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The World of the Crusades

Page 50

by Christopher Tyerman

Henry IV 1399–1413

  Henry V 1413–22

  Henry VI 1422–61

  Edward IV 1461–70, 1471–83

  Henry VI 1470–71

  Edward V 1483

  Richard III 1483–85

  Henry VII 1485–1509

  Henry VIII 1509–47

  Edward VI 1547–53

  Mary I 1553–8

  Elizabeth I 1558–1603

  Sicily

  Roger I 1062–1101

  Simon 1101–5

  Roger II 1105–54

  William I 1154–66

  William II 1166–89

  Tancred 1189–94

  William III 1194

  Henry I (VI of Germany) 1194–7

  Frederick I (II of Germany) 1197–1250

  Conrad I (IV of Germany) 1250–54

  Conrad II (Conradin) 1254–8

  Manfred 1258–66

  Charles I 1266–85 (Naples only 1282–5)

  Naples:

  Charles II 1285–1309

  Robert I 1309–43

  Sicily:

  Peter I (III of Aragon) 1282–5

  James I (II of Aragon) 1285–96

  Frederick II 1296–1337

  (these kingdoms continued independent until the sixteenth century)

  Castile

  Ferdinand I 1036–65

  Sancho II 1065–72

  Alfonso VI 1072–1109

  Urraca 1109–26

  Alfonso VII 1126–57

  Sancho III 1157–8

  Alfonso VIII 1158–1214

  Henry I 1214–17

  Ferdinand III 1217–52

  Alfonso X 1252–84

  Sancho IV 1284–95

  Ferdinand IV 1295–1312

  Alfonso XI 1312–50

  Peter I 1350–69

  Henry II 1369–79

  John I 1379–90

  Henry III 1390–1406

  John II 1406–54

  Henry IV 1454–74

  Isabella 1474–1504

  Ferdinand V (II of Aragon) 1475–1516

  as Spain:

  Charles I (V of Germany) 1516–56

  Philip II 1556–98

  León

  Ferdinand I 1037–65

  Alfonso VI 1065–1109

  (1109–57 as Castile)

  Ferdinand II 1157–88

  Alfonso IX 1188–1230

  Ferdinand III 1230–52

  (from 1252 as Castile)

  Aragon

  Sancho I 1063–94

  Peter I 1094–1104

  Alfonso I 1104–34

  Ramiro II 1134–7

  Petronilla and Ramon Berenguer 1137–62

  Alfonso II 1162–96

  Peter II 1196–1213

  James I 1213–76

  Peter III 1276–85

  Alfonso III 1285–91

  James II 1291–1327

  Alfonso IV 1327–36

  Peter III 1336–87

  John I 1387–96

  Martin I 1396–1410

  Ferdinand I 1412–16

  Alfonso V 1416–58

  John II 1458–79

  Ferdinand II 1479–1516

  (from 1516 as Castile/Spain)

  Hungary

  Ladislas I 1077–95

  Coloman 1095–1116

  Stephen II 1116–31

  Bela II 1131–41

  Geza II 1141–62

  Stephen III 1162, 1163–72

  Stephen IV 1162–3

  Bela III 1172–96

  Emeric 1196–1204

  Ladislas II 1204–5

  Andrew II 1205–35

  Bela IV 1235–70

  Stephen V 1270–72

  Ladislas III 1272–90

  Andrew III 1290–1301

  Wenceslas III 1301–4

  Otto of Bavaria 1304–8

  Charles Robert 1308–42

  Louis I 1342–82

  Mary, 1382–6, 1386–7

  Charles II 1385–6

  Sigismund 1387–1437

  Albert I 1438–9

  Ladislas IV 1439–44

  Ladislas V 1444–57

  Matthias Corvinus 1458–90

  Ladislas VI 1490–1516

  Louis II 1516–26

  Ottoman Empire

  Osman d. 1326

  Orkhan 1326–62

  Murad I 1362–89

  Bayezid I 1389–1402

  (Interregnum civil wars 1403–13)

