Saturday, October 17, 2015

On Perigrinus, Part IV: Heroes-The Bouillon Brothers-Godfrey & Baldwin



Bouillon Brother #2: Duke Godfrey, Flayer of Fatimids


1
          Duke Godfrey of Bouillon, French Godefroi de Bouillon   (born c. 1060—died July 18, 1100, kingdom of Jerusalem [now Jerusalem, Israel]), duke of Lower Lorraine (as Godfrey IV; 1089–1100) Brother of Eustace III, and a leader of the First Crusade, who became the first Latin ruler in Israel after the capture of Jerusalem from the Muslims in July 1099.

Being the middle child he had to earn his fame by fighting for his king, the self-proclaimed Holy Roman Emperor



When the call for crusade came, his Norman blood boiled at the thought of someone else earning glory, and plunder! He promptly convinced his brothers, Eustace and Baldwin to help raise a mighty host and devote their combined strength to a good cause selling his castle and lands in the process. It was the knightly version of philanthropy!

He distinguished himself as a powerful and intelligent leader, able to find common ground with his rivals, and local Muslim and Armenian Christian rulers.  I was going to list something about his abilities as a warrior, but ALL of the knights I’ll be discussing were at the top of their class.  They were some of the best martial arts experts in the world, the professional athletes of their day.
And yes, they even had super fans!







He rose to prominence as the supreme commander of the crusading princes, primarily after Antioch but unquestionably after his role in the fall of Jerusalem.

Despite his faults, and though it took more than a little convincing, he saw to the continuation of the march to Jerusalem while others chose to peruse their own interests.  Godfrey certainly, had his own plans, evident by the many schemes and detours which strained his alliance between himself and the other Normans.  He also managed to maintain cooperation with the other princes, filling the void at least to some extent, left by Adhemar’s death. 


Along with his brothers, and Tancred, he successfully stormed the walls of Jerusalem and took the city.  Despite the tumulus relationship with Raymond, Godfrey became the first Duke of Jerusalem.  Shortly after the princes selected Godfrey as supreme commander of the city, they all united one final time, to defeat the Fatimid Caliph’s army and solidified the Kingdom of Jerusalem. 

Godfrey died not long after the battle that secured the Crusader presence and his own kingdom, in 1100.  Scholars debate his COD, but most believe it was caused by a prolonged illness.  It was likely caused by the slow working venom of the last Saracen witch or warlock he slew…  Records of his passing remain lost to most “scholars,” but I have it on good authority that he died, gazing over a field littered with the bodies of his conquered foes.







Bouillon Brother #3: Baldwin I, King of Jerusalem



1.      Baldwin I, byname Baldwin of Boulogne, French Baudouin de Boulogne  (born 1058ish?—died April 2, 1118, Al-ʿArīsh, Egypt), king of the Crusader state of Jerusalem (1100–18) who expanded the kingdom and secured its territory, formulating an administrative apparatus that was to serve for 200 years as the basis for Frankish rule in Syria and Israel. Like the other Normans, he was known for his relatively just treatment/dealings with people of ALL faith backgrounds, so long as it suited his purpose…


One of my least favorite members of the Crusade; he was a shrewd man, great tactician, and like his brothers, deadly in the field.  He is perhaps unduly cast as the most opportunistic and selfish of the knights.  His sullied background stems from his questionable methods during the acquisition of Edessa, which went something like this:

      While on a mission with Tancred to secure strongholds to protect the main army’s flank, he             was adopted as son and heir of the Armenian Christian ruler of Eddessa and his wife.   Not                    long after the bizarre adoption ceremony concluded, an angry mob swarmed the old man and              his wife.  The lord was killed in the fray and Baldwin assumed command of the city, even took            an Armenian Wife.  Historians are suspicious of such convenient regime changes because mob            assassinations were a common way for nobles to dispose of other nobles without soiling their              own reputations. 



