| A life-long
dedication to the study of medieval Spain ably fits Joseph F.
O'Callaghan to address one of the most discussed issues in this
field. Spanish historiography has had to deal for years with
the topic of the specificity of the Iberian Peninsula during
the Middle Ages, because of its Muslim inhabitants. Whether it
be as a state or as subjects of Christian kings (known as Mudejars),
these people felt they were as much 'Spaniards' as were the Christians.
Christian propaganda depicting the 'Reconquista' as a war to
eject the Muslims from territories rightfully owned by Christians
(dealt with in O'Callaghan's first chapter, 'The Reconquest:
Evolution of an Idea') has been idealised in Spain, both as part
of the origins of the nation, and because of the traditional
alignment in the modern Roman Catholic church. Despite some challenges
in the last thirty years, the word 'Reconquest' is still used
generally, with the public continuing to use the term in common
conversation. It is no surprise that Hispanists such as O'Callaghan
himself, J. Hillgarth, P. Linehan, the late D. Lomax and A. MacKay
have all discussed at great length the convenience (or otherwise)
of using this concept for the history of medieval Spain.
Another facet of this question is whether the war prosecuted
by the Christian kingdoms in the Iberian Peninsula - both for
territorial and religious reasons - can be classified within
the more general field of confrontation between Christians and
Muslims in the wider Mediterranean basin: that is, as a part
of the Crusades. Again, recent scholarship has been proposing
this new approach to the Reconquest.(1)
However, it is this book by O'Callaghan that provides the most
accurate and detailed study of this question over a long time
period and throughout the whole peninsula.
Firstly, Joseph O'Callaghan discusses the problem of modern
vocabulary as it is applied to medieval religious conflicts,
in a chapter entitled 'Reconquest, Holy War and Crusade'. He
continues with a good description of the Christian and Islamic
sources he has used for this book. This chapter demands further
comment and commendation. Far from limiting his survey to Spanish
and Portuguese medieval sources, both in the vernacular and Latin,
O'Callaghan has undertaken extensive research in Arabic material
(in translation), French, German and Pontifical records and chronicles
in Latin. This wealth of sources gives a balanced view of the
dilemma 'reconquest versus crusade' and helps to place the Iberian
conflict in a world-wide perspective (at least according to medieval
standards).
Chapters two to five focus on a chronological overview of crusading
in the Iberian Peninsula, from the late eleventh to the middle
of the thirteenth centuries. Although the reason for such a time-frame
is not given in the text, we can assume that the author is analysing
the origins of the crusading phenomenon on both eastern and western
sides of the Mediterranean, and tracing its history up to the
Fifth crusade, that is, the era of splendour of the crusades.
The argument is clear: the precedent of crusade as a religious
war can be found in the Spanish Reconquest (notably at Barbastro,
1063). The concept was then elaborated by the Papacy for the
first and second crusades, when the attack on Islam was envisaged
as a double offensive on both sides of the Mediterranean. When
the crusades to the Holy Land became less frequent, Spanish crusades
were at their apogee, the subject of bulls from several popes,
and concentrating the efforts of native and foreign fighters.
During all this period, the indulgences granted to the 'fighting
pilgrims' were the same as those granted to those going to the
Holy Land. Pilgrimage to Santiago was very closely linked to
crusade in Spain, and to the ideology of pilgrimage/crusade to
the Holy Land. The papacy always tried to keep Spanish knights
preoccupied with engagements in their own territory, while offering
the Church and faithful the possibility to finance crusading
endeavours throughout the eastern and western territories.
In this part of the work, the author uses papal bulls extensively
to demonstrate that those issued for the Holy Land were very
similar in their clauses to those issued for war against Muslims
in the Iberian Peninsula. He relies heavily on the pioneering
work by José Goñi Gaztambide, Historia de la
bula de cruzada en España, (Vitoria: Editorial del
Seminario, 1958), which is rounded out with references to other
primary sources. (It would have been interesting to have the
actual text of some of the bulls quoted so as to compare the
style of those dealing with Spanish matters to those concerning
the Holy Land.) The stress is always placed on the fact that
the papacy transformed the Reconquest into a crusade. Nevertheless,
there is also another question: whether the earlier Spanish propaganda
affected the Roman curia and moved the then Pope Urban II to
call for the First Crusade. The close contacts between the Papacy
and the high clergy coming from the Iberian peninsula to Rome
have been used by scholars to prove this, for example in Theresa
Vann's 'Reconquest and the Origin of the Crusades' [in The
Crusades: Other Experiences, Alternate Perspectives, ed.
