Read An Empire of Memory Online
Authors: Matthew Gabriele
Tags: #History, #Medieval, #Social History, #Religion
106 Annales Augustani, MGH SS 3: 134; Bernold of St Blasien, Chronicon, MGH SS 5: 464; and
Sigebert of Gembloux, Chronicon, MGH SS 6: 367.
The Franks Return to the Holy Land
157
‘brothers in the love of God’. These men were Franks, Flemish, Frisians, Gauls,
Allobroges, Lotharingians, Alamanns, Bavarians, Normans, English, Scots, Aqui-
tanians, Italians, Dacians, Apulians, Iberians, Bretons, Greeks, and Armenians. But
together they were Franks, who celebrated together as Nicaea and Antioch fell, as
the lance was found, as Kerbogha was defeated, and as they traced their bloody steps
into Jerusalem to reclaim the Holy Sepulcher. This is language all but lifted from
the Oxford Roland.107
There was no one origin of the First Crusade. Too often we forget that. Each army that
went east after 1095 had different currents washing over it. Even within those armies, it
is quite likely that individuals had many different ideas inspiring them to set off on this
expedition. And no two people were exactly the same. Bohemond did not join the First
Crusade for the same reasons as Raymond of Saint-Gilles and neither joined for the
same reasons as Peter the Hermit, Robert of Normandy, Anselm of Ribemont, Peter
Tudebode, Bohemond of Taranto, Pons of Balazun, Emicho of Flonheim, or anyone
else. Still, there is a reason that those who responded to the First Crusade came from
within the borders of Charlemagne’s historical empire and clustered around locations
displaying a particular devotion to the Charlemagne legend in the ninth–eleventh
centuries (compare Figures 1.1 and 5.1). There was something that united the
crusaders, something that kept them on the same path, even as they constantly
bickered about the crusade’s direction and purpose.
Urban II offered a general narrative framework that would be familiar to all of his
audiences, but a framework flexible enough to be modified in particular in-
stances.108 Urban could speak to the aristocracy about their Frankish heritage
without ever using the word ‘Frank’ because, when Urban told his story, it
wasn’t new. Many of his audience members had heard it before in the Charlemagne
and Last Emperor legends, in the history they believed they shared as descendents
of the Franks. Regardless of whether they received the message from Urban himself,
his legates, or the numerous itinerant preachers who fanned out across Europe,
many of those who responded to the call ‘dreamt’ on the narrative themes they
heard––ideas like ‘populus Christi’, ‘defense of the ecclesia’, ‘reconquest’, ‘Christen-
dom’, ‘Constantinople’, and ‘Jerusalem’.109 As we have seen in preceding chapters,
all of the East was thought to be Christian land; not only Christ’s patrimony but a
Frankish protectorate under Charlemagne and sacred space to be retaken during
the Last Days, when the world would once again be made Christian by a host of
Franks marching eastwards under the banner of the Frankish Last Emperor.110
107 Fulcher of Chartres, Historia, ed. Hagenmeyer, 255–6 (vs. Kerbogha), 202–3 (description of
the army), and 306–7 (poem on Frankish capture of Jerusalem). Compare Fulcher’s lists with the
descriptions of Charlemagne’s conquests and the battle against Baligant in the contemporary Oxford
Roland. See above at nn. 34–5.
108 e.g. the men of the Italian maritime city-states may not have engaged as well as their northern
counterparts with the narrative of Frankish history that underlay this more general message. But that is the genius of a message containing a shibboleth: those who need to, get it.
