The history of Outremer in the 13th century was materially altered by the establishment of a stable Latin Kingdom on the island of Cyprus. Today I look at how the Lusignan dynasty became established. Unfortunately, the sources for the founding of the Kingdom of Cyprus are not only scanty but dubious, leading me to develop two theses that challenge existing historiography. The first of these is presented below.
We
know that Richard I of England, having conquered Cyprus in May 1191,
sold it to the Knights Templar for 100,000 bezants in July of the same
year. According to Peter Edbury, the leading modern historian of
medieval Cyprus, their rule was “rapacious and unpopular,” resulting in a
revolt in April 1192. Although a Templar sortie temporarily scattered
the rebels, the causes of the revolt were hardly addressed and the
latent threat of continued/renewed violence was clear. In the
circumstances, the Grand Master of the Templars recognized that his
Order would have to invest considerable manpower to regain control of
the island. He also recognized that he did not have the resources to fight in both Cyprus
and Syria. In consequence, he gave precedence (as he must) to the
struggle on the mainland, the Holy Land itself, against the Saracens.
The Templars duly returned the island to Richard of England.
Richard
promptly sold the island a second time, this time to Guy de Lusignan.
Guy de Lusignan had been crowned and anointed King of Jerusalem in 1186
in a coup d’etat engineered by his wife, Sibylla. Although widely viewed
as a usurper, the bulk of the barons submitted to his rule in order to
fight united against the much superior forces of Saladin that threatened
the Kingdom. Guy, however, proceeded to prove the low-opinion of his
barons correct by promptly leading the entire Christian army to an
avoidable defeat on the Horns of Hattin on July 4, 1187. He spent
roughly a year in Saracen captivity, while his Kingdom fell city by city
and castle by the castle to Saladin until only the city of Tyre
remained. Needless to say, this further discredited him with the
surviving barons, prelates, and burghers of his kingdom. His claim to
the crown of Jerusalem was undermined fatally when his wife, through
whom he had gained it, died in November 1190. Although Guy continued to
style himself “King of Jerusalem,” a fiction at first bolstered by King
Richard of England’s support, by April 1192 King Richard had also given
up on him. Bowing to the High Court of Jerusalem, Richard acknowledged
Conrad de Montferrat as King of Jerusalem. The sale of Cyprus to Guy was
evidently a means of compensating him for the loss of his kingdom of
Jerusalem.
Guy may have left for Cyprus at once, in which case he would have arrived in April 1192. However,
this is far from certain because the Third Crusade was still being
conducted. It is unlikely that Guy would have been able to recruit many
knights to accompany him as long as Richard the Lionheart was still
fighting for Jerusalem and Jaffa. A more likely date for Guy’s arrival
on Cyprus is, therefore, October 1192, after Richard’s departure for the
West.
Guy
would have arrived on an island that was either still in a state of
open rebellion or completely lawless. Admittedly, historian George Hill
(who was actually an expert in ancient history, coins and iconography
rather than a medievalist), tries to explain how Guy arrived on an
island eagerly awaiting him by inventing (that is the only word one can
use since he sites no source) the story that the Templars “slew the
Greeks indiscriminately like sheep; a number of Greeks who sought asylum
in a church were massacred; the mounted Templars rode through [Nicosia]
spitting on their lances everyone they could reach; the streets ran
with blood…The Templars rode through the land, sacking villages and
spreading desolation, for the population of both cities and villages
fled to the mountains.” (George Hill, A History of Cyprus, Volume 2: The Frankish Period 1192 – 1432,” Cambridge University Press, 1948, p. 37.)
There’s
a serious problem with this lurid tale. (Quite aside from the technical
one of lances being unsuitable for spitting multiple victims.) As Hill
himself admits, the Templars had just fourteen knights on Cyprus and 29
sergeants; the Greek population of the island at this time was roughly
100,000. Yes, in a surprise sortie to fight their way out of Nicosia and
flee to Acre (as we know they did), the Templars would surely have
killed many civilians, including innocent ones. It is unlikely, however,
that the fleeing Templars would have taken the time to stop and
slaughter people collected in a church; that would have given the far
more numerous armed insurgents (who had forced them to seek refuge in
their commandery in the first place) to rally, attack and kill them.
They certainly did not have the time and resources to slaughter people
in other cities and towns scattered over nearly 10,000 square
kilometers. In short, we can be sure the Templars slaughtered enough
people to be remembered with hatred, but not enough to
break the resistance to Latin rule, much less to denude the island of
its population. If nothing else, if they had broken the resistance, they
would not have fled to Acre, admitted defeat and urged the Grand Chapter to return Cyprus to Richard of England!
