CRISTO RAUL.ORG ' |
MEDIEVAL HISTORY LIBRARY DOOR |
CHAPTER IX. THE FIRST
CRUSADE:
When the pope announced his
plan for a holy war against the Moslems in the east for the recovery of the
Holy Sepulcher, he directed his appeal to fighting men. Plenary indulgence and
other inducements seem to have been intended for those who would fight their
way through to Jerusalem or die in the attempt. To men who regarded fighting as
an honorable profession, what be better, as a troubadour saw it,
than to escape hell by doing deeds of honor? But crowds of lesser folk,
noncombatant pilgrims, became enthusiastic about making the trip to the holy
places in the wake of armed forces; and Urban, when he realized that such folk
would be a hindrance to the expedition, made some effort to prevent them from
going. Thus, in his letter to the people of Bologna, he definitely excluded old
people, those unfit to fight, women without husbands or guardians, clerics
without consent of their superiors, or laymen without clerical blessing. Robert
reports that Urban had said that the benefits of the journey were not for the
members of the clergy who went without the consent of their bishops. But the
urge to go became too strong to be restrained by such regulations. Much more
effective, as the story of the march to Constantinople reveals, was the
necessity of having the means to meet the expenses of the journey.
The chroniclers tell how the
news of this new way to salvation, “constituted by God”, literally flew about
the world. Robert the Monk, for whom modern wireless would have been no
surprise, says that it was known everywhere on the very day that it was
announced at Clermont. But Urban instructed the churchmen to go home from the
council and preach the crusade. As Baldric relates, “And turning to the
bishops, he said, You, brothers and fellow bishops; you, fellow priests and
sharers with us in Christ, make the same announcement through the churches
committed to you and with your whole soul vigorously preach the journey to
Jerusalem”. The importance of the clergy as publicists of the pope’s
undertaking is made clearer by Ekkehard, who believed that the “eastern Franks”
had remained in ignorance of the movement until crusaders came trooping through
their country because the schism had prevented any of their clergy from going to
Clermont and bringing back the news. Southern Italy also seems to have learned
about the crusade late, if we can believe the author of the Gesta, who says that Bohemond did not know about
this “new way of penance” until crusaders came into Italy from France. It seems
likely that Norman Italy thus did not have members of the clergy returning from
Clermont. Also, we know a little about the pope’s use of churchmen. Gerento, abbot of St. Bénigne,
was delegated to promote the crusade in Normandy and England, and two bishops
were sent to rouse the citizens of the maritime republic of Genoa. Robert of Arbrissel, and possibly Peter the Hermit, received papal
encouragement to preach the crusade. It was, of course, an exciting idea, and
once made public by the clergy, it spread rapidly among the people.
The chroniclers give
ridiculously exaggerated estimates of the numbers of those who responded to the
call. Fulcher mentions a “countless multitude, speaking many languages”; while
Guibert says that the movement took in “the whole of Christendom capable of
bearing arms”. If it was God’s work, as contemporaries believed, the numbers
given had to be sufficient to justify such inspiration, and there was no need
to ask about contributory mundane conditions or causes. Ekkehard was
exceptional in noting that the eastern Franks were more easily persuaded to
leave their homes because they had been afflicted for some time by civil
strife, famine, and pestilence. Guibert also took note of economic conditions
in saying that the French had suffered much from famines. Some modern
historians have been intrigued by this eleventh-century suggestion, and have
labored the notion that recruiting for the crusade was facilitated by
unfavorable economic conditions, especially famines, in the west.
Such statistical evidence as
may be obtained by counting up references to famines does not prove that
conditions were more unfavorable at this time and many of the famines reported
were local. But it is now quite generally believed that the last half of the
eleventh century was a period of rising prosperity, marked by reviving trade,
industry, town life, and expansion of agriculture. Money was beginning to
circulate more widely, and there is evidence to indicate that pilgrims and
crusaders obtained money by mortgaging or selling their property. Ready cash
was necessary for the journey, as large numbers of people could not get very
far on the way toward the Holy Sepulcher by depending upon foraging or charity.
Guibert says that when the “cry of crusade” came, “the famine disappeared and
was followed by abundance ... each one hastened to convert into money
everything that he did not need for the journey. What cost most were goods
needed for the journey, others sold for nothing”. As cartularies indicate, the church
did a good business in mortgaging and buying the property of crusaders who
needed money for the long journey.
Alexius, it may be assumed,
hoped to have fighting men to serve in his armies — mercenaries, according to Chalandon — and as reported by Bernold, when Urban called
for volunteers at Piacenza, he told those who might go to take an oath to obey
the emperor. But the basileus became alarmed when he learned the extent of the
movement of people who were coming to help; “all the barbarians between the
Adriatic and the Pillars of Hercules”, his daughter Anna rhetorized. He knew
from experience how dangerous these westerners were when aroused, that they
were greedy and fickle fellows who could not be bound by any agreements. The
first problem that confronted the emperor, however, was how to get them through
the Balkan provinces without trouble, and arrangements to do this were made
much more difficult because the armies were accompanied by art unarmed
multitude of pilgrims. Practically the only information about Byzantine plans
to handle this sudden influx from the west is found in the Alexiad of Anna Comnena,
who was an impressionable girl of thirteen when it happened, but did not write
about it until forty years later. She describes the plans of the imperial
government so clearly that it may well be that she obtained her information
from an official document.
There were two main routes
through the Balkans that led to Constantinople. Earlier in the eleventh century
many pilgrims from Germany had gone through Hungary to enter the empire at
Belgrade, and had then followed the road that went through Nish (Naissus),
Sofia (Sardica), Philippopolis, and Adrianople to the Byzantine capital. But as
the result of disorders in Bulgaria, this route had become less popular than
the old Via Egnatia, which began at Dyrrachium
(Durazzo), and ran through Ochrida, Monastir, Vodena,
and Thessalonica, and on to Constantinople. The northern road, of course, was
an all-land route. It was, naturally, necessary for travelers to cross the
Adriatic to get to Dyrrachium, unless they went around the northern end of this
sea through wild and desolate regions. It was Anna's recollection that all the
crusaders came over the southern road, probably because her cousin, John
Comnenus, was stationed in the western part of the empire, and a large military
force was sent there to guard against a Norman effort to capture Dyrrachium
again.
