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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume
+5, by Various, Edited by Rossiter Johnson
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 5
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: November 20, 2003 [eBook #10151]
+
+Language: English
+
+Chatacter set encoding: iso-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GREAT EVENTS BY FAMOUS
+HISTORIANS, VOLUME 5***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Gwidon Naskrent, David King, and the
+Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+THE GREAT EVENTS
+
+BY
+
+FAMOUS HISTORIANS
+
+
+A COMPREHENSIVE AND READABLE ACCOUNT OF THE WORLD'S HISTORY. EMPHASIZING
+THE MORE IMPORTANT EVENTS, AND PRESENTING THESE AS COMPLETE NARRATIVES
+IN THE MASTER-WORDS OF THE MOST EMINENT HISTORIANS
+
+
+NON-SECTARIAN NON-PARTISAN NON-SECTIONAL
+
+
+ON THE PLAN EVOLVED FROM A CONSENSUS OF OPINIONS GATHERED FROM THE MOST
+DISTINGUISHED SCHOLARS OF AMERICA AND EUROPE. INCLUDING BRIEF
+INTRODUCTIONS BY SPECIALISTS TO CONNECT AND EXPLAIN THE CELEBRATED
+NARRATIVES. ARRANGED CHRONOLOGICALLY. WITH THOROUGH INDICES,
+BIBLIOGRAPHIES. CHRONOLOGIES, AND COURSES OF READING
+
+
+SUPERVISING EDITOR
+
+ROSSITER JOHNSON, LL.D.
+
+
+LITERARY EDITORS
+
+CHARLES F. HORNE, Ph.D.
+
+JOHN RUDD, LL.D.
+
+
+DIRECTING EDITOR
+
+WALTER F. AUSTIN, LL.M.
+
+
+With a staff of specialists
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+VOLUME V
+
+An Outline Narrative of the Great Events
+CHARLES F. HORNE
+
+Feudalism: Its Frankish Birth and English Development
+(9th to 12th Century)
+WILLIAM STUBBS
+
+Decay of the Frankish Empire
+Division into Modern France, Germany, and Italy
+(A.D. 843-911)
+FRANÇOIS P. G. GUIZOT
+
+Career of Alfred the Great (A.D. 871-901)
+THOMAS HUGHES
+JOHN R. GREEN
+
+Henry the Fowler Founds the Saxon Line of German Kings
+Origin of the German Burghers or Middle Classes (A.D. 911-936)
+WOLFGANG MENZEL
+
+Conquest of Egypt by the Fatimites (A.D. 969)
+STANLEY LANE-POOLE
+
+Growth and Decadence of Chivalry (10th to 15th Century)
+LÉON GAUTIER
+
+Conversion of Vladimir the Great
+Introduction of Christianity into Russia (A.D. 988-1015)
+A. N. MOURAVIEFF
+
+Leif Ericson Discovers America (A.D. 1000)
+CHARLES C. RAFN
+SAGA OF ERIC THE RED
+
+Mahometans In India
+Bloody Invasions under Mahmud (A.D. 1000)
+ALEXANDER DOW
+
+Canute Becomes King of England (A.D. 1017)
+DAVID HUME
+
+Henry III Deposes the Popes (A.D. 1048)
+The German Empire Controls the Papacy
+FERDINAND GREGOROVIUS
+JOSEPH DARRAS
+
+Dissension and Separation of the Greek and Roman
+Churches (A.D. 1054)
+HENRY F. TOZER
+JOSEPH DEHARBE
+
+Norman Conquest of England
+Battle of Hastings (A.D. 1066)
+SIR EDWARD S. CREASY
+
+Triumphs of Hildebrand
+"The Turning-point of the Middle Ages"
+Henry IV Begs for Mercy at Canossa (A.D. 1073-1085)
+ARTHUR R. PENNINGTON
+ARTAUD DE MONTOR
+
+Completion of the Domesday Book (A.D. 1086)
+CHARLES KNIGHT
+
+Decline of the Moorish Power in Spain
+Growth and Decay of the Almoravide and Almohade
+Dynasties (A.D. 1086-1214)
+S.A. DUNHAM
+
+The First Crusade (A.D. 1096-1099)
+SIR GEORGE W. COX
+
+Foundation of the Order of Knights Templars (A.D. 1118)
+CHARLES G. ADDISON
+
+Stephen Usurps the English Crown
+His Conflicts with Matilda
+Decisive Influence of the Church (A.D. 1135-1154)
+CHARLES KNIGHT
+
+Antipapal Democratic Movement
+Arnold of Brescia
+St. Bernard and the Second Crusade (A.D. 1145-1155)
+JOHANN A. W. NEANDER
+
+Decline of the Byzantine Empire
+Ravages of Roger of Sicily (A.D. 1146)
+GEORGE FINLAY
+
+Universal Chronology (A.D. 843-1161)
+JOHN RUDD
+
+
+
+
+AN OUTLINE NARRATIVE
+
+TRACING BRIEFLY THE CAUSES, CONNECTIONS, AND CONSEQUENCES OF
+
+THE GREAT EVENTS
+
+(FROM CHARLEMAGNE TO FREDERICK BARBAROSSA)
+
+CHARLES F. HORNE
+
+
+The three centuries which follow the downfall of the empire of
+Charlemagne laid the foundations of modern Europe, and made of it a
+world wholly different, politically, socially, and religiously, from
+that which had preceded it. In the careers of Greece and Rome we saw
+exemplified the results of two sharply opposing tendencies of the Aryan
+mind, the one toward individualism and separation, the other toward
+self-subordination and union.
+
+In the time of Charlemagne's splendid successes it appeared settled that
+the second of these tendencies was to guide the Teutonic Aryans, that
+the Europe of the future was to be a single empire, ever pushing out its
+borders as Rome had done, ever subduing its weaker neighbors, until the
+"Teutonic peace" should be substituted for the shattered "Roman peace,"
+soldiers should be needed only for the duties of police, and a whole
+civilized world again obey the rule of a single man.
+
+Instead of this, the race has since followed a destiny of separation.
+Europe is divided into many countries, each of them a vast camp
+bristling with armies and arsenals. Civilization has continued
+hag-ridden by war even to our own day, and, during at least seven
+hundred of the years that followed Charlemagne, mankind made no greater
+progress in the arts and sciences than the ancients had sometimes
+achieved in a single century. We do indeed believe that at last we have
+entered on an age of rapid advance, that individualism has justified
+itself. The wider personal liberty of to-day is worth all that the race
+has suffered for it. Yet the retardation of wellnigh a thousand years
+has surely been a giant price to pay.
+
+
+DOWNFALL OF CHARLEMAGNE'S EMPIRE
+
+This mighty change in the course of Teutonic destiny, this breakdown of
+the Frankish empire, was wrought by two destroying forces, one from
+within, one from without. From within came the insubordination, the
+still savage love of combat, the natural turbulence of the race. It is
+conceivable that, had Charlemagne been followed on the throne by a son
+and then a grandson as mighty as he and his immediate ancestors, the
+course of the whole broad earth would have been altered. The Franks
+would have grown accustomed to obey; further conquest abroad would have
+insured peace at home; the imperial power would have become strong as in
+Roman days, when the most feeble emperors could not be shaken. But the
+descendants of Charlemagne sank into a decline. He himself had directed
+the fighting energy of the Franks against foreign enemies. His son and
+successor had no taste for war, and so allowed his idle subjects time to
+quarrel with him and with one another. The next generation, under the
+grandsons of Charlemagne, devoted their entire lives to repeated and
+furious civil wars, in which the empire fell apart, the flower of the
+Frankish race perished, and the strength of its dominion was sapped to
+nothingness.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: See _Decay of Frankish Empire_, page 22.]
+
+There were three of these grandsons, and, when their struggle had left
+them thoroughly exhausted, they divided the empire into three. Their
+treaty of Verdun (843) is often quoted as beginning the modern kingdoms
+of Germany, France, and Italy. The division was in some sense a natural
+one, emphasized by differences of language and of race. Italy was
+peopled by descendants of the ancient Italians, with a thin
+intermingling of Goths and Lombards; France held half-Romanized Gauls,
+with a very considerable percentage of the Frankish blood; while Germany
+was far more barbaric than the other regions. Its people, whether Frank
+or Saxon, were all pure Teuton, and still spoke in their Teutonic or
+German tongue.
+
+The Franks themselves, however, did not regard this as a breaking of
+their empire. They looked on it as merely a family affair, an
+arrangement made for the convenience of government among the descendants
+of the great Charles. So firm had been that mighty hero's grasp upon the
+national imagination, that the Franks accepted as matter of course that
+his family should bear rule, and rallied round the various worthless
+members of it with rather pathetic loyalty, fighting for them one
+against the other, reuniting and redividing the various fragments of the
+empire, until the feeble Carlovingian race died out completely.
+
+It is thus evident that there was a strong tendency toward union among
+the Franks. But there was also an outside influence to disrupt their
+empire. Charlemagne had not carried far enough their career of conquest.
+He subdued the Teutons within the limits of Germany, but he did not
+reach their weaker Scandinavian brethren to the north, the Danes and
+Norsemen. He chastised the Avars, a vague non-Aryan people east of
+Germany, but he could not make provision against future Asiatic swarms.
+He humbled the Arabs in Spain, but he did not break their African
+dominion. From all these sources, as the Franks grew weaker instead of
+stronger, their lands became exposed to new invasion.
+
+
+THE LAST INVADERS
+
+Let us take a moment to trace the fortunes of these outside races,
+though the main destiny of the future still lay with Teutonic Europe.
+
+In speaking of the followers of Mahomet, we might perhaps at this period
+better drop the term Arabs, and call them Saracens. They were thus known
+to the Christians; and their conquests had drawn in their train so many
+other peoples that in truth there was little pure Arab blood left among
+them. The Saracens, then, had begun to lose somewhat of their intense
+fanaticism. Feuds broke out among them. Different chiefs established
+different kingdoms or "caliphates," whose dominion became political
+rather than religious. Spain had one ruler, Egypt[2] another, Asia a
+third. In the eleventh century an army of Saracens invaded India[3] and
+added that strange and ancient land to their domain. Europe they had
+failed to conquer; but their fleets commanded the Mediterranean. They
+held all its islands, Sicily, Crete, Sardinia, and Corsica. They
+plundered the coast towns of France and Italy. There was a Saracenic
+ravaging of Rome.
+
+[Footnote 2: See _Conquest of Egypt by the Fatimites_, page 94.]
+
+[Footnote 3: See _Mahometans in India_, page 151.]
+
+On the whole, however, the wave of Mahometan conquest receded. In Spain
+the remnants of the Christian population, Visigoths, Romans, and still
+older peoples, pressed their way down from their old-time, secret
+mountain retreats and began driving the Saracens southward.[4] The
+decaying Roman Empire of the East still resisted the Mahometan attack;
+Constantinople remained a splendid city, type and picture of what the
+ancient world had been.
+
+[Footnote 4: See _Decline of the Moorish Power in Spain_, page 296.]
+
+While the Saracens were thus laying waste the Frankish empire along its
+Mediterranean coasts, a more dangerous enemy was assailing it from the
+east. Toward the end of the ninth century the Magyars, an Asiatic,
+Turanian people, burst on Europe, as the Huns had done five centuries
+before. Indeed, the Christians called these later comers Huns also, and
+told of them the same extravagant tales of terror. The land which the
+Magyars settled was called Hungary. They dwell there and possess it even
+to this day, the only instance of a Turanian people having permanently
+established themselves in an Aryan continent and at the expense of Aryan
+neighbors.
+
+From Hungary the Magyars soon advanced to the German border line, and
+made fierce plundering inroads upon the more civilized regions beyond.
+They came on horseback, so that the slower Teutons could never gather
+quickly enough to resist them. The marauding parties, as they learned
+the wealth and weakness of this new land, grew bigger, until at length
+they were armies, and defeated the German Franks in pitched battles, and
+spread desolation through all the country. They returned now every year.
+Their ravages extended even to the Rhine and to the ancient Gallic land
+beyond. The Frankish empire seemed doomed to reënact, in a smaller, far
+more savage way, the fate of Rome.
+
+Yet more widespread in destruction, more important in result than the
+raids of either Saracens or Magyars, were those of the Scandinavians or
+Northmen. These, the latest, and perhaps therefore the finest, flower of
+the Teutonic stock, are closer to us and hence better known than the
+early Goths or Franks. Shut off in their cold northern peninsulas and
+islands, they had grown more slowly, it may be, than their southern
+brethren. Now they burst suddenly on the world with spectacular dramatic
+effect, wild, fierce, and splendid conquerors, as keen of intellect and
+quick of wit as they were strong of arm and daring of adventure.
+
+We see them first as sea-robbers, pirates, venturing even in
+Charlemagne's time to plunder the German and French coasts. One tribe of
+them, the Danes, had already been harrying England and Ireland. Only
+Alfred,[5] by heroic exertions, saved a fragment of his kingdom from
+them. Later, under Canute,[6] they become its kings. The Northmen
+penetrate Russia and appear as rulers of the strange Slavic tribes
+there; they settle in Iceland, Greenland, and even distant and unknown
+America.[7]
+
+[Footnote 5: See _Career of Alfred the Great_.]
+
+[Footnote 6: See _Canute Becomes King of England_.]
+
+[Footnote 7: _Leif Ericson Discovers America_.]
+
+Meanwhile, after Charlemagne's death they become a main factor in the
+downfall of his empire. Year after year their little ships plunder the
+undefended French coast, until it is abandoned to them and becomes a
+desert. They build winter camps at the river mouths, so that in the
+spring they need lose less time and can hurry inland after their
+retreating prey. Sudden in attack, strong in defence, they venture
+hundreds of miles up the winding waterways. Paris is twice attacked by
+them and must fight for life. They penetrate so far up the Loire as to
+burn Orleans.
+
+It was under stress of all these assaults that the Franks, grown too
+feeble to defend themselves as Charlemagne would have done, by marching
+out and pursuing the invaders to their own homes, developed instead a
+system of defence which made the Middle Ages what they were. All central
+authority seemed lost; each little community was left to defend itself
+as best it might. So the local chieftain built himself a rude fortress,
+which in time became a towered castle; and thither the people fled in
+time of danger. Each man looked up to and swore faith to this, his own
+chief, his immediate protector, and took little thought of a distant and
+feeble king or emperor. Occasionally, of course, a stronger lord or king
+bestirred himself, and demanded homage of these various petty
+chieftains. They gave him such service as they wished or as they must.
+This was the "feudal system."[8]
+
+[Footnote 8: See _Feudalism: Its Frankish Birth and English
+Development_.]
+
+The inclination of each lesser lord was obviously to assert as much
+independence as he could. He naturally objected to paying money or
+service without benefit received; and he could see no good that this
+"overlord" did for him or for his district. It seemed likely at this
+time that instead of being divided into three kingdoms, the Frankish
+empire would split into thousands of little castled states.
+
+That is, it seemed so, after the various marauding nations were disposed
+of. The Northmen were pacified by presenting them outright with the
+coast lands they had most harried. Their great leader, Rolf, accepted
+the territory with some vague and ill-kept promise of vassalage to the
+French King, and with a very firmly held determination that he would let
+no pirates ravage his land or cross it to reach others. So the French
+coast became Normandy, and the Northmen learned the tongue and manners
+of their new home, and softened their harsh name to "Norman," even as
+they softened their harsh ways, and rapidly became the most able and
+most cultured of Frenchmen.
+
+As for the Saracens, being unprogressive and no longer enthusiastic,
+they grew ever feebler, while the Italian cities, being Aryan and left
+to themselves, grew strong. At length their fleets met those of the
+Saracens on equal terms, and defeated them, and gradually wrested from
+them the control of the Mediterranean. Invaders were thus everywhere met
+as they came, locally. There was no general gathering of the Frankish
+forces against them.
+
+The repulse of the Huns proved the hardest matter of all. Fortunately
+for the Germans, their line of Carlovingian emperors died out. So the
+various dukes and counts, practically each an independent sovereign, met
+and elected a king from among themselves, not really to rule them, but
+to enable them to unite against the Huns. After their first elected king
+had been soundly beaten by one of his dukes, he died, and in their next
+choice they had the luck to light upon a leader really great. Henry the
+Fowler, more honorably known as Henry the City-builder,[9] taught them
+how to defeat their foe.
+
+[Footnote 9: See _Henry the Fowler Founds the Saxon Line of German
+Kings_.]
+
+Much to the disgust of his simple and war-hardened comrades, he first
+sent to the Hungarians and purchased peace and paid them tribute. Having
+thus secured a temporary respite, Henry encouraged and aided his people
+in building walled cities all along the frontier. He also planned to
+meet the invaders on equal terms by training his warriors to fight on
+horseback. He instituted tournaments and created an order of knighthood,
+and is thus generally regarded as the founder of chivalry, that fairest
+fruit of mediaeval times, which did so much to preserve honor and
+tenderness and respect for womankind.[10]
+
+[Footnote 10: See _Growth and Decadence of Chivalry_.]
+
+When he felt all prepared, Henry deliberately defied and insulted the
+Hungarians, and so provoked from them a combined national invasion,
+which he met and completely overthrew in the battle of Merseburg (933).
+A generation later the Huns felt themselves strong enough to try again;
+but Henry's son, Otto the Great, repeated the chastisement. He then
+formed a boundary colony or "East-mark" from which sprang Austria; and
+this border kingdom was always able to keep the weakened Huns in check.
+
+At the same time there was growing up in Russia a Slavic civilization,
+which received Christianity[11] from the South as it had received
+Teutonic dominion from the North, and so developed along very similar
+lines to Western Europe. The Russian states served as a barrier against
+later Asiatic hordes; and this, combined with the civilizing of the last
+remnants of the Scandinavians in the North, and the fading of Saracenic
+power in the South, left the tottering civilization of the West free
+from further barbarian invasion. We shall find destruction threatened
+again in later ages by Tartar and by Turk; but the intruders never reach
+beyond the frontier. The Teutons and the half-Romanized ancients with
+whom they had assimilated were left to work out their own problems. All
+the ingredients, even to the last, the Northmen, had been poured into
+the caldron. There remains to see what the intermingling has brought
+forth.
+
+[Footnote 11: See _Conversion of Vladimir the Great_.]
+
+
+FEUDAL EUROPE
+
+We have here, then, somewhere about the middle of the tenth century, a
+date which may be regarded as marking a distinctly new era. The
+ceaseless work of social organization and improvement, which seems so
+strong an instinct of the Aryan mind, had been recommenced again and
+again from under repeated deluges of barbarism. To-day for nearly a
+thousand years it has progressed uninterrupted, except by disturbances
+from within; nor does it appear possible, with our present knowledge of
+science and of the remoter corners of the globe, that our civilization
+will ever again be even menaced by the other races.
+
+Chronologists frequently adopt as a convenient starting-point for this
+modern development the year 962, in which Otto the Great, conqueror of
+the Huns, felt himself strong enough to march a German army to Rome and
+assume there the title of emperor, which had been long in abeyance. To
+be sure, there was still an Emperor of the East in Constantinople, but
+nobody thought of him; and, to be sure, the power of Otto and the later
+emperors was purely German, with scarce a pretence of extending beyond
+their own country and sometimes Italy. Yet here was at least one
+restored influence that made toward unity and, by its own devious and
+erratic ways, toward peace.
+
+It must not be supposed, of course, that there was no more war. But, as
+it became a private affair between relatives, or at least acquaintances,
+its ravages were greatly reduced. It was accepted as the "pastime of
+gentlemen," "the sport of kings;" and though we may quote the phrases
+to-day with kindling sarcasm, yet they open a very different vision from
+that of the older inroads by unknown hordes, frenzied with the passion
+and the purpose of the brute. The usefulness of the common people was
+recognized, and they were allowed to continue to live and cultivate the
+ground; while all the great dukes and even the lesser nobles, having
+secured as many castles as possible, intrenched themselves in their
+strongholds and defied all comers.
+
+They asserted their right of "private war" and attacked each other upon
+every conceivable provocation, whether it were the disputed succession
+to some vast estate or the ravage spread by a reckless cow in a foreign
+field. Indeed, it is not always easy to distinguish these private wars
+from mere robberies or plundering expeditions; and it is not probable
+that the wild barons exercised any very delicate discrimination. Even
+Otto the Great had little real influence or authority over such lords as
+these. His immediate successors found themselves with even less.
+
+In short, it was the golden age of feudalism, of the individual feudal
+lords. In Italy there was no central authority whatever, nor among the
+little Christian states gradually arising in Spain. In France and
+England the title of king was but a name. France was really composed of
+a dozen or more independent counties and dukedoms. For a while its lords
+elected a king as the Germans did; and gradually the title became
+hereditary in the Capet family, the counts of Paris, who had fought most
+valiantly against the Northmen. But the entire power of these so-called
+kings lay in their own estates, in the fact that they were counts of
+Paris, and by marriage or by force were slowly adding new possessions to
+their old. Any other noble might have been equally fortunate in his
+investments, and wrested from them their purely honorary title. In fact,
+there was more than once a king of Aquitaine.
+
+Yet, in 1066, William the Conqueror was able to form for a moment a
+strong and centralized monarchy in England.[12] With him we reach the
+period of the second Northmen, or now Norman, outbreak. The marauders
+had grown polished, but not peaceful, in their French home. They had
+become more numerous and more restless, until we find them again taking
+to their ships and seeking newer lands to master. Only they go now as a
+civilizing as well as a devastating influence.
+
+[Footnote 12: See _Norman Conquest of England_.]
+
+Most famed of their undertakings, of course, was William's Conquest of
+England. But we find them also sailing along the Spanish coast, entering
+the Mediterranean, seizing the Balearic Isles, making out of Sicily and
+most of Southern Italy a kingdom which lasted until 1860, and finally
+ravaging the Eastern Empire, and entering Constantinople itself.[13]
+Last and mightiest of the wandering races, they accomplished what all
+their predecessors had failed to do.
+
+[Footnote 13: See _Decline of the Byzantine Empire_, page 353.]
+
+In England, William, with the shrewdness of his race, recognized the
+tendencies of the age, and erected a state so planned that there could
+be no question as to who was master. He gave fiefs liberally to his
+followers; but he took care that the gifts should be in small and
+scattered parcels. No one man controlled any region sufficiently
+extensive to give him the faintest chance of defying the King. William
+had the famous _Domesday Book_[14] compiled, that he might know just
+what every freeman in his dominions owned and for what he could be held
+accountable. The England of the later days of the Conqueror seemed far
+advanced upon our modern ways.
+
+[Footnote 14: See _Completion of the Domesday Book_, page 242.]
+
+But what can one man, however able and advanced, do against the current
+of his age? History shows us constantly that the great reformers have
+been those who felt and followed the general feeling of their times, who
+became mouthpieces for the great mass of thought and effort behind them,
+not those who struggled against the tide. William's successors failed to
+comprehend what he had done, or why. By the time of Stephen (1135)[15]
+we find the barons of England wellnigh as powerful as those of other
+lands. A civil war arises in which Stephen and his rival Matilda are
+scarce more than pawns upon the board. The lords shift sides at will,
+retreat to safety in their strong castles, plunder the common folk, and
+make private war quite as they please.
+
+[Footnote 15: See _Stephen Usurps the English Crown_, page 317.]
+
+If any sage before the reign of the Emperor Barbarossa, that is, before
+the middle of the twelfth century, had studied to predict the course of
+society, he would probably have said that the empire was wholly
+destroyed, and that the principle of separation was becoming ever more
+insistent, that even kings were mere fading relics of the past, and that
+the future world would soon see every lordship an independent state.
+
+
+THE CONDITION OF SOCIETY UNDER FEUDALISM
+
+Amid all this turmoil of the upper classes, one would like much to know
+what was the condition, what the lives, of the common people.
+Unfortunately, the data are very slight. We see dimly the peasant
+staring from his field as the armed knights ride by; we see him fleeing
+to the shelter of the forests before more savage bandits. We see the
+people of the cities drawing together, building walls around their
+towns, and defying in their turn their so-called "overlords." We see
+Henry the City-builder thus become champion of the lower classes,
+despite the strenuous warning of his conservative and not wholly
+disinterested barons. We see shadowy troops of armed merchants drift
+along the unsafe roads. And, most interesting perhaps of all, we see one
+Arnold of Brescia,[16] an Italian monk, advocating a democracy, actually
+urging a return to what he supposed early Rome to have been, a
+government by the masses. Arnold, too, you see, was in advance of his
+time. He was executed by the advice of even so good and wise a man as
+St. Bernard. But the principle of modern life was there, the germ seems
+to have been planted. These humble people of the cities, "citizens,"
+grow to be rulers of the world.
+
+[Footnote 16: See _Antipapal Democratic Movement_ page 340.]
+
+There was a revival, too, of learning in this quieter age. Schools and
+universities become clearly visible. Abelard teaches at the great
+University of Paris, lectures to "forty thousand students," if one
+chooses to believe in such carrying power of his voice, or such
+radiating power of his influence at second hand through those who heard.
+
+The arts spring up, great cathedrals are begun, the wonder and despair
+of even twentieth-century resources. Royal ladies work on tapestries,
+queer things in their way, but certainly not barbaric. Musical notation
+is improved. Manuscripts are gorgeously illumined. Paintings and
+mosaics, though of the crudest, reappear on long-barren walls.
+Civilization begins to advance with increasing stride.
+
+
+THE INFLUENCE OF CHRISTIANITY
+
+Of all the influences that through these wandering and desolate ages had
+sustained humanity and helped it onward, the mightiest has been left to
+speak of last. It was Christianity, a Christianity which had by now
+taken definite form as the Roman Catholic Church. Strongest of all the
+institutions bequeathed by the ancient empire to her conquerors was this
+Church. Indeed, it has been said that Rome had influenced Christianity
+quite as much as Christianity did Rome. The legal-minded Romans insisted
+on the laying out of exact doctrines and creeds, on the building of a
+definite organization, a priesthood, a hierarchy. They lent the weight
+of law to what had been but individual belief and impulse. Thus the
+Church grew hard and strong.
+
+In the same manner that the early emperors had ordered the persecution
+of Christianity, so the later ones ordered the persecution of
+heathendom, nor had the Church grown civilized or Christian enough to
+oppose this method of conversion. Luckily for all parties, however, the
+heathen were scarce sufficiently enthusiastic to insist on martyrdom,
+and so the persecuting spirit which man ultimately imparted to even the
+purest of religions remained latent.
+
+With the downfall of Rome there came another interval in which the
+Church was weak, and was trampled on by barbarians, and was heroic. Then
+the bishops of Rome joined forces with Pépin and Charlemagne.
+Christianity became physically powerful again. The Saxons were converted
+by the sword. So, also, in Henry the Fowler's time, were the Slavic
+Wends. These Roman bishops, or "popes," were accepted unquestioned
+throughout Western Europe as the leaders of a militant Christianity, a
+position never after denied them until the sixteenth century. In the
+East, however, the bishops of Constantinople insisted on an equal, if
+not higher, authority, and so the two churches broke apart.[17]
+
+[Footnote 17: See _Dissension and Separation of the Greek and Roman
+Churches_.]
+
+In the West, Christianity undoubtedly did great good. Its teachings,
+though applied by often fallible instruments and in blundering ways, yet
+never completely lost sight of their own higher meanings of mercy and
+peace. From the Abbey of Cluny originated that quaint mediaeval idea of
+the "truce of God," by which nobles were very widely persuaded to
+restrict their private wars to the middle of the week, and reserve at
+least Friday, Saturday, and Sunday as days of brotherly love and
+religious devotion. The Church also, from very early days, founded
+monasteries, wherein learning and the knowledge of the past were kept
+alive, where pity continued to exist, where the oppressed found refuge.
+It is from these monasteries that all the arts and scholarship of the
+eleventh century begin dimly to emerge.
+
+Moreover, the fact that the Teutons were all of a common religion
+undoubtedly held them much closer together, made them more merciful
+among themselves, more nearly a unit against the outside world. Perhaps
+in this respect more important even than the religion was the Church;
+that is, the hierarchy, the vast army of monks and priests, abbots and
+bishops, spread over all kingdoms, yet looking always toward Rome. Here
+at least was one common centre for Western civilization, one mighty
+influence that all men acknowledged, that all to some faint extent
+obeyed.
+
+
+THE GROWTH OF THE PAPACY
+
+The power thus concentrating in the Roman papacy made the office one to
+attract eager ambition. It has a political history of its own. At first
+the Christian populace that continued to dwell in Rome despite the
+repeated spoliations, elected, from among themselves, their own pope or
+bishop, regarding him not only as their spiritual guide, but as their
+earthly leader and protector also. Naturally, in their distress, they
+chose the very ablest man they could, their wisest and their noblest. It
+was no pleasant task being pope in those dark days; and sometimes the
+bravest shrank from the position.
+
+But centuries of war and self-defence developed a Roman populace more
+fierce and savage and degenerate, while the growing importance of their
+pope beyond the city's walls brought wealth and splendor to his office.
+The result was that some very unsaintly popes were elected amid unseemly
+squabbles. The conditions surrounding the high office became so bad that
+they were felt as a disgrace throughout all Christendom; and in 1046 the
+German emperor Henry III took upon himself to depose three fiercely
+contending Romans, each claiming to be pope. He appointed in their stead
+a candidate of his own, not a dweller in the city at all, but a German.
+Henry, therefore, must have considered the duties of the pope as bishop
+of the Romans to be far less important than his duties as head of the
+Church outside of Rome.[18]
+
+[Footnote 18: See _Henry III Deposes the Popes_.]
+
+So necessary had this interference by the Emperor become that it was
+everywhere approved. Yet as he continued to appoint pope after pope,
+churchmen realized that in the hands of an evil emperor this method of
+securing their head might prove quite as dangerous and unsatisfactory as
+the former one. So the Church took the matter in hand and declared that
+a conclave of its own highest officials should thereafter choose the man
+who was to lead them.
+
+Under this surely more suitable arrangement, the papal office rose at
+once in dignity. It was held for a time by true leaders, earnest
+prelates of the highest worth and ability. We have said that the rank of
+the bishop of Rome as head of the Church had never been seriously
+questioned among the Teutons; but now the popes asserted a political
+authority as well. They regarded themselves, theoretically, as supreme
+heads of the entire Christian world. They claimed and even partly
+exercised the right to create and depose kings and emperors. To such a
+supremacy as this, however, the Teutons were still too rude and warlike
+to submit. Much is made of the fact that the Emperor Henry IV was
+compelled to come as a suppliant to Pope Gregory at Canossa, 1077.[19]
+But this submission was only forced on him by quarrels with his barons,
+who welcomed the Pope as a chance ally. It proved the power of feudalism
+rather than that of religion. Still we may trace here the beginnings of
+a later day when spirit was really to dominate bodily force, when ideas
+should prove stronger than swords.
+
+[Footnote 19: See _Triumphs of Hildebrand_.]
+
+
+THE FIRST CRUSADE
+
+Under these aroused and able popes, the Western world was stirred to the
+first widespread religious enthusiasm since the ancient days of
+persecution. Jerusalem, long in the hands of a tolerant sect of Saracens
+who welcomed the coming of Christian worshippers as a source of revenue,
+was captured in 1075 by another more fanatic Mahometan sect, and word
+came back to Europe that pilgrimage was stopped.
+
+The crusades followed. A great mass of warriors from every nation of the
+West, men who certainly had never intended to go on pilgrimage
+themselves, were roused to what seems a somewhat perverse anger of
+religious devotion. Under the lead of Godfrey of Bouillon they marched
+eastward, saw the wonders of Constantinople, marvellous indeed to their
+ruder eyes, defeated the sultans of Asia Minor and of Antioch, and ended
+by storming Jerusalem, and erecting there a Christian kingdom where
+Mahometanism had ruled for nearly five hundred years.[20]
+
+[Footnote 20: See _The First Crusade_, page 276.]
+
+Of course, a great flow of pilgrims followed them. Religious orders of
+knighthood were formed[21] to help defend the shrine of Christ and to
+extend Christian conquest farther through the surrounding regions.
+Travel began again. Europe, after having forgotten Asia for seven
+centuries, was introduced once more to its languor, its splendor, and
+its vices. The Aryan peoples had at last filled full their little world
+of Western Europe. They had reached among themselves a state of law and
+union, confused and weak, perhaps, yet secure enough to enable them once
+more to overflow their boundaries and become again the aggressive,
+intrusive race we have seen them in earlier days.
+
+[Footnote 21: See _Foundation of the Order of Knights Templars_, page
+301.]
+
+
+
+
+FEUDALISM: ITS FRANKISH BIRTH AND ENGLISH DEVELOPMENT
+
+NINTH TO TWELFTH CENTURY
+
+WILLIAM STUBBS
+
+
+(That social system--however varying in different times and places--in
+which ownership of land is the basis of authority is known in history as
+feudalism. From the time of Clovis, the Frankish King, who died in A.D.
+511, the progress of the Franks in civilization was slow, and for more
+than two centuries they spent their energies mainly in useless wars. But
+Charles Martel and his son, Pépin the Short--the latter dying in
+768--built up a kingdom which Charlemagne erected into a powerful
+empire. Under the predecessors of Charlemagne the beginnings of
+feudalism, which are very obscure, may be said vaguely to appear.
+Charles Martel had to buy the services of his nobles by granting them
+lands, and although he and Pépin strengthened the royal power, which
+Charlemagne still further increased, under the weak rulers who followed
+them the forces of the incipient feudalism again became active, and the
+State was divided into petty countships and dukedoms almost independent
+of the king.
+
+The gift of land by the king in return for feudal services was called a
+feudal grant, and the land so given was termed a "feud" or "fief." In
+the course of time fiefs became hereditary. Lands were also sometimes
+usurped or otherwise obtained by subjects, who thereby became feudal
+lords. By a process called "subinfeudation," lands were granted in
+parcels to other men by those who received them from the king or
+otherwise, and by these lower landholders to others again; and as the
+first recipient became the vassal of the king and the suzerain of the
+man who held next below him, there was created a regular descending
+scale of such vassalage and suzerainty, in which each man's allegiance
+was directly due to his feudal lord, and not to the king himself. From
+the king down to the lowest landholder all were bound together by
+obligation of service and defence; the lord to protect his vassal, the
+vassal to do service to his lord.
+
+These are the essential features of the social system which, from its
+early growth under the later Carlovingians in the ninth century, spread
+over Europe and reached its highest development in the twelfth century.
+At a time midway between these periods it was carried by the Norman
+Conquest into England. The history of this system of distinctly Frankish
+origin--a knowledge of which is absolutely essential to a proper
+understanding of history and the evolution of our present social
+system--is told by Stubbs with that discernment and thoroughness of
+analysis which have given him his rank as one of the few masterly
+writers in this field.)
+
+
+Feudalism had grown up from two great sources--the _beneficium_, and the
+practice of commendation--and had been specially fostered on Gallic soil
+by the existence of a subject population which admitted of any amount of
+extension in the methods of dependence.
+
+The beneficiary system originated partly in gifts of land made by the
+kings out of their own estates to their kinsmen and servants, with a
+special undertaking to be faithful; partly in the surrender by
+land-owners of their estates to churches or powerful men, to be received
+back again and held by them as tenants for rent or service. By the
+latter arrangement the weaker man obtained the protection of the
+stronger, and he who felt himself insecure placed his title under the
+defence of the church.
+
+By the practice of commendation, on the other hand, the inferior put
+himself under the personal care of a lord, but without altering his
+title or divesting himself of his right to his estate; he became a
+vassal and did homage. The placing of his hands between those of his
+lord was the typical act by which the connection was formed; and the
+oath of fealty was taken at the same time. The union of the beneficiary
+tie with that of commendation completed the idea of feudal obligation--
+the twofold engagement: that of the lord, to defend; and that of the
+vassal, to be faithful. A third ingredient was supplied by the grants of
+immunity by which in the Frank empire, as in England, the possession of
+land was united with the right of judicature; the dwellers on a feudal
+property were placed under the tribunal of the lord, and the rights
+which had belonged to the nation or to its chosen head were devolved
+upon the receiver of a fief. The rapid spread of the system thus
+originated, and the assimilation of all other tenures to it, may be
+regarded as the work of the tenth century; but as early as A.D. 877
+Charles the Bald recognized the hereditary character of all benefices;
+and from that year the growth of strictly feudal jurisprudence may be
+held to date.
+
+The system testifies to the country and causes of its birth. The
+beneficium is partly of Roman, partly of German origin; in the Roman
+system the usufruct--the occupation of land belonging to another
+person--involved no diminution of status; in the Germanic system he who
+tilled land that was not his own was imperfectly free; the reduction of
+a large Roman population to dependence placed the two classes on a
+level, and conduced to the wide extension of the institution.
+
+Commendation, on the other hand, may have had a Gallic or Celtic origin,
+and an analogy only with the Roman clientship. The German _comitatus_,
+which seems to have ultimately merged its existence in one or other of
+these developments, is of course to be carefully distinguished in its
+origin from them. The tie of the benefice or of commendation could be
+formed between any two persons whatever; none but the king could have
+_antrustions_. But the comitatus of Anglo-Saxon history preserved a more
+distinct existence, and this perhaps was one of the causes that
+distinguished the later Anglo-Saxon system most definitely from the
+feudalism of the Frank empire.
+
+The process by which the machinery of government became feudalized,
+although rapid, was gradual.
+
+The weakness of the Carlovingian kings and emperors gave room for the
+speedy development of disruptive tendencies in a territory so extensive
+and so little consolidated. The duchies and counties of the eighth and
+ninth centuries were still official magistracies, the holders of which
+discharged the functions of imperial judges or generals. Such officers
+were of course men whom the kings could trust, in most cases Franks,
+courtiers or kinsmen, who at an earlier date would have been _comites_
+or antrustions, and who were provided for by feudal benefices. The
+official magistracy had in itself the tendency to become hereditary, and
+when the benefice was recognized as heritable, the provincial
+governorship became so too. But the provincial governor had many
+opportunities of improving his position, especially if he could identify
+himself with the manners and aspirations of the people he ruled. By
+marriage or inheritance he might accumulate in his family not only the
+old allodial estates which, especially on German soil, still continued
+to subsist, but the traditions and local loyalties which were connected
+with the possession of them. So in a few years the Frank magistrate
+could unite in his own person the beneficiary endowment, the imperial
+deputation, and the headship of the nation over which he presided. And
+then it was only necessary for the central power to be a little
+weakened, and the independence of duke or count was limited by his
+homage and fealty alone, that is, by obligations that depended on
+conscience only for their fulfilment.
+
+It is in Germany that the disruptive tendency most distinctly takes the
+political form; Saxony and Bavaria assert their national independence
+under Swabian and Saxon dukes who have identified the interests of their
+subjects with their own. In France, where the ancient tribal divisions
+had been long obsolete, and where the existence of the allod involved
+little or no feeling of loyalty, the process was simpler still; the
+provincial rulers aimed at practical rather than political sovereignty;
+the people were too weak to have any aspirations at all. The disruption
+was due more to the abeyance of central attraction than to any
+centrifugal force existing in the provinces. But the result was the
+same; feudal government, a graduated system of jurisdiction based on
+land tenure, in which every lord judged, taxed, and commanded the class
+next below him, of which abject slavery formed the lowest, and
+irresponsible tyranny the highest grade, and private war, private
+coinage, private prisons, took the place of the imperial institutions of
+government.
+
+This was the social system which William the Conqueror and his barons
+had been accustomed to see at work in France. One part of it--the feudal
+tenure of land--was perhaps the only kind of tenure which they could
+understand; the king was the original lord, and every title issued
+mediately or immediately from him. The other part, the governmental
+system of feudalism, was the point on which sooner or later the duke and
+his barons were sure to differ. Already the incompatibility of the
+system with the existence of the strong central power had been
+exemplified in Normandy, where the strength of the dukes had been tasked
+to maintain their hold on the castles and to enforce their own high
+justice. Much more difficult would England be to retain in Norman hands
+if the new king allowed himself to be fettered by the French system.
+
+On the other hand the Norman barons would fain rise a step in the social
+scale answering to that by which their duke had become a king; and they
+aspired to the same independence which they had seen enjoyed by the
+counts of Southern and Eastern France. Nor was the aspiration on their
+part altogether unreasonable; they had joined in the Conquest rather as
+sharers in the great adventure than as mere vassals of the duke, whose
+birth they despised as much as they feared his strength. William,
+however, was wise and wary as well as strong. While, by the insensible
+process of custom, or rather by the mere assumption that feudal tenure
+of land was the only lawful and reasonable one, the Frankish system of
+tenure was substituted for the Anglo-Saxon, the organization of
+government on the same basis was not equally a matter of course.
+
+The Conqueror himself was too strong to suffer that organization to
+become formidable in his reign, but neither the brutal force of William
+Rufus nor the heavy and equal pressure of the government of Henry I
+could extinguish the tendency toward it. It was only after it had, under
+Stephen, broken out into anarchy and plunged the whole nation in misery;
+when the great houses founded by the barons of the Conquest had suffered
+forfeiture or extinction; when the Normans had become Englishmen under
+the legal and constitutional reforms of Henry II--that the royal
+authority, in close alliance with the nation, was enabled to put an end
+to the evil.
+
+William the Conqueror claimed the crown of England as the chosen heir of
+Edward the Confessor. It was a claim which the English did not admit,
+and of which the Normans saw the fallacy, but which he himself
+consistently maintained and did his best to justify. In that claim he
+saw not only the justification of the Conquest in the eyes of the
+church, but his great safeguard against the jealous and aggressive host
+by whose aid he had realized it; therefore, immediately after the battle
+of Hastings he proceeded to seek the national recognition of its
+validity. He obtained it from the divided and dismayed _witan_ with no
+great trouble, and was crowned by the archbishop of York--the most
+influential and patriotic among them--binding himself by the
+constitutional promises of justice and good laws. Standing before the
+altar at Westminster, "in the presence of the clergy and people he
+promised with an oath that he would defend God's holy churches and their
+rulers; that he would, moreover, rule the whole people subject to him
+with righteousness and royal providence; would enact and hold fast right
+law and utterly forbid rapine and unrighteous judgments." The form of
+election and acceptance was regularly observed and the legal position of
+the new King completed before he went forth to finish the Conquest.
+
+Had it not been for this the Norman host might have fairly claimed a
+division of the land such as the Danes had made in the ninth century.
+But to the people who had recognized William it was but just that the
+chance should be given them of retaining what was their own.
+Accordingly, when the lands of all those who had fought for Harold were
+confiscated, those who were willing to acknowledge William were allowed
+to redeem theirs, either paying money at once or giving hostages for the
+payment. That under this redemption lay the idea of a new title to the
+lands redeemed may be regarded as questionable. The feudal lawyer might
+take one view, and the plundered proprietor another. But if charters of
+confirmation or regrant were generally issued on the occasion to those
+who were willing to redeem, there can be no doubt that, as soon as the
+feudal law gained general acceptance, these would be regarded as
+conveying a feudal title. What to the English might be a mere payment of
+_fyrdwite_, or composition for a recognized offence, might to the
+Normans seem equivalent to forfeiture and restoration.
+
+But however this was, the process of confiscation and redistribution of
+lands under the new title began from the moment of the coronation. The
+next few years, occupied in the reduction of Western and Northern
+England, added largely to the stock of divisible estates. The tyranny of
+Odo of Bayeux and William Fitzosbern, which provoked attempts at
+rebellion in 1067; the stand made by the house of Godwin in Devonshire
+in 1068; the attempts of Mercia and Northumbria to shake off the Normans
+in 1069 and 1070; the last struggle for independence in 1071, in which
+Edwin and Morcar finally fell; the conspiracy of the Norman earls in
+1074, in consequence of which Waltheof perished--all tended to the same
+result.
+
+After each effort the royal hand was laid on more heavily; more and more
+land changed owners, and with the change of owners the title changed.
+The complicated and unintelligible irregularities of the Anglo-Saxon
+tenures were exchanged for the simple and uniform feudal theory. The
+fifteen hundred tenants-in-chief of _Domesday Book_ take the place of
+the countless land-owners of King Edward's time, and the loose,
+unsystematic arrangements which had grown up in the confusion of title,
+tenure, and jurisdiction were replaced by systematic custom. The change
+was effected without any legislative act, simply by the process of
+transfer under circumstances in which simplicity and uniformity were an
+absolute necessity. It was not the change from allodial to feudal so
+much as from confusion to order. The actual amount of dispossession was
+no doubt greatest in the higher ranks; the smaller owners may to a large
+extent have remained in a mediatized position on their estates; but even
+_Domesday_, with all its fulness and accuracy, cannot be supposed to
+enumerate all the changes of the twenty eventful years that followed the
+battle of Hastings. It is enough for our purpose to ascertain that a
+universal assimilation of title followed the general changes of
+ownership. The king of _Domesday_ is the supreme landlord; all the land
+of the nation, the old folkland, has become the king's; and all private
+land is held mediately or immediately of him; all holders are bound to
+their lords by homage and fealty, either actually demanded or understood
+to be demandable, in every case of transfer by inheritance or otherwise.
+
+The result of this process is partly legal and partly constitutional or
+political. The legal result is the introduction of an elaborate system
+of customs, tenures, rights, duties, profits, and jurisdictions. The
+constitutional result is the creation of several intermediate links
+between the body of the nation and the king, in the place of or side by
+side with the duty of allegiance.
+
+On the former of these points we have very insufficient data; for we are
+quite in the dark as to the development of feudal law in Normandy before
+the invasion, and may be reasonably inclined to refer some at least of
+the peculiarities of English feudal law to the leaven of the system
+which it superseded. Nor is it easy to reduce the organization described
+in _Domesday_ to strict conformity with feudal law as it appears later,
+especially with the general prevalence of military tenure.
+
+The growth of knighthood is a subject on which the greatest obscurity
+prevails, and the most probable explanation of its existence in
+England--the theory that it is a translation into Norman forms of the
+_thegnage_ of the Anglo-Saxon law--can only be stated as probable.
+
+Between the picture drawn in _Domesday_ and the state of affairs which
+the charter of Henry I was designed to remedy, there is a difference
+which the short interval of time will not account for, and which
+testifies to the action of some skilful organizing hand working with
+neither justice nor mercy, hardening and sharpening all lines and points
+to the perfecting of a strong government.
+
+It is unnecessary to recapitulate here all the points in which the
+Anglo-Saxon institutions were already approaching the feudal model; it
+may be assumed that the actual obligation of military service was much
+the same in both systems, and that even the amount of land which was
+bound to furnish a mounted warrior was the same however the conformity
+may have been produced. The _heriot_ of the English earl or _thegn_ was
+in close resemblance with the _relief_ of the Norman count or knight.
+But however close the resemblance, something was now added that made the
+two identical. The change of the heriot to the relief implies a
+suspension of ownership, and carries with it the custom of "livery of
+seisin." The heriot was the payment of a debt from the dead man to his
+lord; his son succeeded him by allodial right. The relief was paid by
+the heir before he could obtain his father's lands; between the death of
+the father and livery of seisin to the son the right of the "overlord"
+had entered; the ownership was to a certain extent resumed, and the
+succession of the heir took somewhat of the character of a new grant.
+The right of wardship also became in the same way a reëntry, by the
+lord, on the profits of the estate of the minor, instead of being, as
+before, a protection, by the head of the kin, of the indefeasible rights
+of the heir, which it was the duty of the whole community to maintain.
+
+There can be no doubt that the military tenure--the most prominent
+feature of historical feudalism--was itself introduced by the same
+gradual process which we have assumed in the case of the feudal usages
+in general. We have no light on the point from any original grant made
+by the Conqueror to a lay follower, but judging by the grants made to
+the churches we cannot suppose it probable that such gifts were made on
+any expressed condition, or accepted with a distinct pledge to provide a
+certain contingent of knights for the king's service. The obligation of
+national defence was incumbent, as of old, on all land-owners, and the
+customary service of one fully armed man for each five hides of land was
+probably the rate at which the newly endowed follower of the king would
+be expected to discharge his duty. The wording of the _Domesday_ survey
+does not imply that in this respect the new military service differed
+from the old; the land is marked out, not into knights' fees, but into
+hides, and the number of knights to be furnished by a particular
+feudatory would be ascertained by inquiring the number of hides that he
+held, without apportioning the particular acres that were to support the
+particular knight.
+
+It would undoubtedly be on the estates of the lay vassals that a more
+definite usage would first be adopted, and knights bound by feudal
+obligations to their lords receive a definite estate from them. Our
+earliest information, however, on this as on most points of tenure, is
+derived from the notices of ecclesiastical practice. Lanfranc, we are
+told, turned the _drengs_, the rent-paying tenants of his archiepiscopal
+estates, into knights for the defence of the country; he enfeoffed a
+certain number of knights who performed the military service due from
+the archiepiscopal barony. This had been done before the _Domesday_
+survey, and almost necessarily implies that a like measure had been
+taken by the lay vassals. Lanfranc likewise maintained ten knights to
+answer for the military service due from the convent of Christ Church,
+which made over to him, in consideration of the relief, land worth two
+hundred pounds annually. The value of the knight's fee must already have
+been fixed at twenty pounds a year.
+
+In the reign of William Rufus the abbot of Ramsey obtained a charter
+which exempted his monastery from the service of ten knights due from it
+on festivals, substituting the obligation to furnish three knights to
+perform service on the north of the Thames--a proof that the lands of
+that house had not yet been divided into knights' fees. In the next
+reign, we may infer--from the favor granted by the King to the knights
+who defended their lands _per loricas_ (that is, by the hauberk) that
+their demesne lands shall be exempt from pecuniary taxation--that the
+process of definite military infeudation had largely advanced. But it
+was not even yet forced on the clerical or monastic estates. When, in
+1167, the abbot of Milton, in Dorset, was questioned as to the number of
+knights' fees for which he had to account, he replied that all the
+services due from his monastery were discharged out of the demesne; but
+he added that in the reign of Henry I, during a vacancy in the abbacy,
+Bishop Roger, of Salisbury, had enfeoffed two knights out of the abbey
+lands. He had, however, subsequently reversed the act and had restored
+the lands, whose tenure had been thus altered, to their original
+condition of rent-paying estate or "socage."
+
+The very term "the new feoffment," which was applied to the knights'
+fees created between the death of Henry I and the year in which the
+account preserved in the _Black Book_ of the exchequer was taken, proves
+that the process was going on for nearly a hundred years, and that the
+form in which the knights' fees appear when called on by Henry II for
+"scutage" was most probably the result of a series of compositions by
+which the great vassals relieved their lands from a general burden by
+carving out particular estates, the holders of which performed the
+services due from the whole; it was a matter of convenience and not of
+tyrannical pressure. The statement of Ordericus Vitalis that the
+Conqueror "distributed lands to his knights in such fashion that the
+kingdom of England should have forever sixty thousand knights, and
+furnish them at the king's command according to the occasion," must be
+regarded as one of the many numerical exaggerations of the early
+historians. The officers of the exchequer in the twelfth century were
+quite unable to fix the number of existing knights' fees.
+
+It cannot even be granted that a definite area of land was necessary to
+constitute a knight's fee; for although at a later period and in local
+computations we may find four or five hides adopted as a basis of
+calculation, where the extent of the particular knight's fee is given
+exactly, it affords no ground for such a conclusion. In the _Liber
+Niger_ we find knights' fees of two hides and a half, of two hides, of
+four, five, and six hides. Geoffrey Ridel states that his father held
+one hundred and eighty-four _carucates_ and a _virgate_, for which the
+service of fifteen knights was due, but that no knights' fees had been
+carved out of it, the obligation lying equally on every carucate. The
+archbishop of York had far more knights than his tenure required. It is
+impossible to avoid the conclusion that the extent of a knight's fee was
+determined by rent or valuation rather than acreage, and that the common
+quantity was really expressed in the twenty _librates_, the twenty
+pounds' worth of annual value which until the reign of Edward I was the
+qualification for knighthood.
+
+It is most probable that no regular account of the knights' fees was
+ever taken until they became liable to taxation, either in the form of
+_auxilium militum_ under Henry I, or in that of scutage under his
+grandson. The facts, however, which are here adduced, preclude the
+possibility of referring this portion of the feudal innovations to the
+direct legislation of the Conqueror. It may be regarded as a secondary
+question whether the knighthood here referred to was completed by the
+investiture with knightly arms and the honorable accolade. The
+ceremonial of knighthood was practised by the Normans, whereas the
+evidence that the English had retained the primitive practice of
+investing the youthful warrior is insufficient; yet it would be rash to
+infer that so early as this, if indeed it ever was the case, every
+possessor of a knight's fee received formal initiation before he assumed
+his spurs. But every such analogy would make the process of transition
+easier and prevent the necessity of any general legislative act of
+change.
+
+It has been maintained that a formal and definitive act, forming the
+initial point of the feudalization of England, is to be found in a
+clause of the laws, as they are called, of the Conqueror; which directs
+that every freeman shall affirm, by covenant and oath, that "he will be
+faithful to King William within England and without, will join him in
+preserving his lands and honor with all fidelity, and defend him against
+his enemies." But this injunction is little more than the demand of the
+oath of allegiance which had been taken to the Anglo-Saxon kings and is
+here required not of every feudal dependent of the King, but of every
+freeman or freeholder whatsoever.
+
+In that famous council of Salisbury of 1086, which was summoned
+immediately after the making of the _Domesday_ survey, we learn from the
+_Chronicle_ that there came to the King "all his witan, and all the
+landholders of substance in England whose vassals soever they were, and
+they all submitted to him, and became his men and swore oaths of
+allegiance that they would be faithful to him against all others." In
+this act have been seen the formal acceptance and date of the
+introduction of feudalism, but it has a very different meaning. The oath
+described is the oath of allegiance, combined with the act of homage,
+and obtained from all land-owners, whoever their feudal lord might be.
+It is a measure of precaution taken against the disintegrating power of
+feudalism, providing a direct tie between the sovereign and all
+freeholders which no inferior relation existing between them and the
+mesne lords would justify them in breaking. The real importance of the
+passage as bearing on the date of the introduction of feudal tenure is
+merely that it shows the system to have already become consolidated; all
+the land-owners of the kingdom had already become, somehow or other,
+vassals, either of the king or of some tenant under him. The lesson may
+be learned from the fact of the _Domesday_ survey.
+
+The introduction of such a system would necessarily have effects far
+wider than the mere modification of the law of tenure; it might be
+regarded as a means of consolidating and concentrating the whole
+machinery of government; legislation, taxation, judicature, and military
+defence were all capable of being organized on the feudal principle, and
+might have been so had the moral and political results been in harmony
+with the legal. But its tendency when applied to governmental machinery
+is disruptive. The great feature of the Conqueror's policy is his defeat
+of that tendency. Guarding against it he obtained recognition as the
+King of the nation and, so far as he could understand them and the
+attitude of the nation allowed, he maintained the usages of the nation.
+He kept up the popular institutions of the hundred court and the shire
+court. He confirmed the laws which had been in use in King Edward's
+days, with the additions which he himself made for the benefit, as he
+especially tells us, of the English.
+
+We are told, on what seems to be the highest legal authority of the next
+century, that he issued in his fourth year a commission of inquiry into
+the national customs, and obtained from sworn representatives of each
+county a declaration of the laws under which they wished to live. The
+compilation that bears his name is very little more than a reissue of
+the code of Canute; and this proceeding helped greatly to reconcile the
+English people to his rule. Although the oppressions of his later years
+were far heavier than the measures taken to secure the immediate success
+of the Conquest, all the troubles of the kingdom after 1075, in his
+sons' reigns as well as in his own, proceeded from the insubordination
+of the Normans, not from the attempts of the English to dethrone the
+king. Very early they learned that, if their interest was not the
+king's, at least their enemies were his enemies; hence they are
+invariably found on the royal side against the feudatories.
+
+This accounts for the maintenance of the national force of defence, over
+and above the feudal army. The _fyrd_ of the English, the general
+armament of the men of the counties and hundreds, was not abolished at
+the Conquest, but subsisted even through the reigns of William Rufus and
+Henry I, to be reformed and reconstituted under Henry II; and in each
+reign it gave proof of its strength and faithfulness. The _witenagemot_
+itself retained the ancient form, the bishops and abbots formed a chief
+part of it, instead of being, as in Normandy, so insignificant an
+element that their very participation in deliberation has been doubted.
+The king sat crowned three times in the year in the old royal towns of
+Westminster, Winchester, and Gloucester, hearing the complaints of his
+people, and executing such justice as his knowledge of their law and
+language and his own imperious will allowed. In all this there is no
+violent innovation, only such gradual essential changes as twenty
+eventful years of new actors and new principles must bring, however
+insensibly the people themselves--passing away and being replaced by
+their children--may be educated to endurance.
+
+It would be wrong to impute to the Conqueror any intention of deceiving
+the nation by maintaining its official forms while introducing new
+principles and a new race of administrators. What he saw required change
+he changed with a high hand. But not the less surely did the change of
+administrators involve a change of custom, both in the church and in the
+state. The bishops, ealdormen, and sheriffs of English birth were
+replaced by Normans; not unreasonably, perhaps, considering the
+necessity of preserving the balance of the state. With the change of
+officials came a sort of amalgamation or duplication of titles; the
+ealdorman or earl became the _comes_ or count; the sheriff became the
+_vicecomes_; the office in each case receiving the name of that which
+corresponded most closely with it in Normandy itself. With the
+amalgamation of titles came an importation of new principles and
+possibly new functions; for the Norman count and viscount had not
+exactly the same customs as the earls and sheriffs. And this ran up into
+the highest grades of organization; the King's court of counsellors was
+composed of his feudal tenants; the ownership of land was now the
+qualification for the witenagemot, instead of wisdom; the earldoms
+became fiefs instead of magistracies, and even the bishops had to accept
+the status of barons. There was a very certain danger that the mere
+change of persons might bring in the whole machinery of hereditary
+magistracies, and that king and people might be edged out of the
+administration of justice, taxation, and other functions of supreme or
+local independence.
+
+Against this it was most important to guard; as the Conqueror learned
+from the events of the first year of his reign, when the severe rule of
+Odo and William Fitzosbern had provoked Herefordshire. Ralph Guader,
+Roger Montgomery, and Hugh of Avranches filled the places of Edwin and
+Morcar and the brothers of Harold. But the conspiracy of the earls in
+1074 opened William's eyes to the danger of this proceeding, and from
+that time onward he governed the provinces through sheriffs immediately
+dependent on himself, avoiding the foreign plan of appointing hereditary
+counts, as well as the English custom of ruling by viceregal ealdormen.
+He was, however, very sparing in giving earldoms at all, and inclined to
+confine the title to those who were already counts in Normandy or in
+France.
+
+To this plan there were some marked exceptions, which may be accounted
+for either on the ground that the arrangements had been completed before
+the need of watchfulness was impressed on the King by the treachery of
+the Normans, or on that of the exigencies of national defence. In these
+cases he created, or suffered the continuance of, great palatine
+jurisdictions; earldoms in which the earls were endowed with the
+superiority of whole counties, so that all the land-owners held feudally
+of them, in which they received the whole profits of the courts and
+exercised all the "regalia" or royal rights, nominated the sheriffs,
+held their own councils, and acted as independent princes except in the
+owing of homage and fealty to the King. Two of these palatinates, the
+earldom of Chester and the bishopric of Durham, retained much of their
+character to our own days. A third, the palatinate of Bishop Odo in
+Kent, if it were really a jurisdiction of the same sort, came to an end
+when Odo forfeited the confidence of his brother and nephew. A fourth,
+the earldom of Shropshire, which is not commonly counted among the
+palatine jurisdictions, but which possessed under the Montgomery earls
+all the characteristics of such a dignity, was confiscated after the
+treason of Robert of Belesme by Henry I. These had been all founded
+before the conspiracy of 1074; they were also, like the later lordships
+of the marches, a part of the national defence; Chester and Shropshire
+kept the Welsh marches in order, Kent was the frontier exposed to
+attacks from Picardy, and Durham, the patrimony of St. Cuthbert, lay as
+a sacred boundary between England and Scotland; Northumberland and
+Cumberland were still a debatable ground between the two kingdoms.
+Chester was held by its earls as freely by the sword as the King held
+England by the crown; no lay vassal in the county held of the King, all
+of the earl. In Shropshire there were only five lay tenants _in capite_
+besides Roger Montgomery; in Kent, Bishop Odo held an enormous
+proportion of the manors, but the nature of his jurisdiction is not very
+clear, and its duration is too short to make it of much importance. If
+William founded any earldoms at all after 1074 (which may be doubted),
+he did it on a very different scale.
+
+The hereditary sheriffdoms he did not guard against with equal care. The
+Norman viscounties were hereditary, and there was some risk that the
+English ones would become so too; and with the worst consequences, for
+the English counties were much larger than the bailiwicks of the Norman
+viscount, and the authority of the sheriff, when he was relieved from
+the company of the ealdorman, and was soon to lose that of the bishop,
+would have no check except the direct control of the King. If William
+perceived this, it was too late to prevent it entirely; some of the
+sheriffdoms became hereditary, and continued to be so long after the
+abuse had become constitutionally dangerous.
+
+The independence of the greater feudatories was still further limited by
+the principle, which the Conqueror seems to have observed, of avoiding
+the accumulation in any one hand of a great number of contiguous
+estates. The rule is not without some important exceptions, and it may
+have been suggested by the diversity of occasions on which the fiefs
+were bestowed, but the result is one which William must have foreseen.
+An insubordinate baron whose strength lay in twelve different counties
+would have to rouse the suspicions and perhaps to defy the arms of
+twelve powerful sheriffs, before he could draw his forces to a head. In
+his manorial courts, scattered and unconnected, he could set up no
+central tribunal, nor even force a new custom upon his tenants, nor
+could he attempt oppression on any extensive scale. By such limitation
+the people were protected and the central power secured.
+
+Yet the changes of ownership, even thus guarded, wrought other changes.
+It is not to be supposed that the Norman baron, when he had received his
+fief, proceeded to carve it out into demesne and tenants' land as if he
+were making a new settlement in an uninhabited country. He might indeed
+build his castle and enclose his chase with very little respect to the
+rights of his weaker neighbors, but he did not attempt any such radical
+change as the legal theory of the creation of manors seems to presume.
+The name "manor" is of Norman origin: but the estate to which it was
+given existed, in its essential character, long before the Conquest; it
+received a new name as the shire also did, but neither the one nor the
+other was created by this change. The local jurisdictions of the thegns
+who had grants of _sac_ and _soc_, or who exercised judicial functions
+among their free neighbors, were identical with the manorial
+jurisdictions of the new owners.
+
+It may be conjectured with great probability that in many cases the
+weaker freemen, who had either willingly or under constraint attended
+the courts of their great neighbors, were now, under the general
+infusion of feudal principle, regarded as holding their lands of them as
+lords; it is not less probable that in a great number of grants the
+right to suit and service from small land-owners passed from the king to
+the receiver of the fief as a matter of course; but it is certain that
+even before the Conquest such a proceeding was not uncommon; Edward the
+Confessor had transferred to St. Augustine's monastery a number of
+allodiaries in Kent, and every such measure in the case of a church must
+have had its parallel in similar grants to laymen. The manorial system
+brought in a number of new names; and perhaps a duplication of offices.
+The _gerefa_ of the old thegn, or of the ancient township, was replaced,
+as president of the courts, by a Norman steward or seneschal; and the
+_bydel_ of the old system by the bailiff of the new; but the gerefa and
+bydel still continued to exist in a subordinate capacity as the _grave_
+or reeve and the _bedell_; and when the lord's steward takes his place
+in the county court, the reeve and four men of the township are there
+also. The common of the township may be treated as the lord's waste, but
+the townsmen do not lose their customary share.
+
+The changes that take place in the state have their resulting analogies
+in every village, but no new England is created; new forms displace but
+do not destroy the old, and old rights remain, although changed in title
+and forced into symmetry with a new legal and pseudo-historical theory.
+The changes may not seem at first sight very oppressive, but they opened
+the way for oppression; the forms they had introduced tended, under the
+spirit of Norman legality and feudal selfishness, to become hard
+realities, and in the profound miseries of Stephen's reign the people
+learned how completely the new theory left them at the mercy of their
+lords; nor were all the reforms of his successor more stringent or the
+struggles of the century that followed a whit more impassioned than were
+necessary to protect the English yeoman from the men who lived upon his
+strength.
+
+In attempting thus to estimate the real amount of change introduced by
+the feudalism of the Conquest, many points of further interest have been
+touched upon, to which it is necessary to recur only so far as to give
+them their proper place in a more general view of the reformed
+organization. The Norman king is still the king of the nation. He has
+become the supreme landlord; all estates are held of him mediately or
+immediately, but he still demands the allegiance of all his subjects.
+The oath which he exacted at Salisbury in 1086, and which is embodied in
+the semi-legal form already quoted, was a modification of the oath taken
+to Edmund, and was intended to set the general obligation of obedience
+to the king in its proper relation to the new tie of homage and fealty
+by which the tenant was bound to his lord.
+
+All men continued to be primarily the king's men, and the public peace
+to be his peace. Their lords might demand their service to fulfil their
+own obligations, but the king could call them to the _fyrd_, summon them
+to his courts, and tax them without the intervention of their lords; and
+to the king they could look for protection against all foes. Accordingly
+the king could rely on the help of the bulk of the free people in all
+struggles with his feudatories, and the people, finding that their
+connection with their lords would be no excuse for unfaithfulness to the
+king, had a further inducement to adhere to the more permanent
+institutions.
+
+In the department of law the direct changes introduced by the Conquest
+were not great. Much that is regarded as peculiarly Norman was developed
+upon English soil, and although originated and systematized by Norman
+lawyers, contained elements which would have worked in a very different
+way in Normandy. Even the vestiges of Carlovingian practice which appear
+in the inquests of the Norman reigns are modified by English usage. The
+great inquest of all, the _Domesday_ survey, may owe its principle to a
+foreign source; the oath of the reporters may be Norman, but the
+machinery that furnishes the jurors is native; "the king's barons
+inquire by the oath of the sheriff of the shire, and of all the barons
+and their Frenchmen, and of the whole hundred, the priest, the reeve,
+and six _ceorls_ of every township."
+
+The institution of the collective Frank pledge, which recent writers
+incline to treat as a Norman innovation, is so distinctly colored by
+English custom that it has been generally regarded as purely indigenous.
+If it were indeed a precaution taken by the new rulers against the
+avoidance of justice by the absconding or harboring of criminals, it
+fell with ease into the usages and even the legal terms which had been
+common for other similar purposes since the reign of Athelstan. The
+trial by battle, which on clearer evidence seems to have been brought in
+by the Normans, is a relic of old Teutonic jurisprudence, the absence of
+which from the Anglo-Saxon courts is far more curious than its
+introduction from abroad.
+
+The organization of jurisdiction required and underwent no great change
+in these respects. The Norman lord who undertook the office of sheriff
+had, as we have seen, more unrestricted power than the sheriffs of old.
+He was the king's representative in all matters judicial, military, and
+financial in his shire, and had many opportunities of tyrannizing in
+each of those departments: but he introduced no new machinery. From him,
+or from the courts of which he was the presiding officer, appeal lay to
+the king alone; but the king was often absent from England and did not
+understand the language of his subjects. In his absence the
+administration was intrusted to a _judiciar_, a regent, or lieutenant,
+of the kingdom; and the convenience being once ascertained of having a
+minister who could in the whole kingdom represent the king, as the
+sheriff did in the shire, the judiciar became a permanent functionary.
+This, however, cannot be certainly affirmed of the reign of the
+Conqueror, who, when present at Christmas, Easter, and Whitsuntide, held
+great courts of justice as well as for other purposes of state; and the
+legal importance of the office belongs to a later stage. The royal
+court, containing the tenants-in-chief of the crown, both lay and
+clerical, and entering into all the functions of the witenagemot, was
+the supreme council of the nation, with the advice and consent of which
+the King legislated, taxed, and judged.
+
+In the one authentic monument of William's jurisprudence, the act which
+removed the bishops from the secular courts and recognized their
+spiritual jurisdictions, he tells us that he acts "with the common
+council and counsel of the archbishops, bishops, abbots, and all the
+princes of the kingdom." The ancient summary of his laws contained in
+the _Textus Roffensis_ is entitled "_What William, King of the English,
+with his Princes enacted after the Conquest of England_"; and the same
+form is preserved in the tradition of his confirming the ancient laws
+reported to him by the representatives of the shires. The _Anglo-Saxon
+Chronicle_ enumerates the classes of men who attended his great courts:
+"There were with him all the great men over all England, archbishops and
+bishops, abbots and earls, thegns and knights."
+
+The great suit between Lanfranc as Archbishop of Canterbury and Odo as
+Earl of Kent, which is perhaps the best reported trial of the reign, was
+tried in the county court of Kent before the King's representative,
+Gosfrid, bishop of Coutances; whose presence and that of most of the
+great men of the kingdom seem to have made it a witenagemot. The
+archbishop pleaded the cause of his Church in a session of three days on
+Pennenden Heath; the aged South-Saxon bishop, Ethelric, was brought by
+the King's command to declare the ancient customs of the laws; and with
+him several other Englishmen skilled in ancient laws and customs. All
+these good and wise men supported the archbishop's claim, and the
+decision was agreed on and determined by the whole county. The sentence
+was laid before the King, and confirmed by him. Here we have probably a
+good instance of the principle universally adopted; all the lower
+machinery of the court was retained entire, but the presence of the
+Norman justiciar and barons gave it an additional authority, a more
+direct connection with the king, and the appearance at least of a joint
+tribunal.
+
+The principle of amalgamating the two laws and nationalities by
+superimposing the better consolidated Norman superstructure on the
+better consolidated English substructure, runs through the whole policy.
+
+The English system was strong in the cohesion of its lower organism, the
+association of individuals in the township, in the hundred, and in the
+shire; the Norman system was strong in its higher ranges, in the close
+relation to the Crown of the tenants-in-chief whom the King had
+enriched. On the other hand, the English system was weak in the higher
+organization, and the Normans in England had hardly any subordinate
+organization at all. The strongest elements of both were brought
+together.
+
+
+
+
+DECAY OF THE FRANKISH EMPIRE
+
+DIVISION INTO MODERN FRANCE, GERMANY, AND ITALY
+
+A.D. 843-911
+
+FRANÇOIS P.G. GUIZOT
+
+
+(The period with which the following article deals may be said to mark
+the end of distinctively Frankish history. A striking mixture of races
+entered into the formation of this people, and the beginnings of the
+great modern nations into which the Frankish empire was divided brought
+to them varied elements of strength and a diversity of constituents that
+were to be commingled in new national characters and careers.
+
+In 840 Charles the Bald became King of France, and his reign, both as
+king and afterward as emperor, continued for thirty-seven years, during
+which he proved himself to be lacking in those qualities which his
+responsibilities and the wants of his people demanded. He had great
+obstacles to contend against; for besides the ambitions of various
+districts for separate nationality, which led to insurrections in many
+quarters, Greek pirates ravaged the South, where the Saracens also
+wrought havoc, while in the North and West the Northmen burned and
+pillaged, laying waste a wide region and leaving many towns in ruins.
+
+It was an age of turbulence in Europe, and the violence of predatory
+invaders brought woes upon many peoples. On the east of Charles' empire
+the Hungarians, successors of the Huns, began to threaten. In the midst
+of all these distractions and dangers, assailed by enemies without and
+within, Charles found it a task far beyond his abilities to construct a
+state upon foundations of unity. He bore many titles and held several
+crowns, but his actual dominion was narrowly restricted, and his nominal
+subjects were in a state of political subdivision almost amounting to
+dismemberment. After various futile efforts during his later years to
+unify his empire, Charles died from an illness which seized him in 877,
+on his return to France from a fruitless campaign of subjugation and
+pillage in Italy. In the subsequent division of the empire, according to
+the terms of the treaty of Verdun, the several portions included Italy,
+the nucleus of France, and that of the present Germany.
+
+Already suffering from the devastating expeditions of the Norse or
+Northmen, the Carlovingian empire, now weakened by division, became an
+easier prey for the invaders. Emboldened by success, the Northmen at
+length commenced to settle in the regions they invaded, no longer
+returning, as formerly, to their northern homes in winter. Among
+chieftains of the early Norman invaders who settled in France was
+Hastings, who became Count of Chartres; later came Rou, Rolf, or Rollo
+the Rover, to whom Charles the Simple of France gave Normandy, whence
+sprang the conquerors and rulers of England, who laid the foundation of
+the English-speaking nations of today.)
+
+
+The first of Charlemagne's grand designs, the territorial security of
+the Gallo-Frankish and Christian dominion, was accomplished. In the East
+and the North, the Germanic and Asiatic populations, which had so long
+upset it, were partly arrested at its frontiers, partly incorporated
+regularly in its midst. In the South, the Mussulman populations which,
+in the eighth century, had appeared so near overwhelming it, were
+powerless to deal it any heavy blow. Substantially France was founded.
