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This collection
is a new addition to Blackwells 'Essential Readings in
History' series, which reprints important academic articles on
historical topics. The books in the series are useful acquisitions
for academic libraries, as they take the pressure off over-used
journals, but, more importantly, they also make the scholarship
and advances contained in the articles available to a readership
that may not have access to university libraries or obscure journals,
and so allows a wider public access to the process of debate
and reformulation. The series is also useful for researchers,
since the inclusion of an index allows themes, individuals and
events to be traced across all the contributions. Unlike Ashgates
excellent Variorum 'Collected Studies' series, however, the original
pagination is not retained.
The editor of this volume on the crusades, Thomas F. Madden,
has picked out some of the plums from crusade scholarship of
the last 35 years. Not surprisingly, Jonathan Riley-Smith looms
large, contributing two of the twelve articles. His provocatively-entitled
Crusading as an act of love is a superlative attempt
to understand crusade motivation on its own terms, while his
later Early crusaders to the east and the costs of crusading,
1095-1130 forcefully argued against the notion that crusaders
were Europes landless sons, going east solely in the hope
of material gain. There are articles by Giles Constable, Marcus
Bull, R. A. Fletcher, John France, Norman Housley, and, of course,
H. E. J. Cowdreys classic Pope Urban IIs preaching
of the First Crusade. This last has also been reprinted
as number XVI in Cowdreys own collection, Popes, Monks
and Crusaders (Hambledon; London, 1984), but there is certainly
no harm in it appearing again. Cowdrey considered the question
of whether the objective of Jerusalem was integral to Urbans
original vision for the expedition to the East as expressed in
the sermon at Clermont in November 1095, and in subsequent letters
and encyclicals. His argument that Jerusalem was central to the
enterprise from the beginning has been largely accepted ever
since.
Also included is Jonathan Tyermans radical Were
there any crusades in the twelfth century?, which argues
that it is misleading to regard crusades as a separate phenomenon
from the general development of attitudes to warfare in western
Europe before the pontificate of Innocent III (1198-1216). Taken
to their logical conclusion, Tyermans iconoclastic ideas
would put an end to any debate on the crusades before 1198, since
the very term is retrospective and inappropriate. So far, however,
he has not been as influential as Riley-Smith or Cowdrey, although
as an alternative voice, he well merits inclusion here.
Thomas Maddens contribution to the book is to give it
unity and to provide very helpful clarifications of the main
points at issue. He gives, at the beginning of each article,
a short summary of the argument and some indication of how it
influenced subsequent scholarship. He has also provides an introduction
which traces the fluctuating approaches to crusading in western
Europe and America from the Renaissance to the world after 11
September 2001. This survey is very well pitched towards a general
readership, placing the academic debates in the wider context
of world events and how they have changed attitudes to ideologically
motivated warfare.
There is only one aspect of this book that strikes an odd note
and that is the decision to include Sir Steven Runcimans
Byzantium and the Crusades. Like all of Runcimans
output, the nine pages reproduced here are a compelling read
with a clear and forcefully argued thesis. The First Crusade
was, he believed, tantamount to a barbarian invasion of the civilised
and sophisticated Byzantine empire and its consequences were
ultimately to bring about the ruin of Byzantine civilisation.
This mass migration was unwittingly triggered by the Byzantine
emperor, Alexius I Comnenus, when he had sent ambassadors to
the pope at the Council of Piacenza in March 1095 to ask for
mercenary soldiers to enrol in his armies. The emotive appeal
made in response by Urban II at Clermont, however, had the effect
of sending thousands of Frankish knights to Constantinople under
their own leaders, quite a different outcome from what Alexius
had expected.
Consequently, in the words of his daughter, Anna Comnena, Alexius
dreaded the arrival of the crusaders, and there was
misunderstanding and tension from the start. It is commonly
believed by worthy people, wrote Runciman, that the
more we see of each other, the more we shall like each other.
