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On a late November morning in the year 1095, this man,
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Pope Urban II,
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delivered a sermon that would transform the history of Europe.
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His rousing words transfixed the crowd gathered here in the French town of Clermont.
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And in the months that followed,
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his message reverberated across the West.
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The age of the Crusades had begun.
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The Pope proclaimed a new holy war against Islam...
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..for control of the most hallowed site in the Christian cosmos -
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the sacred city of Jerusalem.
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Urban's call to arms initiated a struggle
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that would rage for two centuries -
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one that fires the imagination
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and fuels debate even today.
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The story of the Crusades is remembered as a tale of religious fanaticism
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and unspeakable violence,
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of medieval knights and jihadi warriors,
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of castles and kings, heroism, betrayal, and sacrifice.
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This feels like you're touching the past. It's an amazing feeling.
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But now fresh research, eyewitness testimony,
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and contemporary evidence
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from both the Christian and Islamic worlds sheds new light
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on how it was that these two great religions
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waged war in the name of God...
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..why hundreds of thousands of Christians and Muslims
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answered the call to Crusade and Jihad...
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..and who, ultimately, won the war for the Holy Land.
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From the summer of 1096,
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between 60,000 and 100,000 Christians -
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men, women and children - set out to walk some 2,500 miles
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across the face of the known world. Their goal? Jerusalem.
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Not since the distant glories of ancient Rome had a force of this size been assembled.
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Rich, and poor, peasants and knights, these were the First Crusaders...
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..Christian soldiers who endured unimaginable suffering and privation
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during an armed pilgrimage that lasted for three years.
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So who were they? And why did they fight?
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When Urban II became Pope, Christianity was in turmoil,
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split between the Greek Church of the East and the Latin West.
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The papacy itself stood on the brink of overthrow,
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embroiled in a long-standing feud with the German Empire.
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But Urban had a plan.
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Determined to reassert papal authority,
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in the autumn of 1095 he came to France, where he would launch
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a titanic armed pilgrimage, known to history as the First Crusade.
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By November 1095, the Pope was ready to unveil his plan.
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Here in Clermont in Central France, he gathered 12 archbishops,
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80 bishops and 90 abbots
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for the largest clerical assembly of his career.
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After nine days of general ecclesiastical debate,
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Urban announced his intention to deliver a special sermon,
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and on the 27th of November,
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hundreds of people crowded into a field outside the town to hear him speak.
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"We want you to know what grievous cause leads us to your territory.
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"A grave report has come from the lands of Jerusalem
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"that a foreign race, a race absolutely alien to God,
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"has invaded the land of those Christians
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"and has reduced the people with sword, rapine and fire."
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Urban's speech was the moment of genesis for the concept of a crusade.
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It was primarily designed to meet the needs of the papacy.
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And it contained a brilliantly conceived hook.
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The coming expedition would target
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the greatest pilgrim destination in the Christian world -
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the Holy City of Jerusalem,
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which lay in the hands of Islam.
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But the Pope had a problem.
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Jerusalem had fallen to Islam more than 400 years earlier,
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so he could hardly claim this as a fresh crime.
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To lend urgency to his call,
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Urban therefore turned to one of the most powerful and dangerous forces in human history -
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the idea of otherness,
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of an alien enemy guilty of ghastly crimes who must be repelled.
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"These men have destroyed the altars
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"polluted by their foul practices.
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"They have circumcised the Christians,
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"either spreading the blood from the circumcisions on the altars
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"or pouring it into the baptismal fonts.
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"And they cut open the navels of those
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"who they choose to torment with loathsome death,
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"drag them around and flog them before killing them
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"as they lie prone on the ground with all their entrails out."
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The Pope created an anti-Islamic onslaught peppered with propaganda.
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His graphic imagery bore little relation to the reality of Muslim rule in the Holy Land.
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Nor was Urban's call to arms
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directly inspired by any recent atrocity in the East.
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Nevertheless, his attack ignited a fire of vengeful passion,
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as news of the Crusade resounded across Western Christendom.
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The idea of the Crusade was unleashed in a spiritual age -
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an era that in many ways is wholly alien to our own.
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Today we might be acculturated to notions of tolerance,
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scepticism and religious difference, but a singular truth
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bound together almost every human being alive in 11th-century Europe,
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and that was unconditional and total belief in Christianity.
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At the core of medieval Christianity were the twinned opposing emotions
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of hope and fear,
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the promise of salvation and the threat of damnation.
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The Church taught that every human would face a moment of judgment,
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a weighing of souls.
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Those found to be pure
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would be rewarded with everlasting paradise in Heaven.
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But if you were a sinner,
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then you faced certain punishment -
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an eternity of gruesome torment in Hell.
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This magnificent sculpture cycle depicts the Last Judgment
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and it's the perfect evocation of the whole idea
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of agony and ecstasy in medieval Christianity.
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It was sculpted, we think, by one of the masters of medieval art -
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a man called Gislebertus.
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And we know this because he's left in his inscription
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"Gislebertus hocfecit" - "Gislebertus made this".
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Let's start with the good, let's start with salvation.
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What we see amongst the saved
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are three children being lifted to Heaven by an angle.
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And if we look above
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we can see beautiful, elongated angels lifting the saved up to paradise.
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On the other side, on Christ's left hand, we see those less fortunate,
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those who have sinned and will face an eternity of torment in Hell.
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We can see a man bearing a bag, probably a bag of money,
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meaning he's a miser or a moneylender.
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He's amongst the damned.
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And there we can see a woman with a pair of snakes
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gnawing on her bare breasts, showing that she was lusty or lewd.
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And perhaps most evocatively of all,
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a man with a look of fear and agony on his face
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as a pair of giant demonic hands reach down to strangle him
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and pull him through the gates of Hell.
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This is the tableau of horror laid out before you.
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This is what Gislebertus wanted his audience to understand -
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the consequences of sin in the medieval world.
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Primed to seek redemption,
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Western Christians were thus enthralled when Urban II
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announced his expedition to the Holy Land.
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The price would be huge.
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The faithful would have to give up everything
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to participate in a terrifying, near suicidal journey into the unknown,
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but in return, the Pope seemed to be promising
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a guarantee of eternal salvation.
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Tens of thousands of ordinary Christians
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responded to the Pope's brilliantly-conceived campaign.
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But Urban's target audience was the aristocracy of Western Europe -
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a violent warrior class
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fighting for survival in a world of bloodthirsty lawlessness.
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These warlords would become the Crusades' leaders -
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Christian knights for whom the Pope's call to arms solved a very particular dilemma.
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The Pope knew only too well the anxiety of Christian warriors
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trapped in a worldly profession imbued with violence,
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yet taught by the Church that bloodshed was sinful.