+But what had become of Charlemagne's second grand design, the
+resuscitation of the Roman Empire at the hands of the barbarians that
+had conquered it and become Christians?
+
+Let us leave Louis the Debonair his traditional name, although it is not
+an exact rendering of that which was given him by his contemporaries.
+They called him Louis the Pious. And so, indeed, he was, sincerely and
+even scrupulously pious; but he was still more weak than pious, as weak
+in heart and character as in mind; as destitute of ruling ideas as of
+strength of will, fluctuating at the mercy of transitory impressions or
+surrounding influences or positional embarrassments. The name of
+_Débonnaire_ is suited to him; it expresses his moral worth and his
+political incapacity both at once.
+
+As king of Aquitaine in the time of Charlemagne, Louis made himself
+esteemed and loved; his justice, his suavity, his probity, and his piety
+were pleasing to the people, and his weaknesses disappeared under the
+strong hand of his father. When he became emperor, he began his reign by
+a reaction against the excesses, real or supposed, of the preceding
+reign. Charlemagne's morals were far from regular, and he troubled
+himself but little about the license prevailing in his family or his
+palace. At a distance, he ruled with a tight and heavy hand. Louis
+established at his court, for his sisters as well as his servants,
+austere regulations. He restored to the subjugated Saxons certain of the
+rights of which Charlemagne had deprived them. He sent out everywhere
+his commissioners with orders to listen to complaints and redress
+grievances, and to mitigate his father's rule, which was rigorous in its
+application and yet insufficient to repress disturbance, notwithstanding
+its preventive purpose and its watchful supervision.
+
+Almost simultaneously with his accession, Louis committed an act more
+serious and compromising. He had, by his wife Hermengarde, three sons,
+Lothair, Pépin, and Louis, aged respectively nineteen, eleven, and
+eight. In 817, Louis summoned at Aix-la-Chapelle the general assembly of
+his dominions; and there, while declaring that "neither to those who
+were wisely minded nor to himself did it appear expedient to break up,
+for the love he bare his sons and by the will of man, the unity of the
+empire, preserved by God himself," he had resolved to share with his
+eldest son, Lothair, the imperial throne. Lothair was in fact crowned
+emperor; and his two brothers, Pépin and Louis, were crowned king, "in
+order that they might reign, after their father's death and under their
+brother and lord, Lothair, to wit: Pépin, over Aquitaine and a great
+part of Southern Gaul and of Burgundy; Louis, beyond the Rhine, over
+Bavaria and the divers peoples in the east of Germany." The rest of Gaul
+and of Germany, as well as the kingdom of Italy, was to belong to
+Lothair, Emperor and head of the Frankish monarchy, to whom his brothers
+would have to repair year by year to come to an understanding with him
+and receive his instructions. The last-named kingdom, the most
+considerable of the three, remained under the direct government of Louis
+the Debonair, and at the same time of his son Lothair, sharing the title
+of emperor. The two other sons, Pépin and Louis, entered,
+notwithstanding their childhood, upon immediate possession, the one of
+Aquitaine and the other of Bavaria, under the superior authority of
+their father and their brother, the joint emperors.
+
+Charlemagne had vigorously maintained the unity of the empire, for all
+that he had delegated to two of his sons, Pépin and Louis, the
+government of Italy and Aquitaine with the title of king. Louis the
+Debonair, while regulating beforehand the division of his dominion,
+likewise desired, as he said, to maintain the unity of the empire. But
+he forgot that he was no Charlemagne.
+
+It was not long before numerous mournful experiences showed to what
+extent the unity of the empire required personal superiority in the
+emperor, and how rapid would be the decay of the fabric when there
+remained nothing but the title of the founder.
+
+In 816 Pope Stephen IV came to France to consecrate Louis the Debonair
+emperor. Many a time already the popes had rendered the Frankish kings
+this service and honor. The Franks had been proud to see their King,
+Charlemagne, protecting Adrian I against the Lombards; then crowned
+emperor at Rome by Leo III, and then having his two sons, Pépin and
+Louis, crowned at Rome, by the same Pope, kings respectively of Italy
+and of Aquitaine. On these different occasions Charlemagne, while
+testifying the most profound respect for the Pope, had, in his relations
+with him, always taken care to preserve, together with his political
+greatness, all his personal dignity. But when, in 816, the Franks saw
+Louis the Pious not only go out of Rheims to meet Stephen IV, but
+prostrate himself, from head to foot, and rise only when the Pope held
+out a hand to him, the spectators felt saddened and humiliated at the
+sight of their Emperor in the posture of a penitent monk.
+
+Several insurrections burst out in the empire; the first among the
+Basques of Aquitaine; the next in Italy, where Bernard, son of Pépin,
+having, after his father's death, become king in 812, with the consent
+of his grandfather Charlemagne, could not quietly see his kingdom pass
+into the hands of his cousin Lothair at the orders of his uncle Louis.
+These two attempts were easily repressed, but the third was more
+serious. It took place in Brittany among those populations of Armorica
+who were still buried in their woods, and were excessively jealous of
+their independence. In 818 they took for king one of their principal
+chieftains, named Morvan; and, not confining themselves to a refusal of
+all tribute to the King of the Franks, they renewed their ravages upon
+the Frankish territories bordering on their frontier. Louis was at that
+time holding a general assembly of his dominions at Aix-la-Chapelle; and
+Count Lantbert, commandant of the marches of Brittany, came and reported
+to him what was going on. A Frankish monk, named Ditcar, happened to be
+at the assembly: he was a man of piety and sense, a friend of peace,
+and, moreover, with some knowledge of the Breton king Morvan, as his
+monastery had property in the neighborhood. Him the Emperor commissioned
+to convey to the King his grievances and his demands. After some days'
+journey the monk passed the frontier and arrived at a vast space
+enclosed on one side by a noble river, and on all the others by forests
+and swamps, hedges and ditches. In the middle of this space was a large
+dwelling, which was Morvan's. Ditcar found it full of warriors, the King
+having, no doubt, some expedition on hand. The monk announced himself as
+a messenger from the Emperor of the Franks. The style of announcement
+caused some confusion at first, to the Briton, who, however, hastened to
+conceal his emotion under an air of good-will and joyousness, to impose
+upon his comrades. The latter were got rid of; and the King remained
+alone with the monk, who explained the object of his mission. He
+descanted upon the power of the emperor Louis, recounted his complaints,
+and warned the Briton, kindly and in a private capacity, of the danger
+of his situation, a danger so much the greater in that he and his people
+would meet with the less consideration, seeing that they kept up the
+religion of their pagan forefathers. Morvan gave attentive ear to this
+sermon, with his eyes fixed on the ground, and his foot tapping it from
+time to time. Ditcar thought he had succeeded; but an incident
+supervened. It was the hour when Morvan's wife was accustomed to come
+and look for him ere they retired to the nuptial couch. She appeared,
+eager to know who the stranger was, what he had come for, what he had
+said, what answer he had received. She preluded her questions with
+oglings and caresses; she kissed the knees, the hands, the beard, and
+the face of the King, testifying her desire to be alone with him. "O
+King and glory of the mighty Britons, dear spouse of mine! what tidings
+bringeth this stranger? Is it peace, or is it war?"
+
+"This stranger," answered Morvan, with a smile, "is an envoy of the
+Franks; but bring he peace or bring he war is the affair of men alone;
+as for thee, content thee with thy woman's duties." Thereupon Ditcar,
+perceiving that he was countered, said to Morvan: "Sir King, 'tis time
+that I return; tell me what answer I am to take back to my sovereign."
+
+"Leave me this night to take thought thereon," replied the Breton chief,
+with a wavering air. When the morning came, Ditcar presented himself
+once more to Morvan, whom he found up, but still half drunk and full of
+very different sentiments from those of the night before. It required
+some effort, stupefied and tottering as he was with the effects of wine
+and the pleasures of the night, to say to Ditcar: "Go back to thy King,
+and tell him from me that my land was never his, and that I owe him
+naught of tribute or submission. Let him reign over the Franks; as for
+me, I reign over the Britons. If he will bring war on me, he will find
+me ready to pay him back."
+
+The monk returned to Louis the Debonair and rendered account of his
+mission. War was resolved upon, and the Emperor collected his
+troops--Alemannians, Saxons, Thuringians, Burgundians, and Aquitanians,
+without counting Franks or Gallo-Romans. They began their march, moving
+upon Vannes; Louis was at their head, and the Empress accompanied him,
+but he left her, already ill and fatigued, at Angers. The Franks entered
+the country of the Britons, searched the woods and morasses, found no
+armed men in the open country, but encountered them in scattered and
+scanty companies, at the entrance of all the defiles, on the heights
+commanding pathways, and wherever men could hide themselves and await
+the moment for appearing unexpectedly. The Franks heard them, from amid
+the heather and the brushwood, uttering shrill cries, to give warning
+one to another or to alarm the enemy. The Franks advanced cautiously,
+and at last arrived at the entrance of the thick wood which surrounded
+Morvan's abode. He had not yet set out with the pick of the warriors he
+had about him; but, at the approach of the Franks, he summoned his wife
+and his domestics, and said to them: "Defend ye well this house and
+these woods; as for me, I am going to march forward to collect my
+people; after which to return, but not without booty and spoils." He put
+on his armor, took a javelin in each hand, and mounted his horse. "Thou
+seest," said he to his wife, "these javelins I brandish: I will bring
+them back to thee this very day dyed with the blood of Franks.
+Farewell." Setting out he pierced, followed by his men, through the
+thickness of the forest, and advanced to meet the Franks.
+
+The battle began. The large numbers of the Franks who covered the ground
+for some distance dismayed the Britons, and many of them fled, seeking
+where they might hide themselves. Morvan, beside himself with rage and
+at the head of his most devoted followers, rushed down upon the Franks
+as if to demolish them at a single stroke; and many fell beneath his
+blows. He singled out a warrior of inferior grade, toward whom he made
+at a gallop, and, insulting him by word of mouth, after the ancient
+fashion of the Celtic warriors, cried: "Frank, I am going to give thee
+my first present, a present which I have been keeping for thee a long
+while, and which I hope thou wilt bear in mind;" and launched at him a
+javelin which the other received on his shield. "Proud Briton," replied
+the Frank, "I have received thy present, and I am going to give thee
+mine." He dug both spurs into his horse's sides and galloped down upon
+Morvan, who, clad though he was in a coat of mail, fell pierced by the
+thrust of a lance. The Frank had but time to dismount and cut off his
+head when he fell himself, mortally wounded by one of Morvan's young
+warriors, but not without having, in his turn, dealt the other his
+deathblow. It spreads on all sides that Morvan is dead; and the Franks
+come thronging to the scene of the encounter. There is picked up and
+passed from hand to hand a head all bloody and fearfully disfigured.
+Ditcar the monk is called to see it, and to say whether it is that of
+Morvan; but he has to wash the mass of disfigurement, and to partially
+adjust the hair, before he can pronounce that it is really Morvan's.
+There is then no more doubt; resistance is now impossible; the widow,
+the family and the servants of Morvan arrive, are brought before Louis
+the Debonair, accept all the conditions imposed upon them, and the
+Franks withdraw with the boast that Brittany is henceforth their
+tributary.
+
+On arriving at Angers, Louis found the empress Hermengarde dying; and
+two days afterward she was dead. He had a tender heart which was not
+proof against sorrow; and he testified a desire to abdicate and turn
+monk. But he was dissuaded from his purpose; for it was easy to
+influence his resolutions. A little later, he was advised to marry
+again, and he yielded. Several princesses were introduced; and he chose
+Judith of Bavaria, daughter of Count Welf (Guelf), a family already
+powerful and in later times celebrated. Judith was young, beautiful,
+witty, ambitious, and skilled in the art of making the gift of pleasing
+subserve the passion for ruling. Louis, during his expedition into
+Brittany, had just witnessed the fatal result of a woman's empire over
+her husband; he was destined himself to offer a more striking and more
+long-lived example of it. In 823, he had, by his new empress Judith, a
+son, whom he called Charles, and who was hereafter to be known as
+Charles the Bald. This son became his mother's ruling, if not exclusive,
+passion, and the source of his father's woes. His birth could not fail
+to cause ill-temper and mistrust in Louis' three sons by Hermengarde,
+who were already kings. They had but a short time previously received
+the first proof of their father's weakness. In 822, Louis, repenting of
+his severity toward his nephew, Bernard of Italy, whose eyes he had
+caused to be put out as a punishment for rebellion, and who had died in
+consequence, considered himself bound to perform at Attigny, in the
+church and before the people, a solemn act of penance; which was
+creditable to his honesty and piety, but the details left upon the minds
+of the beholders an impression unfavorable to the Emperor's dignity and
+authority. In 829, during an assembly held at Worms, he, yielding to his
+wife's entreaties, and doubtless also to his own yearnings toward his
+youngest son, set at naught the solemn act whereby, in 817, he had
+shared his dominions among his three elder sons; and took away from two
+of them, in Burgundy and Alemannia, some of the territories he had
+assigned to them, and gave them to the boy Charles for his share.
+Lothair, Pépin, and Louis thereupon revolted. Court rivalries were added
+to family differences. The Emperor had summoned to his side a young
+southron, Bernard by name, duke of Septimania and son of Count William
+of Toulouse, who had gallantly fought the Saracens. He made him his
+chief chamberlain and his favorite counsellor. Bernard was bold,
+ambitious, vain, imperious, and restless. He removed his rivals from
+court, and put in their places his own creatures. He was accused not
+only of abusing the Emperor's favor, but even of carrying on a guilty
+intrigue with the empress Judith. There grew up against him, and, by
+consequence, against the Emperor, the Empress, and their youngest son, a
+powerful opposition, in which certain ecclesiastics, and, among them,
+Wala, abbot of Corbie, cousin-german and but lately one of the privy
+counsellors of Charlemagne, joined eagerly. Some had at heart the unity
+of the empire, which Louis was breaking up more and more; others were
+concerned for the spiritual interests of the Church, which Louis, in
+spite of his piety and by reason of his weakness, often permitted to be
+attacked. Thus strengthened, the conspirators considered themselves
+certain of success. They had the empress Judith carried off and shut up
+in the convent of St. Radegonde at Poitiers; and Louis in person came to
+deliver himself up to them at Compiègne, where they were assembled.
+There they passed a decree to the effect that the power and title of
+emperor were transferred from Louis to Lothair, his eldest son; that the
+act whereby a share of the empire had but lately been assigned to
+Charles was annulled; and that the act of 817, which had regulated the
+partition of Louis' dominions after his death, was once more in force.
+But soon there was a burst of reaction in favor of the Emperor;
+Lothair's two brothers, jealous of his late elevation, made overtures to
+their father; the ecclesiastics were a little ashamed at being mixed up
+in a revolt; the people felt pity for the poor, honest Emperor; and a
+general assembly, meeting at Nimeguen, abolished the acts of Compiègne,
+and restored to Louis his title and his power. But it was not long
+before there was revolt again, originating this time with Pépin, King of
+Aquitaine. Louis fought him, and gave Aquitaine to Charles the Bald. The
+alliance between the three sons of Hermengarde was at once renewed; they
+raised an army; the Emperor marched against them with his; and the two
+hosts met between Colmar and Bâle, in a place called _le Champ rouge_
+("the Field of Red"). Negotiations were set on foot; and Louis was
+called upon to leave his wife Judith and his son Charles, and put
+himself under the guardianship of his elder sons. He refused; but, just
+when the conflict was about to commence, desertion took place in Louis'
+army; most of the prelates, laics, and men-at-arms who had accompanied
+him passed over to the camp of Lothair; and the "Field of Red" became
+the "Field of Falsehood" (_le Champ du Mensonge_). Louis, left almost
+alone, ordered his attendants to withdraw, "being unwilling," he said,
+"that any one of them should lose life or limb on his account," and
+surrendered to his sons. They received him with great demonstrations of
+respect, but without relinquishing the prosecution of their enterprise.
+Lothair hastily collected an assembly, which proclaimed him Emperor,
+with the addition of divers territories to the kingdoms of Aquitaine and
+Bavaria: and, three months afterward, another assembly, meeting at
+Compiègne, declared the emperor Louis to have forfeited the crown, "for
+having, by his faults and incapacity, suffered to sink so sadly low the
+empire which had been raised to grandeur and brought into unity by
+Charlemagne and his predecessors." Louis submitted to this decision;
+himself read out aloud, in the Church of St. Médard at Soissons, but not
+quite unresistingly, a confession, in eight articles, of his faults,
+and, laying his baldric upon the altar, stripped off his royal robe, and
+received from the hands of Ebbo, archbishop of Rheims, the gray vestment
+of a penitent.
+
+Lothair considered his father dethroned for good, and himself henceforth
+sole Emperor; but he was mistaken. For years longer the scenes which
+have just been described kept repeating themselves again and again;
+rivalries and secret plots began once more between the three victorious
+brothers and their partisans; popular feeling revived in favor of Louis;
+a large portion of the clergy shared it; several counts of Neustria and
+Burgundy appeared in arms, in the name of the deposed Emperor; and the
+seductive and able Judith came afresh upon the scene, and gained over to
+the cause of her husband and her son a multitude of friends. In 834, two
+assemblies, one meeting at St. Denis and the other at Thionville,
+annulled all the acts of the assembly of Compiègne, and for the third
+time put Louis in possession of the imperial title and power. He
+displayed no violence in his use of it; but he was growing more and more
+irresolute and weak, when, in 838, the second of his rebellious sons,
+Pépin, king of Aquitaine, died suddenly. Louis, ever under the sway of
+Judith, speedily convoked at Worms, in 839, once more and for the last
+time, a general assembly, whereat, leaving his son Louis of Bavaria
+reduced to his kingdom in Eastern Europe, he divided the rest of his
+dominions into two nearly equal parts, separated by the course of the
+Meuse and the Rhone. Between these two parts he left the choice to
+Lothair, who took the eastern portion, promising at the same time to
+guarantee the western portion to his younger brother Charles. Louis the
+Germanic protested against this partition, and took up arms to resist
+it. His father, the Emperor, set himself in motion toward the Rhine, to
+reduce him to submission; but, on arriving close to Mayence, he caught a
+violent fever, and died on the 20th of June, 840, at the castle
+Ingelheim, on a little island in the river. His last acts were a fresh
+proof of his goodness toward even his rebellious sons and of his
+solicitude for his last-born. He sent to Louis the Germanic his pardon,
+and to Lothair the golden crown and sword, at the same time bidding him
+fulfil his father's wishes on behalf of Charles and Judith.
+
+There is no telling whether, in the credulousness of his good nature,
+Louis had, at his dying hour, any great confidence in the appeal he made
+to his son Lothair, and in the impression which would be produced on his
+other son, Louis of Bavaria, by the pardon bestowed. The prayers of the
+dying are of little avail against violent passions and barbaric manners.
+Scarcely was Louis the Debonair dead, when Lothair was already
+conspiring against young Charles, and was in secret alliance, for his
+despoilment, with Pépin II, the late King of Aquitaine's son, who had
+taken up arms for the purpose of seizing his father's kingdom, in the
+possession of which his grandfather Louis had not been pleased to
+confirm him. Charles suddenly learned that his mother Judith was on the
+point of being besieged in Poitiers by the Aquitanians; and, in spite of
+the friendly protestations sent to him by Lothair, it was not long
+before he discovered the plot formed against him. He was not wanting in
+shrewdness or energy; and, having first provided for his mother's
+safety, he set about forming an alliance, in the cause of their common
+interests, with his other brother, Louis the Germanic, who was equally
+in danger from the ambition of Lothair. The historians of the period do
+not say what negotiator was employed by Charles on this distant and
+delicate mission; but several circumstances indicate that the empress
+Judith herself undertook it; that she went in quest of the King of
+Bavaria; and that it was she who, with her accustomed grace and address,
+determined him to make common cause with his youngest against their
+eldest brother. Divers incidents retarded for a whole year the outburst
+of this family plot, and of the war of which it was the precursor. The
+position of the young king Charles appeared for some time a very bad
+one; but "certain chieftains," says the historian Nithard, "faithful to
+his mother and to him, and having nothing more to lose than life or
+limb, chose rather to die gloriously than to betray their King." The
+arrival of Louis the Germanic with his troops helped to swell the forces
+and increase the confidence of Charles; and it was on the 21st of June,
+841, exactly a year after the death of Louis the Debonair, that the two
+armies, that of Lothair and Pépin on the one side, and that of Charles
+the Bald and Louis the Germanic on the other, stood face to face in the
+neighborhood of the village of Fontenailles, six leagues from Auxerre,
+on the rivulet of Audries. Never, according to such evidence as is
+forthcoming, since the battle on the plains of Châlons against the Huns,
+and that of Poitiers against the Saracens, had so great masses of men
+been engaged. "There would be nothing untruthlike," says that scrupulous
+authority, M. Fauriel, "in putting the whole number of combatants at
+three hundred thousand; and there is nothing to show that either of the
+two armies was much less numerous than the other." However that may be,
+the leaders hesitated for four days to come to blows; and while they
+were hesitating, the old favorite, not only of Louis the Debonair, but
+also, according to several chroniclers, of the empress Judith, held
+himself aloof with his troops in the vicinity, having made equal promise
+of assistance to both sides, and waiting, to govern his decision, for
+the prospect afforded by the first conflict. The battle began on the
+25th of June, at daybreak, and was at first in favor of Lothair; but the
+troops of Charles the Bald recovered the advantage which had been lost
+by those of Louis the Germanic, and the action was soon nothing but a
+terribly simple scene of carnage between enormous masses of men,
+charging hand to hand, again and again, with a front extending over a
+couple of leagues. Before midday the slaughter, the plunder, the
+spoliation of the dead--all was over; the victory of Charles and Louis
+was complete; the victors had retired to their camp, and there remained
+nothing on the field of battle but corpses in thick heaps or a long
+line, according as they had fallen in the disorder of flight or steadily
+fighting in their ranks.... "Accursed be this day!" cries Angilbert, one
+of Lothair's officers, in rough Latin verse; "be it unnumbered in the
+return of the year, but wiped out of all remembrance! Be it unlit by the
+light of the sun! Be it without either dawn or twilight! Accursed, also,
+be this night, this awful night in which fell the brave, the most expert
+in battle! Eye ne'er hath seen more fearful slaughter: in streams of
+blood fell Christian men; the linen vestments of the dead did whiten the
+champaign even as it is whitened by the birds of autumn!"
+
+In spite of this battle, which appeared a decisive one, Lothair made
+zealous efforts to continue the struggle; he scoured the countries
+wherein he hoped to find partisans; to the Saxons he promised the
+unrestricted reëstablishment of their pagan worship, and several of the
+Saxon tribes responded to his appeal. Louis the Germanic and Charles the
+Bald, having information of these preliminaries, resolved to solemnly
+renew their alliance and, seven months after their victory at
+Fontenailles, in February, 842, they repaired both of them, each with
+his army, to Argentaria, on the right bank of the Rhine, between Bâle
+and Strasburg, and there, at an open-air meeting, Louis first,
+addressing the chieftains about him in the German tongue, said: "Ye all
+know how often, since our father's death, Lothair hath attacked us, in
+order to destroy us, this my brother and me. Having never been able, as
+brothers and Christians, or in any just way, to obtain peace from him,
+we were constrained to appeal to the judgment of God. Lothair was beaten
+and retired, whither he could, with his following; for we, restrained by
+paternal affection and moved with compassion for Christian people, were
+unwilling to pursue them to extermination. Neither then nor aforetime
+did we demand aught else save that each of us should be maintained in
+his rights. But he, rebelling against the judgment of God, ceaseth not
+to attack us as enemies, this my brother and me; and he destroyeth our
+peoples with fire and pillage and the sword. That is the cause which
+hath united us afresh; and, as we trow that ye doubt the soundness of
+our alliance and our fraternal union, we have resolved to bind ourselves
+afresh by this oath in your presence, being led thereto by no prompting
+of wicked covetousness, but only that we may secure our common advantage
+in case that, by your aid, God should cause us to obtain peace. If,
+then, I violate--which God forbid--this oath that I am about to take to
+my brother, I hold you all quit of submission to me and of the faith ye
+have sworn to me."
+
+Charles repeated this speech, word for word, to his own troops, in the
+Romance language, in that idiom derived from a mixture of Latin and of
+the tongues of ancient Gaul, and spoken, thenceforth, with varieties of
+dialect and pronunciation, in nearly all parts of Frankish Gaul. After
+this address, Louis pronounced and Charles repeated after him, each in
+his own tongue, the oath couched in these terms: "For the love of God,
+for the Christian people and for our common weal, from this day forth
+and so long as God shall grant me power and knowledge, I will defend
+this my brother and will be an aid to him in everything, as one ought to
+defend his brother, provided that he do likewise unto me; and I will
+never make with Lothair any covenant which may be, to my knowledge, to
+the damage of this my brother."
+
+When the two brothers had thus sworn, the two armies, officers and men,
+took, in their turn, a similar oath, going bail, in a mass, for the
+engagements of their kings. Then they took up their quarters, all of
+them, for some time, between Worms and Mayence, and followed up their
+political proceeding with military fêtes, precursors of the knightly
+tournaments of the Middle Ages. "A place of meeting was fixed," says the
+contemporary historian Nithard, "at a spot suitable for this kind of
+exercises. Here were drawn up, on one side, a certain number of
+combatants, Saxons, Vasconians, Austrasians, or Britons; there were
+ranged, on the opposite side, an equal number of warriors, and the two
+divisions advanced, each against the other, as if to attack. One of
+them, with their bucklers at their backs, took to flight as if to seek,
+in the main body, shelter against those who were pursuing them; then
+suddenly, facing about, they dashed out in pursuit of those before whom
+they had just been flying. This sport lasted until the two kings,
+appearing with all the youth of their suites, rode up at a gallop,
+brandishing their spears and chasing first one lot and then the other.
+It was a fine sight to see so much temper among so many valiant folk,
+for, great as was the number and the mixture of different nationalities,
+no one was insulted or maltreated, though the contrary is often the case
+among men in small numbers and known one to another."
+
+After four or five months of tentative measures or of incidents which
+taught both parties that they could not, either of them, hope to
+completely destroy their opponents, the two allied brothers received at
+Verdun, whither they had repaired to concert their next movement, a
+messenger from Lothair, with peaceful proposals which they were
+unwilling to reject. The principal was that, with the exception of
+Italy, Aquitaine, and Bavaria, to be secured without dispute to their
+then possessors, the Frankish empire should be divided into three
+portions, that the arbiters elected to preside over the partition should
+swear to make it as equal as possible, and that Lothair should have his
+choice, with the title of emperor. About mid-June, 842, the three
+brothers met on an island of the Saône, near Châlons, where they began
+to discuss the questions which divided them; but it was not till more
+than a year after, in August, 843, that assembling, all three of them,
+with their umpires, at Verdun, they at last came to an agreement about
+the partition of the Frankish empire, save the three countries which it
+had been beforehand agreed to accept. Louis kept all the provinces of
+Germany of which he was already in possession, and received besides, on
+the left bank of the Rhine, the towns of Mayence, Worms, and Spire, with
+the territory appertaining to them. Lothair, for his part, had the
+eastern belt of Gaul, bounded on one side by the Rhine and the Alps, on
+the other by the courses of the Meuse, the Saône, and the Rhone,
+starting from the confluence of the two latter rivers, and, further, the
+country comprised between the Meuse and the Scheldt, together with
+certain countships lying to the west of that river. To Charles fell all
+the rest of Gaul: Vasconia or Biscaye, Septimania, the marshes of Spain,
+beyond the Pyrenees; and the other countries of Southern Gaul which had
+enjoyed hitherto, under the title of the kingdom of Aquitaine, a special
+government subordinated to the general government of the empire, but
+distinct from it, lost this last remnant of their Gallo-Roman
+nationality, and became integral portions of Frankish Gaul, which fell
+by partition to Charles the Bald, and formed one and the same kingdom
+under one and the same king.
+
+Thus fell through and disappeared, in 843, by virtue of the treaty of
+Verdun, the second of Charlemagne's grand designs, the resuscitation of
+the Roman Empire by means of the Frankish and Christian masters of Gaul.
+The name of _emperor_ still retained a certain value in the minds of the
+people, and still remained an object of ambition to princes; but the
+empire was completely abolished, and, in its stead, sprang up three
+kingdoms, independent one of another, without any necessary connection
+or relation. One of the three was thenceforth France.
+
+In this great event are comprehended two facts: the disappearance of the
+empire and the formation of the three kingdoms which took its place. The
+first is easily explained. The resuscitation of the Roman Empire had
+been a dream of ambition and ignorance on the part of a great man, but a
+barbarian. Political unity and central, absolute power had been the
+essential characteristics of that empire. They became introduced and
+established, through a long succession of ages, on the ruins of the
+splendid Roman Republic destroyed by its own dissensions, under favor of
+the still great influence of the old Roman senate though fallen from its
+high estate, and beneath the guardianship of the Roman legions and
+Imperial praetorians. Not one of these conditions, not one of these
+forces, was to be met with in the Roman world reigned over by
+Charlemagne. The nation of the Franks and Charlemagne himself were but
+of yesterday; the new Emperor had neither ancient senate to hedge at the
+same time that it obeyed him, nor old bodies of troops to support him.
+Political unity and absolute power were repugnant alike to the
+intellectual and the social condition, to the national manners and
+personal sentiments of the victorious barbarians. The necessity of
+placing their conquests beyond the reach of a new swarm of barbarians
+and the personal ascendency of Charlemagne were the only things which
+gave his government a momentary gleam of success in the way of unity and
+of factitious despotism under the name of empire. In 814 Charlemagne had
+made territorial security an accomplished fact; but the personal power
+he had exercised disappeared with him. The new Gallo-Frankish community
+recovered, under the mighty but gradual influence of Christianity, its
+proper and natural course, producing disruption into different local
+communities and bold struggles for individual liberties, either one with
+another, or against whosoever tried to become their master.
+
+As for the second fact, the formation of the three kingdoms which were
+the issue of the treaty of Verdun, various explanations have been given
+of it. This distribution of certain peoples of Western Europe into three
+distinct and independent groups, Italians, Germans, and French, has been
+attributed at one time to a diversity of histories and manners; at
+another to geographical causes and to what is called the rule of natural
+frontiers; and oftener still to a spirit of nationality and to
+differences of language. Let none of these causes be gainsaid; they all
+exercised some sort of influence, but they are all incomplete in
+themselves and far too redolent of theoretical system. It is true that
+Germany, France, and Italy began at that time to emerge from the chaos
+into which they had been plunged by barbaric invasion and the conquests
+of Charlemagne, and to form themselves into quite distinct nations; but
+there were, in each of the kingdoms of Lothair, of Louis the Germanic,
+and of Charles the Bald, populations widely differing in race, language,
+manners, and geographical affinity, and it required many great events
+and the lapse of many centuries to bring about the degree of national
+unity they now possess. To say nothing touching the agency of individual
+and independent forces, which is always considerable, although so many
+men of intellect ignore it in the present day, what would have happened,
+had any one of the three new kings, Lothair, or Louis the Germanic, or
+Charles the Bald, been a second Charlemagne, as Charlemagne had been a
+second Charles Martel? Who can say that, in such a case, the three
+kingdoms would have taken the form they took in 843?
+
+Happily or unhappily, it was not so; none of Charlemagne's successors
+was capable of exercising on the events of his time, by virtue of his
+brain and his own will, any notable influence.
+
+Attempts at foreign invasion of France were renewed very often and in
+many parts of Gallo-Frankish territory during the whole duration of the
+Carlovingian dynasty, and, even though they failed, they caused the
+population of the kingdom to suffer from cruel ravages. Charlemagne,
+even after his successes against the different barbaric invaders, had
+foreseen the evils which would be inflicted on France by the most
+formidable and most determined of them, the Northmen, coming by sea and
+landing on the coast. The most closely contemporaneous and most given to
+detail of his chroniclers, the monk of St. Gall, tells in prolix and
+pompous but evidently heartfelt and sincere terms the tale of the great
+Emperor's farsightedness.
+
+"Charles, who was ever astir," says he, "arrived by mere hap and
+unexpectedly in a certain town of Narbonnese Gaul. While he was at
+dinner and was as yet unrecognized of any, some corsairs of the Northmen
+came to ply their piracies in the very port. When their vessels were
+descried, they were supposed to be Jewish traders according to some,
+African according to others, and British in the opinion of others; but
+the gifted monarch, perceiving by the build and lightness of the craft,
+that they bare not merchandise but foes, said to his own folk, 'These
+vessels be not laden with merchandise, but manned with cruel foes.' At
+these words all the Franks, in rivalry one with another, run to their
+ships, but uselessly; for the Northmen, indeed, hearing that yonder was
+he whom it was still their wont to call Charles the 'Hammer,'[22] feared
+lest all their fleet should be taken or destroyed in the port, and they
+avoided, by a flight of inconceivable rapidity, not only the glaives,
+but even the eyes of those who were pursuing them.
+
+"Pious Charles, however, a prey to well-grounded fear, rose up from
+table, stationed himself at a window looking eastward, and there
+remained a long while, and his eyes were filled with tears. As none
+durst question him, this warlike prince explained to the grandees who
+were about his person the cause of his movement and of his tears: 'Know
+ye, my lieges, wherefore I weep so bitterly? Of a surety I fear not lest
+these fellows should succeed in injuring me by their miserable piracies;
+but it grieveth me deeply that, while I live, they should have been nigh
+to touching at this shore, and I am a prey to violent sorrow when I
+foresee what evils they will heap upon my descendants and their
+people.'"
+
+[Footnote 22: After his grandfather, Charles Martel.]
+
+The forecast and the dejection of Charles were not unreasonable. It will
+be found that there is special mention made, in the chronicles of the
+ninth and tenth centuries, of forty-seven incursions into France of
+Norwegian, Danish, Swedish, and Irish pirates, all comprised under the
+name of Northmen; and doubtless many other incursions of less gravity
+have left no trace in history. "The Northmen," says Fauriel, "descended
+from the north to the south by a sort of natural gradation or ladder.
+The Scheldt was the first river by the mouth of which they penetrated
+inland; the Seine was the second; the Loire the third. The advance was
+threatening for the countries traversed by the Garonne; and it was in
+844 that vessels freighted with Northmen for the first time ascended
+this last river to a considerable distance inland, and there took
+immense booty. The following year they pillaged and burnt Saintes. In
+846 they got as far as Limoges. The inhabitants, finding themselves
+unable to make head against the dauntless pirates, abandoned their
+hearths, together with all they had not time to carry away. Encouraged
+by these successes the Northmen reappeared next year upon the coasts and
+in the rivers of Aquitaine, and they attempted to take Bordeaux, whence
+they were valorously repulsed by the inhabitants; but in 848, having
+once more laid siege to that city, they were admitted into it at night
+by the Jews, who were there in great force; the city was given up to
+plunder and conflagration; a portion of the people was scattered abroad,
+and the rest put to the sword."
+
+The monasteries and churches, wherein they hoped to find treasures, were
+the favorite object of the Northmen's enterprises; in particular, they
+plundered, at the gates of Paris, the abbey of St. Germain des Prés and
+that of St. Denis, whence they carried off the abbot, who could not
+purchase his freedom save by a heavy ransom. They penetrated more than
+once into Paris itself, and subjected many of its quarters to
+contributions or pillage. The populations grew into the habit of
+suffering and fleeing; and the local lords, and even the kings, made
+arrangement sometimes with the pirates either for saving the royal
+domains from the ravages, or for having their own share therein. In 850
+Pépin, King of Aquitaine, and brother of Charles the Bald, came to an
+understanding with the Northmen who had ascended the Garonne and were
+threatening Toulouse. "They arrived under his guidance," says Fauriel,
+"they laid siege to it, took it and plundered it, not halfwise, not
+hastily, as folks who feared to be surprised, but leisurely, with all
+security, by virtue of a treaty of alliance with one of the kings of the
+country. Throughout Aquitaine there was but one cry of indignation
+against Pépin, and the popularity of Charles was increased in proportion
+to all the horror inspired by the ineffable misdeed of his adversary.
+Charles the Bald himself, if he did not ally himself, as Pépin did, with
+the invaders, took scarce any interest in the fate of the populations
+and scarcely more trouble to protect them, for Hincmar, archbishop of
+Rheims, wrote to him in 859: 'Many folks say that you are incessantly
+repeating that it is not for you to mix yourself up with these
+depredations and robberies, and that everyone has but to defend himself
+as best he may.'"
+
+In the middle and during the last half of the ninth century, a chief of
+the Northmen, named Hastenc or Hastings, appeared several times over on
+the coasts and in the rivers of France, with numerous vessels and a
+following. He had also with him, say the chronicles, a young Norwegian
+or Danish prince, Bioern, called "Ironsides," whom he had educated, and
+who had preferred sharing the fortunes of his governor to living quietly
+with the King, his father. After several expeditions into Western
+France, Hastings became the theme of terrible and very probably fabulous
+stories. He extended his cruises, they say, to the Mediterranean, and,
+having arrived at the coasts of Tuscany, within sight of a city which in
+his ignorance he took for Rome, he resolved to pillage it; but, not
+feeling strong enough to attack it by assault, he sent to the bishop to
+say he was very ill, felt a wish to become a Christian, and begged to be
+baptized. Some days afterward his comrades spread a report that he was
+dead, and claimed for him the honors of a solemn burial. The bishop
+consented; the coffin of Hastings was carried into the church, attended
+by a large number of his followers, without visible weapons; but, in the
+middle of the ceremony, Hastings suddenly leaped up, sword in hand, from
+his coffin; his followers displayed the weapons they had concealed,
+closed the doors, slew the priests, pillaged the ecclesiastical
+treasures, and reëmbarked before the very eyes of the stupefied
+population, to go and resume, on the coasts of France, their incursions
+and their ravages.
+
+Whether they were true or false, these rumors of bold artifices and
+distant expeditions on the part of Hastings aggravated the dismay
+inspired by his appearance. He penetrated into the interior of the
+country, took possession of Chartres, and appeared before Paris, where
+Charles the Bald, intrenched at St. Denis, was deliberating with his
+prelates and barons as to how he might resist the Northmen or treat with
+them. The chronicle says that the barons advised resistance, but that
+the King preferred negotiation, and sent the abbot of St. Denis, "the
+which was an exceeding wise man," to Hastings, who, "after long parley
+and by reason of large gifts and promises," consented to stop his
+cruisings, to become a Christian, and to settle in the countship of
+Chartres, "which the King gave him as an hereditary possession, with all
+its appurtenances." According to other accounts, it was only some years
+later, under the young king Louis III, grandson of Charles the Bald,
+that Hastings was induced, either by reverses or by payment of money, to
+cease from his piracies and accept in recompense the countship of
+Chartres. Whatever may have been the date, he was, it is believed, the
+first chieftain of the Northmen who renounced a life of adventure and
+plunder, to become, in France, a great landed proprietor and a count of
+the King's.
+
+A greater chieftain of the Northmen than Hastings was soon to follow his
+example, and found Normandy in France; but before Rolf, that is, Rollo,
+came and gave the name of his race to a French province, the piratical
+Northmen were again to attempt a greater blow against France and to
+suffer a great reverse.
+
+In November, 885, under the reign of Charles the Fat, after having, for
+more than forty years, irregularly ravaged France, they resolved to
+unite their forces in order at length to obtain possession of Paris,
+whose outskirts they had so often pillaged without having been able to
+enter the heart of the place. Two bodies of troops were set in motion:
+one, under the command of Rollo, who was already famous among his
+comrades, marched on Rouen; the other went right up the course of the
+Seine, under the orders of Siegfried, whom the Northmen called their
+king. Rollo took Rouen, and pushed on at once for Paris. Duke Renaud,
+general of the Gallo-Frankish troops, went to encounter him on the banks
+of the Eure, and sent to him, to sound his intentions, Hastings, the
+newly made count of Chartres. "Valiant warriors," said Hastings to
+Rollo, "whence come ye? What seek ye here? What is the name of your lord
+and master? Tell us this; for we be sent unto you by the King of the
+Franks." "We be Danes," answered Rollo, "and all be equally masters
+among us. We be come to drive out the inhabitants of this land, and to
+subject it as our own country. But who art thou, thou who speakest so
+glibly?" "Ye have sometime heard tell of one Hastings, who, issuing
+forth from among you, came hither with much shipping and made desert a
+great part of the kingdom of the Franks?" "Yes," said Rollo, "we have
+heard tell of him; Hastings began well and ended ill." "Will ye yield
+you to King Charles?" asked Hastings. "We yield," was the answer, "to
+none; all that we shall take by our arms we will keep as our right. Go
+and tell this, if thou wilt, to the King, whose envoy thou boastest to
+be."
+
+Hastings returned to the Gallo-Frankish army, and Rollo prepared to
+march on Paris. Hastings had gone back somewhat troubled in mind. Now
+there was among the Franks one Count Tetbold (Thibault), who greatly
+coveted the countship of Chartres, and he said to Hastings: "Why
+slumberest thou softly? Knowest thou not that King Charles doth purpose
+thy death by cause of all the Christian blood that thou didst aforetime
+unjustly shed? Bethink thee of all the evil thou hast done him, by
+reason whereof he purposeth to drive thee from his land. Take heed to
+thyself that thou be not smitten unawares." Hastings, dismayed, at once
+sold to Tetbold the town of Chartres, and, removing all that belonged to
+him, departed to go and resume, for all that appears, his old course of
+life.
+
+On the 25th of November, 885, all the forces of the Northmen formed a
+junction before Paris; seven hundred huge barks covered two leagues of
+the Seine, bringing, it is said, more than thirty thousand men. The
+chieftains were astonished at sight of the new fortifications of the
+city, a double wall of circumvallation, the bridges crowned with towers,
+and in the environs the ramparts of the abbeys of St. Denis and St.
+Germain solidly rebuilt. Siegfried hesitated to attack a town so well
+defended. He demanded to enter alone and have an interview with the
+bishop, Gozlin. "Take pity on thyself and thy flock," said he to him;
+"let us pass through the city; we will in no wise touch the town; we
+will do our best to preserve, for thee and Count Eudes, all your
+possessions." "This city," replied the bishop, "hath been confided unto
+us by the emperor Charles, king and ruler, under God, of the powers of
+the earth. He hath confided it unto us, not that it should cause the
+ruin but the salvation of the kingdom. If peradventure these walls had
+been confided to thy keeping as they have been to mine, wouldst thou do
+as thou biddest me?"
+
+"If ever I do so," answered Siegfried, "may my head be condemned to fall
+by the sword and serve as food to the dogs! But if thou yield not to our
+prayers, so soon as the sun shall commence his course our armies will
+launch upon thee their poisoned arrows; and when the sun shall end his
+course, they will give thee over to all the horrors of famine; and this
+will they do from year to year."
+
+The bishop, however, persisted, without further discussion; being as
+certain of Count Eudes as he was of himself. Eudes, who was young and
+but recently made Count of Paris, was the eldest son of Robert the
+Strong, Count of Anjou, of the same line as Charlemagne, and but lately
+slain in battle against the Northmen. Paris had for defenders two
+heroes, one of the Church and the other of the empire: the faith of the
+Christian and the fealty of the vassal; the conscientiousness of the
+priest and the honor of the warrior.
+
+The siege lasted thirteen months, whiles pushed vigorously forward with
+eight several assaults, whiles maintained by close investment, and with
+all the alternations of success and reverse, all the intermixture of
+brilliant daring and obscure sufferings that can occur when the
+assailants are determined and the defenders devoted. Not only a
+contemporary but an eye-witness, Abbo, a monk of St. Germain des Près,
+has recounted the details in a long poem, wherein the writer, devoid of
+talent, adds nothing to the simple representation of events; it is
+history itself which gives to Abbo's poem a high degree of interest. We
+do not possess, in reference to these continual struggles of the
+Northmen with the Gallo-Frankish populations, any other document which
+is equally precise and complete, or which could make us so well
+acquainted with all the incidents, all the phases of this irregular
+warfare between two peoples, one without a government, the other without
+a country. The bishop, Gozlin, died during the siege. Count Eudes
+quitted Paris for a time to go and beg aid of the Emperor; but the
+Parisians soon saw him reappear on the heights of Montmartre with three
+battalions of troops, and he reëntered the town, spurring on his horse
+and striking right and left with his battle-axe through the ranks of the
+dumfounded besiegers. The struggle was prolonged throughout the summer;
+and when, in November, 886, Charles the Fat at last appeared before
+Paris, "with a large army of all nations," it was to purchase the
+retreat of the Northmen at the cost of a heavy ransom, and by allowing
+them to go and winter in Burgundy, "whereof the inhabitants obeyed not
+the Emperor."
+
+Some months afterward, in 887, Charles the Fat was deposed, at a diet
+held on the banks of the Rhine, by the grandees of Germanic France; and
+Arnulf, a natural son of Carloman, the brother of Louis III, was
+proclaimed emperor in his stead. At the same time Count Eudes, the
+gallant defender of Paris, was elected King at Compiègne, and crowned by
+the archbishop of Sens. Guy, Duke of Spoleto, descended from Charlemagne
+in the female line, hastened to France and was declared king at Langres
+by the bishop of that town, but returned with precipitation to Italy,
+seeing no chance of maintaining himself in his French kingship.
+Elsewhere Boso, Duke of Arles, became King of Provence, and the
+Burgundian Count Rudolph had himself crowned at St. Maurice, in the
+Valais, King of transjuran Burgundy. There was still in France a
+legitimate Carlovingian, a son of Louis the Stutterer, who was hereafter
+to become Charles the Simple; but being only a child, he had been
+rejected or completely forgotten, and, in the interval that was to
+elapse ere his time should arrive, kings were being made in all
+directions.
+
+In the midst of this confusion the Northmen, though they kept at a
+distance from Paris, pursued in Western France their cruising and
+plundering. In Rollo they had a chieftain far superior to his vagabond
+predecessors. Though he still led the same life that they had, he
+displayed therein other faculties, other inclinations, other views. In
+his youth he had made an expedition to England, and had there contracted
+a real friendship with the wise king Alfred the Great. During a campaign
+in Friesland he had taken prisoner Rainier, Count of Hainault; and
+Alberade, Countess of Brabant, made a request to Rollo for her husband's
+release, offering in return to set free twelve captains of the Northmen,
+her prisoners, and to give up all the gold she possessed. Rollo took
+only half the gold, and restored to the countess her husband. When, in
+885, he became master of Rouen, instead of devastating the city after
+the fashion of his kind, he respected the buildings, had the walls
+repaired, and humored the inhabitants. In spite of his violent and
+extortionate practices where he met with obstinate resistance, there
+were to be discerned in him symptoms of more noble sentiments and of an
+instinctive leaning toward order, civilization, and government. After
+the deposition of Charles the Fat and during the reign of Eudes, a
+lively struggle was maintained between the Frankish King and the
+chieftain of the Northmen, who had neither of them forgotten their early
+encounters. They strove, one against the other, with varied fortunes;
+Eudes succeeded in beating the Northmen at Montfaucon, but was beaten in
+Vermandois by another band, commanded, it is said, by the veteran
+Hastings, sometime Count of Chartres.
+
+Rollo, too, had his share at one time of success, at another of reverse;
+but he made himself master of several important towns, showed a
+disposition to treat the quiet populations gently, and made a fresh trip
+to England, during which he renewed friendly relations with her King,
+Athelstan, the successor of Alfred the Great. He thus became, from day
+to day, more reputable as well as more formidable in France, insomuch
+that Eudes himself was obliged to have recourse, in dealing with him, to
+negotiations and presents. When, in 898, Eudes was dead, and Charles the
+Simple, at hardly nineteen years of age, had been recognized sole King
+of France, the ascendency of Rollo became such that the necessity of
+treating with him was clear. In 911 Charles, by the advice of his
+councillors and, among them, of Robert, brother of the late king Eudes,
+who had himself become Count of Paris and Duke of France, sent to the
+chieftain of the Northmen Franco, Archbishop of Rouen, with orders to
+offer him the cession of a considerable portion of Neustria and the hand
+of his young daughter Gisèle, on condition that he became a Christian
+and acknowledged himself the King's vassal. Rollo, by the advice of his
+comrades, received these overtures with a good grace and agreed to a
+truce for three months, during which they might treat about peace. On
+the day fixed Charles, accompanied by Duke Robert, and Rollo, surrounded
+by his warriors, repaired to St. Clair-sur-Epte, on the opposite banks
+of the river, and exchanged numerous messages. Charles offered Rollo
+Flanders, which the Northman refused, considering it too swampy; as to
+the maritime portion of Neustria he would not be contented with it; it
+was, he said, covered with forests, and had become quite a stranger to
+the ploughshare by reason of the Northmen's incessant incursions. He
+demanded the addition of territories taken from Brittany, and that the
+princes of that province, Bérenger and Alan, lords, respectively, of
+Redon and Dol, should take the oath of fidelity to him. When matters had
+been arranged on this basis, "the bishops told Rollo that he who
+received such a gift as the duchy of Normandy was bound to kiss the
+King's foot. 'Never,' quoth Rollo, 'will I bend the knee before the
+knees of any, and I will kiss the foot of none.' At the solicitation of
+the Franks he then ordered one of his warriors to kiss the King's foot.
+The Northman, remaining bolt upright, took hold of the King's foot,
+raised it to his mouth, and so made the King fall backward, which caused
+great bursts of laughter and much disturbance among the throng. Then the
+King and all the grandees who were about him, prelates, abbots, dukes,
+and counts, swore, in the name of the Catholic faith, that they would
+protect the patrician Rollo in his life, his members, and his folk, and
+would guarantee to him the possession of the aforesaid land, to him and
+his descendants forever; after which the King, well satisfied, returned
+to his domains; and Rollo departed with Duke Robert for the town of
+Rouen."
+
+The dignity of Charles the Simple had no reason to be well satisfied;
+but the great political question which, a century before, caused
+Charlemagne such lively anxiety was solved; the most dangerous, the most
+incessantly renewed of all foreign invasions, those of the Northmen,
+ceased to threaten France. The vagabond pirates had a country to
+cultivate and defend; the Northmen were becoming French.
+
+
+
+
+CAREER OF ALFRED THE GREAT
+
+A.D. 871-901
+
+T. HUGHES
+
+J.R. GREEN
+
+
+(Alfred the Great was the grandson of Egbert, King of the West Saxons,
+who during a reign of thirty-seven years consolidated in the Saxon
+heptarchy the seven Teutonic kingdoms into which Anglia or England had
+been divided, since the expulsion of the Britons by the Saxons about
+585. In the latter part of Egbert's reign the Danish Northmen appeared
+in the estuaries and rivers of England, sacking and burning the towns
+along their banks. Ethelwulf who had been made King of Kent in 828, and
+succeeded his father Egbert as King of Anglia in 837, was early occupied
+in resisting and repelling attacks along his coasts, and by several
+successful pitched battles with the Danish invaders obtained comparative
+freedom from their visits for eight years. Ethelwulf had married
+Osburga, the daughter of Oslac his cup-bearer, and had a daughter and
+five sons, of whom Alfred, the youngest, was born in 849. Part of
+Alfred's childhood was spent in Rome. At Compiègne and Verberie among
+his playmates were Charles, the boy king of Aquitaine, and Judith,
+children of the French king Charles the Bald. Judith at fourteen years
+of age became Ethelwulf's second wife, and when the old King died two
+years later, to the amazement and scandal of the nation married her
+stepson Ethelbald.
+
+According to Ethelwulf's will, Ethelbald became King of Wessex,
+Ethelbert, the second son, King of Kent, while Ethelred and Alfred were
+to be in the line of succession to Ethelbald. Ethelbald died in 860, and
+Judith returned to France, subsequently marrying Baldwin, Count of
+Flanders. Ethelbert as successor joined the kingdoms of Wessex and Kent.
+Alfred lived at the court of Ethelbert, and became noted for the
+intelligence and studious activities which were to make his future reign
+the conspicuous epoch in English history, so brilliantly commemorated a
+thousand years after his death in 901, in the millenary celebrated in
+Winchester and its neighborhood in 1901.
+
+Ethelbert died in 866 and was succeeded by Ethelred. In 868 Alfred
+married Elswitha, the daughter of Ethelred Mucil of Mercia. Meanwhile
+the Danes had resumed their predatory excursions, and in the winter of
+870-871 Ethelred accompanied by Alfred attacked them at Reading, but
+after an initial victory was repulsed. Four days later, Ethelred and
+Alfred with their forces were attacked on Ashdown near White Horse Hill;
+after a heavy slaughter the Danes were out to flight. The Danes,
+however, reinforced by Guthrum with new troops from over the sea, within
+a fortnight resumed offensive operations, and at Merton, two months
+later, Ethelred was mortally wounded. He died almost immediately after
+the battle, and "at the age of twenty-three Alfred ascended the throne
+of his fathers, which was tottering, as it seemed, to its fall.")
+
+
+THOMAS HUGHES
+
+The throne of the West Saxons was not an inheritance to be desired in
+the year 871, when Alfred succeeded his gallant brother. It descended on
+him without comment or ceremony, as a matter of course. There was not
+even an assembly of the witan to declare the succession as in ordinary
+times. With Guthrum and Hinguar in their intrenched camp at the
+confluence of the Thames and Kennet, and fresh bands of marauders
+sailing up the former river, and constantly swelling the ranks of the
+pagan army during these summer months, there was neither time nor heart
+among the wise men of the West Saxons for strict adherence to the letter
+of the constitution, however venerable. The succession had already been
+settled by the Great Council, when they formally accepted the provisions
+of Ethelwulf's will, that his three sons should succeed, to the
+exclusion of the children of any one of them.
+
+The idea of strict hereditary succession has taken so strong a hold of
+us English in later times that it is necessary constantly to insist that
+our old English kingship was elective. Alfred's title was based on
+election; and so little was the idea of usurpation, or of any wrong done
+to the two infant sons of Ethelred, connected with his accession, that
+even the lineal descendant of one of those sons, in his chronicle of
+that eventful year, does not pause to notice the fact that Ethelred left
+children. He is writing to his "beloved cousin Matilda," to instruct her
+in the things which he had received from ancient traditions, "of the
+history of our race down to these two kings from whom we have our
+origin." "The fourth son of Ethelwulf," he writes, "was Ethelred, who,
+after the death of Ethelbert, succeeded to the kingdom, and was also my
+grandfather's grandfather. The fifth was Alfred, who succeeded after all
+the others to the whole sovereignty, and was your grandfather's
+grandfather." And so passes on to the next facts, without a word as to
+the claims of his own lineal ancestor, though he had paused in his
+narrative at this point for the special purpose of introducing a little
+family episode.
+
+When Alfred had buried his brother in the cloisters of Wimborne Minster,
+and had time to look out from his Dorsetshire resting-place, and take
+stock of the immediate prospects and work which lay before him, we can
+well believe that those historians are right who have told us that for
+the moment he lost heart and hope, and suffered himself to doubt whether
+God would by his hand deliver the afflicted nation from its terrible
+straits. In the eight pitched battles which we find by the _Saxon
+Chronicle_ (Asser giving seven only) had already been fought with the
+pagan army, the flower of the youth of these parts of the West Saxon
+kingdom must have fallen. The other Teutonic kingdoms of the island, of
+which he was overlord, and so bound to defend, had ceased to exist
+except in name, or lay utterly powerless, like Mercia, awaiting their
+doom. Kent, Sussex, and Surrey, which were now an integral part of the
+royal inheritance of his own family, were at the mercy of his enemies,
+and he without a hope of striking a blow for them. London had been
+pillaged, and was in ruins. Even in Wessex proper, Berkshire and
+Hampshire, with parts of Wilts and Dorset, had been crossed and
+recrossed by marauding bands, in whose track only smoking ruins and dead
+bodies were found. "The land was as the garden of Eden before them, and
+behind them a desolate wilderness." These bands were at this very moment
+on foot, striking into new districts farther to the southwest than they
+had yet reached. If the rich lands of Somersetshire and Devonshire, and
+the yet unplundered parts of Wilts and Dorset, are to be saved, it must
+be by prompt and decisive fighting, and it is time for a king to be in
+the field. But it is a month from his brother's death before Alfred can
+gather men enough round his standard to take the field openly. Even
+then, when he fights, it is "almost against his will," for his ranks are
+sadly thin, and the whole pagan army are before him, at Wilton near
+Salisbury. The action would seem to have been brought on by the
+impetuosity of Alfred's own men, whose spirit was still unbroken, and
+their confidence in their young King enthusiastic. There was a long and
+fierce fight as usual, during the earlier part of which the Saxons had
+the advantage, though greatly outnumbered.
+
+But again we get glimpses of the old trap of a feigned flight and
+ambuscade, into which they fell, and so again lose "possession of the
+place of death," the ultimate test of victory. "This year," says the
+_Saxon Chronicle_, "nine general battles were fought against the army in
+the kingdom south of the Thames; besides which Alfred, the king's
+brother, and single aldermen and king's thanes, oftentimes made attacks
+on them, which were not counted; and within the year one king and nine
+jarls [earls] were slain." Wilton was the last of these general actions,
+and not long afterward, probably in the autumn, Alfred made peace with
+the pagans, on condition that they should quit Wessex at once.
+
+They were probably allowed to carry off whatever spoils they may have
+been able to accumulate in their Reading camp, but I can find no
+authority for believing that Alfred fell into the fatal and humiliating
+mistake of either paying them anything or giving hostages or promising
+tribute. This young King, who, as crown prince, led the West Saxons up
+the slopes at Ashdown, when Bagsac, the two Sidrocs, and the rest were
+killed, and who has very much their own way of fighting--going into the
+clash of arms "when the hard steel rings upon the high helmets," and
+"the beasts of prey have ample spoil," like a veritable child of
+Odin--is clearly one whom it is best to let alone, at any rate so long
+as easy plunder and rich lands are to be found elsewhere, without such
+poison-mad fighting for every herd of cattle and rood of ground. Indeed,
+I think the careful reader may trace from the date of Ashdown a decided
+unwillingness on the part of the Danes to meet Alfred, except when they
+could catch him at disastrous odds. They succeeded, indeed, for a time
+in overrunning almost the whole of his kingdom, in driving him an exile
+for a few wretched weeks to the shelter of his own forests; but whenever
+he was once fairly in the field they preferred taking refuge in strong
+places, and offering treaties and hostages to the actual arbitrament of
+battle.
+
+So the pagan army quitted Reading, and wintered in 872 in the
+neighborhood of London, at which place they received proposals from
+Buhred, King of the Mercians, Alfred's brother-in-law, and for a money
+payment pass him and his people contemptuously by for the time, making
+some kind of treaty of peace with them, and go northward into what has
+now become their own country. They winter in Lincolnshire, gathering
+fresh strength during 873 from the never-failing sources of supply
+across the narrow seas. Again, however, in this year of ominous rest
+they renew their sham peace with poor Buhred and his Mercians, who thus
+manage to tide it over another winter. In 874, however, their time has
+come. In the spring, the pagan army under the three kings, Guthrum,
+Oskytal, and Amund, burst into Mercia. In this one only of the English
+Teutonic kingdoms they find neither fighting nor suffering hero to cross
+their way, and leave behind for a thousand years the memory of a noble
+end, cut out there in some half-dozen lines of an old chronicler, but
+full of life and inspiration to this day for all Englishmen. The whole
+country is overrun, and reduced under pagan rule, without a blow struck,
+so far as we know, and within the year.
+
+Poor Buhred, titular King of the Mercians, who has made believe to rule
+this English kingdom these twenty-two years--who in his time has marched
+with his father-in-law Ethelwulf across North Wales--has beleaguered
+Nottingham with his brothers-in-law, Ethelred and Alfred, six years
+back, not without show of manhood--sees for his part nothing for it
+under such circumstances but to get away as swiftly as possible, as many
+so-called kings have done before him, and since. The West Saxon court is
+no place for him, quite other views of kingship prevailing in those
+parts. So the poor Buhred breaks away from his anchors, leaving his wife
+Ethelswitha even, in his haste, to take refuge with her brother; or is
+it that the heart of the daughter of the race of Cerdic swells against
+leaving the land which her sires had won, the people they had planted
+there, in the moment of sorest need? In any case Buhred drifts away
+alone across into France, and so toward the winter to Rome. There he
+dies at once--about Christmas-time, 874--of shame and sorrow probably,
+or of a broken heart as we say; at any rate having this kingly gift left
+in him, that he cannot live and look on the ruin of his people, as St.
+Edmund's brother Edwold is doing in these same years, "near a clear well
+at Carnelia, in Dorsetshire," doing the hermit business there on bread
+and water.
+
+The English in Rome bury away poor Buhred, with all the honors, in the
+Church of St. Mary's, to which the English schools rebuilt by his
+father-in-law Ethelwulf were attached. Ethelswitha visited, or started
+to visit, the tomb years later, we are told, in 888, when Mercia had
+risen to new life under her great brother's rule. Through these same
+months Guthrum, Oskytal, and the rest are wintering at Repton, after
+destroying there the cloister where the kingly line of Mercia lie;
+disturbing perhaps the bones of the great Offa, whom Charlemagne had to
+treat as an equal.
+
+Neither of the pagan kings is inclined at this time to settle in Mercia;
+so, casting about what to do with it, they light on "a certain foolish
+man," a king's thane, one Ceolwulf, and set him up as a sort of King
+Popinjay. From this Ceolwulf they take hostages for the payment of
+yearly tribute--to be wrung out of these poor Mercians on pain of
+dethronement--and for the surrender of the kingdom to them on whatever
+day they would have it back again. Foolish king's thanes, turned into
+King Popinjays by pagans, and left to play at government on such terms,
+are not pleasant or profitable objects in such times as these of one
+thousand years since--or indeed in any times, for the matter of that. So
+let us finish with Ceolwulf, just noting that a year or two later his
+pagan lords seem to have found much of the spoil of monasteries, and the
+pickings of earl and churl, of folkland and bookland, sticking to his
+fingers, instead of finding its way to their coffers. This was far from
+their meaning in setting him up in the high places of Mercia. So they
+strip him and thrust him out, and he dies in beggary.
+
+This, then, is the winter's work of the great pagan army at Repton,
+Alfred watching them and their work doubtless with keen eye--not without
+misgivings too at their numbers, swollen again to terrible proportions
+since they sailed away down Thames after Wilton fight. It will take
+years yet before the gaps in the fighting strength of Wessex, left by
+those nine pitched battles, and other smaller fights, will be filled by
+the crop of youths passing from childhood to manhood. An anxious
+thought, that, for a young king.
+
+The pagans, however, are not yet ready for another throw for Wessex; and
+so when Mercia is sucked dry for the present, and will no longer
+suitably maintain so great a host, they again sever. Halfdene, who would
+seem to have joined them recently, takes a large part of the army away
+with him northward. Settling his head-quarters by the river Tyne, he
+subdues all the land, and "ofttimes spoils the Picts and the Strathclyde
+Britons." Among other holy places in those parts, Halfdene visits the
+Isle of Lindisfarne, hoping perhaps in his pagan soul not only to commit
+ordinary sacrilege in the holy places there, which is every-day work for
+the like of him, but even to lay impious hands on, and to treat with
+indignity, the remains of that holy man St. Cuthbert, who has become, in
+due course, patron and guardian saint of hunters, and of that scourge of
+pagans, Alfred the West Saxon. If such were his thoughts, he is
+disappointed of his sacrilege; for Bishop Eardulf and Abbot
+Eadred--devout and strenuous persons--having timely warning of his
+approach, carry away the sainted body from Lindisfarne, and for nine
+years hide with it up and down the distracted northern counties, now
+here, now there, moving that sacred treasure from place to place until
+this bitterness is overpast, and holy persons and things, dead or
+living, are no longer in danger, and the bodies of saints may rest
+safely in fixed shrines; the pagan armies and disorderly persons of all
+kinds having been converted or suppressed in the mean time; for which
+good deed the royal Alfred--in whose calendar St. Cuthbert, patron of
+huntsmen, stands very high--will surely warmly befriend them hereafter,
+when he has settled his accounts with many persons and things. From the
+time of this incursion of Halfdene, Northumbria may be considered once
+more a settled state, but a Danish, not a Saxon one.
+
+The rest and greater part of the army, under Guthrum, Oskytal, and
+Amund, on leaving Repton, strike southeast, through what was "Landlord"
+Edmund's country, to Cambridge, where, in their usual heathen way, they
+pass the winter of 875.
+
+The downfall, exile, and death of his brother-in-law in 874 must have
+warned Alfred, if he had any need of warning, that no treaty could bind
+these foemen, and that he had nothing to look for but the same measure
+as soon as the pagan leaders felt themselves strong enough to mete it
+out to him and Wessex. In the following year we accordingly find him on
+the alert, and taking action in a new direction. These heathen pirates,
+he sees, fight his people at terrible advantage by reason of their
+command of the sea. This enables them to choose their own point of
+attack, not only along the sea-coast, but up every river as far as their
+light galleys can swim; to retreat unmolested, at their own time,
+whenever the fortune of war turns against them; to bring reinforcements
+of men and supplies to the scene of action without fear of hindrance.
+His Saxons have long since given up their seafaring habits. They have
+become before all things an agricultural people, drawing almost
+everything they need from their own soil. The few foreign tastes they
+have are supplied by foreign traders. However, if Wessex is to be made
+safe the sea-kings must be met on their own element; and so, with what
+expenditure of patience and money and encouraging words and example we
+may easily conjecture, the young King gets together a small fleet, and
+himself takes command of it. We have no clew to the point on the south
+coast where the admiral of twenty five fights his first naval action,
+but know only that in the summer of 875 he is cruising with his fleet,
+and meets seven tall ships of the enemy. One of these he captures, and
+the rest make off after a hard fight--no small encouragement to the
+sailor King, who has thus for another year saved Saxon homesteads from
+devastation by fire and sword.
+
+The second wave of invasion had now at last gathered weight and volume
+enough, and broke on the King and people of the West Saxons.
+
+The year 876 was still young when the whole pagan army, which had
+wintered at and about Cambridge, marched to their ships and put to sea.
+Guthrum was in command, with the other two kings, Anketel and Amund, as
+his lieutenants, under whom was a host as formidable as that which had
+marched across Mercia through forest and waste, and sailed up the Thames
+five years before to the assault of Reading. There must have been some
+few days of harassing suspense, for we cannot suppose that Alfred was
+not aware of the movements of his terrible foes. Probably his new fleet
+cruised off the south coast on the watch for them, and all up the Thames
+there were gloomy watchings and forebodings of a repetition of the evil
+days of 871. But the suspense was soon over. Passing by the Thames'
+mouth, and through Dover Straits, the pagan fleet sailed, and westward
+still past many tempting harbors and rivers' mouths, until they came off
+the coast of Dorsetshire. There they land at Wareham, and seize and
+fortify the neck of land between the rivers Frome and Piddle, on which
+stood, when they landed, a fortress of the West Saxons and a monastery
+of holy virgins. Fortress and monastery fell into the hands of the
+Danes, who set to work at once to throw up earthworks and otherwise
+fortify a space large enough to contain their army, and all spoil
+brought in by marauding bands from this hitherto unplundered country.
+This fortified camp was soon very strong, except on the western side,
+upon which Alfred shortly appeared with a body of horsemen and such
+other troops as could be gathered hastily together. The detachment of
+the pagans, who were already out pillaging the whole neighborhood, fell
+back apparently before him, concentrating on the Wareham camp. Before
+its outworks Alfred paused. He is too experienced a soldier now to risk
+at the outset of a campaign such a disaster as that which he and
+Ethelred had sustained in their attempt to assault the camp at Reading
+in 871. He is just strong enough to keep the pagans within their lines,
+but has no margin to spare. So he sits down before the camp, but no
+battle is fought, neither he nor Guthrum caring to bring matters to that
+issue. Soon negotiations are commenced, and again a treaty is made.
+
+On this occasion Alfred would seem to have taken special pains to bind
+his faithless foe. All the holy relics which could be procured from holy
+places in the neighborhood were brought together, that he himself and
+his people might set the example of pledging themselves in the most
+solemn manner known to Christian men. Then a holy ring or bracelet,
+smeared with the blood of beasts sacrificed to Woden, was placed on a
+heathen altar. Upon this Guthrum and his fellow kings and earls swore on
+behalf of the army that they would quit the King's country and give
+hostages. Such an oath had never been sworn by Danish leader on English
+soil before. It was the most solemn known to them. They would seem also
+to have sworn on Alfred's relics, as an extra proof of their sincerity
+for this once, and their hostages "from among the most renowned men in
+the army" were duly handed over. Alfred now relaxed his watch, even if
+he did not withdraw with the main body of his army, leaving his horse to
+see that the terms of the treaty were performed, and to watch the
+Wareham camp until the departure of the pagan host. But neither oath on
+sacred ring, nor the risk to their hostages, weighed with Guthrum and
+his followers when any advantage was to be gained by treachery. They
+steal out of the camp by night, surprise and murder the Saxon horsemen,
+seize the horses, and strike across the country, the mounted men
+leading, to Exeter, but leaving a sufficient garrison to hold Wareham
+for the present. They surprise and get possession of the western
+capital, and there settle down to pass the winter. Rollo, fiercest of
+the vikings, is said by Asser to have passed the winter with them in
+their Exeter quarters on his way to Normandy; but whether the great
+robber himself were here or not, it is certain that the channel swarmed
+with pirate fleets, who could put in to Wareham or Exeter at their
+discretion, and find a safe stronghold in either place from which to
+carry fire and sword through the unhappy country.
+
+Alfred had vainly endeavored to overtake the march to Exeter in the
+autumn of 876, and, failing in the pursuit, had disbanded his own troops
+as usual, allowing them to go to their own homes until the spring.
+Before he could be afoot again in the spring of 877 the main body of the
+pagans at Exeter had made that city too strong for any attempt at
+assault, so the King and his troops could do no more than beleaguer it
+on the land side, as he had done at Wareham. But Guthrum could laugh at
+all efforts of his great antagonist, and wait in confidence the sure
+disbanding of the Saxon troops at harvest time, so long as his ships
+held the sea.
+
+Supplies were running short in Exeter, but the Exe was open and
+communications going on with Wareham. It is arranged that the camp there
+shall be broken up, and the whole garrison with their spoil shall join
+head-quarters. One hundred and twenty Danish war-galleys are freighted,
+and beat down channel, but are baffled by adverse winds for nearly a
+month. They and all their supplies may be looked for any day in the Exe
+when the wind changes. Alfred, from his camp before Exeter, sends to his
+little fleet to put to sea. He cannot himself be with them as in their
+first action, for he knows well that Guthrum will seize the first moment
+of his absence to sally from Exeter, break the Saxon lines, and scatter
+his army in roving bands over Devonshire, on their way back to the
+eastern kingdom. The Saxon fleet puts out, manned itself, as some say,
+partly with sea-robbers, hired to fight their own people. However
+manned, it attacks bravely a portion of the pirates. But a mightier
+power than the fleet fought for Alfred at this crisis. First a dense fog
+and then a great storm came on, bursting on the south coast with such
+fury that the pagans lost no less than one hundred of their chief ships
+off Swanage, as mighty a deliverance perhaps for England--though the
+memory of it is nearly forgotten--as that which began in the same seas
+seven hundred years later, when Drake and the sea-kings of the sixteenth
+century were hanging on the rear of the Spanish _armada_ along the Devon
+and Dorset coasts, while the beacons blazed up all over England and the
+whole nation flew to arms.
+
+The destruction of the fleet decided the fate of the siege of Exeter.
+Once more negotiations are opened by the pagans; once more Alfred,
+fearful of driving them to extremities, listens, treats, and finally
+accepts oaths and more hostages, acknowledging probably in sorrow to
+himself that he can for the moment do no better. And on this occasion
+Guthrum, being caught far from home, and without supplies or ships,
+"keeps the peace well," moving as we conjecture, watched jealously by
+Alfred, on the shortest line across Devon and Somerset to some ford in
+the Avon, and so across into Mercia, where he arrives during harvest,
+and billets his army on Ceolwulf, camping them for the winter about the
+city of Gloster. Here they run up huts for themselves, and make some
+pretense of permanent settlement on the Severn, dividing large tracts of
+land among those who cared to take them.
+
+The campaigns of 876-77 are generally looked upon as disastrous ones for
+the Saxon arms, but this view is certainly not supported by the
+chroniclers. It is true that both at Wareham and Exeter the pagans broke
+new ground, and secured their position, from which no doubt they did
+sore damage in the neighboring districts, but we can trace in these
+years none of the old ostentatious daring and thirst for battle with
+Alfred. Whenever he appears the pirate bands draw back at once into
+their strongholds, and, exhausted as great part of Wessex must have been
+by the constant strain, the West Saxons show no signs yet of falling
+from their gallant King. If he can no longer collect in a week such an
+army as fought at Ashdown, he can still, without much delay, bring to
+his side a sufficient force to hem the pagans in and keep them behind
+their ramparts.
