The Second Crusade Documents Table of Contents
Transcription
The Second Crusade Documents Table of Contents
The Second Crusade Documents Table of Contents Prologue: The Fall of Edessa i Chronicles Fulcher of Chartres: A History of the Expedition to Jerusalem 1095-1127 William of Tyre: A History of Deeds Done Beyond the Sea Odo of Deuil: De Profectione Ludovici VII in Orientem Otto of Freising: The Deeds of Frederick Barbarossa Arab Historians: Excerpts from Ibn al-Athir and Ibn al-Qalanisi 1 7 47 58 66 Memoirs, Letters Letters of Conrad and Louis Usamah Ibn Munqidh: Book of Contemplation (Memoirs) 74 77 Investiture Controversy Gelasius I: Letter to Emperor Anastasius, 494 Emperor Henry IV: Letter to Pope Gregory VII, 1076 Pope Gregory VII: Deposition and Banning of Henry IV, 1076 Pope Gregory VII: Dictatus Papae, 1090 Concordat of Worms, 1122 88 89 91 92 93 Additional Crusade Documents Pope Eugenius III: Summons to a Crusade, 1145 Bernard of Clairvaux: In Praise of the New Knighthood, c. 1136 94 96 Arguments and Passages Relating to Just War Tertullian: On Idolatry c. 200 Origen: Against Celsus c. 250 St. Augustine: Selections c. 420 Gratian: Decretum c.1140 100 101 102 110 Religious Texts New Testament Islam and the Qur’an Additional Qu’ran passages 117 135 174 Maps 180 Medieval Sourcebook: Fulcher of Chartres: History of the Expedition to Jerusalem Fulcher (c. 1059-?) was a chronicler of and participant in the First Crusade. He served as chaplain to Baldwin I, the first king of Jerusalem, and later became canon of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. His account of the calling of the First Crusade (written after the success of the crusade, and probably colored by its success) shows how the crusade was seen as both war of liberation and penitential pilgrimage. Suppporters of the crusade can use this text in Debate 1 to argue that God granted them victory in the First Crusade because their war was just, and therefore they should embark on a new crusade. The German faction may use Book III to argue in Debate 1 that conditions are different for this crusade and it will be unsuccessful unless it is undertaken with the proper devotional spirit. A Table of Contents for Fulcher of Chartres Book I Book II Book III Pope Urban II calls the First Crusade The Crusaders capture Jerusalem Europeans living in the Holy Land adapt to its customs 1 Book I. Urban II's Speech at Clermont In the year 1095 after the Incarnation of Our Lord, evils of all kinds multiplied throughout Europe because of vacillating faith. Pope Urban II then ruled in the city of Rome. He was a man admirable in life and habits who strove prudently and vigorously to raise the status of the Holy Church ever higher and higher. Moreover, he saw the faith of Christendom excessively trampled upon by all, by the clergy as well as by the laity, and peace totally disregarded, for the princes of the lands were incessantly at war quarreling with someone or other. He saw that people stole worldly goods from one another, that many captives were taken unjustly and were most barbarously cast into foul prisons and ransomed for excessive prices, or tormented there by hunger, thirst, and cold, and secretly put to death, that holy places were violated, monasteries and villas consumed by fire, nothing mortal spared, and things human and divine held in derision. When he heard that the interior part of Romania [Asia Minor, the heartland of the Byzantine Empire] had been occupied by the Turks, and the Christians subdued by a ferociously destructive invasion, Urban, greatly moved by compassionate piety and by the prompting of God’s love, crossed the mountains [from Italy] and descended into France and caused a council to be assembled at Clermont…. On the appointed day Urban gathered them around himself and in an eloquent address carefully made known the purpose of the meeting. In the suffering voice of a suffering church he told of its great tribulation. He delivered an elaborate sermon concerning the many raging tempests of the world in which the faith had been degraded. Then as a suppliant he exhorted all to resume the powers of their faith and arouse in themselves a fierce determination to overcome the machinations of the devil, and to try fully to restore the Holy Church, cruelly weakened by the wicked, to its honorable status as of old: “Most beloved brethren: Urged by necessity, I, Urban, by the permission of God, chief bishop and prelate over the whole world, have come into these parts as an ambassador with a divine admonition to you, the servants of God. I hoped to find you as faithful and as zealous in the service of God as I had supposed you to be. But if there is in you any deformity or crookedness contrary to God's law, with divine help I will do my best to remove it. For God has put you as stewards over his family to minister to it. Happy indeed will you be if he finds you faithful in your stewardship. “You are called shepherds; see that you do not act as hirelings. But be true shepherds, with your crooks always in your hands. Do not go to sleep, but guard on all sides the flock committed to you. For if through your carelessness or negligence a wolf carries away one of your sheep, you will surely lose the reward laid up for you with God. And after you have been bitterly scourged with remorse for your faults, you will be fiercely overwhelmed in hell, the abode of death. 2 “For according to the gospel you are the salt of the earth [Matt. 5:13]. But if you fall short in your duty, how, it may be asked, can it be salted? O how great the need of salting! It is indeed necessary for you to correct with the salt of wisdom this foolish people which is so devoted to the pleasures of this world, lest the Lord, when He may wish to speak to them, find them putrefied by their sins unsalted and stinking. For if He shall find worms, that is, sins, in them, because you have been negligent in your duty, He will command them as worthless to be thrown into the abyss of unclean things. And because you cannot restore to Him His great loss, He will surely condemn you and drive you from His loving presence. “But the man who applies this salt should be prudent, provident, modest, learned, peaceable, watchful, pious, just, equitable, and pure. For how can the ignorant teach others? How can the licentious make others modest? And how can the impure make others pure? If anyone hates peace, how can he make others peaceable? Or if anyone has soiled his hands with baseness, how can he cleanse the impurities of another? We read also that if the blind lead the blind, both will fall into the ditch [Matt. 15:14]. But first correct yourselves, in order that, free from blame, you may be able to correct those who are subject to you. If you wish to be the friends of God, gladly do the things which you know will please Him. “You must especially let all matters that pertain to the church be controlled by the law of the church. And be careful that simony does not take root among you, lest both those who buy and those who sell [church offices] be beaten with the scourges of the Lord through narrow streets and driven into the place of destruction and confusion. “Keep the church and the clergy entirely free from the secular power. See that the tithes that belong to God are faithfully paid from all the produce of the land; let them not be sold or withheld. “If anyone seizes a bishop let him be treated as an outlaw. If anyone seizes or robs monks, or clergymen, or nuns, or their servants, or pilgrims, or merchants, let him be anathema [cursed]. Let robbers and incendiaries and all their accomplices be expelled from the church and anathematized. If a man who does not give a part of his goods as alms is punished with the damnation of hell, how should he be punished who robs another of his goods? For thus it happened to the rich man in the gospel [Luke 16:19]; he was not punished because he had stolen the goods of another, but because he had not used well the things which were his. “You have seen for a long time the great disorder in the world caused by these crimes. It is so bad in some of your provinces, I am told, and you are so weak in the administration of justice that one can hardly go along the road by day or night without being attacked by robbers; and whether at home or abroad one is in danger of being despoiled either by force or fraud. “Therefore it is necessary to reenact the truce, as it is commonly called, which was proclaimed a long time ago by our holy fathers. I exhort and demand that you try hard to have the truce kept in your diocese. And if anyone shall be led by his greed or arrogance to break this truce, by the authority of God and with the sanction of this council he shall be anathematized.” 3 After these and various other matters had been attended to, all who were present, clergy and people, gave thanks to God and agreed to the pope's proposition. They all faithfully promised to keep the decrees. Then the pope said that in another part of the world Christianity was suffering from a state of affairs that was worse than the one just mentioned. He continued: “Although, O sons of God, you have promised more firmly than ever to keep the peace among yourselves and to preserve the rights of the church, there remains still an important work for you to do. Freshly quickened by the divine correction, you must apply the strength of your righteousness to another matter which concerns you as well as God. For your brethren who live in the east are in urgent need of your help, and you must hasten to give them the aid which has often been promised them. “For, as the most of you have heard, the Turks and Arabs have attacked them and have conquered the territory of Romania as far west as the shore of the Mediterranean and the Hellespont. They have occupied more and more of the lands of those Christians, and have overcome them in seven battles. They have killed and captured many, and have destroyed the churches and devastated the empire. If you permit them to continue thus with impunity, the faithful of God will be much more widely attacked by them. “On this account I, or rather the Lord, beseech you as Christ's heralds to publish this everywhere and to persuade all people of whatever rank, foot-soldiers and knights, poor and rich, to carry aid promptly to those Christians and to destroy that vile race from the lands of our friends. I say this to those who are present; it is meant also for those who are absent. Moreover, Christ commands it. “All who die on the way, whether by land or by sea, or in battle against the pagans, shall have immediate remission of sins. This I grant them through the power of God with which I am invested. O what a disgrace if such a despised and base race, which worships demons, should conquer a people which has the faith of omnipotent God and is made glorious with the name of Christ! With what reproaches will the Lord overwhelm us if you do not aid those who, with us, profess the Christian religion! “Let those who have been accustomed to wage unjust private warfare against the faithful now go against the infidels and end with victory this war which should have been begun long ago. Let those who for a long time have been robbers now become knights. Let those who have been fighting against their brothers and relatives now fight in a proper way against the barbarians. Let those who have been serving as mercenaries for small pay now obtain the eternal reward. Let those who have been wearing themselves out in both body and soul now work for a double honor. Behold! on this side will be the sorrowful and poor, on that, the rich; on this side, the enemies of the Lord, on that, his friends. “Let those who go not put off the journey, but rent their lands and collect money for their expenses; and as soon as winter is over and spring comes, let hem eagerly set out on the way with God as their guide.” 4 Book II. The Capture of Jerusalem The First Crusade culminated in the Christian capture of Jerusalem on July 15, 1099. Fulcher participated in the storming of the city and in the bloody massacre that followed. On the seventh of June the Franks besieged Jerusalems…. When the Franks saw how difficult it would be to take the city, the leaders ordered scaling ladders to be made, hoping that by a brave assault it might be possible to surmount the walls by means of ladders and thus take the city, God helping. So the ladders were made, and on the day following the seventh, in the early morning, the leaders ordered the attack, and, with the trumpets sounding, a splendid assault was made on the city from all sides. The attack lasted till the sixth hour, but it was discovered that the city could not be entered by the use of ladders, which were few in number, and sadly we ceased the attack. Then a council was held, and it was ordered that siege machines should be constructed by the artisans, so that by moving them close to the wall we might accomplish our purpose, with the aid of God. This was done.... ….When the tower had been put together and had been covered with hides, it was moved nearer to the wall. Then knights, few in number, but brave, at the sound of the trumpet, took their places in the tower and began to shoot stones and arrows. The Saracens defended themselves vigorously, and, with slings, very skillfully hurled back burning firebrands, which had been dipped in oil and fresh fat. Many on both sides, fighting in this manner, often found themselves in the presence of death. …. On the following day the work again began at the sound of the trumpet, and to such purpose that the rams, by continual pounding, made a hole through one part of the wall. The Saracens suspended two beams before the opening, supporting them by ropes, so that by piling stones behind them they would make an obstacle to the rams. However, what they did for their own protection became, through the providence of God, the cause of their own destruction. For, when the tower was moved nearer to the wall, the ropes that supported the beams were cut; from these same beams the Franks constructed a bridge, which they cleverly extended from the tower to the wall. About this time one of the towers in the stone wall began to burn, for the men who worked our machines had been hurling firebrands upon it until the wooden beams within it caught fire. The flames and smoke soon became so bad that none of the defenders of this part of the wall were able to remain near this place. At the noon hour on Friday, with trumpets sounding, amid great commotion and shouting “God help us,” the Franks entered the city. When the pagans saw one standard planted on the wall, they were completely demoralized, and all their former boldness vanished, and they turned to flee through the narrow streets of the city. Those who were already in rapid flight began to flee more rapidly. Count Raymond and his men, who were attacking the wall on the other side, did not yet know of all this, until they saw the Saracens leap from the wall in front of them. Forthwith, they joyfully rushed into the city to pursue and kill the nefarious enemies, as their comrades 5 were already doing. Some Saracens, Arabs, and Ethiopians took refuge in the tower of David, others fled to the temples of the Lord and of Solomon. A great fight took place in the court and porch of the temples, where they were unable to escape from our gladiators. Many fled to the roof of the temple of Solomon, and were shot with arrows, so that they fell to the ground dead. In this temple almost ten thousand were killed. Indeed, if you had been there you would have seen our feet colored to our ankles with the blood of the slain. But what more shall I relate? None of them were left alive; neither women nor children were spared. Book III. The Latins in the Levant Fulcher reflects on how Europeans are affected by living in the Holy Land. Consider, I pray, and reflect how in our time God has transferred the West into the East, for we who were Occidentals now have been made Orientals. He who was a Roman or a Frank is now a Galilaean, or an inhabitant of Palestine. One who was a citizen of Rheims or of Chartres now has been made a citizen of Tyre or of Antioch. We have already forgotten the places of our birth; already they have become unknown to many of us, or, at least, are unmentioned. Some already possess here homes and servants they have received through inheritance. Some have taken wives not merely of their own people, but Syrians, or Armenians, or even Saracens [Muslims] who have received the grace of baptism. Some have with them father-in-law, or daughter-in-law, or son-in-law, or stepson, or stepfather. There are here, too, grandchildren and great-grandchildren. One cultivates vines, another the fields. The one and the other use mutually the speech and the idioms of the different languages. Different languages, now made common, become known to both races, and faith unites those whose forefathers were strangers. As it is written, "The lion and the ox shall eat straw together." Those who were strangers are now natives; and he who was a sojourner now has become a resident, Our parents and relatives from day to day come to join us, abandoning, even though reluctantly, all that they possess. For those who were poor there, here God makes rich. Those who had few coins, here possess countless besants [highly prized gold coins]; and those who had not had a villa, here, by the gift of God, already possess a city. Therefore why should one who has found the East so favorable return to the West? God does not wish those to suffer want who, carrying their crosses, have vowed to follow Him, nay even unto the end. You see, therefore, that this is a great miracle, and one which must greatly astonish the whole world. Who has ever heard anything like it? Therefore, God wishes to enrich us all and to draw us to Himself as His most dear friends. And because He wishes it, we also freely desire the same; and what is pleasing to Him we do with a loving and submissive heart, that with Him we may reign happily throughout eternity. 6 William of Tyre. A History of Deeds Done Beyond the Sea. Babcock and Krey, trr. William (c. 1130-1186) is the great historian of the Crusader states of the twelfth century. He was born in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem, educated in the west, and then returned to serve as both the Chancellor of the Latin Kingdom and the Archbishop of Tyre from 1174 until his death. He provides the historical circumstances in the Kingdom of Jerusalem during Melisende’s reign leading up to the fall of Edessa and the arrival of the French and German kings with what remained of their armies. Supporters of the Crusade in Debate 1 can use the depiction of the danger posed by Nur adDin in Debate 1. Baldwin, Melisende, and Fulcher can use descriptions of them to support their leadership claims in Debate 2. The Eastern faction (and Jerusalem faction) can use the description of the conquering of Edessa and the slaughter of its people to argue that Edessa should be the target of the Crusade in Debate 3. The Eastern and Jerusalem factions can also use the description of the alliance with Damascus and the trustworthiness of Anar/Unar to argue against attacking Damascus in Debate 3. The description of Louis’s and Conrad’s journey supplements the description in Odo of Deuil. Any of the factions might find useful support for arguments about the wisdom or necessity of moving forward with the crusade, and who should lead it. N.B. Some alternate spellings: Melisend/Melisende, Zangi/Zengi, Nur ad-Din/Nureddin, Unar/Anar. A Table of Contents for William of Tyre XIV.11 XVI.1-3 XVI.4-5 XVI.6 XVI.7 XVI.8-13 XVI.14-16 XVI.17 XVI.18-29 XVI.23 XVII.1 Brief description of Patriarch Fulcher Descriptions of Baldwin III and Melisende Siege and fall of Edessa A victorious campaign by Baldwin Death of Zangi, who is succeeded by Nur ad-Din Campaign against Bostrum, fighting with Nur ad-Din and relations with Damascus and Unar Second fall of Edessa, to Nur ad-Din Fulcher become Patriarch of Jerusalem Crusade preached in West; the journeys of Conrad and Louis Brief description of Frederick Barbarossa Council at Acre 7 BOOK XIV CHAPTER 6 Fulcher becomes Archbishop of Tyre. About the same time [1134-1135], William, our predecessor, laid aside the burden of the flesh and departed to the Lord. He was the first Latin archbishop of Tyre after the liberation of the city … and was succeeded by Fulcher of good memory, an Aquitanian from the county of Angouleme. Fulcher was religious and God-fearing, possessed of little learning, but a faithful man and a lover of discipline. [While still in France, he was on the opposing side of his bishop during the schism of 1131, when there were two claimants to the papacy, and Fulcher suffered “annoyances” from his superior.] Fulcher, a man of revered life, could not endure this treatment. He took leave of his brethren and went to Jerusalem for the sake of prayer. He professed the regular life with constant attendance in the cloister of the church of the Sepulchre of the Lord and was finally called to the curch at Tyre. For twelve years, he ruled that church vigorously and well…. 8 BOOK XVI 1. A brief preface is given. On the death of Fulk, his son Baldwin III succeeds to the throne. The personal appearance of the latter is described. THE events which have been recorded in the present history up to this time have been assembled from the accounts of others who still preserve a faithful recollection of earlier times. It is, therefore, with much difficulty that we have obtained reliable material and the correct chronology and succession of events. As far as possible, however, we have given a faithful account of these events as received from the narratives themselves. The things which now follow we ourselves have, in part, witnessed with our own eyes and, in part, learned from the trustworthy relation of those who were present when the events occurred. Relying upon these two sources, therefore, by the will of God we shall set down for the benefit of posterity with more ease and accuracy the rest of this history. For the memory is ever wont to recall more vividly recent occurrences, and that which the eye presents to the mind is less easily forgotten than that which is conveyed by the ear alone…. Fulk, the third Latin king of Jerusalem, was succeeded by Baldwin III, his son by Queen Melisend. As has been mentioned, Baldwin had one brother named Amaury, a little boy seven years old. When Baldwin later died without children, this brother succeeded him in the kingdom, as will be related in the following chapters. Baldwin was thirteen years old when he came to the throne [in 1143], and he reigned twenty years. He was a youth of excellent natural ability and even at that time gave plain evidence of that character which later he fully attained. On reaching manhood, he was easily preeminent among all others by beauty of feature and form as well as by his general bearing. In vivacity of mind and brilliancy of speech he was superior to all the nobles of the realm. He was taller than the average man, but his limbs were so well proportioned to his height that no feature seemed out of harmony with the whole. His features were comely and refined, his complexion florid, a proof of innate strength. In this respect he resembled his mother and was not inferior to his maternal grandfather. His eyes were of medium size, rather prominent and sparkling. He had straight yellowish hair and wore a rather full beard on cheeks and chin. He was of somewhat full habit, although he could not be called fleshy like his brother or spare like his mother. In short, it may be said that his whole appearance was so superior by reason of a certain remarkable dignity which shone forth from him that even strangers could not fail to recognize his innate kingly majesty. 2. Concerning his life and habits. 9 BALDWIN'S habit of mind was equally well constituted and was in complete accord with his great physical beauty. He had an unusually keen intellect and was gifted by nature with the rare advantage of eloquent speech. Nor did he appear inferior to any other prince in his dignified and agreeable manners. He was extremely affable and tender-hearted, and, although he was liberal to almost everyone, far beyond his means, yet he was not at all desirous of the money of others. He did not trouble the patrimony of the churches, nor did he, like a prodigal, lie in wait for the riches of his subjects. He had one characteristic that is usually very rare in youth. Even at that time of life he feared God and felt great reverence for ecclesiastical institutions and the prelates of the church. He was gifted with a vivacious disposition and had, besides, the advantage of an accurate memory. He was fairly well educated, much more so than was his brother Amaury, who succeeded him. Whatever leisure he could snatch from his public duties he delighted to devote to reading. He particularly enjoyed listening to the reading of history and inquired with great diligence into the deeds and habits of the noblest kings and princes of former times. With men of letters and wise laymen he loved above all to converse. His gracious affability led him to greet even the most lowly by name, much to their surprise. He voluntarily offered an opportunity of conversing with him to anyone who wished it or whom he casually met. If an audience was requested, he did not refuse it. In this way, he gained the favor of both fathers and people so that he was more popular with men of both classes than any of his predecessors had been. He endured hardships with patience and, after the example of the best princes, displayed great wisdom and foresight in the uncertain issues of war. In the midst of difficult situations which he endured for the sake of extending the realm, he showed royal steadfastness and at no time lost the presence of mind befitting a brave man. He was fully acquainted with the customary law by which the kingdom of the East was governed, so that in difficult questions, even the older nobles were wont to consult his knowledge and marvel at the erudition of his trained mind. His conversation was witty and jovial. Since he had unusual facility in adapting himself easily to everyone, he mingled acceptably with every age and condition. He was, moreover, a man of unusual courtesy, and this was the more remarkable because he permitted himself great freedom of speech. If he observed any reprehensible or striking faults in his friends, he corrected them in public regardless of whether his words pleased or offended. Yet these rebukes, since they were made more in jollity—or, rather, in lightness of heart—than with any intent to hurt, did not greatly lessen his popularity with the victims of 10 his blunt remarks. His frankness was readily pardoned, in fact, because he bore with equanimity the cutting words which were directed against him in retaliation. In such things and in the pernicious games of chance and dice he indulged more than befitted royal majesty. In pursuit of the desires of the flesh, also, he is said to have dishonored the marriage ties of others. This was in his youth, however, for when he became a man, like the apostle he “put away childish things." [I Corinthians 13:11] Thus by the practice of the virtues he atoned for the faults of earlier years. For after he took a wife he is said to have been entirely faithful to her. The reprehensible faults, displeasing to God, which he had contracted in his youth, under the impulse of that critical period, he later with wise counsel abandoned and became changed for the better. He was extremely temperate in taking bodily refreshment; in fact he was abstemious beyond the requirements of that age. He abominated excess either in food or in drink and used to say that it was touchwood for the worst crimes. 3. Concerning his elevation to the throne and of how long he reigned under the guardianship of his mother. KING FULK died on the tenth day of November. On the day of the Lord's Nativity following, in the year of the Incarnation of the Lord 1142, Baldwin was solemnly anointed, consecrated, and crowned, together with his mother, in the church of the Sepulchre of the Lord. The ceremony was conducted by William, patriarch of Jerusalem, before the customary assemblage of the princes and all the prelates of the church. The head of the holy Roman church at that time was Eugenius III; Aimery was patriarch of Antioch, and William, patriarch of Jerusalem. Archbishop Fulcher presided over the church at Tyre. Melisend, the king's mother, was a woman of great wisdom who had had much experience in all kinds of secular matters. She had risen so far above the normal status of women that she dared to undertake important measures. It was her ambition to emulate the magnificence of the greatest and noblest princes and to show herself in no wise inferior to them. Since her son was as yet under age, she ruled the kingdom and administered the government with such skilful care that she may be said truly to have equalled her ancestors in that respect. As long as her son was w!lling to be governed by her counsel, the people enjoyed a highly desirable state of tranquillity, and the affairs of the realm moved on prosperously. But the more frivolous elements in the kingdom soon found that the queen's wise influence hindered their attempts to draw the king into their own pursuits. They therefore persuaded their royal master, who, like others of his age, was "pliable as wax in being bent toward vice, but rough toward those who rebuked him," to withdraw from the guardianship of his mother and to rule the kingdom 11 of his fathers himself. Itwas unseemly, they said, that a king who ought to rule all others should constantly be tied to the apron strings of his mother like the son of a private person. Although this intrigue originated in the thoughtless levity or malice of certain individuals, it came near being the ruin of the whole kingdom, as will be explained in more detail later when this subject is discussed. 4. Zangi lays siege to Edessa. The location of this city is described. THAT same year [1143], during the interval between the death of King Fulk and the elevation of Baldwin to the throne, the accursed Zangi with a mighty host laid siege to Edessa. This city, also more commonly known as Rohas, was the great and famous capital of the land of the Medes. Zangi was a powerful Turk, lord and ruler of the city once called Nineveh, but now known as Mosul, the metropolis of the region formerly known as the land of Assur. His reliance lay not only in the numbers and strength of his people but also in the fact that a serious feud had arisen between Raymond, prince of Antioch, and Joscelin, count of Edessa. This latter city was situated a day's journey beyond the Euphrates. Its lord and master, the count just mentioned, had, contrary to the custom of his predecessors, given up his home there and established his permanent residence near the Euphrates at a castle called Turbessel. The fertility of the country in that vicinity and the leisure afforded by that place had led him to make this change. At Turbessel, he was far from the disturbance caused by his enemies, he had time for luxurious pleasures of every kind, and he felt no responsibility, as he should have done, for the noble city. The inhabitants of Edessa were native Chaldeans and peaceful Armenians. They were utterly ignorant of the use of arms and familiar only with the business of trading. Latins also came hither occasionally, but citizens of that race were few in number. The protection of the city was entirely in the hands of mercenaries. These did not receive wages according to the time or kind of service rendered but often had to wait a year or more before they could collect what was due them. Both Baldwin and Joscelin the Elder, as soon as they came into possession of this countship, had established their permanent residence at Edessa. They saw to it carefully that adequate supplies of arms and food and all else necessary for some length of time should be brought thither from the surrounding places. By this means perfect security for Edessa was obtained, and it also became justly formidable to the other cities in the vicinity. But as has been said, there was now enmity between the prince of Antioch and the count, and this was no longer concealed but had already reached the stage of open hatred. Consequently, neither felt any concern for the troubles or unlucky disasters 12 of the other; rather, each rejoiced in the distress of the other and exulted over any untoward mischance. The great prince Zangi seized the opportunity offered by these dissensions. He levied a countless number of cavalry forces from all over the East, summoned also the people of the neighboring cities, and laid siege to Edessa. He blocked all the entrances to the city so closely that the besieged could not issue forth, nor could anyone enter from outside. The people shut up within the city were soon driven to extremities by the shortage of food and provisions of all kinds. Edessa was surrounded by a massive wall and protected by lofty towers in the upper part of the city. There was another stronghold lower down, to which, even if the city should be taken, the citizens could flee for refuge. All such defenses may avail against the foe if there are fighters who will put up a valiant fight for liberty, but they are useless when there are none among the besieged willing to undertake the part of defenders. For walls, towers, and ramparts avail but little if there are none to man them. Hence, when Zangi found that the city was without defenders his hope of taking it was greatly increased. He placed his troops in a circle round about, stationed the chiefs of the legions in advantageous positions, and invested the city. Stones and missiles hurled from the engines battered the walls without ceasing and showers of arrows allowed the citizens no respite. Meanwhile, swiftly flying rumor spread the news abroad that Edessa, faithful worshipper of God, was undergoing the horrors of siege at the hand of enemies of the Christian faith and name. The hearts of all true believers, far and near, were appalled, and the zealous began to arm themselves to take vengeance upon the wicked foe. The tidings of this critical situation roused the count [Joscelin] to action, and he began assiduously to assemble his forces. Mindful too late of the noble city, he began, as it were, "to prepare funeral rites for the dead: for those whom, when sick and suppliant, he had neglected to aid." He went about among the Christians and besought aid from his friends. He dispatched messengers to his lord, the prince of Antioch [Raymond], and begged him with most humble and earnest prayers that he would sympathize with him in his trouble and deliver Edessa from the threatened fate of slavery. News of the dire calamity also reached the king of Jerusalem [Baldwin]. Rumors of the siege of Edessa and the straits which her citizens were enduring were confirmed. After a conference with her nobles, the queen [Melisend], who held the reins of government, ordered her kinsman, Manasses, the royal constable, Philip of Nablus, and Elinandus of Tiberias to march thither with a strong force at once to assist the count and the afflicted citizens. The prince of Antioch, however, rejoiced 13 in the count's misfortune. Without regard for his own responsibility for the general welfare and the fact that “personal hatred should not be permitted to injure the common interest,” he offered excuses to delay giving the aid which had been asked. 5. Edessa is captured and her people slain. IN the meantime Zangi continued to attack the city without intermission and ran through the whole gamut of injuries. No method was left untried which might tend to increase the woes of the citizens and help him to take the city. Through subterranean passages he sent in miners who dug tunnels under the wall. These were supported overhead by beams which were then set on fire. When the props burned away, a great part of the wall fell and left a breach which afforded the enemy an entrance more than a hundred cubits wide. The desired approach thus obtained, the legions rushed together from all directions, entered the city, and put to the sword all whom they encountered. Neither age, condition, nor sex was spared. To them might this saying well be applied: "They slay the widow and the stranger, and murder the fatherless."[Psalms 94:6] Thus the city was captured and delivered over to the sword of the enemy. As soon as this happened, the more sensible and alert among the citizens fled with their wives and children to the citadel, which, as has been said, was in the city. Here they hoped that their lives at least might be safe, if only for a short time. But the inrush of such a crowd of people caused a panic, and many perished miserably in the struggling mob. Among others who died in this way are said to have been the Very Reverend Hugo, archbishop of Edessa, and some of his clergy. Those who were present at the time felt that the prelate was in some measure to blame for this catastrophe. Although he was said to have amassed great riches, which he might have used to pay troops for defending the city, he preferred, like a miser, to store up his wealth rather than to consider his perishing people. As a result, he reaped the fruits of his avarice and shared the fate of the populace. Unless the Lord in His mercy should come to his aid, an unsavory reputation will ever attend his memory. For terrible are the words of Scripture concerning men of his sort: "Thy money perish with thee." [Acts 8:20] Thus, while the prince of Antioch, influenced by foolish hatred, put off rendering the aid due to his brethren and the count was waiting for help from strangers, the ancient city fell[Decembr 1144]. Edessa, devoted to the Christian name from the times of the apostles, the city which was rescued from the superstitions of the infidels by the words and preaching of the Apostle Thaddeus, suffered the undeserved yoke of servitude. Tradition says that the holy Apostle Thomas was buried in this city, 14 as was also the Apostle Thaddeus and blessed King Abgar. This is that Abgar, the illustrious ruler of the city whose letter to the Lord Jesus Christ is mentioned by Eusebius of Caesarea in his work called the Ecclesiastical History…. But so much on this matter; now let us resume the history. 6. A fortress beyond the Jordan, called the Valley of Moses, is taken by the king. DURING the first year of this King Baldwin's reign, the Turks, with the consent and at the invitation of certain people dwelling in that vicinity, seized one of our strongholds called the Valley of Moses, in Syria Sobal beyond the Jordan. This place is located near the waters of Strife, where Moses, when the people of Israel were murmuring and dying from thirst, struck water from the rock and the whole people and their beasts drank thereof. When it became known that the enemy had seized this fortress and had killed the Christians dwelling there, the king, although still very young, levied forces from all over the land and set forth thither. With his troops he crossed the famous valley now occupied by the Dead sea, which is also called the lake of Asphalt, and went up into the hill country of Arabia Secunda or Arabia Petra, in the land of Moab. From there he traversed Syria Sobal, or Arabia Tertia, now commonly called the land of Montreal, and came to his destination. The inhabitants of the country had already had news of our approach and with their wives and children had fled into the fortress, the defenses of which seemed to render it impregnable. For several days our forces exerted themselves in vain before the place. Volleys of stone missiles, repeated showers of arrows, and other methods of assault were tried with no result. Finally the Christians became convinced that, because of its fortifications, the place could not be taken. They therefore turned to other plans. The entire region was covered with luxuriant olive groves which shaded the surface of the land like a dense forest. From these trees the dwellers in that land derived all their living, as their fathers had done before them. If these failed, then all means of livelihood would be taken away. It was determined, therefore, to root out the trees and burn them. It was thought that the terrified inhabitants, rendered desperate by the destruction of their olive groves, would either give up or drive out the Turks who had taken refuge in the citadel and surrender the fortress to us. This plan was entirely successful. As soon as they saw their beloved trees cut down, the people changed their tactics and adopted others. On condition that the Turks whom they had 15 called in should be allowed to depart unharmed and that they themselves with their families should not be punished by death for their wicked conduct, they restored the stronghold to the king. The castle was thereupon received, a garrison appointed, and supplies of food and arms sent in. Thus the king successfully finished the first campaign after his accession to the throne and, with his whole army safe and sound, returned victorious to his own land. 7. Zangi is killed while besieging Calogenbar. His son Nureddin succeeds him. ZANGI was greatly elated by his brilliant success in subjugating the city of Edessa. He immediately applied himself to besieging Calogenbar, a fortified place on the river Euphrates. While he was carrying on the siege of this place, however, the lord of the town entered into a conspiracy with some of the chamberlains and eunuchs of Zangi's own household. One night, as the prince, gorged with wine and unusually drunk, was lying in his tent, he was slain by some of his own servants. [September 1146] When the news of his death arrived, one of our people remarked apropos of his assassination, "What a happy coincidence! A guilty murderer, with the bloody name Sanguinus, has become ensanguined with his own blood." The murderers were received within the walls by the lord of the besieged city, according to agreement, and thus escaped the vengeance of the dead man's kin. Zangi's entire army fled when deprived of the support and protection of their lord. His sons succeeded him, the one at Mosul in the Orient, and the other, Nureddin by name, at Aleppo. The latter was a wise and prudent man and, according to the superstitious traditions of his people, one who feared God. He was fortunate also in that he greatly increased the heritage which was left him by his father. 8. A certain noble of Damascus, governor of the city of Bostrum, enters into an alliance with the king. The army of the realm is sent to that city. Anar, governor of Damascus, tries to prevent these plans. NOT long after this, in the second year of King Baldwin's reign [more likely 1147], a certain noble Turkish satrap came with a noble retinue to Jerusalem. For some reason he had incurred the anger of Mejeredin [Mujir aI-Din], king of Damascus. He had, moreover, fallen under the displeasure of the governor, Mehen-Eddin [Mu'in aI-Din], or Anar, a man whose authority throughout the land of the Damascenes was far greater than that of the king himself. This satrap assured the king and his mother that, if an honorable compensation worthy of his consideration 16 were granted him, he would surrender to them the city of Bastrum, over which he ruled, and also the stronghold of Selcath. Bostrum is the metropolis of Arabia Prima, which today is called in the common speech Bussereth. [Bostrum is south of Damascus, in southern Syria.] This same nobleman, Tantais by name, was said to be an Armenian by birth. He was tall of stature, of agreeable countenance, and his entire bearing gave evidence of a manly spirit. Accordingly, a general conference of the nobles was called. The reasons for the visit of this great man were explained and every aspect of his proposition carefully considered. It was finally unanimously resolved that he be granted an honorable and satisfactory compensation, that an army be levied, and an expedition sent to Bostrum. All agreed that, if through the agency of this man, Bostrum could be brought under our jurisdiction and added to the Christian name with perpetual right, such an increase of the kingdom would be most acceptable to God. An agreement satisfactory to both parties was thereupon concluded, and the heralds were ordered to call together all the people of the realm immediately. After imploring aid from on high, the king and his nobles took with them the Life-giving Cross of Salvation and proceeded to Tiberias. Camp was established near the bridge where the waters of the Jordan separate from the sea. There was an alliance and a temporary peace between Anar and King Baldwin which had existed also in the time of the king's father. Accordingly it was necessary that the governor be formally notified, in order that he might have a legitimate time, following the custom of the land, to assemble an army and make preparations for resistance. Otherwise the king would appear to have entered his territory suddenly and without official notice, which is contrary to the law of treaties. Messengers had accordingly been sent to Anar, but he, as a shrewd man, had wisely deferred sending an answer. A month had already passed. During this time, he had been actively engaged in calling to his aid both by entreaties and by money all the neighboring chiefs of his own race from far and near. When large numbers had assembled from all parts, Anar sent the following message to the king and his nobles: "Contrary to the terms of the treaty into which you entered, you are preparing to march into the land of my lord and you are endeavoring to protect with undeserved patronage his rebellious servant, who is acting against the allegiance which he has sworn. We humbly beseech the lord king to desist from this unjust purpose and to preserve intact the substance of the agreements previously concluded between us. We are ready in all sincerity to refund to the king all the expense to which he has been put for this expedition." To this the king responded by the advice of all as follows: "We do 17 not intend to violate in any way the provisions of the treaty which we have made with you. But as this nobleman came to discuss matters with us in a friendly way, we cannot honorably fail a man who has placed all his hope in our kingdom. It will be satisfactory to us, however, if we are permitted to conduct him back in safety to the city which he abandoned for our benefit. After he has withdrawn into his own castle, let his lord deal with him according to the laws of the land and recompense him as he deserves. As for us, both in coming and going we will wholly refrain from inflicting any injury upon our friend, the king of Damascus, as, by the will of God, we are bound to do." This same Anar was a man of much wisdom and a lover of our people. He had three daughters, one of whom he had married to the king of the Damascenes, just mentioned [Mejeredin]; another to Nureddin, the son of Zangi; and the third to a distinguished knight, Margar. He had, therefore, the good of the realm at heart, not only because he was the father-in-law of the king, but also because of his own great discretion. The king, however, was indolent by nature and devoted to drinking and revelry. He cared only for pleasure and gave himself up entirely to dissolute practices. Anar, as has been mentioned, made great efforts to gain the favor of the Christians by all possible complaisance; he made use of every art by which friends are won. But whether this proceeded from the heart and from sincerity of purpose or was forced upon him by necessity contrary to his own wishes may well be questioned by the wise. Doubtless either might be the case, for he regarded his son-in-law, Nureddin, with the same distrust that he had formerly felt toward the latter's father, Zangi. He ever feared that Nureddin might drive the king, who was also his son-in-law, but a most worthless and grossly ignorant man, from the kingdom. He himself would then lose the reins of government. This was the principal reason why he regarded our favor as most essential to his interests and in every possible way endeavored to secure it. This wise man seems to have had almost prophetic foresight, for the situation that he feared actually came to pass. After his death, Nureddin, with the consent of the people of Damascus, drove out the reigning king by force and seized the throne. It was for this reason, therefore, that he exerted himself faithfully to make good the expense to which the king had been put in raising the expedition and to send him back to his own land unharmed. Doubtless he would have adopted an even less hostile attitude toward the king and his forces in this matter if he could have restrained, as he would have liked, the allies whom he had summoned from without. For we have found many reliable proofs which give definite testimony to his 18 loyalty, sincerity, and steadfastness in various matters. 9. The army experiences countless perils while on the march [to capture Bostrum]. AMONG the envoys who brought this report was a certain Bernard Vacher, who stood in very close relation to the king. When these facts were announced, the people at once began to cry out that Bernard was a traitor, that anyone who would seek to dissuade them in this matter and put obstacles in their way was not loyal to the Christians. With loud shouts, the irresponsible mob began to demand that the march be resumed, that the effort to obtain possession of that noble city be not readily abandoned. Thanks were due to the nobleman who had offered a service to Christianity that would be remembered throughout the ages; his proposal should be carried out in every detail faithfully and devotedly; for this purpose they ought to strive even to the death. Amid tumultuous uproar the will of the crowd prevailed, and the advice of saner minds was rejected. The baggage was accordingly arranged, the camp broken up, and the march directed toward the city. After passing Cavea Roab, they entered the plain called Medan, where the Arabs and other Eastern people are wont to hold yearly fairs. At this point our army began to encounter the enemy in such vast numbers that even those who had formerly been most insistent that the campaign be continued would gladly have turned back, had that been possible. Yet the troops, although astounded at the magnitude of the enemy's array, prepared to go into battle at once. On the advice of those experienced in the art of warfare, however, the king ordered that camp be made first. This was done, and the troops took thought for their bodily refreshment as far as was possible in the critical situation. The night passed in sleepless vigilance. The enemy's hosts, now increased beyond number, closed in on all sides about our legions, confident that on the morrow the Christians, bound like the lowest slaves, would become their prey. Our people, however, wisely kept constant watch and attended most carefully to their duties, as behooved brave men. When morning came, a conference was held, and it was determined to advance, for to retreat seemed not only disgraceful but practically impossible. In fact, the enemy now encircled them on every side and effectually hindered either course. Nevertheless, our men pressed on courageously. A path was finally opened by the sword through the enemy's midst, and our forces, as with one accord, advanced toward their destination. Burdened as they were, however, with breastplates, helmets, and shields, they moved at a slow pace. Their progress was hindered also by the great numbers of the foe around them. The cavalry squadrons, being without baggage, could have proceeded more rapidly, but it was necessary that they 19 adapt their movements to the pace of the infantry companies, that the ranks might not be broken and the enemy be given a chance to break in upon the formations. So the cohorts suffered with each other, and the entire Christian company was as one. The knights showed such care for the people on foot that they often dismounted from their horses and shared like hardships. They even offered to carry the weary, that the difficulties of the march might be made lighter. Meanwhile, the enemy continued to harass the army with ceaseless showers of arrows and strove to break our lines by increasing their efforts. But the more the Christians were menaced, the more closely they massed themselves together. Fearlessly and ardently they continued on their way. As a culminating point of troubles, they were assailed by terrible thirst, which was intensified by the difficulty of the march and by the heat of summer. Their route was through an arid and waterless country, for that entire region is without springs. In winter the natives collect the rain water in reservoirs, both natural and artificial. At this time, however, these had become useless, for the province had recently suffered from a pest of locusts of extraordinary extent, so that all the pools of this kind had been spoiled and the water corrupted by the dead insects therein. The region through which our road lay is called Trachonitis. Luke mentions it in his Gospel as follows: "Philip tetrarch of Ituraea and of the region of Trachonitis." The name seems to us to be derived rather from the tracones. For the hidden, subterranean caves in which that region abounds are called tracones. Nearly all the people of that locality live in grottos and caves and have their homes in these tracones, 10. On arriving at their destination, they find the city occupied by the enemy. Accordingly, they return home without accomplishing their end. THE Christians traversed a part of that country under conditions of extreme danger. About the last hour of the day, they came to a place which was called Adratum in earlier days, but which is now generally known as the city of Bernard d'Estampes. It is one of the suffragan cities of the metropolis of Bostrum. The inhabitants of this place had joined the enemy's forces, and therefore our people had to suffer even worse hardships than before. For when they tried to obtain water from the cisterns which lay open, they lost even the buckets which had been let down. The foe, hidden in the subterranean caverns, cut the ropes by which these had been lowered, and sent them back dangling. The frustration of this hope, for the sake of which they had so long 20 labored in vain, intensified the agony of their thirst. For four successive days our people never indulged in rest; indeed, they were so continually persecuted that they scarcely had leisure, even during the night, to satisfy their bodily needs. Day by day the enemy's numbers increased, while our forces as steadily decreased. Some were killed, others fatally wounded. Still others, panic-stricken and despairing of their lives, swelled the throng around the baggage, skulked among the horses and pack animals, and feigned weakness, that they might not be compelled to come out and bear the brunt of the enemy's attack. Dense showers of arrows and other missiles fell like rain or hail upon our forces so incessantly that the host of men and beasts seemed covered with weapons. Well might a spectator marvel at the continued perseverance of the foe in attacking and the invincible endurance of the Christians in resisting. Nonetheless, our people continued to let fly showers of arrows and darts, but as the enemy were able to move about freely, our missiles rarely injured them. The Christians continued their march under many perils, and at last, in the fourth day they drew near their destination and saw the city at a distance. With great difficulty they drove off the enemy by force and took possession of the waters which flowed forth in moderation from the rocks. Camp was made near by, and the forces devoted themselves for a short period to bodily refreshment and relaxation. That night the Christians enjoyed some degree of rest and were eagerly looking forward to the morrow. But in the silence of midnight, a bearer of ill tidings stealthily left the city and made his way through the enemy's lines to our camp. He announced that he had private messages for the king and begged to be led to him at once. He was admitted. The nobles were summoned and also the noble lord, the former governor of the city, who had led us into the present predicament. The messenger then disclosed the fact that the wife of this same lord had betrayed the city and surrendered it to the Turks. They had introduced their forces and taken possession of all the strongholds, including the citadel itself. Everyone else had been driven out. Our people were overwhelmed by the news of this disaster. They held a conference and finally decided that their best course was to return speedily to their own land at whatever risk. Some of the chief men of the kingdom, however, privately counselled the king to mount the horse of John Gomani, which was reputed to excel all other army steeds in swiftness and endurance, and, with the Cross of Salvation in his hand, to look out for his own safety alone. This advice was given in despair of the possibility of return and in anticipation that the entire army would shortly be destroyed. The king, however, although still very young, rejected this counsel with royal magnificence and clearly 21 showed what his character would be in later years. He declared that he would scorn to save his own life if a people consecrated to God were to perish so wretchedly. Although these admonitions proceeded from loyal affection, the king declined to heed them, and other plans were adopted. To advance farther meant utter destruction; therefore measures for the retreat were taken. Now for the first time the Christians felt the hardship of their situation in double measure, for their great hope now was gone, and they realized that their efforts had been all in vain. Their troubles up to this time had been serious enough—in fact, almost unendurable—and they had suffered miseries equal to any they might encounter afterward. Yet as they struggled on, they were supported by the confident hope of taking the city, and these pleasurable anticipations enabled them to hold out. Now, however, this hope had failed them, and they realized that their project must be abandoned. Accordingly, the herald proclaimed the return, and all prepared for the homeward march. 