To handle the crowds expected
from the west, the imperial government planned to send officials who would be
provided with interpreters familiar with Latin. Commanders of Byzantine ships,
who watched for pirates in the Adriatic, were instructed to bring word of
approaching pilgrim transports, so that the officials could greet them and take
them in hand. Military forces were to serve as escorts, and “discreetly” put
them back on the road by light skirmishing if they strayed out of bounds.
Finally, and what was very necessary if foraging was to be prevented, the
government planned to have stores of provisions at the larger towns on the
routes so that pilgrims and crusaders could provide themselves with food —
provided they could pay for it, of course. That these plans were carried out is
evident from the accounts of western chroniclers.
Unfortunately, bands of pilgrims
and crusaders began to arrive in Bulgaria before Byzantine officials were ready
to take care of them. Possibly the imperial government had assumed that the
date set by the pope, August 15, 1096, would be observed, or, as may be
inferred from Anna, it had been assumed that the northern route would not be
much used. And it is entirely probable that Urban himself was surprised that
crusading bands went off ahead of the time set and did not wait for his legate, Adhémar, as he had proposed to the Flemings. But
early in February, while the pope was north of the Loire in western France, a
group of lords met at Paris, and, in the presence of their excommunicated king,
chose his brother, Hugh, count of Vermandois, to lead
them on the crusade. At the same lime, lesser folk, aroused by the preaching of
Peter the Hermit, were marching north through Capetian territories, and it was
this popular movement, which is known as the Peasants’ or People’s Crusade,
that was responsible for the premature appearance of bands of crusaders and
pilgrims on the northern road into the Byzantine empire.
Peter had high credentials. He
carried a letter which was said to have fallen from heaven, and it contained a
prophecy chat the Christians would drive the “infidels” from the holy places if
they tried. According to another story, the Hermit had seen Christ in a vision
as he prayed at the Holy Sepulcher, for it was long believed that he had gone
on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and that on his return he had persuaded pope
Urban to launch the crusade. This legend, related by Albert of Abe, was given
wider currency by William of Tyre. Thus it came to be believed that Peter, not
Urban, initiated the crusade, and this explanation was accepted until late in
the nineteenth century, when it finally became clear that there was no evidence
to show that Peter had any influence on the pope.
Peter, who seems to have been
born in Picardy, was a small man, “short in stature, but great in heart and
eloquence”. At a time when popular preaching was unusual, he had great
influence, and many followed him as he moved northward from Berry through
Capetian territory. At Étampes he enlisted Geoffrey Burel, known as Master of
the Footmen, and at Poissy he was joined by a knight
named Walter, with his nephews, Walter Sans-Avoir (“the Penniless”), William, Matthew, and Simon. Reginald of Bray came from the
vicinity of Liège. It was with a considerable following that Peter arrived at
Trier in April, and a few days later he was preaching at Cologne. But the
“proud Franks” became impatient, and under the leadership of Walter Sans-Avoir started off toward Constantinople. Albert says there
were only eight knights in this band, which clearly consisted largely of
pilgrims. Walter, an outstanding knight, according to Fulcher of Chartres,
proved to be a capable leader, and his followers seem to have been well
prepared, and they were orderly and peaceful on their journey.
The Germans ridiculed these
pilgrims for having sold their property in order to go on what they thought was
a foolish journey, saying that they had exchanged the certain for the
uncertain, and had abandoned the land of their birth for a doubtful land of
promise. But the Germans, who knew little about the movement at first, changed
their attitude as they saw the crowds, who seem to have been very orderly,
cross through their country. Certainly, king Coloman did not hesitate to grant Walter’s request for permission to cross Hungary with
the privilege of buying food along the way. This concession was made, the
chronicler says, because Walter seemed a worthy man, who had undertaken his
journey with the best of intentions. Hungarians, of course, were accustomed to
pilgrim travel through their country.
After marching through
Hungary, Walter’s band crossed the Sava river into Bulgaria. Nicetas, the
Byzantine governor of Bulgaria, who was stationed at Nish, either was without
instructions about how to handle crusading bands, or had not informed whoever
was in command at Belgrade, and Walter’s request for market privileges was denied.
To complicate matters at this time, sixteen stragglers, who had remained behind
at Semlin, in Hungary, came in with complaints of
being robbed. Walter wisely refused to consider retaliation. In the meantime,
further trouble had arisen at Belgrade, where, unable to buy food, his people
had spread out in the countryside to forage. Some sixty pilgrims were
surrounded in a church, where they were burned to death. Walter, to avoid
further trouble, hurried his band off along the road to Nish through the Bulgarian
forests. When they arrived at this town on June 18, Nicetas granted market
privileges and even made good the losses, at the same time assuring Walter that
his people would be able to buy provisions on the rest of the way to
Constantinople. Conducted by an escort, this band reached Constantinople
without further difficulty, and the only incident recorded on this last stage
of the journey is the death of the older Walter, whose body was found to be
marked with a cross. At the capital city, where they arrived about mid-July,
Walter and his people made camp outside the walls to await the coming of Peter.
They had behaved very well, and had asked only for the right to buy their food,
which was precisely what the Byzantine government had planned to provide.
Peter, the preacher who could
arouse emotions, was not as capable a leader as the knight, Walter.
Nevertheless, it seems certain that he intended to have a peaceful journey, as
his followers were prepared to pay their way and do not seem to have been guilty
of the persecution of the Jews which became so prevalent in the Rhine valley
after their departure. Peter, to be sure, had a letter from French Jews
advising their brethren elsewhere to aid Peter for the good of Israel, which
may mean that he threatened them to obtain money; and later on we learn that he
had a treasure chest. Peter’s following, after the departure of the French,
probably consisted mainly of Germans who were recruited in the Rhineland.
Ordericus Vitalis says that he added many by his preaching at Cologne, and it
seems that he was accompanied by two German counts and a bishop. Albert
mentions French, Lorrainers, Swabians, and Bavarians, the last being added on
the march through southern Germany. At Odenburg (Sopron) on the Hungarian boundary, Peter waited until he received permission
to march through Hungary, which was granted by king Coloman with the stipulation that there should be no pillaging nor disputes about
markets. Peter agreed to the terms, and his band was orderly until Semlin was reached, where some of the crusaders became so
indignant at seeing the clothing and arms of the sixteen stragglers from
Walter's band, hanging defiantly from the walls, that they captured the town by
assault. They were also disturbed by a rumor that one of Coloman’s officials, named Guz — Runciman suggests that he may
have been a Ghuzz (the Arabic form of Oghuz) Turk —
was plotting with Nicetas against them, Peter seems to have lost control of the
hotheads in his band, and, fearing retaliation, he made haste to get his people
out of Hungary.
