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Authors: Tom Holland

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Such a question, even for those secure in the righteousness of their own cause, even for those fighting beneath a banner of St. Peter, had never been a simple one to answer. No matter, for instance, back in 1066, that William’s men had been following their duke to war against a usurper, and with the full blessing of the Pope himself: they had still been obliged, in the wake of the slaughter at Hastings, to undertake
penance or else to remain filthy with the sin of murder. A great and excruciating tension, then: for it had set the desperation for salvation against the need – and perhaps the longing – to fight. Now, however, with a single sermon, a single ordinance, that tension appeared resolved. No wonder, then, as news of what had been decreed by Urban spread, that there should have been “a great stirring of heart throughout all the Frankish lands”
131
– and far beyond. A whole new road to the City of God had suddenly opened up before the Christian people. The heroic labour of buttressing the world against Antichrist, and of preparing for the dreadful hour of Judgement, had all of a sudden become one in which the great mass of them could share. Not a pilgrim but he could know, as he set off for the Holy Sepulchre, that he was helping to set the universe to rights.

“Then will appear the sign of the Son of Man in heaven.”
132
Sure enough, five months after the Council of Clermont, and even as the Pope was celebrating Easter in central France, a mysterious cross mat erialised in the sky. Just as it had done many centuries before, during the fabled reign of the first Christian Caesar, now it struck those who saw it as a certain portent of victory. Yet as thousands upon thousands of pilgrims set to sewing the image of it upon their clothes, or branding it on their flesh, or, as Guiscard’s eldest son would do, ripping up their cloaks to fashion crosses out of the shredded fabric, they were preparing for war unprompted by any Constantine. The crusaders, as they would come to be known, followed no emperor.
133
Henry, still an excommunicate, still cooped up haplessly in northern Italy, would hardly have deigned to set himself at the head of anything summoned by Urban – even had he not been impotent to do so. Alexius, informed to his consternation that “the whole of the West was on the march”
134
and descending directly on Constantinople, worked hard to bribe and browbeat the leaders of the pilgrimage into a nominal obedience to himself – but hardly with the intention of leading them onwards to Jerusalem. Better than anyone else, he knew what such a venture would demand.

True, Alexius was careful not to wallow openly in pessimism. He
even went so far as to float the odd rumour, hinting mysteriously that it was his destiny to lay down his crown before the Holy Sepulchre.
135
Conspiratorial whisperings such as this, however, were intended exclusively for Western consumption. In reality, the beleaguered
Basileus
had not the slightest desire to play at being the last emperor. The preservation of Constantinople, not the liberation of Jerusalem, was his true responsibility. Fortunately, once the crusaders had all been transported across the Bosphorus, safely away from the Queen of Cities, it proved possible, albeit briefly, for the two ambitions to be squared. In June 1097, Nicaea was brought to capitulate, and the banner of the Second Rome fluttered once again over the birthplace of the Christian creed. Then, the following month, in a bloody and desperate struggle, the crusaders broke a formidable Turkish army in open battle. For the remainder of the year, even as they lumbered on their way through increasingly bleak and hostile territory, the Turks shrank from confronting them head on.

The following spring, taking full advantage of his enemies’ reverses, Alexius dispatched his brother-in-law to mop up in the crusaders’ wake. Then, in the summer, he led out a second army himself. By June, perhaps half of the territories lost to the Turks in the wake of Manzikert had been restored to imperial rule. Meanwhile, of the crusaders themselves, the news was grim in the extreme. Alexius, who had been pondering whether to join forces with them, was reliably informed by a deserter that the entire expedition stood on the verge of utter destruction. Accordingly, rather than risk his gains, the
Basileus
opted to consolidate them. He withdrew to Constantinople, leaving the crusaders to their fate.