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The real genius of Urban's crusading ideal was that it solved this dilemma,
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reconciling faith and violence.
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Urban spoke of a new sacred struggle,
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in which fighting would not simply be permitted,
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but actively encouraged and even rewarded.
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The day after Pope Urban's sermon at Clermont,
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Count Raymond of Toulouse,
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the most powerful secular Lord in Southern France,
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became the first nobleman to commit to the Crusade.
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Determined to prepare his soul for the gruelling expedition ahead,
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Raymond then came here, to this cathedral in Le Puy.
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The Count made a large donation
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to secure the favourable intercession of the Virgin Mary,
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and according to one chronicle requested...
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"So long as I live a candle should burn for me incessantly,
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"day and night upon the altar
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"before the revered image of the Mother of God."
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Some Christian knights may have embarked upon the holy war believing they would reap rich rewards
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from conquest and plunder in the East.
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But the vast majority were primarily driven by faith
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and the promise of redemption.
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It's often argued that Raymond, and many like him,
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joined the Crusade in search of material gain.
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But I think this theory is simply unsustainable,
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given the vast weight of contemporary evidence that shows us the exact opposite.
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Raymond actually walked away from one of the richest lordships in Europe to join this expedition.
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And like many of his fellow Crusaders,
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he probably expected to die in the East.
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I think most people joined this Crusade
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because they earnestly believed that the coming campaign would cleanse their souls of sin.
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They were, I think, looking for redemption in the fire of holy war.
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For noblemen like Raymond,
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and the retinues of knights and infantry that came with them,
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the Crusade offered the promise of eternal salvation,
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and, in return, their personal fortunes would bankroll the sacred expedition.
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Raymond of Toulouse became the Crusade's elder statesman,
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but he was just one of scores of rich and powerful noblemen
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for whom the combined allure of military conquest and religious redemption proved irresistible.
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There was Godfrey of Bouillon,
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a pious duke whose lands extended from North-Eastern France into the low countries of Germany.
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Despite a long-standing feud with the papacy,
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Godfrey was so enthralled by the crusading message that he joined the expedition to Jerusalem.
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There was the Southern-Italian Norman, Bohemond of Taranto,
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a guileful military genius, perhaps the greatest general of his age.
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And there was Stephen of Blois from Northern France, William the Conqueror's son-in-law.
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Stephen left his wife Adela behind to rule in his stead
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and later wrote her a series of extraordinary letters from the front line,
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describing his adventures in the East.
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"In fighting against these enemies of God and of our own, we have,
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"by God's grace, endured many sufferings
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"and innumerable evils up to the present time."
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'Stephen's words survive as a direct, eye-witness account of the Crusade.
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'But there were many other contemporaries
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'who also sought to chronicle this remarkable expedition.'
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This manuscript is a French copy
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of the Histoire d'Outremer.
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William of Tyre.
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It's illuminated.
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It is one of our most popular manuscripts
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for the story of Crusaders.
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This feels like you're touching the past.
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It's an amazing feeling.
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'This is an illustrated copy, produced in 1289,
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'of the most famous chronicle of the Crusades,
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'written by William of Tyre,
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'a Christian historian working in the Holy Land in the 12th century.'
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There's something absolutely extraordinary about being this close
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to an item of this kind of rarity.
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Such a precious manuscript - to actually be able to touch it,
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for me, it's almost electrifying.
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This is an absolute masterpiece in terms of depicting
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the start of the First Crusade.
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And what it shows is a series of knights riding out from Europe,
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preparing for their 3,000-mile journey to reach Jerusalem.
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And we can see Godfrey of Bouillon himself,
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one of the great leaders of the Crusade, in amongst this group.
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And he's against a golden background,
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and it's that gold that really sets this image alight.
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It makes it seem as if the horses themselves are moving,
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it gives action, gives life to the image.
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And it's that which conveys this sense of a journey beginning - the start of the Crusade.
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But this dignified procession belies the ramshackle reality of the First Crusade.
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For most people, embarking on a crusade was a colossal leap of faith.
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This would be a journey to a wholly alien and unknown world,
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attempted with little or no planning and no accurate maps.
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This was an extraordinary mass migration
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undertaken by over 60,000 people -
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an unprecedented tide of humankind.
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The first to depart were small groups of peasants and some knights.
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Too poor to pay for ships, their only option was to walk,
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dragging their few belongings behind on carts,
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living hand-to-mouth off the land.
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As they marched East, this rabble of Christian fanatics
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became embroiled in a series of murderous attacks on the Jews of Europe.
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The main contingents of knights soon followed.
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But it was only in the first months of 1097,
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almost a year after the first pilgrims set out,
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that the First Crusade finally united at Constantinople,
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capital of the Byzantine Empire.
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For most Crusaders, this was the end of the world as they knew it -
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a mighty metropolis ten times the size of any city in Western Europe.
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And it was the centre of the Greek Church in the East,
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the greatest Christian superpower of the medieval age.
250
00:20:52,560 --> 00:20:56,320
Constantinople boasted an unrivalled collection of sacred relics.
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It had the Crown of Thorns, locks of hair from the Virgin Mary,
252
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at least two heads of John the Baptist,
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and the bones of virtually all the apostles.
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And it had this - St Sophia,
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undoubtedly medieval Christendom's most spectacular church.
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"I arrived at Constantinople with great joy by the grace of God.
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"The Emperor verily received me with dignity and honour
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"and with the greatest affection as if I were his own son."
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The Crusaders had arrived at the gateway to the Orient,
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the frontier with Islam.
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The Byzantine Emperor had, for some time,
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been appealing to the West for help
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in defending Christendom's Eastern border.
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With the aid of his troops, the Crusaders targeted Nicaea,
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an Islamic foothold in Western Asia Minor.
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After a month-long siege, the city was conquered.
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The holy war had begun.
268
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But there was no immediate response to this audacious invasion.
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The Crusaders had, inadvertently, chosen the perfect moment to strike.
270
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The Muslim world was in a state of disarray,
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riven by religious and ethnic divisions.
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As yet, Islam could not draw upon the same profound sense of shared purpose
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that united the Crusaders,
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the dream that drove these Christians on towards their sacred objective.
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"I tell you, my beloved,"
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wrote Stephen of Blois to his wife back in France,
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"In five weeks, we will reach Jerusalem."
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00:23:28,480 --> 00:23:30,000
Because of its vast size,
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the Crusade couldn't realistically move forward as a single force.
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A column of 60,000 people might take an entire day
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just to pass a single point.
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And foraging for food and supplies as they went,
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they might scour the surrounding landscape like a plague of locust.
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Instead, the Crusaders decided to divide their army in two.
