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CHAPTER XXIV.THE FOURTH CRUSADE
When Innocent III ascended the papal throne in
January 1198, the German crusade planned by Henry VI was still in progress.
Within a few months, however, it ended in ignominious failure. Thereupon pope
Innocent decided to take upon himself the task of arousing Europe to a new
effort to recover the Holy Land. In so doing, he was reverting to Urban II’s
original conception of the crusade as a papal responsibility, and
simultaneously revealing his own exalted conception of the role of the papacy
in the affairs of Christendom. He announced the project in an encyclical sent
out in August 1198 to the archbishop of the west, to be communicated by them to
the bishops and other clergy and to the faithful of their provinces. Innocent
followed the traditional lines of crusading propaganda, stressing his peculiar
grief over the sufferings of Jerusalem, denouncing the princes of the west for
their luxury and vice and wars among themselves, and summoning all Christians
to win eternal salvation by girding themselves for the holy war. Passing over
monarchs and lesser rulers, Innocent sent his summons to all cities, counts,
and barons, whom he commanded to raise troops in numbers proportionate to their
resources, and to send them overseas at their own expense by the following March,
to serve for at least two years. Archbishops, bishops, and abbots were to
contribute either armed men or an equivalent amount of money. Two
cardinal-legates would proceed to Palestine to act as the pope’s
representatives there in preparing the way for the coming of the host. The
proclamation included the usual inducements: plenary indulgence for crusaders,
papal protection for their possessions, and a moratorium on the payment of
debts and interest during their absence.
Innocent then wrote to king Philip Augustus of
France and king Richard the Lionhearted of England, who had been at war ever
since Richard’s return from captivity in 1194, admonishing them, under penalty
of an interdict to be laid on their lands, to make peace or at least a five
years’ truce with each other, not only because the war they were waging was
causing untold miseries to the common people of their realms, but also because
it would interfere with the recruiting of troops for the crusade he was inaugurating.
The two cardinals who were eventually to go to Palestine were in the meantime
employed on special tasks at home: cardinal Soffredo went to Venice to enlist the support of the Venetians, and cardinal Peter
Capuano went to France to promulgate the crusade there. Two cardinals were also
sent to persuade the Pisans and Genoese to make peace and prepare to take part
in the crusade. The pope wrote to the Byzantine emperor, Alexius III Angelus,
reproving him for not having long since come to the aid of the Holy Land, and
admonishing him as well to acknowledge the primacy of the papacy. Alexius
replied in February 1199 with recriminations of his own. Arriving in France
late in 1198, Peter Capuano called an assembly of the French clergy at Dijon,
where he promulgated the papal bull. He found Philip Augustus, by Christmas
1198, faced with a coalition of French lords whom Richard had won over to his
side — including count Baldwin of Flanders and Hainault, count Louis of Blois,
and the counts of Boulogne and Toulouse — and therefore eager to listen to
Peter’s proposals for a truce. Two or three weeks later Peter met with Richard
in Normandy. Though Richard maintained that he was only fighting to recover the
lands which Philip had perfidiously seized in his absence on the Third Crusade
and accused Philip of responsibility for his captivity in Germany, complaining
also that the pope had not given him the protection due him as a returning
crusader, he finally yielded to Peter’s plea that the war was hindering the recovery
of Jerusalem. Late in January 1199 Richard and Philip met and made a truce for
five years. But before the end of March Richard was dead, and Philip Augustus
soon renewed against John his efforts to seize the Angevin lands on the
continent.
The date, March 1199, originally set by the pope
for the departure of the armies, passed — as did most of the rest of the year —
without even the formation of an expeditionary force. Innocent III kept writing
letters: to the archbishops and high clergy of the west to spur them to greater
efforts; to the patriarch and clergy of the kingdom of Jerusalem explaining why
the crusade had been delayed; and to the princes of ‘Outremer’ to urge them to
compose their quarrels and make ready to participate in the coming war on the
‘infidel’. Finally, at the very end of the year, he took a bold and
unprecedented step. This was nothing less than an attempt, announced in another
circular letter to the archbishops, to finance the crusade by a levy on the
incomes of the clergy. The pope announced that he and the cardinals and clergy
of Rome had assessed themselves in the amount of a tenth of their revenues for
the next year for the expenses of the crusade. Now by his apostolic authority
he commanded all the clergy of both orders to contribute a fortieth of their
revenues for the following year to the same cause. Exception was made in the
case of certain religious orders, like the Carthusians, Cistercians, and
Premonstratensians, who were to contribute only a fiftieth. Each archbishop was
to call together the bishops of his province in council, and transmit to them
the papal command. Each bishop in turn was to summon the clergy of his diocese,
and order them to make a true return of one fortieth of their annual revenues,
see that the money was collected and deposited in a secure place, and report to
the papal court the amount collected. The archbishops were authorized to use
some of the money to help pay the expenses of indigent crusaders. In addition
the pope commanded that a chest be placed in every parish church to receive the
gifts of the faithful, who were to be exhorted in sermons every Sunday to make
such contributions, with the promise of papal indulgence in proportion to the
amount of their alms.
Innocent recognized the exceptional character of
the levy, and assured the clergy that it would not be used as a precedent for
establishing a papal tax on their incomes. Nevertheless, the measure seems to
have met pretty generally with at least passive resistance. More than a year
later. Innocent had to write to the clergy of France reproaching them for their
laxity. He reminded them that they had voluntarily promised his legate, at the
Council of Dijon, to contribute a thirtieth of their incomes, but had not yet
paid even the fortieth he had commanded. Ralph de Diceto reports that the notary sent from Rome to oversee the levy acted high-handedly,
and there was a general suspicion that such funds were apt to stick to the
fingers of the Roman gentry. In speaking of the levy, Matthew Paris calls it a
questionable exaction which future events were to show was displeasing to God.
According to Ralph of Coggeshall the Cistercians protested against the pope’s
attempt to collect the levy as a persecution of the order.
There is no way of knowing how much money was
collected locally under the terms of this levy, or how much was actually
transmitted to Rome. With all this opposition, tacit and expressed, on the part
of the clergy, the levy was probably not very successful. Nor do we know what
pecuniary results, if any, attended the pope’s tentative effort to extend the
levy to monarchs and nobles. In June 1201 the papal legate, Octavian,
cardinal-bishop of Ostia, who had succeeded cardinal Peter in France, made the
proposal to the kings of England and France. Philip Augustus and John met
together and agreed to contribute a fortieth of a year’s income from their
lands and the lands of their vassals, on the condition that they should
undertake the collection themselves and decide how the money was to be used.
The monarchs then issued writs commanding their vassals to assess themselves in
this amount. Of any money which may have been raised in this way, probably not
much went to defray the expenses of the crusade. Both Philip and John had other
and more pressing uses for any revenue they could collect.
As a further recruiting measure in France, on
November 5, 1198, Innocent III, presumably acting through Peter Capuano, had
commissioned the parish priest, Fulk of Neuilly, to preach the crusade to the
people. For some two or three years previously, Fulk had been conducting a
revivalist campaign in the regions around Paris. With the license of his bishop
he had been traveling about, preaching to great crowds of people and flaying
them for their sins, especially usury and prostitution, and many tales were
told of the sudden conversion of moneylenders and harlots, and of the miracles
of healing and other wonders that attended his preaching. From November 1195
until his death in May 1202, Fulk devoted himself entirely to the crusade. He
undoubtedly succeeded in arousing among the common people an immense, if
short-lived, enthusiasm. Contemporaries generally testify to his large
influence.