A decision that had been, by all objective standards, the only rational one. The reports brought to Alexius that the crusade faced certain ruin were only marginally exaggerated. The odds against the winning of the Holy Sepulchre, always steep, had become, by the summer of 1098, astronomical. The Sultan of Baghdad, resolved to annihilate the invaders once and for all, had dispatched an immense army, “swarming everywhere from the mountains and along different
roads like the sands of the sea.”
136
Against this prodigious task force, the crusaders, who had numbered perhaps one hundred thousand the previous spring as they streamed towards Constantinople, could muster at best a threadbare twenty thousand – non-combatants included.
137
Disease, starvation and casualties in battle; the loss of virtually the entire expedition’s supply of horses and mules, so that even dogs had ended up being employed as pack animals; the lack of anything approaching a unified leadership: all these factors, as the crusaders themselves freely acknowledged, should have spelled their doom. “For certainly, in my opinion,” as one contemporary put it, “what they went through was an ordeal without precedent. Never before had there been among the princes of the world men who exposed their bodies to such suffering, solely in the expectation of a celestial reward.”
138

No wonder, then, when the ferociously outnumbered crusaders succeeded in yet again shattering the Turks upon their steel, when they continued to win famous cities long lost to Christendom, and when, on 7 June 1099, they finally arrived in triumph before the walls of Jerusalem, there were few among them who doubted that they had arrived as well at a turning point in the order of heaven and earth. No one could know for certain what wonders might follow their capture of the Holy Sepulchre – but merely to win it would rank as wonder enough. Ambition, greed and ingenuity: all these qualities, honed by the three long and terrible years of the pilgrimage, had served to bring the crusaders to the very brink of a miracle. Yet in the mingled sense of urgency and brutality that they had displayed, and in their conviction that there was nothing in the world that might not be changed and improved by their own labours, there lay the proof of a revolution long pre-dating their taking up of the Cross. For better and for worse, the previous century had seen Christendom, and the Christian people, transformed utterly. The arrival of the crusaders before the walls of the Holy City was merely a single – albeit the most spectacular – manifestation of a process which, since the convulsive period of the
Millennium, had made of Europe something restless, and dynamic, and wholly new. Nor would it be the last.

A thousand years had passed now since an angel, parting the veil which conceals from mankind the plans of the Almighty for the future, had given to St. John a revelation of the last days. And the saint, writing it down, had recorded how a great battle was destined to be fought; and how the Beast, at its end, would be captured and thrown into a lake of fire. But before that could be brought about, and the world born anew, Christ Himself, “clad in a robe dipped in blood,” was destined to lead out the armies of heaven. “From his mouth issues a sharp sword with which to smite the nations, and he will rule them with a rod of iron; he will tread the wine press of the fury of the wrath of God the Almighty.”
139

On 15 July, the crusaders finally broke into Jerusalem and took possession of the object of all their yearnings. The wine press was duly trodden: the streets were made to flow with blood. And at the end of it, when the slaughter was done, and the whole city drenched in gore, the triumphant warriors of Christ, weeping with joy and disbelief, assembled before the Sepulchre of the Saviour and knelt in an ecstasy of worship.

Meanwhile, on the Temple Mount, where it had been foretold that Antichrist would materialise at the end of days enthroned in fearsome and flame-lit glory, all was stillness. The slaughter upon the rock of the Temple had been especially terrible, and not a living thing had been left there to stir. Already, in the summer heat, the corpses were starting to reek.

Antichrist did not appear.

Timeline

All dates are
anno Domini
.