11. The army encounters untold perils on the return march. The Turks are amazed at the perseverance of our troops. AT dawn on the following day, Nureddin arrived from the city mentioned above and, with an infinite number of Turks, joined the cohorts of the enemy. His father-in-law had appealed to him for aid. The Christians, however, started out on the return march, as had been arranged. As soon as the Turks perceived this movement, they hastened against them and, with a great clamor, tried to prevent the retreat. But the very difficulties that beset our people on every side strengthened their courage. With their swords they broke through the opposing ranks and, although with extreme danger and at the cost of many lives, forced their way through. General orders had been given that the bodies of all the dead in the Christian ranks be placed upon camels and other pack animals, that the knowledge of the massacre of our forces might not tend to strengthen the enemy. The weak and wounded were also to be placed on beasts of burden so as to give the impression that not a single Christian had been killed or wounded. Even these disabled ones were directed to draw their swords, that they might present at least a semblance of strength. It was a source of amazement, therefore, to the wiser heads among the enemy that, after such volleys of arrows, such repeated conflicts, such torture of thirst, dust, and unbearable heat, not a single dead or disabled Christian could be found. This people must indeed be made of iron, they thought, for otherwise they could not sustain persistently such continuing pressure, Accordingly, as all 22 their efforts were in vain, the enemy turned to other tactics. The entire country thereabout was covered with a dense growth of brambles, dry thistles and other weeds, old stubble and crops now ripe. To this they set fire, and a strong wind soon carried it furiously toward us. Our misfortunes were now doubled by the encroaching flames and the dense clouds of smoke which attended them. With cries of woe the people turned as one body to the venerable Robert, archbishop of Nazareth, and tearfully begged him: "Pray for us, father; through the Lifegiving Cross which you bear in your hands, the Cross upon which we believe that the Author of our salvation hung, rescue us from these evils, for we can no longer endure them." The wind had borne the smoke toward them so that the faces and the general aspect of the people were black, like that of smiths when working at the forge. The heat from the fires in addition to the usual heat of summer, together with extreme thirst, had raised their suffering to a point beyond endurance. The beloved man of God was deeply moved by their cries and supplications. In humility of spirit, he raised the Cross of Salvation toward the flames, which were rushing against him in all their violence, and invoked aid from on high. Immediately divine favor attended them; in a moment the wind veered about and sent the reeking volume of cloud and flame against the enemy. Thus the evil which the Turks had prepared for our undoing was turned to their own destruction. They stood amazed at the wondrous miracle; unique indeed must be that faith of the Christians which through prayer could bring about so swift an answer from their Lord God. For a time entirely engrossed by their own danger, they perforce gave our troops some peace and allowed them a short respite. 12. An envoy is dispatched to the enemy on behalf of peace. A noble knight in the enemy's ranks falls. The Turkish army is dispersed, and our forces proceed without further hindrance. THUS our army was hard pressed by these intolerable evils. Meanwhile, the great nobles and those of wider experience began to realize that the endurance of the people could not last much longer. Accordingly, they went to the king and persuaded him to send an envoy to Anar concerning peace. Any terms would be accepted, provided only that the Christian army be allowed to return home. For this mission was selected a man of rather doubtful repute, who, once before on a similar errand, had acted disloyally toward the people of Christ. Yet because of his familiarity with the language of the Turks, this mission also was entrusted to him. In response to the injunction that he should faithfully perform the duty laid upon him, he is reported to have said, "The suspicions against me are unjust and far beyond anything that I 23 have deserved; yet I will go. But if I am guilty of the charges brought against me, may I not be permitted to return; or rather, may I perish by the sword of the enemy.” The wretched man had pronounced his own sentence of death and soon experienced the judgment of God, for before he reached the Turks and accomplished his mission he perished at the hand of the enemy. Four distinguished Arab chiefs, followed by a host of their people, took part in this campaign. They were brothers, sons of the mighty and distinguished Arab satrap Morel. These troops kept making persistent and very spirited attacks upon the flanks of our army. Yet our soldiers under the commands given them did not dare to break out of line against them. For if, contrary to the discipline of war, they should break the ranks, they would be exposed to a harsh sentence as deserters from their places. In the retinue of that Turk who was with us, however, there was a certain knight who could not endure this situation and longed to relieve us of the annoyance. Regardless of the rules imposed and reckless of his life, he spurred his horse forward with great courage. He threw the spear which he was carrying against one of the four brothers, then ran him through with his sword in the midst of his ranks, and hurled the lifeless body to the ground. Then he returned without injury to our lines. An immense throng at once gathered round the body of the dead chief. When it became evident that he had already breathed forth his luckless spirit, the assembled crowd broke into loud lamentations and gave expression to their intense grief in floods of tears. But our people rejoiced greatly. Eagerly they demanded to know the name of the man who had exposed himself to such peril and thereby wrought a feat worthy of eternal fame. It was discovered that he was an alien who might readily be pardoned for transgressing the rules, especially as he did not know the language and had not understood the public edict. Accordingly, although he had undoubtedly acted contrary to the rules of military discipline, yet, since he had been unaware of the command, he was mercifully pardoned, and his deed was regarded as praiseworthy, rather because of the result than because it was right. In this way the enemy's battle line on that side was broken. Our army was now able to spread out, and accordingly, in the more open country they soon secured compensation for the straits which they had suffered. After an uninterrupted march of several days, they again came to Cavea Roab. Since the passage was very narrow and it might 24 be dangerous to cross here, the leaders purposely ordered that it be avoided. But Anar, the procurator of Damascus, observed that the king was leading his army toward the valley just mentioned. Accordingly, he sent messengers to say that if the king pleased he would cause a meal to be prepared for him in all good faith beyond Cavea, for he knew that now for several days the army had been suffering from lack of provisions. Whether this was a sincere offer, made out of good will toward the Christians, or whether it was simply a ruse to force the Christian army into the narrow defiles of still more dangerous valleys we have not been able to ascertain. Nevertheless, the traditional belief is that the gifts of an enemy should rightly be distrusted. Consequently, by unanimous decision, it was determined to proceed by the upper road which was more level and less dangerous. There was no one to guide them, however, through the country which they must traverse. But suddenly there appeared ahead of the ranks an unknown knight mounted upon a white horse. He wore a breastplate and short gauntlets reaching to the elbow and carried a red standard. Like an angel of the Lord, this man led them by the shortest routes to waters hitherto unknown and showed them the best and most convenient places to make camp. It had taken the expedition practically five days to reach Cavea, but under the guidance of this leader they arrived at Gadara in three. 13. Our legions reach Gadara. The place is described. The troops return home. GADARA is situated in the region called Decapolis, of which it is written in the Gospel of Mark, "and again, departing from the coasts of Tyre and Sidon, he came unto the sea of Galilee, through the midst of the coasts of Decapolis." As its name indicates, this land contains ten cities, namely, Hippus, Pella, Gadara, the place just mentioned, and seven others. This last-named city is situated on the borderland between the enemy's country and our own. When our first legions reached it, the Turks once more began to harass our rear ranks, as if again seized by their former evil fury. They soon perceived, however, that their efforts were of no avail, for the Christians had already entered their own land. Accordingly, exhausted under the burden of smoke, extreme hot weather, and fatigue, they broke ranks and began to return in throngs to their own country. That night passed in unusual tranquillity. Our men allowed their wearied bodies the rest and refreshment so much needed, and on the following day they proceeded to Tiberias. Those who still preserve an accurate memory of this occurrence all agree that the leader of this march was known to no one. When the 25 army made camp, he always disappeared immediately. He was never seen anywhere in the camp, but in the morning he again went on ahead of the troops. No one now living can remember any equally perilous expedition during the period of the Latins in the Orient which did not result in a decisive victory for the enemy. When the king returned to the realm and the Cross of the Lord was restored to Jerusalem, there was great rejoicing among the people who had remained at home, because their friends had now returned. Well might they cry, "For this my son was dead, and is alive again; he was lost, and is found." [Luke 15:24] Shortly after this, that same noble Turk was summoned with pacific words under pretense of reconciliation by the subtle Anar. He met with most shameful treatment, however. The wretched man was blinded and spent the rest of his life in the utmost poverty and misery. 14. The citizens of Edessa appeal to the count [Joscelin]. He hurries thither and, without the knowledge of the enemy, receives the city. WHILE these events were transpiring in our vicinity, a deplorable thing which should be recorded happened in the county of Edessa. In order that the details of this occurrence may be fully understood it is necessary to go back somewhat earlier in the story. After the death of Zangi, that greatest persecutor of the Christian faith, his son Nureddin was detained at Mosul for a time on the matter of his succession to his father's principate. Only a few of his retainers were left to keep guard at Edessa. All the rest of the population was strong in the Christian faith. Realizing this fact, the inhabitants of Edessa secretly sent messengers to Count Joscelin and announced that, with the exception of a few Turks who were guarding the citadel, their city was practically abandoned to the citizens. Now the people of Edessa were, and had been from the time of the apostles, rooted and grounded in the Christian faith so that, as has been mentioned elsewhere, there were very few, practically none, of other faiths dwelling among them. Most earnestly, they begged the count that he would assemble military forces and hasten to the city, which the citizens would at once surrender to him without danger or obstacle. Joscelin hastily assembled all the troops of that country, both infantry and cavalry. Then, accompanied by Baldwin of Manash, a noble and powerful man, he quickly crossed the river and appeared suddenly at night before Edessa with all his followers. While the Turks who had been left as guards were sleeping, in the silence of the night, the citizens admitted some of the count's people by ropes and 26 ladders. These opened the gates to the rest who were waiting outside. All rushed in at the same time pell-mell; they spread through the city in every direction and put to the sword every foe whom they encountered. Some of the latter, however, succeeded in escaping death and reached the citadel. In this manner, the count and his army of Christians held the city for several days. They did not succeed in taking the citadel, however, for that was carefully fortified and well equipped with provisions, weapons, and soldiers. The lack of success in this respect was largely due to the fact that the count's forces had brought with them neither engines nor anything with which to build them. Nor could any material suitable for the purpose be found in the city. 15. Nureddin attacks Edessa. He places the city under siege. He causes the Christians extreme distress. MESSENGERS were now sent forth to inform Christian people everywhere of this success and to invite those in the vicinity to hasten thither to assist in holding and preserving for the Christian religion forever the city which had been received through the grace of God. Christians everywhere rejoiced over this news, and, in proportion to the deep sorrow which they had felt over the captivity of Edessa, they received consolation in like measure. Mourning soon took the place of extreme joy, however, and the sound of the zither was changed into strains of grief. Sorrow, even more intense than before, revived. For as soon as Nureddin learned that the inhabitants had surrendered Edessa to the count, he levied troops from all parts of the Orient and ordered the herald to direct the people of the neighboring cities to assemble at one place. Suddenly he appeared before Edessa, placed his legions in a circle about it, and began siege operations. Thus it was with our people as it is written, "The sword without, and terror within." [Deuteronomy 32:25] For outside, the enemy's lines being made ready for battle prevented all exit and threatened death to the Christians, while within, the Turks in the citadel also inspired them with fear and harassed them with constant attacks. Beset by so many difficulties, the Christians knew not what to do. They took frequent counsel together and as frequently changed their plans. But to whatever course of action they turned, they found no path which led to safety, no escape without danger of death. At last, in view of all the exigencies of place and time, it was unanimously resolved that they must leave the city, even at the risk of death. Unquestionably, it would be better to encounter the enemy and force a path to safety with the sword than to endure a siege. In the latter case, either all without distinction would perish by the sword, or, through lack of food, be enslaved by the Turks and forced to endure the bitter yoke of servitude, 27 a fate worse than any form of death. This decision was approved by all; the plan was extremely perilous, yet, in view of other possible fates that might befall them, it seemed to be the only course. The citizens, by whose zealous efforts the count and his soldiers had been introduced into the city, heard with dismay that all hope of resistance had fled and that every path to safety was closed. If they should remain in Edessa, after the departure of the count, they, as the authors of the attempt, would certainly be punished by death in its most dreadful form. They preferred, therefore, to depart with their wives and children and to share uncertain fortune with their brethren of the Christian army, rather than to fall by certain death, or, a still more fearful fate, to suffer servitude under an infidel enemy. 16. The count leaves the city with his army and endeavors to return to his own country. He is pursued by Nureddin. The army is massacred, but the count escapes by flight. As soon as the gates were opened, all rushed eagerly forth as if thereby lay the only path to safety. Although they well knew that a way must be cut through the enemy's lines with the sword, yet whatever might happen after they had once left the city seemed of little consequence. Meanwhile, the Turks in the citadel had unbarred the entrances and let some of their number into the city. These pressed hard on the Christians from behind and forced them to hasten their departure. At the same time the Turks outside the gates heard that some of their people were already in the city and were fighting with the Christians. Anxious to join them, they forcibly seized the gates which had been opened to allow our people to depart. Thus a great multitude of all ranks and classes was massed at that point, as one party tried to issue forth and the other endeavored to force an entrance. A fierce struggle, serious in its consequences to both sides, ensued in the narrow space. The foe outside fought furiously to push in, but the strength and determination of the Christians finally prevailed against them. A passage was opened by the sword, at the cost of many lives on both sides, and our people spread out over the plain. There might have been seen a most piteous spectacle, deplorable even to describe! A helpless throng of unwarlike citizens, old men and sick people, matrons and tender maidens, aged women and little ones, even babes at the breast, all crowded together in the narrow gateway. Some were trodden under the feet of the horses; others, crushed by the on-pressing multitude, were stifled to death; while still others fell under the merciless sword of the Turks. The greater part of the citizens, both men and women, who had elected to follow the departing army perished miserably at that time, A few escaped because of their 28 own strength and vigor or by the assistance of the horses and were able to accompany the army as it retreated. Nureddin, on perceiving that the Christians were preparing to return home, summoned his cohorts for pursuit. He drew up his troops ready for battle and arranged his lines in good order; then, ever pressing close on their rear, he kept up a series of continual attacks. The Christians directed their march toward the Euphrates, which was about fourteen miles from Edessa. Constant fighting and ever-present danger attended the count and his army upon the entire march thither. At almost every step there were engagements, now of many, again of individuals, which resulted in great loss on both sides. There died that noble man whom we mentioned before, Baldwin of Marash, a warrior distinguished for his military achievements. Many other excellent men perished also at this time who were well worthy of being remembered. May their souls enjoy everlasting rest! Their names are forgotten but are surely written in heaven, for they died with a glorious end for the sake of the faith and liberty of the people of Christ! The count's strength was entirely unequal to that of the enemy. He had lost the greater part of his forces and could no longer withstand the continual onslaughts of the Turks. In order to save his life, therefore, he crossed the Euphrates and retired to Samosata. The others fled in different directions as seemed best to each; the baggage and equipment was abandoned, and all thought only of life and safety. The news of the disaster spread far and wide through all the neighboring lands, and those who had rejoiced over the capture of Edessa were now all the more cruelly depressed by the second loss of the city, the massacre of the nobles, and the discomfiture of the Christian people [November/December 1146]. 17. William, patriarch of Jerusalem, dies. Fulcher, archbishop of Tyre, succeeds to that chair, and Ralph, the king's chancellor, is imposed upon the church of Tyre by royal power. ABOUT this time, William, patriarch of Jerusalem, of precious memory, a simple and God-fearing man, went the way of all flesh. He died on September 27, in the fifteenth year of his rule [1145]. On January 25 of the following year, Fulcher, archbishop of Tyre, was chosen in his place, the third in the number of our predecessors. About the time of the feast of Epiphany, a thunderbolt sent from on high struck the church of the Sepulchre of the Lord on Mt. Sion and exposed it to great danger, The omen terrified the entire city and was, as we believe, a portent of disaster. A comet also was visible for 29 many days, and certain other unusual signs, prophetic of future events, appeared…. 18. The people of the West are aroused. Conrad, emperor of the Romans, and Louis, king of France, with many other princes, set forth on the way to aid the Christians of the East. WHEN the city of Edessa was captured, as has been related, the story of the ominous disaster was carried by rumor throughout the entire West. It was said that the impious race of Turks had not only overwhelmed the city of Edessa but was also laying waste the cities, villas, and fortified places of our people and overrunning the entire East unchecked. Thus the people of Christ were suffering extraordinary trials because of constant combats and repeated invasions. Messengers went about to peoples and nations everywhere spreading these reports; provinces which had become lazy and enervated by long periods of peace were visited and their aid besought to avenge these great wrongs. Pope Eugenius III, a devout man of God, also felt the solicitude of a father for his sons of the East, it was said, and was in full and affectionate sympathy with them. He dispatched throughout the various regions of the West religious men, eloquent in exhortation, powerful both in word and deed, to inform princes and people, tribes and tongues everywhere of the intolerable sufferings of their brethren in the East and to rouse them to go forth to avenge these terrible wrongs. Among these envoys was Bernard, abbot of Clairvaux, of immortal memory, beloved of God, a man whose honorable life was an example to all and in every respect worthy of remembrance. He was chosen as the leader for carrying out this mission so pleasing to God, and with all diligence he executed the task laid upon him. Although weak of body because of approaching old age, almost constant fasting, and a too meager diet, he went about through the kingdom and through the country everywhere with his colaborers beloved of God, zealously and indefatigably preaching the kingdom of God. With all due care he described the affliction of the people of the East and the woes by which they were continually oppressed. He set forth clearly that the cities of the faithful, once devoted to the Christian profession, were now suffering the direst servitude under the persecutors of the name of Christ. Bound with chains and shackles, consumed by hunger, confined in horrible prisons, in filth and squalor, clothed with bitterness, those brethren for whom also Christ was willing to die were sitting in beggary and irons. To the task of liberating their oppressed brethren he invited them and stirred their hearts with longing to avenge such wrongs; he promised that aid from on high and eternal rewards with the elect awaited all who would undertake this pious work. 30 As with devoted perseverance he spread this message among nations, principalities, and kingdoms, he won instant favor with great and small. Voluntarily they gave a ready assent to his preaching and vowed to take the road to Jerusalem. Fitting upon their shoulders the sign of the quickening cross, they prepared for the journey. Not alone with the throngs of common people were his persuasive words effective, but even with the supreme rulers of the world and those who occupied the highest pinnacle of kingdoms. The most powerful and illustrious kings of the land, namely, Conrad, emperor of the Romans, and Louis, king of the Franks, with many princes of both kingdoms, embraced the word with equal desire for the same end. Upon their shoulders and garments they impressed the saving token of the revivifying cross in all devotion as a sign that they too would undertake the pilgrimage. 19. The emperor sets out first with his army and arrives at Constantinople. The sultan of Iconium sets ambuscades for him. THE two monarchs made all due arrangements for the government of their kingdoms and joined to their number those who in fervent longing had taken upon themselves the vows of salvation. When all necessary preparation for the march had been completed as befitted royal dignity, they set out upon the pilgrimage pleasing to God, in the month of May. They departed under unlucky auspices, however, and with sinister omens. For they started on the way as if contrary to the will of an angry God, and, in punishment for the sins of man, they accomplished nothing pleasing to Him on that entire pilgrimage. Nay, they even rendered worse the situation of those to whom they intended to bring succor. The leaders had decided to advance separately, each one conducting his own army, so that disagreements and contentions might not arise among the people. In this way, also, the necessaries of life for the legions might more easily be procured, and fodder for the horses and pack animals would be more abundant. They traversed Bavaria, crossed the mighty river Danube at Ratisbon, and descended into Austria with the river on their left. They then entered the land of Hungary, where they received honorable treatment from the king of that country. Passing through that kingdom and the two Pannonias, they went through the provinces of the Bulgarians, namely, Moesia and Dacia Mediterranea, with Dacia Ripensis on the left. They reached Thrace, passed through the famous cities of Philippopolis and Adrianople, and finally arrived at the royal city. They had a friendly interview with Manuel, emperor of Constantinople, 31 and enjoyed a few days of rest, most necessary for the refreshment and relaxation or the armies after so many hardships. Then they crossed the Hellespont, whose waters wash the banks of Constantinople and form the boundary between Europe and Asia, and entered Bithynia, the first province of Asia which one reaches. All the legions encamped in the village of Chalcedon, whence the city they had just left could be seen not far away…. The sultan of Iconium had known for a long time that these great princes were on the march and, in great fear of their coming, he had already called for aid from the most remote parts of the Orient. Full of anxiety as to ways and means by which he might ward off the imminent dangers arising from the presence of so many enemies, he fortified cities, restored ruined strongholds, and implored aid from the neighboring peoples. With constant anxiety he awaited the arrival of the enemy who were said to be at his gates and, from day to day, looked forward with apprehension to the destruction of his people and the desolation of his country. Rumor said that the approaching host had never been equalled in number, that their cavalry forces alone would cover the whole surface of the land; the largest rivers would not suffice to furnish them drink, nor could the most fertile countries supply them with food. Although these reports were greatly exaggerated, yet the actual facts might well strike terror to the hearts of great chiefs who were not followers of the Christian faith. For, according to the uniform statement of men who took part in this expedition, there were in the army of the emperor alone about seventy thousand mailed knights, besides the people on foot, women and children, and light armed cavalry. In the army of the king of France also it was estimated that there were seventy thousand valiant men wearing the breastplate, In addition to those on foot. If God in His good pleasure had deigned to attend them and had granted them His mercy and saving grace, doubtless they might have subdued to the Christian faith not only the sultan but indeed all the provinces of the Orient. But the Lord In His just, although secret, judgment rejected their service and did not regard it as an acceptable offering, perchance because it was offered with unworthy hands. 20. After crossing the Hellespont, the army of Emperor Conrad is led astray by the malice of the Greeks and drawn into very dangerous places. As soon as all the legions had been moved across the Hellespont, Emperor Conrad with some of the principal nobles of his suite took leave of the emperor and also sailed across the sea. The legions, each under command of its own leader, were then ordered to advance. Leaving Galatia, Paphlagonia, and the two provinces of Pontus on the left and 32 Phrygia, Lydia, and Asia Minor on the right, Conrad marched straight through the center of Bithynia to Nicomedia, the metropolis of that land. On the right he passed Nicaea, the city where, in the time of Emperor Constantine, the synod of three hundred and eighteen holy fathers convened to combat the wicked doctrine of the unhappy Arius. From here the entire army, in battle array, followed the shortest route to Lycaonia, the capital of which is Iconium. At this place, the sultan had assembled large forces of armed men and also an immense body of Turks from the neighboring lands. He was awaiting a favorable time and place to attack the Christians as they tried to pass and thus to prevent their advance. By bribes and entreaties he had roused against our people all the kings, leaders, and chiefs of every degree, even in the most remote provinces of the East. By a constant succession of messengers, he had prayed them to consider that if such a mighty host of armed men were permitted to pass through the country without opposition, they would reduce the entire East to their sway by force of arms. A great number of nations responded quickly to his call and from the two Armenias, Cappadocia, Isauria, Cilicia, Media, and Parthia a vast multitude assembled. With the assistance of all these nations, he hoped that he might be able to resist with somewhat equal forces the mighty host which was said to be approaching. On departing from Constantinople, Conrad had requested the emperor to furnish him with guides who knew the country and were well informed about the neighboring provinces. These men, however, proved to be far from trustworthy. It was understood that they had been furnished to lead the armies in all good faith so that the troops following them might not be exposed imprudently to dangers and difficulties or to lack of food while on the march. As soon as they had conducted the army into the land of the enemy, however, these guides informed the leaders that in order to take advantage of a shorter route, which led through unoccupied country, necessary food for a certain number of days must be carried with them. Within a few days thereafter, they faithfully promised that the armies would arrive at the far-famed city of Iconium and would find themselves in a most fertile country full of all kinds of provisions. Obedient to this injunction, the Christians loaded pack animals, carts, and all kinds of vehicles with provisions, for they trusted their guides and followed them in simple good faith. The guides, however, led by the malice inherent in the Greek race and also by their customary hatred of the Christians, acted treacherously. Either because commanded by their master or because bribed by the Turks, they purposely led the legions by unfrequented routes and drew them into places which offered the enemy favorable opportunities 33 to attack and overcome a credulous people. 21. The guides furnished by the Greek emperor to lead Emperor Conrad's army wickedly depart and leave the troops exposed to great danger. WHEN the allotted number of days had passed and the expedition had not reached the destination so eagerly desired, the emperor ordered the Greek guides to be brought before him. In the presence of his nobles he began to put searching questions to them: Why was it that the army had already been upon the march longer than had been stipulated in the beginning and yet had not reached its destination? The guides as usual resorted to falsehoods and asserted steadfastly that, with the help of God, all the legions would arrive at Iconium within three days. The emperor, a man without guile, readily believed their words and answered that he would endure these three days also, since he had faith in their promises. On the following night, camp was made in the usual manner, but while all were resting after their labors, these treacherous guides secretly fled in the dead of night and left the people who had been confided to their faithful care without leaders. At length the light of day returned and the time for resuming the march approached, but those who usually led the lines could not be found. The treachery of the deserters was finally reported to the emperor and the chiefs of the army, and their perfidy became known to all. Moreover, these men of Belial [a Biblical demon], in order to add to their wickedness and heap crime upon crime, hastened to the army of the king of France, which was reported to be in the vicinity. There they falsely declared that Emperor Conrad, who had gone on ahead under their guidance, had been entirely successful and had gained an important victory over the enemy. He had seized Iconium by force of arms and had destroyed it from the very foundations. It seems evident to us that they made this assertion either to induce the king to follow the same route and thus fall into the same perils, or, possibly, by leading him to believe that Conrad had been entirely successful, to prevent him from hurrying to the assistance of his imperilled brethren. It may be, however, that they invented this story to avert punishment from themselves. For if they had reported that the army had perished, they would have been seized as traitors, since it was by their wickedness that the people had rushed to their destructlon. Whatever their intentions may have been, it is certain that it was their perfidy which led the betrayed army to descend into that abyss of death. 34 As soon as the emperor realized that the army was without guides, he called a council of all the chiefs to consider what course of action must be taken. An utter lack of harmony was immediately disclosed; some declared that they must turn back, while others advised that they continue on their way. Well might it have been said of them in this crisis, "He poureth contempt upon princes and causeth them to wander in the wilderness where there is no way." [Psalms 107:40] While they were in this state of uncertainty, anxious over their ignorance of the country and concerned about the lack of provisions (for fodder for the horses and pack animals as well as all kinds of food supplies for the troops had entirely given out), there came a report that the enemy's army, a vast multitude of Turks, was near at hand. This proved to be true. The Christians were in a sterile wilderness, far from all cultivated land; they had been purposely led there, as we have said before, by their traitorous guides. They should have marched through Lycaonia, which they had left on the right. By this route they would have passed through a cultivated land full of all kinds of supplies and would have arrived at their destination in far less time. Instead, the Greeks led them to the left and forced the entire army to turn aside into the wilderness of Cappadocia, far from Iconium. It was common talk, and probably quite true, that these perilous wanderings were devised with the knowledge and at the command of the Greek emperor, who has always envied the successful advance of the Christians. For it is well known that the Greeks have always looked with distrust on all increase of power by the Western nations (as they still do), especially by that of the Teutonic nation, as rivals of the empire. They take it ill that the king of the Teutons calls himself the emperor of the Romans. For thereby he seems to detract too much from the prestige of their own emperor, whom they themselves call monarch, that is, the one who rules supreme over all and therefore is the one and only emperor of the Romans. 22. The Turks make a sudden attack upon the Teutonic host; the legions are destroyed, but the emperor escapes. DURING this time, the emperor's army was suffering from hunger, from ignorance of the country, from long-continued privations, as well as from the difficulties of the roads, the lack of horses, and the burden of the baggage. Meanwhile, the Turkish satraps and officers of various ranks, well aware of the situation, assembled their forces and made a sudden attack upon the Christian camp. This unexpected action threw the legions into utter confusion, for they had not foreseen anything of the kind. The strength of the Turks lay in their swift horses, which 35 had suffered from no lack of food, and in their light equipment of bows and arrows. With loud cries, they surrounded the camp and with their usual agility fell furiously upon our soldiers, who were retarded by their heavy armor. The Christians were superior to the foe in strength and practice in arms, yet, weighed down as they were with breastplates, greaves, and shields, they could not combat the Turks, nor could they pursue them very far from the camp. Their horses also, emaciated by hunger and the long marches, were utterly unable to gallop hither and yon. The Turks, on the contrary, charged en masse; while still at a distance they let fly countless showers of arrows which fell like hail upon the horses and their riders and brought death and wounds from afar. When the Christians tried to pursue, however, the Turks turned and fled upon their swift horses and thus escaped the sword of their foes. Our army, hemmed in on all sides, was in mortal danger from the constant showers of darts and arrows. They had no chance to retaliate or to engage the foe at close quarters, nor could they lay hold of the enemy. As often as they tried to make a counterattack, the Turks broke ranks, eluded all their attempts, and galloped off in different directions. Then, when the Christians returned to their camp, the Turks reconstructed their lines, again surrounded our forces, and attacked even more furiously, as if they were besieging a town. Thus, by the hidden, though just, purposes of God, the valor of these great Christian princes, whose arms and strength, courage and numbers had seemed incomparable, suddenly collapsed under the pressure of a rather mild warfare. Scarcely a vestige of their former army remained, and merely a remnant of their vast forces. Of seventy thousand mailed knights and many companies of foot soldiers, countless in number, barely a tenth part escaped, according to the statement of those who were on this expedition. Some perished by hunger, others were cut down by the sword, and still others fell into the hands of the enemy as prisoners. The emperor escaped, however, with a few of his nobles. After several days, he succeeded with great difficulty in reaching the vicinity of Nicaea with the remnant of his followers. But the victorious Turks, laden with spoils and enriched by countless treasures, with horses and arms even to superabundance, retired to their own fortresses. There, since they knew the country well, they eagerly awaited the coming of the king of France, for, according to report, he had reached practically these same parts. Since they had vanquished the superior forces of Emperor Conrad, they hoped even more easily to rout the army of the king of France. The result was, in fact, as they had anticipated. The sultan of Iconium did not participate in this great adventure. Because God permitted it, a noble and powerful Turkish satrap called 36 Paramus, who commanded the sultan's troops, accomplished this almost unhoped-for feat. The event took place in the month of November, in the year of the Incarnation 1146. [more probably October 1147] 23. The king of the Franks crosses the Hellespont and arrives with his host at Nicaea in Bithynia. The two sovereigns confer with one another. Emperor Conrad returns to Constantinople. MEANWHILE the king of the Franks, following almost the same route with his army, had arrived at Constantinople. There he remained for a short time. He held several private interviews with the emperor, who showed him great honor and, on his departure, presented him with bountiful gifts. The nobles of his suite also were treated with marked favor. From Constantinople the king passed into Bithynia with all his legions. At a point between the royal city and the Black Sea (which are distant from each other thirty miles), he crossed the Hellespont. Here it is at its narrowest, barely a mile in width. He then marched round the Nicomedian gulf which is so named from the adjacent city of Nicomedia, capital of Bithynia, and which also forms part of the Bosphorus or Hellespont. In the village of Nicaea, not very far from the city itself, the king established his camp until he should determine by what route to advance. He made careful inquiries about the emperor of the Romans [Conrad], who had preceded him, and was told that the emperor had lost his army, but that he himself, a wanderer and a fugitive, had made his escape with a few of his nobles. At first this was merely a doubtful rumor, without trustworthy foundation. As time went on, however, it received definite confirmation. For a little later Frederick, duke of Swabia, [Frederick Barbarossa] came to the army of the king of the Franks from the emperor's camp. He brought full and detailed information about the disaster, which up to that time had been known merely through vague, and unreliable rumors. The duke, a young man of admirable qualities, later succeeded his uncle, Emperor Conrad, as ruler of the Roman Empire, which he now governs with vigor and success. He had come to invite the king to a conference with the emperor, that they might consult together, albeit too late, over the route to be followed. On hearing of the tragic disaster which had befallen the emperor and the perils and destruction of their brethren, the entire army was moved with righteous indignation and pity. The king, deeply stirred by the duke's report, held counsel with his people. Then, under the duke's escort, he set out with some of his nobles to confer with the emperor, whose camp was not far away. The two monarchs exchanged the customary salutations with the kiss of peace. They then engaged in a friendly conference, during which they decided to persevere in the accomplishment of their people 37 and to join their forces for the advance march. Many from both hosts, however, and especially from that of the Teutons, disregarded their vows and returned to Constantinople. Their travelling money was exhausted, and the extreme hardships of the march and the necessary outlay terrified them. After consulting with the chief commanders of both armies, the two monarchs abandoned the route which the emperor had previously taken on the left and directed the line of march toward Asia Minor. On their right were the two Phrygias and behind them Bithynia. They marched, now by the inland route, now by the road along the shore, with Philadelphia on the left, and came first to Smyrna. From there they proceeded to Ephesus, the capital of Asia Minor, famous for the life and preaching of John the Evangelist, and also the place of his burial. At Ephesus, the emperor commanded the legions which had survived to march back overland. He himself took ship and returned to Constantinople. The reasons for this action are unknown; perchance he was chagrined over the depleted numbers of the great host which he had led forth; perchance he found the arrogance of the Franks unendurable. He was received by the emperor with even more marked distinction than before and remained at Constantinople with his nobles until the beginning of the following spring. The two sovereigns were closely united by marriage; for their wives were sisters, daughters of the elder Berengar, count of Sulzbach, a great and noble prince, very powerful in the kingdom of the Teutons. Hence the emperor showed Conrad very great favor and, at the special request of the empress, lavished gifts upon him and his nobles most liberally. 24. The king of the Franks proceeds by a different route to Ephesus. Here Guy of Ponthieu dies. In spite of the efforts of the foe, the Franks cross the river Meander. MEANWHILE the king of the Franks, much engaged with his nobles over preparations for the march, was tarrying at Ephesus to allow his army to recuperate. During this time, Count Guy of Ponthieu, a noble distinguished for his military skill and prowess, fell ill and died. He was buried with all due honor in the vestibule of the church at Ephesus. From here the king set out with the whole army and marched with all the speed possible toward the east. After a few days' march he reached the fords of the river Meander, beloved of swans. This is the river of which our Naso writes in the Heroides: So when destiny calls, cast down in the wet grass, The white swan sings at the shoals of the Meander! Amid the green meadows on the banks of this river the king made his 38 camp. Here for the first time, the longing of the Franks to see their foe was gratified, for as the Christians tried to approach the river, great numbers of Turks appeared on the opposite bank and prevented them from using the water. At last they found the fords, however, and, despite the enemy's efforts, forced a passage across the river and rushed upon the Turks. They killed many of them and took numerous prisoners. The rest turned and fled. The victorious Franks at once seized the Turkish camp, which was filled with spoils of the richest kind and supplies of every description, and by vigorous action made themselves masters of the farther bank. Filled with joy over the victory and the rich spoils which they had seized, the Christians passed a quiet night and, at dawn, prepared to resume the march. Thence they advanced to Laodicea, a city of that same locality. Here they supplied themselves with provisions for several days, as was their custom, and again set forth as with one mind. 25. The Frankish army suffers a most disastrous defeat. The vanguard which had gone on ahead escapes. A PRECIPITOUS mountain, very difficult of ascent, blocked the path of the advancing army. According to the plan of march, it must be surmounted that day. It was customary upon this campaign to designate each day a certain number of distinguished men to act as leaders—some to conduct the advance guard and others to bring up the rear as protection for the non-militant throng and especially for the crowd of people on foot. On these men also devolved the duty of planning with the nobles the route to be followed, the length of the march, and the location of the camp for the next day. On this particular day, the choice fell, in the order of his turn, upon a certain nobleman from Aquitaine named Geoffrey de Rancogne. Accordingly, he went on ahead with the standard of the king and ascended the mountain with the vanguard, His orders were that the vanguard should make camp on the heights. When he reached the summit, however, the greater part of the day still remained, and Geoffrey decided, notwithstanding his orders, to advance a little farther, for he felt that the march had been too short that day. The guides assured him that there was a better spot for the camp near by. Accordingly, he went on farther. The people who were following the vanguard supposed that the camp was to be placed on the summit of the mountain, and, in the belief that the day's march was nearly completed, they began rather carelessly to lag behind, Thus the army was divided; some had already crossed the ridge, while others were still loitering upon it, The Turks, ever on the alert for an opportunity to attack, immediately recognized the situation; they were, in fact, ever following alongside the army with this very end in view, and from a distance they kept close watch on the 39 movements of the Christians. The way was narrow and the ranks were separated, because the larger and stronger force had gone on ahead; the Turks knew that the situation of the rear ranks could not easily become known, nor could help be sent to them in their extremity. They took advantage of the favorable opportunity and seized the summit of the mountain, so as to cause still greater confusion between our van and the rear guard. Then in battle array, they fell upon our forces, and before the latter could seize arms the Turks had broken up their lines by force. No longer was the fight carried on with bows and arrows, it was fought at close quarters with the sword and brought death and destruction to the Christians. All who tried to flee were most cruelly pursued. Our people were hindered by the narrow defiles, and their horses were exhausted by the long marches and the difficulty of the roads. In addition, they were hindered by the enormous amount of baggage. Yet they resisted as with one accord and with unflinching courage fought valiantly on behalf of life and liberty and in defense of their companions of the way. They carried on the combat with swords and lances and by both words and example cheered each other to continued effort. The Turks, inspired by the hope of victory, likewise endeavored to animate each other; they called to mind how, only a few days before, they had routed a much greater army with less danger and had easily triumphed over forces more numerous and far stronger. The battle was long fought and of doubtful outcome. Finally, however, in punishment for our sins, the infidels conquered. Many Christians were killed and large numbers made prisoners; our army was reduced to a very few. Many noble and illustrious men perished that day, men notable for their military deeds and well worthy of pious remembrance, Among the number were the count of Varennes, a man preeminent even among great lords, Gauchiers de Montjoy, Evrard de Breteuil, Itiers de Meingnac, and many others. Their names we do not remember, but we believe that they are written in heaven and their memory will be held in benediction forever. That day the glorious reputation of the Franks was lost through a misfortune most fatal and disastrous for the Christians; their valor, up to this time formidable to the nations, was crushed to earth. Henceforward it was as a mockery in the eyes of those unclean races to whom formerly it had been a terror. Why was it, O blessed Lord Jesus, that this people, so devoted to Thee, who longed to adore the traces of Thy footprints and to kiss the venerated places which Thou hadst consecrated by Thy bodily presence, suffered defeat at the hand of those who hated Thee? Truly, Thy judgments are as a bottomless pit and there is no one who can 40 understand them. For Thou, alone, O Lord, art able to do all things and there is no one who can resist Thy will. 26. The king escapes by chance and joins the advance guard. The remnant of the army reaches Attalia and from there crosses over into Syria. MEANWHILE, the king, rather by chance than by his own efforts, escaped amid the great peril and confusion. In the silence of midnight, without a guide, he climbed the slope of the mountain so often mentioned and, with a few attendants, reached the camp which had been placed somewhat farther on. As has been said, the vanguard, followIng the royal standard, had traversed the narrow passes of the mountain without difficulty and had established camp without opposition in a suitable location. They were utterly unaware of all that had happened to the army in their rear. Yet when they found that the arrival of the troops was interrupted and great delay ensued, an ominous foreboding of some disaster prevailed, an inkling that all was not as could be desired. But when those who had escaped with the king arrived at the camp, the sad disaster became known with certainty. Then sorrow toll upon the army, and grievous anxiety seized the hearts of all. With tremulous voice and tearful sighs, each sought for those most dear to him, and when they were found missing, grief was redoubled. The camp resounded with lamentations, and the troops were torn with anguish. Throughout the entire camp there was not a place which was not filled with mourning for friends and household companions. One sought his father, another his master. Here a woman was searching everywhere for her son, there another for her husband. Those whose search was fruitless passed a sleepless night, burdened with anxious fear lest the worst had happened to the absent ones. During the night, however, there arrived at the camp some of each class. These, rather by chance than by their own wisdom, had escaped death by hiding among the bushes and rocks or in underground caverns under the protection of the kindly darkness. This disaster occurred in January in the year of the Incarnation of our Lord 1146. [should be 1148] From this time, there began to be a shortage of bread and all other provisions in the camp. Moreover, for many days thereafter, they had no market of any kind. But there was an even worse trouble. They had no guides to lead them and they were wandering now here, now there, without knowledge of the locality. Finally, however, they entered Pamphylia, over steep mountain passes and through deep valleys, and with great difficulty, although without conflict with the enemy, succeeded in reaching Attalia, the capital of that district. Attalia lies upon the seacoast and is subject to the emperor of Constantinople. It possesses very rich fields, which are, nevertheless, of no advantage to 41 the townspeople, for they are surrounded by enemies on all sides who hinder their cultivation. Therefore, the fertile soil lies fallow, since there is no one to work it. Yet the place has many other advantages which it offers freely to visitors. It is most delightfully situated, it abounds in clear and healthful waters, and it is planted with fruitbearing trees. The grain supply is brought from overseas in ample quantities, so that those resorting there are well supplied with the necessaries of life. It borders very closely, however, on the land of the enemy, and since it was found impossible to endure their continual attacks, it became tributary to them. Through this connection, Attalia maintains trade in necessaries with the enemy. Our soldiers, unacquainted with the Greek language, corrupted the name of this city to Satalia. Accordingly that entire portion of the sea, from the promontory of Lissidona to the island of Cyprus, is called the Attalic sea and is known in common parlance as the Satalian gulf. At Attalia the king of the Franks and his people suffered from a serious shortage of food brought on by the great number of people who had come thither; in fact, the survivors of the army, and above all the poor, nearly perished of famine. Here the king left the people on foot and with his nobles went on board ship. Isauria and Cilicia were passed on the left, and the island of Cyprus on the right. After a short sea voyage with favorable winds, they sailed into the mouth of the Orontes river, which flows by Antioch, and landed at the place which is now called the Port of St. Simeon, near the ancient city of Seleucia, ten miles from Antioch. [March 1148] 27. Raymond, prince of Antioch, receives the king of the Franks with great honor at the Port of St. Simeon and conducts him to Antioch. Later, however, they are wickedly alienated. FOR many days Raymond, prince of Antioch, had eagerly awaited the arrival of the king of the Franks. When he learned that the king had landed in his domains, he summoned all the nobles of the land and the chief leaders of the people and went out to meet him with a chosen escort. He greeted the king with much reverence and conducted him with great pomp into the city of Antioch, where he was met by the clergy and the people. Long before this time—in fact, as soon as he heard that Louis was coming—Raymond had conceived the idea that by his aid he might be able to enlarge the principality of Antioch. With this in mind, therefore, even before the king started on the pilgrimage, the prince had sent to him in France a large store of noble gifts and treasures of great price in the hope of winning his favor. He also counted greatly on the interest of the queen [Eleanor of Aquitaine] 42 with the lord king, for she had been his inseparable companion on his pilgrimage. She was Raymond's niece, the eldest daughter of Count William of Poitou, his brother. As we have said, therefore, Raymond showed the king every attention on his arrival. He likewise displayed a similar care for the nobles and chief men in the royal retinue and gave them many proofs of his great liberality. In short, he outdid all in showing honor to each one according to his rank and handled everything with the greatest magnificence. He felt a lively hope that with the assistance of the king and his troops he would be able to subjugate the neighboring cities, namely, Aleppo, Shayzar, and several others. Nor would this hope have been futile, could he have induced the king and his chief men to undertake the work. For the arrival of King Louis had brought such fear to our enemies that now they not only distrusted their own strength but even despaired of life itself. Raymond had already more than once approached the king privately in regard to the plans which he had in mind. Now he came before the members of the king's suite and his own nobles and explained with due formality how his request could be accomplished without difficulty and at the same time be of advantage and renown to themselves. The king, however, ardently desired to go to Jerusalem to fulfil his vows, and his determination was irrevocable. When Raymond found that he could not induce the king to join him, his attitude changed. Frustrated in his ambitious designs, he began to hate the king's ways; he openly plotted against him and took means to do him injury. He resolved also to deprive him of his wife, either by force or by secret intrigue. The queen readily assented to this design, for she was a foolish woman. Her conduct before and after this time showed her to be, as we have said, far from circumspect. Contrary to her royal dignity, she disregarded her marriage vows and was unfaithful to her husband. As soon as the king discovered these plots, he took means to provide for his life and safety by anticipating the designs of the prince. By the advice of his chief nobles, he hastened his departure and secretly left Antioch with his people. Thus the splendid aspect of his affairs was completely changed, and the end was quite unlike the beginning. His coming had been attended with pomp and glory; but fortune is fickle, and his departure was ignominious. Some people attribute this outcome to the king's own base conduct. They maintain that he received his just deserts because he did not accede to the request of a great prince from whom he and his followers had received kind treatment. This is of especial interest, because these 43 persons constantly affirm that if the king would have devoted himself to that work, one or more of the above-named cities might easily have been taken. 