforth was obliged to pay an annual tribute of 5,000 ducats to the Mamluk sultan in Cairo. Christian Cyprus would never again threaten the Muslim world. In 1489 the widow ofJames II (1464-73), the last Lusignan king, handed the island over to Venice. Venetian rule lasted until 1571, when Cyprus was conquered by the Ottoman Turks.<br /> <br /> Opposite: A tower and the winged lion of<br /> <br /> St. Mark, Venetian emblems on the citadel Cyprus.<br /> <br /> of Famagusta,<br /> <br /> of St. Nicholas, Famagusta, now a mosque. The western Europeans who ruled Cyprus from 1191 to 1571 have lift an indelible mark on the Cypriot landscape. The cathedrals of Famagusta and Nicosia, built in the western Gothic style, still stand, while monasteries such as the Lusignan-period Bellapais and the Venetian Ayia Napa bear witness to the one-time wealth and power of the Catholic church on the mainly Greek Orthodox island. Rule by a minority of western settlers was made possible by the construction of massive castles, such as those at Kantara, St. Hilarion, and Buffavento.<br /> <br /> Below: The Venetian cathedral<br /> <br /> 178<br /> <br /> THE LAST CRUSADES: THE OTTOMAN THREAT<br /> <br /> THE RISE OF THE OTTOMANS It is ironic that while the crusades were designed to combat the spread of Islam, they ultimately had the opposite effect, allowing a Muslim power to gain a foothold in Europe and to extend its control almost to the gates of Vienna. The process had begun with the capture and sack of Constantinople by the Fourth Crusade in 1204 (see Chapter Five). Although Constantinople was recaptured by Michael VIII Palaeologus in 1261 (see pages 162-163), the reconstituted Byzantine empire had a precarious existence. When news of the recapture reached Rome, the pope at once preached a crusade against Byzantium, promising that those who joined the expedition The tiled minaret of the late 14th-century Green Mosque in Iznik) Turkey. Iznik) formerly Nicaea) was captured by the Ottoman Turks in 1331. Under Ottoman rule the city became famous for its tiles) which adorn many Turkish monuments (see page 197).<br /> <br /> to recover Constantinople would receive the same remission of sin as those who went to the Holy Land. The promotion of a crusade against Christians was seen as justified because the Byzantine church was still in schism with that of Rome, and in 1274 Michael VIII successfully thwarted the planned crusade by seeking a union of the churches, which was established at the second council of Lyons. But the union never really worked and was dropped after 1282, and as a precaution against the continued threat of a crusade from the West both Michael VIII and his successor, Andronicus II (1282-1328), had to move troops from the empire's frontier in Asia Minor. At first, this diversion of resources did not matter too much, since the main Muslim power in the region, the Seljuk sultanate ofKonya (Iconium), was too preoccupied with dynastic rivalry to present any threat to the denuded eastern Byzantine frontier. However, in order to gain support from their more powerful subjects during periods of civil strife, the Seljuk sultans made them grants of land on the edges of the sultanate, particularly along the border with Byzantium, in return for military service. As time went on, these Seljuk vassals tended to become semi-autonomous amirs who acted independently from their supposed overlords in Konya. They considered themselves ghazis, or warriors of Islam, and not bound by any peace treaty that the sultan might have with the Byzantines. Consequently, from the 1260s, they mounted regular raids into Byzantine territory. Resistance to these incursions was minimal, the Byzantine defenses, such as they were, being centered on the large towns of the region, such as Smyrna (Izmir) and Nicaea (Iznik), which left the countryside exposed to attack. As soon as this became clear, the Turks came no longer to raid, but to settle. The cities held out, but they became increasingly isolated in a countryside that was no<br /> <br /> THE RISE OF THE OTTOMANS<br /> <br /> longer under Byzantine<br /> <br /> con~rol.AndronicusII<br /> <br /> 179<br /> <br /> attempted to retrieve<br /> <br /> the situation and led a number of campaigns into Asia Minor, but he was hampered by his inability to remain for long in the region-the situation in the West always called him back. One by one, Byzantine cities fell to the Turks: Smyrna in 1329, Nicaea in 1331, Nicomedia<br /> <br /> The approximate distribution of the various Turkish emirates in Anatolia during the early 14th century. Within a century) the emirate nearest Constantinople-the Ottoman-had b~come the most dominant one and the precursor of an empire.<br /> <br /> In 1339, and finally Philadelphia, which held out until 1392. What had once been Byzantine Asia Minor was now ruled by a<br /> <br /> TIlE LOSS OF ASIA MINOR<br /> <br /> number of small Turkish emirates. In the vicinity of Konya lay Kara-<br /> <br /> George Pachytneres, a clergytnan<br /> <br /> man, which in 1316 had captured the city and ended the Seljuk sul-<br /> <br /> in the cathedral of Hagia Sophia in<br /> <br /> tanate. In western Asia Minor, the emirates of Menteshe, Aydin,<br /> <br /> Constantinople in the early fourteenth<br /> <br /> Sarukhan, and Karasi were founded. But most significant for the<br /> <br /> century, wrote a graphic account of<br /> <br /> future was an emirate in the far northwest, facing Constantinople, established by a ghazi called Osman or Uthman (1288-1326). It is from Osman that the name of his followers is derived: the Ottomans. Osman defeated a Byzantine army at Bapheum in 1302, captured the city of Prousa (Bursa) in 1326, and established his capital city there. His son, Orhan (1326-62), consolidated Ottoman power in<br /> <br /> the upheavals of his titne. He blatned Byzantiutn's loss of Asia Minor on the etnperor Michael VIII Palaeologus, who had taxed the region too heavily: "Its inhabitants, unable to find the tax in currency, which they were required to do, gave up the hopeless task and went over to the Turks day by day, regarding<br /> <br /> western Asia Minor and acquired the first Ottoman foothold in<br /> <br /> thetn as better tnasters than the etnperor.<br /> <br /> Europe (see pages 182-183). Orhan's position was recognized in 1346<br /> <br /> The trickle of defectors becatne a flood<br /> <br /> when he married the daughter of the Byzantine emperor. Later gen-<br /> <br /> and the Turks etnployed thetn as guides<br /> <br /> erations of Turks regarded Osman and Orhan as the founders of the Ottoman empire, which came to dominate the Balkans and the east-<br /> <br /> and allies to lead thetn the other way and to ravage the lands of those who retnained loyal to the etnperor, at first by way of<br /> <br /> ern Mediterranean. Their tombs, rebuilt during the nineteenth cen-<br /> <br /> raiding parties, but soon as pertnanent<br /> <br /> tury, can still be seen on the citadel overlooking Bursa.<br /> <br /> settlers taking over the land."<br /> <br /> 180<br /> <br /> THE LAST CRUSADES: THE OTTOMAN THREAT<br /> <br /> THE MARITIME LEAGUE At first, western Europeans failed to react to the Turkish conquest of Asia Minor or to realize the inevitable dire consequences for the Christian position in the East. However, matters changed in the early fourteenth century, when the Turks captured ports such as Ephesus and Smyrna, and thus gained access to the Aegean. The new rulers of these towns used local Greek labor to build warships and launch piratical attacks against Christian ships. Venetian merchant galleys, lumbering to and from Constantinople, were particularly vulnerable.The most dangerous of the Turkish amirs was Umur ofAydin (see box), who by 1341 could muster a fleet of 350 vessels and an army of 15,000 men and whose base at Smyrna, tucked away on a wide bay at the base of a fortified hill, provided a perfect haven. HUMBERT'S CRUSADE The expedition led by the French aristocrat Humbert II, dauphin (ruler)<br /> <br /> Alarmed by these developments, Pope Clement VI (1342-52) formed a maritime league with a fleet of twenty galleys from Venice,<br /> <br /> of Viennois, has been described by one<br /> <br /> Cyprus, and the Hospitaller island of Rhodes, along with some ves-<br /> <br /> historian as "one of the most pathetic<br /> <br /> sels of his own, paid for by taxing the clergy. The fleet was placed<br /> <br /> crusading ventures of the period." A<br /> <br /> under the command of Enrico d'Asti, the Latin patriarch of Con-<br /> <br /> romantic and dreamy character, Humbert<br /> <br /> stantinople, and assembled at Negroponte on the island of Euboea,<br /> <br /> had already founded his own order of chivalry, the Order of St. Catherine.<br /> <br /> Greece, in September 1343. At first the fleet's chances of success<br /> <br /> Roused to enthusiasm by the news of the<br /> <br /> seemed slim, its leaders bickering over finance and objectives. But in<br /> <br /> capture of Smyrna (see main text),<br /> <br /> October 1344 it arrived at Smyrna to find the port poorly defended<br /> <br /> Humbert begged the pope to appoint him<br /> <br /> and Umur absent with most of his army. This great stroke of luck<br /> <br /> "Captain General of the Crusade against<br /> <br /> enabled the Christians to sail in unopposed, burn most of the Turk-<br /> <br /> the Turks and those Unfaithful to the Holy Church of Rome." Having taken the cross,<br /> <br /> ish ships in the harbor, and occupy both the port and the town.<br /> <br /> he sailed for Smyrna with a force of volunteers in the autumn of 1345. Once there, however, Humbert found the heat intolerable and complained that the dust<br /> <br /> UMUR, tiTHE LION OF GOD"<br /> <br /> was so thick that it came up to his men's knees. He mounted a few sorties but was<br /> <br /> The exploits ofUmur, amir ofAydin (1336-44), against Christian<br /> <br /> unable to dislodge the Turks from the<br /> <br /> shipping in the Aegean were later celebrated in a verse chronicle by<br /> <br /> fortress that they still held overlooking the<br /> <br /> the fifteenth-century Turkish poet Enveri, who lauded Umur as "the<br /> <br /> town. Although he had sworn to remain in<br /> <br /> Lion of God." However, contemporary sources paint a less flattering<br /> <br /> the East for three years, Humbert returned<br /> <br /> picture. Two ambassadors from Venice, who visited Umur at Ephesus<br /> <br /> to France in November 1346 and spent the rest of his days as a Dominican friar.<br /> <br /> in 1345, reported that he was immensely fat, with a stomach "like a wine cask." They found him dressed in silk, drinking almond milk and eating eggs, spices, and rice with a golden spoon. Moreover, in spite of his reputation, U mur failed to dislodge the Christians from Smyrna and in 1348 was killed in the subsequent fighting.<br /> <br /> THE MARiTiME LEAGUE<br /> <br /> 181<br /> <br /> The following January, Enrico d' Asti led a foray inland and was killed with many of his followers. In general, though, the league had enjoyed a great success. It had neutralized the main center ofTurkish piracy in the Aegean and captured an important base for further operations on the coast of Asia Minor. Umur died in fighting in 1348, and in April that year a treaty was made with his brother, who<br /> <br /> promised to dismantle his fleet and to suppress Turkish piracy in the Aegean. The pope dissolved the league in 1350 and Smyrna was handed over to the Knights Hospitaller, who held the city until 1402. The league's triumph was ephemeral. By concentrating solely on the threat to shipping, the allies failed to see the greater danger posed by Turks who might one day succeed in crossing into Europe. Thus they took no action against the Ottomans, who were penned into northwestern Asia Minor, with no access to the Aegean.<br /> <br /> A Venetian Fleet at the Siege of Chioggia, 1379 (detail)) an anonymous 16th-century painting.<br /> <br /> War galleys from venice formed the core of the Maritime League) just as they had earlier played a crucial role in supporting the crusader states (see pages 48-49) 102-103)) together with the ships of venice 1 great rival) Genoa. This painting depicts an episode during a series of wars between the two Italian maritime states) who competed for centuries to control lucrative eastern trade routes and markets.<br /> <br /> 182<br /> <br /> THE LAST CRUSADES: THE OTTOMAN THREAT<br /> <br /> THE CONQ!)EST OF THE BALKANS The Turkish conquest ofByzantium came to a halt in the early fourteenth century, when it reached the sea and could go no further. At two points in northwestern Asia Minor, the Bosporus and the Dardanelles, the sea was a narrow strait, but these two potential crossing points were guarded on the western side respectively by the Byzantine capital of Constantinople and by the fortified town of Gallipoli. The Ottomans, whose territory lay to the east, were thus prevented from extending their conquests northwestward. That is how the situation would have remained, had it not been for a natural calamity. On the night of 2nd March 1354 a violent earthquake struck Byzantine Thrace, and Gallipoli was devastated. Suleyman, a son of the Ottoman amir Orhan, at once-apparently on the same daycrossed the Dardanelles with his army to occupy the ruins of GalThe Selimiye mosque) Edirne) built by the great Ottoman architect Sinan during the reign if the sultan Selim II (1566-74). Edirne (formerly Adrianople) is the largest Turkish city in Europe after Istanbul and served as the Ottoman capital from the 1360s until 1453.<br /> <br /> lipoli. The Ottomans had their first foothold in Europe. In 1366 Count Amedeo of Savoy recaptured Gallipoli and handed it back to the Byzantines, but it was already too late. During the previous twelve years, Turk settlers had flooded into Thrace, and in 1361 the Turks took the Byzantine city ofAdrianople (Edirne), effectively<br /> <br /> THE CON QlJ EST 0 F THE BA L KA N 5<br /> <br /> cutting Constantinople off by land. The Turks could not take the Byzantine capital itself, largely because of its massive fortifications. Christian resistance in the Balkans was led not by the enfeebled Byzantine empire but by the Serbs, until they suffered a disastrous defeat on the Marica river in September 1371. One by one, the Christian rulers of the Balkans were forced to come to terms. The<br /> <br /> 183<br /> <br /> TSAR DUSHAN OF SERBIA Fortnerly a weak client state of the Byzantine etnpire, Serbia had expended rapidly in the early fourteenth century under Stephen Dushan (1331-55), who took advantage of a Byzantine civil war to seize tnuch of the southern Balkans. Adopting<br /> <br /> Serbs became vassals of the Ottomans, and from ca. 1373 the Bul-<br /> <br /> the title of tsar (derived frotn Caesar, the<br /> <br /> garian tsar and the Byzantine emperor had to accept a similar status.<br /> <br /> ancient title of the Rotnan etnperors),<br /> <br /> Adrianople replaced Bursa (Prousa) as the Ottoman capital and<br /> <br /> Dushan tnodeled his court on that of<br /> <br /> Orhan's successor, Murad I (1362-89), adopted the more prestigious title of sultan. The Ottomans were the new masters of the Balkans. But Christian resistance had not ended. In the 1380s the Serbian prince Lazar (1371-89) led a revolt and on 15th June 1389 met the armies of Murad I at Kosovo Polje, the Field of Blackbirds. At first the battle went well for the Serbs, who killed the sultan. But the Turks rallied under his son, Bayezid, and in the counterattack Lazar fell along with thousands of his followers. The victorious new sultan, Bayezid I (1389-1402), executed most of the Serbian prisoners, extended his direct control over Serbia, and in 1394 besieged Constantinople. The only hope for the Balkan Christians now was that help would come from the West in the form of a crusade.<br /> <br /> THE JANISSERIES One reason for the phenomenal success of the Ottomans in conquering the Balkans so rapidly in the late fourteenth century was the abundant manpower that they had at their disposal. The most useful source of high-quality troops was the corps known as the Janisseries, or the "New Levies" (Turkish yeni<br /> <br /> (eri) , created around the time of the capture ofAdrianople in 1361 (see main text) as a standing army directly under the command of the sultan. At first the soldiers who made up this elite regiment were recruited from Christian prisoners of war, but later the sultans took an annual tribute from the Christians living under their rule (the Devshirme) payable in young boys of about eight years old. These children were then encouraged to convert to Islam and trained to be soldiers. In the course of time, they were enrolled in the Janisseries, where their loyalty to the sultan and their bravery in battle became legendary. They fought in all the major Ottoman campaigns. A Turkish Janissery) by a 16th-century French artist. Unlike other Muslims) Janisseries were forbidden to grow beards) but could wear a mustache.