As few boats were available,
his people had to take time to construct rafts, watched by Pechenegs, Byzantine
mercenaries, gathered on the Bulgarian side of the Sava, possibly to act as an
escort. After a brush with these mercenaries, in which a few were captured, the
crossing was made, and the band moved on to Belgrade, which they found
deserted. By July 2 they reached Nish, where the chronicler says Nicetas had
collected Bulgars, Kumans, Pechenegs, and Hungarians for the defense of the
town. But he granted markets on condition that hostages, Walter of Breteuil and
Geoffrey Burel, should be given as a pledge for good behavior, who, as all went
well, were released the next morning.
According to Albert’s
information, some Germans who had become quarrelsome while trading with
citizens set fire to some mills outside the walls, and imperial troops then
attacked the baggage train which was in the rear of the departing crusaders and
pilgrims, and captured women and children. Albert thought these unfortunates
were still in captivity when he was writing his history more than a quarter of
a century later. Peter hurried back and ordered his people to do nothing until
he could negotiate with Nicetas for the return of the prisoners, but,
disregarding orders, headstrong young men attempted to storm the walls of the
town, only to be repulsed with heavy losses. In the meantime, Peter had sent
Bulgars, who had joined his pilgrimage, to ask Nicetas for a cessation of
fighting until the troubles could be discussed. The Byzantine governor accepted
the proposal, but “the footmen”, unwilling to wait any longer, began to load up
their wagons again and march away; although Peter, Fulcher, and Reginald tried
to persuade them to stay. To the imperials, it seemed that Peter and his
leaders were trying to hurry their people away to avoid negotiating, and they
again attacked; in the rout that followed, many were killed, and the rest
bought refuge in the surrounding forests.
When Peter finally united his
band, Albert's informant thought that a fourth of them had been lost. Stopping
at a deserted town, which has been identified as Palanka,
they spent three days in gathering and parching grain, on which they fed
themselves till they reached the next town, Sofia, on July 12. Here Byzantine
officials from Constantinople took charge, promising free markets for the rest
of the way, with the stipulation that the band should not stay more than three
days at any market town. At Philippopolis, the eloquent Peter told his story of
misfortunes with such fervor that the citizens gave his people gold bezants,
silver coins, horses, and mules. At Adrianople, imperial messengers urged Peter
to hurry on, saying that the emperor had heard much about him and was eager to
see him. On August 1, the band arrived at Constantinople, having been on the
way from Cologne three months and eleven days.
Other bands that were formed
soon after Peter’s departure failed to get through Hungary because they
expected to live off the country. The followers of a certain Folkmar passed through Saxony and Bohemia into Hungary. As
Albert does not mention him, and Ekkehard is very brief, little is known about
him. It may be assumed that the persecutions of Jews at Magdeburg and Prague
were the work of this band. Ekkehard merely says that Folkmar traversed Bohemia to Nitra where his band was broken up, some being killed and
others captured, because “sedition was incited”. It is not very enlightening to
learn further that survivors attributed their escape to a cross which they saw
in the heavens.
Gottschalk, a German priest
from the Rhineland, was inspired by Peter to preach the pilgrimage to
Jerusalem. With followers from eastern France, Lorraine, and southern Germany,
he followed Peter’s route into Hungary. Although Albert, who twice says that
his information was derived from eye-witnesses, specifics that these people,
both horsemen and footmen, had collected money and equipment for the journey,
and were peaceful on their march through Germany, Ekkehard calls Gottschalk “a
false servant of God” (mercenarius, non pastor). Nevertheless, king Coloman had a favorable enough impression of this band to grant them the privilege of
markets in his country on condition that they were not disorderly. But, while
negotiating for permission to enter Hungary, Bavarians, Swabians, and “other
fools”, who became drunk on stolen wine, took grain, from the Hungarians, who
were soon roused to retaliate. The pilgrims were forced to seek refuge in the
monastery of St. Martin, and in the negotiations that followed, Gottschalk and
his followers were persuaded to surrender both arms and money, “the means of
supporting life on the way to Jerusalem”. Then the Hungarians killed or
captured most of the band, “just as they affirm who were there and barely
escaped”. Such is the improbable account given by Albert. Ekkehard merely says
that the band established a fortified camp and engaged in foraging. The
“massacre" probably took place in July”.
Folkmar’s band and possibly Gottschalk’s followers were involved in the wave of anti-semitism that swept through the Rhineland at this
time. Jews, who had been encouraged to settle in the growing cities along the
Rhine, were protected by the ecclesiastical princes and the emperor.
Money-lending at usurious rates of interest made them prosper, and riches
gained by such unchristian practices, as well as their ostentation and
exclusiveness, made these strangers unpopular and even hated, and crusaders,
going forth to fight the enemies of their faith, were easily persuaded to
persecute and rob Jewish “unbelievers”. Especially ready to sack the Jewries
were poor crusaders who needed money to finance their journey. Was not the
purpose of their expedition to oppose the enemies of Christianity? The
chronicler Ekkehard praised the persecution of “these execrable people”, who
were “enemies within the church”'. But Cosmas of Prague, it is interesting to
note, held it uncanonical to force baptism on them, for, as Albert put it, “God
is a just judge who has not ordained that anyone should be brought into the
Christian obedience unwillingly by force”. Actuated by more selfish reasons, no
doubt, Henry IV later declared chat Jews who had been forced to become
Christians could return to their own faith, and the ecclesiastical princes made
efforts to protect their Jewish wards from mob violence. According to a late
Jewish source, Godfrey of Bouillon threatened to avenge the blood of Christ on
the Jews, but denied that he had ever intended to harm them when Henry IV advised
both lay and ecclesiastical lords to protect them. Nevertheless, he did collect
a thousand marks of silver from the Jewries of Mainz and Cologne to help defray
the expenses of his crusade, and it may be assumed that Godfrey had Jew-baiters
in his army, although the worst of the persecutions were over before he
departed for the east.
The most fanatical pogroms may
be attributed to the various bands that came together under the leadership of
count Emicho of Leiningen, who had feudal holdings
between Mainz and Worms, and was said to be “most powerful in that region”.