?33
The crucifixion of Jesus.
?64
The execution of St. Peter in Rome.
?95
St. John writes the Book of Revelation.
?287
The martyrdom of St. Maurice and the Theban Legion.
312
Constantine captures Rome, supposedly after a vision of Christ.
330
The founding of Constantinople.
426
St. Augustine completes his book on the City of God.
?507
The conversion of Clovis, King of the Franks.
711
The Muslim invasion of Spain.
751
Pepin makes himself king, deposing the dynasty of Clovis.
754
Pope Stephen II, having crossed the Alps, anoints Pepin.
800
Charlemagne is crowned Emperor of the West by Pope Leo III.
843
The Treaty of Verdun: Charlemagne’s empire is divided between his three grandsons.
846
Muslim pirates sack St. Peter’s in Rome.
856
Viking pirates sack Orléans.
899
The Hungarians begin their raids on Christendom.
905
The termination of the Carolingian line of emperors: the imperial throne of the West is left vacant.
910
The founding of the abbey of Cluny.
911
Rollo, a Viking warlord, agrees to convert to Christianity, and is granted the overlordship of what will become Normandy.
919
Henry, the Duke of Saxony, is elected King of East Francia.
929
Abd al-Rahman III, Emir of Al-Andalus, proclaims himself Caliph.
936
Henry, King of East Francia, dies, and is succeeded by his son, Otto.
939
The Battle of Andernach: Otto crushes a revolt led by his brother.
955
The Battle of the Lech: the threat to Christendom from the Hungarians is destroyed for good.
962
Otto is crowned emperor by Pope John XII.
966
The baptism of Miesco, Duke of the Poles.
967
Magdeburg is established as an archbishopric.
969
The assassination in Constantinople of Nicephorus Phocas, and his replacement as emperor by John Tzimiskes.
972
The arrival of Theophanu, John Tzimiskes’s niece, in Rome. A council is held at Aurillac, designed to promote the Peace of God.
973
The death of Otto. He is succeeded by his son, Otto II. Edgar, King of the English, stages an imperial coronation at Bath, and establishes a single currency.
975
The death of Edgar.
978
The murder of Edward, Edgar’s son, at Corfe. He is succeeded as king by his half-brother, Ethelred.
982
The Battle of Cotrone. Otto II retreats to Rome.
983
The revolt of the Slavs. Otto II dies in Rome. His infant son, Otto III, is crowned king.
986
The settlement of Greenland.
987
Hugh Capet is elected King of France. Fulk Nerra becomes Count of Anjou. Sweyn Forkbeard deposes his father, Harald Bluetooth, to become King of Denmark.
988
Vladimir of Kiev converts to Christianity.
991
The Battle of Maldon. Fire in Rome almost destroys St. Peter’s.
992
The death of Adso of Montier-en-Der while on pilgrimage to Jerusalem.
994
Odilo becomes Abbot of Cluny. The relics of St. Martial are
publicly displayed on a hill above Limoges in a successful attempt to arrest a pestilence.
996
Otto III appoints his cousin as the first German pope, and is crowned as emperor. Robert II “the Pious” becomes King of France. Al-Hakim becomes the Fatimid Caliph of Egypt.
997
The martyrdom of St. Adalbert. The suppression of a peasant insurrection in Normandy. Al-Mansur, the effective ruler of al-Andalus, sacks Santiago.
998
Otto III suppresses an insurrection in Rome.
999
Otto III appoints Gerbert of Aurillac as Pope.
1000
Otto III visits the shrine of St. Adalbert in Poland and the tomb of Charlemagne in Aachen. The conversion of Iceland to Christianity. The death of Olaf Trygvasson, following his defeat by Sweyn Forkbeard.
1002
The death of Otto III. He is succeeded by Henry II. The death of al-Mansur. Ethelred orders a pogrom of Danes living in England: the St. Brice’s Day Massacre.
1003
Henry II enters an alliance with the Wends.
1004
Muslim pirates sack Pisa.
1006
Count Richard II of Normandy lays claim to the title of “duke.”
1009
The massacre of the Berber residents of Córdoba. The Church of the Holy Sepulchre is demolished on the orders of the Caliph al-Hakim.
1010
Berber forces lay Córdoba under siege. Jews are persecuted – and almost certainly massacred – for the first time in France.
1013
The fall and sack of Córdoba. Sweyn Forkbeard invades England.
1014
The death of Sweyn Forkbeard and the return from exile in Normandy of Ethelred.
1016
The death of Ethelred. Canute establishes himself as King of England. Turkish horsemen attack Armenia.
1018
A band of Norman mercenaries take service with the Byzantines in southern Italy.
1022
Twelve clerics are burned to death for heresy in Orléans.
1024
The death of Henry II marks the extinction of the Liudolfing dynasty. Conrad II is elected as king.
1026
A mass pilgrimage, sponsored by Duke Richard III of Normandy, arrives in Jerusalem.
1027
Canute arrives in Rome for Conrad II’s coronation as emperor.
1028
The public frustration of Adémar’s attempt to prove that St. Martial had been one of Christ’s original apostles.
1030
