It is easy to conceive of the crusades as a conflict between Latin Christian West and the Muslim Middle East, forgetting that between these two geographic/religious groupings was an Orthodox Christian Empire -- what we have come to call the Byzantine Empire. It was the latter that both triggered the crusades and became a victim of them. In a four-part series, I look briefly at the complex role of Byzantium in the crusades, starting today with a look at the Byzantine perspective of the world on the eve of the crusades.
Despite
its near-ubiquitous use, the term “Byzantine Empire” to describe the
powerful state that at one time controlled the Balkans, Caucasus, Middle
East, and North Africa is an anachronism. The term was not used until
after the demise of this once great empire. During the roughly one
thousand years of its existence (ca. 330 to 1453), the residents of the
“Byzantine Empire” called themselves “Romans” and the “Byzantine”
Emperors viewed themselves as the legitimate successors of the Roman
Emperors. Emperor Constantine I (Roman Emperor 306 – 337) had moved the
capital of the Roman Empire from Rome to a city he built on the
Bosporos, straddling the straits, in order to have a foothold in both
Europe and Asia. He named his new capital after himself: Constantinople.
Constantine I as Founder of Constantinople |
Roughly
half a century later, in 395 AD, the Emperor Theodosius divided the
Roman Empire into two parts. All of Western and Central Europe and the
eastern parts of North Africa fell to the “Western Empire” ruled from
Rome, while most of the Balkans, Caucasus, Middle East, and Egypt
composed the “Eastern Empire” ruled from Constantinople. However, the
Western Empire was at this time very weak and in 404 the capital was
moved from Rome to Ravena. In 476 AD, the last Western Roman Emperor was
deposed, making the Emperor in Constantinople the sole successor to the
traditions, glory, and heritage of the entire Roman Empire.
Seen
from Constantinople, the establishment of the Holy Roman Empire under
Charlemagne in 800 AD was not a legitimate “revival” of the Western
Roman Empire. First, the Orthodox Church did not recognize the authority
of the Pope to crown Emperors, and second Charlemagne was himself a
Frank — i.e. he was a barbarian, not a Roman.
Charlemagne by Albrecht Duerer |
The Byzantine categorization of all peoples
who were not subject to Constantinople as “barbarians” was a
fundamental feature of Byzantine identity that shaped and colored all
their policies and interactions. To the Byzantine elite, the Kings of
France and England and the Holy Roman Emperors were no less uncivilized barbarians than
the sultans of Damascus and the Atabegs of Aleppo. The former were only
slightly better for being Christian barbarians rather than Muslim
barbarians.
Thus, even in the 12th century, during a period of (rare) accord between Constantinople and the crusader states, the Byzantine Emperor could describe the Latin Christians as “Barbarian peoples whose way of life is entirely incompatible with our own. Their gaze is scarcely human, while ours is full of humanity; our speech is agreeable, while theirs is harsh and garbled. They are all armed and … bloodthirsty … while we are peaceful and compassionate and refuse to carry weapons needlessly, not being in thrall to Ares.” [Manuel Comnenus, trans. Michael Angold, 291.]
Added to this profound sense of cultural superiority came the religious belief that Constantinople — not Rome or Jerusalem — was the center of the Christian world and that the Emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire was the head of the Church. Thus, the authority of the Pope was nil in Constantinople, where the patriarchs of the Eastern Church were more beholden to the Emperor than the other way around. In the eyes of the “Romans” living in the “Roman Empire,” Constantinople was not only the new Rome, it was also the new Jerusalem since it as here that the Head of the Church resided and ruled, surrounded by sacred relics displayed in the Pharos chapel in the Imperial district of the city.
Thus, even in the 12th century, during a period of (rare) accord between Constantinople and the crusader states, the Byzantine Emperor could describe the Latin Christians as “Barbarian peoples whose way of life is entirely incompatible with our own. Their gaze is scarcely human, while ours is full of humanity; our speech is agreeable, while theirs is harsh and garbled. They are all armed and … bloodthirsty … while we are peaceful and compassionate and refuse to carry weapons needlessly, not being in thrall to Ares.” [Manuel Comnenus, trans. Michael Angold, 291.]
Added to this profound sense of cultural superiority came the religious belief that Constantinople — not Rome or Jerusalem — was the center of the Christian world and that the Emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire was the head of the Church. Thus, the authority of the Pope was nil in Constantinople, where the patriarchs of the Eastern Church were more beholden to the Emperor than the other way around. In the eyes of the “Romans” living in the “Roman Empire,” Constantinople was not only the new Rome, it was also the new Jerusalem since it as here that the Head of the Church resided and ruled, surrounded by sacred relics displayed in the Pharos chapel in the Imperial district of the city.
Agia Sophia, Constantinople/Istanbul |
With
Constantinople the center of the Christian world, the role of Jerusalem
remained secondary in the Eastern Orthodox tradition. Even when
Jerusalem was a component part of the Byzantine Empire, there was no
strong tradition of pilgrimage to Jerusalem. Although for devout Latin
Christians the pilgrimage to Jerusalem was viewed as the ultimate
pilgrimage long before the era of the crusades, for Eastern Orthodox
Christians a “pilgrimage to Jerusalem was to a large extent the preserve
of ascetics." [Angold, 291.]
If
the tradition of pilgrimage to Jerusalem was rare, the concept of Holy
War was outright alien. As Nikolaos Chrissis explains: “…in Byzantine
thought there was an emphasis on peace, while war was not seen as
meritorious or glorious in itself but rather as a necessary evil, a last
resort if all efforts at peace had failed.” [Chrissis, 261.]
The Orthodox Church resisted recognizing soldiers who died defending
Christendom as martyrs and even questioned whether soldiers shouldn’t be
excluded from communion for three years “since their hands were not
clean.” [Chrissis, 261.] While the attitudes of the Orthodox clergy
toward soldiers defending Christians and Christendom softened over time
as the threat became ever greater, still Orthodox Christianity never
produced militant religious orders similar to the Templars,
Hospitallers, and Teutonic Knights.
All
these attitudes combined to make misunderstandings and tensions between
the Eastern Roman Empire and the crusaders inevitable. Next week I look
at how those conflicts manifested themselves in the early crusades and
the first half of the 12th century.
Sources and recommended reading:
Angold, Michael, “The Fall of Jerusalem (1187) as Viewed from Constantinople,” in The Crusader World, ed. Adrian Boas (London: Routledge, 2016), 289-309.
Chrissis, Nicolaos, “Byzantine Crusaders: Holy War and Crusade Rhetoric in Byzantine Contacts with the West (1095-1341),” in The Crusader World, ed. Adrian Boas (London: Routledge, 2016), 259-277.
Papayianni,
Aphrodite, "Memory and Ideology: The Image of the Crusades in Byzantine
Historiography, Eleventh - Thirteenth Centuries," in The Crusader World, ed. Adrian Boas (London: Routledge, 2016), 278-288.
Wright,
Chris, "On the Margins of Christendom: The Impact of the Crusades on
Byzantium," in ed. Conor Kostick (London: Routledge, 2011), 55-82.
Dr. Helena P. Schrader is the author of six books set in the Holy Land in the Era of the Crusades. Find out more at: https://www.helenapschrader.com/crusades.html
To my western latin barbarian ear, they sound pompous, I suppose a inheritance of their Roman and Greek heritage.
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