The first nucleus of an expeditionary force came
into existence late in November 1199, at a tournament held in Champagne at
count Theobald’s castle of Ecry, attended by counts,
barons, and knights from the counties of Champagne and Blois and from the Île
de France. There count Theobald himself and count Louis of Blois took the
cross, and their example was followed by many other jousters. Geoffrey of
Villehardouin, who apparently was present and took the cross with the others,
begins his narrative of the actual expedition with this incident; except for
the unreliable Ernoul, no other contemporary
chronicler mentions it. Nothing in Villehardouin’s account implies that Fulk of Neuilly was present at the tournament. Instead,
the taking of the cross appears as the spontaneous response of the lords to the
prevailing excitement over the crusade. Had Fulk been there, Villehardouin
would scarcely have failed to mention it. Yet later historians, especially the
nineteenth-century writers of the Romantic school, such as Michaud, have so
popularized the legend that Fulk in person won the nobles for the cross at Ecry that it still appears in histories of the crusade.
The example set by counts Theobald of Champagne
and Louis of Blois inspired neighboring and related princes of northern France
to similar action. At Bruges on Ash Wednesday (February 23, 12oo), count
Baldwin of Flanders and Hainault, who was married to a sister of Theobald, took
the cross, together with his brother Henry and many high barons of the region;
in Picardy, count Hugh of St, Pol; in Perche, count Geoffrey and his brother
Stephen, cousins of Louis of Blois. Thus by the summer of 1200 a considerable
crusading army had been formed. An initial meeting at Soissons was adjourned
for two months to allow time for further enlistments. At a second meeting, held
at Compiègne, each of the three counts, Theobald, Louis, and Baldwin, named two
of his barons to act as his agents in contracting for ships to carry the host
overseas. Sometime around the turn of the year the six envoys set out for
Venice.
The forces raised in northern France in this first
stage of recruiting were to form the core of the army that went on the Fourth
Crusade. The leaders belonged to the very highest rank of the feudal nobility
of France. Theobald and Louis were scions of the two branches of the family of
Blois-Champagne, one of the great feudal dynasties of France. They were double
first cousins, since their fathers were brothers and their mothers were
sisters. They were also nephews both of Philip Augustus and of Richard the
Lionhearted, their maternal grandmother, the famous Eleanor of Aquitaine,
having been married first to Louis VII of France and later to Henry II of
England. Thus the mothers of the young counts were half-sisters of Philip
Augustus, as well as of Richard and John. Participation in the crusading movement
had been a tradition with the family, ever since an ancestor, Stephen of Blois,
had taken part in the First Crusade. Theobald’s older brother, Henry, had
played a prominent role in the Third Crusade, and had been ruler of Jerusalem
until his death in 1197. Count Baldwin IX of Flanders, who had married
Theobald’s and Henry’s sister Mary, was also Baldwin VI of Hainault, a fief of
the empire, held of the bishop of Liege. All three of the counts were young
men, under thirty years of age. Villehardouin’s list
of the northern French barons who had so far taken the cross includes, notably,
Matthew of Montmorency, Reginald of Montmirail, Simon of Montfort, Reginald of Dampierre, Guy of Coucy, James of Avesnes, and Peter of Bracieux.
The most interesting name is that of the historian himself, Geoffrey of
Villehardouin, marshal of Champagne. A man of mature years, he had held high
office at the court of Champagne, and from his first responsible task as
Theobald’s representative in Venice, he was to play an important role in the
expedition and in the establishment of the Latin empire. His comrade-in-arms
Conon of Bethune, one of Baldwin’s barons and his representative on this first
mission, was well known as a courtly poet, and had ahead of him a long and
distinguished career in the east.
This crusading host resembled the ordinary
feudal levy in its composition and organization. The divisions or army corps
were the regional contingents, each commanded by the prince of the territory as
the counts of Champagne, Blois, and Flanders. Within each division, the
companies were captained by the barons who were the vassals of the count, and
the companies were composed of knights and sergeants serving under the banners
of their own baron. Thus the bonds which held the host together were
essentially feudal in character. Taking the cross was in theory a voluntary act
on the part of the individual crusader, but in fact the relationship of vassal
to lord had played a decisive part in the enlistment, and it was the
determining factor in the exercise of command.
As to numbers, it may be roughly estimated that
between eight and ten thousand fighting men had been enrolled by the end of the
year 1200. Geoffrey of Villehardouin’s list contains
the names of some ninety barons, and while he expressly states that he did not
name them all, it may be supposed that his list is fairly complete. Robert of Clari later describes the company in which he served under
the banner of his lord Peter of Amiens as containing ten knights and sixty
sergeants. This first enlistment, therefore, probably consisted of about a
hundred barons’ companies of some eighty to a hundred men each. The force
comprised in the main three categories of troops: armored knights, light-armed
squires (sergeants on horseback), and foot-soldiers (sergeants on foot), in the
usual proportions of one to two to four.
In seeking transportation overseas at an Italian
port, the envoys were following a well established practice, for the sea route had by now almost entirely superseded the long and
difficult land route of the first crusading expeditions. The Italian maritime
cities had developed a lucrative passenger traffic in pilgrims and crusaders,
along with their carrying trade in the Mediterranean. Individual pilgrims now
usually sought passage in the great freighters which set out each year from
Pisa, Genoa, and Venice, while bands of crusaders often contracted to hire
individual ships at one or another of these ports. In this case, however, the
six envoys from the three counts were asking Venice to furnish a fleet large
enough to transport a whole army, and the Venetians would certainly consider so
serious an undertaking as a matter of state policy, to be determined in the
light of their other interests and commitments.
By the end of the twelfth century Venice had
already entered upon her greatest age as a commercial, colonial, and maritime
power. Her widespread interests in the eastern Mediterranean required the
maintenance of a powerful naval establishment and the pursuit of a vigilant and
aggressive diplomacy. Like the other Italian maritime cities, Venice had long
since acquired valuable trading privileges and exemptions in the ports of
‘Outremer’, such as Acre and Tyre, in return for naval help given to the
kingdom of Jerusalem. This had given the Venetians a practical interest in the
affairs of the crusader states and had deepened their rivalry with Pisa and
Genoa. More recently Venice and her rivals had also developed a profitable
trade in Egypt through the port of Alexandria. From the point of view of the
crusader states and the papacy, this was traffic with the enemy, especially as
Egypt demanded much-needed timber and other naval stores in exchange for the
spices of the Far East. Popes and councils had fulminated in vain against this
trade in war contraband on the part of Italian cities.
Venice especially had a bad reputation among the
Christians of the east as being more concerned with the profits from this trade
than with the triumph of the cross. In her trade with Constantinople and other
cities of the Byzantine empire, Venice still enjoyed the special advantages
granted by emperor Alexius I in 1082 in exchange for Venetian help against
Robert Guiscard. John II Comnenus had tried to revoke this grant, and Venice
had resorted to war to force him to renew it in 1126. Manuel I had again
renewed it in 1148, but Byzantine relations with Venice continued to be
strained, Manuel’s mass arrest of Venetians in 1171, and his confiscation of
their property coupled with the massacre of all the Latins in 1182, had
heightened the tension. Although Isaac II Angelus in 1187 and Alexius III
Angelus in 1198 had renewed the privileges, the Byzantines owed Venice much
money. Moreover, Alexius III was not only favoring the Pisans and Genoese
unduly but also levying tolls on Venetian ships, contrary to the provisions of
the treaties. When the six French envoys arrived early in February 1201, Venice
was under the governance of one of the greatest personages of her history, the
aged, half-blind, but indomitable doge Enrico Dandolo. Elected to this lifetime
office in 1192, he had guided the fortunes of the city in troubled times with
great craft and vigor. According to Marino Sanudo the
younger (d.1533) he is said to have been 85 years of age at the time of his election
as doge. Although this seems scarcely credible, as it would make him 95 at the
outset of the Fourth Crusade, in which he was to play so active a part, the
sources generally agree on his great age and his badly impaired vision.