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Led by Bohemond of Taranto,
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00:23:59,560 --> 00:24:03,600
the first contingent set off, with a plan to regroup after four days,
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00:24:03,600 --> 00:24:07,640
here at an abandoned Byzantine military camp,
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100 miles south-east of Nicaea.
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But the holy army never made its rendezvous.
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00:24:19,640 --> 00:24:22,200
HORSE WHINNIES IN PANIC
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As the Crusaders marched across the plains of Asia Minor,
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they were ambushed by a ferocious band of nomadic warriors...
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..their first terrifying taste of Turkish horsemen in full flight.
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One of Bohemond's followers recalled the moment of horror
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00:24:44,600 --> 00:24:46,800
as the Turks suddenly came into view
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and began to howl and gabble.
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HORSE WHINNIES IN PANIC
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Another eye-witness, caught in the thick of the fighting, wrote,
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"The Turks were howling like wolves."
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00:24:58,480 --> 00:25:02,720
"They began shooting a cloud of arrows.
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00:25:02,720 --> 00:25:04,560
"We were all stunned by this.
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00:25:06,200 --> 00:25:09,640
"Because for all of us, this form of warfare was unknown."
303
00:25:13,640 --> 00:25:17,440
Ranged against a seemingly endless multitude of Turks,
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the Christians were thrown into disarray.
305
00:25:20,320 --> 00:25:22,920
Instead of chaotic retreat,
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Bohemond managed to establish a defensive formation.
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00:25:26,360 --> 00:25:30,480
But isolated and exposed, the Crusaders faced disaster.
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00:25:35,760 --> 00:25:38,240
"Huddled together like sheep in a fold,
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00:25:38,240 --> 00:25:42,240
"we were trembling and frightened, surrounded on all sides by enemies
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"so that we couldn't turn in any direction," one Crusader later recalled.
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To strengthen their resolve,
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the Crusaders passed a morale-boosting message down the line.
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"Stand fast, trusting in Christ and the victory of the cross."
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00:26:04,240 --> 00:26:07,520
One account described how the Turks burst into the camp,
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00:26:07,520 --> 00:26:10,800
striking with arrows loosed from their horned bows,
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00:26:10,800 --> 00:26:16,240
killing men, women and children indiscriminately and sparing no-one on grounds of age.
317
00:26:18,800 --> 00:26:21,720
Stunned and terrified by this hideous killing,
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00:26:21,720 --> 00:26:26,320
girls who were delicate and nobly born were rushing to get themselves dressed up
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and offering themselves to the Turks.
320
00:26:28,560 --> 00:26:32,560
So that at least, appeased by their beauty,
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00:26:32,560 --> 00:26:34,720
they may offer their prisoners some pity.
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00:26:42,560 --> 00:26:45,440
This idea of Western women rushing into their tents
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to beautify themselves,
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00:26:47,080 --> 00:26:51,680
all in the hope that they'd be taken slave rather than killed on the spot,
325
00:26:51,680 --> 00:26:55,800
can almost sound comical. But this anecdote is supposed to tell us something.
326
00:26:55,800 --> 00:26:59,600
It's supposed to reveal that the Crusaders were absolutely terrified
327
00:26:59,600 --> 00:27:01,760
by what they encountered at Dorylaeum.
328
00:27:01,760 --> 00:27:05,880
They'd come across an alien enemy - something they'd never experienced before.
329
00:27:05,880 --> 00:27:08,880
What's really extraordinary is that they didn't give up,
330
00:27:08,880 --> 00:27:12,000
they didn't buckle. Instead they managed to re-group,
331
00:27:12,000 --> 00:27:15,800
re-order their lines and hold their position for five hours
332
00:27:15,800 --> 00:27:18,040
until crusading reinforcements arrived.
333
00:27:21,280 --> 00:27:26,520
In the ensuing battle, as many as 4,000 Christians were killed.
334
00:27:26,520 --> 00:27:30,560
But, crucially, the Crusaders simply refused to give in.
335
00:27:32,640 --> 00:27:35,400
The Turks were not defeated at Dorylaeum,
336
00:27:35,400 --> 00:27:37,600
but their resistance was broken,
337
00:27:37,600 --> 00:27:40,400
and the route across Asia Minor opened up.
338
00:27:44,200 --> 00:27:48,400
Empowered by their faith, the Western invaders seemed invincible.
339
00:27:49,840 --> 00:27:52,880
In contrast, Islam's defence lay in the hands
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00:27:52,880 --> 00:27:55,960
of a disparate array of squabbling warlords.
341
00:27:59,080 --> 00:28:01,600
But the Crusaders faced a different kind of enemy
342
00:28:01,600 --> 00:28:03,760
as they marched across Asia Minor,
343
00:28:03,760 --> 00:28:07,000
enduring the blistering heat of the summer months,
344
00:28:07,000 --> 00:28:09,960
plagued by starvation and thirst.
345
00:28:16,440 --> 00:28:19,920
For the first time, a lack of water became a real issue.
346
00:28:19,920 --> 00:28:22,920
The death rate skyrocketed and there's one thing that's
347
00:28:22,920 --> 00:28:27,480
really extraordinary about this period and that's that the eyewitness testimony
348
00:28:27,480 --> 00:28:32,600
seems to suggest that the Crusaders were almost as concerned, if not more concerned,
349
00:28:32,600 --> 00:28:37,520
about the death of animals as they were about those men and women who died through thirst.
350
00:28:37,520 --> 00:28:40,480
We've always thought that the Crusaders
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00:28:40,480 --> 00:28:44,680
arrived in the Holy Land with their cavalry intact, the truth is
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00:28:44,680 --> 00:28:49,240
that, crossing Asia Minor, almost all of these Western horses died.
353
00:28:49,240 --> 00:28:51,280
By the time they reached the Holy Land,
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00:28:51,280 --> 00:28:54,320
the Crusaders were forced to ride, sometimes on donkeys
355
00:28:54,320 --> 00:28:58,680
with their feet dragging in the dirt, others were astride oxen.
356
00:28:58,680 --> 00:29:02,080
So this idea of an invincible military force,
357
00:29:02,080 --> 00:29:04,960
that the Crusade had at its fingertips, is an illusion.
358
00:29:11,440 --> 00:29:15,560
Christian numbers were severely depleted by an epic journey
359
00:29:15,560 --> 00:29:19,200
that concluded with a terrifying traverse of the Taurus Mountains.
360
00:29:22,800 --> 00:29:26,320
By the time the First Crusade reached northern Syria,
361
00:29:26,320 --> 00:29:29,000
in the autumn of 1097,
362
00:29:29,000 --> 00:29:33,960
only around half of those who had left Europe a year earlier survived.
363
00:29:37,920 --> 00:29:41,680
The crossing of Asia Minor had been an extraordinary feat in itself.