Another incident throwing doubt on Baldwin’s exalted reputation comes from Tancred, another of my favorite knights (of all time).  Tancred was quite certain that his re-enforcements (some 400 knights) were ambushed and executed by Baldwin, whilst on their march to Antioch.
Lord Baldwin showed his true Ahole colors again when Antioch was secure, and he no longer needed the support of the Armenians, he shipped his Armenian wife off to a convent,


and married some other chick.  Though he was an important asset to the Crusader Army, and well-loved as King of Jerusalem, it is my opinion that he was everything Hugh the Great wished he could be: King of the Douche Bags.


*Because I decided to introduce the Crusader Princes by order of importance, Hugh will be discussed later… Much, much, later….

Baldwin’s death was one of the most unfortunate of the Crusader Princes:

   While fishing with some buddies, don’t ask if they used live or artificial!  These guys were              knights!  Not just any Sir Joe Tinhat mind you, these guys were knights knights. They spear-              fished crocs and hippos in the Nile with their lances. Seriously…



Unfortunately the river dragons had fled the area that day, so they had to settle for lancing fish.  After eating the fish Baldwin believed that his meal had caused an old stomach wound to open, and he died on his way back to Jerusalem in 1018.

His death was mourned by ALL, (accept his Armenian ex-wife) even his enemies were sad to see him go.  Despite my opinion of him, I must acknowledge that he was one of the greatest rulers that region ever had. Ever! 
·        He had fantastic diplomats
·        Kept order in the region
·        Created and maintained alliances that few rulers have held since, and they paid him tribute! (a              knight’s version of extortion)
·        His enemies were absolutely terrified of him (Many believed that he would eat them)
·        Maintained, and increased trade

Sunday, October 4, 2015

On Perigrinus, Part IV: Heroes-The Bouillon Brothers-Eustace III

          

Part IV: Heroes-The Bouillon Brothers-Eustace III "The Noble" or just "Zack"


In A.D. 1096 there were no nations, only kingdoms made up of competing lords.  The most powerful kingdoms were not the ordered nation states, like that of today.  Medieval Europe was comprised of unstable realms that expanded and contracted with every generation.  When Pope Urban gave the call for crusade, the two most powerful kings (of France & Germany) had been excommunicated so the burden/opportunity to lead fell to their most powerful subjects.  

 One such group of powerful leaders was a unique trio of brothers who "took up the cross" together.  They would go on to   ...SPOILER ALERT ...  win themselves a kingdom.  

 This week I'll be introducing the character profiles of the Bouillon Brothers:




 First up: Eustace III, Count of Boulogne (1060-1125AD)

 Eustace III (The name was cool back then, it was like Zack back in 1992!) succeeded as Count of  Boulogne in 1087.  Though not as well-known today as his younger brothers are, he was the eldest  and in my opinion, the most "knightly" of the three

 I imagine he looked something like this:



 These brothers hail roughly from the nation known today as Belgium and parts of France.  They  were subjects of the German King or “Ze HOLY ROMAN EMPEROR!” (as Heinrich IV would’ve  certainly called himself.)



 Though subjects of the HRE

  (Holy Roman Empire-  consisted of all modern day Germany, large parts of other countries,    including German occupied Italy/Rome. > Google "anti-pope" for more info), 

the brothers' ancestry was distinctly Norman.  Their father fought alongside William at Hastings, the battle that transformed William the Bastard of Normandy into King William I the Conqueror, a much more palatable title…

(The Saxons, and my ancestors the Celts however, still used his former title in their conversations, and likely bestowed it on every other Norman as well.)

Germanic nobility, like their French counterparts, often had difficulties with sibling rivalry, especially when it came to transfers of power.  The Vikings/Normans by comparison had slightly healthier relationships with their family.  Godfrey and his brothers, are a testament to that distinct Norse cultural tradition of literal “brothers in arms.” 