  Mehmed I 1413–21

  Murad II 1421–51

  Mehmed II 1451–81

  Bayezid II 1481–1512

  Selim I 1512–20

  Suleiman I 1520–66

  Selim II 1566–74

  Jerusalem

  Godfrey of Bouillon 1099–1100

  Baldwin I 1100–1118

  Baldwin II 1118–31

  Fulk 1131–43 and Melisende 1131–52

  Baldwin III 1143–63

  Amalric 1163–74

  Baldwin IV 1174–85

  Baldwin V 1185–6

  Guy of Lusignan 1186–92; with his wife Sybil 1186–90, daughter of Amalric

  Isabel I 1192–1205; with Conrad I 1192; Henry 1192–7; Aimery 1197–1205

  Maria 1205–12

  John of Brienne 1210–25

  Isabel II 1212–28; with Frederick (II of Germany) 1225–8

  Conrad II (IV of Germany) 1228–54

  Conrad III (Conradin) 1254–68

  Hugh I (III of Cyprus) 1268–84

  John 1284–5

  Henry I (II of Cyprus) 1285–1324

  Antioch

  Bohemund 1098–1105

  Tancred regent 1101–3, 1105–8; prince 1108–12

  Roger of Salerno 1113–19

  Baldwin II of Jerusalem 1119–26, 1130–1

  Bohemund II 1126–30

  Fulk of Jerusalem 1130–36

  Raymond of Poitiers 1136–49

  Constance 1149–53, 1161–3

  Raynald of Châtillon 1153–61

  Bohemund III 1163–1201

  Bohemund IV 1201–16, 1219–33

  Raymond Roupen 1216–19

  Bohemund V 1233–52

  Bohemund VI 1252–68

  Tripoli

  Raymond IV of Toulouse, I of Tripoli 1102–5

  William-Jordan 1105–9

  Bertrand 1109–12

  Pons 1112–37

  Raymond II 1137–52

  Raymond III 1152–87

  Bohemund IV of Antioch 1187–1233

  Bohemund V 1233–52

  Bohemund VI 1252–75

  Bohemund VII 1275–87

  Edessa

  Baldwin I of Boulogne 1098–1100

  Baldwin II of Le Bourcq 1100–18

  Joscelin I of Courtenay 1119–31

  Joscelin II 1131–50

  (Joscelin III titular count 1150–88)

  Valois dukes of Burgundy

  Philip the Bold 1363–1404

  John the Fearless 1404–19

  Philip the Good 1419–67

  Charles the Rash 1467–77

  GLOSSARY

  Abbasids

  Caliphs of orthodox Sunnis, 750–1258, based in Baghdad

  al-Andalus

  Muslim Spain

  Almohads

  Fundamentalist Muslim dynasty and movement originating in early twelfth-century Morocco; created an empire in north Africa and al-Andalus that lasted until the mid-thirteenth century

  Almoravids

  Fundamentalist Muslim dynasty and movement from Morocco that established an empire in north Africa and al-Andalus between the 1050s and the mid-twelfth century

  askars

  Groups of professional soldiers in the service of Arab and Turkish rulers

  assise

  Literally a sitting, its meaning transferring from a meeting of a court to legal processes and then to the actual laws themselves

  atabeg

  Regent or guardian of Turkish or Mamluk princes

  Ayyubids

  Family of the Kurdish comman
der Ayyub, Saladin’s father; a dynasty that ruled parts of the Near East from the 1160s

  Byzantium

  Modern name given to the surviving eastern Roman Empire based in Constantinople; finally extinguished by the Ottoman Turks in the mid-fifteenth century

  caliph

  Successor to the Prophet Muhammed (d. 632), religious and political leader of Islam, a role contested between different Islamic traditions

  canon law

  The rules, laws, principles and ordinances governing the Church and the conduct of the faithful, increasingly codified in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries although quiet on the legal theory of crusading

  Cathars

  A name given by their persecutors to twelfth- and thirteenth-century dualist believers (from the Greek katharos, clean or pure); those in Languedoc also called Albigensians