This robber baron had an evil reputation for oppression, and Ekkehard asserts
that he “usurped leadership” over pilgrims by deluding them with reports of
divine revelations which he had received “like another Saul”. He was joined by
another adventurer, who had acquired his bad reputation in Spain, William the
Carpenter, viscount of Melun and Gatinais, and
kinsman of Hugh of Vermandois. Other French lords, Clarebold of Vendeuil, Thomas of
La Fère, and Drogo of Nesle,
also joined Emicho, whose band consisted of “pilgrims
and crusaders” (cruce signati)
from France, England, Flanders, Lorraine, and southern Germany in addition to
his original followers from the Rhine region. To Albert it was a sinful
collection of men, women, and children, who regarded the pilgrimage as a
pleasure trip, but he notes that they provided themselves with whatever was
needed by people taking the road to Jerusalem.
Early persecutions in the
Moselle valley may be attributed to bands moving toward the Rhine. (It does not
seem possible to distinguish various bands as Wolff has attempted to do.) Early
in May, a few Jews who refused to be baptized were killed at Metz, and, at
Speyer, a massacre was prevented because bishop John gave asylum to Jews in his
palace. At Worms, similar action by the bishop was not effective, and on May
18, crusaders and a mob from the surrounding countryside forced their way into
the episcopal palace and killed all within. This pogrom may have been the work
of Emicho’s band, as was that which took place soon
after at Mainz, where this “enemy of all the Jews” arrived on May 25, to find
the gates closed against him. But the Jews who paid the archbishop Ruthard to protect them seem to have been betrayed. Their
enemies were admitted to the city two days later and a massacre followed. Later,
when the archbishop was accused of having taken money from the Jews, he fled
without defending himself.
When Emicho arrived at Cologne, on May 29, Jewish sources say that most of their brethren
were saved either by finding protection in the houses of Christian friends or
by escaping from the city. When Albert says that two hundred attempted to
escape to Neuss, he may have in mind the massacre that occurred in that place
later. He also believed that many were killed at Cologne, where he says the mob
found “much money” to divide. After the departure of Emicho,
other bands carried out a series of persecutions farther down the Rhine valley.
This outbreak of anti-Semitism probably came after the departure of Emicho from Cologne, where he had waited for the various
bands to gather.
Emicho, Clarebold, and Thomas led that “intolerable
crowd of men and women” (twelve thousand is Ekkehard’s figure), laden with loot
from the ghettos, as far as Hungary on the way to Jerusalem. Their route led
from the Rhine, up the Main and down the Danube, and on the way they were
joined by count Hartmann of Dillingen-Kyburg with a
contingent of Swabian nobles. At the town of Wieselburg,
which was fortified and flanked by swamps, at the juncture of the Leitha river
with the Danube, they were halted, and Coloman refused to permit them to enter his kingdom, possibly because, as Ekkehard
says, he had heard that the Germans were as willing to kill Hungarians as
pagans. Finding advance effectively blocked, Emicho and his colleagues undertook to construct a bridge, an operation which took six
weeks. During this time, the crusaders resorted to foraging, and engaged in
many skirmishes with the Hungarians, while the leaders quarreled about who
should have Hungary when they had conquered this land.
When the bridge was completed,
the crusaders crossed to attack the town, and by means of machines soon
breached the walls. Just as victory seemed certain, for some reason that the
chronicler was unable to explain, the crusaders were seized by sudden panic,
and, in their haste to return to the other bank of the river, many were
drowned. The Hungarians rallied to pursue and succeeded in completely
destroying this band of marauders. The leaders, having good horses, escaped.
Thomas, Clarebold, and William the Carpenter made
their way southward into Italy, where they may have joined William's kinsman,
Hugh of Vermandois. The only explanation for this
sudden defeat offered by Ekkehard is that it was the will of God. “Men of our
race, having zeal for, but not knowledge of, God”, he says, “in the very militia which
Christ provided for liberating Christians, began to attack other Christians ...
thus bringing the crusade into bad repute”.
Too many eager pilgrims,
inspired by religious enthusiasm, and too few fighting men, had marched away in
these early bands. Forty years after, Anna Comnena still believed that the preaching of Peter had aroused the religious fervor of
the crusading movement, but, she explains, shrewd, perverse men, such as
Bohemond, made use of these simple folk to promote their own selfish ends. Her
father understood all this quite well, she says, because he knew how naive the
westerners were, and she makes the vanity of Hugh of Vermandois seem ridiculous. Nevertheless, most of our information about Hugh's journey
comes from her account.
Hugh, whom she calls Ubos, announced his departure from France in a bombastic
letter to Alexius, making the preposterous claim that he was the “basileus of basileis, the greatest on earth”, and being of royal blood,
he demanded that he be honored with an appropriate reception when he arrived at
Constantinople. The second son of king Henry I and his second wife, Anna, the
princess of Kiev, Hugh had obtained his feudal possessions by marrying the
daughter of the count of Vermandois. He departed
about the middle of August 1096, with a respectable following. When he reached
Rome, the pope gave him the standard of St, Peter, an honor of which he proudly
informed the emperor when he sent a second announcement of his coming.
Alexius, his daughter
recalled, instructed his nephew, John Comnenus, then stationed at Dyrrachium,
to welcome Hugh when he arrived. Before setting sail from Bari, Hugh sent a delegation
of twenty-four resplendent knights to warn the governor that he was coming.
Fulcher briefly states that Hugh, “the first of the heroes who crossed the sea,
landed at the city of Dyrrachium in Bulgaria, with his personal following, but
having imprudently departed with a scant army, he was detained by the citizens
there and taken to Constantinople, where he was detained for a time, not
altogether free”. There are other references to his not being free, but
according to Anna, he arrived with “a scant army” because most of his followers
had been lost in a storm. Only good fortune had permitted Hugh to land on the
shore somewhere between Cape Pali and Dyrrachium, where he was picked up
bedraggled and forlorn and taken before John Comnenus, who fed and refitted
him, and sent him on to Constantinople under the escort of a high official.