Zack was a valiant knight, skilled both in war and administration.  He was also loyal and honorable some of his most notable actions were:
  • He supported Robert’s claim to the English throne in 1088, because he believed it to be the will of King William I.  Certainly not because he believed the throne was in more capable hands with Robert Dufus, than it was with his younger, more intelligent brother, William Rufus. (He later changed is name to Robert Curthose, don't bother Googling it, the previous interpretation of his middle name has since been lost to history)  >.>
  • Antioch: When many fled or literally died of despair, He backed his friends and brothers in battles where they were hopelessly outnumbered, and championed a cause that seemed all but lost.  He was part of the A-Team that stormed Antioch (we'll discuss this later), and he accompanied Raymond to deliver Jerusalem from their most recent conquerors. ("Deliver" was apparently a relative term then, as the population suffered more sacking/pillaging than most of the previous conquered cities) 
  • He returned to his kingdom after fulfilling his pledge to reclaim the Holy Land, and never sought to expand his power there.  Though he did attempt to assume the title King of Jerusalem after the death of the Baldwin brother, by the time he reached the Mediterranean sea, Baldwin's successor had assumed the throne and contemporaries say that the succession came as a great relief to the old knight.



Post crusade Bio:


After fulfilling his oath, he returned to Europe to administer his domains.  He married Mary of Scotland, daughter of King Malcolm III of Scotland, and Saint Margaret of Scotland. That’s right, he married the daughter of a Legend and a Saint!  Eustace and Mary had one daughter, Matilda of Boulogne.  He died,  at a ripe old age of some such number I can't recall, and historians probably don't know for sure anyway.

Monday, September 14, 2015

On Perigrinus, Part IV: Heroes-Adhemar & Raymond

Hero Profiles: The Bishop & the Count of St. Gilles

It has been brought to my attention that my Blog on the Crusade has been a bit content heavy, and for that I apologize.  Being a geek, I tend to assume everyone is as interested in the subject as I am.  Naturally, I’ve found this is rarely the case.  I’ve decided, rather than blogging another massive post, I’ll do short parts.  The First Crusade was comprised of a veritable dream team of “knights.”  Though there were many knights of renowned in the crusader period, history has left us only a few accounts and most of them are of the commanders, mentioning only a few names and deeds of the lesser nobles. 

As I discuss the Crusade, several names pop up and it gets very confusing.  “So and So of So and So, Duke of Someplace," and etc.  I’ve embellished their titles a bit to help their names stick.  So this post will begin to introduce what I call, the Crusader Heroes.  A sort of profile for the individuals that will play primary roles in the narrative as I discuss the siege of Antioch, Jerusalem, and the Battle of Ramla.  These men commanded their troops in person, and are responsible for the success of the Crusade of 1096-1099 and the Crusader kingdoms that ruled the region for the next two centuries. 

 (Keep in mind, these knights lived well before the age of chivalry, so their “knightly” conduct was only as true as  their faith, which after all, provided the means for of the age of chivalry)
I’ll begin in order of rank/importance, at the time of the call for crusade.

Adhémar the Righteous, Turksbane, the Bishop of Puy


 Adhémar of Monteil, also called Adhémar of Puy, Adhémar was made bishop of Le Puy in 1077. He made a pilgrimage to the East in 1086–87. Responding to Pope Urban II’s call in November 1095 for a holy expedition to the East, he was appointed papal legate of the Crusade. Wounded and temporarily captured, he recovered and entered Constantinople (now Istanbul) with Raymond IV of Toulouse and his troops and had friendly audiences with the Byzantine emperor.



Much more than a minister, or official papal snitch, he was the primary authority figure of the Crusade.  His task was monumental: to keep the peace, and mediate between the crusader leaders and the Emperor. He maintained unity and kept up the army’s moral, all while still commanding his own army in battle. 



He led honorably, and well.  His quick thinking, and fierceness in battle saved the entire Army at Dorylaeum.

 He sharply chastised and or criticized evil, including Raymond’s shameless, albeit successful, attempts to curry favor among the masses by fabricating miracles.


