In
histories of the crusading movement the Second Crusade generally figures
briefly as a fiasco, modeled slavishly on the First Crusade, but without its
mystic power, and lacking the vigorous secular quality of the Third and Fourth
Crusades. This estimate is partly deserved; but existing records show that the
Second Crusade had a complicated character of its own and formed a turning
point in the development of the crusades. Without doubt its leaders followed
the example of Urban and Godfrey of Bouillon in that they tried to adapt and
regularize the phenomena of the First
Crusade without changing its essential character. Eugenius's bull with its
careful attention to the status and privileges of the crusaders; the insistence
on authorized preachers; the reliance on experienced military leaders; the
desire for the orderly departure of the crusade through territories whose
rulers had been consulted beforehand—all
are facts which show an extension and clarification of concepts present in the
First Crusade. This interest in organization and rcgularization is a sign of
the times which had given rise to the orders of the
Templars and the Hospitallers in the interval between the two crusades.
For
direction the Second Crusade looked to the papacy in the main, although it was
not as peculiarly the work of Eugenius as the First Crusade had been of Urban.
The pope, of course, formulated the crusade. St. Bernard, with all his
personal prestige and eloquence, was his deputy. Louis and the other rulers
implemented his plan, while the papal legates exerted considerable weight in
the crusading armies. Far more than in the First Crusade, however, lay rulers
like Louis of France and Conrad of Germany cooperated in planning and
negotiations, and Louis's determination to aid the east did much to make the
first stages of the crusade possible.
In
scope the Second Crusade was never duplicated in medieval times. Besides the
great allied armies that wont east for the Palestinian crusade, there were
expeditions against the Moors in Portugal and Spain and against the Wends in
Pomerania, all in all a grandiose conception far surpassing the aims of the
First Crusade and pointing to later adaptations of the crusading idea.
As
in the First Crusade, however, the combination of pilgrimage and military
expedition proved troublesome. The armies, made unwieldy by many noncombatants,
were slow, difficult to provision, and sometimes unruly; while religious
goals and military objectives were not always identical. Then, too, the
Palestinian expeditions proved to be too predominantly land-based. Fleets from
Scandinavia, Genoa, Pisa, southern France, and the Iberian peninsula were
engaged in the Wendish and Spanish crusades; while the Sicilians, Venetians,
and part of the Byzantine fleet were occupied by a war outside the crusade and
extremely detrimental to it. In both the Wendish and Palestinian armies the
crusaders displayed little realistic knowledge of the conditions they were to
meet. Preparations against the Wends were particularly hasty; but the Jerusalem
crusaders, in spite of more thorough and efficient planning, did not understand
the situation in the east, which was far more complicated than in 1096-1097.
Fifty years after the First Crusade, the Turks were stronger and more unified.
The Greeks looked for harm rather than aid from the westerners; and Palestine had
changed from a land of opportunity which could be wrested from the Moslems to a
loosely knit feudal kingdom as various in interests and alliances as its
European prototypes and without
the black-and-white view of Moslem-Christian relations entertained in the west.
Thus the ill-informed crusaders were often disappointed and embittered by the
confusing and contradictory conditions which they encountered; and they failed
to unite under strong leadership or to bring their great coalitions to a
successful outcome in the east or Pomerania. The conquests of the Second
Crusade were Lisbon, Almeria, Tortosa, Lerida, and Fraga, far removed from the
Palestinian theater and the central plans for the crusade. In the east the
crusaders actually harmed the Latin states when the Moslems learned how easily
their armies could be vanquished; and the friction between French and Germans,
French and Greeks, Germans and Syrians, and newly-arrived crusaders and
inhabitants of Outremer made cooperation on a grand scale impossible for a long
time to come.
Like
the First Crusade, the Second received its impetus from the east. As early as
the summer of 1145 pilgrims and travelers coming home from Jerusalem had spread
the sad news of the fall of Edessa in the preceding December, and the Armenian
bishops who came shortly afterward to consult pope Eugenius about the possible
union of the Roman and Armenian churches must have enlarged the pope's
information about affairs in the east. In addition, messengers were sent west
to appeal for help. We have no record of any from count Joscelin of Edessa; but
Raymond of Antioch, the suzerain of Edessa and the Latin prince whose lands lay
next in the path of the Moslems, apparently recognized that his troops and Joscelin's
were not sufficient for the reconquest and asked for aid from the Franks or
other parts of Europe. The Chronicle of Morigny speaks of emissaries from both
Antioch and Jerusalem, "begging with supplication that the unconquerable
force of the Franks should dispel the danger that had come and drive away
future harm"; and Otto of Freising heard bishop Hugh of Jabala, a city in the
principality of Antioch, at the papal curia in November 1145, "bewailing
in tearful fashion the peril of the church beyond the sea after the capture of
Edessa and on account of this wishing to cross the Alps to the king of the
Romans and the Franks to stir up aid".
We
do not know whether Hugh of Jabala made his journey to France and Germany, but
his pleas and those of the Armenian bishops apparently helped to influence
Eugenius III to call for a new crusade by issuing the bull Quantum
praedecessores from Vetralla on December 1, 1145. The pope had been moved by
the plight of Edessa. Like Urban, he also hoped that the crusade
would further the union of the Christian churches. Although leaning heavily on
the example of Urban and other popes, Eugenius's Quantum praedeccssores, the
first crusading bull ever issued, is a virtual charter of the crusade rather
than a letter or appeal and as such is of great importance not only to the
Second Crusade but to those which followed. Addressing "his dear son
Louis, the illustrious and glorious king of the Franks, and his cherished sons
the princes and all the faithful living throughout Gaul", Eugenius
recalled Urban's summons to the First Crusade, which resulted in the conquest
of Jerusalem and other sites in the Holy Land and the retention of those places
and additions to their number until the sins of the faithful had brought about
the recent capture of Edessa; and he exhorted the Franks and Italians, and
especially the powerful nobles among them, to emulate their forefathers and
"gird themselves courageously to oppose the multitude of unbelievers which
is rejoicing that it has obtained a victory over us, ... to defend the eastern
church... to snatch from their hands the many thousands of captives who are our
kinsmen". To those vowing to go on the crusade he promised remission of
penance, protection of wives, children, and possessions, freedom from legal
action from the time of taking the cross until their return or death,
cancellation of the obligation to pay interest on debts, and permission to
mortgage property in order to gain funds for the journey.
A
strange silence concerning Quantum praedecessores follows. The next plan for
succor of Edessa comes from another quarter—the Christmas court Louis VII of
France held at Bourgcs a few weeks later. There the king "revealed for the
first time to the bishops and magnates of the realm, whom he had purposely summoned
in greater numbers than usual for his coronation, the secret in his heart"
(i.e. his desire to go to the aid of the east) and Godfrey, bishop of
Langres, gave an address "concerning the devastation of Edessa, the
oppression of the Christians, and the arrogance of the heathen, and admonished all that together with their king
they should fight for the King of all in order to succor the Christians."
There is no allusion to the pope nor to a crusade,
with
its inducements of pardon and other privileges for those taking the crusading
vow. Instead Odo of Deuil and Otto of Fraising seem to describe a desire for a
military expedition to aid Edessa as an answer to the pleas from the east,
similar in character to the forces raised by Hugh of Payens in 1129 for an
attack on Damascus. To this plan the assembly did not respond favorably; and
abbot Suger of St. Denis, the senior statesman of the court, openly opposed the
king's participation- Finally Louis and his nobles agreed to meet again at
Easter and meanwhile to ask the opinion of St. Bernard, "as if he were a
divine oracle". This decision, too, suggests that the papal bull had not
reached Louis; for if it had, a direct appeal to Eugenius would have been in
order.
When
consulted St. Bernard refused to make a decision, saying that such an important
matter should be referred to the pope; and so an embassy went to Eugenius,
and the early months of 1146 were given over to negotiations which can be
considered the starting point of the actual organization of the Second Crusade.
The pope granted Louis's wish to go to the east by enlisting the young king in
the papal crusade. Since he was busy coping with the political situation in
Rome, where Arnold of Brescia was fomenting discord against him, Eugenius
authorized St. Bernard to preach the crusade in his place. On March 1, 1146, he
reissued Quantum praedecessores to emphasize his guidance of the movement from
its inception.
Despite
this marked papal guidance, however, it is well to notice that without the
support of Louis VII Quantum praedeceessores might
have come to nothing. No popular response to the bull has been recorded. As we
have seen, the French nobles at Bourges, who were most likely to offer aid to
the east, were apathetic or opposed to such an expedition when first approached
and apparently ignorant of the pope's wishes. Unlike the First Crusade this
movement, then, was not entirely the work of the pope. Although Eugenius alone
could establish it as a crusade, Louis's initial persistence in desiring to aid
the east and Bernard's inspired preaching made the crusade an actuality.
At
Vézclay on March 31 Louis met again with his court, fortified by the pope's
approval and three months of preparation, which were far more effective than
the sudden revelation of his project at Bourges. Since there was no building
large enough to contain the crowd, the assembly met in the fields. Wearing the
cross sent him by the pope, Louis accompanied St. Bernard onto the platform.
The abbot of Clairvaux read the papal bull and delivered an eloquent address.
Immediately the audience responded with fervor and cried out for crosses until
Bernard had exhausted his supply and had to rip pieces of cloth from his own
garments in order to satisfy the demands. Among those who enrolled were Louis's
queen, Eleanor of Aquitaine, a niece of Raymond of Antioch; the bishops of
Noyon, Langres, and Lisieux; Thierry of Alsace, count of Flanders, a kinsman of
the king of Jerusalem; Henry, son of count-palatine Theobald of Blois; Robert
count of Perche and Dreux, Louis's brother; count Alfonso Jordan of Toulouse,
son of Raymond, who had led an army on the First Crusade; the counts of Nevers,
Tonnerre, Bourbon, Soissons, and Ponthieu; William of Warenne, earl of Surrey;
barons like Enguerrand of Coucy, Geoffrey of Rancon, Hugh of Lusignan, and
William of Courtenay; Everard of Barres, later grand master of the Temple, with
a group of Templars; many other nobles and knights and throngs of lesser folk.
Recruiting had begun most successfully.
Before
leaving Vézelay the leaders decided that they must have a year for preparation
before the crusade could depart. Since it was necessary to enter into
diplomatic negotiations with the rulers of the countries through which the
crusaders might pass on their way to Anatolia, Louis VII wrote to Roger of
Sicily, the Byzantine emperor Manuel, Conrad of Germany, and Géza of Hungary
describing the plans for the large army of crusaders being recruited and
asking
for the privilege of securing food supplies and free passage through their
lands. The pope also wrote to Manuel (and most likely to the other rulers
involved) announcing the expedition and its purpose. Favorable replies were not
slow in coming. Conrad and Géza assented. Roger sent Louis an embassy
"which pledged his realm as to food supplies and transportation by water
and every other need and promised that he or his son would go along on the
journey." These promises were very attractive because they held out the
possibility of avoiding the difficult overland ronte. Furthermore, Roger had
been successful in expeditions against the Arabs in North Africa and knew the
ways of the Moslems. Yet Roger's great political ambitions made an alliance with
him a delicate matter. As pretender to the throne of Antioch he was the enemy
of Raymond, queen Eleanor's uncle, who had solicited aid for Edessa, while the
expansion of his power in the so-called kingdom of Sicily had alienated his
interests from those of Conrad, the pope, and Manuel.
