Last week I
described some of the urban architecture in the crusader states that inspired
admiration — but also envy — on the part of visitors from the West. Throughout
the existence of the crusader states, pilgrims from the West flocked to the
Holy Land, some in search of salvation, some simply “sight-seeing,” and some as
“armed pilgrims” to offer their sword (or bow or axe) in the defense of the
Christian territories. Many of these pilgrims wrote accounts of their travels,
and many chroniclers in the West, whether they had personally been there or
not, included impressions of the Holy Land obtained second (or third, or fourth) hand from these travellers in their
works. From the mid-12th century on, a hefty strain of critique
and censure of the settlers in “Outremer” runs through many of these works.
Each defeat, each unsuccessful crusade, was routinely attributed to the sins of
those involved: that is the crusaders and the residents of the Holy Land.
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| Medieval Depiction of a Godfrey de Bouillon, the first pious and devout Ruler of Jerusalem, often contrasted to the later "degenerate" kings. |
By the Third
Crusade Westerners clearly viewed the residents of Outremer with suspicion. No previous
set-back was comparable to the loss of the entire
kingdom, including, obviously, the most sacred site of all, the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem. Although
men flocked to take the cross and the largest armies led by the most prominent
rulers of the age set out on the Third Crusade, their objective was
to rescue the Holy Land — not the kingdom or people who had occupied the Holy
Land since the First Crusade. On the contrary, most of the crusaders appear to
have blamed the residents of Outremer collectively
(rather than just Guy de Lusignan personally) for losing the Holy Land. These people
were at the latest by this time given the derisive name of poulain, which derives from the French for foal and imputed mixed
blood. They were viewed as the
sinners to blame for the catastrophe, which the (by inference) virtuous
men from the West now needed to rectify.
These were the
beliefs held before setting out on
crusade, but they were reinforced by confrontation with life in Outremer.
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| Crusaders |
The first problem
was the widespread use of stone building materials, something that was still
pretty much a luxury in the West. The extensive use of stone, therefore, made the cities of Outremer appear
exotic to the pilgrim arriving by sea before he or she even set
foot on land. Admittedly, those coming
by land would have already adjusted to the use of stone and brick. Still, the
physical differences in the architecture and the heat of the summer sun (most
pilgrims came in the spring and departed in the fall), undoubtedly created a
sense of being in a very different world, and most people are suspicious of
things that seem very different from home.
The second
problem, of course, was that the majority of the natives (Orthodox Christians,
Jews and Muslims) dressed in “oriental” styles. Although the Latin elites still
followed Western fashion for the most part, the climate alone dictated some
adaptation of Western clothing. In temperatures approaching 40 degrees
Centigrade (100 degrees Fahrenheit), it was unthinkable to wear the heavy furs
and wools, or the layers of clothing common in the West. While Latin women
never adopted “the veil” in the Arab tradition of black robes completely
concealing a woman’s figure including arms and face, Latin women would certainly
have protected their faces from the ravages of the Palestinian sun with sheer
silks, probably short enough to be thrown back over their head when
indoors. More shocking to the
new-comers, however, the very same fashions if worn in gauze and silk
rather than wool and linen would have resulted in gowns that clung and revealed
more of the female figure. Meanwhile, while neither knights nor sergeants went
around in turbans and kaftans (as some modern writers would have you believe), again
the fabrics used for shirts, tunics, hose and surcoats would have been
considerably lighter and sheerer than fabrics common in the West. Easy access to some
of the more powerful dyes (saffron for yellow, the sea snails (porphyra) for purple, etc.) may have made these clothes brighter and more vivid
as well. The result was undoubtedly a somewhat mind-boggling mixture of styles
and colors that seemed extravagant and exotic to the newcomer.
| White Limestone and Palms -- so different from Northern Europe |
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| Hollywood's Interpretation of Mixed Styles and Opulence in the Crusader Sates Sibylla of Jerusalem as depicted in "The Kingdom of Heaven" |
The third problem
was the discovery that the majority of the population in Outremer, including
the Orthodox Christian natives, spoke Arabic. Regardless of religion, this was
the lingua-franca of Outremer, used by merchants across the region alongside
Greek. The poulains born in Outremer,
living side-by-side with Arabic speaking neighbors in the cities, trading with
Arabic-speaking shopkeepers, or even lords dealing with Arab-speaking tenants
and servants all had to acquire a degree of competency in Arabic just to conduct
daily business. To more recent arrivals
this command of the “infidel's” language smacked of treason. The fact that many
Latin Christians, who had come out as crusaders, later married Arabic- or
Greek-speaking women reinforced the impression of ambiguous loyalty on the part
of the poulains. At a minimum, it
created suspicion simply because the newcomers could not hope to understand Arabic
based on an understanding of Latin, the lingua-franca of the West.