364
00:29:41,680 --> 00:29:44,600
But now, standing at the gateway to the Holy Land,
365
00:29:44,600 --> 00:29:47,080
the Crusaders faced a gargantuan task,
366
00:29:47,080 --> 00:29:50,080
one that eclipsed everything that had gone before.
367
00:29:50,080 --> 00:29:54,080
The conquest of one of the great cities of the Orient - Antioch.
368
00:30:02,040 --> 00:30:05,920
Antioch was a crucial staging post, as the Crusade now looked south
369
00:30:05,920 --> 00:30:10,240
to Jerusalem itself, perhaps less than a month's march away.
370
00:30:13,920 --> 00:30:17,200
But Antioch lay under the rule of Muslim Turks,
371
00:30:17,200 --> 00:30:20,760
shielded by two great mountains,
372
00:30:20,760 --> 00:30:23,080
and a ring of awesome battlements that made this
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00:30:23,080 --> 00:30:27,560
one of the most strongly-fortified cities in the medieval world.
374
00:30:41,560 --> 00:30:43,440
So this is the iron gate.
375
00:30:43,440 --> 00:30:48,240
I absolutely love this place, because it's the perfect spot to come to if you want to
376
00:30:48,240 --> 00:30:51,280
understand what medieval Antioch would have looked like.
377
00:30:51,280 --> 00:30:55,360
And why the Crusaders thought this city was going to be impregnable.
378
00:31:00,080 --> 00:31:04,120
This is Antioch's last surviving gate, part of a series
379
00:31:04,120 --> 00:31:08,120
of formidable defences that made an immediate attack impossible.
380
00:31:10,760 --> 00:31:14,040
The city was garrisoned by around 5,000 Turks...
381
00:31:15,920 --> 00:31:17,840
..enough to mount a defence
382
00:31:17,840 --> 00:31:22,480
but not sufficient to confront the Crusaders in open battle.
383
00:31:23,840 --> 00:31:27,280
The result, an appalling stalemate that would test
384
00:31:27,280 --> 00:31:29,720
the Christians' faith to the limit.
385
00:31:31,240 --> 00:31:35,160
From the autumn of 1097 onwards, the Crusaders committed
386
00:31:35,160 --> 00:31:40,320
themselves to the grinding reality of a medieval encirclement siege -
387
00:31:40,320 --> 00:31:43,560
a devastating war of attrition that would last for eight months.
388
00:31:47,480 --> 00:31:51,400
That winter would prove to be a living hell for the Crusaders
389
00:31:51,400 --> 00:31:56,800
camped outside Antioch, facing illness, disease and starvation.
390
00:32:02,560 --> 00:32:07,200
The height of the Crusaders' suffering came in January 1098.
391
00:32:07,200 --> 00:32:11,480
Stephen of Blois, who managed to survive these darkest of days,
392
00:32:11,480 --> 00:32:13,240
later wrote in a letter,
393
00:32:13,240 --> 00:32:16,560
"Throughout that winter we suffered from excessive cold,
394
00:32:16,560 --> 00:32:20,920
"and enormous torrents of rain. What some say about the impossibility
395
00:32:20,920 --> 00:32:24,600
"of being able to bear the heat of the sun throughout Syria is untrue
396
00:32:24,600 --> 00:32:28,520
"because the winters there are very similar to our own in the West."
397
00:32:28,520 --> 00:32:33,160
That January, hundreds, perhaps thousands, lost their lives,
398
00:32:33,160 --> 00:32:35,880
not to the edge of a sword, but to illness,
399
00:32:35,880 --> 00:32:37,640
and malnourishment.
400
00:32:37,640 --> 00:32:39,760
Indeed, according to one account,
401
00:32:39,760 --> 00:32:44,560
food became so scarce that the poor were forced to eat dogs and rats,
402
00:32:44,560 --> 00:32:48,880
the skin of beasts and even seeds of grain found in manure.
403
00:32:52,480 --> 00:32:58,400
Many Christians began to question why God had abandoned the Crusade, his sacred venture.
404
00:33:01,560 --> 00:33:05,840
And when it seemed that things couldn't get any worse,
405
00:33:05,840 --> 00:33:08,760
the Muslim world finally appeared to unite.
406
00:33:14,760 --> 00:33:18,360
Just as the advent of spring began to shift the balance
407
00:33:18,360 --> 00:33:20,680
of the siege in the Crusaders' favour,
408
00:33:20,680 --> 00:33:23,640
a dread-laden rumour began to circulate.
409
00:33:23,640 --> 00:33:27,440
Scouts from the Christian camp revealed that they'd seen
410
00:33:27,440 --> 00:33:28,680
a Muslim army.
411
00:33:28,680 --> 00:33:34,040
Reportedly swarming over mountain paths. Like the sands of the sea.
412
00:33:41,040 --> 00:33:44,240
Kerbogha of Mosul, a fearsome Iraqi general,
413
00:33:44,240 --> 00:33:47,200
and some 40,000 Syrian and Mesopotamian troops were
414
00:33:47,200 --> 00:33:51,760
on the way, and now they were less than one week away from Antioch.
415
00:34:12,360 --> 00:34:16,280
This huge relief force, mobilised in response to desperate appeals
416
00:34:16,280 --> 00:34:19,320
for support from Antioch's Muslim leaders,
417
00:34:19,320 --> 00:34:22,280
outnumbered the Crusaders by two to one.
418
00:34:26,400 --> 00:34:28,600
Stranded outside the city,
419
00:34:28,600 --> 00:34:32,520
the Christian army would surely be crushed against Antioch's walls.
420
00:34:33,760 --> 00:34:37,840
Facing the very real threat of panic and mass desertion,
421
00:34:37,840 --> 00:34:41,680
the Crusade's leaders convened an emergency council.
422
00:34:43,000 --> 00:34:49,280
And Bohemond, the military genius who had taken command at Dorylaeum, stepped forward.
423
00:34:53,040 --> 00:34:56,520
Bohemond argued that whoever could orchestrate Antioch's fall
424
00:34:56,520 --> 00:34:58,880
should be given legal rights to the city.
425
00:34:58,880 --> 00:35:02,480
And it was only after the bargain had been sealed,
426
00:35:02,480 --> 00:35:05,440
that the wily Bohemond showed his hand.
427
00:35:10,720 --> 00:35:16,440
Bohemond had made contact with a renegade inside Antioch,
428
00:35:16,440 --> 00:35:20,720
an Armenian Christian tower commander named Firuz,
429
00:35:20,720 --> 00:35:23,200
who was willing to betray the city.
430
00:35:26,080 --> 00:35:30,240
Just a few short days after the Crusaders' emergency council,
431
00:35:30,240 --> 00:35:34,120
a small group of Bohemond's men stole up to the foot
432
00:35:34,120 --> 00:35:37,640
of an isolated section of the city's south-eastern walls.