Manuel's
reply was a partial answer, more cautious in essence than Roger's. While he
indicated willingness to assist the crusaders in preparation of the route,
crossing over to Asia Minor, and market privileges, he had detained two
Templars from the embassy while he prepared a more detailed answer, "since
the matter is great and demands consideration". Recalling the throng of
soldiers who came to Constantinople during the First Crusade and the agreements
which Alexius had exacted then, Manuel wanted time to draw up the conditions on
which he would fulfil Louis's requests. He also held out some hope that he
would join in the fight against the Turks, since they had been the aggressors
at Edessa. Manuel wrote to Eugenius, too, saying that he would consent to
receive the crusaders well, but wanted them to agree to honor him "just as
the Franks who formerly came honored my famous grandfather", that is, by taking
an oath of homage to him; and he asked Eugenius to strive for this and to write
to him again.
In
other words, the Greeks, too, wanted to profit from their experiences in the
First Crusade and in 1101 and to control the movements of the crusaders while
they were in the Byzantine empire. The situation of the Greeks had altered
greatly, to the disadvantage of the crusaders. At the time of the First Crusade
Alexius had asked for help from the west to start an offensive against
the Turks, who had been turned back from Constantinople only recently and still
occupied land formerly held by the Byzantine empire. Manuel had made no such
appeal. In 1146 the Greeks did not dread the Moslems nor see such a pressing
need to regain lost territory, since the First Crusade had helped to reestablish
them in some of their territories in Asia Minor and had created the Latin
states which served as buffers between the Greeks and Moslems. Talk of a new
crusade revived memories of previous armies from the west and made the Greeks
fear that the crusaders would turn their attack against Constantinople as
Bohemond had done in 1107. Furthermore, the appeal for the crusade had stemmed
in part from Raymond of Antioch and was suspect to Manuel as a device to
strengthen Raymond until he would not need Byzantine help and could put the
Greek protectorate over northern Syria into question once more. Louis and his
advisors apparently did not sense these ramifications. They saw only that
Manuel had expressed willingness to help them.
In
addition to the negotiations with foreign rulers, undertaken together with the
pope, Louis had many domestic matters to look after. He needed to raise money
to maintain himself and his followers during the crusade. The pope had
authorized the crusaders to cease paying interest on debts and to mortgage
their property to gain funds for the journey. The king needed additional
resources and apparently employed something like a forced loan or an extension
of the feudal aids to collect considerable sums of money before he left. The
details and nature of the levy are not clear from the evidence at hand, but it
may have foreshadowed the famous Saladin Tithe of the Third Crusade.
While
the pope and the king of France were looking after the ways and means of the
crusade, Bernard plunged at once into additional recruiting by letter and by
word of mouth. Eloquently he pictured the Turkish conquest of Edessa as the
prelude to an attack on Jerusalem and the very shrine of the Christian religion
unless his hearers worked to prevent it. "What are you brave men doing?
What are you servants of the cross doing? Will you thus give a holy place to
dogs and pearls to swine?" he demanded. Declaring that God was making a
trial of the Christians and giving them an opportunity for salvation in his
service, Bernard exhorted his audience to receive the blessed arms of the
Christian zealously.
Wherever St. Bernard went he excited great reverence because of his impassioned
preaching and the many miracles of healing which he performed. Everywhere, too,
his preaching and letters were accompanied by the papal bull, with its official
appeals and promises. The combination of the pontifical appeal and the inspired
preacher was extremely successful. Bernard was soon able to write to Eugenius:
"You have commanded and I have obeyed, and the authority of him who gives the
command has made my obedience fruitful; whenever I have announced and spoken of
the crusade, the crusaders have been multiplied beyond number. Cities and
castles are emptied..."
Unfortunately
news soon came of uprisings stirred against the Jews by the unauthorized
preaching of the crusade in northern France around Sully and Carentan by a
Cistercian monk named Radulf. As in the First Crusade it had proved all too
easy to heighten the propaganda for fighting the enemies of the Holy Land in
Palestine to include the Jews and then to encourage persecution of the Jews close
at hand. Anti-Semitic feeling in France was widespread, but St. Bernard set
himself against this sentiment and sent a message to northern France asking the
inhabitants to follow the teachings of Christ and abstain from persecution.
When his letter went unheeded, Bernard set out for northern France and
Flanders, intent on preaching the crusade there and utilizing the excitement
aroused by Radulf for more orderly preparations. But at the same time he
continued to widen the scope of the entire movement by letter, sending one to
Manfred of Brescia in midsummer and another soon after to England, where the
Flemish enthusiasm for the crusade had spread.0
St.
Bernards journey to the north was highly successful. Radulf
fled
before him, and countless numbers were enrolled in the crusade. On his return,
however, Bernard again received complaints about Radulf, this time from the
archbishop of Mainz. Escaping Bernard's orbit, the monk had gone into Germany
in August to continue his inflammatory preaching and to arouse the people of
Cologne, Mainz, Worms, and Speyer against the Jews. Once more Bernard attempted
to quell Radulf by a letter of condemnation to be read in public. When this
made little impression the abbot of Clairvaux widened the scope of his
enlistment by writing directly to the affected groups in Speyer and Cologne in
an effort to incorporate them into an orderly and useful army. Complimenting
them on their zeal for the work of God, he called on them to abjure their
private wars and the persecutions of the Jews in order to take the cross and
participate in the spiritual rewards of the army of Christ. With his customary
desire for an orderly expedition, he recalled Peter the Hermit and his
ill-fated army as a horrible example and told the Germans not to listen to
unauthorized preachers, not to set out before the main army was ready to go,
and not to choose leaders unless they were experienced military men who could
keep the army strong and well-disciplined.
Letters,
however, continued to be less effective than Radulf's fiery harangues. In late
October St. Bernard went to Germany to preach the crusade in person and to stop
Radulf's activities once and for all. As enrollment in the crusade had spread,
St. Bernard's ideas of its scope had widened, too, and while following and encouraging the popular demand he apparently began to hope to unite all
Christendom against the Moslems. Hence, after encountering Radulf in Mainz and
sending him back to the cloister, Bernard went on to Worms and other cities,
arriving at the end of November in Frankfurt, where Conrad III of Germany was
holding court. Ostensibly he came to discuss a truce between Albero of Trier
and Henry of Namur with a view to their participation in the crusade; but he
was also eager to enlist Conrad, since in Bernard's expanding plans the emperor
was the logical strong leader for the Germans then being recruited. Conrad
refused. Momentarily discouraged, Bernard thought of returning to Clairvaux
and the French phase of the crusade, but the bishop of Constance prevailed upon
him to preach the crusade to the Swiss, a course approved by the other bishops
and by Conrad, who was not hostile to the idea of raising recruits in German
territory.
Accordingly,
St. Bernard set out on still another journey for the crusade. Although he had
to speak through an interpreter, people flocked to hear him wherever he went,
eager to witness the miracles which he performed and to join the crusade he
advocated. While in Constance he was near the south German seat of the Welfs
and apparently made his influence felt in the Welf circle through the medium of
count Conrad of Zähringen. Fresh from these new achievements Bernard returned
to Speyer on December 24 and after several days succeeded in gaining Conrad's
promise that he would consult his nobles about the advisability of his going on
crusade. Bernard saw that Conrad showed signs of weakening. At the daily mass
held for the court the abbot unexpectedly insisted on preaching a sermon and
directed his closing remarks to Conrad, not as a king but as a man.
Dramatically he pictured Conrad standing before Christ to be judged and Christ
saying, "O man, what is there that I should have done for you and did not do?". During the enumeration of kingship, wealth, wisdom, active courage, and bodily
strength which Conrad possessed, the emperor cried out in acknowledgment of
the divine gifts which he had received and in revulsion from his own ingratitude,
"I am ready to serve Him". Those present also called out in witness of the
glory of God, and Bernard received Conrad as a crusader and gave him the banner
from the altar for his use in the army of God. Frederick of Swabia, Conrad's
nephew, and countless others of all ranks enrolled in the army.
When
Conrad took the cross Bernard felt that his dearest wish concerning the
preaching of the crusade had been accomplished. He called it "the miracle
of miracles". Certainly it was a turning point; the crusade was no longer
a French expedition under Louis, with auxiliary forces from Italy, Britain, and
other parts of the west, but a joint movement on the part of the two mightiest
sovereigns of Europe. In magnitude it had far surpassed the original request
for aid and the plans which Eugenius and Louis had formed. St. Bernard had
inspired such enthusiasm as had not been felt since the First Crusade and had
raised it to such a pitch that it seemed as if most of Europe would be
affected; but he had also enlisted two princes whose royal rank and conflicting
diplomatic interests were to weaken the papal dream of strong leadership.
Eugenius
did not share St. Bernard's extreme enthusiasm for Conrad's decision. He
apparently had not thought that the emperor would go to the east and had hoped
that Conrad would soon help to establish him in Rome. The news overtook him in
northern Italy, where he was preaching the crusade before going to France to
participate in the final plans before the crusaders departed. For nearly two
months he delayed answering Conrad and concentrated on the Italian aspects of
the crusade, which also had expanded and taken a different turn. Recruiting for
the Palestinian crusade had been relatively slow there, even though Eugenius
had sent a special bull in the previous October exhorting the clergy to recruit
their parishioners. The colonies in Syria and Palestine seemed to have lost
some of their importance to commercial cities like Genoa and Pisa, partly
because the second generation of crusaders showed much less friendliness to
them than the first generation had done and partly because of similar
opportunities closer home. Hence interest had shifted to another sector of the
battle against the Moslems: Spain and North Africa.
Sometime
after the launching of the crusade at Vézelay, however, Eugenius had received
and granted a request from Alfonso VII, king of Castile, for an extension of
the crusaders' indulgence to Spaniards undertaking a campaign against the
Moslems in their part of the world. In so doing the pope had followed the
example of his predecessors. When the First Crusade began to draw knights from
the "holy war" in Spain, Urban had pressed them not to abandon their
enterprise at home, since it was as meritorious as the Palestinian crusade, by
promising them indulgences and participation in life eternal; and Paschal II,
a former legate in Spain,
wrote
in 1101 a letter to Castile, saying, "Do not abandon the war against the
Moors to go to the east; go back home, and in combat there you will accomplish
your penance." Thus Spain became the first country in Europe to keep
knights at home to combat the Moslem instead of joining the great crusades to
the east.
In
1146-1147 the Spaniards were not the only ones involved in this new development
of the Second Crusade. The pope permitted the Genoese to join the campaign in
Spain, and forces from the sea-faring towns of southern France were also to
make up part of the expedition. During the early part of 1147 the pope worked
to establish peace in Tuscany, so that the crusaders could rely on the support
of the Pisan fleet. By no means all his efforts, however, were directed towards
the Spanish phase of the crusade. Most outstanding of those whom Eugenius
enrolled in the Palestinian crusade at this time was count Amadeo III of Savoy
and Maurienne, who was to be the leader of the Lombard pilgrims.
At
last the pope wrote to Conrad reproaching him for undertaking such a great
project as the crusade without papal advice and warned and exhorted him to make
careful plans for the regulation of his realm daring the crusade. He must have
pointed out Conrad's unstable position in Germany and Italy and expressed the
fear that a long absence during his son's minority would weaken that position
still further; but Cosack's theory that
the
pope urged Conrad to set aside his crusading oath does not seem tenable.