Godfrey of Bouillon departed
from the west about the same time as Hugh, but, as he followed the northern
route, he was longer on the way. If Godfrey, like all “Celts”, was proud of his
race, as Anna says, it was not without good reason, as he was descended from
Charlemagne. A second son, like Hugh, he did not inherit the county of Boulogne
and the extensive English holdings of his father. A promising future seemed to
open in his fifteenth year, when his maternal uncle, Godfrey the Hunchback,
duke of Lower Lorraine, was assassinated, and on his deathbed designated his
nephew as his heir. But the emperor Henry IV, gave the duchy to his own infant
son, Conrad, conferring the margraviate of Antwerp on Godfrey by way of
consolation. This and the county of Bouillon, with other family possessions in
the neighborhood, made Godfrey a feudal lord of some importance. He aided the
emperor in his wars, and may have participated in the siege of Rome. Finally,
in 1089, Henry made him duke of Lower Lorraine; but, either because ducal
authority had deteriorated, or because Godfrey was a poor administrator, he
seems to have derived neither power nor wealth from the duchy. Certainly he had
to finance his crusade chiefly from his hereditary holdings and was able to
sell or mortgage Verdun for a sum said to have been substantial, while the
bishop of Liège gave either 1,300 or 1,500 marks of silver for Bouillon. As
there is no evidence that he realized anything from his duchy, Anna’s statement
that “the man was very rich” is not justified.
No trustworthy evidence
explains why Godfrey took the cross. The Chronicle of Zimmern relates
that he decided to go on this pilgrimage while he was ill during the siege of
Rome. Caffaro says that he went on some such
pilgrimage, then visited Raymond of St, Gilles and Adhémar,
and with them initiated the crusade. All this is as legendary as his later
reputation for piety, to which William of Tyre contributed by saying that he
took monks with him on the crusade, “notable for their holy lives”, to
celebrate the divine offices. In reality, he had ruined monasteries in the
neighborhood of Bouillon by his exactions, and it was his mother, the pious
Ida, who induced him to make a few donations to churches to save his reputation
before he departed. When crusading excitement spread throughout the Walloon
region, and neighboring lords made ready for the pilgrimage, Godfrey decided to
go along. Being the duke, he was made leader of the army.
The more important of
Godfrey's companions seem to have come chiefly from the region about Godfrey's
holdings. Baldwin, the duke's younger brother, who cautiously took time to make
up his mind, was accompanied by his wife. Another Baldwin, of Le Bourg, was a
kinsman of Godfrey, possibly a cousin. The oldest brother, Eustace, count of
Boulogne, who inherited his father's extensive lands in England, also went on
the crusade, but whether with Godfrey or with Robert of Normandy is uncertain.
A third Baldwin, count of Hainault, Reginald, count of Toul, and a bishop, the
schismatic Otto of Strassburg, are mentioned.
Godfrey’s follower seem to have been adequately prepared, and he may have
maintained a personal following from his own resources. The size of this army
cannot be estimated from the dubious figures in the chronicles.
Albert says that Godfrey was
on the march by the middle of August, and was at the Hungarian border for three
weeks in September. The delay was due to the suspicions that king Coloman had of the intentions of any armed forces after the
troubles he had had with Folkmar, Gottschalk, and Emicho. So, while his people were encamped at Tollenburg (either Bruck an der Leitha or possibly Tulln), Godfrey sent forward a delegation of twelve, headed
by Geoffrey of Esch, who had been engaged in previous
negotiations with the Hungarian king. According to Albert, they rather
tactlessly asked Coloman why he had been killing
Christian pilgrims, and he replied that he had found it necessary to exterminate
them because they were unholy robbers. He demanded a personal conference with
Godfrey, and the two met on a bridge; but, still unconvinced, the king invited
the duke to visit at his court. Godfrey accepted, and after eight days finally
obtained permission to march through Hungary, on condition that his brother
Baldwin and his family be given as hostages to guarantee that there would be no
pillage. When Godfrey returned to camp with this proposal, Baldwin angrily
refused, but yielded when the duke offered to be hostage himself. Godfrey then
ordered heralds to proclaim that anyone guilty of foraging would be put to
death, while Coloman warned his people that all who
failed to provide necessities at fair prices would be punished, and he
undertook to escort the crusaders with a strong force of horsemen.
The march through Hungary was
without incident, and the army reached Semlin late in
November. As soon as the army had crossed the Sava into Bulgaria, king Coloman appeared on the other bank and surrendered the
hostages. As Belgrade was deserted, the crusaders marched on toward Nish.
Byzantine officials met them on the way with assurances that free markets would
be available at towns along the route, and Godfrey promised that his people
would take nothing except fodder for their horses. At Nish, Godfrey received a
generous supply of food as a gift, and his people found abundant supplies for
sale. As equally satisfactory markets were provided at Sofia and Philippopolis,
the army halted to rest and replenish supplies at both places. Before leaving
the latter city, however, Godfrey was greatly disturbed by a rumor that Hugh,
William the Carpenter, Drogo, and Clarebold were
prisoners of the emperor, and he immediately sent a demand to Alexius that the
captives be released. But Baldwin, count of Hainault, and Henry of Esch, excited by the report of handsome imperial gifts to
Hugh, departed at dawn in order to reach Constantinople before the generosity
of the basileus might be dried up by Godfrey’s ultimatum.
At Selymbria (Silivri) on the Sea of Marmara, Godfrey permitted
eight days of pillage in the surrounding region because the emperor was holding
Hugh and his companions, Albert says. But, when Alexius sent two Franks with
the assurance that the count of Vermandois either
was, or would be, released, Godfrey called in the foragers, and moved on to the
outskirts of Constantinople just in time to celebrate Christmas there. Tension
was relieved when Hugh came out to the camp, and imperial officials invited
Godfrey to an audience with the emperor. But Godfrey, still suspicious of
Alexius, declined. Albert explains that certain men, “from Frankish lands”,
secretly advised Godfrey not to enter the city because the Greeks were not to
be trusted. Also unconfirmed, and still less plausible, is a talk about
Bohemond proposing that Godfrey join him in an attack on Constantinople.
Bohemond crossed the sea
fifteen days after Hugh. It was a familiar crossing to this eldest son of
Robert Guiscard, who had been his father’s second in command during the war in
Albania from 1081 to 1085. So confident had Guiscard been at that time that he
had made Bohemond heir to all future conquests on the eastern side of the
Adriatic; Roger Borsa, second son by a second
marriage, was to inherit his Italian possessions. When Guiscard died and the
bold adventure overseas failed, Bohemond returned to wrest what land he could
from his less capable half-brother, and although Borsa had the powerful support of his uncle, count Roger of Sicily, Bohemond became
one of the strongest lords in southern Italy. Nevertheless, what he could hope
for there was not enough to satisfy his ambition, and he welcomed the greater
opportunity that the crusade offered.