<br /> <br /> Constantinople, with its elaborate ritual and ceretnonial. However, his new etnpire lacked any centralized structure and was incapable of surviving defeat at the hands of the Turks. Dushan's successors were reduced to the status of Otton'lan vassals.<br /> <br /> 184<br /> <br /> THE LAST CRUSADES: THE OTTOMAN THREAT<br /> <br /> THE CRUSADE OF NICOPOLIS In 1394 appeals for help had reached the West from the Byzantine emperor, Manuel II Palaeologus (1391-1425), and from the king of Hungary, Sigismund (1387-1437), along with ominous reports that the Ottoman sultan Bayezid I was boasting that he would soon lead his armies to France, stopping off at Rome to feed his horse on the altar of St. Peter's. Both the pope of Rome and his rival at Avignon (see page 141) issued crusading bulls and the response was enthusiastic, with more than<br /> <br /> 10,000<br /> <br /> volunteers flocking to the standard of<br /> <br /> John, count of Nevers, the son of the duke of Burgundy. However, in spite of this auspicious beginning, the crusade of Nicopolis, as it became known, was to be the last of the great crusading expeditions. The French knights traveled east in magnificent array, followed by twenty-four cartloads of expensive tents and pavilions alone, all made of green velvet and embroidered, with the arms of the count of Nevers picked out in gold thread. When they entered Buda, the Hungarian capital, in July 1396, King Sigismund was so impressed Manuel II, here shown on a silver coin of his reign, ruled a Byzantine empire that consisted of little more than Constantinople. Following the defeat at Nicopolis, he journeyed to the courts of western Europe to appeal in person for help. He received sympathy but little else.<br /> <br /> that he exclaimed that not only would he now be able to drive the Turks from Europe, but were the sky to fall, he would support it on his spears. Such optimism seemed justified when the combined French and Hungarian army moved south across the Danube. Two Turkish fortresses were taken with little trouble and when the crusaders laid siege to the fortress at Nicopolis (Nikopol, Bulgaria), few<br /> <br /> SKANDERBEG OF ALBANIA The most prolonged and successful resistance to the<br /> <br /> and by the knowledge of Turkish military techniques<br /> <br /> Turks in the Balkans was led by an Albanian chieftain<br /> <br /> that he had acquired in the sultan's service.<br /> <br /> who is known to history as Skanderbeg. Born Gj ergj<br /> <br /> Yet Skanderbeg's stand against the Turks received<br /> <br /> (George) Kastriotes ca. 14°5, the son of a Christian<br /> <br /> little help from western Christendom. When he visited<br /> <br /> Albanian client prince of the Ottomans, he was brought<br /> <br /> Rome in 1466-67 to seek financial aid, the pope gave<br /> <br /> up as a Muslim at the Ottoman court at Edirne, where<br /> <br /> him so little money that he was scarcely able to pay his<br /> <br /> he was nicknamed Iskander Beg (Lord Alexander), after<br /> <br /> hotel bill. On Skanderbeg's death in January 1468, the<br /> <br /> Alexander the Great, on account of his bravery. In 1444,<br /> <br /> rebellion he had started came to an end and in the years<br /> <br /> after serving with distinction in the sultan's armies for<br /> <br /> that followed many Albanians accepted Turkish rule and<br /> <br /> several years, he escaped from Edirne and returned to his<br /> <br /> converted to Islam. Although today the majority of<br /> <br /> homeland, where he renounced Islam and led a revolt<br /> <br /> Albanians are (at least nominally) Muslims, as the<br /> <br /> against his Turkish overlords. He held out for more than<br /> <br /> champion of the country's independence Skanderbeg<br /> <br /> twenty years, helped by Albania's mountainous terrain<br /> <br /> remains a national hero.<br /> <br /> THE CRUSADE OF NICOPOLIS<br /> <br /> doubted that it would be swiftly taken and that the host would be able to move on to its ultimate goal, the relief of Constantinople. But the crusaders had reckoned without the resourcefulness and military ability of Bayezid. As soon as he received news of the crusade, he broke off his siege of Constantinople and marched his entire army north to Nicopolis in less than three weeks, a feat that earned him the nickname of Yilderim (Thunderbolt). His arrival came as a devastating surprise to the crusade leaders, who were having dinner when a messenger burst in with the news. When the two armies met on 25th September 1396, the French knights insisted on attacking immediately, without waiting for the Hungarians who were coming up more slowly behind. The initial French charge scattered the Turkish vanguard, but the knights then found themselves confronted with a steep slope, fortified with sharpened wooden stakes. While they were negotiating these obstacles, the knights were suddenly attacked by Bayezid's household cavalry, which emerged unexpectedly from some nearby woods. Outnumbered and tired, the French were easily overcome, and the Hungarians arrived to be confronted with the full weight of the advancing Ottoman army. In the ensuing rout, Sigismund escaped by ship down the Danube but John of Nevers and many other French nobles were taken prisoner. Crusaders drowned when they tried to swim out to the Christian ships anchored in the Danube: so overloaded did the vessels become that their crews pushed the fleeing soldiers back into the water. When the news reached Paris, according to one chronicler, "bitter despair and affliction reigned in all hearts" and the defeat seems to have had a deep impact on enthusiasm for crusading in the East. Although projects for crusades would continue to be discussed, never again would an expedition against the Turks on this scale be mounted from a country such as France that was not in the front line of conflict with the Ottomans. Henceforward it would be left to those whose borders were directly threatened to defend Christendom against the expansion of Islam.<br /> <br /> 185<br /> <br /> The armies of the sultan Bayezid I, the Thunderbolt, rout the European crusaders at the battle of Nicop 0 lis, 1396. This illustration is from the Hunernama ofLoqman, 1396, which is an account by Loqman, the Ottoman court historian, of the rule of the Bayezid I-who is depicted at the center wearing the lmge plumed turban.<br /> <br /> 186<br /> <br /> THE LAST CRUSADES: THE OTTOMAN THREAT<br /> <br /> DISASTER AT VARNA After the defeat at Nicopolis in 1396, the Christian position in the Opposite: The tomb ofTimur Lang (((the<br /> <br /> Lame/' 1336-1405) in Samarkand. One of the most successful and ruthless of Mongol conquerors, Timur led devastating expeditions from Samarkand that ranged from Asia Minor to India. His empire fragmented following his death. Below: Timur's army in battle. His difeat of the<br /> <br /> Ottomans in 1402 delayed by half a century their conquest of Constantinople. Persian, 16th century.<br /> <br /> Balkans was redeemed by intervention from an unexpected quarter when the Ottoman sultan Bayezid I became embroiled in a war with the Mongols led by the fearsome Timur Lang, or Tamerlaine. Bayezid's army was defeated at Ankara on 28th July 1402 and Bayezid was captured. The once-proud sultan was reputedly kept in an iron cage until he died the following year. The siege of Constantinople was lifted because the Ottoman empire was plunged into civil war, with Bayezid's numerous sons fighting for his throne. It was only a brief respite for Byzantium.Within twenty years the Ottoman empire was strong and united under one undisputed sultan, Murad II (1421-51), who soon made his intentions clear by mounting a brief siege of Constantinople in 1422 and by capturing the Byzantine city of Thessalonica in 1430. In view of the renewed threat, the Byzantine emperor John VIII Palaeologus (1425-48) once more appealed to the pope to send a crusade to save Constantinople from the Turks. To make his appeal more attractive, he affirmed his desire to end the schism which, despite attempts at reunion, continued to divide the Greek Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches. In 1438, accompanied by a large delegation, John attended a church council at Florence, where the schism was declared to be at an end and the churches reunited. In return for his compliance,John was promised his crusade, and the pope dispatched Cardinal Giuliano Cesarini as legate to Hungary to coordinate the anti-Ottoman forces in the region. The resultant army was mainly composed of Hungarians and Poles under King Ladislas III of Poland and Hungary (1434-44), and Serbs under their ruler, George Brankovich (1427-56). No troops came from western Europe, although naval support was provided by the pope, the duke of Burgundy, and the Venetians. By June 1443, preparations were complete and an army some 25,000 strong moved down through the Balkans to attack the Turks, capturing Nish and Sofia without much resistance. The crusaders then marched on Adrianople, but by that time winter was setting in and they were forced to retire beyond the Danube. In spite of these successes, Ladislas and Brankovich seem to have had doubts as to their ability to inflict a serious defeat on the Turks. Accordingly, in August the following year, an ambassador was sent to the court of Murad II and he concluded a ten-year truce, sealed by solemn oaths on both sides. Brankovich and the Serbs thereupon left the crusader<br /> <br /> DISASTER AT VARNA<br /> <br /> 187<br /> <br /> army but Ladislas was left to face the wrath of the papal legate.<br /> <br /> IBN KHALDUN'S "NEW WORLD"<br /> <br /> Cesarini denounced the truce as a betrayal of the cause of the<br /> <br /> The Christian reconquest of Spain, the<br /> <br /> crusade and urged Ladislas to break it, advising that oaths sworn to<br /> <br /> rise of the Ottotnans, and the even tnore<br /> <br /> infidels were not, in any case, binding. Ladislas gave way and in Sep-<br /> <br /> dratnatic successes ofTitnur influenced the<br /> <br /> tember 1444 the army, now much smaller without the Serbian contingent, invaded Ottoman territory once more. The sultan was shocked by the Christian volte-face and hurried back from Asia Minor to confront the invasion. He is said to have had the broken treaty fixed to his standard and to have exclaimed: "Christ, if you are God as your followers claim, punish them for<br /> <br /> great scholar Ibn Khaldun (1332-1406) of Tunis, whose fatnily had fled Seville before it fell to Christian forces. In his fatnous Prolegomenon (Muqaddima), he argues that a sedentary civilization will inevitably lose its dynatnistn, decay, and be replaced by a new, rising, dynatnic force, one frequently inspired by faith. And so the cycle would<br /> <br /> their perfidy." When Murad caught up with the crusaders at Varna<br /> <br /> continue. His theories were infortned by<br /> <br /> on the Black Sea, the Ottoman army outnumbered the Christians<br /> <br /> observations about the fall of Muslitn<br /> <br /> three to one, but the battle, fought in a driving wind, was fierce and long drawn out. Turkish casualties were so high that it took Murad<br /> <br /> dynasties to tnore vigorous and tnotivated rivals. Ibn Khaldun, who served as an envoy to Castile and, later, to Titnur, was especially<br /> <br /> three days to be sure that he had won. The Christian army, on the<br /> <br /> aware that there were significant titnes of<br /> <br /> other hand, was almost completely annihilated, with Ladislas and<br /> <br /> turbulence that heralded a new world order.<br /> <br /> Cesarini among the dead. In Hungary the legend persisted that<br /> <br /> This "new world" was being born in other<br /> <br /> Ladislas had survived the battle and spent the rest of his life as a wan-<br /> <br /> lands (he does not say where), and he was<br /> <br /> dering hermit, seeking to atone for his breach of faith, which had brought such disastrous consequences.<br /> <br /> painfully aware that his own civilization of al-Andalus was nearing its end.<br /> <br /> 188<br /> <br /> THE LAST CRUSADES: THE OTTOMAN THREAT<br /> <br /> THE FALL OF CONSTANTINOPLE Although the Christians had been defeated at Varna, the whole episode was a sobering experience for the Ottomans. Fears of cooperation between Byzantium and the West were perhaps exaggerated, for there was intense opposition in Constantinople to the union of the churches agreed at the council of Florence in 1438 (see page 186), which many regarded as a betrayal of the Orthodox faith. The new Ottoman sultan, Mehmed II (1451-81), decided as a priority to eliminate Constantinople and in April 1453 he laid siege This 16th-century wall painting in the Orthodox monastery of Moldovita in Romania depicts the siege of Constantinople. The citY5 massive Roman land walls had stood for more than 1) 000 years without being breached (the crusaders of 1204 had gained entry by assaulting the harbor walls on the Golden Horn). Howevefy in 1453 they were subjected to bombardment by cannons) a recent addition to the weaponry of Muslim and Christian armies.<br /> <br /> to the city by land, as his predecessor Bayezid I had done. However, unlike Bayezid he possessed a number of cannon, with which he was able to bombard the ancient walls of Constantinople. The Byzantine emperor, Constantine XI Palaeologus (1449-53), sent last desperate appeals to Rome. In reply, Pope Nicholas V (1447-55) insisted that the union of Florence be implemented at once. As one Byzantine chronicler bitterly remarked: "We received as much help from Rome as we did from the [Mamluk] sultan [of Egypt]."<br /> <br /> THE FALL OF CONSTANTINOPLE<br /> <br /> The Byzantines and their Venetian and Genoese allies had little<br /> <br /> 189<br /> <br /> THE SIEGE OF BELGRADE<br /> <br /> chance against Mehmed's huge army. In the early hours of 29th May<br /> <br /> Christian encounters with the Ottotllan<br /> <br /> 1453 the Janisseries fought their way through a breach in the walls<br /> <br /> Turks in the fifteenth century did not<br /> <br /> made by the bombardment, and by midday it was all over. Constantine XI was dead (see box) and the city founded by his namesake<br /> <br /> always end in catastrophic defeats like those of Nicopolis, Varna, and, above all, Constantinople. In July 1456 the Turks laid<br /> <br /> was in Turkish hands. Mehmed rode in triumph on a white horse<br /> <br /> siege to Belgrade, which was then part of<br /> <br /> into Hagia Sophia and declared the great cathedral to be a mosque.<br /> <br /> the kingdotll of Hungary. The Hungarian<br /> <br /> News of the fall of Constantinople was greeted in western Europe with shock, and the pope at once called for a crusade to retake the city. One of the first to respond was Philip the Good, duke<br /> <br /> king and his court fled to Vienna and it was left to a seventy-year-old Franciscan friar, John of Capistrano, to tour Hungary preaching the crusade and gathering an<br /> <br /> of Burgundy (1419-67), but he undertook to go only if the king of<br /> <br /> artlly of thousands of volunteers. Poorly<br /> <br /> France or another powerful ruler were also to do so. In the event,<br /> <br /> artlled and thoroughly disorganized as<br /> <br /> no monarch felt secure enough to leave his own kingdom to take<br /> <br /> they were, Capistrano's force succeeded in driving the Turks frotll the walls of<br /> <br /> on the Turks and Philip's crusade was never launched. It was not until the pontificate of Pius II (1458-64) that serious<br /> <br /> Belgrade, capturing<br /> <br /> 100<br /> <br /> inflicting tllore than<br /> <br /> 13,000<br /> <br /> cannon, and casualties.<br /> <br /> efforts were made to gather the means for a counterattack. After attempts to persuade secular rulers to lead the crusade proved fruitless, the elderly Pius mustered a fleet of his own at the Italian port ofAncona. InJune 1464 he took the cross at a ceremony at St. Peter's in Rome and then set out for Ancona to lead the crusade in person. But by this time he was so frail that he had to be carried in a litter, and shortly after arriving at the port he fell ill and died. Few shared the late pope's enthusiasm for the venture and the ships that he had gathered quietly sailed for home. There was to be no crusade and Constantinople, once the greatest city of Christendom, remained in the hands of the Turks as the new capital of the Ottoman empire.