28, The winter being over, Emperor Conrad arrives in Syria by sea. Count Alphonse also lands at the city of Acre. He dies at Caesarea. EMPEROR CONRAD passed the winter in the royal city. He was treated with the utmost courtesy by the emperor of Constantinople, as befitted so great a prince, and on his departure received many and splendid gifts. Attended by his escort of nobles, he set sail for the East in a fleet which was provided by his imperial highness and landed at the port of Acre. From there he went on to Jerusalem. King Baldwin and Fulcher, patriarch of precious memory, accompanied by the clergy and the entire people, met him outside the city and, to the sound of hymns and chants, conducted him into Jerusalem…. [April 1148] 29. The king of the Franks leaves Antioch and proceeds to Jerusalem. The patriarch of Jerusalem is sent to meet him. MEANWHILE, news was received at Jerusalem that the king of the Franks had left Antioch and was approaching the land of Tripoli. The nobles at once unanimously resolved to send Fulcher, patriarch of Jerusalem of precious memory, to invite the king with fitting words and salutary counsel to visit the kingdom. For it was feared that the prince of Antioch might become reconciled to him and call him back or that he might be detained by the count of Tripoli, his kinsman. In either case, the desires of the people of Jerusalem would be hindered., The possessions of the Latins in the East were divided into four principalities. The first to the south was the kingdom of Jerusalem, which began at the brook between Jubail and Beirut, martime cities of the province of Phoenicia, and ended at the desert which is beyond Daron. The second toward the north was the county of Tripoli, which began at the rivulet just mentioned and extended to another stream between Maraclea and Valenia, likewise maritime cities. The third was the principality of Antioch. This began at the last-named rivulet and extended toward the west to Tarsus in Cilicia. The county of Edessa, the fourth division, began at the forest called Marrim and extended out toward the east beyond the Euphrates. From the first, the great and powerful lords of these countries had cherished the hope that through the valiant assistance of these severeigns who were coming they might be able to enlarge their own territories and extend their boundaries immensely. All had powerful enemies whose hated cities, so near their own territories, they longed to 44 add to their own domains. All were anxious over their own affairs and eager to extend their lands. Accordingly, each one, intent on anticipating the others, sent messengers with gifts and invitations to the two monarchs. Of these, the hopes of the king and people of Jerusalem seemed most likely to be realized. Love and reverent devotion for the holy places naturally drew all thither; moreover, the emperor was now with them. There was reason to believe that the king of the Franks would also hasten thither, both to accomplish his pilgrimage and to offer his prayers, and also that he might engage in some work for the advancement of Christianity, as decided by common counsel. The chief men of the realm greatly feared that the king might be detained in the vicinity of Aleppo by the prince [Raymond], to whom he was closely bound by the ties of marriage and affection, a contingency which seemed quite probable. They feared also that the queen might intervene. They therefore sent the patriarch to meet him. When they learned, however, that the king and the prince had parted with far from friendly feelings, they felt increased hope that he would leave there without delay and come to Jerusalem. Yet to guard against the tricks of fortune and to anticipate anything that might happen, they sent the venerable patriarch to use his influence with the king. Nor was this hope in vain; the king was persuaded by Fulcher's words and proceeded at once to Jerusalem. All the clergy and people went out to meet him on his arrival. With all due honor and ceremony he was welcomed to the city and, to the accompaniment of hymns and chants, was led with his nobles to the venerable places. When at last his prayers had been accomplished according to custom, a general court was proclaimed at the city of Acre to consider the results of this great pilgrimage, the completion of such great labors, and also the enlargement of the realm. On the appointed day they assembled at Acre, as had been arranged. Then, together with the nobles of the realm who possessed an accurate knowledge of affairs and places, they entered into a careful consideration as to what plan was most expedient. 45 BOOK XVII 1. A general council is held at the city of Acre on the coast. The names of the princes who attended are given. It seems well worth while and quite in harmony with the present history that the names of the nobles who were present at the council just mentioned, men who had come from lands of great importance, should be recorded here for the benefit of posterity. Foremost among these was the famous Conrad, king of the Teutons and emperor of the Romans. He was accompanied by the following ecclesiastical nobles of his court: Otto, bishop of Freising, his brother, a man of letters; Stephen, bishop of Metz; and Henry, bishop of Toul, brother of Count Thierry of Flanders. Theotwin, bishop of Porto, the papal legate, a Teuton by birth, also accompanied the emperor’s train by command of Pope Eugenius. Among the secular princes present were Henry, duke of Austria, the emperor’s brother; Duke Guelf, a distinguished and powerful noble; and Frederick [Barbarossa], the illustrious duke of the Swabians and Vindelicians, son of the emperor’s eldest brother. The last-named prince was a young man of remarkable character who later succeeded his uncle Conrad and now rules the Roman Empire with vigor and courage. There were present also Hermann, margrave of Verona; Berthold of Andechs, later duke of Bavaria; [the elder] William, margrave of Montferrat, the emperor’s brother-in-law; and Guy, count of Blandras, whose wife was the sister of the margrave just named…. Other noted men of high rank, whose names and titles we do not recall, also attended. Louis, most pious king of the Franks, of famous memory in the Lord, was also present. With him were Godfrey, bishop of Langres; Arnulf, bishop of Lisieux; Guy of Florence, cardinalpriest of the church of Rome, with title St. Chrysogonus, the legate of the apostolic see; Robert, count of Perche, the king’s brother; and Henry, count of Troyes, son of the elder Count Theobald and also son-in-law of the king of Jerusalem; and Ives de Nesle from Soissons, a wise and loyal man. All are worthy of remembrance, but since it would take too long to record them here, their names are intentionally omitted. From our own lands there were present Baldwin, king of Jerusalem; a youth of great promise, and his mother, a wise and circumspect woman, strong of heart and not inferior in wisdom to any prince whatsoever. They were accompanied by the Patriarch Fulcher; Baldwin, bishop of Acre; Bernard, bishop of Sidon; William, bishop of Beirut; Adam, bishop of Banyas; Gerald, bishop of Bethlehem; Robert, master of the Knights of the Temple; and Raymond, master of the Hospital. Among the lay nobles were: Manasses, the royal constable; Philip of Nablus; Elinandus of Tiberias; Gerard of Sidon; Walter of Caesarea; Payens, lord of the country which lies beyond the Jordan; the elder Balian; Humphrey of Toron; Guy of Beirut, and many others. To name each individually would take far too long. All these great men had assembled, as we said, at the city of Acre for the purpose of considering, first of all, the best time and place when, by the will of God, they might endeavor to enlarge the kingdom and add to the glory of the Christian name. 46 Medieval Sourcebook: Odo of Deuil: The Crusade of Louis VII I have added and revised passages from the translation of V.G. Barry to the documents translated by Brundage [LC]. Odo of Deuil (1110-1162) was a monk and confidant of the famous Abbot Suger of St. Denis, near Paris. He accompanied Louis VII during the entire crusade and late in 1149 returned to France with him. He describes the journey of the French army only as far as Antioch. The French faction can use this text to understand what happened on the journey east and the dangers and hardships the French army faced. They may use the description of the French losses to justify a second chance at victory in Debate 1. The German faction may use the description of the French losses as an argument against continuing the crusade in Debate 1. Both French and German factions can use Odo’s narrative to understand the animosity between the two groups. Louis can use Odo’s descriptions of him to support his leadership claim in Debate 2. A Table of Contents for Odo of Deuil Book II Book III Book VII Louis and his army march through central Europe The French army arrives in Byzantine territory Conflicts arise among French, Germans, and Greeks The French army is attacked by the Turks The remnant of the French army eventually reaches the Holy Land 47 Book II. The French Army in Central Europe [Adapted from Brundage] A German army under Conrad II set out through Hungary, but met a disastrous end at the hands of the Seljuqs in Anatolia. While the Germans were marching heedlessly toward defeat, the French army, led by King Louis VII, was following in their tracks, about a month behind. The story of their journey is related by the French King's chaplain, Odo of Deuil: In what we have written the description of outstanding actions is given as a good example; the names of the cities are given to show the route of the journey; the description of the character of the localities is given as a guide to show what types of provisions are needed. Since there will always be pilgrims to the Holy Sepulcher, it is hoped that they will be more cautious in view of our experiences. The rich cities of Metz, Worms, Würzburg, Ratisbon, and Passau, then, lie a three-day journey from one another. From the last named city it is a five-day journey to WienerNeustadt and from there it takes one day to reach the Hungarian border. The country in between these towns is forested and provisions must be brought from the towns, since the countryside cannot provide enough for an army. There are plenty of rivers there and also springs and meadows. When I passed through that area the mountains seemed rugged to me. Now, however, compared to Romania [i.e. Anatolia/Asia Minor], I would call it a plain. This side of Hungary is bordered by muddy water. On the other side it is separated from Bulgaria by a clear stream. The Drave River is in the middle of Hungary. One bank of the river is steep and the other has a gentle slope, so that it is shaped like a ball. The result of this is that when even a little rain falls and is added to the water of the nearby swamps, even rather distant places are flooded. We heard that many of the Germans who preceded us were suddenly flooded out there. When we came to the place where their camp had been, we could scarcely ford it. We had only a few small boats and it was therefore necessary to make the horses swim. They found it easy to get in but hard to get out; however, with some work and God's protection they came across without losses. All the rest of this country is covered with lakes, swamps, and springs—if springs can be made by travellers, even in the summer, by scraping the earth a little bit—except for the Danube, which follows a straight enough course and carries the wealth of many areas by ship to the noble city of Gran. This country is such a great food-producing area that Julius Caesar's commissariat is said to have been located there. The marketing and exchange facilities there were sufficient for our needs. We crossed Hungary in fifteen days. From there, at the entrance to Bulgaria, the fortress called the Bulgarian Belgrade presented itself; it is so called to distinguish it from the Hungarian town of the same name. One day from Belgrade, with a river between them, lies the poor little town of Branicevo. Beyond these towns the country is, so to speak, forested meadow or crop-producing woods. It is bountiful in good things which grow by themselves and it would be good for other things if it had any farmers. It is not flat, nor is it rugged with mountains; rather it is watered by streams and very clear springs which flow between the hills, vines, and usable fields. It lacks any rivers, and between there and Constantinople we had no use for our boats. Five days from this place lies Nish, which, though small, is the first city of this section of Greece. The cities 48 of Nish, Sofia, Philippopolis, and Adrianople are four days apart from each other and from the last of these it is five days to Constantinople. The countryside in between is flat. It is full of villages and forts and abounds in all kinds of good things. On the right and left there are mountains close enough to be seen. These are so long that they enclose a wide, rich, and pleasant plain…. The fact that the German emperor [Conrad] went first gave our king an advantage in that he found new bridges constructed over the many rivers in Germany without having to build them himself. Now, to tell the truth, the emperor set out in a most imperial fashion in respect to both fleet and land forces; this was advisable, for at that time the Hungarians were his enemies. Thus, the spirited emperor, who was both sailor and foot soldier (seeing that he had a very large army in the fleet with him and the horses and the rank and file beside him on the shore), entered Hungary as became a prince. There was, moreover, a certain man named Boris who claimed a hereditary right to Hungary and had sent letters to that effect to our king, setting forth his complaint in full and humbly suing for justice. On meeting the emperor, he set forth his case to him, promising him many things and received from him hope of receiving his right. But the King of Hungary, knowing that he could conquer more easily by gold than by force, poured out much money among the Germans and thus escaped an attack from them. Now Boris, who had been deluded by vain hope, hiding away as best he could, awaited the passage of our king, and stealthily joined the Franks. Protected and concealed by them, he went through Hungary with the army. Meanwhile, the King of Hungary, fearing and revering our king, sought his favor by sending messengers and gifts, but he avoided crossing the Danube to meet him. He hoped for a conference with the man whom recommendation had commended to him, but since he was afraid to cross to our side of the river, he humbly entreated our king to come to his side. And so the king, whose custom it was to to be won over easily by charity and humility, took along certain of his bishops and lords and gratified his wish. Then, after kisses and embraces, they established a peace, strengthened their friendship, and provided that from that time forth our pilgrims might pass through Hungary in safety. When he had accomplished this, our king left the king of Hungary a happy man. Kingly gifts of horses, vases, and garments accompanied hime, and the King of Hungary further intended to reverence our king and his nobles insofar as he could, when, alas, he found out that Boris was with the Franks. The Hungarians hunt out Boris in the Frankish army. Boris escapes, but is found—almost naked, filthy, and beaten—by Frankish guards and brought to King Louis. Everyone thought he was a robber. But after he had thrown himself at the king’s feet, even though he did not know our language and the king did not then have an interpreter, he, nevertheless, by mixing with his own language certain words we knew and by repeating his own name often, made known his identity. Soon, therefore, he was clad properly, and his case was reserved for the next day. 49 Now the Hungarian king, who feared Boris, immediately found out what had happened. He therefore demanded Boris from the king as from a friend and as if his surrender were obligatory according to their pact of friendship; and in return he made many promises which were scarcely credible. Likewise, he stirred the minds of the nobles by his presence and presents, but neither the urgency of his supplications nor his gifts could obtain this request from the king before the council had given judgment. Our king said that the King of Hungary was his friend, but he must not do anything which ill became a pilgrim. Then, when the bishops and other magnates had been assembled and the matter examined, they decided the king should preserve peace with the Hungarian king and should protect the life of the nobleman, even though he was a captive, because it would be a crime either to sell a man to death or, without cause, to break a treaty with a friend. Therefore, the King of Hungary, not trusting himself to us, but departing with some distress, sought safety in a more remote part of his kingdom. Our king, however, keeping Boris with him, with due honor took him out of Hungary. Book III. The French and German Armies in Byzantine Territory. Thus far we had been at play, for we had neither suffered any damages from men's malice nor had we feared any dangers from the plots of cunning men. From the time when we entered Bulgaria and the land of the Greeks, however, both the strength and morale of the army were put to the test. In the impoverished town of Branicevo, as we were about to enter an uninhabited area, we loaded up with supplies, most of which came via the Danube from Hungary. There was such a number of boats there, brought by the Germans, that the populace's supplies of firewood and timber for building were assured for a long time. Our men took the smaller boats across the river and bought supplies from a certain Hungarian fortress which was not far away. Here we first encountered the stamina, a copper coin. We unhappily gave—or rather, lost—five denarii for one of them and a mark for twelve solidi. Thus the Greeks were tainted with perjury at the very entrance to their country. You may remember that, as has been said, their representatives had sworn, on the Emperor's behalf, that they would furnish us with a proper market and exchange. We crossed the rest of this desolate country and entered a most beautiful and wealthy land which stretches without interruption to Constantinople. Here we first began to receive injuries and to take notice of them. The other areas had sold us supplies properly and had found us peaceful. The Greeks, however, shut up their cities and fortresses and sent their merchandise down to us on ropes suspended from the walls. The supplies purveyed in this manner, however, were insufficient for our multitude. The pilgrims, therefore, secured the necessary supplies by plundering and looting, since they could not bear to suffer want in the midst of plenty. It seemed to some that the Germans who had preceded us were at fault in this respect, since they had looted everything and we discovered that they had burned several settlements outside the walls of towns. The story must be told, although reluctantly. Outside of the walls of Philippopolis was a noble town inhabited by Latin peoples who sold a great many supplies to travellers for profit. When the Germans settled down in the taverns there, a juggler was 50 present, as bad luck would have it. Although he did not know their language, he sat down, made a sign, and got a drink. After guzzling for a long time, he took a charmed snake out of his pocket and placed it in his schooner, which he had deposited on the ground. He went on to play other juggler’s tricks among people of whose language and customs he was ignorant. The Germans rose up in horror, as if they had seen a monster, seized the entertainer, and tore him to pieces. They blamed everyone for the misdeeds of one man and declared that the Greeks had tried to murder them with poison. The town was aroused by the tumult in the suburb and the Duke came out beyond the walls with a group of his men to settle the disturbance. The Germans, whose eyes were bleary with wine and anger, saw, not unarmed men, but a posse. The angry Germans, therefore, rushed upon the men who had come to preserve peace in the belief that they were going to take revenge for the murder. The Germans snatched up their bows—for these are their weapons—and went out once more to turn to flight those from whom they had fled. They killed and wounded the Greeks and when all the Greeks had been expelled from the suburb, the Germans stopped. Many of the Germans were killed there, especially those who had gone into the inns, for, in order to get their money, the Greeks threw them into caves. When the Germans had plucked up their spirits and had taken up their weapons again, they returned and, in order to redress their shame and the slaughter of their men, they burned nearly everything outside of the walls. The Germans were also unbearable to us. On one occasion some of our men wished to get away from the crowding of the multitude around the King. They therefore went on ahead and stayed near the Germans. Both they and the Germans went to market, but the Germans would not allow the Franks to buy anything until they got enough for themselves. From this arose a brawl, or rather a squabble, for when one man denounces another whom he does not understand in a loud voice, that is a squabble. The Franks struck them and the Germans struck back. The Franks then returned from the market with their supplies. The Germans, who were numerous, were scornful of the pride of a few Franks and took up arms against them. The Germans attacked them fiercely and the Franks, who were armed in a similar fashion, resisted spiritedly. God put an end to this wickedness, for night soon fell.... Thus, as the Germans went forward they disturbed everything and for this reason the Greeks fled from our peaceful prince who followed after the Germans. Nonetheless, the congregation of the churches and all the clergy came out from the cities with their icons and other Greek paraphernalia and they always received our king with due honor and with fear. The Duke of Sofia, a kinsman of the [Byzantine] emperor, saw to procuring part of the market for the pilgrims. He served the king honorably, too, with respect to provisions, but Louis, keeping little of nothing of this for himself, divided the entire amount, some with the poor, and some with the rich. And so peace was maintained more strictly with Louis, because he was less needy and commanded more respect than the others…. Now I want to describe how the Germans were led to Constantinople. They proceeded boldly, but not wisely enough, for, although they found plenty elsewhere in that land, they showed no moderation. Foot soldiers of theirs were killed when they lagged behind drunk, and, since the bodies were not buried, all things were polluted, so that to the Franks who came later less harm arose from the armed Greeks than from the dead Germans…. 51 The Germans arrive at Constantinople. Before the city stood a spacious and impressive ring of walls enclosing various kinds of game and including canals and ponds. Also, inside were certain hollows and caves which, in lieu of forests, furnished lairs for the animals. In that lovely place certain palaces which the emperors had built as their springtime resort are conspicuous for their splendor. Into this “Place of Delights” the German emperor burst and, destroying practically everything, under the very eyes of the Greeks seized their delights for his own uses…. Meanwhile, the King of the Franks, whose habit was always to season majesty with humility, entreated the German emperor that he wait for him on this side of the Hellespont, and that those whose common will had undertaken a task should also use a common plan of action. The German emperor, however, was hastening ardently toward the place for which he had set out, and when he had received a guide for the journey (or, rather, for wandering and death) from the Greek emperor, he went across…. Odo postpones further discussion of the German disaster in Asia Minor. He tells of some of the Crusade leaders who, unwilling to continue with the Germans, stayed behind to wait for the Franks. The Greeks, however, withheld provisions and tried to force them to cross over into Asia Minor. Meanwhile, barbarian mercenaries, presumably under Greek authority, attacked the Crusaders. The Byzantine emperor maintained he knew nothing of the incident, and allowed the troops to lodge near his palace and opened the markets to them. This outcome would have satisfied the messengers if they had not judged one crime in the light of another; for they learned that the emperor had an agreement with the Turks and that the very man who had written to our king that he was going to accompany him in fighting the infidels and had won a recent and renowned victory over them had actually confirmed a twelve-year armistice with them. Also, his treachery was increased and made clear by that fact that only a great number could get through his realm in safety; for others, who had sent a few men ahead to Constantinople to provide arms and food for the journey had suffered a considerable loss of possessions and were mourning their wounded and dead. And this did not happen just once; for from the time we entered his territory we endured the robberies which his people perpetrated on us because our strength did not equal theirs. Perhaps this condition would have been bearable, and it could have been said that we deserved the evils which we suffered on account of the evils which we had committed, if blasphemy had not been added. For instance, if our priests celebrated mass on Greek altars, the Greeks afterwards purified them with propitiatory offerings, as if they had been defiled…. And, O dreadful thing! we heard of an ill usage of theirs which should be expiated by death; namely, that every time they celebrate the marriage of one of our men, if he has been baptized in the Roman way, they rebaptize him before they make the pact. 52 We know other heresies of theirs, both concerning their treatment of the Eucharist and concerning the procession of the Holy Ghost, but none of these matters would mar our page if not pertinent to our subject. Actually, it was for these reasons that the Greeks had incurred the hatred of our men, for their error had become known even among the lay people. Because of this they were judged not to be Christians, and the Franks considered killing them a matter of no importance and hence could with the more difficulty be restrained from pillaging and plundering. Book VII Louis learned of the German disaster after leaving Constantinople, and he followed a route closer to the sea. After leaving Laodicea, however, the vanguard of his army marched too fast over the mountains, exposing the center of the army to Turkish attack. Most of Louis’s royal guard was killed, but the king escaped and nightfall halted the Turkish attack. The next day, the army continued, but with a more organized order of march under the protection of the Templars, who were more experienced in warfare against the Turks. Nearby the baggage train was still crossing the pass, because the closer packed it was, the slower it fled over the crags. When he came upon it, the king, who was on foot, secured a horse and accompanied the men through the evening, which had already fallen. At the time breathless cohorts of knights from the camp met him and groaned when they saw him alone, bloody, and tired, for, without asking, they knew what had happened and mourned inconsolably for the the missing royal escort…. The Franks were very numerous and glowed with courage; but it was night, and the enemy held the other side of the deep valley; and thus neither the hour nor the place was suitable for further pursuit on the part of the Franks. With the king, accordingly, they arrived at the camp late at night, and the people there who had been fearful before now mourned because their grief was actual, but they were somewhat comforted by the king’s safety. There was no sleep that night, during which each man either waited for some one of his friends who never came or joyously, and with no regard for material loss, welcomed one who had been despoiled…. Without dispelling the shadows of grief from the sorrowing people, the next day dawned brightly, and the enemy army became visible, spread over the mountains in a rich and happy throng. Now, while bewailing their lost comrades and possessions, our men, who were paupers since the day before and cautious now that it was too late, banished their carelessness and advanced in an order designed to save what they still had. But because our king could not endure the fact that his nobles were impoverished and because his pious heart made him have regard for those below them, he dispelled the wants of both classes as generously as if he had forgotten that he had shared their loss at all. Already hunger was assailing the horses, which for many days had eaten little grass and no grain; already there was no food for the men, who still had to march for twelve days; and like a beast which becomes more savage after tasting blood, the enemy harassed us the more boldly after learning of our weakness and the more greedily after profiting thereby. 53 Against them the Templars and the Master of the Temple, Lord Evrard of Barres, who should be revered for his piety and who furnished the army an honorble example, saved their own possessions wisely and alertly and protected those of other people as courageously as possible. Now the king liked the example which they set and was glad to imitate it, and he wanted the army to be influenced in that direction, for he knew that, even if extreme hunger should weaken them, unity of spirit would also strengthen them in their weakness. By common consent, therefore, it was decided that during this dangerous period all should establish fraternity with the Templars, rich and poor taking oath that they would not flee the field and that they would obey in every respect the officers assigned them by the Templars. Thus they were given a commander named Gilbert, and he was given associates, to each of whom he should assign fifty knights. Because the Turks were quick to flee, our men were commanded to endure, until they received an order, the attacks of the enemies; and to withdraw forthwith when recalled, even though they should be making a stand as originally commanded. When they had learned this, they were also taught the order of the march, so that a person in front would not rush to the rear and the guards on the flanks would not fall into disorder. Moreover, those whom nature or fortune had made foot soldiers (for, because they had lost or sold their equipment, many nobles were marching among the crowd in a manner unusual for them) were drawn up at the very rear in order to oppose with their bows the enemies’ arrows… We advanced according to this arrangement, and after descending the mountains, rejoiced at reaching level ground, and, since we were surrounded by protectors, we endured the enemies’ bold attacks without any loss. On this route, however, were two rivers a mile apart, and the deep mud on their banks made crossing difficult. After crossing the first we awaited the rear guard and pulled the feeble baggage horses from the mud with our hands. Almost mingling with the enemy, the knights and foot soldiers in the rear guard crossed, too, but they suffered no loss, for they were protected by the pact of mutual aid. We went toward the second river with the intent of passing between two crags from whose summit it was possible to shoot at the crowd as it approached. From both sides the Turks hastened to the crags, but our knights seized one of them first. The Turks climbed the other, however, and threw on the ground hair plucked from their heads, and by this sign, we were told, they indicated that they could not be dislodged from that spot by any kind of fear. But that sign was either false in this instance or did not mean anything, because the throng of our foot soldiers routed them immediately. But while they were struggling for the top of the crag, the knights thought that the Turks’ retreat could be cut off between the two rivers. Therefore, when permission had been granted by the commander, all attacked the Turks at once, and they killed those whom they could overtake, thus avenging the death of their comrades and their own losses. Upon reaching the mud flats many Turks found death and a grave in a place suited to their filthy natures. While our wrathful attack and lengthy pursuit destroyed those fugitives, everybody’s hunger was slight and his day was brighter. 54 But the Turks and the Greeks were planning our destruction in many different ways. For, although they were formerly enemies, they entered into an agreement for this very purpose. And so, by gathering the flocks and the cattle from everywhere and by allowing them to graze ahead of us, they destroyed the produce which they could not burn. For this reason horses were left on the road exhausted or dead, and also left behind were their packs, tents, clothing, arms, and many other things which, with the exception of those that the poor carried away, our men burned in order to prevent their falling into the enemies’ hands. Therefore the army ate and kept on hand plenty of horse flesh, and the horses which were not fit for the pack train alleviated our hunger; with this food and bread baked in the ashes of the campfires even the wealthy were satisfied. By such provision our hunger was relieved, and as a result of the aforesaid fraternity we routed the enemy four times and were victorious each time, and by careful endeavor, until we reached Attalia, we kept ourselves safe, without suffering any loss to our forces except on the day when we made Geoffrey of Rancon our leader to death and destruction [referring to attack at beginning of passage]…. Although Attalia was part of the Byzantine Empire, its proximity to Muslim territory required it to develop working arrangements and trade with its neighbors. These arrangements sowed suspicion in the minds of the French. The arrival of a messenger from the Byzantine emperor requiring the French nobles to reconfirm their agreement with him (to return to the emperor any of his former lands that the Crusaders take from their enemies) in exchange for market privileges only confirmed the French belief that the Greeks were in league with the Turks against them. As they determined how best to proceed, they were told by the Greeks that they might sail to Antioch in a journey of just three days, as opposed to marching through desolate enemy territory for forty days. Horses were sought for, but since they were few and weak, the barons forced the king to risk shipwreck, so that God might permit his patience, like Paul’s, to be tried “in perils in the sea…” Then the commandant of the city and the emperor’s messenger were consulted about this undertaking, and they answered the plea favorably and promised that ships for the entire army would arrive soon. Meanwhile the winter loosed the bad weather that it had delayed; it rained, snowed, thundered, and lightened, and the wind with which we were hoping that the Lord would soon favor us did not come until the fifth week; and the same was true, too, about the ships which we were awaiting on the promise of the Greeks. Now, since the Greeks knew that the time at their disposal was short, they performed all the evil deeds which they could, robbing us of goods in the market and, insofar as they could by their plots, depriving us of life. The well and the sick found whatever their condition demanded, but the high price grieved them… Those who still had a horse or mule exchanged them for bread or sold them in the meat market as if they were cattle. For when among the Greeks our plight was to sell without profit and to buy at an extremely dear price. From the Greeks, then, the Turks learned that our knights had no horses, and, taking advantage of this security, prepared to attack the army in full force. This was made known to the king, and for a move against the Turks, he concealed with him the Templars and the 55 wealthy knights, who still had kept their chargers even though they were starving. Appearing suddenly before the advancing Turks, he killed some, thus forcing the rest to recross the river without using a bridge and to believe from that time forth that the army had plenty of excellent horses. Meanwhile the Greeks furnished ships at an outrageous price, as was true of their other wares…. Those who are ignorant of such things will say that this city should have been captured and that revenge should have been exacted for the citizens’ fraud. Let such people reflect that we had no food and were besieged on the right and on the left by enemies within and without and that it was impossible to destroy the lofty towers or to undermine the double walls quickly without siege machinery. The commandant and the emperor’s messenger could have been seized when they were coming to see the king, but the citizens would not have given up the city in order to save these two from being hanged. And the king found it abhorrent and contrary to this custom to have the city seized by treachery and to hazard the danger of all without seizing it. May God spare the German emperor, even though it was by avoiding his ill fortune and following his inexpert advice that we came into these evil straits; but how will a just judge, either God or man, spare the Greek emperor, who by cunning cruelty killed so many Christians in both the German and the Frankish armies? When it became clear that there were insufficient ships to take the entire French army to Antioch, Louis embarked with a portion of his army. He paid the commandant and the emperor’s messenger to ensure that the Greeks would provide an escort as far as Tarsus for the remaining portion of his army. After Louis’ departure, however, the Greeks maintained that the winter weather and the presence of the Turks made the march impossible. Then the Turks drew near the city, went in and out, and openly communicatd with the Greeks. They saw their enemies confined close-packed between two kinds of enemies and walls, just like sheep in a fold, and they realized that since they dared to go neither in nor out they could be mowed down with arrows there. The wall was low and curving, and such a large crowd of people could not gain protection by clinging to it; and thus the ones farther away were likely to be wounded. Therefore the Turks shot arrows in from advantageous points and wounded or killed some of the people. Then, taking their bows in hand, the seasoned youths began to leap down from the wall, so that they might either protect their own lives and those of their comrades or sell their lives dearly; and by seeking peace thus forcibly they compelled the enemy to withdraw farther. They would have had peace; but the Greeks, by confining well and ailing people in one narrow and unclean place, killed them without inflicting a single wound. And while some starved because they had no money and disease wasted others, many died from the effect of the corpses left near at hand, with the Greeks not inflicting death but awaiting it for the Franks. For this reason two troops of three or four thousand strong men marched out, judging that living within the city was tantamount to dying without. After taking up their arms, they went forth with the intention of crossing the two rivers. The first they crossed easily, but at the second they halted before a double obstacle. For they could cross the stream only if they 56 swam across, and they could penetrate the enemey drawn up there only if they fought through, but both they could not accomplish at the same time; and turning back for this reason, they were routed and killed. By the blood of these soldiers the Turks’ thirst was quenched and the Greeks’ treachery was transformed into violence, for the Turks returned to see the survivors and then gave generous alms to the sick and the poor, but the Greeks forced the stronger Franks into their service and beat them by way of payments. Some Turks bought our coins from their allies and distributed them among the poor with a liberal hand, but the Greeks robbed those who had anything left. Therefore, avoiding the fellow believers who were so cruel to them, the Franks went safely among the unbelievers, who had compassion on them; and, we have heard, more than three thousand young men went with the Turks when they departed…. Now God, cursing the town of Attalia, smote its people so severly with sudden death that many houses there remained empty, and the living, stunned and fearful, planned to leave it altogether. The emperor, although opposed to God in judgment, also completely despoiled the city of silver and gold, because it had prepared a fleet and a market for the king. Thus, God and he held opposite opinions, but both punished the city. Now after the king had spent five weeks in this city he spent three more weeks suffering shipwreck on the way to Antioch, for some of his vessels were battered and damaged, but yet, by the will of God, not sunk. Serious were the losses and hazards which he endured, Father Suger, but you ought to be comforted by the fact that he is safe. For it will even be to his advantage to have toiled thus, since he is recognized as one who is prudent in time of danger and serenely happy after suffering losses, and he had borne all kinds of fortune wisely and steadfastly. His only grief was for the misfortune of his subjects, of whom he always took as much care as possible, on the theory that a king is born not for his own benefit, but for the advantage of others and that a king should be not only pious but also without any fear of poverty. In order to live up to his ideal of honor he disregarded the caution usual for a king and, clad in mail, endured the nights’ cold and the days’ heat while protecting alternately the van and the rear guard. Amid so many hardships his safe preservation was owed to no other remedy than his religion, for he always took communion before he went to attack the enemy forces and on his return requested vesters and compline, in such wise always making God the alpha and the omega of this deeds. Thus, as a generous prince, a brave knght, a lively youth, a mature older man, he adapted himself to various situations, circumstances, and capacities; and by his integrity he procured the favor of men, by his piety the favor of God. 57 Otto of Freising. The Deeds of Frederick Barbarossa. Book I. I have slightly adapted Mierow’s translation [LC]. Otto (c. 1114-1158) was Bishop of Friesing, near present day Munich, Germany, in what was then the Holy Roman Empire. He accompanied Conrad on crusade in 1147, and reached Jerusalem in spite of the great losses in the army. He returned to Germany in 1148 or 1149. This passage gives you Pope Eugenius’ summons to the crusade (available elsewhere in these documents) and an important letter of Bernard of Clairvaux. Bernard was the most influential preacher of the Second Crusade—and you will also find his important letter on the Templars later in these documents. The passage also describes the danger posed to European Jews each time a crusade against the infidel was proclaimed. Men like Raoul (also known as Radulf or Ralph) often inspired violence against them. Note, though, that Bernard makes clear that the church does not approve of violence against Jews. Supporters of the crusade can use the arguments of Pope Eugenius and Bernard of Clairvaux in Debate 1. Both supporters and opponents of the crusade can use the attacks on the Jews to bolster their arguments. Do crusades necessarily lead to attacks against the wrong enemy? or is the church able to control and direct the violence? Conrad may find support here for his claim to leadership in Debate 2. The Western factions can use the arguments here to support attacking Damascus in Debate 3. A Table of Contents for Otto of Freising 35-36 37 38-40 41-44 45-48 Pope Eugenius calls the Second Crusade Bernard of Clairvaux introduced Raoul preaches against the Jews and Bernard opposes him Bernard preaches the Second Crusade Conrad takes the cross and sets out for the Holy Land 58 35. While Eugenius was pope in Rome, Conrad reigning there [the Holy Roman Empire, or Germany] and Louis in France, Manuel being emperor in the royal city [Byzantium/Constantinople], and Fulk ruling at Jerusalem, Louis was impelled by a secret desire to go to Jerusalem because his brother Philip had bound himself by the same vow but had been prevented by death. He was unwilling further to postpone this resolve; he therefore summoned certain of his princes and revealed what he was turning over in his mind. There was at that time in France a certain abbot of the monastery of Clairvaux named Bernard, venerable in life and character, conspicuous in his religious order, endowed with wisdom and a knowledge of letters, renowned for signs and wonders. The princes decided to have him summoned and to ask of him, as of a divine oracle, what ought to be done with reference to this matter. Bernard was called and his advice requested regarding Louis’s wish. As he judged it unbecoming to give answer concerning so weighty a matter on the sole basis of his own opinion, he replied that it was best to refer the question to the hearing and the consideration of the Roman pontiff. Therefore, an embassy was sent to Eugenius, and the whole matter was set before him. And he, pondering upon the example set by his predecessor—namely, the fact that Urban, upon an occasion of this sort, had won back into the unity of peace the Church across the water and two patriarchal sees (of Antioch and Jerusalem) that had cut themselves off from obedience to the Roman see—gave his assent to Louis’s wishes for extending the observance of the Christian faith. He granted to Bernard, who was looked upon by all the peoples of France and Germany as a prophet and apostle, the authority to preach and to move the hearts of all thereto. Whence there is extant the Pope’s letter directed to the king and his princes, as follows [this is the same text you have elsewhere of Pope Eugenius’ call to crusade]: 36. “Bishop Eugenius, servant of the servants of God, to his most beloved son in Christ, Louis, the illustrious king of the French, and to his beloved sons, the princes, and to all the faithful ones of God who are established throughout Gaul, —greeting and apostolic benediction. “How much our predecessors the Roman pontiffs did labour for the deliverance of the oriental church, we have learned from the accounts of the ancients and have found it written in their acts. For our predecessor of blessed memory, pope Urban, did sound, as it were, a celestial trump and did take care to arouse for its deliverance the sons of the holy Roman church from the different parts of the earth. At his voice, indeed, those beyond the mountain and especially the bravest and strongest warriors of the French kingdom, and also those of Italy, inflamed by the ardour of love did come together, and, congregating a very great army, not without much shedding of their own blood, the divine aid being with them, did free from the filth of the pagans that city where our Saviour willed to suffer for us, and where He left His glorious sepulchre to us as a memorial of His passion, -and many others which, avoiding prolixity, we refrain from mentioning. “Which, by the grace of God, and the zeal of your fathers, who at intervals of time have striven to the extent of their power to defend them and to spread the name of Christ in those parts, have been retained by the Christians up to this day; and other cities of the infidels have 59 by them been manfully stormed. But now, our sins and those of the people themselves requiring it, a thing which we can not relate without great grief and wailing, the city of Edessa which in our tongue is called Rohais,-which also, as is said, once when the whole land in the east was held by the pagans, alone by herself served God under the power of the Christians-has been taken and many, of the castles of the Christians occupied by them (the pagans). The archbishop, moreover, of this same city, together with his clergy and many other Christians, have there been slain, and the relics of the saints have been given over to the trampling under foot of the infidels, and dispersed. Whereby how great a danger threatens the church of God and the whole of Christianity, we both know ourselves and do not believe it to be hid from your prudence. For it is known that it will be the greatest proof of nobility and probity, if those things which the bravery of your fathers acquired be bravely defended by you the sons. But if it should happen otherwise, which God forbid, the valour of the fathers will be found to have diminished in the case the of the sons. “We exhort therefore all of you in God, we ask and command, and, for the remission of sins enjoin: that those who are of God, and, above all, the greater men and the nobles do manfully gird themselves; and that you strive so to oppose the multitude of the infidels, who rejoice at the time in a victory gained over us, and so to defend the oriental church -freed from their tyranny by so great an outpouring of the blood of your fathers, as we have said, - and to snatch many thousands of your captive brothers from their hands,- that the dignity of the Christian name may be increased in your time, and that your valour which is praised throughout the whole world, may remain intact and unshaken. May that good Matthias be an example to you, who, to preserve the laws of his fathers, did not in the least doubt to expose himself with his sons and relations to death, and to leave whatever he possessed in the world; and who at length, by the help of the divine aid, after many labours however, did, as well as his progeny, manfully triumph over his enemies. “We, moreover, providing with paternal solicitude for your tranquillity and for the destitution of that same church, do grant and confirm by the authority conceded to us of God, to those who by the promptings of devotion do decide to undertake and to carry through so holy and so necessary a work and labour, that remission of sins which our aforesaid predecessor pope Urban did institute; and do decree that their wives and sons, their goods also and possessions shall remain under the protection of our selves and of the archbishops, bishops and other prelates of the church of God. By the apostolic authority, moreover, we forbid that, in the case of any thing, which they possessed in peace, when they took the cross, any suit be brought hereafter until most certain news has been obtained concerning their return or their death. Moreover since those who war for the Lord should by no means prepare themselves with precious garments, nor with provision for their personal appearance, nor with dogs or hawks , other things which portend licentiousness: we exhort your prudence in the Lord that those who have decided to undertake so holy a work shall not strive after these things, but shall show zeal and diligence with all their strength in the matter of arms, horses and other things with which they may fight the infidels. But those who are oppressed by debt and begin so holy a journey with a pure heart, shall not pay interest for the time past, and if they or n t others for them are bound by an oath or pledge i ' he matter of interest, we absolve them by apostolic authority. It is allowed to them also when their relations, being warned, or the lords to whose fee they belong, are either unwilling or unable to advance them the money, to freely 60 pledge without any reclamation, their lands or other possessions to churches, or ecclesiastical persons, or to any other of the faithful. According to the institution of our aforesaid predecessor, by the authority of almighty God and by that of St. Peter the chief of the apostles, conceded to us by God, we grant such remission and absolution of sins, that he who shall devoutly begin so sacred a journey and shall accomplish it, or shall die during it, shall obtain absolution for all his sins which with a humble and contrite heart he shall confess, and shall receive the fruit of eternal retribution from the Remunerator of all. “Given at Vetralle on the Calends of December (1145).” 37. Accordingly, to return to the order of the narrative, the venerable abbot, Bernard, made no misuse of the authority of the apostolic see that had been granted to him. He valiantly girded himself with the sword of the Word of God; and when he had aroused the hearts of many for the expedition overseas, finally [in 1146] a general assembly was summoned at Vézelay, a town of France, where the bones of the blessed Mary Magdalene are preserved. The great and illustrious of all the provinces of France were summoned to attend. There Louis, the king of the Franks, with great eagerness of spirit received the cross from Bernard and volunteered for military service across the seas, with counts Thierry of Flanders and Henry, the son of Thibaud of Blois, and other barons and noblemen of his kingdom. 38. Meanwhile, the monk Raoul, a man who did indeed wear the habit of religion and shrewdly imitated the strictness of religion, but was only moderately imbued with a knowledge of letters, entered those parts of France which touch the Rhine and inflamed many thousands of the inhabitants of Cologne, Mainz, Worms, Speyer, Strasbourg, and other neighboring cities, towns, and villages to accept the cross. However, he heedlessly included in his preaching that the Jews whose homes were scattered throughout the cities and towns should be slain as foes of the Christian religion. The seed of this doctrine took such firm root and so grew in numerous cities of France and Germany that a large number of Jews were killed in this stormy uprising, while many took refuge under the wings of the prince of the Romans [Conrad]. So it came about that not a few of them, fleeing from such cruelty, to save their lives betook themselves to a town of the prince called Nuremberg and to others of his municipalities. 39. But Bernard, Abbot of Clairvaux, giving instructions to beware of such teaching, dispatched messengers and letters to the peoples of France and Germany to point out clearly by the authority of the sacred page that the Jews were not to be killed for the enormity of their crimes, but were to be scattered. In this connection he called attention also to the testimony of the writer of Psalms who says in the 57th Psalm: “God shall let me see my desire upon mine enemies. Slay them not.” And also, “Scatter them by thy power.” 40. Now, when countless throngs in western France had been aroused for this expedition across the sea, Bernard decided to turn his attention to the eastern kingdom of the Franks, to stir it with the plowshare of preaching, both that he might by the word of sacred exhortation move the heart of the prince of the Romans [Conrad] to accept the cross, and that he might silence Raoul, who in connection with the Jews was moving the people in the cities to 61 repeated outbreaks against their lords. Hearing of this, Conrad called a general assembly to be held at the city of Speyer at the time of the Lord’s Nativity [Christmas 1146]. Bernard, coming thither, persuaded the king with Frederick, his brother’s son, and other princes and illustrious men to accept the cross, performing many miracles both publicly and in private. Coming to Mainz also, he found Raoul living there in greatest favor with the people. He summoned him and warned him not to arrogate to himself on his own authority the word of preaching, roving about over the land in defiance of the rule of the monks. Finally he prevailed upon him to the point where he promised to obey and to return to his monastery. The people were very angry and even wanted to start an insurrection, but they were restrained by regard for Bernard’s saintliness…. 42. After this, Conrad entered Bavaria and there held a general assembly in the month of February. He took with him, in place of the abbot of Clairvaux, Adam, abbot of Ebrach, a devout and very learned man. He celebrated solemn Mass as was customary and then, having invoked the grace of the Holy Spirit, ascended the pupit and after reading the letters of the apostolic see and of the abbot of Clairvaux, by a brief exhortation persuaded practically all who were present to undertake the aforesaid military service. For there was no need of persuasive words of human wisdom or the ingratiating use of artful circumlocution, in accordance with the precepts of the rhetoricians, since all who were present had been aroused by previous report and hurried forward of their own accord to receive the cross. In that same hour three bishops accepted the cross, namely, Henry of Regensberg, Otto of Freising, and Reginbert of Passau; also, the Duke of the Bavarians, Henry, brother of the king, and from the order of counts, nobles, and illustrious men, a throng without number. Moreover, so great a throng of highwaymen and robbers (strange to say) came hurrying forward that no man in his senses could fail to comprehend that this so sudden and so unusual a transformation came from the hand of the Most High, and comprehending did not marvel with amazement of heart…. 43. The following is a copy of the letter which the abbot of Clairvaux sent to the eastern realm of the Franks: “To the Lords and very dear Fathers, the Archbishops and Bishops, with the whole clergy and the faithful people of Eastern France and Bavaria: Bernard, called Abbot of Clairvaux, desires that they may abound in the spirit of strength. “I write to you with respect to a matter which concerns the service of Christ, in Whom is our salvation. This I say in order that the Lord's authority may excuse the unworthiness of the person who speaks; let the consideration of its usefulness to yourselves also excuse the faults of my address. I, indeed, am of small account; but I have no small love for you all, in the bowels of Jesus Christ. This, now, is my reason for writing to you, that I may thus approach you as a whole. I would rather do so by word of mouth, if the opportunity, as well as the will, were afforded me. “Behold, brethren, now is the accepted time, now is the day of salvation. The earth also is 62 moved and has trembled, because the God of heaven has begun to destroy the land which is His: His, I say, in which the word of the Father was taught, and where He dwelt for more than thirty years, a man among men; His, for He enlightened it with miracles, He consecrated it with His own blood; in it appeared the first fruits of His resurrection. And now, for our sins, the enemies of the Cross have raised blaspheming heads, ravaging with the edge of the sword the land of promise. For they are almost on the point, if there be not One to withstand them, of bursting into the very city of the living God, of the holy places of the spotless Lamb with purple blood. Alas! they rage against the very shrine of the Christian faith with blasphemous mouths, and would enter and trample down the very couch on which, for us, our Life lay down to sleep in death. “What are you going to do then, O brave men? What are you doing, O servants of the Cross? Will you give what is holy to the dogs, and cast your pearls before swine? How many sinners there, confessing their sins with tears, have obtained pardon, after the defilement of the heathen had been purged by the swords of your fathers! The wicked man sees and is grieved; he gnashes with his teeth, and consumes away. He prepares the instruments of sin, and will leave no sign or trace of so great piety, if ever (which God forbid!) he gain possession of this holiest of holy places. Verily that would be an irremediable grief to all time, an irrecoverable loss, a vast disgrace to this most graceless generation, and an everlasting shame. “What are we then to think, brethren? Is the Lord's arm shortened so that it cannot save, because He calls His weak creatures to guard and restore His heritage? Can He not send more than twelve legions of angels, or merely speak the word, and the land shall be set free? It is altogether in His power to effect what He wishes; but I tell you, the Lord, your God, is trying you. He looks upon the sons of men to see if there be any to understand, and seek, and bewail his error. For the Lord hath pity upon His people, and provides a sure remedy for those that are afflicted. “Think what care He uses for your salvation, and wonder. Behold the abyss of His love, and trust Him, O ye sinners. He wills not your death, but that you may turn and live; for now He seeks occasion, not against you, but for your benefit….” In these words and with reference to the same theme, Bernard busied himself in the manner and fashion of the orators. And that the Jews should not be killed he proved by reason and by authority…. Concerning the Jews he spoke thus: “They are living signs to us, representing the Lord's passion. For this reason they are dispersed into all regions, that now they may pay the just penalty of so great a crime, and that they may be witnesses of our redemption.” 