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Authors: Thomas Asbridge

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The precepts of Arab Nationalism are essentially secular in character: positing the separation of spiritual and temporal authority in Islam; and advocating the governance of Arab Muslim states by political, rather than religious, leaders. As such, Arab Nationalist leaders have shown little interest in the crusades as wars of religion, focusing instead upon the notion of threatening foreign imperialism and the propaganda value of forging comparisons between their own lives and the achievements of Saladin. Gamal Abdel Nasser, Egypt’s prime minister (and later president) from 1954 to 1970, was one of the first proponents of Arab Nationalist ideology. He claimed that Israel’s creation was ‘a substitute for the crusades’, instituted when ‘imperialism signed a pact with Zionism’. Nasser also made repeated attempts to liken himself to Saladin. It was no coincidence that Youseff Chahine’s famous ‘historical’ epic
Saladin
(1963)–in its day the highest-budget Arabic film in history–was produced in Egypt, with a star actor who bore a striking resemblance to Nasser.

Commenting on the Arab–Israeli conflict in 1981, Syria’s President Hafez Asad encouraged Muslims to ‘go back to the Crusaders’ invasion. Although they fought us for 200 years, we did not surrender or capitulate.’ Asad also styled himself as ‘the Saladin of the twentieth century’ and in 1992 erected a larger-than-life statue of his hero in the heart of Damascus. The Iraqi Arab Nationalist leader Saddam Hussein was even more obsessed with Saladin. Conveniently forgetting Saladin’s Kurdish heritage and instead emphasising their shared birthplace of Tikrit, Saddam went to extraordinary lengths to connect their two careers. Iraqi stamps and banknotes depicted Saladin standing alongside Saddam and the exteriors of his palaces were decorated with golden statues of the president dressed as Saladin. Saddam even ordered the production of a children’s picture book,
The Hero Saladin
, in which he himself was named as ‘the second Saladin’.
17

Islamism is the polar opposite of Arab Nationalism in terms of ideology–espousing the notion that Islam must be governed as a theocracy. Nonetheless, Islamists have, if anything, been even more strident in their attempts to establish spurious links between the medieval crusades and the modern world. Given its spiritual perspective, Islamist propaganda presents the crusades as aggressive religious wars waged against the
Dar al-Islam
(Islamic territory), the only response to which can be violent physical
jihad
. One of the most influential Islamist ideologues, Sayyid Qutb (who was executed in Egypt for treason in 1966), described western imperialism as a ‘mask for the crusading spirit’, stating that ‘the crusader spirit runs in the blood of all westerners’. He also declared that there was a conspiracy of ‘international Crusaderism’ behind the West’s Levantine interventions, citing Allenby’s supposed reference to the medieval crusades as proof.

Qutb’s ideas have influenced many radical Islamist organisations, from Hamas to Hezbollah. But in the twenty-first century the most dangerous proponents of his particular brand of extremism have been Osama bin Laden and his ally Ayman al-Zawahiri–the leading voices of the terrorist network known as al-Qaeda. Their rhetoric was littered with references to the crusades in the lead-up to 2001. When, just after 9/11, George W. Bush ill-advisedly chose to characterise his proposed ‘war on terrorism’ as a ‘crusade’ (a term carefully avoided since), he simply played into al-Qaeda’s hands. Indeed, in late 2002, bin Laden released a statement declaring that ‘one of the most important positive results of the raids on New York and Washington was the revelation of the truth regarding the conflict between the Crusaders and the Muslims [and] the strength of the hatred which the Crusaders feel towards us’. Then, in March 2003, after the US-led invasion of Iraq, bin Laden added: ‘The Zionist-Crusader campaign on [Islam] today is the most dangerous and rabid ever…[to learn] how to resist these enemy forces from outside, we must look at the previous Crusader wars against out countries.’ This inflammatory and misleading propaganda, grounded in the manipulation of history, has shown little sign of abating.
18

THE CRUSADES IN HISTORY

 