<br /> <br /> THE LAST ROMAN EMPEROR The contemporary Greek historian Doukas describes<br /> <br /> The last "Emperor of the Romans" was dead (though<br /> <br /> the last stand of Constantine IX as the Turks broke into<br /> <br /> the Ottoman sultans adopted the title, in Turkish Kaisar-<br /> <br /> Constantinople on the morning of 29th May 1453:<br /> <br /> i-Rum). But his heroic resistance made him something<br /> <br /> "Despairing and hopeless, he stood [on the walls] with<br /> <br /> of a folk hero for the Greeks in the following centuries<br /> <br /> sword and shield in hand and poignantly cried out, 'Is<br /> <br /> of Turkish rule. The story grew up that Constantine had<br /> <br /> there no one among the Christians who will take my<br /> <br /> not died at all: at the last moment an angel had swooped<br /> <br /> head from me?' He was abandoned and alone. Then one<br /> <br /> down, turned him into a marble column, and hidden the<br /> <br /> of the Turks wounded him by striking him flush, and he,<br /> <br /> column in a cave near the city walls. One day the angel<br /> <br /> in turn, gave the Turk a blow. A second Turk delivered a<br /> <br /> would return, change the column back into the<br /> <br /> mortal blow from behind and the emperor fell to the<br /> <br /> emperor, and place in his hand the sword that he had<br /> <br /> earth. They slew him as a common soldier, because they<br /> <br /> wielded in his last battle. The emperor would then drive<br /> <br /> did not know he was emperor."<br /> <br /> out the Turks and reign once more in Constantinople.<br /> <br /> 190<br /> <br /> THE LAST CRUSADES: THE OTTOMAN THREAT<br /> <br /> KNIGHTS OF THE MEDITERRANEAN The Knights Hospitaller suffered a very different fate from the other great crusading order, the Templars (see page 175). Ejected from the Holy Land, the Hospitallers at first took refuge on Cyprus, but in 1306 they gained a new base when they seized the island of Rhodes<br /> <br /> from the Byzantine empire. They fortified the main town and harbor, built castles across the island, and also maintained footholds on the coast of Asia Minor at Smyrna until 1402 and at Bodrum until 1523. From these bases, the knights once more became Christen-<br /> <br /> dom's frontline defenders against the remorseless Ottoman advance. At first the Ottomans paid little attention to Rhodes, seeing it as a minor Christian outpost. However, by the 1470S it was clear that the Turks were planning an attack and the grand master of the Hospitallers, FulkVillaret, began laying up supplies in preparation for a siege. In the spring of 1480, Sultan Mehmed II landed a force of about 15,000 on the island. rfhe defenders numbered only 3,5°0, of whom only a few hundred were serving knights of the order, and the walls of Rhodes town were subjected to an intense bombardment. Nevertheless, the Turks were unable to take the port and were compelled to abandon the siege. The successful defense of Rhodes boosted the prestige of the Hospitallers in the West as never before. However, it was only a matter of time before the Ottoman offensive was renewed, because Rhodes served as a base for piratical attacks on Turkish shipping as well as a safe haven for disaffected JEAN DE LA VALLETTE Much of the credit for the Hospitallers' successful defense of Malta in 1565 (see tnain text) belongs to the grand tnaster<br /> <br /> THE TURKS IN ITALY: OTRANTO<br /> <br /> at the titne,Jean de la Vallette (1494-1568,<br /> <br /> At the time of the first siege of Rhodes (see main text), the<br /> <br /> above). Originally frotn Provence in the<br /> <br /> nightmare of an Ottoman invasion of western Europe seemed to be<br /> <br /> south of France, Vallette had joined the order at the age of twenty and was a veteran of the 1522 siege of Rhodes. He had prepared so well for the Ottotnan attack on Malta that even on a barren<br /> <br /> coming true. Provoked by raids on the coast ofAsia Minor by a papal fleet, in August 1480 a Turkish force seized Otranto on the heel of Italy, and rounded up the inhabitants who were then sold into slavery. The elderly archbishop of Otranto, Stefano Pendinelli, was<br /> <br /> island notoriously short of water, the<br /> <br /> murdered along with most of his clergy. As the news spread, rumors<br /> <br /> garrison never suffered frotn hunger<br /> <br /> grew thick and fast, greatly exaggerating the size of the Turkish force<br /> <br /> or thirst, while his inspiring leadership<br /> <br /> and prompting the pope to consider fleeing to France. However, the<br /> <br /> undoubtedly induced the defenders to<br /> <br /> danger was soon contained. The army of the king of Naples and a<br /> <br /> stand firtn in a situation that tnust have<br /> <br /> fleet sent by the pope besieged the Turkish garrison in Otranto and<br /> <br /> seetned hopeless. The city of Valetta,<br /> <br /> it surrendered on loth September 1481.<br /> <br /> founded after the siege, was natned in his honor, and his totnb still stands in the city's cathedral.<br /> <br /> Ottoman royalty. In July 1522, when another Ottoman army landed on the island, the defenses were far stronger than they had been in 1480 and there were at least 7,000 troops to man them. But this time the Turks were going to stay for as long as it took to reduce the island, and with no prospect of help from the West, the grand master was forced to surrender. The sultan permitted the knights to withdraw honorably and on 1st January 1523 they sailed for Europe, ending their occupation of Rhodes after more than two centuries. After some years in search of a new base, in 1530 the Hospitallers accepted Malta from the Holy Roman emperor-with some reluctance, since the island was barren and poor. The Hospitallers also complained that it would be difficult to defend, an assertion put to the test in the spring of 1565 when an Ottoman fleet began the third great siege fought by the order. Over the next five months, the grand master Jean de la Vallette (see sidebar) led a heroic defense. Against overwhelming odds, the Turks were held at bay for long enough to allow a Spanish relief force to arrive from Sicily. The Hospitallers were once more left free to continue their attacks on Muslim shipping and Ottoman territories as far afield as Greece and Cyprus. Their presence on Malta carne to an end at the hands not of the Turks but of Napoleon Bonaparte, who seized the island in 1798 as a base for his own operations in the Mediterranean. In the following centuries the Most Venerable Order of the Hospital of St. John ofJerusalem reverted to its original role of caring for others. Perhaps its most visible offshoot today is the St. John Ambulance, the worldwide paramedic and first aid charity.<br /> <br /> of Malta in 1565 centered on the fort of St. Elmo at the mouth of the Grand Harbor, Valetta. The present fortifications of the harbor (above) were constructed after the siege. Above: Much of the successful difense<br /> <br /> Opposite: Jean de la Vallette) grand master of the<br /> <br /> the Hospitallers. A later portrait by Franfois-Xavier Dupre (1803-71).<br /> <br /> 192<br /> <br /> THE LAST CRUSADES: THE OTTOMAN THREAT<br /> <br /> THE REFORMATION While the battle to contain the expansion of the Ottoman empire continued unabated, in western Europe a development was taking place that was to have far-reaching implications for the crusading ethos. In 1517 the practice of selling indulgences-the principal inducement for Christians to participate in or finance crusades (see page 176)-came under vociferous attack from a German monk named Martin Luther (1483-1546). Luther argued that in promising remission of sin in return for money or military service, the pope was selling what was, in fact, a free gift, purchased by Christ's death and resurrection and available to all who sincerely repented. The attack on indulgences soon became an assault on the institution of the papacy itself, which came to be seen by Luther and his followers as an instrument of the Devil to lead Christians astray. As the sixteenth century went on, new "Protestant" churches emerged THE PAPAL ALUM MINES The sale of indulgences was not the only source of revenue that the popes could draw on in order to finance crusading expeditions against the Turks. Alulll, a naturally occurring sulfate of alutninutn and potassiutn, was a vital ingredient in the dyeing process, helping the dye to adhere to the fabric. The only source was at Phocaea to the north of Stnyrna (Iztnir) in Asia Minor, in Turkish territory. However, in 1461 John of Castro discovered rich deposits of alutn at Tolfa in the Papal States (central Italy). Within a year<br /> <br /> 8,000<br /> <br /> tnen had been set<br /> <br /> to work extracting the tnineral, enabling the popes both to cut off the lucrative Turkish trade in alutn and to provide a rich source of incotne for thetnselves, tnuch of which went toward financing crusading expeditions.<br /> <br /> THE REFORMATION<br /> <br /> in England, Scotland, Scandinavia, and northern Germany, which refused to acknowledge the authority of the pope. Luther and his followers came to regard crusades as another of the false doctrines propagated by the pope. "How shamefully," wrote Luther, "the pope has this long time baited us with the war against the Turks, taken our money, destroyed so many Christians, and made so much mischief1" He claimed that to fight against the Ottomans was to oppose the judgment of God, who was using the Turks as an instrument to punish Christians for their sins: as proof Luther pointed to the disastrous outcome of the Varna expedition of 1444 (see pages 186-187) and other crusading enterprises. Henceforth the defense of Christendom against the Turks, in which the popes had always taken a leading role, could never be seen in the same way in Protestant countries. The English divine John Foxe was uncertain whether the sultan or the pope "hath been the more bloody and pernicious adversary to Christ." Some extremists even saw the Turks as preferable, such as the English bishop who wrote in 1571 that if the Ottomans invaded Italy, they would at least "bridle the ferocity of Antichrist [the pope]." England and other Protestant powers saw no harm in supplying the Turks with war materiel-particularly tin, which was essential for bronze cannonand thus assisting them in their attacks on Christian Europe. By 1529, however, with the Turks approaching Vienna, even Luther was compelled to modify his views. In his On the War with the Turks (1529), he urged that the struggle against the "scourge of<br /> <br /> God" should be prosecuted vigorously, but by secular rulers, not the pope. Although not a follower of Luther, the Dutch humanist scholar Desiderius Erasmus (ca. 1469-1536) held views similar to Luther's later position. In Erasmus's view, war should be made on the Turks only as a last resort to defend Christian countries, and it would be infinitely preferable to convert them to the Christian faith. Moreover, the old idea of a united Christendom facing the Muslim enemy was still a potent one. In 1571, when news arrived in Protestant England of the victory of the Catholic Don John ofAustria over the Turkish fleet at Lepanto (see pages 194-195), there was general rejoicing in the streets of London, with bonfires, the ringing of church bells, and hearty banquets. In Calvinist Scotland, the young King James VI (later James I of England) celebrated Lepanto in an epic poem, drawing the moral that if God could give such a victory to false Christians, how much more merciful would he be to true believers. Thus, although the war with the Turks was largely left to the Catholic powers during the sixteent<br /> <br /> century, the ideal<br /> <br /> of the crusade lived on, even in the Protestant world.<br /> <br /> 193<br /> <br /> Opposite: Demons crowning the Antipope)Jrom a 14th-century manuscript. Luthers attack on the papacy echoed those of the riform movements oj the period of the Great Schism) which had ended a century earlier (see pages 14cr141). Below: Desiderius Erasmus in his Study) by Hans Holbein the Younger (1497-1543). In his Consideration of the War that should be Waged against the Turks (1530)) the great Dutch humanist scholar identified two mistaken views. The first was to portray the Turks as savage barbarians) since Christians were often responsible JorJar worse atrocities. The second was to do nothing while the Ottomans overran eastern Europe and ((abandon our brothers to a servitude which they do not deserve. ))<br /> <br /> 194<br /> <br /> THE LAST CRUSADES: THE OTTOMAN THREAT<br /> <br /> THE BATTLE OF LEPANTO In the first half of the sixteenth century, the Holy Roman emperor Charles V (ruled 1519-56) became, by a series of genealogical accidents, the ruler of much of western and central Europe. From one grandfather he inherited the kingdoms of Spain and Naples and from another the Habsburg lands ofAustria and central Europe. His enormous realm also benefited from the plentiful supply of gold then flowing in from the Spanish conquests in the Americas. It was only natural that such a powerful Catholic ruler should lead the war against the Turks, and all the more so because, after a period of passivity between 1481 and 1512, the Ottomans were once more on the move. The sultan Selim I (1512-20) conquered Syria and Egypt from the Mamluks, and added Jerusalem to the Ottoman empire. Selim's The Battle of Lepanto, 1571) by an anonymous<br /> <br /> Venetian artist of the 16th century. By the standards of the time) the battle was on a massive scale. The Ottoman fleet numbered 275 vessels as opposed to 209 Christian ships) and at least 100) 000 men must have been involved in the fighting. Eighty Turkish vessels were sunk and 117 captured) with about 30) 000 men dead or captive) compared with Christian casualties of 8) 000 dead and less than a score of ships lost.<br /> <br /> successor, Suleyman the Magnificent (1520-66), took Rhodes from the Hospitallers in 1522 (see page 189) and subdued the kingdom of Hungary with his victory at Mohics in 1526, thus bringing the Ottomans to the borders of the Habsburg domains. However, the war that developed between the Habsburgs and Ottomans in the sixteenth century was largely fought in the Mediterranean where, following the conquest of Egypt and Syria, and their alliance with the Barbary corsairs of North Africa, the Turks<br /> <br /> THE BATTLE OF LEPANTO<br /> <br /> 195<br /> <br /> posed an even greater threat than they did in the Balkans. In 1569, when the Turks invaded the Venetian-ruled island of Cyprus, the fleets of Spain,Venice, and the papacy were combined in a maritime league under the command of Don John ofAustria, the illegitimate son of Charles V On 7th October 1571, the ships of the league engaged the Turkish fleet off Lepanto in southern Greece, at the entrance to the Gulf of Corinth. Although the Turks had the advantage in terms of numbers, the Christians had more guns and their combined firepower had a devastating effect on the Ottoman fleet. It was a Christian victory on an unprecedented scale and it ended the myth of Ottoman invincibility at sea. Yet Lepanto was by no means a turning point. Although the sultan, Selim II (1566-74), was so enraged by the news that he did not sleep for three days and nights, he later commented that "the infidel has only singed my beard. It will grow again." The Otton1.an fleet was rapidly reconstructed, with the shipyards of Constantinople at one point turning out a new vessel every day. In the same year as Lepanto, the Turks went on to complete their conquest of Cyprus, and the maritime league, far from capitalizing on its success, broke up shortly afterward. In 1574 the new Turkish fleet expelled the Spanish from the foothold they had gained on the coast ofTunisia. The Ottoman threat was as real at the end of the sixteenth century<br /> <br /> A hat jewel made for Don John ofAustria, who led the Christian fleet to a resounding victory over the Ottoman fleet at Lepanto.<br /> <br /> as it had been a century before.<br /> <br /> THE BARBARY CORSAIRS Ottoman naval power in the Mediterranean was greatly<br /> <br /> Mediterranean. In the seventeenth century the<br /> <br /> assisted by an alliance with the pirates who operated<br /> <br /> inhabitants of the southern coasts of England and Ireland<br /> <br /> from bases on the coasts of Barbary (the name given by<br /> <br /> lived in constant fear of corsair attacks. Even after the<br /> <br /> Europeans to North Africa west of Egypt). In 1518, one<br /> <br /> English and French navies had neutralized the threat to<br /> <br /> of them, Hizir Reis, also known as Khayr aI-Din<br /> <br /> their countries, corsairs continued to harry shipping of<br /> <br /> Barbarossa, came to an agreement with the sultan<br /> <br /> other countries into the eighteenth and nineteenth<br /> <br /> whereby he would win Algiers with Ottoman help and<br /> <br /> centuries. Corsair attacks on United States vessels<br /> <br /> in 1532 he was appointed grand admiral of the Ottoman<br /> <br /> sparked the young republic's first foreign war (1801-05),<br /> <br /> navy. After 1587, the corsairs reverted to independent<br /> <br /> which ended with a decisive American naval victory<br /> <br /> action, preying mercilessly on Christian shipping and<br /> <br /> over the Barbary states that harbored the corsairs. The<br /> <br /> coastal towns, and seizing captives to be sold as slaves<br /> <br /> Barbary War led to important developments in the<br /> <br /> or held to ransom.