The envoys of the French counts presented to the
doge and his “small council” of six their request for ships to carry the
crusaders oversea. A week later, in reply, the Venetian authorities offered not
only to provide transport, for pay, but also to join the crusade as equal partners.
They would supply enough transports to carry 4,500 knights and their horses,
9,000 squires, and 20,000 foot soldiers, with their gear and provisions, in
return for the sum of 94,000 marks of silver, to be paid in installments. This
estimate of the size of the army for which transportation would be needed must
have been made by the envoys themselves. It was at least three times as large
as the number of crusaders actually enrolled before the envoys had set out on
their mission. They were anticipating many more enlistments of crusaders than
in fact they would obtain. This miscalculation was a primary source of the
troubles that were to haunt the expedition throughout its whole course. The
Venetians were to put the transports at the service of the crusaders for a year
from the time of departure, which was set for the day of Sts.
Peter and Paul of the following year (June 29, 1202), unless that date should
be changed by common consent. As their own contribution the Venetians were to
furnish fifty war galleys fully manned and equipped for the same length of
service, on condition that Venice should share equally with the crusaders in
any conquests or gains made on the campaign.
The envoys accepted the proposal, which the doge
then submitted for ratification first to the large council of forty, and then
to larger bodies of one hundred, two hundred, and a thousand, and finally to
the people as a whole, before whom the envoys knelt weeping to loud cries of
“We grant it” from more than 10,000 assembled in St. Mark’s for mass. After the
terms had been accepted by both sides, the covenant was drawn up and signed, on
the one hand by the six envoys in the names of the three counts who had
accredited them, and on the other by the doge and his council of state and council
of forty. The negotiators also agreed secretly that the attack should be
directed against Egypt “because more harm could be inflicted on the Turks there
than in any other land”. But they would keep up the pretense that the
expedition would go direct to Palestine, no doubt to conceal their true
intentions from the enemy and to prevent discontent from arising among the rank
and file of the crusaders, who naturally expected to be led to Jerusalem.
It was stipulated in the covenant that a copy of
it should be transmitted to pope Innocent to secure his confirmation. This
joint expedition of a French army and a Venetian fleet, however, arranged for
on their own initiative by the French leaders and the government of Venice, was
something quite different from the general crusade of western Europe under
papal auspices envisaged by the pope. Nevertheless, he felt constrained to
accept it as a partial realization of his own project. Not only did he confirm
the covenant when it was presented to him at Rome, but he went further and
undertook to make the plan his own. In May, a few weeks after receiving a copy
of the treaty, he wrote to the clergy in England, instructing them to see to it
that those who had taken the cross in that land should be ready to proceed overseas
by the next summer, “at the time set by our beloved sons, the counts of
Flanders, Champagne, and Blois”. He also wrote, about the same time, to the
French clergy, endorsing the expedition planned by the envoys and the
Venetians. Similar instructions may have been sent to the German clergy, for
bishop Conrad of Halberstadt and abbot Martin of Pairis in Alsace were eventually to lead contingents from
that country to Venice.
The negotiations at Venice had taken several
weeks, and the envoys were not able to set out for home until sometime in April
1201. Late in May, after their return, count Theobald of Champagne died. He had
been the first to take the cross, and seems to have been regarded as the leader
of the crusade. In any event it was now decided to replace him with a formally
elected commander-in-chief. So a council was held at Soissons toward the end of
June, which was attended by the counts of Flanders, Blois, St, Pol, and Perche,
together with a number of high barons. There Geoffrey of Villehardouin proposed
the name of marquis Boniface of Montferrat, “a very worthy man and one of the
most highly esteemed of men now living”. Villehardouin was able to assure the
assembly that Boniface would accept the nomination, so it is clear that
somebody had already consulted him about it. After considerable discussion, the
barons agreed, and decided to send envoys to Boniface to ask him to come to
France and accept the command.
Vassals of the empire for their principality in
northern Italy, the members of the house of Montferrat had distinguished
themselves as crusaders. Boniface’s father, William the Old, had fought in the
Second Crusade, and had been captured fighting at Hattin in 1187. His eldest
brother, William Longsword, had married Sibyl, daughter of Amalric of Jerusalem
(1176), and was posthumously the father of king Baldwin V. A second brother,
Renier, had married, in 118o, Maria, a daughter of the emperor Manuel Comnenus,
had become Caesar, and was poisoned by Andronicus Comnenus in 1183. A third
brother, Conrad, had married, in 1185, Theodora, a sister of the emperor Isaac
Angelus, had also become Caesar, and helped put down a serious revolt against
Isaac in 1185. He had escaped from the fiercely anti-Latin atmosphere of
Constantinople, saved Tyre from Saladin in 1187, married Isabel, the heiress to
the kingdom of Jerusalem (whose first husband, Humphrey of Toron,
was still alive also), and considered himself king from 1190 until his
assassination in 1192. The intimate identification of Boniface’s whole family
with the east, however, could hardly have been the sole reason why the
crusaders chose him as their commander. The Gesta of
pope Innocent III declares that Philip Augustus favored Boniface, but it is not
clear why.
We know that, after leaving Venice, four of the
six crusader envoys had proceeded to Genoa, and it is possible that the Genoese
authorities, intimately linked with the family of Montferrat, had informed them
of Boniface’s interest. Two historians report, moreover, that Manuel Comnenus
had bestowed Thessalonica on Renier of Montferrat, and had crowned him king. Of
course, no Byzantine emperor would have done precisely that, but we know Manuel
had made Renier Caesar. Nor is there anything inherently improbable about the
story that Manuel had given Renier Thessalonica as pronoiar in
1081. Alexius I Comnenus, in the first recorded act of his reign, had made
Nicephorus Melissenus Caesar, and assigned
Thessalonica to him. After the crusade, Boniface of Montferrat was to insist on
having Thessalonica, and no other property, for himself, and he did in fact
become its first Latin king. We are perhaps justified, therefore, in assuming
that, as early as the spring of 1201, his interest in obtaining the command of
the crusader armies sprang from a determination to fight on Byzantine soil for
what he considered a family fief, and possibly even for the imperial throne
itself. About fifty years old, Boniface apparently had never been overseas or
taken part in any crusading movement. He had, however, campaigned in Sicily in
Henry VI’s war with Tancred, and had also fought a long-drawn-out struggle with
the Lombard communes. At his court chivalry flourished and he patronized
Provencal troubadours like Peter Vidal. His own court poet was the troubadour Rambald of Vacqueyras.
Boniface now appeared at Soissons, and accepted
the command which the crusaders offered him. Villehardouin says that only
thereafter did the marquis receive the cross, in a special ceremony; but there
is some evidence that he may already have taken it in Italy. From Soissons,
Boniface proceeded to Citeaux at the time of the annual chapter of the
Cistercians (Holy Cross day, September 14, 1201). Fulk of Neuilly preached a
sermon, and many Burgundians took the cross. The marquis then went on into Germany
to attend the Christmas court of his suzerain, the German king, the
Hohenstaufen Philip of Swabia, whose loyal friend he was. Philip, brother of
the recently deceased emperor Henry VI, had married Irene, daughter of the
Byzantine emperor Isaac Angelus, and widow of the Sicilian prince Roger, whom
Henry VI had conquered. With his Byzantine bride Philip had acquired the cause
of her father Isaac Angelus, who had been deposed, blinded, and relegated to
prison with his son Alexius in 1195 by his brother, Alexius III Angelus.