433
00:35:37,640 --> 00:35:40,480
There, Firuz lowered a ladder.
434
00:35:45,960 --> 00:35:49,440
We know from eyewitness testimony that these men must have been
435
00:35:49,440 --> 00:35:53,600
absolutely terrified, most of them expecting to be killed as soon as
436
00:35:53,600 --> 00:35:55,320
they reached the top.
437
00:35:55,320 --> 00:35:58,040
As it turned out, they were able to despatch the guards
438
00:35:58,040 --> 00:36:01,840
at all the three surrounding towers in almost complete silence,
439
00:36:01,840 --> 00:36:05,480
and soon afterwards a small gate was opened below.
440
00:36:08,400 --> 00:36:13,160
The calm night air was suddenly shattered, a shrill bugle sounded
441
00:36:13,160 --> 00:36:16,440
to signal a wave of secondary attacks on other parts of the city.
442
00:36:19,240 --> 00:36:22,400
And the Christians began screaming out their battle cry,
443
00:36:22,400 --> 00:36:24,360
"God wills it! God wills it!"
444
00:36:26,280 --> 00:36:29,600
The Muslim garrison was thrown into a state of utter confusion
445
00:36:29,600 --> 00:36:32,240
and soon Antioch's remaining gates were thrown open
446
00:36:32,240 --> 00:36:33,880
and the Crusaders poured in.
447
00:36:33,880 --> 00:36:38,040
In the half light of dawn, a chaotic slaughter began
448
00:36:38,040 --> 00:36:42,960
as the Crusaders unleashed eight months of pent-up anger and aggression.
449
00:36:53,000 --> 00:36:58,280
This illumination depicts the fall of Antioch on the 3rd of June 1098.
450
00:36:58,280 --> 00:37:00,920
And I think it's an absolutely remarkable image.
451
00:37:00,920 --> 00:37:04,800
One Muslim is having a sword stabbed through his chest.
452
00:37:06,000 --> 00:37:07,840
Another is about to be decapitated.
453
00:37:08,840 --> 00:37:12,840
And I find this image quite troubling because in many ways it's very beautiful.
454
00:37:12,840 --> 00:37:16,440
The colour is extraordinary, it looks as if it was painted
455
00:37:16,440 --> 00:37:18,440
last week, not 800 years ago.
456
00:37:18,440 --> 00:37:22,200
But, at the same time, it's horrific.
457
00:37:22,200 --> 00:37:25,280
And I think, in a way, this cuts to the heart of the enigma
458
00:37:25,280 --> 00:37:28,480
of the First Crusade and the Crusades that would follow,
459
00:37:28,480 --> 00:37:31,280
because this is about violence that's enacted
460
00:37:31,280 --> 00:37:33,280
in the context of Holy War.
461
00:37:37,160 --> 00:37:41,640
And perhaps in that context the idea that that violence might be sinful,
462
00:37:41,640 --> 00:37:44,680
that it might be morally wrong, has been erased.
463
00:37:44,680 --> 00:37:47,000
Because this was now the work of God.
464
00:37:52,160 --> 00:37:56,120
Having spent eight months battling to gain entry to Antioch,
465
00:37:56,120 --> 00:38:01,400
the Crusaders now found themselves ensnared in a bizarre predicament.
466
00:38:06,480 --> 00:38:10,960
The very next day, Kerbogha's great army began to arrive.
467
00:38:10,960 --> 00:38:15,120
The first Crusaders were now trapped inside Antioch,
468
00:38:15,120 --> 00:38:18,200
the besiegers had become the besieged.
469
00:38:24,600 --> 00:38:28,600
Kerbogha's ferocious army formed a cordon around Antioch.
470
00:38:32,720 --> 00:38:36,600
Trapped inside a city already bereft of supplies,
471
00:38:36,600 --> 00:38:41,720
the Christians now faced the greatest test of their faith.
472
00:38:44,160 --> 00:38:45,920
Food very quickly ran short
473
00:38:45,920 --> 00:38:48,320
and starvation became endemic.
474
00:38:48,320 --> 00:38:50,360
It was said that the poor were forced
475
00:38:50,360 --> 00:38:52,200
to eat the leather of their own shoes,
476
00:38:52,200 --> 00:38:56,360
while others drank the blood from the few remaining horses to sustain themselves.
477
00:38:56,360 --> 00:38:58,120
Many Crusaders now deserted.
478
00:38:58,120 --> 00:38:59,800
Lowering ropes from the walls,
479
00:38:59,800 --> 00:39:03,000
and escaping under cover of darkness, these rope danglers,
480
00:39:03,000 --> 00:39:06,600
as they came to be known, included many well-known knights.
481
00:39:09,760 --> 00:39:12,760
The Crusaders had reached their lowest point.
482
00:39:12,760 --> 00:39:15,880
Weakened by hunger, utterly terrified of the enemy outside
483
00:39:15,880 --> 00:39:20,840
baying for their blood, they were in a state of total despair.
484
00:39:20,840 --> 00:39:25,240
It seemed that the First Crusade was about to end in disaster.
485
00:39:29,560 --> 00:39:34,320
Surely only a miracle could save the Christians now.
486
00:39:45,760 --> 00:39:51,440
In mid-June 1098, a southern French peasant named Peter Bartholomew came forward,
487
00:39:51,440 --> 00:39:55,200
announcing that he'd experienced a series of visions.
488
00:39:55,200 --> 00:39:57,440
In these, St Andrew revealed to him
489
00:39:57,440 --> 00:40:03,200
the resting place of an incredibly powerful spiritual weapon - the Holy Lance -
490
00:40:03,200 --> 00:40:08,200
the very spear that had pierced the side of Christ on the Cross.
491
00:40:19,120 --> 00:40:21,520
Peter Bartholomew led a group of Crusaders
492
00:40:21,520 --> 00:40:26,280
to the basilica of St Peter's in Antioch and began digging.
493
00:40:27,960 --> 00:40:32,000
One member of this party, Raymond of Aguilers, described the scene.
494
00:40:36,240 --> 00:40:38,960
"We'd been digging until evening when some of us
495
00:40:38,960 --> 00:40:42,040
"began to give up hope of unearthing the lance.
496
00:40:42,040 --> 00:40:45,320
"But Peter Bartholomew, seeing the exhaustion of our workers,
497
00:40:45,320 --> 00:40:48,720
"stripped off his outer garments and, clad only in a shirt
498
00:40:48,720 --> 00:40:51,200
"and bare-footed, dropped into the hole"
499
00:40:56,520 --> 00:41:00,920
"He then begged us to pray to God, to return his lance
500
00:41:00,920 --> 00:41:03,640
"and bring strength and victory to his people.
