Laura Morreale TIGHTENING THE NOOSE THE BATTLE OF HATTIN
Transcription
Laura Morreale TIGHTENING THE NOOSE THE BATTLE OF HATTIN
April 2012 TIGHTENING THE NOOSE THE BATTLE OF HATTIN Saladin in Battle, 13th century German manuscript, Wikiimedia Commons Laura Morreale Today, Jerusalem is one of the world’s most contested cities, with Jews, Christians, and Muslims jockeying for control of the city and its holy sites. In the Middle Ages, the city and surrounding area was no less divided than it is today, with control of the city passing back and forth between Muslims and Christians several times. In 1187, eight hundred and twenty-five years ago, Christians and Muslims met in a battle that decided the fate of the holy city...at least for a while. In June of that year, Saladin, a brilliant Kurdish Muslim military leader, had seized the city of Tiberias, near Jerusalem. Saladin, whose 1 name means “Righteousness of Faith,” believed that he could lure the Christian army (or the “Franks” as they were called by Muslims) into open combat. Once he had brought the Franks into open combat, Saladin planned to strike a decisive blow for Muslim forces. In previous years, Saladin had unsuccessfully raided Christian settlements with small bands of warriors, but now his army boasted roughly 30,000 men; it was the largest army he had ever commanded and it posed a real threat to the Christian army. Preparing for Battle Saladin was fortunate in that the Franks were already divided among themselves, with Guy of Lusignan, the King of Jersulam, and Reynald of Transjordan both struggling for control over the Frankishheld territories. However, the Christians managed to answer Saladin’s challenge by assembling a Christian army numbering around 20,000. The army included knights and soldiers whose main job was to protect and defend the Crusader cities of Jerusalem and Tripoli. On July 2nd, the Franks held a war council to decide whether to confront the Muslims at Tiberias, or to allow the city to fall into Muslim hands. Attacking Saladin and his army APRIL 2012 The ultimate prize---the Dome of the Rock, built 688-691 AD, UHP PHOTO at Tiberias would require the Franks to march fifteen By mid-afternoon, the Frankish army was so tired, miles to Tiberias in the summer heat, over a hot, dry thirsty, and overextended that the order was given to landscape with few sources of water. halt and make camp. They had covered only half the distance between Turan and Tiberias. At the war council, Guy argued that the Franks should take the chance of marching in the heat. Reynald disagreed. Dismissing Reynald’s warnings The Battle as a sign of cowardice, Guy managed to win over the majority of the Franks to his view. The decision to rest proved a fatal error. On the morning of July 3rd, the Frankish army began its long march towards Tiberias. At mid-day they stopped at a spring located in Turan, six miles from their point of departure. Sensing that the Franks had fallen into his trap, Saladin flanked the Christian forces on two sides, surrounding them, and cutting off their access to the water at Turan. Muslim cavalrymen had been harassing the Christian army at its fringes almost immediately since they had left their encampment in the morning, and now they continued to badger the Franks while they took their noontime water and rest. The Christians spent a tortured night with no water, no hope for reinforcements, and no path for retreat. It was still nine miles to Tiberas, more than a full day’s march, but Guy of Lusignan elected to leave Turan and its water and venture out across the plateau that same afternoon. Now, the Muslim army left Tiberias to meet the oncoming Christian threat face to face. Saladin positioned his men atop a ridge of hills, overlooking the hot, dry plain the Franks were struggling to cross. 2 The Muslim army pressed ever closer upon them, taunting them with whooping cries of victory as the night wore on. When morning arrived, the Christians were greeted with a blinding screen of smoke, coming from the brush fires the Muslims had lit. In the scorching heat, struggling with stinging eyes, noses and throats, the Christians’ thirst intensified. Desperate to abandon the scorching heat of the plateau and head for the water supply at the springs of Hattin, the Christians fled north. But there, the Muslim army cut them off, forcing them into a battle. APRIL 2012 At roughly nine o’clock on the morning of July 4, the two armies directly clashed on the plains located just to the south of the Horns of Hattin, a two-peaked slope to the north of the Christian encampment. The Christians resorted to tactics that had been successful against the Muslims in previous campaigns, by assembling their infantrymen and cavalry in tight formation. Turning the Battle Usually, their infantry, armed with crossbows and pikes and clothed in heavy leather cloaks, shielded the armored knights from the shower of incoming arrows, and allowed the mounted warriors to serve as a second wave against the oncoming enemy. But on this morning, the exhausted and parched infantry offered little resistance to the Muslim onslaught. They broke ranks after only a few charges, fleeing towards the Horns of Hattin in a desperate search for water. When the infantry fled, the knights on horseback were bombarded with Muslim arrows and forced to dismount. While some knights escaped through THE ARID PLAINS OF HATTIN, PUBLIC DOMAIN 3 enemy lines, a greater number gathered together near their rallying point, the Holy Cross (containing what was believed to be a piece of the True Cross). The Christians had brought this relic intending it to serve as divine help and inspiration during the battle. Amid his disoriented cavalry, Guy of Lusignan pitched his red tent, which was known to belong to the king, and made three final attempts to advance on the enemy. Each time the Franks rallied for a charge, Saladin, who was watching from afar, pulled nervously at his beard, according to his son al-Afdal. But after the third charge Saladin finally saw the red tent fall. He fell to the ground and knelt in prayer, thanking God for his victory. Both Guy and Reynald were captured and brought before Saladin. Guy was treated with the hospitality and respect due a conquered king. But Reynald, who had provoked Saladin many times before, received no such treatment. Instead, Saladin ordered Reynald into his tent and beheaded him with his own sword. Reynald’s corpse was then dragged before APRIL 2012 Guy, who looked on in horror. The Frankish army was decimated by the defeat, with the majority of the infantry and knights killed, captured, or sold into slavery. The Christian relic, the Holy Cross, was seized and paraded upside-down through the streets of Damascus. With so few soldiers remaining to mount an effective defense, Jerusalem quickly fell to the Muslim forces. But transfer of the city from Christian to Muslim hands did not mean an end to the struggles to control the Holy Land. In Europe, Saladin’s victory led to a resounding cry for a new Crusade to reclaim the Holy Land…and a Third Crusade was quickly launched. Dr. Laura Morreale is an independent historian. Her dissertation, Chronicle and Community in Northern Italy, 1270-1360, explored the introduction of vernacular Italian into local historical writing. She has recently written about the interaction between French and Italian vernacular traditions in thirteenthcentury Florentine historiography (Speculum, October, 2010), and has produced an English translation of Martin da Canal’s Old French history of Venice, Les Estoires de Venise (Unipress, 2009). She also edits Fordham’s French of Italy website. Tight Formation, The Battle of Hattin, Medieval Manuscript, Date Unknown, Wikimedia