+
+But the nature of the service was telling sadly on the resources of the
+kingdom south of the Thames. To the Saxons there came no new levies,
+while from the north and east of England, as well as from over the sea,
+Guthrum was ever drawing to his standard wandering bands of sturdy
+Northmen. The most important of these reinforcements came to him from an
+unexpected quarter this autumn. We have not heard for some years of
+Hubba, the brother of Hinguar, the younger of the two vikings who
+planned and led the first great invasion in 868. Perhaps he may have
+resented the arrival of Guthrum and other kings in the following years,
+to whom he had to give place. Whatever may have been the cause, he seems
+to have gone off on his own account: carrying with him the famous raven
+standard, to do his appointed work in these years on other coasts under
+its ominous shade.
+
+This "war flag which they call raven" was a sacred object to the
+Northmen. When Hinguar and Hubba had heard of the death of their father,
+Regnar Lodbrog, and had resolved to avenge him, while they were calling
+together their followers, their three sisters in one day wove for them
+this war-flag, in the midst of which was portrayed the figure of a
+raven. Whenever the flag went before them into battle, if they were to
+win the day the sacred raven would rouse itself and stretch its wings;
+but if defeat awaited them, the flag would hang round its staff and the
+bird remain motionless. This wonder had been proved in many a fight, so
+the wild pagans who fought under the standard of Regnar's children
+believed. It was a power in itself, and Hubba and a strong fleet were
+with it.
+
+They had appeared in the Bristol Channel in this autumn of 877, and had
+ruthlessly slaughtered and spoiled the people of South Wales. Here they
+propose to winter; but, as the country is wild mountain for the most
+part, and the people very poor, they will remain no longer than they can
+help. Already a large part of the army about Gloster are getting
+restless. The story of their march from Devonshire, through rich
+districts of Wessex yet unplundered, goes round among the new-comers.
+Guthrum has no power, probably no will, to keep them to their oaths. In
+the early winter a joint attack is planned by him and Hubba on the West
+Saxon territory. By Christmas they are strong enough to take the field,
+and so in midwinter, shortly after Twelfth Night, the camp at Gloster
+breaks up, and the army "stole away to Chippenham," recrossing the Avon
+once more into Wessex, under Guthrum. The fleet, after a short delay,
+crosses to the Devonshire coast, under Hubba, in thirty war-ships.
+
+And now at last the courage of the West Saxons gives way. The surprise
+is complete. Wiltshire is at the mercy of the pagans, who, occupying the
+royal burgh of Chippenham as headquarters, overrun the whole district,
+drive many of the inhabitants "beyond the sea for want of the
+necessaries of life," and reduce to subjection all those that remain.
+Alfred is at his post, but for the moment can make no head against them.
+His own strong heart and trust in God are left him, and with them and a
+scanty band of followers he disappears into the forest of Selwood, which
+then stretched away from the confines of Wiltshire for thirty miles to
+the west. East Somerset, now one of the fairest and richest of English
+counties, was then for the most part thick wood and tangled swamp, but
+miserable as the lodging is it is welcome for the time to the King. In
+the first months of 878 Selwood Forest holds in its recesses the hope of
+England.
+
+It is at this point, as is natural enough, that romance has been most
+busy, and it has become impossible to disentangle the actual facts from
+monkish legend and Saxon ballad. In happier times Alfred was in the
+habit himself of talking over the events of his wandering life
+pleasantly with his courtiers, and there is no reason to doubt that the
+foundation of most of the stories still current rests on those
+conversations of the truth-loving King, noted down by Bishop Asser and
+others.
+
+The best known of these is, of course, the story of the cakes. In the
+depths of the Saxon forests there were always a few neatherds and
+swineherds, scattered up and down, living in rough huts enough, we may
+be sure, and occupied with the care of the cattle and herds of their
+masters. Among these in Selwood was a neatherd of the King, a faithful
+man, to whom the secret of Alfred's disguise was intrusted, and who kept
+it even from his wife. To this man's hut the King came one day alone,
+and, sitting himself down by the burning logs on the hearth, began
+mending his bow and arrows. The neatherd's wife had just finished her
+baking, and having other household matters to attend to, confided her
+loaves to the King, a poor tired-looking body, who might be glad of the
+warmth, and could make himself useful by turning the batch, and so earn
+his share while she got on with other business. But Alfred worked away
+at his weapons, thinking of anything but the good housewife's batch of
+loaves, which in due course were not only done, but rapidly burning to a
+cinder. At this moment the neatherd's wife comes back, and flying to the
+hearth to rescue the bread, cries out: "Drat the man! never to turn the
+loaves when you see them burning. I'ze warrant you ready enough to eat
+them when they are done." But besides the King's faithful neatherd,
+whose name is not preserved, there are other churls in the forest, who
+must be Alfred's comrades just now if he will have any. And even here he
+has an eye for a good man, and will lose no opportunity to help one to
+the best of his power. Such a one he finds in a certain swineherd called
+Denewulf, whom he gets to know, a thoughtful Saxon man, minding his
+charge there in the oak woods. The rough churl, or thrall, we know not
+which, has great capacity, as Alfred soon finds out, and desire to
+learn. So the King goes to work upon Denewulf under the oak trees, when
+the swine will let him, and is well satisfied with the results of his
+teaching and the progress of his pupil.
+
+But in those miserable days the commonest necessaries of life were hard
+enough to come by for the King and his few companions, and for his wife
+and family, who soon joined him in the forest, even if they were not
+with him from the first. The poor foresters cannot maintain them, nor
+are this band of exiles the men to live on the poor. So Alfred and his
+comrades are soon out foraging on the borders of the forest, and getting
+what subsistence they can from the pagans, or from the Christians who
+had submitted to their yoke. So we may imagine them dragging on life
+till near Easter, when a gleam of good news comes tip from the west, to
+gladden the hearts and strengthen the arms of these poor men in the
+depths of Selwood.
+
+Soon after Guthrum and the main body of the pagans moved from Gloster,
+southward, the viking Hubba, as had been agreed, sailed with thirty
+ships-of-war from his winter quarters on the South Welsh coast, and
+landed in Devon. The news of the catastrophe at Chippenham, and of the
+disappearance of the King, was no doubt already known in the West; and
+in the face of it Odda the alderman cannot gather strength to meet the
+pagan in the open field. But he is a brave and true man, and will make
+no terms with the spoilers; so, with other faithful thanes of King
+Alfred and their followers, he throws himself into a castle or fort
+called Cynwith, or Cynuit, there to abide whatever issue of this
+business God shall send them. Hubba, with the war-flag Raven, and a host
+laden with the spoil of rich Devon vales, appear in due course before
+the place. It is not strong naturally, and has only "walls in our own
+fashion," meaning probably rough earthworks. But there are resolute men
+behind them, and on the whole Hubba declines the assault, and sits down
+before the place. There is no spring of water, he hears, within the
+Saxon lines, and they are otherwise wholly unprepared for a siege. A few
+days will no doubt settle the matter, and the sword or slavery will be
+the portion of Odda and the rest of Alfred's men; meantime there is
+spoil enough in the camp from Devonshire homesteads, which brave men can
+revel in round the war-flag Raven, while they watch the Saxon ramparts.
+Odda, however, has quite other views than death from thirst, or
+surrender. Before any stress comes, early one morning he and his whole
+force sally out over their earthworks, and from the first "cut down the
+pagans in great numbers": eight hundred and forty warriors--some say
+twelve hundred--with Hubba himself are slain before Cynuit fort; the
+rest, few in number, escape to their ships. The war-flag Raven is left
+in the hands of Odda and the men of Devon.
+
+This is the news which comes to Alfred, Ethelnoth the alderman of
+Somerset, Denewulf the swineherd, and the rest of the Selwood Forest
+group, some time before Easter. These men of Devonshire, it seems, are
+still stanch, and ready to peril their lives against the pagan. No doubt
+up and down Wessex, thrashed and trodden out as the nation is by this
+time, there are other good men and true, who will neither cross the sea
+nor the Welsh marches nor make terms with the pagan; some sprinkling of
+men who will yet set life at stake, for faith in Christ and love of
+England. If these can only be rallied, who can say what may follow? So,
+in the lengthening days of spring, council is held in Selwood, and there
+will have been Easter services in some chapel or hermitage in the
+forest, or, at any rate, in some quiet glade. The "day of days" will
+surely have had its voice of hope for this poor remnant. Christ is risen
+and reigns; and it is not in these heathen Danes, or in all the Northmen
+who ever sailed across the sea, to put back his kingdom or to enslave
+those whom he has freed.
+
+The result is that, far away from the eastern boundary of the forest, on
+a rising ground--hill it can scarcely be called--surrounded by dangerous
+marshes formed by the little rivers Thone and Parret, fordable only in
+summer, and even then dangerous to all who have not the secret, a small
+fortified camp is thrown up under Alfred's eye, by Ethelnoth and the
+Somersetshire men, where he can once again raise his standard. The spot
+has been chosen by the King with the utmost care, for it is his last
+throw. He names it the Etheling's _eig_ or island, "Athelney." Probably
+his young son, the Etheling of England, is there among the first, with
+his mother and his grandmother Eadburgha, the widow of Ethelred Mucil,
+the venerable lady whom Asser saw in later years, and who has now no
+country but her daughter's. There are, as has been reckoned, some two
+acres of hard ground on the island, and around vast brakes of
+alder-bush, full of deer and other game.
+
+Here the Somersetshire men can keep up constant communication with him,
+and a small army grows together. They are soon strong enough to make
+forays into the open country, and in many skirmishes they cut off
+parties of the pagans and supplies. "For, even when overthrown and cast
+down," says Malmesbury, "Alfred had always to be fought with; so, then
+when one would esteem him altogether worn down and broken, like a snake
+slipping from the hand of him who would grasp it, he would suddenly
+flash out again from his hiding-places, rising up to smite his foes in
+the height of their insolent confidence, and never more hard to beat
+than after a flight."
+
+But it was still a trying life at Athelney. Followers came in slowly,
+and provender and supplies of all kinds are hard to wring from the
+pagan, and harder still to take from Christian men. One day, while it
+was yet so cold that the water was still frozen, the King's people had
+gone out "to get them fish or fowl, or some such purveyance as they
+sustained themselves withal." No one was left in the royal hut for the
+moment but himself, and his mother-in-law Eadburgha. The King--after his
+constant wont whensoever he had opportunity--was reading from the Psalms
+of David, out of the Manual which he carried always in his bosom. At
+this moment a poor man appeared at the door and begged for a morsel of
+bread "for Christ his sake." Whereupon the King, receiving the stranger
+as a brother, called to his mother-in-law to give him to eat. Eadburgha
+replied that there was but one loaf in their store, and a little wine in
+a pitcher, a provision wholly insufficient for his own family and
+people. But the King bade her nevertheless to give the stranger part of
+the last loaf, which she accordingly did. But when he had been served
+the stranger was no more seen, and the loaf remained whole, and the
+pitcher full to the brim. Alfred, meantime, had turned to his reading,
+over which he fell asleep, and dreamt that St. Cuthbert of Lindisfarne
+stood by him, and told him it was he who had been his guest, and that
+God had seen his afflictions and those of his people, which were now
+about to end, in token whereof his people would return that day from
+their expedition with a great take of fish. The King awakening, and
+being much impressed with his dream, called to his mother-in-law and
+recounted it to her, who thereupon assured him that she too had been
+overcome with sleep and had had the same dream. And while they yet
+talked together on what had happened so strangely to them, their
+servants come in, bringing fish enough, as it seemed to them, to have
+fed an army.
+
+The monkish legend goes on to tell that on the next morning the King
+crossed to the mainland in a boat, and wound his horn thrice, which drew
+to him before noon five hundred men. What we may think of the story and
+the dream, as Sir John Spelman says, "is not here very much material,"
+seeing that, whether we deem it natural or supernatural, "the one as
+well as the other serves at God's appointment, by raising or dejecting
+of the mind with hopes or fears, to lead man to the resolution of those
+things whereof he has before ordained the event."
+
+Alfred, we may be sure, was ready to accept and be thankful for any
+help, let it come from whence it might, and soon after Easter it was
+becoming clear that the time is at hand for more than skirmishing
+expeditions. Through all the neighboring counties word is spreading that
+their hero King is alive and on foot again, and that there will be
+another chance for brave men ere long of meeting once more these
+scourges of the land under his leading.
+
+A popular legend is found in the later chroniclers which relates that at
+this crisis of his fortunes Alfred, not daring to rely on any evidence
+but that of his own senses as to the numbers, disposition, and
+discipline of the pagan army, assumed the garb of a minstrel and with
+one attendant visited the camp of Guthrum. Here he stayed, "showing
+tricks and making sport," until he had penetrated to the King's tents,
+and learned all that he wished to know. After satisfying himself as to
+the chances of a sudden attack, he returns to Athelney, and, the time
+having come for a great effort, if his people will but make it, sends
+round messengers to the aldermen and king's thanes of neighboring
+shires, giving them a tryst for the seventh week after Easter, the
+second week in May.
+
+On or about the 12th of May, 878, King Alfred left his island in the
+great wood, and his wife and children and such household gods [sic] as
+he had gathered round him there, and came publicly forth among his
+people once more, riding to Egbert's Stone--probably Brixton--on the
+east of Selwood, a distance of twenty-six miles. Here met him the men of
+the neighboring shires--Odda, no doubt, with his men of Devonshire, full
+of courage and hope after their recent triumph; the men of
+Somersetshire, under their brave and faithful alderman Ethelnoth; and
+the men of Wilts and Hants, such of them at least as had not fled the
+country or made submission to the enemy. "And when they saw their King
+alive after such great tribulation, they received him, as he merited,
+with joy and acclamation." The gathering had been so carefully planned
+by Alfred and the nobles who had been in conference or correspondence
+with him at Athelney that the Saxon host was organized and ready for
+immediate action on the very day of muster. Whether Alfred had been his
+own spy we cannot tell, but it is plain that he knew well what was
+passing in the pagan camp, and how necessary swiftness and secrecy were
+to the success of his attack.
+
+Local traditions cannot be much relied upon for events which took place
+a thousand years ago, but where there is clearly nothing improbable in
+them they are at least worth mentioning. We may note, then, that
+according to Somersetshire tradition, first collected by Dr.
+Giles--himself a Somersetshire man, and one who, besides his _Life of
+Alfred_ and other excellent works bearing on the time, is the author of
+the _Harmony of the Chroniclers_, published by the Alfred Committee in
+1852--the signal for the actual gathering of the West Saxons at Egbert's
+Stone was given by a beacon lighted on the top of Stourton hill, where
+Alfred's Tower now stands. Such a beacon would be hidden from the Danes,
+who must have been encamped about Westbury, by the range of the
+Wiltshire hills, while it would be visible to the west over the low
+country toward the Bristol Channel, and to the south far into
+Dorsetshire.
+
+Not an hour was lost by Alfred at the place of muster. The bands which
+came together there were composed of men well used to arms, each band
+under its own alderman, or reeve. The small army he had himself been
+disciplining at Athelney, and training in skirmishes during the last few
+months, would form a reliable centre on which the rest would have to
+form as best they could. So after one day's halt he breaks up his camp
+at Egbert's Stone and marches to Aeglea, now called Clay hill, an
+important height, commanding the vale to the north of Westbury, which
+the Danish army were now occupying. The day's march of the army would be
+a short five miles. Here the annals record that St. Neot, his kinsman,
+appeared to him, and promised that on the morrow his misfortunes would
+end.
+
+There are still traces of rude earthworks round the top of Clay hill,
+which are said to have been thrown up by Alfred's army at this time. If
+there had been time for such a work, it would undoubtedly have been a
+wise step, as a fortified encampment here would have served Alfred in
+good stead in case of a reverse. But the few hours during which the army
+halted on Clay hill would have been quite too short time for such an
+undertaking, which, moreover, would have exhausted the troops. It is
+more likely that the earthworks, which are of the oldest type, similar
+to those at White Horse hill, above Ashdown, were there long before
+Alfred's arrival in May, 878. After resting one night on Clay hill,
+Alfred led out his men in close order of battle against the pagan host,
+which lay at Ethandune. There has been much doubt among the antiquaries
+as to the site of Ethandune, but Dr. Giles and others have at length
+established the claims of Edington, a village seven miles from Clay
+hill, on the northeast, to the spot where the strength of the second
+wave of pagan invasion was utterly broken and rolled back weak and
+helpless from the rock of the West Saxon kingdom.
+
+Sir John Spelman, relying apparently only on the authority of Nicholas
+Harpesfeld's _Ecclesiastical History of England_, puts a speech into
+Alfred's mouth, which he is supposed to have delivered before the battle
+of Edington. He tells them that the great sufferings of the land had
+been yet far short of what their sins had deserved. That God had only
+dealt with them as a loving Father, and was now about to succor them,
+having already stricken their foe with fear and astonishment, and given
+him, on the other hand, much encouragement by dreams and otherwise. That
+they had to do with pirates and robbers, who had broken faith with them
+over and over again; and the issue they had to try that day was whether
+Christ's faith or heathenism was henceforth to be established in
+England.
+
+There is no trace of any such speech in the _Saxon Chronicle_ or Asser,
+and the one reported does not ring like that of Judas Maccabaeus. That
+Alfred's soul was on fire that morning, on finding himself once more at
+the head of a force he could rely on, and before the enemy he had met so
+often, we may be sure enough, but shall never know how the fire kindled
+into speech, if indeed it did so at all. In such supreme moments many of
+the strongest men have no word to say--keep all their heat within.
+
+Nor have we any clew to the numbers who fought on either side at
+Ethandune, or indeed in any of Alfred's battles. In the _Chronicles_
+there are only a few vague and general statements, from which little can
+be gathered. The most precise of them is that in the _Saxon Chronicle_,
+which gives eight hundred and forty as the number of men who were slain,
+as we heard, with Hubba before Cynuit fort, in Devonshire, earlier in
+this same year. Such a death-roll, in an action in which only a small
+detachment of the pagan army was engaged, would lead to the conclusion
+that the armies were far larger than one would expect. On the other
+hand, it is difficult to imagine how any large bodies of men could find
+subsistence in a small country, which was the seat of so devastating a
+war, and in which so much land remained still unreclaimed. But whatever
+the power on either side amounted to we may be quite sure that it had
+been exerted to the utmost to bring as large a force as possible into
+line at Ethandune.
+
+Guthrum fought to protect Chippenham, his base of operations, some
+sixteen miles in his rear, and all the accumulated plunder of the busy
+months which had passed since Twelfth Night; and it is clear that his
+men behaved with the most desperate gallantry. The fight began at
+noon--one chronicler says at sunrise, but the distance makes this
+impossible unless Alfred marched in the night--and lasted through the
+greater part of the day. Warned by many previous disasters the Saxons
+never broke their close order, and so, though greatly outnumbered,
+hurled back again and again the onslaughts of the Northmen. At last
+Alfred and his Saxons prevailed, and smote his pagan foes with a very
+great slaughter, and pursued them up to their fortified camp on Bratton
+hill or Edge, into which the great body of the fugitives threw
+themselves. All who were left outside were slain, and the great spoil
+was all recovered. The camp may still be seen, called Bratton Castle,
+with its double ditches and deep trenches, and barrow in the midst sixty
+yards long, and its two entrances guarded by mounds. It contains more
+than twenty acres, and commands the whole country side. There can be
+little doubt that this camp, and not Chippenham, which is sixteen miles
+away, was the last refuge of Guthrum and the great northern army on
+Saxon soil.
+
+So, in three days from the breaking up of his little camp at Athelney,
+Alfred was once more King of all England south of the Thames; for this
+army of pagans, shut up within their earthworks on Bratton Edge, are
+little better than a broken and disorderly rabble, with no supplies and
+no chance of succor from any quarter. Nevertheless he will make sure of
+them, and above all will guard jealously against any such mishap as that
+of 876, when they stole out of Wareham, murdered the horsemen he had
+left to watch them, and got away to Exeter. So Bratton camp is strictly
+besieged by Alfred with his whole power.
+
+Guthrum, the destroyer, and now the King of East Anglia, the strongest
+and ablest of all the Northmen who had ever landed in England, is now at
+last fairly in Alfred's power. At Reading, Wareham, Exeter, he had
+always held a fortified camp, on a river easily navigable by the Danish
+war-ships, where he might look for speedy succor or whence at the worst
+he might hope to escape to the sea. But now he, with the remains of his
+army, is shut up in an inland fort with no ships on the Avon, the
+nearest river, even if they could cut their way out and reach it, and no
+hopes of reinforcements overland. Halfdene is the nearest viking who
+might be called to the rescue, and he, in Northumbria, is far too
+distant. It is a matter of a few days only, for food runs short at once
+in the besieged camp. In former years, or against any other enemy,
+Guthrum would probably have preferred to sally out and cut his way
+through the Saxon lines, or die sword in hand as a son of Odin should.
+Whether it were that the wild spirit in him is thoroughly broken for the
+time by the unexpected defeat at Ethandune, or that long residence in a
+Christian land and contact with Christian subjects have shaken his faith
+in his own gods, or that he has learned to measure and appreciate the
+strength and nobleness of the man he had so often deceived, at any rate
+for the time Guthrum is subdued. At the end of fourteen days he sends to
+Alfred, suing humbly for terms of any kind; offering on the part of the
+army as many hostages as may be required, without asking for any in
+return; once again giving solemn pledges to quit Wessex for good; and,
+above all, declaring his own readiness to receive baptism. If it had not
+been for the last proposal, we may doubt whether even Alfred would have
+allowed the ruthless foes with whom he and his people had fought so
+often, and with such varying success, to escape now. Over and over again
+they had sworn to him, and broken their oaths the moment it suited their
+purpose; had given hostages, and left them to their fate. In all English
+kingdoms they had now for ten years been destroying and pillaging the
+houses of God and slaying even women and children. They had driven his
+sister's husband from the throne of Mercia, and had grievously tortured
+the martyr Edmund. If ever foe deserved no mercy, Guthrum and his army
+were the men.
+
+When David smote the children of Moab, he "measured them with a line,
+casting them down to the ground; even with two lines measured he to put
+to death, and with one full line to keep alive." When he took Rabbah of
+the children of Ammon, "he brought forth the people that were therein,
+and put them under saws and under harrows of iron, and under axes of
+iron, and made them pass through the brick-kiln." That was the old
+Hebrew method, even under King David, and in the ninth century
+Christianity had as yet done little to soften the old heathen custom of
+"woe to the vanquished." Charlemagne's proselytizing campaigns had been
+as merciless as Mahomet's. But there is about this English King a divine
+patience, the rarest of all virtues in those who are set in high places.
+He accepts Guthrum's proffered terms at once, rejoicing over the chance
+of adding these fierce heathen warriors to the church of his Master, by
+an act of mercy which even they must feel. And so the remnant of the
+army are allowed to march out of their fortified camp, and to recross
+the Avon into Mercia, not quite five months after the day of their
+winter attack and the seizing of Chippenham. The northern army went away
+to Cirencester, where they stayed over the winter, and then returning
+into East Anglia settled down there, and Alfred and Wessex hear no more
+of them. Never was triumph more complete or better deserved; and in all
+history there is no instance of more noble use of victory than this. The
+West Saxon army was not at once disbanded. Alfred led them back to
+Athelney, where he had left his wife and children; and while they are
+there, seven weeks after the surrender, Guthrum and thirty of the
+bravest of his followers arrive to make good their pledge.
+
+The ceremony of baptism was performed at Wedmore, a royal residence
+which had probably escaped the fate of Chippenham, and still contained a
+church. Here Guthrum and his thirty nobles were sworn in, the soldiers
+of a greater King than Woden, and the white linen cloth, the sign of
+their new faith, was bound round their heads. Alfred himself was
+godfather to the viking, giving him the Christian name of Athelstan; and
+the chrism-loosing, or unbinding of the sacramental cloths, was
+performed on the eighth day by Ethelnoth, the faithful alderman of
+Somersetshire. After the religious ceremony there still remained the
+task of settling the terms upon which the victors and vanquished were
+hereafter to live together side by side in the same island; for Alfred
+had the wisdom, even in his enemy's humiliation, to accept the
+accomplished fact, and to acknowledge East Anglia as a Danish kingdom.
+The Witenagemot had been summoned to Wedmore, and was sitting there, and
+with their advice the treaty was then made, from which, according to
+some historians, English history begins.
+
+We have still the text of the two documents which together contain
+Alfred and Guthrum's peace, or the treaty of Wedmore; the first and
+shorter being probably the articles hastily agreed on before the
+capitulation of the Danish army at Chippenham; the latter the final
+terms settled between Alfred and his witan, and Guthrum and his thirty
+nobles, after mature deliberation and conference at Wedmore, but not
+formally executed until some years later.
+
+The shorter one, that made at the capitulation, runs as follows:
+
+"ALFRED AND GUTHRUM'S PEACE.--This is the peace that King Alfred and
+King Guthrum, and the witan of all the English nation, and all the
+people that are in East Anglia have all ordained, and with oaths
+confirmed, for themselves and their descendants, as well for born as
+unborn, who reck of God's mercy or of ours.
+
+"First, concerning our land boundaries. These are upon the Thames, and
+then upon the Lea, and along the Lea unto its source, then straight to
+Bedford, then up the Ouse to Watling Street.
+
+"Then there is this: if a man be slain we reckon all equally dear,
+English and Dane, at eight half marks of pure gold, except the churl who
+dwells on gavel land and their leisings, they are also equally dear at
+two hundred shillings. And if a king's thane be accused of manslaughter,
+if he desire to clear himself, let him do so before twelve king's
+thanes. If any man accuse a man who is of less degree than king's thane,
+let him clear himself with eleven of his equals and one king's thane.
+And so in every suit which be for more than four mancuses; and if he
+dare not, let him pay for it threefold, as it may be valued.
+
+"_Of Warrantors_.--And that every man know his warrantor, for men, and
+for horses, and for oxen.
+
+"And we all ordained, on that day that the oaths were sworn, that
+neither bondman nor freeman might go to the army without leave, nor any
+of them to us. But if it happen that any of them from necessity will
+have traffic with us, or we with them, for cattle or goods, that is to
+be allowed on this wise: that hostages be given in pledge of peace, and
+as evidence whereby it may be known that the party has a clean book."
+
+By the treaty Alfred is thus established as King of the whole of England
+south of the Thames; of all the old kingdom of Essex south of the Lea,
+including London, Hertford, and St. Albans; of the whole of the great
+kingdom of Mercia, which lay to the west of Watling Street, and of so
+much to the east as lay south of the Ouse. That he should have regained
+so much proves the straits to which he had brought the northern army,
+who would have to give up all their new settlements round Gloster. That
+he should have resigned so much of the kingdom which had acknowledged
+his grandfather, father, and brothers as overlords proves how formidable
+his foe still was, even in defeat, and how thoroughly the northeastern
+parts of the island had by this time been settled by the Danes.
+
+The remainder of the short treaty would seem simply to be provisional,
+and intended to settle the relations between Alfred's subjects and the
+army while it remained within the limits of the new Saxon kingdom. Many
+of the soldiers would have to break up their homes in Glostershire; and,
+with this view, the halt at Cirencester is allowed, where, as we have
+already heard, they rest until the winter. While they remain in the
+Saxon kingdom there is to be no distinction between Saxon and Dane. The
+were-gild, or life-ransom, is to be the same in each case for men of
+like rank; and all suits for more than four mancuses (about twenty-four
+shillings) are to be tried by a jury of peers of the accused. On the
+other hand, only necessary communications are to be allowed between the
+northern army and the people; and where there must be trading, fair and
+peaceful dealing is to be insured by the giving of hostages. This last
+provision, and the clause declaring that each man shall know his
+warrantor, inserted in a five-clause treaty, where nothing but what the
+contracting parties must hold to be of the very first importance would
+find place, are another curious proof of the care with which our
+ancestors, and all Germanic tribes, guarded against social
+isolation--the doctrine that one man has nothing to do with another--a
+doctrine which the great body of their descendants, under the leading of
+Schultze, Delitzsch, and others, seem likely to repudiate with equal
+emphasis in these latter days, both in Germany and England.
+
+Thus, in July, 878, the foundations of the new kingdom of England were
+laid, for new it undoubtedly became when the treaty of Wedmore was
+signed. The Danish nation, no longer strangers and enemies, are
+recognized by the heir of Cerdic as lawful owners of the full half of
+England. Having achieved which result, Guthrum and the rest of the new
+converts leave the Saxon camp and return to Cirencester at the end of
+twelve days, loaded with such gifts as it was still in the power of
+their conquerors to bestow: and Alfred was left in peace, to turn to a
+greater and more arduous task than any he had yet encountered.
+
+
+JOHN RICHARD GREEN
+
+Alfred was the noblest as he was the most complete embodiment of all
+that is great, all that is lovable, in the English temper. He combined
+as no other man has ever combined its practical energy, its patient and
+enduring force, its profound sense of duty, the reserve and self-control
+that steady in it a wide outlook and a restless daring, its temperance
+and fairness, its frank geniality, its sensitiveness to action, its
+poetic tenderness, its deep and passionate religion. Religion, indeed,
+was the groundwork of Alfred's character. His temper was instinct with
+piety. Everywhere throughout his writings that remain to us the name of
+God, the thought of God, stir him to outbursts of ecstatic adoration.
+
+But he was no mere saint. He felt none of that scorn of the world about
+him which drove the nobler souls of his day to monastery or hermitage.
+Vexed as he was by sickness and constant pain, his temper took no touch
+of asceticism. His rare geniality, a peculiar elasticity and mobility of
+nature, gave color and charm to his life. A sunny frankness and openness
+of spirit breathe in the pleasant chat of his books, and what he was in
+his books he showed himself in his daily converse. Alfred was in truth
+an artist, and both the lights and shadows of his life were those of the
+artistic temperament. His love of books, his love of strangers, his
+questionings of travellers and scholars, betray an imaginative
+restlessness that longs to break out of the narrow world of experience
+which hemmed him in. At one time he jots down news of a voyage to the
+unknown seas of the north. At another he listens to tidings which his
+envoys bring back from the churches of Malabar.
+
+And side by side with this restless outlook of the artistic nature he
+showed its tenderness and susceptibility, its vivid apprehension of
+unseen danger, its craving for affection, its sensitiveness to wrong. It
+was with himself rather than with his reader that he communed as
+thoughts of the foe without, of ingratitude and opposition within, broke
+the calm pages of Gregory or Boethius.
+
+"Oh, what a happy man was he," he cries once, "that man that had a naked
+sword hanging over his head from a single thread; so as to me it always
+did!" "Desirest thou power?" he asks at another time. "But thou shalt
+never obtain it without sorrows--sorrows from strange folk, and yet
+keener sorrows from thine own kindred." "Hardship and sorrow!" he breaks
+out again; "not a king but would wish to be without these if he could.
+But I know that he cannot!"
+
+The loneliness which breathes in words like these has often begotten in
+great rulers a cynical contempt of men and the judgments of men. But
+cynicism found no echo in the large and sympathetic temper of Alfred. He
+not only longed for the love of his subjects, but for the remembrance of
+"generations" to come. Nor did his inner gloom or anxiety check for an
+instant his vivid and versatile activity. To the scholars he gathered
+round him he seemed the very type of a scholar, snatching every hour he
+could find to read or listen to books read to him. The singers of his
+court found in him a brother singer, gathering the old songs of his
+people to teach them to his children, breaking his renderings from the
+Latin with simple verse, solacing himself in hours of depression with
+the music of the Psalms.
+
+He passed from court and study to plan buildings and instruct craftsmen
+in gold work, to teach even falconers and dog-keepers their business.
+But all this versatility and ingenuity was controlled by a cool good
+sense. Alfred was a thorough man of business. He was careful of detail,
+laborious, methodical. He carried in his bosom a little handbook in
+which he noted things as they struck him--now a bit of family genealogy,
+now a prayer, now such a story as that of Ealdhelm playing minstrel on
+the bridge. Each hour of the day had its appointed task; there was the
+same order in the division of his revenue and in the arrangement of his
+court.
+
+Wide, however, and various as was the King's temper, its range was less
+wonderful than its harmony. Of the narrowness, of the want of
+proportion, of the predominance of one quality over another which go
+commonly with an intensity of moral purpose Alfred showed not a trace.
+Scholar and soldier, artist and man of business, poet and saint, his
+character kept that perfect balance which charms us in no other
+Englishman save Shakespeare. But full and harmonious as his temper was,
+it was the temper of a king. Every power was bent to the work of rule.
+His practical energy found scope for itself in the material and
+administrative restoration of the wasted land.
+
+His intellectual activity breathed fresh life into education and
+literature. His capacity for inspiring trust and affection drew the
+hearts of Englishmen to a common centre, and began the upbuilding of a
+new England. And all was guided, controlled, ennobled by a single aim.
+"So long as I have lived," said the King as life closed about him, "I
+have striven to live worthily." Little by little men came to know what
+such a life of worthiness meant. Little by little they came to recognize
+in Alfred a ruler of higher and nobler stamp than the world had seen.
+Never had it seen a king who lived solely for the good of his people.
+Never had it seen a ruler who set aside every personal aim to devote
+himself solely to the welfare of those whom he ruled. It was this grand
+self-mastery that gave him his power over the men about him. Warrior and
+conqueror as he was, they saw him set aside at thirty the warrior's
+dream of conquest; and the self-renouncement of Wedmore struck the
+keynote of his reign. But still more is it this height and singleness of
+purpose, this absolute concentration of the noblest faculties to the
+noblest aim, that lifts Alfred out of the narrow bounds of Wessex.
+
+If the sphere of his action seems too small to justify the comparison of
+him with the few whom the world owns as its greatest men, he rises to
+their level in the moral grandeur of his life. And it is this which has
+hallowed his memory among his own English people. "I desire," said the
+King in some of his latest words, "I desire to leave to the men that
+come after me a remembrance of me in good works."
+
+His aim has been more than fulfilled. His memory has come down to us
+with a living distinctness through the mists of exaggeration and legend
+which time gathered round it. The instinct of the people has clung to
+him with a singular affection. The love which he won a thousand years
+ago has lingered round his name from that day to this. While every other
+name of those earlier times has all but faded from the recollection of
+Englishmen, that of Alfred remains familiar to every English child.
+
+The secret of Alfred's government lay in his own vivid energy. He could
+hardly have chosen braver or more active helpers than those whom he
+employed both in his political and in his educational efforts. The
+children whom he trained to rule proved the ablest rulers of their time.
+But at the outset of his reign he stood alone, and what work was to be
+done was done by the King himself. His first efforts were directed to
+the material restoration of his realm. The burnt and wasted country saw
+its towns built again, forts erected in positions of danger, new abbeys
+founded, the machinery of justice and government restored, the laws
+codified and amended. Still more strenuous were Alfred's efforts for its
+moral and intellectual restoration. Even in Mercia and Northumbria the
+pirate's sword had left few survivors of the schools of Egbert or Bede,
+and matters were even worse in Wessex, which had been as yet the most
+ignorant of the English kingdoms.
+
+"When I began to reign," said Alfred, "I cannot remember one priest
+south of the Thames who could render his service-book into English." For
+instructors indeed he could find only a few Mercian prelates and
+priests, with one Welsh bishop, Asser.
+
+"Formerly," the King writes bitterly, "men came hither from foreign
+lands to seek for instruction, and now when we desire it we can only
+obtain it from abroad." But his mind was far from being prisoned within
+his own island. He sent a Norwegian shipmaster to explore the White Sea,
+and Wulfstan to trace the coast of Esthonia; envoys bore his presents to
+the churches of India and Jerusalem, and an annual mission carried
+Peter's pence to Rome.
+
+But it was with the Franks that his intercourse was closest, and it was
+from them that he drew the scholars to aid him in his work of education.
+A scholar named Grimbald came from St. Omer to preside over his new
+abbey at Winchester; and John, the old Saxon, was fetched from the abbey
+of Corbey to rule a monastery and school that Alfred's gratitude for his
+deliverance from the Danes raised in the marshes of Athelney. The real
+work, however, to be done was done, not by these teachers, but by the
+King himself. Alfred established a school for the young nobles in his
+court, and it was to the need of books for these scholars in their own
+tongue that we owe his most remarkable literary effort.
+
+He took his books as he found them--they were the popular manuals of his
+age--the _Consolation of Boethius_, the _Pastoral_ of Pope Gregory, the
+compilation of Orosius, then the one accessible handbook of universal
+history, and the history of his own people by Bede. He translated these
+works into English, but he was far more than a translator, he was an
+editor for the people. Here he omitted, there he expanded. He enriched
+Orosius by a sketch of the new geographical discoveries in the north. He
+gave a West Saxon form to his selections from Bede. In one place he
+stops to explain his theory of government, his wish for a thicker
+population, his conception of national welfare as consisting in a due
+balance of priest, soldier, and churl. The mention of Nero spurs him to
+an outbreak on the abuses of power. The cold providence of Boethius
+gives way to an enthusiastic acknowledgment of the goodness of God.
+
+As he writes, his large-hearted nature flings off its royal mantle, and
+he talks as a man to men. "Do not blame me," he prays with a charming
+simplicity, "if any know Latin better than I, for every man must say
+what he says and do what he does according to his ability."
+
+But simple as was his aim, Alfred changed the whole front of our
+literature. Before him, England possessed in her own tongue one great
+poem and a train of ballads and battle-songs. Prose she had none. The
+mighty roll of the prose books that fill her libraries begins with the
+translations of Alfred, and above all with the chronicle of his reign.
+It seems likely that the King's rendering of Bede's history gave the
+first impulse toward the compilation of what is known as the English or
+_Anglo-Saxon Chronicle_, which was certainly thrown into its present
+form during his reign. The meagre lists of the kings of Wessex and the
+bishops of Winchester, which had been preserved from older times, were
+roughly expanded into a national history by insertions from Bede; but it
+is when it reaches the reign of Alfred that the chronicle suddenly
+widens into the vigorous narrative, full of life and originality, that
+marks the gift of a new power to the English tongue. Varying as it does
+from age to age in historic value, it remains the first vernacular
+history of any Teutonic people, and, save for the Gothic translations of
+Ulfilas, the earliest and most venerable monument of Teutonic prose.
+
+But all this literary activity was only a part of that general
+upbuilding of Wessex by which Alfred was preparing for a fresh contest
+with the stranger. He knew that the actual winning back of the Danelagh
+must be a work of the sword, and through these long years of peace he
+was busy with the creation of such a force as might match that of the
+Northmen. A fleet grew out of the little squadron which Alfred had been
+forced to man with Frisian seamen.
+
+The national _fyrd_ or levy of all freemen at the King's call was
+reorganized. It was now divided into two halves, one of which served in
+the field while the other guarded its own _burhs_ (burghs or boroughs)
+and townships, and served to relieve its fellow when the men's forty
+days of service were ended. A more disciplined military force was
+provided by subjecting all owners of five hides of land to
+"thane-service," a step which recognized the change that had now
+substituted the _thegn_ for the _eorl_ and in which we see the beginning
+of a feudal system. How effective these measures were was seen when the
+new resistance they met on the Continent drove the Northmen to a fresh
+attack on Britain.
+
+In 893 a large fleet steered for the Andredsweald, while the sea-king
+Hasting entered the Thames. Alfred held both at bay through the year
+till the men of the Danelagh rose at their comrades' call. Wessex stood
+again front to front with the Northmen. But the King's measures had made
+the realm strong enough to set aside its old policy of defence for one
+of vigorous attack. His son Edward and his son-in-law Ethelred, whom he
+had set as ealdorman[23] over what remained of Mercia, showed themselves
+as skilful and active as the King.
+
+[Footnote 23: Primitive of alderman; in this period, a chieftain, lord,
+or earl; subsequently, the chief magistrate of a territorial district,
+as of a county or province.]
+
+The aim of the Northmen was to rouse again the hostility of the Welsh,
+but while Alfred held Exeter against their fleet, Edward and Ethelred
+caught their army near the Severn and overthrew it with a vast slaughter
+at Buttington. The destruction of their camp on the Lea by the united
+English forces ended the war; in 897 Hasting again withdrew across the
+Channel, and the Danelagh made peace. It was with the peace he had won
+still about him that Alfred died in 901; and warrior as his son Edward
+had shown himself, he clung to his father's policy of rest.
+
+
+
+
+HENRY THE FOWLER FOUNDS THE SAXON LINE OF GERMAN KINGS
+
+ORIGIN OF THE GERMAN BURGHERS OR MIDDLE CLASSES
+
+A.D. 911-936
+
+WOLFGANG MENZEL
+
+
+(The famous treaty of Verdun [843] was the culmination of a series of
+civil wars between the descendants of Charlemagne. By it the great
+empire which Charlemagne had built up was divided among his three
+grandsons, Lothair, Charles the Bald, and Louis. With this treaty the
+history of the Franks closes, and Germany and France take their places,
+along with Italy, as distinct and separate nations.
+
+The Teutonic kingdom, or Germany, fell to Louis. On his death, in 876,
+after an uneventful reign, he was succeeded by his sons Charles the Fat,
+Carloman, and Louis. The latter two dying, Charles the Fat became sole
+King of Germany. A little later he became ruler of Italy, and was
+crowned emperor by the pope. Then he was invited by the West Franks to
+become their king. Thus almost the whole empire of the great Charlemagne
+was reunited in the hands of Charles the Fat. However, his people soon
+became disgusted with his weak efforts in the treatment of a series of
+invasions by the Northmen, and he was deposed in 887. He died the next
+year, and the Carlovingian empire fell to pieces, never to be united
+again.
+
+Charles the Fat was succeeded in Germany by his nephew, Arnulf, who also
+took possession of Italy and was crowned emperor by the pope, though his
+power in Italy was merely nominal. On his death in 889 his second son,
+Ludwig [Louis III] the child, became king in Germany.
+
+The race of Charlemagne in Germany ended in 911 by the death of Ludwig.
+Though a mere child he had been enthroned through the intrigues of Otto,
+Duke of Saxony, and Hatto, Archbishop of Mayence, who virtually governed
+the empire during Ludwig's short reign.
+
+The empire at that time was composed of various nations, each under the
+rule of a powerful duke. The bond of union between these nations was
+slight. The dukes were constantly waging war against each other, and
+these internal dissensions greatly weakened the central government.
+
+At the same time the empire was exposed to the incursions of the Magyars
+or Hungarians, whose wholesale depredations and cruelties so dismayed
+the child-king that he concluded a treaty of peace with the invaders and
+consented to pay them a ten-years' tribute.
+
+The Germans were deeply sensible of the dishonor incurred by this
+ignominious tribute, and of the dangers of their internal dissensions.
+They longed for a stronger government, and on the death of Ludwig the
+crown was offered to Otto of Saxony, the strongest of the dukes. He
+declined in favor of Conrad, Duke of Franconia, a descendant in the
+female line from Charlemagne. But Conrad's rule was weak, and during his
+short reign of seven years civil war continued, part of the time with
+Henry the Fowler, son of Duke Otto [who died in 912], owing to Conrad's
+attempt to separate Thuringia from Saxony in order to weaken Henry's
+ducal power. The empire also was again invaded by the Slavs and
+Hungarians.
+
+Conrad died without male issue in 918, whereupon the Germans elected as
+emperor Henry the Fowler, who thus became the first of the Saxon dynasty
+in Germany, and proved himself to be the wisest and most vigorous
+sovereign who had ruled in Germany since the days of Charlemagne.)
+
+
+The extinction of the Carlovingian line did not sever the bond of union
+that existed between the different nations of Germany, although a
+contention arose between them concerning the election of the new
+emperor, each claiming that privilege for itself; and as the increase of
+the ducal power had naturally led to a wider distinction between them,
+the diet convoked for the purpose represented nations instead of
+classes. There were consequently four nations and four votes: the Franks
+under Duke Conrad, whose authority, nevertheless, could not compete with
+that of the now venerable Hatto, Archbishop of Mayence, who may be said
+to have been, at that period, the pope in Germany; the Saxons,
+Frieslanders, Thuringians, and some of the subdued Slavi, under Duke
+Otto; the Swabians, with Switzerland and Elsace, under different
+_grafs_, who, as the immediate officers of the crown, were named
+_kammerboten_, in order to distinguish them from the grafs nominated by
+the dukes; the Bavarians, with the Tyrolese and some of the subdued
+eastern Slavi, under Duke Arnulf the Bad, the son of the brave duke
+Luitpold. The Lothringians formed a fifth nation, under their duke
+Regingar, but were at that period incorporated with France.
+
+The first impulse of the diet was to bestow the crown on the most
+powerful among the different competitors, and it was accordingly offered
+to Otto of Saxony, who not only possessed the most extensive territory
+and the most warlike subjects, but whose authority, having descended to
+him from his father and grandfather, was also the most firmly secured.
+But both Otto and his ancient ally, the bishop Hatto, had found the
+system they had hitherto pursued, of reigning in the name of an imbecile
+monarch, so greatly conducive to their interest that they were
+disinclined to abandon it. Otto was a man who mistook the prudence
+inculcated by private interest for wisdom, and his mind, narrow as the
+limits of his dukedom, and solely intent upon the interests of his
+family, was incapable of the comprehensive views requisite in a German
+emperor, and indifferent to the welfare of the great body of the nation.
+The examples of Boso, of Odo, of Rudolph of Upper Burgundy, and of
+Berenger, who, favored by the difference in descent of the people they
+governed, had all succeeded in severing themselves from the empire, were
+ever present to his imagination, and he believed that as, on the other
+side of the Rhine, the Frank, the Burgundian, and the Lombard severally
+obeyed an independent sovereign, the East Frank, the Saxon, the Swabian,
+and the Bavarian, on this side of the Rhine, were also desirous of
+asserting a similar independence, and that it would be easier and less
+hazardous to found a hereditary dukedom in a powerful and separate state
+than to maintain the imperial dignity, undermined, as it was, by
+universal hostility.
+
+The influence of Hatto and the consent of Otto placed Conrad, Duke of
+Franconia, on the imperial throne. Sprung from a newly risen family, a
+mere creature of the bishop, his nobility as a feudal lord only dating
+from the period of the Babenberg feud, he was regarded by the Church as
+a pliable tool and by the dukes as little to be feared. His weakness was
+quickly demonstrated by his inability to retain the rich allods of the
+Carlovingian dynasty as heir to the imperial crown, and his being
+constrained to share them with the rest of the dukes; he was,
+nevertheless, more fully sensible of the dignity and of the duties of
+his station than those to whom he owed his election probably expected.
+His first step was to recall Regingar of Lothringia, who was oppressed
+by France, to his allegiance as vassal of the empire.
+
+Otto died in 912, and his son Henry, a high-spirited youth, who had
+greatly distinguished himself against the Slavi, ere long quarrelled
+with the aged bishop Hatto. According to the legendary account, the
+bishop sent him a golden chain so skilfully contrived as to strangle its
+wearer. The truth is that the ancient family feud between the house of
+Conrad and that of Otto, which was connected with the Babenbergers,
+again broke out, and that the Emperor attempted again to separate
+Thuringia, which Otto had governed since the death of Burkhard, from
+Saxony, in order to hinder the overpreponderance of that ducal house.
+Hatto, it is probable, counselled this step, as a considerable portion
+of Thuringia belonged to the diocese of Mayence, and a collision between
+him and the duke was therefore unavoidable. Henry flew to arms, and
+expelled the adherents of the bishop from Thuringia, which forced the
+Emperor to take the field in the name of the empire against his haughty
+vassal. This unfortunate civil war was a signal for a fresh irruption of
+the Slavi and Hungarians. During this year the Bohemians and Sorbi also
+made an inroad into Thuringia and Bavaria, and in 913 the Hungarians
+advanced as far as Swabia, but being surprised near Oetting by the
+Bavarians under Arnulf, who on this occasion bloodily avenged his
+father's death, and by the Swabians under the kammerboten Erchanger and
+Berthold, they were all, with the exception of thirty of their number,
+cut to pieces. Arnulf subsequently embraced a contrary line of policy,
+married the daughter of Geisa, King of Hungary, and entered into a
+confederacy with the Hungarian and the Swabian kammerboten, for the
+purpose of founding an independent state in the south of Germany, where
+he had already strengthened himself by the appointment of several
+markgrafs, Rudiger of Pechlarn in Austria, Rathold in Carinthia, and
+Berthold in the Tyrol. He then instigated all the enemies of the empire
+simultaneously to attack the Franks and Saxons, at that crisis at war
+with each other, in 915, and while the Danes under Gorm the Old, and the
+Obotrites, destroyed Hamburg, immense hordes of Hungarians, Bohemians,
+and Sorbi laid the country waste as far as Bremen.
+
+The Emperor was, meanwhile, engaged with the Saxons. On one occasion
+Henry narrowly escaped being taken prisoner, being merely saved by the
+stratagem of his faithful servant, Thiatmar, who caused the Emperor to
+retreat by falsely announcing to him the arrival of a body of
+auxiliaries. At length a pitched battle was fought near Merseburg, in
+915, between Henry and Eberhard, the Emperor's brother, in which the
+Franks[24] were defeated, and the superiority of the Saxons remained,
+henceforward, unquestioned for more than a century. The Emperor was
+forced to negotiate with the victor, whom he induced to protect the
+northern frontiers of the empire while he applied himself in person to
+the reëstablishment of order in the south.
+
+[Footnote 24: So great a slaughter took place that the Saxons said on
+the occasion:
+
+ "'Twere difficult to find a hell
+ Where so many Franks might dwell!"]
+
+In Swabia, Salomon, Bishop of Constance, who was supported by the
+commonalty, adhered to the imperial cause, while the kammerboten were
+unable to palliate their treason, and were gradually driven to
+extremities. Erchanger, relying upon aid from Arnulf and the Hungarians,
+usurped the ducal crown and took the bishop prisoner. Salomon's extreme
+popularity filled him with such rage that he caused the feet of some
+shepherds, who threw themselves on their knees as the captured prelate
+passed by, to be chopped off. His wife, Bertha, terror-stricken at the
+rashness of her husband, and foreseeing his destruction, received the
+prisoner with every demonstration of humility, and secretly aided his
+escape. He no sooner reappeared than the people flocked in thousands
+around him. "_Heil Herro! Heil Liebo!_" ("Hail, master! Hail, beloved
+one!") they shouted, and in their zeal attacked and defeated the
+traitors and their adherents. Berthold vainly defended himself in his
+mountain stronghold of Hohentwiel. The people so urgently demanded the
+death of these traitors to their country that the Emperor convoked a
+general assembly at Albingen in Swabia, sentenced Erchanger and Berthold
+to be publicly beheaded, and nominated Burkhard, in 917, whose father
+and uncle had been assassinated by order of Erchanger, as successor to
+the ducal throne. Arnulf withdrew to his fortress at Salzburg, and
+quietly awaited more favorable times. His name was branded with infamy
+by the people, who henceforth affixed to it the epithet of "the Bad,"
+and the _Nibelungenlied_ has perpetuated his detested memory.
+
+Conrad died in 918 without issue. On his death-bed, mindful only of the
+welfare of the empire, he proved himself deserving even by his latest
+act of the crown he had so worthily worn, by charging his brother
+Eberhard to forget the ancient feud between their houses, and to deliver
+the crown with his own hands to his enemy, the free-spirited Henry, whom
+he judged alone capable of meeting all the exigencies of the State.
+Eberhard obeyed his brother's injunctions, and the princes respected the
+will of their dying sovereign.
+
+The princes, with the exception of Burkhard and of Arnulf, assembled at
+Fritzlar, elected the absent Henry king, and despatched an embassy to
+inform him of their decision. It is said that the young duke was at the
+time among the Harz Mountains, and that the ambassadors found him in the
+homely attire of a sportsman in the fowling floor. He obeyed the call of
+the nation without delay and without manifesting surprise. The error he
+had committed in rebelling against the State, it was his firm purpose to
+atone for by his conduct as emperor. Of a lofty and majestic stature,
+although slight and youthful in form, powerful and active in person,
+with a commanding and penetrating glance, his very appearance attracted
+popular favor; besides these personal advantages, he was prudent and
+learned, and possessed a mind replete with intelligence. The influence
+of such a monarch on the progressive development of society in Germany
+could not fail of producing results fully equalling the improvements
+introduced by Charlemagne.
+
+The youthful Henry, the first of the Saxon line, was proclaimed king of
+Germany at Fritzlar, in 919, by the majority of votes, and, according to
+ancient custom, raised upon the shield. The Archbishop of Mayence
+offered to anoint him according to the usual ceremony, but Henry
+refused, alleging that he was content to owe his election to the grace
+of God and to the piety of the German princes, and that he left the
+ceremony of anointment to those who wished to be still more pious.
+
+Before Henry could pursue his more elevated projects, the assent of the
+southern Germans, who had not acknowledged the choice of their northern
+compatriots, had to be gained. Burkhard of Swabia, who had asserted his
+independence, and who was at that time carrying on a bitter feud with
+Rudolph, King of Burgundy, whom he had defeated, in 919, in a bloody
+engagement near Winterthur, was the first against whom he directed the
+united forces of the empire, in whose name he, at the same time, offered
+him peace and pardon. Burkhard, seeing himself constrained to yield,
+took the oath of fealty to the new-elected King at Worms, but continued
+to act with almost his former unlimited authority in Swabia, and even
+undertook an expedition into Italy in favor of Rudolph, with whom he had
+become reconciled. The Italians, enraged at the wantonness with which he
+mocked them, assassinated him. Henry bestowed the dukedom of Swabia on
+Hermann, one of his relations, to whom he gave Burkhard's widow in
+marriage. He also bestowed a portion of the south of Alemannia on King
+Rudolph in order to win him over, and in return received from him the
+holy lance with which the side of the Saviour had been pierced as he
+hung on the cross. Finding it no longer possible to dissolve the
+dukedoms and great fiefs, Henry, in order to strengthen the unity of the
+empire, introduced the novel policy of bestowing the dukedoms, as they
+fell vacant, on his relations and personal adherents, and of allying the
+rest of the dukes with himself by intermarriage, thus uniting the
+different powerful houses in the State into one family.
+
+Bavaria still remained in an unsettled state. Arnulf the Bad, leagued
+with the Hungarians, against whom Henry had great designs, had still
+much in his power, and Henry, resolved at any price to dissolve this
+dangerous alliance, not only concluded peace with this traitor on that
+condition, but also married his son Henry to Judith, Arnulf's daughter,
+in 921. Arnulf deprived the rich churches of great part of their
+treasures, and was consequently abhorred by the clergy, the chroniclers
+of those times, who, chiefly on that account, depicted his character in
+such unfavorable colors.
+
+In France, Charles the Simple was still the tool and jest of the
+vassals. His most dangerous enemy was Robert, Count of Paris, brother to
+Odo, the late King. Both solicited aid from Henry, but in a battle that
+shortly ensued near Soissons, Count Robert losing his life and Charles
+being defeated, Rudolph of Burgundy, one of Boso's nephews, set himself
+up as king of France, and imprisoned Charles the Simple, who craved
+assistance from the German monarch, to whom he promised to perform
+homage as his liege lord. Henry, meanwhile, contented himself with
+expelling Rudolph from Lotharingia, and, after taking possession of
+Metz, bestowed that dukedom upon Gisilbrecht, the son of Regingar, and
+reincorporated it with the empire. These successes now roused the
+apprehensions of the Hungarians, who again poured their invading hordes
+across the frontier. In 926 they plundered St. Gall, but were routed
+near Seckingen by the peasantry, headed by the country people of
+Hirminger, who had been roused by alarm fires; and again in Alsace, by
+Count Liutfried: another horde was cut to pieces near Bleiburg, in
+Carinthia, by Eberhard and the Count of Meran. The Hungarian King,
+probably Zoldan, was, by chance, taken prisoner during an incursion by
+the Germans, a circumstance turned by Henry to a very judicious use. He
+restored the captured prince to liberty, and also agreed to pay him a
+yearly tribute, on condition of his entering into a solemn truce for
+nine years. The experience of earlier times had taught Henry that a
+completely new organization was necessary in the management of military
+affairs in Germany before this dangerous enemy could be rendered
+innoxious, and, as an undertaking of this nature required time, he
+prudently resolved to incur a seeming disgrace by means of which he in
+fact secured the honor of the State. During this interval of nine years
+he aimed at bringing the other enemies of the empire, more particularly
+the Slavi, into subjection, and making preparations for an expedition
+against Hungary by which her power should receive a fatal blow.
+
+In the mean time Gisilbrecht, the youthful Duke of Lotharingia, again
+rebelled, but was besieged and taken prisoner in Zuelpich by Henry, who,
+struck by his noble appearance, restored to him his dukedom, and
+bestowed upon him his daughter, Gerberga, in marriage. Rudolph of France
+also sued for peace, being hard pressed by his powerful rival, Hugo the
+Great or Wise, the son of Robert. Charles the Simple was, on Henry's
+demand, restored to liberty, but quickly fell anew into the power of his
+faithless vassals.
+
+Peace was now established throughout the empire, and afforded Henry an
+opportunity for turning his attention to the introduction of measures,
+in the interior economy of the State, calculated to obviate for the
+future the dangers that had hitherto threatened it from without. The
+best expedient against the irruptions of the Hungarians appeared to him
+to be the circumvallation of the most important districts, the erection
+of forts and of fortified cities. The most important point, however, was
+to place the garrisons immediately under him as citizens of the State,
+commanded by his immediate officers, instead of their being indirectly
+governed by the feudal aristocracy and by the clergy. As these garrisons
+were intended not only for the protection of the walls, but also for
+open warfare, he had them trained to fight in rank and file, and formed
+them into a body of infantry, whose solid masses were calculated to
+withstand the furious onset of the Hungarian horse. These garrisons were
+solely composed of the ancient freemen, and the whole measure was, in
+fact, merely a reform of the ancient _arrier-ban_, which no longer
+sufficed for the protection of the State, and whose deficiency had long
+been supplied by the addition of vassals under the command of their
+temporal or spiritual lieges, and by the mercenaries or bodyguards of
+the emperors. The ancient class of freemen, who originally composed the
+arrier-ban, had been gradually converted into feudal vassals; but they
+were at that time still so numerous as to enable Henry to give them a
+completely new military organization, which at once secured to them
+their freedom, hitherto endangered by the preponderating power of the
+feudal aristocracy, and rendered them a powerful support to the throne.
+By collecting them into the cities, he afforded them a secure retreat
+against the attempts of the grafs, dukes, abbots, and bishops, and
+created for himself a body of trusty friends, of whom it would naturally
+be expected that they would ever side with the Emperor against the
+nobility.
+
+This new regulation appears to have been founded on the ancient mode of
+division. At first, out of every nine freemen--which recalls the
+_decania_--one only was placed within the new fortress, and the
+remaining eight were bound--perhaps on account of their ancient
+association into corporations or guilds--to nourish and support him; but
+the remaining freemen, in the neighborhood of the new cities, appear to
+have been also gradually collected within their walls, and to have
+committed the cultivation of their lands in the vicinity to their
+bondmen. However that may be, the ancient class of freemen completely
+disappeared as the cities increased in importance, and it was only among
+the wild mountains, where no cities sprang up, that the _centen_ or
+cantons and whole districts or _gauen_ of free peasantry were to be met
+with.
+
+Henry's original intention in the introduction of this new system was,
+it is evident, solely to provide a military force answering to the
+exigencies of the State; still there is no reason to suppose him blind
+to the great political advantage to be derived from the formation of an
+independent class of citizens; and that he had in reality premeditated a
+civil as well as a military reformation may be concluded from the fact
+of his having established fairs, markets, and public assemblies, which,
+of themselves, would be closely connected with civil industry, within
+the walls of the cities; and, even if these trading warriors were at
+first merely feudatories of the Emperor, they must naturally in the end
+have formed a class of free citizens, the more so as, attracted within
+the cities by the advantages offered to them, their number rapidly and
+annually increased.
+
+The same military reasons which induced the emperor Henry to enroll the
+ancient freemen into a regular corps of infantry, and to form them into
+a civil corporation, caused him also to metamorphose the feudal
+aristocracy into a regular troop of cavalry and a knightly institution.
+The wild disorder with which the mounted vassals of the empire, the
+dukes, grafs, bishops, and abbots, each distinguished by his own banner,
+rushed to the attack, or vied with each other in the fury of the
+assault, was now changed by Henry, who was well versed in every knightly
+art, to the disciplined manoeuvres of the line, and to that of fighting
+in close ranks, so well calculated to withstand the furious onset of
+their Hungarian foe. The discipline necessary for carrying these new
+military tactics into practice among a nobility habituated to license
+could alone be enforced by motives of honor, and Henry accordingly
+formed a chivalric institution, which gave rise to new manners and to an
+enthusiasm that imparted a new character to the age. The tournament--
+from the ancient verb _turnen_, to wrestle or fight, a public contest in
+every species of warfare, carried on by the knights in the presence of
+noble dames and maidens, whose favor they sought to gain by their
+prowess, and which chiefly consisted of tilting and jousting either
+singly or in troops, the day concluding with a banquet and a dance--was
+then instituted. In these tournaments the ancient heroism of the Germans
+revived; they were in reality founded upon the ancient pagan legends of
+the heroes who carried on an eternal contest in their Walhalla, in order
+to win the smiles of the Walkyren, now represented by earth's well-born
+dames.
+
+The ancient spirit of brotherhood in arms, which had been almost
+quenched by that of self-interest, by the desire of acquiring feudal
+possessions, by the slavish subjection of the vassals under their
+lieges, and by the intrigues of the bishops, who intermeddled with all
+feudal matters, also reappeared. A great universal society of Christian
+knights, bound to the observance of peculiar laws, whose highest aim was
+to fight only for God--before long also for the ladies--and who swore
+never to make use of dishonorable means for success, but solely to live
+and to die for honor, was formed; an innovation which, although merely
+military in its origin, speedily became of political importance, for, by
+means of this knightly honor, the little vassal of a minor lord was no
+longer viewed as a mere underling, but as a confederate in the great
+universal chivalric fraternity. There were also many freemen who
+sometimes gained their livelihood by offering their services to
+different courts, or by robbing on the highways, and who were too proud
+to serve on foot; Henry offered them free pardon, and formed them into a
+body of light cavalry. In the cities the free citizens, who were
+originally intended only to serve as foot soldiery, appear ere long to
+have formed themselves into mounted troops, and to have created a fresh
+body of infantry out of their artificers and apprentices. It is certain
+that every freeman could pretend to knighthood.
+
+Although the chivalric regulations ascribed to the emperor Henry, and to
+his most distinguished vassals, may not be genuine, they offer
+nevertheless infallible proofs of the most ancient spirit of knighthood.
+Henry ordained that no one should be created a knight who either by word
+or by deed injured the holy Church; the Pfalzgraf Conrad added, "no one
+who either by word or by deed injured the holy German empire"; Hermann
+of Swabia, "no one who injured a woman or a maiden"; Berthold, the
+brother of Arnulf of Bavaria, "no one who had ever deceived another or
+had broken his word"; Conrad of Franconia, "no one who had ever run away
+from the field of battle." These appear to have been, in fact, the first
+chivalric laws, for they spring from the spirit of the times, while all
+the regulations concerning nobility of birth, the number of ancestors,
+the exclusion of all those who were engaged in trade, etc., are, it is
+evident from their very nature, of a much later origin.
+
+
+
+
+CONQUEST OF EGYPT BY THE FATIMITES
+
+A.D. 969
+
+STANLEY LANE-POOLE
+
+
+(It was the fate of the religion which Mahomet founded, as it has been
+of other great systems, to undergo many sectarian divisions, and to be
+used as the instrument of conquest and political power. When Islam had
+somewhat departed from the character which it first manifested in moral
+sternness and fiery zeal, and had established itself in various parts of
+the world on a basis of commerce or of science, rather than that of its
+original inspiration, various off shoots of the faith began to assume
+prominence. Among the sects which sprang up was one that claimed to
+represent the true succession of Mahomet. This sect was itself the
+result of a schism among the adherents of one of the two principal
+divisions of the Moslems--the Shiahs. They maintained that Ali, a
+relation and the adopted son of Mahomet and husband of his daughter
+Fatima, was the first legitimate imam or successor of the prophet. They
+regarded the other and greater division--the Sunnites, who recognized
+the first three caliphs, Abu-Bekr, Omar, and Othman--as usurpers. Ali
+was the fourth caliph, and the Sunnites in turn looked upon his
+followers, the Shiahs, as heretics.
+
+The schism among the Shiahs grew out of the claim of the schismatics
+that the legitimate imam or successor of the Prophet must be in the line
+of descent from Ali. The sixth imam, Jaffer, upon the death of his
+eldest son, Ismail, appointed another son, Moussa or Moses, his heir;
+but a large body of the Shiahs denied the right of Jaffer to make a new
+nomination, declaring the imamate to be strictly hereditary. They formed
+a new party of Ismailians, and in 908 a chief of this sect, Mahomet,
+surnamed el-Mahdi, or the Leader--a title of the Shiahs for their
+imams--revolted in Africa. He called himself a descendant of Ismail and
+claimed to be the legitimate imam. He aimed at the temporal power of a
+caliph, and soon established a rival caliphate in Africa, where he had
+obtained a considerable sovereignty. The dynasty thus begun assumed the
+name of Fatimites in honor of Fatima. The fourth caliph of this line,
+El-Moizz, conquered Egypt about 969, founded the modern Cairo, and made
+it his capital. The claims of the Egyptian caliphate were heralded
+throughout all Islam, and its rule was rapidly extended into Syria and
+Arabia. It played an important part in the history of the Crusades, but
+in 1171 was abolished by the famous Saladin, and Egypt was restored to
+the obedience which it had formerly owned to Bagdad. The Bagdad caliphs,
+called Abbassides--claiming descent from Abbas, the uncle of
+Mahomet--remained rulers of Egypt until 1517, or until within twenty
+years of the death of the last Abbasside.)
+
+
+Three hundred and thirty years had passed since the Saracens first
+invaded the valley of the Nile. The people, with traditional docility,
+had liberally adopted the religion of their rulers, and the Moslems now
+formed the great majority of the population. Arabs and natives had
+blended into much the same race that we now call Egyptians; but so far
+the mixture had not produced any conspicuous men. The few commanding
+figures among the governors, Ibn-Tulun, the Ikshid, Kafur, were
+foreigners, and even these were but a step above the stereotyped
+official. They essayed no great extension of their dominions; they did
+not try to extinguish their dangerous neighbors the schismatic
+Fatimites; and though they possessed and used fleets, they ventured upon
+no excursions against Europe.
+
+The great revolution which had swept over North Africa, and now spread
+to Egypt, arose out of the old controversy over the legitimacy of the
+caliphate. The prophet Mahomet died without definitely naming a
+successor, and thereby bequeathed an interminable quarrel to his
+followers. The principle of election, thus introduced, raised the first
+three caliphs, Abu-Bekr, Omar, Othman, to the _cathedra_ at Medina; but
+a strong minority held that the "divine right" rested with Ali, the
+"Lion of God," first convert to Islam, husband of the prophet's daughter
+Fatima, and father of Mahomet's only male descendants. When Ali in turn
+became the fourth caliph, he was the mark for jealousy, intrigue, and at
+length assassination; his sons, the grandsons of the Prophet, were
+excluded from the succession; his family were cruelly persecuted by
+their successful rivals, the Ommiad usurpers; and the tragedy of Kerbela
+and the murder of Hoseyn set the seal of martyrdom on the holy family
+and stirred a passionate enthusiasm which still rouses intense
+excitement in the annual representations of the Persian passion play.
+
+The rent thus opened in Islam was never closed. The ostracism of Ali
+"laid the foundation of the grand interminable schism which has divided
+the Mahometan Church, and equally destroyed the practice of charity
+among the members of their common creed and endangered the speculative
+truths of doctrine."
+
+The descendants of Ali, though almost universally devoid of the
+qualities of great leaders, possessed the persistence and devotion of
+martyrs, and their sufferings heightened the fanatical enthusiasm of
+their supporters. All attempts to recover the temporal power having
+proved vain, the Alides fell back upon the spiritual authority of the
+successive candidates of the holy family, whom they proclaimed to be the
+imams or spiritual leaders of the faithful. This doctrine of the imamate
+gradually acquired a more mystical meaning, supported by an allegorical
+interpretation of the _Koran_; and a mysterious influence was ascribed
+to the imam, who, though hidden from mortal eye, on account of the
+persecution of his enemies, would soon come forward publicly in the
+character of the ever-expected _mahdi_, sweep away the corruptions of
+the heretical caliphate, and revive the majesty of the pure lineage of
+the prophet. All Mahometans believe in a coming mahdi, a messiah, who
+shall restore right and prepare for the second advent of Mahomet and the
+tribunal of the last day; but the Shiahs turned the expectation to
+special account. They taught that the true Imam, though invisible to
+mortal sight, is ever living; they predicted the mahdi's speedy
+appearance, and kept their adherents on the alert to take up arms in his
+service. With a view to his coming they organized a pervasive
+conspiracy, instituted a secret society with carefully graduated stages
+of initiation, used the doctrines of all religions and sects as weapons
+in the propaganda, and sent missionaries throughout the provinces of
+Islam to increase the numbers of the initiates and pave the way for the
+great revolution. We see their partial success in the ravages of the
+Karmathians, who were the true parents of the Fatimites. The leaders and
+chief missionaries had really nothing in common with Mahometanism. Among
+themselves they were frankly atheists. Their objects were political, and
+they used religion in any form, and adapted it in all modes, to secure
+proselytes, to whom they imparted only so much of their doctrine as they
+were able to bear. These men were furnished with "an armory of
+proselytism" as perfect, perhaps, as any known to history: they had
+appeals to enthusiasm, and arguments for the reason, and "fuel for the
+fiercest passions of the people and times in which they moved." Their
+real aim was not religious or constructive, but pure nihilism. They used
+the claim of the family of Ali, not because they believed in any divine
+right or any caliphate, but because some flag had to be flourished in
+order to rouse the people.
+
+One of these missionaries, disguised as a merchant, journeyed back to
+Barbary in 893, with some Berber pilgrims who had performed the sacred
+ceremonies at Mecca. He was welcomed by the great tribe of the Kitama,
+and rapidly acquired an extraordinary influence over the Berbers--a race
+prone to superstition, and easily impressed by the mysterious rites of
+initiation and the emotional doctrines of the propagandist, the wrongs
+of the prophetic house, and the approaching triumph of the Mahdi.
+Barbary had never been much attached to the caliphate, and for a century
+it had been practically independent under the Aglabite dynasty, the
+barbarous excesses of whose later sovereigns had alienated their
+subjects. Alides, moreover, had established themselves, in the dynasty
+of the Idrisides, in Morocco since the end of the eighth century. The
+land was in every respect ripe for revolution, and the success of
+Abu-Abdallah esh-Shii, the new missionary, was extraordinarily rapid. In
+a few years he had a following of two hundred thousand armed men, and
+after a series of battles he drove Ziyadat-Allah, the last Aglabite
+prince, out of the country in 908. The missionary then proclaimed the
+imam Obeid-Allah as the true caliph and spiritual head of Islam. Whether
+this Obeid-Allah was really a descendant of Ali or not, he had been
+carefully prepared for the role, and reached Barbary in disguise, with
+the greatest mystery and some difficulty, pursued by the suspicions of
+the Bagdad caliph, who, in great alarm, sent repeated orders for his
+arrest. Indeed, the victorious missionary had to rescue his spiritual
+chief from a sordid prison at Sigilmasa. Then humbly prostrating himself
+before him, he hailed him as the expected mahdi, and in January, 910, he
+was duly prayed for in the mosque of Kayrawan as "the Imam 'Obeid-Allah
+el-Mahdi, Commander of the Faithful.'"
+
+The missionary's Berber proselytes were too numerous to encourage
+resistance, and the few who indulged the luxury of conscientious
+scruples were killed or imprisoned. El-Mahdi, indeed, appeared so secure
+in power that he excited the jealousy of his discoverer.
+
+Abu-Abdallah, the missionary, now found himself nobody, where a month
+before he had been supreme. The Fatimite restoration was to him only a
+means to an end; he had used Obeid-Allah's title as an engine of
+revolution, intending to proceed to the furthest lengths of his
+philosophy, to a complete social and political anarchy, the destruction
+of Islam, community of lands and women, and all the delight of
+unshackled license. Instead of this, his creature had absorbed his
+power, and all such designs were made void. He began to hatch treason
+and to hint doubts as to the genuineness of the Mahdi, who, as he truly
+represented, according to prophecy, ought to work miracles and show
+other proofs of his divine mission. People began to ask for a "sign." In
+reply, the Mahdi had the missionary murdered.