The Battle of Stiklestad and the death of Olaf, King of Norway. Olaf’s half-brother, Harald Hardrada, seeks sanctuary with Yaroslav, the King of the Rus.
1031
Olaf’s body is exhumed and found to be incorrupt: he starts to be hailed as a saint.
1033
Adémar – and a great crowd of other pilgrims – arrive in Jerusalem. Peter Damian becomes a hermit.
1035
The arrival in Jerusalem of Duke Robert of Normandy is followed soon afterwards by his death in Nicaea. He is succeeded as duke by his infant son, William. The death of Canute. Harald Hardrada travels to Constantinople.
1039
Henry III succeeds his father, Conrad II, as king of the
Reich
.
1043
Henry III marries Agnes of Aquitaine. Edward “the Confessor” is crowned as King of England.
1044
Harald Hardrada flees Constantinople.
1045
Harald Hardrada marries Elizabeth, Yaroslav’s daughter.
1046
The Synod of Sutri: Henry III disposes of three rival popes, and replaces them with a German appointee of his own.
1047
The arrival of Robert of Hauteville – soon to be nicknamed “Guiscard” – in southern Italy. Duke William of Normandy wins his first battle. Harald Hardrada becomes undisputed King of Norway.
1048
Bruno of Toul is crowned in Rome as Pope Leo IX. He tours the Rhineland, and stages a council in Reims. Hugh of Semur becomes Abbot of Cluny in succession to Odilo.
1053
The Battle of Civitate: Leo IX is taken prisoner by the Normans.
1054
Cardinal Humbert’s embassy to Constantinople: its ultimate
result is schism between the churches of the Old and the New Rome. The death of Leo IX.
1055
Beatrice and Matilda of Tuscany are exiled by Henry III to the Rhineland.
1056
The death of Henry III. He is succeeded as king by his infant son, Henry IV.
1057
Peter Damian becomes a cardinal. Street battles break out in Milan between supporters of the archbishop and insurrectionists known as the “Patarenes.” Beatrice and Matilda return to Tuscany.
1059
The cardinals lay claim to the right to choose a pope. Peter Damian arrives in Milan in an attempt to make peace between the archbishop and the Patarenes. Robert Guiscard is accepted as a papal vessel, and invested with the dukedom of Apulia.
1061
The Normans invade Sicily.
1062
Henry IV is kidnapped by the Archbishop of Cologne.
1065
Henry IV comes of age. His mother, Agnes, leaves for Rome.
1066
The death of Edward the Confessor. Harald Godwinsson succeeds him as King of England. The Battle of Stamford Bridge: the defeat and death of Harald Hardrada. The Battle of Hastings: the defeat and death of Harald Godwinsson. William of Normandy is crowned as King of England.
1070
A public penance is imposed on all who fought at Hastings.
1071
The Battle of Manzikert.
1072
Rival bishops are appointed in Milan. The death of Peter Damian. Palermo is captured by the Normans. Alfonso VI becomes King of León.
1073
Archdeacon Hildebrand is elected Pope. He takes the name Gregory VII. Rebellion against Henry IV breaks out in Saxony.
1074
The abandonment of Gregory’s expedition to Constantinople and Jerusalem.
1075
Henry IV suppresses the revolt in Saxony. Gregory charges the Germans not to obey disobedient bishops. Henry imposes his own candidate on the archbishopric of Milan.
1076
Gregory threatens Henry IV with excommunication. At a
conference in Worms, two-thirds of the German bishops renounce their loyalty to Gregory. Gregory excommunicates Henry. Rebellion breaks out again in Saxony, and Henry is threatened with deposition by a gathering of rebellious princes at Tribur.
1077
Henry IV stages a public penance at Canossa, and is absolved from excommunication. An assembly of princes at Forcheim elects Duke Rodulf of Swabia as king. Civil war in the
Reich
. The death of Agnes.
1078
Gregory formally bans the investiture of bishops by emperors and kings.
1080
Gregory excommunicates Henry IV for a second time. Henry nominates an anti-pope. Rudolf of Swabia dies in battle. Alfonso VI imposes the Roman form of the Mass on his kingdom.
1081
Henry IV marches abortively on Rome. Alexius Comnenus becomes emperor in Constantinople. Robert Guiscard crosses the Adriatic.
1082
Robert Guiscard withdraws again to Apulia.
1083
Henry IV captures St. Peter’s.
1084
Henry IV captures Rome and is anointed as emperor by Clement III, the newly crowned anti-pope. He retreats before the advance of Robert Guiscard, who rescues Gregory from the Castel Sant’Angelo and sacks Rome.
1085
Death of Gregory. Alfonso VI captures Toledo. Death of Robert Guiscard.
1087
Urban II is crowned as Pope.
1090
The last Muslim outpost in Sicily submits to Norman rule.
1095
The Council of Piacenza. Urban II tours France. He consecrates the “
maior ecclesia
” of Cluny. At a council held at Clermont, he calls for an armed expedition to restore Jerusalem to Christendom.
1097
The capture of Nicaea from the Turks.
1099
The capture of Jerusalem.
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