Communicating the Crusading Activity of the Kings of Navarre in the 14th and 15th Centuries
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Singularity of the Late Mediaeval Historiography of Navarre
3. Narrative of the Events of the Crusades: A fragmented Navarrese Memory
3.1. The Nature of the First Navarrese Memory of the Crusades (14th Century)
Seignor, sachiés: qui or ne s’en ira, en cele terre ou Dex fu mors et vis, et qui la crois d’Outremer ne penra, a paines mais ira en Paradis. Qui a en soi pitié ne remembrance au haut Seignor doit querre sa venjance et deliver s aterre et son país.
During his father’s lifetime, Theobald, serving God, travelled overseas to help in the Holy Land, and God helped him to conquer towns and castles that he gave to the Christians and did much good for the poor and defenceless knights. He then returned to his homeland and, following the death of his father, inherited the kingdom of Navarre.
This Theobald, driven by the ardour of his faith, came to the aid of the Holy Land with an infinite number of knights, princes and barons, and conquered many lands which he restored to Christian sovereignty; he bore the expenses of all the knights there who had no means of their own, and even those who were not dependent on him, until the expedition was concluded, and through negotiations and coinage freed many knights captured by the Hagarenes.
Theobald, glad to place himself at the service of God, gathered a large cavalry and crossed the sea to liberate Jerusalem in the Holy Land. He conquered many lands from the Muslims and handed them to the Christians and assisted many of the poor knights he found who had no means to return. He also freed many of the captive knights and did much good.
King Theobald married the daughter of the king of France and went to the land of the Moors with his father-in-law, the king of France, and died in Tunis, where his father-in-law the king of France was.(García de Eugui; trans. Eugui 1999, p. 392)
This king built Tiebas Castle, and he was rich, hard and rigorous; he clashed with Pedro Jiménez de Gazólaz, bishop of Pamplona, and with the burgh [borough] that belonged to the bishop; but, in other things, he was brave, cheerful and a good singer-songwriter; and he arranged for good apples and pears to be brought from Champagne because he liked fruit. As a result of his confrontation with the bishop, the latter excommunicated him and imposed an interdict on him in the kingdom that lasted three years, and mass was not celebrated wherever the king ordered…
[Theobald]…husband of Isabella, daughter of Saint Louis of France…, his father-in-law, with whom he went to the land of the Moors in Carthage, in the kingdom of Tunisia, and there he fell ill, and on his return on the island of Sicily, he died in Trapani without [his] family, in the year of the Lord 1270, on December 4, and his remains rest in Provins. He reigned seventeen years and three months
3.2. Writing about the Crusades in the 15th Century: Textual and Communicative Renewal
Thus, this king Theobald, wanting to imitate his predecessor kings, and knowing the preaching of the Crusade in the kingdom of France against the Muslim enemies of the faith, left his kingdom of Navarre and went to Paris where the most Christian and holy king, King Saint Louis, was to be found and where, according to the chronicle of the kings of France, he met with the principles of his kingdom to order the war that was to be launched against the Muslims. King Theobald and Peter Mauclerc, Lord of Brittany and Count of Bar, the Count of Montfort and all the elite of the nobility of France who had taken up the cross to go to the Holy Land, moved their followers and set out to free the land of Jerusalem from the hands of the enemies of the faith. Once in the eastern lands, the count of Brittany and many others separated from the retinue without the consent of the commoners or of the king of Navarre, captain of the quest; and taken prisoners by the Muslims were Amaury, count of Montfort, the Count of Bar and Richard of Beaumont and Lancelot of Lille and many others of great standing; and after large sums of coinage were paid in ransom, they returned to France and king Theobald returned to Navarre
Chapter IV in which it states how this king went with his father-in-law, King Saint Louis of France, to Tunis, wanting to imitate his predecessors, the most Christian kings of Navarre.
4. Conclusions: Political Function and Epic Rhetoric
Funding
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Pavón Benito, J. Communicating the Crusading Activity of the Kings of Navarre in the 14th and 15th Centuries. Religions 2023, 14, 1304. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14101304
Pavón Benito J. Communicating the Crusading Activity of the Kings of Navarre in the 14th and 15th Centuries. Religions. 2023; 14(10):1304. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14101304
Chicago/Turabian StylePavón Benito, Julia. 2023. "Communicating the Crusading Activity of the Kings of Navarre in the 14th and 15th Centuries" Religions 14, no. 10: 1304. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14101304
APA StylePavón Benito, J. (2023). Communicating the Crusading Activity of the Kings of Navarre in the 14th and 15th Centuries. Religions, 14(10), 1304. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14101304