<br /> <br /> United States Navy and was directly responsible for the<br /> <br /> The corsairs were not all Muslims (they recruited<br /> <br /> creation of the United States Marine Corps. A second,<br /> <br /> many Christians, some of whom converted to Islam) and<br /> <br /> briefer, war in 1815 ended the Barbary threat to<br /> <br /> their activities were by no means confined to the<br /> <br /> American vessels once and for all.<br /> <br /> 196<br /> <br /> THE LAST CRUSADES: THE OTTOMAN THREAT<br /> <br /> THE GLORIES OF THE OTTOMANS The Ottoman empire was by no means dedicated solely to<br /> <br /> Constantinople (Istanbul) and other cities. Of these the most<br /> <br /> warfare or to self-indulgence, as its Christian critics liked to<br /> <br /> striking is the vast Suleymaniye, built by Sinan from 1550-57<br /> <br /> think. Even the most warlike of sultans were patrons of art and<br /> <br /> for Suleyman the Magnificent. The central dome of the<br /> <br /> architecture, and everyone sponsored the building of at least<br /> <br /> mosque is surrounded by no fewer than 400 smaller domes<br /> <br /> one kiilliye, a complex of religious, educational, and charitable<br /> <br /> that cover a hospital, an orphanage, a soup kitchen, an asylum,<br /> <br /> buildings, of which a mosque was the central feature. In their patronage, the sultans were extraordinarily eclectic,<br /> <br /> a library, baths, a travelers' hospice, and Suleyman's tomb. Between the buildings are colonnaded courts with fountains.<br /> <br /> employing artists from among the peoples they had conquered.<br /> <br /> The complex proj ects Ottoman power and grandeur but also,<br /> <br /> Two of the greatest Ottoman architects, Christodoulos and<br /> <br /> in the purposes of the individual buildings, the humanity and<br /> <br /> Mimar Sinan, were Greeks by birth. The sultans also imported<br /> <br /> philanthropy enjoined on Muslims in the Quran.<br /> <br /> luxury goods from outside the empire, particularly Chinese<br /> <br /> If Ottoman buildings are in'lpressive when viewed from the<br /> <br /> pottery, which was to be an important influence on Ottoman<br /> <br /> outside, the interiors are often even more memorable owing to<br /> <br /> ceramics. Such outside influences ensured that the Ottoman<br /> <br /> the use of glazed ceramic tiles in the decoration. The tiles<br /> <br /> empire developed a style of art and architecture that was a<br /> <br /> produced from the later fifteenth century in the town of<br /> <br /> synthesis of the Islamic traditions of the Near East and those<br /> <br /> Nicaea (Iznik), achieved a richness and variety of pattern and<br /> <br /> of the Classical world and Byzantium.<br /> <br /> color that has never been equaled. These tiles were used lavisWy<br /> <br /> The most obvious and visible legacy of the Ottoman elnpire is its architecture, especially the kiilliyes built in<br /> <br /> on the interior walls of Constantinople's mosques. The magnificent Blue Mosque of Sultan Ahmed I (1603-17) takes<br /> <br /> its name from the hue of the Iznik tiles that decorate its walls and soaring arches. Some of the finest examples are found in the mosque of Rustem Pasha, built in 1561 by Sinan. Iznik tiles also feature prominently in the decoration of the Topkapi palace, the residence of Ottoman sultans for nearly three centuries. There was another area in which Ottoman artists advanced beyond traditional Islamic art. The sultans employed painters to provide miniature illustrations for chronicles of the important events of thejr reigns and other official books. As in the case of tiles, these illustrations show a delight in vibrant color, particularly scarlet. The Suriname or Book<br /> <br /> of Festivals,<br /> <br /> commissioned by Sultan Murad III (1594-95), is a fine example of the work of these artists.<br /> <br /> Above: The Suleymaniye Mosque} Istanbul} built by Sinan in the 155 os for Suleyman the Magnificent (1520-66). The greatest of the<br /> <br /> Ottoman sultans} and regarded as such in his own lifetime} Suleyman presided over an empire whose power and reputation were at their height. Opposite: A Turkish miniature painting of Dervishes} members of a Muslim sect} peiforming their characteristic ((whirling)) devotional dance. Left: The tiled interior of the Baghdad Pavilion in the Fourth Court of the Topkapi palace} Istanbul.<br /> <br /> 198<br /> <br /> THE LAST CRUSADES: THE OTTOMAN THREAT<br /> <br /> THE END OF THE CRUSADES The reality of the Turkish threat in the mid-seventeenth century was brought home when the Ottomans invaded the Venetian-ruled island of Crete in 1645, finally conquering it in 1669, after twentyfour years of fighting. In July r683 the Ottoman grand vizier, Kara Mustafa Pasha, penetrated Habsburg lands with a huge army and laid siege to Vienna. The city was poorly prepared for a siege since a peace treaty with the Ottomans was still in force, but it managed to hold out until 11th September, when a relieving force under King John III Sobieski of Poland came to the rescue. Given the continuing danger, Catholic Europe maintained the rhetoric and institutions of the crusade. Papal indulgences were issued for those who took part in the defense of Crete and Vienna, and in 1684 a Holy League was formed by Pope Innocent IX, the A DIPLOMAT'S VIEW OF THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE Sir Paul Rycaut (1628-1700) was appointed private secretary to the English ambassador in Constantinople in 1660 and wrote of his experiences in The Present State<br /> <br /> of the Ottoman Empire (1668). He portrayed the Turks in very negative terms, not because they were not Christians, but<br /> <br /> Holy Roman empire, Poland, andVenice. Special preaching attracted thousands ~ of volunteers to the league. These last crusaders even included Protestants such as the fiery Scottish republican Andrew Fletcher (1655-1716). It was also in the later seventeenth century that attitudes began to change. There were two reasons behind this. The first was the slow evaporation of the Ottoman threat: between 1684 and 1697 the Holy<br /> <br /> because their system of government was<br /> <br /> League operated with unprecedented success, largely thanks to west-<br /> <br /> a "fabric of slavery," characterized by<br /> <br /> ern technical superiority, which made itself felt for the first time.<br /> <br /> "severity, violence, and cruelty," an<br /> <br /> While western armies now had the advantage of professional well-<br /> <br /> absolute monarchy where the individual had no protection against the arbitrary whims of the sultan. But he regarded this<br /> <br /> trained infantry supported by mobile field artillery, the Ottoman Janisseries, who had once been key to Turkish success, had become<br /> <br /> system as a natural one for an oriental<br /> <br /> a powerful force for conservatism, vigorously opposing the intro-<br /> <br /> people like the Turks to live under, just as<br /> <br /> duction of new military techniques. Consequently, in the I690S the<br /> <br /> it was natural for Englishmen to enjoy the<br /> <br /> Austrians were able to drive the Turks back south of the Danube. By<br /> <br /> protection of the law, even against the<br /> <br /> the treaty ofKarlowitz ofJanuary 1699, the sultan was compelled for<br /> <br /> king. Rycaut's view was typical of how the Ottoman empire<br /> <br /> W(;lS<br /> <br /> then being seen<br /> <br /> in western Europe, and indeed of how<br /> <br /> the first time to yield large tracts of territory, ceding most of Hungary to Austria and giving up other areas to Poland,Venice, and Rus-<br /> <br /> westerners have tended to perceive the<br /> <br /> sia. As the eighteenth century progressed, it became clear that there<br /> <br /> "oriental" world ever since--as exotic<br /> <br /> was no longer any likelihood of the sultan marching into Rome at<br /> <br /> and fascinating, but at the same time intrinsically corrupt and cruel.<br /> <br /> the head of his troops.The Ottoman empire now entered on its long period of decline which was to end in its formal dissolution in 1923. The second factor was a new attitude to the place of religious belief in society. Philosophers such as John Locke (1632-1704), David Hume (1711-76), and Voltaire (1694-1778) argued that religion was a matter of private conscience alone and had nothing to do with government policy or the state. It certainly did not provide<br /> <br /> THE END OF THE CRUSADES<br /> <br /> 199<br /> <br /> the grounds for going to war with a foreign power. Crusades were no longer seen as the heroic defense of a beleaguered Christendom but as the savagery of a barbarous and superstitious past. For Hume, the crusades were "the most signal and durable monument of human folly that has yet appeared in any age or nation." Not that these intellectuals were admirers of the Ottomans, whose government they regarded as arbitrary and cruel. Rather, they regarded the superiority of Christendom as resting not on a set of" correct" religious beliefs, but on a set of cultural, political, and social values, particularly the rule of law, limits on the powers of government, and freedom of the individual. In future, western European relations with the Ottoman empire would be based solely on commercial and strategic considerations,<br /> <br /> The Siege of Vienna, 1683) by an anonymous 17th-century artist. The city was saved from Kara Mustafa 5forces by the timely intervention of King John III Sobieski of Poland. Although the rapid Turkish retreat offered a good opportunity to inflict a significant difeat) the Austrians were uneasy about being beholden to aforeign prince and declined to join the Polish king in pursuit, causing him to lament ((the ingratitude of those whom we have saved. Kara Mustafa drew little benefit from his escape: he was strangled soon afterward by some Janisseries at Belgrade on the orders of the sultan. JJ<br /> <br /> with Britain and France often supporting the Turks against Christian Russia, most notably during the Crimean War of r854-56.<br /> <br /> 9<br /> <br /> THE LEGACY OFTHE CRUSADES CAROLE<br /> <br /> HILLENBRAND<br /> <br /> Crusading in the vvestern Imagination<br /> <br /> 202<br /> <br /> Islamic Responses to the vvest<br /> <br /> 206<br /> <br /> A Clash of Civilizations?<br /> <br /> 210<br /> <br /> 202<br /> <br /> THE LEGACY OF THE CRUSADES<br /> <br /> CRUSADING IN THE WESTERN IMAG INATION Despite having lost the Holy Land, Europeans did not forget the crusades; and memories of this momentous interlude in their history remained, even after the Ottoman empire had ceased to pose a real threat to Europe. Many European perceptions of Muslims and the Muslim world were rooted in the crusading experience and Europe created myths and ideals based on it. The Return from the Crusade) by Carl<br /> <br /> Friedrich Lessing (1808-80). The old and weary knight still proudly bears the banner and insignia of the Teutonic Knights. The exploits of German crusaders) especially in the age of the Hohenstaufen dynasty of Holy Roman emperors (founders and patrons of the Teutonic Order)) inspired Lessing and other artists during the period of Germany 5 struggles for unification) which culminated in the creation of the ((Second Reich)) in 1871.<br /> <br /> Napoleon's Egyptian campaign of 1798 may be taken as a key moment in the growth of orientalism in Europe and of scholarly interest in the crusades. Thereafter, the academic study of the crusades began in earnest, and the sixteen volumes of the Recueil des<br /> <br /> historiens des Croisades produced (1841-1906) in France by the august Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres, were a monument to nineteenth-century scholarship. Unlike earlier luminaries of the Enlightenment, such as Voltaire, Gibbon, and Hume, who had criticized crusading as irrational fanaticism, nineteenth-century scholars had a more positive attitude. But imaginative fiction was more influential than historiography in molding public perceptions of the crusades. Torquato Tasso's epic poem of the First Crusade, Gerusalemme Liberata (1581), was a particularly rich resource for nineteenth-century creative artists. The romantic lure of the crusades became a potent source of inspiration for many novelists, playwrights, poets, musicians, and artists, who portrayed the crusaders as the flower of medieval European chivalry in conflict with an exotic Muslim enemy. The crusades could also be seen to epitomize, and indeed to intensify, the epic struggle between Christianity and Islam that had begun in the seventh century. Benjamin Disraeli (1804-81), the British prime minister and novelist, visited the tombs of the crusader kings in 183 I, and the N ear East was a setting for several of his novels. Artists such as David Roberts (see illustration, opposite), Edward Lear, and Jean-Leon Gerome painted the Holy Land; other painters depicted crusader subjects. Rossini and Verdi, among others, composed operas in crusader settings. Poets such as Lamartine and Nerval evoked the Orient. William Wordsworth wrote four sonnets about the crusades. Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832) deserves special attention in this context. Although he criticized the crusades in his Essay on Chivalry published in 1818, his attitude toward them was generally romantic. Of his four popular novels with crusader backgrounds, The Talisman<br /> <br /> (r825) was especially famous. Scott's depiction of Saladin drew on a<br /> <br /> literary tradition stretching back to medieval times, idealizing him with a blend of Orientalist fantasy and chivalric legend. Scott contrasts' albeit with Eurocentric condescension, "the Christian and English monarch" Richard the Lionheart, who showed "all the cruelty of an Eastern [sovereign]," and Saladin, "who displayed the deep policy and prudence of a European<br /> <br /> sove~eign."<br /> <br /> The Damascus Gate,jerusalem) by David<br /> <br /> Roberts (1839). The crusades fitted well into the 19th-century European view of the Orient as, in the words of the Palestinian writer and academic Edward Said (1935-2003)) ((a place of romance) exotic beings) haunting memories and landscapes) remarkable experiences. ))<br /> <br /> Notwithstanding Scott, it was probably paintings that most influenced the Victorian public's imagination. Paintings worked on multiple levels, some obvious, some perhaps only subliminal. They treat much more than the crusades as a historical phenomenon. They are<br /> <br /> ISLAM, "ENEMY OF CIVILIZATION"<br /> <br /> about pride in national heritage; bringing the cross to the heathen;<br /> <br /> The French writer<br /> <br /> imperial claims to distant lands; the lure of the exotic; romanticism;<br /> <br /> Chateaubriand (1768-1848) visited the Holy<br /> <br /> and the mystique of the Middle Ages. All these themes resonated in<br /> <br /> Fran~ois-Rene de<br /> <br /> Land in 1806 and was made a papal knight of the Holy Sepulcher, vowing to recover<br /> <br /> nineteenth-century British society-and their echoes reverberate to<br /> <br /> it from the "infidel." His Itineraire de Paris<br /> <br /> this day. In Victorian England and elsewhere, pictures reached a<br /> <br /> aJerusalem<br /> <br /> wider public than did any scholarly account of the crusades.<br /> <br /> describes the crusades as a confrontation<br /> <br /> In the nineteenth century the foremost ruler of the world's Muslims was QueenVictoria. Imperial expansion by Britain, France,<br /> <br /> et de Jerusalem<br /> <br /> a Paris<br /> <br /> (1811)<br /> <br /> between Islam and "civilization": "The crusades were not only about the deliverance of the Holy Sepulcher,<br /> <br /> Germany, and other European states in non-Christian regions was<br /> <br /> but more about knowing which would<br /> <br /> inevitably accompanied by Christian missions undertaking, as the<br /> <br /> win on earth: a religion [Islam] that was<br /> <br /> title of a popular British series of books proclaimed, the Conquests of<br /> <br /> the enemy of civilization, systematically<br /> <br /> the Cross. European nationalism also brought to the fore crusading<br /> <br /> favorable to ignorance, to despotism, to<br /> <br /> heroes such as Louis IX (St. Louis) in France, Richard the Lionheart<br /> <br /> slavery; or a religion that had caused to reawaken in modern people the genius<br /> <br /> in England, and Frederick Barbarossa in Germany. Belgium, estab-<br /> <br /> of a sage antiquity, and had abolished<br /> <br /> lished only in r830, proudly commemorated Godfrey of Bouillon.