Angeliki E. Laiou, Roy Parviz Mottahedeh - The Crusades from the Perspective of Byzantium and the Muslim World (2001).pdf

(7481 KB) Pobierz
dblaio$$f1
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
415371544.005.png 415371544.006.png 415371544.007.png 415371544.008.png
Preface
The studies in this volume originated in a symposium organized by Roy P. Mottahedeh
and myself and held at Dumbarton Oaks on 2–4 May 1997. Over the two previous years,
a considerable number of scholarly conferences had been planned, to commemorate the
nine hundredth anniversary of the Council of Clermont and its results. Most of these
focused on the Crusades from the viewpoint of Western Europe. Indeed, the consider-
able and exciting scholarship produced during recent decades has also, to a large extent,
been concerned with the internal, Western, aspects of this movement. Notable excep-
tions do, of course, exist. Still, it seemed to us that there was need of a conference that
would look at the crusade from the perspective of those areas to which it was primarily
directed, namely, the Eastern Muslim areas and the Byzantine Empire.
The Dumbarton Oaks symposium took place on the nine hundredth anniversary of
the appearance of the crusading armies outside the city of Nicaea. Our purpose was to
examine several important issues that, in one way or another, a ected the Byzantine and
Muslim worlds at the time of the Crusades or because of them. The movement having
been a lengthy and recurrent one, our time frame extended to the late thirteenth century.
The first essay published here analyzes the development of the historiography of the
Crusades. The other essays discuss various topics ranging from the problem of the holy
war in Byzantium and Islam to the question of attitudes and perceptions, the e
Angeliki E. Laiou
Harvard University and Academy of Athens
ect on
art, and the impact of the Crusades on the economies of the East. We neither expected
nor planned a comprehensive examination of the crusading movement seen from Con-
stantinople, Baghdad or Cairo. Rather, we hope that this volume, by contributing to the
very lively scholarly discussion on the Crusades, stimulates further research on develop-
ments that engaged the eastern Mediterranean, both Christian and Muslim, and the
Muslim world generally.
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
415371544.001.png 415371544.002.png 415371544.003.png 415371544.004.png
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
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
[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
Zgłoś jeśli naruszono regulamin