It is my opinion that he is the greatest hero of the Crusade.  Without his skills of leadership, mediation, and benevolence of character, (combined with Bohemund’s tactical brilliance) the crusade would have failed as miserably as those that were to follow.  Had he survived Antioch, I believe that Christian rule of the region would have endured much longer.


Raymond the Hapless, Champion of the Empire, Count of Toulouse


1.       Count Raymond IV, byname Raymond of Saint-Gilles, French Raimond de Saint-Gilles   (born 1041 or 1042, Toulouse, county of Toulouse, France—died February 28, 1105, near Tripoli [now in Lebanon])  He held only nominal allegiance to King Philip, as he was powerful enough to rule as a king himself.

Compared to the other crusader leaders, Raymond was unrivaled in wealth and power.  He was a shrewd populist leader, and expert manipulator.  He shared many of the same qualities as our president, but a french version... Baroque Obama?



That being said, he was the only Crusader leader to fulfill his oaths to God, the Church, and Emperor Alexius.  So in that sense he was absolutely nothing like the sitting POTUS...

He was one of the few major nobles who took up the quest for primarily unselfish reasons. (All knights earned their title and keep through glorious deeds)  While true to his oaths/loyalties, he was also treacherous, and not above using dishonorable means to achieve his political ends. (Such as fabricating miracles or assassinating his enemies)


Whether or not he actively participated in dishonorable deeds, or simply allowed them to occur, he did so only to his enemies (the Normans became his enemies at Antioch).  Though most armchair historians prefer that he be remembered as a selfish, ill-tempered, old man.  I remember him as one of the good guys, and most knightly of the great crusader princes.


He was fearless in battle and intrigue, a practitioner of total war.  He is said to have often used Virgil’s quote: “Dolus an virtus quis in hoste requirat” which basically means: It’s war and I’ll win by ANY means at my disposal.  Raymond had a large and well-practiced network of spies and assassins.  He used them against both rival knights, and troublesome clergy.  His schemes against Bohemund and Tancred, were constantly foiled.  Bohemund was always one step ahead of the Count, likely contributing to his “ill temper.”


Perhaps the most notable example of Raymond’s plans being turned against him was the minor Crusade of 1101, or as I like to call it, Crusade 1.5. ( I’ll put the summary of those circumstances at the end of this profile)



He was a loyal champion of the Emperor Alexius (Alexios Komnenos), conquering territories for his patron without seeking personal gain. (Other than those attained by standard looting practices) He is most remembered for his refusal to be crowned King of Jerusalem, saying: “How could I wear a crown of gold, where my savior wore a crown of thorns?”  He allowed Godfrey to take command, though Godfrey also refused the tittle “King of Jerusalem” for the same reasons he was more than happy to assume command of the city.  After the Egyptian Army was defeated, and Jerusalem secure, Raymond went on fighting Muslim and Norman opposition.  He succumbed to illness endeavoring to create his own crusader state in Tripoli, however his men won the city and established a third crusader state.  



Raymond & Crusade 1.5


Raymond, along with several other nobles that were unable, or unwilling to attend/complete the first crusade, marched out to help consolidate Christian power in the region.  Raymond led a large army back down the relatively secure road of 1097, but the majority of his infantry (the bulk of his army was made up of Lombards) betrayed him, and forced him to make a detour.  Unfortunately for the count, he had unwittingly attached himself to friends of Bohemund.  They refused to march to Tripoli, until they had rescued Bohemund from Danishmend Gazi “the Wise.”