Moreover, Philip had inherited from his late brother Henry the traditional
enmity toward Byzantium which had expressed itself in Henry’s great but
abortive plan for an expedition against the Byzantines, a legacy to the Hohenstaufens from their Norman predecessors in Sicily.
When Boniface took command of the crusading armies, new interests thus found a
voice in the leadership. From Germany he went back to Montferrat to make his
final preparations.
The covenant between the Venetians and the
crusaders had set the date for the arrival of the host in Venice before the end
of April 1202, in order to permit departure at the time of the summer crossing
toward the end of June. In fact, however, the first bands did not leave the
various regions of France until April and May, and others straggled along
throughout June, July, and August. Boniface himself arrived in Venice with his
contingent of Lombards only in the middle of August, and the small bands of
crusaders from Germany put in their appearance at about the same time. Worse
still, a number of the ‘high men’ from the Île de France, Burgundy, and
Provence decided on their own initiative not to sail from Venice at all, but to
seek transportation overseas for themselves and their men at other ports, some
from Marseilles and some from southern Italy. So when the leaders in Venice
were able to make a muster of the forces at their command, they found to their
dismay that only about a third of the expected 33,500 men had turned up at
Venice. The leaders had counted on raising the large sum of money still owing
the Venetians by collecting passage money from the individual crusaders, but
they found that, with only ten or twelve thousand troops on hand, they could
not meet their obligations. After the individual soldiers had made their
contribution, Boniface and the counts and some of the high barons added what
money they could spare from their private funds, and pledged their gold and
silver plate to the Venetian moneylenders, but in the end they still owed the
Venetians some 34,000 marks. Thus the expedition was threatened with failure
before it ever got under way, for the Venetians were not likely to go on with
it unless they received all the money that was coming to them by the terms of
the contract. Villehardouin lays the blame for the threatened fiasco on those
who, as he says, were false to their oaths and went to other ports. The primary
cause, however, was the excessively high estimate made in the first place by
Villehardouin himself and the other envoys as to the size of the army for which
transportation would be needed, liven if all the defaulting contingents had
come to Venice, they still would not have made up more than half the estimated
number of 33,500 men.
At this juncture, doge Enrico Dandolo came
forward with a proposal that offered a way out of the impasse. For some time
the rulers of Hungary, now in control of the Croatian hinterland, had been
encouraging the towns along the Dalmatian coast to rebel against
Venetian authority, dominant in Dalmatia for about a century, and to seek
Hungarian protection. In 1186 Zara, one of the most important of these Venetian
vassal cities in Dalmatia, had in this way gone over to king Bela III of
Hungary. Despite repeated efforts, Venice had failed to recover it. The doge
now asked that the crusading army help him regain Zara. In return Venice would
allow the crusaders to postpone payment of the debt until such time as they
could meet it out of their share of the booty, to be won later during the
expedition. Since the alternative was the abandonment of the crusade and the
probable forfeiture of the money already paid, the leaders accepted the
proposal, although many crusaders objected violently to turning their arms
against Christians. With this matter settled, early in September 1202 the doge
himself took the cross at a great assembly in St. Mark’s, and prepared to go
with the expedition as commander of the Venetian forces, leaving the government
of Venice to his son Renier in his absence. Then it was that the Venetians
began for the first time to take the cross in great numbers, Villehardouin
tells us. Apparently they had been waiting for the doge to take the lead.
At this point in his narrative Villehardouin
records what he calls a marvelous and portentous event: the appeal of a
Byzantine prince to the crusaders to help him recover his rights in
Constantinople. This was the “young Alexius”, son of Isaac II Angelus, who had
succeeded in escaping to the west to seek the help of his brother-in-law,
Philip of Swabia. Landing at Ancona the party of the young prince traveled
north through Italy, and at Verona, according to Villehardouin, encountered
some tardy crusaders who were on their way to Venice. Learning from them of the
gathering of an army which was preparing to go overseas, Alexius and his
advisers decided to send envoys to the leaders of the crusade and ask them for
help. Boniface and the counts and high barons were sufficiently interested,
Villehardouin tells us, to send envoys of their own to accompany Alexius’ party
to Philip’s court. “If he will aid us to recover the land of Outremer, we will
aid him to conquer his land; for we know that it was unjustly taken from him
and his father”. So Villehardouin reports the response of the crusaders to an
appeal which he dates immediately before the departure of the fleet in the fall
of 1202. Indeed if one accepts Villehardouin’s version of events, one must assume that the fleet actually sailed on October 1,
1202, without any commitment to the young Alexius, whose appeal, we are to
believe, had only recently been delivered to them.
It was, of course, this appeal and the eventual
decision of the crusader chieftains to accede to it that resulted in the
diversion of the Fourth Crusade from its original purpose of fighting the
Moslems in Palestine or in Egypt, to Constantinople, where the expedition would
first restore Isaac and the young Alexius, and then oust them and found a Latin
empire on Byzantine soil. This endeavor coincided with the interests of Venice,
of Boniface of Montferrat, of Philip of Swabia, and — to the extent that it
placed a Roman Catholic dynasty and patriarch on the imperial and
ecclesiastical thrones of Constantinople — of Innocent III as well. So modern
scholars have often questioned Villehardouin’s version of events, which has seemed to them “official” history, concealing
behind a plausible narrative a deep-laid secret plot among the interested
parties, hatched long before their intentions were revealed to the rank and
file of the crusaders, most of whom would have much preferred to carry out a
real crusade against the “infidel”. Few problems of medieval history have
elicited so much scholarly controversy as the “diversion” problem. Though
numerous, the sources are often vague or contradictory, naturally enough, since
if there was indeed a plot one could hardly expect a contemporary in the secret
to reveal it, while one who had no knowledge of it could not reveal any. Both
the modern editors of Villehardouin accept his story at face value, and are
thus partisan of what has come to be called the théorie du hazard or d’occasion,
according to which the decision to help the young Alexius was really not made
until the last moment.
In the early days of the discussion, the
Venetians received most of the blame for the diversion. They had, it was
alleged, concluded a secret treaty with al-Adil, the Aiyubid sultan, promising not to attack his lands. Indeed, one scholar wrote as if the
text of the treaty itself were available. But by 1877, it was clear that the
treaty in question actually belonged to a far later date, and that Venice had
made no secret promises to the sultan before the Fourth Crusade. Though
innocent of this charge, Venice was of course profoundly hostile to Alexius III
Angelus; she wished at least to assure herself that the rights owed her by
treaty would be respected, and at most to take over the commerce of
Constantinople completely. The doge may have lost his eyesight through action
by Byzantines, and in any case hated the Greeks. The Venetians were also deeply
concerned with the growing influence of Genoa at Byzantium. Even before the
Venetians had been cleared of treason, scholars were shifting the blame for the
diversion to Philip of Swabia and Boniface of Montferrat: Philip’s kinship with
Isaac and the young Alexius, the traditional Norman-Hohenstaufen hostility
toward Byzantium, Boniface’s family claim to Thessalonica and honors in the
Byzantine empire, and Boniface’s loyalty to Philip were alleged to be the
underlying motives. Innocent III too was declared to be involved in the secret
diplomacy.
For so important a project as the diversion of
the crusade to be carefully plotted in advance, all agree, one must shake Villehardouin’s testimony that the young Alexius landed in
Italy as late as August 1202, since, if he really arrived as late as that, there
would have been no time to hatch the plot, Villehardouin is correct, and one
must accept the théorie du hasard. As a matter of fact, however, we have a good
deal of evidence tending to show that the young Alexius arrived in the west not
in August 1202, but sometime in 1201. If this is accepted, a plot becomes
highly plausible but not absolutely certain,.
