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This is an extract from:
The Crusades from the Perspective
of Byzantium and the Muslim World
edited by Angeliki E. Laiou and Roy Parviz Mottahedeh
published by
Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection
Washington, D.C.
© 2001 Dumbarton Oaks
Trustees for Harvard University
Washington, D.C.
Printed in the United States of America
www.doaks.org/etexts.html
TheHistoriographyoftheCrusades
GilesConstable
I.TheDevelopmentofCrusadingHistoriography
erentpointsofview,and
everyaccountandreferenceinthesourcesmustbeinterpretedinthelightofwhere,
when,bywhom,andinwhoseinterestsitwaswritten.
1
Eachparticipantmadehis—
andinfewcasesher—owncrusade,andtheleadershadtheirowninterests,motives,
andobjectives,whichoftenputthematoddswithoneanother.Theywerealldistrusted
bytheByzantineemperorAlexiosKomnenos,whosepointofviewispresentedinthe
Alexiad
writteninthemiddleofthetwelfthcenturybyhisdaughterAnnaKomnene.
TheTurkishsultanKilijArslannaturallysawthingsfromanotherperspective,asdidthe
indigenousChristianpopulationsintheeast,especiallytheArmenians,andthepeoples
oftheMuslimprincipalitiesoftheeasternMediterranean.TherulersofEdessa,Antioch,
Aleppo,andDamascus,andbeyondthemCairoandBaghdad,eachhadtheirownatti-
tudestowardthecrusades,whicharereflectedinthesources.Tothesemustbeadded
thepeoplesthroughwhoselandsthecrusaderspassedontheirwaytotheeast,andin
particulartheJewswhosu
ff
eredatthehandsofthefollowersofPetertheHermit.
2
The historiography of the crusades thus begins with the earliest accounts of their
originsandhistory.Asidefromsomestudiesofindividualsources,however,andanum-
berofbibliographiesandbibliographicalarticles,
3
thehistoriographyhasreceivedcom-
1
Thisarticleisarevisedversionofthepaperpresentedatthesymposium.Itconcentratesongeneralprob-
lemsconcerningthecrusadestotheeast.Thereferencestosecondaryworksareillustrativeandarenotde-
signedtogiveabibliographyofthecrusades.IamindebtedtoBenjaminZ.Kedarforvarioussuggestions.A
shortenedversionofpartIwillappear(inRussian)intheforthcomingFestschriftforAaronGurevich.
2
The Jews and the Crusaders: The Hebrew Chronicles of the First and Second Crusades,
ed.andtrans.S.Eidelberg
(Madison,Wisc.,1977).Amongsecondaryworks,seemostrecentlyD.Lohrmann,“AlbertvonAachenund
dieJudenpogromedesJahres1096,”
Zeitschrift des Aachener Geschichtsvereins
100(1995–96):129–51.
3
H.E.Mayer,
Bibliographie zur Geschichte der Kreuzz¨ge
(Hannover,1960),andidemandJ.McLellan,“Se-
lectBibliographyoftheCrusades,”in
A History of the Crusades,
ed.K.M.Setton(Madison,Wisc.,1955–89),
6:511–664.OthergeneralbibliographiesareL.deGermonandL.Polain,
Catalogue de la biblioth`que de feu M. le
comte Riant,
pt.2(Paris,1899),andA.S.Atiya,
The Crusade: Historiography and Bibliography
(Bloomington,Ind.-
London,1962),whichhasasectiononhistoriography(17–28).Amongthereviewarticles,seeG.Schnu¨rer,
“NeuereArbeitenzurGeschichtederKreuzzu¨ge,”
HJ
34(1914):848–55;T.S.R.Boase,“RecentDevelop-
mentsinCrusadingHistoriography,”
History,
n.s.,22(1937):110–25;J.LaMonte,“SomeProblemsinCrusad-
ingHistoriography,”
Speculum
15(1940):57–75;J.A.Brundage,“RecentCrusadeHistoriography:Some
ObservationsandSuggestions,”
CHR
49(1964):493–507;F.Cardini,“Glistudisullecrociatedal1945ad
oggi,”
RSI
80(1968):79–106;andH.Mo¨hring,“KreuzzugundDschihadindermediaevistischenundorienta-
Thecrusadeswerefromtheirinceptionseenfrommanydi
ff
[2]
Historiography of the Crusades
parativelylittleattentionfromscholars.Theonlygeneralworksarealongandstilluseful
appendixtothefirst(butnotthesecond)editionofHeinrichvonSybel’s
Geschichte des
ersten Kreuzzugs,
whichappearedatDu¨sseldorfin1841andwastranslatedintoEnglish
in1861,andthetwovolumes(inRussian)byM.A.Zaboroventitled
Vvedenie v istorio-
grafiju Krestovykh pokhodov
(Introductiontothehistoriographyofthecrusades),which
dealswiththemedievalsources,and
Istoriografija Krestovykh pokhodov (XV–XIX vv.)