+
+The first Fatimite caliph, though without experience, was so vigorous a
+ruler that he could dispense with the dangerous support of his
+discoverer. He held the throne for a quarter of a century and
+established his authority, more or less continuously, over the Arab and
+Berber tribes and settled cities from the frontier of Egypt to the
+province of Fez (Fas) in Morocco, received the allegiance of the
+Mahometan governor of Sicily, and twice despatched expeditions into
+Egypt, which he would probably have permanently conquered if he had not
+been hampered by perpetual insurrections in Barbary. Distant governors,
+and often whole tribes of Berbers, were constantly in revolt, and the
+disastrous famine of 928-929, coupled with the Asiatic plague which his
+troops had brought back with them from Egypt, led to general
+disturbances and insurrections which fully occupied the later years of
+his reign. The western provinces, from Tahart and Nakur to Fez and
+beyond, frequently threw off all show of allegiance. His authority was
+founded more on fear than on religious enthusiasm, though zeal for the
+Alide cause had its share in his original success. The new "Eastern
+doctrines," as they were called, were enforced at the sword's point, and
+frightful examples were made of those who ventured to tread in the old
+paths. Nor were the freethinkers of the large towns, who shared the
+missionary's esoteric principles, encouraged; for outwardly, at least,
+the Mahdi was strictly a Moslem. When people at Kayrawan began to put in
+practice the missionary's advanced theories, to scoff at all the rules
+of Islam, to indulge in free love, pig's flesh, and wine, they were
+sternly brought to order. The mysterious powers expected of a mahdi were
+sedulously rumored among the credulous Berbers, though no miracles were
+actually exhibited; and the obedience of the conquered provinces was
+secured by horrible outrages and atrocities, of which the terrified
+people dared not provoke a repetition at the hands of the Mahdi's savage
+generals.
+
+His eldest son Abul-Kasim, who had twice led expeditions into Egypt,
+succeeded to the caliphate with the title of El-Kaim, 934-946. He began
+his reign with warlike vigor. He sent out a fleet in 934 or 935, which
+harried the southern coast of France, blockaded and took Genoa, and
+coasted along Calabria, massacring and plundering, burning the shipping,
+and carrying off slaves wherever it touched. At the same time he
+despatched a third army against Egypt; but the firm hand of the Ikshid
+now held the government, and his brother, Obeid-Allah, with fifteen
+thousand horse, drove the enemy out of Alexandria and gave them a
+crushing defeat on their way home. But for the greater part of his reign
+El-Kaim was on the defensive, fighting for existence against the
+usurpation of one Abu-Yezid, who repudiated Shiism, cursed the Mahdi and
+his successor, stirred up most of Morocco and Barbary against El-Kaim,
+drove him out of his capital, and went near to putting an end to the
+Fatimite caliphate.
+
+It was only after seven years of uninterrupted civil war that this
+formidable insurrection died out, under the firm but politic management
+of the third caliph, El-Mansur (946-953), a brave man who knew both when
+to strike and when to be generous. Abu-Yezid was at last run to earth,
+and his body was skinned and stuffed with straw, and exposed in a cage
+with a couple of ludicrous apes as a warning to the disaffected.
+
+The Fatimites so far wear a brutal and barbarous character. They do not
+seem to have encouraged literature or learning; but this is partly
+explained by the fact that culture belonged chiefly to the orthodox
+caliphate; and its learned men could have no dealings with the heretical
+pretender. The city of Kayrawan, which dates from the Arab conquest in
+the eighth century, preserves the remains of some noble buildings, but
+of their other capitals or royal residences no traces of art or
+architecture remain to bear witness to the taste of their founders. Each
+began to decay as soon as its successor was built.
+
+With the fourth caliph, however, El-Moizz, the conqueror of Egypt,
+953-975, the Fatimites entered upon a new phase.
+
+El-Moizz was a man of politic temper, a born statesman, able to grasp
+the conditions of success and to take advantage of every point in his
+favor. He was also highly educated, and not only wrote Arabic poetry and
+delighted in its literature, but studied Greek, mastered Berber and
+Sudani dialects, and is even said to have taught himself Slavonic in
+order to converse with his slaves from Eastern Europe. His eloquence was
+such as to move his audience to tears. To prudent statesmanship he added
+a large generosity, and his love of justice was among his noblest
+qualities. So far as outward acts could show, he was a strict Moslem of
+the Shiah sect, and the statement of his adversaries that he was really
+an atheist seems to rest merely upon the belief that all the Fatimites
+adopted the esoteric doctrines of the Ismailian missionaries.
+
+When he ascended the throne in April, 953, he had already a policy, and
+he lost no time in carrying it into execution. He first made a progress
+through his dominions, visiting each town, investigating its needs, and
+providing for its peace and prosperity. He bearded the rebels in their
+mountain fastnesses, till they laid down their arms and fell at his
+feet. He conciliated the chiefs and governors with presents and
+appointments, and was rewarded by their loyalty.
+
+At the head of his ministers he set Gawhar "the Roman," a slave from the
+Eastern Empire, who had risen to the post of secretary to the late
+Caliph, and was now by his son promoted to the rank of _wazir_ commander
+of the forces. He was sent in 958 to bring the ever-refractory Maghreb
+(Morocco) to allegiance. The expedition was entirely successful,
+Sigilmasa and Fez were taken, and Gawhar reached the shore of the
+Atlantic.
+
+Jars of live fish and sea-weed reached the capital, and proved to the
+Caliph that his empire touched the ocean, the "limitless limit" of the
+world. All the African littoral, from the Atlantic to the frontier of
+Egypt--with the single exception of Spanish Ceuta--now peaceably
+admitted the sway of the Fatimite Caliph.
+
+The result was due partly to the exhaustion caused by the long struggle
+during the preceding reigns, partly to the politic concessions and
+personal influence of the able young ruler. He was liberal and
+conciliatory toward different provinces, but to the Arabs of the capital
+he was severe. Kayrawan teemed with disaffected folk, sheiks, and
+theologians bitterly hostile to the heretical "orientalism" of the
+Fatimites, and always ready to excite a tumult. Moizz was resolved to
+give them no chance, and one of his repressive measures was the curfew.
+At sunset a trumpet sounded, and anyone found abroad after that was
+liable to lose not only his way, but his head. So long as they were
+quiet, however, he used the people justly, and sought to impress them in
+his favor. In a singular interview, recorded by Makrisi, he exhibited
+himself to a deputation of sheiks, dressed in the utmost simplicity, and
+seated before his writing materials in a plain room, surrounded by
+books. He wished to disabuse them of the idea that he led in private a
+life of luxury and self-indulgence.
+
+"You see what employs me when I am alone," he said; "I read letters that
+come to me from the lands of the East and the West, and answer them with
+my own hand; I deny myself all the pleasures of the world, and I seek
+only to protect your lives, multiply your children, shame your rivals,
+and daunt your enemies." Then he gave them much good advice, and
+especially recommended them to keep to one wife.
+
+"One woman is enough for one man. If you straitly observe what I have
+ordained," he concluded, "I trust that God will, through you, procure
+our conquest of the East in like manner as he has vouchsafed us the
+West."
+
+The conquest of Egypt was indeed the aim of his life. To rule over
+tumultuous Arab and Berber tribes in a poor country formed no fit
+ambition for a man of his capacity. Egypt, its wealth, its commerce, its
+great port, and its docile population--these were his dream.
+
+For two years he had been digging wells and building rest-houses on the
+road to Alexandria. The West was now outwardly quiet, and between Egypt
+and any hope of succor from the eastern caliphate stood the ravaging
+armies of the Karmatis. Egypt itself was in helpless disorder. The great
+Kafur was dead, and its nominal ruler was a child. Ibn-Furat, the
+_wazir_, had made himself obnoxious to the people by arrests and
+extortions. The very soldiery was in revolt, and the Turkish retainers
+of the court mutinied, plundered the wazir's palace, and even opened
+negotiations with Moizz. Hoseyn, the nephew of the Ikshid, attempted to
+restore public order, but after three months of vacillating and
+unpopular government he returned to his own province in Palestine to
+make terms with the Karmatis. Famine, the result of the exceptionally
+low Nile of 967, added to the misery of the country; plague, as usual,
+followed in the steps of famine; over six hundred thousand people died
+in and around Fustat, and the wretched inhabitants began in despair to
+migrate to happier lands.
+
+All these matters were fully reported to Moizz by the renegade Jew Yakub
+Killis, a former favorite of Kafur, who had been driven from Egypt by
+the jealous exactions of the wazir, Ibn-Furat, and who was perfectly
+familiar with the political and financial state of the Nile valley. His
+representations confirmed the Fatimite Caliph's resolve; the Arab tribes
+were summoned to his standard; an immense treasure was collected, all of
+which was spent in the campaign; gratuities were lavishly distributed to
+the army, and at the head of over one hundred thousand men, all well
+mounted and armed, accompanied by a thousand camels and a mob of horses
+carrying money, stores, and ammunition, Gawhar marched from Kayrawan in
+February, 969. The Caliph himself reviewed the troops. The marshal
+kissed his hand and his horse's shoe. All the princes, emirs, and
+courtiers passed reverently on foot before the honored leader of the
+conquering army, who, as a last proof of favor, received the gift of his
+master's own robes and charger. The governors of all the towns on the
+route had orders to come on foot to Gawhar's stirrup, and one of them
+vainly offered a large bribe to be excused the indignity.
+
+The approach of this overwhelming force filled the Egyptian ministers
+with consternation, and they thought only of obtaining favorable terms.
+A deputation of notables, headed by Abu-Giafar Moslem, a _sherif_, or
+descendant of the Prophet's family, waited upon Gawhar near Alexandria,
+and demanded a capitulation. The general consented without reserve, and
+in a conciliatory letter granted all they asked. But they had reckoned
+without their host; the troops at Fustat would not listen to such
+humiliation, and there was a strong war party among the citizens, to
+which some of the ministers leaned. The city prepared for resistance,
+and skirmishes took place with Gawhar's army, which had meanwhile
+arrived at the opposite town of Giza in July. Forcing the passage of the
+river, with the help of some boats supplied by Egyptian soldiers, the
+invaders fell upon the imposing army drawn up on the other bank, and
+totally defeated them. The troops deserted Fustat in a panic, and the
+women of the city, running out of their houses, implored the sherif to
+intercede with the conqueror.
+
+Gawhar, like his master, always disposed to a politic leniency, renewed
+his former promises, and granted a complete amnesty to all who
+submitted. The overjoyed populace cut off the heads of some of the
+refractory leaders, in their enthusiasm, and sent them to the camp in
+pleasing token of allegiance. A herald, bearing a white flag, rode
+through the streets of Fustat proclaiming the amnesty and forbidding
+pillage, and on August the 5th the Fatimite army, with full pomp of
+drums and banners, entered the capital.
+
+That very night Gawhar laid the foundations of a new city, or rather
+fortified palace, destined for the reception of his sovereign. He was
+encamped on the sandy waste which stretched northeast of Fustat on the
+road to Heliopolis, and there, at a distance of about a mile from the
+river, he marked out the boundaries of the new capital. There were no
+buildings, save the old "Convent of the Bones," nor any cultivation
+except the beautiful park called "Kafur's Garden," to obstruct his
+plans. A square, somewhat less than a mile each way, was pegged out with
+poles, and the Maghrabi astrologers, in whom Moizz reposed extravagant
+faith, consulted together to determine the auspicious moment for the
+opening ceremony. Bells were hung on ropes from pole to pole, and at the
+signal of the sages their ringing was to announce the precise moment
+when the laborers were to turn the first sod. The calculations of the
+astrologers were, however, anticipated by a raven, who perched on one of
+the ropes and set the bells jingling, upon which every mattock was
+struck into the earth, and the trenches were opened. It was an unlucky
+hour; the planet Mars (El-Kahir) was in the ascendant; but it could not
+be undone, and the place was accordingly named after the hostile planet,
+El-Kahira, "the Martial" or "Triumphant," in the hope that the sinister
+omen might be turned to a triumphant issue. Cairo, as Kahira has come to
+be called, may fairly be said to have outlived all astrological
+prejudices. The name of the Abbasside caliph was at once expunged from
+the Friday prayers at the old mosque of Amr at Fustat; the black
+Abbasside robes were proscribed, and the preacher, in pure white,
+recited the Khutba for the imam Moizz, emir el-muminin, and invoked
+blessings on his ancestors Ali and Fatima and all their holy family. The
+call to prayer from the minarets was adapted to Shiah taste. The joyful
+news was sent to the Fatimite Caliph on swift dromedaries, together with
+the heads of the slain. Coins were struck with the special formulas of
+the Fatimite creed--"Ali is the noblest of [God's] delegates, the wazir
+of the best of apostles"; "the Imam Maadd calls men to profess the unity
+of the Eternal"--in addition to the usual dogmas of the Mahometan faith.
+For two centuries the mosques and the mint proclaimed the shibboleth of
+the Shiahs.
+
+Gawhar set himself at once to restore tranquillity and alleviate the
+sufferings of the famine-stricken people. Moizz had providently sent
+grain ships to relieve their distress, and as the price of bread
+nevertheless remained at famine rates, Gawhar publicly flogged the
+millers, established a central corn-exchange, and compelled everyone to
+sell his corn there under the eye of a government inspector. In spite of
+his efforts the famine lasted for two years; plague spread alarmingly,
+insomuch that the corpses could not be buried fast enough, and were
+thrown into the Nile; and it was not till the winter of 971-972 that
+plenty returned and the pest disappeared. As usual, the viceroy took a
+personal part in all public functions. Every Saturday he sat in court,
+assisted by the wazir Ibn-Furat, the cadi, and skilled lawyers, to hear
+causes and petitions and to administer justice. To secure impartiality,
+he appointed to every department of state an Egyptian and a Maghrabi
+officer. His firm and equitable rule insured peace and order; and the
+great palace he was building, and the new mosque, the Azhar, which he
+founded in 970 and finished in 972, not only added to the beauty of the
+capital, but gave employment to innumerable craftsmen.
+
+The inhabitants of Egypt accepted the new _regime_ with their habitual
+phlegm. An Ikshidi officer in the Bashmur district of Lower Egypt did,
+indeed, incite the people to rebellion, but his fate was not such as to
+encourage others. He was chased out of Egypt, captured on the coast of
+Palestine, and then, it is gravely recorded, he was given sesame oil to
+drink for a month, till his skin stripped off, whereupon it was stuffed
+with straw and hung up on a beam, as a reminder to him who would be
+admonished. With this brief exception we read of no riots, no sectarian
+risings, and the general surrender was complete when the remaining
+partisans of the deposed dynasty, to the number of five thousand, laid
+down their arms. An embassy sent to George, King of Nubia, to invite him
+to embrace Islam, and to exact the customary tribute, was received with
+courtesy, and the money, but not the conversion, was arranged. The holy
+cities of Mecca and Medina in the Higaz, where the gold of Moizz had
+been prudently distributed some years before, responded to his
+generosity and success by proclaiming his supremacy in the mosques; the
+Hamdanide prince who held Northern Syria paid similar homage to the
+Fatimite Caliph at Aleppo, where the Abbassides had hitherto been
+recognized. Southern Syria, however, which had formed part of the
+Ikshid's kingdom, did not submit to the usurpers without a struggle.
+Hoseyn was still independent at Ramla, and Gawhar's lieutenant, Giafar
+ben Fellah, was obliged to give him battle. Hoseyn was defeated and
+exposed bareheaded to the insults of the mob at Fustat, to be finally
+sent, with the rest of the family of Ikshid, to a Barbary jail.
+Damascus, the home of orthodoxy, was taken by Giafar, not without a
+struggle, and the Fatimite doctrine was there published, to the
+indignation and disgust of the Sunnite population.
+
+A worse plague than the Fatimite conquest soon afflicted Syria. The
+Karmati leader, Hasan ben Ahmad, surnamed El-Asam, finding the
+blackmail, which he had lately received out of the revenues of Damascus,
+suddenly stopped, resolved to extort it by force of arms. The Fatimites
+indeed sprang from the same movement, and their founder professed the
+same political and irreligious philosophy as Hasan himself; but this did
+not stand in his way, and his knowledge of their origin made him the
+less disposed to render homage to the sacred pretensions of the new
+imams, whom he contemptuously designated as the spawn of the quacks,
+charlatans, and the enemies of Islam. He tried to enlist the support of
+the Abbasside Caliph, but El-Muti replied that Fatimis and Karmatis were
+all one to him, and he would have nothing to do with either. The
+Buweyhid prince of Irak, however, supplied Hasan with arms and money;
+Abu-Taghlib, the Hamdanide ruler of Rahba on the Euphrates, contributed
+men; and, supported by the Arab tribes of Okeyl, Tavy, and others, Hasan
+marched upon Damascus, where the Fatimites were routed, and their
+general, Giafar, killed. Moizz was forthwith publicly cursed from the
+pulpit in the Syrian capital, to the qualified satisfaction of the
+inhabitants, who had to pay handsomely for the pleasure.
+
+Hasan next marched to Ramla, and thence, leaving the Fatimite army of
+eleven thousand men shut up in Jaffa, invaded Egypt. His troops
+surprised Kulzum at the head of the Red Sea, and Farama (Pelusium), near
+the Mediterranean, at the two ends of the Egyptian frontier. Tinnis
+declared against the Fatimites, and Hasan appeared at Heliopolis in
+October, 971. Gawhar had already intrenched the new capital with a deep
+ditch, leaving but one entrance, which he closed with an iron gate. He
+armed the Egyptians as well as the African troops, and a spy was set to
+watch the wazir Ibn-Furat, lest he should be guilty of treachery. The
+sherifs of the family of Ali were summoned to the camp, as hostages for
+the good behavior of the inhabitants. Meanwhile, the officers of the
+enemy were liberally tempted with bribes. Two months they lay before
+Cairo, and then, after an indecisive engagement, Hasan stormed the gate,
+forced his way across the ditch, and attacked the Egyptians on their own
+ground. The result was a severe repulse, and Hasan retreated, under
+cover of night, to Kulzum, leaving his camp and baggage to be plundered
+by the Fatimites, who were only balked of a sanguinary pursuit by the
+intervention of night. The Egyptian volunteers displayed unexpected
+valor in the fight, and many of the partisans of the late dynasty, who
+were with the enemy, were made prisoners.
+
+Thus the serious danger, which went near to cutting short the Fatimite
+occupation of Egypt, was not only resolutely met, but even turned into
+an advantage. There was no more intriguing on behalf of the Ikshidids;
+Tinnis was recovered from its temporary defection and occupied by the
+reinforcements which Moizz had hurriedly despatched under Ibn-Ammar to
+the succor of Gawhar; and the Karmati fleet, which attempted to recover
+this fort, was obliged to slip anchor, abandoning seven ships and five
+hundred prisoners. Jaffa, which still held out resolutely against the
+besieging Arabs, was now relieved by the despatch of African troops from
+Cairo, who brought back the garrison, but did not dare to hold the post.
+The enemy fell back upon Damascus, and the leaders fell out among
+themselves.
+
+The Karmati chief was not crushed, however, by his defeat. In the
+following year he was collecting ships and Arabs for a fresh invasion.
+Gawhar, who had long urged his master to come and protect his conquest,
+now pointed out the extreme danger of a second attack from an enemy
+which had already succeeded in boldly forcing his way to the gate of
+Cairo. Moizz had delayed his journey, because he could not safely trust
+his western provinces in his absence; but on the receipt of this grave
+news, he appointed Yusuf Bulugin ben Zeyri, of the Berber tribe of
+Sanhaga, to act as his deputy in Barbary, left Sardaniya--the
+Fontainebleau of Kayrawan, as Mansuriya was its Versailles--in November,
+972, and making a leisurely progress, by way of Kabis, Tripolis,
+Agdabiya, and Barka, reached Alexandria in the following May. Here the
+Caliph received a deputation, consisting of the cadi of Fustat and other
+eminent persons, whom he moved to tears by his eloquent and virtuous
+discourse. A month later he was encamped in the gardens of the monastery
+near Giza, where he was reverently welcomed by his devoted servant,
+Gawhar, content to efface himself in his master's shadow.
+
+The entry of the new Caliph into his new capital was a solemn spectacle.
+With him were all his sons and brothers and kinsfolk, and before him
+were borne the coffins of his ancestors. Fustat was illuminated and
+decked for his reception; but Moizz would not enter the old capital of
+the usurping caliphs. He crossed from Roda by Gawhar's new bridge, and
+proceeded direct to the palace-city of Cairo. Here he threw himself on
+his face and gave thanks to God.
+
+There was yet an ordeal to be gone through before he could regard
+himself as safe. Egypt was the home of many undoubted sherifs or
+descendants of Ali, and these, headed by a representative of the
+distinguished Tabataba family, came boldly to examine his credentials.
+Moizz must prove his title to the holy imamate inherited from Ali, to
+the satisfaction of these experts in genealogy. According to the story,
+the Caliph called a great assembly of the people, and invited the
+sherifs to appear; then, half drawing his sword, he said:
+
+"Here is my pedigree," and scattering gold among the spectators, added,
+"and there is my proof."
+
+It was perhaps the best argument he could produce. The sherifs could
+only protest their entire satisfaction at this convincing evidence; and
+it is at any rate certain that, whatever they thought of the Caliph's
+claim, they did not contest it. The capital was placarded with his name,
+and the praises of Ali and Moizz were acclaimed by the people, who
+flocked to his first public audience. Among the presents offered him,
+that of Gawhar was especially splendid, and its costliness illustrates
+the colossal wealth acquired by the Fatimites. It included five hundred
+horses with saddles and bridles encrusted with gold, amber, and precious
+stones; tents of silk and cloth of gold, borne on Bactrian camels;
+dromedaries, mules, and camels of burden; filigree coffers full of gold
+and silver vessels; gold-mounted swords; caskets of chased silver
+containing precious stones; a turban set with jewels, and nine hundred
+boxes filled with samples of all the goods that Egypt produced.
+
+
+
+
+GROWTH AND DECADENCE OF CHIVALRY
+
+TENTH TO FIFTEENTH CENTURY
+
+LÉON GAUTIER
+
+
+(Writers on the history of chivalry are unable to refer its origin to
+any definite time or place; and even specific definition of chivalry is
+seldom attempted by careful students. They rather give us, as does
+Gautier in the picturesque account which follows, some recognized
+starting-point, and for definition content themselves with
+characterization of the spirit and aims of chivalry, analysis of its
+methods, and the story of its rise and fall.
+
+Chivalry was not an official institution that came into existence by the
+decree of a sovereign. Although religious in its original elements and
+impulses, there was nothing in its origin to remind us of the foundation
+of a religious order. It would be useless to search for the place of its
+birth or for the name of its founder. It was born everywhere at once,
+and has been everywhere at the same time the natural effect of the same
+aspirations and the same needs. "There was a moment when people
+everywhere felt the necessity of tempering the ardor of old German
+blood, and of giving to their ill-regulated passions an ideal. Hence
+chivalry!"
+
+Yet chivalry arose from a German custom which was idealized by the
+Christian church; and chivalry was more an ideal than an institution. It
+was "the Christian form of the military profession; the knight was the
+Christian soldier." True, the profession and mission of the church meant
+the spread of peace and the hatred of war, she holding with her Master
+that "they who take the sword shall perish with the sword." Her thought
+was formulated by St. Augustine: "He who can think of war and can
+support it without great sorrow is truly dead to human feelings." "It is
+necessary," he says, "to submit to war, but to wish for peace." The
+church did, however, look upon war as a divine means of punishment and
+of expiation, for individuals and nations. And the eloquent Bossuet
+showed the church's view of war as the terrestrial preparation for the
+Kingdom of God, and described how empires fall upon one another to form
+a foundation whereon to build the church. In the light of such
+interpretations the church availed herself of the militant auxiliary
+known as chivalry.
+
+Along with the religious impulse that animated it, chivalry bore,
+throughout its purer course, the character of knightliness which it
+received from Teutonic sources. How the fine sentiments and ennobling
+customs of the Teutonic nations, particularly with respect to the
+gallantry and generosity of the male toward the female sex, grew into
+beautiful combination with the rule of protecting the weak and
+defenceless everywhere, and how these elements were blended with the
+spirit of religious devotion which entered into the organization and
+practices of chivalry, forms one of the most fascinating features in the
+study of its development; and this gentler side, no less than its
+sterner aspects, is faithfully presented in the brilliant examination of
+Gautier. And the heroic sentiment and action which inspired and
+accomplished the sacred warfare of the Crusades are not less admirably
+depicted in these pages; while in his summary of the decline of chivalry
+Gautier has perhaps never been surpassed for penetrating insight and
+lucid exposition.)
+
+
+There is a sentence of Tacitus--the celebrated passage in the
+_Germania_--that refers to a German rite in which we really find all the
+military elements of the future chivalry. The scene took place beneath
+the shade of an old forest. The barbarous tribe is assembled, and one
+feels that a solemn ceremony is in preparation. Into the midst of the
+assembly advances a very young man, whom you can picture to yourself
+with sea-green eyes, long fair hair, and perhaps some tattooing. A chief
+of the tribe is present, who without delay places gravely in the hands
+of the young man a _framea_ and a buckler. Failing a sovereign ruler, it
+is the father of the youth, or some relative, who undertakes this
+delivery of weapons. "Such is the 'virile robe' of these people," as
+Tacitus well puts it; "such is the first honor of their youth. Till then
+the young man was only one in a family; he becomes by this rite a member
+of the Republic. _Ante hoc domus pars videtur: mox rei publicae_. This
+sword and buckler he will never abandon, for the Germans in all their
+acts, whether public or private, are always armed. So, the ceremony
+finished, the assembly separates, and the tribe reckons a _miles_--a
+warrior--the more. That is all!"
+
+The solemn handing of arms to the young German--such is the first germ
+of chivalry which Christianity was one day to animate into life.
+"_Vestigium vetus creandi equites seu milites_." It is with reason that
+Sainte-Palaye comments in the very same way upon the text of the
+_Germania_, and that a scholar of our own days exclaims with more than
+scientific exactness, "The true origin of _miles_ is this bestowal of
+arms which among the Germans marks the entry into civil life."
+
+No other origin will support the scrutiny of the critic, and he will not
+find anyone now to support the theory of Roman origin with Sainte-Marie,
+or that of the Arabian origin with Beaumont. There only remains to
+explain in this place the term knight (chevalier), but it is well known
+to be derived from _caballus_, which primarily signifies a beast of
+burden, a pack-horse, and has ended by signifying a war-horse. The
+knight, also, has always preserved the name of _miles_ in the Latin
+tongue of the Middle Ages, in which chivalry is always called _militia_.
+Nothing can be clearer than this.
+
+We do not intend to go further, however, without replying to two
+objections, which are not without weight, and which we do not wish to
+leave behind us unanswered.
+
+In a certain number of Latin books of the Middle Ages we find, to
+describe chivalry, an expression which the "Romanists" oppose
+triumphantly to us, and of which the Romish origin cannot seriously be
+doubted. When it is intended to signify that a knight has been created,
+it is stated that the individual has been girt with the _cingulum
+militare_. Here we find ourselves in full Roman parlance, and the word
+signified certain terms which described admission into military service,
+the release from this service, and the degradation of the legionary.
+When St. Martin left the militia, his action was qualified as _solutio
+cinguli_, and at all those who act like him the insulting expression
+_militaribus zonis discincti_ is cast. The girdle which sustains the
+sword of the Roman officer--_cingulum zona_, or rather _cinctorium_--as
+also the baldric, from _balteus_, passed over the shoulder and was
+intended to support the weapon of the common soldier. "You perceive
+quite well," say our adversaries, "that we have to do with a Roman
+costume." Two very simple observations will, perhaps, suffice to get to
+the bottom of such a specious argument: The first is that the Germans in
+early times wore, in imitation of the Romans, "a wide belt ornamented
+with bosses of metal," a baldric, by which their swords were suspended
+on the left side; and the second is that the chroniclers of old days,
+who wrote in Latin and affected the classic style, very naturally
+adopted the word _cingulum_ in all its acceptations, and made use of
+this Latin paraphrasis--_cingulo militari decorare_--to express this
+solemn adoption of the sword. This evidently German custom was always
+one of the principal rites of the collation of chivalry. There is then
+nothing more in it than a somewhat vague reminiscence of a Roman custom
+with a very natural conjunction of terms which has always been the habit
+of a literary people.
+
+To sum up, the word is Roman, but the thing itself is German. Between
+the _militia_ of the Romans and the chivalry of the Middle Ages there is
+really nothing in common but the military profession considered
+generally. The official admittance of the Roman soldier to an army
+hierarchically organized in no way resembled the admission of a new
+knight into a sort of military college and the "pink of society." As we
+read further the singularly primitive and barbarous ritual of the
+service of knightly reception in the twelfth century, one is persuaded
+that the words exhale a German odor, and have nothing Roman about them.
+But there is another argument, and one which would appear decisive. The
+Roman legionary could not, as a rule, withdraw from the service; he
+could not avoid the baldric. The youthful knight of the Middle Ages, on
+the contrary, was always free to arm himself or not as he pleased, just
+as other cavaliers are at liberty to leave or join their ranks. The
+principal characteristic of the knightly service, and one which
+separates it most decidedly from the Roman _militia_, was its freedom of
+action.
+
+One very specious objection is made as regards feudalism, which some
+clear-minded people obstinately confound with chivalry. This was the
+favorite theory of Montalembert. Now there are two kinds of feudalism,
+which the old feudalists put down very clearly in two words now out of
+date--"fiefs of dignity" and "fiefs simple." About the middle of the
+ninth century, the dukes and counts made themselves independent of the
+central power, and declared that people owed the same allegiance to them
+as they did to the emperor or the king. Such were the acts of the "fiefs
+of dignity," and we may at once allow that they had nothing in common
+with chivalry. The "fiefs simple," then, remained.
+
+In the Merovingian period we find a certain number of small proprietors,
+called _vassi_, commending themselves to other men more powerful and
+more rich, who were called _seniores_. To his senior who made him a
+present of land the _vassus_ owed assistance and fidelity. It is true
+that as early as the reign of Charlemagne he followed him to war, but it
+must be noted that it was to the emperor, to the central power, that he
+actually rendered military service. There was nothing very particular in
+this, but the time was approaching when things would be altered. Toward
+the middle of the ninth century we find a large number of men falling
+"on their knees" before other men! What are they about? They are
+"recommending" themselves, but, in plainer terms, "Protect us and we
+will be your men." And they added: "It is to you and to you only that we
+intend in future to render military service; but in exchange you must
+protect the land we possess--defend what you will in time concede to us;
+and defend _us_ ourselves." These people on their knees were "vassals"
+at the feet of their "lords"; and the fief was generally only a grant of
+land conceded in exchange for military service.
+
+Feudalism of this nature has nothing in common with chivalry.
+
+If we consider chivalry in fact as a kind of privileged body into which
+men were received on certain conditions and with a certain ritual, it is
+important to observe that every vassal is not necessarily a cavalier.
+There were vassals who, with the object of averting the cost of
+initiation or for other reasons, remained _damoiseaux_, or pages, all
+their lives. The majority, of course, did nothing of the kind; but all
+could do so, and a great many did.
+
+On the other hand we see conferred the dignity of chivalry upon
+insignificant people who had never held fiefs, who owed to no one any
+fealty, and to whom no one owed any.
+
+We cannot repeat too often that it was not the cavalier (or knight), it
+was the _vassal_ who owed military service, or _ost_, to the _seigneur_,
+or lord; and the service _in curte_ or _court_: it was the vassal, not
+the knight, who owed to the "lord" relief, "aid," homage.
+
+The feudal system soon became hereditary. Chivalry, on the contrary, has
+never been hereditary, and a special rite has always been necessary to
+create a knight. In default of all other arguments this would be
+sufficient.
+
+But if, instead of regarding chivalry as an institution, we consider it
+as an ideal, the doubt is not really more admissible. It is here that,
+in the eyes of a philosophic historian, chivalry is clearly distinct
+from feudalism. If the western world in the ninth century had _not_ been
+feudalized, chivalry would nevertheless have come into existence; and,
+notwithstanding everything, it would have come to light in Christendom;
+for chivalry is nothing more than the Christianized form of military
+service, the armed _force_ in the service of the unarmed Truth; and it
+was inevitable that at some time or other it must have sprung, living
+and fully armed, from the brain of the church, as Minerva did from the
+brain of Jupiter.
+
+Feudalism, on the contrary, is not of Christian origin at all. It is a
+particular form of government, and of society, which has scarcely been
+less rigorous for the church than other forms of society and government.
+Feudalism has disputed with the church over and over again, while
+chivalry has protected her a hundred times. Feudalism is force--chivalry
+is the brake.
+
+Let us look at Godfrey de Bouillon. The fact that he owed homage to any
+suzerain, the fact that he exacted service from such and such vassals,
+are questions which concern feudal rights, and have nothing to do with
+chivalry. But if I contemplate him in battle beneath the walls of
+Jerusalem; if I am a spectator of his entry into the Holy City; if I see
+him ardent, brave, powerful and pure, valiant and gentle, humble and
+proud, refusing to wear the golden crown in the Holy City where Jesus
+wore the crown of thorns, I am not then anxious--I am not curious--to
+learn from whom he holds his fief, or to know the names of his vassals;
+and I exclaim, "There is the knight!" And how many knights, what
+chivalrous virtues, have existed in the Christian world since feudalism
+has ceased to exist!
+
+The adoption of arms in the German fashion remains the true origin of
+chivalry; and the Franks have handed down this custom to us--a custom
+perpetuated to a comparatively modern period. This simple, almost rude
+rite so decidedly marked the line of civil life in the code of manners
+of people of German origin, that under the Carlovingians we still find
+numerous traces of it. In 791 Louis, eldest son of Charlemagne, was only
+thirteen years old, and yet he had worn the crown of Aquitaine for three
+years upon his "baby brow." The king of the Franks felt that it was time
+to bestow upon this child the military consecration which would more
+quickly assure him of the respect of his people. He summoned him to
+Ingelheim, then to Ratisbon, and solemnly girded him with the sword
+which "makes men." He did not trouble himself about the framea or the
+buckler--the sword occupied the first place. It will retain it for a
+long time.
+
+In 838 at Kiersy we have a similar scene. This time it is old Louis who,
+full of sadness and nigh to death, bestows upon his son Charles, whom he
+loved so well, the "virile arms"--that is to say, the sword. Then
+immediately afterward he put upon his brow the crown of "Neustria."
+Charles was fifteen years old.
+
+These examples are not numerous, but their importance is decisive, and
+they carry us to the time when the church came to intervene positively
+in the education of the German _miles_. The time was rough, and it is
+not easy to picture a more distracted period than that in the ninth and
+tenth centuries. The great idea of the Roman Empire no longer, in the
+minds of the people, coincided with the idea of the Frankish kingdom,
+but rather inclined, so to speak, to the side of Germany, where it
+tended to fix itself. Countries were on the way to be formed, and people
+were asking to which country they could best belong. Independent
+kingdoms were founded which had no precedents and were not destined to
+have a long life. The Saracens were for the last time harassing the
+southern French coasts, but it was not so with the Norman pirates, for
+they did not cease for a single year to ravage the littoral which is now
+represented by the Picardy and Normandy coasts, until the day it became
+necessary to cede the greater part of it to them. People were fighting
+everywhere more or less--family against family--man to man. No road was
+safe, the churches were burned, there was universal terror, and everyone
+sought protection. The king had no longer strength to resist anyone, and
+the counts made themselves kings. The sun of the realm was set, and one
+had to look at the stars for light. As soon as the people perceived a
+strong man-at-arms, resolute, defiant, well established in his wooden
+keep, well fortified within the lines of his hedge, behind his palisade
+of dead branches, or within his barriers of planks; well posted on his
+hill, against his rock, or on his hillock, and dominating all the
+surrounding country--as soon as they saw this each said to him, "I am
+your man"; and all these weak ones grouped themselves around the strong
+one, who next day proceeded to wage war with his neighbors. Thence
+supervened a terrible series of private wars. Everyone was fighting or
+thinking of fighting.
+
+In addition to this, the still green memory of the grand figure of
+Charlemagne and the old empire, and I can't tell what imperial
+splendors, were still felt in the air of great cities; all hearts
+throbbed at the mere thought of the Saracens and the Holy Sepulchre; the
+crusade gathered strength of preparation far in advance, in the rage and
+indignation of all the Christian race; all eyes were turned toward
+Jerusalem, and in the midst of so many disbandments and so much
+darkness, the unity of the church survived fallen majesty!
+
+It was then, it was in that horrible hour--the decisive epoch in our
+history--that the church undertook the education of the Christian
+soldier; and it was at that time, by a resolute step, she found the
+feudal baron in his rude wooden citadel, and proposed to him an ideal.
+This ideal was chivalry!
+
+That chivalry may be considered a great military confraternity as well
+as an eighth sacrament, will be conceded. But, before familiarizing
+themselves with these ideals, the rough spirits of the ninth, tenth, and
+eleventh centuries had to learn the principles of them. The chivalrous
+ideal was not conceived "all of a piece," and certainly it did not
+triumph without sustained effort; so it was by degrees, and very slowly,
+that the church succeeded in inoculating the almost animal intelligence
+and the untrained minds of our ancestors with so many virtues.
+
+In the hands of the church, which wished to mould him into a Christian
+knight, the feudal baron was a very intractable individual. No one could
+be more brutal or more barbarous than he. Our more ancient
+ballads--those which are founded on the traditions of the ninth and
+tenth centuries--supply us with a portrait which does not appear
+exaggerated. I know nothing in this sense more terrible than _Raoul de
+Cambrai_, and the hero of this old poem would pass for a type of a
+half-civilized savage. This Raoul was a kind of Sioux or other redskin,
+who only wanted tattoo and feathers in his hair to be complete. Even a
+redskin is a believer, or superstitious to some extent, while Raoul
+defied the Deity himself. The savage respects his mother, as a rule; but
+Raoul laughed at his mother, who cursed him. Behold him as he invaded
+the Vermandois, contrary to all the rights of legitimate heirs. He
+pillaged, burned, and slew in all directions: he was everywhere
+pitiless, cruel, horrible. But at Origni he appears in all his ferocity.
+"You will erect my tent in the church, you will make my bed before the
+altar, and put my hawks on the golden crucifix." Now that church
+belonged to a convent. What did that signify to him? He burned the
+convent, he burned the church, he burned the nuns! Among them was the
+mother of his most faithful servitor, Bernier--his most devoted
+companion and friend--almost his brother! but he burned her with the
+others. Then, when the flames were still burning, he sat himself down,
+on a fast-day, to feast amid the scenes of his sanguinary
+exploits--defying God and man, his hands steeped in blood, his face
+lifted to heaven. That was the kind of soldier, the savage of the tenth
+century, whom the church had to educate!
+
+Unfortunately this Raoul de Cambrai is not a unique specimen; he was not
+the only one who had uttered this ferocious speech: "I shall not be
+happy until I see your heart cut out of your body." Aubri de Bourguignon
+was not less cruel, and took no trouble to curb his passions. Had he the
+right to massacre? He knew nothing about that, but meanwhile he
+continued to kill. "Bah!" he would say, "it is always an enemy the
+less." On one occasion he slew his four cousins. He was as sensual as
+cruel. His thick-skinned savagery did not appear to feel either shame or
+remorse; he was strong and had a weighty hand--that was sufficient.
+Ogier was scarcely any better, but notwithstanding all the glory
+attaching to his name, I know nothing more saddening than the final
+episode of the rude poem attributed to Raimbert of Paris. The son of
+Ogier, Baudouinet, had been slain by the son of Charlemagne, who called
+himself Charlot. Ogier did nothing but breathe vengeance, and would not
+agree to assist Christendom against the Saracen invaders unless the
+unfortunate Charlot was delivered to him. He wanted to kill him, he
+determined to kill him, and he rejoiced over it in anticipation. In vain
+did Charlot humble himself before this brute, and endeavor to pacify him
+by the sincerity of his repentance; in vain the old Emperor himself
+prayed most earnestly to God; in vain the venerable Naimes, the Nestor
+of our ballads, offered to serve Ogier all the rest of his life, and
+begged the Dane "not to forget the Saviour, who was born of the Virgin
+at Bethlehem." All their devotion and prayers were unavailing. Ogier,
+pitiless, placed one of his heavy hands on the youthful head, and with
+the other drew his sword, his terrible sword "Courtain." Nothing less
+than the intervention of an angel from heaven could have put an end to
+this terrible scene in which all the savagery of the German forests was
+displayed.
+
+The majority of these early heroes had no other shibboleth than "I am
+going to separate the head from the trunk!" It was their war-cry. But if
+you desire something more frightful still, something more "primitive,"
+you have only to open the _Loherains_ at hazard, and read a few stanzas
+of that raging ballad of "derring-do," and you will almost fancy you are
+perusing one of those pages in which Livingstone describes in such
+indignant terms the manners of some tribe in Central Africa. Read this:
+"Begue struck Isore upon his black helmet through the golden circlet,
+cutting him to the chine; then he plunged into his body his sword
+Flamberge with the golden hilt; took the heart out with both hands, and
+threw it, still warm, at the head of William, saying, 'There is your
+cousin's heart; you can salt and roast it.'" Here words fail us; it
+would be too tame to say with Goedecke, "These heroes act like the
+forces of nature, in the manner of the hurricane which knows no pity."
+We must use more indignant terms than these, for we are truly amid
+cannibals. Once again we say, there was the warrior, there was the
+savage whom the church had to elevate and educate!
+
+Such is the point of departure of this wonderful progress; such are the
+refractory elements out of which chivalry and the knight have been
+fashioned.
+
+The point of departure is Raoul of Cambrai burning Origni. The point of
+arrival is Girard of Roussillon falling one day at the feet of an old
+priest and expiating his former pride by twenty-two years of penitence.
+These two episodes embrace many centuries between them.
+
+A very interesting study might be made of the gradual transformation
+from the redskin to the knight; it might be shown how, and at what
+period of history, each of the virtues of chivalry penetrated
+victoriously into the undisciplined souls of these brutal warriors who
+were our ancestors; it might be determined at what moment the church
+became strong enough to impose upon our knights the great duties of
+defending it and of loving one another.
+
+This victory was attained in a certain number of cases undoubtedly
+toward the end of the eleventh century: and the knight appears to us
+perfected, finished, radiant, in the most ancient edition of the
+_Chanson of Roland_, which is considered to have been produced between
+1066 and 1095.
+
+It is scarcely necessary to observe that chivalry was no longer in
+course of establishment when Pope Urban II threw with a powerful hand
+the whole of the Christian West upon the East, where the Tomb of Christ
+was in possession of the Infidel.
+
+In legendary lore the embodiment of chivalry is Roland: in history it is
+Godfrey de Bouillon. There are no more worthy names than these.
+
+The decadence of chivalry--and when one is speaking of human
+institutions, sooner or later this word must be used--perhaps set in
+sooner than historians can believe. We need not attach too much
+importance to the grumblings of certain poets, who complain of their
+time with an evidently exaggerated bitterness, and we do not care for
+our own part to take literally the testimony of the unknown author of
+_La Vie de Saint Alexis_, who exclaims--about the middle of the eleventh
+century--that everything is degenerate and all is lost! Thus: "In olden
+times the world was good. Justice and love were springs of action in it.
+People then had faith, which has disappeared from amongst us. The world
+is entirely changed. The world has lost its healthy color. It is
+pale--it has grown old. It is growing worse, and will soon cease
+altogether."
+
+The poet exaggerates in a very singular manner the evil which he
+perceives around him, and one might aver that, far from bordering upon
+old age, chivalry was then almost in the very zenith of its glory. The
+twelfth century was its apogee, and it was not until the thirteenth that
+it manifested the first symptoms of decay.
+
+"_Li maus est moult want_" exclaims the author of _Godfrey de Bouillon_,
+and he adds, sadly, "_Tos li biens est finés_."
+
+He was more correct in speaking thus than was the author of _Saint
+Alexis_ in his complainings, for the decadence of chivalry actually
+commenced in his time. And it is not unreasonable to inquire into the
+causes of its decay.
+
+_The Romance of the Round Table_, which in the opinion of prepossessed
+or thoughtless critics appears so profoundly chivalrous, may be
+considered one of the works which hastened the downfall of chivalry. We
+are aware that by this seeming paradox we shall probably scandalize some
+of our readers, who look upon these adventurous cavaliers as veritable
+knights. What does it matter? _Avienne que puet_. The heroes of our
+_chansons de geste_ are really the authorized representatives and types
+of the society of their time, and not those fine adventure-seeking
+individuals who have been so brilliantly sketched by the pencil of
+Crétien de Troyes.
+
+It is true, however, that this charming and delicate spirit did not
+give, in his works, an accurate idea of his century and generation. We
+do not say that he embellished all he touched, but only that he
+enlivened it. Notwithstanding all that one could say about it, this
+school introduced the old Gaelic spirit into a poetry which had been
+till then chiefly Christian or German. Our epic poems are of German
+origin, and the _Table Round_ is of Celtic origin. Sensual and light,
+witty and delicate, descriptive and charming, these pleasing romances
+are never masculine, and become too often effeminate and effeminating.
+They sing always, or nearly so, the same theme. By lovely pasturages
+clothed with beautiful flowers, the air full of birds, a young knight
+proceeds in search of the unknown, and through a series of adventures
+whose only fault is that they resemble one another somewhat too closely.
+
+We find insolent defiances, magnificent duels, enchanted castles, tender
+love-scenes, mysterious talismans. The marvellous mingles with the
+supernatural, magicians with saints, fairies with angels. The whole is
+written in a style essentially French, and it must be confessed in
+clear, polished, and chastened language--perfect!
+
+But we must not forget, as we said just now, that this poetry, so
+greatly attractive, began as early as the twelfth century to be the mode
+universally; and let us not forget that it was at the same period that
+the _Percevalde Gallois_ and _Aliscans, Cleomadès_, and the
+_Couronnement Looys_ were written. The two schools have coexisted for
+many centuries: both camps have enjoyed the favor of the public. But in
+such a struggle it was all too easy to decide to which of them the
+victory would eventually incline. The ladies decided it, and no doubt
+the greater number of them wept over the perusal of _Erec_ or _Enid_
+more than over that of the _Covenant Vivien_ or _Raoul de Cambrai_.
+
+When the grand century of the Middle Ages had closed, when the blatant
+thirteenth century commenced, the sentimental had already gained the
+advantage over our old classic _chansons_; and the new school, the
+romantic set of the _Table Round_, triumphed! Unfortunately, they also
+triumphed in their manners; and they were the knights of the Round Table
+who, with the Valois, seated themselves upon the throne of France.
+
+In this way temerity replaced true courage; so good, polite manners
+replaced heroic rudeness; so foolish generosity replaced the charitable
+austerity of the early chivalry. It was the love of the unforeseen even
+in the military art; the rage for adventure--even in politics. We know
+whither this strategy and these theatrical politics led us, and that
+Joan of Arc and Providence were required to drag us out of the
+consequences.
+
+The other causes of the decadence of the spirit of chivalry are more
+difficult to determine. There is one of them which has not, perhaps,
+been sufficiently brought to light, and this is--will it be
+believed?--the exdevelopment of certain orders of chivalry! This
+statement requires some explanation.
+
+We must confess that we are enthusiastic, passionate admirers of these
+grand military orders which were formed at the commencement of the
+twelfth century. There have never been their like in the world, and it
+was only given to Christianity to display to us such a spectacle. To
+give to one single soul the double ideal of the soldier and the monk, to
+impose upon him this double charge, to fix in one these two conditions
+and in one only these two duties, to cause to spring from the earth I
+cannot tell how many thousands of men who voluntarily accepted this
+burden, and who were not crushed by it--that is a problem which one
+might have been pardoned for thinking insoluble. We have not
+sufficiently considered it. We have not pictured to ourselves with
+sufficient vividness the Templars and the Hospitallers in the midst of
+one of those great battles in the Holy Land in which the fate of the
+world was in the balance.
+
+No: painters have not sufficiently portrayed them in the arid plains of
+Asia forming an incomparable squadron in the midst of the battle. One
+might talk forever and yet not say too much about the charge of the
+Cuirassiers at Reichshoffen; but how many times did the Hospitaller
+knights and the Templars charge in similar fashion? Those soldier-monks,
+in truth, invented a new idea of courage. Unfortunately they were not
+always fighting, and peace troubled some of them. They became too rich,
+and their riches lowered them in the eyes of men and before heaven. We
+do not intend to adopt all the calumnies which have been circulated
+concerning the Templars, but it is difficult not to admit that many of
+these accusations had some foundation. The Hospitallers, at any rate,
+have given no ground for such attacks. They, thank heaven, remained
+undefiled, if not poor, and were an honor to that chivalry which others
+had compromised and emasculated.
+
+But when all is said, that which best became chivalry, the spice which
+preserved it the most surely, was poverty!
+
+Love of riches had not only attacked the chivalrous orders, but in a
+very short space of time all knights caught the infection. Sensuality
+and enjoyment had penetrated into their castles. "Scarcely had they
+received the knightly baldric before they commenced to break the
+commandments and to pillage the poor. When it became necessary to go to
+war, their sumpter-horses were laden with wine, and not with weapons;
+with leathern bottles instead of swords; with spits instead of lances.
+One might have fancied, in truth, that they were going out to dinner,
+and not to fight. It is true their shields were beautifully gilt, but
+they were kept in a virgin and unused condition. Chivalrous combats were
+represented upon their bucklers and their saddles, certainly; but that
+was all!"
+
+Now who is it who writes thus? It is not, as one might fancy, an author
+of the fifteenth century--it is a writer of the twelfth; and the
+greatest satirist, somewhat excessive and unjust in his statements, the
+Christian Juvenal whom we have just quoted, was none other than Peter of
+Blois.
+
+A hundred other witnesses might be cited in support of these indignant
+words. But if there is some exaggeration in them, we are compelled to
+confess that there is a considerable substratum of truth also.
+
+These abuses--which wealth engendered, which more than one poet has
+stigmatized--attracted, in the fourteenth century, the attention of an
+important individual, a person whose name occupies a worthy place in
+literature and history. Philip of Mezières, chancellor of Cyprus under
+Peter of Lusignan, was a true knight, who one day conceived the idea of
+reforming chivalry. Now the way he found most feasible in accomplishing
+his object, in arriving at such a difficult and complex reform, was to
+found a new order of chivalry himself, to which he gave the
+high-sounding title of "the Chivalry of the Passion of Christ."
+
+The decadence of chivalry is attested, alas! by the very character of
+the reformers by which this well-meaning Utopian attempted to oppose it.
+The good knight complains of the great advances of sensuality, and
+permits and advises the marriage of all knights. He complains of the
+accursed riches which the Hospitallers themselves were putting to a bad
+use, and forbade them in his _Institutions_; but nevertheless the
+luxurious habits of his time had an influence upon his mind, and he
+permitted his knights to wear the most extravagant costumes, and the
+dignitaries of his order to adopt the most high-sounding titles. There
+was something mystical in all this conception, and something theatrical
+in all this agency. It is hardly necessary to add that the "Chivalry of
+the Passion" was only a beautiful dream, originating in a generous mind.
+Notwithstanding the adherence of some brilliant personages, the order
+never attained to more than a theoretical organization, and had only a
+fictitious foundation. The idea of the deliverance of the Holy Sepulchre
+from the Infidel was hardly the object of the fifteenth-century
+chivalry; for the struggle between France and England then was engaging
+the most courageous warriors and the most practised swords. Decay
+hurried on apace!
+
+This was not the only cause of such a fatal falling away. The portals of
+chivalry had been opened to too many unworthy candidates. It had been
+made vulgar! In consequence of having become so cheap the grand title of
+"knight" was degraded. Eustace Deschamps, in his fine, straightforward
+way, states the scandal boldly and "lashes" it with his tongue. He says:
+"Picture to yourself the fact that the degree of knighthood is about to
+be conferred now upon babies of eight and ten years old."
+
+Well might this excellent man exclaim in another place: "Disorders
+always go on gathering strength, and even incomparable knights like Du
+Guesclin and Bayard cannot arrest the fatal course of the institution
+toward ruin." Chivalry was destined to disappear.
+
+It is very important that one should make one's self acquainted with the
+true character of such a downfall. France and England in the fourteenth
+and fifteenth centuries still boasted many high-bred knights. They
+exchanged the most superb defiances, the most audacious challenges, and
+proceeded from one country to another to run each other through the body
+proudly. The Beaumanoirs, who drank their blood, abounded. It was a
+question who would engage himself in the most incredible pranks; who
+would commit the most daring folly! They tell us afterward of the
+beautiful passages of arms, the grand feats performed, and the
+inimitable Froissart is the most charming of all these narrators, who
+make their readers as chivalrous as themselves.
+
+But we must tell everything: among these knights in beautiful armor
+there was a band of adventurers who never observed, and who could not
+understand, certain commandments of the ancient chivalry. The laxity of
+luxury had everywhere replaced the rigorous enactments of the old
+manliness, and even warriors themselves loved their ease too much. The
+religious sentiment was not the dominant one in their minds, in which
+the idea of a crusade now never entered. They had not sufficient respect
+for the weakness of the Church nor for other failings. They no longer
+felt themselves the champions of the good and the enemies of evil. Their
+sense of justice had become warped, as had love for their great native
+land.
+
+Again, what they termed "the license of camps" had grown very much
+worse; and we know in what condition Joan of Arc found the army of the
+King. Blasphemy and ribaldry in every quarter. The noble girl swept away
+these pests, but the effect of her action was not long-lived. She was
+the person to reestablish chivalry, which in her found the purity of its
+now-effaced type; but she died too soon, and had not sufficient
+imitators.
+
+There were, after her time, many chivalrous souls, and, thank heaven,
+there are still some among us; but the old institution is no longer with
+us. The events which we have had the misfortune to witness do not give
+us any ground to hope that chivalry, extinct and dead, will rise again
+to-morrow to light and life.
+
+In St. Louis' time, caricature and parody--they were low-class forces,
+but forces nevertheless--had already commenced the work of destruction.
+We are in possession of an abominable little poem of the thirteenth
+century, which is nothing but a scatological pamphlet directed against
+chivalry. This ignoble _Audigier_, the author of which is the basest of
+men, is not the only attack which one may disinter from amid the
+literature of that period. If one wishes to draw up a really complete
+list it would be necessary to include the _jabliaux_--the _Renart_ and
+the _Rose_, which constitute the most anti-chivalrous--I had nearly
+written the most Voltairian--works that I am acquainted with. The thread
+is easy enough to follow from the twelfth century down to the author of
+_Don Quixote_--which I do not confound with its infamous predecessors--
+to Cervantes, whose work has been fatal, but whose mind was elevated.
+
+However that may be, parody and the parodists were themselves a cause of
+decay. They weakened morals. Gallic-like, they popularized little
+_bourgeois_ sentiments, narrow-minded, satirical sentiments; they
+inoculated manly souls with contempt for such great things as one
+performs disinterestedly. This disdain is a sure element of decay, and
+we may regard it as an announcement of death.
+
+Against the knights who, here and there, showed themselves unworthy and
+degenerate, was put in practice the terrible apparatus of degradation.
+Modern historians of chivalry have not failed to describe in detail all
+the rites of this solemn punishment, and we have presented to us a scene
+which is well calculated to excite the imagination of the most
+matter-of-fact, and to make the most timid heart swell.
+
+The knight judicially condemned to submit to this shame was first
+conducted to a scaffold, where they broke or trod under foot all his
+weapons. He saw his shield, with device effaced, turned upside down and
+trailed in the mud. Priests, after reciting prayers for the vigil of the
+dead, pronounced over his head the psalm, "_Deus laudem meam_," which
+contains terrible maledictions against traitors. The herald of arms who
+carried out this sentence took from the hands of the pursuivant of arms
+a basin full of dirty water, and threw it all over the head of the
+recreant knight in order to wash away the sacred character which had
+been conferred upon him by the accolade. The guilty one, degraded in
+this way, was subsequently thrown upon a hurdle, or upon a stretcher,
+covered with a mortuary cloak, and finally carried to the church, where
+they repeated the same prayers and the same ceremonies as for the dead.
+
+This was really terrible, even if somewhat theatrical, and it is easy to
+see that this complicated ritual contained only a very few ancient
+elements. In the twelfth century the ceremonial of degradation was
+infinitely more simple. The spurs were hacked off close to the heels of
+the guilty knight. Nothing could be more summary or more significant.
+Such a person was publicly denounced as unworthy to ride on horseback,
+and consequently quite unworthy to be a knight. The more ancient and
+chivalrous, the less theatrical is it. It is so in many other
+institutions in the histories of all nations.
+
+That such a penalty may have prevented a certain number of treasons and
+forfeitures we willingly admit, but one cannot expect it to preserve all
+the whole body of chivalry from that decadence from which no institution
+of human establishment can escape.
+
+Notwithstanding inevitable weaknesses and accidents, the Decalogue of
+Chivalry has none the less been regnant in some millions of souls which
+it has made pure and great. These ten commandments have been the rules
+and the reins of youthful generations, who without them would have been
+wild and undisciplined. This legislation, in fact--which, to tell the
+truth, is only one of the chapters of the great Catholic Code--has
+raised the moral level of humanity.
+
+Besides, chivalry is not yet quite dead. No doubt, the ritual of
+chivalry, the solemn reception, the order itself, and the ancient oaths,
+no longer exist. No doubt, among these grand commandments there are many
+which are known only to the erudite, and which the world is unacquainted
+with. The Catholic Faith is no longer the essence of modern chivalry;
+the Church is no longer seated on the throne around which the old
+knights stand with their drawn swords; Islam is no longer the hereditary
+enemy; we have another which threatens us nearer home; widows and
+orphans have need rather of the tongues of advocates than of the iron
+weapon of the knights; there are no more duties toward liege-lords to be
+fulfilled; and we even do not want any kind of superior lord at all;
+_largesse_ is now confounded with charity; and the becoming hatred of
+evil-doing is no longer our chief, our best, passion!
+
+But whatever we may do there still remains to us, in the marrow, a
+certain leaven of chivalry which preserves us from death. There are
+still in the world an immense number of fine souls--strong and upright
+souls--who hate all that is small and mean, who know and who practise
+all the delicate promptings of honor, and who prefer death to an
+unworthy action or to a lie!
+
+That is what we owe to chivalry, that is what it has bequeathed to us.
+On the day when these last vestiges of such a grand past are effaced
+from our souls--we shall cease to exist!
+
+
+
+
+CONVERSION OF VLADIMIR THE GREAT
+
+INTRODUCTION OF CHRISTIANITY INTO RUSSIA
+
+A.D. 988-1015
+
+A. N. MOURAVIEFF
+
+
+(According to early Greek and Roman writers, Russia in their time was
+inhabited by Scythians and Sarmatians. The Greeks established commercial
+relations with the most southerly tribes. In the fourth and fifth
+centuries, during the migrations of the nations, Russia was invaded by
+Goths, Alans, Huns, Avars, and Bulgarians, who, however, made no
+settlements. They were followed by the Slavs, who are looked upon as the
+Sarmatians already mentioned.
+
+The Slavs settled as far north as the upper Volga. The chief settlements
+were Novgorod and Kieff, which became the capitals of independent
+principalities, Novgorod especially becoming an important commercial and
+trading centre.
+
+The commerce northward through the Baltic was subject to the attacks of
+the Scandinavian Northmen, known as Varangians. They demanded tribute of
+the Slavs, and on its refusal attacked and captured Novgorod. A little
+later Novgorod established its independence as a republic; but within a
+few years we find this section controlled by a Varangian tribe from Rus,
+a district of Sweden. This tribe was led by three brothers, Ruric the
+Peaceful, Sineous the Victorious, and Trouvor the Faithful, who settled
+and ruled in different parts of the country.
+
+In 864, on the death of his brothers, Ruric consolidated their
+territories with his, assumed the title of grand prince, peaceably took
+possession of Novgorod and made it his capital, naming the country
+Russia, after his native place.
+
+With the advent of the Varangians the authentic history of Russia
+begins. The millenary of that event was celebrated in 1862 at Novgorod,
+as the foundation of the Russian empire.
+
+Ruric died in 879. In the next hundred years his successors conquered
+many neighboring lands and added them to the empire. Kieff became the
+capital. Numerous invasions into the territory of the Greek empire were
+made and Constantinople was frequently attacked, resulting sometimes in
+repulse, and at others in exacting heavy tribute from the Eastern
+Emperor. Treaties were executed and a gradual growth of commerce and
+intercourse between the Greeks and Russians took place. Olga, the famous
+and popular widow of Ruric's son, Igor, became a Christian and was
+baptized in Constantinople in 955, and during the rest of her life lent
+her powerful influence to the spread of the faith. And though her son,
+the emperor Sviatoslaf, remained a pagan throughout his reign,
+Christianity continued to grow, and the general Christianization of
+Russia during the reign of her grandson, Vladimir, was aided materially
+by the great example of the good queen Olga.
+
+In 970 Sviatoslaf divided his empire among his three sons, Iaropolk I,
+Oleg, and Vladimir. After the death of Sviatoslaf in 972 civil war began
+between the three brothers. Oleg was killed and Vladimir fled to Sweden.
+In 980, supported by a force of Varangians, Vladimir returned, captured
+Novgorod and Kieff, and put Iaropolk to death. Under Vladimir, later
+known as Vladimir the Great, Russia increased in importance, and
+civilization was enhanced by the spread of Christianity through the
+missionary efforts of the Greek Church, now the Holy, Orthodox,
+Catholic, Apostolic, Oriental Church. It is, therefore, not strange that
+the Russian prelates were distinguished by their loyalty and fidelity to
+the Greek Church throughout the continued conflicts between it and the
+Roman Church which resulted in their separation in 1054.
+
+In the fifteenth century, with the consent of the patriarchate of
+Constantinople, the Orthodox Graeco-Russian Church assumed national
+independence, and became the state church; and after the establishment
+of Mahometanism in Constantinople, since its capture by Mahomet II in
+1453, the reigning Czar of Russia has come to be regarded not only as
+the temporal and spiritual head of the Greek Church by the great mass of
+adherents which form the bulk of the population in Russia, but also as
+the champion of all the followers of the church in Greece and throughout
+the orient.
+
+The story of the introduction of Christianity into Russia presents an
+interesting psychological study of the growth and development of the
+religious sentiment inherent in man--be he never so brutalized and
+barbarous. Notwithstanding its display of national pride and bias,
+pardonable in a native historian, Mouravieff's account is exceedingly
+interesting.)
+
+
+The Russian Church, like the other orthodox churches of the East, had an
+apostle for its founder. St. Andrew, the first called of the Twelve,
+hailed with his blessing long beforehand the destined introduction of
+Christianity into our country; ascending up and penetrating by the
+Dnieper into the deserts of Scythia, he planted the first cross on the
+hills of Kieff. "See you," said he to his disciples, "these hills? On
+these hills shall shine the light of divine grace. There shall be here a
+great city, and God shall have in it many churches to his name."
+
+Such are the words of the holy Nestor, the monk and annalist of the
+Pechersky monastery, that point from whence Christian Russia has sprung.
+
+But it was only after an interval of nine centuries that the rays of
+divine light beamed upon Russia from the walls of Byzantium, in which
+city the same apostle, St. Andrew, had appointed Stachys to be the first
+bishop, and so committed, as it were, to him and to his successors, in
+the spirit of prescience, the charge of that wide region in which he had
+himself preached Christ. Hence the indissoluble connection of the
+Russian with the Greek Church, and the dependence of her metropolitans
+during six centuries upon the patriarchal throne of Constantinople,
+until, with its consent, she obtained her own equality and independence
+in that which was accorded to her native primates.
+
+The Bulgarians of the Danube, the Moravians, and the Slavonians of
+Illyria had been already enlightened by holy baptism about the middle of
+the ninth century, during the reign of the Greek emperor Michael and the
+patriarchate of the illustrious Photius. St. Cyril and St. Methodius,
+two learned Greek brothers, translated into the Slavonic the New
+Testament and the books used in divine service, and according to some
+accounts even the whole Bible.
+
+This translation of the Word of God became afterward a most blessed
+instrument for the conversion of the Russians, for the missionaries were
+by it enabled to expound the truths of the Gospel to the heathens in
+their native dialect, and so win for them a readier entrance to their
+hearts.
+
+Oskold and Dir, two princes of Kieff and the companions of Ruric, were
+the first of the Russians who embraced Christianity. In the year 866
+they made their appearance in armed vessels before the walls of
+Constantinople when the Emperor was absent, and threw the Greek capital
+into no little alarm and confusion. Tradition reports that "The
+patriarch Photius took the virginal robe of the Mother of God from the
+Blachern Church, and plunged it beneath the waves of the strait, when
+the sea immediately boiled up from underneath and wrecked the vessels of
+the heathen. Struck with awe, they believed in that God who had smitten
+them, and became the first-fruits of their people to the Lord." The hymn
+of victory of the Greek Church, "To the protecting Conductress," in
+honor of the most holy Virgin, has remained a memorial of this triumph,
+and even now concludes the _Office for the First Hour_ in the daily
+_Matins_; for that was, indeed, the first hour of salvation to the land
+of Russia.
+
+It is probable that on their return to their own country the princes of
+Kieff sowed there the seeds of Christianity; for, eighty years
+afterward, on occasion of a conference for peace between the prince Igor
+and certain Byzantine ambassadors, we find mention already of a "Church
+of the Prophet Elias" in Kieff where the Christian Varangians swore to
+the observance of the treaty. Constantine Porphyrogenitus and other
+Greek annalists even relate that in the lifetime of Oskold there was a
+bishop sent to the Russians by the emperor Basil the Macedonian, and the
+patriarch St. Ignatius, and that he made many converts, chiefly "in
+consequence of the miraculous preservation of a volume of the Gospels,
+which was thrown publicly into the flames and taken out after some time
+unconsumed." Also in Condinus, _Catalogue of Sees Subject to the
+Patriarch of Constantinople_, the metropolitical see of Russia appears
+as early as the year 891.
+
+Lastly, it is certain that many of the Varangians who served in the
+imperial bodyguard were Christians, and that the Greek sovereigns never
+lost sight of any opportunity of converting them to their own faith, by
+which they hoped to soften their savage manners. When the emperor Leo
+was concluding a peace with Oleg, he showed not only his own treasures
+to the ambassadors of the Russian prince, but also the splendor of the
+churches, the holy relics, the precious _icons_, and the "Instruments of
+the Passion of our Lord," if by any means they might catch from them the
+spirit of the faith.
+
+Some such influences as these, while Christianity as yet was only
+struggling for an uncertain existence at Kieff, produced in good time
+their effect on the wisest of the daughters of the Slavonians, the
+widowed princess Olga, who governed Russia during the minority of her
+son Sviatoslaf. She undertook a voyage to Constantinople for no other
+end than to obtain a knowledge of the true God, and there she received
+baptism at the hands of the patriarch Polyeuctes; the emperor
+Constantine Porphyrogenitus himself, who admired her wisdom, being her
+godfather. Nestor draws an affecting picture of the patriarch
+foretelling to the newly illumined princess the blessings which were to
+descend by her means on future generations of the Russians, while Olga,
+now become Helena by baptism--that she might resemble both in name and
+deed the mother of Constantine the Great--stood meekly bowing down her
+head and drinking in, as a sponge that is thirsty of moisture, the
+instructions of the prelate concerning the canons of the Church,
+fasting, prayer, almsgiving, and continence, all which she observed with
+exactness on her return to her own country.
+
+Although, in spite of all her entreaties, the fierce and warlike prince
+Sviatoslaf persisted in refusing to humble his proud heart under the
+meek yoke of Christ, he had still so much affection for his mother as
+not to persecute such as agreed with her in religion, but even to allow
+them freely to make open profession of their faith under the protection
+of that princess. He confided his children to her care during his
+incessant military expeditions, and so enabled her to confirm the saving
+impressions of Christianity among the people who respected her, and to
+instil them into the mind of her young grandson Vladimir; for nothing
+sinks so deep into the heart as the simple-and affectionate words of a
+mother. The princess had with her a priest named Gregory, whom she had
+brought from Constantinople, and by him she was buried after her death
+in the spot which she had herself appointed, without any of the usual
+pagan ceremonies. The people, by whom she had been surnamed "the Wise"
+during life, began to bless her for a saint after her death, when they
+came themselves to follow the example of this "Morning Star" which had
+risen and gone before to lead Russia into the path of salvation.
+
+Nowhere has Christianity ever been less persecuted at its first
+introduction than in our own country. The _Chronicle_ speaks of only two
+Christian martyrs, the Varangians Theodore and John, who were put to
+death by the fury of the people because one of them, from natural
+affection, had refused to give up his son when he had been devoted by
+the prince Vladimir to be offered as a sacrifice to Peroun.
+
+Probably the very zeal of this prince for the heathen deities, to whom
+he set up statues and multiplied altars, may have inspired the
+neighboring nations with the desire of converting so powerful a ruler to
+their respective creeds; and thus his blind impulse toward the Deity,
+which was unknown to him, received a true direction. The Mahometan
+Bulgarians were the first to send ambassadors to him, with the offer of
+their faith; but the mercy of Providence--for so it plainly
+was--inspired him to give them a decided refusal on the ground that he
+did not choose to comply with some of their regulations; though else a
+sensual religion might well have enticed a man who was given up to the
+indulgence of his passions.
+
+The Chazarian Jews flattered themselves with the hope of attracting the
+Prince by boasting of their religion and the ancient glory of Jerusalem.
+"But where," demanded the wise grandson of Olga, "is your country?"
+
+"It is ruined by the wrath of God for the sins of our fathers," was
+their answer. Vladimir then said that he had no mind to embrace the law
+of a people whom God had abandoned. There came also western doctors from
+Germany, who would have persuaded Vladimir to embrace Christianity, but
+their Christianity seemed strange to him; for Russia had hitherto no
+acquaintance but with Byzantium.
+
+"Return home," he said; "our ancestors did not receive this religion
+from you."
+
+A Greek embassy had the best success of them all. A certain philosopher,
+a monk named Constantine, after having exposed the insufficiency of
+other religions, eloquently set before the Prince those judgments of God
+which are in the world, the redemption of the human race by the blood of
+Christ, and the retribution of the life to come. His discourse
+powerfully affected the heathen monarch, who was burdened with the heavy
+sins of a tumultuous youth; and this was particularly the case when the
+monk pointed out to him on an icon, which represented the last judgment,
+the different lot of the just and of the wicked.
+
+"Good to these on the right hand, but woe to those on the left!"
+exclaimed Vladimir, deeply affected. But sensual nature still struggled
+in him against heavenly truth. Having dismissed the missionary, or
+ambassador, with presents, he still hesitated to decide, and wished
+first to examine further concerning the faith, in concert with the
+elders of his council, that all Russia might have a share in his
+conversion. The council of the Prince decided to send chosen men to make
+their observations on each religion on the spot where it was professed;
+and this public agreement explains in some degree the sudden and general
+acceptance of Christianity which shortly after followed in Russia. It is
+probable that not only the chiefs, but the common people also, were
+expecting and ready for the change.
+
+The Greek emperors did not fail to profit by this favorable opportunity,
+and the patriarch himself in person celebrated the divine liturgy in the
+Church of St. Sophia with the utmost possible magnificence before the
+astonished ambassadors of Vladimir. The sublimity and splendor of the
+service struck them; but we do not ascribe to the mere external
+impression that softening of the hearts of these heathens, on which
+depended the conversion of a whole nation. From the very earliest times
+of the Church, extraordinary signs of God's power have constantly gone
+hand-in-hand with that apparent weakness of man by which the Gospel was
+preached; and so also the _Byzantine Chronicle_ relates of the Russian
+ambassadors, "That during the Divine liturgy, at the time of carrying
+the Holy Gifts in procession to the throne or altar and singing the
+cherubic hymn, the eyes of their spirits were opened, and they saw, as
+in an ecstasy, glittering youths who joined in singing the hymn of the
+'Thrice Holy.'"
+
+Being thus fully persuaded of the truth of the orthodox faith, they
+returned to their own country already Christians in heart, and without
+saying a word before the Prince in favor of the other religions, they
+declared thus concerning the Greek: "When we stood in the temple we did
+not know where we were, for there is nothing else like it upon earth:
+there in truth God has his dwelling with men; and we can never forget
+the beauty we saw there. No one who has once tasted sweets will
+afterward take that which is bitter; nor can we now any longer abide in
+heathenism."
+
+Then the _boyars_ said to Vladimir: "If the religion of the Greeks had
+not been good, your grandmother Olga, who was the wisest of women, would
+not have embraced it."