109 On ‘dreaming’ on Urban’s message, see Flori, ‘Une ou plusieurs “première croisade”?’, 22.
110 Urban II’s ‘theology of history’, so convincingly described by Alfons Becker, might subtly echo
this idea. The pure ecclesia was punished by Muslim invasions but was in the process of ‘reconquest and 158
The Franks Recreate Empire
Now, at the end of this study, it should not surprise us that the participants in
the First Crusade, even though they came from what we think of as such disparate
regions, could rely on a common political culture, using it to harken back to older,
eighth- and ninth-century conciliar models in order to govern the armies as they
marched to Jerusalem.111 It should not surprise us that the crusaders themselves
and the narrators of this event could use Franci and christiani almost interchange-
ably. It should not surprise us if the crusaders and their later chroniclers saw the
travelers as new Israelites, a chosen people, marching to reclaim the Holy Land
from its profane invaders. None of these were new ideas. This was indeed ‘old wine
in new bottles’, a vintage borrowed from the ninth-century Franks, filtered through
the passage of time, and now repackaged in slightly different form by the interac-
tion between speaker and audience in 1095–6.112
Expressed first in sources from the ninth century, this definition of the Franks
as warriors, chosen by God to exercise His will, survived (often manifested in a
conscious intellectual attachment to a Frankish Golden Age believed to have existed
under Charlemagne) in the writings of men scattered across Charlemagne’s old
empire; men such as Notker the Stammerer of St Gall, Adso Dervensis, Benedict of
Monte Soratte, Ademar of Chabannes, William of Jumièges, the anonymous
author of the Descriptio qualiter, and Pseudo-Alcuin. But this understanding of
Frankish identity also survived in the memories of the high and low aristocracy of
those same regions, due to the dependence that aristocracy’s piety owed to their
close connection to the aforementioned religious, as well as the aristocracy’s willful
restoration’. See Becker, Papst Urban II., ii. 333–71. Constantinople mattered as much as Jerusalem in this scheme. Looked at this way, the modern historiographical debate about the First Crusade’s
ultimate goal––Constantinople or Jerusalem––might actually be a case of not seeing the forest for
the trees. Jerusalem and Constantinople were not symbolically equivalent in the eyes of Urban and the
crusaders but the ideas of aiding the Eastern empire and retaking the Holy Sepulcher interpenetrated
one another and would have been hard to separate at the end of the 11th cent. On this debate, which
has a vast bibliography, see the useful summary in Jonathan Riley-Smith, ‘Erdmann and the
Historiography of the Crusades, 1935–1995’, in Luis García-Guijarro Ramos (ed.), La Primera
Cruzada novecientos años después: El concilo de Clermont y los orígenes del movimiento cruzado
(Madrid, 1997), 17–29.
111 Koziol, ‘Political Culture’, 47, 71–5; and Christopher Tyerman, ‘Principes et Populus: Civil
Society and the First Crusade’, in Simon Barton and Peter Lineham (eds.), Cross, Crescent and
Conversion: Studies on Medieval Spain and Christendom in Memory of Richard Fletcher (Leiden,
2008), 150–1.
112 The phrase is from Tyerman, God’s War, 57. Tyerman, however, is speaking Urban repackaging
Gregory VII’s ideas. On the crusaders as a new chosen people, see Paul Alphandéry, ‘Les Citations bibliques chez les historiens de la Première Croisade’, Revue de l’Histoire des Religions, 99 (1929), 139–57; Delaruelle,
‘Essai sur la formation’, 107–10; Johan Chydenius, Medieval Institutions and the Old Testament (Helsinki, 1965), 81–2; Rousset, Les Origines, 187–92; Joshua Prawer, ‘Jerusalem in the Christian and Jewish
Perspectives of the Early Middle Ages’, in Gli ebrei nell’alto medioevo: 30 marzo–5 aprile 1978, 2 vols.
(Spoleto, 1980), ii. 744; Anne Derbes, ‘A Crusading Fresco Cycle at the Cathedral of Le Puy’, Art Bulletin, 73 (1991), 561–76; Rubenstein, Guibert of Nogent, 100–1; and Riley-Smith, First Crusade, 111–12, 147–8; among others. On the crusade as constituting ‘Christendom’, see Jan van Laarhoven, ‘“Christianitas” et réforme grégorienne’, Studi Gregoriani, 6 (1959–61), esp. 37–98; Paul Rousset, ‘La Notion de Chrétienté aux XIe et XIIe siècles’, Le Moyen Âge, 69 (1963), 191–203; and Jan van Laarhoven, ‘Chrétienté et croisade: Une tentative terminologique’, Cristianesimo nella storia, 6 (1985), 27–43.