The historian of his
expedition, the author of the Gesta would
have his readers believe that Bohemond did not know about the armies that were
forming beyond the mountains until French crusaders came down into Italy. When
certain that they were fighting men, and on their way to rescue the Holy
Sepulcher, he quickly made up his mind to take the cross. This was seven or
eight months after Clermont while he was cooperating with his brother and uncle
in besieging Amalfi. Dramatically he cut an expensive cloak into crosses, and
won so many followers for his crusade that the siege had to be raised. There
were many young men in Italy, says Malaterra, “who
were eager for something new, as is natural at that age”.
The dominating personality of
this large, powerful man, whose eyes flashed fire, fascinated young Anna Comnena. At the age of forty, probably because of his
military experience in Albania, he raised an army more quickly than any of the
other leaders. How he financed his expedition is very obscure, although it is
not likely that he undertook to provide for any followers, except those in his
personal following, and this famulatus, mentioned
in the Gesta, may have been composed of
his kinsmen. Tancred, his twenty-year-old nephew, it is said, had to be
persuade by gifts, flattery, and the position of second in command, whereas his
brother William, without waiting for Bohemond, joined Hugh and was escorted
with him to Constantinople. Also mentioned are two cousins, Richard of the
Principate and Rainulf with his son Richard. Bohemond’s army was small, Anna
says, “because he lacked money”. As he did not transport all his people at one
time, it may be inferred that shipping facilities were not available to many of
the pilgrims always so eager to follow crusading armies.
The Normans landed between
Dyrrachium and Avlona. Byzantine officials were
ready for them, and provisions seem to have been plentiful at a place called “Dropuli”, in the valley of the Viyosa river, where the different contingents became united into one army. Then
marching from village to village, the anonymous author of the Gesta says, they came to Castoria,
where Christmas was celebrated. This was familiar territory to Bohemond, but
his previous occupation of this region had not been forgotten by the natives,
who, from either hatred or fear of the Normans, refused to sell them
provisions. Bohemond, although he was anxious to allay Greek suspicions of his
intentions, and had ordered that his men do no foraging, had to permit them to
get food. They took cattle, horses, asses, “everything that we found”, says the
chronicler. Somewhere on the way between Castoria and
the Vardar, they felt justified in destroying a town because it was inhabited
by heretics, Paulicians. At the Vardar, the imperial escort caught up with
them, and attacked those in the rear who had not crossed the river. Tancred and
others recrossed and drove the imperials away.
After passing Thessalonica,
they were met by the delegation which Bohemond had sent to Constantinople after
his landing, and with them was an important Byzantine official. Although he
gave assurance that provisions would be available the rest of the way, Norman
propensities to pillage were not easily restrained. When young Tancred proposed
to storm and loot a town which was full of supplies, Bohemond became very
angry. The citizens, when they realized that he had saved them, were so
grateful that they came forth in a procession, bearing crosses to bless him as
their protector. It seems, however, that Bohemond was not able to prevent all
foraging, and after hearing the complaints of imperial officials, he ordered
his men to return all the animals that they had stolen. At Roussa (Keshan), Bohemond decided to accept the invitation
of Alexius to leave his army and hurry on to Constantinople. But no sooner was
he gone than young Tancred, who as second in command was left in charge of the
army, gave them their long-desired chance to live off the country. “Seeing the
pilgrims buying food”, as the anonymous author of the Gesta puts
it, he “at once led them off the main road into a pleasant valley, where they
could live happily because they found all good things there”. In the meantime,
Bohemond arrived at the capital city on April 10, eager to make a favorable
impression on his former enemy, Alexius. He was assigned quarters outside the city.
According to a rumor, he made his servants eat the food provided in order to
see whether it contained poison.
The largest army on the
crusade was that of Raymond, count of Toulouse, who was accompanied by Adhémar, bishop of Le Puy, the papal legate. Raymond, the
great lord of southern France, the wealthiest of all the crusading leaders
according to the chroniclers, aided many poor soldiers to equip themselves for
the journey. The pope, in his letter to the Flemings, had suggested that
Raymond would provide for the needy. But this army also had the largest
following of noncombatants, and Raymond seems to have felt that it was his duty
to help all pilgrims. Raymond of Aguilers says that
this army was composed of those who came from Burgundy, Auvergne, Gascony, and Gothia, who were called Provençals,
while all others were French, but to the enemy all were known as Franks. These
provinces, situated along the Mediterranean, were developing a brilliant
civilization, and, because of interest in the holy war in Spain, this was the
region upon which Urban probably counted most for support of the crusade.
Raymond, aged about fifty-five
years, was decidedly old for that period when the life expectancy of the
military class was low, and it is not surprising that he was ill oftener than
others, once almost to death. However, he survived Adhémar,
a younger man, the papal legate, who was a fighting prelate, a good horseman
who knew how to wear the armor of a knight. The reports that Raymond took a vow
never to return home, and sold all his possessions, may have arisen because he
was old, but it is more likely that they arose because he stayed in the east
until he died. Also, he took his wife and youngest son with him and left
Bertram, his son by his first wife, in charge of his possessions in Languedoc.
About all that can be learned about how he financed his expedition comes from a
few charters; grants to such abbeys as St. Gilles, Chaise Dieu, and the church
of Le Puy, together with a suggestion that he sold Forez.
Inasmuch as Raymond of Aguilers noted that none died
of starvation during the march through Dalmatia where little or no food could
be obtained along the way, Raymond and the nobles who went with him seem to
have made adequate preparation. Among the lords of southern France known to
have been in his army, several were his own vassals. Perhaps because of Adhémar, the clergy were well represented and seem to have
exerted considerable influence on the conduct of the crusade. The chaplain
of Adhémar, Bernard of Valence, became
patriarch of Antioch.