44. And so, as countless peoples and nations, not only from the Roman empire, but also from the neighboring realms—that is, France, England, Pannonia—were moved to take the cross, suddenly almost the entire West became so still that not only the waging of war but even the carrying of arms in public was considered wrong. 45. Now Conrad, the king of the Romans, called together the princes at Frankfort. And there his son, Henry, who was still a boy, was chosen king by vote of the princes. Conrad 63 commanded he should be anointed and crowned king in the palace at Aachen on Mid-Lent Sunday, and chose him as his associate in the kingdom…. 46. And so, when the rigor of winter cold had been dispelled, as flowers and plants came forth from the earth’s bosom under the gracious showers of spring and green meadows smiled upon the world, making glad the face of the earth, King Conrad led forth his troops from Nuremberg, in battle array. At Regensburg he took ship to descend the Danube, and on Ascension Sunday he pitched camp in the East Mark near a town called Ardacker. There for two or three days he awaited his men who were already coming up. Proceeding thence almost to the limits of his realm, he halted not far from the river Fischa. After observing Whitsunday there, he crossed the Leitha with practically all his troops, some descending the Danube and others coming by land, and made camp in Pannonia. But he drew after him so great a throng that the rivers seemed scarcely to suffice for navigation, or the extent of the plains for marching. Louis, the king of the Franks, with his men followed not far behind him, bringing with him, of our people, the Lorrainers, whose princes or leaders were the bishops Stephen of Metz and Henry of Toul, and the counts Reinald of Mouzon and Hugh of Vaudemont, and from Italy Amadeus of Turin, his brother William, marchese of Montferrat, their uncles, and many others. 47. But since the outcome of that expedition, because of our sins, is known to all, we, who have purposed this time to write not a tragedy but a joyous history, leave this to be related by others elsewhere… Nevertheless, lest we shroud in silence the good fortune of our present Emperor Frederick, which from his youth to this very day has never turned on him a completely clouded face, I wish to record one incident out of all, and to represent all that happened to us on that march. 48. When after Pannonia Bulgaria had been crosssed, at the cost of much toil and difficulty of the way, and when upper Thrace was passed, after Mt. Hebrus had been surmounted, when now we had been marching for several days with much gladness of heart in the most fruitful regions of lower Thrace on our way to the royal city [Constantinople], on the seventh day before the Ides of September [September 7], that is, on the day before the festival of the birth of the blessed Mary, we came to a certain valley near a town called Cherevach, attractive because of its green fields and marked by the course of a little stream through the midst of it. Captivated by the charm of the spot, we all decided to pitch our tents there and to rest in that place that day, in order to celebrate with great jollity the glad birthday of the Mother of God, ever virgin. Only Duke Frederick with his retinue and his uncle Welf—for the troops of the Lorrainers had not yet united with us—marked out a camp near us on the side of a certain mountain opposite. Not far was the Hellespont…. I confess that during the entire time of our expedition we never had a pleasanter camp; never (so far as one may judge from sense impressions) had our encampment covered a wider circuit. But look! about the time of the morning watch a certain little cloud appeared and sent down a gentle rain. Suddenly such a tempestuous storm of rain and wind ensued that it caused the tents to sway, tore them loose, and dashed them violently to the ground, arousing us from our 64 beds, to which we had retired after matins. A tumult arose, filling all the air round about. For the little stream—whether from the backwash of the neighboring sea or the downpour of rain or a cloudburst betokening the vengeance of the Majesty on high is uncertain—had swollen so greatly and in consequence of its swollen waters had so overflowed beyond its custom that it covered the entire camp. What were we to do? Considering this a divine punishment rather than a natural inundation, we were the more dismayed. Nevertheless, we hurried to our powerful steeds, each one seeking to cross the river as best he could. You might have seen some swimming, some clinging to horses, some ignominiously hauled along by ropes to escape the danger, some dashing in disorder into the river and sinking because they were heedlessly entangled with others. A great many, believing they could wade across, were swept away by the rush of the river, injured by the rocks, and, swallowed up by the force of the eddies, lost their lives in the river. Some, who had not learned how to swim, laid hold of those who were swimming and clung to them in order that they might escape and exhausted them, so hampered, until they ceased the motions of their arms and, flat on their backs, both alike were submerged and drowned. Now some of us betook ourselves to the tents of Duke Frederick, which alone remained entirely unharmed by this destructive flood. There, hearing the solemn service of the Mass, we sang “Let us rejoice,” not with joy, but with much bitterness of heart, hearing the grief and the groans of our men. Finally, some managed to cross the torrent with great fear and effort; others, in their despair fastening together wagons and other equipment they could secure, placed this material as a bulwark against the onrushing water and awaited the cessation of the flood. But how great a loss our army sustained there both in men and goods and in the utensils necessary for so long a journey I need not relate. On the following day, when the waters had subsided and the face of the land appeared, all of us being scattered here and there, you might have obtained as sad a picture of our encampment as on the preceding day you could have seen it glad. So that, not inappropriately, it appeared clearer than light how great is the power of the high Deity, and how human happiness is unstable and passes quickly. 65 Francesco Gabrieli. Arab Historians of the Crusades. The following excerpts by Ibn al-Athir and Ibn al-Qalanisi are taken (and lightly edited) from pages 41-55 of Gabrieli’s collection of Arab chronicles. These passages may be used to understand the Muslim perspective on the Crusades. With the appearance on the scene of Zangi, the Atabeg of Mosul and Aleppo (1129-46), the real Muslim counter-offensive against the Crusades began. Ibn al-Athir was the faithful servant and historian of Zangi. According to his religious view of history, it was Providence that put into Zangi's hands the kingdom of Damascus. Zangi's real aim, even when fighting the Crusaders, was Damascus, nominally ruled by the incompetent descendents of Tughtikin (the first serious opponent of the Crusaders), and controlled in fact by Unur. Faced with the threat of Zangi, none of these hesitated to make an alliance with the Franks. In the following extracts Ibn al-Athir presents an exalted image of his hero, and Ibn al-Qalanisi the opposite view, that of civil patriotism and loyalty to the local dynasty of Tughtikin. ZANGI, MAN OF DESTINY FOR ISLAM (IBN AL-ATHIR, X, 458) If God in his mercy had not granted that Zangi should conquer Syria, the Franks would have overrun it completely. They had laid siege to this town and that, but Tughtikin had barely heard the news before he was mustering his men and marching on the Frankish territories. He besieged them and raided them, and in this way forced the Franks to abandon their campaign and return home. Now in this year (1128), by God's decree, Tughtikin died, and Syria would have been left completely at their mercy, with no one to defend its inhabitants; but that God in His mercy to the Muslims was pleased to raise to power Zangi, whose deeds in the battle with the Franks we shall, God willing, record here. ZANGI TAKES THE FORTRESS OF BA’RIN. THE DEFEAT OF THE FRANKS (IBN AL-ATHIR, XI, 33-34) In shawwal of this year (1137), Zangi left Hims and laid siege to Ba'rin, a strongly defended fortress near Hamar, held by the Franks. He surrounded it and began to attack it and try to storm it. The Franks marshalled their cavalry and infantry and set out, kings, counts and barons together, against the Atabeg Zangi to make him lift the siege. But Zangi was unmoved. He stood firm to await them, and when they arrived he faced them in a battle which after some bitter fighting resolved itself into a rout of the Franks, who fled, closely pursued by the Muslims. The Frankish King shut himself up inside the near-by fort of Ba'rin, and was besieged there by the Muslims. The Ata-beg cut off all means of communication with the fort, so that not even news of their homelands got inside, so closely were movements controlled by Zangi and so great was the fear of him. 66 Then priests and monks traversed the Byzantine empire, the countries of the Franks and the neighbouring Christian states raising armies to fight the Muslims and declaring that if Zangi took Ba'rin and the Franks inside it, he would overrun all their lands in no time, for there would be no one to defend them. They said that the Muslims had but one ambition: to march on Jerusalem. So the Christians flocked to Syria by land and sea. Among them was the Byzantine Emperor. Meanwhile Zangi continued to wage war on the Franks, who held out but were running short of food and other essentials, for the siege had been sprung on them unexpectedly, leaving them no time to make preparations. They had not believed that anyone could put them on the defensive—they had been expecting to take over the whole of Syria themselves. When they ran out of food they ate their horses, and then they were forced to ask for terms. They requested Zangi to guarantee their lives until they reached their own domains. At first he refused to accept their terms, but hearing that the Emperor and the rest of the Franks were approaching Syria he granted the men in the fort their lives and fixed the ransom at 50,000 dinar. They accepted his terms and yielded up the fort to him. When they emerged they learnt that a great concourse was on its way to save them, and reproached themselves for having surrendered, unaware of what was happening outside the fort. While the siege of Ba'rin was going on Zangi had taken Ma’arra and Kafartab from the Franks. Like the population of the whole region between there and Aleppo and Hamar, as well as of Ba'rin, the inhabitants of these two towns had been reduced to a state of squalid misery by the constant pillaging and slaughter, for this region had been a theatre of war since the beginning. When Zangi assumed command the people breathed again, the countryside blossomed and soon began to bring in a large revenue. It was an unqualified victory, as anyone who saw knows. One of Zangi's finest acts was his treatment of the people of Ma’arra. When the Franks took the town they seized their possessions, and at the reconquest their descendants and survivors presented themselves before Zangi to ask for restitution of their belongings. He asked to see the documents giving proof of ownership, but they replied that the Franks had taken everything including the title-deeds. He had the land registers in Aleppo examined, and anyone for whom there was an entry for the land tax on a particular holding was given that land. Thus he restored their land to the people of Ma'arra, the finest act of justice and generosity that I ever heard of. DAMASCUS AND THE FRANKS IN ALLIANCE AGAINST ZANGI (IBN AL-QALANISI, 270-3) In this year (1139-40) news came that the Atabeg Zangi had finished repairing the damage to Baalbek and its fort and had begun preparations for a siege of Damascus. Soon came the news that he had left Baalbek in rabi' I (November 1139) and had encamped in the Biqa. From there he sent a message to Jamal ad-Din inviting him to exchange the city for another of his own choice or suggestion. Jamal ad-Din refused, and so on Wednesday 13 rabi' II (6 December) Zangi left the Biqa and camped at Darayya, immediately outside Damascus. On his arrival at Darayya the advance parties of the two sides came to blows. Jamal ad-Din's 67 men were defeated, and some took refuge inside the city. On Friday Zangi advanced in force on the side of the city where the Musalla was, and won a victory against a great host composed of the citizen militia and peasants. There was wholesale slaughter. Survivors were killed or imprisoned. Those who could, whether or not they were wounded, escaped to the city. That day, but for God's grace, the city would have fallen. Zangi took his prisoners back to camp, and for the next few days undertook no operations. He sent out messengers and exerted himself to obtain peace by courtesy and diplomacy, offering the amir of Damascus, Baalbek and Hims and other towns that he suggested. Jamal ad-Din Muhammad ibn Taj al-Muliik would have preferred to accept these terms and to come to a peaceful agreement without bloodshed, in a way that would bring peace and prosperity to the people. But his advisers rejected this view. For several days Zangi sent out his troops in raidng parties, without deploying his full force or completing the blockade, in order to avoid violence and to act like a man restrained by peaceful intentions and a reluctance to indulge in bloodshed and pillage. In jumada 1 Jamal ad-Din showed the first signs of an illness that was finally to gain complete mastery of him, its grip tightening and loosening, its tide ebbing and flowing until he was absolutely at its mercy. Medicine and magic art had no effect on him, and in the end his destiny fulfilled itself, and on the night of Friday 8 sha'ban (29 March 1140), at the very hour of his brother and forerunner Shihab adDin Mahmud's assassination, he passed to his Creator. The people were overcome by this coincidence of day and hour, and gave praise and glory to God. He was given a place in his grandmother’s sepulchre at al-Paradis. After his burial the commanders and notables decided to fill the gap left by his death by putting in his place his son, the amir Adab ad-Daula Abu Sa’id Abaq Ibn Jamal ad-Din Muhammad. They swore solemn oaths of loyalty and obedience, faithful service and counsel. Thus the matter was settled. The city had an effective government, all discord ceased, and confusion was replaced by calm, so that after a time of unrest men's spirits were once more tranquil. When the Atabeg 'Imad ad-Din learnt of Jamal ad-Din's death, he brought his troops up close to the city, in the hope that on their leader's death disunity among the military commanders would give him the opportunity to realize some of his ambitions. But things did not go as he had anticipated: he found the civil and military authorities of Damascus firm in their decision to fight it out and to continue their resistance and opposition to him. He returned to camp discouraged and furious. At this point the Franks agreed to give Damascus support and help in driving Zangi back and prevent his getting what he wanted. The agreement was sealed with a solemn oath, and each side gave guarantees that it would honour its obligations. The Franks asked for a certain sum of money for them to use on any operations that they undertook, and also for hostages, for their own peace of mind. This was agreed, and money and hostages—relatives of the army commanders—were handed over. Then the Franks began their preparations for assisting Damascus, and messages passed between them in which it was agreed that the Franks should concenrrate their resources on the other forts and towns in the area, to drive off Zangi and prevent his achieving his ambition of taking Damascus, before he became so powerful and well-equipped that he could break through the Frankish lines and attack their own territories. When Zangi heard what was afoot, and that the Frankish troops were assembling ready to 68 move at the same time as the army from Damascus, he left his camp, and on Sunday 5 ramadan moved off toward Hauran to confront the Franks if that was what they wanted, or to follow them if they moved off. After using these tactics for a while he turned aside at the Ghuta of Damascus and camped at 'Adhra' on Wednesday 24 shawwal (l2 June). He burnt some villages in the Marj and the Ghuta as far as Harasta at-Tin, and on the following Saturday left for the north on the receipt of defmite information that the Franks were encamped in force at al-Madan, One of the conditions of the Franco-Damascene agreement was that the Muslims should hand over Baniyas, which was held by Ibrahim ibn Turghiit. This man, you will understand, had taken his men on a raiding mission in the region of Tyre and there crossed the path of Raymond of Antioch, who was on his way to reinforce the Franks at Damascus. In the battle Ibrahim was defeated and killed, together with a few of his men. The rest returned to Baniyas and mustered reinforcements from the tribes of the Wadi tTaim and elsewhere in sufficient numbers to defend the fortress. Then the amir Mu'in ad-Din attacked and besieged the fort with the army from Damascus, using catapults and various other methods. He had a large Frankish contingent with him, and the siege continued throughout shawwal (May-June 1140). Then came the news that in shawwal the Atabeg 'Imad ad-Din, from his camp at Baalbek, had summoned the Turcomans to attack Baniyas and drive off the besiegers. This was the situation at the end of dhu l-hijja of that year. Baniyas was beleaguered until all its stores were gone and there was no food for the defenders, then it surrendered to Mu’in ad-Din. The governor was recompensed with other fiefs and benefices, and Mu'in ad-Din handed the city over to the Franks as he had agreed, and returned in triumph to Damascus at the end of shawwal. On the morning of Saturday 7 dhu l-hijja (22June) the Atabeg Imad ad-Din appeared with his army outside Damascus. At the Musalla he had attacked the city wall unnoticed, for the citizens were all deep in the final hours of sleep. As dawn broke they realized what was happening and a great cry of anguish went up as they rushed to their posts on the walls. The gates opened and the citizen cavalry and infantry came out. Zangi had sent his own men out on raiding missions in Hauran, the Ghuta, the Marj and other places, and confronted the army from Damascus with his guards, to prevent their pursuing their raiding parties. The two sides came to blows and a large number of troops were involved in the fighting on both sides, but Zangi withdrew his men, for his main concern was to act as cover for the raiders. These rounded up vast numbers of horses and cattle, sheep, lambs, oxen, and household goods, for their action had taken the city completely by surprise. That night Zangi camped at Marj Rahit, so that his men could reassemble with their booty, and then left by the northern route, taking a vast quantity of booty with him. After his setback at Damascus Zangi recovered his position by conquering Edessa (1144) and breaking up the county, the first of the four Christian states born of the First Crusade to disappear. We give versions of the story by Ibn al-Qalanisi and Ibn al-Athir. The latter, as usual, covers the wider field, giving in anecdotal form both the local events and their effect on the whole struggle between Christianity and Islam. Barely two years after this triumph his hero was assassinated while fighting other Muslims. He bequeathed his political and military ambitions to his son Nur ad-Din, Sultan of Aleppo. Ibn al-Athir's eulogy of Zangi, with due 69 allowance made for its emotional bias, reveals traits of character of which we have independent confirmation. ZANGI TAKES EDESSA (lBN AL-QALANISI, 279-80) In this year (1144) news came from the north that Zangi had taken Edessa by storm, in spite of its strength and state of readiness to face even a powerful besieging army. Zangi had always coveted Edessa and watched for a chance to achieve his ambition. Edessa was never out of his thoughts or far from his mind. At last he heard that Joscelin I Prince of Edessa, with a large part of his army, the flower of his gallant company of knights, had been killed in battle far away from the city. It seemed as if it was God's will. When Zangi heard the news he hastened to besiege and blockade Edessa with a large force. He sent to summon the aid of the Turcomans, in fulfillment of their obligations in the Holy War. Large numbers answered his appeal and they completely surrounded the city, intercepting all supplies and reinforcements. It was said that even the birds dared not fly near, so absolute was the desolation made by the besiegers' weapons and so unwinking their vigilance. Catapults drawn up against the walls battered at them ceaselessly, and nothing interrupted the remorseless struggle. Special detachments of sappers from Khurasan and Aleppo began work at several suitable places, digging into the bowels of the earth until their tunnels, propped up with beams and special equipment, reached under the towers of the city wall. The next step was to light the fires, and they applied to Zangi for permission. This was given after he had been into the tunnels to inspect them and had admired their imposing work. The wooden supports were fired, flames spread and devoured the beams, the walls above the tunnels crumbled, and the Muslims took the city by storm. Many men of both sides were killed when the walls collapsed, and many more Franks and Armenians were killed, wounded or put to flight. The city was taken at dawn on Saturday 26 jumada II (23 December 1144). Then the looting and the killing began, the capturing and pillaging. The hands of the victors were filled with money and treasure, horses and booty enough to gladden the heart and make the soul rejoice. Then Zangi ordered that the carnage should come to an end, and began to rebuild the walls where they had been damaged. He appointed suitable men to govern and defend the city and to look after its interests. He reassured the inhabitants with promises of good govermnent and universal justice. Then he left Edessa for Sariij, to which the Franks had fled, and took it. Indeed every region and town through which he passed was immediately handed over to him. (lBN AL-ATHIR, XI, 64-6) On 6 jumada II of that year the Atabeg Zangl seized from the Franks the city of Edessa and other forts in the Jazira. The Franks had penetrated far into this area, as far as Amid and Nusaibin, Ras al-'Ain and ar-Raqqa. Their influence extended from near Mardin to the Euphrates, and covered Edessa, Sariij, al-Bira, Sinn ibn 'Utair, Jamlin, al-Mu'azzar, Quradi and other cities as well. All these and other regions west of the Euphrates belonged to Joscelin, the most famous of the Franks and the leader of their army by virtue of his valour 70 and command of strategy. Zangi knew that if he made a direct attack on Edessa the Franks would concentrate there to defend it, and it was too well fortified to be an easy conquest. He moved to Diyar Bah, to give the Franks the impression that his interests lay elsewhere and that he was in no position to attack their kingdom. When the Franks felt sure that he could not extract himself from the war he was fighting with the Artuqids and other princes at Diyar Bakr, and so felt safe from him, Joscelin left Edessa and crossed the Euphrates to move westwards. As soon as Zangi's spies informed him of this, he issued orders to his army to set out the next day for Edessa, His amirs were summoned to his presence, and he ordered food to be served. 'No one', he said, 'shall eat with me at this table unless he is prepared to hurl his lance with me tomorrow at the gates of Edessa.' The only ones who dared to come forward were a solitary amir and a youth of humble birth whose bravery and prowess were known to all, for he had no equal in battle. The amir said to him; 'What are you doing here?' but the Atabeg intervened: 'Leave him, for his, I can see, is not a face that will be lagging behind me in battle.' The army set out and reached the walls of Edessa. Zangi was the first to charge the Franks, but the young man was at his side. A Frankish knight lunged at Zangi from the side, but the amir faced him and transfixed him with his lance," and Zangi was saved. They besieged the city and attacked it for three weeks. Zangi made several assaults on it, and used sappers to mine the walls. He was straining every nerve in the struggle, for fear that the Franks should marshal their forces and march on him to relieve the fortress. Then the sappers undermined the wall and it collapsed, and Zangi took the city and besieged the citadel. The citizens and their goods were seized, the young taken captive, the men killed. But when Zangi inspected the city he liked it and realized that it would not be sound policy to reduce such a place to ruins. He therefore gave the order that his men should return every man, woman and child to his home together with the goods and chattels looted from them. This was done in all but a very few cases, in which the captor had already left the camp. The city was restored to its former state, and Zangi installed a garrison to defend it. Then he received the surrender of Sariij and other cities west of the Euphrates. The only exception was al-Bira, a strongly defended fort on the bank of the Euphrates. So he marched on it and besieged it, but it was well stocked and well guarded, and so after some time, as by God's will we shall describe, he lifted the siege. It is said that a great authority on genealogies and biographies tells the following story: the King of Sicily sent a naval expedition that ravaged Tripoli in North Africa. Now there was in Sicily a learned, God-fearing Muslim whom the King held in great respect, relying on his advice rather than that of his own priests and monks; so much so that the people used to say that the King was really a Muslim. One day, as the King was standing at a window overlooking the sea, he saw a small boat come into the harbour. The crew told him that his army had invaded Muslim territory, laid it waste and returned victorious. The Muslim sage was dozing at the King's side. The King said to him: 'Did you hear what they said?' 'No.' 'They told me that we have defeated the Muslims in Tripoli. What use is Muhammad now to his land and his people?' 'He was not there,' replied the old man, 'he was at Edessa, which the Muslims have just taken.' The Franks who were present laughed, but the King said: 'Do not laugh, for by God this man is incapable of speaking anything but the truth.' And a few days 71 later news came from the Franks in Syria that Edessa had been taken. 'Certain honest and godly men have told me that a holy man saw the dead Zangi in a dream and asked him: 'How has God treated you?' and Zangi replied, 'God has pardoned me, because I conquered Edessa.' DEATH, AND A EULOGY OF HIM (IBN AL-ATHIR, XI, 72-4) In this year, on 5 rabi II (14 September 1146), the Atabeg Zangi, martyr for the Faith, ruler of Mosul and Syria, was killed while he was besieging Ja'bar as we have narrated. He was killed at night, murdered by a group of his courtiers. They fled to the fortress, whose inhabitants joyfully shouted the news to the (besieging) camp. When Zangi’s servants came to his bedside they found that there was still a spark of life in him. My father, one of Zangi's close friends, recalled: ‘I went straight to him; he was still alive, and when he saw me, clearly wanting to make an end of it he made a sign to me with his fingers imploring me to take pity on him. At the very suggestion I fell to the ground and said: "My Lord, who had done this?" but he was beyond speech, and yielded up his soul, may the Lord have mercy on him. Zangi was a handsome man, with a swarthy complexion, fine eyes, and hair that was beginning to go grey. He was more than 60 years old, for he had been a baby when his father was killed, as has been narrated. After his death he was buried at Raqqa, His subjects and his army went in awe of him; under his government the strong dared not harm the weak. Before he came to power the absence of strong rulers to impose justice, and the presence of the Franks close at hand, had made the country a wilderness, but he made it flower again. The population increased, and so did its prosperity. My father told me that he had seen Mosul in such a state of desolation that from the cymbal-makers' quarter one could see as far as the old Great Mosque, the maidiin and the Sultan's palace, for not a building in between remained standing. It was not safe to go as far as the old Great Mosque without an escort, so far was it from human habitation, whereas now it is the centre of a mass of buildings, and every one of the areas mentioned just now is built up. My father also told me about the occasion when Zangi arrived in the Jazira one winter. One of his chief amirs, 'Izz ad-Din ad-Dubaisi, who held the city of Daquqa as a fief from him, billeted himself on aJew. The Jew appealed to the Atabeg, who sympathized with him. He had only to give ad-Dubaisi a look to make him pack his bags and move. Then the Sultan himself entered the city and had his baggage and tents unpacked. My father said: 'I remember seeing his men putting up his tents in the mud, spreading straw on the ground to keep them out of the mire. Then he appeared and took up residence there. Such was the strictness of his principles.’ Mosul had been one of the most impoverished regions before Zangi's time, but during and after his reign it blossomed with crops, sweet-smelling flowers and other plants as fruitfully as anywhere else in the world. Zangi also used to take care to protect the honour of his subjects’ women, especially his soldiers' wives. He used to say that if the soldiers' wives were not kept under strict control during their husbands' long absences on campaigns they would certainly go astray. He was the bravest man in the world. Of the time before he came to power it is enough to say that he 72 went with the amir Maudiid of Mosul to Tiberias, in Frankish territory, and flung a lance at the city gates that left a scar in the wood. In the same way he attacked the Humaidi fortress of ‘Aqar, which was at the top of a lofty mountain, and flung a lance that reached as far as the walls. There are other similar stories. During his reign in Mosul he was entirely surrounded by hostile states, all doing their best to seize his kingdom. But he, far from merely defending himself from his enemies, never let a year pass without taking over a piece of enemy territory. His neighbour on the Takrit side was the Caliph al-Mustarshid bi-Illah, who besieged Mosul. On the Shahraziir side was the Sultan Mas'ud, then Ibn Suqman of Khilat, then Dawiid ibn Suqman of Hisn Kaifa, then the Prince of Amid and Mardin, then the Franks, from Damascus to Mardin, and finally the Princes of Damascus itself All these states were trying to encroach on his lands, but he attacked now this one, now that, making a conquest here, a treaty there, until at his death he had taken over several tracts of land at the expense of all his neighbours. You will find the details in the book in which we describe his reign and those of his sons. 73 Letter from Conrad to Pope Eugenius. March 1147. Although the Pope had encouraged Louis to embark on the crusade, the participation of Conrad came as a surprise to him. Conrad by the grace of God King of the Romans and always Augustus to his father in Christ Eugenius, supreme pontiff of the Holy Roman Church, [expressing to him] filial love and due reverence in the Lord. We have gratefully received the letter from your holiness sent with your legate Bishop Theodwin of Santa Rufina, a man who has been received by us with love and honour, and we have carried out the suggestions contained within it with filial and cordial charity. Hence we have with God’s assistance taken careful and effective steps for the government of our kingdom, which has been granted to us by God, a matter about which you advised and exhorted us with paternal affection. This was discussed with great attention and thoroughness at a gathering of the princes at Frankfurt, where we held a general court. A lasting peace has been confirmed throughout every part of our kingdom, and our son Henry has been chosen with the unanimous agreement of the princes and the eager acclamation of the whole kingdom as king and as the successor to our sceptre. We have ordered that in accordance with Divine mercy he should be crowned in the palace at Aachen in the middle of Lent. Indeed, the matter which was of concern to your good self, that we have assumed such a great task, namely the holy and life-giving cross and the intention of making so great and lengthy an expedition, without your knowledge, proceeds from a strong feeling of true love. But the Holy Spirit, which ‘bloweth where it listeth’ [John 3:8], and is accustomed to ‘coming suddenly’ [Mark 13:36], allowed us to make no delay to take counsel with you or anybody else; and immediately He touched our heart with His wondrous finger, He commanded our absolute obedience without there being any opportunity for delay interposing. Since we understand both from your letter and from the legate that you will come to Gaul, we request, venerable father, and advise you with the utmost respect and thought, that you seek to cross the Rhine so that we can meet together so that we may be able both to discuss and to plan how, with the help of God’s compassion, the peace of the churches and the ordering of the Christian religion may be augmented with appropriate measures and the well-being of the kingdom which has been granted to us by God, and the enhancement of our honour, may be confirmed through necessary decisions. And since there is very little time available for preparing our journey, we would very much like to meet with you at Strassburg on the sixth day of Easter Week. We commend to your sincerity our envoys, men who are especially prudent and discreet, lovers of the Holy Roman Church and of the kingdom, and who are most dear to us, namely Bishop Bucco of Worms, Bishop Anselm of Havelburg and Abbot Wibald of Korvey, so that you may hear those things that they say as though they were from our own mouth, and you will not refuse to discuss and arrange the affairs of the Holy Roman Church and the kingdom with them in a friendly fashion. 74 Letter from Conrad to Abbot Wibald. January/February 1148. Conrad by the grace of God King of the Romans to the venerable Abbot Wibald of Korvey and Stavelot [wishing him] his grace and all good things. Since we have had proof of your loyalty towards us and our kingdom shown on many occasions, we do not doubt that you will greatly rejoice now that you hear of the favourable state of our affairs. We therefore bring news to you, our loyal subject. After we had arrived at Nicea with a numerous and untouched army, we wanted to complete our expedition in good time. So we set off towards Iconium on the direct route, accompanied by guides to show us the way, and carrying with us as many supplies as we could. But however, after ten days on the road, and with a similar march still left, the supplies began to run short for everyone, particularly for the cavalry, while the Turks unceasingly harried and inflicted death upon the crowd of people on foot, who were unable to keep up. Pitying the fate of the suffering people, who were dying both from famine and from the arrows fired by the enemy, and on the request of all the princes and barons, we led the army away from that wasteland towards the sea, so as to regroup; preferring to keep it unharmed for greater things in future rather than to win a bloody victory over the archers. When we arrived at the sea coast and pitched camp, much to our surprise the king of France arrived at our tents in the midst of a great storm, not wanting to wait for better weather in his joy. He was distressed that our army had been worn down by hunger and toil, but showing no little joy in our company. Indeed he and all his princes faithfully and devotedly offered us their service. They provided us with money and whatever else they had which we wanted. They then joined forces with us and our princes, although indeed some of our people were left behind, being unable to follow either because of illness or through lack of money, and because of this they became separated from the army. We then went without difficulty as far as Ephesus, where the Saint's [John] tomb is, from which Manna is believed to gush forth, and there we celebrated the Lord's Nativity. We stopped there for some days, since both we and many of our men had fallen ill. We wanted to go on when we had recovered our health, but were so ill that we were quite unable to proceed. Hence, after waiting for us as long as they could, the king and his army set off regretfully, but we remained racked by illness for a considerable time. When our brother the Emperor of the Greeks heard of this he was much upset, and he and our most beloved daughter the empress came to us in haste, and generously provided us and our princes with everything that we needed for our journey from his own resources. He brought us back almost by force to his palace in Constantinople, so that we might be speedily restored to health by his doctors. There he showed us greater honour, so we have heard, than had ever been demonstrated to any of our predecessors. We now plan to set off for Jerusalem on Quadragesima Sunday [March 7], we shall muster a new army there over Easter, and then travel on to Edessa. We ask that you yourself pray, and have your brothers also pray, that God should indeed deign to make our journey a success; and commend us to [the prayers of] all the faithful. We ourselves commend our son to your faithful care. 75 Letter from Louis VII to his regent, Abbot Suger. March/April 1148. Louis, by the grace of God King of the French and Duke of the Aquitanians, to Suger, venerable Abbot of St. Denis, greeting and [his] grace. It is our duty to send news of our affairs in the East as quickly we can to you, who are dear to us. For we know that you have a heartfelt desire to hear about them, and nothing can make us happier than for you to receive good news about us. After we had departed the frontiers of our kingdom, the Lord favoured our journey, and He brought us in good health and unharmed as far as Constantinople, and by Divine mercy with our whole army safe and in excellent spirits. There we were joyfully and honourably received by the emperor. After remaining there for a little while to gather the supplies that seemed to be needed, we sailed across the Bosphorus and commenced our march through Romania. However, we suffered great damage in these regions, both through the treachery of the emperor and through our own fault, and we were indeed threatened by many and grave perils. For we were spared neither the vicious ambush of robbers nor the serious difficulties of the route, and faced daily battles with the Turks who with the emperor's permission entered his lands to harry the soldiery of Christ, and who strove with all their might to harm us. Since in many places it was impossible to find food, the people were soon suffering from hunger. And on one particular day Divine judgement exacted punishment for our sins, and a number of our barons were killed. For among those who died on the climb into the mountains of Laodicea the Lesser and in the region round about were our blood-relation the Count of Warenne, Rainald of Tonnerre, Manasses de Bulles, Walter de Montjay, Everard of Breteuil, and many more, the list of whom will be announced at a more favourable moment than the present, since our grief does not allow us to speak further about them now. We ourselves frequently risked death, but on each occasion were saved by Divine grace. We escaped the attacks of the Turks and, protected by the Lord, arrived at Attalia with our army safe. There we had frequent and prolonged discussions as to the best way to continue our journey, and the general opinion of the bishops and princes was that, since our horses had for a long time been worn down by hunger and the hardships of the journey, and the way forward was beset with great difficulty, we should hurry on to Antioch by ship. We followed their advice, and on the Friday after the middle of Lent [March 10, 1148] we and the majority of our princes arrived safely by sea at the aforesaid city, and it is from there that we have had this letter despatched to you. As for the rest, all our work is in the hand of God, who, as we trust in him, will not abandon us who have our hopes in him, but will guide His enterprise to a glorious conclusion. For you should most certainly know that we shall either return in glory or we shall never return at all. It remains therefore for you to think frequently of us, and always commend us most sincerely to the prayers of religious men everywhere. And since our money has been in no small way diminished by many and various expenses, all of which have been entirely necessary to us, you should devote your energy to raising cash, and hasten to send what has been collected to us by trustworthy envoys. We shall only be able to further Christ's business without much expense and great labour. Farewell. 76 Medieval Sourcebook: Usamah Ibn Munqidh (1095-1188): Autobiography. Usamah (1095-1188) was a Muslim warrior and courtier who fought against the Crusaders with Saladin (the Third Crusade.) Yet as a resident of the area around Palestine, he also had a chance to befriend a number of them. His autobiography dates from around 1175. I have supplemented the excerpts from the Medieval Sourcebook with additional passages from the Penguin edition of Usamah’s works. §§ Meeting with Nur al-Din By that route of ours we arrived at Bosra, where we found that Nur al-Din (may God have mercy upon him) was encamped against Damascus. It happened that the amir Asad al-Din Shirkuh" (may God have mercy upon him) had already arrived in Basra, so I went with him to the army. We arrived on Sunday night." I awoke the next morning to discuss my mission with Nur al-Din. He said, addressing yours truly," 'The people of Damascus are my enemies. The Franks are my enemies. I don't trust either of them enough to get between them.' My brother, 'Izz al-Dawla 'Ali (may God have mercy upon him), was in the group that left with me from Damascus, he and his companions, for Ascalon. He (may God have mercy upon him) was one of the great cavaliers of the Muslims, who fought for religion, not for worldly matters. One day we went out from Ascalon to make a foray on Bayt Jibril and raid it. So we went and attacked them. I noticed, as we set off to Ieave the town, that there were some large heaps of grain there. So I stopped with my comrades and started a fire and set the threshing floors alight. We then went from one place to another in this fashion, while the army itself had gone on ahead of me. Meanwhile, the Franks (God curse them) assembled from their fortresses. These are close to one another and house large numbers of cavalry so that the Franks can attack Ascalon day or night. But now the Franks made a sortie against our comrades. One of our horsemen came to me at full gallop and cried, “The Franks have come!” So I set off for our comrades; the vanguard of the Franks had already arrived. The Franks (God curse them) are the most cautious of all men in war. They climbed up a hill and stayed there, and we climbed a hill directly across from them. Between these two hills was an open space where our comrades who had been separated from us and those who led the extra horses crossed right beneath them. The Franks didn't even send one man down against them for fear of some ambush or trick. If the Franks had just come down, they would have captured our comrades down to the last man. And we, all the while, stood right across from them, inferior in numbers, with our main troops gone ahead of us, routed. But the Franks remained stationed on that hill until our comrades' crossing was finished—then they set out against us. As we fought, we withdrew before them, and they did not renew their pursuit. But whoever stopped his horse, they killed, and whoever fell from his mount, they captured. Then they turned back from us. Thus God (Glory be to Him) decreed that we would be safe thanks to their exaggerated sense of caution. If we had been as numerous as they were and had been as victorious over them as they had been over us, we would have wiped them out. 77 I spent four months in Ascalon fighting the Franks. During this period, we made an assault on Yubna, in which we killed about a hundred souls and captured some prisoners. After that period, a letter came to me from Ibn al-Sallar (may God have mercy upon him), summoning me back. So I set out for Egypt while my brother, 'Izz al-Dawla 'Ali (may God have mercy upon him), remained behind in Ascalon. The army there set out and made an attack on Gaza, during which he achieved martyrdom (may God have mercy upon him). He was a genuine scholar, a real cavalier and a truly devout Muslim. § Usama's Family Delivered. The Franks Seize his Property I then entered the service of Nur al-Din (may God have mercy upon him). He corresponded with Ibn Ruzzik about transporting my household and sons who had been left behind in Egypt, and who, I might add, had been treated very well. But Ibn Ruzzik sent the messenger back and begged off, claiming that he feared for their safety because of the Franks. He wrote to me, saying, “Come back to Egypt: you know what our relationship is like. If you are expecting any ill-will from the palace staff, then you can go to Mecca where I will send you a document granting you the city of Aswan, and I will send you all the reinforcements you need to combat the Abyssinians (for Aswan is one of the frontier-fortresses of the Muslims). Then I will let your household and sons come to join you.” So I consulted with Nur al-Din, seeking his advice on the matter. He said, 'You are not seriously considering, having just left behind Egypt and all her troubles, going back there! Life is too short for that! I'll send a messenger to the king of the Franks to obtain safepassage for your household, and I'll also send someone along to conduct them here.' And so he (may God have mercy upon him) sent a messenger and obtained the safe-passage from the king, with his cross right on it, good for both land- and sea-travel. So I sent along the safe-passage with a servant of mine, as well as a letter from Nur aI-Din and my own letter for Ibn Ruzzik. Ibn Ruzzik then sent my family on to Damietta in one of his own personal launches, along with all the provisions and cash they would need, and his own letter of protection. From Damietta, they sailed in a Frankish ship. As they approached Acre, where the king was (may God not have mercy upon him), the king sent out a group of men in a small boat to sink the ship with axes, as my own companions looked on. The king rode out on his horse, stopped at the shore and took as pillage everything that was in the ship. A servant of mine swam across to him, holding the safe-passage document, and said to him, 'My lord king, is this not your document of safe-passage?” “Indeed it is,” he said. “But this is the procedure among the Muslims: if one of their ships is wrecked off one of their towns, then the inhabitants of that town get to pillage it.” My servant then asked, “So you are going to take us prisoner?” “No,” the king replied, and he had my family (may God curse him) brought to a building, where he had the women searched and took everything they had with them. In the ship there had been jewellery that had been entrusted to the women, along with cloth and gems, swords and other weapons, and gold and silver amounting to something like thirty thousand dinars. The Franks took it all and then sent my household five hundred dinars, saying, 'You can get to your country on this,' even though the party totalled some fifty 78 men and women. As for me, I was at that very moment with Nur al-Din in the land of the king Mas'ud, in the region of Ra'ban and Kaysun. The news that my children and my brother's children and our women were safe made it easier to take the news about all the wealth that was lost. Except for my books: they totalled four thousand bound volumes of the most precious tomes. Their loss was for me a heartache that lasted all my life. § Introduction In the midst of these events, there were periods when I saw countless battles against infidels and against Muslims. Of the wonders that I witnessed and experienced in these various wars, I will mention here only those that come to mind. For forgetfulness is not to be disparaged in someone who has seen time pass without cease; it is indeed a legacy of all sons of Adam passed on from their father (God's blessing be upon him, and peace). § An Aged Retainer Strikes a Devastating Blow One of the most amazing spear-thrusts occurred with a Kurdish soldier called Hamadat, a long-time comrade who had travelled with my father (may God have mercy upon him) to Isfahan to the court of the sultan Malikshah. But now he had grown old, raised children, and his eyesight was weak. My uncle Sultan (may God have mercy upon him) said to him, 'Hamadat, you have become old and feeble, and we owe you many favours as you have served us well. If you retire to your mosque (for he had a mosque by the door to his house) and let us register your children in the stipend-list, then you will get two dinars every month and a load of flour, so long as you stick to your mosque.' 'I'll do it, sir,' he said. But the deal only lasted a short time. For he later came to my uncle and said, 'Sir, by God, I can't get used to just sitting around the house. I would rather be killed on my horse than die in my bed.' 'It's up to you,' my uncle replied, and gave orders that his name be registered like it used to be. Only a few days passed before the Cerdagnais, the lord of Tripoli attacked us. The soldiers rushed to confront them, and Hamadat was among the most courageous group. He positioned himself on some raised ground, facing south, but a Frankish horseman attacked him from the west. One of our comrades shouted at him, 'Hamadat!' so he turned and saw the horseman headed for him. He pointed the head of his horse northward, hefted his spear in his hand and thrust it straight into the chest of the Frank, the spear piercing him right through. The Frank retreated clasping his horse's neck, breathing his last. When the fighting ended, Hamadat said to my uncle, 'Tell me, sir: if Hamadat had kept to his mosque, who would have struck that blow?' 79 This reminds me of the verse of aI-Find al-Zimmani: Behold the blow of an old man, ground down and worn, While my peers shun weapons, this makes me feel reborn! This aI-Find was already an old man when he went to battle and struck with his spear two approaching horsemen and killed them both together. § The Model of a Loyal Servant On that same day, a servant that used to belong to my uncle 'Izz al-Dawla Nasr (may God have mercy upon him), called Sham'un, was struck by a wicked spear-thrust that he took protecting my other uncle Sultan (may God have mercy upon him). It happened that my uncle Sultan later sent him as a messenger to the king Ridwan.v son of Tutush, in Aleppo. When Sharn'un had come before him, the king said to his own servants, 'All servants and subjects" should be as loyal as this man was to his master.' And he then said to Sham'un, 'Tell them your story about what you did with your master back in the days of my father.” Instead, Sham'un told him," 'My lord, the other day I went into battle alongside my master, and a horseman attacked him with his spear. So I jumped between him and my master to redeem my master with my own life, and the horseman speared me instead. He cut two of my ribs, and these two ribs - by your grace - I keep with me in a little box.' At this, King Ridwan said to him, 'By God, I will not respond until you send someone to bring this box and the ribs.' So Sham'un rose and sent for someone to bring forth the box, and there were indeed two rib-bones inside it. Ridwan was astonished by this and said to his companions, 'This is how you should be acting in my service.' §§ On Reason and Warfare A digression. We were chatting about warfare one day in the hearing of my tutor, the learned sheikh known as Ibn al-Munira (may God have mercy upon him). So I said to him, 'Say, master! If you would mount a charger, put on a kazaghand and helmet, belt on a sword, carry a spear and shield and position yourself at the Judge's Mosque (a narrow place where the Franks - God curse them - used to pass by), not a single one of them would be able to get by you!' 'Oh no,' he replied. 'By God, they'd all get by.' I said, 'But they'd be terrified of you, and they wouldn't know who you were!' 'Glory be to God!' he replied. 'Don't I know myself?' Then he said to yours truly, 'A man of 80 reason does not fight.' So I said, 'But master! Are you judging so-and-so and so-and-so (and I listed some of our comrades who were courageous horsemen) to be witless?' “That is not what I meant,' he replied. 'I merely meant that all reason is absent at the time of battle. If it were present, then men would not confront swords with their faces, nor spears and arrows with their chests. This is not the sort of thing that reason calls for.' He was (may God have mercy upon him), however, more experienced with scholarship than he was with combat. For it is precisely reason that fills one with resolve in the face of swords, spears and arrows out of disdain towards being cast as a coward and smeared with bad reputation. The proof of that is that a man of courage, before going in to battle, will be stricken with shakes, he shivers and changes in colour due to all the dangers he thinks upon and talks to himself about, dangers stemming from what he plans to do and the risks he is about to encounter. A man's soul will always shudder at such dangers and loathe them. But once that man of courage enters the fray of battle and wades among its throngs, all that shaking ,suddering and changing of colour disappears. § Motives for Fighting: Two Muslim Martyrs during the Second Crusade Among men there are those that go to battle just as the Companions of the Propher! (may God be pleased with them) used to go to battle: to obtain entrance to Paradise, and not to pursue some selfish desire or to gain a reputation. Here is an example: The Frankish king of the Germans (may God curse him), when he arrived in Syria, assembled all the Franks that were in Syria to his side and marched on Damascus. So the army of Damascus and its populace came out to do battle with the Franks. Among them were the jurist al-Findalawi and the sheikh and ascetic 'Abd ai-Rahman al-Halhuli (may God have mercy upon them both). The two of them were among the most virtuous of all Muslims. As they approached the enemy, the jurist said to 'Abd al-Rahman, 'Aren't these the Romans?' 'Yes, indeed,' he replied. 'Then how long are we going to stand here?' the jurist asked. 'Go, in the name of God - may He be exalted!' replied 'Abd al-Rahman. And so the two men advanced and did battle until they were killed in the same place. May God have mercy upon them both. § Women's Courage for the Sake of Honour: Usama's Mother On that same day, my mother (may God have mercy upon her) distributed my swords and kazaghand-armour. She came to a sister of mine, an older woman, and said, 'Put on your shoes and covering. 81 And so she got dressed and my mother took her to a balcony in my house that looked out over the river valley to the east, and made her sit [us] there while she took a seat at the entrance to the balcony. God - glory be to Him- granted us victory over the enemy. But when I came to my house in search of some of my weapons, I found nothing except the scabbards of the swords and the sacks for the kazaghands. So I asked, 'Mother, where are my weapons?' 'My son,' she replied, 'I gave the weapons to whoever would use them to fight for us. I didn't know if you were safe or not.' I replied, 'And my sister? What is she doing here?' 'My son,' my mother replied, 'I made her sit here on the balcony while I took my seat just outside. That way, if I should see that the Batinis had reached us, I could push her off, throwing her down to the valley. For I would rather see her dead than see her a prisoner of peasants and wool-carders.' I thanked her for that, and so did my sister, who prayed that God would reward my mother on her behalf. Their courage for the sake of honour is more intense than such courage among men. § Women's Disdain for Danger On the same day, an old woman named Funun, who had been a servant-girl of my grandfather Sadid al-Mulk 'Ali (may God have mercy upon him), covered herself with her veil, took up a sword and went out into battle. And she kept at it until we were able to climb up and overpower the enemy. So no one can deny that noble women possess disdain for danger, courage for the sake of honour and sound judgment. § Only God can Bring Victory in Battle Victory in war is from God alone (may He be blessed and exalted), not from organization or skilled conduct, and not from strength of numbers of troops or allies. Whenever my uncle (may God have mercy upon him) used to send me to fight Turks or Franks, I would ask him, 'My lord, tell me how I should conduct myself when I finally meet the enemy.' 'War conducts itself, my boy,' he would say. And he was right. § Risk-Taking: A Warrior's Duty As for taking risks in acts of valour, it does not happen because one has renounced life. Indeed, it comes about when a man becomes known for his audacity and is given the label of courage. When he then takes part in battle, his ambition demands that he perform noteworthy deeds that his peers cannot accomplish. His spirit so quails at death and riding into danger that it almost overwhelms him, stopping him from what he wants to do, until he forces his spirit and makes it undertake that which it hates to do. As a result, shudders spread throughout his body and his colour changes. But when he enters into battle, his terror disappears and his cravenness subsides. 