(His-
toriographyofthecrusades[15th–19thcentury]),whichwerepublishedinMoscowin
1966and1971respectively.
4
Tothesecanbeaddedalongarticle,partlyhistoriographical
andpartlybibliographical,byLaetitiaBoehmentitled“‘GestaDeiperFrancos’—oder
‘GestaFrancorum’?DieKreuzzu
¨
gealshistoriographischesProblem”andachapterby
Jonathan Riley-Smith on “The Crusading Movement and Historians” in the
Oxford
Illustrated History of the Crusades.
5
Itisinteresting,andperhapssignificant,thatthereisno
sustainedtreatmentofhistoriographyinthegeneralhistoriesofthecrusadesbyRene´
Grousset,StevenRunciman,andHansEberhardMayer,norinthesix-volumecoopera-
tive
History of the Crusades
editedbyKennethSetton.
Thehistoriographyofthecrusadesasseenfromthewest,withwhichthisarticleis
concerned,canbedividedintothreeperiods,ofwhichthefirst,andlongest,wentfrom
1095 until the end of the sixteenth century; the second covered the seventeenth and
eighteenth centuries; and the third began in the early nineteenth century and comes
downtothepresent.Therewassomeoverlapbetweentheperiods,butbroadlyspeaking,
duringthefirst,theMuslimswereacontinuingthreattoWesternEuropeandthede-
fenseofChristendomwasseenasapressingconcern.Inthesecondperiod,thecrusades
movedincreasinglyintothepast,butapastthatwascoloredbyconfessionalorrationalist
values,whichchangedinthethirdperiod,whenthecrusadesweresubjectedtoserious,
thoughnotalwaysimpartial,scholarlyinvestigation.Thisthirdperiodbreaksdowninto
thenineteenthcentury,whenthecrusadesweregenerallywellregarded,andthetwenti-
ethcentury,whentherehasbeenarisingtideofcriticismand,morerecently,agrowing
divisionbetweenscholarlyandpopularviewsofthecrusades.
Interestinthecrusadestodayisstillinfluencedbypoliticalandideologicalinterests,
includingtheconsequencesofEuropeancolonialism,thetensionsbetweenwesternand
non-westernsocieties,especiallyintheMiddleEast,and,morebroadly,thelegitimacy
ofusingforcetopromoteevenworthyandlegitimatecauses.
6
Theseconcernscontrib-
listischenForschung1965–1985,”
Innsbrucker historische Studien
10–11(1988):361–86.SeealsoH.E.Mayer,
“AmericaandtheCrusades,”
PAPS
125(1981):38–45;C.R.Young,“TheCrusades:ATragicEpisodein
East-WestRelations,”
South Atlantic Quarterly
55(1956):87–97;andthecollectionofreprintsandexcerptsin
The Crusades: Motives and Achievements,
ed.J.A.Brundage,ProblemsinEuropeanCivilization(Boston,1964).
4
H.vonSybel,
Geschichte des ersten Kreuzzugs
(Du¨sseldorf,1841),148–80,trans.L.D.Gordon,
The History
and Literature of the Crusades
(London,1861),311–56;andM.A.Zaborov,
Vvedenie v istoriografiju Krestovykh
pokhodov
(Moscow,1966)and
Istoriografija Krestovykh pokhodov (XV–XIX vv.)
(Moscow,1971).Fortheserefer-
encesIamindebtedtoAlexanderKazhdan,whoalsosummarizedthecontentsforme.
5
L.Boehm,“‘GestaDeiperFrancos’—oder‘GestaFrancorum’?DieKreuzzu¨gealshistoriographisches
Problem,”
Saeculum
8(1957):43–81,andJ.Riley-Smith,“TheCrusadingMovementandHistorians,”in
The
Oxford Illustrated History of the Crusades,
ed.J.Riley-Smith(Oxford,1995),1–12.SeealsoL.Boehm,“Die
Kreuzzu¨geinbibliographischerundhistoriographischerSicht,”
HJ
81(1962):223–37.
6
P.Rousset,
Histoire d’une id´ologie: La croisade
(Lausanne,1983),206–8;K.Armstrong,
Holy War
(London,
1988),xiii–xiv;J.Riley-Smith,“History,theCrusadesandtheLatinEast,1095–1204:APersonalView,”in
Giles Constable
[3]
reyBarracloughechoedthisviewin1970:“Wenolongerre-
gard the crusades ... as a great movement in defense of Western Christendom, but
ratherasthemanifestationofanew,driving,aggressivespiritwhichnowbecamethe
mark of Western civilization. We no longer regard the Latin states of Asia Minor as
outpostsofcivilizationinaworldofunbelievers,butratherasradicallyunstablecenters
ofcolonialexploitation.”Heattributedthischangein“ourverdictontheCrusades”to
“ourexperienceoftotalwarandthehazardsoflivinginathermonuclearage.Waris
alwaysevil,ifsometimesaninescapableevil;HolyWaristheevilofevils.”