<br /> <br /> base servitude."<br /> <br /> 204<br /> <br /> THE LEGACY OF THE CRUSADES<br /> <br /> THE FI:RST WORLD WAR: liA GREAT CRUSADE" Some commentators used crusading imagery in connection with the First World War, seeing it as a "war to end all wars" and depicting it as a conflict between cultures, fought to contain German militarism. Despite the loss of life, some clergy saw it as a crusade to defend freedom and to liberate the Holy Places from the control of Germany's Muslim ally, the Ottoman empire. Basil Bourchier, a British clergyman, wrote: "Not only is this a holy war. It is the holiest war that has ever MARK TWAIN IN THE HOLY LAND The crusades inspired some American art, such as The March of the Crusaders by George Innes (1825-94), but otherwise the<br /> <br /> been waged .... [The pagan god] Odin is ranged against Christ. Berlin is seeking to prove its supremacy over BetWehem." In 1916 the British premier, David Lloyd George, declared: "Young men from every quarter of the country flocked to the standard of international<br /> <br /> romantic idealization of crusading did not<br /> <br /> right, as to a great crusade."When Britain's General Allenby took<br /> <br /> make great headway in the United States,<br /> <br /> Jerusalem from the Turks in December 1917, Punch magazine published<br /> <br /> which tended to shy away from anything<br /> <br /> The Last Crusade, a cartoon depicting Richard the Lionheart looking<br /> <br /> that glorified the Old World. The crusades<br /> <br /> down on Jerusalem and saying" At last my dream come true."<br /> <br /> were also deeply linked with Catholicism, which was widely criticized at the time as un-American, and there was a wide antipathy toward such ideas as nobility, feudalism, and wars of religion. The novelist Mark Twain visited Europe<br /> <br /> Crusading ancestry was a source of pride and was echoed in family heraldic devices in Britain, France, and elsewhere. Attempts<br /> <br /> and the Holy Land in 1867, and describes<br /> <br /> were made in the nineteenth century to revive the Knights Templar,<br /> <br /> his travels in The Innocents Abroad (1869), his<br /> <br /> but calls for the Order of St.John (the Knights Hospitaller) to return<br /> <br /> most popular work in his lifetime. With<br /> <br /> to its military role and help free the Holy Land from the Muslim<br /> <br /> quiet irony and a skepticism typical of contemporary Americans he describes the purported sacred relics displayed by the Catholic monks in the church of the Holy<br /> <br /> Ottoman empire had little impact. Instead, the order<br /> <br /> successf~lly<br /> <br /> reverted to its original role of caring for the sick and needy. Crusading imagery was applied to contemporary political situa-<br /> <br /> Sepulcher. Most impressive of all the<br /> <br /> tions, despite a lack of historical verisimilitude; thus the Crimean<br /> <br /> church's "relics," however, is the sword<br /> <br /> War (1854-56) was seen as a kind of crusade for the custodianship<br /> <br /> of Godfrey of Bouillon: "N 0 blade in Christendom wields such enchantment as this-no blade of all that rust in the ancestral halls of Europe is able to invoke such visions of romance in the brain of him who looks upon it-none that can prate of such chivalric deeds or tell such brave tales of the warrior days of<br /> <br /> of the Holy Places, although France and Britain fought on the side of the ailing Ottoman empire against Christian Russia. Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany (1888-1918) visited the Near East in 1898 and in Jerusalem saw a recently established German Templar colony. In Damascus, in a carefully orchestrated act, he placed a bronze wreath on Saladin's tomb. The wreath (seized as a trophy<br /> <br /> old.... It speaks to him of Baldwin, and<br /> <br /> during the First World War by T.E. Lawrence, "Lawrence ofArabia,"<br /> <br /> Tancred, the princely Saladin, and great<br /> <br /> and now in London) is ornately decorated with Arabic inscriptions,<br /> <br /> Richard of the Lion Heart. It was with<br /> <br /> some from of the Quran and one that mentions Saladin by name.<br /> <br /> just such blades as these that these splendid heroes of romance used to segregate a man, so to speak, and leave<br /> <br /> Crusade imagery was also exploited by both sides in the Spanish Civil War, and by General Dwight D. Eisenhower in the Second<br /> <br /> the half of him to fall one way and the<br /> <br /> World War. On 6th June 1944, at the beginning of Operation<br /> <br /> other half the other."<br /> <br /> Crusader, the Allied invasion of Europe, he declared: "Soldiers,<br /> <br /> CRUSADING IN THE WESTERN IMAGINATION<br /> <br /> 205<br /> <br /> sailors, and airmen of the Allied Expeditionary Forces, you are about to embark on a great crusade." In the nineteenth century, the metaphorical use of crusade to mean the pursuit of a worthy cause had become widespread, building on Thomas Jefferson's phrase "crusade against ignorance." But Eisenhower claimed to use the term literally: "Only by the destruction of the Axis was a decent world possible; the war became for me a crusade in the traditional sense of that often misused word" (Crusade in Europe, 1948). The symbolism of the crusades was, therefore, versatile. For the artists of romanticism the crusades provided a rich vein of inspira ~ tion-acts of courage in a "just war" in the exotic East, the emotional homecoming of the crusader, and so on. Nationalists could adopt and celebrate individual crusading heroes, while contemporary political and military situations called forth crusading analogies. Yet the crusades have not always been a source of inspiration, as the attitudes of Voltaire, Hume, and other eighteenth-century luminaries demonstrate. Some Christians have been assailed by a sense of guilt; for example, Sir Steven Runciman described the Crusades as "a tragic and destructive episode." More recently, the "Reconciliation Walk," led in 1999 by an American child in the build-up to the 900th anniversary of the fall ofJerusalem in 1°99, distributed a written statement: "We deeply regret the atrocities committed in the name of Christ by our predecessors."<br /> <br /> The Taking ofJerusalem by the Crusaders, 15th July 10 99) by Emile Signal (1804-92). The French were very aware of the leading role played by their kinsmen in the crusades. In the 1830S French noble families competed to place their coats of arms in the Salles des Croisades at Versailles) which the king set aside for French families who) like himself, had distinguished crusading ancestors.<br /> <br /> 206<br /> <br /> THE LEGACY OF THE CRUSADES<br /> <br /> ISLAMIC RESPONSES TO THE WEST The Islamic world reacted to western imperialism and colonization in a variety of ways. The Egyptian scholar Abd aI-Rahman al-Jabarti (1754-1825), considered by many as the first voice of the modern Arab renaissance, wrote two contemporary accounts of Napoleon's occupation of Egypt in 1798. He attacked the French for the materialist ethos of their revolution, but following the expulsion of the French and the return of the Ottomans, he criticized Muslim PAN-ARABISM AND THE POWER OF THE CRUSADER METAPHOR<br /> <br /> society and expressed admiration for European science. Nineteenth-century Muslim intellectuals fell broadly into two<br /> <br /> The year after the Suez crisis of 1956,<br /> <br /> groups. Those who embraced the challenge of modernization and<br /> <br /> when an attempt by British, French,<br /> <br /> western scientific ideas, the "modernists" as they came to be called,<br /> <br /> and Israeli forces to seize the Suez Canal was successfully rebuffed, the Egyptian<br /> <br /> such as Indian educationalist and jurist Sayyid Ahmad Khan (1817-<br /> <br /> historian Muhammad Kamal Husayn<br /> <br /> 98), who tried to integrate the advances of western science and<br /> <br /> declared: "The struggle conducted today<br /> <br /> technology into Islam. Others, the "traditionalists," epitomized by<br /> <br /> by the leaders of the Arab liberation<br /> <br /> the Wahhabi movement in what is now Saudi Arabia, turned inward<br /> <br /> movement is the same as that conducted in the past by the Ayyubids and Matnluks to oust the crusaders. And, as the Arabs were victorious in the past, they will be in the present." In such statements it matters little that the Ayyubids (including Saladin) were Kurds or that the Mamluks were<br /> <br /> and sought a return to the pristine values of early Islam, a society uncontaminated by external, above all European, influences and based only on the principles of the Quran and hadith (see page 19). In the twentieth century, as European imperialism gave way to United States hegemony, the response of traditionalists was the same. Extremist groups with an Islamic platform, such as the Muslim<br /> <br /> Turks. The rhetoric allows modern Arabs<br /> <br /> Brotherhood in Egypt, struggled against all corrupt rulers in order<br /> <br /> to claim these victories as their own. In<br /> <br /> to establish a unified Muslim state on Earth. Their leading ideo-<br /> <br /> Arab nationalist discourse, Islam is not<br /> <br /> logue, Sayyid Qutb (1906-66), who was executed for treason by<br /> <br /> necessarily in the foreground; crusading<br /> <br /> President Nasser, spoke of the age-old confrontation between Islam<br /> <br /> metaphors are flexible enough to fit secular contexts and nationalist ideals.<br /> <br /> and "polytheists"-including Christians, Hindus, and Communists. Qutb was influenced by the prolific Indian writer Sayyid Abu'l A'la Mawdudi (1903-79), whose work has been seminal among radicals trained in the religious colleges (madrasas) of Pakistan, and notably among the Taliban in Afghanistan. The concept ofjihad plays a paramount role in Mawdudi's thinking. His book Jihad in Islam has gone through many editions; the fifth has on its cover the word jihad written as a calligraphic blood-red sword. For Mawdudi, Islam is not concerned with one nation to the exclusion of others; he stresses the universality of Islam, since "Islam wants the whole Earth." Nowadays jihad is an overused word; but it can serve as a powerful rallying cry against perceived forces of aggression and interference. For some, the call for jihad has a specific political focus, such as Palestine. Other Muslim pressure groups take a strongly ethical stance against America's global economic as well as political<br /> <br /> ISLAMIC RESPONSES TO THE WEST<br /> <br /> domination; hence the recently instituted ''jihad against Coca Cola," an attempt to undermine the product which symbolizes the United States around the world. Two rival Muslim companies, Mecca Cola and Qibla Cola, declare that they give the statutory ten percent of their income, as decreed by Islam, to Muslim good causes. But not all the rhetoric has an exclusively religious basis. Saddam Husayn's absolutist secular regime in Iraq fabricated an eclectic array of myths to bolster its fragile ideological base, and it spoke of the necessity for a great battle against the "American-Israeli conspiracy." Despite his clear lack of religious credentials, Saddam called on occasion for jihad against the West. Modern Muslims have rediscovered and reinterpreted the crusades, which retrospectively provide powerful symbols for their<br /> <br /> 207<br /> <br /> Napoleon Bonaparte in the Grand Mosque at Cairo) by Henri Uvy (1841-19°4). The contemporary Egyptian scholar Abd al-Rahman<br /> <br /> al-Jabarti criticized Napoleon'S occupation of 1798) calling the French ((materialists who deny all God'S attributes) the Hereafter and Resurrectio,n) and who reject Prophethood.)) On the other hand) he was impressed with the army of scholars and scientists brought by Napoleon to conduct a comprehensive survey of Egypt'S fiora)fauna) and monuments.<br /> <br /> 208<br /> <br /> THE LEGACY OF THE CRUSADES<br /> <br /> Opposite, above: Jerusalem Day 1988 was<br /> <br /> commemorated by this Iraqi stamp bearing the image of Saladin and his fellow Tikriti) President Saddam Husayn) the self-styled ((Second Saladin)) (see sidebar on opposite page). Opposite, below: A Saudi Arabian stamp iS5f,4ed<br /> <br /> to mark the 800th anniversary of Saladin 5 victory over the crusaders at Hattin in 1187. Both this and the Iraqi stamp above feature the Dome of the Rock) the quintessential icon of the Holy City. Below: A monumental statue of Saladin)fianked<br /> <br /> by warriors and a sufi (on the far side and not visible here) stands majestically in front of the medieval citadel of Damascus) capital of the republic of Syria and site of Saladin 5 tomb. At the base of the statue) visible at bottom right) are two slumped Franks) symbolizing defeated men. The two are King Gu~ who holds a bag of ransom money) and Reynald of Chatillon) who wears the haunted look of a man not expecting to survive.<br /> <br /> politicians. According to such thinking, the crusader states were "proto-colonies," prefiguring Napoleon's Egyptian expedition, the mandate period after 1918 (when Britain and France occupied Arab territories of the former Ottoman empire under League of Nations mandates), and, above all, the creation of the state of Israel in 1948. Arab nationalists and nationalist movements have evoked the victorious struggle of Muslim rulers against the Franks in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries (see sidebar on page 206). For figures such as Sayyid Qutb, who spoke of "international crusaderism," the crusades never ended; the struggle between Christianity and Islam is ongoing. Others interpret the crusades as the first acts of western imperialism (called in Arabic "premature imperialism"), and it is a sober fact that most traditionally Muslim countries have at one time been colonized by Europeans. The rhetoric of such political discourse is strongly anti-imperialist, antiwestern, and anti-Christian, its imagery evoking stereotypes from the crusading period. Christian westerners have "polluted" Islamic territory and its most sacred places. Mehmet Ali Agca, the Turk who attempted to kill the pope in 1981, wrote in a letter: "I have decided to kill Pope John Paul II, supreme commander of the crusades."<br /> <br /> iSLAMiC RESPONSES TO THE WEST<br /> <br /> 209<br /> <br /> Just as in Saladin's day, the recapture ofJerusalem, the third holiest city in Islam, is still the principal aim of certain Arab and Muslim activists. And all Palestinians outside Jerusalem yearn to have access to the Muslim religious places in the Holy City. Some Muslims draw analogies between the Latin kingdom of Jerusalem and the state of Israel. The fact that one was Christian and the other is Jewish does not, in their view, undermine the basic truth of infidel violation of Muslim space. Groups such as Hamas (Movements of Islamic Resistance) and Hizballah (Party of God) were set up under a religious banner to fight for the liberation of Palestine and against western" crusader" intervention and support for Israel. The vast majority of Muslims do not share such extreme views, but it is undeniable that for many Muslims Jerusalem is as focal today as it was after 1099, when the Holy City fell to the Franks, who occupied it until Saladin retook it in 1187. As in 1099, the loss of Jerusalem in the Six Day War of 1967 was a terrible blow to the Muslim world. The poignancy of the loss was made more acute that same year by an arson attack on the Aqsa mosque by an Australian Christian zealot. The attack destroyed the beautiful pulpit commissioned by Nur ad-Din and placed in the mosque by Saladin in 1187. The founder of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Ayatollah Khomeini, was fully behind the Muslim, anti-Zionist struggle to liberate Jerusalem. In the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s, Iranian soldiers were issued maps of their route via Iraq to Jerusalem. Khomeini made the last Friday of Ramadan into "Jerusalem Day" and a famous Iranian stamp of 1980 commemorating "Universal Jerusalem Day" bears the words "Let us liberate Jerusalem" in Arabic, Persian, and English.<br /> <br /> SADDAM, THE "SECOND SALADIN" The self-styled jihad fighter Saddatn Husayn tnodeled hitnself on Saladin,<br /> <br /> Jerusalem Day is now marked throughout the Muslim world by<br /> <br /> exploiting the fact that they both catne<br /> <br /> stamps that also depict the Dome of the Rock or Saladin on horse-<br /> <br /> frotn Tikrit-Saddatn even tweaked his<br /> <br /> back, returning to recapture Jerusalem. The obsession with the crusades for some Muslim thinkers is a<br /> <br /> birth date to coincide with Saladin's. In July 1987, the Sooth anniversary of Saladin's great victory over the crusaders at Hattin<br /> <br /> modern phenomenon, as is the Muslim "rediscovery" of Saladin.