82 I was present at the siege of the citadel of al-Sawr with the King of Amirs, the atabeg Zangi (may God have mercy upon him), someone I have already touched on. The citadel belonged to the amir Qara Arslan (may God have mercy upon him), and was fully manned with crossbowmen. This was after Zangi's defeat at Amid.275 As soon as his tents were set up, Zangi dispatched one of his comrades, who shouted up underneath the citadel, 'Enemy crossbowmen! The atabeg says to you, "By the grace of the sultan, if but one of my comrades is killed by your arrows, I will absolutely cut off your hands." Zangi then set up the mangonels against the citadel, which took down one side of it. But not enough of it was brought down for the men to use the breach to get up into rhe citadel. However, one of the atabeg's bodyguards, a man from Aleppo called Ibn al-Ariq, climbed up through the breach and set to striking the enemy with his sword. But they injured him with a number of wounds and threw him down from the tower into the moat. By then, our men had overwhelmed them at that breach and we took possession of the citadel. The representatives of the atabeg climbed up to the citadel and took possession of its keys, sending them to Timurtash, and granting Zangi the citadel. Now, it happened that a crossbow-bolt struck a man from the Khurasanian troops in his knee, cutting through the cap that is on top of the joint, and he died. The moment the atabeg took possession of the citadel, therefore, he summoned ithe crossbowmen, who were nine in number. They came with their bows slung from their shoulders. Zangi ordered that their thumbs be sliced from their wrists so their hands became limp and useless. As for Ibn al-'Ariq, he treated his wounds and recovered after being at death's door. He was a brave man who pushed himself to face all manner of dangers. I saw something like that on yet another occasion. The atabeg had encamped before the citadel of al-Bari'a.!" which is surrounded by solid rock upon which tents cannot be pitched. The atabeg therefore encamped in the plain and delegated his amirs to conduct the siege in turns. One day, the atabeg rode over to the siege; it was the turn of the amir Abu Bakr alDubaysi, but he did not have sufficient materiel for battle. The atabeg stopped there and said to Abu Bakr, 'Advance and fight them!' So Abu Bakr marched at the head of his comrades even though they were practically unarmed, and the infantrymen -from the citadel came out to attack them. At this, one of Abu Bakr's comrades, called Mazyad, who was not then known for his prowess in battle or his courage, came forward and fought furiously, striking at them with his sword and dispersing their crowds. He was wounded many times. I saw him as they carried him back to camp and he was about to breathe his last breath. But then later he got well. Abu Bakr al-Dubaysi presented him and Zangi promoted him and invested him with a robe of honour and made him a member of his own bodyguard. Mysterious are the works of the Creator, the author of all things! When one comes to recount cases regarding the Franks, he cannot but glorify Allah (exalted is he!) and sanctify him, for he sees them as animals possessing the virtues of courage and fighting, but nothing else; just 83 as animals have only the virtues of strength and carrying loads. I shall now give some instances of their doings and their curious mentality. In the army of King Fulk, son of Fulk, was a Frankish reverend knight who had just arrived from their land in order to make the holy pilgrimage and then return home. He was of my intimate fellowship and kept such constant company with me that he began to call me "my brother." Between us were mutual bonds of amity and friendship. When he resolved to return by sea to his homeland, he said to me: “My brother, I am leaving for my country and I want you to send with me thy son (my son, who was then fourteen years old, was at that time in my company) to our country, where he can see the knights and learn wisdom and chivalry. When he returns, be will be like a wise man.” Thus there fell upon my ears words which would never come out of the head of a sensible man; for even if my son were to be taken captive, his captivity could not bring him a worse misfortune than carrying him into the lands of the Franks. However, I said to the man: “By thy life, this has exactly been my idea. But the only thing that prevented me from carrying it out was the fact that his grandmother, my mother, is so fond of him and did not this time let him come out with me until she exacted an oath from me to the effect that I would return him to her.” Thereupon he asked, "Is thy mother still alive?" "Yes." I replied. 'Well," said he, "disobey her not." A case illustrating their curious medicine is the following: The lord of al-Munaytirah wrote to my uncle asking him to dispatch a physician to treat certain sick persons among his people. My uncle sent him a Christian physician named Thabit. Thabit was absent but ten days when be returned. So we said to him, "How quickly has thou healed thy patients!" He said: They brought before me a knight in whose leg an abscess had grown; and a woman afflicted with imbecility. To the knight I applied a small poultice until the abscess opened and became well; and the woman I put on diet and made her humor wet. Then a Frankish physician came to them and said, "This man knows nothing about treating them." He then said to the knight, "Which wouldst thou prefer, living with one leg or dying with two?" The latter replied, "Living with one leg." The physician said, "Bring me a strong knight and a sharp ax." A knight came with the ax. And I was standing by. Then the physician laid the leg of the patient on a block of wood and bade the knight strike his leg with the ax and chop it off at one blow. Accordingly he struck it—while I was looking on—one blow, but the leg was not severed. He dealt another blow, upon which the marrow of the leg flowed out and the patient died on the spot. He then examined the woman and said, "This is a woman in whose head there is a devil which has possessed her. Shave off her hair." Accordingly they shaved it off and the woman began once more to eat their ordinary diet—garlic and mustard. Her imbecility took a turn for the worse. The physician then said, "The devil has penetrated through her head." He 84 therefore took a razor, made a deep cruciform incision on it, peeled off the skin at the middle of the incision until the bone of the skull was exposed and rubbed it with salt. The woman also expired instantly. Thereupon I asked them whether my services were needed any longer, and when they replied in the negative I returned home, having learned of their medicine what I knew not before. I have, however, witnessed a case of their medicine which was quite different from that. The king of the Franks had for treasurer a knight named Bernard, who (may Allah's curse be upon him!) was one of the most accursed and wicked among the Franks. A horse kicked him in the leg, which was subsequently infected and which opened in fourteen different places. Every time one of these cuts would close in one place, another would open in ancther place. All this happened while I was praying for his perdition. Then came to him a Frankish physician and removed from the leg all the ointments which were on it and began to wash it with very strong vinegar. By this treatment all the cuts were healed and the man became well again. He was up again like a devil. Another case illustrating their curious medicine is the following: In Shayzar we had an artisan named abu-al-Fath, who had a boy whose neck was afflicted with scrofula. Every time a part of it would close, another part would open. This man happened to go to Antioch on business of his, accompanied by his son. A Frank noticed the boy and asked his father about him. Abu-al-Fath replied, "This is my son." The Frank said to him, 'Wilt thou swear by thy religion that if I prescribe to you a medicine which will cure thy boy, thou wilt charge nobody fees for prescribing it thyself? In that case, I shall prescribe to you a medicine which will cure the boy." The man took the oath and the Frank said: “Take uncrushed leaves of glasswort, burn them, then soak the ashes in olive oil and sharp vinegar. Treat the scrofula with them until the spot on which it is growing is eaten up. Then take burnt lead, soak it in ghee butter and treat him with it. That will cure him.” The father treated the boy accordingly, and the boy was cured. The sores closed and the boy returned to his normal condition of health. I have myself treated with this medicine many who were afflicted with such disease, and the treatment was successful in removing the cause of the complaint…. The Franks are void of all zeal and jealousy. One of them may be walking along with his wife. He meets another man who takes the wife by the hand and steps aside to converse with her while the husband is standing on one side waiting for his wife to conclude the conversation. If she lingers too long for him, he leaves her alone with the conversant and goes away. Here is an illustration which I myself witnessed: When I used to visit Nablus, I always took lodging with a man named Mu'izz, whose home was a lodging house for the Muslims. The house had windows which opened to the road, and there stood opposite to it on the other side of the road a house belonging to a Frank who sold wine for the merchants. He would take some wine in a bottle and go around announcing it by shouting, "So and so, the merchant, has just opened a cask full of this wine. He who wants to buy some of it will find it in such and such a place." The Frank's pay for the announcement made would be the wine in that bottle. One day this Frank went home and found a man with his wife in the same bed. He asked him, "What could have made you enter into my wife's room?" The man replied, "I was tired, so I went in to rest." "But how," asked he, "didst thou 85 get into my bed?" The other replied, "I found a bed that was spread, so I slept in it." "But," said be, "my wife was sleeping together with you!" The other replied, "Well, the bed is hers. How could I therefore have prevented her from using her own bed?" "By the truth of my religion," said the husband, "if thou shouldst do it again, thou and I would have a quarrel." Such was for the Frank the entire expression of his disapproval and the limit of his jealousy…. Another illustration: I entered the public bath in Sur [Tyre] and took my place in a secluded part. One of my servants thereupon said to me, "There is with us in the bath a woman." When I went out, I sat on one of the stone benches and behold! the woman who was in the bath had come out all dressed and was standing with her father just opposite me. But I could not be sure that she was a woman. So I said to one of my companions, "By Allah, see if this is a woman," by which I meant that he should ask about her. But he went, as I was looking at him, lifted the end of her robe and looked carefully at her. Thereupon her father turned toward me and said, "This is my daughter. Her mother is dead and she has nobody to wash her hair. So I took her in with me to the bath and washed her head." I replied, "Thou hast well done! This is something for which thou shalt be rewarded [by Allah]!"… I once went in the company of al-Amir Mu'in-al-Din (may Allah's mercy rest upon his soul!) to Jerusalem. We stopped at Nablus. There a blind man, a Muslim, who was still young and was well dressed, presented himself before al-Amir carrying fruits for him and asked permission to be admitted into his service in Damascus. The amir consented. I inquired about this man and was informed that his mother had been married to a Frank whom she had killed. Her son used to practice ruses against the Frankish pilgrims and cooperate with his mother in assassinating them. They finally brought charges against him and tried his case according to the Frankish way of procedure. They installed a huge cask and filled it with water. Across it they set a board of wood. They then bound the arms of the man charged with the act, tied a rope around his shoulders and dropped him into the cask, their idea being that in case he was innocent, he would sink in the water and they would then lift him up with the rope so that he might not die in the water; and in case he was guilty, he would not sink in the water. This man did his best to sink when they dropped him into the water, but he could not do it. So he had to submit to their sentence against him—may Allah's curse be upon them! They pierced his eyeballs with red-hot awls. Later this same man arrived in Damascus. Al-Amir Mu'in-al-Din (may Allah's mercy rest upon his soul!) assigned him a stipend large enough to meet all his needs and said to a slave of his, "Conduct him to Burhan-al-Din al-Balkhi (may Allah's mercy rest upon his soul!) and ask him on my behalf to order somebody to teach this man the Koran and something of Muslim jurisprudence." Hearing that, the blind man remarked, "May triumph and victory be thine! But this was never my thought.... What didst thou think I was going to do for thee?" asked Mu'in-al-Din. The blind man replied, "I thought thou wouldst give me a horse, a mule and a suit of armor and make me a knight." Mu'in-al-Din then said, "I never thought that a blind man could become a knight."… 86 Among the Franks are those who have become acclimatized and have associated long with the Muslims. These are much better than the recent comers from the Frankish lands. But they constitute the exception and cannot be treated as a rule. Here is an illustration. I dispatched one of my men to Antioch on business. There was in Antioch at that time al-Ra'is Theodoros Sophianos, to whom I was bound by mutual ties of amity. His influence in Antioch was supreme. One day he said to my man, "I am invited by a friend of mine who is a Frank. Thou shouldst come with me so that thou mayest see their fashions." My man related the story in the following words: I went along with him and we came to the home of a knight who belonged to the old category of knights who came with the early expeditions of the Franks. He had been by that time stricken off the register and exempted from service, and possessed in Antioch an estate on the income of which he lived. The knight presented an excellent table, with food extraordinarily clean and delicious. Seeing me abstaining from food, he said, "Eat, be of good cbeer! I never eat Frankish dishes, but I have Egyptian women cooks and never eat except their cooking. Besides, pork never enters my home." I ate, but guardedly, and after that we departed. As I was passing in the market place, a Frankish woman all of a sudden hung to my clothes and began to mutter words in their language, and I could not understand what she was saying. This made me immediately the center of a big crowd of Franks. I was convinced that death was at hand. But all of a sudden that same knight approached. On seeing me, he came and said to that woman, "What is the matter between you and this Muslim?" She replied, "This is he who has killed my brother Hurso." This Hurso was a knight in Afiimiyah who was killed by someone of the army of Hamah. The Christian knight shouted at her, saying, "This is a bourgeois (i.e., a merchant) who neither fights nor attends a fight." He also yelled at the people who had assembled, and they all dispersed. Then he took me by the hand and went away. Thus the effect of that meal was my deliverance from certain death. 87 Medieval Sourcebook: Gelasius I on Spiritual and Temporal Power, 494 The pope's view of the natural superiority of the spiritual over the temporal power finds a clear expression in the following remarkable letter of Gelasius I (494) to Emperor Anastasius. Refer to the gamebook to understand the context and significance of the investiture conflict. There are two powers, august Emperor, by which this world is chiefly ruled, namely, the sacred authority of the priests and the royal power. Of these, that of the priests is the more weighty, since they have to render an account for even the kings of men in the divine judgment. You are also aware, dear son, that while you are permitted honorably to rule over humankind, yet in things divine you bow your head humbly before the leaders of the clergy and await from their hands the means of your salvation. In the reception and proper disposition of the heavenly mysteries you recognize that you should be subordinate rather than superior to the religious order, and that in these matters you depend on their judgment rather than wish to force them to follow your will. If the ministers of religion, recognizing the supremacy granted you from heaven in matters affecting the public order, obey your laws, lest otherwise they might obstruct the course of secular affairs by irrelevant considerations, with what readiness should you not yield them obedience to whom is assigned the dispensing of the sacred mysteries of religion. Accordingly, just as there is no slight danger in the case of the priests if they refrain from speaking when the service of the divinity requires, so there is no little risk for those who disdain—which God forbid—when they should obey. And if it is fitting that the hearts of the faithful should submit to all priests in general who properly administer divine affairs, how much the more is obedience due to the bishop of that see which the Most High ordained to be above all others, and which is consequently dutifully honored by the devotion of the whole Church. 88 Medieval Sourcebook: Henry IV: Letter to Gregory VII, Jan 24 1076 King Henry IV of Germany (1056-1106) condemns Pope Gregory as a usurper. Henry, king not through usurpation but through the holy ordination of God, to Hildebrand [the pope’s original name], at present not pope but false monk. Such greeting as this hast thou merited through thy disturbances, inasmuch as there is no grade in the church which thou hast omitted to make a partaker not of honour but of confusion, not of benediction but of malediction. For, to mention few and especial cases out of many, not only hast thou not feared to lay hands upon the rulers of the holy church, the anointed of the Lord—the archbishops, namely, bishops and priests—but thou hast trodden them under foot like slaves ignorant of what their master is doing. Thou hast won favour from the common herd by crushing them; thou hast looked upon all of them as knowing nothing, upon thy sole self, moreover, as knowing all things. This knowledge, however, thou hast used not for edification but for destruction; so that with reason we believe that St. Gregory, whose name thou has usurped for thyself, was prophesying concerning thee when he said: "The pride of him who is in power increases the more, the greater the number of those subject to him; and he thinks that he himself can do more than all." And we, indeed, have endured all this, being eager to guard the honour of the apostolic see; thou, however, has understood our humility to be fear, and hast not, accordingly, shunned to rise up against the royal power conferred upon us by God, daring to threaten to divest us of it. As if we had received our kingdom from thee! As if the kingdom and the empire were in thine and not in God's hand! And this although our Lord Jesus Christ did call us to the kingdom, did not, however, call thee to the priesthood. For thou has ascended by the following steps. By wiles, namely, which the profession of monk abhors, thou has achieved money; by money, favour; by the sword, the throne of peace. And from the throne of peace thou hast disturbed peace, inasmuch as thou hast armed subjects against those in authority over them; inasmuch as thou, who wert not called, hast taught that our bishops called of God are to be despised; inasmuch as thou hast usurped for laymen and the ministry over their priests, allowing them to depose or condemn those whom they themselves had received as teachers from the hand of God through the laying on of hands of the bishops. On me also who, although unworthy to be among the anointed, have nevertheless been anointed to the kingdom, thou hast lain thy hand; me who as the tradition of the holy Fathers teaches, declaring that I am not to be deposed for any crime unless, which God forbid, I should have strayed from the faith, am subject to the judgment of God alone. For the wisdom of the holy fathers committed even Julian the apostate not to themselves, but to God alone, to be judged and to be deposed. For himself the true pope, Peter, also exclaims: "Fear God, honour the king." But thou who does not fear God, dost dishonour in me his appointed one. 89 Wherefore St. Paul, when he has not spared an angel of Heaven if he shall have preached otherwise, has not excepted thee also who dost teach otherwise upon earth. For he says: "If any one, either I or an angel from Heaven, should preach a gospel other than that which has been preached to you, he shall be damned." Thou, therefore, damned by this curse and by the judgment of all our bishops and by our own, descend and relinquish the apostolic chair which thou has usurped. Let another ascend the throne of St. Peter, who shall not practise violence under the cloak of religion, but shall teach the sound doctrine of St. Peter. I Henry, king by the grace of God, do say unto thee, together with all our bishops: Descend, descend, to be damned throughout the ages. 90 Medieval Sourcebook: Gregory VII: First Deposition and Banning of Henry IV (Feb 22, 1076) O St. Peter, chief of the apostles, incline to us, I beg, thy holy ears, and hear me thy servant whom thou has nourished from infancy, and whom, until this day, thou hast freed from the hand of the wicked, who have hated and do hate me for my faithfulness to thee. Thou, and my mistress the mother of God, and thy brother St. Paul are witnesses for me among all the saints that thy holy Roman church drew me to its helm against my will; that I had no thought of ascending thy chair through force, and that I would rather have ended my life as a pilgrim than, by secular means, to have seized thy throne for the sake of earthly glory. And therefore I believe it to be through thy grace and not through my own deeds that it has pleased and does please thee that the Christian people, who have been especially committed to thee, should obey me. And especially to me, as thy representative and by thy favour, has the power been granted by God of binding and loosing in Heaven and on earth. On the strength of this belief therefore, for the honour and security of thy church, in the name of Almighty God, Father, Son and Holy Ghost, I withdraw, through thy power and authority, from Henry the king, son of Henry the emperor, who has risen against thy church with unheard of insolence, the rule over the whole kingdom of the Germans and over Italy. And I absolve all Christians from the bonds of the oath which they have made or shall make to him; and I forbid any one to serve him as king. For it is fitting that he who strives to lessen the honour of thy church should himself lose the honour which belongs to him. And since he has scorned to obey as a Christian, and has not returned to God whom he had deserted—holding intercourse with the excommunicated; practising manifold iniquities; spurning my commands which, as thou dost bear witness, I issued to him for his own salvation; separating himself from thy church and striving to rend it—I bind him in thy stead with the chain of the anathema. And, leaning on thee, I so bind him that the people may know and have proof that thou art Peter, and above thy rock the Son of the living God hath built His church, and the gates of Hell shall not prevail against it. 91 Medieval Sourcebook: Gregory VII: Dictatus Papae 1090 The Dictatus Papae was included in the Pope's register in the year 1075. Some argue that it was written by Pope Gregory VII (r. 1073-1085) himself; others argue that it had a later and different origin. Regardless, there is little doubt that it expresses Gregory’s principles. The Dictates of the Pope 1. That the Roman church was founded by God alone. 2. That the Roman pontiff alone can with right be called universal. 3. That he alone can depose or reinstate bishops. 4. That, in a council his legate, even if a lower grade, is above all bishops, and can pass sentence of deposition against them. 5. That the pope may depose the absent. 6. That, among other things, we ought not to remain in the same house with those excommunicated by him. 7. That for him alone is it lawful, according to the needs of the time, to make new laws, to assemble together new congregations, to make an abbey of a canonry; and, on the other hand, to divide a rich bishopric and unite the poor ones. 8. That he alone may use the imperial insignia. 9. That of the pope alone all princes shall kiss the feet. 10. That his name alone shall be spoken in the churches. 11. That this is the only name in the world. 12. That it may be permitted to him to depose emperors. 13. That he may be permitted to transfer bishops if need be. 14. That he has power to ordain a clerk of any church he may wish. 15. That he who is ordained by him may preside over another church, but may not hold a subordinate position; and that such a one may not receive a higher grade from any bishop. 16. That no synod shall be called a general one without his order. 17. That no chapter and no book shall be considered canonical without his authority. 18. That a sentence passed by him may be retracted by no one; and that he himself, alone of all, may retract it. 19. That he himself may be judged by no one. 20. That no one shall dare to condemn one who appeals to the apostolic chair. 21. That to the latter should be referred the more important cases of every church. 22. That the Roman church has never erred; nor will it err to all eternity, the Scripture bearing witness. 23. That the Roman pontiff, if he have been canonically ordained, is undoubtedly made a saint by the merits of St. Peter; St. Ennodius, bishop of Pavia, bearing witness, and many holy fathers agreeing with him. As is contained in the decrees of St. Symmachus the pope. 24. That, by his command and consent, it may be lawful for subordinates to bring accusations. 25. That he may depose and reinstate bishops without assembling a synod. 26. That he who is not at peace with the Roman church shall not be considered catholic. 27. That he may absolve subjects from their fealty to wicked men. 92 Medieval Sourcebook: The Concordat of Worms 1122 Gregory VII’s policy was continued by his successors as Pope, Urban II and Paschal II. Paschal was briefly imprisoned, and granted investiture to Henry V, but his capitulation did not last. The first phase of the papal-imperial struggle of the Middle Ages only came to an end with the Concordat of Worms in 1122. The King was recognized as having the right to invest bishops with secular but not sacred authority. The struggle, however, would continue. Privilege of Pope Calixtus II I, bishop Calixtus, servant of the servants of God, do grant to thee beloved son, Henry—by the grace of God august emperor of the Romans—that the elections of the bishops and abbots of the German kingdom, who belong to the kingdom, shall take place in thy presence, without simony and without any violence; so that if any discord shall arise between the parties concerned, thou, by the counsel or judgment of the metropolitan and the coprovincials, may'st give consent and aid to the party which has the more right. The one elected, moreover, without any exaction may receive the regalia from thee through the lance, and shall do unto thee for these what he rightfully should. But he who is consecrated in the other parts of the empire [Burgundy and Italy] shall, within six months, and without any exaction, receive the regalia from thee through the lance, and shall do unto thee for these what he rightfully should, excepting all things which are known to belong to the Roman church. Concerning matters, however, in which thou dost make complaint to me, and dost demand aid, I, according to the duty of my office, will furnish aid to thee. I give unto thee true peace, and to all who are or have been on thy side in the time of this discord. Edict of the Emperor Henry V In the name of the holy and indivisible Trinity, I, Henry, by the grace of God august emperor of the Romans, for the love of God and of the holy Roman church and of our master pope Calixtus, and for the healing of my soul, do remit to God, and to the holy apostles of God, Peter and Paul, and to the holy catholic church, all investiture through ring and staff; and do grant that in all the churches that are in my kingdom or empire there may be canonical election and free consecration. All the possessions and regalia of St. Peter which, from the beginning of this discord unto this day, whether in the time of my father or also in mine, have been abstracted, and which I hold: I restore to that same holy Roman church. As to those things, moreover, which I do not hold, I will faithfully aid in their restoration. As to the possessions also of all other churches and princes, and of all other lay and clerical persons which have been lost in that war: according to the counsel of the princes, or according to justice, I will restore the things that I hold; and of those things which I do not hold I will faithfully aid in the restoration. And I grant true peace to our master pope Calixtus, and to the holy Roman church, and to all those who are or have been on its side. And in matters where the holy Roman church shall demand aid I will grant it; and in matters concerning which it shall make complaint to me I will duly grant to it justice. 93 Medieval Sourcebook: Eugenius III: Summons to A Crusade. December 1, 1145 In 1144, the Crusade principality of Edessa fell to the resurgent Muslims. As a result, Pope Eugenius III called for a new crusade, known as the Second Crusade. He was enthusiastically supported in this call by his mentor, Bernard of Clairvaux. Bishop Eugenius, servant of the servants of God, to his most beloved son in Christ, Louis, the illustrious king of the French, and to his beloved sons, the princes, and to all the faithful ones of God who are established throughout Gaul,-greeting and apostolic benediction. How much our predecessors the Roman pontiffs did labour for the deliverance of the oriental church, we have learned from the accounts of the ancients and have found it written in their acts. For our predecessor of blessed memory, pope Urban, did sound, as it were, a celestial trump and did take care to arouse for its deliverance the sons of the holy Roman church from the different parts of the earth. At his voice, indeed, those beyond the mountain and especially the bravest and strongest warriors of the French kingdom, and also those of Italy, inflamed by the ardour of love did come together, and, congregating a very great army, not without much shedding of their own blood, the divine aid being with them, did free from the filth of the pagans that city where our Saviour willed to suffer for us, and where He left His glorious sepulchre to us as a memorial of His passion, -and many others which, avoiding prolixity, we refrain from mentioning. Which, by the grace of God, and the zeal of your fathers, who at intervals of time have striven to the extent of their power to defend them and to spread the name of Christ in those parts, have been retained by the Christians up to this day; and other cities of the infidels have by them been manfully stormed. But now, our sins and those of the people themselves requiring it, a thing which we can not relate without great grief and wailing, the city of Edessa which in our tongue is called Rohais,-which also, as is said, once when the whole land in the east was held by the pagans, alone by herself served God under the power of the Christians-has been taken and many, of the castles of the Christians occupied by them (the pagans). The archbishop, moreover, of this same city, together with his clergy and many other Christians, have there been slain, and the relics of the saints have been given over to the trampling under foot of the infidels, and dispersed. Whereby how great a danger threatens the church of God and the whole of Christianity, we both know ourselves and do not believe it to be hid from your prudence. For it is known that it will be the greatest proof of nobility and probity, if those things which the bravery of your fathers acquired be bravely defended by you the sons. But if it should happen otherwise, which God forbid, the valour of the fathers will be found to have diminished in the case the of the sons. We exhort therefore all of you in God, we ask and command, and, for the remission of sins enjoin: that those who are of God, and, above all, the greater men and the nobles do manfully gird themselves; and that you strive so to oppose the multitude of the infidels, who rejoice at the time in a victory gained over us, and so to defend the oriental church -freed from their tyranny by so great an outpouring of the blood of your fathers, as we have said, - and to snatch many thousands of your captive brothers from their hands,- that the dignity of the 94 Christian name may be increased in your time, and that your valour which is praised throughout the whole world, may remain intact and unshaken. May that good Matthias be an example to you, who, to preserve the laws of his fathers, did not in the least doubt to expose himself with his sons and relations to death, and to leave whatever he possessed in the world; and who at length, by the help of the divine aid, after many labours however, did, as well as his progeny, manfully triumph over his enemies. We, moreover, providing with paternal solicitude for your tranquillity and for the destitution of that same church, do grant and confirm by the authority conceded to us of God, to those who by the promptings of devotion do decide to undertake and to carry through so holy and so necessary a work and labour, that remission of sins which our aforesaid predecessor pope Urban did institute; and do decree that their wives and sons, their goods also and possessions shall remain under the protection of our selves and of the archbishops, bishops and other prelates of the church of God. By the apostolic authority, moreover, we forbid that, in the case of any thing, which they possessed in peace, when they took the cross, any suit be brought hereafter until most certain news has been obtained concerning their return or their death. Moreover since those who war for the Lord should by no means prepare themselves with precious garments, nor with provision for their personal appearance, nor with dogs or hawks, other things which portend licentiousness: we exhort your prudence in the Lord that those who have decided to undertake so holy a work shall not strive after these things, but shall show zeal and diligence with all their strength in the matter of arms, horses and other things with which they may fight the infidels. But those who are oppressed by debt and begin so holy a journey with a pure heart, shall not pay interest for the time past, and if they or n t others for them are bound by an oath or pledge i ' he matter of interest, we absolve them by apostolic authority. It is allowed to them also when their relations, being warned, or the lords to whose fee they belong, are either unwilling or unable to advance them the money, to freely pledge without any reclamation, their lands or other possessions to churches, or ecclesiastical persons, or to any other of the faithful. According to the institution of our aforesaid predecessor, by the authority of almighty God and by that of St. Peter the chief of the apostles, conceded to us by God, we grant such remission and absolution of sins, that he who shall devoutly begin so sacred a journey and shall accomplish it, or shall die during it, shall obtain absolution for all his sins which with a humble and contrite heart he shall confess, and shall receive the fruit of eternal retribution from the Remunerator of all. Given at Vetralle on the Calends of December. 95 ORB Online Encyclopedia. St. Bernard of Clairvaux. In Praise of the New Knighthood (trans. Conrad Greenia) The following passage is taken from a treatise written in the early 12th century by the Cistercian abbot Bernard of Clairvaux, on behalf of the fledgling Knights Templar. Bernard became one of the most outspoken proponents of launching a Second Crusade later in the century. This work might be viewed as a combination of exhortation to the Knights, and advertisement to the population in general. Officially it is an answer to a letter written to Bernard by his friend Hugh de Payens, one of the founders of the Templars. CHAPTER ONE A WORD OF EXHORTATION FOR THE KNIGHTS OF THE TEMPLE IT SEEMS THAT A NEW KNIGHTHOOD has recently appeared on the earth, and precisely in that part of it which the Son from on high visited in the flesh. As he then troubled the princes of darkness in the strength of his mighty hand, so there he now wipes out their followers, the children of disbelief, scattering them by the hands of his mighty ones. Even now he brings about the redemption of his people raising up again a horn of salvation for us in the house of his servant David. This is, I say, a new kind of knighthood and one unknown to the ages gone by. It ceaselessly wages a twofold war both against flesh and blood and against a spiritual army of evil in the heavens. When someone strongly resists a foe in the flesh, relying solely on the strength of the flesh, I would hardly remark it, since this is common enough. And when war is waged by spiritual strength against vices or demons, this, too, is nothing remarkable, praiseworthy as it is, for the world is full of monks. But when the one sees a man powerfully girding himself with both swords and nobly marking his belt, who would not consider it worthy of all wonder, the more so since it has been hitherto unknown? He is truly a fearless knight and secure on every side, for his soul is protected by the armor of faith just as his body is protected by armor of steel…. Go forth confidently then, you knights, and repel the foes of the cross of Christ with a stalwart heart. Know that neither death nor life can separate you from the love of God which is in Jesus Christ, and in every peril repeat, "Whether we live or whether we die, we are the Lord's." What a glory to return in victory from such a battle! How blessed to die there as a martyr! Rejoice, brave athlete, if you live and conquer in the Lord; but glory and exult even more if you die and join your Lord. Life indeed is a fruitful thing and victory is glorious, but a holy death is more important than either. If they are blessed who die in the Lord, how much more are they who die for the Lord! 2. To be sure, precious in the eyes of the Lord is the death of his holy ones, whether they die in battle or in bed, but death in battle is more precious as it is the more glorious. How secure is life when the conscience is unsullied! How secure, I say, is life when death is anticipated without fear; or rather when it is desired with feeling and embraced with reverence! How holy and secure this knighthood and how entirely free of the double risk run by those men who fight not for Christ! Whenever you go forth, O worldly warrior, you must fear lest the 96 bodily death of your foe should mean your own spiritual death, or lest perhaps your body and soul together should be slain by him. Indeed, danger or victory for a Christian depends on the dispositions of his heart and not on the fortunes of war. If he fights for a good reason, the issue of his fight can never be evil; and likewise the results can never be considered good if the reason were evil and the intentions perverse. If you happen to be killed while you are seeking only to kill another, you die a murderer. If you succeed, and by your will to overcome and to conquer you perchance kill a man, you live a murderer. Now it will not do to be a murderer, living or dead, victorious or vanquished. What an unhappy victory—to have conquered a man while yielding to vice, and to indulge in an empty glory at his fall when wrath and pride have gotten the better of you! But what of those who kill neither in the heat of revenge nor in the swelling of pride, but simply in order to save themselves? Even this sort of victory I would not call good, since bodily death is really a lesser evil than spiritual death. The soul need not die when the body does. No, it is the soul which sins that shall die. CHAPTER TWO ON WORLDLY KNIGHTHOOD WHAT, THEN IS THE END OR FRUIT of this worldly knighthood, or rather knavery, as I should call it? What if not the mortal sin of the victor and the eternal death of the vanquished? Well then, let me borrow a word from the Apostle and exhort him who plows, to plow in hope, and him who threshes, to do so in view of some fruit. What then, O knights, is this monstrous error and what this unbearable urge which bids you fight with such pomp and labor, and all to no purpose except death and sin? You cover your horses with silk, and plume your armor with I know not what sort of rags; you paint your shields and your saddles; you adorn your bits and spurs with gold and silver and precious stones, and then in all this glory you rush to your ruin with fearful wrath and fearless folly. Are these the trappings of a warrior or are they not rather the trinkets of a woman? Do you think the swords of your foes will be turned back by your gold, spare your jewels or be unable to pierce your silks? As you yourselves have often certainly experienced, a warrior especially needs these three things—he must guard his person with strength, shrewdness and care; he must be free in his movements, and he must be quick to draw his sword. Then why do you blind yourselves with effeminate locks and trip yourselves up with long and full tunics, burying your tender, delicate hands in big cumbersome sleeves? Above all, there is that terrible insecurity of conscience, in spite of all your armor, since you have dared to undertake such a dangerous business on such slight and frivolous grounds. What else is the cause of wars and the root of disputes among you, except unreasonable flashes of anger, the thirst for empty glory, or the hankering after some earthly possessions? It certainly is not safe to kill or to be killed for such causes as these. CHAPTER THREE ON THE NEW KNIGHTHOOD 97 BUT THE KNIGHTS OF CHRIST may safely fight the battles of their Lord, fearing neither sin if they smite the enemy, nor danger at their own death; since to inflict death or to die for Christ is no sin, but rather, an abundant claim to glory…. The knight of Christ, I say, may strike with confidence and die yet more confidently, for he serves Christ when he strikes, and serves himself when he falls. Neither does he bear the sword in vain, for he is God's minister, for the punishment of evildoers and for the praise of the good. If he kills an evildoer, he is not a mankiller, but, if I may so put it, a killer of evil…. I do not mean to say that the pagans are to be slaughtered when there is any other way to prevent them from harassing and persecuting the faithful, but only that it now seems better to destroy them than that the rod of sinners be lifted over the lot of the just, and the righteous perhaps put forth their hands unto iniquity. 5. What then? If it is never permissible for a Christian to strike with the sword, why did the Savior's precursor bid the soldiers to be content with their pay, and not rather forbid them to follow this calling? But if it is permitted to all those so destined by God, as is indeed the case provided they have not embraced a higher calling, to whom, I ask, may it be allowed more rightly than to those whose hands and hearts hold for us Sion, the city of our strength? Thus when the transgressors of divine law have been expelled, the righteous nation that keeps the truth may enter in security. Certainly it is proper that the nations who love war should be scattered, that those who trouble us should be cut off, and that all the workers of iniquity should be dispersed from the city of the Lord. They busy themselves to carry away the incalculable riches placed in Jerusalem by the Christian peoples, to profane the holy things and to possess the sanctuary of God as their heritage. Let both swords of the faithful fall upon the necks of the foe, in order to destroy every high thing exalting itself against the knowledge of God, which is the Christian faith…. CHAPTER FOUR ON THE WAY OF LIFE OF THE KNIGHTS OF THE TEMPLE AND NOW AS A MODEL, or at least for the shame of those knights of ours who are fighting for the devil rather than for God, we will briefly set forth the life and virtues of these cavaliers of Christ. Let us see how they conduct themselves at home as well as in battle, how they appear in public, and in what way the knight of God differs from the knight of the world. In the first place, discipline is in no way lacking and obedience is never despised. As Scripture testifies, the undisciplined son shall perish and rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft, to refuse obedience is like the crime of idolatry. Therefore they come and go at the bidding of their superior. They wear what he gives them, and do not presume to wear or to eat anything from another source. Thus they shun every excess in clothing and food and content themselves with what is necessary. They live as brothers in joyful and sober company, without wives or children. So that their evangelical perfection will lack nothing, they dwell united in one family with no personal property whatever, careful to keep the unity of the 98 Spirit in the bond of peace. You may say that the whole multitude has but one heart and one soul to the point that nobody follows his own will, but rather seeks to follow the commander. They never sit in idleness or wander about aimlessly, but on the rare occasions when they are not on duty, they are always careful to earn their bread by repairing their worn armor and torn clothing, or simply by setting things to order. For the rest, they are guided by the common needs and by the orders of their master. There is no distinction of persons among them, and deference is shown to merit rather than to noble blood. They rival one another in mutual consideration, and they carry one another's burdens, thus fulfilling the law of Christ. No inappropriate word, idle deed, unrestrained laugh, not even the slightest whisper or murmur is left uncorrected once it has been detected. They foreswear dice and chess, and abhor the chase; they take no delight in the ridiculous cruelty of falconry, as is the custom. As for jesters, magicians, bards, troubadours and jousters, they despise and reject them as so many vanities and unsound deceptions. Their hair is worn short, in conformity with the Apostle's saying, that it is shameful for a man to cultivate flowing locks. Indeed, they seldom wash and never set their hair—content to appear tousled and dusty, bearing the marks of the sun and of their armor. 8. When the battle is at hand, they arm themselves interiorly with faith and exteriorly with steel rather than decorate themselves with gold, since their business is to strike fear in the enemy rather than to incite his greed. They seek out horses which are strong and swift, rather than those which are brilliant and well-plumed, they set their minds on fighting to win rather than on parading for show. They think not of glory and seek to be formidable rather than flamboyant. At the same time, they are not quarrelsome, rash, or unduly hasty, but soberly, prudently and providently drawn up into orderly ranks, as we read of the fathers. Indeed, the true Israelite is a man of peace, even when he goes forth to battle. Once he finds himself in the thick of battle, this knight sets aside his previous gentleness, as if to say, "Do I not hate those who hate you, O Lord; am I not disgusted with your enemies?" These men at once fall violently upon the foe, regarding them as so many sheep. No matter how outnumbered they are, they never regard these as fierce barbarians or as awe-inspiring hordes. Nor do they presume on their own strength, but trust in the Lord of armies to grant them the victory. They are mindful of the words of Maccabees, "It is simple enough for a multitude to be vanquished by a handful. It makes no difference to the God of heaven whether he grants deliverance by the hands of few or many; for victory in war is not dependent on a big army, and bravery is the gift of heaven." On numerous occasions they had seen one man pursue a thousand, and two put ten thousand to flight. Thus in a wonderous and unique manner they appear gentler than lambs, yet fiercer than lions. I do not know if it would be more appropriate to refer to them as monks or as soldiers, unless perhaps it would be better to recognize them as being both. Indeed they lack neither monastic meekness nor military might. What can we say of this, except that this has been done by the Lord, and it is marvelous in our eyes…. 99 Tertullian. On Idolatry. Tertullian (c.160- c.220) was an early Christian apologist. This passage from On Idolatry may be useful to those arguing against the crusade. Chapter 19. Concerning Military Service In that last section, decision may seem to have been given likewise concerning military service, which is between dignity and power. But now inquiry is made about this point, whether a believer may turn himself unto military service, and whether the military may be admitted unto the faith, even the rank and file, or each inferior grade, to whom there is no necessity for taking part in sacrifices or capital punishments. There is no agreement between the divine and the human sacrament [military oath], the standard of Christ and the standard of the devil, the camp of light and the camp of darkness. One soul cannot be due to two masters— God and Cæsar. And yet Moses carried a rod, and Aaron wore a buckle, and John the Baptist is girt with leather and Joshua the son of Nun leads a line of march; and the People warred: if it pleases you to sport with the subject. But how will a Christian man war, nay, how will he serve even in peace, without a sword, which the Lord has taken away? [Matthew 26: 52; 2 Corinthians 10:4; John 18:36] For although soldiers had come unto John, and had received the formula of their rule [Luke 3:1213]; although, likewise, a centurion had believed [Matthew 8:5; Luke 7:1] still the Lord afterward, in disarming Peter, disarmed every soldier. No dress is lawful among us, if assigned to any unlawful action. N.B. The rod, the buckle, and leather refer to clothing associated with Roman legionaries. 100 Origen of Alexandria. Against Celsus. Book VII. Origen (185-254) was an early Christian theologian. In this, his most famous work, he refutes the arguments of the pagan Celsus against Christianity. This chapter gives a metaphorical interpretation for violence in the name of God and may be useful to those arguing against the crusade. Chapter 22 If I must now explain how the just man “slays his enemies,” and prevails everywhere, it is to be observed that, when he says, “Every morning will I destroy the wicked of the land, that I may cut off all workers of iniquity from the city of Jehovah,” by “the land” he means the flesh whose lusts are at enmity with God; and by “the city of Jehovah” he designates his own soul, in which was the temple of God, containing the true idea and conception of God, which makes it to be admired by all who look upon it. As soon, then, as the rays of the Sun of righteousness shine into his soul, feeling strengthened and invigorated by their influence, he sets himself to destroy all the lusts of the flesh, which are called “the wicked of the land,” and drives out of that city of the Lord which is in his soul all thoughts which work iniquity, and all suggestions which are opposed to the truth. And in this way also the just give up to destruction all their enemies, which are their vices, so that they do not spare even the children, that is, the early beginnings and promptings of evil. In this sense also we understand the language of the 137th Psalm: “O daughter of Babylon, who art to be destroyed; happy shall he be that rewards you as you have served us: happy shall he be that takes and dashes your little ones against the stones.” For “the little ones” of Babylon (which signifies confusion) are those troublesome sinful thoughts which arise in the soul and he who subdues them by striking, as it were, their heads against the firm and solid strength of reason and truth, is the man who “dashes the little ones against the stones;” and he is therefore truly blessed. God may therefore have commanded men to destroy all their vices utterly, even at their birth, without having enjoined anything contrary to the teaching of Christ; and He may Himself have destroyed before the eyes of those who were “Jews inwardly” all the offspring of evil as His enemies. And, in like manner, those who disobey the law and word of God may well be compared to His enemies led astray by sin; and they may well be said to suffer the same fate as they deserve who have proved traitors to the truth of God. 101 Augustine. Selections on What Makes for a Just War. St. Augustine (354-430), Bishop of Hippo in North Africe, is one of the most influential theologians in Christian history. He was the founder of Christian thinking about what constitutes a just war. He did not write a systematic treatise on the subject; his thoughts are scattered throughout his sermons, treatises, and letters. Although Augustine considers military force necessary in some cases, he consistently laments the fallen state of humankind that makes war necessary. While the Greeks thought that that men are at their most human when engaged in politics, Augustine sees the City of Man”—devoted to temporal desires—as inherently inferior to the “City of God.” In his most famous work, he contrasts the two: “The two cities, therefore, were created by two loves: the earthly city by love of oneself, even to the point of contempt for God; the heavenly city by the love of God, even to the point of contempt for oneself.” These passages, and much of the commentary, are taken from The Ethics of War: Classic and Contemporary Readings, edd. Gregory M. Reichberg, Henrik Syse, and Endre Begby. From City of God, Book IV, Chapter 15 Let our opponents consider the possibility that rejoicing over the extent of their reign is not appropriate for good men. To be sure, the iniquity of those against whom just wars were waged helped the emplre to grow, because it surely would have stayed small if its neighbors were peaceful and just and did not, through wrongdoing, provoke war. Human affairs would have been happier that way. All kingdoms would have been small, enjoying concord with their nelghbors. There would thus have been many kingdoms of peoples in the world, just as there are many homes of citizens in a city. Waging war and extending the empire by subduing peoples is therefore viewed as happiness by the wicked, but as a necessity by the good. But because it would be worse if wrongdoers dominated those who are more just, it is not inappropriate to call even this necessity “happiness.” Nevertheless, without doubt it is a better happiness to have concord with a good neighbor than to subjugate a bad one through war. It is a wicked prayer to wish for someone to hate or to fear so that there might be someone to conquer. If, then, by waging just wars, not impious or iniquitous ones, the Romans were able to acquire such a large empire, should not “the iniquity of foreigners” be worshipped like some goddess? Indeed, we see how much assistance she has given to the extension of the empire, making others into wrongdoers so that there might be someone to wage just wars against in order that the empire might grow. From City of God, Book XIX, Chapter 73 102 They say, however, that the wise man will wage only just wars—as if, mindful that he is human, he would not much rather lament that he is subject to the necessity of waging just wars. If they were not just, he would not be required to wage them, and thus he would be free of the necessity of war. It is the iniquity on the part of the adversary that forces a just war upon the wise man. Even if it did not give rise to the necessity of war, such iniquity must certainly be lamented by a human being since it belongs to human beings. Therefore, let anyone who reflects with sorrow upon these evils so great, so horrid, and so savage, confess that he is miserable, Anyone, however, who either permits or considers these things without sorrow in mind is certainly much more miserable, since he thinks himself happy because he has lost human feeling. Augustine does not describe the horror of war primarily in terms of human suffering—although that certainly plays a part—but more in terms of virtue and vice. War distracts pious human beings from the path of virtue and opens up a Pandora’s box of vices; and, furthermore, there is no real virtue or glory to be had in waging war. From Against Faustus the Manichean, Book XXII, Chapter 744 What is it about war that is to be blamed? Is it that those who will die someday are killed so that those who will conquer might dominate in peace? This is the complaint of the timid, not of the religious. The desire for harming, the cruelty of revenge, the restless and implacable mind, the savageness of revolting, the lust for dominating, and similar things—these are what are justly blamed in wars. Often, so that such things might also be justly punished, certain wars that must be waged against the violence of those resisting are commanded by God or some other legitimate ruler and are undertaken by the good. From City of God, Book III, Chapter 14 This lust to dominate inflicts great evils on the human race and wears it down. Overwhelmed by it Rome exulted in her victory over Alba and used the term glory to describe the accolades she received for her crime because, as our Scriptures say, “in the desire of his heart the sinner wins praise and the wrongdoer is commended" (Psalm 10:3). Tear away the false and misleading disguise so that we may see the facts as they are. Let no one say to me, “This man or that one is great because he fought with so and so and beat him.” Gladiators, too, are victorious. Their kind of cruelty also wins praise as its reward, but I think it is better to suffer the consequences of any kind of lethargy than to seek glory in that kind of fighting. 