The contemporary Byzantine historian, Nicetas Choniates, who is reliable, but whose chronology is often
difficult to unravel, declares that Alexius III Angelus had freed his nephew,
the young Alexius, from prison and taken him along on his campaign against a
rebellious official, Manuel Camytzes, in 1201. Early
in the campaign (1201), Nicetas says, the young Alexius fled the imperial camp,
boarded a Pisan vessel (which had put into the Marmara port of Athyra ostensibly for ballast), escaped his uncle’s agents
by cutting his hair in western style and dressing in western clothes, and
sailed away to the west, where, Nicetas knew, he turned to his sister Irene and
her husband Philip of Swabia for help. The Gesta Innocentii reports that Boniface of
Montferrat visited Innocent in Rome, at a time after Boniface “was said to have
discussed” with Philip of Swabia a plan to restore the young Alexius; with him
he brought a letter from Philip Augustus, to which we have the reply, dated
March 26, 1202. This would push the alleged conversations between Boniface,
Philip, and the young Alexius back to a date in 1201, certainly long before the
summer of 1102, Villehardouin’s date for the arrival
of the young Alexius in the west.
Then too, Alexius III Angelus, who was of course
fully conscious, once his nephew had escaped, of the danger that now threatened
him, wrote to the pope, asking for assurances that he would not support Philip
of Swabia and the young Alexius against him, and offering to negotiate for a
union between the Greek and Latin churches, as the Byzantine emperors usually
did when danger threatened. Innocent answered somewhat reassuringly in a letter
dated November 16, 1202. He reminded Alexius III that papal policy opposed
Philip of Swabia and supported his rival Otto IV for the German imperial
throne. Innocent also referred, however, to a visit which the young Alexius had
paid him in Rome; and in so doing used the word olim to
describe the period elapsing since the visit had taken place. It has been
cogently argued that the word olim could not refer to anything
as recent as August 1202, but must refer to a considerably longer period, as
far back as 1201. The Annals of Cologne also include a passage
which may well date the young Alexius’ arrival in the summer of 1201. Finally,
Robert of Clari tells us that in mid-December 1202 at
Zara, Boniface of Montferrat in a speech to the crusaders, told them that “last
year at Christmas”, that is, Christmas 1201, he had seen the young Alexius at
the court of Philip of Swabia.
When all these passages are taken together, they
strongly suggest that Villehardouin was wrong about the date of the arrival of
the young Alexius in the west, and that he had in fact been there since
sometime in 1201, or long enough to have launched a plot with Boniface and
Philip, and perhaps with the Venetians and the pope. But this is a long way
from proving that such a plot was actually launched. Nor need we believe that
Villehardouin deliberately lied about the time the young Alexius arrived. He
may simply have erred. Moreover, he may be right and the other evidence
misleading. The problem of the diversion is still with us. Though scholars have
not heeded a plea made half a century ago to give up trying to solve an
insoluble problem, the plea itself makes excellent sense. We are unlikely to be
able to go beyond the statement that the diversion which occurred suited the
interests of the young Alexius and Isaac, Philip of Swabia and Boniface of
Montferrat, and the Venetians, and that they may therefore have planned it.
Before the fleet sailed on October 1, 1202,
Innocent III had learned of the plan to attack Zara. He had sent Peter Capuano
to Venice, to accompany the crusaders to the east as papal legate. But the doge
and his council, says the author of the Gesta,
afraid that he would interfere with their wicked plan to attack Zara, told him
bluntly that they would not accept him as a legate; he could come along as a
preacher if he wished; if not, he could go back to Rome. Insulted, he returned
and told Innocent about the proposed attack on a Christian city. The pope wrote
instantly, sending the letter by the hand of abbot Peter of Locedio,
forbidding the crusaders to attack any Christian city, and mentioning Zara
specifically by name as a place in the hands of the king of Hungary, who had
himself taken the cross. Peter Capuano also told the pope about the proposals
to attack Constantinople on behalf of the young Alexius. Innocent’s letter of
November 16, 1202, to Alexius III Angelus, already referred to, assures the
emperor that Philip of Swabia and the young Alexius had indeed sought to loose the crusading force against Constantinople, that the
crusaders had then sent Peter Capuano to the pope to ask his advice, that —
despite Alexius III’s propensity for fine words and no action — the pope would
not permit the attack, although, he said ominously, there were many of his
cardinals who thought he ought to allow it because of the disobedience of the
Greek church.
But the papal commands, however firmly intended,
were disobeyed. During the first week of October 1202, the great fleet (from
200 to 230 ships, including sixty galleys, and the rest transports, some with
special hatches for horses) sailed out into the Adriatic. For more than a month
it coasted along the Istrian and Dalmatian shores, putting in at various ports
in an awesome demonstration of Venetian might. On November 10 it appeared off
Zara. Quite probably because of papal warning of excommunication, Boniface had
prudently stayed behind, and did not participate in the operations. It was
after the landing at Zara that the disaffection that had been brewing in the
host came into the open. Some of the barons belonging to the party that had
opposed the attack on Zara from the beginning sent word to the defenders not to
capitulate, for the crusaders, they said, would not take part in the assault.
At an assembly of the crusading leaders and the Venetians, abbot Guy of Les
Vaux-de-Cernay arose and forbade the attack in the
name of the pope. He was supported in his opposition by Simon of Montfort and a
number of the high barons. The leaders, however, persuaded the majority of the
crusaders that they were bound to help the Venetians capture the city, although
Simon of Montfort with his followers withdrew some distance from the walls so
as to have no part in the sinful action. After two weeks of siege and assault,
Zara surrendered; the garrison and inhabitants were spared, but the crusaders
and Venetians occupied the city, dividing the booty between them. By this time
(November 24, 1202), it was too late to undertake the passage overseas, and the
expedition wintered in Zara. Within three days a major riot broke out between
French and Venetians, ending in many casualties.
In mid-December, Boniface of Montferrat arrived.
Some two weeks later came envoys bearing proposals from Philip of Swabia and
the young Alexius: if the armies would help Isaac Angelus and the young Alexius
recover the Byzantine imperial throne, they would bring the empire back into
submission to the papacy. Moreover, they would give 200,000 marks of silver, to
be divided equally between the crusaders and the Venetians, and would also pay
for provisions for the whole expedition for an additional year. The young
Alexius would then join the crusade against the Saracens in person, if the
leaders wanted him to do so, but in any case he would contribute an army of
10,000 Greeks, and would maintain at his own expense as long as he should live
a garrison of 500 knights to serve in Syria in defense of the Holy Land.
At the headquarters of the Venetians, the doge
and the leading barons heard this tempting offer. The next day, at a general
assembly of the host, the lesser men heard the proposals for the first time.