It is a sad delusion (p. 214). There had been differences
between Byzantium and the West in the past, but since contact
between the two societies was sporadic, open animosity had little
chance to develop. Now that the westerners were brought into
the heart of the empire in large numbers, those differences,
especially those between the Byzantine and western churches and
the more tolerant attitude of the Byzantines towards Muslim powers,
became more noticeable and led to resentment. Although Runciman
lays some of the blame at the door of the Byzantine emperors
who reigned after 1143, the sack of Constantinople by the Fourth
Crusade in April 1204 was the culmination of the mounting
dislike and suspicion that all western Christendom now felt towards
the Byzantines (p. 219).
Cogent though Runcimans views are, the fact remains that
they are hardly new. Although published in 1986, this contribution
is in fact a straight summary of the position adopted by Runciman
in his History of the Crusades which was published between
1951 and 1954 (3 vols, Cambridge University Press). That singles
it out immediately from the rest of the articles. The next earliest
is Cowdreys, which came out in History for 1970,
while the rest all appeared in the 1980s or 1990s.
Moreover, while Cowdreys thesis has stood largely unchallenged
since it first appearance, Runcimans most certainly has
not. One of the main problems is its almost uncritical acceptance
of the main Byzantine source for the First Crusade, Anna Comnenas
Alexiad, which presents Alexius Is actions throughout
the episode as motivated solely by Christian charity and places
the blame for subsequent disagreements on the shoulders of the
crusade leadership and particularly of the Norman, Bohemond of
Taranto. Runciman also takes at face value Anna Comnenas
descriptions of some of the crusaders as uncouth louts and this
is largely the basis for belief that the two peoples were mutually
estranged from the start. It could be objected that the classicising
literary genre in which Comnena wrote dictated that foreign peoples
be presented as barbarians and that this did not
necessarily mean that the entire populations of the two halves
of Christendom were in a constantly increasing state of mutual
antipathy.
Madden is, of course, well aware of all this. He openly admits
in his introduction that many aspects of Runcimans work
have been criticised since he wrote (pp. 6, 11), and he himself
has done much to mitigate Runcimans picture of mutual intolerance
leading directly to the sack of Constantinople. The second edition
of Donald E. Quellers The Fourth Crusade: The Conquest
of Constantinople (University of Pennsylvania Press; Philadelphia,
1997), which Madden co-authored, presents the diversion to Constantinople
as the outcome of a series of accidents, in no way related to
any previous history of east-west hostility. One can even detect
a certain antipathy to the Runciman thesis on Maddens part
in his introduction to this collection, albeit expressed in oblique
fashion. He is highly critical of the 1995 BBC Television series,
presented by Terry Jones, because it portrayed the crusades as
a long, misguided war of intolerance, ignorance and barbarism
against a peaceful and sophisticated Muslim world (p.1).
Substitute Byzantine for Muslim, and
you are left with the essence of Runcimans opinion on the
matter, one that he expressed succinctly in interviews given
for the Jones programme. Jones was, moreover, heavily dependent
on Runciman as his main historical source. He even faithfully
reproduced some of Runcimans errors. In the second episode,
for example, while recounting the siege of Antioch in 1097-8,
Jones mentions how Alexius I obligingly sent the English exile,
Edgar the Aethling, from Constantinople with a shipload of siege
engines for the hard-pressed crusaders. The story appears in
History of the Crusades, vol. 1, p. 227, but subsequent
investigations have shown that it has no basis whatsoever. (1)
It therefore seems impossible to criticise Jones without, by
implication, criticising Runciman as well.
All this begs the question as to why Madden includes Runciman
at all, in a book which, he asserts, is designed to explode popular
myths and disseminate a more thoughtful approach to the problem
(p.12). History of the Crusades is still in print and
is probably much more widely available than the works of any
of the other authors featured in this collection. It is not as
though people need to be encouraged to read Runciman. He jokingly
boasted that he had made more money for his publisher, Cambridge
University Press, than any other author apart from God, since
his books were only outsold by the Bible.