+
+The weight of the name of Olga decided her grandson, and he said no more
+in answer than these words: "Where shall we be baptized?"
+
+But Vladimir, led by a sense which had not yet been purged by Greece,
+thought it best to follow the custom of his ancestors, who made warlike
+descents upon Constantinople, and so win to himself, sword in hand, his
+new religion. He embarked his warriors on board their vessels and
+attacked Cherson in the Taurid, a city which was subject to the emperors
+Basil and Constantine.
+
+After a long and unsuccessful siege a certain priest, named Anastasius,
+by means of an arrow shot from the town, informed the Prince that the
+fate of the besieged depended upon his cutting off the aqueducts, which
+supplied them with water. Vladimir in great joy made a vow that he would
+be baptized if he gained possession of the town; and he did gain
+possession of it. Then he sent to Constantinople to demand from the
+Greek Emperor the hand of their sister Anna, and they in answer proposed
+as a condition that he should embrace Christianity; for though they
+themselves desired an alliance with so powerful a prince, they at the
+same time took care to follow the prudent and pious policy of their
+predecessors, who had ever sought to bring their fierce neighbors under
+the humanizing influence of the faith. The Prince declared his consent;
+because, in his own words, he had "long since examined and conceived a
+love for the Greek law."
+
+It was her faith alone which influenced the princess to sacrifice
+herself at once for the temporal interests of her own country and for
+the eternal welfare of a strange people. Accompanied by a venerable body
+of clergy, she sailed for Cherson, and on her arrival induced the Prince
+to hasten his baptism. "For it was so ordered," says the pious annalist,
+"by the wisdom of God, that the sight of the Prince was at that time
+much affected by a complaint of the eyes, but at the moment that the
+Bishop of Cherson laid his hands upon him, when he had risen up out of
+the bath of regeneration, Vladimir suddenly received not only spiritual
+illumination, but also the bodily sight of his eyes, and cried out, 'Now
+I have seen the true God!'"
+
+Many of the Prince's suite were so struck by his miraculous recovery
+that they followed his example and were baptized in like manner; and
+these were doubtless afterward zealous for the introduction of
+Christianity into their country. The baptism and marriage of Vladimir
+were both celebrated in the Church of the Most Holy Mother of God; and
+hence, no doubt, arose his peculiar zeal for the most pure Virgin, to
+whose honor he afterward erected a cathedral church in his own city of
+Kieff. In Cherson itself he built a church, in the name of his angel or
+patron St. Basil; and taking with him the relics of St. Clement, Bishop
+of Rome, and his disciple Thebas, with church vessels and ornaments and
+icons, he restored the city to be again under the power of the emperors,
+and returned to Kieff, accompanied by the princess, their daughter, and
+her Greek ecclesiastics.
+
+Nestor makes no mention of any of the bishops and priests from
+Constantinople and Cherson who followed in the train of the Prince,
+excepting only of one, Anastasius, the priest who had rendered him such
+good service during the siege; but the _Books of the Genealogies_ give
+the name of Michael, a Syrian by birth, and of six other bishops who
+were sent together with him to Cherson by the patriarch Nicholas
+Chrysoberges. Some have ventured to suppose that Michael was the name of
+the bishop of the times of Oskold; but Nestor says nothing about him,
+and this much only is certain, that he stands the first in the list of
+the metropolitans of Russia.
+
+After his return to Kieff the "Great Prince" caused his twelve sons to
+be baptized, and proceeded to destroy the monuments of heathenism. He
+ordered Peroun to be thrown into the Dnieper. The people at first
+followed their idol, as it was borne down the stream, but were soon
+quieted when they saw that the statue had no power to help itself.
+
+And now Vladimir, being surrounded and supported by believers in his own
+domestic circle, and encouraged by seeing that his boyars and suite were
+prepared and ready to embrace the faith, made a proclamation to the
+people, "That whoever, on the morrow, should not repair to the river,
+whether rich or poor, he should hold him for his enemy." At the call of
+their respected lord all the multitude of the citizens in troops, with
+their wives and children, flocked to the Dnieper; and without any manner
+of opposition received holy baptism as a nation from the Greek bishops
+and priests. Nestor draws a touching picture of this baptism of a whole
+people at once: "Some stood in the water up to their necks, others up to
+their breasts, holding their young children in their arms; the priests
+read the prayers from the shore, naming at once whole companies by the
+same name." He who was the means of thus bringing them to salvation,
+filled with a transport of joy at the affecting sight, cried out to the
+Lord, offering and commending into his hands himself and his people: "O
+great God! who hast made heaven and earth, look down upon these thy new
+people. Grant them, O Lord, to know thee the true God, as thou hast been
+made known to Christian lands, and confirm in them a true and unfailing
+faith; and assist me, O Lord, against my enemy that opposes me, that,
+trusting in thee and in thy power, I may overcome all his wiles."
+
+Vladimir erected the first church--that of St. Basil, after whom he was
+named--on the very mount which had formerly been sacred to Peroun,
+adjoining his own palace. Thus was Russia enlightened.
+
+So sudden and ready a conversion of the inhabitants of Kieff might well
+seem improbable--that is, unless effected by violence--did we not attend
+to the fact that the Russians had been gradually becoming enlightened
+ever since the times of Oskold, for more than a hundred years, by means
+of commerce, treaties of peace, and relations of every kind with the
+Greeks, as well as with the Bulgarians and Slavonians of kindred origin
+with ourselves, who had already been long in possession of the Holy
+Scriptures in their own language. The constant endeavors of the Greek
+emperors for the conversion of the Russians by means of their
+ambassadors and preachers, the tolerance of the princes, the example and
+protection of Olga, and the very delay and hesitation of Vladimir in
+selecting his religion must have favorably disposed the minds of the
+people toward it; especially if it be true, as has been asserted, that
+Russia had already had a bishop in the time of Oskold. In a similar way,
+though under different circumstances, in the vast Roman Empire, the
+conversion of Constantine the Great suddenly rendered Christianity the
+dominant religion, because, in fact, it had long before penetrated among
+all ranks of his subjects.
+
+Vladimir engaged zealously in building churches throughout the towns and
+villages of his dominions, and sent priests to preach in them. He also
+founded many towns all around Kieff, and so propagated and confirmed the
+Christian religion in the neighborhood of the capital, from whence the
+new colonies were sent forth. Neither was he slow in establishing
+schools, into which he brought together the children of the boyars,
+sometimes even in spite of the unwillingness of their rude parents. In
+the mean time the Metropolitan with his bishops made progresses into the
+interior of Russia, to the cities of Rostoff and Novgorod, everywhere
+baptizing and instructing the people. Vladimir himself, for the same
+good end, went in company with other bishops to the district of Souzdal
+and to Volhynia. The boyars on the Volga and some of the Pechenegian
+princes embraced the gospel of salvation together with his subjects, and
+rejoiced to be admitted to holy baptism.
+
+The pious Prince wished to see in his own capital a magnificent temple
+in honor of the birth of the most holy Virgin, to be a likeness and
+memorial of that at Cherson, in which he himself had been baptized; and
+the year after his conversion he sent to Greece for builders, and laid
+the foundation of the first stone cathedral in Russia, on the very same
+spot where the Varangian martyrs had suffered. But the first
+metropolitan was not to live to its completion; only his holy remains
+were buried in it, and were thence translated afterward to the Pechersky
+Lavra. Another metropolitan, Leontius, a Greek by birth, sent by the
+same patriarch Nicholas, consecrated the new temple, to the great
+satisfaction of Vladimir, who made a vow to endow it with the tenth part
+of all his revenues; and from hence it was called "the Cathedral of the
+Tithes."
+
+These tithes, according to the ordinance ascribed to Prince Vladimir,
+consisted of the fixed quota of corn, cattle, and the profits of trade,
+for the support of the clergy and the poor; and besides this there was a
+further tithe collected from every cause which was tried; for the right
+of judging causes was granted to the bishops and the metropolitan, and
+they judged according to the Nomocanon. The canons of the holy councils
+and the Greek ecclesiastical laws, together with the Holy Scriptures,
+were taken, from the very first, as the basis of all ecclesiastical
+administration in Russia; and together with them there came into use
+some portions also of the civil law of the Greeks, through the influence
+of the Church. The care of the new temple and the collection of tithes
+for its support were intrusted to a native of Cherson named Anastasius,
+who enjoyed the confidence of Vladimir and his successors.
+
+The light of Christianity had now been diffused throughout the whole of
+Russia; but still the faith was nowhere as yet firmly established,
+because there were no bishops regularly settled in the towns. The
+metropolitan Leontius formed the first five dioceses, and appointed
+Joachim of Cherson to be Bishop of Novgorod, Theodorus of Rostoff,
+Neophytus of Chernigoff, Stephen the Volhynian of Vladimir, and Nicetas
+of Belgorod. Assisted by Dobrina, the uncle of the "Great Prince," who
+had long governed in Novgorod, the new bishop Joachim threw the statue
+of Peroun into the Volkoff, and broke down the idolatrous altars without
+any opposition on the part of the citizens; for they, too, like the
+inhabitants of Kieff, from their comparative degree of civilization and
+from their relations of intercourse with the Greeks, were in all
+probability already favorably disposed for the reception of
+Christianity. Tradition asserts that even as far back as the time of St.
+Olga the hermits Sergius and Germanus lived upon the desolate island of
+Balaam in the lake Ladoga, and that from thence St. Abramius went forth
+to preach Christ to the savage inhabitants of Rostoff.
+
+The attempt to found a diocese at Rostoff was less successful. The first
+two bishops, Theodore and Hilarion, were driven away by the fierce
+tribes of the forest district of Meri, who held obstinately to their
+idols in spite of the zeal of St. Abramius. It cost the two succeeding
+bishops, St. Leontius and St. Isaiah, many years of extraordinary labor
+and exertion, attended frequently by persecutions, before they at length
+succeeded in establishing Christianity in that savage region, from
+whence it spread itself by degrees into all the surrounding districts.
+
+Thus Vladimir, having piously observed the commandments of Christ during
+the course of his long reign, had the consolation of seeing before his
+death the fruits of his own conversion in all the wide extent of his
+dominions. He departed this life in peace at Kieff, and was soon
+reckoned with his grandmother Olga among the guardian saints of Russia.
+John, the third metropolitan, who had been sent from Constantinople upon
+the death of Leontius, buried the Prince in the Church of the Tithes,
+which he had built, near the tomb of the Grecian princess, his wife, and
+the uncorrupted relics of St. Olga were translated to the same spot.
+
+
+
+
+LEIF ERICSON DISCOVERS AMERICA
+
+A.D. 1000
+
+CHARLES C. RAFN
+
+SAGA OF ERIC THE RED
+
+
+(Besides the Northmen or Norsemen, those ancient Scandinavians
+celebrated in history for their adventurous exploits at sea, the Chinese
+and the Welsh have laid claim to the discovery of North America at
+periods much earlier than that of Columbus and the Cabots. But to the
+Norse sailors alone is it generally agreed that credit for that
+achievement is probably due. Associated with their supposed arrival and
+sojourn on the coast of what is now New England, about A.D. 1000, the
+"Round Tower" or "Old Stone Mill" at Newport, R.I., the mysterious
+inscription on the "Dighton Rock" in Massachusetts, and the "Skeleton in
+Armor" dug up at Fall River, Mass., and made the subject of a ballad by
+Longfellow, have figured prominently in the discussion of this
+pre-Columbian discovery. But these conjectural evidences are no longer
+regarded as having any connection with historical probability or as
+dating back to the time of the Northmen.
+
+It is considered, however, to be pretty certain that at the end of the
+tenth century or at the beginning of the eleventh the Northmen reached
+the shores of North America. About that time, it is known, they settled
+Iceland, and from there a colony went to Greenland, where they long
+remained. From there, either by design or by accident, some of them, it
+is supposed, may have reached the coast of Labrador, and thence sailed
+down until they came to the region which they named Vinland. From there
+they sent home glowing accounts to their countrymen in the northern
+lands, who came in larger numbers to join them in the New World.
+
+About the middle of the nineteenth century great interest among students
+of this subject was aroused by a work written by Prof. C.C. Rafn, of the
+Royal Society of Northern Antiquaries, Copenhagen. In this work--
+_Antiquitates Americanae_--the proofs of this visit of the Northmen to
+the shores of North America were convincingly set forth. In the same
+work the Icelandic sagas, written in the fourteenth century, and
+containing the original accounts of the Northmen's voyages to Vinland,
+were first brought prominently before modern scholars. Although many
+other writings on the voyages have since appeared, the great work of
+Rafn still holds its place of authority, very little in the way of new
+material having been brought to light. The portion of his narrative
+which follows covers the main facts of the history, and the translation
+from the saga furnishes an excellent example of its quaint and simple
+narration.)
+
+
+CHARLES C. RAFN
+
+Eric The Red, in the spring of 986, emigrated from Iceland to Greenland,
+formed a settlement there, and fixed his residence at Brattalid in
+Ericsfiord. Among others who accompanied him was Heriulf Bardson, who
+established himself at Heriulfsnes.
+
+Biarne, the son of the latter, was at that time absent on a trading
+voyage to Norway; but in the course of the summer returning to Eyrar, in
+Iceland, and finding that his father had taken his departure, this bold
+navigator resolved "still to spend the following winter, like all the
+preceding ones, with his father," although neither he nor any of his
+people had ever navigated the Greenland sea.
+
+They set sail, but met with northerly winds and fogs, and, after many
+days' sailing, knew not whither they had been carried. At length when
+the weather again cleared up, they saw a land which was without
+mountains, overgrown with wood, and having many gentle elevations. As
+this land did not correspond to the descriptions of Greenland, they left
+it on the larboard hand, and continued sailing two days, when they saw
+another land, which was flat and overgrown with wood.
+
+From thence they stood out to sea, and sailed three days with a
+southwest wind, when they saw a third land, which was high and
+mountainous and covered with icebergs (glaciers). They coasted along the
+shore and saw that it was an island.
+
+They did not go on shore, as Biarne did not find the country to be
+inviting. Bearing away from this island, they stood out to sea with the
+same wind, and, after four days' sailing with fresh gales, they reached
+Heriulfsnes, in Greenland.
+
+Some time after this, probably in the year 994, Biarne paid a visit to
+Eric, Earl of Norway, and told him of his voyage and of the unknown
+lands he had discovered. He was blamed by many for not having examined
+these countries more accurately.
+
+On his return to Greenland there was much talk about undertaking a
+voyage of discovery. Leif, a son of Eric the Red, bought Biarne's ship,
+and equipped it with a crew of thirty-five men, among whom was a German,
+of the name of Tyrker, who had long resided with his father, and who had
+been very fond of Leif in his childhood. In the year 1000 they commenced
+the projected voyage, and came first to the land which Biarne had seen
+last. They cast anchor and went on shore. No grass was seen; but
+everywhere in this country were vast ice mountains (glaciers), and the
+intermediate space between these and the shore was, as it were, one
+uniform plain of slate (_hella_). The country appearing to them
+destitute of good qualities, they called it Hellu-Land.
+
+They put out to sea, and came to another land, where they also went on
+shore. The country was very level and covered with woods; and
+wheresoever they went there were cliffs of white sand (_sand-ar
+hvitir_), and a low coast (_o-soe-bratt_). They called the country Mark
+Land (woodland). From thence they again stood out to sea, with a
+northeast wind, and continued sailing for two days before they made land
+again. They then came to an island which lay to the eastward of the
+mainland. They sailed westward in waters where there was much ground
+left dry at ebb tide.
+
+Afterward they went on shore at a place where a river, issuing from a
+lake, fell into the sea. They brought their ship into the river, and
+from thence into the lake, where they cast anchor. Here they constructed
+some temporary log huts; but later, when they had made up their mind to
+winter there, they built large houses, afterward called Leifs-Budir
+(Leif's-booths).
+
+When the buildings were completed Leif divided his people into two
+companies, who were by turns employed in keeping watch at the houses,
+and in making small excursions for the purpose of exploring the country
+in the vicinity. His instructions to them were that they should not go
+to a greater distance than that they might return in the course of the
+same evening, and that they should not separate from one another.
+
+Leif took his turn also, joining the exploring party the one day, and
+remaining at the houses the other.
+
+It so happened that one day the German, Tyrker, was missing. Leif
+accordingly went out with twelve men in search of him, but they had not
+gone far from their houses when they met him coming toward them. When
+Leif inquired why he had been so long absent, he at first answered in
+German, but they did not understand what he said. He then said to them
+in the Norse tongue: "I did not go much farther, yet I have a discovery
+to acquaint you with: I have found vines and grapes."
+
+He added by way of confirmation that he had been born in a country where
+there were plenty of vines. They had now two occupations: namely, to hew
+timber for loading the ship, and collect grapes; with these last they
+filled the ship's longboat. Leif gave a name to the country, and called
+it Vinland (Vineland). In the spring they sailed again from thence, and
+returned to Greenland.
+
+Leif's Vineland voyage was now a subject of frequent conversation in
+Greenland, and his brother Thorwald was of opinion that the country had
+not been sufficiently explored. He, accordingly, borrowed Leif's ship,
+and, aided by his brother's counsel and directions, commenced a voyage
+in the year 1002. He arrived at Leif's-booths, in Vineland, where they
+spent the winter, he and his crew employing themselves in fishing. In
+the spring of 1003 Thorwald sent a party in the ship's long-boat on a
+voyage of discovery southward. They found the country beautiful and well
+wooded, with but little space between the woods and the sea; there were
+likewise extensive ranges of white sand, and many islands and shallows.
+
+They found no traces of men having been there before them, excepting on
+an island lying to westward, where they found a wooden shed. They did
+not return to Leif's-booths until the fall. In the following summer,
+1004, Thorwald sailed eastward with the large ship, and then northward
+past a remarkable headland enclosing a bay, and which was opposite to
+another headland. They called it Kial-Ar-Nes (Keel Cape).
+
+From thence they sailed along the eastern coast of the land, into the
+nearest firths, to a promontory which there projected, and which was
+everywhere overgrown with wood. There Thorwald went ashore with all his
+companions. He was so pleased with this place that he exclaimed: "This
+is beautiful! and here I should like well to fix my dwelling!"
+Afterward, when they were preparing to go on board, they observed on the
+sandy beach, within the promontory, three hillocks, and repairing hither
+they found three canoes, under each of which were three Skrellings
+(Esquimaux). They came to blows with the latter and killed eight, but
+the ninth escaped with his canoe. Afterward a countless number issued
+forth against them from the interior of the bay.
+
+They endeavored to protect themselves by raising battle-screens on the
+ship's side. The Skrellings continued shooting at them for a while and
+then retired. Thorwald was wounded by an arrow under the arm, and
+finding that the wound was mortal he said: "I now advise you to prepare
+for your departure as soon as possible, but me ye shall bring to the
+promontory, where I thought it good to dwell; it may be that it was a
+prophetic word that fell from my mouth about my abiding there for a
+season; there shall ye bury me, and plant a cross at my head, and
+another at my feet, and call the place Kross-a-Ness (Crossness) in all
+time coming." He died, and they did as he had ordered. Afterward they
+returned to their companions at Leif's-booths, and spent the winter
+there; but in the spring of 1005 they sailed again to Greenland, having
+important intelligence to communicate to Leif.
+
+Thorstein, Eric's third son, had resolved to proceed to Vine-land to
+fetch his brother's body. He fitted out the same ship, and selected
+twenty-five strong and able-bodied men for his crew; his wife, Gudrida,
+also went along with him. They were tossed about the ocean during the
+whole summer, and knew not whither they were driven; but at the close of
+the first week of winter they landed at Lysufiord, in the western
+settlement of Greenland.
+
+There Thorstein died during the winter; and in the spring Gudrida
+returned again to Ericsfiord.
+
+
+SAGA OF ERIC THE RED
+
+There was a man named Thorwald; he was a son of Asvald, Ulf's son,
+Eyxna-Thori's son. His son's name was Eric. He and his father went from
+Jaederen to Iceland, on account of manslaughter, and settled on
+Hornstrandir, and dwelt at Draugar. There Thorwald died, and Eric then
+married Thorheld, a daughter of Jorund, Atli's son, and Thorbiorg the
+sheep-chested, who had been married before to Thorbiorn of the Haukadal
+family.
+
+Eric then removed from the north, and cleared land in Haukadal, and
+dwelt at Ericsstadir, by Vatnshorn. Then Eric's thralls caused a
+landslide on Valthiof's farm, Valthiofsstadir. Eyiolf the Foul,
+Valthiof's kinsman, slew the thralls near Skeidsbrekkur, above
+Vatnshorn. For this Eric killed Eyiolf the Foul, and he also killed
+Duelling-Hrafn, at Leikskalar.
+
+Geirstein and Odd of Jorva, Eyiolf's kinsmen, conducted the prosecution
+for the slaying of their kinsmen, and Eric was in consequence banished
+from Haukadal. He then took possession of Brokey and Eyxney, and dwelt
+at Tradir on Sudrey the first winter. It was at this time that he loaned
+Thorgest his outer dais-boards. Eric afterward went to Eyxney, and dwelt
+at Ericsstad. He then demanded his outer dais-boards, but did not obtain
+them.
+
+Eric then carried the outer dais-boards away from Breidabolstad, and
+Thorgest gave chase. They came to blows a short distance from the farm
+of Drangar. There two of Thorgest's sons were killed, and certain other
+men besides. After this each of them retained a considerable body of men
+with him at his home. Styr gave Eric his support, as did also Eyiolf of
+Sviney, Thorbiorn, Vifil's son, and the sons of Thorbrand of Alptafirth;
+while Thorgest was backed by the sons of Thord the Yeller, and Thorgeir
+of Hitardal, Aslak of Langadal, and his son, Illugi. Eric and his people
+were condemned to outlawry at Thorsness-thing. He equipped his ship for
+a voyage in Ericsvag; while Eyiolf concealed him in Dimunarvag, when
+Thorgest and his people were searching for him among the islands. He
+said to them that it was his intention to go in search of that land
+which Gunnbiorn, son of Ulf the Crow, saw when he was driven out of his
+course, westward across the main, and discovered Gunnviorns-skerries.
+
+He told them that he would return again to his friends if he should
+succeed in finding that country. Thorbiorn and Eyiolf and Styr
+accompanied Eric out beyond the islands, and they parted with the
+greatest friendliness. Eric said to them that he would render them
+similar aid, so far as it might be within his power, if they should ever
+stand in need of his help.
+
+Eric sailed out to sea, from Snaefells-iokul, and arrived at that ice
+mountain which is called Blacksark. Thence he sailed to the southward
+that he might ascertain whether there was habitable country in that
+direction. He passed the first winter at Ericsey, near the middle of the
+western settlement.
+
+In the following spring he proceeded to Ericsfirth, and selected a site
+there for his homestead. That summer he explored the western uninhabited
+region, remaining there for a long time, and assigning many local names
+there. The second winter he spent at Ericsholms, beyond Hvarfsgnipa. But
+the third summer he sailed northward to Snaefell, and into Hrafnsfirth.
+He believed then that he had reached the head of Ericsfirth; he turned
+back then, and remained the third winter at Ericsey, at the mouth of
+Ericsfirth.
+
+The following summer he sailed to Iceland and landed in Breidafirth. He
+remained that winter with Ingolf at Holmlatr. In the spring he and
+Thorgest fought together, and Eric was defeated; after this a
+reconciliation was effected between them.
+
+That summer Eric set out to colonize the land which he had discovered,
+and which he called Greenland, because, he said, men would be the more
+readily persuaded thither if the land had a good name. Eric was married
+to a woman named Thorhild, and had two sons; one of these was named
+Thorstein, and the other Leif. They were both promising men. Thorstein
+lived at home with his father, and there was not at that time a man in
+Greenland who was accounted of so great promise as he.
+
+Leif had sailed to Norway, where he was at the court of King Olaf
+Tryggvason. When Leif sailed from Greenland, in the summer, they were
+driven out of their course to the Hebrides. It was late before they got
+fair winds thence, and they remained there far into the summer.
+
+Leif became enamoured of a certain woman, whose name was Thorgunna. She
+was a woman of fine family, and Leif observed that she was possessed of
+rare intelligence. When Leif was preparing for his departure, Thorgunna
+asked to be permitted to accompany him. Leif inquired whether she had in
+this the approval of her kinsmen. She replied that she did not care for
+it. Leif responded that he did not deem it the part of wisdom to abduct
+so high-born a woman in a strange country, "and we so few in number."
+"It is by no means certain that thou shalt find this to be the better
+decision," said Thorgunna. "I shall put it to the proof,
+notwithstanding," said Leif. "Then I tell thee," said Thorgunna, "that I
+foresee that I shall give birth to a male child; and though thou give
+this no heed, yet will I rear the boy, and send him to thee in Greenland
+when he shall be fit to take his place with other men. And I foresee
+that thou will get as much profit of this son as is thy due from this
+our parting; moreover, I mean to come to Greenland myself before the end
+comes."
+
+Leif gave her a gold finger-ring, a Greenland Wadmal mantle, and a belt
+of walrus tusk.
+
+This boy came to Greenland, and was called Thorgils. Leif acknowledged
+his paternity, and some men will have it that this Thorgils came to
+Iceland in the summer before the Froda-wonder. However, this Thorgils
+was afterward in Greenland, and there seemed to be something not
+altogether natural about him before the end came. Leif and his
+companions sailed away from the Hebrides, and arrived in Norway in the
+autumn.
+
+Leif went to the court of King Olaf Tryggvason. He was well received by
+the King, who felt that he could see that Leif was a man of great
+accomplishments. Upon one occasion the King came to speech with Leif,
+and asked him, "Is it thy purpose to sail to Greenland in the summer?"
+
+"It is my purpose," said Leif, "if it be your will."
+
+"I believe it will be well," answered the King, "and thither thou shalt
+go upon my errand, to proclaim Christianity there."
+
+Leif replied that the King should decide, but gave it as his belief that
+it would be difficult to carry this mission to a successful issue in
+Greenland. The King replied that he knew of no man who would be better
+fitted for this undertaking; "and in thy hands the cause will surely
+prosper."
+
+"This can only be," said Leif, "if I enjoy the grace of your
+protection."
+
+Leif put to sea when his ship was ready for the voyage. For a long time
+he was tossed about upon the ocean, and came upon lands of which he had
+previously had no knowledge. There were self-sown wheat-fields and vines
+growing there. There were also those trees there which are called
+"mansur," and of all these they took specimens. Some of the timbers were
+so large that they were used in building. Leif found men upon a wreck,
+and took them home with him, and procured quarters for them all during
+the winter. In this wise he showed his nobleness and goodness, since he
+introduced Christianity into the country, and saved the men from the
+wreck; and he was called Leif "the Lucky" ever after.
+
+Leif landed in Ericsfirth, and then went home to Brattahlid; he was well
+received by everyone. He soon proclaimed Christianity throughout the
+land, and the Catholic faith, and announced King Olaf Tryggvason's
+messages to the people, telling them how much excellence and how great
+glory accompanied this faith.
+
+Eric was slow in forming the determination to forsake his old belief,
+but Thiodhild embraced the faith promptly, and caused a church to be
+built at some distance from the house. This building was called
+Thiodhild's church, and there she and those persons who had accepted
+Christianity--and there were many--were wont to offer their prayers.
+
+At this time there began to be much talk about a voyage of exploration
+to that country which Leif had discovered. The leader of this expedition
+was Thorstein Ericsson, who was a good man and an intelligent, and
+blessed with many friends. Eric was likewise invited to join them, for
+the men believed that his luck and foresight would be of great
+furtherance. He was slow in deciding, but did not say nay when his
+friends besought him to go. They thereupon equipped that ship in which
+Thorbiorn had come out, and twenty men were selected for the expedition.
+They took little cargo with them, naught else save their weapons and
+provisions.
+
+On that morning when Eric set out from his home he took with him a
+little chest containing gold and silver; he hid this treasure and then
+went his way. He had proceeded but a short distance, however, when he
+fell from his horse and broke his ribs and dislocated his shoulder,
+whereat he cried, "Ai, ai!" By reason of this accident he sent his wife
+word that she should procure the treasure which he had concealed--for to
+the hiding of the treasure he attributed his misfortune. Thereafter they
+sailed cheerily out of Ericsfirth, in high spirits over their plan. They
+were long tossed about upon the ocean, and could not lay the course they
+wished.
+
+They came in sight of Iceland, and likewise saw birds from the Irish
+coast. Their ship was, in sooth, driven hither and thither over the sea.
+In autumn they turned back, worn out by toil and exposure to the
+elements, and exhausted by their labors, and arrived at Ericsfirth at
+the very beginning of winter.
+
+Then said Eric: "More cheerful were we in the summer, when we put out of
+the firth, but we still live, and it might have been much worse."
+
+Thorstein answers: "It will be a princely deed to endeavor to look well
+after the wants of all these men who are now in need, and to make
+provision for them during the winter." Eric answers: "It is ever true,
+as it is said, that 'It is never clear ere the winter comes,' and so it
+must be here. We will act now upon thy counsel in this matter."
+
+All of the men who were not otherwise provided for accompanied the
+father and son. They landed thereupon, and went home to Brattahlid,
+where they remained throughout the winter.
+
+
+
+
+MAHOMETANS IN INDIA
+
+BLOODY INVASIONS UNDER MAHMUD A.D. 1000
+
+ALEXANDER DOW
+
+
+(While Buddhism was giving place to Hinduism in India a new faith had
+arisen in Arabia. Mahomet, born A.D. 570, created a conquering religion,
+and died in 632. Within a hundred years after his death, his followers
+had invaded the countries of Asia as far as the Hindu Kush. Here their
+progress was stayed, and Islam had to consolidate itself during three
+more centuries before it grew strong enough to grasp the rich prize of
+India. But almost from the first the Arabs had fixed eager eyes upon
+that wealthy empire, and several premature inroads foretold the coming
+storm.
+
+About fifteen years after the death of the Prophet, Othman sent a naval
+expedition to Thana and Broach on the Bombay coast. Other raids toward
+Sind took place in 662 and 664, with no lasting results.
+
+Hinduism was for a time submerged, but never drowned, by the tide of
+Mahometan conquest, which set steadily toward India about A.D. 1000. At
+the present day the south of India remains almost entirely Hindu. By far
+the greater number of the Indian feudatory chiefs are still under
+Brahman influence. But in the northwest, where the first waves of
+invasion have always broken, about one-third of the population now
+profess Islam. The upper valley of the Ganges boasts a succession of
+Mussulman capitals; and in the swamps of Lower Bengal the bulk of the
+non-Aryan or aboriginal population have become converts to the Mahometan
+religion. The Mussulmans now make fifty-seven millions of the total of
+two hundred and eighty-eight millions in India.
+
+The armies of Islam had carried the crescent throughout Asia west of the
+Hindu Kush, and through Africa and Southern Europe, to distant Spain and
+France, before they obtained a foothold in the Punjab.
+
+The brilliant attempt in 711 to found a lasting Mahometan dynasty in
+Sind failed. Three centuries later, the utmost efforts of a series of
+Mussulman invaders from the northwest only succeeded in annexing a small
+portion of the frontier Punjab provinces.
+
+The popular notion that India fell an easy prey to the Mussulmans is
+opposed to the historical facts. Mahometan rule in India consists of a
+series of invasions and partial conquests, during eleven centuries from
+Othman's raid, about A.D. 647, to Ahmad Shah's tempest of devastation in
+1761.
+
+At no time was Islam triumphant throughout all India. Hindu dynasties
+always ruled over a large area.
+
+The first collision between Hinduism and Islam on the Punjab frontier
+was the act of the Hindus. In 977 Jaipal, the Hindu chief of Lahore,
+annoyed by Afghan raids, led his troops through the mountains against
+the Mahometan kingdom of Ghazni, in Afghanistan. Subuktigin, the
+Ghaznivide prince, after severe fighting, took advantage of a hurricane
+to cut off the retreat of the Hindus through the pass. He allowed them,
+however, to return to India, on the surrender of fifty elephants and the
+promise of one million _dirhams_ [about $125,000].
+
+In 997 Subuktigin died, and was succeeded by his son, Mahmud of Ghazni,
+aged sixteen. This valiant monarch, surnamed "the Great," reigned for
+thirty-three years, and extended his father's little Afghan kingdom into
+a great Mahometan sovereignty, stretching from Persia on the west to far
+within the Punjab on the east.)
+
+
+Mahmud was born about the year 357 of the Hegira--or 350, according to
+some authorities--and, as astrologers say, with many happy omens
+expressed in the horoscope of his life. Subuktigin, being asleep at the
+time of his birth, dreamed that he beheld a green tree springing forth
+from his chimney, which threw its shadow over the face of the earth and
+screened from the storms of heaven the whole animal creation. This
+indeed was verified by the justice of Mahmud; for, if we can believe the
+poet, in his reign the wolf and the sheep drank together at the same
+brook.
+
+When Mahmud had settled his dispute with his brother Ismail, he hastened
+to Balik, from whence he sent an ambassador to Munsur, Emperor of
+Bokhara, to whom the family of Ghazni still pretended to owe allegiance,
+complaining of the indignity which he met with in the appointment of
+Buktusin to the government of Khorassan, a country so long in possession
+of his father. It was returned to him for answer that he was already in
+possession of the territories of Balik, Turmuz, and Herat, which was
+part of the empire, and that there was a necessity to divide the favors
+of Bokhara among her friends. Buktusin, it was also insinuated, had been
+a faithful and good servant; which seemed to throw a reflection upon the
+family of Ghazni, who had rendered themselves independent in the
+governments they held of the royal house of Samania. Mahmud, not
+discouraged by this answer, sent Hasan Jemmavi with rich presents to the
+court of Bokhara, and a letter in the following terms: "That he hoped
+the pure spring of friendship, which had flowed in the time of his
+father, should not now be polluted with the ashes of indignity, nor
+Mahmud be reduced to the necessity of divesting himself of that
+obedience which he had hitherto paid to the imperial family of Samania."
+
+When Hasan delivered his embassy, his capacity and elocution appeared so
+great to the Emperor, that, desirous to gain him over to his interest by
+any means, he bribed him at last with the honors of the wazirate, but
+never returned an answer to Mahmud. That prince having received
+information of this transaction, through necessity turned his face
+toward Nishapur, and marched to Murgab. Buktusin, in the mean time,
+treacherously entered into a confederacy with Faek, and, forming a
+conspiracy in the camp of Munsur, seized upon the person of that prince
+and cruelly put out his eyes. Abdul, the younger brother of Munsur, who
+was but a boy, was advanced by the traitors to the throne. Being,
+however, afraid of the resentment of Mahmud, the conspirators hastened
+to Merv, whither they were pursued by the King with great expedition.
+Finding themselves, upon their march, hard pressed in the rear by
+Mahmud, they halted and gave him battle. But the sin of ingratitude had
+darkened the face of their fortune, so that the breeze of victory blew
+upon the standards of the King of Ghazni.
+
+Faek carried off the young King, and fled to Bokhara, and Buktusin was
+not heard of for some time, but at length he found his way to his
+fellows in iniquity and began to collect his scattered troops. Faek, in
+the mean time, fell ill and soon afterward expired. Elak, the Usbek
+King, seizing upon the opportunity offered him by that event, marched
+with an army from Kashgar to Bokhara and deprived Abdul-Mallek and his
+adherents of life and empire at the same time. Thus perished the last of
+the house of Samania, which had reigned for the space of one hundred and
+twenty-seven years.
+
+The Emperor of Ghazni, at this juncture, employed himself in settling
+the government of the provinces of Balik and Khorassan, the affairs of
+which he regulated in such an able manner that the fame thereof reached
+the ears of the Caliph of Bagdad, the illustrious Al-Kadar Balla, of the
+noble house of Abbas. The Caliph sent him a rich dress of honor, such as
+he had never before bestowed on any king, and dignified Mahmud with the
+titles of the Protector of the State and Treasurer of Fortune. In the
+end of the month Zikada, in the year of the Hegira 390, Mahmud hastened
+from the city of Balak to Herat, and from Herat to Sistan, where he
+defeated Khaliph, the son of Achmet, the governor of that province of
+the extinguished family of Bokhara, and returned to Ghazni. He then
+turned his face toward India, took many forts and provinces, in which,
+having appointed his own governors, he returned to his dominions where
+he "spread the carpet of justice so smoothly upon the face of the earth
+that the love of him, and loyalty, gained a place in every heart."
+
+Having negotiated a treaty with Elak the Usbek, the province of
+Maver-ul-nere was ceded to him, for which he made an ample return in
+presents of great value; and the closest friendship and familiarity, for
+a long time, existed between the kings.
+
+Mahmud made a vow to heaven that if ever he should be blessed with
+tranquillity in his own dominions he would turn his arms against the
+idolaters of Hindustan. He marched in the year 391 (Ad Hegira) from
+Ghazni with ten thousand of his chosen horse, and came to Peshawur,
+where Jipal, the Indian prince of Lahore, with twelve thousand horse and
+thirty thousand foot, supported by three hundred chain-elephants,
+opposed him. On Saturday, the 8th of the month Mohirrim, in the year 392
+of the Hegira, an obstinate battle ensued, in which the Emperor was
+victorious; Jipal, with fifteen of his principal officers, was taken
+prisoner, and five thousand of his troops lay dead upon the field.
+Mahmud in this action acquired great wealth and fame, for round the neck
+of Jipal alone were found sixteen strings of jewels, each of which was
+valued at one hundred and eighty thousand rupees.
+
+After this victory, the Emperor marched from Peshawur, and investing the
+fort of Batandi, reduced it, releasing his prisoners upon the payment of
+a large ransom, and the further stipulation of an annual tribute, then
+returned to Ghazni. It was in those days a custom of the Hindus that
+whatever rajah was twice defeated by the Moslems should be, by that
+disgrace, rendered ineligible for further command. Jipal, in compliance
+with this custom, having raised his son to the government, ordered a
+funeral pile to be prepared, upon which he sacrificed himself to his
+gods.
+
+A year later, Mahmud again marched into Sistan, and brought Kaliph, who
+had mismanaged his government, prisoner to Ghazni. Finding that the
+tribute from Hindustan had not been paid, in the year A.H. 395 he
+directed his march toward the city of Battea, and, leaving the
+boundaries of Multan, arrived at Tahera, which was fortified with an
+exceeding high wall and a deep, broad ditch. Tahera was at that time
+governed by a prince called Bakhera, who had, in the pride of power and
+wealth, greatly troubled the Mahometan governors whom Mahmud had
+delegated to rule in Hindustan. Bakhera had also refused to pay his
+proportion of the tribute to Annandpal, the son of Jipal, of whom he
+held his authority.
+
+When Mahmud entered the territories of Bakhera, that prince called out
+his troops to receive him, and, taking possession of a strong position,
+engaged the Mahometan army for the space of three days; in which time
+they suffered so much that they were on the point of abandoning the
+attack. But on the fourth day, Mahmud appeared at the head of his
+troops, and addressed them at length, encouraging them to win glory. He
+concluded by telling them that this day he had devoted himself to
+conquest or to death. Bakhera, on his part, invoked the gods at the
+temple, and prepared, with his former resolution, to repel the enemy.
+The Mahometans charged with their usual impetuosity, but were repulsed
+with great slaughter; yet returning with fresh courage and redoubled
+rage, the attack was continued until the evening, when Mahmud, turning
+his face to the holy Kaaba, invoked the aid of the Prophet in the
+presence of his army.
+
+"Advance! advance!" cried then the King. "Our prayers have found favor
+with God!"
+
+Immediately a great shout arose among the host, and the Moslems,
+pressing forward as if they courted death, obliged the enemy to give
+ground, and pursued them in full retreat to the gates of the city.
+
+The Emperor having next morning invested the place, gave orders to make
+preparations for filling up the ditch, which task in a few days was
+nearly completed. Bakhera, finding he could not long defend the city,
+determined to leave only a small garrison for its defence; and
+accordingly, one night, he marched out with the rest of his troops, and
+took position in a wood on the banks of the Indus. Mahmud, being
+informed of his retreat, detached part of his army to pursue him.
+Bakhera, by this time, was deserted by fortune and consequently by most
+of his friends; he found himself surrounded by the Mahometans and
+attempted in vain to force his way through them. When just on the point
+of being taken prisoner, he turned his sword against his breast, while
+the most of his adherents were slaughtered in attempting to avenge his
+death. Mahmud, in the mean time, had taken Tahera by assault; and found
+there one hundred and twenty elephants, many slaves, and much plunder.
+He annexed the town and its dependencies to his own dominions, and
+returned victorious to Ghazni.
+
+In the year A.H. 396 he formed the design of reconquering Multan, which
+had revolted from his rule. Achmet Lodi, the regent of Multan, had
+formerly acknowledged the suzerainty of Mahmud, and after him his
+grandson Daud, till the expedition against Bakhera, when Daud withdrew
+his allegiance. The King marched in the beginning of the spring, with a
+great army from Ghazni, and was met by Annandpal, the son of Jipal,
+Prince of Lahore, in the hills of Peshawur, whom he defeated and obliged
+to fly into Cashmere. Annandpal had entered into an alliance with Daud;
+and as there were two passes only by which the Mahometans could enter
+Multan, Annandpal had taken upon himself to secure that by the way of
+Peshawur, which Mahmud chanced to take. The Sultan, returning from the
+pursuit, entered Multan by the way of Betanda, which was his first
+intention. When Daud received intelligence of the fate of Annandpal,
+thinking himself too weak to keep the field, he shut himself up in his
+fortified place and humbly solicited forgiveness for his fault,
+promising to pay a large tribute and in the future to obey implicitly
+the Sultan's command. Mahmud received him again as a vassal, and
+prepared to return to Ghazni, when news was brought to him from
+Arsallah, who commanded at Herat, that Elak, the King of Kashgar, had
+invaded his realm with an army. The King hastened to settle the affairs
+of Hindustan, which he put into the hands of Shokpal, a Hindu prince who
+had resided with Abu-Ali, governor of Peshawur, and had turned
+Mussulman, taking the name of Zab Sais.
+
+The particulars of the war of Mahmud with Elak are these: It has already
+been mentioned that an uncommon friendship had existed between this
+Elak, the Usbek king of Kashgar, a kingdom in Tartary, and Mahmud. The
+Emperor himself was married to the daughter of Elak, but some factious
+men about the two courts, by misrepresentations of the princes to one
+another, changed their former friendship to enmity. When Mahmud
+therefore marched into Hindustan, and had left the field of Khorassan
+almost destitute of troops, Elak took advantage of the opportunity, and
+resolved to appropriate that province to himself. To accomplish his
+design he ordered his general-in-chief Sapastagi, with a large force, to
+enter Khorassan; and Jaffir Taghi at the same time was appointed to
+command in the territory of Balak. Arsallah, the governor of Herat,
+being informed of these motions, hastened to Ghazni, that he might
+secure the capital. In the mean time the chiefs of Khorassan, finding
+themselves deserted and being in no condition to oppose the enemy,
+submitted themselves to Sapastagi, the general of Elak.
+
+But Mahmud, having by great marches reached Ghazni, flowed onward like a
+torrent with his army toward Balak. Taghi, who had by this time
+possessed himself of the place, fled toward Turmuz at his approach. The
+Emperor then detached Arsallah with a great part of his army to drive
+Sapastagi out of Khorassan; and he also, upon the approach of the troops
+of Ghazni, abandoned Herat, and marched toward Maber-ul-nere.
+
+The King of Kashgar, seeing the bad state of his affairs, solicited the
+aid of Kudar, King of Chuton, a province of Tartary, on the confines of
+China, and that prince marched to join him with fifty thousand horse.
+Strengthened by this alliance, he crossed, with the confederate armies,
+the river Gaon, which was five parasangs from Balak, and opposed himself
+to the camp of Mahmud. That monarch immediately drew up his army in
+order of battle, giving the command of the centre to his brother, the
+noble Nasir, supported by Abu-Nasir, governor of Gorgan, and by
+Abdallah, a chief of reputation in arms. The right wing he committed to
+the care of Alta Sash, an old experienced officer, while the left was
+the charge of the valiant Arsallah, a chief of the Afghans. The front of
+his line he strengthened with five hundred chain-elephants, with open
+spaces behind them, to facilitate their retreat in case of a defeat.
+
+The King of Kashgar posted himself in the centre, the noble Kudir led
+the right, and Taghi the left. The armies advanced to the charge. The
+shouts of warriors, the neighing of horses, and the clashing of arms
+reached the broad arch of heaven, while dust obscured the face of day.
+
+Elak, advancing with some chosen squadrons, threw the centre of Mahmud's
+army into disorder. Mahmud, perceiving the enemy's progress, leaped from
+his horse, and, kissing the ground, invoked the aid of the Almighty. He
+then mounted an elephant-of-war, encouraged his troops, and made a
+violent assault upon Elak. The elephant seizing the standard-bearer of
+the enemy, folded his trunk around him and tossed him aloft in the air.
+He then surged forward like a mountain removed from its base by an
+earthquake, and trod the enemy under his feet like locusts. When the
+troops of Ghazni saw their King forcing his way alone through the
+enemy's ranks they rushed forward with headlong impetuosity and drove
+the enemy with great slaughter before them. Elak, abandoned by fortune
+and his army, turned his face to fly. He crossed the river with a few of
+his surviving friends, never afterward appearing in the field to dispute
+the victory with Mahmud.
+
+The King after this triumph marched two days after the runaways. On the
+third night a great storm of wind and snow overtook the Ghaznian army in
+the desert. The King's tents were pitched with much difficulty, while
+the army was obliged to lie in the snow. Mahmud, having ordered great
+fires to be kindled around his tents, they became so warm that many of
+the courtiers began to take off their upper garments; when a facetious
+chief, whose name was Dalk, came in shivering with the cold, at which
+the King, observing, said: "Go out, Dalk, and tell the Winter that he
+may burst his cheeks with blustering, for here we value not his
+resentment." Dalk went out accordingly, and, returning in a short time,
+kissed the ground, and thus addressed the King: "I have delivered the
+King's message to Winter, but the Surly Season replied that if his hands
+cannot tear the skirts of Royalty and hurt the attendants of the King,
+yet he will so use his power to-night on his army that in the morning
+Mahmud will be obliged to saddle his own horses."
+
+The King smiled at this reply, but it presently rendered him more
+thoughtful and he determined to proceed no farther. In the morning some
+hundreds of men and horses were found to have perished with the cold.
+Mahmud at the same time received advices from India, that Zab Sais, the
+renegade Hindu, had thrown off his allegiance, and, returning to his
+former religion, expelled all the officers who had been appointed by the
+King, from their respective departments. The King immediately determined
+to punish this renegade, and with great expedition advanced toward
+India. He sent on a part of his cavalry in front, which, coming
+unexpectedly upon Zab Sais, defeated him and brought him prisoner to the
+King. The rebel was fined four lacs of rupees, of which Mahmud made a
+present to his treasurer, and made Zab Sais a prisoner for life.
+
+Mahmud, having thus settled his affairs in India, returned in autumn to
+Ghazni, where he remained for the winter in peace. But in the spring of
+the year A.H. 399 Annandpal, sovereign of Lahore, began to raise
+disturbance in Multan, so that the King was obliged to undertake another
+expedition into those parts, with a great army, to correct the Indians.
+Annandpal, hearing of his intentions, sent ambassadors everywhere to
+request the assistance of the other princes of Hindustan, who considered
+the extirpation of the Moslems from India as a meritorious and political
+as well as a religious action.
+
+Accordingly the princes of Ugin, Gualier, Callinger, Kannoge, Delhi, and
+Ajmere entered into a confederacy, and, collecting their forces,
+advanced toward the heads of the Indus, with the greatest army that had
+been for some centuries seen upon the field in India. The two armies
+came in sight of one another in a great plain near the confines of the
+province of Peshawur. They remained there encamped forty days without
+action: but the troops of the idolaters daily increased in number. They
+were joined by the Gakers, and other tribes with their armies, and
+surrounded the Mahometans, who, fearing a general assault, were obliged
+to intrench themselves.
+
+The King, having thus secured himself, ordered a thousand archers to the
+front, to endeavor to provoke the enemy to advance to the intrenchments.
+The archers accordingly were attacked by the Gakers, who,
+notwithstanding all the King could do, pursued the retreating bowmen
+within the trenches, where a dreadful scene of carnage ensued on both
+sides, in which five thousand Moslems in a few minutes were slain. The
+enemy's soldiers being now cut down as fast as they advanced, the attack
+grew weaker, when suddenly the elephant which carried the Prince of
+Lahore, who was chief in command, took fright at the report of a gun
+(_sic_), and turned tail in flight.
+
+This circumstance struck the Hindus with a panic, for, thinking they
+were deserted by their general, they immediately followed the example.
+Abdallah, with six thousand Arabian horse, and Arsallah, with ten
+thousand Turks, Afghans, and Chilligis, pursued the enemy for two days
+and nights; so that twenty thousand Hindus were killed in their
+flight--in addition to the great multitude that fell on the field of
+battle.
+
+Thirty elephants, with much rich plunder, were brought to the King, who,
+to establish the faith, marched against the Hindus of Nagrakot, breaking
+down their idols and destroying their temples. There was at that time,
+in the territory of Nagrakot, a strong fort called Bima, which Mahmud
+invested after having destroyed the country round about with fire and
+sword. Bima was built by a prince of the same name, on the top of a
+steep mountain; and here the Hindus--on account of its strength--had
+deposited the wealth consecrated to their idols in all the neighboring
+kingdoms; so that in this fort, it was said, there was a greater
+quantity of gold, silver, precious stones, and pearls than ever had been
+collected in the royal treasury of any prince on earth.
+
+Mahmud invested the place with such expedition that the Hindus had not
+time to send troops into it for its defence--the greater part of the
+garrison having been sent to the field. Those within consisted, for the
+most part, of priests, who being adverse to the bloody business of war,
+in a few days solicited permission to capitulate. Their request being
+granted, they opened the gates and fell upon their faces before Mahmud,
+who with a few of his officers and attendants immediately entered and
+took possession of the place.
+
+In Bima were found: seven hundred thousand _dinars_; seven hundred
+maunds of gold and silver plate; forty maunds of pure gold in ingots;
+two thousand maunds of silver bullion, and twenty maunds of various
+jewels set, which had been collecting from the time of Bima. With this
+immense treasure the King returned to Ghazni, and in the year A.H. 400
+held a magnificent festival, where he displayed to the people his wealth
+in golden thrones, and in other rich receptacles, in a great plain
+without the city of Ghazni; and after the feast every individual
+received a princely gift.
+
+In the following year Mahmud led his army toward Ghor. The native prince
+of that country, Mahomet of the Sur tribe of Afghans, with ten thousand
+troops, opposed him. The King, finding that the troops of Ghor defended
+themselves in their intrenchments with such obstinacy, commanded his
+army to make a feint of retreating, to lure the enemy out of their
+fortified camp, which manoeuvre proved successful. The Ghorians, being
+deceived, pursued the army of Ghazni to the plain, where the King,
+facing round with his troops, attacked them with great impetuosity.
+Mahomet was taken prisoner and brought to the King; but in his despair
+he had taken poison, which he always kept under his ring, and died in a
+few hours. His country was annexed to the dominion of Ghazni. Some
+historians affirm that neither the sovereigns of Ghor nor its
+inhabitants were Mussulmans till after this victory; while others of
+good credit assure us that they were converted many years before, even
+so early as the time of the famous Ali, the son-in-law of the Prophet.
+
+Mahmud, in the same year, was under the necessity of marching again to
+Multan, which had revolted; but having soon reduced it, and cut off a
+great number of the chiefs, he brought Daud, the son of Nazir, the
+rebellious governor, prisoner to Ghazni, and imprisoned him in the fort
+of Gorci for life.
+
+In the year A.H. 402, the passion of war fermenting in the mind of
+Mahmud, he resolved upon the conquest of Tannasar, in the kingdom of
+Hindustan. It had reached the ears of the King that Tannasar was held in
+the same veneration by idolaters as Mecca was by the Mahometans; that
+there they had set up a great number of idols, the chief of which they
+called Jug Sum. This Jug Sum, they pretended to say, existed when as yet
+the world existed not. When the King reached the country about the five
+branches of the Indus, he desired that--according to the treaty that
+existed between himself and Annandpal--he should not be disturbed by his
+march through that country. He accordingly sent an embassy to Annandpal,
+advising him of his intentions, and desiring him to send guards for the
+protection of his towns and villages, which he, the King, would take
+care should not be molested by the followers of his camp.
+
+Annandpal agreed to this proposal, and prepared an entertainment for the
+reception of the King, issuing an order for all his subjects to supply
+the royal camp with every necessary of life. In the mean time he sent
+his brother with two thousand horse to meet the King and deliver this
+message:
+
+"That he was the subject and slave of the King; but that he begged
+permission to acquaint his Majesty that Tannasar was the principal place
+of worship of the inhabitants of that country; that if it was a virtue
+required by the religion of Mahmud to destroy the religion of others, he
+had already acquitted himself of that duty to his God in the destruction
+of the temple of Nagracot; but if he should be pleased to alter his
+resolution against Tannasar, Annandpal would undertake that the amount
+of the revenues of that country should be annually paid to Mahmud, to
+reimburse the expense of his expedition: that besides, he, on his own
+part, would present him with fifty elephants, and jewels to a
+considerable amount."
+
+The King replied: "That in the Mahometan religion it was an established
+tenet that the more the glory of the Prophet was exalted, and the more
+his followers exerted themselves in the subversion of idolatry, the
+greater would be their reward in heaven; that therefore it was his firm
+resolution, with the assistance of God, to root out the abominable
+worship of idols from the land of India: why then should he spare
+Tannasar?"
+
+When this news reached the Indian king of Delhi, he prepared to oppose
+the invaders, sending messages all over Hindustan to acquaint the rajahs
+that Mahmud, without any reason or provocation, was marching with an
+innumerable army to destroy Tannasar, which was under his immediate
+protection: that if a dam was not expeditiously raised against this
+roaring torrent, the country of Hindustan would soon be overwhelmed in
+ruin, and the tree of prosperity rooted up; that therefore it was
+advisable for them to join their forces at Tannasar, to oppose with
+united strength the impending danger. But Mahmud reached Tannasar before
+they could take any measure for its defence, plundered the city and
+broke the idols, sending Jug Sum to Ghazni, where he was soon stripped
+of his ornaments. He then ordered his head to be struck off and his body
+to be thrown on the highway. According to the account of the historian
+Hago Mahomet of Kandahar, there was a ruby found in one of the temples
+which weighed four hundred and fifty miskals!
+
+Mahmud, after these transactions at Tannasar, proceeded to Delhi, which
+he also took, and wanted greatly to annex to his dominions, but his
+nobles told him that it was impossible to keep the rajahship of Delhi
+till he had entirely subjected Multan to Mahometan rule, destroyed the
+power and exterminated the family of Annandpal, Prince of Lahore, which
+lay between Delhi and the northern dominions of Mahmud. The King
+approved of this counsel, and immediately determined to proceed no
+further against that country, till he had accomplished the reduction of
+Multan and Annandpal. But that prince behaved with so much policy and
+hospitality that he changed the purpose of the King, who returned to
+Ghazni. He brought to Ghazni forty thousand captives and much wealth, so
+that that city could now be hardly distinguished in riches from India
+itself.
+
+
+
+
+CANUTE BECOMES KING OF ENGLAND
+
+A.D. 1017
+
+DAVID HUME
+
+
+(After the success of King Alfred over the Danes in the last quarter of
+the ninth century, England enjoyed a considerable respite from the
+invasions of the bold ravagers who had caused great suffering and loss
+to the country. This immunity of England seems to have been partly due
+to the fact that the Danish adventurers had gained a foothold in the
+north of France, where they found all the employment they needed in
+maintaining their establishments. Under the reign of Edward the
+Elder--chosen to succeed Alfred--the English enjoyed an interval of
+comparative peace and industry. During this time and under the following
+reigns, known as those of the Six Boy-Kings, the social side of life had
+an opportunity to develop from a semi-barbarous to a more civilized
+state. The bare and rough walls of hall and court were screened by
+tapestry hangings, often of silk, and elaborately ornamented with birds
+and flowers or scenes from the battlefield or the chase. Chairs and
+tables were skilfully carved and inlaid with different woods and, among
+the wealthier nobility, often decorated with gold and silver. Knives and
+spoons were now used at table--the fork was to come many long years
+later; golden ornaments were worn; and a variety of dishes were
+fashioned, often of precious metals, brass, and even bone. The bedstead
+became a household article, no longer looked upon with superstitious
+awe; and musical instruments--principally of the harp pattern--began to
+find favor in their eyes, and were passed round from hand to hand, like
+the drinking-bowl, at their rude festivals.
+
+But toward the end of a century following the victories of Alfred the
+Danes again threatened an invasion, and in 981-991 they made several
+landings, in the latter year overrunning much territory. King Ethelred
+[the "Unready"] procured their departure by bribery, which led the Danes
+to repeat their visit the next year, following it up by a descent in
+force under King Sweyn of Denmark and Olaf of Norway. They defeated the
+English in battle and ravaged a great part of the country, exacting as
+before ruinous contributions from the already impoverished people. After
+the siege and taking of London, 1011-1013, the flight of the cowardly
+Ethelred to the court of Normandy, the sudden death of Sweyn, who had
+been but a few months before proclaimed King of England, and the return
+of Ethelred to his throne, Canute, the son of Sweyn, claimed the crown
+and ravaged the land in the manner and custom of his race. The
+complications and strife engendered by the rival claims of the Dane and
+Edmund ["Ironside"], son of Ethelred, and which ended in the triumph of
+Canute and the complete subjugation of England, are hereinafter narrated
+by Hume, the English historian.)
+
+
+The Danes had been established during a longer period in England than in
+France; and though the similarity of their original language to that of
+the Saxons invited them to a more early coalition with the natives, they
+had hitherto found so little example of civilized manners among the
+English that they retained all their ancient ferocity, and valued
+themselves only on their national character of military bravery. The
+recent as well as more ancient achievements of their countrymen tended
+to support this idea; and the English princes, particularly Athelstan
+and Edgar, sensible of that superiority, had been accustomed to keep in
+pay bodies of Danish troops, who were quartered about the country and
+committed many violences upon the inhabitants. These mercenaries had
+attained to such a height of luxury, according to the old English
+writers, that they combed their hair once a day, bathed themselves once
+a week, changed their clothes frequently; and by all these arts of
+effeminacy, as well as by their military character, had rendered
+themselves so agreeable to the fair sex that they debauched the wives
+and daughters of the English and dishonored many families. But what most
+provoked the inhabitants was that, instead of defending them against
+invaders, they were ever ready to betray them to the foreign Danes, and
+to associate themselves with all straggling parties of that nation.
+
+The animosity between the inhabitants of English and Danish race had,
+from these repeated injuries, risen to a great height, when Ethelred
+(1002), from a policy incident to weak princes, embraced the cruel
+resolution of massacring the latter throughout all his dominions. Secret
+orders were despatched to commence the execution everywhere on the same
+day, and the festival of St. Brice, which fell on a Sunday, the day on
+which the Danes usually bathed themselves, was chosen for that purpose.
+It is needless to repeat the accounts transmitted concerning the
+barbarity of this massacre: the rage of the populace, excited by so many
+injuries, sanctioned by authority, and stimulated by example,
+distinguished not between innocence and guilt, spared neither sex nor
+age, and was not satiated without the tortures as well as death of the
+unhappy victims. Even Gunhilda, sister to the King of Denmark, who had
+married Earl Paling and had embraced Christianity, was, by the advice of
+Edric, Earl of Wilts, seized and condemned to death by Ethelred, after
+seeing her husband and children butchered before her face. This unhappy
+princess foretold, in the agonies of despair, that her murder would soon
+be avenged by the total ruin of the English nation.
+
+Never was prophecy better fulfilled, and never did barbarous policy
+prove more fatal to the authors. Sweyn and his Danes, who wanted but a
+pretence for invading the English, appeared off the western coast, and
+threatened to take full revenge for the slaughter of their countrymen.
+Exeter fell first into their hands, from the negligence or treachery of
+Earl Hugh, a Norman, who had been made governor by the interest of Queen
+Emma. They began to spread their devastations over the country, when the
+English, sensible what outrages they must now expect from their
+barbarous and offended enemy, assembled more early and in greater
+numbers than usual, and made an appearance of vigorous resistance. But
+all these preparations were frustrated by the treachery of Duke Alfric,
+who was intrusted with the command, and who, feigning sickness, refused
+to lead the army against the Danes, till it was dispirited and at last
+dissipated by his fatal misconduct. Alfric soon after died, and Edric, a
+greater traitor than he, who had married the King's daughter and had
+acquired a total ascendant over him, succeeded Alfric in the government
+of Mercia and in the command of the English armies. A great famine,
+proceeding partly from the bad seasons, partly from the decay of
+agriculture, added to all the other miseries of the inhabitants. The
+country, wasted by the Danes, harassed by the fruitless expeditions of
+its own forces, was reduced to the utmost desolation, and at last
+submitted (1007) to the infamy of purchasing a precarious peace from the
+enemy by the payment of thirty thousand pounds.
+
+The English endeavored to employ this interval in making preparations
+against the return of the Danes, which they had reason soon to expect. A
+law was made, ordering the proprietors of eight hides of land to provide
+each a horseman and a complete suit of armor, and those of three hundred
+and ten hides to equip a ship for the defence of the coast. When this
+navy was assembled, which must have consisted of near eight hundred
+vessels, all hopes of its success were disappointed by the factions,
+animosities, and dissensions of the nobility. Edric had impelled his
+brother Brightric to prefer an accusation of treason against Wolfnoth,
+governor of Sussex, the father of the famous earl Godwin; and that
+nobleman, well acquainted with the malevolence as well as power of his
+enemy, found no means of safety but in deserting with twenty ships to
+the Danes. Brightric pursued him with a fleet of eighty sail; but his
+ships being shattered in a tempest, and stranded on the coast, he was
+suddenly attacked by Wolfnoth, and all his vessels burned and destroyed.
+The imbecility of the King was little capable of repairing this
+misfortune. The treachery of Edric frustrated every plan for future
+defence; and the English navy, disconcerted, discouraged, and divided,
+was at last scattered into its several harbors.
+
+It is almost impossible, or would be tedious, to relate particularly all
+the miseries to which the English were henceforth exposed. We hear of
+nothing but the sacking and burning of towns; the devastation of the
+open country; the appearance of the enemy in every quarter of the
+kingdom; their cruel diligence in discovering any corner which had not
+been ransacked by their former violence. The broken and disjointed
+narration of the ancient historians is here well adapted to the nature
+of the war, which was conducted by such sudden inroads as would have
+been dangerous even to a united and well-governed kingdom, but proved
+fatal where nothing but a general consternation and mutual diffidence
+and dissension prevailed. The governors of one province refused to march
+to the assistance of another, and were at last terrified from assembling
+their forces for the defence of their own province. General councils
+were summoned; but either no resolution was taken or none was carried
+into execution. And the only expedient in which the English agreed was
+the base and imprudent one of buying a new peace from the Danes, by the
+payment of forty-eight thousand pounds.
+
+This measure did not bring them even that short interval of repose which
+they had expected from it. The Danes, disregarding all engagements,
+continued their devastations and hostilities; levied a new contribution
+of eight thousand pounds upon the county of Kent alone; murdered the
+Archbishop of Canterbury, who had refused to countenance this exaction;
+and the English nobility found no other resource than that of submitting
+everywhere to the Danish monarch, swearing allegiance to him, and
+delivering him hostages for their fidelity. Ethelred, equally afraid of
+the violence of the enemy and the treachery of his own subjects, fled
+into Normandy (1013), whither he had sent before him Queen Emma and her
+two sons, Alfred and Edward. Richard received his unhappy guests with a
+generosity that does honor to his memory.
+
+The King had not been above six weeks in Normandy when he heard of the
+death of Sweyn, who expired at Gainsborough before he had time to
+establish himself in his new-acquired dominions. The English prelates
+and nobility, taking advantage of this event, sent over a deputation to
+Normandy, inviting Ethelred to return to them, expressing a desire of
+being again governed by their native prince, and intimating their hopes
+that, being now tutored by experience, he would avoid all those errors
+which had been attended with such misfortunes to himself and to his
+people. But the misconduct of Ethelred was incurable; and on his
+resuming the government, he discovered the same incapacity, indolence,
+cowardice, and credulity which had so often exposed him to the insults
+of his enemies. His son-in-law Edric, notwithstanding his repeated
+treasons, retained such influence at court as to instil into the King
+jealousies of Sigefert and Morcar, two of the chief nobles of Mercia.
+Edric allured them into his house, where he murdered them; while
+Ethelred participated in the infamy of the action by confiscating their
+estates and thrusting into a convent the widow of Sigefert. She was a
+woman of singular beauty and merit; and in a visit which was paid her,
+during her confinement, by Prince Edmund, the King's eldest son, she
+inspired him with so violent an affection that he released her from the
+convent, and soon after married her without the consent of his father.
+
+Meanwhile the English found in Canute, the son and successor of Sweyn,
+an enemy no less terrible than the prince from whom death had so lately
+delivered them. He ravaged the eastern coast with merciless fury, and
+put ashore all the English hostages at Sandwich, after having cut off
+their hands and noses. He was obliged, by the necessity of his affairs,
+to make a voyage to Denmark; but, returning soon after, he continued his
+depredations along the southern coast. He even broke into the counties
+of Dorset, Wilts, and Somerset, where an army was assembled against him,
+under the command of Prince Edmund and Duke Edric. The latter still
+continued his perfidious machinations, and, after endeavoring in vain to
+get the prince into his power, he found means to disperse the army, and
+he then openly deserted to Canute with forty vessels.
+
+Notwithstanding this misfortune Edmund was not disconcerted, but,
+assembling all the force of England, was in a condition to give battle
+to the enemy. The King had had such frequent experience of perfidy among
+his subjects that he had lost all confidence in them: he remained at
+London, pretending sickness, but really from apprehensions that they
+intended to buy their peace by delivering him into the hands of his
+enemies. The army called aloud for their sovereign to march at their
+head against the Danes; and, on his refusal to take the field, they were
+so discouraged that those vast preparations became ineffectual for the
+defence of the kingdom. Edmund, deprived of all regular supplies to
+maintain his soldiers, was obliged to commit equal ravages with those
+which were practised by the Danes; and, after making some fruitless
+expeditions into the north, which had submitted entirely to Canute's
+power, he retired to London, determined there to maintain to the last
+extremity the small remains of English liberty. He here found everything
+in confusion by the death of the King, who expired after an unhappy and
+inglorious reign of thirty-five years (1016). He left two sons by his
+first marriage, Edmund, who succeeded him, and Edwy, whom Canute
+afterward murdered. His two sons by the second marriage, Alfred and
+Edward, were, immediately upon Ethelred's death, conveyed into Normandy
+by Queen Emma.
+
+Edmund, who received the name of "Ironside" from his hardy valor,
+possessed courage and abilities sufficient to have prevented his country
+from sinking into those calamities, but not to raise it from that abyss
+of misery into which it had already fallen. Among the other misfortunes
+of the English, treachery and disaffection had crept in among the
+nobility and prelates; and Edmund found no better expedient for stopping
+the further progress of these fatal evils than to lead his army
+instantly into the field, and to employ them against the common enemy.
+After meeting with some success at Gillingham, he prepared himself to
+decide, in one general engagement, the fate of his crown; and at
+Scoerston, in the county of Gloucester, he offered battle to the enemy,
+who were commanded by Canute and Edric. Fortune, in the beginning of the
+day, declared for him; but Edric, having cut off the head of one Osmer,
+whose countenance resembled that of Edmund, fixed it on a spear, carried
+it through the ranks in triumph, and called aloud to the English that it
+was time to fly; for, behold! the head of their sovereign. And though
+Edmund, observing the consternation of the troops, took off his helmet,
+and showed himself to them, the utmost he could gain by his activity and
+valor was to leave the victory undecided. Edric now took a surer method
+to ruin him, by pretending to desert to him; and as Edmund was well
+acquainted with his power, and probably knew no other of the chief
+nobility in whom he could repose more confidence, he was obliged,
+notwithstanding the repeated perfidy of the man, to give him a
+considerable command in the army. A battle soon after ensued at
+Assington, in Essex, where Edric, flying in the beginning of the day,
+occasioned the total defeat of the English, followed by a great
+slaughter of the nobility. The indefatigable Edmund, however, had still
+resources. Assembling a new army at Gloucester, he was again in
+condition to dispute the field, when the Danish and English nobility,
+equally harassed with those convulsions, obliged their kings to come to
+a compromise and to divide the kingdom between them by treaty. Canute
+reserved to himself the northern division, consisting of Mercia, East
+Anglia, and Northumberland, which he had entirely subdued. The southern
+parts were left to Edmund. This prince survived the treaty about a
+month. He was murdered at Oxford by two of his chamberlains, accomplices
+of Edric, who thereby made way for the succession of Canute the Dane to
+the crown of England.
+
+The English, who had been unable to defend their country and maintain
+their independency under so active and brave a prince as Edmund, could
+after his death expect nothing but total subjection from Canute, who,
+active and brave himself, and at the head of a great force, was ready to
+take advantage of the minority of Edwin and Edward, the two sons of
+Edmund. Yet this conqueror, who was commonly so little scrupulous,
+showed himself anxious to cover his injustice under plausible pretences.
+Before he seized the dominions of the English princes, he summoned a
+general assembly of the states in order to fix the succession of the
+kingdom. He here suborned some nobles to depose that, in the treaty of
+Gloucester, it had been verbally agreed, either to name Canute, in case
+of Edmund's death, successor to his dominions or tutor to his
+children--for historians vary in this particular; and that evidence,
+supported by the great power of Canute, determined the states
+immediately to put the Danish monarch in possession of the government.
+Canute, jealous of the two princes, but sensible that he should render
+himself extremely odious if he ordered them to be despatched in England,
+sent them abroad to his ally, the King of Sweden, whom he desired, as
+soon as they arrived at his court, to free him, by their death, from all
+further anxiety. The Swedish monarch was too generous to comply with the
+request; but being afraid of drawing on himself a quarrel with Canute,
+by protecting the young princes, he sent them to Solomon, King of
+Hungary, to be educated in his court. The elder, Edwin, was afterward
+married to the sister of the King of Hungary; but the English prince
+dying without issue, Solomon gave his sister-in-law, Agatha, daughter of
+the emperor Henry II, in marriage to Edward, the younger brother; and
+she bore him Edgar, Atheling, Margaret, afterward Queen of Scotland, and
+Christina, who retired into a convent.
+
+Canute, though he had reached the great point of his ambition in
+obtaining possession of the English crown, was obliged at first to make
+great sacrifices to it; and to gratify the chief of the nobility, by
+bestowing on them the most extensive governments and jurisdictions. He
+created Thurkill Earl or Duke of East Anglia--for these titles were then
+nearly of the same import--Yric of Northumberland, and Edric of Mercia;
+reserving only to himself the administration of Wessex. But seizing
+afterward a favorable opportunity, he expelled Thurkill and Yric from
+their governments, and banished them the kingdom; he put to death many
+of the English nobility, on whose fidelity he could not rely, and whom
+he hated on account of their disloyalty to their native prince. And even
+the traitor Edric, having had the assurance to reproach him with his
+services, was condemned to be executed and his body to be thrown into
+the Thames; a suitable reward for his multiplied acts of perfidy and
+rebellion.
+
+Canute also found himself obliged, in the beginning of his reign, to
+load the people with heavy taxes in order to reward his Danish
+followers: he exacted from them at one time the sum of seventy-two
+thousand pounds, besides eleven thousand which he levied on London
+alone. He was probably willing, from political motives, to mulct
+severely that city, on account of the affection which it had borne to
+Edmund and the resistance which it had made to the Danish power in two
+obstinate sieges.[25] But these rigors were imputed to necessity; and
+Canute, like a wise prince, was determined that the English, now
+deprived of all their dangerous leaders, should be reconciled to the
+Danish yoke, by the justice and impartiality of his administration. He
+sent back to Denmark as many of his followers as he could safely spare;
+he restored the Saxon customs in a general assembly of the states; he
+made no distinction between Danes and English in the distribution of
+justice; and he took care, by a strict execution of law, to protect the
+lives and properties of all his people. The Danes were gradually
+incorporated with his new subjects; and both were glad to obtain a
+little respite from those multiplied calamities from which the one, no
+less than the other, had, in their fierce contest for power, experienced
+such fatal consequences.
+
+[Footnote 25: In one of these sieges Canute diverted the course of the
+Thames, and by that means brought his ships above London bridge.]