Either the march through
northern Italy and around the northern end of the Adriatic was not recorded by
Raymond of Aguilers, or the first section of his
account has been lost, and so his story begins with the entrance into Dalmatia
(which he calls Sclavonia) in which wilderness they
wandered for forty days, at least. They saw neither wild animal nor bird,
partly because of the fog and mist, which the good chaplain says was often so
thick that it had to be pushed away. As it was winter, the roads through this
mountainous region were difficult, and the natives would neither sell
provisions nor offer guidance. Moreover, some of them followed the rear of the
army to rob and kill stragglers, “the poor, aged, and infirm”. The count tried
to protect them, and was always the last to seek rest, sometimes not till the
cock crew; and once when he was caught in an ambush he nearly lost his life.
Savagely he retaliated by mutilating prisoners and leaving them behind to
terrify others. When they reached Scutari (now in Albania), the count induced
the local chieftain to agree to grant markets, but the only outcome seems to
have been quarrels in which some of his men were killed. They hurried on,
anxious to reach Byzantine territory, where they believed that the people were
their Christian brothers and allies.
But the good chaplain and the
hungry pilgrims also were disappointed when imperial troops attacked “peaceful
folk” in groves and villages far from the camp, and although “the duke”, John Comnenus,
promised peace, two noble lords were killed. But Raymond, it seems clear, was
willing to cooperate with Byzantine policy, for his chronicler complains that
although there were opportunities to retaliate, it seemed wiser to continue
the march. But the military escort, he bitterly complains, was always in front
and behind, on the right and on the left, carrying out the imperial
instructions, as indicated by Anna. Unfortunately, in the valley of Pelagonia, when Pecheneg mercenaries found the papal legate
away from camp, they threw him from his mule, and injured him severely with a
blow on the head. Fortunately for Adhémar, his
captors made so much commotion that crusaders rushed forth to rescue him. Not
long after, because of an ambush, Raymond says, the crusaders attacked the
imperial troops, killing some and putting the rest to flight. And so suspicious
of the Greeks was Raymond of Aguilers that he was not
impressed by a friendly letter which arrived from the emperor about this time
when they were still hemmed in by Byzantine troops. Following the Egnatian way, the army reached Thessalonica about the
beginning of April, where Adhémar, who had not
recovered from his injury, decided to wait for his brother, Hugh of Monteil, who had been delayed at Dyrrachium by illness.
At Roussa,
where the author of the Gesta notes
that the Normans had been welcomed some two weeks earlier, the Provençals met a reception so little to their liking that
they stormed over the walls, shouting “Toulouse, Toulouse”, and joyfully looted
the town. As Runciman suggests, it is probable that the Normans and also the
Flemings had exhausted the stock of supplies intended for the crusaders and
pilgrims. At Rodogto (Tekirdagh)
another brush with imperials took place, but it was not serious enough to
prevent Raymond from accepting the invitation of Alexius to come to
Constantinople ahead of his army. Chaplain Raymond was bitter about this when
he wrote his history, and it was his belief that Raymond had been misled by his
own envoys whom he had sent to Constantinople earlier. They had been corrupted
because they had accepted money from the emperor, who had promised them much
for the future. But he adds that Raymond was told that Bohemond, Robert of
Flanders, and Godfrey were eager to see him. The count reached Constantinople
April 21, where he was well received.
Friendly negotiations with
Alexius were interrupted by news that the Provençals had been disastrously defeated by imperial troops. Raymond of Aguilers was so mortified by what happened that his
lamentations merely reveal that the crusaders fled before their attackers and
abandoned arms and baggage. No doubt they had given provocation by excessive
pillage, and like the armies of Godfrey and Bohemond, the Provençals had exhausted their resources sufficiently to resort to foraging on the last
stage of the march. But the reaction of the Byzantine troops on this occasion
seems to have been unusually vigorous, and count Raymond became so angry that
he flew into a rage and had to be calmed by the other leaders. His army arrived
at Constantinople on April 27. The account of the march to Constantinople given
by Raymond of Aguilers indicates that the imperial
military escort had much trouble with this army. As it was a large army,
Byzantine officials may have had difficulty in providing enough food along the
way, and the poor pilgrims — of whom there were many — were always ready to
forage. Provinciales ad vittualia was
their reputation according to Radulf (Ralph) of Caen.
The good chaplain undoubtedly reflects the general resentment of his people,
who were opposed to any police restrictions, but it must be noted that he is
quite definitely anti-Greek in his history.
Robert of Flanders had arrived
at Constantinople before Raymond, but we have no account of his march across
the Balkan peninsula. When he crossed the Adriatic in the winter, and left his
companions Robert of Normandy and Stephen of Blois behind in southern Italy,
the chronicler, Fulcher of Chartres, stayed with them. Robert II, count of
Flanders, dubbed the “Jerusalemite”, was the son of Robert I, “the Frisian”,
who had made a pilgrimage to Jerusalem sometime between 1087 and 1091, possibly
to atone for complicity in the assassination of Godfrey the Hunchback, the
maternal uncle of Godfrey of Bouillon. After his return he sent five hundred
horsemen to Alexius, and probably he was the recipient of the original of the
“spurious” letter from Alexius to a count of Flanders. His son, therefore, had
every opportunity to learn about the east, and Urban may have had this in mind
when he wrote his letter to the Flemings soon after Clermont. The pope had
every reason to be satisfied with the response made to his appeal by Robert,
who seems to have been much influenced by the religious appeal of the crusade.
“The Holy Ghost fired his heart to check the wickedness of the pagans”, the
motive attributed to him in a document subscribed to by his wife, seems to be a
fairly accurate statement. He gave evidence of pious inclinations while on the
expedition.
Robert had inherited a
prosperous feudal state which his father had reduced to reasonably good order,
and he seems to have been able to raise funds adequate for the demands of the
journey. At least he preferred a gift in relics to gold, silver, and jewels
when he was in southern Italy. He was able to raise an effective army, and by
his decision to make the rough winter crossing of the Adriatic he probably
discouraged most of the Flemish pilgrims who may have followed him to Italy.
The military strength of his possessions may have been as great as 1,000
horsemen, but how many of these volunteered for the crusade cannot be
ascertained. In 1099, when count Raymond sought to subsidize other leaders for
the march on Jerusalem, he estimated that Robert’s strength was six-tenths of
that of Godfrey or Robert of Normandy. His wife thought that he departed with a
very large following.