The majority of the rank and file clearly opposed further warfare against
Christians, and, supported by some of the clergy, urged that the armies proceed
directly to Palestine. Many of the important barons shared this view. But even
the clergy was divided, some arguing, like the leaders — whose opinions
Villehardouin reflects — that the only way to recover Jerusalem was to begin
the war by the Byzantine adventure. Despite the divided opinion, the chiefs of
the expedition, including Boniface, Baldwin of Flanders, Louis of Blois, Hugh
of St Pol, and others — fewer than twenty — signed the agreement accepting the
offer of the young Alexius and pledging the host to intervention at
Constantinople. The move did not end dissension. Many of the lesser people,
suffering from hunger and other discomforts while the more important barons
monopolized the army’s resources, deserted during the winter, fleeing in
merchant ships, some of which were lost at sea, or by land through Croatian
territory, where the inhabitants massacred them. One group of nobles also
departed, swearing that they would return after delivering messages in Syria;
but they did not come back. A Flemish contingent, which had been proceeding by
sea, arrived safely in Marseilles; although Baldwin commanded its leaders to
make rendezvous with the main body off the coast of Greece, they went instead
direct to Palestine. Simon of Montfort, Enguerrand of Boves, and other important barons also departed,
having made arrangements with king Emeric of Hungary to permit them to pass
through his Croatian territories, and thus regain Italy by marching along the
shores of the Adriatic. These defections, Villehardouin reports bitterly, hurt
the crusader forces seriously.
Those crusaders who had taken part in the attack
on Zara in defiance of the pope’s specific commands, had automatically incurred
excommunication. The leaders now first secured provisional absolution from the
bishops in the host, and then sent a delegation to Rome to explain to Innocent
how they had been unwillingly forced into the sin of disobedience, and to ask
forgiveness. Eager not to jeopardize the success of the whole crusade, of which
he still expected great things the pope received the delegates kindly. He sent
them back with a reproving letter, but not nearly so vigorous in its
denunciation of the taking of Zara as one might have expected. After the guilty
crusaders should have restored what they had taken illegally, and on condition
that they commit no more such offenses, the pope agreed to absolve them. The
Venetians, however, could not be let off so easily. They had rebuffed Peter
Capuano at Venice, had openly flouted Innocent’s warning not to attack Zara,
and had shown no signs of repentance. Though the envoys of the crusaders tried
to dissuade the pope from excommunicating them, he would not accede. Indeed the
papal emissary who brought the letter of absolution for the crusaders bore also
a letter of excommunication for the doge and the Venetians. Boniface and his
fellow barons, however, took it upon themselves to withhold this letter. They
wrote the pope explaining that they had done so to prevent the dissolution of
the crusade, and saying that they would deliver it if the pope should still
insist.
The surviving correspondence between pope and
crusaders up to this point deals only with Zara. Yet the pope was well aware of
the designs upon Constantinople. We have observed his reference to them in his
letter of November 1202 to Alexius III. It was not until Innocent received
Boniface’s letter explaining the withholding of the papal ban from the
Venetians that, in June 1203, he finally wrote commanding Boniface to deliver
the letter of excommunication on pain of incurring a similar punishment himself,
and flatly forbidding the attack on Constantinople. By then it was too late.
The fleet had left Zara before the letter was written, much less delivered. How
for does the curious papal failure to condemn the diversion in time argue
Innocent’s complicity in a plot? Some modern historians believe that the pope
was protesting “for the record”, and had secretly endorsed the attack on
Constantinople. The Greeks, from that day to this, have regarded Innocent as
the ringleader in a plot. It seems more likely that Innocent rather allowed the
diversion to happen. Perhaps he felt he could not prevent it. Moreover, it
promised to achieve— though by methods he could not publicly endorse — one of
the chief aims of his foreign policy, the union of the churches, and simultaneously
to further a second aim, the crusade.
From Zara, most of the army sailed early in
April 1203, Dandolo and Boniface remaining behind until the young Alexius could
join them. Then they touched at Durazzo (Dyrrachium), where the population
received the young Alexius as their emperor. The news that the great expedition
had now been launched against him came direct from Durazzo to Alexius III in
Constantinople, where bad naval administration had reduced the city’s defenses
to a pathetically low level. So fond was Alexius III of hunting that the
imperial foresters would not permit the cutting of trees for ship-timber, while
the admiral of the fleet, Michael Stryphnus,
brother-in-law of the empress Euphrosyne, sold nails, anchors, and sails alike
for money. Only about twenty rotten and worm-eaten vessels could now be hastily
assembled. Meanwhile the advance party of the crusaders had arrived in Corfu,
where the inhabitants at first received them cordially. The arrival of the
young Alexius, however, spurred the Corfiotes to
attack the fleet in the harbor. In revenge, the armies devastated the island.
It was already clear that the appearance of a Latin-sponsored claimant to the
Byzantine imperial throne — no matter how legitimate his claim — would arouse
only hostility among Greeks.
At Corfu Alexius confirmed his agreements, and,
in all probability, undertook to give Crete to Boniface. Here too, the leaders
had to face new dissension. A large group of the barons — perhaps half of the
total — who had opposed the diversion to Constantinople now withdrew from the
host and set up camp by themselves, intending to send over to Brindisi and
secure ships to take them direct to Syria. Boniface and the counts and a number
of high barons, accompanied by the bishops and abbots and by the young Alexius,
went to the camp of these “deserters”, and besought them with tears not to
break up the host in this way. Finally the recalcitrants yielded; they would stay with the expedition until Michaelmas (September 29),
on the solemn assurance that at any time after that date, on two weeks’ notice,
they would be supplied with ships to transport them to Palestine.
Leaving Corfu on the eve of Pentecost (May 24,
1203), the fleet set sail for Constantinople. It skirted the Morea, entered the
Aegean Sea, and made its first landing on the island of Euboea (Negroponte),
whence some of the galleys and transports detoured to the island of Andros and
forced the inhabitants to recognize young Alexius and pay him tribute. The rest
of the ships proceeded to Abydus on the Asiatic shore
at the mouth of the Dardanelles, and occupied it without resistance. Taking
advantage of the spring harvest, the host took wheat on board. A week later,
after the other vessels had come up, the reunited fleet passed through the
Dardanelles and the Sea of Marmara, and anchored off the abbey of St, Stephen,
seven miles south of Constantinople, now in full view. Having foraged on the
Marmara islands, the fleet passed so close to the walls of the capital that
some of the defenders opened fire. It then landed and disembarked men and
horses at Chalcedon on St, John’s day, June 24, just a month after the
departure from Corfu. From Chalcedon the crusaders set out by land for Scutari
(Chrysopolis), a league to the north, while the ships followed along the shore.
At Scutari, foraging parties raided the land
around for provisions, and the crusaders had their first encounter with the
armed forces of emperor Alexius III, when a scouting party of some eighty
knights attacked and put to flight a much larger body of Greek troops that had
been stationed to watch their movements. An envoy from Constantinople now
arrived at the camp at Scutari with a message from the emperor. He demanded to
know what they were doing in his land, since they were supposed to be on their
way to recover the Holy Sepulcher; if they were in need, he would gladly give
them provisions for their journey, but if they harbored any hostile intentions
toward him or his empire, he would destroy them to a man. The crusader spokesman,
Conon of Bethune, answered that Alexius III was a traitor and usurper, and
demanded his surrender to his nephew, whom, Conon said, the crusaders would try
to persuade to treat him gently.
After sending back this defiance, the leaders
decided to appeal to the people of Constantinople to acknowledge their protégé.
The galleys set out from the harbor of Scutari, one of them bearing the young
Alexius, Boniface, and Dandolo, and sailed as close as they could to the sea
walls, while those on board shouted out to the crowds thronging the shore and
the walls that they were come to help the people of Constantinople overthrow
their tyrant and restore their rightful lord. The demonstration failed, as the
only response was a shower of missiles.