+
+The removal of Edmund's children into so distant a country as Hungary
+was, next to their death, regarded by Canute as the greatest security to
+his government: he had no further anxiety, except with regard to Alfred
+and Edward, who were protected and supported by their uncle Richard,
+Duke of Normandy. Richard even fitted out a great armament, in order to
+restore the English princes to the throne of their ancestors; and though
+the navy was dispersed by a storm, Canute saw the danger to which he was
+exposed from the enmity of so warlike a people as the Normans. In order
+to acquire the friendship of the duke, he paid his addresses to Queen
+Emma, sister of that prince, and promised that he would leave the
+children whom he should have by that marriage in possession of the Crown
+of England. Richard complied with his demand and sent over Emma to
+England, where she was soon after married to Canute. The English, though
+they disapproved of her espousing the mortal enemy of her former husband
+and his family, were pleased to find at court a sovereign to whom they
+were accustomed, and who had already formed connections with them; and
+thus Canute, besides securing, by this marriage, the alliance of
+Normandy, gradually acquired, by the same means, the confidence of his
+own subjects. The Norman prince did not long survive the marriage of
+Emma; and he left the inheritance of the duchy to his eldest son of the
+same name, who, dying a year after him without children, was succeeded
+by his brother Robert, a man of valor and abilities.
+
+Canute, having settled his power in England beyond all danger of a
+revolution, made a voyage to Denmark, in order to resist the attacks of
+the King of Sweden; and he carried along with him a great body of the
+English, under the command of Earl Godwin. This nobleman had here an
+opportunity of performing a service, by which he both reconciled the
+King's mind to the English nation and, gaining to himself the friendship
+of his sovereign, laid the foundation of that immense fortune which he
+acquired to his family. He was stationed next the Swedish camp, and
+observing a favorable opportunity, which he was obliged suddenly to
+seize, he attacked the enemy in the night, drove them from their
+trenches, threw them into disorder, pursued his advantage, and obtained
+a decisive victory over them. Next morning Canute, seeing the English
+camp entirely abandoned, imagined that those disaffected troops had
+deserted to the enemy: he was agreeably surprised to find that they were
+at that time engaged in pursuit of the discomfited Swedes. He was so
+pleased with this success, and with the manner of obtaining it, that he
+bestowed his daughter in marriage upon Godwin, and treated him ever
+after with entire confidence and regard.
+
+In another voyage, which he made afterward to Denmark, Canute attacked
+Norway, and, expelling the just but unwarlike Olaus, kept possession of
+his kingdom till the death of that prince. He had now by his conquests
+and valor attained the utmost height of grandeur: having leisure from
+wars and intrigues, he felt the unsatisfactory nature of all human
+enjoyments; and equally weary of the glories and turmoils of this life,
+he began to cast his view toward that future existence, which it is so
+natural for the human mind, whether satiated by prosperity or disgusted
+with adversity, to make the object of its attention. Unfortunately, the
+spirit which prevailed in that age gave a wrong direction to his
+devotion: instead of making compensation to those whom he had injured by
+his former acts of violence, he employed himself entirely in those
+exercises of piety which the monks represented as the most meritorious.
+He built churches, he endowed monasteries, he enriched the
+ecclesiastics, and he bestowed revenues for the support of chantries at
+Assington and other places, where he appointed prayers to be said for
+the souls of those who had there fallen in battle against him. He even
+undertook a pilgrimage to Rome, where he resided a considerable time:
+besides obtaining from the pope some privileges for the English school
+erected there, he engaged all the princes through whose dominions he was
+obliged to pass to desist from those heavy impositions and tolls which
+they were accustomed to exact from the English pilgrims. By this spirit
+of devotion, no less than by his equitable and politic administration,
+he gained, in a good measure, the affections of his subjects.
+
+Canute, the greatest and most powerful monarch of his time, sovereign of
+Denmark and Norway, as well as of England, could not fail of meeting
+with adulation from his courtiers; a tribute which is liberally paid
+even to the meanest and weakest princes. Some of his flatterers,
+breaking out one day in admiration of his grandeur, exclaimed that
+everything was possible for him; upon which the monarch, it is said,
+ordered his chair to be set on the sea-shore while the tide was rising;
+and as the waters approached, he commanded them to retire, and to obey
+the voice of him who was lord of the ocean. He feigned to sit some time
+in expectation of their submission; but when the sea still advanced
+toward him, and began to wash him with its billows, he turned to his
+courtiers, and remarked to them that every creature in the universe was
+feeble and impotent, and that power resided with one Being alone, in
+whose hands were all the elements of nature; who could say to the ocean,
+"Thus far shalt thou go, and no farther," and who could level with his
+nod the most towering piles of human pride and ambition.
+
+The only memorable action which Canute performed after his return from
+Rome was an expedition against Malcolm, King of Scotland. During the
+reign of Ethelred, a tax of a shilling a hide had been imposed on all
+the lands of England. It was commonly called _danegelt_; because the
+revenue had been employed either in buying peace with the Danes or in
+making preparations against the inroads of that hostile nation. That
+monarch had required that the same tax should be paid by Cumberland,
+which was held by the Scots; but Malcolm, a warlike prince, told him
+that as he was always able to repulse the Danes by his own power, he
+would neither submit to buy peace of his enemies nor pay others for
+resisting them. Ethelred, offended at this reply, which contained a
+secret reproach on his own conduct, undertook an expedition against
+Cumberland; but though he committed ravages upon the country, he could
+never bring Malcolm to a temper more humble or submissive. Canute, after
+his accession, summoned the Scottish King to acknowledge himself a
+vassal for Cumberland to the Crown of England; but Malcolm refused
+compliance, on pretence that he owed homage to those princes only who
+inherited that kingdom by right of blood. Canute was not of a temper to
+bear this insult; and the King of Scotland soon found that the sceptre
+was in very different hands from those of the feeble and irresolute
+Ethelred. Upon Canute's appearing on the frontiers with a formidable
+army, Malcolm agreed that his grandson and heir, Duncan, whom he put in
+possession of Cumberland, should make the submissions required, and that
+the heirs of Scotland should always acknowledge themselves vassals to
+England for that province.
+
+Canute passed four years in peace after this enterprise, and he died at
+Shaftesbury; leaving three sons, Sweyn, Harold, and Hardicanute. Sweyn,
+whom he had by his first marriage with Alfwen, daughter of the Earl of
+Hampshire, was crowned in Norway; Hardicanute, whom Emma had borne him,
+was in possession of Denmark; Harold, who was of the same marriage with
+Sweyn, was at that time in England.
+
+
+
+
+HENRY III DEPOSES THE POPE
+
+THE GERMAN EMPIRE CONTROLS THE PAPACY
+
+A.D. 1048
+
+FERDINAND GREGOROVIUS
+
+JOSEPH E. DARRAS
+
+
+(After the extinction of the Carlovingian line, A.D. 887, and the
+division of the empire, the Church of Rome and the Christian world fell
+into a highly demoralized state, attributable to the destitution to
+which ecclesiastical bodies were reduced by the frequent predations of
+bands of robbers, the immorality of the priesthood, and the power of
+electing the popes falling into the hands of intriguing and licentious
+patrician females, whom aspirants to the holy see were not ashamed to
+bribe for their favors. So depraved had the general spirit of the age
+become that Pope Boniface VII, A.D. 974, robbed St. Peter's Church and
+its treasury and fled to Constantinople; while Pope John XVIII, A.D.
+1003, was prevented, by general indignation only, from accepting a sum
+of money from Emperor Basil to recognize the right of the Greek
+patriarch to the title of "Universal Bishop."
+
+A child, son of one of the old noble houses, was consecrated pope as
+Benedict IX, A.D. 1033, according to some authorities, at the age of ten
+or twelve years. He became noted for his profligacy and was driven from
+his throne, the Romans electing, as Pope Sylvester III, John, Bishop of
+Sabina, who is said to have paid a high price for the dignity. Benedict,
+however, regained the papal seat shortly afterward, and drove Sylvester
+into a refuge, but later sold the office to John Gratianus, Arch-priest
+of Rome, who as Gregory VI made laudable attempts to effect a general
+reformation. He failed in his efforts, and a chaotic state ensued; three
+popes claiming the triple tiara and reigning in Rome: Gregory at the
+Vatican, Benedict in the Lateran, and Sylvester in the Church of Santa
+Maria Maggiore.
+
+On the invitation of the Roman people, Henry the Black, the young and
+zealous Emperor of Germany, repaired to Italy in 1045 and summoned a
+great ecclesiastical council at Sutri, which passed a decree deposing
+the three papal claimants. The same council elected to the tiara the
+German bishop of Bamberg, who reigned in the holy see as Clement II. One
+of his first ceremonies, carried out with all the gorgeous pomp of the
+Roman Church, was the imperial coronation of Henry and his wife Agnes.
+
+But Henry's action, while "it dragged the Church out of the slough it
+had fallen into," startled the ecclesiastical world, and was a prelude
+to the struggle between pope and emperor which, under St. Hildebrand,
+Pope Gregory VII, culminated in the independent establishment of the
+pontificate and papal power.)
+
+
+FERDINAND GREGOROVIUS
+
+Henry III, the son and successor of Conrad, was young, vigorous, and
+God-fearing; a noble prince called, like Charles and Otto the Great, to
+restore Rome, to deliver it from tyrants, and to reform the almost
+annihilated Church. For the papacy had been still further dishonored by
+Benedict IX. It seemed as if a demon from hell, in the disguise of a
+priest, occupied the chair of Peter and profaned the sacred mysteries of
+religion by his insolent courses.
+
+Benedict IX, restored in 1038, protected by his brother Gregory, who
+ruled the city as senator of the Romans, led unchecked the life of a
+Turkish sultan in the palace of the Lateran. He and his family filled
+Rome with robbery and murder; all lawful conditions had ceased. Toward
+the end of 1044, or in the beginning of the following year, the populace
+at length rose in furious revolt; the Pope fled, but his vassals
+defended the Leonina against the attacks of the Romans. The
+Trasteverines remained faithful to Benedict, and he summoned friends and
+adherents; Count Gerard of Galeria advanced with a numerous body of
+horse to the Saxon gate and repulsed the Romans. An earthquake added to
+the horrors in the revolted city. The ancient chronicle which relates
+these events does not tell us whether Trastevere was taken by assault
+after a three-days' struggle, but merely relates that the Romans
+unanimously renounced Benedict, and elected Bishop John of the Sabina to
+the papacy as Sylvester III. John also owed his elevation to the gold
+with which he bribed the rebels and their leader, Girardo de Saxo. This
+powerful Roman had first promised his daughter in marriage to the Pope,
+and afterward refused her; for the Pope had not hesitated, in all
+seriousness, to sue for the hand of a Roman lady, a relative of his own.
+Her father lured him on with the hope of winning her, but required that
+Benedict should in the first place resign the tiara.
+
+The Pope, burning with passion, consented and fulfilled his promise
+during the revolt of the Romans. He was mastered by the demon of
+sensuality; it was reported by the superstitious that he associated with
+devils in the woods and attracted women by means of spells. It was
+asserted that books of magic, with which he had conjured demons, had
+been found in the Lateran. His banishment meanwhile aroused the haughty
+spirit of his house, and anger at Gerard's treacherous conduct proved a
+further incentive to revenge. His numerous adherents still held St.
+Angelo, and his gold acquired him new friends. After a forty-nine days'
+reign, Sylvester III was driven from the apostolic chair, which the
+Tusculan reascended in March, 1045.
+
+Benedict now ruled for some time in Rome, while Sylvester III found
+safety either within some fortified monument in the city or in some
+Sabine fortress, and continued to call himself pope. A beneficent
+darkness veils the horrors of this year. Hated by the Romans, insecure
+on his throne, in constant terror of the renewal of the revolution,
+Benedict eventually found himself obliged to abdicate. The abbot
+Bartholomew of Grotta Ferrata urged him to the step, but he unblushingly
+sold the papacy for money like a piece of merchandise. In exchange for a
+considerable income, that is to say, for the revenue of "Peter's pence"
+from England, he made over his papal dignities by a formal contract to
+John Gratianus, a rich archpriest of the Church of St. John at the Latin
+gate, on May 1, 1045.
+
+Could the holiest office in Christendom be more deeply outraged than by
+a sale such as this? And yet so general was the traffic in
+ecclesiastical dignities throughout the world that when a pope finally
+sold the chair of Peter the scandal did not strike society as specially
+heinous.
+
+John Gratian, or Gregory VI, set aside the canon law with a defiant
+courage which perhaps was only understood by the minority of his
+compatriots; he bought the papacy in order to wrest it from the hands of
+a criminal, and this remarkable Pope, although regarded as an idiot in
+that terrible period, was possibly an earnest and high-minded man.
+Scarcely had Peter Damian knowledge of this traffic when he wrote to
+Gregory VI on his elevation, rejoicing that the dove with the olive
+branch had returned to the ark. The Saint may have known the Pope
+personally and have been persuaded of his spiritual virtues. Even the
+chroniclers of the time, who represent him--assuredly with injustice--as
+so rude and simple that he was obliged to appoint a representative, are
+unable to fasten any crime upon him. The Cluniacs in France and the
+congregations of Italy all hailed his elevation as the beginning of a
+better time, and side by side with this simonist Pope a young and brave
+monk suddenly appears, who, after the heroic exertions of a lifetime,
+was to raise the degenerate papacy to a height hitherto undreamed of.
+Hildebrand first issues from obscurity by the side of Gregory VI; he
+became the Pope's chaplain, and this fact alone proves that Gregory was
+no idiot. How far Hildebrand's activity already extended, whether he had
+any share in Gregory's illegal elevation, we do not know; but in the
+"representative" spoken of by the chronicles, we may easily recognize
+the gifted young monk who was Gregory's counsellor, and who later took
+the name of Gregory VII in grateful recollection of his predecessor.
+
+While Benedict IX pursued his wild career in Tusculum or Rome, Gregory
+VI remained Pope for nearly two years. His desire was to save the
+Church, which stood in need of a drastic reform--and which soon
+afterward obtained it. The papacy, lately a hereditary fief of the
+counts of Tusculum, was utterly ruined; the _dominium temporale_, the
+ominous gift of the Carlovingians, the box of Pandora in the hands of
+the Pope from which a thousand evils had arisen, had disappeared, since
+the Church could scarcely command the fortresses in the immediate
+neighborhood of the city. A hundred lords, the captains or vassals of
+the Pope, stood ready to fall upon Rome; every road was infested with
+robbers, every pilgrim was robbed; within the city the churches lay in
+ruins, while the priests caroused. Daily assassinations made the streets
+insecure. Roman nobles, sword in hand, forced their way into St. Peter's
+itself to snatch the gifts which pious hands still placed upon the
+altar.
+
+The chronicler who describes this state of things extols Gregory for
+having repressed it. The captains, it is true, besieged the city, but
+the Pope boldly assembled the militia, restored a degree of order, and
+even conquered several fortresses in the district. Sylvester had
+apparently made an attempt on Rome; he was, however, defeated by
+Gregory's energy. The short and dark period of Gregory's pontificate was
+terrible, and his severity toward the robbers soon made him hated by the
+nobles and even by the equally rapacious cardinals.
+
+Whatever he may have done under the influence of French and Italian
+monks to rescue the Church from its state of barbarous confusion, it
+was--as in the time of Otto the Great--by the German dictatorship alone
+that it could be saved. The exertions of Gregory VI soon ceased to bear
+any result; his means were exhausted, and his opponents gradually
+overpowered him. So utter was the state of anarchy that it is said that
+all three popes lived in the city at the same time: one in the Lateran,
+a second in St. Peter's, and a third in Santa Maria Maggiore.
+
+The eyes of the better citizens at length turned to the King of Germany.
+The archdeacon Peter convoked a synod without consulting Gregory, and it
+was here resolved urgently to invite Henry to come and take the imperial
+crown and raise the Church from the ruin into which it had fallen.
+
+Henry, coming from Augsburg, crossed the Brenner, and arrived at Verona
+in September, 1046, accompanied by a great army and filled with the
+ardent desire of becoming the reformer of the Church. No enemy opposed
+him, the bishops and dukes, among them the powerful margrave Boniface of
+Tuscany, did homage without delay. The Roman situation was provisionally
+discussed at a great synod in Pavia. Gregory VI now hastened to meet the
+King at Piacenza, where he hoped to gain the monarch to his side. Henry,
+however, dismissed him with the explanation that his fate and that of
+the antipopes would be canonically decided by a council.
+
+Shortly before Christmas he assembled one thousand and forty-six bishops
+and Roman clergy at Sutri. The three popes were summoned, and Gregory
+and Sylvester III actually appeared. Sylvester was deposed from his
+pontificate and condemned to penance in a monastery. Gregory VI,
+however, gave the council cause to doubt its competence to judge him.
+Gregory, who was an upright man, or one at least conscious of good
+intentions, consented publicly to describe the circumstances of his
+elevation, and was thereby forced to condemn himself as guilty of simony
+and unworthy of the papal office. He quietly laid down the insignia of
+the papacy, and his renunciation did him honor. Henry, with the bishops
+and the margrave Boniface, immediately started for the city, which did
+not shut its gates against him; for Benedict II had hid himself in
+Tusculum, and his brothers did not venture on any resistance. Rome,
+weary of the Tusculum horrors, joyfully accepted the German King as her
+deliverer. Never afterward was a king of Germany received with such glad
+acclamations by the Roman people; never again did any other effect such
+great results or achieve the like changes. With the Roman expedition of
+Henry III begins a new epoch in the history of the city, and more
+especially of the Church. It seemed as if the waters of the deluge had
+subsided, and as if men from the ark had landed on the rock of Peter to
+give new races and new laws to a new world. What law, that stern and
+terrible power which kills, binds, and holds together, signifies in
+human affairs, has indeed been experienced by few periods so fully as by
+that with which we have now to deal.
+
+A synod, assembled in St. Peter's on December 23d, again pronounced all
+three popes deposed, and a canonical pope had consequently to be
+elected. Like Otto III before his coronation, Henry had also at his side
+a man who was to wear the tiara and to confer the crown upon himself.
+
+Adalbert of Hamburg and Bremen having refused the papacy, the King chose
+Suidger of Bamberg. The royal command was all that was required to place
+the candidate on the sacred chair. Henry, however, would not violate any
+of the canonical forms. As King of Germany he possessed no right either
+over that city or yet over the papal election. The right must first be
+conferred upon him, and this was done by a treaty which he had already
+concluded with the Romans at Sutri. "Roman Signors," said Henry at the
+second sitting of the synod on December 24th, "however thoughtless your
+conduct may hitherto have been, I still accord you liberty to elect a
+pope according to ancient custom; choose from among this assembly whom
+you will."
+
+The Romans replied: "When the royal majesty is present, the assent to
+the election does not belong to us, and, when it is lacking, you are
+represented by your _patricius_. For in the affairs of the republic the
+patricius is not patricius of the pope, but of the emperor. We admit
+that we have been so thoughtless as to appoint idiots as popes. It now
+behooves your imperial power to give the Roman republic the benefit of
+law, the ornament of manners, and to lend the arm of protection to the
+Church."
+
+The senators of the year 1046, who so meekly surrendered the valuable
+right to the German King, heeded not the shades of Alberic and the three
+Crescentii; since these--their patricians--would have accused them of
+treason.
+
+The Romans of these days were, however, ready for any sacrifice so that
+they obtained freedom from the Tusculum tyranny. Nothing more clearly
+shows the utter depth of their exhaustion and the extent of their
+sufferings than the light surrender of a right which it had formerly
+cost Otto the Great such repeated efforts to extort from the city. Rome
+made the humiliating confession that she possessed no priest worthy of
+the papacy, that the clergy in the city were rude and utter simonists.
+All other circumstances, moreover, forbade the election of a Roman or
+even of an Italian to the papacy.
+
+The Romans besought Henry to give them a good pope; he presented the
+Bishop of Bamberg to the assenting clergy, and led the reluctant
+candidate to the apostolic chair. Clement II, consecrated on Christmas
+Day, 1046, immediately placed the imperial crown on Henry's head and on
+that of his wife Agnes. There were still many Romans who had been
+eye-witnesses of like transactions--that is to say, of papal election
+and imperial coronation following one the other in immediate
+succession--in the case of Otto III and Henry V; who, as they now saw
+the second German pope mount the chair of Peter, may have recalled the
+fact that the first had only lived a few sad years in Rome and had died
+in misery.
+
+The coronation of Henry III was performed under such significant
+conditions and in such perfect tranquillity that it offers the most
+fitting opportunity for describing in a few sentences the ceremonial of
+the imperial coronation.
+
+Since Charles the Great, these repeated ceremonies, with the more
+frequent coronations or Lateran processions of the popes, formed the
+most brilliant spectacle in Rome.
+
+When the Emperor-elect approached with his wife and retinue, he first
+took an oath to the Romans, at the little bridge on the Neronian Field,
+faithfully to observe the rights and usages of the city. On the day of
+the coronation he made his entrance through the Porta Castella close to
+St. Angelo and here repeated the oath. The clergy and the corporations
+of Rome greeted him at the Church of Santa Maria Traspontina, on a
+legendary site called the Terebinthus of Nero. The solemn procession
+then advanced to the steps of the cathedral. Senators walked by the side
+of the King, the prefect of the city carried the naked sword before him,
+and his chamberlains scattered money.
+
+Arrived at the steps he dismounted from his horse and, accompanied by
+his retinue, ascended to the platform where the Pope, surrounded by the
+higher clergy, awaited him sitting. The King stooped to kiss the Pope's
+foot, tendered the oath to be an upright protector of the Church,
+received from the Pope the kiss of peace, and was adopted by him as the
+son of the Church. With solemn song both King and Pope entered the
+Church of Santa Maria in Turri, beside the steps of St. Peter's, and
+here the King was formally made canon of the cathedral. He then
+advanced, conducted by the Lateran count of the palace and by the
+_primicerius_ of the judges, to the silver door of the cathedral, where
+he prayed, and the Bishop of Albano delivered the first oration.
+
+Innumerable mystic ceremonies awaited the King in St. Peter's itself.
+Here, a short way from the entrance, was the _rota porphyretica_, a
+round porphyry stone inserted in the pavement, on which the King and
+Pope knelt. The imperial candidate here made his profession of faith,
+the Cardinal-bishop of Portus placed himself in the middle of the rota
+and pronounced the second oration. The King was then draped in new
+vestments, was made a cleric in the sacristy by the Pope, was clad with
+tunic, dalmatica, pluviale, mitre and sandals, and was then led to the
+altar of St. Maurice, whither his wife, after similar but less fatiguing
+ceremonies, accompanied him. The Bishop of Ostia here anointed the King
+on the right arm and neck and delivered the third oration.
+
+If the Emperor-elect were fitted by the dignity of his calling, then the
+solemnity of the function, the mystic and tedious pomp, the magnificent
+monotone of prayer and song in the ancient cathedral, hallowed by so
+many exalted memories, must have stirred his inmost soul. The pinnacle
+of all human ambition, the crown of Charles the Great, lay glittering
+before his longing eyes on the altar of the Prince of the Apostles. The
+Pope, however, first placed a ring on the finger of the Anointed, as
+symbol of the faith, the permanence and strength of his Catholic rule;
+with similar formulæ girt him with the sword, and finally placed the
+crown upon his head. "Take," he said, "the symbol of fame, the diadem of
+royalty, the crown, the empire, in the name of the Father, of the Son,
+and of the Holy Ghost; renounce the archfiend and all sins, be upright
+and merciful, and live in such pious love that thou mayest hereafter
+receive the everlasting crown in company with the saints, from our Lord
+Jesus Christ."
+
+The church resounded with the Gloria and the Laudes: "Life and victory
+to the Emperor, to the Roman and the German army," and with the endless
+acclamations of the rude soldiers who hailed their King in German, Slav,
+and Romance tongues.
+
+The Emperor divested himself of the symbols of the empire, and now
+ministered to the Pope as subdeacon at mass. The Count Palatine
+afterward removed the sandals, and put the red imperial boots with the
+spurs of St. Maurice upon him. Whereupon the entire procession,
+accompanied by the Pope, left the church and advanced along the
+so-called "Triumphal Way," through the flower-bedecked city, amid the
+ringing of all the bells, to the Lateran. At special stations were
+posted clergy singing praises, and the _scholæ_ or guilds placed to
+salute the Emperor as he passed. Chamberlains scattered money before and
+behind the procession, and all the scholæ and the officials of the
+palace received the _presbyterium_ or customary present of money. A
+banquet closed the solemnities in the papal palace.
+
+Such are merely the barest outlines of an imperial coronation of this
+period. The ceremonies, borrowed from Byzantine pomp, had been
+established since Charles the Great, and had remained essentially the
+same, although, in the course of time, many details had been altered and
+others had been introduced. The magnificence of these spectacles is no
+longer rivalled by the pageantry of our days. The multitudes of dukes
+and counts, of bishops and abbots, knights and nobles with their
+retinues, the splendor of their attire, the strangeness of their faces
+and their tongues, the martial array of warriors, the mystic
+magnificence of the papacy with all its orders in such picturesque
+costume, the aspect of secular Rome, of judges and senators, of consuls
+and _duces_, of the militia with their banners, in curious, motley,
+fantastic attire; lastly, as the sublime scene of the drama, the stern,
+gloomy, ruinous city, through which the procession solemnly
+advanced--all combined to produce a picture of such mighty and universal
+historic interest that even a Roman accustomed to the pomp of Trajan's
+period could not have beheld it without feelings of astonishment.
+
+These coronation processions restored to the city its character of
+metropolis. The Romans of the time might flatter themselves that the
+emperors whom they elected still ruled the universe. The strangers who
+flocked to the city freely distributed their gold, and the hungry
+populace could live for weeks on the proceeds of the coronation.
+
+
+J.E. DARRAS
+
+The accession of Gregory VI was the harbinger of an epoch of moral
+renaissance. The wise Pontiff, whose glory it had been to free the
+Church from a disgraceful yoke, proved himself worthy of the sovereign
+power, as much by the zeal with which he wielded as by the noble
+disinterestedness with which he resigned it. He found the temporal
+domains of the Church so far diminished that they hardly furnished the
+Pope with the means of an honorable maintenance. As guardian of the
+rights of the Church, he hurled an excommunication against the usurpers.
+The infuriated plunderers marched upon Rome with an armed force. The
+Pope also raised troops, took possession of St. Peter's church, drove
+out the wretches who stole the offerings laid upon the tombs of the
+Apostles, took back several estates belonging to the domain of the
+Church, and secured the safety of the roads, upon which pilgrims no
+longer ventured to travel except in caravans. This policy displeased the
+Romans, who had now become habituated to plunder. Their complaints
+induced Henry III, King of Germany, to hurry to Italy, and to summon a
+council at Sutri, during the Christmas festival, to inquire whether the
+election of Gregory should be regarded as simoniacal. The Pope and the
+clergy entertained the sincere conviction that they were justified in
+bringing about, even by means of money, the abdication of the unworthy
+Benedict, thus to end the scandal which so foully disgraced the Holy
+See. As opinions were divided on this point, Gregory VI, to set all
+doubts at rest, stripped himself, with his own hands, of the Pontifical
+vestments, and gave up to the bishops his pastoral staff. Having given
+to the world this noble example of self-denial, Gregory withdrew to the
+monastery of Cluny, bearing with him the consciousness of a great duty
+done. He died in that holy solitude in the odor of sanctity.
+
+The see left vacant by the magnanimous humility of Gregory VI was
+bestowed, by general consent, upon Suidger, bishop of Bamberg, whom King
+Henry had brought with him to Rome. The new Pope, whose elevation was
+due only to universally known and acknowledged virtues, took the name of
+Clement II, and was crowned on Christmas-Day (A.D. 1046); in the same
+solemnity he bestowed the imperial title and crown upon Henry III, and
+his queen, Agnes, daughter of William, duke of Aquitaine.
+
+The Emperor Henry, during his sojourn in Rome, sent for St. Peter Damian
+to assist the Pope by his counsels. The illustrious religious thus wrote
+to the Pontiff, in excuse for not complying: "Notwithstanding the
+Emperor's request, so expressive of his benevolence in my regard, I
+cannot devote to journeys the time which I have promised to consecrate
+to God in solitude. I send the imperial letter in order that your
+Holiness may decide, if it become necessary. My soul is weighed down
+with grief when I see the churches of our provinces plunged into
+shameful confusion through the fault of bad bishops and abbots. What
+does it profit us to learn that the Holy See has been brought out from
+darkness into the light, if we still remain buried in the same gloom of
+ignominy? But we hope that you are destined to be the savior of Israel.
+Labor then, Most Holy Father, once more to raise up the kingdom of
+justice, and use the vigor of discipline to humble the wicked and to
+raise the courage of the good."
+
+On his return to Germany, Henry took the Pope with him. The city of
+Beneventum refused to open its gates to the Sovereign Pontiff, who, at
+the Emperor's request, pronounced against it a sentence of
+excommunication. Clement made but a short visit to his native land, and
+hastened back to Rome. His apostolic zeal led him to visit, in person,
+the churches of Umbria, the deplorable condition of which he had learned
+from the letter of St. Peter Damian. On reaching the monastery of St.
+Thomas of Aposello, he was seized with a mortal disease, before having
+accomplished the object of his journey. His last thought was for his
+beloved church of Bamberg, to which he sent, from his dying couch, a
+confirmation of all its former privileges, assuring it, in the most
+touching terms, of his unchanging affection.
+
+
+
+
+DISSENSION AND SEPARATION OF THE GREEK AND ROMAN CHURCHES
+
+A.D. 1054
+
+HENRY FANSHAWE TOZER
+
+JOSEPH DEHARBE
+
+
+(In the division of the Greek Catholic Church from that at Rome,
+Protestant writers see a very natural and legitimate separation of two
+equal powers. Roman Catholics, regarding the Papal supremacy as
+established from the beginning, treat the division as a plot by evil and
+malignant men. Both viewpoints are here given.
+
+The Eastern--or Greek Christian--Church, now known as the Holy Orthodox,
+Catholic, Apostolic, Oriental Church, first assumed individuality at
+Ephesus, and in the catechetical school of Alexandria, which flourished
+after A.D. 180. It early came into conflict with the Western or Roman
+Church: "the Eastern Church enacting creeds, and the Western Church
+discipline."
+
+In the third century, Dionysius, Bishop of Rome, accused the Patriarch
+of Alexandria of error in points of faith, but the Patriarch vindicated
+his orthodoxy. Eastern monachism arose about 300; the Church of Armenia
+was founded about the same year; and the Church of Georgia or Iberia in
+340.
+
+Constantine the Great caused Christianity to be recognized throughout
+the Roman Empire, and in 325 convened the first ecumenical or general
+Council at Nicaea [Nice], when Arius, excommunicated for heresy by a
+provincial synod at Alexandria in 321, defended his views, but was
+condemned. Arianism long maintained a theological and political
+importance in the East and among the Goths and other nations converted
+by Arian missionaries. In A.D. 330, Constantine removed the capital of
+the Roman Empire to Constantinople, and thence dates the definite
+establishment of the Greek Church and the serious rivalry with the Roman
+Church over claims of preeminence, differences of doctrine and ritual,
+charges of heresy and inter-excommunications, which ended in the final
+separation of the churches in 1054.
+
+In A.D. 461, the churches of Egypt, Syria, and Armenia separated from
+the Church of Constantinople, over the Monophysite controversy on the
+single divine or single compound nature of the Son; in 634 the struggle
+with Mahometanism began; in 676 the Maronites of Lebanon formed a strong
+sect, which, in 1182, joined the Roman Church. In 988, Vladimir the
+Great of Russia founded the Græco-Russian Church, in which the Greek
+Church found a refuge, when Mahometanism was established at
+Constantinople, after its capture by the Turks in 1453.)
+
+
+HENRY FANSHAWE TOZER
+
+The separation of the Eastern and Western churches, which finally took
+place in the year 1054, was due to the operation of influences which had
+been at work for several centuries before. From very early times a
+tendency to divergence existed, arising from the tone of thought of the
+dominant races in the two, the more speculative Greeks being chiefly
+occupied with purely theological questions, while the more practical
+Roman mind devoted itself rather to subjects connected with the nature
+and destiny of man. In differences such as these there was nothing
+irreconcilable: the members of both communions professed the same forms
+of belief, rested their faith on the same divine persons, were guided by
+the same standard of morals, and were animated by the same hopes and
+fears; and they were bound by the first principles of their religion to
+maintain unity with one another. But in societies, as in individuals,
+inherent diversity of character is liable to be intensified by time, and
+thus counteracts the natural bonds of sympathy, and prevents the two
+sides from seeing one another's point of view. In this way it coöperates
+with and aggravates the force of other causes of disunion, which adverse
+circumstances may generate. Such causes there were in the present
+instance, political, ecclesiastical, and theological; and the nature of
+these it may be well for us to consider, before proceeding to narrate
+the history of the disruption.
+
+The office of bishop of Rome assumed to some extent a political
+character as early as the time of the first Christian emperors. By them
+this prelate was constituted a sort of secretary of state for Christian
+affairs, and was employed as a central authority for communicating with
+the bishops in the provinces; so that after a while he acted as minister
+of religion and public instruction. As the civil and military power of
+the Western Empire declined, the extent of this authority increased; and
+by the time when Italy was annexed to the Empire of the East, in the
+reign of Justinian, the popes had become the political chiefs of Roman
+society. Nominally, indeed, they were subject to the exarch of Ravenna,
+as vicegerent of the Emperor at Constantinople, but in reality the
+inhabitants of Western Europe were more disposed to look to the
+spiritual potentate in the Imperial city as representing the traditions
+of ancient Rome.
+
+The political rivalry that was thus engendered was sharpened by the
+traditional jealousy of Rome and Constantinople, which had existed ever
+since the new capital had been erected on the shores of the Bosporus.
+Then followed struggles for administrative superiority between the popes
+and the exarchs, culminating in the shameful maltreatment and banishment
+of Martin I by the emperor Constans--an event which the See of Rome
+could never forget.
+
+The attempt to enforce iconoclasm in Central Italy was influential in
+causing the loss of that province to the Empire; and even after the
+Byzantine rule had ceased there, the controversy about images tended to
+keep alive the antagonism, because, although that question was once and
+again settled in favor of the maintenance of images, yet many of the
+emperors, in whose persons the power of the East was embodied, were
+foremost in advocating their destruction. Indeed, from first to last,
+owing to the close connection of church and state in the Byzantine
+empire, the unpopularity of the latter in Western Europe was shared by
+the former. To this must be added the contempt for one another's
+character which had arisen among the adherents of the two churches, for
+the Easterns had learned to regard the people of the West as ignorant
+and barbarous, and were esteemed by them in turn as mendacious and
+unmanly.
+
+In ecclesiastical matters also the differences were of long standing.
+These related to questions of jurisdiction between the two
+patriarchates. Up to the eighth century, the patriarchate of the West
+included a number of provinces on the eastern side of the
+Adriatic--Illyricum, Dacia, Macedonia, and Greece. But Leo the Isaurian,
+who probably foresaw that Italy would ere long cease to form part of his
+dominions, and was unwilling that these important territories should own
+spiritual allegiance to one who was not his subject, altered this
+arrangement, and transferred the jurisdiction over them to the Patriarch
+of Constantinople. Against this measure the bishops of Rome did not fail
+to protest, and demands for their restoration were made up to the time
+of the final schism. A further ecclesiastical question, which in part
+depended on this, was that of the Church of the Bulgarians. The prince
+Bogoris had swayed to and fro in his inclinations between the two
+churches, and had ultimately given his allegiance to that of the East;
+but the controversy did not end there. According to the ancient
+territorial arrangement the Danubian provinces were made subject to the
+archbishopric of Thessalonica, and that city was included within the
+Western patriarchate; and on this ground Bulgaria was claimed by the
+Roman see as falling within that area. The matter was several times
+pressed on the attention of the Greek Church, especially on the occasion
+of the council held at Constantinople in 879, but in vain. The Eastern
+prelates replied evasively, saying that to determine the boundaries of
+dioceses was a matter which belonged to the sovereign. The Emperor, for
+his part, had good reason for not yielding, for by so doing he would not
+only have admitted into a neighboring country an agency which would soon
+have been employed for political purposes to his disadvantage, but would
+have justified the assumption on which the demand rested, viz., that the
+pope had a right to claim the provinces which his predecessors had lost.
+Thus this point of difference also remained open, as a source of
+irritation between the two churches.
+
+But behind these questions another of far greater magnitude was coming
+into view, that of the papal supremacy. From being in the first instance
+the head of the Christian church in the old Imperial city, and afterward
+Patriarch of the West, and _primus inter pares_ in relation to the other
+spiritual heads of Christendom, the bishop of Rome had gradually
+claimed, on the strength of his occupying the _cathedra Petri_, a
+position which approximated more and more to that of supremacy over the
+whole Church. This claim had never been admitted in the East, but the
+appeals which were made from Constantinople to his judgment and
+authority, both at the time of the iconoclastic controversy and
+subsequently, lent some countenance to its validity.
+
+But the great advance was made in the pontificate of Nicholas I
+(858-867), who promulgated, or at least recognized, the _False
+Decretals_. This famous compilation, which is now universally
+acknowledged to be spurious, and can be shown to be the work of that
+period, contains, among other documents, letters and decrees of the
+early bishops of Rome, in which the organization and discipline of the
+Church from the earliest time are set forth, and the whole system is
+shown to have depended on the supremacy of the popes. The newly
+discovered collection was recognized as genuine by Nicholas, and was
+accepted by the Western Church. The effect of this was at once to
+formulate all the claims which had before been vaguely asserted, and to
+give them the authority of unbroken tradition. The result to Christendom
+at large was in the highest degree momentous. It was impossible for
+future popes to recede from them, and equally impossible for other
+churches which valued their independence to acknowledge them. The last
+attempt on the part of the Eastern Church to arrange a compromise in
+this matter was made by the emperor Basil II, a potentate who both by
+his conquests and the vigor of his administration might rightly claim to
+negotiate with others on equal terms. By him it was proposed (A.D. 1024)
+that the Eastern Church should recognize the honorary primacy of the
+Western patriarch, and that he in turn should acknowledge the internal
+independence of the Eastern Church. These terms were rejected, and from
+that moment it was clear that the separation of the two branches of
+Christendom was only a question of time.
+
+Already in the papacy of Nicholas I a rupture had occurred in connection
+with the dispute between the rival patriarchs of Constantinople,
+Ignatius and Photius. The former of these prelates, who was son of the
+emperor Michael I, and a man of high character and a devout opponent of
+iconoclasm, was appointed, through the influence of Theodora, the
+restorer of images, in the reign of her son, Michael the Drunkard. But
+the uncle of the Emperor, the Caesar Bardas, who was a man of flagrantly
+immoral life, had divorced his own wife, and was living publicly with
+his son's widow. For this incestuous connection Ignatius repelled him
+from the communion. Fired with indignation at this insult, the Caesar
+determined to ruin both the Patriarch and his patroness, the
+Empress-mother, and with this view persuaded the Emperor to free himself
+from the trammels of his mother's influence by forcing her to take
+monastic vows. To this step Ignatius would not consent, because it was
+forbidden by the laws of the Church that any should enter on the
+monastic life except of their own free will. In consequence of his
+resistance a charge of treasonable correspondence was invented against
+him, and when he refused to resign his office he was deposed (857).
+Photius, who was chosen to succeed him, was the most learned man of his
+age, and like his rival, unblemished in character and a supporter of
+images, but boundless in ambition. He was a layman at the time of his
+appointment, but in six days he passed through the inferior orders which
+led up to the patriarchate. Still, the party that remained faithful to
+Ignatius numbered many adherents, and therefore Photius thought it well
+to enlist the support of the Bishop of Rome on his side. An embassy was
+therefore sent to inform Pope Nicholas that the late Patriarch had
+voluntarily retired, and that Photius had been lawfully chosen, and had
+undertaken the office with great reluctance. In answer to this appeal
+the Pope despatched two legates to Constantinople, and Ignatius was
+summoned to appear before a council at which they were present. He was
+condemned, but appealed to the Pope in person.
+
+On the return of the legates to Rome it was discovered that they had
+received bribes, and thereupon Nicholas, whose judgment, however
+imperious, was ever on the side of the oppressed, called together a
+synod of the Roman Church, and refused his consent to the deposition of
+Ignatius. To this effect he wrote to the authorities of the Eastern
+Church, calling upon them at the same time to concur in the decrees of
+the apostolic see; but subsequently, having obtained full information as
+to the harsh treatment to which the deposed Patriarch had been
+subjected, he excommunicated Photius, and commanded the restoration of
+Ignatius "by the power committed to him by Christ through St. Peter."
+
+These denunciations produced no effect on the Emperor and the new
+Patriarch, and a correspondence between Michael and Nicholas, couched in
+violent language, continued at intervals for several years. At last, in
+consequence of a renewed demand on the part of the Pope that Ignatius
+and Photius should be sent to Rome for judgment, the latter prelate,
+whose ability and eloquence had obtained great influence for him,
+summoned a council at Constantinople in the year 867, to decree the
+counter-excommunication of the Western Patriarch. Of the eight articles
+which were drawn up on this occasion for the incrimination of the Church
+of Rome, all but two relate to trivial matters, such as the observance
+of Saturday as a fast, and the shaving of their beards by the clergy.
+The two important ones deal with the doctrine of the Procession of the
+Holy Spirit, and the enforced celibacy of the clergy.
+
+The condemnation of the Western Church on these grounds was voted, and a
+messenger was despatched to bear the defiance to Rome; but ere he
+reached his destination he was recalled, in consequence of a revolution
+in the palace at Constantinople. The author of this, Basil the
+Macedonian, the founder of the most important dynasty that ever occupied
+the throne of the Eastern Empire, had for some time been associated in
+the government with the emperor Michael; but at length, being fearful
+for his own safety, he resolved to put his colleague out of the way, and
+assassinated him during one of his fits of drunkenness.
+
+It is said that in consequence of this crime Photius refused to admit
+him to the communion; anyhow, one of the first acts of Basil was to
+depose Photius. A council, hostile to him, was now assembled, and was
+attended by the legates of the new pope, Hadrian II (869). By this
+Ignatius was restored to his former dignity, while Photius was degraded
+and his ordinations were declared void. So violent was the animosity
+displayed against him that he was dragged before the assembly by the
+Emperor's guard, and his condemnation was written in the sacramental
+wine. During the ten years which elapsed between his restoration and his
+death Ignatius continued to enjoy his high position in peace, but for
+Photius other vicissitudes were in store.
+
+On the removal of his rival, so strangely did opinion sway to and fro at
+this time in the empire, the current of feeling set strongly in favor of
+the learned exile. He was recalled, and his reinstatement was ratified
+by a council (879). But with the death of Basil the Macedonian (886), he
+again fell from power, for the successor of that Emperor, Leo the
+Philosopher, ignominiously removed him, in order to confer the dignity
+on his brother Stephen. He passed the remainder of his life in honorable
+retirement, and by his death the chief obstacle in the way of
+reconcilement with the Roman Church was removed. It is consoling to
+learn, when reading of the unhappy rivalry of the two men so superior to
+the ordinary run of Byzantine prelates, that they never shared the
+passions of their respective partisans, but retained a mutual regard for
+one another.
+
+We have now to consider the doctrinal questions which were in dispute
+between the two churches. Far the most important of these was that
+relating to the addition of the _Filioque_ clause to the Nicene Creed.
+In the first draft of the Creed, as promulgated by the council of
+Nicaea, the article relating to the Holy Spirit ran simply thus: "I
+believe in the Holy Ghost." But in the Second General Council, that of
+Constantinople, which condemned the heresy of Macedonius, it was thought
+advisable to state more explicitly the doctrine of the Church on this
+subject, and among other affirmations the clause was added, "who
+proceedeth from the Father." Again, at the next general council, at
+Ephesus, it was ordered that it should not be lawful to make any
+addition to the Creed, as ratified by the Council of Constantinople. The
+followers of the Western Church, however, generally taught that the
+Spirit proceeds from the Son as well as from the Father, while those of
+the East preferred to use the expression, "the Spirit of Christ,
+proceeding from the Father, and receiving of the Son," or, "proceeding
+from the Father through the Son." It was in the churches of Spain and
+France that the _Filioque_ clause was first introduced into the Creed
+and thus recited in the services, but the addition was not at once
+approved at Rome. Pope Leo III, early in the ninth century, not only
+expressed his disapproval of this departure from the original form, but,
+in order to show his sense of the importance of adhering to the
+traditional practice, caused the Creed of Constantinople to be engraved
+on silver plates, both in Greek and Latin, and thus to be publicly set
+forth in the Church. The first pontiff who authorized the addition was
+Nicholas I, and against this Photius protested, both during the lifetime
+of that Pope and also in the time of John VIII, when it was condemned by
+the council held at Constantinople in 879, which is called by the Greeks
+the Eighth General Council. It is clear from what we have already seen
+that Photius was prepared to seize on _any_ point of disagreement in
+order to throw it in the teeth of his opponents, but in this matter the
+Eastern Church had a real grievance to complain of. The Nicene Creed was
+to them what it was not to the Western Church, their only creed, and the
+authority of the councils, by which its form and wording were
+determined, stood far higher in their estimation. To add to the one and
+to disregard the other were, at least in their judgment, the violation
+of a sacred compact.
+
+The other question, which, if not actually one of doctrine, had come to
+be regarded as such, was that of the _azyma_, that is, the use of
+unfermented bread in the celebration of the eucharist. As far as one can
+judge from the doubtful evidence on the subject, it seems probable that
+ordinary, that is, leavened bread, was generally used in the church for
+this purpose until the seventh or eighth century, when unleavened bread
+began to be employed in the West, on the ground that it was used in the
+original institution of the sacrament, which took place during the Feast
+of the Passover. In the Eastern Church this change was never admitted.
+It seems strange that so insignificant a matter of observance should
+have been erected into a question of the first importance between the
+two communions, but the reason of this is not far to seek. The fact is
+that, whereas the weighty matters of dispute--the doctrine of the
+Procession of the Holy Spirit, and the papal claims to supremacy--
+required some knowledge and reflection in order rightly to understand
+their bearings, the use of leavened or unleavened bread was a matter
+within the range of all, and those who were on the lookout for a ground
+of antagonism found it here ready to hand.
+
+In the story of the conversion of the Russian Vladimir we are told that
+the Greek missionary who expounded to him the religious views of the
+Eastern Church, when combating the claims of the emissaries of the Roman
+communion, remarked: "They celebrate the mass with unleavened bread;
+therefore they have not the true religion." Still, even Photius, when
+raking together the most minute points of difference between him and his
+adversaries, did not introduce this one. It was reserved for a
+hot-headed partisan at a later period to bring forward as a subject of
+public discussion.
+
+This was Michael Cerularius, Patriarch of Constantinople, with whose
+name the Great Schism will forever be associated.
+
+The circumstances which led up to that event are as follows: For a
+century and a half from the death of Photius the controversy slumbered,
+though no advance was made toward an understanding with respect to the
+points at issue. In Italy, and even at Rome, churches and monasteries
+were tolerated in which the Greek rite was maintained, and similar
+freedom was allowed to the Latins resident in the Greek empire. But this
+tacit compact was broken in 1053 by the patriarch Michael, who, in his
+passionate antagonism to everything Western, gave orders that all the
+churches in Constantinople in which worship was celebrated according to
+the Roman rite should be closed. At the same time--aroused, perhaps, in
+some measure by the progress of the Normans in conquering Apulia, which
+tended to interfere with the jurisdiction still exercised by the Eastern
+Church in that province--he joined with Leo, the archbishop of Achrida
+and metropolitan of Bulgaria, in addressing a letter to the Bishop of
+Trani in Southern Italy, containing a violent attack on the Latin
+Church, in which the question of the azyma was put prominently forward.
+
+Directions were further given for circulating this missive among the
+Western clergy. It happened that at the time when the letter arrived at
+Trani, Cardinal Humbert, a vigorous champion of ecclesiastical rights,
+was residing in that city, and he translated it into Latin and
+communicated it to Pope Leo IX. In answer, the Pope addressed a
+remonstrance to the Patriarch, in which, without entering into the
+specific charges that he had brought forward, he contrasted the security
+of the Roman See in matters of doctrine, arising from the guidance which
+was guaranteed to it through St. Peter, with the liability of the
+Eastern Church to fall into error, and pointedly referred to the more
+Christian spirit manifested by his own communion in tolerating those
+from whose opinions they differed. Afterward, at the commencement of
+1054, in compliance with a request from the emperor Constantine
+Monomachus, who was anxious on political grounds to avoid a rupture, he
+sent three legates to Constantinople to arrange the terms of an
+agreement. These were Frederick of Lorraine, Chancellor of the Roman
+Church; Peter, Archbishop of Amalfi, and Cardinal Humbert.
+
+The legates were welcomed by the Emperor, but they unwisely adopted a
+lofty tone toward the haughty Patriarch, who thenceforward avoided all
+communication with them, declaring that on a matter which so seriously
+affected the whole Eastern Church he could take no steps without
+consulting the other patriarchs. Humbert now published an argumentative
+reply to Michael's letter to the Pope, in the form of a dialogue between
+two members of the Greek and Latin churches, in which the charges
+brought against his own communion were discussed _seriatim_, and
+especially those relating to fasting on Saturday and the use of
+unleavened bread in the eucharist. A rejoinder to this appeared from the
+pen of a monk of the monastery of Studium, Nicetas Pectoratus, in which
+the enforced celibacy of the Western clergy, on which Photius had before
+animadverted, was severely criticised. The Cardinal retorted in
+intemperate language, and so entirely had the legates secured the
+support of Constantine that Nicetas' work was committed to the flames,
+and he was forced to recant what he had said against the Roman Church.
+But the Patriarch was immovable, and for the moment he occupied a
+stronger position than the Emperor, who desired to conciliate him. At
+last the patience of the legates was exhausted, and on July 16, 1054,
+they proceeded to the Church of St. Sophia, and deposited on the altar,
+which was prepared for the celebration of the eucharist, a document
+containing a fierce anathema, by which Michael Cerularius and his
+adherents were condemned. After their departure they were for a moment
+recalled, because the Patriarch expressed a desire to confer with them;
+but this Constantine would not permit, fearing some act of violence on
+the part of the people. They then finally left Constantinople, and from
+that time to the present all communion has been broken off between the
+two great branches of Christendom.
+
+The breach thus made was greatly widened at the period of the crusades.
+However serious may have been the alienation between the East and West
+at the time of their separation, it is clear that the Greeks were not
+regarded by the Latins as a mere heretical sect, for one of the primary
+objects with which the First Crusade was undertaken was the deliverance
+of the Eastern Empire from the attacks of the Mahometans. But the
+familiarity which arose from the presence of the crusaders on Greek soil
+ripened the seeds of mutual dislike and distrust. As long as
+negotiations between the two parties took place at a distance, the
+differences, however irreconcilable they might be in principle, did not
+necessarily bring them into open antagonism, whereas their more intimate
+acquaintance with one another produced personal and national ill-will.
+The people of the West now appeared more than ever barbarous and
+overbearing, and the Court of Constantinople more than ever senile and
+designing. The crafty policy of Alexius Comnenus in transferring his
+allies with all speed into Asia, and declining to take the lead in the
+expedition, was almost justified by the necessity of delivering his
+subjects from these unwelcome visitors and avoiding further
+embarrassments. But the iniquitous Fourth Crusade (1204) produced an
+ineradicable feeling of animosity in the minds of the Byzantine people.
+The memory of the barbarities of that time, when many Greeks died as
+martyrs at the stake for their religious convictions, survives at the
+present day in various places bordering on the Aegean, in legends which
+relate that they were formerly destroyed by the Pope of Rome.
+
+Still, the anxiety of the Eastern emperors to maintain their position by
+means of political support from Western Europe brought it to pass that
+proposals for reunion were made on several occasions. The final attempt
+at reconciliation was made when the Greek empire was reduced to the
+direst straits, and its rulers were prepared to purchase the aid of
+Western Europe against the Ottomans by almost any sacrifice.
+Accordingly, application was made to Pope Eugenius IV, and by him the
+representatives of the Eastern Church were invited to attend the council
+which was summoned to meet at Ferrara in 1438. The Emperor, John
+Palaeologus and the Greek patriarch Joseph proceeded thither.
+
+The Emperor, however, on his return home, soon discovered that his
+pilgrimage to the West had been lost labor. Pope Eugenius, indeed,
+provided him with two galleys and a guard of three hundred men, equipped
+at his own expense, but the hoped-for succors from Western Europe did
+not arrive. His own subjects were completely alienated by the betrayal
+of their cherished faith; the clergy who favored the union were regarded
+as traitors. John Palaeologus himself did not survive to see the final
+catastrophe; but Constantinople was captured by the Turks, and the
+Empire of the East ceased to exist.
+
+
+JOSEPH DEHARBE
+
+The bonds so often and so painfully knit between the Eastern and Western
+churches were destined at last to be completely torn asunder, and the
+truth of our Lord's words, "Who is not for Me, is against Me," was again
+to be proved. The Greek schism places strikingly before our eyes the
+fate of such churches as supinely yield their rights and independence,
+and submit willingly to State tyranny. In the year 857 the wicked
+Bardas, uncle to the reigning Emperor, who wielded an almost absolute
+power and disregarded all laws, human and divine, unjustly banished from
+his See, Ignatius, the rightful patriarch of Constantinople, and placed
+in his stead the learned, but worthless, Photius. Such bishops as
+refused to recognize the intruder (who had received all the orders in
+six days from an excommunicated bishop) were deposed, imprisoned and
+exiled.
+
+Photius tried, by cruel ill-treatment, to force the aged Ignatius to
+abdicate, and by a well-contrived fabrication endeavored to obtain the
+support of Pope Nicholas I. When, however, this great Pope learned the
+true facts of the case from the imprisoned Ignatius, he assembled a
+synod in Rome in 864, by which Photius and all the bishops whom he had
+consecrated were deposed. Fired by ambition, Photius now threw off all
+concealments. He summoned the bishops of his own party, laid various
+charges against the Roman Church, and in his inconsiderate rage ended by
+anathematising the holy Father. Pope Nicholas, in a most powerful
+letter, exhorted the Emperor Michael III to set bounds to the disorders
+of Photius, warning him that a fearful judgment would await him if the
+faithful were misled and so many believers caused to swerve from the
+right path. It was not, however, till the reign of his successor that
+Photius was banished and the much-tried St. Ignatius restored to his
+rights.
+
+To remedy the evil brought about by Photius, the eighth general council
+was held in Constantinople, at the desire of St. Ignatius and the
+Emperor, and presided over by the legates of Pope Adrian. Photius, when
+called upon to answer for himself, having nothing to say in his own
+defence, excused his silence by the example of our Lord, who also was
+silent when accused. The fathers were filled with indignation at this
+blasphemous speech, and his guilt having been fully proved, they cried
+unanimously: "Anathema on Photius, promoted through court favor!
+Anathema to the tyrant Photius, to the inventor of lies, to the new
+Judas! Anathema on all his followers and protectors! Everlasting glory
+to the most holy Roman Pope Nicholas! Long life to Adrian, the holy
+Father in Rome!" At the next sitting of the council, a collection of
+spurious and falsified writings, together with the acts of the synod
+which Photius had held against Pope Nicholas, and which were filled with
+lies and invective and had forged signatures appended to them, were
+publicly burned in the church. But hardly had Ignatius died in the year
+879, when the crafty Photius, who knew well how to ingratiate himself
+with the Emperor, reascended the ill-fated chair and began afresh his
+old courses. His rule did not last long. He was again deposed and
+banished to a monastery, where he died about the year 891. His death,
+however, in nowise healed the wounds which he had inflicted on the
+Eastern Church. His party survived him. He had filled most of the Greek
+sees with men of his own cast, and had illegally bestowed benefices on
+great numbers of priests. These all harbored a deep-seated dislike
+towards Rome, and only awaited a favorable opportunity to renew the
+breach with her. Thus that sectarian spirit which Photius had kindled
+continued to smoulder on like a spark beneath the ashes, and spread
+itself wider and wider, as well among the worst sort of the clergy as
+among the fickle and discontented population.
+
+It was after all this that the patriarchs of Constantinople attempted to
+make themselves fully independent of the West. The splendor of the
+imperial city of Byzantium was a constant incitement to their desire for
+freedom, and they were certain for the most part of being supported in
+their endeavors by the emperors. As early as the time of Pope Gregory
+the Great, the patriarch John the Faster had taken on himself the title
+of "Oecumenical," or universal bishop, whilst Gregory, in apostolic
+humility, chose that of "Servant of the servants of God." It was in the
+middle of the eleventh century that a complete separation was
+accomplished. The universally recognized precedence of the See of Peter
+was intolerable to the ambitious spirit of the patriarch Michael
+Cerularius. To aid him in casting off the hated yoke, he circulated,
+like Photius, a document in which the Western Church was loaded with
+invective and all manner of accusations laid to her charge. The celibacy
+of the secular clergy, the use of unleavened bread for the sacrifice,
+fasting on Saturdays, the shaving of beards, the omission of the
+Alleluia in Lent, were all brought forward as causes of offence. These
+complaints were at once answered by Pope St. Leo IX, who tried, in a
+most eloquent letter, to bring the deluded patriarch to reason. He
+reminded him of the sanctity and inviolability of the unity of Christ's
+Church, the folly and presumption of his attempting to direct the
+successor of Peter, whom Christ had Himself confirmed in the faith, and
+pointed out to him with what ingratitude and contempt he was treating
+the Roman Church, the mother and guardian of all the churches. Lastly,
+he urged upon the patriarch to set aside all discord and pride, and to
+allow divine mercy and peace to prevail instead of strife. But the
+paternal words were spoken in vain, and the legates also who were sent
+by the Pope to Constantinople were powerless to move the obduracy of the
+patriarch. He persistently refused all communication with them by speech
+or writing. Having therefore formally laid their complaints in the most
+distinct terms before the Emperor and Senate, they proceeded to
+extremities. On the 16th of July, 1054, they appeared in the church of
+St. Sophia at the beginning of divine service, and declared solemnly
+that all their endeavors to re-establish peace and union had been
+defeated by Cerularius. They then laid the bull of excommunication on
+the high altar and left the church, shaking, as they did so, the dust
+from off their feet, and exclaiming in the deepest grief, "God sees it;
+He will judge." Thus was the unhappy schism between the East and the
+West accomplished.
+
+
+
+
+NORMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND
+
+BATTLE OF HASTINGS
+
+A.D. 1066
+
+SIR EDWARD SHEPHERD CREASY
+
+
+(Toward the end of the reign of Edward the Confessor the claims of three
+rival competitors for the English crown were persistently urged. These
+claimants were Harald Hardrada, King of Norway, whose claim was based
+upon an alleged compact of King Hardicanute with King Magnus, Harald's
+predecessor; Duke William of Normandy, and the Saxon Harold, son of
+Godwin, Earl of Wessex. This Harold, born about 1022, became Earl of
+East Anglia about 1045; was banished with his father by Edward the
+Confessor in 1051, and restored with his father in 1052; succeeded his
+father as Earl of Wessex in 1053--relinquishing the earldom of East
+Anglia--and from 1053 to 1066 was chief minister of Edward.
+
+Harold--probably in 1064--being shipwrecked on the coast of Normandy,
+became a guest and virtual prisoner of William, Duke of Normandy, by
+whom the Saxon was forced to take an oath that he would marry William's
+daughter and assist him in obtaining the crown of England; William then
+allowed Harold to return to his country. Upon the death of Edward the
+Confessor--January 5, 1066--an assembly of thanes and prelates and
+leading citizens of London declared that Harold should be their king.
+His accession as Harold II dates from the day after Edward's death.
+Harold justified himself on the ground that his oath to William of
+Normandy was taken under constraint.
+
+William published his protest against what he called the bad faith of
+Harold, and proclaimed his purpose to assert his rights by the sword. He
+also obtained the countenance of the Pope, whose authority Harold
+refused to recognize. A banner, blessed by the Pope for the invasion of
+England, was sent to William from the Holy See, and the clergy of the
+Continent upheld his enterprise as being the Cause of God. Thus
+supported by the spiritual power, then wielding vast influence, William
+proceeded to gather "the most remarkable and formidable armament which
+the western nations had witnessed." With this following he entered upon
+an undertaking the speedy and complete success of which, in the single
+and decisive battle of Hastings, was fruitful in historic results such
+as are seldom so traceable to definite causes and events. "No one who
+appreciates the influence of England and her empire upon the destinies
+of the world will ever rank that victory as one of secondary
+importance.")
+
+
+All the adventurous spirits of Christendom flocked to the holy banner,
+under which Duke William, the most renowned knight and sagest general of
+the age, promised to lead them to glory and wealth in the fair domains
+of England. His army was filled with the chivalry of Continental Europe,
+all eager to save their souls by fighting at the Pope's bidding, eager
+to signalize their valor in so great an enterprise, and eager also for
+the pay and the plunder which William liberally promised. But the
+Normans themselves were the pith and the flower of the army, and William
+himself was the strongest, the sagest, and the fiercest spirit of them
+all.
+
+Throughout the spring and summer of 1066 all the seaports of Normandy,
+Picardy, and Brittany rang with the busy sound of preparation. On the
+opposite side of the Channel King Harold collected the army and the
+fleet with which he hoped to crush the southern invaders. But the
+unexpected attack of King Harald Hardrada of Norway upon another part of
+England disconcerted the skilful measures which the Saxon had taken
+against the menacing armada of Duke William.
+
+Harold's renegade brother, Earl Tostig, had excited the Norse King to
+this enterprise, the importance of which has naturally been eclipsed by
+the superior interest attached to the victorious expedition of Duke
+William, but which was on a scale of grandeur which the Scandinavian
+ports had rarely, if ever, before witnessed. Hardrada's fleet consisted
+of two hundred warships and three hundred other vessels, and all the
+best warriors of Norway were in his host. He sailed first to the
+Orkneys, where many of the islanders joined him, and then to Yorkshire.
+After a severe conflict near York he completely routed Earls Edwin and
+Morcar, the governors of Northumbria. The city of York opened its gates,
+and all the country, from the Tyne to the Humber, submitted to him.
+
+The tidings of the defeat of Edwin and Morcar compelled Harold to leave
+his position on the southern coast and move instantly against the
+Norwegians. By a remarkably rapid march he reached Yorkshire in four
+days, and took the Norse King and his confederates by surprise.
+Nevertheless, the battle which ensued, and which was fought near
+Stamford Bridge, was desperate, and was long doubtful. Unable to break
+the ranks of the Norwegian phalanx by force, Harold at length tempted
+them to quit their close order by a pretended flight. Then the English
+columns burst in among them, and a carnage ensued the extent of which
+may be judged of by the exhaustion and inactivity of Norway for a
+quarter of a century afterward. King Harald Hardrada and all the flower
+of his nobility perished on the 25th of September, 1066, at Stamford
+Bridge, a battle which was a Flodden to Norway.
+
+Harold's victory was splendid; but he had bought it dearly by the fall
+of many of his best officers and men, and still more dearly by the
+opportunity which Duke William had gained of effecting an unopposed
+landing on the Sussex coast. The whole of William's shipping had
+assembled at the mouth of the Dive, a little river between the Seine and
+the Orne, as early as the middle of August. The army which he had
+collected amounted to fifty thousand knights and ten thousand soldiers
+of inferior degree. Many of the knights were mounted, but many must have
+served on foot, as it is hardly possible to believe that William could
+have found transports for the conveyance of fifty thousand war-horses
+across the Channel.
+
+For a long time the winds were adverse, and the Duke employed the
+interval that passed before he could set sail in completing the
+organization in and improving the discipline of his army, which he seems
+to have brought into the same state of perfection as was seven centuries
+and a half afterward the boast of another army assembled on the same
+coast, and which Napoleon designed for a similar descent upon England.
+
+It was not till the approach of the equinox that the wind veered from
+the northeast to the west, and gave the Normans an opportunity of
+quitting the weary shores of the Dive. They eagerly embarked and set
+sail, but the wind soon freshened to a gale, and drove them along the
+French coast to St. Valery, where the greater part of them found
+shelter; but many of their vessels were wrecked, and the whole coast of
+Normandy was strewn with the bodies of the drowned.
+
+William's army began to grow discouraged and averse to the enterprise,
+which the very elements thus seemed to fight against; though, in
+reality, the northeast wind, which had cooped them so long at the mouth
+of the Dive, and the western gale, which had forced them into St.
+Valery, were the best possible friends to the invaders. They prevented
+the Normans from crossing the Channel until the Saxon King and his army
+of defence had been called away from the Sussex coast to encounter
+Harald Hardrada in Yorkshire; and also until a formidable English fleet,
+which by King Harold's orders had been cruising in the Channel to
+intercept the Normans, had been obliged to disperse temporarily for the
+purpose of refitting and taking in fresh stores of provisions.
+
+Duke William used every expedient to reanimate the drooping spirits of
+his men at St. Valery; and at last he caused the body of the patron
+saint of the place to be exhumed and carried in solemn procession, while
+the whole assemblage of soldiers, mariners, and appurtenant priests
+implored the saint's intercession for a change of wind. That very night
+the wind veered, and enabled the mediaeval Agamemnon to quit his Aulis.
+
+With full sails, and a following southern breeze, the Norman armada left
+the French shores and steered for England. The invaders crossed an
+undefended sea, and found an undefended coast. It was in Pevensey Bay,
+in Sussex, at Bulverhithe, between the castle of Pevensey and Hastings,
+that the last conquerors of this island landed on the 29th of September,
+1066.
+
+Harold was at York, rejoicing over his recent victory, which had
+delivered England from her ancient Scandinavian foes, and resettling the
+government of the counties which Harald Hardrada had overrun, when the
+tidings reached him that Duke William of Normandy and his host had
+landed on the Sussex shore. Harold instantly hurried southward to meet
+this long-expected enemy. The severe loss which his army had sustained
+in the battle with the Norwegians must have made it impossible for many
+of his veteran troops to accompany him in his forced march to London,
+and thence to Sussex. He halted at the capital only six days, and during
+that time gave orders for collecting forces from the southern and
+midland counties, and also directed his fleet to reassemble off the
+Sussex coast. Harold was well received in London, and his summons to
+arms was promptly obeyed by citizen, by thane, by socman, and by ceorl,
+for he had shown himself, during his brief reign, a just and wise king,
+affable to all men, active for the good of his country, and, in the
+words of the old historian, sparing himself from no fatigue by land or
+by sea. He might have gathered a much more numerous army than that of
+William; but his recent victory had made him overconfident, and he was
+irritated by the reports of the country being ravaged by the invaders.
+As soon, therefore, as he had collected a small army in London he
+marched off toward the coast, pressing forward as rapidly as his men
+could traverse Surrey and Sussex, in the hope of taking the Normans
+unawares, as he had recently, by a similar forced march, succeeded in
+surprising the Norwegians. But he had now to deal with a foe equally
+brave with Harald Hardrada and far more skilful and wary.
+
+The old Norman chroniclers describe the preparations of William on his
+landing with a graphic vigor, which would be wholly lost by transfusing
+their racy Norman couplets and terse Latin prose into the current style
+of modern history. It is best to follow them closely, though at the
+expense of much quaintness and occasional uncouthness of expression.
+They tell us how Duke William's own ship was the first of the Norman
+fleet. It was called the _Mora_, and was the gift of his duchess
+Matilda. On the head of the ship, in the front, which mariners call the
+prow, there was a brazen child bearing an arrow with a bended bow. His
+face was turned toward England, and thither he looked, as though he was
+about to shoot. The breeze became soft and sweet, and the sea was smooth
+for their landing. The ships ran on dry land, and each ranged by the
+other's side. There you might see the good sailors, the sergeants, and
+squires sally forth and unload the ships; cast the anchors, haul the
+ropes, bear out shields and saddles, and land the war-horses and the
+palfreys. The archers came forth and touched land the first, each with
+his bow strung, and with his quiver full of arrows slung at his side.
+All were shaven and shorn; and all clad in short garments, ready to
+attack, to shoot, to wheel about and skirmish. All stood well equipped
+and of good courage for the fight; and they scoured the whole shore, but
+found not an armed man there. After the archers had thus gone forth, the
+knights landed all armed, with their hauberks on, their shields slung at
+their necks, and their helmets laced. They formed together on the shore,
+each armed and mounted on his war-horse; all had their swords girded on,
+and rode forward into the country with their lances raised. Then the
+carpenters landed, who had great axes in their hands, and planes and
+adzes hung at their sides. They took counsel together, and sought for a
+good spot to place a castle on. They had brought with them in the fleet
+three wooden castles from Normandy in pieces, all ready for framing
+together, and they took the materials of one of these out of the ships,
+all shaped and pierced to receive the pins which they had brought cut
+and ready in large barrels; and before evening had set in they had
+finished a good fort on the English ground, and there they placed their
+stores. All then ate and drank enough, and were right glad that they
+were ashore.
+
+When Duke William himself landed, as he stepped on the shore he slipped
+and fell forward upon his two hands. Forthwith all raised a loud cry of
+distress. "An evil sign," said they, "is here." But he cried out
+lustily: "See, my lords, by the splendor of God,[26] I have taken
+possession of England with both my hands. It is now mine, and what is
+mine is yours."
+
+[Footnote 26: William's customary oath.]
+
+The next day they marched along the sea-shore to Hastings. Near that
+place the Duke fortified a camp, and set up the two other wooden
+castles. The foragers, and those who looked out for booty, seized all
+the clothing and provisions they could find, lest what had been brought
+by the ships should fail them. And the English were to be seen fleeing
+before them, driving off their cattle, and quitting their houses. Many
+took shelter in burying-places, and even there they were in grievous
+alarm.
+
+Besides the marauders from the Norman camp, strong bodies of cavalry
+were detached by William into the country, and these, when Harold and
+his army made their rapid march from London southward, fell back in good
+order upon the main body of the Normans, and reported that the Saxon
+King was rushing on like a madman. But Harold, when he found that his
+hopes of surprising his adversary were vain, changed his tactics, and
+halted about seven miles from the Norman lines. He sent some spies, who
+spoke the French language, to examine the number and preparations of the
+enemy, who, on their return, related with astonishment that there were
+more priests in William's camp than there were fighting men in the
+English army. They had mistaken for priests all the Norman soldiers who
+had short hair and shaven chins, for the English laymen were then
+accustomed to wear long hair and mustaches. Harold, who knew the Norman
+usages, smiled at their words, and said, "Those whom you have seen in
+such numbers are not priests, but stout soldiers, as they will soon make
+us feel."
+
+Harold's army was far inferior in number to that of the Normans, and
+some of his captains advised him to retreat upon London and lay waste
+the country, so as to starve down the strength of the invaders. The
+policy thus recommended was unquestionably the wisest, for the Saxon
+fleet had now reassembled, and intercepted all William's communications
+with Normandy; and as soon as his stores of provisions were exhausted,
+he must have moved forward upon London, where Harold, at the head of the
+full military strength of the kingdom, could have defied his assault,
+and probably might have witnessed his rival's destruction by famine and
+disease, without having to strike a single blow. But Harold's bold blood
+was up, and his kindly heart could not endure to inflict on the South
+Saxon subjects even the temporary misery of wasting the country. "He
+would not burn houses and villages, neither would he take away the
+substance, of his people."
+
+Harold's brothers, Gurth and Leofwine, were with him in the camp, and
+Gurth endeavored to persuade him to absent himself from the battle. The
+incident shows how well devised had been William's scheme of binding
+Harold by the oath on the holy relics.
+
+"My brother," said the young Saxon prince, "thou canst not deny that
+either by force or free will thou hast made Duke William an oath on the
+bodies of saints. Why then risk thyself in the battle with a perjury
+upon thee? To us, who have sworn nothing, this is a holy and a just war,
+for we are fighting for our country. Leave us then alone to fight this
+battle, and he who has the right will win."
+
+Harold replied that he would not look on while others risked their lives
+for him. Men would hold him a coward, and blame him for sending his best
+friends where he dared not go himself. He resolved, therefore, to fight,
+and to fight in person; but he was still too good a general to be the
+assailant in the action; and he posted his army with great skill along a
+ridge of rising ground which opened southward, and was covered on the
+back by an extensive wood. He strengthened his position by a palisade of
+stakes and osier hurdles, and there he said he would defend himself
+against whoever should seek him.
+
+The ruins of Battle Abbey at this hour attest the place where Harold's
+army was posted; and the high altar of the abbey stood on the very spot
+where Harold's own standard was planted during the fight, and where the
+carnage was the thickest. Immediately after his victory William vowed to
+build an abbey on the site; and a fair and stately pile soon rose there,
+where for many ages the monks prayed and said masses for the souls of
+those who were slain in the battle, whence the abbey took its name.