Nevertheless, Madden is facing a genuine difficulty here. He
has included two articles on the Muslim experience of the crusades:
Nikita Elisséeff on the slow response to calls for jihad
after the First Crusade, and Benjamin Kedar on Muslims under
crusader rule. It is, however, difficult to find alternatives
to Runciman which sum up the Byzantine experience in the same
accessible and engaging way. There are surveys by Joan Hussey
and Anthony Bryer which cover the period 1081 to 1204, but both
are now fairly dated and in any case, they tend to mirror Runcimans
central contention that cultural differences were the ultimate
source of conflict. (2)
There are, of course, a number of scholars who have reinterpreted
aspects of Byzantine-crusader relations. Of these the three most
prominent must be Paul Magdalino, Ralph-Johannes Lilie and Jonathan
Shepard. Magdalinos and Lilies close studies of Byzantine
policies towards the crusader states of Syria show not steadily
mounting tension, but periods of animosity interspersed with
co-operation and alliance. (3)
Shepard re-examines the whole question of Byzantine involvement
with the genesis of the First Crusade in two masterly articles.
Adopting a more critical stance towards Anna Comnena, Shepard
argues that there was far more to the episode than an innocent
Byzantine emperor taken aback by the turn of events and that
Alexius was cleverly exploiting the situation for his own ends.
While Runciman unabashedly labels Bohemond as a villain,
whose greed and lack of scruple poisoned relations with the Byzantines,
Shepard argues that this picture is an uncritical and literal
reading of Anna Comnena, who vilified the Norman leader with
the hindsight acquired in the forty-year interval between these
events and the writing of her history. There is intriguing evidence
that in 1096-7, Alexius viewed Bohemond as a potential tool,
ally and recruit, a kind of imperial agent to oversee the re-conquest
of Asia Minor.(4)
Yet there are problems in using the works of these authors for
a volume of this type. Lilies articles are in German, with
only his major book being available in English. Magdalinos
work tends to be extremely detailed, making it far less accessible
and readable than the broad canvas of Runciman. Shepard, like
Magdalino, is a painstaking scholar who has little interest in
broad generalisations. He often tends to write at length in order
to bring out the full potential of the evidence he adduces. 'When
Greek meets Greek' covers almost a hundred pages, which would
create difficulties of space in a small paperback publication.
In short, even though his work is now fifty years old and many
of his ideas discarded, in one respect, namely his sheer accessibility
combined with genuine erudition, Runciman remains unsurpassed.
For this reason, Madden is justified in including him. Yet his
very inclusion is also ample proof that a re-examination of east-west
relations at the time of the crusades is long overdue.
Jonathan Harris
August 2002
1. Nicholas Hooper, Edgar
the Aethling: Anglo-Saxon prince, rebel and Crusader, Anglo-Saxon
England, 14 (1985), 197-214, at pp.208-209.
2. J. M. Hussey, 'Byzantium
and the Crusades, 1081-1204', in K. M. Setton, gen. Ed., A
History of the Crusades (6 vols, University of Wisconsin
Press; Madison,1969-89), ii, pp. 123-51; A. A. M. Bryer, 'The
first encounter with the West AD 1050-1204', in Byzantium:
An Introduction, ed. P. Whitting (2nd edn, Blackwells;
Oxford, 1981), pp. 85-110.
3. R-J. Lilie, Byzantium
and the Crusader States 1095-1204, trans. J. C. Morris and
J. C. Ridings (Oxford University Press; Oxford, 1993); Paul Magdalino,
The Empire of Manuel I Komnenos 1143-1180 (Oxford University
Press; Oxford, 1993), pp. 66-108.
4. 'Cross-purposes: Alexius
Comnenus and the First Crusade', in The First Crusade Origins
and Impact, ed. Jonathan Phillips (Manchester University
Press; Manchester, 1997), pp. 107-29, and idem, When Greek
meets Greek: Alexius Comnenus and Bohemond in 1097-98,
Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies, 12 (1988), 185-277. |