  Chalcedonian Christians

  Those denominations, including Catholics and Eastern Orthodox, that subscribe to the definition of the Trinity of Father, Son and Holy Ghost agreed at the Council of Chalcedon; other substantial Christian groups in the Near East, such as the Nestorian, Maronite and Jacobite communities, held different views on the nature of the Trinity and the relationship of the human and divine in Jesus

  cogs

  Round, clinker-built, single square-rigged sailing transport ships, central to Baltic trade and warfare, and increasingly used on crusades to the Levant from the later twelfth century

  commune

  Formal sworn civil association pooling command, jurisdiction and funds; crusade examples created before and during campaigns

  crucesignatus/a

  A man or woman who, in recognition of swearing a vow to pursue holy war, has received, been ‘signed with’, a cross; a crusader

  dar al-Islam

  The house of Islam; Muslim lands, as opposed to the dar al-harb, the house of war, or the dar al-ahd, the house of truce

  Fatimids

  Caliphs of Shia Muslims, 909–1171, based in north Africa, then Egypt

  frangopouloi

  Western Europeans settled in Byzantium

  Franks

  A generic term for western settlers in Outremer, ifranj in Arabic, sometimes derisively known in western Europe as poulains; also the name applied to the early medieval populations of modern France and western Germany

  Great Schism

  1378–1417 when two then, from 1409, three rival popes were recognised by different groups across western Christendom; crusades were occasionally used in the conflict

  Hohenstaufen

  German imperial dynasty producing four crusaders, Conrad III, Frederick I Barbarossa, Henry VI and Frederick II; also rulers of Sicily from 1194; target of papal hostility and crusades, 1239–68

  Hussites

  Followers of the religious ideas of Jan Hus (d. 1415) in Bohemia, a combination of ideological dissent and Czech nationalism; they survived repeated crusades to suppress them

  Il-Khans of Persia

  Mongol rulers of Iraq and Iran, 1261–1353; until 1323 putative but not actual allies of crusaders against Mamluk Egypt

  indulgence

  The remission of God’s punishment for sin, available to the sinner after confession to a priest and authorised by the pope acting as the successor to St Peter as Christ’s vicegerent with the power according to Christ’s command in Matthew 16:19 to bind and loose on earth and heaven

  jihad

  Literally ‘struggle’ or ‘striving’ in Arabic; in Islamic tradition denotes either inner spiritual struggle or the external struggle or holy war against infidels and heretics

  Khwarazmians

  Turkish nomadic freelance mercenaries displaced from the steppes by the Mongols; invaded Outremer in the pay of the sultan of Egypt in 1244, capturing Jerusalem

  madrasa

  Islamic religious school or college

  Mamluks

  Slave soldiers, usually steppe Turks; organised into regiments attached to Arab and Turkish rulers, played an increasingly prominent and independent military and hence political role until they usurped rule in Egypt, creating a Mamluk sultanate, 1250–1517

  mendicants

  Literally beggars; applied to members of the religious Orders founded by Francis of Assisi and Dominic of Osma, the Franciscan and Dominican friars, who were prominent in promoting crusading from the 1220s

  Mongols

  Asiatic steppe people of Altaic stock, united under Genghis Khan (d. 1227) before forging the largest land empire in history from China to Iraq and southern Russia; renowned for ruthlessness but adept at incorporating conquered people into their armies; in the 1240s their campaigning reached eastern and central Europe but, as non-Muslims, they were sometimes seen as potential allies for crusaders in the Levant against the mutual enemy, Egypt

  Moors

  Non-Muslim designation of Muslim inhabitants of the western Mediterranean

  Mozarabs

  Christians living in al-Andalus

  mudejars

  Muslims living under Christian rule in Spain

  Ottomans

  Turkish rulers of a small thirteenth-century principality in north-west Asia Minor who from the fourteenth to sixteenth centuries created an empire that stretched from the Danube to the Sahara; based from 1453 at Constantinople/Istanbul, the Ottoman Empire lasted until 1922