The Franks Return to the Holy Land
159
adherence to a common political culture that intellectually emphasized continuity
with this imagined Frankish past.113
Social memory informs identity but it can also tell a community how to act in
certain situations.114 Ideas can make people do things. Being called a ‘Frank’
mattered in the early Middle Ages because, as a component of identity, that
appellation governed a field of actions. In this particular instance, this ‘case study’
of the First Crusade, the invocation of Frankish identity became a call to sanctified
violence. The narrative that the First Crusade proposed was powerful because it was
framed in a language that both speaker and listener understood, even if in slightly
different ways. That language, sometimes implicitly, but often explicitly, described
the crusade’s participants as the populus christianus, as protectors of the ecclesia all
the way to the East. It called upon them as warriors, as God’s chosen people who
held a special place in sacred history, to fight against his enemies; and this narrative
was told at the end of the eleventh century, at a particular moment when the
Charlemagne legend had spread across Europe and shared elements with the Last
Emperor legend. This matrix told all those who thought of themselves as Franks that
their glory lay not only in the past. Many who thought of themselves as Franks, men
like Nithard and William of Jumièges, may have thought that their people’s special
place had been lost in the late ninth century, evidenced by events like Fontenoy.115
But the Franks always held out hope. They believed that they would have another
chance.
It came at the end of the eleventh. The First Crusade was a moment of promise;
both figure and fulfillment within sacred history; an opportunity to reclaim God’s
favor. The combination of late eleventh-century Frankish identity and a call to
Christian holy war told those who still thought of themselves as Franks to once
more take up their burden and march to the East against the enemies of Christ,
reclaiming God’s favor, putting on the glorious mantle their ancestors had worn
and participating in the prophesied glory to come.
113 On the flow of ideas between the aristocracy and their local religious houses, see Bull, Knightly
Piety, 155–203.
114 On social memory and action, see Walter Pohl, ‘Memory, Identity and Power in Lombard
Italy’, in Uses of the Past, 11; and James Fentress and Chris Wickham, Social Memory (Oxford, 1992).
On the power of language to shape action, see François Furet, Interpreting the French Revolution, tr.
Elborg Forster (Cambridge, 1981), 1–79; and Keith Michael Baker, Inventing the French Revolution:
Essays on French Political Culture in the Eighteenth Century (Cambridge, 1990), 5–6. For a dissenting
view specifically relating to the First Crusade, see John France, ‘Patronage and the Appeal of the First Crusade’, in Jonathan Phillips (ed.), The First Crusade: Origins and Impact (Manchester, 1997), 5–20.
115 Fontenoy was also remembered as catastrophic moment for the Franks by Hugh of Flavigny and
was directly tied to the success of the First Crusade. Hugh recorded that a great light was seen in the northern sky before the final battle of the crusade at Jerusalem. Such a light had been seen before, he continues, before Fontenoy, before the removal of King Louis, at the coronation of Hugh Capet, and
before the invasion of the Hungarians. The light portended great slaughter and a great historical
rupture for the Franks. Hugh of Flavigny, Chronicon, MGH SS 8: 481. Note, however, that Hugh
recorded these other events earlier in his chronicle but said nothing of a divine light in those sections.
He was, like our crusade chroniclers, reading history backwards. For more on how transformative the
First Crusade was for the West, see Rubenstein, First Crusade, forthcoming.
M I S C E L L A N E O U S T E X T S
1. Saint-Gall: late ninth century
Notker the Stammerer, Vita Karoli Magni
2. Vienne: late ninth century
Ado of Vienne, Martyrologium
3. Reichenau: tenth century
Translatio sanguinis
4. Monte Soratte: mid-tenth century
Benedict of Monte Soratte, Chronicon
5. Montier-en-Der: mid-tenth century
Adso of Montier-en-Der, De antichristo
6. Novalesa: early eleventh century
Chronicon
7. Saint-Cybard of Angoulême: early eleventh century
Ademar of Chabannes, Chronicon
8. Niederaltaich: early eleventh century
Annales
9. Saint-Sauveur of Charroux: eleventh century
Privilegium and Historia
10. San Millán de Cogolla: eleventh century
Nota Emilianense
11. The Hague: eleventh century
Fragment de la Haye
12. Île-de-France/Paris: end of eleventh century
Descriptio qualiter Karolus Magnus
13. Alba: late eleventh century
Benzo of Alba, Ad Heinricum
14. Saint-Pierre of Chartres: late eleventh century
Earliest MS of Pseudo-Alcuin
15. Saint-Pé: late eleventh century
Charter mentioning Roland and Oliver as brothers
16. Saint-Aubin of Angers: late eleventh century
Charter mentioning Roland and Oliver as brothers