Poor communication, intelligence, and discipline (of the Norman/Lombard army) resulted in disaster.  The entire force was surrounded and eventually destroyed.  Raymond’s conduct in the hapless conflict was epic.  Considered an old man by medieval standards he still fought his way to an outcropping of rock, where he stood alone amidst a sea of blood thirsty Turks and Arab warriors.  He was rescued in true knightly idiom by Count Stephen, formerly “Stephen The Sensitive” now “The Redeemed.”  They fled the field with a handful of others, leaving the women and children in camp behind to slow their pursuers, in not so knightly a fashion…

Friday, June 12, 2015

On Peregrinus, Part III: First Contact

First Contact: The Men of Iron


The People’s Crusade: 


Both the Pope and the Emperor had hoped for an army well led and organized, but many set out on their own and Christ was not their motivation. They marched under the guise of crusaders and terrorized the countryside, most of these bands were eventually destroyed in or around Hungary.  A massive rabble led by Peter the Hermit called the Pauper’s Crusade, departed in mob fashion, and without supplies.  They were comprised of poor men and women, and a few knights.  Albert of Aix wrote:

In response to his (Peter the Hermit) constant admonition and call, bishops, abbots, clerics, and monks set out; next, most noble laymen, and princes of the different kingdoms; then, all the common people, the chaste as well as the sinful, adulterers, homicides, thieves, perjurers, and robbers; indeed, every class of the Christian profession, nay, also, women and those influenced by the spirit of penance—all joyfully entered upon this expedition.

Due to starvation and other motivators, they attacked and robbed the country along the route to Constantinople, over 10,000 are said to have died along the road side due to starvation and exposure.  Chaos followed their march, Albert left an account that tells of a scene of desperation.  The harsh conditions, questionable devotion, and lack of discipline lead to acts of cruel thievery and murder.  The evil actions committed by the “crusaders” were immediately reciprocated by the host country:

They (The Hungarians) fell upon them (“Crusaders”) with cruel slaughter, cut down the defenseless and unarmed and inflicted upon them frightful slaughter, to such an extent (as those affirm for a truth who were present and barely escaped) that the entire plain of Belgrade was filled by the bodies of the slain and was covered with their blood.

Modern society often criticizes the crusade(s) as being an example of the evils religion brings upon the world.  Many Christians even, view this period as a black eye on the Church.  I however see this period as a supreme example of the benefit of Christian Character in contrast of the human condition.  One of the reasons the enemies of Christianity will bring up the crusades in their arguments, is due to the events that occurred on the march to Constantinople but Ekkehard wrote:

Thus the men of our race, zealous, doubtless, for God, though not according to the knowledge of God, began to persecute other Christians while yet upon the expedition which Christ had provided for freeing Christians. They were kept from fraternal bloodshed only by divine mercy; and the Hungarians, also, were freed. This is the reason why some of the more guileless brethren, ignorant of the matter, and too hasty in their judgment, were scandalized and concluded that the whole expedition was vain and foolish.

The first army of crusaders to arrive at Constantinople were the poor, haggard followers of Peter the Hermit.  Emperor Alexius was well aware of their conduct along their journey to his Empire so he denied them entry into the city.  He soon conveyed them across the channel where they were placed in an old fortification near the Turkish line to “await orders” (The real Crusading Army).  It is said that driven by their fanaticism, they disobeyed the Emperor and marched into enemy territory. It is more likely they were driven by a want of supply (greed) and the sense of urgency felt by their leaders as their numbers and discipline dwindled every day they remained idle.  Unprepared for the steppe style of warfare and poorly armed, they were almost completely destroyed by the local Turkish Emir.

                The Turks however mighty and numerous, were far from the united power they would become under the Ottoman banner.  They had inflicted a serious defeat on “Rum” as they called the Eastern Romans, but like the princes of Western Europe, they would rather fight against one another than work together.  Amin Maalouf wrote a fantastic book from the oft overlooked Muslim perspective called, The Crusades through Arab Eyes.  Maalouf describes the harsh world of Turkish politics, and gives a much better insight into the politics of the Middle East than the Crusader accounts do.  Unlike the “Frang,” as the Western Europeans were called, Turkish successions were never smooth transitions of power and were almost immediately followed by civil war.  The Turks’ were nomadic in nature, and thus prefer leaving the governing of their conquered cities to slaves that paid them an annual tribute.  They would destroy irrigated land and create pastures, so both the land and the cultures there suffered greatly under Turkish rule.  Each Emir thought only of increasing his own power, reputation and influence.  Alliances were based on mutual benefit and nothing more.  Treachery was the most common character trait in the East, honor based loyalty was a foreign concept.
                  In July 1096 the rabble under the command of Peter the Hermit entered the recently conquered territory of Kilij Arslan the Sultan of Rum.  (King of the Romans)  Arslan was only 17 years old, but was already trying to make a name for himself by conquering the territory of more famous men.  He was in the middle of just such a campaign when word reached him from his spies in Emperor Alexius’ army (Alexius used Turkish mercenaries) that an army of “Frang” had arrived at an old fort near his capital of Nicaea.  After hearing of the slaughter and pillaging of the countryside around his capital, (where his pregnant wife was living) he lifted his siege rode swiftly meet this strange new threat.

