Prof. Martha Carlin
Week 4: Tuesday
THE LATER CRUSADES
1147-8
Fall of county of Edessa to Muslims (1144) leads to 2nd Crusade:
Preached by St.
Bernard of
Clairvaux
Led by King
Louis VII of France (accompanied by wife Queen
Eleanor
of
Aquitaine)
and Emperor Conrad III of Germany
Main achievement: capture of Lisbon
1170s-80s Re-unification of Muslim state in Egypt under Saladin (d. 1193)
1187
Saladin crushes Crusader army at Hattin and re-conquers much of
Crusader
States,
including Jerusalem, leading to:
1189-93 Third
Crusade, led by King
Richard I ("the Lionheart") of England, Philip
II
("Augustus")
of France, and Emperor
Frederick I ("Barbarossa") of
Germany:
Barbarossa drowns on way to Crusade (1190)
Philip leaves Crusade early to attack Richard's
castles in Normandy
Richard
takes Acre, makes treaty with Saladin and returns to confront
Philip, but is
captured and held for
ransom by Barbarossa's son, Henry
VI
1201-4 Fourth
Crusade, preached by Pope
Innocent III and led by lesser princes
(including
Baldwin, Count of Flanders):
Diverted first to Zara (to repay Venetians for fleet), and then to
Constantinople
(captured
and looted, 1204, and Latin dynasty rules there until 1261.
The loot
included numerous relics, such as the
head
of St. John the Baptist, and
4
gilded bronze horses, which were used to decorate
St.
Mark's Cathedral in Venice.)
1209-29 Albigensian
Crusade, preached by Pope
Innocent III against Cathars
(rather
successful; also extended French royal authority into S. France; >
Inquisition)
1212
Crusade against Muslims in Spain, preached by Pope
Innocent III
(successful);
"Children's Crusade" (hopeless)
1217-21 Fifth Crusade: in Egypt (failure)
1229 Emperor Frederick II purchases possession of Jerusalem (temporary success)
1248, 1270 6th and 7th Crusades, led by King Louis IX (St. Louis) of France (both failures)
1291
Fall
of last Crusader stronghold (Acre)
Online readings:
Annales Herbipolenses, 1147: A hostile view of the
2nd
Crusade, by an anonymous annalist of
Würzburg
De expugnatione terrae sanctae per Saladinum:
Eyewitness
account of the capture of Jerusalem
by Saladin, 1187
THE INQUISITION
12th cent. Rediscovery in the West of
codification of Roman law (produced in Constantinople
under Emperor Justinian in mid 500s) leads to rapid development
of
civil (secular)
and canon (ecclesiastical) law, and election of canon lawyers to high
church
office, including the papacy.
1215
Pope
Innocent III (a canon lawyer) convenes the 4th Lateran Council, the
most
important church council held in medieval Europe. It passes a
series
of canons (church
laws), one of which (Canon 21) requires that all Christians shall make
confession and
take Communion at least once a year, at Easter, on pain of
excommunication.
This
provides a legal basis for the Inquisition, which is established in the
1220s to
identify and eliminate all heresies and heretics.
Online readings:
The crusade against heresy: Decree of the Council of Toulouse, 1229
The birth of the Inquisition: Gregory IX sends Domincan friars as Inquisitors to France, 1233
Bernard Gui, Inquisitor’s Manual (c. 1307-23): On the heresies of the Waldensians (or "Poor