So the leaders now made preparations for an
attack, mustering their forces (probably something over 10,000) in the plain
outside Scutari in seven '”battles” or divisions, each containing as far as
possible men of the same region and each commanded by one of the counts or high
barons. On July 5 the fleet crossed the Bosporus; the French repulsed a
Byzantine force and made a landing at Galata, across the Golden Horn from
Constantinople. The next day the French stormed and captured Galata’s principal
defense work, a great tower. The Venetian fleet broke the harbor chain that
closed the opening of the Golden Horn, and moved in, sinking or capturing the
few Byzantine galleys stationed there as a defending force. They now wanted to
concentrate the attack against the sea walls from the waters of the Golden
Horn; but the French preferred to fight on land, and agreed to time their
assault to coincide with the Venetian action. So the French forces now marched
inland from Pera along the shore of the Golden Horn
until they came to the little stream at its upper end. Over this they threw a
bridge, then crossed and established their camp outside the land walls of the
city near the Blachernae palace, at the angle between the land walls and the
walls of the Golden Horn. The Venetian fleet moved up to the inner end of the
harbor, and maintained contact, preparing scaling ladders and siege artillery,
and building platforms high up on the spars of their galleys. Repeated
Byzantine sorties kept the land forces engaged, and necessitated the building
of palisades around the camp. It was ten days before the preparations for the
assault were complete.
It came on July 17. The Varangian guard of
English and Danes successfully defended with swords and axes the section of
wall chosen by the French crusaders, but the Venetians, with the blind old
Dandolo waving the banner of St, Mark in the foremost galley and shouting at
his forces, beached their galleys below the sea walls, and with scaling ladders
seized first one tower and then another until they held twenty-five along the
sea wall, and actually were capturing horses within the walls and sending them
to the crusader forces by boat. For defense against the vastly superior
Byzantine forces, they set fire to the buildings inside the walls, destroying
the whole neighborhood utterly and beginning the tragic ruin of the city.
Meanwhile Alexius III with a huge army made a sortie against the crusader
battalions attacking the land walls. Wisely refusing to break ranks, the
crusaders drew up before their camp, and awaited an onslaught which, in the
end, failed to materialize; Alexius III approached close, but then withdrew. At
the news of the Byzantine sortie, Dandolo ordered his forces to withdraw from
the towers they held, and the Venetians now joined the French. Despite the
temporary lodgment of the Venetians on the walls, the action as a whole had
failed.
But that night Alexius III fled with his
daughter Irene and his jewels to Mosynopolis, a
Thracian town. Abandoned, the Byzantine officials released Isaac from prison
and restored him to office, sending messengers before dawn to inform the Latins
of their action. The wary host sent four representatives, two Frenchmen and two
Venetians, to investigate the truth of the report. Through the open gate and
between the lines of the axe-bearing Varangians, Villehardouin and his three
colleagues came into the Blachernae and the presence of Isaac Angelus. They
required him to ratify the obligations which the young Alexius had assumed
toward the crusading army, and returned with the proper chrysobull, reluctantly granted. Then the Byzantines
opened the city to the entire crusading force, which escorted the young Alexius
into the capital. The next day the Latins yielded to the urgent request of
Isaac and Alexius to take their forces out of Constantinople proper, in order
to avoid a riot, and to lodge them across the Golden Horn in the Jewish suburb
of Estanor, now Pera. The
object of the expedition attained, the Latins became wide-eyed tourists amid
the marvels of Byzantium, wondering at the sacred relics, buying briskly from
the Greeks.
On August 1, 1203, the young Alexius was
crowned co-emperor. Late in August 1203 the leaders sent to the pope and the
monarchs of the west an official circular letter, explaining their decision to
go to Constantinople, recounting their experiences since their departure from
Zara, announcing the postponement of the attack on Egypt until the spring, and
summoning crusading Europe to join the host there in glorious deeds against the
“infidel”. This letter was apparently the first word Innocent III had had from
the expedition since it had left Zara in April. He also received an
accompanying letter from Alexius IV, dated August 23, in which the newly
elected emperor assured the pope of his filial devotion and of his firm
intention to bring the Greek church back into obedience to Rome. Not until
February 1204 did the pope reply, reproving the leaders for their disobedience,
and commanding them to proceed at once with all their forces to the rescue of the
Holy Land. He conjured young Alexius to fulfill his promise in respect to the
Greek church, and warned him that, unless he did so, his rule could not endure.
To the doge of Venice, who apparently had sent a conciliatory message, he
recalled the Venetians’ persistent disobedience, and admonished him not to
forget his vows as a crusader. He wrote also to the French clergy in the host
commanding them to see to it that the leaders did penance for their misdeeds
and carried out their professed good intentions. By the time the pope’s
admonitions and instructions arrived, the dizzy pace of events in
Constantinople had presented Christendom with a startling new development.
In the months between August 1203 and March 1204
relations rapidly deteriorated between the crusading armies and the emperors
they had restored. Alexius IV began to pay installments on his debt of 200,000
marks to the crusaders, who in turn paid off their own debt to the Venetians
and reimbursed the knights who had paid passage money from Venice. But the
leaders once more postponed departure for Palestine, as Alexius IV begged them
to delay until the following March (1204) in order that he might have time to
raise the rest of the money he owed them. So greatly did the Greeks hate him,
because he had won restoration through a Latin army, that he declared he feared
for his life. He hoped, however, to make himself secure within the next seven
months. Meanwhile he promised to pay for the Venetian fleet for an additional
year, and asked the crusaders to renew their own agreement with the Venetians.
The leaders agreed, but when the news became known, those who at Corfu had
opposed the entire venture demanded ships for immediate passage to Syria, and
were with difficulty persuaded to stay.
While Alexius IV was out of Constantinople with
some of the Latins on an imperial progress to receive homage, to assert his
sovereignty over disloyal territory, and to try to capture his uncle Alexius
III, tension ruled in the city. The Greek clergy were vigorously resisting
Alexius’ efforts to effect a union with Rome, and smoldered with resentment at
his melting down church vessels to get money to pay the Latins. Bitter hatred
swept the Greeks at the sight of their new emperor fraternizing with the hated Latins-Greeks
pillaged the old quarters of the established Latin merchants. Latins burned
down a mosque, and probably started a great conflagration, which lasted a week,
endangered Hagia Sophia, did vast damage, and killed many people. To avoid a
massacre, the remaining resident Latins took their families and as much as they
could of their property, and crossed the harbor to join the crusaders. On his
return, Alexius IV changed his attitude towards the Latins, stopped visiting
their camp, gave them only token payments, and began to put them off with
excuses. In November 1203 a six-man delegation, three French and three
Venetian, delivered an ultimatum to Isaac and Alexius. Relations now
degenerated into war.
Twice the Greeks sent fire-ships in the harbor
down against the Venetian fleet in a determined but unsuccessful effort to burn
it. By now a conspiracy had been hatched inside the city against the pro-Latin
Alexius IV. At its head was the son-in-law of Alexius III, a Ducas also named Alexius, known as Mourtzouphlus because his bushy eyebrows met. Late in January 1204 a mob in Hagia Sophia told
the senate and the high clergy that they would no longer be ruled by the Angeli. An unwilling youth, Nicholas Canabus,
was put forward and chosen emperor. Alexius IV appealed to the crusaders to
occupy the Blachernae and give him protection, but chose as envoy Mourtzouphlus himself, the leading spirit of the
conspiracy. Shedding the cloak of deceit, Mourtzouphlus came out into the open, seized the throne late in January, and early in
February imprisoned and probably executed Canabus;
strangled Alexius IV with a bowstring; possibly murdered Isaac, who in any case
soon died; and seized the throne. Alexius V Ducas Mourtzouphlus, a great-great-grandson of Alexius I Comnenus,
thus came to power as the avowed leader of the passionately anti-Latin
populace. Warfare between the Greeks and the Latins continued. Alexius V
restored the sea walls and added new wooden defenses; he took personal command
of his troops and in one sharp skirmish against Henry, brother of Baldwin of
Flanders, suffered defeat and lost a celebrated icon he was using as a
standard.