In
the same period St, Bernard was spurred on to even greater activity as the time
for the departure of the crusading armies drew near. Instead of going directly
from Speyer to France he went via Cologne, preaching the crusade along the
lower Rhine. On February 2 he arrived at Chalons-sur-Marne, where Louis VII
was conducting interviews with French and German nobles and messengers from
Conrad and Welf. For two days they discussed the conduct of the crusade. It was
a time for pooling information, drafting final arrangements, and altering the
general plan of the crusade to accommodate the participation of Conrad and
others recruited during Bernard's absence in Germany and Switzerland. One of the
main problems discussed must have been the route or routes which the armies
would follow. Since Conrad and Roger of Sicily were enemies, the German army
never considered going to the east via Sicily, and so had already decided on
the land route through Hungary and the Balkan peninsula. Now the French and
their allies had to decide whether to follow the same plan or to strike out
independently. It was necessary also to consider the business to be introduced
at the general meeting to be held at Etampes in two weeks, the choice of
regents for the realm, and a change in the date of departure so that the French
and German armies would not overlap during the journey and overtax the
provisions and other facilities available. Conrad's messengers must have received
information as to the present state of affairs and an indication of what
remained to be done in the next few months.
The
large general meeting of the French crusaders and magnates took place at
Etampes on February 16, 1147. They heard St. Bernard's report on the splendid
progress of enrollment in the crusade and then turned their attention to the
letters and envoys from different countries involved in the expedition or from
those guaranteeing passage and markets for the crusaders. Next they chose the
route which Louis's army would follow. There can be no doubt that the debate
was long and heated. Among the French there was a party, including Godfrey of
Langres, with strong sympathy for Roger of Sicily and a distrust of the Greeks
which had been fostered either by experience in the east or by reading
prejudicial accounts of the First Crusade and the period since then. To them
the sea route seemed far preferable; but Conrad's example and the tradition of
Godfrey of Bouillon's army carried the day. At this
the disappointed Sicilian envoys departed with dire predictions about the
future, and there was no further talk of Roger or his son participating in the
crusade. Finally the assembly chose Suger and count William of Nevers as
regents during the king's absence and decided to postpone their departure from
Easter to June 15.
After
Etampes St, Bernard had to attend another important meeting, the great assembly
at Frankfurt on March 13. Busy with affairs at Chalons and Etampes, he had not
been able to attend the court Conrad had held at Regensburg a month earlier and
hence had entrusted the preaching of the crusade there to the Cistercian abbot,
Adam of Ebrach. After reading the papal bull and Bernard's letter to the East
Franks and Bavarians, Adam had signed a multitude of crusaders ranging in rank
from Conrad's half-brother, bishop Otto of Freising, to a vast crowd of robbers
who had repented of their sins. Despite the huge numbers already enlisted
further efforts were still being made. To bishop Henry of Olmütz, who took the
cross at that time, were probably entrusted a copy of the papal bull and
Bernard's recruiting letter addressed to Vladislav of Poland, couched in the
usual terms and pointing out that a large army of the Lord which was going to
set out at Easter planned to pass through Hungary.
As
at Etampes the assembly at Frankfurt had much business to settle. The pope's
exhortations for the security of the realm and whatever advice he offered may
have had some influence on Conrad when he received them during the diet.
Certainly he, too, wanted to leave the empire in as strong a position as
possible. Peace was ordained and confirmed mutually through all the empire,
and Conrad's ten-year-old son was elected and acclaimed king and successor to
his father, with the archbishop of Mainz as his guardian and regent and Wibald
of Stavelot (later of Corvey) as another guardian. Messengers from Louis were
present to preserve the rapport between the two kings. The route through Hungary
was announced. Also the German crusaders set mid-May as the date of their
departure, so that they could precede the
French
army by several weeks on the overland march and join forces only at
Constantinople.
Once
again events took an entirely new turn. A portion of the crusaders, composed
mainly of Saxons, declared that they wanted to go on crusade against their
pagan Slavic neighbors east of the Elbe rather than against the Moslems in
Palestine. The circumstances of the movement are not at all clear, but it
appears to have been of popular origin (though not from the actual border
country) and to have been countenanced by St. Bernard as analogous to the
Spanish part of the crusade which had already been authorized by the pope. A
special sign, the cross on the orb, was selected for this Wendish crusade and
the feast of Saints Peter and Paul indicated as the date for the participants
to set out from Magdeburg. Many joined at once.
Conrad's
envoys to Eugenius, the bishops of Worms and Havelberg and abbot Wibald, left
the diet to meet the pope at Dijon on March 30 and probably acquainted the
pontiff with the situation. Those conversations and a meeting with St. Bernard
at Clairvaux a week later apparently satisfied the pope in regard to the
Wendish crusade. His bull Divini dispensatione issued on April 13, established
the expedition as a crusade coexisting with the Palestinian and Spanish ones.
He granted the crusaders' indulgence to participants if they had not enrolled
in the Jerusalem crusade previously, if they retained their devout purpose
throughout, and if they did not allow the Wends to buy their freedom from conversion.
Conversion or destruction was to be the watchword. As papal legate he
designated Anselm of Havelberg, one of the messengers whom Conrad had sent
from Frankfurt.
Although
friendly relations now existed between him and Conrad, Eugenius did not go to
Strasburg to confer on German matters. Instead he went to Paris with Louis and
helped to convince Suger that he should overcome his reluctance to act as
regent of the kingdom, then celebrated Easter at St. Denis, and took pan in
much of the business relating to the final arrangements for the crusade. At
this time the pope received a second letter
and embassy from Manuel, embodying the emperor's considered conclusions
concerning the passage of the French army through his realm. He indicated that
the routes and supplies requested had been readied for the French, but that
Louis and his magnates for their part would have to guarantee not to harm the
Byzantine empire in any way during their passage and would have to promise to
return to the Byzantines any cities captured from the Turks which had
originally belonged to the empire. This latter provision was further defined by
a list of cities involved, which had been sent along with the messengers.
Manuel asked the pope for cooperation in inducing Louis to agree to these
provisions. To show his assent Eugenius was to send a cardinal with the French
army and some other sign which would be unmistakable to the French, and by
these means to restrain irresponsible members of the army from harming
Byzantine territory. Finally Manuel asked for more news from the pope and
touched on the attractive possibility of union between the papacy and the
eastern church.
Eugenius
did appoint cardinals as legates to accompany the two main armies to Palestine.
They were probably chosen before Manuel's letter arrived; Eugenius had already
designated a legate for the Wendish crusade in April and would not have
neglected the opportunity of doing likewise for the longer established
Palestinian expeditions. He chose two of the most illustrious members of his
curia as his representatives: Theodwin, cardinal-bishop of Porto, to accompany
the Germans, and Guido of Florence, the cardinal-priest of San Chrysogono, to
go with the French. Eugenius envisaged their powers on a grand scale; they
were to keep the sovereigns in peace and amity and to provide for their
well-being in both spiritual and temporal matters. Without doubt the cardinal
Guido was told of the pope's correspondence with Manuel and urged to preserve
the peace between the Greeks and the westerners. In addition the pope later
named bishop Henry of Olmütz as a special legate to aid and advise the
cardinals and to work particularly for the union of the churches. This proved
impossible, however, because the bishop had decided to join the Wendish
crusade instead. Even so the crusading army was rich in ecclesiastics of official
position, since Arnulf of Lisieux and Godfrey of Langres claimed legatine
authority over the Anglo-Norman and French contingents respectively. Although
their position was nominally subordinate to that of the cardinal legates, the
two bishops, who
were very uhlike in temperament and sympathies, were more suited to dissipate
the unity of the legatine authority than to augment it."
Almost
all Europe was now engaged in last-minute preparations for the crusade. In
France and Germany crusaders from all parts of the west had been gathering
since February and March. The Castilian king and his allies were preparing to
attack the Moslem town of Almeria. Recruiting for the expedition against the
Wends continued; both Bernard's letter and the papal bull were sent to Moravia,
and the papal legate Hubald carried the bull to Denmark, with the result that
the Danes who might have taken an active part in the eastern crusade found this
an easy and accessible way to accomplish their vows and expiate their crimes.
On
April 27 the first party of crusaders had begun their journey. Men from Flanders,
Frisia, Normandy, and Cologne set out for England, where they were joined by
Scottish and English crusaders. In general these were sea-faring men,
accustomed to dealing with other lands in their voyages. No princely leader
directed the expedition; but before they left Dartmouth on May 19, they had set
up a very strict code of behavior, which has been recorded by the author of De
expugnatione Lyxbonensi as follows: "Among these people of so many
different tongues the firmest guarantees of peaces and friendship were taken;
and furthermore, they sanctioned very strict laws, as, for example, a life for
a life and a tooth for a tooth. They forbade all display of costly garments.
Also they ordained that women should not go out in public; that the peace must
be kept by all, unless they ahould suffer injuries recognized by the
proclamation; that weekly chapters should be held by the laity and the clergy
separately unless some great emergency should require their meeting together;
that each ship should have its own priest and keep the same observances as are
prescribed for parishes; that no one retain the seaman or the servant of
another in his employ; that everyone make weekly confession and communicate on
Sunday; and so on through the rest of the obligatory articles with separate
sanctions for each. Furthermore they constituted for every thousand of the
forces two elected members who were to be called judges or coniuraty through
whom the cases of the constables were to be settled in accordance with the
proclamation and by whom the distribution of moneys was to be carried
out."
After
suffering stormy weather in the first part of the voyage they proceeded along
the north coasts of Spain and Portugal and arrived at Oporto on June 16. There
they were met by the bishop of the city, who explained that his sovereign,
Alfonso I of Portugal, was warring against the Moors and had succeeded in
capturing the city of Santarem three months before; and that when he had heard
that the crusaders were coming by sea he went further south to besiege Lisbon,
leaving the bishop of Oporto to welcome the crusaders and to induce them to help
in the siege. Reaction to this proposal was mixed. Since the struggle against
the Saracens in Portugal was not part of the crusade on which they were bound,
some thought that they should not interrupt their journey to the Holy Land for
this enterprise; but since they would be combating the Moors at Lisbon, too,
and would also replenish their coffers with booty and ransom, they finally
decided to go to Lisbon and negotiate with the king. There they agreed to take
part in Alfonso's plans, with the understanding that they would have the right
of plundering and that the plundered city would then belong to the king.
Operations began July 1; and shortly afterwards the attacking army gained
control of the suburbs outside the city and set up the siege. The crusaders
suffered several setbacks when the Moslems destroyed their siege machinery, but
the city had great difficulty in gaining supplies and was not able to secure
aid from neighboring Moorish chiefs. At last the walls were breached, and on
October 24, 1147, the city capitulated. The crusaders realized their hope of
rich booty; then Alfonso occupied Lisbon and the neighboring castles of Cintra
and Palmela. An Englishman, Gilbert of Hastings, was made bishop and some
others of the men decided to remain as settlers. Most of those on the
expedition, however, were to spend the winter only and to leave for the east on
February 1. With the conquest of Lisbon they had already attained
the high point of their expedition and had made one of the few territorial
acquisitions of the Second Crusade.
By
a coincidence the Spanish crusaders, who were entirely separate from the
Portuguese in their efforts against the Moslems, succeeded in capturing Almeria
on October 17, just a week before Lisbon fell. In this enterprise the Genoese
took the main initiative. Alfonso of Castile and Raymond Berengar of
Aragon-Catalonia directed soldiers from Christian Spain, and boats and
troops from the ports of Languedoc fought under the leadership of count William
of Montpellier. At the end of the following year Raymond Berengar, William of
Montpellier, the Genoese, Narbonnese, and Bérarnaise went on to capture
Tortosa; and in 1149 they consolidated this victory by gaining possession of
Fraga and Lerida, the last remnants of Moslem domination in Catalonia.
