Four Myths
about the Crusades
Paul F. Crawford (from IR 46:1) - 04/21/11
Paul F. Crawford (from IR 46:1) - 04/21/11
Myth #1: The crusades represented an unprovoked
attack by Western Christians on the Muslim world.
Nothing could be further from the truth, and even a cursory
chronological review makes that clear. In a.d. 632, Egypt, Palestine, Syria,
Asia Minor, North Africa, Spain, France, Italy, and the islands of Sicily,
Sardinia, and Corsica were all Christian territories. Inside the boundaries of
the Roman Empire, which was still fully functional in the eastern
Mediterranean, orthodox Christianity was the official, and overwhelmingly
majority, religion. Outside those boundaries were other large Christian communities—not
necessarily orthodox and Catholic, but still Christian. Most of the Christian
population of Persia, for example, was Nestorian. Certainly there were many
Christian communities in Arabia.
By a.d. 732, a century later, Christians had lost Egypt, Palestine,
Syria, North Africa, Spain, most of Asia Minor, and southern France. Italy and
her associated islands were under threat, and the islands would come under
Muslim rule in the next century. The Christian communities of Arabia were
entirely destroyed in or shortly after 633, when Jews and Christians alike were
expelled from the peninsula.6 Those in Persia were under severe
pressure. Two-thirds of the formerly Roman Christian world was now ruled by
Muslims.
Myth #2: Western Christians went on crusade
because their greed led them to plunder Muslims in order to get rich.
Again, not true. One version of Pope Urban II’s speech at Clermont
in 1095 urging French warriors to embark on what would become known as the
First Crusade does note that they might “make spoil of [the enemy’s]
treasures,”8 but this was no more than an observation on the
usual way of financing war in ancient and medieval society. And Fulcher of
Chartres did write in the early twelfth century that those who had been poor in
the West had become rich in the East as a result of their efforts on the First
Crusade, obviously suggesting that others might do likewise.9 But
Fulcher’s statement has to be read in its context, which was a chronic and
eventually fatal shortage of manpower for the defense of the crusader states.
Fulcher was not being entirely deceitful when he pointed out that one might become
rich as a result of crusading. But he was not being entirely straightforward
either, because for most participants, crusading was ruinously expensive.
Myth #3: Crusaders were a cynical lot who did
not really believe their own religious propaganda; rather, they had ulterior,
materialistic motives.
This has been a very popular argument, at least from Voltaire on.
It seems credible and even compelling to modern people, steeped as they are in
materialist worldviews. And certainly there were cynics and hypocrites in the
Middle Ages—beneath the obvious differences of technology and material culture,
medieval people were just as human as we are, and subject to the same failings.
However, like the first two myths, this statement is generally
untrue, and demonstrably so. For one thing, the casualty rates on the crusades
were usually very high, and many if not most crusaders left expecting not to
return. At least one military historian has estimated the casualty rate for the
First Crusade at an appalling 75 percent, for example.14 The
statement of the thirteenth-century crusader Robert of Crésèques, that he had
“come from across the sea in order to die for God in the Holy Land”15—which
was quickly followed by his death in battle against overwhelming odds—may have
been unusual in its force and swift fulfillment, but it was not an atypical
attitude. It is hard to imagine a more conclusive way of proving one’s dedication
to a cause than sacrificing one’s life for it, and very large numbers of
crusaders did just that.
Myth #4: The crusades taught Muslims to hate
and attack Christians.
Part of the answer to this myth may be found above, under Myth #1.
Muslims had been attacking Christians for more than 450 years before Pope Urban
declared the First Crusade. They needed no incentive to continue doing so. But
there is a more complicated answer here, as well.
Up until quite recently, Muslims remembered the crusades as an
instance in which they had beaten back a puny western Christian attack. An
illuminating vignette is found in one of Lawrence of Arabia’s letters,
describing a confrontation during post–World War I negotiations between the
Frenchman Stéphen Pichon and Faisal al-Hashemi (later Faisal I of Iraq). Pichon
presented a case for French interest in Syria going back to the crusades, which
Faisal dismissed with a cutting remark: “But, pardon me, which of us won the
crusades?”
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