103 From Letter 138, to Marcellinus These precepts about patience that we have been discussing must always be observed with respect to one's interior disposition, and a spirit of benevolence must always permeate the will so as to avoid returning evil for evil…. If the earthly city observes Christian principles, even its wars will be waged with the benevolent purpose that better provision might be made for the defeated to live harmoniously together in justice and godliness. Yet, war is not sinful per se, as becomes clear in a letter Augustine writes to Boniface, a Roman governor in North Africa. From Letter 189, to Boniface Do not think that it is impossible for anyone serving in the military to please God. Among those who did so was the holy David, to whom the Lord gave such great testimony. Among them also were many just men of that time. Among them also was the centurion who said to the Lord, “I am not worthy that you should enter under my roof, but only say the word and my servant will be healed; for I, too, am a man under authority and have soldiers under me: I say to one, ‘go,’ and he goes, and to another, ‘come,’ and he comes, and to my servant, ‘do this,’ and he does it.” And the Lord said about him, “Amen, I say to you, I have not found such faith in Israel” (Matthew 8:8-10)… Among them also were those soldiers who came to John to be baptized. John was the holy precursor of the Lord and friend of the bridegroom. The Lord himself said of him, “There has arisen no one born of woman greater than John the Baptist” (Matthew 11:11). When they asked him what they should do, he replied to them, “Terrorize no one, accuse no one falsely, and be content with your pay” (Luke 3:14). He surely did not prohibit them from serving in the military when he commanded them to be content with their pay. Those who serve God with the highest discipline of chastity, renouncing all worldly actions, indeed have a greater place before God. “Yet everyone,” as the apostle says, “has his own proper gift from God, one after this manner, another after that” (1 Corinthians 7:7). Some, then, fight for you against invisible enemies by praying; you toil for them against visible barbarians by fighting. Would that there were one faith in all, for there would be both less toiling and the devil with his angels would be more easily overcome! Yet, because it is necessary in this world that the citizens of the kingdom of heaven are troubled by temptations among the erring and impious in order that they might be tried and tested as gold in the furnace (Proverbs 17:3), we should not want to live with only the holy and the just before the time in order that we might deserve to receive that life in its own time. 104 Augustine insists that the aim of war must be peace. The challenge is to pursue the right kind of peace. There is a lower peace, merely enforcement of someone’s arbitrary will be force. And there is a higher peace, consisting of concord and order. It is this second peace that must be sought in order for a war to be just. From City of God, Book XIX, Chapter 12 Anyone who pays any attention to human affairs and our common human nature, recognizes as I do that just as there is no one who does not wish to be joyful, so there is no one who does not wish to have peace. Indeed, even those who want war want nothing other than to achieve victory; by warring, therefore, they desire to attain a glorious peace. What else is victory, unless triumphing over the opposition? When this has happened, there will be peace. Therefore, even those who are eager to exercise the military virtues by commanding or fighting wage war with the intention of peace. Consequently, the desired end of war is peace, for everyone seeks peace, even by waging war, but no one seeks war by making peace…. After all, even the evil wage war for the sake of the peace of their own associates, and they would want to make everyone their own, if they could, so that everyone and everything would be enslaved to one individual. How would that happen if they did not consent to his peace, either through love or fear? In this manner, pride imitates God in a distorted way. It hates equality with partners under God, but wants to impose its own domination upon its partners in place of God. Consequently, it hates the just peace of God and loves its own iniquitous peace. Nevertheless, it is not able not to love some sort of peace. Truly, there is no defect so contrary to nature that it wipes away even the last vestiges of nature. Accordingly, he who knows to prefer the upright to the deformed, and the ordered to the distorted, sees that the peace of the iniquitous, in comparison to the peace of the just, should not be called “peace” at all, However, it is necessary that even what is distorted be at peace in some way with a part of the things in which it exists or from which it is established, Otherwise, it would not exist at all. From Letter 189, to Boniface Therefore, when you are arming for battle, think first that even your bodily strength is a gift of God. In this way, you will not think of using the gift of God against God. When fidelity is promised it must be kept, even to an enemy against whom war is being waged. How much more must it be kept with a friend for whom the war is fought! The will should be concerned with peace and necessity with war, so that God might liberate us from necessity and preserve us in peace. Peace is not sought in order to provoke war, but war is waged in order to attain peace. Be a peacemaker, then, even by fighting, so that through your victory you might bring 105 those whom you defeat to the advantages of peace. “Blessed are the peacemakers,” says the Lord, “for they will be called children of God” (Matthew 5:9). If human peace is so sweet for attaining the temporal well-being of mortals, how much more sweet is divine peace for attaining the eternal well-being of the angels! Let necessity slay the warring foe, not your will. As violence is returned to one who rebels and resists, so should mercy be to one who has been conquered or captured, especially when there is no fear of a disturbance of the peace. From Letter 229, to Darius Preventing war through persuasion and seeking or attaining peace through peaceful means rather than through war are more glorious things than slaying men with the sword. If those who engage in combat are good men, they ure undoubtedly striving for peace, but they do so by shedding blood; your charge [as ambassador] however, was to prevent bloodshed. That is your good fortune in contrast to the others who are required to kill. Perfect peace, however, will never be found in this world. From City of God, Book XVII, Chapter 1315 Whoever hopes for so great a good as is promised to David in this world and on this earth shows all the understanding of a fool. Does anyone really think that the promise of such a good was fulfilled in the peace that existed during the reign of Solomon? Through that excellent proclamation Scripture surely prizes the peace of Solomon as a shadow of a future event. Still, the idea that the "promise to David was fulfilled in the reign of Solomon is carefully precluded when, after the passage says, “And the son of iniquity will not approach to humiliate him,” it immediately adds, “as he has done from the beginning, from the days in which I established judges over my people Israel” (2 Samuel 7:10-11). Now, judges had been established over that people from the time that they received the land of the promise, before there began to be kings in Israel. Also, the son of iniquity— that is, the foreign enemy—certainly did humiliate them during the intervals of time of which we read that peace alternated with war. Yet, longer periods of peace are found than the one enjoyed by Solomon, who reigned for forty years. Under that judge called Ehud there were eighty years of peace. Thus, dismiss the thought that this promise given to David predicts the reign of Solomon, much less that of any other king, for none of them reigned in peace as long as Solomon. Never did that people possess the kingdom so securely that it did not have to worry about being overrun by enemies, for due to the great vicissitudes of human events no people has ever been granted such security that they did not dread attacks hostile to this life. Therefore, that place which is 106 promised to be such a peaceful and secure dwelling is eternal, and is owed to the eternal ones in Jerusalem, the free mother. In that place will dwell those who are truly the people of Israel, for the name Israel is understood to mean “seeing God.” In this journey full of hardships, the pious soul must be led, through faith, by a longing for that reward. Augustine never wrote a separate treatise on war in which he laid out the criteria that must be fulfilled for a war to be just. However, directly and indirectly, his writings foreshadow the three criteria that would come to be seen as necessary for justifying going to war (known as ius ad bellum): 1. rightful (or legitimate) authority 2. just cause and 3. right intention, He hints, too, at the connection between the latter and what would later come to be called ius in bello, referring to what actions can justly be used while at war. Augustine is clear, though brief, on the importance of rightful authority. He is famous for having emphasized the significance of original sin for human existence and argues that political authority was instituted by God partly as a punishment for sin, partly to keep the peace of this world. Political authority includes the authority to use armed force. If all human beings were to have such authority, to use at their own discretion and whim, there would be no end to war and conflict. As William Stevenson has said, “God did not create human lusts, but once foreseen, God ‘used’ them, in the form of political authority, both to control the chaos engendered by sin and to punish sinners.” Augustine's statements on authority and war must also be read in light of claims from the Manicheans (among them the theologian Faustus) that the Biblical God himself was not a rightful authority, since in the Old Testament he seems to have commanded acts that were cruel and excessively violent. The Manicheans—a Gnostic movement which was considered heretical by Augustine and the mainstream church—claimed that there was a contradiction between the bellicose attitudes of the Old Testament and the pacific spirit of the new. To Augustine, there was no such contradiction, since it is not war in itself that is to be feared, but malice and hatred. From Against Faustus the Manichean, Book XXII, Chapters 74-5, 78 At this point, however, it would be tedious, and unnecessary, to enter into a discussion about just and unjust wars, for it makes a great difference by which causes and under which authorities men undertake the wars that must be waged. The natural order, which is suited to the peace of mortal things, requires that the authority and deliberation for undertaking war be under the control 107 of a leader, and also that, in the executing of military commands, soldiers serve peace and the common well-being. Moreover, it is wrong to doubt that a war which must be waged, undertaken under the authority of God, whether in order to constrain, crush, or subjugate the pride of mortals, is undertaken rightly, since even a war which is waged out of human desire can do no harm to the incorruptible God or to his saints. Insofar as the patience of the saints is tried and their souls humbled, and they suffer fatherly correction, they are benefited rather than harmed. No one can have any power over them except what has been given to him from above (see John 19:11); for, “There is no power except from God” (Romans 13:1), who either commands or permits it. Therefore, a just man, if he should happen to serve as a soldier under a human king who is sacrilegious, could rightly wage war at the king's command, maintaining the order of civic peace, for what he is commanded to do is not contrary to the sure precepts of God, or else it is not sure whether it is or not. In this latter case, perhaps the iniquity of giving the orders will make the king guilty while the rank of a servant in the civil order will show the soldier to be innocent. Since all this is true about a just man serving a sacrilegious human king, how much more innocently may the man who wages war at God's command be occupied in the administration of wars? After all, everyone who serves God knows that he can never command what is evil…. It is, therefore, malicious to blame Moses for waging war since he ought to be blamed less if he were to wage war on his own accord than if he were not to do so when God commanded it. Moreover, to dare to blame God himself because he commanded such things, or not to believe that a just and good God was able to command such things, is the mark of a human being, to put it mildly, unable to consider that for divine providence, extending in time through all things high and low, what arises is not a novelty and what dies does not vanish, but all things, individually, in their own order of natures or merits, either give way or succeed or abide. Furthermore, a correct human will is joined to divine law and inordinate human desire is checked by the order of divine law, so that a good man wills nothing other than what is commanded and a wicked man can do nothing more than what is permitted, and he can do that only in such a way that he cannot accomplish without punishment what he wills unjustly. Augustine was not very elaborate in his comments on just cause. Nevertheless, he did exert a great influence on later thinkers, who would often cite the following passage on the connection between war, justice, and punishment. From Questions on the Heptateuch, Book VI, Chapter 1018 As a rule just wars are defined as those which avenge injuries, if some nation or state against whom one is waging war has neglected to punish a wrong committed 108 by its citizens, or to return something that was wrongfully taken. Augustine is not always consistent in his views on defense of religion and the spreading of the gospel as just causes for using armed force. The following early work recommends persuasion over persecution. From On the True Religion, Book XVI, Chapter 31 Christ did nothing by force, but did everything by persuading and warning. Indeed, the old slavery having been ended, the time of liberty dawned. Man was already being suitably and profitably persuaded that he had been created with free choice. By performing miracles, Christ instilled faith in the God that he was; by his suffering, he instilled faith in the humanity that he was bearing. Hence, speaking to the crowds as God, he denied his own mother when she was announced to him (Matthew 12:46-50); yet, the Gospel says that as a boy he was subordinate to his parents (Luke 2:51). In his teaching, God appeared; in his stages of growing up, a human being. Also, about to change the water into wine, he said as God, “Go away from me, woman. What do you want of me? My hour is not yet come” (John 2:4). However, when the hour in which he would die as a human being had come, he recognized his mother from the cross and commended her to the disciple whom he loved more than the others (John 19:26-7). To their ruin, the peoples, followers of pleasures, desired riches; he wanted to be poor. They longed for honors and empires; he did not want to become a king. They thought that the bodily generation of children was a great good; he scorned such a union and such descendants. In their pride, they abhorred insults; he withstood every kind of insult. They judged injuries to be intolerable; what greater injury is there than to be condemned though just and innocent? They cursed bodily pain; he was flogged and tortured. They were afraid to die; he was punished with death. They thought that the cross was the most degrading kind of death; he was crucified. All the things which we, not living rightly, were desiring to have, he deemed of little account by abstaining from them. All the things which we, deviating from the zeal for truth, were desiring to avoid, he destroyed by enduring them. No sin can be committed unless that which he scorned is desired or that which he endured is evaded. 109 Gratian. Decretum. Little is known about Gratian, the author of this influential legal textbook, published in Italy around 1140. It is organized around particular cases that raise legal questions. The questions included here are all part of Case 23, dealing with heresy. The questions I have included from that case are those most relevant to arguments dealing with just war. This text became an important source in arguing the justice of later crusades. It’s a little close to the time of the Second Crusade to have been influential in 1148. That is, your character is unlikely to have read it, but it pulls together ideas that were certainly current at the time, and you should feel free to quote from it in your arguments. The format is one in which Gratian presents arguments against his case, and then refutes them. This material should be useful to you regardless of the position you are arguing. I have edited out some of Gratian’s glosses (interpretive commentary). These passages are taken from The Ethics of War: Classic and Contemporary Readings, edd. Gregory M. Reichberg, Henrik Syse, and Endre Begby. Question I Gratian: It would seem that it is contrary to the teaching of the Gospel to serve as a soldier, since the point of all soldiering is either to resist injury or to carry out vengeance; but injury is either warded off from one’s own person or from one’s associates, both of which are prohibited by the law of the Gospel. For it is said: “If anyone strikes you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also” (Matthew 5:39); and again: “If anyone forces you to go one mile go with him two miles” (Matthew 5:41); likewise, the Apostle said to the Romans: “Beloved, never avenge yourselves, but leave it to the wrath of God” (Matthew 12:19): What else, then, is meant by these passages, except that we are barred from resisting injury? 1. Furthermore, when Peter defended his master with a sword, Christ said: “Put your sword into its sheath”; “Do you think that I cannot appeal to my Father, and he will send me more than twelve legions of angels?” (Matthew 26:52). Finally, as is read about St. Andrew, when there was a rush of people to rescue him from the clutches of a wicked judge and to save him from an unjust death, he urged upon them patience, both in word and deed, lest they prevent his martyrdom. What else are we hereby incited to do than patiently to endure similar trials? 2. Next is is said in Proverbs: “Vengeance is mine, and I will repay, says the Lord” [the passage is actually Deuteronomy 32:35.] Likewise, it is said in the Gospel: “Judge not, and you will not be judged” (Mathew 7:11)…. What else is enjoined by all this if not that punishment of delinquents is to be reserved to divine judgment? Since, therefore, as was stated above, all soldiering seems to aim at resisting an attack or at inflicting vengeance, and since each of these is prohibited by the law of the Gospel, it appears that it is a sin to serve as a soldier…. 110 Gratian: Here is how we answer these arguments: The precepts of patience have to prevail less in outward deed than in the preparation of the heart. Hence Augustine said in his Sermon on the Child of the Centurion: Canon 2. The precepts of patience have to be observed through firmness of the mind, not in outward attitude. The just and pious man ought to be ready to put up with the malice of those he wants to become good, in order that the number of the good may increase, instead of adding himself by equal malice to the number of the wicked. In sum, these precepts are rather for the preparation of the heart which is internal, than for the deed which is in the open; so that patience and benevolence are to be confined to the secret of the mind, while that has to show in the open what would seem to profit to those we want to become better…. Likewise, Augustine to Boniface: Do not think that none can please God while serving in arms…. Therefore keep this in mind first of all, when you prepare to fight, that your valor, including your bodily courage, is a gift of God. Thus you will care not to use a gift of God against the Lord. For, when it has been vowed, faith is not to be kept even toward the enemy against whom war is being waged; how much more toward a friend whom one is fighting for? To strive for peace is a matter of willing, but war should be of necessity, so that God may free us from necessity and conserve us in peace. For peace is not pursued in order to wage war, but war is waged in order to gain peace. Be therefore peaceable while you wage war, so that you may in winning lead over to the benefit of peace those whom you defeat…. It is therefore necessity, not will, that crushes the fighting enemy. Just as he who fights and resists is checked by violence, mercy is due to the vanquished, to the captive, mostly when no trouble to the peace is to be feared on his part. Canon 3. Many can please God in the profession of arms. Likewise, Augustine against the Manichaeans: What is to be blamed in war? Is it the death of some who are to die in any case, so that others may be forced to Canon 4. peaceful subjection? To reprove this is cowardice, not What is rightfully to religion. What is rightly reproved in war are love of be blamed in war. mischief, revengeful cruelty, fierce implacable enmity, wild resistance, lust of power, and such like. And it is generally to punish these things, when force is required to inflict punishment, that, in obedience to God or some lawful authority, good men undertake wars, when they find themselves in such a position as regards the conduct of human affairs, that this very position justly compels them either to give such orders or to obey them. Thus John does not order soldiers to lay down their arms, and Christ urges that money be given to Caesar, because soldiers need to get their 111 pay on account of war. For this natural order which seeks the peace of mankind ordains that the authority and resolve to undertake war lie with the princes. 1. But if war is undertaken to serve human greed, this does not trouble the saints, over whom no one can have any power but what is given from above. For there is no power but from God, who either orders or permits. Thus a rightous man, who happens to be serving even under a sacrilegious king, can rightfully engage in combat at his command if, keeping up the order instead of peace, it is either certain that what he is ordered is not contrary to God's law, or it is not certain whether it is contrary to God's law…. Gratian: From all this we gather that soldiering is not a sin, and that the precepts of patience are to be observed in the preparation of the heart, not in the ostentation of the body. Question II Gratian: Now, as to what constitutes a just war, Isidore in Twenty Books of Etymologies says: That war is just which is waged by an edict in order to regain what has been stolen or to repel the attack of enemies. A judge is called such because he pronounces justice to the people, or because he adjudicates justly. To adjudicate justly is to judge justly. For he is no judge who has no justice within himself. Canon 1. What is a just war. Likewise, Augustine in Seven Questions Concerning the Heptateuch says: Our Lord God himself gave the order to Joshua to set up an ambush behind him, that is, to arrange his warriors so as to trap the enemy in an ambush. This teaches us that such things are not done unjustly by those who fight a just war; so that the just man doesn't need particularly to worry about this, except that war be undertaken by one who has the right to do so. For this right does not belong to everyone. Yet when a just war is undertaken, it does not affect justice whether one fights openly or by ambushes. Just wars are usually defined as those which have for their end the avenging of injuries, when it is necessary by war to constrain a nation or a city which has either neglected to punish an evil action committed by its citizens, or to restore what has been taken unjustly. But also this kind of war is certainly just which is ordered by God, who knows what is owed to everyone; in which case the leader of the army or the people itself are not to be deemed authors but agents of the war. Canon 2. It is of no concern to justice whether one fights openly or by ambushes. Gratian: Since therefore the just war is one which is waged by an edict, or by which injustices arc avenged, it is asked how the children of Israel fought just wars. On this subject, Augustine wrote in his Questions on [the book of] Numbers that 112 Canon 3. The sons of Israel were refused passage, and therefore they waged just wars. One ought indeed to note how just wars were waged by the sons of Israel against the Amorites. For they were denied innocent passage, which ought to have been granted according to the most equitable law governing human society. Question III Gratian: But injury done to associates should not be repelled, as shown by examples and authorities…. Thus we also read about the faithful that they suffered with joy to be robbed of their goods, without asking for any assistance by others; rather, they rejoiced at being found worthy of bearing disgrace in the name of Christ. And the Apostle also advises the Corinthians, in his first epistle to them, patiently to put up with injury and fraud, rather than to scandalize their brethren by asserting their rights… Since therefore he who is being protected from injury by the force of arms is no less scandalized than he whose stolen property is being claimed before a judge, it is evident that armed assistance ought not to be requested. And what ought not to be requested, ought not to be granted in law. But on the other hand many things are being regularly granted that are not legally claimed. The virtuous will indeed not regularly claim that an injury be sanctioned, lest he render all evil for an evil; and yet the judge would rightly inflict such punishment; nor would he do it if he did not thereby render a good deed for an evil one…. Likewise, Ambrose writes in the first book of his work On the Duties of Ministers: Canon 5. He is full of justice who protects his country from barbarians. The courage that protects one’s country from barbarians in war, or defends the weak in peace, or associates against brigands, is full of justice. Likewise, Ambrose writes in the first book of his work On the Duties of Ministers: The law of valor lies not in inflicting injury but in repelling it; for he who fails to ward of an injury from an associate if he can do so, is quite as blamable as he who inflicts it. It is here, therefore, that Moses the saint gave the first proofs of his courage at war. For when he saw a Hebrew being mistreated by an Egyptian, he defended him by striking the Egyptian and hiding him in the sand. Solomon too said: Deliver him who is being led to death (Proverbs 24:11). Canon 7. He who does not ward off an injury from an associate is similar to him who caused it. 113 Question IV Gratian: Likewise, this Gospel sentence, “He who resorts to the sword shall perish by the sword,” that is advanced as an objection, is explained by Augustine in Book II Chap. 70 of his Against Manicheans: Canon 36. Who should be said to resort to the sword. He resorts to the sword who has armed himself to spill the blood of another without the order or assent of a legitimate power. Gratian: It has been briefly shown that the good laudably pursue the wicked, and that the wicked damnably pursue the good…. It has been shown that vengeance may be exerted. It now remains to show who is to exert it and by what means, and that those who are punished are more cherished than those who remain unpunished: both points are proven with many authorities. Likewise, Augustine writes in On the Lord's Sermon on the Mountain: That vengeance which aims at correction is not prohibited; it even belongs to mercy, and it is not in conflict with the attitude whereby he who wants someone to be punished is ready to suffer more from him; but only he is apt to inflict this vengeance who has overcome by the mildness of love that hatred which usually impels those who avenge themselves. Indeed, it is not to be feared that the parents would hate their little son when he is being chidden in order not to sin again…. No one should therefore exert vengeance but he on whom regular power has been conferred thereto, and who punishes like a father striking his little child, unable as he is to hate him owing to his age…. Canon 51. Vengeance that aims at correction is not to be prohibited. Gratian: From all this we gather that vengeance is to be inflicted not out of passion for vengeance itself, but out of zeal for justice; nor in order that hatred be vented, but that evil deeds be corrected. But since retribution is sometimes inflicted by destroying goods, sometimes by flogging, sometimes even by death, we ask whether it is slnful for the judge or his minister to put the guilty to death. Question V Gratian: Now, that nobody is allowed to kill anyone is proved by that precept whereby the Lord in the Decalogue prohibited homicide, saying: “Thou shalt not kill.” Likewise it is said in the Gospel that “Whoever takes the sword, shall perish by the sword.” Likewise, it is said by Pope Gregory: 114 Canon 7. Those who are accused of shedding blood must be defended by the Church. Let the Church defend those who are accused of bloodshed, lest it partake in the spilling of blood. Gratian: Hence it appears that the wicked are to be corrected by flogging, not to be quelled by maiming or temporal death. §l. But an objection arises from what the Lord said to Moses: “Do not suffer evildoers to live” (Exodus 22:18)…. This precept forbids thus anyone to arm himself by his own authority to inflict death on somebody; it does not forbid putting the culprits to death by the command of the law. For he who in the exercise of public power puts to death the wicked by the command of the law is neither considered a transgressor of this precept nor a stranger to the heavenly fatherland. Therefore Augustine wrote to Publicola: As to putting men to death in order that nobody be killed by them, I do not approve of it, except perhaps by a soldier or by someone held thereto owing to a public function, so that he does not do it for himself but for others, or for the city where he finds himself, having been conferred legitimate power in conformity with his person. As to those who are held back by some terror from doing evil, they may themselves draw some benefit from it. Hence it is said: We should not resist evil, lest you take delight in vengeance, which feeds the mind in others’ misfortune; yet we should not for all that neglect the correction of evil men…. Canon 8. It is no sin to kill a man in the exercise of a public function. I.ikcwisc, Augustine, On Free Will, Book 1: If killing a man is indeed homicide, it sometimes can happen without sin. For neither a soldier killing an enemy, nor a judge or his minister killing a criminal, nor someone inadvertently or imprudently throwing a spear would sin, in my opinion, when they killed a man. Nor are they usually called homicides. - The same, in Questions on Leviticus: §l. When a man is justly killed, it is the law, not you, who kills him. Canon 41. He does not sin who kills a criminal by virtue of his functions. Likewise, Pope Nicholas to the army of the Franks: Canon 46. Whoever dies in the fight against the infidel is deserving of the celestial kingdom. We want all of you to know charity, since none of those who will have faithfully died in this battle (we say this without wishing it) shall in the least be denied the celestial kingdom. Likewise, Augustine to Boniface: 115 For who of us would have someone of his enemies, I say not die, but even lose something? But if the house of David could not regain peace otherwise than by the death of Absalom, his son, in the war he was waging against the father—although the latter had been at great pains to enjoin his men as far as possible to take him safe and alive so that he might repent and obtain his pardon from paternal affection—what else remained than to weep his loss and to soothe his sorrow at the thought of peace being restored in his kingdom? Canon 48. The peace of the Church alleviates the sorrow caused by those who are lost. Gratian: If therefore saintly men and public powers waging war did not transgress that command, “Thou shalt not kill,” while inflicting death on all villains deserving it; if the soldier, acting in obedience to his authorities, is not guilty of homicide when, following their order, he kills any villain; if killing murderers and punishing poisoners does not amount to spilling blood but to serving the law; if the peace of the church allays the sorrow caused by the lost ones; if those who, inflamed by the zeal of their Catholic mother, put to death the excommunicated are not considered homicides—then it is obvious that it is allowed not only to whip but also to kill the wicked. 116 New Testament Passages All factions should make use of the New Testament. The German and Eastern factions can find passages supporting peace in Debate 1. Each candidate for leadership can find passages supporting secular or religious authority to support their claims in Debate 2. A Table of Contents for New Testament Passages Matthew 5 Matthew 16 Matthew 22 Luke 3 Luke 14 Luke 19 Luke 22 Matthew 26 John 18 John 15 Romans 13 1 Peter 2 The Beatitudes, Salt and Light, Fulfillment of the Law, Murder, Adultery, Divorce, Oaths, An Eye for an Eye, Love for Enemies Demand for a Sign, Yeast of the Pharisees and Sadducees, Peter’s Confession of Christ, Jesus Predicts his Death Paying Taxes to Caesar John the Baptist Prepares the Way Jesus at a Pharisee’s House, Parable of the Great Banquet, Cost of Being a Disciple Parable of the Ten Minas, Triumphal Entry, Jesus at the Temple Judas Agrees to Betray Jesus, Last Supper, Jesus Prays on Mount of Olives, Jesus Arrested Jesus Arrested Jesus Arrested Vine and Branches, World Hates the Disciples Submission to Authorities, Love for the Day is Near Submission to Rulers and Masters 117 Matthew 5 The Beatitudes 1 Now when he saw the crowds, he went up on a mountainside and sat down. His disciples came to him, 2 and he began to teach them, saying: 3Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. 4 Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted. 5 Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth. 6 Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled. 7 Blessed are the merciful, for they will be shown mercy. 8 Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God. 9 Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called sons of God. 10 Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. 11Blessed are you when people insult you, persecute you and falsely say all kinds of evil against you because of me. 12 Rejoice and be glad, because great is your reward in heaven, for in the same way they persecuted the prophets who were before you. Salt and Light 13 You are the salt of the earth. But if the salt loses its saltiness, how can it be made salty again? It is no longer good for anything, except to be thrown out and trampled by men. 14 You are the light of the world. A city on a hill cannot be hidden. 15 Neither do people light a lamp and put it under a bowl. Instead they put it on its stand, and it gives light to everyone in the house. 16 In the same way, let your light shine before men, that they may see your good deeds and praise your Father in heaven. The Fulfilment of the Law 17 Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfil them. 18 I tell you the truth, until heaven and earth disappear, not the smallest letter, not the least stroke of a pen, will by any means disappear from the Law until everything is accomplished. 19 Anyone who breaks one of the least of these commandments and teaches others to do the same will be called least in the kingdom of heaven, but whoever practises and teaches these commands will be called great in the kingdom of heaven. 20 For I tell you that unless your righteousness surpasses that of the Pharisees and the teachers of the law, you will certainly not enter the kingdom of heaven. Murder 21 You have heard that it was said to the people long ago, 'Do not murder, and anyone who murders will be subject to judgment.' 22 But I tell you that anyone who is angry with his brother will be subject to judgment. Again, anyone who says to his brother, 'Raca,' is answerable to the Sanhedrin. But anyone who says, 'You fool!' will be in danger of the fire of hell. 118 23 Therefore, if you are offering your gift at the altar and there remember that your brother has something against you, 24 leave your gift there in front of the altar. First go and be reconciled to your brother; then come and offer your gift. 25 Settle matters quickly with your adversary who is taking you to court. Do it while you are still with him on the way, or he may hand you over to the judge, and the judge may hand you over to the officer, and you may be thrown into prison. 26 I tell you the truth, you will not get out until you have paid the last penny. Adultery 27 You have heard that it was said, 'Do not commit adultery.' 28 But I tell you that anyone who looks at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with her in his heart. 29 If your right eye causes you to sin, gouge it out and throw it away. It is better for you to lose one part of your body than for your whole body to be thrown into hell. 30 And if your right hand causes you to sin, cut it off and throw it away. It is better for you to lose one part of your body than for your whole body to go into hell. Divorce 31 It has been said, 'Anyone who divorces his wife must give her a certificate of divorce.' 32 But I tell you that anyone who divorces his wife, except for marital unfaithfulness, causes her to become an adulteress, and anyone who marries the divorced woman commits adultery. Oaths 33 Again, you have heard that it was said to the people long ago, 'Do not break your oath, but keep the oaths you have made to the Lord.' 34 But I tell you, Do not swear at all: either by heaven, for it is God's throne; 35 or by the earth, for it is his footstool; or by Jerusalem, for it is the city of the Great King. 36 And do not swear by your head, for you cannot make even one hair white or black. 37 Simply let your 'Yes' be 'Yes', and your 'No', 'No'; anything beyond this comes from the evil one. An Eye for an Eye 38 You have heard that it was said, 'Eye for eye, and tooth for tooth.' 39 But I tell you, Do not resist an evil person. If someone strikes you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also. 40 And if someone wants to sue you and take your tunic, let him have your cloak as well. 41 If someone forces you to go one mile, go with him two miles. 42 Give to the one who asks you, and do not turn away from the one who wants to borrow from you. Love for Enemies 43 You have heard that it was said, 'Love your neighbour and hate your enemy.' 44 But I tell you: Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, 119 45 that you may be sons of your Father in heaven. He causes his sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous. 46 If you love those who love you, what reward will you get? Are not even the tax collectors doing that? 47 And if you greet only your brothers, what are you doing more than others? Do not even pagans do that? 48 Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect. 120 Matthew 16 The Demand for a Sign 1 The Pharisees and Sadducees came to Jesus and tested him by asking him to show them a sign from heaven. 2 He replied, When evening comes, you say, 'It will be fair weather, for the sky is red,' 3 and in the morning, 'Today it will be stormy, for the sky is red and overcast.' You know how to interpret the appearance of the sky, but you cannot interpret the signs of the times. 4 A wicked and adulterous generation looks for a miraculous sign, but none will be given it except the sign of Jonah. Jesus then left them and went away. The Yeast of the Pharisees and Sadducees 5 When they went across the lake, the disciples forgot to take bread. 6 Be careful, Jesus said to them. Be on your guard against the yeast of the Pharisees and Sadducees. 7 They discussed this among themselves and said, It is because we didn't bring any bread. 8 Aware of their discussion, Jesus asked, You of little faith, why are you talking among yourselves about having no bread? 9 Do you still not understand? Don't you remember the five loaves for the five thousand, and how many basketfuls you gathered? 10 Or the seven loaves for the four thousand, and how many basketfuls you gathered? 11 How is it you don't understand that I was not talking to you about bread? But be on your guard against the yeast of the Pharisees and Sadducees. 12 Then they understood that he was not telling them to guard against the yeast used in bread, but against the teaching of the Pharisees and Sadducees. Peter's Confession of Christ 13 When Jesus came to the region of Caesarea Philippi, he asked his disciples, Who do people say the Son of Man is? 14 They replied, Some say John the Baptist; others say Elijah; and still others, Jeremiah or one of the prophets. 15 But what about you? he asked. Who do you say I am? 16 Simon Peter answered, You are the Christ, the Son of the living God. 17 Jesus replied, Blessed are you, Simon son of Jonah, for this was not revealed to you by man, but by my Father in heaven. 18 And I tell you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of Hades will not overcome it. 19 I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven; whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven. 20 Then he warned his disciples not to tell anyone that he was the Christ. Jesus Predicts His Death 21 From that time on Jesus began to explain to his disciples that he must go to Jerusalem and suffer many things at the hands of the elders, chief priests and teachers of the law, and that he must be killed and on the third day be raised to life. 22 Peter took him aside and began to rebuke him. Never, Lord! he said. This shall never 121 happen to you! 23 Jesus turned and said to Peter, Get behind me, Satan! You are a stumbling-block to me; you do not have in mind the things of God, but the things of men. 24 Then Jesus said to his disciples, If anyone would come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross and follow me. 25 For whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for me will find it. 26 What good will it be for a man if he gains the whole world, yet forfeits his soul? Or what can a man give in exchange for his soul? 27 For the Son of Man is going to come in his Father's glory with his angels, and then he will reward each person according to what he has done. 28 I tell you the truth, some who are standing here will not taste death before they see the Son of Man coming in his kingdom. 122 Matthew 22 Paying Taxes to Caesar 15 Then the Pharisees went out and laid plans to trap him in his words. 16 They sent their disciples to him along with the Herodians. Teacher, they said, we know you are a man of integrity and that you teach the way of God in accordance with the truth. You aren't swayed by men, because you pay no attention to who they are. 17 Tell us then, what is your opinion? Is it right to pay taxes to Caesar or not? 18 But Jesus, knowing their evil intent, said, You hypocrites, why are you trying to trap me? 19 Show me the coin used for paying the tax. They brought him a denarius, 20 and he asked them, Whose portrait is this? And whose inscription? 21 Caesar's, they replied. Then he said to them, Give to Caesar what is Caesar's, and to God what is God's. 22 When they heard this, they were amazed. So they left him and went away. Luke 3 John the Baptist Prepares the Way 7John said to the crowds coming out to be baptised by him, You brood of vipers! Who warned you to flee from the coming wrath? 8 Produce fruit in keeping with repentance. And do not begin to say to yourselves, 'We have Abraham as our father.' For I tell you that out of these stones God can raise up children for Abraham. 9 The axe is already at the root of the trees, and every tree that does not produce good fruit will be cut down and thrown into the fire. 10 What should we do then? the crowd asked. 11 John answered, The man with two tunics should share with him who has none, and the one who has food should do the same. 12 Tax collectors also came to be baptised. Teacher, they asked, what should we do? 13 Don't collect any more than you are required to, he told them. 14 Then some soldiers asked him, And what should we do? He replied, Don't extort money and don't accuse people falsely— be content with your pay. 123 Luke 14 Jesus at a Pharisee's House 1 One Sabbath, when Jesus went to eat in the house of a prominent Pharisee, he was being carefully watched. 2 There in front of him was a man suffering from dropsy. 3 Jesus asked the Pharisees and experts in the law, Is it lawful to heal on the Sabbath or not? 4 But they remained silent. So taking hold of the man, he healed him and sent him away. 5 Then he asked them, If one of you has a son or an ox that falls into a well on the Sabbath day, will you not immediately pull him out? 6 And they had nothing to say. 7 When he noticed how the guests picked the places of honour at the table, he told them this parable: 8 When someone invites you to a wedding feast, do not take the place of honour, for a person more distinguished than you may have been invited. 9 If so, the host who invited both of you will come and say to you, 'Give this man your seat.' Then, humiliated, you will have to take the least important place. 10 But when you are invited, take the lowest place, so that when your host comes, he will say to you, 'Friend, move up to a better place.' Then you will be honoured in the presence of all your fellow guests. 11 For everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, and he who humbles himself will be exalted. 12 Then Jesus said to his host, When you give a luncheon or dinner, do not invite your friends, your brothers or relatives, or your rich neighbours; if you do, they may invite you back and so you will be repaid. 13 But when you give a banquet, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, the blind, 14 and you will be blessed. Although they cannot repay you, you will be repaid at the resurrection of the righteous. The Parable of the Great Banquet 15 When one of those at the table with him heard this, he said to Jesus, Blessed is the man who will eat at the feast in the kingdom of God. 16 Jesus replied: A certain man was preparing a great banquet and invited many guests. 17 At the time of the banquet he sent his servant to tell those who had been invited, 'Come, for everything is now ready.' 18 But they all alike began to make excuses. The first said, 'I have just bought a field, and I must go and see it. Please excuse me.' 19 Another said, 'I have just bought five yoke of oxen, and I'm on my way to try them out. Please excuse me.' 20 Still another said, 'I have just got married, so I can't come.' 21 The servant came back and reported this to his master. Then the owner of the house became angry and ordered his servant, 'Go out quickly into the streets and alleys of the town and bring in the poor, the crippled, the blind and the lame.' 22 'Sir,' the servant said, 'what you ordered has been done, but there is still room.' 23 Then the master told his servant, 'Go out to the roads and country lanes and make them 124 come in, so that my house will be full. 24 I tell you, not one of those men who were invited will get a taste of my banquet.' The Cost of Being a Disciple 25 Large crowds were travelling with Jesus, and turning to them he said: 26 If anyone comes to me and does not hate his father and mother, his wife and children, his brothers and sisters— yes, even his own life— he cannot be my disciple. 27 And anyone who does not carry his cross and follow me cannot be my disciple. 28 Suppose one of you wants to build a tower. Will he not first sit down and estimate the cost to see if he has enough money to complete it? 29 For if he lays the foundation and is not able to finish it, everyone who sees it will ridicule him, 30 saying, 'This fellow began to build and was not able to finish.' 31 Or suppose a king is about to go to war against another king. Will he not first sit down and consider whether he is able with ten thousand men to oppose the one coming against him with twenty thousand? 32 If he is not able, he will send a delegation while the other is still a long way off and will ask for terms of peace. 33 In the same way, any of you who does not give up everything he has cannot be my disciple. 34 Salt is good, but if it loses its saltiness, how can it be made salty again? 35 It is fit neither for the soil nor for the manure heap; it is thrown out. He who has ears to hear, let him hear. 125 Luke 19 The Parable of the Ten Minas 11 While they were listening to this, he went on to tell them a parable, because he was near Jerusalem and the people thought that the kingdom of God was going to appear at once. 12 He said: A man of noble birth went to a distant country to have himself appointed king and then to return. 13 So he called ten of his servants and gave them ten minas. 'Put this money to work,' he said, 'until I come back.' 14 But his subjects hated him and sent a delegation after him to say, 'We don't want this man to be our king.' 15 He was made king, however, and returned home. Then he sent for the servants to whom he had given the money, in order to find out what they had gained with it. 16 The first one came and said, 'Sir, your mina has earned ten more.' 17 'Well done, my good servant!' his master replied. 'Because you have been trustworthy in a very small matter, take charge of ten cities.' 18 The second came and said, 'Sir, your mina has earned five more.' 19 His master answered, 'You take charge of five cities.' 20 Then another servant came and said, 'Sir, here is your mina; I have kept it laid away in a piece of cloth. 21 I was afraid of you, because you are a hard man. You take out what you did not put in and reap what you did not sow.' 22 His master replied, 'I will judge you by your own words, you wicked servant! You knew, did you, that I am a hard man, taking out what I did not put in, and reaping what I did not sow? 23 Why then didn't you put my money on deposit, so that when I came back, I could have collected it with interest?' 24 Then he said to those standing by, 'Take his mina away from him and give it to the one who has ten minas.' 25 'Sir,' they said, 'he already has ten!' 26 He replied, 'I tell you that to everyone who has, more will be given, but as for the one who has nothing, even what he has will be taken away. 27 But those enemies of mine who did not want me to be a king over them— bring them here and kill them in front of me.' The Triumphal Entry 28 After Jesus had said this, he went on ahead, going up to Jerusalem. 29 As he approached Bethphage and Bethany at the hill called the Mount of Olives, he sent two of his disciples, saying to them, 30 Go to the village ahead of you, and as you enter it, you will find a colt tied there, which no-one has ever ridden. Untie it and bring it here. 31 If anyone asks you, 'Why are you untying it?' tell him, 'The Lord needs it.' 32 Those who were sent ahead went and found it just as he had told them. 33 As they were untying the colt, its owners asked them, Why are you untying the colt? 34 They replied, The Lord needs it. 35 They brought it to Jesus, threw their cloaks on the colt and put Jesus on it. 126 36 As he went along, people spread their cloaks on the road. 37 When he came near the place where the road goes down the Mount of Olives, the whole crowd of disciples began joyfully to praise God in loud voices for all the miracles they had seen: 38Blessed is the king who comes in the name of the Lord! Peace in heaven and glory in the highest! 39Some of the Pharisees in the crowd said to Jesus, Teacher, rebuke your disciples! 40 I tell you, he replied, if they keep quiet, the stones will cry out. 41 As he approached Jerusalem and saw the city, he wept over it 42 and said, If you, even you, had only known on this day what would bring you peace— but now it is hidden from your eyes. 43 The days will come upon you when your enemies will build an embankment against you and encircle you and hem you in on every side. 44 They will dash you to the ground, you and the children within your walls. They will not leave one stone on another, because you did not recognise the time of God's coming to you. Jesus at the Temple 45 Then he entered the temple area and began driving out those who were selling. 46 It is written, he said to them, 'My house will be a house of prayer'; but you have made it 'a den of robbers'. 47 Every day he was teaching at the temple. But the chief priests, the teachers of the law and the leaders among the people were trying to kill him. 48 Yet they could not find any way to do it, because all the people hung on his words. 127 Luke 22 Judas Agrees to Betray Jesus 1 Now the Feast of Unleavened Bread, called the Passover, was approaching, 2 and the chief priests and the teachers of the law were looking for some way to get rid of Jesus, for they were afraid of the people. 3 Then Satan entered Judas, called Iscariot, one of the Twelve. 4 And Judas went to the chief priests and the officers of the temple guard and discussed with them how he might betray Jesus. 5 They were delighted and agreed to give him money. 6 He consented, and watched for an opportunity to hand Jesus over to them when no crowd was present. The Last Supper 7 Then came the day of Unleavened Bread on which the Passover lamb had to be sacrificed. 8 Jesus sent Peter and John, saying, Go and make preparations for us to eat the Passover. 9 Where do you want us to prepare for it? they asked. 10 He replied, As you enter the city, a man carrying a jar of water will meet you. Follow him to the house that he enters, 11 and say to the owner of the house, 'The Teacher asks: Where is the guest room, where I may eat the Passover with my disciples?' 12 He will show you a large upper room, all furnished. Make preparations there. 13 They left and found things just as Jesus had told them. So they prepared the Passover. 14 When the hour came, Jesus and his apostles reclined at the table. 15 And he said to them, I have eagerly desired to eat this Passover with you before I suffer. 16 For I tell you, I will not eat it again until it finds fulfilment in the kingdom of God. 17 After taking the cup, he gave thanks and said, Take this and divide it among you. 18 For I tell you I will not drink again of the fruit of the vine until the kingdom of God comes. 19 And he took bread, gave thanks and broke it, and gave it to them, saying, This is my body given for you; do this in remembrance of me. 20 In the same way, after the supper he took the cup, saying, This cup is the new covenant in my blood, which is poured out for you. 21 But the hand of him who is going to betray me is with mine on the table. 22 The Son of Man will go as it has been decreed, but woe to that man who betrays him. 23 They began to question among themselves which of them it might be who would do this. 24 Also a dispute arose among them as to which of them was considered to be greatest. 25 Jesus said to them, The kings of the Gentiles lord it over them; and those who exercise authority over them call themselves Benefactors. 26 But you are not to be like that. Instead, the greatest among you should be like the youngest, and the one who rules like the one who serves. 27 For who is greater, the one who is at the table or the one who serves? Is it not the one who is at the table? But I am among you as one who serves. 28 You are those who have stood by me in my trials. 128 29 And I confer on you a kingdom, just as my Father conferred one on me, 30 so that you may eat and drink at my table in my kingdom and sit on thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel. 31 Simon, Simon, Satan has asked to sift you as wheat. 32 But I have prayed for you, Simon, that your faith may not fail. And when you have turned back, strengthen your brothers. 33 But he replied, Lord, I am ready to go with you to prison and to death. 34 Jesus answered, I tell you, Peter, before the cock crows today, you will deny three times that you know me. 35 Then Jesus asked them, When I sent you without purse, bag or sandals, did you lack anything? Nothing, they answered. 36 He said to them, But now if you have a purse, take it, and also a bag; and if you don't have a sword, sell your cloak and buy one. 37 It is written: 'And he was numbered with the transgressors'; and I tell you that this must be fulfilled in me. Yes, what is written about me is reaching its fulfilment. 38 The disciples said, See, Lord, here are two swords. That is enough, he replied. Jesus Prays on the Mount of Olives 39 Jesus went out as usual to the Mount of Olives, and his disciples followed him. 40 On reaching the place, he said to them, Pray that you will not fall into temptation. 41 He withdrew about a stone's throw beyond them, knelt down and prayed, 42 Father, if you are willing, take this cup from me; yet not my will, but yours be done. 43 An angel from heaven appeared to him and strengthened him. 44 And being in anguish, he prayed more earnestly, and his sweat was like drops of blood falling to the ground. 45 When he rose from prayer and went back to the disciples, he found them asleep, exhausted from sorrow. 46 Why are you sleeping? he asked them. Get up and pray so that you will not fall into temptation. Jesus Arrested 47 While he was still speaking a crowd came up, and the man who was called Judas, one of the Twelve, was leading them. He approached Jesus to kiss him, 48 but Jesus asked him, Judas, are you betraying the Son of Man with a kiss? 49 When Jesus' followers saw what was going to happen, they said, Lord, should we strike with our swords? 50 And one of them struck the servant of the high priest, cutting off his right ear. 51 But Jesus answered, No more of this! And he touched the man's ear and healed him. 129 Matthew 26 Jesus Arrested 47 While he was still speaking, Judas, one of the Twelve, arrived. With him was a large crowd armed with swords and clubs, sent from the chief priests and the elders of the people. 48 Now the betrayer had arranged a signal with them: The one I kiss is the man; arrest him. 49 Going at once to Jesus, Judas said, Greetings, Rabbi! and kissed him. 50 Jesus replied, Friend, do what you came for. Then the men stepped forward, seized Jesus and arrested him. 51 With that, one of Jesus' companions reached for his sword, drew it out and struck the servant of the high priest, cutting off his ear. 52 Put your sword back in its place, Jesus said to him, for all who draw the sword will die by the sword. 53 Do you think I cannot call on my Father, and he will at once put at my disposal more than twelve legions of angels? 54 But how then would the Scriptures be fulfilled that say it must happen in this way? 55 At that time Jesus said to the crowd, Am I leading a rebellion, that you have come out with swords and clubs to capture me? Every day I sat in the temple courts teaching, and you did not arrest me. 56 But this has all taken place that the writings of the prophets might be fulfilled. Then all the disciples deserted him and fled. John 18 Jesus Arrested 1 When he had finished praying, Jesus left with his disciples and crossed the Kidron Valley. On the other side there was an olive grove, and he and his disciples went into it. 2 Now Judas, who betrayed him, knew the place, because Jesus had often met there with his disciples. 