<br /> <br /> (see pages 74-75), a celebratory conference<br /> <br /> Although, ironically, this was largely due to his iconic status in west-<br /> <br /> entitled "The Battle of Liberation: frotn<br /> <br /> ern Europe (see page 93), Saladin's historical role as a key figure in the<br /> <br /> Saladin to Saddatn Husayn" was held in<br /> <br /> struggle against the Franks has been eagerly seized upon by modern<br /> <br /> Tikrit. The satne year a children's book<br /> <br /> Arab and Islamic thinkers. Arab political leaders, such as Nasser and Sadat in Egypt and Saddam Husayn in Iraq (see sidebar), aspired to<br /> <br /> called Saladin the Hero was published, with a picture of Saddatn on its cover. Its pages recorded the "heroic" deeds of Saddatn,<br /> <br /> become the "Second Saladin." Despite Saladin's Kurdish origins, his<br /> <br /> the "Second Saladin." The irony of such<br /> <br /> mantle has been donned by Arab and wider Islamic militant groups<br /> <br /> tnanipulation of the truth was not lost on<br /> <br /> eager to fight the "crusaders," the salibiyyun (cross bearers)-the West and specifically the United States. To some, Saladin embodies the<br /> <br /> Saddatn's critics: He tnassacred thousands of Saladin's Kurdish countrytnen and was not, unlike Saladin, renowned for his<br /> <br /> heroic spirit of the Arab nation; others espouse the Islamist view-<br /> <br /> cletnency. Perhaps tnost glaringly, Saddatn's<br /> <br /> point, that he unites the Middle East under the banner of Islam.<br /> <br /> tnilitary exploits ended in failure.<br /> <br /> 210<br /> <br /> THE LEGACY OF THE CRUSADES<br /> <br /> A CLASH OF CIVILIZATIONS? The historian Bernard Lewis was the first to coin the phrase" clash of civilizations" when he wrote in 1990 of "the perhaps irrational but surely historic reaction of an ancient rival [Islam] against our Judeo-Christian heritage, our secular present, and the worldwide expansion of both." Lewis's idea was elaborated by Samuel HuntingREMEMBERING THE CRUSADES The Palestinian writer Mahtnud Darwish (born 1941) writes tnovingly of the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982 in his book<br /> <br /> Memory for Forgetfulness. The work is infused<br /> <br /> ton, and although Huntington has modified his views since 11th September 2001, his hypothesis remains very influential because of the polarization he sees between the West and the Islamic world. Huntington speaks of a new era of world politics in which coun-<br /> <br /> with the tnetnory of the crusades and<br /> <br /> tries group themselves according to "civilization." As the world<br /> <br /> shifts effortlessly between botnbed Beirut<br /> <br /> becomes a smaller place, with increased immigration and interac-<br /> <br /> and the crusader occupation of the Holy Land. The word "Frank" in Arabic<br /> <br /> tions among peoples, their consciousness of the deep-rooted civi-<br /> <br /> pritnarily tneans "western European," but<br /> <br /> lization to which they belong intensifies. The revival of religion (and<br /> <br /> is also popularly used to tnean "foreigner"<br /> <br /> here he singles out Islam) provides an identity above national boun-<br /> <br /> in general. Darwish sees the tertn as an<br /> <br /> daries. Nowadays, with the West at the peak of its power, other civ-<br /> <br /> extended tnetaphor for the foreign<br /> <br /> ilizations turn inward, but are faced with America's global influence<br /> <br /> invaders who have occupied Arab lands. Despite his tnelancholy reflections about<br /> <br /> on lifestyle and material goods. Huntington identifies global fault<br /> <br /> the Lebanon and the Levant, he retnains<br /> <br /> lines, flashpoints for crisis and bloodshed (such as the Balkans), and<br /> <br /> optitnistic about the future of the region.<br /> <br /> highlights the ancient "bloody borders" between Islam and the West,<br /> <br /> A CLASH OF CIVILIZATIONS?<br /> <br /> 211<br /> <br /> where their troubled interaction could become more virulent: "The fault lines between civilizations will be the battle lines of the future." For many, Huntington's paradigm is too adversarial and simplistic. In 2001 the Palestinian commentator Edward W Said (19352003) accused Lewis and Huntington of conjuring up "a cartoonlike world where Popeye and Bluto bash each other mercilessly," ignoring "the internal dynamics and plurality of every civilization." Like other world faiths, Islam is not monolithic, and it is by no means a given that a Persian-speaking Iranian Shiite will make common cause with an Arabic-speaking Saudi Sunni, though both rightly call themselves Muslims. Nor will an Indonesian, Turkish, or Balkan Muslim necessarily feel a great affinity with either. And where do Arab Christians fit into Huntington's model? They feel allegiance at once to their Arabness, their nation state, and their faith. The prominence given to the speeches of Usama bin Laden in the world's media since the 11th September outrage does not help the majority of Muslims who stress that Islam and terrorism are incompatible and condemn the Western demonization of Islam. Nor does Usama's uncompromisingly hostile message against "global<br /> <br /> Above: The historic hostilities and suspicion<br /> <br /> crusaders" (the United States and its allies) help to allay Western fears.<br /> <br /> between Christianity and Islam have prompted ifforts by leaders of the two faiths to promote mutual understanding. 70 this end, on 6th May 2001 Pope John Paul II became the first pope to enter a mosque when Sheikh Ahmad Kuftaro, the Grand Mufti (most senior Muslim cleric) of Syria, welcomed him in the 8th-century Umayyad mosque in Damascus.<br /> <br /> What of the Western "side" of the "clash"? In the wake of 11th September, President George W Bush declared: "This crusade, this war on terrorism, is going to take a while." His aides rapidly denied that he had used the term literally, but it still provoked a storm in the Muslim world. It is doubtful whether the West's leaders or its media are conscious that the historic root of" crusade" is the Latin crux (cross). But this root is not lost in Arabic, which has no single<br /> <br /> word for" crusade," and translates it, for example, as harb aI-salib (war of the cross), harb salibiyya (cross war), or hamla salibiyya (cross attack). It is hardly surprising that Muslims are sensitive to the term. Certainly, to some Muslim propagandists at least, the rhetoric of conflict is expressed in religious terms, as being against "Christians" and "crusaders," even if it is in reality against American globalization and secularization. At the same time, "crusader" can simply be used in the Muslim world as a pejorative word for a western European. But more importantly, both sides in the propaganda war bandy the terms crusade and jihad very loosely and invoke history in a cavalierly simplistic manner. Those who speak of "crusade" conveniently forget the Fourth Crusade (and others) where Christian fought Christian, not to mention times when Muslims allied with crusaders against other Muslims. And those who trumpet Saladin's conquest of Jerusalem conveniently forget that his descendants handed back the Holy City to the Franks thirty-nine years later.<br /> <br /> Opposite: The ruins of Mostar in BosniaHerzegovina during the civil war in the largely Muslim former Yugoslav republic, 30th September 1993. Although Bosnia was a secular state from its formation, the Bosnian armed forces included a battalion of mujahidin 6ihad fighters) who had flocked from all over the Muslim world to aid the new state against ((Christian and Serbian" enemies.<br /> <br /> 212<br /> <br /> REFERENCE SECTION<br /> <br /> FURTHER READING General Readings Andrea, Alfred J. Encyclopedia of the Crusades. Greenwood Press: Westport, 2003. Brundage, James A. Medieval Canon Law and the Crusader. University ofWisconsin Press: Madison, 1969. Cole, Penny J. The Preaching of the<br /> <br /> Crusades to the Holy Land) 1095-1270. Medieval Academy of America: Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1991.<br /> <br /> Ellenblum, Ronnie. Frankish Rural<br /> <br /> Settlement in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem. Cambridge University Press (CUP): Cambridge and New York, 1998.<br /> <br /> Folda, Jaroslav. The Art of the Crusaders in the Holy Land) 1098-1187. CUP: Cambridge and New York, 1995. France, John. UJestern Waifare in the Age of the Crusades) 1000-1300. Cornell University Press: Ithaca, 1999. Harris, Jonathan. Byzantium and the Crusades. Hambledon Press: London and New York, 2003. Hillenbrand, Carole. The Crusades: Islamic Perspectives. Edinburgh University Press: Edinburgh, 1999. Kedar, Benjamin Z. Crusade and<br /> <br /> Mission: European Approaches toward the Muslims. Princeton University Press (PUP): Princeton, 1984.<br /> <br /> Kennedy, Hugh. Crusader Castles. CUP: Cambridge and New York, 1994. Lilie, Ralph-Johannes. Byzantium and the Crusader States) 1096-1204. (Trans.J.C. Morris and Jean E. Ridings.) Clarendon Press: Oxford and New York, 1993. Madden, Thomas F. A Concise History of the Crusades. Rowman and Littlefield: New Lanham, 1999. Marshall, Christopher. Waifare in the Latin East) 1192-1291. CUP: Cambridge and New York, 1992. Mayer, Hans E. The Crusades. 2nd edition. (Trans. John Gillingham.) Oxford University Press (OUP): Oxford and New York, 1988. Phillips, Jonathan. Defenders of the Holy<br /> <br /> Land: Relations between the Latin East and the UJest) 111g-1187. Clarendon Press: Oxford and New York, 1996.<br /> <br /> Prawer, Joshua. The Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem. Weidenfeld and Nicolson: London, 1972.<br /> <br /> Richard, Jean. The Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem. (Trans. Janet Shirley.) North Holland: New York, 1979. Richard, Jean. The Crusades) c. 1071-[, 1291. (Trans. Jean Birrell.) CUP: Cambridge and New York, 1999. Riley-Smith, Jonathan. The Crusades: A Short History.Yale University Press: New Haven and London, 1987. Riley-Smith, Jonathan. (Editor.) The<br /> <br /> Oxford Illustrated History of the Crusades. OUP: Oxford and New York, 1995.<br /> <br /> Riley-Smith, Jonathan. What UJere the Crusades? 3rd edition. Ignatius Press: San Francisco, 2002. Runciman, Steven R. A History of the Crusades. 3 vols. CUP: Cambridge and New York, 1951-1954. Setton, Kenneth M. (General editor.)<br /> <br /> A History of the Crusades. 6 vols. University ofWisconsin Press and University of Pennsylvania Press (UPP): Madison and Philadelphia, 1958-1989.<br /> <br /> Mango, Cryil. (Editor.) The Oxford History of Byzantium. OUP: Oxford and New York, 2002. Perowne, Stuart. The Holy Places of Christendom. OUP: New York, 1976. Prawer, Joshua and Ben-Shammai, Haggai. (Editors.) The History ofJerusalem 638-1099. NYU Press: New York, 1996. Peters, HE. Muhammad and the Origins of Islam. SUNY Press: Albany, New York, 1994. Robinson, Francis. (Editor.) The<br /> <br /> Cambridge Illustrated History of the Islamic World. CUP: Cambridge, 1996. Whittow, M. The Making of Orthodox Byzantium) 600-1025. Macmillan: Basingstoke, England, 1996. Chapter<br /> <br /> 2<br /> <br /> Angold, M. The Byzantine Empire 1025-1204. Longman: London, 1984. Anonymous. Gesta Francorum et aliorum Hierosolimitanorum. (Edited by R.Hill.) Nelson: Edinburgh, 1962. Asbridge, T.S. The First Crusade. Free Press: London, 2004<br /> <br /> Siberry, Elizabeth. Criticism of Crusading) 1095-1274. Clarendon Press: Oxford and New York, 1985.<br /> <br /> France, John. Victory in the East: A Military History of the First Crusade.<br /> <br /> Smail, R.C. Crusading VVaifare) 1097-1193. 2nd edition. CUP: Cambridge and New York, 1995.<br /> <br /> Holt, P.M. The Age of the Crusades: The<br /> <br /> Chapter<br /> <br /> Berkey, Jonathan P. The Formation of<br /> <br /> Riley-Smith, Jonathan. The First Crusade and the Idea of Crusading. Athlone: London, 1986.<br /> <br /> Islam: Religion and Society in the Near East) 600-1800. CUP: Cambridge, 2002.<br /> <br /> Chapter 3<br /> <br /> Brown, Peter. The Rise ofUJestern Christendom. 2nd edition. Blackwell: Oxford and Cambridge, Massachusetts, 2003.<br /> <br /> Gabrieli, F. Arab Historians of the Crusades. Dorset Press: New York, 1969.<br /> <br /> I<br /> <br /> CUP: Calnbridge, 1994.<br /> <br /> Near East from the Eleveneth Century to 1517.<br /> <br /> Longman: London, 1986.<br /> <br /> Hamilton, B. The Leper King and his Heirs: Cowdrey, H.E.J. Pope Gregory VII: 1 073-1 085. OUP: Oxford, 1998.<br /> <br /> Baldwin IVand the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem. CUP: Cambridge, 2000.<br /> <br /> Elad, Amikan. Medieval Jerusalem and<br /> <br /> Kedar, Benjamin K. "The Battle of Hattin Revisited" in B.K. Kedar. (Editor.) The Horns of Hattin. Ashgate: Aldershot, 1992, pp. 190-207.<br /> <br /> Islamic Worship: Holy Places) Ceremony) Pilgrimage. E.J. Brill: Leiden, 1995. Esposito, John. (Editor.) The Oxford History of Islam. OUP: Oxford, 1999. Luscombe, David and Riley-Smith, Jonathan. (Editors.) The New Cambridge Medieval History) Vol. 4: c.1024-c.1198) Parts I and 2. CUP: Canibridge, 2004.<br /> <br /> Kennedy, Hugh. Crusader Castles. CUP: Cambridge, 1994. Lyons, M.C. and Jackson, D.E.P. Saladin: The Politics of Holy War. CUP: Cambridge, 1982.<br /> <br /> FURTHER READING<br /> <br /> Nicholson, H. Templars) Hospitallers and<br /> <br /> Teutonic Knights. Images of the Military Orders 1128-1291. Leicester University Press: Leicester, 1993.<br /> <br /> Phillips, J.P. Defenders of the Holy Land:<br /> <br /> Relations between the Latin East and the vvest 111g--1187. OUP: Oxford, 1996. Pryor, J. Geography) Technology and War. CUP: Cambridge, 1992. Chapter 4<br /> <br /> ofJerusalem and the Third Crusade: Sources in Translation.<br /> <br /> Edbury, Peter ~ The Conquest<br /> <br /> Scolar: Aldershot, Hampshire, and Brookfield, Verm.ont, 1996.<br /> <br /> Queller, Donald E. and Madden, Thomas F. The Fourth Crusade: The Conquest of Constantinople. 2nd edition. UPP: Philadelphia: 1997. Chapter 6<br /> <br /> London, 1997.<br /> <br /> Goodwin, Jason. Lords of the Horizons: A History of the Ottoman Empire. Henry<br /> <br /> Lambert, Malcolm. Medieval Heresy:<br /> <br /> Popular Movements from the Gregorian Reform to the Reformation. 2nd edition. Blackwell: Oxford, 1992.<br /> <br /> Housley, Norman. The Italian Crusades:<br /> <br /> the Papal-Angevin alliance and the Crusades against Christian Lay Powers) 1254-1343.<br /> <br /> Gillingham, John. Richard 1. Yale University Press: New Haven, 1999.<br /> <br /> Nicolle, David. Lake Peipus 1242: Battle on the Ice. Reed International: London, 1996.<br /> <br /> Lyons, Malcolm Cameron and Jackson, D.E.P. Saladin: The Politics of the Holy War. CUP: Can1.bridge and New York, 1982.<br /> <br /> Partner, Peter. The Knights Templar and Their Myth. Destiny Books: Rochester, Vern1.ont, 1990.<br /> <br /> J. Chronicle of the Third Crusade: a Translation of the Itinerarium<br /> <br /> Chapter 7<br /> <br /> peregrinorum et gesta Regis Ricardi. Ashgate: Aldershot, Hampshire, and Brookfield, Vermont, 1997.<br /> <br /> Abulafia, David. Frederick II: A Medieval Emperor. Allen Lane: London, 1988.<br /> <br /> Rogers, Randall. Latin Siege Warfare in the Twelfth Century. Clarendon Press: Oxford, 1992. Chapter 5 Andrea, Alfred J. Contemporary Sources for the Fourth Crusade. E.J. Brill: Leiden, 2000. Angold, Michael. The Fourth Crusade: Event and Context. Longman: London and New York, 2003. Brand, Charles M. Byzantium Confronts the vvest) 118cr1204. Harvard University Press: Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1968. Lock, Peter. The Franks in the Aegean) 1204-1500. Longman: London and New York, 1995. Madden, Thomas F. Enrieo Dandolo and the Rise of venice. Johns Hopkins University Press: Baltimore, 2003.<br /> <br /> Brockman, Eric. The Two Sieges of Rhodes) 148cr 1522. John Murray: London, 1969 (reprinted New York: Barnes and Noble, 1995). Edbury, Peter ~ The Kingdom of Cyprus and the Crusades) 1191-1374. CUP: Cambridge, 199 I.<br /> <br /> orthern Crusades: The Baltic and the Catholic Frontier, 11 ocr 1525. 2nd edition. Penguin:<br /> <br /> Kejr, Jiri. The Hussite Revolution. Orbis: Prague, 1988.<br /> <br /> Pringle, R. Denys. "King Richard I and the walls of Ascalon" in Palestine Exploration Quarterly 116, 1984, pp. 133-147; reprinted in D. Pringle (Editor.) Fortification and Settlement in Crusader Palestine. Variorum: Aldershot, 2000.