‘Crusade parallelism’ has played a distinct role in shaping the modern world–one that, in recent times, has been widely misunderstood. The manipulation of the history and memory of the war for the Holy Land began with nineteenth-century romanticism and western colonial triumphalism. It has been perpetuated by political propaganda and ideological invective in the Muslim world. The purpose of identifying and examining this process is not to condone or condemn the ideologies of imperialism, Arab Nationalism or Islamism–but rather to expose the crude simplicity and glaring inaccuracy of the ‘historical’ parallels evoked in their name. The political, cultural and spiritual resonances of the distant crusades have been manufactured by an imaginary view of the past; one that trades in caricature, distortion and fabrication, not the medieval realities of reciprocal violence, diplomacy and trade, enmity and alliance that lay at the heart of crusading.

Of course, humankind has always shown a proclivity for the deliberate misrepresentation of history. But the dangers attendant upon ‘crusade parallelism’ have proven to be particularly intense. Over the last two centuries, a fallacious narrative has taken hold. It suggests that the crusades were pivotal to the relationship between Islam and the West because they engendered a deep-rooted and irrevocable sense of mutual antipathy, leaving these two cultures locked in a destructive and perpetual war. This notion–of a direct and unbroken trail of conflict linking the medieval and modern eras–has helped to cultivate a pervasive, and almost fatalistic, acceptance that a titanic clash of civilisations is inevitable. Yet dark, brutal, even savage as they sometimes were, the crusades left no permanent marks upon western Christian or Muslim society. In truth, the war for the Holy Land had been all but forgotten by the end of the Middle Ages and was only resurrected centuries later.

Perhaps the crusades do have things to tell us about our world. Most, if not all, of their lessons are common to other eras of human history. These wars lay bare the power of faith and ideology to inspire fervent mass movements and to elicit violent discord; they affirm the capacity of commercial interests to transcend the barriers of conflict; and they illustrate how readily suspicion and hatred of the ‘other’ can be harnessed. But the notion that the struggle for dominion of the Holy Land–waged by Latin Christians and Levantine Muslims so many centuries ago–does, or somehow should, have a direct bearing upon the modern world is misguided. The reality of these medieval wars must be explored and understood if the forces of propaganda are to be assuaged, and incitements to hostility countered. But the crusades must also be placed where they belong: in the past.

I owe many debts of gratitude to those who helped me through six years spent researching and writing this book. My colleagues in the Department of History at Queen Mary University of London have been wonderfully supportive throughout, and I particularly would like to thank Virginia Davis, Julian Jackson, Peter Hennessy, Miri Rubin, Peter Denley, Yossi Rapoport, Dan Todman and Alice Austin. My students, not least those on my Special Subject ‘The First Crusade’ and the London MA in Crusader Studies, also have been a great source of inspiration.

Peter Edbury kindly read the first draft of this work (when it was considerably longer than it is now!), and I also benefited enormously from the friendship and the assistance offered by Sue Edgington and William Purkis. Andrew Gordon and John Saddler shaped my early vision of the book, while the patience and encouragement of Mike Jones at Simon & Schuster, Dan Halpern and Matt Weiland at Ecco enabled me to complete the project. Sue Phillpott’s astute eye helped to refine the text, and I am especially grateful to Katherine Stanton for her judicious editorial guidance and the great care she has taken in preparing this book for publication. My agents Peter Robinson and George Lucas have always been stalwart sources of support and advice. The numerous discussions of the crusading world I enjoyed with Tony To, Don MacPherson and Kario Salem also helped to spark my idea of switching perspectives between Christendom and Islam in this work.