In
the middle of May, while the Lisbon crusaders were getting under way, Conrad of
Germany began his journey to the east as the commander of a far more
heterogeneous army, composed mainly of Franconians, Bavarians, and Swabians in
such great numbers that the rivers and surrounding countryside could hardly
accomodate them. The German crusaders ranged from bishops, princes, and
magnates advancing with fully equipped troops to include at the other extreme
not only those with no equipment or money and no realization of the implication
of the long, hard journey, but also the robbers and other criminals whose
enlistment had been hailed as a special sign of divine grace. Problems of discipline,
maintenance, and provisioning must have been inherent in such a huge and
loosely-knit group from the beginning; but they were not yet critical.
The
German crusaders went from Nuremberg to Regensburg. There the emperor paused to
negotiate a truce with king Géza of Hungary, who had defeated the Germans at
the battle of Leitha the year before and who now feared that Conrad and his
army might retaliate and succeed in placing the pretender Boris on the
Hungarian throne. During the last week in May the crusaders went to Ardagger
and thence to Vienna where more crusaders, including Ottokar of Styria, joined
the army, and negotiations with Géza were continued. The Hungarian king finally
agreed to allow
the
huge army to pass through his realm and to pay Conrad a large sum of money
levied from the Hungarian church in order to guarantee that the passage of the
army would be peaceful. Soon after the middle of June the crusaders crossed the
border and entered Hungary in martial array, as if it were an enemy land; they
managed to observe the terms of the truce, however, and without untoward
incident arrived around July 20 at Branits on the Bulgarian border, where the
ancient road to Constantinople begins. Apparently a few Hungarian crusaders had
joined the army during its transit.
The
emperor Manuel had been alarmed by the news of Conrad's participation in the
crusade and had apparently thought that it might indicate a shift away from the
German-Byzantine alliance against Roger to a concentration of the forces of
western Europe against Constantinople. He had therefore taken the precaution of
strengthening the fortifications of Constantinople and equipping and readying
his home troops, some of whom were detailed to remain in the city and others to
follow the Germans in order to insure that they should pass through the
Byzantine realm peacefully. In addition he sought to maintain diplomatic
relations with the leaders of the crusading armies. Here at the entrance to
Byzantine territory two Greek messengers came to Conrad bringing greetings
from Manuel and seeking to ascertain the German emperor's intentions. They
said that the Germans could not traverse the Byzantine empire unless they swore
not to injure the emperor's interests in any way; whereupon the chief nobles
in the army swore that they had not entered Byzantine territory to injure the
Greeks, but were going to tight the Turks in Anatolia. Satisfied with this
assurance, the ambassadors promised to furnish provisions during the passage of
the army. The crusaders then took the highway along the Morava to Nish and
Sofia, which led through difficult mountainous terrain. At both cities they
were treated well and received ample provisions; and the Greeks had no serious
complaint to make against the Germans. When they reached the richer land around
Philippopolis, however, relations became more strained. There were instances of
plundering, of rough treatment of the people bringing provisions to the camp,
and even of armed conflict between the rear guard and the natives. Conrad
appeared
neither willing nor able to enforce discipline in these matters, a circumstance
not entirely surprising when one remembers the miscellaneous character of his
army and the long march which it had already accomplished without any major
incidents like the fighting around Belgrade in the First Crusade. A Byzantine
force under general Prosouch, however, followed the Germans at a little
distance, quashing the inroads of stragglers and, when the raiders were
unusually fierce, coming into more open conflict for a short time near
Philippopolis.
Sometimes,
as at Adrianople, Greek elements were guilty of breaking the peace. Perhaps
because of his experience of disorders around Philippopolis, Conrad did not
stop at Adrianople, but led his army on beyond. Unfortunately, a relative who
remained in the city because of illness was killed by Greek marauders and the
inn where he was lodging burned and looted. The emperor's nephew, Frederick
(later Frederick I), returned to avenge the incident by burning a monastery in
which the sick man had lodged, capturing and killing some men, and searching
for the lost money. Open warfare seemed sure to result, but Prosouch and others
managed to make peace.
Aware
of the tension between the crusaders and his people and still fearful for the
safety of his capital, Manuel asked Conrad to cross the Dardanelles at Sestus
rather than the Bosporus at Constantinople. To this route, which was actually
more direct and favorable than the one he chose, Conrad would not agree,
perhaps because he did not care to have Manuel dictate his route or because he
had agreed to meet Louis at Constantinople or because the armies of the First
Crusade had not gone that way. It remained for Frederick I to make use of the
route through Sestus during the Third Crusade. Conrad and his army continued
according to their original plan, and Manuel went on strengthening his capital
and sent additional forces to police the Germans on their journey.
Nature
administered the next rebuff to the crusaders. On September 8 the German army
encamped in a pleasant meadow called the plain of the Chocrobacchi, which was
watered by the Melas river. During the night the river became swollen with torrential
rains and swept away many men and animals and much equipment in a flash flood.
The crusaders were stricken by the thought that this was a sign of divine
disapprobation and were full of sorrow when they viewed the wreckage. Again
Manuel sent messages, of comfort this time and inviting the German sovereign to
a conference. Conrad seems to have refused unless the emperor
would
come to meet him as he approached the city, and so the negotiations were
abandoned.
By
September 10 the Germans were before Constantinople. During the rest of the
month they remained outside the city, first at the inclosure known as the
Philopatium, which is on the land side, and then in the suburb of Pera, from
which they crossed the Bosporus. Although the rulers did not meet, and the
crusaders were not allowed inside the city, the army took the opportunity to
rest from the long march. Some looting and reprisals took place, and there is a
tradition that Conrad observed the defenses of the city with interest and
threatened to return and invest the city in the following year. Actually
negotiations were never broken off entirely, partly perhaps because of the good
offices of Manuel's empress, Bertha of Sulzbach, who was Conrad's
sister-in-law. The army was furnished with supplies, and Manuel pressed Conrad
to cross over into Asia Minor. He also seems to have suggested some interchange
of forces, with the idea of giving Conrad the support of some Greek troops in
Asia Minor if the German commander would leave part of his army in
Constantinople for Manuel' use.
At
that time Roger of Sicily, who had been their common enemy for a long time, was
attacking the Byzantine empire. Aftet Roger withdrew from the crusade at
Etampes, he decided that the time was propitious for him to attack the
Byzantine empire and establish himself more firmly in southern Italy, since
Conrad and Manuel were both occupied. He alleged that Manuel had insulted him
by refusing to allow his son to marry Manuel's daughter. Corfu and Cephalonia
fell to Roger; and he plundered Corinth, Thebes, Euboea, and possibly Athens.
Manuel had to call in the Venetians as allies and probably would have used the
German reinforcements, too, against Roger or a possible coalition between
Roger and the French. Conrad would not agree with this plan, but finally
decided to go on to Asia Minor without waiting for Louis. When he crossed at
the end of September, he and his army received gifts from Manuel. At the same
time the Lorrainers, who had preceded the main part of the French army, were
forced to cross, too, and they waited for their comrades on the shore of Asia
Minor. But Conrad had had enough of waiting. He and his army pressed on, eager
to arrive before Edessa and begin the conflict.
The French Crusaders
Metz
had been chosen as the assembly point for the French army. The large army
gathering there in June included Lotharingian crusaders under Stephen of Metz
and Henry of Toul, Thierry of Alsace, count of Flanders, Reginald of Bar, and
Hugh of Vaudemont. From northern Italy came the rulers of Savoy and Montferrat.
There were contingents from Brittany, Burgundy, central France, and Lorraine,
and, of course, Eleanor's men from Poitou and Aquitaine. The large band from
Provence, however, did not go at this time. They could afford to wait until
August, since they had chosen the sea route which would be less time-consuming.
They sailed from the mouth of the Rhone under the aegis of Alfonso Jordan, the
count of Toulouse, bearer of the proud crusading name of St- Gilles.
At
this time Louis enacted laws necessary for securing peace and maintaining
discipline in the army, probably similar to those agreed upon by the Lisbon
crusaders; and the leaders of the various parts of the army confirmed these by
solemn oath. Also he dispatched the bishop of Arras and the abbot of St. Bertin
to Worms to prepare a fleet to take the crusaders across the Rhine at that
point. On June 29 Louis and his army arrived in Worms, were honorably received,
and crossed the river safely. They encamped on the other side to await the
arrival of bishop Arnulf of Lisieux and his Norman and English troops and sent
men on to Regensburg to meet the Greek messengers who had been expecting the
king for a long time. While here some friction and altercations arose between
the crusaders and the citizens of Worms who were looking after the provisions.
Prices soared. Because of this and the congestion in the army, the counts of
Auvergne and Savoy and the marquis of Montferrat decided to leave the main
group and take their troops through the Alps to Apulia and thence across to
Constantinople.
At
Regensburg the army crossed the Danube on a new bridge and found a fleet
prepared to carry their baggage and many of the people as far as Bulgaria.
Louis gave audience to the Byzantine ambassadors, who delivered letters from
Manuel. Conciliatory in the main and seeking to secure the good will of the
crusaders, the letters contained two important stipulations which Manuel had
already revealed to the pope but does not seem to have included
in the German negotiations: namely, that the king should not seize any city or
stronghold in Manuel's realm and that if he drove the Turks from any place in
Anatolia which had belonged to Byzantium, that place should be restored to
Manuel. These stipulations the nobles were to confirm by oath. At once a great
discussion arose. The nobles were willing to endorse the first clause but could
not agree about the second, even though the messengers resorted to threats,
saying that the emperor would destroy the supplies gathered for them if they
delayed much longer, since he would consider their hesitation a sign of
hostility. Even so the crusaders refused to comply. The presence of an
anti-Greek party, including Godfrey of Langres and Louis's brother, Robert of
Perche, made itself felt, but at last a compromise was reached. Some of the leaders
swore on behalf of the king to guarantee the security of the Greek realm, and
the ambassadors confirmed the promise of a sufficient market, suitable
exchange, and other necessary privileges. Consideration of the much-debated
provision about restoration of conquered lands to the emperor was postponed
until Louis and Manuel could meet together. One of the messengers took the news
to Constantinople at once; the other accompanied the French army until legates
had been selected to go with him to the Byzantine capital ahead of the main
army and prepare for the negotiations with Manuel.
The
French followed the route of the German army along the Danube to Passau and
then to Vienna and the Hungarian border without outstanding incident. They
continued to use the bridges which Conrad had built and were well received at
the principal cities. In the more mountainous, wooded, and often swampy country
of Hungary the going was harder; but as the result of early negotiations
between Louis and king Géza the army received ample supplies. The
relationship between the two sovereigns was far more amicable than the armed
neutrality which Conrad and Géza had observed. They met together, established a
common peace, and provided that French pilgrims could pass through Hungary in
safety in the future; and Géza presented Louis with horses, vessels, and
garments. Relations were impaired, however, when Géza discovered that the
pretender Boris had secretly joined the French army, and Louis refused to hand
him over because Boris had sought asylum with him. The Hungarian king therefore
withdraw to a part of his kingdom which did not lie along the crusaders' route,
and the army continued peaceably as far as the Bulgarian border, and there
stocked up on provisions, supplied
in great part by the Hungarians, before undertaking the passage of the
difficult western part of that country.
From
the first the French crusaders were not satisfied with the rate of exchange the
Greeks offered them, and they had to suffer from the antagonism which the
passage of the German army had kindled in the inhabitants, Louis, however,
worked to disperse misunderstandings. He was aided by Michael Branas, the duke
of Sofia, who had been appointed to accompany him through the Balkan peninsula
and who established peace with the inhabitants along the route and helped to
procure markets. Louis shared the provisions thus obtained with rich and poor
alike in his army, and so it was possible for him to maintain peace more easily
than for the commanders of troops who had less prestige and less money to
insure the provisioning of their followers and had to resort to plundering when
the markets were not sufficient. The drain even on the royal treasury was
great; from the edge of Hungary and at many later points Louis had to write
urgently to Suger for additional funds to cover his heavy daily expenses.