<br /> <br /> Bradford, ErnIe. The Great Siege: Malta 1565. Hodder and Stoughton: London, 1961.<br /> <br /> Christiansen, Eric. The<br /> <br /> Edbury, Peter ~ "The Templars in Cyprus)) in The Military Orders: Fighting for the Faith and Caring for the Sick by Malcolm Barber (Editor.). Variorun1.: Aldershot, 1994, pp. 189-195.<br /> <br /> Nicholson, Helen<br /> <br /> 213<br /> <br /> Clarendon Press: Oxford, 1982.<br /> <br /> Arnitai-Preiss, Reuven. Mongols and<br /> <br /> Mamluks: The Mamluk- Ilkhanid War, 126cr1281. CUP: Cambridge, 1995. Jordan, William Chester. Louis IX and the Challenge of the Crusade. PUP: Princeton, 1979. Kedar, Benjarnin Z. Crusade and<br /> <br /> Mission: European Approaches toward the Muslims. PUP: Princeton, 1984.<br /> <br /> Holt: New York, 1998.<br /> <br /> Housley, Norman. Documents on the Later Crusades) 1274-1580. Palgrave Macmillan: London and New York, 1996. Housley, Norman. The Later Crusades) 1274-1580. OUP: Oxford, 1992. Imber, Colin. The Ottoman Empire Palgrave Macmillan: London and New York, 2002. Levey, Michael. The World of Ottoman ArtThames and Hudson: London, 1975. Nicol, D.M. The Last Centuries of Byzantium) 1261-1453. 2nd edition. CUP: Can1.bridge, 1993. Nicolle, David. Constantinople 1453: The End of Byzantium. Osprey: Oxford, 2000. Nicolle, David. ieopolis 1396: The Last Crusade. Osprey: Oxford, 1999. Runciman, Steven R. The Fall of Constantinople) 1453. CUP: Cambridge, 1965.<br /> <br /> Stoye, John ~ The Siege of Vienna. London: Collins: London, 1964. Vaughan, Dorothy M. Europe and the<br /> <br /> Turk: A Pattern of Alliances) 135cr1700 . Liverpool University Press: Liverpool, 1954.<br /> <br /> Chapter 9<br /> <br /> Lilie, Ralph-Johannes. Byzantium and the Crusader States. (Trans. J. Morris and J. Ridings.) Clarendon Press: Oxford, 1993.<br /> <br /> Elizabeth Siberry. The<br /> <br /> Maier, Christoph. Preaching the Crusades:<br /> <br /> Hillenbrand, Carole. The Crusades: Islamic Perspectives. Edinburgh University Press: Edinburgh, 1999, PP.589-616.<br /> <br /> Mendicant Friars and the Cross in the Thirteenth Century. CUP: Cambridge, 1994. Powell, James M. Anatomy of a Crusade. UPP: Philadelphia, 1986. Richard, Jean. Saint Louis: Crusader: King of France. (Trans. Jean Birrell.) CUP: Cambridge, 1992. Chapter 8<br /> <br /> ew Crusaders. Images of the Crusades in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Ashgate: Aldershot, 2000.<br /> <br /> Riley-Smith, Jonathan. (Editor.) The<br /> <br /> Oxford Illustrated History of the Crusades. OUP: Oxford and New York, 1995, pp. 365-39 1.<br /> <br /> Mahmud Darwish. Memory for Forgeifulness. (Trans. Ibrahin1. Muhawi.) University of California Press: Berkeley, 1995·<br /> <br /> Bicheno, Hugh. The Cross and the<br /> <br /> Crescent: The Battle of Lepanto 1571. Weidenfeld and Nicolson: London, 2003.<br /> <br /> 214<br /> <br /> REFERENCE SECTION<br /> <br /> CHRONOLOGY 634 - 644 Muslim armies of Caliph Vmar capture Egypt, Syria, and the Holy Land from the Byzantine empire. 71I - 716 Muslims occupy most of Iberia. 756 Caliphate of Cordoba established. 844 Ramiro I of Asturias defeats Muslims at battle of Clavijo. 969 Antioch recaptured by Byzantium; Fatimids capture Cairo. 1009 Fatimids destroy Holy Sepulcher. 1°51 Caliphate of Cordoba fragments. 1055 Seljuk Turks seize Baghdad. 1°71 Seljuks defeat Byzantines at Manzikert. 1092 Death of Seljuk sultan Malik Shah; Seljuk empire fragments. 1095 Byzantine emperor Alexius appeals for aid; Pope V rban II calls at the council at Clermont for holy war in the East backed by papal indulgence. 1096 - 99 The First Crusade 1096 Crusaders depart; People's Crusade. 1097 Crusader victory at Dorylaeum. 1098 March Baldwin of Boulogne founds first crusader state at Edessa. November Crusaders take Antioch 1099 Crusaders take Jerusalem; Godfrey of Bouillon becomes first ruler of Latin kingdom ofJerusalem. 1I00 - 1I0I Follow-up crusade defeated in Asia Minor by Turks. 1I07 - IIIO King Sigurd of Norway brings army to Holy Land. III2 The Hospital of St John receives papal approval and protection. 1120 Foundation of the military order of the Knights Templar. 1I23 - 24 Venetian expedition to Holy Land. II39 Order of the Hospital of St. John (Hospitallers) begins military activities, taking over the fortress of Bethgibelin near Ascalon. II44 Zengi, ruler of Mosul and Aleppo, captures Edessa. 1146 Death of Zengi. 1147 Preaching of Second Crusade; Wendish Crusade launched. 1148 - 49 The Second Crusade 1I49 Siege of Damascus fails; end of Second Crusade. IIS3 Capture ofAscalon by forces of King Baldwin III ofJerusalem. 1I54 Nur ad-Din, son of Zengi, captures Damascus. I166 - 69 Campaigns of King Amalric I of Jerusalem against Egypt. 1I69 Saladin becomes vizier of Egypt.<br /> <br /> II 74 1I87<br /> <br /> Death of Nur ad-Din; Saladin seizes Damascus. July Saladin defeats King Guy of Jerusalem at Hattin. 2nd October Saladin takes Jerusalem. 29th October Papal bull Audita tremendi proclaims Third Crusade.<br /> <br /> 1I89 - 92 The Third Crusade 1I90 Emperor Frederick I drowns in Asia Minor en route to the Holy Land. II9I June Richard I captures Cyprus. July Acre falls to Richard I and Philip II. 1I92 Treaty ofJaffa; end ofThird Crusade 1197 - 98 German crusade recovers some territory; German hospital at Acre becomes a military order (the Teutonic Order). 1201 - 05 The Fourth Crusade 1204 Crusaders sack Constantinople and found Latin empire. 1209 - 29 Albigensian Crusade in France. 1215 Fourth Lateran council. 1216 Honorius III succeeds Innocent III. 1217 - 29 The Fifth Crusade 1218 Fifth Crusade lands near Danuetta in Egypt. 1219 August Francis of Assisi preaches to crusaders and the sultan 1219 November Crusaders take Damietta. 1221 Crusaders surrender to Ayyubid sultan al-Kamil 1225 - 30 Teutonic Order begins military operations in Prussia. 1225 Emperor Frederick II vows to leave on crusade by 31st August 1227 and is betrothed to the heiress of the kingdom ofJerusalem. 1227 September Frederick sails for the East but illness forces him back; Pope Gregory IX excommunicates him. 1228 Frederick sets out on crusade again. 1229 Christians regain Jerusalem by treaty ofJaffa between Frederick and al-Kamil; end of Fifth Crusade. 1230 Frederick's excommunication lifted. 1236 Ferdinand III of Castile takes Cordoba. 1239 - 41 Crusades ofTheobald IV of Champagne and Richard of Cornwall. 1239 Crusade against Frederick II; Swedish crusade against Finns. 1241 Gregory IX dies; papal vacancy. 1243 Innocent IV elected pope. 1244 Kwarizmians take Jerusalem; city lost to Christians for the last time.<br /> <br /> 1244<br /> <br /> Egyptians defeat Franks and Syrians at Gaza. 1248 - 49 First crusade of King Louis IX of France captures Damietta. 125° Surrender of Louis near al-Mansurah. 125° Mamluks seize power in Egypt 12 54 Louis IX returns from Acre to France 12 58 Mongols sack Baghdad and kill last Abbasid caliph. 1260 Baibars defeats Mongols at Ain Jalud 1261 Michael Palaeologus expels Latins from Constantinople and becomes Byzantine emperor as Michael VIII. 1268 Baibars conquers Antioch. 1270 Louis IX dies on crusade near Tunis. 1270 - 72 Crusade of the Lord Edward. 1277 Charles ofAnjou purchases claim to throne ofJerusalem. 1277 Sultan Baibars dies. 1282 Sicilian Vespers; Charles of Anjou loses Sicily to Aragon. 1289 Mamluks capture Tripoli. 1291 Mamluks capture Acre; last Frankish base on mainland lost. 1306 Knights Hospitaller move to Rhodes. 1307 Knights Templar suppressed. 1309 Teutonic Order moves headquarters to West Prussia. 1312 Knights Templar abolished. 1344 Maritime League captures Smyrna. 1354 Ottoman Turks establish their first base in Europe at Gallipoli. 1365 Cyprus captures, then abandons, Alexandria. 1389 Ottomans crush Serbs at Kosovo Polje. 1396 Failed crusade of Nicopolis. 1410 Teutonic Order defeated at Tannenberg. 1420 - 3I Crusades against the Hussites 1426 Mamluks defeat Cyprus 1444 Ottomans crush Polish and Hungarian crusaders at Varna. 1478 Cyprus ceded to Venice. 1453 Ottomans capture Constantinople. 1523 Ottomans expel Hospitallers from Rhodes. 1529 Ottomans besiege Vienna. 1530 Hospitallers resettle on Malta. 1571 August Ottomans capture Cyprus from Venice. September Don John ofAustria defeats Ottoman fleet at Lepanto. 1683 Ottomans driven from Vienna. 1699 Treaty of Karlowitz: Ottomans concede territory for the first time 1798 Napoleon expels the Hospitallers from Malta.<br /> <br /> </div> </div> </div> <div class="row hidden-xs"> <div class="col-md-12"> <h2></h2> <hr /> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades-a-short-history.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/the-crusades-a-short-history_5bf1259eb7d7bcf71f8d79e6.jpg" alt="The Crusades: a short history" /> <h3 class="note-title">The Crusades: a short history</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades-a-short-history.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusadescdb572b51839ddd09c717b6dd35ac9a336755.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/the-crusades_5befc6f0b7d7bcf41f4ffee2.jpg" alt="The Crusades" /> <h3 class="note-title">The Crusades</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusadescdb572b51839ddd09c717b6dd35ac9a336755.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades4f6ac44e04ef8703601998809e80ba8d82961.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/the-crusades_5bfce60db7d7bcfa1f285340.jpg" alt="The Crusades" /> <h3 class="note-title">The Crusades</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades4f6ac44e04ef8703601998809e80ba8d82961.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades9b412310a29bb4045378dfe3adba293619117.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/the-crusades_5bede4e2b7d7bcf41f4ff9f9.jpg" alt="The Crusades" /> <h3 class="note-title">The Crusades</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades9b412310a29bb4045378dfe3adba293619117.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-oxford-history-of-the-crusades.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/the-oxford-history-of-the-crusades_5ad16585b7d7bccc10e7d756.jpg" alt="The Oxford History of the Crusades" /> <h3 class="note-title">The Oxford History of the Crusades</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/the-oxford-history-of-the-crusades.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-oxford-history-of-the-crusadesf84b14580538bc09fd1bb7a5e6d1250192803.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/the-oxford-history-of-the-crusades_5ba6ce3ab7d7bc056b87415f.jpg" alt="The Oxford History of the Crusades" /> <h3 class="note-title">The Oxford History of the Crusades</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/the-oxford-history-of-the-crusadesf84b14580538bc09fd1bb7a5e6d1250192803.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/crusades.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/crusades_5bec0362b7d7bcf71f8d39a5.jpg" alt="Crusades" /> <h3 class="note-title">Crusades</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/crusades.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-ii-the-later-crusades-1189-1311-history-of-the-.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-ii-the-later-crus_5b6a87d4b7d7bc914ffc9726.jpg" alt="A History of the Crusades, Volume II: The Later Crusades, 1189-1311 (History of the Crusades (University of Wisconsin Press))" /> <h3 class="note-title">A History of the Crusades, Volume II: The Later Crusades, 1189-1311 (History of the Crusades (University of Wisconsin Press))</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-ii-the-later-crusades-1189-1311-history-of-the-.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades-5ea6d1d168f6a.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/the-crusades_5ea6d1d1097c4700418b7c83.jpg" alt="The Crusades" /> <h3 class="note-title">The Crusades</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades-5ea6d1d168f6a.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/the-crusades_5add2e53b7d7bce201553757.jpg" alt="The Crusades" /> <h3 class="note-title">The Crusades</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusadesa4538187b176d754b47de70079e515d951375.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/the-crusades_5c0c8dc9b7d7bc6a53e19d28.jpg" alt="The Crusades" /> <h3 class="note-title">The Crusades</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusadesa4538187b176d754b47de70079e515d951375.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/photography-an-illustrated-history-oxford-illustrated-histories.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/photography-an-illustrated-history-oxford-illustra_5af9fdbab7d7bcbb2bb2161c.jpg" alt="Photography: An Illustrated History (Oxford Illustrated Histories)" /> <h3 class="note-title">Photography: An Illustrated History (Oxford Illustrated Histories)</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/photography-an-illustrated-history-oxford-illustrated-histories.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/jerusalem-illustrated-history-atlasd95d1f7b50304b1f02e04c113cde5d7d77468.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/jerusalem-illustrated-history-atlas_5bfdde51b7d7bcfa1f285d13.jpg" alt="Jerusalem: Illustrated History Atlas" /> <h3 class="note-title">Jerusalem: Illustrated History Atlas</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/jerusalem-illustrated-history-atlasd95d1f7b50304b1f02e04c113cde5d7d77468.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/jerusalem-illustrated-history-atlas.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/jerusalem-illustrated-history-atlas_5b6e39b0b7d7bce47f181326.jpg" alt="Jerusalem: Illustrated History Atlas" /> <h3 class="note-title">Jerusalem: Illustrated History Atlas</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/jerusalem-illustrated-history-atlas.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/sports-an-illustrated-history-illustrated-histories.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/sports-an-illustrated-history-illustrated-historie_5a7e4399b7d7bcd64bd2b35c.jpg" alt="Sports: An Illustrated History (Illustrated Histories)" /> <h3 class="note-title">Sports: An Illustrated History (Illustrated Histories)</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/sports-an-illustrated-history-illustrated-histories.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-v-the-impact-of-the-crusades-on-the-near-east-5ea7a5129c1b3.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-v-the-impact-of-t_5ea7a512097c47d2248b4722.jpg" alt="A History of the Crusades, Volume V: The impact of the crusades on the Near East" /> <h3 class="note-title">A History of the Crusades, Volume V: The impact of the crusades on the Near East</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-v-the-impact-of-the-crusades-on-the-near-east-5ea7a5129c1b3.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-v-the-impact-of-the-crusades-on-the-near-east.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-v-the-impact-of-t_5a7e6ce8b7d7bceb54bc80e6.jpg" alt="A History of the Crusades, Volume V: The Impact of the Crusades on the Near East" /> <h3 class="note-title">A History of the Crusades, Volume V: The Impact of the Crusades on the Near East</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-v-the-impact-of-the-crusades-on-the-near-east.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-v-the-impact-of-the-crusades-on-the-near-east4c9032d27c64d19af4962e125fe6045290053.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-v-the-impact-of-t_5a7e6e0db7d7bcec545b2127.jpg" alt="A History of the Crusades, Volume V: The impact of the crusades on the Near East" /> <h3 class="note-title">A History of the Crusades, Volume V: The impact of the crusades on the Near East</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-v-the-impact-of-the-crusades-on-the-near-east4c9032d27c64d19af4962e125fe6045290053.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-vi-the-impact-of-the-crusades-on-europe.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-vi-the-impact-of-_5a7e6b83b7d7bcec545b2121.jpg" alt="A History of the Crusades, Volume VI: The Impact of the Crusades on Europe" /> <h3 class="note-title">A History of the Crusades, Volume VI: The Impact of the Crusades on Europe</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-vi-the-impact-of-the-crusades-on-europe.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-3-the-kingdom-of-acre-and-the-later-crusades.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-3-the-kingdom-of-_5af02054b7d7bc22383d8015.jpg" alt="A History of the Crusades: Volume 3, The Kingdom of Acre and the Later Crusades" /> <h3 class="note-title">A History of the Crusades: Volume 3, The Kingdom of Acre and the Later Crusades</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-3-the-kingdom-of-acre-and-the-later-crusades.