501
00:41:03,640 --> 00:41:06,880
"Finally, the Lord showed us his lance,
502
00:41:06,880 --> 00:41:11,760
"and I kissed its point as it barely protruded from the ground -
503
00:41:11,760 --> 00:41:16,200
"what great joy and exaltation filled the city."
504
00:41:24,520 --> 00:41:28,600
What Peter Bartholomew supposedly found was probably no more
505
00:41:28,600 --> 00:41:31,400
than a small shard of metal.
506
00:41:34,320 --> 00:41:38,080
But the idea that God might manifest his will on Earth
507
00:41:38,080 --> 00:41:43,440
through such sacred objects was part and parcel of medieval Christianity.
508
00:41:44,480 --> 00:41:46,440
And the ravings of a religious fanatic
509
00:41:46,440 --> 00:41:51,640
and the discovery of such a significant relic
510
00:41:51,640 --> 00:41:55,000
had the potential to reignite the Crusaders' belief
511
00:41:55,000 --> 00:41:56,560
in their holy mission.
512
00:41:58,000 --> 00:42:02,360
Most accounts indicate that the discovery of the Holy Lance had an electrifying effect
513
00:42:02,360 --> 00:42:04,200
on the Crusaders' state of mind.
514
00:42:06,920 --> 00:42:09,480
Even though they were exhausted, starving,
515
00:42:09,480 --> 00:42:11,760
and facing seemingly insurmountable odds,
516
00:42:11,760 --> 00:42:15,720
this seemingly irrefutable demonstration of divine support
517
00:42:15,720 --> 00:42:20,160
fired the Crusaders to take up arms and confront Kerbogha head on.
518
00:42:26,880 --> 00:42:29,960
On that day, they scored a miraculous victory,
519
00:42:29,960 --> 00:42:32,320
driving Kerbogha's horde from the field.
520
00:42:36,320 --> 00:42:41,000
Antioch was theirs, and the cult of the Holy Lance was born -
521
00:42:41,000 --> 00:42:45,440
a cult with the power to shape the future of the Crusade.
522
00:43:13,120 --> 00:43:16,320
I've always been captivated by the story of the Holy Lance
523
00:43:16,320 --> 00:43:20,080
and for a long time I believed, like everyone else, that the discovery
524
00:43:20,080 --> 00:43:23,280
of this relic provided an electrifying boost to Crusader morale,
525
00:43:23,280 --> 00:43:26,320
sending them sprinting out of Antioch to confront Kerbogha.
526
00:43:31,160 --> 00:43:34,640
I'd come to Venice to see perhaps the oldest surviving copy
527
00:43:34,640 --> 00:43:38,440
of a chronicle written by Matthew of Edessa,
528
00:43:38,440 --> 00:43:43,040
an Armenian historian who lived during the time of the First Crusade.
529
00:43:43,040 --> 00:43:46,120
It's really exciting to see this manuscript.
530
00:43:48,920 --> 00:43:52,000
Poised between the Western Christian and Muslim perspectives,
531
00:43:52,000 --> 00:43:55,760
Matthew's account offers a more neutral version of events.
532
00:43:55,760 --> 00:43:58,000
So this is the text.
533
00:43:58,000 --> 00:44:00,800
So one of the reasons that I've come here
534
00:44:00,800 --> 00:44:05,760
is because Matthew Of Edessa offer us a unique moment in his text
535
00:44:05,760 --> 00:44:09,480
where he describes what's actually happening in Antioch in June 1098.
536
00:44:09,480 --> 00:44:12,080
Can you show us that specific bit of evidence?
537
00:44:12,080 --> 00:44:14,200
This is the part.
538
00:44:15,880 --> 00:44:19,920
- And could you read the section actually in Armenian to me?
- Yes.
539
00:44:23,800 --> 00:44:27,440
'The Franks became threatened with a famine, because provisions
540
00:44:27,440 --> 00:44:30,760
'in the city had long become exhausted.
541
00:44:30,760 --> 00:44:35,800
'More and more hard-pressed, they resolved to obtain from Kerbogha
542
00:44:35,800 --> 00:44:40,120
'a promise of amnesty on condition that they deliver the city
543
00:44:40,120 --> 00:44:44,120
'into his hands, and return to their own country.'
544
00:44:45,360 --> 00:44:47,560
So Matthew's telling us that the Crusaders
545
00:44:47,560 --> 00:44:50,680
in this month of June, that they actually tried to negotiate
546
00:44:50,680 --> 00:44:55,240
a surrender to be able to leave Antioch - to give up effectively?
547
00:44:55,240 --> 00:45:00,640
Yes, yes. And, er...to have his assurance
548
00:45:00,640 --> 00:45:08,640
that they could turn to their home in, er...Europe.
549
00:45:18,080 --> 00:45:19,240
For so long,
550
00:45:19,240 --> 00:45:22,120
the Crusaders' reaction to the discovery of the Holy Lance
551
00:45:22,120 --> 00:45:23,360
has been held up as proof
552
00:45:23,360 --> 00:45:25,720
of their unshakable, almost blind, piety
553
00:45:25,720 --> 00:45:28,520
but if they did indeed try to negotiate a surrender,
554
00:45:28,520 --> 00:45:31,520
then we're left with a very different image -
555
00:45:31,520 --> 00:45:35,560
one of medieval warriors still wracked by fear and doubt.
556
00:45:35,560 --> 00:45:38,920
For me, Matthew's account is so important - because it allows us
557
00:45:38,920 --> 00:45:42,840
to construct a more human and more nuanced image of these Crusaders.
558
00:45:46,040 --> 00:45:49,160
Kerbogha dismissed the Crusaders' terms of surrender,
559
00:45:49,160 --> 00:45:53,120
leaving the Christians with a hopeless choice -
560
00:45:53,120 --> 00:45:57,520
to die within the city from starvation, or to die fighting.
561
00:46:02,160 --> 00:46:05,520
In the end, the Crusaders did undoubtedly
562
00:46:05,520 --> 00:46:08,000
make an extraordinarily brave decision -
563
00:46:08,000 --> 00:46:10,280
to confront Kerbogha's hoard head on.
564
00:46:10,280 --> 00:46:11,920
But they seem to have done so
565
00:46:11,920 --> 00:46:14,960
not in a state of ecstatic religious fervour
566
00:46:14,960 --> 00:46:18,000
but in utter desperation, expecting to die.
567
00:46:21,760 --> 00:46:25,520
The Christians fought with a primal sense of desperation.
568
00:46:25,520 --> 00:46:30,920
Ironically, facing certain death, with nothing to lose, they won...