The leaders of the crusade now decided to take
Constantinople for a second time, acting on their own behalf. In March 1204
Dandolo, acting for Venice, and Boniface, Baldwin, Louis of Blois, and Hugh of
St. Pol acting for the non-Venetians, concluded a new treaty regulating their
behavior after the city should have fallen. All booty was to be piled up in one
place. The Venetians would receive three quarters of it up to the amount needed
to pay the remaining debt owed them by the crusaders, while the non-Venetians
would receive one quarter. Anything over and above the amount of the debt would
be evenly divided between the two parties, but if the total should be
insufficient to pay the debt, the non-Venetians would none the less receive one
quarter. Food would be divided equally. Venice would retain all titles and
property, lay and ecclesiastical, previously held in the Byzantine empire, and
all privileges, written and unwritten.
Twelve electors, six Venetians and six
non-Venetians, would then proceed to elect a Latin emperor. He would have one
quarter of the empire, including the two Byzantine imperial palaces, Blachernae
and Boukoleon. The remaining three quarters would be
divided evenly between Venetians and non-Venetians. The clergy of the party to
which the emperor did not belong, would then have the right to name a cathedral
chapter for Hagia Sophia, which in turn would choose a patriarch. Each party
would name clergy for its own churches. The conquerors would give to the church
only as much of the Greek churches’ property as would enable the clergy to live
decently. All church property above and beyond this minimum would be divided with
all the other booty.
Both parties agreed to remain in the east for
one year to assist the new Latin empire and emperor; thereafter, all who might
remain would take an oath to the emperor, and would swear to maintain all
previous agreements. Each party would select a dozen or more representatives to
serve on a mixed commission to distribute fiefs and titles among the host, and
to assign the services which the recipients would owe the emperor and empire.
Fiefs would be hereditary, and might pass in the female line; their holders
might do what they wished with their own, saving the rights of the emperor and
the military service owed to him. The emperor would provide all forces needful
beyond those owed by his feudatories. No citizen of a state at war with Venice
might be received during such a war in the territory of the empire. Both
parties pledged themselves to petition the pope to make all violations of the
pact punishable by excommunication. The emperor must swear to abide by all
agreements between the parties. If any amendment to the present agreement
should be thought desirable, it might be made at the discretion of the doge and
six councilors, acting together with Boniface and six councilors. The doge
would not be bound by any oath to render service to the emperor for any fief or
title assigned to him, but all those to whom the doge might assign such fiefs
or titles would be bound by oath to render all due service to the emperor as
well.
The provisions of this pact of March 1204
foreshadow the future problems of the Latins at Constantinople. Though
crusaders and Venetians clearly regarded their operations as a raid for
plunder, they nevertheless proposed to found a new state on the very ground
they intended to ravage. The future emperor would have only a quarter of the
empire; the doge, who would take no oath to him, would have three eighths.
Though the doge’s own vassals would owe military service, the doge himself
would not. The emperor would have to supply all necessary troops and equipment
beyond what might be furnished by the feudatories. Yet he himself would not
even participate in the distribution of fiefs or the assignment of obligations.
Before the first Latin emperor of Constantinople was even chosen, his
fellow-Latins had made it certain that he would be a feudal monarch with
insufficient resources and little power. The Venetian establishment in former
Byzantine territory, however, was greatly strengthened. No longer dependent
upon grants from successive Byzantine emperors, the Venetians had “constitutionally”
excluded their enemies from competition. Laymen had disposed, in advance, of
the most important ecclesiastical office, and had virtually secularized church
property. Taken together with subsequent Venetian behavior, the treaty of March
1204 indicates that Dandolo had little interest in the title of emperor, and
was ready to let the crusaders take the post for one of their own candidates,
in exchange for the commercial and ecclesiastical supremacy.
This agreement made, the Venetians busied themselves
with getting the fleet ready for action. This time a combined force of
crusaders and Venetians operating from the ships would launch the assault
against the sea walls on April 9. At daybreak the fleet stood out across the
harbor on a front a half league long, with the great freighters interspersed
between the galleys and the horse transports. The freighters were brought as
close to the wall as possible and the flying bridges swung out to reach the
tops of the towers, while some of the troops disembarked and tried to scale the
walls from the ground. On this day the assault failed and after several hours
of desperate fighting the assailants gave up the attempt, reembarked on the
vessels, and returned to the camp across the harbor. On April 12th they renewed
the attack. With a strong wind at its back the fleet crossed the harbor and
made for the same section of the wall. The great freighters were able to
grapple their flying bridges onto the tops of a few of the towers and the
troops swarmed over and drove off the defenders. Others landed, scaled the
walls, and broke down the gates from inside. The horses were led ashore from
the transports; the knights mounted and rode through the gates. The Greeks
retreated farther within the city, and the assailants consolidated their hold
on the section in front of the wall they had taken. During the night some of
the Germans in the division of the marquis, fearing an attack, set fire to the
buildings in front of them, and a new conflagration raged through that part of
the city, to add to the terrors of the populace.
That night the crusaders and Venetians slept on
their arms, expecting to have to renew the fighting in the morning. In fact,
however, Mourtzouphlus had fled the city, and the
Latins entered meeting no further resistance. For three days they indulged in
excesses which the Greeks have not forgotten to this day, and which Innocent
III himself bitterly condemned when he heard of them. The Latins defiled Greek
sanctuaries, murdered and raped, stole and destroyed the celebrated monuments
of the capital. The historian Nicetas Choniates wrote
a separate treatise on the statues which had perished in the terror. When it
was over, Boniface of Montferrat ordered all booty brought in for division.
Many risked execution in an effort to keep what they had already seized, and
much was doubtless concealed. But what was turned in yielded 400,000 marks and
10,000 suits of armor. The humbler knights resented the greed of the leaders,
who took all the gold and silk and fine houses for themselves, leaving the
poorer men only the plain silver ornaments, such as the pitchers which the
Greek ladies of Constantinople had carried with them to the baths. Sacred
relics shared the fate of profane wealth. The Fourth Crusade had come a long way
from Ecry, and now terminated without having
encountered a single armed Moslem.
Indeed, we may regard the momentous events of
1203-1204 as the culmination of an assault of the Latin west upon the Byzantine
east that had been intermittently under way for more than a century. Boniface
of Montferrat, as ally of Philip of Swabia, had inherited the anti-Byzantine
ambitions of Robert Guiscard, Bohemond, the Norman kings of Sicily, and their
Hohenstaufen heir, Henry VI, as well as the claims of his own elder brothers,
Conrad and Renier. Dandolo was avenging the Byzantine massacre of the Latin
residents of Constantinople in 1182, the mass arrest of the Venetians by Manuel
Comnenus in 1171 (the bills for this affair had never been settled), and
possibly early injuries to himself; these episodes had in turn sprung out of
the natural mutual hatred between the Greek population and the pushing, rowdy,
shrewd, and successful Italian interlopers in Constantinople, whose privileges
and possessions in the capital dated back to the chrysobull of
Alexius I of 1082. In the French and German barons of 1204 we may see the
successors of all those hosts of crusaders that had poured through
Constantinople, with an envious eye to its wealth and a scornful distaste for
its inhabitants, since the days of Godfrey of Bouillon, or Louis VII, or
Frederick Barbarossa. The sword that had hung precariously over the heads of
the Byzantines for so long had fallen at last.
CHAPTER XXVTHE LATIN EMPIRE OF CONSTANTINOPLE : 1204-1261 |