                The rabble had been confiscating supplies in preparation for the siege of Nicaea. Under the pretext of “foraging expeditions,” “crusader” villains slaughtered and robbed men, women, and children of all faith backgrounds.  Perhaps over confident in the lack of resistance they had received, they ventured further and further into the interior. 
“Because of the danger of ambushes and attacks from the Turks, they (Byzantines) forbade Peter and his whole army from marching towards the mountainous region of the city of Nicaea, until a greater number of Christians should be added to their number. Peter heard the message, and he with all the Christian people assented to the counsel of the Emperor. They tarried there for the course of two months, feasting in peace and joy, and sleeping secure from all hostile attacks. and so two months later, having become wanton and unrestrained because of ease and an inestimable abundance of food, heeding not the voice of Peter, but against his will, they entered into the region of the city of Nicaea and the realms of Soliman. (The Turks)  They took as plunder cattle, sheep, goats, the herds of the Greek servants of the Turks, and carried them off to their fellows. Peter, seeing this, was sorrowful in heart, knowing that they did it not with impunity. Whereupon he often admonished them not to seize any more booty contrary to the counsel of the Emperor, but in vain did he speak to a foolish and rebellious people.  But the Teutons, (Germans) seeing that affairs turned out so well for the Romans (Not the Romans we think of today, but possibly men from the old Germanic-Roman territory: Alamannia- just my guess, but they were certainly Latins)  and the Franks, and that they returned unhindered so many times with their booty, were inflamed with an inordinate desire for plunder.” –Albert of Aix

Unfortunately for Peter’s forces, they had failed to realize that the Greek, Arab, and Armenian inhabitants they had so effortlessly destroyed, were not regular Turkish forces.  I had always imagined All the crusaders as being far superior to All the Muslim forces.  In my mind’s eye I pictured them something like this:
   


No contest right!?  Turns out, though there is some truth in this comparison, it’s a bit off.  The Turkish forces, had their own version of knights.  In tactics, skill and appearance they were more like the Mongolian horde than the forty thieves of Arabian Nights.  Though the “Frang” Knights were notoriously fierce and unrivaled in melee combat, the rank and file of Peter’s army were little more than a starving mob of angry peasants.  The reality looked more like this:
  




The result was just as you might expect, almost the entire army, the pilgrims, and family members that followed were slaughtered or sold into slavery.  A few thousand managed to take refuge in a nearby coastal fort, and though in ruins, they were able to hold off the forces of Arslan long enough for the Byzantine navy to rescue them. 

                                                The Real Crusade: 

The Battle of Dorylaeum


Arslan had lost hardly any men defeating The People's Crusade.  He returned to his capital and celebrated his victory.  Once back to his usual self-aggrandizing shenanigans, he ignored reports that additional Crusaders had arrived near his capital.  To appease the troubled messengers, he sent a small detachment of cavalry.  After his last experience with the “Frang” he was confident the small force he sent, was more than enough to destroy the newly arrived infidels.  A few days passed when, what remained of his cavalry returned with news of their defeat and that the city was now besieged!