  Outremer

  The land beyond the sea, the principalities in Syria and Palestine settled by western Europeans after the First Crusade

  papal bull

  Public letter of the pope (a decree, order, grant of rights or privileges, etc.) authenticated by a lead seal (bulla); bula de cruzada authorising the sale of indulgences became a regular fiscal feature of Spanish rule into the twentieth century

  passage

  Term used to describe naval activity – civilian, commercial and military – during the twice-yearly windows when the winds and currents allowed for easier sea communication between the western Mediterranean and the Levant; also became used as synonym for sea-borne crusades, either of mass (passagium generale) or smaller, professional nature (passagium particulare)

  penance

  In Christian terms, a punishment performed in expiation of sin and demonstration of repentance, customarily imposed by priests after the sinner has confessed to the sin

  pilgrimage

  Journeys to holy sites; regarded as spiritually beneficial or imposed as a penance; also a metaphor for internal spiritual journeying

  portolan

  Navigational charts and maps based on compass points and observed distances between ports; in use by the late thirteenth century and probably earlier

  reconquista

  The name given somewhat tendentiously to the conquest of al-Andalus by Iberian Christian rulers from the late eleventh century

  redemption of vows

  A system developed from the late twelfth century and perfected between 1213 and 1234 that allowed the faithful to take the cross and fulfil their obligation and enjoy the privileges by redeeming their oath not by participation but through paying money or other material contributions; this developed into the direct sale of remissions and indulgences

  Reisen

  Raids; short winter and summer Baltic campaigns by the Teutonic Knights against the Lithuanians in the fourteenth century attracting western European recruits

  Rumelia

  The European territories of the Ottoman Empire, chiefly the Balkans

  Seljuks

  Nomadic Turks from the Eurasian steppes who invaded and conquered much of the Near East in the eleventh century

  Shi’ites

  Muslims who believe authority in Islam rightfully descends through the immediate family of Muhammed via his son-in-law Ali (caliph assassinated 661) and his descendants, spiritual leaders called imams, opposed to the authority of Sunni caliphs

  sultan

  Islamic ruler, beneath the notional authority of the caliph

  Sunnis

  The majori
ty of Muslims who followed the sunna or custom, the accepted sayings and practices of Muhammed, which developed and clarified doctrine and law beyond the Koran

  tithes

  Taxes on laity and/or clergy for the crusade calculated on a tenth of annual surplus income; most famously used in 1188 in England and France, the so-called Saladin Tithe; from 1215 it became an irregular tax on the Church for the crusade

  trebuchet

  Effective large-scale throwing machine or catapult in use at sieges by 1200

  ulema

  Body of specialist Muslim religious and legal scholars

  Umayyads

  Muslim dynasty of caliphs, 661–750, who later established themselves as rulers of al-Andalus based at Cordoba, 756–1031, proclaiming themselves caliphs in 919

  umma

  The community of all Muslim people

  Zengids

  Turkish dynasty related to Imad al-Din Zengi (d. 1146), ruler of Mosul and Aleppo

  NOTES

  PREFACE

  1. Ralph Glaber, Opera, ed. J. France (Oxford 1989), pp. 36–7; 61.

  2. C. Morris, The Sepulchre of Christ and the Medieval West (Oxford 2005); M. Biddle, The Tomb of Christ (Stroud 1999).

  INTRODUCTION

  1. From the only surviving version of the decree of Urban II’s Council of Clermont, November 1095, J. and L. Riley-Smith, The Crusades: Idea and Reality 1095–1274 (London 1981), p. 37; trans. from R. Somerville, The Councils of Urban II: 1. Decreta Claromontensia (Amsterdam 1972), p. 74; cf. pp. 108, 124.

  2. P. Jackson, ‘The Crusade against the Mongols (1241)’, Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 42 (1991), 1–18, esp. 6–7, 17–18; E. T. Kennan, ‘Innocent III, Gregory IX and Political Crusades’, Reform and Authority in the Medieval and Reformation Church, ed. G. F. Lytle (Washington, DC 1981), pp. 26–9; C. Tyerman, God’s War: A New History of the Crusades (London 2006), pp. 705 (Baltic) and 904 and nn. 63–5 (anti-crusade crusades).

 

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