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-ii-the-later-crusades-1189-1311.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-ii-the-later-crus_5b035468b7d7bc766941c8f1.jpg" alt="A History of the Crusades, Volume II: The Later Crusades, 1189-1311" /> <h3 class="note-title">A History of the Crusades, Volume II: The Later Crusades, 1189-1311</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-ii-the-later-crusades-1189-1311.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades-an-encyclopedia-5ea802c9a94d0.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/the-crusades-an-encyclopedia_5ea802c9097c4749648b4659.jpg" alt="The Crusades: An Encyclopedia" /> <h3 class="note-title">The Crusades: An Encyclopedia</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades-an-encyclopedia-5ea802c9a94d0.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades-1095-1197.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/the-crusades-1095-1197_5b9b8c87b7d7bcfe125aae19.jpg" alt="The Crusades, 1095-1197" /> <h3 class="note-title">The Crusades, 1095-1197</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades-1095-1197.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades-almanac.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/the-crusades-almanac_5addc4cdb7d7bc433967db12.jpg" alt="The Crusades: Almanac" /> <h3 class="note-title">The Crusades: Almanac</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades-almanac.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades-an-encyclopedia.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/the-crusades-an-encyclopedia_5abb132db7d7bc635980ee61.jpg" alt="The Crusades: An Encyclopedia" /> <h3 class="note-title">The Crusades: An Encyclopedia</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades-an-encyclopedia.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/armies-of-the-crusades.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/armies-of-the-crusades_5b2e00acb7d7bc2e6bb4005a.jpg" alt="Armies of the Crusades" /> <h3 class="note-title">Armies of the Crusades</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/armies-of-the-crusades.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/american-religions-an-illustrated-history.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/american-religions-an-illustrated-history_5b036188b7d7bc766941c9eb.jpg" alt="American Religions an Illustrated History" /> <h3 class="note-title">American Religions an Illustrated History</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/american-religions-an-illustrated-history.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/ancient-greece-an-illustrated-history-.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/ancient-greece-an-illustrated-history-_5bfa5631b7d7bcf41f5036fa.jpg" alt="Ancient Greece: --An Illustrated History--" /> <h3 class="note-title">Ancient Greece: --An Illustrated History--</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/ancient-greece-an-illustrated-history-.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/age-of-the-crusades.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/age-of-the-crusades_5b2c6dc0b7d7bcd26a6cffe5.jpg" alt="Age of the Crusades" /> <h3 class="note-title">Age of the Crusades</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/age-of-the-crusades.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-2 col-md-3"> <div class="note"> <div class="note-meta-thumb"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades-biographies8df31c04d86dcaf063171ad1275fc36b84123.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/300x300/the-crusades-biographies_5c0bb1f2b7d7bc1b3ef9f0a8.jpg" alt="The Crusades: Biographies" /> <h3 class="note-title">The Crusades: Biographies</h3> </a> </div> <div class="note-action"> <a class="more-link" href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades-biographies8df31c04d86dcaf063171ad1275fc36b84123.html">Read more</a> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-lg-3 col-md-4 col-xs-12"> <div class="panel-recommend panel panel-primary"> <div class="panel-heading"> <h4 class="panel-title">Recommend Documents</h4> </div> <div class="panel-body"> <div class="row m-0"> <div class="col-md-3 col-xs-3 pl-0 text-center"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades-a-short-history.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/60x80/the-crusades-a-short-history_5bf1259eb7d7bcf71f8d79e6.jpg" alt="" width="100%" /> </a> </div> <div class="col-md-9 col-xs-9 p-0"> <label> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades-a-short-history.html"> The Crusades: a short history </a> </label> <div class="note-meta"> <div class="note-desc">...</div> </div> </div> <div class="clearfix"></div> <hr class="mt-15 mb-15" /> </div> <div class="row m-0"> <div class="col-md-3 col-xs-3 pl-0 text-center"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusadescdb572b51839ddd09c717b6dd35ac9a336755.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/60x80/the-crusades_5befc6f0b7d7bcf41f4ffee2.jpg" alt="" width="100%" /> </a> </div> <div class="col-md-9 col-xs-9 p-0"> <label> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusadescdb572b51839ddd09c717b6dd35ac9a336755.html"> The Crusades </a> </label> <div class="note-meta"> <div class="note-desc"></div> </div> </div> <div class="clearfix"></div> <hr class="mt-15 mb-15" /> </div> <div class="row m-0"> <div class="col-md-3 col-xs-3 pl-0 text-center"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades4f6ac44e04ef8703601998809e80ba8d82961.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/60x80/the-crusades_5bfce60db7d7bcfa1f285340.jpg" alt="" width="100%" /> </a> </div> <div class="col-md-9 col-xs-9 p-0"> <label> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades4f6ac44e04ef8703601998809e80ba8d82961.html"> The Crusades </a> </label> <div class="note-meta"> <div class="note-desc">Also by this Author Ancient Greece The Crusades MIKE PAINE POCKET ESSENTIALS This edition published in 2005 by Poc...</div> </div> </div> <div class="clearfix"></div> <hr class="mt-15 mb-15" /> </div> <div class="row m-0"> <div class="col-md-3 col-xs-3 pl-0 text-center"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades9b412310a29bb4045378dfe3adba293619117.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/60x80/the-crusades_5bede4e2b7d7bcf41f4ff9f9.jpg" alt="" width="100%" /> </a> </div> <div class="col-md-9 col-xs-9 p-0"> <label> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades9b412310a29bb4045378dfe3adba293619117.html"> The Crusades </a> </label> <div class="note-meta"> <div class="note-desc"></div> </div> </div> <div class="clearfix"></div> <hr class="mt-15 mb-15" /> </div> <div class="row m-0"> <div class="col-md-3 col-xs-3 pl-0 text-center"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-oxford-history-of-the-crusades.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/60x80/the-oxford-history-of-the-crusades_5ad16585b7d7bccc10e7d756.jpg" alt="" width="100%" /> </a> </div> <div class="col-md-9 col-xs-9 p-0"> <label> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-oxford-history-of-the-crusades.html"> The Oxford History of the Crusades </a> </label> <div class="note-meta"> <div class="note-desc">THE OXFORD H I S T O RY O F THE CRUSADES t h e e d i to r Jo n at h a n R i l e y- S m i t h is Dixie Professor of Ec...</div> </div> </div> <div class="clearfix"></div> <hr class="mt-15 mb-15" /> </div> <div class="row m-0"> <div class="col-md-3 col-xs-3 pl-0 text-center"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-oxford-history-of-the-crusadesf84b14580538bc09fd1bb7a5e6d1250192803.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/60x80/the-oxford-history-of-the-crusades_5ba6ce3ab7d7bc056b87415f.jpg" alt="" width="100%" /> </a> </div> <div class="col-md-9 col-xs-9 p-0"> <label> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-oxford-history-of-the-crusadesf84b14580538bc09fd1bb7a5e6d1250192803.html"> The Oxford History of the Crusades </a> </label> <div class="note-meta"> <div class="note-desc">THE OXFORD H I S T O RY O F THE CRUSADES t h e e d i to r Jo n at h a n R i l e y- S m i t h is Dixie Professor of Ec...</div> </div> </div> <div class="clearfix"></div> <hr class="mt-15 mb-15" /> </div> <div class="row m-0"> <div class="col-md-3 col-xs-3 pl-0 text-center"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/crusades.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/60x80/crusades_5bec0362b7d7bcf71f8d39a5.jpg" alt="" width="100%" /> </a> </div> <div class="col-md-9 col-xs-9 p-0"> <label> <a href="https://epdf.tips/crusades.html"> Crusades </a> </label> <div class="note-meta"> <div class="note-desc"></div> </div> </div> <div class="clearfix"></div> <hr class="mt-15 mb-15" /> </div> <div class="row m-0"> <div class="col-md-3 col-xs-3 pl-0 text-center"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-ii-the-later-crusades-1189-1311-history-of-the-.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/60x80/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-ii-the-later-crus_5b6a87d4b7d7bc914ffc9726.jpg" alt="" width="100%" /> </a> </div> <div class="col-md-9 col-xs-9 p-0"> <label> <a href="https://epdf.tips/a-history-of-the-crusades-volume-ii-the-later-crusades-1189-1311-history-of-the-.html"> A History of the Crusades, Volume II: The Later Crusades, 1189-1311 (History of the Crusades (University of Wisconsin Press)) </a> </label> <div class="note-meta"> <div class="note-desc">A HISTORY OF THE CRUSA DES Kenneth M. Setton, GENERAL EDITOR A HISTORY OF THE CRUSADES Kenneth M. Setton, GENERAL E...</div> </div> </div> <div class="clearfix"></div> <hr class="mt-15 mb-15" /> </div> <div class="row m-0"> <div class="col-md-3 col-xs-3 pl-0 text-center"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades-5ea6d1d168f6a.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/60x80/the-crusades_5ea6d1d1097c4700418b7c83.jpg" alt="" width="100%" /> </a> </div> <div class="col-md-9 col-xs-9 p-0"> <label> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades-5ea6d1d168f6a.html"> The Crusades </a> </label> <div class="note-meta"> <div class="note-desc"></div> </div> </div> <div class="clearfix"></div> <hr class="mt-15 mb-15" /> </div> <div class="row m-0"> <div class="col-md-3 col-xs-3 pl-0 text-center"> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades.html"> <img src="https://epdf.tips/img/60x80/the-crusades_5add2e53b7d7bce201553757.jpg" alt="" width="100%" /> </a> </div> <div class="col-md-9 col-xs-9 p-0"> <label> <a href="https://epdf.tips/the-crusades.html"> The Crusades </a> </label> <div class="note-meta"> <div class="note-desc">The Crusades This German-to-English translation of a highly successful book is a clear, approachable, student-friendly...</div> </div> </div> <div class="clearfix"></div> <hr class="mt-15 mb-15" /> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="modal fade" id="report" tabindex="-1" role="dialog" aria-hidden="true"> <div class="modal-dialog"> <div class="modal-content"> <form role="form" method="post" action="https://epdf.tips/report/crusades-the-illustrated-history" style="border: none;"> <div class="modal-header"> <button type="button" class="close" data-dismiss="modal" aria-hidden="true">&times;</button> <h4 class="modal-title">Report "Crusades: The Illustrated History"</h4> </div> <div class="modal-body"> <div class="form-group"> <label>Your name</label> <input type="text" name="name" required="required" class="form-control" /> </div> <div class="form-group"> <label>Email</label> <input type="email" name="email" required="required" class="form-control" /> </div> <div class="form-group"> <label>Reason</label> <select name="reason" required="required" class="form-control"> <option value="">-Select Reason-</option> <option value="pornographic" selected="selected">Pornographic</option> <option value="defamatory">Defamatory</option> <option value="illegal">Illegal/Unlawful</option> <option value="spam">Spam</option> <option value="others">Other Terms Of Service Violation</option> <option value="copyright">File a copyright complaint</option> </select> </div> <div class="form-group"> <label>Description</label> <textarea name="description" required="required" rows="3" class="form-control" style="border: 1px solid #cccccc;"></textarea> </div> <div class="form-group"> <div style="display: inline-block;"> <div class="g-recaptcha" data-sitekey="6Lemmz0UAAAAAANSnNH_YtG0406jaTUcUP7mxrLr"></div> </div> </div> <script src='https://www.google.com/recaptcha/api.js'></script> </div> <div class="modal-footer"> <button type="button" class="btn btn-default" data-dismiss="modal">Close</button> <button type="submit" class="btn btn-success">Send</button> </div> </form> </div> </div> </div> <footer class="footer" style="margin-top: 60px;"> <div class="container-fluid"> Copyright &copy; 2024 EPDF.TIPS. All rights reserved. <div class="pull-right"> <span><a href="https://epdf.tips/about">About Us</a></span> | <span><a href="https://epdf.tips/privacy">Privacy Policy</a></span> | <span><a href="https://epdf.tips/term">Terms of Service</a></span> | <span><a href="https://epdf.tips/copyright">Copyright</a></span> | <span><a href="https://epdf.tips/dmca">DMCA</a></span> | <span><a href="https://epdf.tips/contact">Contact Us</a></span> | <span><a href="https://epdf.tips/cookie_policy">Cookie Policy</a></span> </div> </div> </footer> <!-- Modal --> <div class="modal fade" id="login" tabindex="-1" role="dialog" aria-labelledby="myModalLabel"> <div class="modal-dialog" role="document"> <div class="modal-content"> <div class="modal-header"> <button type="button" class="close" data-dismiss="modal" aria-label="Close" on="tap:login.close"><span aria-hidden="true">&times;</span></button> <h4 class="modal-title" id="add-note-label">Sign In</h4> </div> <div class="modal-body"> <form action="https://epdf.tips/login" method="post"> <div class="form-group"> <label class="sr-only" for="email">Email</label> <input class="form-input form-control" type="text" name="email" id="email" value="" placeholder="Email" /> </div> <div class="form-group"> <label class="sr-only" for="password">Password</label> <input class="form-input form-control" type="password" name="password" id="password" value="" placeholder="Password" /> </div> <div class="form-group"> <div class="checkbox"> <label class="form-checkbox"> <input type="checkbox" name="remember" value="1" /> <i class="form-icon"></i> Remember me </label> <label class="pull-right"><a href="https://epdf.tips/forgot">Forgot password?</a></label> </div> </div> <button class="btn btn-primary btn-block" type="submit">Sign In</button> </form> <hr style="margin-top: 15px;" /> <a href="https://epdf.tips/login/facebook" class="btn btn-facebook btn-block"><i class="fa fa-facebook"></i> Login with Facebook</a> </div> </div> </div> </div> <!-- Global site tag (gtag.js) - Google Analytics --> <script async src="https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=UA-111550345-1"></script> <script> window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'UA-111550345-1'); </script> <script src="https://epdf.tips/assets/js/jquery-ui.min.js"></script> <link rel="stylesheet" href="https://epdf.tips/assets/css/jquery-ui.css"> <script> $(function () { $("#document_search").autocomplete({ source: function (request, response) { $.ajax({ url: "https://epdf.tips/suggest", dataType: "json", data: { term: request.term }, success: function (data) { response(data); } }); }, autoFill: true, select: function( event, ui ) { $(this).val(ui.item.value); $(this).parents("form").submit(); } }); }); </script> <!-- cookie policy --> <div id="EPDFTIPS_cookie_box" style="z-index:99999; border-top: 1px solid #fefefe; background: #97c479; width: 100%; position: fixed; padding: 5px 15px; text-align: center; left:0; bottom: 0;"> Our partners will collect data and use cookies for ad personalization and measurement. <a href="https://epdf.tips/cookie_policy" target="_blank">Learn how we and our ad partner Google, collect and use data</a>. <a href="#" class="btn btn-success" onclick="accept_EPDFTIPS_cookie_box();return false;">Agree & close</a> </div> <script> function accept_EPDFTIPS_cookie_box() { document.cookie = "EPDFTIPS_cookie_box_viewed=1;max-age=15768000;path=/"; hide_EPDFTIPS_cookie_box(); } function hide_EPDFTIPS_cookie_box() { var cb = document.getElementById('EPDFTIPS_cookie_box'); if (cb) { cb.parentElement.removeChild(cb); } } (function () { var EPDFTIPS_cookie_box_viewed = (function (name) { var matches = document.cookie.match(new RegExp("(?:^|; )" + name.replace(/([\.$?*|{}\(\)\[\]\\\/\+^])/g, '\\$1') + "=([^;]*)")); return matches ? decodeURIComponent(matches[1]) : undefined; })('EPDFTIPS_cookie_box_viewed'); if (EPDFTIPS_cookie_box_viewed) { hide_EPDFTIPS_cookie_box(); } })(); </script> <!-- end cookie policy --> </body> </html>

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10