                What the Sultan of Rum had failed to realize was that multiple “armies” marched out on crusade, but only one was the official Crusader Army.  This army represented nearly all the Crown heads of Europe, with their private armies of picked men.  Aside from the thousands of volunteers, civilians, and pilgrims, the Army that marched out of Constantinople, was a massive experienced force of warriors, and merciless raiders.  

Let's step out of the middle ages and into the future. Imagine for a moment,  you are the governor of a small state or county in a post-apocalyptic America.  You have a small army of professional soldiers of varying background and experience, as well as hordes of armed locals.  




You show up to the battlefield expecting an army of transient bandits, only to find yourself facing a  professional army of infantry and armored cavalry, headed by thousands of Navy Seals.  To make this proposed sci-fi thriller even more ridiculous than a Kevin Costner film, said army is lead by the clones of Gen. Patton, Sam Houston, Stone Wall Jackson, & George Washington. All of them are hell bent on your destruction…  



This is the situation Arslan found himself in!  He was wise enough to patch things up with his enemies, and unite against a common foe but he was wholly unprepared to face the force that awaited him.  Hoping to take advantage of his vast numerical superiority (A point that wikipedia and I differ on), and the element of surprise, he attacked the besiegers at their weakest point.  

The weakest point by his definition was the point with the smallest number of armed troops, and those furthest from re-enforcement.  Unfortunatly for Arslan and his allies, it was Bohemund's camp.  Arslan expected the crusaders to break and flee under such a ferocious surprise attack but Bohemund was a verteran.  He ordered his knights to dismount and they successfully formed a line of battle, protecting the noncombatants and poorly armed troops from the Turkish mounted archers.  The Turks discovered to their horror, that arrows couldn’t pierce the knights' armor.  What was worse, when the troops engaged in close combat, they were easily cut to pieces. Bohemund fought constantly for some 7 hours, until eventually being relieved by the other crusader leaders.  After this engagement these Knights were simply called: "The Men of Iron." Their line of battle: "The moving fortress"

The battle raged all day, the Turks were well supplied and the Crusaders were cut off.  The battle was finally decided when the Papal legate, Bishop Adhemar of Le Puy, maneuvered his forces under the cover of nearby hills to the enemy's rear. Once near the Turkish supply camp, he attacked the Turks from the rear, burning thier camp and scattering the muslim horde.  Many of you may be thinking, "What's a Papal Legate"?  You may think it strange that a Bishop, and Papal legate (Pope's enforcer) would be leading troops into battle. Interestingly, back in the good ol' days, there used to be Warrior Bishops.  I'm not sure what they looked like in battle.  Art from this period typically shows them in robes and halos, but I think Bishop Addy (That's what his friends called him) looked something like this:



I’ve talked about the appearance of the factions involved in this epic contest quite a bit, but don't just take my word for it.  Anna Comnena, the daughter of Emperor Alexius I, left us a fantastic reference.  She was best known for her beauty and for writing a biography of her father: The Alexiad.   A fascinating, though doubtless exaggerated, account of the Byzantine Empire.   Her account is important to this article because she describes a Norman knight.  She does so, so vividly it’s like being pulled into the pages of history, back in time, and into his actual presence. What follows is her description of  Bohemund, Prince of Taranto at her father’s court (The place where all the nobles hung out):

Now [Bohemond] was such as, to put it briefly, had never before been seen in the land of the Romans, be he either of the barbarians or of the Greeks, for he was a marvel for the eyes to behold, and his reputation was terrifying. Let me describe the barbarian's appearance more particularly – he was so tall in stature that he overtopped the tallest by nearly one cubit, narrow in the waist and loins, with broad shoulders and a deep chest and powerful arms. And in the whole build of the body he was neither too slender nor overweighted with flesh, but perfectly proportioned and, one might say, built in conformity with the canon of Polycleitus

(Polycleitus was a famous artist in ancient Greece, best known for his sculptures of Greek gods/goddesses) 

His skin all over his body was very white, and in his face the white was tempered with red. His hair was yellowish, but did not hang down to his waist like that of the other barbarians; for the man was not inordinately vain of his hair, but had it cut short to the ears. Whether his beard was reddish, or any other colour I cannot say, for the razor had passed over it very closely and left a surface smoother than chalk...
 His blue eyes indicated both a high spirit and dignity; and his nose and nostrils breathed in the air freely; his chest corresponded to his nostrils and by his nostrils...the breadth of his chest. For by his nostrils nature had given free passage for the high spirit which bubbled up from his heart. 