8
AndJohn
Warddescribedthecrusadesin1995as“amovementofviolentwhitesupremacistcolo-
nialism.”
9
Thisviewisnowcommoninworksaddressedtothegeneralpublic,includingpopular
presentationsandmovies.AleafletdistributedinClermontduringtheconferenceheld
in 1995 to commemorate the summons to the First Crusade was headed “The Cru-
sades—didGodwillit?”echoingthecrusadingcryof“Deuslevolt.”Itwentontoask
“CantheChurchmemorializetheCrusadeswithoutaskingforgiveness?”andcalledon
thepopetodenythatanywarcanbeholyandthatsinscanbeforgivenbykillingpagans.
Accordingtothisview,thecrusaderswereinspiredbygreedandreligiousfanaticismand
theMuslimsweretheinnocentvictimsofexpansionistaggression.Manyscholarstoday,
however,rejectthishostilejudgmentandemphasizethedefensivecharacterofthecru-
sadesastheywereseenbycontemporaries,whobelievedthatChristianitywasendan-
gered by enemies who had already overrun much of the traditional Christian world,
includingJerusalemandtheHolyLand,andwhothreatenedtotakeovertheremainder.
Almostallthehistoriansandchroniclersoftheexpeditionsthatwerelatercalledthe
FirstCrusadeconsideredthemaresponsetotheMuslimthreatstoChristianholyplaces
andpeoplesintheeast.
10
Theywrotefromdi
ff
erentpointsofview,however,andused
Crusaders and Muslims in Twelfth-Century Syria,
ed.M.Shatzmiller,TheMedievalMediterranean1(Leiden-
NewYork-Cologne,1993),7–8;andidem,“RevivalandSurvival,”in
Oxford History
(asinnote5),386.
7
S.Runciman,
A History of the Crusades,
3vols.(Cambridge,1952–54),3:480.
8
G.Barraclough,“Deuslevolt?”
New York Review of Books,
21May1970,16.
9
J.Ward,“TheFirstCrusadeasDisaster:ApocalypticismandtheGenesisoftheCrusadingMovement,”in
Medieval Studies in Honour of Avrom Saltman,
Bar-IlanStudiesinHistory4(Ramat-Gan,1995),255.Cf.onthe
currentunfavorableviewofthecrusadesM.Balard,
Les Croisades
(Paris,1988),9;Riley-Smith,“History”(asin
note6),1–2;andthereviewofT.JonesandA.Ereira,
Crusades,
byM.Evans,D.Green,andJ.M.B.Porterin
Nottingham Medieval Studies
39(1995):201.
10
C.Erdmann,
The Origin of the Idea of Crusade,
trans.M.BaldwinandW.Go
ff
utedtothechangefromthecomparativelyfavorableattitudetowardthecrusadesthat
prevailedinthenineteenthandearlytwentiethcenturiesintoamorecritical,andeven
hostile,view.StevenRunciman,intheconclusiontohis
History of the Crusades,
called
thecrusades“atragicanddestructiveepisode”andsaidthat“theHolyWaritselfwas
nothingmorethanalongactofintoleranceinthenameofGod,whichisthesinagainst
theHolyGhost.”
7
Geo
ff
art(Princeton,1977),8,349;
E.Delaruelle,
Id´e de croisade au moyen-ˆge
(Turin,1980),23;andJ.Riley-Smith,
What Were the Crusades?
(London-Basingstoke,1977),22–33,whostressedtherecurrenceof“theideasofliberation(anotherwordfor
recovery)anddefence”(23)andsaidthat“acrusade,wheneverandagainstwhomsoeveritwasaimed,wasre-
gardedasbeingessentiallydefensive”(29).SeealsoJ.Flori,“Guerresainteetre´tributionsspirituellesdansla2e
moitie´duXIesie`cle,”
RHE
85(1990):627–28,ontheconceptofthelegitimacyofrecoveringwronglytaken
lands.
[4]
Historiography of the Crusades
varyingterminologyandbiblicalpassages.