Khalil Semaan (Binghamton: Global Publications, in press)].
A further point needing clarification is why those French knights,
who had already fought in Jerusalem, would have wanted to join
the crusade in Spain afterwards (Baleares, Zaragoza), if the
remission of their sins was already achieved (pp. 35-38)? Maybe
more stress should be made on economic matters at this point.
The last three chapters examine more earthly matters, such as
the current state of warfare technology and armies, the financing
of the crusade and the ritual accompanying the whole campaign,
as sanctioned by Mozarabic and Roman liturgy. These three aspects
were vital for the success of Christian campaigns, and should
not be ignored. Indeed, the chapter on finance (enlarged and
changed, but inspired by a previous paper presented by the author
in the conference which commemorated the conquest of Seville
by Fernando III [2]). is the
clearest explanation of the variety of incomes used by the king
to subsidise his wars one can read on this particular subject.
However, I missed the detailed study of the changing meaning
of 'tercias' (a term which is difficult to pin down, but
which O'Callaghan has successfully elucidated), which was included
in the article but not in this book.
The eighth chapter, 'The Liturgy of Reconquest and Crusade',
gives a groundbreaking approach to crusading campaigns in Spain,
as it studies the development of a religious war step by step.
This is a very convenient tool for students and public who are
not experts in the field of crusades. Another interesting issue
mentioned by the author is preaching. A study of this subject
for the Spanish front is still to be made. It is unfortunate
that O'Callaghan has not undertaken this task more in depth -
undoubtedly due to space constraints - especially given that
recent works on the subject have ignored or misunderstood the
role of preachers and their mission in the Iberian Peninsula.(3)
There are also some interesting works on the 'Cleansing of Mosques
and Consecration of Churches' which have been omitted in the
- otherwise - very complete and updated bibliography of this
book.(4)
A few objections to minor errors: the word 'parias' has
no origin in Arabic, but comes from the Latin pars, partis,
that is, the kinglets paid 'their parts' to the Christian monarchs.
Two mistakes can be found on pages 17 and 289 (Aníbal
Barbero for Abilio Barbero), and pages 191 and 196 (San Isidro
instead of San Isidoro or Saint Isidore), which do not hinder
comprehension of the text, but may confuse the reader when looking
for references.
The genealogical tables should be very useful to the reader.
However, while the maps included in the book may help the non-Spanish
reader with the evolution of frontiers in the Iberian Peninsula,
they do not clarify the arguments given in the text. Nowadays
we can count on very good cartographic material for the Reconquest,
offered in a small but valuable volume (J. Mestre Campi and F.
Sabaté, eds, Atlas de la 'Reconquista' (Barcelona:
Peninsula, 1998)), which depicts the issues involved much more
clearly.
In the light of recent events, the study of the long-lasting
armed confrontation between Christianity and Islam can provide
new clues for the understanding of the mechanisms of world power.
Joseph O'Callaghan has provided an interesting approach to the
phenomenon of religious wars, focused on such modern concerns
as propaganda and economic foundations. It is our hope, as historians
of medieval Spain, that he will also succeed in calling the attention
of other scholars to the importance of a broader view in crusading
studies, which should take into account the Spanish horizon.
August 2003
Notes
1. For an updated bibliography,
see José Manuel Rodríguez García, 'Historiografía
de las cruzadas', Espacio, Tiempo y Forma, Sección
III- Historia Medieval, 13 (2000), 341-95.
2. Joseph F. O'Callaghan,
'La financiación de la conquista de Sevilla', in Sevilla,
1248, coord. M. González Jiménez (Madrid: Fundación
Ramón Areces/Ayuntamiento de Sevilla, 2000), pp. 191-206.
3. The two works by Christoph
T. Maier, Preaching the Crusades. Mendicant Friars and the
Cross in the Thirteenth Century (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1994) and Crusade Propaganda and Ideology: Model Sermons
for the Preaching of the Cross (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 2000), fail to include the Iberian Peninsula in the European
context. A work which should be acknowledged, still in press
at the time when Joseph O'Callaghan was working on this book,
is Patrick Henriet, 'L'idéologie de la guerre sainte dans
le Haut Moyen Âge hispanique', Francia. Forschungen
zur Westeuropäischen Geschichte, 29:1 (2002), 171-220.
4. I am thinking of a thought-provoking
article written by Pascal Buresi, 'Les conversions d'églises
et de mosquées en Espagne au XIe-XIIIe siècles',
in Villes et religion: Mélanges offerts à Jean-Louis
Biget par ses élèves (Paris: Publications de
la Sorbonne, 2000), pp. 333-50. |