Tag Archives: francesco gabrieli

A Crusader’s Mom

Something a bit different.

Early crusaders were volunteers, who took vows to go on a crusade, rather than members of a professional army. As a result, they had to fund themselves for the duration of a crusade, which could often involve traveling across continents over a period of years and often experiencing extraordinary hardships and danger.

Naturally, this was massively expensive and may reflect why only 1% or 2% of Europe’s more religious knights were willing to commit to the First Crusade, as crusading not only promised a high probability of death or injury but was also massively expensive and could be crippling financially. Charters show that those who participated in the crusades were often concerned about the costs more than anything, as many had to mortgage or sell properties to be able to afford to take part.

While there are many Latin Christian sources confirming this, there is one well known source by the Arab historian Ibn al-Athir, who confirms it as well. In his account of the siege of Tyre, he notes:

“A Frankish [crusader] prisoner told me that he was his mother’s only son, and their house was their sole possession, and she had sold it and used the money obtained from it to equip him to go and free Jerusalem.”

Source: Gabrieli’s Arab Historians of the Crusades, 1969.

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ISIS and the Medieval Spoils System: The Fate of Captured Women

I don’t know Arabic, but assuming the translations that accompany this widely reported on video of ISIS (or “Islamic State”) soldiers laughing and joking as they wait to receive their share of captured Yazidi slave girls are accurate, then it is deeply disturbing. Around 19 seconds into the clip, one smiling soldier exclaims, “By Allah, man, I am looking for one to get me a girl.” At this, other soldiers in the room laugh and another declares for the camera, “Today is the female sex slave market day, which has been ordained.” The video is available on YouTube here.

Beyond the revulsion one feels for their cavalier attitude toward the enslavement and sexual abuse of children, a crime that fits well with a long list of documented atrocities committed by members of ISIS, I was struck (as a medieval historian) by how well such rhetoric seems to match a twelfth-century Arabic source for the crusading era. Continue reading