In
addition to the problems of Greek-French relations, there were also some
altercations between the advance part of the French army and the rear of the
German army as to who should secure supplies at the Greek markets. The French
army had traveled at a faster rate than the Germans, who had set out a month
earlier, and so the advance party of Lorrainers was in Constantinople by
mid-September while Louis, going more slowly, was still in Philippopolis.
During the journey across Bulgaria Louis received no news from the ambassadors
whom he had sent to Constantinople, but he had many reassuring messages from
Manuel and his empress. Again the Greeks urged the crusaders to by-pass
Constantinople by taking the road from Adrianople to Sestus, and like Conrad,
Louis refused to fall in with this plan.
When
a day away from Constantinople, Louis at last met his messengers. They brought
the disquieting news that, contrary to their original plan, Conrad had crossed
the Bosporus without waiting for the French and that the Lorrainers had been
forced to accompany him. In addition some members of the French army who had
reached Constantinople in September and refused to cross over had been attacked
by Byzantine mercenaries; and they had been rescued from this dilemma only by
the intercession of the French
envoys. To these indications of haste and lack of cooperation on the part
of the Germans and coercion on the part of the Greeks was added the news that
Manuel had concluded a treaty with the Selchukid sultan of Iconium (Konya).
Such an action was not comprehensible to the French. They remembered Manuel's
writing to Louis that although the Greeks had been more or less at peace with
the Turks, the capture of Edessa broke the peace, and so influenced Manuel to
collect an army to go against them. Since then, however, Manuel's attitude had
changed. He had been frightened by the great increase in the crusading forces
and by the participation of the German emperor; he had become aware of the
strong preparations embarked upon by the sultan of Iconium; and he had
experienced western hostility in the form of Roger's attacks.
On
hearing of the Turkish alliance the anti-Greek party in the army advised the
king along the very lines which Manuel feared; to retreat and capture a
foothold in the rich and populous countryside through which they had just
passed, and then with the aid of Roger and his fleet to attack Constantinople.
This advice did not prevail, however; the king and his army followed their
original plan and arrived at Constantinople on October 4. Unlike their
reception of Conrad the Greeks gave Louis a splendid welcome and conducted him
to an audience with Manuel in the imperial palace. There the two sovereigns
discussed the crusaders' plans in a friendly fashion, and the emperor promised
to give whatever aid he could. Louis and his retinue were housed in the
Philopatium, as the Germans had been; but in contrast to his cool treatment of
Conrad, Manuel spared no pains in entertaining Louis and conducted him on a
tour of the famous shrines of the city, invited him to a fabulous banquet, and
sent a group of special clergy to celebrate the feast of St. Denis in Louis's
presence. Meanwhile the army camped outside the city, whose gates were closed
to all except the king and his retinue. As before, the Greeks furnished an
ample market and suitable rates of exchange, but the crusaders did a certain
amount of plundering and destruction of property, some of which was held in
check by punishments meted out by the king. The fiery bishop of Langres kept
urging the French to capture the city before which they stood, pointing out
its weaknesses and stirring up hostility by citing the wrongs which John
Comnenus, Manuel's father, had done to Antioch and the enmity between Greek
and Roman bishops in Asia Minor. This effort to sidetrack the crusade was
fruitless as far as an actual change in goal was
concerned,
but it must have damaged the morale of the army by adding to the already present
distrust and hostility towards the Greeks. Unlike the members of the Fourth
Crusade who were convinced by similar arguments, the majority of crusaders in 1147, according to Odo, agreed with those who cited the pope's call to the
crusade as controlling their plan of action. The papal legate, cardinal Guido
of Florence, must have been the one who pointed out that Eugenius had called
not for an attack on Constantinople, but for a pilgrimage to the Holy Sepulcher
and the destruction or conversion of the Moslems. Thus Manuel's request for help
from Eugenius in restraining hotheads in the French army had been granted.
Certainly papal policies exerted a greater influence over the course of the
crusade after it left western Europe than critics like John of Salisbury have
acknowledged. Unfortunately neither cardinal legate was able to dominate the
army under his spiritual guidance as Adhemar of Le Puy had, or as St. Bernard
could have done, and to carry it forward with a positive plan. Despite their
good qualities Theodwin was considered barbarous and crude by the French, and
Guido exhibited more interest in books and dialectics than in battles. Their
leadership lacked vigor and was further reduced to a monitory position by
contrast with more aggressive ecclesiastics like the bishops of Langrcs and
Lisieux and by strong lay interests.
During
this critical time Louis was waiting for the lords of Savoy, Auvergne, and
Montferrat who had left the main army at Worms and were now coming to
Constantinople via Brindisi and Dyrrachium (Durazzo). Manuel was suspicious of
the long delay and probably distrusted the new forces, since they were coming
by way of the Norman kingdom of Sicily. Therefore he had part of the market
removed. Especially effective was the circulation of rumors about the Germans'
progress in Asia Minor. They were credited with slaughtering 14,000 Turks,
capturing Iconium, and asking Manuel to come and hold the city while they sped
ahead to further conquests. These stories caused such discontent in the French
army that Louis finally agreed to cross the Bosporus before his allies arrived.
Using Greek boats and accompanied by Greek provisioned and money-changers, the
army entered Asia Minor.
As
yet, after nearly two weeks of proximity, the Byzantine and French sovereigns
had not come to any agreement about their relations in Asia Minor. Once he had
succeeded in removing the French from their potentially dangerous position
before Constantinople, Manuel detained them on the opposite shore with a series
of diplomatic exchanges. At last his terms were clear: an alliance between one
of Louis's kinswomen and Manuel's nephew and the homage of the barons in return
for guides, fair exchange, markets where possible, the right of plunder where
markets were not available, and suitable gifts for the king and his barons. At
once Robert of Perche and some comrades abducted the French noblewoman who had
figured in Manuel's plans and went to Nicomedia without paying homage to the
emperor. Again the rest of the anti-Greek party urged bold action, advising
Louis to seize Constantinople; but the milder and more expedient counsel which
stressed the crusaders' need for guides, supplies, and the friendship of the
Byzantines won out once more. In the meantime the long-awaited contingent which
had traveled through Italy managed to cross over without the help of the
Greeks, who had wished to split the army by detaining them; and the reunited
army determined to set out on its march through Asia Minor. Only then did
Manuel hold the long-deferred meeting, and he and Louis came to the following
agreement: that the king would not take from the emperor any town or
stronghold which was under his jurisdiction; that the emperor should send along
two or three of his chief barons as guides and should furnish market facilities;
that the crusaders should have the rights of plunder where supplies were not
offered. The barons then paid homage to Manuel and received gifts from him.
Manuel had also hoped to induce Louis to enter into an alliance against Roger,
but he was unsuccessful. This may account in part for his detached attitude
towards the French crusaders thereafter. In addition, of course, he was opposed
to the establishment of independent Latin principalities in Anatolia and was
bound by a treaty of peace with the Moslems. Thus the participants in the
Second Crusade did not receive active assistance from the Greeks in any way
comparable to that rendered by Alexius during the First Crusade, and this
proved a grave handicap during their penetration of Anatolia.
The Wendish Crusade
While
the Lisbon expedition, the Spanish crusade, and the various armies of the
Palestinian crusade were embarking upon their various journeys and campaigns,
the Wendish crusade, the latest comer to the scene, was still in a state of
preparation. Apparently
the agitation for a crusade against the Slavs had not come as the result of any
recent invasion or at the instance of the people living nearest them. By 1147
count Adolf of Holstein had managed to build up his position in connection with
the Wends quite successfully. He had brought in German colonists and reestablished
Lübeck, had restored churches like Neumunster, and had won the friendship of
Niklot, the Obotrite prince who was the chief leader of the Wends. News of the
crusade disrupted these arrangements; although Niklot asked Adolf to remain his
ally, it was impossible for the count to oppose the holy war. The pact had to
be broken off. Niklot retired to the northeast, establishing a strong fortress,
and mustering an army, and on June 26 took the offensive before the crusaders arrived.
He sailed into the harbor of Lübeck, burned parts of the city, killed many of
the citizens or took them prisoners, and captured much booty. Then he proceeded
to lay waste the surrounding country, so that all the recently won advantages
were lost.
June
29 had been set as the time for the crusade to leave Magdeburg, but as usual
recruits were slow in coming. Finally approximately 40,000 men set off from
Artlenburg in the middle of July under the leadership of the duke of Saxony,
Conrad of Zahringen, archbishop Adalbero of Bremen, and others. Anxious to
punish Niklot, they crossed the lower Elbe and arrived at the Wends'
stronghold, Dobin. There the Saxons were joined by a large army and fleet of
Danes who had come to retaliate for sea-raids which Niklot had perpetrated. The
Wends, however, made a successful foray against the Danes and look many
prisoners; and their allies the Rani attacked the fleet and partially destroyed
it. In reply the Danes harassed the inhabitants along the coast and rescued much
of their fleet. Despite this lively beginning, it early became apparent that
the siege was being conducted with mixed feelings. The Saxons apparently
thought that it was not to their advantage to devastate a land belonging to
them and to harass a people which was becoming more and more dependent on them.
Those who had come to seek fiefs found little encouragement; and those who had
come in order to fulfil the crusading vow and return home as quickly as
possible grew restive. Furthermore the Danes were anxious to regain their men
who had been captured. And so a truce and then a peace were concluded on the
following terms: Idolatry was to be discontinued; the Danish prisoners were to
be released;
and Niklot was to become an ally of count Adolf of Holstein again and to pay
tribute. The first two conditions were never really carried out. In practice
the fanatic vow "to convert or to destroy" had dwindled to a clause which
was not enforced; and the prisoners returned were for the most part infirm. The
alliance between count Adolf and Niklot was resumed, however, and continued
along the lines which had been established before the crusade was announced.
Early
in August the papal legate, Anselm of Havelberg, led the main body of crusaders
from Magdeburg. Their numbers included bishop Henry of Olmütz, the palgrave
Hermann of the Rhine, Frederick of Saxony, Albert the Bear and his two sons,
Wibald of Corvey, and many others, totalling perhaps 80,000 men. They planned
to attack the tribe of the Liutizi. Crossing the Elbe, they rested at Havelberg
and then stormed into enemy country, bringing devastation. The natives fled
before them, however; and the crusaders were not able to meet them in hand to
hand fighting until part of the army set up a siege before Demmin. Here again
the crusaders proved leas ruthless in carrying out their vow against the Slavs
than one might expect. Discontent broke out in the besieging army; and in early
September the crusaders returned home after doing little more than devastate
some of the open countryside.
While
part of their number had encamped before Demmin the rest had gone to Stettin.
This was a singular choice, since Christianity had already been established
there; and it was possibly dictated by Albert the Bear's desire to gain more
land. Many of the crusaders were amazed when crosses were displayed on the
walls and a group of citizens led by bishop Adalbert of Stettin came to treat
with the army and to point out that this was not a heathen city and would
profit more from preaching than from being put to the sword. On hearing this
the bishops in the army entered into negotiations with Ratibor, the Christian
prince of the Pomeranians, and with bishop Adalbert; and peace was concluded.
From there the crusaders, unsatisfied with the turn of events, went home.