569
00:46:32,680 --> 00:46:36,440
..defeating an enemy that turned out to be anything but invincible.
570
00:46:41,800 --> 00:46:43,880
Far from being a united army,
571
00:46:43,880 --> 00:46:48,440
Kerbogha's force was actually a loose and fragile coalition of rival warlords,
572
00:46:48,440 --> 00:46:53,480
each suspicious that Kerbogha himself was hoping to use the Crusader invasion
573
00:46:53,480 --> 00:46:56,040
as a pretext to seize Antioch as his own.
574
00:46:56,040 --> 00:46:59,240
That was why the Muslim army shattered so readily
575
00:46:59,240 --> 00:47:01,760
when struck by the Christians charge,
576
00:47:01,760 --> 00:47:03,920
retreating in headlong defeat.
577
00:47:06,080 --> 00:47:10,840
For most Crusaders, the seemingly miraculous victory over Kerbogha
578
00:47:10,840 --> 00:47:13,600
was proof of the power of the Holy Lance,
579
00:47:13,600 --> 00:47:17,760
and the relic's most ardent advocate, Raymond of Toulouse,
580
00:47:17,760 --> 00:47:21,480
now asserted moral leadership over the expedition.
581
00:47:23,880 --> 00:47:25,840
But in the months that followed,
582
00:47:25,840 --> 00:47:29,360
some of the Crusades' leaders became increasingly greedy
583
00:47:29,360 --> 00:47:30,760
for power and plunder.
584
00:47:32,720 --> 00:47:35,360
Bohemond remained to rule Antioch,
585
00:47:35,360 --> 00:47:40,360
and instead of driving on to Jerusalem, the expedition's holy goal,
586
00:47:40,360 --> 00:47:45,240
Raymond insisted on pursuing further conquests in Syria and Lebanon.
587
00:47:55,840 --> 00:47:59,720
For many Christians, these delays were unforgivable.
588
00:48:00,840 --> 00:48:05,840
Some even began to question the authenticity of the Holy Lance,
589
00:48:05,840 --> 00:48:11,120
and the integrity of the increasingly delusional fanatic who had found it.
590
00:48:17,800 --> 00:48:22,080
Facing a barrage of criticism, Peter Bartholomew actually begged
591
00:48:22,080 --> 00:48:26,080
to undergo a potentially lethal trial by ordeal,
592
00:48:26,080 --> 00:48:30,320
all to prove his own innocence and the authenticity of the Holy Lance.
593
00:48:32,800 --> 00:48:36,640
On 10th April 1099,
594
00:48:36,640 --> 00:48:39,560
outside the city of Arqa in Lebanon,
595
00:48:39,560 --> 00:48:43,440
the peasant visionary began to prepare for a dramatic trial,
596
00:48:43,440 --> 00:48:47,840
the outcome of which would determine the fate of the First Crusade.
597
00:48:52,000 --> 00:48:55,760
Peter spent the next four days fasting to purify his soul
598
00:48:55,760 --> 00:48:57,520
and then on Good Friday,
599
00:48:57,520 --> 00:49:00,720
olive branches were stacked into two pyres,
600
00:49:00,720 --> 00:49:04,640
four feet in height and 13 feet in length.
601
00:49:29,120 --> 00:49:30,880
With the two pyres set alight,
602
00:49:30,880 --> 00:49:34,240
wearing a simple tunic and bearing the relic of the Holy Lance,
603
00:49:34,240 --> 00:49:38,880
Peter Bartholomew willingly walked into the heart of the inferno.
604
00:49:55,640 --> 00:49:58,280
Some of Peter Bartholomew's supporters later wrote
605
00:49:58,280 --> 00:50:02,040
that he managed to emerge miraculously from the flames unscathed,
606
00:50:02,040 --> 00:50:05,760
and it was only subsequently that a frenzied crowd mobbed him
607
00:50:05,760 --> 00:50:08,160
and broke the bones of his body,
608
00:50:08,160 --> 00:50:11,280
but a very different story was told by his opponents.
609
00:50:11,280 --> 00:50:15,480
They recorded that he emerged mortally wounded by burns.
610
00:50:15,480 --> 00:50:21,160
One thing's certain. The man who had found the Holy Lance in Antioch
611
00:50:21,160 --> 00:50:24,400
had died within 12 days of his ordeal.
612
00:50:28,960 --> 00:50:31,720
The spell of the Holy Lance was broken,
613
00:50:31,720 --> 00:50:36,200
and, with it, the reputation of Raymond of Toulouse.
614
00:50:39,520 --> 00:50:43,560
It was Godfrey of Bouillon who emerged as the Crusade's new leader,
615
00:50:43,560 --> 00:50:49,120
as after more than ten months of delay the Christians advanced with almost breakneck speed.
616
00:50:56,240 --> 00:51:01,440
Any thoughts of further conquests in Lebanon and Palestine were abandoned.
617
00:51:01,440 --> 00:51:03,360
And just three weeks later,
618
00:51:03,360 --> 00:51:07,080
on Tuesday, 6th June, in the year 1099,
619
00:51:07,080 --> 00:51:08,880
after three years
620
00:51:08,880 --> 00:51:11,280
and more than 2,000 miles,
621
00:51:11,280 --> 00:51:13,920
the First Crusade finally arrived
622
00:51:13,920 --> 00:51:17,720
at the spiritual centre of the Christian cosmos.
623
00:51:30,360 --> 00:51:34,480
Around 90% of those who had set out from Western Europe
624
00:51:34,480 --> 00:51:39,000
had been lost along the way, either to death or desertion.
625
00:51:41,840 --> 00:51:45,160
For those few who managed to make it this far,
626
00:51:45,160 --> 00:51:50,600
the sight long-awaited of Jerusalem must have been incredibly moving.
627
00:51:50,600 --> 00:51:53,880
But it wasn't just because the journey to get here
628
00:51:53,880 --> 00:51:56,200
had been so long and arduous -
629
00:51:56,200 --> 00:52:01,560
it was because this place was the most sacred Christian site on Earth.
630
00:52:01,560 --> 00:52:07,200
It was the place in which Christ had undergone his passion, his life, his death,
631
00:52:07,200 --> 00:52:11,160
and, perhaps most importantly of all, his resurrection.
632
00:52:11,160 --> 00:52:14,080
Many Crusaders believed that if they could conquer this city,
633
00:52:14,080 --> 00:52:17,560
it would become one with the heavenly Jerusalem,
634
00:52:17,560 --> 00:52:20,320
a glorious Christian paradise.
635
00:52:27,080 --> 00:52:31,640
Jerusalem's walls, and the Muslim garrison within,
636
00:52:31,640 --> 00:52:35,160
made it an even bigger obstacle than Antioch.