3 So Judas came to the grove, guid- ing a detachment of soldiers and some officials from the chief priests and Pharisees. They were carrying torches, lanterns and weapons. 4 Jesus, knowing all that was going to happen to him, went out and asked them, Who is it you want? 5 Jesus of Nazareth, they replied. I am he, Jesus said. (And Judas the traitor was standing there with them.) 6 When Jesus said, I am he, they drew back and fell to the ground. 7 Again he asked them, Who is it you want? And they said, Jesus of Nazareth. 8 I told you that I am he, Jesus answered. If you are looking for me, then let these men go. 9 This happened so that the words he had spoken would be fulfilled: I have not lost one of those you gave me. 10 Then Simon Peter, who had a sword, drew it and struck the high priest's servant, cutting off his right ear. (The servant's name was Malchus.) 11 Jesus commanded Peter, Put your sword away! Shall I not drink the cup the Father has given me? 130 John 15 The Vine and the Branches 1 I am the true vine, and my Father is the gardener. 2 He cuts off every branch in me that bears no fruit, while every branch that does bear fruit he prunes so that it will be even more fruitful. 3 You are already clean because of the word I have spoken to you. 4 Remain in me, and I will remain in you. No branch can bear fruit by itself; it must remain in the vine. Neither can you bear fruit unless you remain in me. 5 I am the vine; you are the branches. If a man remains in me and I in him, he will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing. 6 If anyone does not remain in me, he is like a branch that is thrown away and withers; such branches are picked up, thrown into the fire and burned. 7 If you remain in me and my words remain in you, ask whatever you wish, and it will be given you. 8 This is to my Father's glory, that you bear much fruit, showing yourselves to be my disciples. 9 As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Now remain in my love. 10 If you obey my commands, you will remain in my love, just as I have obeyed my Father's commands and remain in his love. 11 I have told you this so that my joy may be in you and that your joy may be complete. 12 My command is this: Love each other as I have loved you. 13 Greater love has no one than this, that he lay down his life for his friends. 14 You are my friends if you do what I command. 15 I no longer call you servants, because a servant does not know his master's business. Instead, I have called you friends, for everything that I learned from my Father I have made known to you. 16 You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you to go and bear fruit— fruit that will last. Then the Father will give you whatever you ask in my name. 17 This is my command: Love each other. The World Hates the Disciples 18 If the world hates you, keep in mind that it hated me first. 19 If you belonged to the world, it would love you as its own. As it is, you do not belong to the world, but I have chosen you out of the world. That is why the world hates you. 20 Remember the words I spoke to you: 'No servant is greater than his master.' If they persecuted me, they will persecute you also. If they obeyed my teaching, they will obey yours also. 21 They will treat you this way because of my name, for they do not know the One who sent me. 22 If I had not come and spoken to them, they would not be guilty of sin. Now, however, they have no excuse for their sin. 23 He who hates me hates my Father as well. 24 If I had not done among them what no-one else did, they would not be guilty of sin. But now they have seen these miracles, and yet they have hated both me and my Father. 25 But this is to fulfil what is written in their Law: 'They hated me without reason.' 131 26 When the Counsellor comes, whom I will send to you from the Father, the Spirit of truth who goes out from the Father, he will testify about me. 27 And you also must testify, for you have been with me from the beginning. 132 Romans 13 Submission to the Authorities 1 Everyone must submit himself to the governing authorities, for there is no authority except that which God has established. The authorities that exist have been established by God. 2 Consequently, he who rebels against the authority is rebelling against what God has instituted, and those who do so will bring judgment on themselves. 3 For rulers hold no terror for those who do right, but for those who do wrong. Do you want to be free from fear of the one in authority? Then do what is right and he will commend you. 4 For he is God's servant to do you good. But if you do wrong, be afraid, for he does not bear the sword for nothing. He is God's servant, an agent of wrath to bring punishment on the wrongdoer. 5 Therefore, it is necessary to submit to the authorities, not only because of possible punishment but also because of conscience. 6 This is also why you pay taxes, for the authorities are God's servants, who give their full time to governing. 7 Give everyone what you owe him: If you owe taxes, pay taxes; if revenue, then revenue; if respect, then respect; if honour, then honour. Love, for the Day Is Near 8 Let no debt remain outstanding, except the continuing debt to love one another, for he who loves his fellow-man has fulfilled the law. 9 The commandments, Do not commit adultery, Do not murder, Do not steal, Do not covet, and whatever other commandment there may be, are summed up in this one rule: Love your neighbour as yourself. 10 Love does no harm to its neighbour. Therefore love is the fulfilment of the law. 11 And do this, understanding the present time. The hour has come for you to wake up from your slumber, because our salvation is nearer now than when we first believed. 12 The night is nearly over; the day is almost here. So let us put aside the deeds of darkness and put on the armour of light. 13 Let us behave decently, as in the daytime, not in orgies and drunkenness, not in sexual immorality and debauchery, not in dissension and jealousy. 14 Rather, clothe yourselves with the Lord Jesus Christ, and do not think about how to gratify the desires of the sinful nature. 133 1 Peter 2 Submission to Rulers and Masters 13 Submit yourselves for the Lord's sake to every authority instituted among men: whether to the king, as the supreme authority, 14 or to governors, who are sent by him to punish those who do wrong and to commend those who do right. 15 For it is God's will that by doing good you should silence the ignorant talk of foolish men. 16 Live as free men, but do not use your freedom as a cover-up for evil; live as servants of God. 17 Show proper respect to everyone: Love the brotherhood of believers, fear God, honour the king. 18 Slaves, submit yourselves to your masters with all respect, not only to those who are good and considerate, but also to those who are harsh. 19 For it is commendable if a man bears up under the pain of unjust suffering because he is conscious of God. 20 But how is it to your credit if you receive a beating for doing wrong and endure it? But if you suffer for doing good and you endure it, this is commendable before God. 21 To this you were called, because Christ suffered for you, leaving you an example, that you should follow in his steps. 22He committed no sin, and no deceit was found in his mouth. 23When they hurled their insults at him, he did not retaliate; when he suffered, he made no threats. Instead, he entrusted himself to him who judges justly. 24 He himself bore our sins in his body on the tree, so that we might die to sins and live for righteousness; by his wounds you have been healed. 25 For you were like sheep going astray, but now you have returned to the Shepherd and Overseer of your souls. 134 Mark Carnes 1/20/09 12:06 AM Formatted: Font:Italic, Font color: Black Islam and the Qur’an This essay is taken from the Reacting to the Past faculty forum. It was originally written for use with the reacting game, Defining a Nation: India on the Eve of Independence, 1945. “Islam” is an Arabic word whose linguistic roots--s-l-m--mean both submission and peace, as in the familiar greeting, “salaam.” Islam consequently is a religion that asks its adherents, called Muslims, to submit completely to the will of Allah, creator and ruler of the universe; Muslims use the word Allah in much the same way that Jews and Christians use the word God. According to Islam, Allah revealed His intentions to many prophets, including Noah, Moses and Jesus. But Allah chose Muhammad, a seventh-century Arab trader, to be His final prophet. In 610 A.D., Muhammad received his first revelation from Allah. Over the next two decades Muhammad received 114 revelations. One revelation itself explained that Allah spoke to Muhammad “by suggestion, as if from behind a veil, or through a messenger sent and authorized by Allah to suggest what He pleases.” After the Prophet’s death in 632, Muhammad’s sayings were compiled into a single text called the Qur’an (sometimes spelled Koran), the sacred scripture of Islam; each revelation became a separate chapter, called sura, of the Qur’an. The suras are arranged (mostly) with the longest first and then in descending order of length. This structure fractures both the chronological sequence of the revelations as well as the narrative order of events. Sayyid Mawdudi1, a major 20th-century Islamic commentator (and a key figure in the early history of Pakistan), conceded that a stranger to the Qur’an will be baffled by its organization and structure: “He begins to feel that the Qur’an is a book without any order or interconnection between its verses or continuity of its subject.” The Qur’an does not adhere to chronological order because it is not a work of history; it does not group its topics because it is not a work of philosophy. Instead, Mawdudi explained, readers should accept from the outset that the Qur’an is “the only book of its kind in the whole world: that its literary style is quite different from that of all other books: that its theme is unique and that his preconceived notions of a book cannot help him understand the Qur’an.”2 The best way to understand the Qur’an is to listen to it, in Arabic, repeatedly, from beginning to end. Many Islamic scholars insist that the Qur’an cannot be translated. They speak of translations as attempts to convey surface meanings: the literal truth of the Qur’an is inseparable from the poetic Arabic in which it was originally expressed. One of the first translators described the Qur’an in the original Arabic as “an immutable symphony, the very sound of which moves men to tears and ecstasy.”3 Yet those who do not speak Arabic must rely on translations; and, as Mawdudi himself observed, the Qur’an presupposes that readers know the story of Muhammad : “One cannot understand fully many of the topics discussed in the Quran unless one is acquainted with the 1 Mawdudi is also spelled Maududi or Maudoodi. Sayyid Abul A’la Maududi, The Meaning of the Quran, Vol 1. (Lahore, 1967), p. 8. 3 Muhammad Marmaduke Pickthall, The Meaning of the Glorious Koran: and Explanatory Translation (New York: American Library, 1953), p. 11. An Englishman who became a convert, he insisted that only believers could translate it with any degree of accuracy. 2 135 Mark Carnes 8/21/08 11:54 AM Formatted: Indent: First line: 0.5" Mark Carnes 1/16/09 2:06 PM Formatted: Indent: Left: 0.5" Mark Carnes 1/20/09 12:08 AM Formatted: Font:Italic, No underline Mark Carnes 1/20/09 12:08 AM Formatted: Font:Italic, No underline Mark Carnes 1/20/09 12:08 AM Formatted: Font:Italic, No underline Mark Carnes 1/20/09 12:08 AM Formatted: Font:Italic, No underline background of their revelation”. Thus Allah “revealed the Quran piecemeal to meet the requirements of the [Islamic] Movement in its different stages.” 5 What follows is a narrative essay on the life of Muhammad, interspersed with chronologically pertinent excerpts from the Qur’an. This provides both an account on the early history of Islam and the principles on which it was founded. The excerpts of the Quran included in this essay were derived from multiple translations and edited for coherence, simplicity, and continuity. By way of illustration, consider the opening verses of Muhammad’s first Revelation, as rendered by various translators: Read: In the name of thy Lord Who Createth man from a clot. (M. M. Pickthal) Proclaim: In the name of thy Lord and Cherisher, Who created/Created man out of a (mere) clot of congealed blod: (Y. Ali) Recite in the name of your Lord who created—created man from clots of blood. (N. J. Dawood). Read in the name of your Lord Who created. He created man from a clot. (M. H. Shakir) Read in the name of your Lord, Who created: He created man from a clot. (M. Fakhry) Recite in the name of your lord who created—From an embryo created the human (M. Sells) The present essay has chosen a simpler rendering: Recite in the name of your Lord, who created man from a clot of blood. This version is not better than the others; its chief virtue is its simplicity; and in religious texts simplicity is not necessarily a virtue. Scholars should consult other “less simple,” translations; students who seek further understanding of a particular text may also wish to consult other versions, several of which are available online.7 Final note: The verses of the Qur’an are usually the words of Allah, who speaks in the first person plural (“We”). When Muhammad addresses his followers, his words are usually prefaced with “Say”. The Early Life of Muhammad: 570-609 Muhammad was born around 570 in Mecca, on the western edge of the Arabian Desert. His father died before his birth, and Muhammad’s grandfather took charge of the boy. Because city life was regarded as unhealthful, the infant was sent to a wet nurse from a nomadic tribe, and Muhammad spent some of his infancy in the desert. At six, Muhammad’s mother died; and at eight, his grandfather died as well. Mark Carnes 8/21/08 12:20 PM Formatted: Normal, Pattern: Clear Mark Carnes 8/21/08 12:20 PM Formatted: Font:Not Italic, Font color: Black Mark Carnes 8/21/08 12:20 PM Formatted: Font:Not Italic, Font color: Black Mark Carnes 1/16/09 2:12 PM Formatted: Font:Italic Mark Carnes 1/16/09 2:12 PM Formatted: Font:Italic Mark Carnes 1/16/09 2:12 PM Formatted: Font:Italic Mark Carnes 1/16/09 2:12 PM Formatted: Font:Italic, No underline Mark Carnes 1/16/09 2:12 PM Formatted: Font:Italic, No underline 5 7 Maududi, Meaning , p.14. A number of translations of the Qur’an have won scholarly respect, including: N. J. Dawood, The Koran Penguin Books, 2006), revised from the earlier editions, the first of which was published in 1956, and Ahmed Ali, Al-Quran: A Contemporary Translation (Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1994). The Oxford Dictionary of Islam (Oxford Univesity Press, 2004), edited by John L. Esposito, is an authoritative guide to most of the words and phrases associated with Islamic civilization. 136 Mark Carnes 1/16/09 2:12 PM Formatted: Font:Italic, No underline Mark Carnes 1/16/09 2:12 PM Formatted: Font:Italic, No underline Mark Carnes 1/16/09 2:13 PM Formatted: Font:Italic, No underline Mark Carnes 1/16/09 2:13 PM Formatted: No underline Muhammad was then placed under the protection of an uncle, Abu Talib, leader of the Hashim clan. The Hashim were one of the larger kinship networks in the Quraysh tribe that dominated Mecca. Muhammad was trained in archery, swordsmanship and wrestling. He apparently traveled on some trading ventures with Abu Talib. At this time Mecca was a major mercantile center for the camel caravans from Ethiopia, the Mediterranean, and Yemen. Part of Mecca’s appeal was that it was home of the Ka’aba, a cube-shaped shrine dedicated to the highest God of the Arabs and surrounded by statues of another 360 gods. The Quraysh tribe supervised the Ka’aba, ensuring the safety of all pilgrims and traders. But the community values that characterized Arab tribes in the desert were being eroded by the circumstances of urban life. Arab traders and bankers, striving for riches, concentrated on their own advancement and neglected their obligations to the tribe. As a young man Muhammad, who lacked the resources to engage in trade independently, perhaps pondered the materialism that eroded traditional Arab values. On a trading journey around 595, Muhammad was charged with looking after the merchandise of a wealthy widow, Khadijah. She was impressed with him and proposed marriage. He accepted. The couple had six children.8 Her wealth provided him with the wherewithal to join the mercantile elite of Mecca. The First Revelation (610 A.D.) In 610, Muhammad and his family went on a retreat to the mountains outside Mecca. While sightseeing at a cave, Muhammad was visited by an immense presence—he later identified it as the angel Gabriel—who instructed him to “Recite.” Muhammad replied that he knew not how. Then the angel embraced him and said, “You are the Messenger of God,” and commenced conveying verses of a holy book called the Qur’an—“the recitation.” Sura 96 (Recite) 1. Recite in the name of your Lord, who created 2. Man from a clot of blood 3. Recite! Your Lord is Most Bountiful, 4. Who taught man to write with the pen 5. Taught man what he knew not. 6. Man errs 7. In thinking himself his own master: 8 The two sons died early in life, but four daughters survived to adulthood. Fatimah, the best-known of these, married Muhammad’s cousin, Ali, whom Shi’a Muslims regard as Muhammad’s divinely ordained successor. Sunni Muslims adhere to a different line of succession, a major reason for the division of Muslims into Sunni and Shiite sects. For more information, read the section of this essay on the Legacy of Muhammad. 137 8. For all things return to your Lord. Afterwards Muhammad could hardly believe what had happened in the cave, and said so to his family. But Khadijah and others offered reassurances. Eventually Muhammad came to understand that Allah had selected him as a prophet, like Moses and Jesus; Muhammad’s task was to convey Allah’s new messages to mankind. But while Allah had sent previous prophets to the Jews and Christians, Muhammad was the first Arab prophet; and Allah’s message was to be conveyed in Arabic. Usually the revelations came from a male angel. But sometimes, Muhammad explained, the revelations came “like the reverberations of a bell.” Increasingly the revelations were conveyed directly to Muhammad’s heart. Sura 75 (No Need to Move Tongue Fast to Learn Revelation) 16. You [Muhammad] need not move your tongue too fast to learn this revelation. 17: We shall see to its collection and recital. 18. So, when We recite it, you listen carefully. 19. We shall explain what it means. Muhammad: Giving Warning, 612 After the first few revelations, however, no others followed for several years. Then in 612, they resumed. Some of these offered reassurance to Muhammad personally: Sura 93 (Did He Not Give You Shelter?) 1. I swear, By the light of the rising sun, 2. And by the night when darkness descends . 3. The Lord has neither forsaken you nor does he hate you. 4. And surely the life that will follow will be better for you than that which has gone before. 6. When you were an orphan, did He not find you and give you shelter? 7. Did He not find you to be in error and guide you? 8. Did He not find you poor and bring you riches? 9. Therefore, do not wrong the orphan. 138 10. Do not chide the beggar. 11. But proclaim the goodness of your Lord! The obligation to care for orphans and give alms to the poor was a recurring theme of subsequent revelations, and they became foundations—“pillars”—of Islamic practice. Other revelations explained that Allah had given Muhammad a special task: To warn people to submit to Allah completely, to care for orphans and the dispossessed, and to cease lusting after wealth. Sura 74 (Arise and Give Warning) 1. O you who are clothed! 2. Arise and give warning, 3. Magnify your Lord, 4. Purify your garments, S. Shun uncleanness. 6. Do no favors expecting gain 7. And for the sake of your Lord, be patient. 8. For when the trumpet is sounded, 9. Then shall come a difficult day 10. For the unbelievers . 11. Leave, then, to Me the man [unbeliever] 12. Whom I [Allah] created helpless 13. And gave abundant wealth 14. And children and made things easy for him. 15. Yet he craves that I shall give him more. 16. And he stubbornly denies Our revelations 17. And I will torment him. . . 139 21-25: He who looks around, frowning and scowling, and turns away in prideful arrogance, and who says: “This [the Qur’an] is but counterfeit sorcery, the words of a mere mortal! [Muhammad]” 26: I will cast him into the Fire. This theme recurs throughout the Qur’an. Allah will punish those who, having learned the truth, subsequently challenge or reject it. Sura 70 (No Power Can Avert Allah’s Punishment) 1. A skeptic once demanded proof that unbelievers would receive their [deserved] punishment. 2. No power can avert Allah’s punishment, 3. He is the Lord of the Ladders. 4. To Him ascend the angels and the Spirit in a day the measure of which is fifty thousand years. S. Therefore endure with a goodly patience. 6. Surely the skeptics think the Day of Judgment is far off, 7. But we see it near at hand. 8. On the day when the heaven shall be as molten copper 9. And the mountains shall be as tufts of wool 10. Friends will meet, but not speak to each other. 11. To evade the awaiting torment, the sinner will gladly sacrifice his children 12. And his wife and his brother 13. And the nearest of his kinsfolk who gave him shelter, 14. And all the people of the earth, if this might deliver him. 15. But no! The fire of Hell 16. Dragging him by the head, 140 17. Shall claim him who turned from the Truth, 18. Who amassed wealth and hoarded it. . . 22. Not so the true worshippers. . . Proud people were wrong to assume that their success in business was due to personal merit. This is one of many instances where Muhammad’s revelations criticized the wealthy. All good comes from Allah, whose benevolence toward mankind is among His main attributes. Indeed, Allah has placed the entire substance of the universe to serve man’s purposes: Sura 55 (The Beneficent God) 1. The Beneficent God, 2. Taught the Qur’an. 3. He created man, 4. Taught him how to speak. S. The sun and the moon follow their regular course. 6. And the plants and trees bow down in adoration. 7. And the heaven, He raised it high, and He made the balance of all things 8. That you may not transgress that balance. . 9. Give just weight and full measure. 10. And the earth, He has set it for living creatures; 11. With its fruit and palms having sheathed clusters, 12. And the chaff-covered grain and scented herbs. 13. Which of the bounties of your Lord will you deny? 14. He created man from dry clay like earthen vessels, 15. And He created the jinn from the flame of fire. 16. Which then of the bounties of your Lord will you deny? 141 17. Lord of the East and Lord of the West. 18. Which then of the bounties of your Lord will you deny? . . . 57: We created you: will you not believe then in Our power? . . . Allah also was generous in creating human beings who were fundamentally sound. The Bible, on the other hand, reports that all mankind was tainted by the sinfulness of Adam and Eve; but when the Qur’an discusses the story of Adam and Eve, Allah specifically does not blame the children or their descendents for the sin of Adam and Eve: Sura 7 (Allah never commands what is shameful) 28. When they do something that is shameful, they say: “We found our fathers doing so,” and “Allah commanded us thus.” Say: “No, Allah never commands what is shameful. Do you say of Allah what you do not know?” Muhammad revealed both the goodness of Allah, and the penalty for transgressing His will. But otherwise the Qur’an discouraged theological speculation; believers were obliged to regard Allah with awe, and appreciate the good that He had done for all mankind. More, they were instructed to perform the requisite prayers and give alms to the poor. Those who speculated on the attributes of Allah deceived themselves. The Revelation of 615: Muhammad had, at first, shared his revelations with only his family and a small group of acquaintances. They performed the prescribed prayers, bowing and touching their foreheads to the ground, and otherwise submitting to Allah’s will. But these actions—especially the abject prostration of the Muslims during prayer—offended the sensibilities of many members of the Quraysh tribe. Some rregarded these new practices as blasphemous. In 615 Muhammad received a new revelation. He needed to proselytize more broadly: he was to spread the word of Allah to “his nearest relations”—a reference, clearly, to the whole Hashim clan. He was to warn them of the error of their ways: Sura 26 (Warn your Nearest Relations) 185. The [unbelievers] said [to Muhammad]: “You are among the deluded; 186. You are but a mortal like ourselves, and we think you are lying. 187. If you are not lying, then make something fall from the heavens upon us.” 142 188. He said: “My Lord knows what you do.” 189. But they called him a liar, and so they were smote by the scourge of the Day of Darkness; their punishment was grievous indeed. 190. Most surely there is a sign in this, but most of them do not believe. 191. And most surely your Lord is Mighty, the Merciful. 192. And most surely this is a revelation from the Lord of the worlds. 193. The Faithful Spirit has descended with it, 194. Into your heart that you may give warning 195. In the noble language of Arabic. . . . . . 196. Thus was it foretold in the ancient scriptures [Torah].197. Is it not sufficient proof that the learned men of the Israelites understood it? 198. And if We reveal it to a foreign man, 199. Even that it be recited aloud, 200. They would still not have believed. 201. They will not believe until they have been smitten by a woeful scourge. 202. And it shall come to them all of a sudden, while they shall not perceive; 203. Then they will say: “Shall we ever be granted respite?” 204. Yet now [by scorning and humiliating Muhammad], they hasten their punishment. 205. Consider: if We let them enjoy themselves for years, 206. And then comes that fearsome scourge, 207. Of what benefit then will those enjoyments be? 143 208. And We did not destroy any town without first warning its inhabitants, 209. To remind, and We are never unjust. 210. And the devils will not have brought this down upon the unbelievers. 211. The devils do not wish it, 212. Nor have they the power to accomplish it. 213. So call on no other god besides Allah, , lest you be of those suffer His punishment. 214. And warn your nearest relations, 215. And be kind to those who follow you in belief. 216. But if they disobey you, then say: “Surely I am not responsible for what you do.” Muhammad’s initial attempt to “warn his nearest relations” misfired. He had invited the men of the Hashim clan to a meal whose simplicity echoed the abstemious message of the Qur’an. Then he appealed to the gathering to convert to Islam. Few did so, and some ridiculed him and his revelations; these attempts to humiliate Muhammad were a recurrent theme in the Meccan revelations—the revelations that came during the time Muhammad lived in Mecca. But the bitterness of his critics was in part a response to the fact that Muhammad posed a powerful threat to the Meccan trading elite. Young people were especially drawn to Muhammad’s criticisms of the materialism and selfishness of Meccan society; and nearly all Arabs were impressed with the beauty and power of the Arabic of Muhammad’s revelations. At the famous dinner for the men of the Hashim, an adolescent boy spoke up against Muhammad’s critics, a sign of the widening generational divide within Meccan society; Islam would be the wedge that would drive the generations even farther apart. With each new revelation, moreover, Islam moved further from Arab religious traditions. For example, the Arabs traditionally invoked the gods for assistance during life; there was little conception of an afterlife. But Muhammad’s revelations increasingly alluded to the possibility that Allah would reward the faithful with eternal life. Sura 36 (“Who Will Give Life to the Bones?”) 74. And they have taken other gods besides Allah, hoping that this will help them. 75. But they [the other gods] cannot help them: yet those who worship the idols stand like warriors ready to defend those idols. 144 76. Therefore let not their words grieve you; surely We know what they do in open and of what they hide. 77. Does not man see that We have created him from the small seed? Yet he is openly contentious! 78. And he argues with us vehemently, and forgets his own creation. He asks: “Who will give life to the bones when they are rotten?” 79. Say: “He who first brought them into being will give them life again. He comprehends all creation 80. He gives you from the green tree a flame, and lo! You light a fire! 81. He Who has created the heavens and the earth—can He not create others like them? He is indeed the All-Knowing Creator. 82. His command, when He wishes anything, is only to say, “Be,” and it is. 83. Therefore glory be to Him who controls all things, and to Him shall you be brought back [to life?]. The Attack on Polytheism: 616 That Muslims were obliged to submit completely to Allah implied that they owed no obligations to the traditional deities worshiped by Arab peoples. But Muhammad had not explicitly indicted polytheism. That changed with several crucial revelations in 616. Some of his followers were aghast at this new direction: They could readily “submit” to Allah as the principal deity; but they saw no reason why this obliged them to repudiate the lesser gods of their parents and ancestors. Muhammad’s attack on the traditional gods also infuriated the leaders of the Quraysh. Partly this was for financial reasons. Mecca provided a shrine for all of the deities of many tribes; this made Mecca an ideal trading and tourist destination for Arab peoples. Islam’s repudiation of their various gods might endanger the Meccan business trade. But many Quraysh begrudgingly acknowledged the power of Muhammad’s message. That Muhammad’s group of followers was growing was indisputable; and his message proved especially appealing to the young. Some Qurayshi leaders approached Muhammad with a compromise: they would endorse Allah and Islam if Muhammad would accept some of the traditional gods, especially the three goddesses of Mecca [Al-Lat, Al-Uzza, and Manat], as lesser deities ruled by Allah. Muhammad was perhaps tempted 9by this compromise: 9 This incident refers to one the most controversial issues surrounding the Qur’an. According to AlTabari, a ninth century Persian historian and important commentator on the Qur’an, Muhammad 145 Sura 17 (They Nearly Lured You Away from Our Revelations) 73.Indeed, they [the Meccans] nearly lured you [Muhammad] away from Our revelations, so that you might invent some other scripture in Our name. Then they would have taken you for a friend. 74. Had We [again, Allah] not enabled you to stand firm, you might have inclined towards them a very little. 75. In that case We would certainly have made you to taste a double punishment—in life, and after death. Then you would not have found any helper against Us. 76. And surely they endeavored to unsettle you from the land that they might expel you from it, and in that case they will not tarry behind you but a little. But then Muhammad came down emphatically against idolatry. Sura 53 (The Goddesses of Mecca are but Names) 18. Have you considered Al-Lat and Al-Uzza pondered adding two verses to Sura 53:18-19, which seemingly endorsed the three principal goddesses of Mecca: 18. Have you considered Al-Lat and Al-Uzza 19. and on Manat, the third [the three pagan goddesses of Mecca, daughters of God]? [Added?]: These are the high-flying birds [gharaniq] Whose intercession is approved. Al-Tabari claimed that a wilySatan had tempted Muhammad into uttering utter these latter two verses, which some critics dubbed “the satanic verses.” Karen Armstrong, in Muhammad: A Biography of the Prophet (1991), explained that Western critics err when they cite these passages as evidence that Muhammad was not receiving the word of God. The Christian conception of Satan—the ultimate source of evil in the world—differs from the Islamic conception, which regards Satan as a deficient genie who tempts and deceives mankind but does not bring about mankind’s destruction. Muhammad’s capacity to be “lured” by Satan underscores the importance of free will in Islamic thought (pp.112-115). 146 19. And on Manat, the third [the three pagan goddesses of Mecca, daughters of god]? 20. They are but names which you and your fathers have invented: 21-24: Allah has vested no authority in them. 25. The unbelievers [polytheists] follow but vain guesses and the vagaries of their own souls, despite having long since received the true guidance of their Lord. . .” The point was hammered home in Sura 112, one of the shortest: Sura 112 (Allah is the One God) 1. Say: ‘Allah is One, the Eternal God, 2. He begot none, 3. Nor was he begotten. 4. None is equal to Him.” As Muhammad’s group grew—perhaps approaching 100 followers—the leaders of the Quraysh put increasing pressure on Abu Talib, leader of the Hashim clan, to silence and punish Muhammad. “Oh Abu Talib,” one explained, “your nephew has cursed our gods, insulted our religion, mocked our way of life and accused our forefathers of error; either you must stop him or you must let us get at him . . . and we will rid you of him.” Talib, though unpersuaded of Muhammad’s revelations, refused to silence his nephew. More important, Talib persisted in declaring that Muhammad, as a son of the Hashim, was protected by the entire clan. Should any of his foes kill Muhammad, the Hashim would avenge his death. Tensions mounted. When groups of Muslims came into contact with other Quraysh, insults would fly. Sometimes scuffles escalated into riots. Vulnerable Muslims—slaves and the poor—lived in real danger, and Muhammad arranged for several score Muslim families to leave Mecca and settle in Abyssinia in North Africa, where they would fall under the protection of the local Christian ruler. The organized exodus of large numbers of Muslims, including the children of well-to-do Qurayshi merchants, enraged the leaders of Mecca. On several occasions conspirators attempted to assassinate Muhammad , but each time Allah intervened, or so Muhammad claimed. One would-be assassin, after overhearing a sura, put away his weapon and converted to Islam on the spot. Late in the year, Abu Lahab, one of Muhammad’s fiercest critics, issued a boycott against the entire Hashim clan: unless the Hashim abandoned Muhammad, other Meccan clans would refuse to do business with any Hashim or allow intermarriage with them. Fights became 147 even more common. For safety, Muslims increasingly crowded into Abu Talib’s street, which soon became a Muslim ghetto. A new revelation indicted Abu Lahab by name: Sura 111 (Perish Abu Lahab) 1. Perish the hands of Abu Lahab, and may he perish, too. 2. His wealth and what he earns will not avail him. 3. He shall roast in a flaming fire. 4. And his wife will be a bearer of firewood, 5. She shall have a fibrous rope around her neck. Moderate Quraysh, fearing a civil war, sent a delegation to propose another compromise with the Muslims. But Muhammad received an emphatic revelation rejecting any concessions: Sura 109 (“Sura of Rejection: I do not worship what You Worship”) 1. Say: “O unbelievers! 2. I do not worship what you worship, 3. Nor do you worship what I worship. 4. Nor shall I worship that which you worship, 5. Nor will you worship what I worship: 6. You shall have your religion and I shall have mine.” Abu Lahab’s boycott was adopted by most clans and lasted two years; some Hashim traders were nearly ruined. But things got far worse. Flight to Medina : 622 In 619, Khadija, Muhammad’s beloved wife, died. That same year, Abu Talib, Muhammad’s uncle, protector, and head of the Hashim, fell ill. Muhammad tried to persuade his dying uncle to convert to Islam, but Abu Talib gently declared that he could not deny the gods of his father. After Talib’s death, the new leader of the Hashim clan was Abu Lahab, Muhammad’s staunchest enemy. Attacks on Muslims intensified, as did threats against Muhammad. Muhammad explored a mass exodus from Mecca, but to where? At one point, while being 148 chased by enemies, Muhammad ran into an orchard and addressed Allah, confessing his fears and doubts. The following revelation ensued: Sura 46 (“I do not know what will be done with me”) 2. We [Allah] created the heavens and the earth and all that lies between them to show the truth; We created them to last for a set term. Yet the unbelievers ignore our warning. 3. Say: “Have you [unbelievers] pondered well those idols whom you worship besides Allah? Show me what part of the earth they have created! Show what part of the heavens. Show me what sacred scripture or other aspect of divine knowledge, if they be the truthful ones.” 4. Who is in greater error than the man who prays to idols which will not hear him? Idols that, on the Day of Resurrection, cannot heed his prayers? . . . 6.When Our revelations are recited to them, indisputable and clear, the unbelievers say: “This is obvious magic.” That is their response to the Truth when they hear it. 7. Do they say: “He [Muhammad] has invented The Qur’an himself? Say: “If I have indeed invented The Qur’an, then there is nothing you can do to shield me from the wrath of Allah. He well knows what you say about it. Sufficient is He as my witness, and your witness. He is the Forgiving One, the Merciful.” 8. Say . “I am not the first among the prophets; nor do I know what will be done with me or you. I follow only what is revealed to me, and my only duty is to give clear warning.” . . . In 620, Muhammad awakened in the middle of the night and went to the Ka’aba to recite the Qur’an. Eventually he fell asleep. Then he was lifted by Gabriel onto a horse that carried him through the night sky over Jerusalem. They arrived at the Temple Mount, where Muhammad climbed a ladder that extended through seven levels. At each he was presented to previous prophets, such as Adam, Jesus, Moses, and, on the 7th, Abraham. A final summit led to Allah, who told Muhammad that Muslims must offer prayers of submissions frequently. On awakening after this “Night Journey,” Muhammad told Muslims that they must pray five times a day, bowing to Jerusalem. Around this time, too, the Muslims impressed a group of Arabs from Medina, a fertile oasis about 200 miles north of Mecca. These people converted to Islam and proposed that Muhammad and the Muslims move and join them in Medina, which was inhabited by Jewish and Arab farming tribes. In 622, Muhammad called on Muslims to make a hijra—an 149 Mark Carnes 1/20/09 12:30 AM Formatted: Font:Italic, Font color: Black emigration—from Mecca to Medina. Compromise with the Quraysh was out of the question: the Muslims would go their own way. The Quraysh, on the other, refused to let the Muslims establish a rival source of power. Bloodshed seemed inevitable. But Allah expected his human creations to “defend themselves” against injustice. Muhammad’s predicament was insoluble. The Qurayshi leaders had encouraged thugs to assassinate him and humiliate his followers. Should Muslims resist and, if so, should they respond with force? Allah’s response was emphatic: Sura 22 (Jihad: Allah’s Permission to Fight Injustice) 38. Surely Allah will defend those who believe; Allah does not love ingrates and the treacherous. 39. Permission is given to those who fight because they are wronged. Surely Allah will grant them victory-40. Those who have been expelled from their homes simply for declaring: “Our Lord is Allah” . . . And whoever helps Allah will be helped by Him. Allah is Strong, Mighty. 78. Fight for the cause of Allah with the devotion due to Him. . . . “Fight for the cause of Allah”—the Arabic term is jihad, a word that has become controversial.10 It means either “armed action to achieve God’s will” or a more personal “striving to walk in the path of God.” The context of Sura 22 makes it clear that jihad here means armed resistance to oppressors: “Permission is given to those who fight because they are wronged.” Muslims would not require Allah’s permission to follow His path, a task they were obliged to undertake. For one group of Qurayash to take up arms against others of their tribe, however, was a profound violation of deep-seated cultural norms; Sura 22 gave the Muslims permission to do this. For a time, Muhammad remained in Mecca, planning emigrations to Medina. In October 622, hundreds of Muslims made the trek north to Medina. (The history of the Muslim era commences not with the birth of Muhammad or with his first revelations, but with the 622 hijra, when Allah’s plan took concrete form on earth.) As Muslim merchants and shoppers disappeared from the markets and the streets of Mecca, the Quraysh became even angrier at Muhammad. Islam had become a plague, depriving Mecca of many of its most purposeful people. Qurayshi soldiers, Muhammad knew, would soon come after him in Medina. War was inevitable, Muhammad believed, but he knew that the Muslims would win. To that end, he obliged Muslims to take a “Pledge” of jihad. Such fighting within a tribe was almost without precedent. Allah provided Muhammad with qualifications on jihad: Although Muslims must fight evil-doers, especially those who drove the Muslims out of Mecca, Allah insisted that Muslims show “kindness” to those who had done no harm to Muslims. Only those who did the Muslims wrong were to be chastised. 10 One who does jihad is a mujahid; the plural is mujahideen. 150 Mark Carnes 8/20/08 11:24 PM Formatted: Normal, Indent: Left: 0" Sura 60 (Resisting enemies but exhibiting mercy) 1. Believers! Do not make friends with those who are enemies of Mine and yours. Would you show them kindness, when they have denied the truth that has been revealed to you and driven out the Apostle and yourselves, because you believe in Allah, your Lord? If you persist in jihad and seeking My pleasure, would you secretly show them love as well? I know what you conceal and what you reveal; and whoever of you does this, he has strayed from the straight path. 7. It may be that Allah will bring about friendship between you and those whom you hold to be your enemies among them; and Allah is Powerful; and Allah is Forgiving, Merciful. 8. Allah does not forbid, regarding those who did not fight you nor drive you from your homes, that you show them kindness and deal with them justly; surely Allah loves the doers of justice. 9. Allah only forbids you respecting those who made war upon you on account of your religion, and drove you forth from your homes and backed up (others) in your expulsion, that you make friends with them, and whoever makes friends with them, these are the unjust. Just prior to the exodus from Mecca, some Meccans had issued a reward for Muhammad’s assassination. Shortly afterwards a gang of young men forced their way into his house. Muhammad and Abu Bakr, a close friend, fled to the mountains outside of Mecca, where they hid in a cave. The attackers would have discovered them had not a rock dove and a spider contrived to conceal its entrance. A merciful Allah had saved the prophet: Sura 9 (Allah saves Muhammad in the cave) 40. If you will not aid him, Allah certainly aided him when those who disbelieved expelled him, he and his companion, when they were both in the cave. He said to his companion, “Grieve not, surely Allah is with us.” So Allah sent down His tranquility upon him and assisted him with soldiers you did not see, and lowered the word of those who disbelieved; and the word of Allah, that is the highest; and Allah is Mighty, Wise. When Muhammad arrived safely in Medina, the Muslims there were overjoyed. Now it dawned on them that they had managed to break free of their tribe—the Quraysh—and had yet survived. Perhaps no other Arab peoples could make that claim. And because the ceased to be bound by clan or tribe, theirs was a different type of community, one founded on faith (an umma). 151 But how should they govern themselves? Allah provided the answer: Sura 7 (Allah Commands all Creation) 54: Your Lord is Allah, Who created the heavens and the earth in six days, then established Himself on the Throne. He draws the night to veil the day, each seeking the other in rapid succession. He created the sun, the moon, and the stars, all governed by laws under His Command. Verily, all creation and command are His. Blessed be Allah, the Lord of the worlds. Other suras make much the same point: Sura 42 (The Decision is with Allah) 10. Whatever it be wherein you differ, the decision thereof is with Allah. Such is Allah, my Lord. In Him I trust and to Him I turn. Allah is the sole source of all authority on earth. But when Allah’s commands were unclear, who then was to decide what was right or wrong? Sura 42 (Muhammad to Judge) 15. . . . Say: “I [Muhammad] believe in the Book which Allah has sent down, and I am commanded to judge justly between you. Allah is our Lord and your Lord. For us is the responsibility for our deeds, and for you your deeds. There is no contention between you and us. Allah will bring us together and to Him is our final goal.” Before the Muslim influx into Medina, Arab and Jewish tribes had long contended for control of the town. Many of these Arabs welcomed the infusion of Muslim immigrants, assuming that the influx of well-disciplined Arabs would help suppress the Jews of Medina. But Muhammad suspected that the Quraysh tribes would attack the Muslim outpost in Mecca; to help defend that town, he sought to ally with all of the peoples of Medina, including the Jewish tribes. To that end, he instructed the Muslims to hold a special meeting every Friday afternoon, when Jews were preparing for the Sabbath; he also allowed Muslims to marry Jewish women and eat Jewish food. Perhaps in consequence of his “Night Journey” to Jerusalem along the way to the Throne of Allah, Muhammad instructed Muslims to bow to Jerusalem during prayers, as did the Jews. In short, Muhammad advised toleration with the “people of the Book”—Jews and Christians who had received the revelations of the Bible and who, like the Muslims, embraced monotheism. 152 Sura 29 (Allah and the Jewish God are the Same) 46. And do not dispute with the people of the Book save in the fairest way. Except for them who do evil. And say: “We believe in that which has been revealed to us and what has been revealed to you, and our Allah and your God is One, and to Him do we submit. As Muhammad became more familiar with the Jews of Medina, he perhaps appreciated the similarities of these monotheistic religions. The Book of Genesis, too, included an intriguing detail that Muhammad seized as foreshadowing the origins of the Arab peoples. The pivotal detail came from the story of Abraham, the Jewish patriarch. According to Genesis, Abraham and Sarah had a son, Isaac; Abraham had another son, Ishmael, by his slave concubine Hagar. Sarah, favoring her own son, insisted that Abraham send Ishmael away. God advised Abraham to do as his wife proposed: Genesis: Chapter 21: (Biblical antecedents for the Muslims) 14. So Abraham rose early in the morning, and took bread and a skin of water, and gave it to Hagar, putting it on her shoulder, along with the child, and sent her away. And she departed, and wandered in the wilderness of Beersheba. 15 When the water in the skin was gone, she cast the child under one of the bushes. 16 Then she went, and sat down over against him a good way off, about the distance of a bowshot; for she said, "Let me not look upon the death of the child." And as she sat over against him, the child lifted up his voice and wept. 17 And God heard the voice of the lad; and the angel of God called to Hagar from heaven, and said to her, "What troubles you, Hagar? Fear not; for God has heard the voice of the lad where he is. 18 Arise, lift up the lad, and hold him fast with your hand; for I will make him a great nation." 19 Then God opened her eyes, and she saw a well of water; and she went, and filled the skin with water, and gave the lad a drink. 20 And God was with the lad, and he grew up; he lived in the wilderness, and became an expert with the bow. 153 This text seemingly refuted the Quraysh claim that Muhammad undermined the traditional gods of the Arabs. If the Arabs peoples were descended from Abraham, and if they originally believed in one God, then the Qur’an had rediscovered the lost Arab tradition of monotheism! Muhammad increasingly identified the Muslims as the descendents of Ishmael, and the nation of “Islam” as the “great nation,” spawned in the “wilderness,” as predicted in the Book of Genesis. Sura 2, one of the most important in the Qur’an, developed these and other points. It identified Allah as the same God worshipped by the “Children of Israel”. Allah/God, though preferring the Jews “to all other nations,” built the Ka’aba in Mecca as a house of worship for all mankind, consecrated by Abraham and Ishmael. Although meant for those who believed in Allah, Allah would allow disbelievers—a reference to the polytheistic Quraysh— to endure “for a while,” but then He would destroy them and send a prophet to reveal His message to the faithful: Sura 2 (Ishmael, Abraham’s Son, as Founder of Arab People) 120. O Children of Israel! Remember the grace I bestowed on you, and remember that I preferred you to all other nations. And remember that I preferred you to all other nations. . . 124. We made the House [the Ka’aba in Mecca] a resort and a sanctuary for mankind, saying: “Make the place where Abraham stood a house of worship.” We instructed Abraham and Ishmael to cleanse Our House for those who walk round it, who meditate in it, and who kneel and prostrate themselves. 125. And when Abraham said: “My Lord, make this a secure city and feed with fruits those of its inhabitants who believe in Allah and the Last Day.” Allah, in acceptance, replied: “As for those who disbelieve, I shall provide for them for a while, and then subject them to the scourge of the Fire: an evil Fate!” 126. And while Abraham and Ishmael raised the foundations of the House, they prayed: “Our Lord, accept this from us. Surely You are the All-Hearing, the Omniscient.” 127. “Our Lord, cause us to submit to You, and make of our posterity a nation that submits to you. Show us our sacred rites, and pardon us. You are, indeed, the Pardoner, the Merciful.” 128. “Our Lord, send them an apostle from among themselves who will recite to them Your revelations, to teach them the Qur’an and the wisdom, and to purify them.” While Muhammad was positing the religious foundations of the Muslims, some Arabs within Medina challenged Muhammad’s leadership. Some of the Medina Jews, too, mocked 154 Muhammad’s credentials and disputed the Qur’an’s rendering of stories in the Torah. Muhammad retorted that, according to the Torah itself, Moses, like Muhammad, had called on his people to submit to the will of Allah, and yet they persisted in sin and faithlessness: Sura 2 (Muhammad’s criticism of Jewish Inconstancy) 82: When We [Allah] made a covenant with the Children of Israel, We said: “You shall worship none other than Allah; show kindness to your parents, to your relatives, to orphans and the poor. Exhort men to righteousness. Perform the requisite prayers. Give the alms tax.” But you all broke your covenant except a few, and paid no heed. . . 104. The unbelievers among the People of the Book and the pagans [polytheists] resent the blessings [revelations of the Qur’an] that have been sent by Allah. But Allah chooses whom he will for His mercy. Allah’s bounty is great. . . 112. The Jews say: “The Christians err in their path.” The Christians say, “The Jews err in their path.” Yet both read the same Scriptures. God will on the Day of Judgment render a decision on their disputes. In addition to criticizing the Jews for breaking their covenant with Allah, Sura 2 instructs Muslims that they are to cease bowing toward Jerusalem: Sura 2 (Muslims now pray towards Mecca) 142. The ignorant will ask, “What caused [Muhammad and the Muslims] to turn away, during their prayers, from [their former direction—Jerusalem]? Say: “To Allah belongs the East and the West. He guides whom He will to the right path. . .” 143. We ordained [Jerusalem as the direction of your previous prayer] only so that We could distinguish those who follow the Prophet from those who were to disown him. It was indeed a hard test except for those whom Allah guided. . . 144. Often We see your face looking upward for revelation and guidance. Now we shall turn you toward a prayer-direction that shall please you. Turn your face then towards the Sacred Mosque in Mecca. Wherever you of the faithful be, turn your faces towards it. . . 145. The People of the Book [Jews and Christians] certainly know this to be the Truth from their Lord. Allah knows what they do. 155 But even if you gave them every proof, they would not bow in prayer toward Mecca, nor will you bow toward their holy places. . . Following this revelation, relations with many of the Jews of Medina deteriorated rapidly. After Jewish critics issued a particularly sharp denunciation of Muhammad, they were seized and thrown out of the mosque. Nearly everyone in Medina was on edge for yet another reason: any day, they expected Qurayshi warriors from Mecca to attack. When that day came, how would Muhammad respond? Some religious leaders, when confronted by overwhelming force, accept suffering on earth as a small price to pay for redemption in heaven; Jesus, for example, taught that his kingdom was “not of this world” but of that which would follow death. But when the Meccans threatened Medina, Muhammad explained that Allah wanted the Muslims to prevail on earth. There would be a war, and the Muslims must win it. To that end, Muhammad had several revelations that outlined the rules governing Islamic warriors: Sura 2 (Jihad: Do not Attack First, and Do Not Fight those who Surrender) 191. Fight for the sake of Allah those that fight against you. But do not attack them first. God does not love the aggressors. 192. Slay them wherever you find them. Drive them out of the places from which they drove you. Idolatry is worse than carnage. But do not fight them within the precincts of the Holy Mosque unless they attack you there. If they attack you, put them to the sword. Thus shall the unbelievers be rewarded. Allah is forgiving, merciful. 193. Fight against them until idolatry is no more and God’s religion prevails. But if they desist, fight none except the evil-doers. 194. A sacred month for a sacred month: sacred things are subject to retaliation, too. If anyone attacks you, attack him as he attacked you. Have fear of God, and know that God is with the righteous.” War with the Quraysh: Victory at Badr, 624 While the Muslims awaited attack from Mecca, they confronted another even more pressing problem. The Muslims who crowded into Medina were tradespeople; but Medina was a farming community whose arable land had already been occupied. A few Muslim settlers commenced trading in the market of Medina, but the Meccan merchants had monopolized nearly all of the trade in the region. The Muslims in Medina had no means of subsistence; how could they feed their families and house themselves? How could the Muslim umma hold together? In 623, therefore, Muhammad authorized two raids against Mecca-bound caravans. Raids were not uncommon in Arabia: one needy tribe often seized the camels and goods of another, 156 a practice that was tolerated as long as no one was hurt during the raids. But Arabian raiders never attacked their own tribespeople. The Muslims, by preying on the Meccan caravans, would be violating this principle. This was unprecedented. The initial raids failed: the caravans sneaked past in the night and no goods were seized. In early 624, however, a Muslim raiding party attacked and seized a Meccan caravan, killing one trader and capturing two others. Due to an unforeseen delay, the attack had occurred during a month that, by pagan Arab tradition, was sacred and thus debarred from warfare. Many Muslims were appalled to learn that their raiders had violated this norm. Muhammad initially sided with the critics, upbraiding the raiders and refusing to accept the captured goods. When the raiders complained of their ill treatment, Muhammad announced another revelation, this one in defense of the raid: Sura 2 (War: Fighting in Holy Month Wrong, but less wrong than persection) 213-218. They will question you concerning the holy month, and fighting in it. Say: “Fighting during [a holy month] is a heinous thing, but to bar people from God’s way, disbelief in Him and the Holy Mosque, and to expel its people from it—that is more heinous in God’s sight; and persecution is more heinous than slaying. And they will not cease fighting with you until they turn you back from your religion, if they can; and whoever turns his back from his religion will die an unbeliever; his works will go for nothing, in this world and the hereafter. Such shall abide in the Fire.” While the Quraysh in Mecca were still fuming over the caravan attacks and the death of their trader, Muhammad led some 350 Muslims on a raid to seize another large Mecca-bound caravan north of Medina. The Quraysh learned of the attack and dispatched a 1000-man force to intercept the Muslim raiders. The two armies converged in the desert near the village of Badr. The Quraysh clans, each led by its own chieftain, sallied forth to no concerted purpose; but the Muslims, led by Muhammad, fought hard and with single-minded direction. Muslim archers weakened the attackers, and then a massed formation of Muslim soldiers crushed the disorganized Qurayshi troops. The Meccans were routed, leaving fifty dead and seventy more prisoners. To nearly everyone’s amazement, the Muslims had defeated the most powerful tribe in Arabia. As his victorious Muslim troops marched back to Medina, Muhammad received a revelation reaffirming that Allah had endorsed the Muslim cause—and had sided with the Muslim warriors: Sura 8 (Jihad: Allah Endorses Fight for Justice) 5. The Lord asked you to leave your home to fight for justice, but some of the faithful were reluctant. 6. Although the truth had been revealed, they disputed with you, as if they were being driven to certain death. 157 7. Allah promised you victory over one of the enemy bands [either the unarmed Meccan caravan or the armed Qurayshi soldiers] and [Muhammad] desired to attack the unarmed [caravan], Allah sought to vindicate the truth by His words and destroy the unbelievers. 