I would like to offer heartfelt thanks to all those who have stood by me through these years. To James Ellison, the finest of friends and colleagues; to John Hardy, a true friend through all seasons; to Steve Jones and Stuart Webber, who always knew not to ask how the book was going; and to Robert and Maria Oram, Simon Bradley, Anthony Scott, Daniel Richards, Julie Jones and Lizzie Webber for their unfailing support. I am most grateful to my family for their encouragement, and wish to thank Per Asbridge, Camilla Smith, Jane Campbell, Margaret Williams and Craig Campbell. My parents have shown enormous kindness, as always, and without their help it would have been all but impossible to write this book. At the centre of my life, throughout, have been Christine and Ella, my wife and daughter. It is their patience and love that has sustained me, above and beyond all else, and they who deserve my deepest thanks.

Thomas Asbridge
September 2009
West Sussex

 

27 November 1095: Pope Urban II’s sermon on the First Crusade at Clermont

 

18 June 1097: Nicaea surrenders to the First Crusade

 

1 July 1097: Battle of Dorylaeum

 

3 June 1098: First Crusade sacks Antioch

 

28 June 1098: Battle of Antioch against Kerbogha of Mosul

 

15 July 1099: First Crusade captures Jerusalem

 

May 1104: Battle of Harran

 

28 June 1119: Roger of Antioch slain at the Field of Blood

 

June 1128: Zangi assumes control of Aleppo

 

December 1144: Zangi conquers Edessa

 

1 December 1145: Pope Eugenius III proclaims the Second Crusade

 

September 1146: Zangi assassinated; Nur al-Din assumes control of Aleppo

 

July 1148: Failure of the Second Crusade’s siege of Damascus

 

29 June 1149: Battle of Inab

 

19 August 1153: Latins conquer Ascalon

 

April 1154: Nur al-Din occupies Damascus

 

11 August 1164: Nur al-Din defeats the Franks near Harim

 

March 1169: Saladin assumes the title of vizier of Egypt

 

September 1171: Abolition of the Fatimid caliphate in Egypt

 

15 May 1174: Death of Nur al-Din; that October Saladin assumes control of Damascus

 

25 November 1177: Battle of Mont Gisard

 

12 June 1183: Saladin occupies Aleppo

 

May 1185: Death of King Baldwin IV of Jerusalem

 

4 July 1187: Battle of Hattin

 

2 October 1187: Saladin retakes Jerusalem

 

29 October 1187: Pope Gregory VIII issues call for the Third Crusade

 

November 1187: Richard the Lionheart takes the cross

 

28 August 1189: Guy of Lusignan lays siege to Acre

 

10 June 1190: Death of Frederick Barbarossa in Asia Minor

 

8 June 1191: Richard the Lionheart arrives at Acre

 

12 July 1191: Third Crusaders occupy Acre

 

20 August 1191: Richard I executes Muslim prisoners outside Acre

 

7 September 1191: Battle of Arsuf

 

13 January 1192: Richard I orders first retreat from Beit Nuba

 

4 July 1192: Third Crusade makes its second retreat from Beit Nuba

 

2 September 1192: Treaty of Jaffa finalised

 

4 March 1193: Death of Saladin

 

15 August 1198: Pope Innocent III issues call for the Fourth Crusade

 

12 April 1204: Fourth Crusade sacks Constantinople

 

November 1215: Pope Innocent III presides over the Fourth Lateran Council

 

5 November 1219: Fifth Crusade captures Damietta

 

17 March 1229: Frederick II Hohenstaufen enters Jerusalem

 

11 July 1244: Khwarizmians sack Jerusalem

 

18 October 1244: Battle of La Forbie

 

5 June 1249: King Louis IX of France lands in Egypt

 

8 February 1250: Battle of Mansourah

 

April 1250: Louis IX taken captive by Turanshah

 

February 1258: Mongols sack Baghdad

 

3 September 1260: Battle of Ayn Jalut

 

June 1261: Baybars invested as Mamluk sultan

 

19 May 1268: Baybars sacks Antioch

 

8 April 1271: Hospitallers surrender Krak des Chevaliers to Baybars

 

27 April 1289: Qalawun captures Tripoli

 

18 May 1291: Mamluk conquest of Acre

 
BOOK: The Crusades: The Authoritative History of the War for the Holy Land
3.83Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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