Despite
the absurdity of the notion that Guy arrived on a peaceful island
willing to receive him without resistance, most histories today repeat a
charming story. Namely: as soon as Guy arrived on Cyprus he sent to his
arch-enemy Saladin for advice on how to rule it. What is more, the ever
chivalrous and wise Sultan graciously responded that “if he wants the
island to be secure he must give it all away.” (See Edbury, The Kingdom of Cyprus and the Crusades, 1191 – 1374,
Cambridge University Press, 1991, p. 16.) Allegedly, based on this
advice, Guy invited settlers from all the Christian countries of the
eastern Mediterranean to settle on Cyprus, offering everyone rich
rewards and making them marry the local women. According to this fairy
tale, the dispossessed peoples of Syria, both high and low, flooded to
Cyprus and were rewarded with rich fiefs, until Guy had only enough land
to support just 20 household knights, but after that everyone lived
happily ever after.
History
isn’t like that, although―often―there is a kernel of truth in such
legends. I think it is fair to assume that very many of the men and
women who had lost their lands and livelihoods to the Saracens after
Hattin did eventually come
to settle on Cyprus, but I question that they arrived in the first two
years after Guy acquired the island. The reason I doubt this is simple.
The Knights Templar had just abandoned the island because it would be too costly, time-consuming and difficult to pacify. In short, whoever came to Cyprus with Guy in early or late 1192 would not have
found an empty island―much less one full of happy natives waiting to
welcome them with song and flowers. On the contrary, they would have
faced a population which had successfully expelled the Templars and
ready to resist further attempts by the Latins to control and dominate
them. Perhaps the one sentence about making the settlers marry local
women is a hint to a more chilling reality: that, after years of
resistance to Latin rule, when the settlers finally came, they found a
local population with few young men but many young widows.
Furthermore,
we know that at no time in his life did Guy de Lusignan distinguish
himself by wisdom or common sense. He had alienated his brother-in-law
King Baldwin IV and nearly the entire High Court of Jerusalem within
just three years of his marriage to Sibylla. He
lost his entire kingdom in a disastrous and unnecessary campaign less
than a year after he was crowned king. He started a strategically
nonsensical siege of Acre that consumed crusader lives and resources for
three years. He did nothing of note the entire time Richard the
Lionheart was in the Holy Land. Is it really credible that he then took
control of a rebellious island (that the Templars thought beyond their
capacity to pacify) and set everything right in less than two years?
I think not.
And Guy had only two years because he died in 1194, either in April/May or toward the end of the year depending on which source one consults. That is too little time even for a more competent leader to be the architect of Cyprus’ success. That honor belongs, I believe, to his older brother, the ever competent Aimery de Lusignan, who was lord of Cyprus not just two years but eleven.
And Guy had only two years because he died in 1194, either in April/May or toward the end of the year depending on which source one consults. That is too little time even for a more competent leader to be the architect of Cyprus’ success. That honor belongs, I believe, to his older brother, the ever competent Aimery de Lusignan, who was lord of Cyprus not just two years but eleven.
It
was certainly Aimery, who obtained a crown by submitting the island to
the Holy Roman Emperor, and it was Aimery who established a Latin church
hierarchy on the island. Indeed, there is ample evidence of Aimery’s
able administration of both Cyprus and, from 1197 to 1205, the Kingdom
of Jerusalem as well. It
was Aimery de Lusignan who collected the oral tradition for the laws of
Jerusalem (that had worked so well) and had them written down in a
legal codex known as The Book of the King. Thus,
it was Aimery, who founded not only the dynasty that would last three
hundred years but also laid the legal and institutional foundations that
would serve Cyprus so well into the 15th century.
In short, in my opinion, it is far more likely that Aimery, not Guy, brought settlers in―after first pacifying the native population and institutionalizing tolerance for the Orthodox church that mirrored the customs of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. It is this thesis that forms the basis of: The Last Crusader Kingdom: Founding of a Dynasty in 12th Century Cyprus.
In short, in my opinion, it is far more likely that Aimery, not Guy, brought settlers in―after first pacifying the native population and institutionalizing tolerance for the Orthodox church that mirrored the customs of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. It is this thesis that forms the basis of: The Last Crusader Kingdom: Founding of a Dynasty in 12th Century Cyprus.
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