Thus
the expedition against the Wends had accomplished little or nothing beyond
interrupting for a time the more peaceful relations which were being
established between the Saxons and the Slavs. The desire to split off from the
Palestinian crusade apparently rose mainly from the application of two
familiar crusading motives to local conditions: that of the clerics who wished to
extend the influence of the church to the north and that of the lay princes who
were eager to augment their domains and eliminate inroads from the Slavs. At
the outset each group had endorsed a policy of extermination or conversion of
the heathen; but when faced with the sieges of pagan Dobin and Demmin the lay
nobles whose interests were involved hesitated to destroy valuable property
and potential allies and so carried out their crusading vows as expediently as
possible, while at Stettin the crusade was diverted against a Christian city
in order to satisfy a desire for territorial expansion and then was brought to
a halt when this became clear. The disparity between the ambitions of the
crusaders and the actual conditions obtaining among the Slavs and their
neighbors was very great. The Wendish crusade thus stands in marked contrast to
the more realistic campaigns carried out in Portugal and Spain.
In
Europe the crusade, despite the meager accomplishments against the Wends, had
made a satisfactory beginning. Crusaders like the conquerors of Lisbon and
Almeria had finished their immediate battles successfully and could wait for
the spring before setting out again. The armies for the Palestinian crusade,
however, were still traveling towards their goal. The French army hastened
past Nicomedia and Nicaea, eager to join the Germans and participate in and
emulate their conquests. At this sanguine moment when the long journey and
wearisome negotiations promised to give way to the accomplishment of their
hopes, they learned that the German army had not captured Iconium as the Greeks
had reported but had been defeated by the Turks and forced to retreat in
disorder towards Nicaea. Conrad had planned to combat the Turks as soon as
possible and without waiting for the French. Apparently he had hoped to
accomplish this scheme with the support of the military forces in his army
while sending the pilgrims to Jerusalem by another route, but this sensible
idea caused great dissatisfaction among the crusaders and could not be carried
out. A group did leave Conrad's forces and travel south along the coast under
the leadership of the emperor's half-brother, the bishop of Freising, but the
army was not pared down to a purely military expedition. At Nicaea Conrad
gathered provisions for the march on
the sultan's capital of Iconium and prepared to follow a shortcut through the
mountains which the Greek guides showed them.
The
unwieldy army found the mountains very difficult to traverse and went so
slowly that they exhausted their supplies before they emerged from the
confusing mountainous terrain. Somewhere near Dorylaeum (near modern
Eskishehir) they suffered an ambush from the Turks, who had been building up
their strength against the crusaders for some time. The German cavalry charged
the enemy in vain, because the Moslems feigned flight until they had tired the
crusaders and drawn them away from the main army, which sustained terrible
losses. After this catastrophe Conrad yielded to the request of the princes and
nobles and led the expedition back towards the sea in the hope of renewing its
strength and keeping it relatively intact for an engagement when conditions
should be more favorable. The retreat was dreadful. Although begun in an
orderly fashion, it degenerated into a rout. The hungry crusaders withdrew
slowly because of their weariness and their attempts to secure food, and the
Turks became more during day by day in harassing them and finally succeeded in
killing count Bernard of Plötzkau and his men who had been protecting the rear
of the army. Then they molested all parts of the column at will. Fatalities and
injuries were numerous, and Conrad was wounded. When the army finally reached
Nicaea at the beginning of November it broke up. Most of its members tried to
return home via Constantinople, a terrible undertaking for them with their
reduced or vanished strength and equipment. Conrad and a nucleus of his barons
sent messengers to tell Louis of the disaster and to ask him to meet the
emperor and be ready to aid and counsel him in his time of need.
The
French army was grieved and stupefied by this turn of events. Cries against the
treachery of the Greeks broke forth, but it is worth noting that Conrad in his
letters to Wibald of Corvey did not mention this factor in his account of the
disaster, even though he could have shifted responsibility from himself in this
way. Instead, the Germans tended to blame themselves for an over-bold reliance
on their own strength and for the offense which their sins had given God. Odo
records what must have been the comment of the military party of both armies: "When
the holy father forbade dogs and falcons and restricted the nature of knights'
clothing and arms, men who did not concur with this command acted with a lack
of wisdom and utility which equaled the presence of wisdom and utility in his
command. But would
that
he had instructed the infantry in the same way and, keeping the weak at home,
had equipped all the strong with the sword instead of the wallet and the bow
instead of the staff; for the weak and helpless are always a burden to their
comrades and a source of prey to their enemies". The vast number of
pilgrims on the crusade was proving a hazard to the military aims.
Louis
and his nobles offered Conrad money and equipment and agreed to wait at
Lopadium until Conrad could collect more supplies before continuing the
journey. Markets became scarcer in the interim, and the French resorted to
plundering the countryside, as their agreement with Manuel permitted. To this
the enraged inhabitants responded by molesting and sometimes killing members
of the weakened German forces who followed after and finally had to be
conducted to the rendezvous at Lopadium by a French escort.
In
the council held at this time Conrad expressed a desire to continue the crusade
in Louis's company and asked to be stationed in the middle of the army, since
he and his forces were not strong enough to guard the front or rear. At his
request for additional troops Louis designated Amadeo of Savoy, the marquis of
Montferrat, the bishop of Metz, the count of Bar, and others as additions to
the emperor's forces. In this order they arrived at Esscron (near Balikesir)
sometime after November 11. Louis had originally planned to travel to Antioch
through Philadelphia (Alashehir) on a good road which was less direct than the
one Conrad had taken in the direction of Iconium but shorter than the coastal
route which Otto and his men had chosen. Reports that the way through
Philadelphia afforded meager supplies, however, caused Conrad, in reaction from
his former desire for speed, to persuade Louis and his advisers to change their
minds and follow the longer but better supplied road near the sea.
The
army found that this road, too, crossed mountainous country and rivers which
were swollen with the winter rains, while food was expensive and difficult to
obtain from the fortified cities located at intervals. Some crusaders managed
to take passage in ships; some remained behind in the service of the Greeks;
but the majority arrived at Ephesus around mid-December. Here they were greeted
by Greek messengers who warned Louis that the Turks had gathered a large force
to combat the crusaders and urged him to take refuge in the imperial
strongholds. It seems likely that this message was bona fide and that the
Turks, encouraged by their success in dispersing the German army, had pushed
into Byzantine territory to repeat their tactics against the French, while the
Greek inhabitants who had been alienated by the disorders during the passage
of the western army were not going to oppose the Turks and may have been
willing to cooperate with them in some instances. This time, however, Louis did
not put credence in the emperor's news, and he refused to give in to fear of
the Turks. Thereupon the imperial messengers produced other letters listing
injuries which the king and his army had been responsible for in Byzantine
territory and serving notice that Manuel could not restrain his men from
vengeance in the future. The Franco-Greek alliance, on which so much time and
effort had been spent, had become extremely shaky, particularly since the
German defeat in Asia Minor had removed one source of anxiety from the Greeks.
At
Ephesus Conrad became ill and failed to recuperate quickly enough to continue
with the army. When Manuel and his wife heard this they invited Conrad to come
to Constantinople to convalesce. There is no doubt that Manuel was very glad
to separate the two western sovereigns and to have an opportunity to strengthen
the old agreement with Conrad against Sicily and Hungary, now that the German
emperor was powerless to threaten Constantinople, and Conrad on his part must
have been happy to exchange the lesser place which he had to accept in Louis's
army for the attentions lavished upon him at the Greek court. Byzantine
diplomacy had reversed itself. Now it was the German sovereign who was wooed
by the court while the French king marched at the head of his army through Asia
Minor. Manuel himself acted as Conrad's physician until the illness had been
cured; and the difficult winter season, passed among the amenities of life in
Constantinople, was fruitful in strengthening pre-crusade ties between the
Byzantines and the Germans, but not in promoting unity among the crusading
armies.
Meanwhile
the French army had continued on its stubborn way. The first contact with the
Turks came in a successful skirmish on Christmas eve near Ephesus. After this
heartening incident winter weather, with torrents of cold rains, began in
earnest. On the way to Laodicea ad Lycum the crusaders found Turkish forces
blocking the ford of the swollen Maeander river and using their usual tactics
of harassing the army as it advanced; but after two days the Turks were finally
routed and the crusaders came to Laodicea on January 3 or 4, 1148. The French
rightly felt themselves in a kind of no man's land where Turkish forces could
appear suddenly and, when
defeated, as at the Maeander, seek refuge in Greek towns like Carian Antioch.
It was impossible to secure enough food at Laodicca for the journey to Adalia
(Antalya), but the army had to go on rather than exhaust its strength in vain
waiting. Turks and some of the inhabitants lurked threateningly around them;
worst of all, the crusaders saw gruesome evidence of the destruction of part
of Otto of Freising's army just a week or so before. Therefore Louis drew his
troops into battle array and stationed himself with his body-guard at the rear
while Geoffrey of Rancon, one of the chief Poitevin barons, and Amadeo of Savoy
took command of the van. Unfortunately for the crusaders, not all the army had
taken the warning signs seriously. Perhaps overconfident because of their
success thus far, the vanguard disregarded the royal order to spend an entire
day in crossing a mountain near Cadmus. When the passage was not too difficult,
they outdistanced the rest and climbed a second mountain, pitching camp on the
other side. This confused the center part, which stopped and piled up while
trying to discover where the vanguard had gone. In the midst of this turmoil
the watchful enemy closed in, attacking the unprotected middle of the army
before the rear guard came up. Louis heard the noise of the struggle and
arrived on the scene as quickly as possible, sending his chaplain to the
vanguard to cell them of the situation. They were prevented from returning, however,
by the onrush of men fleeing the battle. Louis and his nobles, unaccompanied by
the foot soldiers or sergeants which he would have provided for a pitched
conflict, managed to charge against the Turks and distract their attention from
the noncombatants, who fled to safety; but in the ensuing engagement the Turks
destroyed almost all of the royal guard. Fortunately for the crusaders, Louis
was not recognized and fought his way to safety. The approach of night and fear
of a surprise attack finally halted the Turks, who collected their rich spoils
and departed without pressing their advantage further. Thus the king was able
to join the baggage train which was still crossing the mountain; and then he
encountered the reinforcements coming from the van. They decided, however, that
it would be unwise to launch a counter attack during the night. Louis
alleviated the needs of those in his army as generously as he could from his
own supplies; and the next day he led the army on, with the enemy continuing
its policy of harassing the troops.
The
French still had twelve days of hard marching before they could reach Adalia,
and there were not enough provisions for the
journey. Louis and his magnates must have feared that the army would break up
in disorder as the Germans had on the road between Dorylacum and Nicaea.
Apparently there was no serious talk of retreat, since they had found little
protection and few supplies at Laodicea. The French continued doggedly towards
Adalia as best they could. At this time the Templars, who had had more
experience of this sort of warfare in west and east than the other knights,
stood out because of their ability to look after their own equipment and
protect the people around them; and so by common consent it was agreed that the
army should form a sort of fraternity with the Templars during the emergency,
all taking an oath that they would not flee the field and that they would obey
in every respect the officers assigned them. The knights were divided into
groups of fifty and each group put under the command of Gilbert the Templar or
one of his associates. They had to learn to endure Turkish attacks without
being drawn away in fruitless pursuit, to attack only when ordered, and to
return from pursuit at once when the signal was given. Also they were taught to
maintain an order of march in which each man kept the position given him. The
archers on foot were drawn up at the rear of the army to combat the Turkish
bowmen; and nobles who had lost or sold their equipment on the journey were
included in this group.
The
new system worked well. The crusaders managed to rout enemy attacks four times
or so in the days that followed and to go ahead in an orderly fashion with
forces intact. Since the Turks and Greeks had burned the stores of food and
destroyed the pasturage and crops in the fields by allowing flocks and cattle
to graze ahead of the advancing army, many of the horses succumbed and many
packs, tents, clothing, arms, etc. had to be abandoned and destroyed. The army
subsisted on horse-meat and bread baked in the ashes of the campfires. At last
they arrived at Adalia on January 20.