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| Church Art was particularly influence by Byzantine traditions and mosaics, for example, were more common. |
This suspicion
about the loyalty of the residents of the crusader states had been reinforced over the decades leading up to the Third Crusade by a series of truces the Kings of Jerusalem had made with their Muslim
counterparts. While the residents in the crusader states recognized the sheer
tactical utility of periodic truces and pauses in the fighting, newly arrived
crusaders were often appalled to think they had come so far to fight the Saracens,
only to be told: “Oh, well, thanks for coming, but at the moment we have a truce
and aren’t fighting the Saracens, we're trading with them instead.” Such armed pilgrims returned home embittered and
told stories about how the poulains
had “sold out” to the Saracens.
Another source of
friction between Western visitors and permanent residents of the crusader
states was the apparent “wealth” of the natives. As early as 1125, Fulcher of
Chartres, one of the chroniclers of the First Crusade, had written that in the
crusader states “he who was poor [at home in the West] attains riches here. He
who had no more than a few deniers finds himself here in possession of a
fortune. He who owned not so much as one village finds himself, by God’s grace,
the lord of a city.” (Cited in Bartlett, Downfall
of the Crusader Kingdom, p. 189.) Fulcher was trying to recruit settlers,
and was doubtless exaggerating, but his claims seemed to match what visitors encountered.
Because the Latin Christians in the crusader states were integrated into the upper and middle levels of society while the very bottom rungs were filled by native Christians or Muslims, travelers to the crusader states from the West was more likely to encounter and interact with men and women from a higher strata of society. Furthermore, because items that were outrageously expensive in the West were produced in the crusader states (silk, glass, sugar, citrus fruits, pomegranates) these “luxury” items were accessible to people much farther down the social scale than in the West. Visitors were undoubtedly aghast to find common laborers and soldiers enjoying lemons and sugar, or wearing, if not pure silk, some of the mixed textiles that combined silk with cotton or linen.
Because the Latin Christians in the crusader states were integrated into the upper and middle levels of society while the very bottom rungs were filled by native Christians or Muslims, travelers to the crusader states from the West was more likely to encounter and interact with men and women from a higher strata of society. Furthermore, because items that were outrageously expensive in the West were produced in the crusader states (silk, glass, sugar, citrus fruits, pomegranates) these “luxury” items were accessible to people much farther down the social scale than in the West. Visitors were undoubtedly aghast to find common laborers and soldiers enjoying lemons and sugar, or wearing, if not pure silk, some of the mixed textiles that combined silk with cotton or linen.
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| This glass and enamel cup is believed to originate from the crusader states. |
And then there
was the issue of bathing. Not that bathing was not an integral part of Western
culture in this period; it was. But in the West bathing was considerably more
difficult and less convenient, at least during the winter months when a bath
could only be enjoyed if the water was first heated up. Furthermore,
for the upper classes, bathing was a private affair — a tub carried up to a
bedchamber, filled with buckets of water hauled there by servants, and attended
upon by a wife, daughter or squire. In the crusader states the public
bath-houses of the Greeks and Romans had been taken over, rebuilt and
supplemented by those of the Arabs and Turks. Bathing was not only easier and
cheaper in a climate where cooler was better most of the time, bathing was also a
public affair with professional bath attendants rather than retainers and
family in attendance. The public baths in the tradition of the Greeks, Romans
and Turks included massages with fragrant oils rubbed into the skin. All of
this smelled, particularly clerics, like “dins of iniquity” reminiscent of Jezebel,
Salome and the Queen of Sheba.
Last but not
least, the culture of West Europeans clashed with the culture of the crusader
states because the crusader states were heavily urbanized and cosmopolitan at a
time when most Western kingdoms were still predominantly agricultural and parochial. The poulains had little
choice but to be tolerant of different customs, clothes, foods and even
religions because they were surrounded by these things. To survive they traded
with Cairo and Damascus, Aleppo and Constantinople. Jews were allowed to live
throughout the kingdom except in Jerusalem itself. Muslims likewise lived, and
were allowed to follow their religion, across the kingdom, again with the
exception of Jerusalem itself. Muslims even had the right to the haj in some cities such as Nablus. Although
taxed more heavily, neither Muslims nor Jews were subject to persecution, and
some enjoyed wealth and administrative power. This was quite simply because poulains, who never made up more than
20% of the population, could not afford bigotry in any regard. Yet that very
tolerance struck many newcomers as near-heresy. It was a short step from being
scandalized at poulain tolerance and
jealous of the poulain wealth to
seeing in the poulains the sinners to
blame for all the disasters that had befallen the Holy Land — reinforcing all
the prejudices which with the crusaders had sailed from the West.
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| A 19th Century -- equally erroneous - depiction of a Turkish bath that reflects the same misconception about the mixing of sex with cleanliness. |
My novels set in the crusader kingdoms show Outremer through the eyes of the poulains rather than the crusaders:
