637
00:52:36,600 --> 00:52:40,200
But for the Crusaders, having come so far,
638
00:52:40,200 --> 00:52:42,920
defeat here was simply unthinkable.
639
00:52:45,160 --> 00:52:47,480
After a frantic six-week siege,
640
00:52:47,480 --> 00:52:50,880
Godfrey of Bouillon made the decisive breakthrough,
641
00:52:50,880 --> 00:52:54,800
breaching the city's inner defences.
642
00:53:04,120 --> 00:53:07,040
On the 15th July, 1099,
643
00:53:07,040 --> 00:53:11,160
the first Crusaders finally achieved their long-cherished dream -
644
00:53:11,160 --> 00:53:13,560
the liberation of Jerusalem.
645
00:53:16,680 --> 00:53:21,200
Surging through these streets in bloodthirsty ravening packs,
646
00:53:21,200 --> 00:53:23,160
they overran the Holy City.
647
00:53:28,440 --> 00:53:31,480
Fuelled by three years of unimaginable strife,
648
00:53:31,480 --> 00:53:33,360
privation and yearning,
649
00:53:33,360 --> 00:53:39,000
they unleashed a rampaging torrent of barbaric and indiscriminate slaughter.
650
00:53:45,040 --> 00:53:49,600
One Crusader joyfully reported "With the fall of Jerusalem,
651
00:53:49,600 --> 00:53:52,120
"one could see many marvellous works.
652
00:53:52,120 --> 00:53:54,520
"Some pagans were mercifully beheaded,
653
00:53:54,520 --> 00:53:58,040
"others pierced by arrows plunged from towers, yet others,
654
00:53:58,040 --> 00:54:01,800
"tortured for a long time, were burnt to death in searing flames".
655
00:54:03,360 --> 00:54:06,280
Piles of heads, hands and feet littered the streets,
656
00:54:06,280 --> 00:54:10,520
and even the soldiers carrying out the killing could hardly bear the stench
657
00:54:10,520 --> 00:54:13,560
rising from the blood lapping at their ankles.
658
00:54:15,760 --> 00:54:18,760
Jews as well as Muslims were butchered.
659
00:54:18,760 --> 00:54:21,880
This was holy war in all its horror.
660
00:54:25,800 --> 00:54:30,120
Many Muslims fled to Jerusalem's most hallowed ground,
661
00:54:30,120 --> 00:54:35,120
revered in Islam as the site of Mohammed's ascent to heaven.
662
00:54:40,480 --> 00:54:43,000
But the Christian warriors went after them,
663
00:54:43,000 --> 00:54:47,040
cutting them down as far as the famous Aqsa Mosque...
664
00:54:48,920 --> 00:54:50,680
..where there was such a massacre
665
00:54:50,680 --> 00:54:54,200
that the Crusaders were wading through their enemies' blood.
666
00:55:02,160 --> 00:55:03,560
The massacre that took place
667
00:55:03,560 --> 00:55:08,800
on the streets of Jerusalem was not simply a feral outpouring of pent-up rage.
668
00:55:08,800 --> 00:55:13,280
Instead, it was a much more calculated and prolonged campaign of killing,
669
00:55:13,280 --> 00:55:15,880
that lasted at least two days.
670
00:55:15,880 --> 00:55:21,000
It left this city awash with blood and strewn with corpses.
671
00:55:25,400 --> 00:55:29,960
In a moment that perfectly encapsulated the Crusade's extraordinary fusion
672
00:55:29,960 --> 00:55:31,720
of violence and faith...
673
00:55:33,920 --> 00:55:37,280
..at sunset on 15th July, 1099,
674
00:55:37,280 --> 00:55:41,560
the Crusaders, still covered in their enemies' blood,
675
00:55:41,560 --> 00:55:45,240
gathered here in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre,
676
00:55:45,240 --> 00:55:49,760
believed to be the site of Christ's death and resurrection,
677
00:55:49,760 --> 00:55:51,840
to give thanks to their God.
678
00:55:57,400 --> 00:56:00,520
For us today, the idea that the first Crusaders
679
00:56:00,520 --> 00:56:03,680
could present themselves as faithful Christians,
680
00:56:03,680 --> 00:56:06,720
even as they carried out acts of butchery
681
00:56:06,720 --> 00:56:10,480
might seem abhorrent, almost incomprehensible.
682
00:56:13,440 --> 00:56:15,920
But if we want to understand the first Crusaders,
683
00:56:15,920 --> 00:56:19,600
then we have to try to see the world as they saw it,
684
00:56:19,600 --> 00:56:24,720
to appreciate that they had a distinctly medieval conception of religion.
685
00:56:37,280 --> 00:56:41,160
All the best eyewitness and contemporary evidence
686
00:56:41,160 --> 00:56:44,320
indicates that they ardently believed in what they were doing,
687
00:56:44,320 --> 00:56:49,280
that for them killing for Christ was itself an act of devotion,
688
00:56:49,280 --> 00:56:53,400
an expression of faith that would open the gates of heaven.
689
00:56:58,840 --> 00:57:04,480
Four years after Pope Urban II delivered his dramatic call to arms,
690
00:57:04,480 --> 00:57:07,080
the First Crusaders had achieved their goal.
691
00:57:12,760 --> 00:57:18,120
Jerusalem was now undeniably in the hands of Western Christians.
692
00:57:23,880 --> 00:57:27,200
The success of the first Crusades stunned Christian Europe,
693
00:57:27,200 --> 00:57:31,000
and it became the most widely-recorded event of the Middle Ages.
694
00:57:31,000 --> 00:57:34,480
Contemporaries saw Jerusalem's seemingly miraculous conquest
695
00:57:34,480 --> 00:57:37,520
as an immutable proof that their God did indeed want them
696
00:57:37,520 --> 00:57:40,200
to embrace the idea of Holy War.
697
00:57:40,200 --> 00:57:42,760
This single moment of Christian triumph
698
00:57:42,760 --> 00:57:46,880
would fuel enthusiasm for the Crusades for centuries to come.
699
00:57:55,600 --> 00:57:59,440
But in the decades and centuries that followed, Islam came to regard
700
00:57:59,440 --> 00:58:06,040
the sack of Jerusalem as the central act of Crusader barbarity and defilement.
701
00:58:09,320 --> 00:58:12,720
The Middle East was now locked into a bitter struggle
702
00:58:12,720 --> 00:58:14,720
that would rage for 200 years,
703
00:58:14,720 --> 00:58:19,240
a conflict in which Muslims would embrace the cause of Jihad,
704
00:58:19,240 --> 00:58:24,520
uniting in pursuit of vengeance and the Holy Land's re-conquest.
705
00:58:42,480 --> 00:58:44,480
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706
00:58:44,480 --> 00:58:46,520
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