As
William of Tyre has pointed out, Adalia belonged to the Byzantine empire but
was so close to Moslem territory that it had had to establish a working
agreement with the Turks and so maintained a trade in necessary articles with
them. To this town Manuel had sent a messenger who forced the French nobles
to reconfirm their
pact with the emperor in return for market privileges. Food was obtainable,
though at high prices; but it was impossible to obtain grain for the starving
horses, and the Turks lingering outside the city prevented access to the
surrounding pastures. Furthermore, the crusaders could not obtain animals in
the city to replace the ones lost on the journey. In this new emergency the
king was eager to march on to Antioch, but his barons recommended going by sea
in order to avoid the forty days' journey which would traverse the same type of
barren countryside infiltrated with enemy forces which they had experienced
since leaving Ephesus and to which their depleted strength was not equal. The
Greeks had promised to collect a large fleet from the neighboring villages and
islands and had told the crusaders that the trip to Antioch would take only
three days by sea. Still reluctant to endorse this plan, Louis offered to
equip the knights from his own resources and to go with them along the route
which the soldiers of the First Crusade had taken to Antioch via Tarsus, while
he suggested sending the pilgrims by ship. Once again the hope of separating
the military forces from the noncombatants was not realized. The barons opposed
the king's proposal as unsuitable since they were "sluggish with idleness
and ailing with weariness and annoyances" and in many cases without
weapons and horses.
When
it proved impossible to reequip the knights the French approached the
commandant of the city and Manuel's messenger to secure passage by water; and
they were promised enough ships to transport the entire army. Then winter
storms set in and continued for almost a month, delaying the fleet. Prices in
the town sky-rocketed, and the crowded conditions were unpleasant. When the
ships did come, accomodation on them proved to be expensive and inadequate for
the numbers in the army. Louis apportioned the first ships among his bishops
and barons. Next came a long wait for more vessels. At last it became evident
that no more ships were coming. Then the greater part of the army, which had no
place on shipboard, took the only alternative open to them: the decision to
march to Antioch. With his usual generosity Louis tried to provide for their
needs. He gave the commandant and the emperor's messenger five hundred marks to
insure that they and a large troop of men would accompany the crusaders across
two nearby rivers, which the enemy was guarding, and then give the French an
escort to lead them safely to Tarsus; those unfit for the journey were to be
sheltered in the city until they recovered and could get
an
opportunity to follow their comrades. Accordingly, the invalids were admitted
to the city and the troops for the overland journey made preparations for their
departure. All the horses which the king could collect were furnished to
knights of proven valor.
After
appointing the counts of Flanders and Bourbon to see that the agreement was
carried out, Louis embarked for Antioch. He left behind him the larger part of
the army which he had led for more than sight months across Europe and down the
wintry and unfriendly coast of Asia Minor and for whose requirements he had
provided as well as he could throughout. This large, slow-moving expedition of
mixed character had been far different from that envisioned in his first plan
for a military force which would go to succor Edessa and the east. Louis, like
Conrad, had hoped eventually to separate the pilgrims from the soldiers in
order to accomplish his military aims efficiently, but not in the manner in
which the severance came about at Adalia. Here and elsewhere between
Constantinople and Jerusalem the lack of a friendly supporting fleet was
particularly disastrous. If the army could have been provisioned and rearmed by
ships, or if the noncombatants could have been transported easily, the fate of
the large western armies in 1147-1148 might have been far different. The
sea-faring peoples were engaged, however, in the Spanish, Wendish and Lisbon
expeditions or the Sicilian-Byzantine struggle.
As
it was, Louis had clung somewhat timidly, and perhaps in reaction from Conrad's
unfortunate dash toward Iconium, to nominally friendly territory with the
apparent idea of reaching Jerusalem before launching his offensive. Thus his
barons had not had ready opportunities for practicing their warlike arts and
replenishing their resources by attacking enemy strongholds. Instead, the
initiative had been taken by the enemy, whose large concentrations of troops
and knowledge of the country and the necessary movements of the crusaders
enabled them to pick the time and place for conflicts. Also unsatisfactory
relations with the Greek inhabitants and their emperor had embittered and confused
the French still further. The most lurid tales of Manuel and his treachery are
admittedly not true; but his desire to separate the western armies and their
commanders, his truce with the Turks and his lack of any substantial
support of the crusaders in Anatolia, while they may be justified as dictated
by self-interest (and suggested by the Norman attack upon Greece) cannot be
ignored as factors in the dispersal of the large pilgrim armies.
The
morning after Louis departed the Turks descended on the crusaders, but were
beaten off. Then the Greeks said that the winter season and the presence of the
Turks made it impossible to take the army to Tarsus; and after several days of
argument forced the king's representatives to leave Adalia on the ships which
returned for them. The end of the army left behind came swiftly. Many were
killed in combat with the Turks outside Adalia; some were led into slavery by
the Moslems or were admitted to Greek service; others died of the plague which
raged in the city. Only a small percentage of the original number could have
managed to get through to Tarsus and Antioch.
Louis
did not arrive at St. Simeon, the port for Antioch, in three days as promised.
Although some of the ships did so, he was driven off course by unfavorable
winds and may even have touched Cyprus before reaching the port more than two
weeks later, on March 19. There he received a warm and splendid welcome from
prince Raymond of Antioch and his people. Raymond was Eleanor's uncle, and he
had been one of the first to send messages to the west asking for aid.
Consequently his pleasure at the arrival of Louis and his barons after three
years of anticipation was very great. He escorted the king and his followers to
Antioch with pomp and ceremony unlike anything which they had experienced since
Constantinople and showered them with attentions and gifts. In return Raymond
counted on their support in a campaign against the cities of Aleppo and Shaizar
in order to alleviate Turkish pressure on the hard pressed northern section of
the Latin states. To his surprise and growing disgust Louis was inclined to do
no such thing. Even though the neighboring Turks feared the recently arrived
French, and Raymond thought the situation promising for conquest, Louis was not
sympathetic. The powerful preaching of the crusade had wrought a great change
in the early, simple plan of a military expedition for the aid of the east; the
concepts of holy war and pilgrimage had been impressed on those who enlisted,
and Louis was of the temperament to respond to such ideas. Privately and in
council he announced that he planned to go on to Jerusalem in order to fulfil
his crusading vow. After visiting
the holy places, Louis apparently hoped to plan a joint campaign with Conrad,
other western crusaders, and the knights of the Latin principalities. Then,
too, the French crusaders had been reduced to a tenth or less of their original
numbers during their journey to Antioch and now consisted mostly of knights
without substantial numbers of sergeants and archers to reinforce their
strength. A more vigorous general than Louis or a less travel-worn army might
have overcome their scruples and welcomed the opportunities which Raymond
offered for extending and protecting the northern section of the Latin states,
just as the maritime crusaders had agreed to turn aside to help the king of
Portugal defeat the Moslems at Lisbon, but for this group the attractions of
Jerusalem were too many and too close at hand. Furthermore, Raymond's device of
interesting Eleanor in his schemes in order to sway Louis was not a happy one.
The queen entered into her uncle's plans wholeheartedly and enjoyed the
diversions offered her in Antioch as well; but Louis distrusted this enthusiasm,
and gossiping courtiers apparently misconstrued and magnified her lively
enjoyment of the visit. The final step in a worsening situation came when
Raymond lost his patience with Louis and tried to injure the French king by
advising Eleanor to remain in Antioch if her husband left and to divorce him on
the ground of consanguinity. Louis countered these moves by taking his queen
and his people away from Antioch sooner than he had planned and setting out
quietly for Tripoli.
Raymond
had not been the only prince looking forward to the arrival of the crusaders
and hoping to make use of their resources, manpower, and prestige. Joscelin of
Edessa, Raymond of Tripoli, and Baldwin and Melisend of Jerusalem hoped to
attract Louis to their domains, too. Since the rulers of Jerusalem feared that
the French might be detained in Antioch or Tripoli, they sent Fulcher of
Angoulême, the patriarch of Jerusalem (1147-1157), to invite Louis to visit
their kingdom. We can be sure that the patriarch pointed out that Otto of Freising
and survivors from his army had reached Jerusalem on April 4 and that Conrad
had arrived a week
or so later.
The German ruler had parted from Manuel on the best of terms,
laden with many splendid gifts, and had travelled with a Greek fleet. On
landing at Acre he went to Jerusalem, where Fulcher had helped to welcome him
outside the city and to conduct him within to the sound of hymns and chants.
There the emperor had established himself in the house of the Templars and had
visited the shrines of the holy city. He had intended to accomplish his vows
and then to gather an army and set out for Edessa, which he had been
unsuccessful in rescuing the autumn before; but in Jerusalem he was influenced
to consider an expedition against Damascus to redress the failure of a
campaign of the summer before. Conrad needed to build up his army again and
so set out for Acre to secure the services of the men arriving at the seaport.
Probably among them were the Lisbon crusaders.
The
emergence of Damascus as a goal for the crusading armies was abrupt. From the
time of the first appeal for aid in 1145, Edessa and northern Syria had been to
the fore. Jerusalem, however, had been mentioned as needing protection from
further inroads by the Moslems and it was always the goal of the crusaders'
religious aspirations. At the court of Jerusalem Conrad had encountered local
and feudal ambition as marked as, and even less far-seeing than, that which
Louis had found in Antioch, but harder to recognize. His glamor of the holy
city, the authoritative position which Baldwin held for westerners as the king
of the Latin state, and the reputation which the Templars had for military
sagacity made the arguments for a Damascene campaign weighty. No one seems to
have objected seriously that the young king and his barons should have been
more mindful of the precarious welfare of the northern principalities than of
the aggrandizement of their comparatively secure domain. Damascus, like Aleppo,
was a desirable city whose capture had long been wished for. Also, Conrad was
probably told that the devastation of Edessa in 1146 had been so complete that
its repossession would be of doubtful value. Thus the problem of the city whose
fall had stirred the west to the monumental crusade was pushed aside.
Louis
was eager to lead his army to Jerusalem; and the news that Conrad was preparing
for a joint expedition with the eastern Franks and recruiting his ranks from
newly-arrived crusaders must
have raised new hopes of military conquest in Palestine, with an army in full
strength and shorn of its non-military elements. Louis could count on gaining
added strength from the contingents from Provence and Languedoc who had come to
Acre in late April with count Alfonso Jordan of Toulouse and his son Bertram.
Unfortunately the count of Toulouse himself furnished an incident for
dissension between the crusaders and the eastern Franks. As the son of Raymond
of Toulouse, who had founded the county of Tripoli, he was rumored to aspire to
that principality, which was being governed by Raymond II, the grandson of the
French count's elder brother. On the road south to Jerusalem, Alfonso Jordan
died at Caesarea, the victim, it was said, of poison administered at the
command of the count of Tripoli and his sister-in-law, queen Melisend of
Jerusalem. Bertram continued his journey and later took part in the siege of
Damascus; but Tripoli appears to have been in a state of unrest after the death
of Alfonso Jordan, and rumors over this latest incident between the Franks of
the east and west were as rampant as they had been in Antioch. On reaching
Jerusalem, Louis was given the same ceremonious welcome which Conrad had
experienced, and he and his nobles were conducted to the holy places. After he
had accomplished the devotions customary for a Jerusalem pilgrim, a general
court was announced for June 24 at Acre, "to consider the results of this
great pilgrimage, the completion of such great labors, and also the enlargement
of the realm". The roster of rulers and lay and ecclesiastical lords who
attended was brilliant, Conrad was accompanied by Otto of Freising, the
bishops of Metz and Toul, the papal legate Theeodwin of Porto, the dukes of
Bavaria and Swabia, duke Welf, margrave Hermann of Verona, Berthold of Andechs,
William of Montferrat, and count Guy of "Blandras" (Biandrate) as his
principal advisors. Louis's train included the bishops of Langres and Lisieux,
the papal legate Guido of Florence, the counts of Perche, Troyes, Flanders, and
Soissons, and Bertram of Toulouse; while king Baldwin and his mother were
supported by patriarch Fulcher, the archbishops of Caesarea and Nazareth, the
bishops of Acre, Sidon, Beirut, Banyas, and Bethlehem, Robert of Craon, called
the Burgundian, master of the Temple, and Raymond of Le Puy, master of the
Knights of St. John, the royal constable, the lords of Nablus, Tiberias, Sidon,
Caesarea, the Transjordan, Toron, and Beirut. No representatives from the
principalities of Antioch, Edessa, or Tripoli are known to have been present,
however. The
rulers of Edessa and Antioch were engaged
in defending their lands against Nur-ad-Din, and the count of Tripoli had
serious internal problems to settle.