A certain charm hung about this man but was partly marred by a general air of the horrible... He was so made in mind and body that both courage and passion reared their crests within him and both inclined to war. His wit was manifold and crafty and able to find a way of escape in every emergency. In conversation he was well informed, and the answers he gave were quite irrefutable. This man who was of such a size and such a character was inferior to the Emperor alone in fortune and eloquence and in other gifts of nature.
                
Her description of Bohemund must’ve been the inspiration for Ragnar’s character in the History Channel’s hit show: Vikings.





The Fall of Nicaea


 After his defeat, Arslan sent a messenger to the governor of Nicaea telling him to act according to his own best interests.  The governor promptly struck a deal with Emperor Alexius, and secretly transferred the city back into Byzantine control.  The crusaders awoke the next morning to find Byzantine colors waving over the city.  Some were happy at the peaceful end but the Normans, and Teutons were enraged at having been robbed of glory and plunder.  There was no bloodshed, the Sultan’s wife and child were cared for by Emperor Alexius. Arslan fled into the desert and began to spread the word to the other Muslim lords of the impending threat to their recent conquests.

Bohemund’s mere presence may have been enough to weaken the knees of young princesses and the walls of his enemies but his ambition and political cunning were less amiable.  Princess Anna writes:    

For when this man of evil design (Bohemund) had left his country in which he possessed no wealth at all under the pretext, indeed, of adoring at the Lord's Sepulcher, but in reality endeavoring to acquire for himself a kingdom, he found himself in need of much money, especially, indeed, if he was to seize the Roman power. In this he followed the advice of his father (Duke Robert Guiscard) and, so to speak, was leaving no stone unturned. Moreover, the Emperor, who understood fully his wicked intention and perverse mind, skillfully managed carefully to remove whatever might further Bohemund's ambitious designs. Wherefore, Bohemund, seeking a home for himself in the East and using Cretan scheming against Cretans, did not obtain it. For the Emperor feared lest, after obtaining power, he would use it to place the Latin counts under obligation to him, finally thus accomplishing easily what he wished. But since he did not want Bohemund to surmise that he was already discovered, the Emperor misled him by this hope: "Not yet," he said, "has the time come for the thing which you say; but after a little it shall come about by your fortitude and trust in me."

From about 1080-1085, Bohemund had commanded most or the Norman knights that would go on to follow him on “crusade”, during his father’s attempts to take the Byzantine throne for himself.  Robert was the effectual king of Viking (Norman) Italy.  Bohemund was ambitious for two historically known reasons:
  1.        Being the first born and likely favored son of Robert, he was to inherit his father’s kingdom.  Unfortunately Robert’s shield maiden and 2nd wife Sikelgaita, wanted her son to inherit the kingdom and was vehemently against the war with Byzantium.  Bohemund was dis-inherited by his younger half-brother Roger II, King of Sicily.
  2.        Bohemund had pledged to his father, that he would carry on his dream of conquering Byzantium. His actions on and after the crusade corroborate this narrative.

It’s obvious that the leaders of the Crusade had various intentions but the Normans’, specifically Bohemund’s intentions, heavily influenced and marred Byzantine-Crusader relations.  The peaceful transition of the city of Nicaea back into Byzantine hands infuriated the Normans, even though they had pledged to return control of ALL formerly Byzantine cities back to Byzantine control.  Nicaea was the turning point in relations between the Greek and Latin powers, the mistrust and political intrigue almost destroyed the entire expedition.