8. Thus could he manifest the truth of that which was true, and show the falsehood of that which was false, though the wrongdoers wished otherwise. The same revelation outlined other rules of just war: Sura 8 (Jihad: Treatment of Captives) 65. O Prophet! urge the believers to war; if there are twenty patient ones of you they shall overcome two hundred, and if there are a hundred of you they shall overcome a thousand unbelievers, for they are devoid of understanding. . . 67. It is wrong for a prophet to take captives unless he has fought and triumphed in the land; you desire the fleeting goods of this world [spoils of war] , while Allah desires for you the world to come. Allah is Mighty, Wise. 68. Had there not been a previous dispensation from Allah, you would have been sternly punished for what you took. 69. Eat then of the lawful and good things which you have acquired in war, and neglect not your duty to Allah; surely Allah is Forgiving, Merciful. 70. O Prophet! say to your captives: “If Allah finds goodness in your hearts, He will give to you better than that which has been taken away from you and will forgive you. Allah is Forgiving, Merciful.” 71. But if they wish to betray you, they have previously betrayed Allah, and so He gave you mastery over them. Allah is Knowing, Wise. 72. Surely those who believed and fled their homes and fought for Allah’s cause with their property and their souls, and those who have sheltered and helped them-- these are the true believers. As for those who believed afterwards, emigrated and struggled along with you—those are part of you. Allah sees what you do. 158 Sura 8 (Jihad until idolatry shall cease) 38. Tell the unbelievers that if they change their ways their past shall be forgiven; but if they return to error, then they will suffer as had happened to the ancient peoples [i.e., the enemies of God as outlined in the Bible]. 39. Make war on them until idolatry shall cease and Allah’s religion will be persecuted no more. On entering Medina, the Muslims perceived the enormity of their victory. Ridiculed, scorned and driven from their homes, the outnumbered Muslims had crushed the mightiest tribe in the Arab world. Such a victory, Muhammad revealed, could only have been achieved by Allah: Sura 8 ( Allah Slew the Unbelievers) 9. When called upon your Lord for help, He answered: “I will assist you with a thousand of the angels following one another.” 10. And Allah only gave it as a good news and that your hearts might be at ease. Victory comes only from Allah; surely Allah is Mighty, Wise. . . 12. When your Lord revealed to the angels: “I am with you, so support those who believe. I will cast terror into the hearts of those who disbelieve. Therefore strike off their heads and strike off every fingertip of them.” 13. This is because they acted adversely to Allah and His Apostle; and everyone who opposes Allah and His Apostle will feel the sting of Allah’s punishment. 14. This-- taste it: the Fire awaits the unbelievers. 15. O believers! when you meet those who disbelieve marching for war, then turn not your backs to them. 16. Whoever turns his back on that day—unless he does so in preparation of fighting or for joining another unit, incurs the wrath of Allah, and his abode is hell; and an evil destination shall it be. 17. So you did not slay them, but Allah slew them; and when you threw [pebbles at the enemy, a reference Muhammad’s early gesture during the battle], it was not you who threw, but Allah, 159 that He might confer on the believers a good gift. Surely Allah is Hearing, Knowing. This victory confirmed Muhammad’s belief that the Muslims were following in the footsteps of the ancient Jews: When the Jews were being oppressed by the Pharaohs and driven from their homes, had not Allah intervened to destroy the Egyptian army by drowning it in the Red Sea? So, too, Allah had slain the Qurayshi oppressors of the Muslims. Believing that the Jews commemorated their deliverance from the Egyptian army at Passover, Muhammad called for an annual fast during Ramadan to commemorate the Muslim victory at Badr.12 Stalemate: 625-627 But the war was not over. The Qurayshi leaders believed that the Muslim victory at Badr was a fluke; if the Quraysh attacked again, the Muslims would fold. Increasingly, too, some Jewish tribes in Medina, alarmed at the swagger of the victorious Muslims, dispatched emissaries to Mecca: Medina, the Jews reported, was not united behind the Muslims; if the Meccans attacked again, many Jewish tribes there would support the attackers. Some Jewish tribes strengthened their own fortresses in Medina in expectation of a future showdown with the Muslims. The Meccans commenced plans for another offensive against Medina. Early in 625, Muslim raiders seized another Qurayshi caravan. In March, the Quraysh sent 3000 men and as many camels—the cavalry—to attack Medina. Muhammad led 1000 Muslims. The two armies converged about five miles from Medina, near a mountain at Uhud. As at Badr, the Quraysh initiated the attack with a cavalry charge; but this time the Muslim line buckled. Muhammad tried to rally his men, but he was struck in the head and knocked unconscious. Many thought he was dead. But he regained consciousness and, by the end of the day, the Muslims regrouped. But 65 Muslim soldiers had been killed, against 22 Qurayshi soldiers. The Muslims had suffered a major defeat. This posed serious theological problems. If Allah had slain the enemies of the Muslims at Badr, why did He not do so at Uhud? And if Muhammad truly was receiving Allah’s guidance, why had the Muslim troops become confused? Why did they fail? Several revelations answered these questions: In Sura 3 Allah reiterated that Muhammad was merely a prophet: only Allah could win battles. And sometimes, Allah explained, He tested believers, all the better to discern who was worthy of Paradise: Sura 3: (Muhammad merely a Messenger; Defeat a test of the Believers) 139. This is a declaration to mankind: a guidance and a warning for the believers. Do not be faint-hearted; do not despair. If you have faith, you will prevail. 140. If you have suffered a defeat, so did the enemy. We [Allah] give mankind trials, so that Allah may know the true believers and choose martyrs from among them. Allah does not like evil-doers; and that Allah may annihilate the infidels. 12 Although the exact origins of Passover are uncertain, most sources agree that it celebrated the deliverance of the Jews from Egyptian bondage. 160 141. Did you suppose that you would enter Paradise before Allah had known who among you had struggled, who was steadfast? . . . 144. And Muhammad is only a Messenger; Messengers have passed away before him. What: if he should die or is slain, will you turn upon your heels? If any man should turn about on his heels, he will not harm Allah in any way, and Allah will recompense the grateful. 145. No one dies unless Allah so wills it: the term of a man’s life is fixed; and whoever desires the reward of this world, I shall give him of it, and whoever desires the reward of the hereafter, I shall give him of it, too. I will reward the grateful. . . . 157. And if you are slain in the way of Allah or you die, certainly forgiveness from Allah and mercy is better than what they amass. 158. And if indeed you die or you are slain, you will surely be gathered with Allah. As the Muslim army limped back to Medina, Muhammad was forced to address some practical problems caused by the defeat. Who would care for the wives and children of the slain soldiers? In traditional Arab tribes, the extended clan provided sustenance and protection for all of its members. But the Muslims in Medina had severed their ties to the Quraysh tribe and their clans and kinfolk. Muslims were protected not by their relations, but by the Muslim community, the umma. But the umma lacked the structures to care for the new widows and their children. Muhammad’s revelation addressed the problem: Sura 4 ( In Support of widows and orphans: in defense of polygamy) 1. O people! Fear your Lord, Who created you from a single being[Adam] and created its mate [Eve] and from these two scattered many men and women abroad. . . 2. And give to the orphans their property, and do not substitute worthless property for good property, and do not add their property to your own property; this is surely a great crime. 3. And if you fear that you cannot act fairly towards orphans, then marry such women as seem good to you, two and three and four; but if you fear that you cannot be equitable, then only marry one or what your right hands possess [captives of war or slave-girls]; this is more proper, that you may not deviate from the right course. 161 4. And give women their dowries as a free gift, but if they of themselves be pleased to give up to you a portion of it, then consume it with enjoyment and pleasure. Muhammad himself took more wives, chiefly to build alliances with various Bedouin tribes. During 626 the Quraysh and Muslims prepared for the decisive battle. In March 627, a Meccan army of some 10,000 men marched to Medina. The Muslims, reinforced by Bedouin tribes, defended Medina with 3,000 soldiers. To prepare for the Meccan onslaught, Muhammad ordered that a huge trench be dug around Medina, with the excavated earth mounded into a long defensive wall. When the Meccans arrived at the outskirts of Medina, they were stymied. They had planned to again begin battle with a cavalry charge, but they could find no way to breach the trench and wall. They commenced a siege. When they ran out of food and supplies, they gave up and returned to Mecca. The Muslims had survived again, victors of what became known as the Battle of the Trench. After brief victory celebrations, the Muslims turned on one of the Jewish tribes in Medina that had betrayed them. During the siege, this tribe’s leaders had conspired to sneak Meccan soldiers through the Muslim defenses and into Medina. But the Muslims got wind of the plot and foiled it. After the Meccans had withdrawn, the Jewish tribe knew that retribution would follow; so they retreated into their fortress within Medina. The Muslims attacked the fortress and forced the Jews to surrender; then all 700 men of the tribe were beheaded and the women and children sold into slavery. 13 (Those Jewish tribes that had remained loyal to the Muslims were not harmed.) A revelation explained: Sura 33 (Destruction of the Jewish Traitors) 26. Allah turned back the unbelievers [Meccans] in their rage, and they went away empty-handed. He helped the faithful cope with the challenges war: He is mighty, all-powerful. 27. Allah brought down from their fortresses those who had supported the unbelievers from among the People of the Book [the Jews of Medina] and cast terror into their hearts, so that some you slew and others you took captive. 28. He made you masters of their land, their houses, and their goods, and of yet another land on which you had never set foot before. Truly, Allah has power over all. The Pilgrimage to Mecca: 628-629 13 The massacre of one of the Jewish tribes of Medina, though an unspeakable barbarity, was not without precedent in the ancient world. To cite one example: According to the Torah, in 550 B.C. Kind David slaughtered 200 Philistines, castrated them, and sent their foreskins to the Philistine king. 162 News of the failure of the huge Meccan offensive and of the savage Muslim vengeance against the Jewish rebels reverberated throughout Arabia. Tribes increasingly regarded the Muslims as peculiarly well-disciplined, well-motivated, and nearly invincible in battle. Many tribes that had been allied to the Meccans now allied with Muhammad. Muslim merchants established Medina as a trading center to rival Mecca. For their part, the Meccans also sensed that the tide had turned: the failed offensive had exhausted their resources—and perhaps their will. Rather than attempt another attack, they waited for Muhammad and his allies. But now Muhammad changed directions. Allah had commanded Muhammad to undertake jihad not to crush the Quraysh, but to bring an end to idolatry: “Undertake jihad until idolatry shell cease and Allah’s religion will be persecuted no more.” Protracted war with the Quraysh could only weaken the Arabs and undermine Muhammad’s larger cause. So rather than make plans for a crushing attack on Mecca, he sought an accommodation with the Quraysh. But how? How could he come to terms with those bent on destroying him and the Muslims? In March 628, Allah revealed the solution: Sura 48 (A pilgrimage to Mecca): 629 27. Allah has fulfilled His Apostle’s vision, truly: “If Allah wills, you shall enter the Sacred Mosque [of Mecca], safe and without fear, with your hair cropped or shaven.” For He knew what you knew not; He granted you a swift victory. 28. It is He that has sent forth His apostle with guidance and the true religion, so that he may raise it above all religions. Allah sees all and knows all. The morning after this revelation, Muhammad made an extraordinary announcement: at the behest of Allah, he would soon leave on a pilgrimage to the Ka’aba in Mecca. Other Muslims were free to join him, but none would carry weapons. On hearing this, the Muslims’ Bedouin allies rejected the pilgrimage as utter madness: the Quraysh would instantly solve their problem with the Muslims by slaughtering the unarmed pilgrims. Muhammad ignored all objections and made the necessary preparations. Allah had counseled war, and He had brought them victory; now He counseled tranquility, and Muhammad proceeded without fear of the consequences. Muhammad’s purposefulness and confidence were infectious. When he finally set forth on his pilgrimage, he was joined by 1000 Muslims. All had shaved their heads and wore the white robes of traditional pilgrims. The Quraysh were perplexed by the mass Muslim pilgrimage. The Quraysh had always ensured the right of pilgrims to enter Mecca and visit the Ka’aba, a guarantee that contributed to the ascendancy of Mecca as a trading center. But the Meccans were horrified by the prospect of Muhammad returning in triumph, leading a procession of fanatical followers. Some Qurayshi leaders proposed to intercept the Muslims and butcher them; others insisted that the Muslims be accorded the rights of all pilgrims. While the Meccans debated the matter, they sent a small army to the outskirts of Mecca to delay Muslim entry. 163 When forced to halt, the Muslims sat down in the desert. Then came negotiations. Eventually Muhammad, perhaps infused with a sense of tranquility, accepted most of the terms proposed by the Quraysh. He agreed to end the pilgrimage and lead the Muslims back to Medina in return for a promise that Muslims would be granted admission to Mecca in all future years. Muhammad also promised to cease raiding Meccan caravans and to return future Muslim converts who fled to Medina. The Meccans accepted Muhammad’s proposal to allow the Bedouin tribes to ally with either with Mecca or Medina. If both sides kept the treaty’s provisions, a truce between Mecca and Medina would last for ten years. When Muhammad announced the terms of the settlement to the pilgrims on the outskirts of Mecca, they were appalled. How could they return to Medina without having completed their pilgrimage? Opposition mounted when Muhammad ordered that converts who had escaped from Mecca and joined the Muslim pilgrims be returned to Mecca as promised. Muhammad, some Muslims claimed, had betrayed the Muslim cause. Some considered mutiny. Never had Muhammad encountered such vehement internal opposition. Then Muhammad announced, “A sura has descended upon me, which is dearer to me than anything under the sun.” Sura 48 (Allah’s Tranquility Enfolds All Believers) 2. Surely We have given you a manifest victory that Allah may forgive you your sins, old and new, and guide you on a straight path 3. And that Allah may help you with mighty help. 4. It is He who sent down the tranquility into the hearts of the believers, that they might add faith to their faith. . . . 11. The Bedouins who stayed behind [during the pilgrimage to Mecca] will say to you: “We worried about the security of our possessions and our families: so we ask forgiveness.” Say: “ . . . Allah is fully aware of what you do.” 12. “Rather, you believed that the Apostle and the believers would never return to their families; . . . you thought evil thoughts and were a useless people.” 13. He who does not believe in Allah and His Apostle, We have, indeed, prepared for the unbelievers a hot Fire. . . 18. Allah was well-pleased with the believers, when they paid you homage under the acacia tree; so He knew what was in their hearts and sent down the Tranquility upon them and rewarded them with a victory near at hand”. . . 164 27. It is He who sent forth His Apostle with the guidance and the religion of truth, that He may exalt it above every other religion. Allah is witness to this. 28-29. Muhammad is the Apostle of Allah. Those who follow him are ruthless to the unbelievers but merciful to one another. You see them worshipping on their knees, seeking the grace of Allah and His good will. The dust marks are on their foreheads, evidence of their prostration before Allah. Thus are they described in the Torah and the Gospel [Mark iv, 26-9]. They are like the seed which puts forth its shoot and strengthens it, so that it rises stout and firm upon its stalk, a joy to the farmers. Through them He seeks to enrage the unbelievers. Yet to those of them who will embrace the Faith and do good works, Allah has promised forgiveness and great bounty. This new “tranquility,” or “serenity,” as it is sometimes translated, marked a new approach to the situation in Arabia. The Bedouin tribes, free to ally with whichever side they preferred, increasingly allied with the Muslims. Muhammad’s power spread far northward, in a region where several Jewish tribes were powerful. Muhammad sent an army to suppress one of the Jewish tribes that had allied with Mecca; after a siege, it surrendered. But Muhammad agreed to lenient surrender terms; the grateful chief of the Jewish tribe offered his daughter in marriage to Muhammad, and Muhamad accepted. Other Jewish tribes now voluntarily accepted Muslim protection. Sura 3 (Jihad: Deal with Enemies Gently) 159. Thus it is due to mercy from Allah that you deal with [your enemies] gently, and had you been rough, hard hearted, they would certainly have dispersed from around you; pardon them therefore and ask pardon for them, and take counsel with them in the affair; so when you have decided, then place your trust in Allah; surely Allah loves those who trust. By March of 629, the time for the agreed-upon Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca had come. Now nearly 3000 Muslims joined Muhammad. As the large procession, wearing white garments, approached Mecca, the Quraysh evacuated the city. Muhammad led the pilgrims to the Ka’aba, the sacred black stone of antiquity, and he kissed it. An uncle who had opposed Muhammad now offered him his daughter in marriage; Muhammad invited the Quraysh, waiting in the nearby hills, to come to the wedding feast. After three days, as agreed, Muhammad led the pilgrims out of Mecca and back to Medina. The Quraysh watched in astonishment: the Muslims were disciplined, united, and joyous. Many Meccans converted on the spot. 165 Mark Carnes 8/21/08 12:09 AM Formatted: Font:12 pt, Not Italic, Font color: Black Mark Carnes 8/21/08 12:09 AM Formatted: Font:12 pt, Not Italic, Font color: Black The Triumph at Mecca: 630 In November 629, some Quraysh participated in a surprise attack against a Bedouin tribe that had allied with the Muslims, a violation of the truce. Some Qurayshi leaders, expecting Muslim retaliation, immediately entered into negotiations with Muhammad. By early 630, Muhammad assembled a huge army and began a slow march towards Mecca. Qurayshi soldiers surrendered in advance of Muhammad’s arrival and placed themselves under his protection. A few refused to give up. When the Muslims entered Mecca, a brief fight ensued; but the Muslim victory was swift. Muhammad ordered no reprisals and did not oblige the vanquished Meccans to accept Islam. Instead, he led a procession around the Ka’aba and shattered the 360 idols arrayed around the black stone, all the while intoning: Sura 17 (The Truth has Come) 82: Say: “The Truth has Come, and falsehood has vanished; surely falsehood is certain to vanish.” As the Quraysh began to emerge from their houses, Muhammad called on them to join his umma, the great brotherhood of all Muslims: Sura 49 (Muslims: A Band of Brothers) 10. The believers are a band of brothers. Make peace among your brothers and fear Allah. . . . 11. Believers, let no man mock another man, who may perhaps be better than himself. Let no woman mock another woman, who may perhaps be better than herself. . . 12. Believers, avoid suspicion of each other, for in some cases suspicion is a crime. Do not spy on one another, nor defame one another. . . 13. O mankind! We have created you male and female, and appointed you races and tribes, that you may know one another. Surely the noblest among you in the sight of Allah is the one who fears Allah most. Allah is All-knowing, All-wise. The umma of Muhammad’s “tranquility” had worked miracles. The Quraysh were becoming reunited, but this time as Muslims, a community built on brotherhood and equality, devoid of racial, tribal, and status distinctions. The practical benefits of “tranquility” became evident immediately: a week after the Meccan capitulation, no other tribe declared war on the Muslims; when Muhammad gathered his army to meet them, several thousand new Meccan converts joined. Another Muslim victory followed, and then others. In October of 630, Muhammad led an army in excess of 30,000 through vast stretches of Arabia, venturing north to the edge of the Byzantine Empire. Whether his troops fought a battle at Tabouk is a source of debate, but the sweeping advance 166 of the Muslim army introduced more Arab peoples to Islam. Tribalism and polytheism were fading before the Muslim onslaught. As head of a huge army, Muhammad focused increasingly on military issues; new revelations further develop the concept of jihad: Sura 9 (Allah absolves repenting idolaters, but orders war against others; honor treaties) 2. A Proclamation from Allah and His Apostle to mankind: Allah and His Apostle have no obligation toward the idolaters. If you repent, it will be better for you; but if you pay no heed, then you shall not be immune from Allah’s judgment. 3. Proclaim to the unbelievers a woeful punishment, except those idolaters who have honored their treaties with you and did not aid your enemies. Honor your treaties with them for the full term. Allah loves the righteous. 5. When the sacred months have expired, kill the idolaters wherever you find them. Take them captive, besiege them, and a lie in wait for them in ambush at all points. Sura 9 (Give refuge to those who seek it) 6. If an idolater seeks refuge with you, give him refuge, so that he may hear the word of Allah; then take him to safety. That is because the idolaters are ignorant people. . . 11. If they repent and take to prayer and pay the requisite alms tax, they will be your brethren in religion. Thus do we make clear Our revelations to those who know. 12. But if, having made a pledge to you, they break it and revile your religion, [you must] make war on the leaders of the unbelievers—for they have no regard for pledges. . . . 14. Make war on them: Allah will punish them at your hands and will humble them. He will grant you victory over them and heal the hearts of the faithful. Allah shows mercy to whomever He pleases. Allah is all-knowing and wise. Sura 9 (A Mandate for Jihad) 167 38. Believers: why, when you are told, “March in the cause of Allah,” do you bask in idleness? Are you content with this life over that which is to come? The blessings of this life are so few as compared with those of the life to come! 39. If you do not go to war [jihad]14, He will punish you severely, and will replace you with other men. You can in no way harm Him: for Allah has power over all things. By early 631, nearly all of Arabia was under Muslim domination. The Death of Muhammad: 632 Muhammad had little time to enjoy the triumph of Islam in Arabia. In 632, he made a “Farewell hajj, or Pilgrimage” to Mecca. (Making such a pilgrimage subsequently became one of the duties enjoined on all Muslims, if at all possible.) On his return he complained of headaches and died. Many Muslims responded with despair. But Abu Bakr, one of the first converts to Islam and a chief lieutenant of the Prophet, discouraged shows of grief. He explained that Muhammad had insisted that he not become deified, as Christians had regarded Jesus. “O men, if anyone worships Muhammad, Muhammad is dead,” Abu Bakr added. “If anyone worships Allah, Allah is alive, immortal.” Abu Bakr then recited Muhammad’s revelation after Uhud, when it seemed that Muhammad had been killed in battle: Sura 3 (Muhammad is just a messenger) 144. And Muhammad is only a Messenger; Messengers have passed away before him. Why, if he should die or is slain, will you turn upon your heels? If any man should turn about on his heels, he will not harm Allah in any way, and Allah will recompense the grateful. 145. And a soul will not die but with the permission of Allah: the term is fixed; and whoever desires the reward of this world, I shall give him of it, and whoever desires the reward of the hereafter I shall give him of it, and I will reward the grateful. The Legacy of Muhammad Succession: Abu Bakr as Caliph The Muslim umma, united during Muhammad’s lifetime, became divided after his death. A council of prominent Muslims at Medina, claiming that Muhammad had named no successor, 14 This reference to jihad—to “striving for —vpi;f pertain either to armed action or a personal striving in the path of God. The former is sometimes identified as “greater jihad,” while the other as “lesser jihad.” 168 Mark Carnes 8/21/08 12:12 AM Formatted: Indent: Left: 1" elected Abu Bakr as caliph, “successor” to the Prophet. But others insisted that Muhammad had named Ali, husband of Muhammad’s daughter, Fatimah, as successor. Abu Bakr prevailed, but the dispute fractured the Muslim world—and does so to this day. Sunni Arabs, the dominant sect, adhere to the tradition established by Abu Bakr; Shi’ite Muslims, the major sect in Iran, regard Abu Bakr and his two successors as usurpers to a title that belonged to Ali, who, like all of Muhammad’s family, benefited from divine inspiration.15 Bakr, as the first caliph, was forced to contend with two additional challenges: A host of would-be prophets surfaced; and some tribes that had been drawn into the Muslim orbit now sought to break away. Abu Bakr addressed both threats decisively: He proclaimed that Muhammad was the last of the prophets; anyone who claimed to be a prophet was an imposter and their revelations were fraudulent. And while Islam opposed coercion in matters of religion, no Muslim tribe that had accepted Allah now had the right to repudiate Him. Such willful denial of Allah warranted death. Abu Bakr’s authority was complete. The Spread of Islam In 634 Abu Bakr died, but by then Islam had become an almost irresistible force: subsequent Islamic rulers did not supervise its expansion so much as channel its force in particular directions. Caliph ‘Umar I, who ruled from 634-644, divided the world into two regions: one where Allah’s will (Islam) prevailed (Dar al-Islam) and one where it did not (Dar alHarb). Dar al-Islam was a realm of peace and justice; Dar al-Harb was a zone of war, into which Islam was to be projected. Like Abu Bakr, who worried that upstarts and usurpers would somehow seize Muhammad’s message, ‘Umar sought to suppress innovators—and innovations. To that end, he ordered the compilation of Muhammad’s revelations into a single authoritative source—the Qur’an; he also ordered the destruction of all other collections of Muhammad’s revelations. The success of Muslim armies was partly due to vacuum caused by the decline of the Byzantine empire and the earlier collapse of the Roman empire. The Muslims conquered Damascas (Syria) in 637, Jerusalem in 638, Egypt in 642, Persepolis (Iran) in 650. By the late 600s, Muslims had swept through most of northern Africa; in 711 they won victories throughout the Iberian peninsula (now Spain and Portugal). Within a century of Muhammad’s death, Islamic influence extended from the Atlantic Ocean to the frontier of India. As they were gaining territory, wealth, and power, Muslim rulers were plagued by the schemes of rebellious generals and overlords, the revolts of subject peoples, as well as courtly intriguers and assassins —recurrent themes in the history of all ancient empires. Yet none of this halted the Muslim advance, nor sapped the movement of its Islamic message. Wherever Muslim armies triumphed, mosques were built16, local peoples converted to Islam, and the Arabic language and culture advanced. In the early years of conquest, Muslim rulers 15 In 656, after the assassination of the third caliph, Ali became the fourth caliph. His tumultuous reign was marked by civil war. He was assassinated in 661. His followers, who became known as Shi’a or Shi’ites, insisted that only Ali’s male descendants were entitled to serve as calilph. Ali’s son Husayn continued the struggle for control of the Muslims. In 680 he and his supporters were trapped and killed at Karbala in Iraq by troops of Mu’awiya I, founder of the Umayyad dynasty, who reigned as monarch-caliph. 16 . In 692 the dome of the “Dome of the Rock” mosque in Jerusalem was completed; still standing, it is regarded as an exemplar of early Islamic architecture. In 715 the Great Mosque of Damascus was completed, built upon the ruins of the church of St. John. 169 were sustained by the spoils of war; but increasingly they imposed taxes and initiated trade to generate revenue for the state. Jews and Christians (“People of the Book”), though allowed to practice their faiths, but were obliged to pay special taxes for that right. The spread of Islam greatly exceeded the administrative capacity of the original rulers in Medina. By the tenth century, the Islamic empire had been fractured into a dozen separate realms ruled by hereditary dynasties. In the early 1300s Osman I founded of the Ottoman Dynasty (modern Turkey). Over the next three-hundred years, Ottoman rulers succeeded in unifying the western portion of the Islamic empire and pushed northward far into Europe. Other major Islamic dynasties were located in India (Mughal Empire—1526-1707) and Iran (Safavid Empire, 1501-1722). Five Pillars of Islam Islam demanded obedience; to that end, Muslim leaders propounded a simplified set of behavioral rules which by the late 600s became known as the Five Pillars of Islam: 1. Witnessing to the oneness of Allah and the belief in Muhammad as Allah’s final prophet; “There is no God but Allah and Muhammad is his Prophet.” (shahadad) 2. Performing the five prescribed prayers (salat) at daybreak, noon, midafternoon, sunset, and evening. The proper times are announced from the minaret of the mosque by the muezzin (public announcer). This shows that one is a member of the community of believers. (Umma) The first sura is recited at these times. In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful, Praise be to Allah, Lord of the Universe, The Compassionate, the Merciful, Master of the Day of Judgment! You alone we worship, and to You alone we turn for help Guide us to the straight path, The path of those whom You have favored, Not of those who have incurred Your wrath, Nor of those who have gone astray. 3. Giving alms (Zakah) to the poor, for spreading the faith or for freeing debtors. 4. Observing of the month long fast of Ramadan, the ninth month of the lunar calendar.. The believer refrains from eating, even drinking water, and from sexual activity during the daylight hours, sacrificing bodily desires for the sake of Allah. 170 5. Making at least one pilgrimage to Mecca, the most sacred of places, if at all possible. In addition to these “Pillars,” which are essentially practices, certain beliefs, held almost universally by Muslims, became normative: They included: belief in the Day of Judgment or the Last Day; Paradise as a reward for faithfulness; “jihad,” or struggling for righteous in one’s personal life and in society; just war in defense of the Islamic community against unbelievers; attitudes toward the place of women and children in society; sexuality as a God-given attribute to be properly enjoyed; the mark of a good ruler; martyrdom; free will and predestination. Shari’ah: The Diffusion of Islamic Law Islamic law, too, spread throughout the Muslim world. During his years as Prophet, Muhammad embodied Islamic law: he channeled Allah’s will to resolve disputes within the Muslim umma (See Sura 7). But after Muhammad’s death, Allah’s will could only be determined by consulting the Qur’an or other texts written during Muhammad’s lifetime or based on recollections of others after his death. 17 The task of Islamic judges and legal scholars was to apply those fixed standards to the evolving problems of society. By the ninth century Islamic law had become regularized into a system known as Shari’ah— “the path leading to the watering place”; Islamic courts were established throughout the Muslim world. In Western jurisprudence, most crimes are regarded as offenses against the state: robbers and murderers are tried by public prosecutors. But Shari’ah regarded many such crimes as civil offenses. Thus victims of assault or even murder sought redress at Islamic courts according to the principle of reciprocal retaliation: “an eye for an eye.” Shari’ah specified punishments for six crimes: death for apostasy and highway robbery; dismemberment of a hand for thievery; stoning to death for adultery; 80 lashes of the whip for promiscuity and for imbibing alcohol. Other laws illegalized usury and gambling, as well as speculative business ventures. Different versions of Shari’ah were propounded in various Islamic realms. Shi’ah Muslims, whose founders insisted that the original caliphs lacked the divinity that inhered within the family of Muhammad (and, especially, his son-in-law, Ali), reposed authority to divinelyinspired Islamic leaders called imams. Shi’ah versions of Shari’ah gave imams considerable latitude in rendering judgments. Because Shari’ah was derived from the Qur’an, which was not subject to further modification, Islamic law proved to be inflexible. This was, of course, part of its appeal: It was not man-made law, but invariant principles whose justice was vouchsafed by their divine origin. But sometimes the rigidityof Shari’ah proved to be a source of difficulty. In matters of family and religion, in particular, Shari’ah seemed peculiarly adapted to the patriarchal society of 7th century Arabia. During the 19th-century, Western nations penetrated much of the Islamic world and imposed European legal systems: secular courts and law codes. Except in Arabia, where Shari’ah was retained in full, Shari’ah was increasingly confined to issues pertaining to domestic and family matters. In 1926, a modernizing regime in Turkey eliminated Shari’ah completely. 17 The reports or collections of Muhammad’s sayings are called hadith; Sunni Muslims refer to one set of hadith, and Shi’ah Muslims, to another. This is a source of doctrinal disputes. 171 Mark Carnes 1/20/09 11:01 PM Formatted: Font:Italic, Font color: Black Mark Carnes 1/20/09 11:01 PM Formatted: Font:Italic, Font color: Black In the 1930s, Egyptian laws sharply circumscribed the situations in which Shari’ah could even be applied to family issues, such as marriage of minors and divorce. Islam and the State Islamic political theory originated with the fact that Allah commanded obedience (Suras 7 and 42, above). No person had any “right” to share His authority. Muhammad, as “messenger,” transmitted Allah’s will. But Muhammad’s death ended that connection to the divine. The first few Successors, or caliphs, ruled as Muhammad’s successors, but they lacked his direct relationship with Allah. These caliphs did not interpret Allah’s will: they applied it. Their authority was derived from Allah’s will as expressed in the Qur’an—and in other sayings (hadith) of Muhammad. Muhammad made no distinction between political and religious authority; nor did the early caliphs. But as the Muslim armies swarmed across North Africa and eastward into India, the caliphs of Arabia lost control of outer reaches of the Islamic empire. Renegade generals, rebellious provincial governors, or ambitious tribal leaders seized power from officials in Medina or Mecca. Nearly all of the upstarts adhered to the Five Pillars of Islam, built mosques, endorsed Islamic law, and otherwise ruled as Muslims. But they also usually ruled as hereditary monarchs and established dynasties. By the tenth century, the term “sultan” had emerged to describe Islamic monarchs. Increasingly, a caste of clerics supervised religious practice and attended to the faith of the people, while the rulers endorsed Islam and supported the Islamic clerics, but otherwise governed according to their own counsel. But was such governance consistent with Allah’s will? Had the sultans usurped Allah’s authority? For that matter, had the sultans, by commanding their subjects to bow down in subjugation, transformed themselves into idols? And how could such rulers reconcile their enormous palaces, exquisite gardens, and elaborate displays of wealth with the Qur’an’s repeated denunciation of material goods and its endorsement of a simple life and egalitarian values? Some Muslim theologians, especially those of the Sunni sect, had a ready answer. Allah commanded people to obey His will: He therefore endorsed rulers who enforced Muslim behavior (especially the Five Pillars). When contending parties vied for control of a government, Allah manifested His will by determining which would prevail. The victor’s authority had been legitimated by Allah’s support. (See Sura 8 above: “Allah Slew the Unbelievers.”) Some theologians, Shi’ite especially, were skeptical of this arrangement; they regarded it as profoundly conservative, for it always endorsed the current power structure. Such Muslims conceived of the council of Islamic scholars, the ulema, as an institution that could check the power of sultans and ensure their compliance with the Qur’an. But by the 20th century, most Muslim clerics focused on the spiritual health of their followers and conceded to the practice of government to hereditary elites. During the 20th century, however, this convention was challenged by several Muslim scholars. Perhaps the most important was Sayyid Mawdudi (1903-1973), a key Muslim figure in India. Mawdudi reasoned that the clerics’ emphasis on personal piety had allowed pseudo-Islamic rulers to hold power. Such rulers failed to bring the “coercive power and authority of the state” to bear on society, and thus contributed to the laxity in morals and practice. This laxity, Mawdudi insisted, was in violation of the will of Allah. A true revival 172 of Islam required an infusion of Islamic values into the state itself. He pointed to the early history of Islam, when Muhammad himself ruled the Muslim umma as a Prophet of Allah. Mawdudi realized that it would be difficult to wrest power from entrenched political elites. He eventually thought the best strategy was to reinvigorate the umma, the community of believers, and then thrust it into the political arena. To that end, in 1941 Mawdudi founded in Lahore the Jama’at-I Islami, a political organization that sought to create an explicitly Islamic state. 18 Mawdudi wrote: It is wrong to describe the Islamic state as a democracy, for it is more correct to describe it as divine or theocratic. . . Theocracy in Islam is not in the hands of the clergy or the religious leaders, but in the hands of the Muslim Ummah that must run its affairs in accordance with the Book of God and the Sunnah of His Messenger. If I am allowed to coin a new term, I would rather call this type of government ‘theodemocratic’ or ‘a divine democracy,’ since it gives the Muslims a limited government and is controlled by the supreme power of God.” 19 Many Islamic clerics vehemently opposed this line of reasoning. They conceded that while Muhammad had ruled Medina as a Muslim prophet, no one else was entitled to do so. And the division of clerical and political tasks between mullahs and imams and sultans and nizams was the political foundation on which the Islamic empire had been built. But the most important objection to Mawdudi’s formulation was theological: Allah commanded obedience. And Allah, who determined the course of the planets, could have chosen to force human beings to do His will. But He instead allowed people to choose to do otherwise; he conferred upon them free will. Allah did not want Islamic governments to use police powers to corral people into mosques. Good Islamic rulers established the stable and secure context for Islamic practice; and Islamic clerics sought to instill faith and teach the deeper meanings of holy scriptures. Mawdudi’s theocentric governments violated this essential provision of the faith, and Mawdudi was himself censured by some Islamic bodies. Yet the concept of a theocratic Islamic state gained momentum, especially in parts of the Muslim world where Shi’ia prevailed: Iran during the past three decades, and Afghanistan under the Taliban. Indeed, perhaps the central issue confronting Muslims today is whether the traditional rule of hereditary elites or elite-linked military dictators, was a violation of proper Islamic practice. 18 A decade or so later, Sayyid Qutb (1906-1966), a proponent of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, opposed the secular rule of Egypt’s Abdul Gamal Nasser in the 1950s on similar grounds. 19 Nazarriyyat al-Islam wa Hadyihi, pp. 34-35 , cited in Eltigani Abdelgadir Hamid, The Qur’an and Politics: A study of the Origins of Political Thought in the Makkan Qur’an (London, 2004), p.84.) 173 Qur’an. Additional excerpts, especially related to Jihad. These passages [except for the first three] are in chronological order, as best that can be determined. In case of conflict between passages, the later passages are generally held to have greater authority, in accordance with Suras 2:106, 13:39, and 16:103, quoted below. Headings in parentheses are meant to be helpful summaries; they are not part of the Qur’an itself. The translation is by A. Yusuf Ali, though I have removed parentheses around some words to improve readability. The selections and headings have been taken and adapted from the following website: http://www.answering-islam.org/Bailey/jihad.html. Sura 2:106 None of our revelations (verses) do we abrogate or cause to be forgotten, but we substitute something better or similar. Knowest thou not that God hath power over all things? Sura 13:39 God doth blot out or confirm what he pleaseth. With Him is the Mother of the Book. Sura 16:101 When we substitute one revelation for another—and God knows best what He reveals in stages—they say, “Thou are but a forger” but most of them understand not. Sura 109:1,2,6 (Unbelievers have their own religion.) Say, O ye that reject faith! I worship not that which ye worship… To you be your way, and to me mine. Sura 16:93 (God leaves alone those he allows to stray from the truth.) If God so willed, He could make you all one people, but He leaves straying whom He pleases, and He guides whom He pleases, but ye shall certainly be called to account for all your actions. Sura 16:125,126 (Invite conversion only with gracious preaching and argument.) Invite all to the way of thy Lord with wisdom and beautiful preaching; and argue with them in ways that are best and most gracious…. And if ye do catch them out, catch them out no worse than they catch you out. But if ye show patience, that is indeed the best course for those who are patient. Sura 29:46 (Emphasize unity with Jews and Christians.) And dispute ye not with the People of the Book, except with means better than mere disputation…. But say, “We believe in the revelation which has come down to us and in that which came down to you. Our God and your God is One, and it is to Him we bow in Islam.” Sura 10:25 (God’s call to the house of peace with reward in paradise) But God doth call to the home of peace. He doth guide whom He pleaseth to a way that is straight. To those who do right is a goodly reward—yea, more than in measure! 174 Sura 22:39-41 (One may make war to defend oneself.) To those against whom war is made, permission is given to fight, because they are wronged, and verily, God is most powerful for their aid. They are those who have been expelled from their homes in defiance of right, for no cause except that they say, “Our Lord is God.” Did not God check one set of people by means of another, there would surely have been pulled down monasteries, churches, synagogues and mosques, in which the name of God is commemorated in abundant measure. God will certainly aid those who aid His cause, for verily God is full of strength, exalted in might, able to enforce His will. Sura 22:58 (Rewards for those who die in jihad) Those who leave their homes in the cause of God, and are then slain or die, on them will God bestow verily a goodly provision. Truly God is He who bestows the best provision. Sura 2:190-194 (Fight defensively against attack from Meccan Arabs until persecution stops and Islam is established.) Fight in the cause of God those who fight you, but do not transgress limits; for God loveth not transgressors. And slay them wherever ye catch them, and turn them out from where they have turned you out; for tumult and oppression are worse than slaughter; But fight them not at the Sacred Mosque, unless they first fight you there; but if they fight you, slay them. Such is the reward of those who suppress faith. But if they cease, God is oft-forgiving, most merciful. And fight them on until there is no more tumult or oppression, and there prevail justice and faith in God; but if they cease, let there be no hostility except to those who practice oppression… If then any one transgresses the prohibition against you, transgress ye likewise against him. But fear God, and know that God is with those who restrain themselves. Sura 2:216,217 (Fighting against Meccan Arabs is commanded, except during the month of pilgrimage.) Fighting is prescribed for you, and ye dislike it. But it is possible that ye dislike a thing which is good for you, and that ye love a thing which is bad for you. But God knoweth, and ye know not. They ask thee concerning fighting in the prohibited month. Say: “Fighting therein is a grave offence; but graver is it in the sight of God to prevent access to the path of God, to deny Him, to present access to the sacred mosque, and drive out its members.” Tumult and oppression are worse than slaughter. Sura 2:256 (Do not force those defeated to become Muslims, but if they reject Islam they will suffer in hell.) Let there be no compulsion in religion…. Of those who reject faith the patrons are the Evil Ones. From light they will lead them forth into the depths of darkness. They will be companions of fire, to dwell therein forever. Sura 8:38 (Continue fighting until they stop persecution and until Islam is established. If they stop fighting, stop. A fifth of booty belongs to God and His leader.) Say to the unbelievers, if now they desist from unbelief, their past would be forgiven them, but if they persist, the punishment of those before them is already a matter of warning for 175 them. And fight them on until there is no more tumult or oppression, and there prevail justice and faith in God altogether and everywhere. But if they cease, verily God doth see all that they do. If they refuse, be sure that God is your protector—the best to protect and the best to help. And know that out of all the booty that ye may acquire in war, a fifth share is assigned to God—and to the Apostle, and to near relatives, orphans, the needy, and the wayfarer. Sura 3:157,165-167,169-171 (Martyrs have sins forgiven and go to paradise; they bring glory and peace to their loved ones. Believers suffer defeat when they disobey and do not strive.) And if ye are slain, or die, in the way of God, forgiveness and mercy from God are far better than all they [unbelievers] could amass ... What! When a single disaster smites you, although ye smote your enemies with one twice as great, do you say, “Whence is this?” Say to them, “It is from yourselves. For God hath power over all things.” What ye suffered on the day the two armies met was with the leave of God, in order that He might test the believers…. Think not of those who are slain in God's way as dead. Nay, they live, finding their sustenance in the presence of their Lord. They rejoice in the bounty provided by God and with regard to those left behind, who have not yet joined them in their bliss, the martyrs glory in the fact that on them is no fear, nor have they cause to grieve. Sura 61:4,11-13 (God loves those who fight in his cause. He will give victory, forgiveness of sins, and admission to paradise to those who fully strive.) Truly God loves those who fight in His cause in battle array, as if they were a solid cemented structure … that ye believe in God and His Apostle, and that ye strive your utmost in the cause of God, with your property and your persons. That will be best for you, if ye but knew! He will forgive you your sins, and admit you to gardens beneath which rivers flow, and to beautiful mansions in gardens of eternity. That is indeed the supreme achievement. And another favour will He bestow, which ye do love—help from God and a speedy victory. So give the glad tidings to the believers. Sura 48:15-17 (Those who lag behind will face God’s punishment.) Those who lagged behind will say, when ye are free to march and take booty in war, “Permit us to follow you.” They wish to change God's decree. Say, “Not thus will ye follow us. God has already declared this beforehand.” Then they will say, “But ye are jealous of us.” Nay, but little do they understand such things. Say to the desert Arabs who lagged behind, “Ye shall be summoned to fight against a people given to vehement war. Then shall ye fight, or [unless] they shall submit. Then if ye show obedience, God will grant you a goodly reward, but if ye turn back as ye did before, He will punish you with a grievous penalty.” No blame is there on the blind, nor is there blame on the lame, nor on one ill if he joins not the war. But he that obeys God and His Apostle, God will admit him to gardens beneath which rivers flow, and he who turns back, God will punish him with a grievous penalty. Sura 48:29a (Fight unbelievers but be loving with one another) Muhammad is the Apostle of God, and those who are with him are strong against unbelievers, but compassionate amongst each other. Sura 9:1-6 (Dissolve treaties with pagans who have not maintained their terms. In the future, make no more treaties with pagans, but kill those who do not receive Islam.) 176 A declaration of immunity from God and His Apostle, to those of the pagans with whom ye have contracted mutual alliances. Go ye, then, for four months backwards and forwards as ye will throughout the land, but know ye that ye cannot frustrate God by your falsehood, but that God will cover with shame those who reject Him. And an announcement from God and His Apostle, to the people assembled on the day of the great pilgrimage—that God and His Apostle dissolve treaty obligations with the pagans. If, then ye repent, it were best for you. But if ye turn away, know ye that ye cannot frustrate God. And proclaim a grievous penalty to those who reject faith. But the treaties are not dissolved with those pagans with whom ye have entered into alliance and who have not subsequently failed you in aught, nor aided any one against you. So fulfil your engagements with them to the end of their term, for God loveth the righteous. But when the forbidden months are past, then fight and slay the pagans wherever ye find them, and seize them, beleaguer them, and lie in wait for them in every stratagem of war. But if they repent, and establish regular prayers and practice regular charity, then open the way for them. For God is oft-forgiving, most merciful. If one among the pagans ask thee for asylum, grant it to him, so that he may hear the Word of God; and then escort him to where he can be secure. That is because they are men without knowledge. Sura 9:11,12,14,15 (Pagans who accept Islam become brother Muslims. Fight those who break their agreements, and God will punish them through you.) But even so, if they repent, establish regular prayer, and practice regular charity, they are your brethren in faith…. But if they violate their oaths after their covenant, and taunt you for your faith, fight ye the chiefs of unfaith, for their oaths are nothing to them… Fight them and God will punish them by your hands, cover them with shame, help you to victory over them, heal the breasts of believers, and still the indignation of their hearts. For God will turn in mercy to whom He will…. Sura 9:16 (God knows who strives.) Or think ye that ye shall be abandoned, as though God did not know those among you who strive with might and main, and take none for friends and protectors except God, His Apostle, and the community of believers? But God is well-acquainted with all that ye do. Sura 9:19-22 (Jihad is the greatest service in the sight of God.) Do ye make the giving of drink to pilgrims, or the maintenance of the Sacred Mosque, equal to the pious service of those who believe in God and the last day, and strive [jihad] with might and main in the cause of God? They are not comparable in the sight of God, and God guides not those who do wrong. Those who believe, and suffer exile and strive with might and main in God's cause with their goods and their persons have the highest rank in the sight of God. They are the people who will achieve salvation. Their Lord doth give them glad tidings of a mercy from Himself, of His good pleasure, and of gardens for them, wherein are delights that endure. They will dwell therein for ever. Verily in God's presence is a reward, the greatest of all. Sura 9:25,26 (Fighting in Battle of Hunain, January 630.) Assuredly God did help you in many battlefields and on the day of Hunain. Behold! Your great numbers elated you, but they availed you naught. That land, for all that it is wide, did constrain you, and ye turned back in defeat. But God did pour His calm on the Apostle and 177 on the believers, and sent down forces which ye saw not. He punished the unbelievers; thus doth He reward those without faith. Sura 9:28 (Do not allow pagans to enter the Ka‘aba.) O ye who believe! Truly the pagans are unclean, so let them not, after this year of theirs, approach the Sacred Mosque. Sura 9:29-31 (Fight Jews and Christians until they are subdued because God’s curse is on them.) Fight those who believe not in God nor the last day, nor hold that forbidden which hath been forbidden by God and His Apostle, nor acknowledge the religion of truth, even if they are of the people of the Book, until they pay the jizya [poll tax] with willing submission, and feel themselves subdued. The Jews call Uzair [Ezra] a son of God, and the Christians call Christ the Son of God…. God's curse be on them; how they are deluded away from the truth! They take their priests and their anchorites to be their lords in derogation of God, and they take as their Lord Christ the son of Mary. Yet they are commanded to worship but One God…. Sura 9:38,39,41 (Fight with all you have or God will punish you.) O ye who believe! What is the matter with you, that when ye are asked to go forth in the cause of God, ye cling heavily to the earth? Do ye prefer the life of this world to the hereafter? But little is the comfort of this life, as compared with the hereafter. Unless ye go forth, He will punish you with a grievous penalty, and put others in your place… Go ye forth, whether equipped lightly or heavily, and strive [jihad] and struggle with your goods and your persons, in the cause of God. That is best for you, if ye but knew. Sura 9:52,73 (Muslims will receive either victory or martyrdom and paradise. Unbelievers, whose abode is hell, can expect only punishment from God.) Say, ‘Can you expect for us any fate other than one of two glorious things - martyrdom or victory? But we can expect for you either that God will send His punishment from Himself, or by our hands. So wait expectant. We too will wait with you.’… O Prophet! Strive [jihad] hard against the unbelievers and the hypocrites, and be firm against them. Their abode is hell—an evil refuge indeed. Sura 9:81-96 (God rejects those who are able to fight but refuse. The disabled are forgiven.) Those who were left behind [in the Tabuk expedition] rejoiced in their inaction behind the back of the apostle of God. They hated to strive and fight with their goods and their persons, in the cause of God. They said, ‘Go not forth in the heat.’…. If, then, God bring thee back to any of them, and they ask thy permission to come out with thee, say, ‘Never shall ye come out with me, nor fight an enemy with me. For ye preferred to sit inactive on the first occasion. Then sit ye now with those who lag behind.’ Nor do thou ever pray for any of them that dies, nor stand at his grave. For they rejected God and his apostle, and died in a state of perverse rebellion. Nor let their wealth nor their sons dazzle thee. God's plan is to punish them with these things in this world, and that their souls may perish in their very denial of God. When a sura comes down, enjoining them to believe in God and to strive and fight along with his apostle, those with wealth and influence among them ask thee for exemption, and say, ‘Leave us behind. We would be with those who sit at home.’ They prefer to be with 178 the women, who remain behind at home. Their hearts are sealed and so they understand not. But the apostle, and those who believe with him, strive and fight with their wealth and their persons. For them are all good things, and it is they who prosper. God hath prepared for them gardens under which rivers flow, to dwell therein…. There is no blame on those who are infirm, or ill, or who find no resources to spend on the cause, if they are sincere in duty to God and his apostle…. Nor is there blame on those who came to thee to be provided with mounts, and when thou saidst, ‘I can find no mounts for you’ they turned back. Their eyes streaming with tears of grief that they had no resources wherewith to provide the expenses…. Sura 9:111 (God gives paradise to all who strive in His cause.) God hath purchased of the believers their persons and their goods. For theirs in return is the garden of Paradise. They fight in His cause, and slay and are slain. Sura 9:122 (Not all should go to fight; those who stay are equal with those who go.) Nor should the believers all go forth together. If a contingent from every expedition remained behind, they could devote themselves to studies in religion, and admonish the people when they return to them…. Sura 9:123 (Fight the unbelievers surrounding you.) O ye who believe! Fight the unbelievers who gird you about, and let them find firmness in you, and know that God is with those who fear Him. 179