In
his description of the court William of Tyre characterizes the nobles of the
realm of Jerusalem as possessing an accurate knowledge of affairs and places,
attributes which were normal enough for the inhabitants of the country, but in
sharp contrast to the elementary and romantic notions that the European crusaders
entertained concerning the Holy Land. On foreign soil, among situations which
had repeatedly proved far more complex than they had suspected, the western
princes felt and were made to feel that they needed the advice of men who knew
the place intimately. The day was past when they could afford to dash ahead
into practically unknown territory or plod ahead without a vigorous plan for a
campaign. With the nobles of Jerusalem they entered into careful consideration
as to what action would be most expedient. Various plans were presented before
the council and discussed. Some crusaders like the count of Flanders and Arnulf
of Lisieux were eager to leave the Holy Land behind and to go home without
attempting the campaign, and Conrad seemed to be turning to that point of view.
Louis and his warlike supporters like the bishop of Langres wanted to stay and
perform some deed worthy of their country and their ancestors. Surely there
must have been advocates for the northern campaign planned by Raymond of
Antioch or for the relief of Edessa. In the end, however, the recommendation of
the more belligerent Syrian barons won out, even though there was a native
faction which considered an expedition against a city as consistently friendly
as Damascus unwise. At this decision some of the crusaders like Welf did go
home; but the greatest part of the troops, numbering at least 50,000 and
commanded by Baldwin, Louis, and Conrad, assembled at Tiberias in mid-July.
Fired
by the sight of the True Cross, the Christian army marched to Banyas for a
further conference about strategy. Here the leaders received the advice of men
well acquainted with the situation of Damascus and its surroundings, and in
council with the barons and prelates decided to attack from the west, where the
city's strongest fortifications were protected by orchards that would
assure the attacking army a supply of food and water.
Going by Mount Lebanon,
they arrived at Daraiya, a few miles southwest of Damascus, on July 23. There
they arranged the armies in battle formation and decided upon the order of
march, to eliminate disorder and rivalry as much as possible during the siege.
First went the forces of the eastern Franks, whose superior knowledge of the
country fitted them for finding the best route and opening the attack. Louis
and his men followed close behind to strengthen and aid the Jerusalemite army, while
Conrad commanded the rear in anticipation of a possible surprise attack from
that direction. In this way they advanced on the following day through the
plain before the city, which was irrigated by canals and thickly set with
mud-walled orchards whose density and narrow paths made the approach extremely
difficult. The Damascenes harassed the army from hiding places among the trees,
openly blocked the paths, shot arrows from towers in the orchards, and hid
behind perforated walls in order to stab the attackers with lances. Despite
this vigorous defense the crusaders killed or captured many of the Moslems and
drove the rest back into the city. As they emerged from the gardens, however,
they found the cavalry and archers of Damascus and its allies massed on the
bank of the Barada river, which flowed beside the city. After some hesitation
the crusaders rallied and began to attack, but were not able to break through
until Conrad and his knights rushed from the rear in a powerful charge and then
began hand to hand fighting. With great courage and ferocity they drove the
Moslems back from the river and inside the city. Thus the army was established
in a good position, with access to food and water. They had gained some booty
in the gardens and had timber at hand to use for defenses; at the same time
they were able to destroy bridges which were necessary to the enemy.
Inside
the walls the Damascenes were terrified. Their vizir, Muin-ad-Din Unur (or
Onfir), had sent urgent messages for help to Saif-ad-Din of Mosul and his
brother Nur-ad-Din. Both had raised large forces to come to the aid of
Damascus, but the citizens were afraid that they could not hold out until help
came. Unur, however, was indomitable. He stirred his people by displaying
the
Koran of the caliph Uthman while they tried desperately to fortify the city
from within. The next day he led a counter-attack which was not successful in
forcing the crusaders from their position but did kill and wound many of their
number. This example of courage heartened the Damascenes; and the situation
remained the same during that night and the next day, with no serious attack
made by either side. By this time Saif-ad-Din and Nur-ad-Din had reached Homs,
and Saif-ad-Din had notified Unur that he would fight the crusaders if a man of
his choice could command Damascus during the conflict. Although he said that he
would return the city to Unur if the Moslems won, the vizir of Damascus was in
a dilemma. Because of his former friendly relations with Jerusalem he had
incurred the hostility of the Moslems and felt that Saif-ad-Din would not
really return the city.
Unur
had apparently written to the Syrian Franks in an attempt to induce them to
raise the siege. According to Ibn-al-Athir he pointed out that if Damascus
fell, the foreign Franks would expect it for themselves and would claim
additional land which belonged to the kingdom of Jerusalem, and that, if he
gave the city to Saif-ad-Din, Jerusalem would be readily accessible for the
next Moslem campaign. The effect of this message was heightened by the fact
that Saif-ad-Din had written to the crusaders saying that he would seize them
if they did not leave Damascus alone. All this news appalled the Syrian Franks,
and Unur has been credited with increasing his advantage by sending money to encourage
them to withdraw. Furthermore the Palestinian barons had been annoyed when the
three kings had agreed to grant Damascus to the count of Flanders when it fell,
since they felt that it should go to Guy of Beirut. They decided to raise the
siege and draw Louis and Conrad away.
The
crusaders knew that the western part of the city, which they faced, had been
well fortified during their delay and the eastern part held open for flight if
that became necessary. Since the proximity of the great Moslem armies now made
it necessary to capture the city quickly, the council advocated a shift in
position. During the night of July 26 the new view of the situation and the
proposed change in tactics were discussed. Finally the crusaders, whose belief
in the experts must have been somewhat shaken by this time, agreed to the plan,
and on July 27 they advanced to the east. Here they found themselves in a worse
position than before, lacking water and with very little food at hand, since
they had counted on entering the city quickly. The
walls
were too thick to storm at once, and the large armies of Nur-ad-Din and his
brother still threatened from the rear. The folly of the move was apparent to
all; and it was impossible to return to the western approach which the
Moslems had reoccupied and where the army would have been obliged to repeat
their first arduous offensive in order to gain a foothold. Retreat from the
city seemed the only solution, but the bishop of Langres and the most belligerent
part of the French army advocated remaining and lighting it out. At last
Conrad, the count of Flanders, and the native barons induced Louis to agree
with them. This he did for the common good and as a token of his respect for
Conrad. Thus the armies withdrew, suffering Moslem attacks as they went.
The
failure at Damascus gave rise to much bitterness and many accusations of
treachery against various persons and groups. The Templars, the Palestinian
barons, and Raymond of Antioch were named most often. Even Conrad, who was too
cautious to name names, wrote to Wibald that betrayal had been encountered
where least expected, when the city was declared unassailable in the west and
the armies were moved intentionally to another place where there was not a suitable
approach or water supply for the army. Thus the great alliance was destroyed in
one short campaign. Although the troops besieging Damascus had agreed on their
return to attack Ascalon and had fixed a day and place for the assembly of the
expedition, the atmosphere was full of accusations and charges which
discouraged cooperation. When Conrad arrived at the rendez-vous he found few
others there, and after eight days' waiting for a muster that never occurred he
decided that he had been deceived a second time and made plans to leave
Palestine as soon as possible and to winter in Constantinople on the way home.
The crusade had been a series of shattering defeats for him, but he consoled
himself with the reflection that he and his army had accomplished everything
which God had wished or the people of the land had permitted. He felt the kind
of antagonism for the inhabitants of the Latin principalities which the French
vented on the Greeks; and so he turned his attention to the one advantage which
his eastern journey seemed to offer: a closer alliance with the Byzantine
emperor Manuel. This was built partly on the marriages of Manuel and Bertha and
Manuel's niece Theodora and Henry of Bavaria, the second of which was
celebrated at this time. Bertha's dowry had been southern Italy; Theodora's
seems to have been part or all of Austria. To ensure the possession of these
portions a coalition was established among Manuel, Conrad, the duke of
Bohemia,
the margrave of Istria, Henry of Carinthia, Henry of Bavaria-Austria, William
of Montferrat, Venice, Genoa, Pisa, Poland, Galicia, and the Kumans against
Hungary, Sicily, and their allies, among whom duke Welf was numbered once more,
now that he had returned from the crusade.
Louis
was less eager to depart from Palestine. He still dreamed of achieving
something helpful to the Holy Land. To Suger's urgent pleas that he come home,
he replied that in view of the oppression of the church and the emergency
existing in the east he had been moved by piety and by the prayers of the
eastern church to remain until after the following Easter. In the meantime he
did what he could financially to aid the inhabitants who were suffering from
frequent Moslem inroads. The defeat of the crusade had reduced the prestige of
the Christians to a very low level and had emboldened the Turks to attempt
things which they had not dared to do before, particularly in northern Syria. When Louis did leave Palestine in 1149 his mind was still full of the necessity
to aid Outremer, but now Byzantium figured as an enemy rather than an ally in
future plans. This conviction was strengthened by the journey home. Louis had
chosen to sail on a Sicilian vessel and so narrowly escaped being captured by
part of the Byzantine navy, which was still at war with Roger. The king did
lose a ship on which some of his retinue were traveling, and Eleanor was
detained for a while. This misadventure added fuel to the French hatred and
distrust of the Byzantines, which had grown tremendously in the past year and
a half. When Louis landed in Calabria, he was glad to claim Roger as an ally,
and together they spoke of launching a new crusade to bring effective aid to
the east and to avenge themselves on the Greeks. Louis crowned Roger king; then
he journeyed home, stopping at the papal curia to tell of his experiences and
to sound out the pope on the idea of a new expedition. Eugenius assented to
this plan, and St. Bernard and Suger supported it, too; but there was no real
response to the new crusade among the nobles and the people. They were
exhausted by the grueling experiences of the Second Crusade and its tremendous
expenditure of resources and strength in the east without any positive
achievement. Conrad, of course, was not willing to be drawn into such a scheme.
His antipathy for the Latin east and
his entente with Manuel were more than enough to alienate him.
There
was to be no epilogue to recover the fortunes of the Second Crusade in
Palestine. The vision of all the forced of Christendom on the march against the
pagan Slavs and the Moslem world had been dissipated by the mixture of military
and non-military elements in the armies, divided leadership, conflicting
interests within Christendom, lack of knowledge and understanding of the
countries invaded, and the growing strength of the Moslems in the east. The
smaller, more concentrated, essentially military expeditions in Portugal and
Spain had achieved the successes of the crusade; and they foreshadowed the
shift from the vast miscellaneous outpourings of the First and Second Crusades
to the more limited personnel and more definite objectives of the Third and
Fourth Crusades.