+Before that time the place was called Senlac. Little of the ancient
+edifice now remains; but it is easy to trace in the park and the
+neighborhood the scenes of the chief incidents in the action; and it is
+impossible to deny the generalship shown by Harold in stationing his
+men, especially when we bear in mind that he was deficient in cavalry,
+the arm in which his adversary's main strength consisted.
+
+William's only chance of safety lay in bringing on a general engagement;
+and he joyfully advanced his army from their camp on the hill over
+Hastings, nearer to the Saxon position. But he neglected no means of
+weakening his opponent, and renewed his summonses and demands on Harold
+with an ostentatious air of sanctity and moderation.
+
+"A monk, named Hugues Maigrot, came in William's name to call upon the
+Saxon King to do one of three things--either to resign his royalty in
+favor of William, or to refer it to the arbitration of the pope to
+decide which of the two ought to be king, or let it be determined by the
+issue of a single combat. Harold abruptly replied, 'I will not resign my
+title, I will not refer it to the pope, nor will I accept the single
+combat.' He was far from being deficient in bravery; but he was no more
+at liberty to stake the crown which he had received from a whole people
+in the chance of a duel than to deposit it in the hands of an Italian
+priest. William, not at all ruffled by the Saxon's refusal, but steadily
+pursuing the course of his calculated measures, sent the Norman monk
+again, after giving him these instructions: 'Go and tell Harold that if
+he will keep his former compact with me, I will leave to him all the
+country which is beyond the Humber, and will give his brother Gurth all
+the lands which Godwin held. If he still persist in refusing my offers,
+then thou shalt tell him, before all his people, that he is a perjurer
+and a liar; that he and all who shall support him are excommunicated by
+the mouth of the Pope, and that the bull to that effect is in my hands.'
+
+"Hugues Maigrot delivered this message in a solemn tone; and the Norman
+chronicle says that at the word _excommunication_ the English chiefs
+looked at one another as if some great danger were impending. One of
+them then spoke as follows: 'We must fight, whatever may be the danger
+to us; for what we have to consider is not whether we shall accept and
+receive a new lord, as if our king were dead; the case is quite
+otherwise. The Norman has given our lands to his captains, to his
+knights, to all his people, the greater part of whom have already done
+homage to him for them: they will all look for their gift if their duke
+become our king; and he himself is bound to deliver up to them our
+goods, our wives, and our daughters: all is promised to them beforehand.
+They come, not only to ruin us, but to ruin our descendants also, and to
+take from us the country of our ancestors. And what shall we do--whither
+shall we go, when we have no longer a country?' The English promised, by
+a unanimous oath, to make neither peace nor truce nor treaty with the
+invader, but to die or drive away the Normans."
+
+The 13th of October was occupied in these negotiations, and at night the
+Duke announced to his men that the next day would be the day of battle.
+That night is said to have been passed by the two armies in very
+different manners. The Saxon soldiers spent it in joviality, singing
+their national songs, and draining huge horns of ale and wine round
+their campfires. The Normans, when they had looked to their arms and
+horses, confessed themselves to the priests, with whom their camp was
+thronged, and received the sacrament by thousands at a time.
+
+On Saturday, the 14th of October, was fought the great battle.
+
+It is not difficult to compose a narrative of its principal incidents
+from the historical information which we possess, especially if aided by
+an examination of the ground. But it is far better to adopt the
+spirit-stirring words of the old chroniclers, who wrote while the
+recollections of the battle were yet fresh, and while the feelings and
+prejudices of the combatants yet glowed in the bosoms of living men.
+
+Robert Wace, the Norman poet, who presented his _Roman de Rou_ to Henry
+II, is the most picturesque and animated of the old writers, and from
+him we can obtain a more vivid and full description of the conflict than
+even the most brilliant romance-writer of the present time can supply.
+We have also an antique memorial of the battle more to be relied on than
+either chronicler or poet (and which confirms Wace's narrative
+remarkably) in the celebrated Bayeux tapestry, which represents the
+principal scenes of Duke William's expedition and of the circumstances
+connected with it, in minute though occasionally grotesque details, and
+which was undoubtedly the production of the same age in which the battle
+took place, whether we admit or reject the legend that Queen Matilda and
+the ladies of her court wrought it with their own hands in honor of the
+royal Conqueror.
+
+Let us therefore suffer the old Norman chronicler to transport our
+imaginations to the fair Sussex scenery northwest of Hastings, as it
+appeared on that October morning. The Norman host is pouring forth from
+its tents, and each troop and each company is forming fast under the
+banner of its leader. The masses have been sung, which were finished
+betimes in the morning; the barons have all assembled round Duke
+William; and the Duke has ordered that the army shall be formed in three
+divisions, so as to make the attack upon the Saxon position in three
+places.
+
+The Duke stood on a hill where he could best see his men; the barons
+surrounded him, and he spake to them proudly. He told them how he
+trusted them, and how all that he gained should be theirs, and how sure
+he felt of conquest, for in all the world there was not so brave an army
+or such good men and true as were then forming around him. Then they
+cheered him in turn, and cried out: "'You will not see one coward; none
+here will fear to die for love of you, if need be.' And he answered
+them: 'I thank you well. For God's sake, spare not; strike hard at the
+beginning; stay not to take spoil; all the booty shall be in common, and
+there will be plenty for everyone. There will be no safety in asking
+quarter or in flight; the English will never love or spare a Norman.
+Felons they were, and felons they are; false they were, and false they
+will be. Show no weakness toward them, for they will have no pity on
+you; neither the coward for running well, nor the bold man for smiting
+well, will be the better liked by the English, nor will any be the more
+spared on either account. You may fly to the sea, but you can fly no
+farther; you will find neither ships nor bridge there; there will be no
+sailors to receive you, and the English will overtake you there and slay
+you in your shame. More of you will die in flight than in battle. Then,
+as flight will not secure you, fight and you will conquer. I have no
+doubt of the victory; we are come for glory; the victory is in our
+hands, and we may make sure of obtaining it if we so please.'
+
+"As the Duke was speaking thus and would yet have spoken more, William
+Fitzosbern rode up with his horse all coated with iron. 'Sire,' said he,
+'we tarry here too long; let us all arm ourselves. _Allons! allons!_'
+
+"Then all went to their tents and armed themselves as they best might;
+and the Duke was very busy, giving everyone his orders; and he was
+courteous to all the vassals, giving away many arms and horses to them.
+When he prepared to arm himself, he called first for his hauberk, and a
+man brought it on his arm and placed it before him, but in putting his
+head in, to get it on, he unawares turned it the wrong way, with the
+back part in front. He soon changed it; but when he saw that those who
+stood by were sorely alarmed, he said: 'I have seen many a man who if
+such a thing had happened to him would not have borne arms or entered
+the field the same day; but I never believed in omens, and I never will.
+I trust in God, for he does in all things his pleasure, and ordains what
+is to come to pass according to his will. I have never liked
+fortune-tellers, nor believed in diviners, but I commend myself to Our
+Lady. Let not this mischance give you trouble. The hauberk which was
+turned wrong, and then set right by me, signifies that a change will
+arise out of the matter which we are now stirring. You shall see the
+name of duke changed into king. Yea, a king shall I be, who hitherto
+have been but duke.'
+
+"Then he crossed himself, and straightway took his hauberk, stooped his
+head and put it on aright, and laced his helmet, and girt on his sword,
+which a varlet brought him. Then the Duke called for his good horse--a
+better could not be found. It had been sent him by a king of Spain, out
+of very great friendship. Neither arms nor the press of fighting men did
+it fear if its lord spurred it on. Walter Giffard brought it. The Duke
+stretched out his hand, took the reins, put foot in stirrup, and
+mounted, and the good horse pawed, pranced, reared himself up, and
+curvetted.
+
+"The Viscount of Toarz saw how the Duke bore himself in arms and said to
+his people that were around him: 'Never have I seen a man so fairly
+armed, nor one who rode so gallantly, or bore his arms or became his
+hauberk so well; neither any one who bore his lance so gracefully or sat
+his horse and managed him so nobly. There is no such knight under
+heaven! a fair count he is, and fair king he will be. Let him fight and
+he shall overcome; shame be to the man who shall fail him!'
+
+"Then the Duke called for the standard which the Pope had sent him, and,
+he who bore it having unfolded it, the Duke took it and called to Raoul
+de Conches. 'Bear my standard,' said he, 'for I would not but do you
+right; by right and by ancestry your line are standard-bearers of
+Normandy, and very good knights have they all been.' But Raoul said that
+he would serve the Duke that day in other guise, and would fight the
+English with his hand as long as life should last.
+
+"Then the Duke bade Walter Giffard bear the standard. But he was old and
+white-headed, and bade the Duke give the standard to some younger and
+stronger man to carry. Then the Duke said fiercely, 'By the splendor of
+God, my lords, I think you mean to betray and fail me in this great
+need.' 'Sire,' said Giffart, 'not so! we have done no treason, nor do I
+refuse from any felony toward you; but I have to lead a great chivalry,
+both hired men and the men of my fief. Never had I such good means of
+serving you as I now have; and, if God please, I will serve you; if need
+be I will die for you, and will give my own heart for yours.'
+
+"'By my faith,' quoth the Duke, 'I always loved thee, and now I love
+thee more; if I survive this day, thou shalt be the better for it all
+thy days.' Then he called out a knight, whom he had heard much praised,
+Tosteins Fitz-Rou le Blanc by name, whose abode was at Bec-en-Caux. To
+him he delivered the standard; and Tosteins took it right cheerfully,
+and bowed low to him in thanks, and bore it gallantly and with good
+heart. His kindred still have quittance of all service for their
+inheritance on this account, and their heirs are entitled so to hold
+their inheritance forever.
+
+"William sat on his war-horse, and called out Rogier, whom they call De
+Montgomeri. 'I rely much on you,' said he; 'lead your men thitherward
+and attack them from that side. William, the son of Osbern the
+seneschal, a right good vassal, shall go with you and help in the
+attack, and you shall have the men of Boilogne and Poix and all my
+soldiers. Alain Fergert and Ameri shall attack on the other side; they
+shall lead the Poitevins and the Bretons and all the barons of Maine;
+and I, with my own great men, my friends and kindred, will fight in the
+middle throng, where the battle shall be the hottest.'
+
+"The barons and knights and men-at-arms were all now armed; the
+foot-soldiers were well equipped, each bearing bow and sword; on their
+heads were caps, and to their feet were bound buskins. Some had good
+hides which they had bound round their bodies; and many were clad in
+frocks, and had quivers and bows hung to their girdles. The knights had
+hauberks and swords, boots of steel, and shining helmets; shields at
+their necks, and in their hands lances. And all had their cognizances,
+so that each might know his fellow, and Norman might not strike Norman,
+nor Frenchman kill his countryman by mistake. Those on foot led the way,
+with serried ranks, bearing their bows. The knights rode next,
+supporting the archers from behind. Thus both horse and foot kept their
+course and order of march as they began, in close ranks at a gentle
+pace, that the one might not pass or separate from the other. All went
+firmly and compactly, bearing themselves gallantly.
+
+"Harold had summoned his men, earls, barons, and vavasors, from the
+castles and the cities, from the ports, the villages and boroughs. The
+peasants were also called together from the villages, bearing such arms
+as they found; clubs and great picks, iron forks and stakes. The English
+had enclosed the place where Harold was with his friends and the barons
+of the country whom he had summoned and called together.
+
+"Those of London had come at once, and those of Kent, of Hertfort, and
+of Essesse; those of Surée and Susesse, of St. Edmund and Sufoc; of
+Norwis and Norfoc; of Cantorbierre and Stanfort, Bedefort and Hundetone.
+The men of Northanton also came; and those of Eurowic and Bokinkeham, of
+Bed and Notinkeham, Lindesie and Nichole. There came also from the west
+all who heard the summons; and very many were to be seen coming from
+Salebiere and Dorset, from Bat and from Sumerset. Many came, too, from
+about Glocestre, and many from Wirecestre, from Wincestre, Hontesire and
+Brichesire; and many more from other counties that we have not named,
+and cannot, indeed, recount. All who could bear arms, and had learned
+the news of the Duke's arrival, came to defend the land. But none came
+from beyond Humbre, for they had other business upon their hands, the
+Danes and Tosti having much damaged and weakened them.
+
+"Harold knew that the Normans would come and attack him hand to hand, so
+he had early enclosed the field in which he had placed his men. He made
+them arm early and range themselves for the battle, he himself having
+put on arms and equipments that became such a lord. The Duke, he said,
+ought to seek him, as he wanted to conquer England; and it became him to
+abide the attack who had to defend the land. He commanded the people,
+and counselled his barons to keep themselves all together and defend
+themselves in a body, for if they once separated, they would with
+difficulty recover themselves. 'The Normans,' said he, 'are good
+vassals, valiant on foot and on horseback; good knights are they on
+horseback and well used to battle; all is lost if they once penetrate
+our ranks. They have brought long lances and swords, but you have
+pointed lances and keen-edged bills; and I do not expect that their arms
+can stand against yours. Cleave whenever you can; it will be ill done if
+you spare aught.'
+
+"The English had built up a fence before them with their shields and
+with ash and other wood, and had well joined and wattled in the whole
+work, so as not to leave even a crevice; and thus they had a barricade
+in their front through which any Norman who would attack them must first
+pass. Being covered in this way by their shields and barricades, their
+aim was to defend themselves; and if they had remained steady for that
+purpose, they would not have been conquered that day; for every Norman
+who made his way in lost his life in dishonor, either by hatchet or
+bill, by club or other weapon.
+
+"They wore short and close hauberks, and helmets that hung over their
+garments. King Harold issued orders, and made proclamation round, that
+all should be ranged with their faces toward the enemy, and that no one
+should move from where he was, so that whoever came might find them
+ready; and that whatever anyone, be he Norman or other, should do, each
+should do his best to defend his own place. Then he ordered the men of
+Kent to go where the Normans were likely to make the attack; for they
+say that the men of Kent are entitled to strike first; and that whenever
+the king goes to battle, the first blow belongs to them. The right of
+the men of London is to guard the king's body, to place themselves
+around him, and to guard his standard; and they were accordingly placed
+by the standard to watch and defend it.
+
+"When Harold had made all ready, and given his orders, he came into the
+midst of the English and dismounted by the side of the standard;
+Leofwine and Gurth, his brothers, were with him; and around him he had
+barons enough, as he stood by his standard, which was, in truth, a noble
+one, sparkling with gold and precious stones. After the victory William
+sent it to the Pope, to prove and commemorate his great conquest and
+glory. The English stood in close ranks, ready and eager for the fight;
+and they, moreover, made a fosse, which went across the field, guarding
+one side of their army.
+
+"Meanwhile the Normans appeared advancing over the ridge of a rising
+ground, and the first division of their troops moved onward along the
+hill and across a valley. And presently another division, still larger,
+came in sight, close following upon the first, and they were led toward
+another part of the field, forming together as the first body had done.
+And while Harold saw and examined them, and was pointing them out to
+Gurth, a fresh company came in sight, covering all the plain; and in the
+midst of them was raised the standard that came from Rome.
+
+"Near it was the Duke, and the best men and greatest strength of the
+army were there. The good knights, the good vassals, and brave warriors
+were there; and there were gathered together the gentle barons, the good
+archers, and the men-at-arms, whose duty it was to guard the Duke, and
+range themselves around him. The youths and common herd of the camp,
+whose business was not to join in the battle, but to take care of the
+harness and stores, moved off toward a rising ground. The priests and
+the clerks also ascended a hill, there to offer up prayers to God, and
+watch the event of the battle.
+
+"The English stood firm on foot in close ranks, and carried themselves
+right boldly. Each man had his hauberk on, with his sword girt, and his
+shield at his neck. Great hatchets were also slung at their necks, with
+which they expected to strike heavy blows.
+
+"The Normans brought on the three divisions of their army to attack at
+different places. They set out in three companies, and in three
+companies did they fight. The first and second had come up, and then
+advanced the third, which was the greatest; with that came the Duke with
+his own men, and all moved boldly forward.
+
+"As soon as the two armies were in full view of each other, great noise
+and tumult arose. You might hear the sound of many trumpets, of bugles,
+and of horns; and then you might see men ranging themselves in line,
+lifting their shields, raising their lances, bending their bows,
+handling their arrows, ready for assault and defence.
+
+"The English stood steady to their post, the Normans still moved on; and
+when they drew near, the English were to be seen stirring to and fro;
+were going and coming; troops ranging themselves in order; some with
+their color rising, others turning pale; some making ready their arms,
+others raising their shields; the brave man rousing himself to fight,
+the coward trembling at the approach of danger.
+
+"Then Taillefer, who sang right well, rode, mounted on a swift horse,
+before the Duke, singing of Charlemagne and of Roland, of Oliver, and
+the peers who died in Roncesvalles. And when they drew nigh to the
+English,
+
+"'A boon, sire!' cried Taillefer; 'I have long served you, and you owe
+me for all such service. To-day, so please you, you shall repay it. I
+ask as my guerdon, and beseech you for it earnestly, that you will allow
+me to strike the first blow in the battle!' And the Duke answered, 'I
+grant it.'
+
+"Then Taillefer put his horse to a gallop, charging before all the rest,
+and struck an Englishman dead, driving his lance below the breast into
+his body, and stretching him upon the ground. Then he drew his sword,
+and struck another, crying out, 'Come on, come on! What do ye, sirs? lay
+on, lay on!' At the second blow he struck the English pushed forward,
+and surrounded, and slew him. Forthwith arose the noise and cry of war,
+and on either side the people put themselves in motion.
+
+"The Normans moved on to the assault, and the English defended
+themselves well. Some were striking, others urging onward; all were bold
+and cast aside fear. And now, behold, that battle was gathered whereof
+the fame is yet mighty.
+
+"Loud and far resounded the bray of the horns and the shocks of the
+lances, the mighty strokes of maces and the quick clashing of swords.
+One while the Englishmen rushed on, another while they fell back; one
+while the men from over sea charged onward, and again at other times
+retreated. The Normans shouted, '_Dex Aie_,' the English people, 'Out.'
+Then came the cunning manoeuvres, the rude shocks and strokes of the
+lance and blows of the swords, among the sergeants and soldiers, both
+English and Norman.
+
+"When the English fall, the Normans shout. Each side taunts and defies
+the other, yet neither knoweth what the other saith; and the Normans say
+the English bark, because they understand not their speech.
+
+"Some wax strong, others weak: the brave exult, but the cowards tremble,
+as men who are sore dismayed. The Normans press on the assault, and the
+English defend their post well; they pierce the hauberks and cleave the
+shields, receive and return mighty blows. Again, some press forward,
+others yield; and thus, in various ways, the struggle proceeds. In the
+plain was a fosse, which the Normans had now behind them, having passed
+it in the fight without regarding it. But the English charged and drove
+the Normans before them till they made them fall back upon this fosse,
+overthrowing into it horses and men. Many were to be seen falling
+therein, rolling one over the others, with their faces to the earth, and
+unable to rise. Many of the English also, whom the Normans drew down
+along with them, died there. At no time during the day's battle did so
+many Normans die as perished in that fosse. So those said who saw the
+dead.
+
+"The varlets who were set to guard the harness began to abandon it as
+they saw the loss of the Frenchmen when thrown back upon the fosse
+without power to recover themselves. Being greatly alarmed at seeing the
+difficulty in restoring order, they began to quit the harness, and
+sought around, not knowing where to find shelter. Then Duke William's
+brother, Odo, the good priest, the Bishop of Bayeux, galloped up and
+said to them: 'Stand fast! stand fast! be quiet and move not! fear
+nothing; for, if God please, we shall conquer yet.' So they took courage
+and rested where they were; and Odo returned galloping back to where the
+battle was most fierce, and was of great service on that day. He had put
+a hauberk on over a white aube, wide in the body, with the sleeve tight,
+and sat on a white horse, so that all might recognize him. In his hand
+he held a mace, and wherever he saw most need he held up and stationed
+the knights, and often urged them on to assault and strike the enemy.
+
+"From nine o'clock in the morning, when the combat began, till three
+o'clock came, the battle was up and down, this way and that, and no one
+knew who would conquer and win the land. Both sides stood so firm and
+fought so well that no one could guess which would prevail. The Norman
+archers with their bows shot thickly upon the English; but they covered
+themselves with their shields, so that the arrows could not reach their
+bodies nor do any mischief, how true so ever was their aim or however
+well they shot. Then the Normans determined to shoot their arrows upward
+into the air, so that they might fall on their enemies' heads and strike
+their faces. The archers adopted this scheme and shot up into the air
+toward the English; and the arrows, in falling, struck their heads and
+faces and put out the eyes of many; and all feared to open their eyes or
+leave their faces unguarded.
+
+"The arrows now flew thicker than rain before the wind; fast sped the
+shafts that the English call 'wibetes.' Then it was that an arrow, that
+had been thus shot upward, struck Harold above his right eye, and put it
+out. In his agony he drew the arrow and threw it away, breaking it with
+his hands; and the pain to his head was so great that he leaned upon his
+shield. So the English were wont to say, and still say to the French,
+that the arrow was well shot which was so sent up against their King,
+and that the archer won them great glory who thus put out Harold's eye.
+
+"The Normans saw that the English defended themselves well, and were so
+strong in their position that they could do little against them. So they
+consulted together privily, and arranged to draw off, and pretend to
+flee, till the English should pursue and scatter themselves over the
+field; for they saw that if they could once get their enemies to break
+their ranks, they might be attacked and discomfited much more easily. As
+they had said, so they did. The Normans by little and little fled, the
+English following them. As the one fell back, the other pressed after;
+and when the Frenchmen retreated, the English thought and cried out that
+the men of France fled and would never return.
+
+"Thus they were deceived by the pretended flight, and great mischief
+thereby befell them; for if they had not moved from their position, it
+is not likely that they would have been conquered at all; but, like
+fools, they broke their lines and pursued.
+
+"The Normans were to be seen following up their stratagem, retreating
+slowly so as to draw the English farther on. As they still flee, the
+English pursue; they push out their lances and stretch forth their
+hatchets, following the Normans as they go, rejoicing in the success of
+their scheme, and scattering themselves over the plain. And the English
+meantime jeered and insulted their foes with words. 'Cowards,' they
+cried, 'you came hither in an evil hour, wanting our lands and seeking
+to seize our property; fools that ye were to come! Normandy is too far
+off, and you will not easily reach it. It is of little use to run back;
+unless you can cross the sea at a leap or can drink it dry, your sons
+and daughters are lost to you.'
+
+"The Normans bore it all; but, in fact, they knew not what the English
+said: their language seemed like the baying of dogs, which they could
+not understand. At length they stopped and turned round, determined to
+recover their ranks; and the barons might be heard crying, '_Dex Aie_!'
+for a halt. Then the Normans resumed their former position, turning
+their faces toward the enemy; and their men were to be seen facing round
+and rushing onward to a fresh _mêlée_, the one party assaulting the
+other; this man striking, another pressing onward. One hits, another
+misses; one flies, another pursues; one is aiming a stroke, while
+another discharges his blow. Norman strives with Englishman again, and
+aims his blows afresh. One flies, another pursues swiftly: the
+combatants are many, the plain wide, the battle and the _mêlée_ fierce.
+On every hand they fight hard, the blows are heavy, and the struggle
+becomes fierce.
+
+"The Normans were playing their part well, when an English knight came
+rushing up, having in his company a hundred men furnished with various
+arms. He wielded a northern hatchet with the blade a full foot long, and
+was well armed after his manner, being tall, bold, and of noble
+carriage. In the front of the battle, where the Normans thronged most,
+he came bounding on swifter than the stag, many Normans falling before
+him and his company.
+
+"He rushed straight upon a Norman who was armed and riding on a
+war-horse, and tried with his hatchet of steel to cleave his helmet; but
+the blow miscarried, and the sharp blade glanced down before the
+saddle-bow, driving through the horse's neck down to the ground, so that
+both horse and master fell together to the earth. I know not whether the
+Englishman struck another blow; but the Normans who saw the stroke were
+astonished and about to abandon the assault, when Roger de Montgomeri
+came galloping up, with his lance set, and, heeding not the long-handled
+axe which the Englishman wielded aloft, struck him down and left him
+stretched on the ground. Then Roger cried out, 'Frenchmen, strike! the
+day is ours!' And again a fierce _mêlée_ was to be seen, with many a
+blow of lance and sword; the English still defending themselves, killing
+the horses and cleaving the shields.
+
+"There was a French soldier of noble mien who sat his horse gallantly.
+He spied two Englishmen who were also carrying themselves boldly. They
+were both men of great worth and had become companions in arms and
+fought together, the one protecting the other. They bore two long and
+broad bills and did great mischief to the Normans, killing both horses
+and men.
+
+"The French soldier looked at them and their bills and was sore alarmed,
+for he was afraid of losing his good horse, the best that he had, and
+would willingly have turned to some other quarter if it would not have
+looked like cowardice. He soon, however, recovered his courage, and,
+spurring his horse, gave him the bridle and galloped swiftly forward.
+Fearing the two bills, he raised his shield, and struck one of the
+Englishmen with his lance on the breast, so that the iron passed out at
+his back. At the moment that he fell the lance broke, and the Frenchman
+seized the mace that hung at his right side, and struck the other
+Englishman a blow that completely fractured his skull.
+
+"On the other side was an Englishman who much annoyed the French,
+continually assaulting them with a keen-edged hatchet. He had a helmet
+made of wood, which he had fastened down to his coat and laced round his
+neck, so that no blows could reach his head. The ravage he was making
+was seen by a gallant Norman knight, who rode a horse that neither fire
+nor water could stop in its career when its master urged it on. The
+knight spurred, and his horse carried him on well till he charged the
+Englishman, striking him over the helmet so that it fell down over his
+eyes; and as he stretched out his hand to raise it and uncover his face,
+the Norman cut off his right hand, so that his hatchet fell to the
+ground. Another Norman sprang forward and eagerly seized the prize with
+both his hands, but he kept it little space and paid dearly for it, for
+as he stooped to pick up the hatchet an Englishman with his long-handled
+axe struck him over the back, breaking all his bones, so that his
+entrails and lungs gushed forth. The knight of the good horse meantime
+returned without injury; but on his way he met another Englishman and
+bore him down under his horse, wounding him grievously and trampling him
+altogether under foot.
+
+"And now might be heard the loud clang and cry of battle and the
+clashing of lances. The English stood firm in their barricades, and
+shivered the lances, beating them into pieces with their bills and
+maces. The Normans drew their swords and hewed down the barricades, and
+the English, in great trouble, fell back upon their standard, where were
+collected the maimed and wounded.
+
+"There were many knights of Chauz who jousted and made attacks. The
+English knew not how to joust, or bear arms on horseback, but fought
+with hatchets and bills. A man, when he wanted to strike with one of
+their hatchets, was obliged to hold it with both his hands, and could
+not at the same time, as it seems to me, both cover himself and strike
+with any freedom.
+
+"The English fell back toward the standard, which was upon a rising
+ground, and the Normans followed them across the valley, attacking them
+on foot and horseback. Then Hue de Mortemer, with the Sires D'Auviler,
+D'Onebac, and St. Cler, rode up and charged, overthrowing many.
+
+"Robert Fitz Erneis fixed his lance, took his shield, and, galloping
+toward the standard, with his keen-edged sword struck an Englishman who
+was in front, killed him, and then drawing back his sword, attacked many
+others, and pushed straight for the standard, trying to beat it down;
+but the English surrounded it and killed him with their bills. He was
+found on the spot, when they afterward sought for him, dead and lying at
+the standard's foot.
+
+"Duke William pressed close upon the English with his lance, striving
+hard to reach the standard with the great troop he led, and seeking
+earnestly for Harold, on whose account the whole war was. The Normans
+follow their lord, and press around him; they ply their blows upon the
+English, and these defend themselves stoutly, striving hard with their
+enemies, returning blow for blow.
+
+"One of them was a man of great strength, a wrestler, who did great
+mischief to the Normans with his hatchet; all feared him, for he struck
+down a great many Normans. The Duke spurred on his horse, and aimed a
+blow at him, but he stooped, and so escaped the stroke; then jumping on
+one side, he lifted his hatchet aloft, and as the Duke bent to avoid the
+blow, the Englishman boldly struck him on the head and beat in his
+helmet, though without doing much injury. He was very near falling,
+however; but, bearing on his stirrups, he recovered himself immediately;
+and when he thought to have revenged himself upon the churl by killing
+him, he had escaped, dreading the Duke's blow. He ran back in among the
+English, but he was not safe even there; for the Normans, seeing him,
+pursued and caught him, and having pierced him through and through with
+their lances, left him dead on the ground.
+
+"Where the throng of the battle was greatest, the men of Kent and Essex
+fought wondrously well, and made the Normans again retreat, but without
+doing them much injury. And when the Duke saw his men fall back and the
+English triumphing over them, his spirit rose high, and he seized his
+shield and his lance, which a vassal handed to him, and took his post by
+his standard.
+
+"Then those who kept close guard by him and rode where he rode, being
+about a thousand armed men, came and rushed with closed ranks upon the
+English, and, with the weight of their good horses, and the blows the
+knights gave, broke the press of the enemy, and scattered the crowd
+before them, the good Duke leading them on in front. Many pursued and
+many fled; many were the Englishmen who fell around, and were trampled
+under the horses, crawling upon the earth, and not able to rise. Many of
+the richest and noblest men fell in the rout, but still the English
+rallied in places, smote down those whom they reached, and maintained
+the combat the best they could, beating down the men and killing the
+horses. One Englishman watched the Duke, and plotted to kill him; he
+would have struck him with his lance, but he could not, for the Duke
+struck him first, and felled him to the earth.
+
+"Loud was now the clamor and great the slaughter; many a soul then
+quitted the body it inhabited. The living marched over the heaps of
+dead, and each side was weary of striking. He charged on who could, and
+he who could no longer strike still pushed forward. The strong struggled
+with the strong; some failed, others triumphed; the cowards fell back,
+the brave pressed on; and sad was his fate who fell in the midst, for he
+had little chance of rising again; and many in truth fell who never rose
+at all, being crushed under the throng.
+
+"And now the Normans had pressed on so far that at last they had reached
+the standard. There Harold had remained, defending himself to the
+utmost; but he was sorely wounded in his eye by the arrow, and suffered
+grievous pain from the blow. An armed man came in the throng of the
+battle, and struck him on the ventail of his helmet, and beat him to the
+ground; and as he sought to recover himself a knight beat him down
+again, striking him on the thick of his thigh, down to the bone.
+
+"Gurth saw the English falling around, and that there was no remedy. He
+saw his race hastening to ruin, and despaired of any aid; he would have
+fled, but could not, for the throng continually increased. And the Duke
+pushed on till he reached him, and struck him with great force. Whether
+he died of that blow I know not, but it was said that he fell under it
+and rose no more.
+
+"The standard was beaten down, the golden standard was taken, and Harold
+and the rest of his friends were slain; but there was so much eagerness,
+and throng of so many around, seeking to kill him, that I know not who
+it was that slew him.
+
+"The English were in great trouble at having lost their King and at the
+Duke's having conquered and beat down the standard; but they still
+fought on, and defended themselves long, and in fact till the day drew
+to a close. Then it clearly appeared to all that the standard was lost,
+and the news had spread throughout the army that Harold, for certain,
+was dead; and all saw that there was no longer any hope, so they left
+the field, and those fled who could.
+
+"William fought well; many an assault did he lead, many a blow did he
+give, and many receive, and many fell dead under his hand. Two horses
+were killed under him, and he took a third when necessary, so that he
+fell not to the ground and lost not a drop of blood. But whatever anyone
+did, and whoever lived or died, this is certain that William conquered
+and that many of the English fled from the field, and many died on the
+spot. Then he returned thanks to God, and in his pride ordered his
+standard to be brought and set up on high, where the English standard
+had stood; and that was the signal of his having conquered, and beaten
+down the standard. And he ordered his tent to be raised on the spot
+among the dead, and had his meat brought thither, and his supper
+prepared there.
+
+"Then he took off his armor; and the barons and knights, pages and
+squires came, when he had unstrung his shield; and they took the helmet
+from his head and the hauberk from his back, and saw the heavy blows
+upon his shield and how his helmet was dinted in. And all greatly
+wondered and said: 'Such a baron (_ber_) never bestrode war-horse nor
+dealt such blows nor did such feats of arms; neither has there been on
+earth such a knight since Rollant and Oliver.'
+
+"Thus they lauded and extolled him greatly and rejoiced in what they
+saw, but grieving also for their friends who were slain in the battle.
+And the Duke stood meanwhile among them, of noble stature and mien, and
+rendered thanks to the King of Glory, through whom he had the victory,
+and thanked the knights around him, mourning also frequently for the
+dead. And he ate and drank among the dead, and made his bed that night
+upon the field.
+
+"The morrow was Sunday; and those who had slept upon the field of
+battle, keeping watch around and suffering great fatigue, bestirred
+themselves at break of day and sought out and buried such of the bodies
+of their dead friends as they might find. The noble ladies of the land
+also came, some to seek their husbands, and others their fathers, sons,
+or brothers. They bore the bodies to their villages and interred them at
+the churches; and the clerks and priests of the country were ready, and
+at the request of their friends took the bodies that were found, and
+prepared graves and lay them therein.
+
+"King Harold was carried and buried at Varham; but I know not who it was
+that bore him thither, neither do I know who buried him. Many remained
+on the field, and many had fled in the night."
+
+Such is a Norman account of the battle of Hastings, which does full
+justice to the valor of the Saxons as well as to the skill and bravery
+of the victors. It is indeed evident that the loss of the battle by the
+English was owing to the wound which Harold received in the afternoon,
+and which must have incapacitated him from effective command. When we
+remember that he had himself just won the battle of Stamford Bridge over
+Harald Hardrada by the manoeuvre of a feigned flight, it is impossible
+to suppose that he could be deceived by the same stratagem on the part
+of the Normans at Hastings. But his men, when deprived of his control,
+would very naturally be led by their inconsiderate ardor into the
+pursuit that proved so fatal to them. All the narratives of the battle,
+however much they vary as to the precise time and manner of Harold's
+fall, eulogize the generalship and the personal prowess which he
+displayed until the fatal arrow struck him. The skill with which he had
+posted his army was proved both by the slaughter which it cost the
+Normans to force the position, and also by the desperate rally which
+some of the Saxons made after the battle in the forest in the rear, in
+which they cut off a large number of the pursuing Normans. This
+circumstance is particularly mentioned by William of Poictiers, the
+Conqueror's own chaplain. Indeed, if Harold or either of his brothers
+had survived, the remains of the English army might have formed again in
+the wood, and could at least have effected an orderly retreat and
+prolonged the war. But both Gurth and Leofwine, and all the bravest
+thanes of Southern England, lay dead on Senlac, around their fallen King
+and the fallen standard of their country. The exact number that perished
+on the Saxons' side is unknown; but we read that, on the side of the
+victors, out of sixty thousand men who had been engaged, no less than a
+fourth perished; so well had the English billmen "plyed the ghastly
+blow," and so sternly had the Saxon battle-axe cloven Norman's casque
+and mail. The old historian Daniel justly as well as forcibly remarks:
+"Thus was tried, by the great assize of God's judgment in battle, the
+right of power between the English and Norman nations; a battle the most
+memorable of all others, and, however miserably lost, yet most nobly
+fought on the part of England."
+
+Many a pathetic legend was told in after years respecting the discovery
+and the burial of the corpse of our last Saxon King. The main
+circumstances, though they seem to vary, are perhaps reconcilable. Two
+of the monks of Waltham Abbey, which Harold had founded a little time
+before his election to the throne, had accompanied him to the battle. On
+the morning after the slaughter they begged and gained permission of the
+Conqueror to search for the body of their benefactor. The Norman
+soldiery and camp followers had stripped and gashed the slain, and the
+two monks vainly strove to recognize from among the mutilated and gory
+heaps around them the features of their former King. They sent for
+Harold's mistress, Edith, surnamed "the Fair," and "the Swan-necked," to
+aid them. The eye of love proved keener than the eye of gratitude, and
+the Saxon lady even in that Aceldama knew her Harold.
+
+The King's mother now sought the victorious Norman, and begged the dead
+body of her son. But William at first answered, in his wrath and the
+hardness of his heart, that a man who had been false to his word and his
+religion should have no other sepulchre than the sand of the shore. He
+added, with a sneer: "Harold mounted guard on the coast while he was
+alive; he may continue his guard now he is dead." The taunt was an
+unintentional eulogy; and a grave washed by the spray of the Sussex
+waves would have been the noblest burial-place for the martyr of Saxon
+freedom. But Harold's mother was urgent in her lamentations and her
+prayers; the Conqueror relented: like Achilles, he gave up the dead body
+of his fallen foe to a parent's supplications, and the remains of King
+Harold were deposited with regal honors in Waltham Abbey.
+
+On Christmas Day in the same year William the Conqueror was crowned, at
+London, King of England.
+
+
+
+
+TRIUMPHS OF HILDEBRAND
+
+"THE TURNING-POINT OF THE MIDDLE AGES:"
+
+HENRY IV BEGS FOR MERCY AT CANOSSA
+
+A.D. 1073-1085
+
+ARTHUR R. PENNINGTON
+
+ARTAUD DE MONTOR
+
+
+(If during the pontificate of Innocent III [1198-1216] the papal power
+attained its greatest height, yet under one of his predecessors the
+chair of St. Peter became a throne of almost absolute supremacy. This
+mighty pontiff, Gregory VII, whose real name, Hildebrand, indicates his
+German descent, was born--the son of a carpenter--in Tuscany, about
+1020. He became a monk of the Benedictine order, and was educated at the
+abbey of Cluny in France. In 1044 he went to Rome, called by a papal
+election, and there saw abuses which from that moment he fixed his mind
+upon striving to abolish. In 1048 he was again in Rome and soon rose to
+the rank of cardinal.
+
+For many years Hildebrand was the real director of papal policy, and
+long before his election as pope, in 1073, he worked to accomplish the
+reforms that distinguish his pontificate, which continued till his
+death, in 1085.
+
+As a part of the Holy Roman Empire, Italy held a dual relation to the
+emperor and the pope. Between the Roman pontiffs and the secular heads
+of the Empire the struggle for supremacy had been long and often bitter.
+At the time of Hildebrand's active appearance the papacy was in a state
+of degradation which demoralized the Church itself.
+
+Long before his elevation to the papal chair Hildebrand's efforts had
+met with much success, and the power of the holy see was gradually
+increased. Independently of the Emperor, whose will had hitherto
+governed the papal elections, in 1058--chiefly through the influence of
+Hildebrand--Pope Nicholas II was chosen by a new method, and from that
+time the choice of popes has been made by the sacred college of
+cardinals.
+
+Hildebrand reluctantly accepted the office of pope; but having entered
+upon the task which he knew to be so formidable, he pursued it with such
+energy, courage, and success as to make his pontificate one of the most
+memorable in the annals of the Church. Of his greatest contests within
+the ecclesiastical jurisdiction--over the celibacy of the clergy and
+simony--as well as of those with the Imperial power represented by Henry
+IV--the "War of Investitures"--the following account will be found to
+present the essential features with a clearness and comprehensiveness
+which are seldom seen in the relation of matter so complex and in a
+narrative so concise. The differing viewpoints are also instructive, as
+presented by Pennington of the Church of England, and Artaud, the
+standard Roman Catholic authority.)
+
+
+ARTHUR R. PENNINGTON
+
+The time had come when Hildebrand was to receive the reward of the
+important services which he had rendered to the holy see. He had been
+the ruling spirit under five popes--Leo, Victor, Stephen, Nicholas, and
+Alexander--four of whom were indebted to him for their election. But now
+he must himself be raised to the papal throne.
+
+The clergy were assembled in the Lateran Church to celebrate the
+obsequies of Alexander. Hildebrand, as archdeacon, was performing the
+service. Suddenly, in the midst of the requiem for the departed, a shout
+was heard which seemed to come as if by inspiration from the assembled
+multitude: "Hildebrand is Pope! St. Peter chooses the archdeacon
+Hildebrand!"
+
+From the funeral procession Hildebrand flew to the pulpit, and with
+impassioned gestures seemed to be imploring silence. The storm, however,
+did not cease till one of the cardinals, in the name of the sacred
+college, declared that they had unanimously elected him whom the people
+had chosen. Arrayed in scarlet robes, crowned with the papal tiara,
+Gregory VII ascended the chair of St. Peter.
+
+The Pope very soon made known the course which he should pursue. He
+issued a prohibition against the marriage of the clergy, and in a
+council at Rome abolished the right of investiture.[27] He was
+determined to redress the wrongs of society. He had seen oppression
+laying waste the fairest provinces of Europe, he had seen many princes,
+goaded on by the revengeful passions of their nature, flinging wide
+their standard to the winds, and dipping their hands in the blood of
+those who, if Christianity be not a fable, were their very brothers. A
+magnificent vision rose up before him. He would rule the world by
+religion; he would be the caesar of the spiritual monarchy. He and a
+council of prelates, annually assembled at Rome, would constitute a
+tribunal from whose judgment there should be no appeal, empowered to
+hold the supreme mediation in matters relating to the interests of the
+body politic, to settle contested successions to kingdoms; and to compel
+men to cease from their dissensions.
+
+[Footnote 27: That is, the right of the civil power to grant church
+offices at will, and to invest ecclesiastics with symbols of their
+offices and receive their oaths of fealty.]
+
+The civil power was to pledge itself to be prompt in the execution of
+their decrees against those who despised their authority. But if the
+decisions of those judges were to carry weight, they must be men of
+unblemished integrity. The purity of their ermine must be altogether
+unsullied. The sale of the highest spiritual offices by the prince, who
+had deprived the clergy and people of their right to elect them, which
+had stained the hands of the Church and undermined its power, must be
+altogether forbidden. Elections must be free. The custom of investiture
+by sovereigns with the ring and crozier, which had rendered the
+hierarchy and clergy the creatures of their will, must be forbidden.
+
+The clergy must possess an absolute exemption from the criminal justice
+of the state. They must recognize but one ruler, the pope, who disposed
+of them indirectly through the bishops or directly in cases of
+exemption, and used them as tools for the execution of his behests. In
+fact, they were to constitute a vast army, exclusively devoted to the
+service of an ecclesiastical monarch.
+
+They must be unconnected by marriage with the world around them, that
+they might be bound more closely to one another and to their head; that
+they might be saved from the temptation of restless projects for the
+advancement of their families, which have caused so much scandal in the
+world; and that they might give an exalted idea of their sanctity,
+inasmuch as, in order that they might give themselves to prayer and the
+ministry of the Word, they would forego that connubial bliss, the
+portion of those,
+
+ "The happiest of their kind,
+ Whom gentler stars unite and in one fate Their hearts, their fortunes,
+ and their beings blend."
+
+The marriage of the clergy was everywhere more or less repugnant to the
+general feeling of Christendom. The rise and progress of asceticism in
+the Church had their source in human nature, and its growth was
+quickened by a reaction from the immorality of paganism. The general
+effect on the position of the clergy was to compel them to keep progress
+with the prevailing movement. Men consecrated to the service of Jehovah
+must rise superior to the common herd of their fellow-creatures.
+
+By a decree of Pope Siricius at the end of the fourth century marriage
+was interdicted to all priests and deacons. This decree was, however,
+very imperfectly observed during the following centuries. The general
+feeling was, however, at this time very strongly against the married
+clergy. But throughout the spiritual realm of Hildebrand in Italy, from
+Calabria to the Alps, the clergy had risen up in rebellion against him
+and the popes his predecessors when they attempted to coerce them into
+celibacy. We believe that this opposition, much more than the strife as
+to investitures, was the cause of the strong feeling, almost
+unprecedented, which existed against Gregory VII.
+
+We must now show that Gregory enforced his views as to investitures.
+This part of our subject is important, because it gave occasion for the
+assertion that the pope could depose the Holy Roman emperor and the king
+of Italy, if he should find him morally or physically disqualified for
+fulfilling the condition on which his appointment depended--that he
+should defend him from his enemies. Henry IV, at the beginning of his
+reign only ten years of age, was at this time Emperor.[28]
+
+[Footnote 28: That is, Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, which included
+the German-speaking people of Europe, and also, in theory at least,
+Italy.]
+
+One day, as he was standing by the Rhine, a galley with silken streamers
+appeared, into which he was invited to enter. After he had been gliding
+for some time down the stream, he found that he was a prisoner. The
+archbishops of Milan and Cologne, with other powerful lords, having
+consigned him to a degrading captivity, administered, in his name, the
+government of the empire. By affording him every means of vicious
+indulgence, they were only too successful in corrupting a noble and
+generous nature. Very soon he was guilty of crimes, and plunged into
+excesses which seemed to cry aloud for vengeance.
+
+The Pope saw that the time had come for the execution of his designs.
+Henry had been guilty of the grossest simony. The spiritual dignities
+had been openly sold to the highest bidder. He saw also that, while the
+clergy took the oath of fealty to the monarch and were invested by him
+with the ring and crozier, he could not establish the superiority of the
+spiritual to the temporal jurisdiction. He therefore summoned a council
+at the Lateran (1075), which issued a decree against lay investitures.
+The Pope, having thus declared war against the Emperor, proceeded to
+fill up certain vacant bishoprics, and to suspend bishops, both in
+Germany and Italy, who had been guilty of simony. He also cited Henry
+before him to answer for his simony, crimes, and excesses.
+
+This citation is alleged to have given occasion for an attempted crime,
+supposed to have been sanctioned by Henry, which may show us that while
+the Pope was asserting a right to rule over the nations, he could not
+rule in his own city. On Christmas Eve, 1075, the city of Rome was
+visited with a violent tempest. Darkness brooded over the land. The
+inhabitants thought that the day of judgment was at hand. In the midst
+of this war of the elements two processions were seen advancing toward
+the Church of Santa Maria Maggiore. At the head of one of them was
+Hildebrand, leading his priests to worship at a shrine. At the head of
+the other was Cencius, a Roman noble. In one of the pauses in the roar
+of the tempest, when the Pope was heard blessing his flock, the arm of
+Cencius grasped his person, and the sword of a ruffian inflicted a wound
+on his forehead. Bound with cords, the Pope was removed to a mansion in
+the city, from which he was the next day to be removed to exile or to
+death. A sword was aimed at the Pontiff's bosom, when the cries of a
+fierce multitude, threatening to burn down the house, arrested the arm
+of the assassin. An arrow, discharged from below, reached and slew the
+latter. Cencius fell at the Pope's feet, a suppliant for pardon and for
+life. The Pontiff immediately pardoned him. Then, amid the acclamations
+of the Roman people, Gregory proceeded to complete the interrupted
+solemnities at Santa Maria Maggiore.
+
+The war between Henry and the Pope continued. Henry summoned a synod at
+Worms in January, 1076, which decreed the deposition of the Pope. The
+envoy charged to convey this sentence appeared in the council chamber of
+the Lateran in February, before an assembly consisting of the mightiest
+in the land, whom the Pope had summoned to sit in judgment on Henry.
+With flashing eyes and in a voice of thunder he directed the Pope to
+descend from the chair of St. Peter. Cries of indignation rang through
+the hall, and a hundred swords were seen leaping from their scabbards to
+inflict vengeance on the daring intruder. The Pope, with difficulty,
+stilled the angry tumult. Then, rising with calm dignity, amid the
+breathless silence of the assembled multitude, he uttered that dread
+anathema which "shuts paradise and opens hell," and absolved the
+subjects of Henry from their allegiance.
+
+The inhabitants of Europe were struck dumb with amazement when they
+witnessed this exercise of papal prerogative. They thought that the
+powerful arm of Henry would have been raised to smite down the audacious
+Hildebrand. The Pope, however, well knew that Henry had by his excesses
+alienated from himself the affections of his subjects. The sentence gave
+a pretext to many of his nobility to withdraw from their allegiance.
+Awed by spiritual terrors, his attendants fell away from him as if he
+had been smitten by a leprosy. An assembly was now summoned at Trebur,
+in obedience to a requisition from the Pope, at which it was decreed
+that, if the Emperor continued excommunicate on the 23d of February,
+1077, his crown should be given to another. The theory of the Holy Roman
+Empire had thus become a practical reality. The vassal of Otho had
+reduced the successor of Otho to vassalage. A great pope had wrung from
+the superstition and reverence of mankind a spiritual empire, which, it
+was hoped, would extend its sway to earth's remotest boundaries.
+
+
+ARTAUD DE MONTOR
+
+Gregory made it an invariable rule to act at the outset with gentleness.
+"No one," says he, "reaches the highest rank at a single spring; great
+edifices rise gradually." Certain of his strength, he chose to employ
+conciliation. He especially sought to convince Henry, but the excesses
+in which that prince wallowed were so abominable that his subjects in
+all parts, and especially the great, revolted against him. In 1076,
+Gregory assembled a council, which pronounced the excommunication of the
+King, with all the terrible consequences attendant upon it.
+
+History shows several emperors of the East excommunicated by preceding
+popes: Arcadius, by Innocent I; Anastasius, by Saint Symmachus; and Leo
+the Isaurian, by Gregory II and Gregory III.
+
+The decree of the same council set forth that the throne vacated by
+Henry was adjudged to Rudolph, duke of Swabia, already created king of
+Germany by the electors of the empire.
+
+Before the election of Rudolph, Gregory had declared that he would
+repair to Germany. King Henry, on his part, promised to come into Italy.
+The Pope left Rome with an escort furnished by the countess of Tuscany,
+daughter of Boniface, marquis of Tuscany. The march of Gregory was a
+triumph. Amidst that escort he reached Vercelli. It was feared by some
+that Henry would make his appearance at the head of an army, but he had
+not that intention. The Pope, nevertheless, deemed it best to retire
+into the fortress of Canossa, belonging to the Countess Matilda, in
+order that he might be secure from all violence.
+
+Henry had spent nearly two months at Spires in a profound and melancholy
+solitude. The weight of the excommunication oppressed him with a
+thousand griefs. Weary of that state of uncertainty, and still, as ever,
+tricky and hypocritical, he conceived the idea of winning over the Pope
+by an apparent piety, and of satisfying his requirements by a brief
+humiliation; moreover, the decree of excommunication declared that it
+should be withdrawn if the King appeared before the Pope within a year
+from the date of the decree. The winter was severe. After running a
+thousand dangers, the King and his queen arrived at Turin, and proceeded
+to Placentia. Thence the prince announced that he would proceed to
+Canossa, by way of Reggio.
+
+The Countess Matilda met him with Hugo, Bishop of Cluny. She wished to
+restore harmony between the Pope and the King. Gregory seemed to desire
+that Henry should return to Augsburg, to be judged by the Diet. The
+envoys of the King at Canossa replied: "Henry does not fear being
+judged; he knows that the Pope will protect innocence and justice; but
+the anniversary of the excommunication is at hand, and if the
+excommunication be not removed, the King, _according to the laws of the
+land_, will lose his right to the crown. The prince humbly requests the
+Holy Father to raise the interdict, and to restore him to the communion
+of the Church. He is ready to give every satisfaction that the Pope
+shall require; to present himself at such place and at such time as the
+Pope shall order; to meet his accusers, and to commit himself entirely
+to the decision of the head of the Church."
+
+Henry, says Voigt, having received permission to advance, was not long
+on the way. The fortress had triple inclosures; Henry was conducted into
+the second; his retinue remained outside the first. He had laid aside
+the insignia of royalty; nothing announced his rank. All day long,
+Henry, bareheaded, clad in penitential garb, and fasting from morning
+till night, awaited the sentence of the sovereign pontiff. He thus
+waited during a second and a third day. During the intervening time he
+had not ceased to negotiate. On the morrow, Matilda interceded with the
+Pope on behalf of Henry, and the conditions of the treaty were settled.
+The prince promised to give satisfaction to the complaints made against
+him by his subjects, and he took an oath, in which his sureties joined.
+When those oaths were taken, the pontiff gave the King the benediction
+and the apostolic peace, and celebrated Mass.
+
+After the consecration of the host, the Pope called Henry and all
+present, and still holding the host in his hand, said to the King: "We
+have received letters from you and those of your party, in which we are
+accused of having usurped the Holy See by simony, and of having, both
+before and since our episcopacy, committed crimes which, according to
+the canons, excluded us from holy orders.
+
+"Although we could justify ourselves by the testimony of those who have
+known our manner of life from our childhood, and who were the authors of
+our promotion to the episcopacy, nevertheless, to do away with all kind
+of scandal, we will appeal to the judgment, not of men, but of God. Let
+the body of our Lord Jesus Christ, that we are about to take, be this
+day a proof of our innocence. We pray the Almighty to dispel all
+suspicion, if we are innocent, and to cause us suddenly to die, if we
+are guilty."
+
+Then turning towards the King, Gregory again spoke: "Dear son, do also
+as you have seen us do. The German princes have daily accused you to us
+of a great number of crimes, for which those nobles maintain that you
+ought to be interdicted, during your whole life, not only from royalty
+and all public function, but also from all ecclesiastical communion, and
+from all commerce of civil life. They urgently demand that you be
+judged, and you know how uncertain are all human judgments. Do, then, as
+we advise, and if you feel that you are innocent, deliver the Church
+from this scandal, and yourself from this embarrassment. Take this other
+portion of the host, that this proof of your innocence may close the
+lips of your enemies, and engage us to be your most ardent defender, to
+reconcile you with the nobles, and forever to terminate the civil war."
+
+This address astonished the King. Going apart with his confidants, he
+tremblingly consulted as to what he could do to avoid so terrible a
+test. At length, having somewhat recovered his calmness, he said to the
+Pope, that as those nobles who remained faithful were, for the most
+part, absent, as well as those who accused him, the latter would give
+little faith to what he might do in his own justification, unless it
+were done in their presence. For that reason, he asked that the test
+should be postponed to the day of the sitting of the general diet, and
+the Pope consented.
+
+When the Pope had finished Mass, he invited the King to dinner, treated
+him with much attention, and dismissed him in peace to his own people,
+who had remained outside the castle. Henry, on his return to his nobles,
+was not well received. Henry, as Voigt shows, soon became alarmed at
+their disapprobation, which originated only in a feeling of wounded
+complicity and ambitious views, which could not hope for success after
+the victory gained by Gregory.
+
+Henry, hearing himself accused of weakness, thought to deliver himself
+from so much annoyance by a bold perjury; and he endeavored to draw
+Gregory and Matilda into a snare. Warned by faithful friends, they did
+not visit the King as had been agreed; and that new wrong determined
+Gregory to suspend his departure for the Diet of Augsburg. No one, not
+even the pious Matilda, now dared to speak of a reconciliation.
+
+Henry held at Brescia, in 1080, a pseudo council of the bishops devoted
+to him; and there he caused Guibert, Archbishop of Ravenna, an avowed
+enemy of Gregory, to be elected as Pope; and he deposed Gregory,
+although he was recognized as the legitimate pope by the whole Catholic
+world, with the exception of the bishops in revolt, under the direction
+of Henry. On learning this, Gregory celebrated at Rome, in the year
+1080, a regular council, in which he again excommunicated Henry, and
+especially the antipope, whom he would never absolve.
+
+
+ARTHUR PENNINGTON
+
+The war continued. Henry's rival for the empire, Rudolph of Swabia, was
+supported by many German partisans, especially by the Saxons. He was
+defeated with great loss at Fladenheim. The skill and courage of the
+Saxon commander, however, turned a defeat into a victory. Emboldened by
+this victory, Gregory excommunicated Henry, and "gave, granted, and
+conceded" that Rudolph might rule the Italian and German empires. With
+the sanction of thirty bishops, an antipope, Guibert, was elected at
+Brixen. The war raged with undiminished violence. The Saxons, the only
+power in alliance with the Romans, gained a victory over Henry in
+Germany at the very same time when Matilda's forces fled before his army
+in the Mantuan territory. Matilda had lately granted all her hereditary
+states to Gregory and his successors forever. Before the summer of the
+year 1080 the citizens of Rome saw the forces of Henry in the Campagna.
+The siege of Rome continued for three years. The capture of the city was
+imminent, when the forces of Robert Guiscard, the Norman, came to the
+rescue of the Pope.
+
+Nicholas II had bestowed on Robert Guiscard the investiture of the
+duchies of Apulia and Calabria; Sicily also, the conquest of which his
+brother Richard was meditating, being prospectively added to Robert's
+dominions. The oath taken by Robert Guiscard on this occasion bound him
+to be the devoted defender of the pontificate. He now became a friend
+indeed. A hasty retreat saved the forces of Henry from the impending
+danger. The Pope returned in triumph to the Lateran. But within a few
+hours he heard from the streets the clash of arms and the loud shouts of
+the combatants. A fierce contest was raging between the soldiers of
+Robert and the citizens who espoused the cause of Henry. A conflagration
+was kindled, which at length destroyed three-fourths of the city.
+Gregory, perhaps conscience-stricken when he thought of the wars he had
+kindled, sought, in the castle of Salerno, from the Normans the security
+which he could no longer expect among his own subjects. He soon found
+that the hand of death was upon him. He summoned round his bed the
+bishops and cardinals who had accompanied him in his flight from Rome.
+He maintained the truth of the principles for which he had always
+contended. He forgave and blessed his enemies, with the exception of the
+antipope and the Emperor. He had received the transubstantiated
+elements. The final unction had been given to him. He then prepared
+himself to die. Anxious to catch the last words from that tongue, to the
+utterances of which they had always listened with intense delight, his
+followers were bending over him, when, collecting his powers for one
+last effort, he said, in an indignant tone, "I have loved righteousness
+and hated iniquity, and, therefore, I die in exile."
+
+
+
+
+COMPLETION OF THE DOMESDAY BOOK
+
+A.D. 1086
+
+CHARLES KNIGHT
+
+
+(When William the Conqueror had been some years established in his
+English realm, he found himself confronted with a feudal baronage
+largely composed of men who had gone with him from Normandy, where many
+of them had reluctantly bowed to his command. They were jealous of the
+royal power and eager for military and judicial independence within
+their own manors. The Conqueror met this situation with the skill of
+political genius. He granted large estates to the nobles, but so widely
+scattered as to render union of the great land-owners and hereditary
+attachment of great areas of population to separate feudal lords
+impossible. He caused under-tenants to be bound to their lords by the
+same conditions of service which bound the lords to the crown, to which
+each sub-tenant swore direct fealty. William also strengthened his
+position as king by means of a new military organization and by his
+control of the judicial and administrative systems of the kingdom. By
+the abolition of the four great earldoms of the realm he struck a final
+blow at the ambition of the greater nobles for independent power. By
+this stroke he made the shire the largest unit of local government. By
+his control of the national revenues he secured a great financial power
+in his own hands.
+
+A large part of the manors were burdened with special dues to the crown,
+and for the purpose of ascertaining and recording these William sent
+into each county commissioners to make a survey, whose inquiries were
+recorded in the _Domesday Book_, so called because its decision was
+regarded as final. This book, in Norman-French, contains the results of
+his survey of England made in 1085-1086, and consists of two volumes in
+vellum, a large folio of three hundred and eighty-two pages, and a
+quarto of four hundred and fifty pages. For a long time it was kept
+under three locks in the exchequer with the King's seal, and is now kept
+in the Public Record Office. In 1783 the British Government issued a
+fac-simile edition of it, in two folio volumes, printed from types
+specially made for the purpose. It is one of the principal sources for
+the political and social history of the time.
+
+The _Domesday Book_ contains a record of the ownership, extent, and
+value of the lands of England at the time of the survey, at the time of
+their bestowal when granted by the King, and at the time of a previous
+survey under Edward the Confessor. Of the detailed registrations of
+tenants, defendants, live stock, etc., as well, as of contemporary
+social features of the English people, the following account presents
+interesting pictures.)
+
+
+The survey contained in the _Domesday Book_ extended to all England,
+with the exception of Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, and
+Durham. All the country between the Tees and the Tyne was held by the
+Bishop of Durham; and he was reputed a count palatine, having a separate
+government. The other three northern counties were probably so
+devastated that they were purposely omitted. Let us first see, from the
+information of _Domesday Book_, by "what men" the land was occupied.
+
+First, we have barons and we have thanes. The barons were the Norman
+nobles; the thanes, the Saxon. These were included under the general
+designation of _liberi homines_, free men; which term included all the
+freeholders of a manor. Many of these were tenants of the King "_in
+capite_"--that is, they held their possessions direct from the Crown.
+Others of these had placed themselves under the protection of some lord,
+as the defender of their persons and estates, they paying some stipend
+or performing some service. In the _Register_ there are also _liberae
+feminae_, free women. Next to the free class were the _sochemanni_ or
+"socmen," a class of inferior land-owners, who held lands under a lord,
+and owed suit and service in the lord's court, but whose tenure was
+permanent. They sometimes performed services in husbandry; but those
+services, as well as their payments, were defined.
+
+Descending in the scale, we come to the _villani_. These were allowed to
+occupy land at the will of the lord, upon the condition of performing
+services, uncertain in their amount and often of the meanest nature. But
+they could acquire no property in lands or goods; and they were subject
+to many exactions and oppressions. There are entries in _Domesday Book_
+which show that the villani were not altogether bondmen, but represented
+the Saxon "churl." The lowest class were _servi_, slaves; the class
+corresponding with the Saxon _theow_. By a degradation in the condition
+of the villani, and the elevation of that of the servi, the two classes
+were brought gradually nearer together; till at last the military
+oppression of the Normans, thrusting down all degrees of tenants and
+servants into one common slavery, or at least into strict dependence,
+one name was adopted for both of them as a generic term, that of
+_villeins regardant_.
+
+Of the subdivisions of these great classes, the _Register_ of 1085
+affords us some particulars. We find that some of the nobles are
+described as _milites_, soldiers; and sometimes the milites are classed
+with the inferior orders of tenantry. Many of the chief tenants are
+distinguished by their offices. We have among these the great regal
+officers, such as they existed in the Saxon times--the _camerarius_ and
+_cubicularius_, from whom we have our lord chamberlain; the _dapifer_,
+or lord steward; the _pincerna_, or chief butler; the constable, and the
+treasurer. We have the hawkkeepers, and the bowkeepers; the providers of
+the king's carriages, and his standard-bearers. We have lawmen, and
+legates, and mediciners. We have foresters and hunters.
+
+Coming to the inferior officers and artificers, we have carpenters,
+smiths, goldsmiths, farriers, potters, ditchers, launders, armorers,
+fishermen, millers, bakers, salters, tailors, and barbers. We have
+mariners, moneyers, minstrels, and watchmen. Of rural occupations we
+have the beekeepers, ploughmen, shepherds, neatherds, goatherds, and
+swineherds. Here is a population in which there is a large division of
+labor. The freemen, tenants, villeins, slaves, are laboring and deriving
+sustenance from arable land, meadow, common pasture, wood, and water.
+The grain-growing land is, of course, carefully registered as to its
+extent and value, and so the meadow and pasture. An equal exactness is
+bestowed upon the woods. It was not that the timber was of great
+commercial value, in a country which possessed such insufficient means
+of transport; but that the acorns and beech-mast, upon which great herds
+of swine subsisted, were of essential importance to keep up the supply
+of food. We constantly find such entries as "a wood for pannage of fifty
+hogs." There are woods described which will feed a hundred, two hundred,
+three hundred hogs; and on the Bishop of London's demesne at Fulham a
+thousand hogs could fatten. The value of a tree was determined by the
+number of hogs that could lie under it, in the Saxon time; and in this
+survey of the Norman period, we find entries of useless woods, and woods
+without pannage, which to some extent were considered identical. In some
+of the woods there were patches of cultivated ground, as the entries
+show, where the tenant had cleared the dense undergrowth and had his
+corn land and his meadows. Even the fen lands were of value, for their
+rents were paid in eels.
+
+There is only mention of five forests in this record, Windsor,
+Gravelings (Wiltshire), Winburn, Whichwood, and the New Forest.
+Undoubtedly there were many more, but being no objects of assessment
+they are passed over. It would be difficult not to associate the memory
+of the Conqueror with the New Forest, and not to believe that his
+unbridled will was here the cause of great misery and devastation.
+Ordericus Vitalis says, speaking of the death of William's second son,
+Richard: "Learn now, my reader, why the forest in which the young prince
+was slain received the name of the New Forest. That part of the country
+was extremely populous from early times, and full of well-inhabited
+hamlets and farms. A numerous population cultivated Hampshire with
+unceasing industry, so that the southern part of the district
+plentifully supplied Winchester with the products of the land. When
+William I ascended the throne of Albion, being a great lover of forests,
+he laid waste more than sixty parishes, compelling the inhabitants to
+emigrate to other places, and substituted beasts of the chase for human
+beings, that he might satisfy his ardor for hunting." There is probably
+some exaggeration in the statement of the country being "extremely
+populous from early times." This was an old woody district, called
+Ytene. No forest was artificially planted, as Voltaire has imagined; but
+the chases were opened through the ancient thickets, and hamlets and
+solitary cottages were demolished.
+
+It is a curious fact that some woodland spots in the New Forest have
+still names with the terminations of _ham_ and _ton_. There are many
+evidences of the former existence of human abodes in places now
+solitary; yet we doubt whether this part of the district plentifully
+supplied Winchester with food, as Ordericus relates; for it is a sterile
+district, in most places, fitted for little else than the growth of
+timber. The lower lands are marsh, and the upper are sand. The
+Conqueror, says the _Saxon Chronicle_, "so much loved the high deer as
+if he had been their father." The first of the Norman kings, and his
+immediate successors, would not be very scrupulous about the
+depopulation of a district if the presence of men interfered with their
+pleasures. But Thierry thinks that the extreme severity of the Forest
+Laws was chiefly enforced to prevent the assemblage of Saxons in those
+vast wooded spaces which were now included in the royal demesnes.
+
+All these extensive tracts were, more or less, retreats for the
+dispossessed and the discontented. The Normans, under pretence of
+preserving the stag and the hare, could tyrannize with a pretended
+legality over the dwellers in these secluded places; and thus William
+might have driven the Saxon people of Ytene to emigrate, and have
+destroyed their cottages, as much from a possible fear of their
+association as from his own love of "the high deer." Whatever was the
+motive, there were devastation and misery. _Domesday_ shows that in the
+district of the New Forest certain manors were afforested after the
+Conquest; cultivated portions, in which the Sabbath bell was heard.
+William of Jumièges, the Conqueror's own chaplain, says, speaking of the
+deaths of Richard and Rufus: "There were many who held that the two sons
+of William the King perished by the judgment of God in these woods,
+since for the _extension_ of the forest he had destroyed many inhabited
+_places (villas) and churches within its circuit_." It appears that in
+the time of Edward the Confessor about seventeen thousand acres of this
+district had been afforested; but that the cultivated parts remaining
+had then an estimated value of three hundred and sixty-three pounds.
+After the afforestation by the Conqueror, the cultivated parts yielded
+only one hundred and twenty-nine pounds.
+
+The grants of land to huntsmen (_venatores_) are common in Hampshire, as
+in other parts of England; and it appears to have been the duty of an
+especial officer to stall the deer--that is, to drive them with his
+troop of followers from all parts to the centre of a circle, gradually
+contracting, where they were to stand for the onslaught of the hunters.
+In the survey many parks are enumerated. The word hay (_haia_), which is
+still found in some of our counties, meant an enclosed part of a wood to
+which the deer were driven.
+
+In the seventeenth century this mode of hunting upon a large scale, by
+stalling the deer--this mimic war--was common in Scotland. Taylor,
+called the "Water Poet," was present at such a gathering, and has
+described the scene with a minuteness which may help us to form a
+picture of the Norman hunters: "Five or six hundred men do rise early in
+the morning, and they do disperse themselves divers ways; and seven,
+eight, or ten miles' compass, they do bring or chase in the deer in many
+herds--two, three, or four hundred in a herd--to such a place as the
+noblemen shall appoint them; then, when the day is come, the lords and
+gentlemen of their companies do ride or go to the said places, sometimes
+wading up to the middle through bourns and rivers; and then they being
+come to the place, do lie down on the ground till those foresaid scouts,
+which are called the 'tinkhelt,' do bring down the deer. Then, after we
+had stayed there three hours or thereabouts, we might perceive the deer
+appear on the hills round about us--their heads making a show like a
+wood--which being followed close by the tinkhelt, are chased down into
+the valley where we lay; then all the valley on each side being waylaid
+with a hundred couple of strong Irish greyhounds, they are let loose as
+occasion serves upon the herd of deer, that with dogs, guns, arrows,
+dirks, and daggers, in the space of two hours fourscore fat deer were
+slain."
+
+_Domesday_ affords indubitable proof of the culture of the vine in
+England. There are thirty-eight entries of vineyards in the southern and
+eastern counties. Many gardens are enumerated. Mills are registered with
+great distinctness; for they were invariably the property of the lords
+of the manors, lay or ecclesiastical; and the tenants could only grind
+at the lord's mill. Wherever we find a mill specified in _Domesday_,
+there we generally find a mill now. At Arundel, for example, we see what
+rent was paid by a mill; and there still stands at Arundel an old mill
+whose foundations might have been laid before the Conquest. Salt works
+are repeatedly mentioned. They were either works upon the coast for
+procuring marine salt by evaporation, or were established in the
+localities of inland salt springs. The salt works of Cheshire were the
+most numerous, and were called "wiches." Hence the names of some places,
+such as Middlewich and Nantwich. The revenue from mines offers some
+curious facts. No mention of tin is to be found in Cornwall. The ravages
+of Saxon and Dane, and the constant state of hostility between races,
+had destroyed much of that mineral industry which existed in the Roman
+times. A century and a half after the Conquest had elapsed before the
+Norman kings had a revenue from the Cornish iron mines. Iron forges were
+registered, and lumps of hammered iron are stated to have been paid as
+rent. Lead works are found only upon the king's demesne in Derbyshire.
+
+Fisheries are important sources of rent. Payments of eels are enumerated
+by hundreds and thousands. Herrings appear to have been consumed in vast
+numbers in the monasteries. Sandwich yielded forty thousand annually to
+Christ Church in Canterbury. Kent, Sussex, and Norfolk appear to have
+been the great seats of this fishery. The Severn and the Wye had their
+salmon fisheries, whose produce king, bishop, and lord were glad to
+receive as rent. There was a weir for Thames fish at Mortlake. The
+religious houses had their _piscinae_ and _vivaria_--their stews and
+fish-pools.
+
+_Domesday_ affords us many curious glimpses of the condition of the
+people in cities and burghs. For the most part they seem to have
+preserved their ancient customs. London, Winchester, and several other
+important places are not mentioned in the record. We shall very briefly
+notice a few indications of the state of society. Dover was an important
+place, for it supplied the king with twenty ships for fifteen days in a
+year, each vessel having twenty-one men on board. Dover could therefore
+command the service of four hundred and twenty mariners. Every burgess
+in Lewes compounded for a payment of twenty shillings when the king
+fitted out a fleet to keep the sea.
+
+At Oxford the king could command the services of twenty burgesses
+whenever he went on an expedition; or they might compound for their
+services by a payment of twenty pounds. Oxford was a considerable place
+at this period. It contained upward of seven hundred houses; but four
+hundred and seventy-eight were so desolated that they could pay no dues.
+Hereford was the king's demesne; and the honor of being his immediate
+tenants appears to have been qualified by considerable exactions. When
+he went to war, and when he went to hunt, men were to be ready for his
+service. If the wife of a burgher brewed his ale, he paid tenpence. The
+smith who kept a forge had to make nails from the king's iron. In
+Hereford, as in other cities, there were moneyers, or coiners. There
+were seven at Hereford, who were bound to coin as much of the king's
+silver into pence as he demanded. At Cambridge the burgesses were
+compelled to lend the sheriff their ploughs. Leicester was bound to find
+the king a hawk or to pay ten pounds; while a sumpter or baggage-horse
+was compounded for at one pound.
+
+At Warwick there were two hundred and twenty-five houses on which the
+king and his barons claimed tax; and nineteen houses belonged to free
+burgesses. The dues were paid in honey and corn. In Shrewsbury there
+were two hundred and fifty-two houses belonging to burgesses; but the
+burgesses complained that they were called upon to pay as much tax as in
+the time of the Confessor, although Earl Roger had taken possession of
+extensive lands for building his castle. Chester was a port in which the
+king had his dues upon every cargo, and where he had fines whenever a
+trader was detected in using a false measure. The fraudulent female
+brewer of adulterated beer was placed in the cucking-stool, a
+degradation afterward reserved for scolds.
+
+This city has a more particular notice as to laws and customs in the
+time of the Confessor than any other place in the survey. Particular
+care seems to have been taken against fire. The owner of a house on fire
+not only paid a fine to the king, but forfeited two shillings to his
+nearest neighbor. Marten skins appear to have been a great article of
+trade in this city. No stranger could cart goods within a particular
+part of the city without being subjected to a forfeiture of four
+shillings or two oxen to the bishop. We find, as might be expected, no
+mention of that peculiar architecture of Chester called the "Rows,"
+which has so puzzled antiquarian writers. The probability is that in a
+place so exposed to the attacks of the Welsh they were intended for
+defence. The low streets in which the Rows are situated have the road
+considerably beneath them, like the cutting of a railway; and from the
+covered way of the Rows an enemy in the road beneath might be assailed
+with great advantage.