11
GuibertofNogentstressedtheapocalyptic
andmillenarianaspects,andEkkehardofAurathesupernaturalandphysicalphenomena
thatprecededandaccompaniedthecrusade.Manywritershadtheirownheroes.The
rolesofGodfreyofBouillonandPetertheHermitwerecentralforAlbertofAachen;
BohemundofTarantointheanonymous
Gesta Francorum
;hisnephewTancredforRalph
of Caen; Raymond of St. Gilles for Raymond of Aguilers; Baldwin of Boulogne for
FulcherofChartres;andGodfreyofBouillonagaininthecrusaderepics,whichdomi-
natedthepopularperceptionofthecrusadesdowntothenineteenthcentury.Odoof
DeuilinhishistoryoftheSecondCrusadeconcentratedontheactivitiesofLouisVII
ofFrance,andtheaccountsoftheThirdCrusadeinthe
Estoire de la guerre sainte
ofAm-
broise and the
Itinerarium regis Ricardi
glorified the role of Richard I of England. The
greatestofallcrusaderhistorians,WilliamofTyre,wrotehis
Chronicon
fromthepoint
ofviewofaLatinChristianbornandlivingintheeastinorder,hesaid,torecord“for
the everlasting memory of the faithful of Christ” the way in which God “wanted to
relievethelong-lastingoppressionofHispeople.”
12
InnocentIIIinhiscrusadingbull
Quia maior
of1213askedhowanyonecould“know
thathisbrothers,Christianinfaithandname,areheldindireimprisonmentamongthe
perfidious Saracens and most profoundly subjected by the yoke of servitude, and not
takee
ff
ectiveactionfortheirliberation...AndindeedtheChristianpeoplesheldalmost
alltheprovincesoftheSaracensuntilthetimesoftheblessedGregory.”
13
Evenmore
strikingly,thefourteenth-centuryCastilianmagnateDonJuanManuelwroteinhis
Libro
de los estados
thattheMuslimshadconqueredandheldmanylandsthathadbelongedto
Christians“whohadbeenconvertedtothefaithofJesusChristbytheapostles.Andon
thisaccountthereiswarbetweentheChristiansandtheMuslims,andwillbewaruntil
theChristianshaverecoveredthelandsthattheMuslimsseizedfromthem,sincethere
wouldbenowarbetweenthemwithregardtothelawnorthereligion(
secta
)thatthey
hold.”
14
Whiletheaccuracyandrealismoftheseviewscanbequestioned,theyreflect
11
P.Alphande´ry,“Lescitationsbibliqueschezleshistoriensdelapremie`recroisade,”
RHR
90(1929):
139–57.
12
WilliamofTyre,
Chronicon,
1.10,inCCcontinuatiomediaeualis63:124.SeeP.EdburyandJ.G.Rowe,
William of Tyre: Historian of the Latin East,
CambridgeStudiesinMedievalLifeandThought4.8(Cambridge,
1988),41.VonSybel,
Geschichte
(asinnote4),148–63,trans.311–31,classifiedthesourcesfortheFirstCru-
sade(149,trans.312)assources(
Quellen
),legends(
Sage
),andWilliamofTyre,whoseuniqueimportanceas
bothaprimarysourceandasecondarywriterentitlehimtoaspecialplace.
13
G.Tangl,
Studien zum Register Innocenz’ III.
(Weimar,1929),90,trans.L.andJ.Riley-Smith,
The Cru-
sades: Idea and Reality, 1095–1274,
DocumentsofMedievalHistory4(London,1981),120.SeeJ.Riley-Smith,
“CrusadingasanActofLove,”
History
65(1980):177–92,citingthisbull(191).P.J.Cole,
The Preaching of the
Crusades to the Holy Land, 1095–1270
(Cambridge,Mass.,1991),105,referredtoInnocent’s“juridicalconcept
ofthecrusadeasmilitaryserviceforChrist.”R.Ro¨hricht,
Kleine Studien zur Geschichte der Kreuzz¨ge,
Wis-
senschaftlicheBeilagezumProgrammdesHumboldts-GymnasiumszuBerlin58(Berlin,1890),9–11,analyzed
themotivesforthecrusadesgiveninpapalbulls,includingtheirnecessity.
14
DonJuanManuel,
Libro de los estados,
ed.R.B.TateandI.R.MacPherson(Oxford,1974),53;seexl,dat-
ingit1328withsubsequentrevisions.AccordingtoV.Cantarino,“TheSpanishReconquest:ACluniacHoly
WaragainstIslam?”in
Islam and the Medieval West: Aspects of Intercultural Relations,
ed.K.I.Semaan(Albany,
N.Y.,1980),98,“TheSpanishReconquestremainedinitsessenceaterritorialstruggle.”SeealsoR.A.
Fletcher,“ReconquestandCrusadeinSpain,c.1050–1150,”
Transactions of the Royal Historical Society
5.37
(1987):31–47,whosaidthatreconquestwasreallyconquest(46–47).
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