With Robert went his first
cousin, Robert of Normandy, and his cousin by marriage, Stephen of Blois,
husband of Adèle, sister of Robert of Normandy. As noted above, it is not clear
whether his neighbor, Eustace III of Boulogne, elder brother of Godfrey,
marched with his brother or with Robert of Normandy. Robert, duke of Normandy,
oldest son of William the Conqueror, was rapidly losing control over his duchy,
partly because of inefficient government on his own part and partly because his
brother, William II, king of England, was endeavoring to take it away from him.
The crusade offered an opportunity to escape from this unpleasant situation,
and he was quite ready to mortgage Normandy for money for his expenses. This
was made possible by the negotiations of Gerento,
abbot of St, Bénigne of Dijon, whom Urban had
commissioned to make peace between the brothers and, when he was in England in
April, the abbot seems to have persuaded William to make a loan of 10,000 marks
of silver to the duke, with Normandy pledged as security. To obtain such a
large sum, king William levied taxes on the English people, including the
clergy, who protested vigorously, but in September when he crossed over to
Normandy he paid Robert the whole amount. With finances arranged, Robert, as
the chroniclers say, took the cross “at the admonition of pope Urban” and “by
the counsel of certain men of religion”. A crusading army was
recruited, a “great army” in the eyes of the chronicler, and in addition to a
goodly following of adventurous Norman lords, it contained contingents from the
neighboring feudal states of Brittany, Perche, and Maine. But the Norman lords
in England were still too busy establishing themselves in that conquered land to
be lured away, and only two are known to have followed the duke. Representing
the Norman church were two bishops who were at Clermont, Odo of Bayeux and
Gilbert of Evreux. Robert also took along as chaplain his sister’s tutor,
Arnulf of Chocques, who was destined to have an
important career overseas.
In the meantime, another lord
in western France was preparing to go crusading. Stephen, count of Chartres and
Blois, was a person of importance in the feudal world, ruler of as many castles
as the days in the year, says Guibert. He has revealed himself in the letters
which he wrote to impress “his sweetest and most amiable wife”, Adele, daughter
of William the Conqueror. His colleagues thought well enough of him to elect
him Quartermaster general for a time and, even after he had disgraced himself
by deserting the expedition, Fulcher of Chartres, the historian who accompanied
him, could say “all of us grieved since he was a very noble man and valiant in
arms”. He was ready to depart with his brother-in-law, Robert of Normandy, and
his wife’s cousin, Robert of Flanders, in October. The abbot Gerento and his secretary, Hugh of Flavigny,
went as far as Pontarlier to say farewell as they
began the crossing of the Alps.
As the pope was at Lucca, the
leaders “and others of us who wished, spoke with him and received his
blessing”, says Fulcher. At Rome, in the church of St. Peter, they were annoyed
by partisans of the anti-pope, but they did not stop to retaliate. Marching “down
the old Roman road”, they stopped at Monte Cassino to commend themselves to St.
Benedict, before going on to the seaport of Bari, where more prayers were said
in the church of St. Nicholas. “We thought to cross the sea at that time”, but
the winter weather was so unfavorable in the opinion of the sailors that Robert
of Normandy and Stephen were glad to accept the hospitality of the south
Italian Normans. Robert of Flanders was urged to do likewise by his sister and
her husband, Roger Borsa, who gave him relics, said
to be some hair of the Virgin Mary and bones of Saints Matthew and Nicholas,
which he sent home to his wife. Then, no doubt with the help of his
brother-in-law, he was able to obtain passage and crossed the Adriatic, to
hurry on to Constantinople.
If the mysterious komes prebentzas who
followed Bohemond, according to Anna, was Baldwin II of Alost, count of Ghent,
a follower of Robert of Flanders, his crossing probably took place during the
winter or early spring. The count, whoever he was, leased, for 6,000 gold
staters, a large pirate ship that had three masts and two hundred rowers.
Unfortunately, the Byzantine fleet was on the lookout for pirates and attacked
and boarded the ship. The hero, in the long story told by Anna, was Marianus Mavrocatacalon, who
commanded the attacking squadron. The count and his party were eventually
landed, and it may be assumed that they went on to Constantinople to join the
other crusading armies.
When spring came, Robert and
Stephen collected their followers at Brindisi, where ships were ready to
transport them to Epirus. On April 5, as the embarkation was beginning, a large
ship broke in two, and four hundred persons, as well as horses and mules, were
drowned; also, “much money” was lost. This catastrophe discouraged many who
were waiting from risking their lives on the deceptive water, and they gave up
their pilgrimage forthwith and turned homeward. The others “thrust themselves
upon the sea”, to find it very peaceful as the wind died down, and they were virtually
becalmed for three days. Not until the fourth day were they able to land at two
places near Dyrrachium. Then, as Fulcher says, “joyfully we resumed our
dry-land journey”.
The march along the Via Egnatia did not provide many incidents that seemed worthy
of note to the chronicler, although he listed the towns to which they came
along the way. A swollen mountain stream swept a few pilgrims to their death;
others were saved by knights who rode their horses into the torrent. The Vardar
was successfully forded, and soon alter they found
Thessalonica to be a “city abounding in all goods”. The arrival at
Constantinople was about May 14, 1097. No brushes with a Byzantine escort are
reported, and there seems to have been no difficulty about obtaining food, which
indicates that the crusaders were able to buy what they needed. No doubt the
long wait in Apulia, and the fear and cost of transportation by sea, had
eliminated many of the impecunious pilgrims. While encamped without the walls,
small parties were permitted to enter the city to visit the churches. Among
these visitors was the chronicler Fulcher, who was greatly impressed by the
sights of this “excellent and beautiful city”.
With the arrival of Robert of
Normandy and Stephen, the first stage of the crusade, the march of the armies
to Constantinople, was ended. That the Byzantine officials had handled the
large numbers of crusaders and pilgrims very successfully is indicated by the
rarity, as a whole, of the complaints made by the western chroniclers who accompanied
the armies. But it must also be noted that the crusading leaders had managed
their undisciplined crowds very well, especially in restraining the propensity
of their men to forage. For, although most of the crusaders, and also the
noncombatant pilgrims, seem to have understood that they had to have the means
to buy food, they were all ready enough to forage
when the opportunity came. Certainly, this was true of the Lorrainers, the
Normans from southern Italy, and the Provençals. That
they were difficult folk to manage, Alexius knew very well, and as they arrived
at Constantinople, he undertook to come to terms with the leaders, one by one.
CHAPTER XTHE FIRST CRUSADE:CONSTANTINOPLE TO ANTIOCH
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