+
+In the civil wars of Charles I the possession of the Rows by the
+Royalists, or Parliamentary troops, was fiercely contested. Of their
+antiquity there is no doubt. They probably belong to the same period as
+the Castle. The wall of Chester and the bridge were kept in repair,
+according to the survey, by the service of one laborer for every hide of
+land in the county. It is to be remarked that in all the cities and
+burghs the inhabitants are described as belonging to the king or a
+bishop or a baron. Many, even in the most privileged places, were
+attached to particular manors.
+
+The _Domesday_ survey shows that in some towns there was an admixture of
+Norman and English burgesses; and it is clear that they were so settled
+after the Conquest, for a distinction is made between the old customary
+dues of the place and those the foreigner should pay. The foreigner had
+to bear a small addition to the ancient charge. No doubt the Norman
+clung to many of the habits of his own land; and the Saxon unwillingly
+parted with those of the locality in which his fathers had lived. But
+their manners were gradually assimilated. The Normans grew fond of the
+English beer, and the English adopted the Norman dress.
+
+The survey of 1085 affords the most complete evidence of the extent to
+which the Normans had possessed themselves of the landed property of the
+country. The ancient demesnes of the crown consisted of fourteen hundred
+and twenty-two manors. But the king had confiscated the properties of
+Godwin, Harold, Algar, Edwin, Morcar, and other great Saxon earls; and
+his revenues thus became enormous. Ordericus Vitalis states, with a
+minuteness that seems to imply the possession of official information,
+that "the king himself received daily one-and-sixty pounds thirty
+thousand pence and three farthings sterling money from his regular
+revenues in England alone, independently of presents, fines for
+offences, and many other matters which constantly enrich a royal
+treasury." The numbers of manors held by the favorites of the Conqueror
+would appear incredible, if we did not know that these great nobles were
+grasping and unscrupulous; indulging the grossest sensuality with a
+pretence of refinement; limited in their perpetration of injustice only
+by the extent of their power; and so blinded by their pride as to call
+their plunder their inheritance. Ten Norman chiefs who held under the
+crown are enumerated in the survey as possessing two thousand eight
+hundred and twenty manors.
+
+This enormous transfer of property did not take place without the most
+formidable resistance, but when a period of tranquillity arrived came
+the era of castle-building. The Saxons had their rude fortresses and
+intrenched earthworks. But solid walls of stone, for defence and
+residence, were to become the local seats of regal and baronial
+domination. _Domesday_ contains notices of forty-nine castles; but only
+one is mentioned as having existed in the time of Edward the Confessor.
+Some which the Conqueror is known to have built are not noticed in the
+survey. Among these is the White Tower of London. The site of Rochester
+Castle is mentioned. These two buildings are associated by our old
+antiquaries as being erected by the same architect. Stow says: "I find
+in a fair register-book of the acts of the bishops of Rochester, set
+down by Edmund of Hadenham, that William I, surnamed Conqueror, builded
+the Tower of London, to wit, the great white and square tower there,
+about the year of Christ 1078, appointing Gundulph, then Bishop of
+Rochester, to be principal surveyor and overseer of that work, who was
+for that time lodged in the house of Edmere, a burghess of London." The
+chapel in the White Tower is a remarkable specimen of early Norman
+architecture.
+
+The keep of Rochester Castle, so picturesquely situated on the Medway,
+was not a mere fortress without domestic convenience. Here we still look
+upon the remains of sculptured columns and arches. We see where there
+were spacious fireplaces in the walls, and how each of four floors was
+served with water by a well. The third story contains the most
+ornamental portions of the building. In the _Domesday_ enumeration of
+castles, we have repeated mention of houses destroyed and lands wasted,
+for their erection. At Cambridge twenty-seven houses are recorded to
+have been thus demolished. This was the fortress to overawe the fen
+districts. At Lincoln a hundred and sixty-six mansions were destroyed,
+"on account of the castle."
+
+In the ruins of all these castles we may trace their general plan. There
+were an outer court, an inner court, and a keep. Round the whole area
+was a wall, with parapets and loopholes. The entrance was defended by an
+outwork or barbacan. The prodigious strength of the keep is the most
+remarkable characteristic of these fortresses; and thus many of these
+towers remain, stripped of every interior fitting by time, but as
+untouched in their solid construction as the mounts upon which they
+stand. We ascend the steep steps which lead to the ruined keep of
+Carisbrook, with all our historical associations directed to the
+confinement of Charles I in this castle. But this fortress was
+registered in _Domesday Book_. Five centuries and a half had elapsed
+between William I and James I. The Norman keep was out of harmony with
+the principles of the seventeenth century, as much as the feudal
+prerogatives to which Charles unhappily clung.
+
+We have thus enumerated some of the more prominent statistics of this
+ancient survey, which are truly as much matter of history as the events
+of this beginning of the Norman period. There is one more feature of
+this _Domesday Book_ which we cannot pass over. The number of parish
+churches in England in the eleventh century will, in some degree,
+furnish an indication of the amount of religious instruction. By some
+most extraordinary exaggeration, the number of these churches has been
+stated to be above forty-five thousand. In _Domesday_ the number
+enumerated is a little above seventeen hundred. No doubt this
+enumeration is extremely imperfect. Very nearly half of all the churches
+put down are found in Lincolnshire, Norfolk, and Suffolk. The
+_Register_, in some cases, gives the amount of land with which the
+church was endowed. Bosham, in Sussex, the estate of Harold, had, in the
+time of King Edward, a hundred and twelve hides of land. At the date of
+the survey it had sixty-five hides. This was an enormous endowment. Some
+churches had five acres only; some fifty; some a hundred. Some are
+without land altogether. But, whether the endowment be large or small,
+here is the evidence of a church planted upon the same foundation as the
+monarchy, that of territorial possessions.
+
+The politic ruler of England had, in the completion of _Domesday Book_,
+possessed himself of the most perfect instrument for the profitable
+administration of his government. He was no longer working in the dark,
+whether he called out soldiers or levied taxes. He had carried through a
+great measure, rapidly, and with a minuteness which puts to shame some
+of our clumsy modern statistics. But the Conqueror did not want his
+books for the gratification of official curiosity. He went to work when
+he knew how many tenants-in-chief he could command, and how many men
+they could bring into the field. He instituted the great feudal
+principle of knight-service. His ordinance is in these words: "We
+command that all earls, barons, knights, sergeants, and freemen be
+always provided with horses and arms as they ought, and that they be
+always ready to perform to us their whole service, in manner as they owe
+it to us of right for their fees and tenements, and as we have appointed
+to them by the common council of our whole kingdom, and as we have
+granted to them in fee with right of inheritance."
+
+These words, "in fee, with right of inheritance," leave no doubt that
+the great vassals of the crown were absolute proprietors, and that all
+their subvassals had the same right of holding in perpetuity. The
+estate, however, reverted to the crown if the race of the original
+feoffee became extinct, and in cases, also, of felony and treason. When
+Alain of Bretagne, who commanded the rear of the army at the battle of
+Hastings, and who had received four hundred and forty-two manors, bowed
+before the King at Salisbury, at the great council in 1085, and swore to
+be true to him against all manner of men, he also brought with him his
+principal _land-sittende_ men (land-owners), who also bowed before the
+King and became his men. They had previously taken the oath of fealty to
+Alain of Bretagne, and engaged to perform all the customs and services
+due to him for their lands and tenements. Alain, and his men, were
+proprietors, but with very unequal rights. Alain, by his tenure, was
+bound to provide for the King as many armed horsemen as the vast extent
+of his estates demanded. But all those whom he had enfeoffed, or made
+proprietors, upon his four hundred and forty-two manors, were each bound
+to contribute a proportionate number. When the free service of forty
+days was to be enforced, the great earl had only to send round to his
+vassals, and the men were at his command.
+
+By this organization, which was universal throughout the kingdom, sixty
+thousand cavalry could, with little delay, be called into the field.
+Those who held by this military service had their allotments divided
+into so many knights' fees, and each knight's fee was to furnish one
+mounted and armed soldier. The great vassals retained a portion of their
+land as their demesnes, having tenants who paid rents and performed
+services not military. But, under any circumstances, the vassal of the
+crown was bound to perform his whole free service with men and horses
+and arms. It is perfectly clear that this wonderful organization
+rendered the whole system of government one great confederacy, in which
+the small proprietors, tenants, and villeins had not a chance of
+independence; and that their condition could only be ameliorated by
+those gradual changes which result from a long intercourse between the
+strong and the weak, in which power relaxes its severity and becomes
+protection.
+
+In the ordinance in which the King commanded "free service" he also
+says, "we will that all the freemen of the kingdom possess their lands
+in peace, free from all tallage and unjust exaction." This, unhappily
+for the freemen, was little more than a theory under the Norman kings.
+There were various modes of making legal exaction the source of the
+grossest injustice. When the heir of an estate entered into possession
+he had to pay a "relief," or _heriot_, to the lord. This soon became a
+source of oppression in the crown; and enormous sums were exacted from
+the great vassals. The lord was not more sparing of his men. He had
+another mode of extortion. He demanded "aid" on many occasions, such as
+the marriage of his eldest daughter, or when he made his eldest son a
+knight. The estate of inheritance, which looks so generous and equitable
+an arrangement, was a perpetual grievance; for the possessor could
+neither transmit his property by will nor transfer it by sale. The heir,
+however remote in blood, was the only legitimate successor.
+
+The feudal obligation to the lord was, in many other ways, a fruitful
+source of tyranny, which lasted up to the time of the Stuarts. If the
+heir were a minor, the lord entered into possession of the estate
+without any accountability. If it descended to a female, the lord could
+compel her to marry according to his will, or could prevent her
+marrying. During a long period all these harassing obligations connected
+with property were upheld. The crown and the nobles were equally
+interested in their enforcement; and there can be little doubt that,
+though the great vassals sometimes suffered under these feudal
+obligations to the king, the inferior tenants had a much greater amount
+of oppression to endure at the hands of their immediate lords. But if
+the freemen were oppressed in the tenure of their property, we can
+scarcely expect that the landless man had not much more to suffer. If he
+committed an offence in the Saxon time, he paid a "mulct"; if in the
+Norman, he was subjected to an _amerciament_. His whole personal estate
+was at the mercy of the lord.
+
+Having thus obtained a general notion of the system of society
+established in less than twenty years after the Conquest, we see that
+there was nothing wanting to complete the most entire subjection of the
+great body of the nation. What had been wanting was accomplished in the
+practical working out of the theory that the entire land of the country
+belonged to the King. It was now established that every tenant-in-chief
+should do homage to the king; that every superior tenant should do
+homage to his lord; that every villein should be the bondman of the
+free; and that every slave should, without any property however limited
+and insecure, be the absolute chattel of some master. The whole system
+was connected with military service. This was the feudal system. There
+was some resemblance to it in parts of the Saxon organization; but under
+that organization there was so much of freedom in the allodial or free
+tenure of land that a great deal of other freedom went with it. The
+casting-off of the chains of feudality was the labor of six centuries.
+
+
+
+
+DECLINE OF THE MOORISH POWER IN SPAIN
+
+GROWTH AND DECAY OF THE ALMORAVIDE AND ALMOHADE DYNASTIES
+
+A.D. 1086-1214
+
+S.A. DUNHAM
+
+
+(During the early part of the eleventh century the western caliphate,
+which with its splendid capital of Cordova had flourished for almost
+three hundred years, entered upon a decline that was the beginning of
+its final dissolution. By A.D. 1020 the local governors openly asserted
+their independence of Cordova and assumed the title of kings.
+Conspicuous among them was Mahomet ben Ismail ben Abid, the _wali_ of
+Seville.
+
+While these petty rulers were determined to renounce allegiance to
+Cordova, it was resolved at that capital to elect a sovereign to subdue
+them and restore the ancient splendor of the empire. The choice fell
+upon Gehwar ben Mahomet, who soon established a degree of tranquillity
+and commercial prosperity unknown for many years. But he failed to
+reëstablish the supremacy of Cordova, which capital Mahomet of Seville
+was preparing to invade when he died. His son, Mahomet Almoateded,
+having subdued Southern Andalusia, became the ally of Mahomet, son and
+successor of Gehwar on the throne of Cordova; but he betrayed the latter
+under pretence of aiding him against his enemies, and usurped the
+sovereignty.
+
+On the death of Mahomet Almoateded, his son Mahomet succeeded him at
+Cordova. He was already King of Seville, and as he soon occupied many
+other cities he became the most independent and powerful sovereign of
+Mahometan Spain. His chief rival, Yahia Alkadia, King of Toledo, was so
+contemptible to his people that they expelled him. He appealed for aid
+to Alfonso VI, King of Leon [Alfonso of Castile]; but that Christian
+soldier was persuaded by Mahomet to oppose, instead of assisting, Yahia.
+The latter was restored to his throne by the King of Badajoz, but
+Alfonso invested Toledo and, after a three-years' siege, reduced the
+city, in A.D. 1085. In the history of the events directly following the
+capitulation it is shown how costly to himself was the alliance of
+Mahomet with Alfonso, and how it played its part in the coming of his
+coreligionists from Africa to his assistance, and finally, as it proved,
+to his own undoing and the supplanting of the power he represented in
+the Mahometan government of Spain.)
+
+
+The fall of Toledo, however it might have been foreseen by the
+Mahometans, filled them with equal dismay and indignation. As Mahomet
+was too formidable to be openly assailed, they turned their
+vociferations of anger against his _hagib_, whom they accused of
+betraying the faith of Islam. Alarmed at the universal outcry, Mahomet
+was not sorry that he could devolve the heavy load of responsibility on
+the shoulders of his minister. The latter fled; but though he procured a
+temporary asylum from several princes, he was at length seized by the
+emissaries of his offended master; was brought, first to Cordova, next
+to Seville; confined within the walls of a dungeon; and soon beheaded by
+the royal hand of Mahomet. Thus was a servant of the King sacrificed for
+no other reason than that he had served that King too well.
+
+The conquest of Toledo was far from satisfying the ambition of Alfonso:
+he rapidly seized on the fortresses of Madrid, Maqueda, Guadalaxara, and
+established his dominion on both banks of the Tagus. Mahomet now began
+seriously to repent his treaty with the Christian, and to tremble even
+for his own possessions. He vainly endeavored to divert his ally from
+the projects of aggrandizement which that ally had evidently formed. The
+kings of Badajoz and Saragossa became tributaries to the latter; nay, if
+any reliance is to be placed on either Christian or Arabic
+historians,[29] the King of Seville himself was subjected to the same
+humiliation. However this may have been, Mahomet saw that unless he
+leagued himself with those whose subjugation had hitherto been his
+constant object--the princes of his faith--his and their destruction was
+inevitable. The magnitude of the danger compelled him to solicit their
+alliance.
+
+[Footnote 29: Condé gives the translation of two letters--one from
+Alfonso to Mahomet, distinguished for a tone of superiority and even of
+arrogance, which could arise only from the confidence felt by the writer
+in his own strength; the other from Mahomet to Alfonso, containing a
+defiance. The latter begins:
+
+"To the proud enemy of Allah, Alfonso ben Sancho, who calls himself lord
+of both nations and both laws. May God confound his arrogance, and
+prosper those who walk in the right way!"
+
+One passage of the same letter says: "Fatigued with war, we were willing
+to offer thee an annual tribute; but this does not satisfy thee: thou
+wishest us to deliver into thine hands our towns and fortresses; but are
+we thy subjects, that thou makest such demands, or hast thou ever
+subdued us? Thine injustice has roused us from our lethargy," etc.]
+
+As the King of Saragossa was too much in fear of the Christians to enter
+into any league against them, and as the one of Valencia (Yahia) reigned
+only at the pleasure of Alfonso, the sovereigns of Badajoz, Almeria, and
+Granada were the only powers on whose coöperation he could calculate (he
+had annihilated the authority of several petty kings). He invited those
+princes to send their representatives to Seville, to consult as to the
+measures necessary to protect their threatened independence. The
+invitation was readily accepted. On the day appointed, Mahomet, with his
+son Al Raxid and a considerable number of his _wazirs_ and _cadis_, was
+present at the deliberations. The danger was so imminent--the force of
+the Christians was so augmented, and that of the Moslems so weakened--
+that such resistance as Mahometan Spain alone could offer seemed
+hopeless. With this conviction in their hearts, two of the most
+influential cadis proposed an appeal to the celebrated African
+conqueror, Yussef ben Taxfin, whose arm alone seemed able to preserve
+the faith of Islam in the Peninsula.
+
+The proposal was received with general applause by all present: they did
+not make the very obvious reflection that when a nation admits into its
+bosom an ally more powerful than itself, it admits at the same time a
+conqueror. The wali of Malaga alone, Abdallah ben Zagut, had courage to
+oppose the dangerous embassy under consideration: "You mean to call in
+the aid of the Almoravides! Are you ignorant that these fierce
+inhabitants of the desert resemble their own native tigers? Suffer them
+not, I beseech you, to enter the fertile plains of Andulasia and
+Granada! Doubtless they would break the iron sceptre which Alfonso
+intends for us; but you would still be doomed to wear the chains of
+slavery. Do you not know that Yussef has taken all the cities of
+Almagreb; that he has subdued the powerful tribes of the east and west;
+that he has everywhere substituted despotism for liberty and
+independence?" The aged Zagut spoke in vain: he was even accused of
+being a secret partisan of the Christian; and the embassy was decreed.
+
+But Zagut was not the only one who foresaw the catastrophe to which that
+embassy must inevitably lead: Al Raxid shared the same prophetic
+feeling. In reply to his father, who, after the separation of the
+assembly, expatiated on the absolute necessity of soliciting the
+alliance of Aben Taxfin as the only measure capable of saving the rest
+of Mahometan Spain from the yoke of Alfonso, he said: "This Aben Taxfin,
+who has subdued all that he pleased, will serve us as he has already
+served the people of Almagreb and Mauritania--he will expel us from our
+country!"
+
+"Anything," rejoined the father, "rather than Andalusia should become
+the prey of the Christians! Dost thou wish the Mussulmans to curse me? I
+would rather become an humble shepherd, a driver of Yussef's camels,
+than reign dependent on these Christian dogs! But my trust is in Allah."
+
+"May Allah protect both thee and thy people!" replied Al Raxid,
+mournfully, who saw that the die of fate was cast.
+
+The course of this history must be interrupted for a moment, while the
+origin and exploits of this formidable African are recorded.
+
+Beyond the chain of Mount Atlas, in the deserts of ancient Getulia,
+dwelt two tribes of Arabian descent--both, probably, of the greater one
+of Zanhaga, so illustrious in Arabian history. At what time they had
+been expelled, or had voluntarily exiled themselves, from their native
+Yemen, they knew not; but tradition taught them that they had been
+located in the African deserts from ages immemorial. Their life was
+passed under the tent; their only possessions were their camels and
+their freedom. Yahia ben Ibrahim, belonging to one of these tribes--that
+of Gudala--made the pilgrimage of Mecca. On his return through the
+province of Cairwan he became acquainted with Abu-Amram, a famous
+_alfaqui_, originally of Fez. Being questioned by his new friend as to
+the religion and manners of his countrymen, he replied that they were
+sunk in ignorance, both from their isolated situation in the desert and
+from their want of teachers; he added, however, that they were strangers
+to cruelty, and that they would be willing enough to receive instruction
+from any quarter. He even entreated the alfaqui to allow some one of his
+disciples to accompany him into his native country; but none of those
+disciples was willing to undertake so long and perilous a journey, and
+it was not without considerable difficulty that Abdallah ben Yassim, the
+disciple of another alfaqui, was persuaded to accompany the patriotic
+Yahia.
+
+Abdallah was one of those ruling minds which, fortunately for the peace
+of society, nature so seldom produces. Seeing his enthusiastic reception
+by the tribe of Gudala, and the influence he was sure of maintaining
+over it, he formed the design of founding a sovereignty in the heart of
+these vast regions. Under the pretext that to diffuse a holy religion
+and useful knowledge was among the most imperative of duties, he
+prevailed on his obedient disciples to make war on the kindred tribe of
+Lamtuna. That tribe submitted, acknowledging his spiritual authority,
+and zealously assisted him in his great purpose of gaining proselytes by
+the sword. His ambition naturally increased with his success: in a short
+time he had reduced, in a similar manner, the isolated tribes around
+him. To his valiant followers of Lamtuna he now gave the name of
+_Muraditins_, or _Almoravides_,[30] which signifies men consecrated to
+the service of God.
+
+[Footnote 30: This Moslem dynasty, founded about 1050, ruled in Africa,
+and afterward in Spain, until 1147, when it was overthrown and succeeded
+by that of the Almohades.]
+
+The whole country of Darah was gradually subdued by this new apostle,
+and his authority was acknowledged over a region extensive enough to
+form a respectable kingdom. But though he exercised all the rights of
+sovereignty, he prudently abstained from assuming the title: he left to
+the emir of Lamtuna the ostensible exercise of temporal power; and when,
+in A.D. 1058, that emir fell in battle, he nominated Abu-Bekr ben Omar
+to the vacant dignity. His own death, which was that of a warrior, left
+Abu-Bekr in possession of an undivided sovereignty. The power and
+consequently the reputation of the emir, spread far and wide, and
+numbers flocked from distant provinces to share in the advantages of
+religion and plunder. His native plains were now too narrow for the
+ambition of Abu-Bekr, who crossed the chain of Mount Atlas, and fixed
+his residence in the city of Agmat, between those mountains and the sea.
+
+But even this place was soon too confined for his increased subjects,
+and he looked round for a site on which he might lay the foundations of
+a great city, the destined metropolis of a great empire. One was at
+length found; and the city of Morocco began to rear its head from the
+valley of Eylana. Before, however, his great work was half completed, he
+received intelligence that the tribe of Gudala had declared a deadly war
+against that of Lamtuna; and that the ruin of one at least of the
+hostile people was to be apprehended. As he belonged to the latter, he
+naturally trembled for the fate of his kindred; and at the head of his
+cavalry he departed for his native deserts, leaving the superintendence
+of the buildings and the command of the army, during his absence, to his
+cousin, Yussef ben Taxfin.
+
+The person and character of Yussef are drawn in the most favorable
+colors by the Arabian writers. We are told that his stature was tall and
+noble, his countenance prepossessing, his eye dark and piercing, his
+beard long, his tone of voice harmonious, his whole frame, which no
+sickness ever assailed, strong, robust, and familiar with fatigue; that
+his mind corresponded with his outward appearance, his generosity, his
+care of the poor, his sobriety, his justice, his religious zeal, yet
+freedom from intolerance, rendering him the admiration of foreigners and
+the love of his own people. But whatever were his other virtues, it will
+be seen that gratitude, honor, and good faith were not among the number.
+Scarcely had his kinsman left the city, than, in pursuance of the design
+he had formed of usurping the supreme authority, he began to win the
+affection of the troops, partly by his gifts and partly by that winning
+affability of manner which he could easily assume. How well he succeeded
+will soon appear. Nor was his success in war less agreeable to so fierce
+and martial a people as the Almoravides. The Berbers who inhabited the
+defiles of Mount Atlas, and who, animated by the spirit of independence
+so characteristic of mountaineers, endeavored to vindicate their natural
+liberty, were quickly subdued by him.
+
+But his policy was still superior. He had long loved, or at least long
+aspired to the hope of marrying, the beautiful Zainab, sister of
+Abu-Bekr; but the fear of a repulse from the proud chief of his family
+had caused him to smother his inclination. He now disdained to
+supplicate for that chief's consent: he married the lady, and from that
+moment proceeded boldly in his projects of ambition. Having put the
+finishing touch to his magnificent city of Morocco, he transferred
+thither the seat of his empire; and by the encouragement he afforded to
+individuals of all nations who chose to settle there, he soon filled it
+with a prosperous and numerous population. The augmentation of his army
+was his next great object; and so well did he succeed in it that on his
+departure, in a hostile expedition against Fez, he found his troops
+exceeded one hundred thousand. With so formidable a force, he had little
+difficulty in rapidly extending his conquests.
+
+Yussef had just completed the subjugation of Fez when Abu-Bekr returned
+from the desert and encamped in the vicinity of Agmat. He was soon made
+acquainted--probably common report had acquainted him long before--with
+the usurpation of his kinsman. With a force so far inferior to his
+rival's, and still more with the conviction that the hearts of the
+people were weaned from him, he might well hesitate as to the course he
+should adopt. His greatest mortification was to hear his own horsemen,
+whom curiosity drew into Morocco, loud in the praises of Yussef, whose
+liberality to the army was the theme of universal admiration, and whose
+service for that reason many avowed their intention of embracing. He now
+feared that his power was at an end, yet he resolved to have an
+interview with his cousin.
+
+The two chiefs met about half-way between Morocco and Agmat,[31] and
+after a formal salutation took their seats on the same carpet. The
+appearance of Yussef's formidable guard, the alacrity with which he was
+obeyed, and the grandeur which surrounded him convinced Abu-Bekr that
+the throne of the usurper was too firmly established to be shaken. The
+poor emir, so far from demanding the restitution of his rights, durst
+not even utter one word of complaint; on the contrary, he pretended that
+he had long renounced empire, and that his only wish was to pass the
+remainder of his days in the retirement of the desert. With equal
+hypocrisy Yussef humbly thanked him for his abdication; the sheiks and
+walis were summoned to witness the renewed declaration of the emir,
+after which the two princes separated. The following day, however,
+Abu-Bekr received a magnificent present from Yussef,[32] who, indeed,
+continued to send him one every year to the period of his death.
+
+[Footnote 31: The distance is about ten or twelve leagues.]
+
+[Footnote 32: This present is made to consist of twenty-five thousand
+crowns of gold, seventy horses of the best breed, all splendidly
+accoutred, one hundred and fifty mules, one hundred magnificent turbans
+with as many costly habits, four hundred common turbans, two hundred
+white mantles, one thousand pieces of rich stuffs, two hundred pieces of
+fine linen, one hundred and fifty black slaves, twenty beautiful young
+maidens, with a considerable quantity of perfumes, corn, and cattle.
+Such a gift was worthy of royalty. In a similar situation a modern
+English sovereign would probably have sent--one hundred pounds.]
+
+Yussef, who, though he had refused to receive the title of _almumenin_,
+which he considered as properly belonging to the Caliph of the East, had
+just exchanged his humble one of emir for those of _almuzlemin_, or
+prince of the believers, and of _nazaradin_, or defender of the faith,
+when the letters of Mahomet reached him. A similar application from
+Omar, King of Badajoz, he had disregarded, not because he was
+indifferent to the glory of serving his religion, still less to the
+advantage of extending his conquests, but because he had not then
+sufficiently consolidated his power. Now, however, he was in peaceful
+possession of an extended empire, and he assembled his chiefs to hear
+their sentiments on an expedition which he had resolved to undertake.
+All immediately exclaimed that war should be undertaken in defence of
+the tottering throne of Islam. Before, however, he returned a final
+answer to the King of Seville, he insisted that the fortress of
+Algeziras should be placed in his hands, on the pretence that if fortune
+were unpropitious he should have some place to which he might retreat.
+That Mahomet should have been so blind as to not perceive the designs
+involved in the insidious proposal is almost enough to make one agree
+with the Arabic historians that destiny had decreed he should fall by
+his own measures. The place was not only surrendered to the artful Moor,
+but Mahomet himself went to Morocco to hasten the departure of Yussef.
+He was assured of speedy succor and induced to return. He was soon
+followed by the ambitious African, at the head of a mighty armament.
+
+Alfonso was besieging Saragossa, which he had every expectation of
+reducing, when intelligence reached him of Yussef's disembarkation. He
+resolved to meet the approaching storm. At the head of all the forces he
+could muster he advanced toward Andalusia, and encountered Yussef on the
+plains of Zalaca, between Badajoz and Merida. As the latter was a strict
+observer of the outward forms of his religion, he summoned the Christian
+King by letter to embrace the faith of the Prophet or consent to pay an
+annual tribute or prepare for immediate battle. "I am told," added the
+writer, "that thou wishest for vessels to carry the war into my kingdom;
+I spare thee the trouble of the voyage. Allah brings thee into my
+presence that I may punish thy presumption and pride!" The indignant
+Christian trampled the letter under foot, and at the same time said to
+the messenger: "Tell thy master what thou hast seen! Tell him also not
+to hide himself during the action: let him meet me face to face!" The
+two armies engaged the 13th day of the moon Regeb, A.H. 479.[33]
+
+[Footnote 33: October 23, A.D. 1086.]
+
+The onset of Alfonso at the head of the Christian cavalry was so fierce
+that the ranks of the Almoravides were thrown into confusion; not less
+successful was Sancho, King of Navarre, against the Andalusians, who
+retreated toward Badajoz. But the troops of Seville kept the field, and
+fought with desperate valor: they would, however, have given way, had
+not Yussef at this critical moment advanced with his reserve and his own
+guard, consisting of his bravest troops, and assailed the Christians in
+the rear and flanks. This unexpected movement decided the fortune of the
+day. Alfonso was severely wounded and compelled to retreat, but not
+until nightfall, nor until he had displayed a valor worthy of the
+greatest heroes. Though his own loss was severe, amounting, according to
+the Arabians, to twenty-four thousand men, that of the enemy could
+scarcely be inferior, when we consider that this victory had no result;
+Yussef was evidently too much weakened to profit by it.
+
+Not long after the battle, Yussef being called to Africa by the death of
+a son, the command of the Almoravides devolved on Syr ben Abu-Bekr, the
+ablest of his generals. That general advanced northward, and seized some
+insignificant fortresses; but the advantage was but temporary, and was
+more than counterbalanced by the disasters of the following year. The
+King of Saragossa, Abu-Giafar, had hoped that the defeat of Zalaca would
+prevent the Christians from attacking him; but that of his allies, the
+Mahometan princes, in the neighborhood, and the taking of Huesca by the
+King of Navarre, convinced him how fallacious was his fancied security.
+Seeing that no advantage whatever had accrued from his former
+expedition, Yussef now proclaimed the Alhiged, or holy war, and invited
+all the Andalusian princes to join him. In A.D. 1088, he again
+disembarked at Algeziras and joined the confederates. But this present
+demonstration of force proved as useless as the preceding: it ended in
+nothing; owing partly to the dissensions of Mahometans, and partly to
+the activity of the Christians, who not only rendered abortive the
+measures of the enemy, but gained some signal advantages over them.
+Yussef was forced to retreat on Almeida. Whether through the distrust of
+the Mahometan princes, who appear to have penetrated his intention of
+subjecting them to his empire, or through his apprehension of Alfonso,
+he again returned to Africa, to procure new and more considerable
+levies. In A.D. 1091 he landed a third time at Algeziras, not so much
+with the view of humbling the Christian King as of executing the
+perfidious design he had so long harbored. For form's sake, indeed, he
+invested Toledo, but he could have entertained no expectation of
+reducing it; and when he perceived that the Andalusian princes refused
+to join him, he eagerly left that city, and proceeded to secure far
+dearer and easier interests: he openly threw off the mask, and commenced
+his career of spoliation.
+
+The King of Granada, Abdallah ben Balkin, was the first victim to
+African perfidy. In the conviction that he must be overwhelmed if
+resistance were offered, he left his city to welcome Yussef. His
+submission was vain: he was instantly loaded with chains, and with his
+family sent to Agmat. Timur ben Balkin, brother of Abdallah, was in the
+same violent manner despoiled of Malaga. Mahomet now perceived the
+grievous error which he had committed, and the prudent foresight of his
+son Al Raxid. "Did not I tell thee," said the latter, mournfully, "what
+the consequences would be; that we should be driven from our palace and
+country?"
+
+"Thou wert indeed a true prophet," replied the self-accused father; "but
+what power could avert the decrees of fate?"
+
+It seemed as if fate had indeed resolved that this well-meaning but
+misguided prince should fall by his own obstinacy; for though his son
+advised him to seek the alliance of Alfonso, he refused to do so until
+that alliance could no longer avail him. He himself seemed to think that
+the knell of his departing greatness was about to sound; and the most
+melancholy images were present to his fancy, even in sleep. "One night,"
+says an Arabic historian, "he heard in a dream his ruin predicted by one
+of his sons: he awoke, and the same verses were repeated:
+
+"'Once, Fortune carried thee in her car of triumph and thy name was by
+renown spread to the ends of the earth. Now, the same renown conveys
+only thy sighs. Days and nights pass away, and like them the enjoyments
+of the world; thy greatness has vanished like a dream!'"
+
+But if Mahomet was superstitious--if he felt that fate had doomed him,
+and that resistance would be useless--he resolved not to fall ignobly.
+His defence was indeed heroic; but it was vain, even though Alfonso sent
+him an aid of twenty thousand men: his cities fell one by one; Seville
+was constrained to capitulate: he and his family were thrown into prison
+until a ship was prepared to convey them into Africa, whither their
+perfidious ally had retired some weeks before. His conduct in this
+melancholy reverse of fortune is represented as truly great. Not a sigh
+escaped him, except for the innocent companions of his misfortune,
+especially for his son, Al Raxid, whose virtues and talents deserved a
+better destiny. Surrounded by the best beloved of his wives, by his
+daughters, and his four surviving sons, he endeavored to console them as
+they wept on seeing his royal hands oppressed with fetters, and still
+more when the ship conveyed all from the shores of Spain. "My children
+and friends," said the suffering monarch, "let us learn to support our
+lot with resignation! In this state of being our enjoyments are but lent
+us, to be resumed when heaven sees fit. Joy and sorrow, pleasure and
+pain, closely follow each other; but the noble heart is above the
+inconstancy of fortune!"
+
+The royal party disembarked at Ceuta, and were conveyed to Agmat, to be
+confined in a fortress. We are told that on their journey a
+compassionate poet presented the fallen King with a copy of verses
+deploring his misfortunes, and that he rewarded the poet with thirty-six
+pieces of gold--the only money he had left, from his once exhaustless
+riches. He had little apprehension of what was to follow--that Yussef
+would leave him without support; that his future life was to be passed
+in penury; nay, that his daughters would be compelled to earn his
+subsistence and their own by the labor of their hands. Yet even in that
+indigent condition, says Aben Lebuna, and through the sadness which
+covered their countenances, there was something about them which
+revealed their high origin. The unfortunate monarch outlived the loss of
+his crown and liberty about four years.
+
+After the fall of Mahomet, the general of Yussef had little difficulty
+in subduing the princes of Andalusia. Valencia next received the African
+yoke. The King of Saragossa was more fortunate. He sent ambassadors to
+Yussef, bearing rich presents, and proposing an alliance with a common
+league against the Christians. "My dominions," said Abu-Giafar, "are the
+only barrier between thee and the Christian princes. Hitherto my
+predecessors and myself have withstood all their efforts; with thy
+succor I shall fear them still less." Yussef accepted the proposal; a
+treaty of alliance was made; and the army of Abu-Giafar was reinforced
+by a considerable body of Amoravides, A.H. 486, with whom he repelled an
+invasion of Sancho, King of Aragon. A third division of the Africans,
+which marched to destroy the sovereignty of Algarve and Badajoz, was no
+less successful. Badajoz capitulated; but, in violation of the treaty,
+the dethroned Omar, with two of his sons, was surrounded and
+assassinated by a body of cavalry, as he was unsuspiciously journeying
+from the scene of his past prosperity in search of another asylum. A
+third son was placed in close confinement.
+
+Thus ended the petty kingdoms of Andalusia, after a stormy existence of
+about sixty years.
+
+For some years after the usurpation of Yussef, peace appears to have
+existed in Spain between the Mahometans and the Christians. Fearing a
+new irruption of Africans, Alfonso contented himself with fortifying
+Toledo; and Yussef felt little inclination to renew the war with one
+whose prowess he had so fatally experienced. But Christian Spain was, at
+one moment, near the brink of ruin. The passion for the crusades was no
+less ardently felt by the Spaniards than by other nations of Europe;
+thousands of the best warriors were preparing to depart for the Holy
+Land, as if there were more merit in contending with the infidels, in a
+remote region, for a barren sepulchre, than at home for the dearest
+interests of man--for honor, patriotism, and religion. Fortunately for
+Spain, Pope Pascal II, in answer to the representations of Alfonso,
+declared that the proper post of every Spaniard was at home, and there
+were his true enemies. Soon afterward Yussef returned to Morocco, where
+he died on the 3d day of the moon Muharram, A.H. 500, after living one
+hundred Arabian or about ninety-seven Christian years.
+
+In A.H. 514 the empire of the Almoravides was tottering to its fall. It
+had never been agreeable to the Mahometans of Spain, whose manners, from
+their intercourse with a civilized people, were comparatively refined.
+The sheiks of Lamtuna were so many insupportable tyrants; the Jews, the
+universal agents for the collection of the revenues, were here, as in
+Poland, the most pitiless extortioners; every savage from the desert
+looked with contempt on the milder inhabitant of the Peninsula. The
+domination of these strangers was indeed so odious that, except for the
+divisions between Alfonso and his ambitious queen Donna Urraca, who was
+sovereign in her own right, all Andalusia might speedily have been
+subjected to Christian rule. Alfonso, the King of Aragon, fell at the
+siege of Fraga about A.D. 1109, but the Almoravides met an equally
+valiant foe in his son and successor, Alfonso Raymond, King of Leon and
+Castile.
+
+After a period of about forty years, during which the Christians were
+steadily increasing their dominions, Coria and Mora and other Mahometan
+strongholds were acquired by Alfonso, now styled the "Emperor"; and
+almost every contest between the two natural enemies had turned to the
+advantage of the Christians. So long, indeed, as the walis were eager
+only to preserve or to extend their authority, independent of each other
+and of every superior, this success need not surprise us--we may rather
+be surprised that the Mahometans were allowed to retain any footing in
+the Peninsula. Probably they would at this time have been driven from it
+but for the seasonable arrival of the victorious Almohades. Both
+Christians and Africans now contended for the superiority. While the
+troops of Alfonso reduced Baeza, and, with a Mahometan ally, even
+Cordova, Malaga, and Seville acknowledged Abu Amram; Calatrava and
+Almeria next fell to the Christian Emperor, about the same time that
+Lisbon and the neighboring towns received Don Enrique, the new sovereign
+of Portugal. Most of these conquests, however, were subsequently
+recovered by the Almohades. Being reinforced by a new army from Africa,
+the latter pursued their successes with greater vigor. They reduced
+Cordova, which was held by an ally of Alfonso; defeated, and forever
+paralyzed, the expiring efforts of the Almoravides; and proclaimed their
+Emperor Abdelmumen as sovereign of all Mahometan Spain.
+
+Notwithstanding the destructive wars which had prevailed for nearly a
+century, neither Moors nor Christians had acquired much advantage by
+them. From the reduction of Saragossa to the present time, the victory,
+indeed, had generally declared for the Christians; but their conquests,
+with the exception of Lisbon and a few fortresses in Central Spain, were
+lost almost as soon as gained; and the same fate attended the equally
+transient successes of the Mahometans. The reasons why the former did
+not permanently extend their territories, were their internal
+dissensions; while Leon was at war with Castile, or Castile with Leon,
+or either with Aragon, we need not wonder that the united Almoravides,
+or their successors the Almohades, should sometimes triumph; but those
+triumphs were sure to be followed by reverses whenever not all, but any
+one, of the Christian states was at liberty to assail its natural enemy.
+The Christians, when at peace among themselves, were always too many for
+their Mahometan neighbors, even when the latter were aided by the whole
+power of Western Africa.
+
+In A.H. 572 (about A.D. 1179) the King of Castile reduced Caenza, and
+the Moors were defeated before Toledo. The following year the Portuguese
+were no less successful before Abrantes, which the Africans had
+besieged. These disasters roused the wrath of Yussef abu Yagur (son and
+successor of Abdulmumen who died A.H. 558 = A.D. 1165); but as an
+obscure rebellion required his presence at that time in Mauritania, he
+did not land in Spain until A.H. 580. He marched without delay against
+Santarem, which his soldiers had vainly besieged some years before.
+Wishing to divide the Portuguese force, he one night sent an order to
+his son Cid Abu Ishac, who lay encamped near him, to march with the
+Andalusian cavalry on Lisbon. The officer who carried the order instead
+of Lisbon named Seville; the whole Moslem army were sure that some
+disaster was impending, and that the siege was to be raised; before
+morning the camp was deserted, the guard alone of Yussef remaining.
+While he despatched orders to recall the alarmed fugitives, the
+Christians, who were soon aware of the retreat, issued from the walls,
+surrounded and massacred the guard. Yussef defended himself like a hero:
+six of the advancing assailants he laid low, before the same fate was
+inflicted on himself. The merciless carnage of the Christians spared not
+even his female attendants. At this moment two companies of cavalry
+arrived, and, finding their monarch dying, furiously charged the
+Christians, whom they soon put to flight. In a few hours the whole army
+returned, and, inspired with the same hope of vengeance, they stormed
+and took the place, and put every living creature to the sword.
+
+Yacub ben Yussef, from his victories afterward named Almansor, who was
+then in Spain, was immediately declared successor to his father. For
+some years he was not personally opposed to the Christians, though his
+walis carried on a desultory indecisive war; he was long detained in
+Africa, first in quelling some domestic commotions, and afterward by
+severe illness. He was scarcely recovered, when the intelligence that
+the Christians were making insulting irruptions to the very outworks of
+Algeziras made him resolve on punishing their audacity. His preparations
+were of the most formidable description. In A.H. 591 he landed in
+Andalusia, and proceeded toward Valencia, where the Christian army then
+lay. There Alfonso VIII, King of Castile, was awaiting the expected
+reinforcements from his allies, the kings of Leon and Navarre. Both
+armies pitched their tents on the plains of Alarcon. The following day
+the Christians commenced the attack, and with so much impetuosity that
+the centre was soon broken. But an Andalusian chief conducted a strong
+body of his men against Alfonso, who with the reserve occupied the hill
+above the plain. While the struggle was in all its fury, Yacub and his
+division took the Christians in flank. The result was fatal to the
+Castilian army, which, discouraged at what it considered a new enemy,
+gave way in every direction. Alfonso, preferring an honorable death to
+the shame of defeat, prepared to plunge into the heart of the Mahometan
+squadrons, when his nobles surrounded him and forced him from the field.
+His loss must have been immense, amounting probably to twenty thousand
+men. With a generosity very rare in a Mahometan, and still more in an
+African, Yacub restored his prisoners to liberty--an action for which,
+we are informed, he received few thanks from his followers. Alfonso
+retreated to Toledo just as the King of Leon arrived with the promised
+reinforcement.
+
+After this signal victory Yacub rapidly reduced Calatrava, Guadalaxara,
+Madrid and Esalona, Salamanca, etc. Toledo, too, he invested, but in
+vain. He returned to Africa, caused his son Mahomet to be declared _wali
+alhadi_, and died, the 22d day of the moon Regeb, A.H. 595.[34] He left
+behind him the character of an able, a valiant, a liberal, a just, and
+even magnanimous prince--of one who labored more for the real welfare of
+his people than any other potentate of his age. He was, beyond doubt,
+the greatest and best of the Almohades.
+
+[Footnote 34: May 19, 1199.]
+
+The character of Mahomet Abu Abdallah, surnamed Alnassir, was very
+different from that of his great father. Absorbed in effeminate
+pleasures, he paid little attention to the internal administration of
+his empire or to the welfare of his people. Yet he was not insensible to
+martial fame; and he accordingly showed no indisposition to forsake his
+harem for the field. After quelling two inconsiderable rebellions, he
+prepared to punish the audacity of Alfonso of Castile, who made
+destructive inroads into Andalusia. Much as the world had been astounded
+at the preparations of his grandfather Yussef, they were not surpassed
+by his own, if, as we are credibly informed, one alone of the five
+divisions of his army amounted to one hundred and sixty thousand men. It
+is certain that a year was required for the assembling of this vast
+armament, that two months were necessary to convey it across the
+straits, and that all Christian Europe was filled with alarm at its
+disembarkation. Innocent III proclaimed a crusade to Spain; and Rodrigo
+of Toledo, the celebrated historian, accompanied by several prelates,
+went from one court to another, to rouse the Christian princes. While
+the kings of Aragon and Navarre[35] promised to unite their forces with
+their brother of Castile to repel the common danger, great numbers of
+volunteers from Portugal[36] and Southern France hastened to the general
+rendezvous at Toledo, the Pope ordered fasting, prayers, and processions
+to be made, to propitiate the favor of heaven, and to avert from
+Christendom the greatest danger that had threatened it since the days of
+the emir Abderahman.
+
+[Footnote 35: Sancho, King of Navarre, is justly accused of backwardness
+at least in joining the Christian alliance. He even sought that of Yacub
+and Mahomet, on condition that his own states should be spared, or
+perhaps amplified at the expense of his neighbors. If the Arabian
+writers are correct, he privately waited on Mahomet in Seville; but the
+result of the interview is unknown.]
+
+[Footnote 36: The King of Portugal was not present in this campaign,
+confidently as the contrary has been asserted by most historians.--_La
+Cléde: Histoire Générale de Portugal_, ii.]
+
+Mahomet opened the campaign of A.H. 608 by the siege of Salvatierra, a
+strong but not important fortress of Estremadura, defended by the
+knights of Calatrava. That he should waste his forces on objects so
+incommensurate with their extent proves how little he was qualified to
+wield them. The place stood out for several months, and did not
+surrender until the Emperor had sustained a heavy loss, nor until the
+season was too far advanced to permit any advantage to be derived from
+this partial success. By suspending the execution of his great design
+until the following season, he allowed Alfonso time to prepare for the
+contest. The following June, the kings of Leon and Castile having
+assembled at Toledo, and been joined by a considerable number of foreign
+volunteers, the Christian army advanced toward the south. That of the
+infidels lay in the neighborhood of Baeza, and extended to the Sierra
+Morena.
+
+On July 12th, A.H. 608, the crusaders reached the mountainous chain
+which divides New Castile from Andalusia. They found not only the
+passes, but the summits of the mountains, occupied by the Almohades. To
+force a passage was impossible; and they even deliberated on retreating,
+so as to draw out, if possible, the enemy from positions so formidable,
+when a shepherd entered the camp of Alfonso and proposed to conduct the
+Christian army, by a path unknown to both armies, to the summit of this
+elevated chain--by a path, too, which would be invisible to the enemy's
+outposts. A few companies having accompanied the man and found him
+equally faithful and well informed, the whole army silently ascended and
+intrenched themselves on the summit, the level of which was extensive
+enough to contain them all. Below appeared the wide-spread tents of the
+Moslems, whose surprise was great on perceiving the heights thus
+occupied by the crusaders. For two days the latter, whose fatigues had
+been harassing, kept their position; but on the third day they descended
+into the plains of Tolosa, which were about to be immortalized by their
+valor. Their right wing was led by the King of Navarre, their left by
+the King of Aragon, while Alfonso took his station in the centre.
+Mahomet had drawn up his army in a similar manner; but, with a strong
+body of reserve, he occupied an elevation well defended besides by vast
+iron chains, which surrounded his impenetrable guard.[37] In one hand he
+held a useless scimitar, in the other the _Koran_. The attack was made
+by the Christian centre against that of the Mahometans; and immediately
+the two wings moved against those of the enemy. The African centre,
+which consisted of the one hundred and sixty thousand volunteers, made a
+determined stand; and though it was broken, it soon rallied, on being
+reinforced from the reserve. At one time, indeed, the superiority of
+numbers was so great on the part of the Moslems that the troops of
+Alfonso appeared about to give way. At this moment that King, addressing
+the archbishop Rodrigo, who was with him, said, "Let us die here,
+prelate!" and he prepared to rush amid the dense ranks of the enemy. The
+prelate, however, and a Castilian general, retained him by the bridle of
+his horse, representing the rashness of his purpose, and advising him to
+reinforce his weak points by new succors. Accordingly those succors,
+among which were the vassals with the pennon of the archbishop, advanced
+to support the sinking Castilians. This manoeuvre decided the fortune of
+the day.[38] The Mahometan centre, after a sharp conflict, was again
+broken, this time irretrievably, and a way opened to the intrenchments
+of the Emperor. Seeing the success of their allies, the two wings
+charged their opponents with double fury and triumphed likewise. But the
+Africans[39] rallied round Mahomet, and presented a mass deep and
+formidable to the conquerors. Rodrigo, with his brother prelate, the
+Archbishop of Narbonne, now incited the Christians to overcome this last
+obstacle: both intrepidly accompanied the van of the centre. The
+struggle was terrific, but short; myriads of the barbarians fell; the
+boundary was first broken down by the King of Navarre; the Castilians
+and Aragonese followed; all opponents were massacred or fled; and the
+victors began to ascend the eminence on which Mahomet still remained.
+Seeing the total destruction or flight of his vast host, the Emperor
+sorrowfully exclaimed, "Allah alone is just and powerful; the devil is
+false and wicked!" Scarcely had he uttered the truism, when an Alarab
+approached, leading by the hand a strong but nimble mule. "Prince of the
+faithful!" said the African, "how long wilt thou remain here? Dost thou
+not perceive that thy Moslems flee? The will of Allah be done! Mount
+this mule, which is fleeter than the bird of heaven, or even the arrow
+which strikes it; never yet did she fail her rider; away! for on thy
+safety depends that of us all!" Mahomet mounted the beast, while the
+Alarab ascended the Emperor's horse, and both soon outstripped not only
+the pursuers but the fugitives. The carnage of the latter was dreadful
+until darkness put an end to it. The victors now occupied the tents of
+the Mahometans, while the two martial prelates sounded the _Te Deum_ for
+the most splendid success which had shone on the banners of the
+Christians since the time of Charles Martel. The loss of the Africans,
+even according to the Arabian writers, who admit that the centre was
+wholly destroyed, could not fall short of one hundred and sixty thousand
+men.[40]
+
+[Footnote 37: These chains are not mentioned by the Arabs; but what can
+be expected from their brevity?]
+
+[Footnote 38: The standard-bearer of Rodrigo, don Domingo Pasquel, canon
+of Toledo, showed that he was well fitted to serve the church militant;
+he twice carried his banner through the heart of the Mahometan forces.]
+
+[Footnote 39: The Arabian account says that the Andalusians were the
+first to flee.]
+
+[Footnote 40: Of this great battle we have an account by four
+eye-witnesses: 1, By King Alfonso, in a letter to the Pope; 2, by the
+historian Rodrigo of Toledo; 3, by Arnaud, Archbishop of Narbonne; 4, by
+the author of the _Annals of Toledo_.
+
+The reduction of several towns, from Tolosa to Baeza, immediately
+followed this glorious victory--a victory in which Don Alfonso nobly
+redeemed his failure in the field of Zalaca--and which, in its immediate
+consequences, involved the ruin of the Mahometan empire in Spain. After
+an unsuccessful attempt on Ubeda, as the hot season was raging, the
+allies returned to Toledo, satisfied that the power of Mahomet was
+forever broken. That Emperor, indeed, did not long survive his disaster.
+Having precipitately fled to Morocco, he abandoned himself to licentious
+pleasures, left the cares of government to his son, or rather his
+ministers, and died on the 10th day of the moon Shaffan, A.H. 610 (A.D.
+1214), not without suspicion of poison.
+
+By recent writers of Spain the number of slain on the part of the
+Africans was two hundred thousand; on that of the Christians,
+twenty-five individuals only. Of course the whole campaign is
+represented as miraculous; and, indeed, actual miracles are
+recorded--which we have neither space nor inclination to notice.]
+
+
+
+
+THE FIRST CRUSADE
+
+A.D. 1096-1099
+
+SIR GEORGE W. COX
+
+
+(Religious feeling in the eleventh century rose to a great pitch of
+enthusiasm, and led men of various nations, with still more various
+motives and aims in worldly affairs, to pursue one common end with their
+whole heart. Between the years 1096 and 1270 these attempts of Christian
+nations to rescue the Holy Land from the "Infidels," as the Mahometans
+were called, added a wholly new character of human enterprise to the
+world's history.
+
+At the time--in the middle of the eleventh century--when the Seljuks, a
+Turkish tribe of Western Asia, had overrun Syria and Asia Minor,
+throwing the East into a state of anarchy, Europe was beginning to adopt
+modes of settled order. Through the Byzantine empire great numbers of
+pilgrims for centuries had passed to visit Palestine. With the improved
+condition of the western nations, which led to an extension of commerce
+in the East, the pilgrimage to that part of the world acquired a new
+importance. As early as 1064 a caravan of seven thousand pilgrims made
+their way to the neighborhood of Jerusalem, where they narrowly escaped
+destruction by the Bedouins, their rescue being effected by a Saracen
+emir.
+
+In 1070 the Seljuks took possession of Jerusalem, inflicting hardships
+on the pilgrims by intolerable exactions, insult, and plunder. Besides
+outraging Christian sentiment, they ruined the commerce of the western
+nations. Throughout Europe arose the cry for vengeance, and men's minds
+were fully prepared for an attempt to conquer Palestine when their
+leaders began to preach the sacred duty of delivering the Holy Sepulchre
+from the hands of the infidels.
+
+At the Council of Clermont, in 1094, Pope Urban II depicted the miseries
+of Christians in Palestine, and, with a power of eloquence unsurpassed
+in his day, called upon those who heard him to wipe off from the face of
+the earth the impurities which caused them, and to lift their oppressed
+fellow-Christians from the depths into which they had been trampled. He
+urged them to take up arms in the service of the Cross, at the same time
+setting before them the temporal, no less than the spiritual, advantages
+that would accrue from the conquest of a land "flowing with milk and
+honey," and which, he said, should be divided among them. He likewise
+offered them full pardon for all their sins.
+
+The enthusiasm of his hearers burst all bounds, and with one voice they
+cried: "God wills it! God wills it!" To all parts of Europe the fervor
+spread. The Pope was powerfully aided by an earnest and eloquent--if
+ignorant--monk, Peter the Hermit, of Amiens, who declared that he would
+rouse the martial spirit of Europe in the cause, and he himself was the
+first--with whatsoever of misguided zeal--to lead the way to the Holy
+Land.
+
+The crusades are so called from the simple circumstance that the badge
+chosen for the movement was the cross, which Pope Urban bade the
+Christian warriors wear on their breasts or on their shoulders, as the
+sign of Him who died for the salvation of their souls, and as the pledge
+of a vow that could never be recalled.)
+
+
+In the enterprise to which Latin Christendom stood committed, the
+several nations or countries of Europe took equal parts; or, rather, no
+_nation_, as such, took any part in it at all; and in this fact we have
+the explanation of that want of coherent action, and even decent or
+average generalship, which is commonly seen in national undertakings.
+For the crusade there was no attempt at a commissariat, no care for a
+base of supplies; and the crusading hosts were a collection of
+individual adventurers who either went without making any provisions for
+their journey or provided for their own needs and those of their
+followers from their own resources. The number of these adventurers was
+naturally determined by the political conditions of the country from
+which they came. In Italy the struggle between the pope and the antipope
+went far toward chilling enthusiasm; and the recruits for the crusading
+army came chiefly from the Normans who had followed Robert Guiscard to
+the sunny southern lands. The Spaniards were busied with a crusade
+nearer home, and were already pushing back to the south the Mahometan
+dominion which had once threatened to pass the barriers of the Pyrenees
+and carry the Crescent to the shores of the Baltic Sea. About ten years
+before the council of Clermont the Moslem dynasty of Toledo had been
+expelled by Alfonso, King of Galicia: the kingdom of Cordova had fallen
+twenty years earlier (1065), and while Peter the Hermit was hurrying
+hither and thither through the countries of Northern Europe, the
+Christians of Spain were winning victories in Murcia, and the land was
+ringing with the exploits of the dauntless Cid, Ruy Diaz de Bivar. By
+the Germans the summons to the rescue of the Holy Sepulchre was received
+with comparative coldness; the partisans of emperors, who had been
+humbled to the dust by the predecessors of Urban, if not by himself,
+were not vehemently eager to obey it. The bishops of Salzburg, Passau,
+and Strasburg, the aged duke Guelph of Bavaria, had undertaken the
+toilsome and perilous journey: not one of them saw their homes again,
+and their death in the distant East was not regarded by their countrymen
+as an encouragement to follow their example. In England the English were
+too much weighed down by the miseries of the Conquest, the Normans too
+much occupied in strengthening their position, and the King, William the
+Red, more ready to take advantage of the needs of his brother Robert
+than to incur any risks of his own. The great movement came from the
+lands extending from the Scheldt to the Pyrenees. Franks and Normans
+alike made ready with impetuous haste for the great adventure; and tens
+of thousands, who could not wait for the formation of something like a
+regular army, hurried away, under leaders as frantic as themselves, to
+their inevitable doom.
+
+Little more than half the time allowed for the gathering of the
+crusaders had passed away, when a crowd of some sixty thousand men and
+women, neither caring nor thinking about the means by which their ends
+could be attained, insisted that the hermit Peter should lead them at
+once to the Holy City. Mere charity may justify the belief that some
+even among these may have been folk of decent lives moved by the earnest
+conviction that their going to Jerusalem would do some good; that the
+vast majority looked upon their vow as a license for the commission of
+any sin, there can be no moral doubt; that they exhibited not a single
+quality needed for the successful prosecution of their enterprise is
+absolutely certain. With a foolhardiness equal to his ignorance Peter
+undertook the task, in which he was aided by Walter the Penniless, a man
+with some pretensions to the soldier-like character. But the utter
+disorder of this motley host made it impossible for them to journey long
+together. At Cologne they parted company; and fifteen thousand under the
+penniless Walter made their way to the frontiers of Hungary, while Peter
+led onward a host which swelled gradually on the march to about forty
+thousand.
+
+Another army or horde of perhaps twenty thousand marched under the
+guidance of Emico, Count of Leiningen, a third under that of the monk
+Gottschalk, a man not notorious for the purity or disinterestedness of
+his motives. Behind these came a rabble, it is said, of two hundred
+thousand men, women, and children, preceded by a goose and a goat, or,
+as some have supposed, by banners on which, as symbols of the mysterious
+faith of Gnostics and Paulicians, the likeness of these animals was
+painted. In this vile horde no pretence was kept up of order or of
+decency. Sinning freely, it would seem, that grace might abound, they
+plundered and harried the lands through which they marched, while three
+thousand horsemen, headed by some counts and gentlemen, were not too
+dignified to act as their attendants and to share their spoil.
+
+But if they had no scruple in robbing Christians, their delight was to
+prove the reality of their mission as soldiers of the cross by
+plundering, torturing, and slaying Jews. The crusade against the Turk
+was interpreted as a crusade directed not less explicitly against the
+descendants of those who had crucified the Redeemer. The streets of
+Verdun and Treves and of the great cities on the Rhine ran red with the
+blood of their victims; and if some saved their lives by pretended
+conversions, many more cheated their persecutors by throwing their
+property and their persons either into the rivers or into the consuming
+fires.
+
+A space of six hundred miles lay between the Austrian frontier and
+Constantinople; and across the dreary waste the followers of Walter the
+Penniless struggled on, destitute of money, and rousing the hostility of
+the inhabitants whom they robbed and ill-used. In Bulgaria their
+misdeeds provoked reprisals which threatened their destruction; and none
+perhaps would have reached Constantinople if the imperial commander at
+Naissos had not rescued them from their enemies, supplied them with
+food, and guarded them through the remainder of their journey. These
+succors involved some costs; and the costs were paid by the sale of
+unarmed men among the pilgrims, and especially of the women and
+children, who were seized to provide the necessary funds. Of those who
+formed the train of the hermit Peter, seven thousand only, it is said,
+reached Constantinople.
+
+Of such a rabble rout the emperor Alexius[41] needed not to be afraid.
+He had already seen and encountered far larger armies of Normans, Turks,
+and Romans; and he now extended to this vanguard of the hosts of Latin
+Christendom a hospitality which was almost immediately abused. They had
+refused to comply with his request that they should quietly await the
+arrival of their fellow-crusaders; and consulting the safety of his
+people not less than his own, he induced them to cross the Bosporus, and
+pitch their camp on Asiatic soil, the land which they had come to wrest
+from the unbelievers.
+
+[Footnote 41: Head of the Byzantine empire.]
+
+Alexius wished simply to be rid of their presence: they had to deal with
+an enemy still more crafty and formidable in the Seljukian sultan David.
+The vagrants whom Peter and Walter had brought thus far on the road to
+Jerusalem were scattered about the land in search of food; and it was no
+hard task for David to cheat the main body with the false tidings that
+their companions had carried the walls of Nice, and were revelling in
+the pleasures and spoils of his capital. The doomed horde rushed into
+the plain which fronts the city; and a vast heap of bones alone remained
+to tell the story of the great catastrophe, when the forces which might
+more legitimately claim the name of an army passed the spot where the
+Seljukian had entrapped and crushed his victims. In this wild expedition
+not less, it is said, than three hundred thousand human beings had
+already paid the penalty of their lives.
+
+Still the First Crusade was destined to accomplish more than any of the
+seven or eight crusades which followed it; and this measure of success
+it achieved probably because none of the great European sovereigns took
+part in it. The task of setting up a Latin kingdom in Palestine was to
+be achieved by princes of the second order.
+
+Of these the foremost and the most deservedly illustrious was Godfrey,
+of Bouillon in the Ardennes, a kinsman of the counts of Boulogne, and
+Duke of Lotharingen (Lorraine). In the service of the emperor Henry IV,
+the enemy or the victim of Hildebrand, he had been the first to mount
+the walls of Rome and cleave his way into the city; he might now hope
+that his crusading vow would be accepted as an atonement for his
+sacrilege. Speaking the Frank and Teutonic dialects with equal ease, he
+exercised by his bravery, his wisdom, and the uprightness of his life an
+influence which brought to his standard, it is said, not less than
+eighty thousand infantry and ten thousand horsemen, together with his
+brothers Baldwin and Eustace, Count of Boulogne.
+
+Among the most conspicuous of Godfrey's colleagues was Hugh, Count of
+Vermandois. With him may be placed the Norman duke Robert, whose
+carelessness had lost him the crown of England, and who had now pawned
+his duchy for a pittance scarcely less paltry than that for which Esau
+bartered away his birthright. The number of the great chiefs who led the
+pilgrims from Northern Europe is completed with the names of Robert,
+Count of Flanders, and of Stephen, Count of Chartres, Troyes, and Blois.
+
+Foremost, by virtue of his title and office, among the leaders of the
+southern bands was the papal legate Adhemar (Aymer) Bishop of Puy--a
+leader rather as guiding the counsels of the army than as gathering
+soldiers under his banner.
+
+A hundred thousand horse and foot attested, we are told, the greatness,
+the wealth, and the zeal of Raymond, Count of Toulouse, lord of Auvergne
+and Languedoc, who had grown old in warfare.
+
+Less tinged with the fanatical enthusiasm of his comrades, and certainly
+more cool and deliberate in his ambition, Bohemond, son of Robert
+Guiscard, looked to the crusade as a means by which he might regain the
+vast regions extending from the Dalmatian coast to the northern shores
+of the Aegean. Nay, if we are to believe William of Malmesbury, he urged
+Urban to set forward the enterprise for the very purpose, partly, of
+thus recovering what he was pleased to regard as his inheritance, and in
+part of enabling the Pontiff to suppress all opposition in Rome.
+Guiscard had left his Apulian domains to a younger son, and Bohemond was
+resolved, it would seem, to add to his principality of Tarentum a
+kingdom which would make him a formidable rival of the Eastern Emperor.
+
+Far above Bohemond rises his cousin Tancred, the son of the marquis Odo,
+surnamed the Good, and of Emma, the sister of Robert Guiscard.
+
+In Tancred was seen the embodiment of those peculiar sentiments and
+modes of thought which gave birth to the crusades, and to which the
+crusades in their turn imparted marvellous strength and splendor.
+
+The miserable remnant of three thousand men who escaped from the field
+of blood before the city of the Seljukian sultan found a refuge in
+Byzantine territory about the time when the better appointed armies of
+the crusaders were setting off on their eastward journey. The most
+disciplined of these troops set out with a vast following from the banks
+of the Meuse and the Moselle under Godfrey of Bouillon, who led them
+safely and without opposition to the Hungarian border. Here the armies
+of Hungary barred the way against the advance of a host at whose hands
+they dreaded a repetition of the havoc wrought by the lawless bands of
+Peter the Hermit and his self-chosen colleagues. Three weeks passed away
+in vain attempts to get over the difficulty. The Hungarian King demanded
+as a hostage Baldwin, the brother of the general: the demand was
+refused, and Godfrey put him to shame by surrendering himself. He asked
+only for a free passage and a free market; but although these were
+granted, it was not in his power to prevent some disorder and some
+depredations as his army or horde passed through the country. The
+mischief might have been much worse, had not the Hungarian cavalry,
+acting professedly as a friendly escort, but really as cautious warders,
+kept close to the crusading hosts.
+
+At length they reached the gates of Philippopolis, and here Godfrey
+learned that Hugh of Vermandois, whose coming had been announced to the
+Greek emperor Alexius by four-and-twenty knights in golden armor, and
+who styled himself the brother of the king of kings and lord of all the
+Frankish hosts, was a prisoner within the walls of Constantinople. With
+Robert of Normandy and Robert of Flanders, with Stephen of Chartres and
+some lesser chiefs, Hugh had chosen to make his way through Italy; and
+the charms of that voluptuous land had a greater effect, it seems, in
+breaking up and corrupting their forces than the delights of Capua had
+in weakening the soldiers of Hannibal.
+
+With little regard to order, the chiefs determined to cross the sea as
+best they might. Hugh embarked at Bari; and if we may believe Anna
+Comnena, the historian and the worshipper of her father Alexius, his
+fleet was broken by a tempest which shattered his own ship on the coast
+between Palos and Dyrrhachium (Durazzo), of which John Comnenus, the
+nephew of the Emperor, was at this time the governor. The Frank chief
+was here detained until the good pleasure of Alexius should be known.
+That wary and cunning prince saw at once how much might be made of his
+prisoner, who was by his orders conducted with careful respect and
+ceremony to the capital. Kept here really as a hostage, but welcomed to
+outward seeming as a friend, Hugh was so completely won by the charm of
+manner which Alexius well knew how and when to put on, that, paying him
+homage and declaring himself his man, he promised to do what he could to
+induce others to follow his example.
+
+From Philippopolis Godfrey sent ambassadors to Alexius, demanding the
+immediate surrender of Hugh. The request was refused, and Godfrey
+resumed his march, treating the land through which he passed as an
+enemy's country, until by way of Adrianople he at length appeared before
+the walls of the capital at Christmastide, 1096. The fears of Alexius
+were aroused by the sight of a host so vast and so formidable: they
+quickened into terror as he thought of the armies which were still on
+their way under the command of Bohemond and Tancred. Of Godfrey, beyond
+the fact of his mission as a crusader, he knew little or nothing; but in
+Bohemond he saw one who claimed as his inheritance no small portion of
+his empire. This gathering of myriads, whom a false step on his part
+might convert into open enemies, was the result of his own entreaties
+urged through his envoys before Urban II in the Council of Piacenza; and
+his mind was divided between a feverish anxiety to hurry them on to
+their destination and so to rid himself of their hateful presence, and
+the desire to retain a hold not only on the crusading chiefs but on any
+conquests which they might make in Syria.
+
+Hugh was sent back to Godfrey's camp; but the quarrel was patched up,
+rather than ended. It was easier to rouse suspicion and jealousy than to
+restore friendship. But it was of the first importance for Alexius that
+he should secure the homage of the princes already gathered round his
+capital before the arrival of his ancient enemy Bohemond. In this he
+succeeded, and a compact was made by which Alexius pledged them his word
+that he would supply them with food and aid them in their eastward
+march, and would protect all pilgrims passing through his dominions. On
+the other hand the crusading chiefs, as already subjects of other
+sovereigns, gave their fealty to the Emperor as their liege lord only
+for the time during which they might remain within his borders, and
+undertook to restore to him such of their conquests as had been recently
+wrested from the empire.
+
+The policy and the bribes of Alexius had overcome the opposition of
+Bohemond. He was to experience a stouter resistance from Raymond of
+Toulouse, who, though he had been the first to enlist, was the last to
+set out on his crusade.
+
+The Count of Toulouse scarcely regarded himself as the vassal even of
+the French King. He was ready, he said, to be the friend of Alexius on
+equal terms; but he would not declare himself to be his man. On this
+point he was immovable, although Bohemond tried the effect of a threat
+(which was never forgiven), that if the quarrel came to blows, he should
+be found on the side of the Emperor. But Alexius soon saw that in
+Raymond he had to deal with an enthusiast as sincere and persistent as
+Godfrey. He took his measures accordingly, winning the heart of the old
+warrior, although he failed to compel his obedience.
+
+While Alexius was busied in dealing with Godfrey and Raymond, Bohemond
+and Tancred, he was not less anxiously occupied with the task of sending
+across the Bosporus the swarms which might soon become an army of
+devouring locusts round his own capital. It was easier to give them a
+welcome than to get rid of them: and more than two months had passed
+since Christmas, when the followers of Godfrey found themselves on the
+soil of Asia.
+
+Godfrey's men had no sooner been landed on the eastern side of the
+Bosporus than all the vessels which had transported them were brought
+back to the western shore. With great astuteness, and at the cost of
+large gifts, Alexius in like manner freed the neighborhood of his
+capital from the invading multitudes. As fast as they came they were
+hurried across, and the Emperor breathed more freely when, on the Feast
+of Pentecost, not a single Latin pilgrim remained on the European shore.
+
+The danger of conflict had throughout been imminent; and the danger
+arose, not so much from the fact that the crusaders were armed men,
+marching through the country of professed allies, but from the thorough
+antagonism between Greeks and Latins in modes of thought and habits of
+life. Nor must we forget the vast gulf which separated the Eastern from
+the Western clergy. The clergy of the West despised their brethren of
+the East for their cowardly submission to the secular arm. These, in
+their turn, shrunk with horror from the sight of bishops, priests, and
+monks riding with blood-stained weapons over fields of battle, and
+exhibiting at other times an ignorance equal to their ferocity.
+
+The strength and valor of the crusaders were soon to be tested. They
+were now face to face with the Turks, on whose cowardice Urban II had
+enlarged with so much complacency before the Council of Clermont. The
+sultan David, or Kilidje Arslan, placed his family and treasures in his
+capital city of Nice and retreated with fifty thousand horsemen to the
+mountains, whence he swooped down from time to time on the outposts of
+the Christians. By these his city was formally invested; and for seven
+weeks it was assailed to little purpose by the old instruments of Roman
+warfare, while some of the besiegers shot their weapons from the hill on
+which were mouldering the bones of the fanatic followers of Peter. It
+was protected to the west by the Askanian lake, and so long as the Turks
+had command of this lake they felt themselves safe. But Alexius sent
+thither on sledges a large number of boats, and the city, subjected to a
+double blockade, submitted to the Emperor, who was in no way anxious to
+see the crusaders masters of the place. The crusaders were making ready
+for the last assault, when they saw the imperial banner floating on the
+walls. Their disappointment at the escape of the miscreants, or
+unbelievers, for so they delighted to speak of them, was vented in
+threats which seemed to bode a renewal of the old troubles; but Alexius,
+with gifts, which added force to his words, professed that his only
+desire now, as it had been, was to forward them safely on their journey.
+Nor had they to go many stages before they found themselves again
+confronted with their adversary.
+
+The conflict took place near the Phrygian Dorylaion, and seemed at first
+to portend dire defeat to the crusaders. More than once the issue of the
+day seemed to be turned by the indomitable personal bravery of the
+Norman Robert, of Tancred, and of Bohemond; and when even those seemed
+likely to be borne down, they received timely succors from Godfrey, and
+Hugh of Vermandois, from Bishop Adhemar of Puy and from Raymond, Count
+of Toulouse. Still the Turks held out, and it seemed likely that they
+would long hold out, when the appearance of the last division of
+Raymond's army filled them with the fear that a new host was upon them.
+
+The crusaders had won a considerable victory. Three thousand knights
+belonging to the enemy had been slain, and Kilidje Arslan was hurrying
+away to enlist the services of his kinsmen. Meanwhile the Latin hosts
+were sweeping onward. Hundreds died from the heat, and dogs or goats
+took the place of the baggage-horses which had perished. At length
+Tancred with his troop found himself before Tarsus, the birthplace and
+the home of that single-hearted apostle who long ago had preached a
+gospel strangely unlike the creed of the crusaders. Following rapidly
+behind him, Baldwin saw with keen jealousy the banner of the Italian
+chief floating on its towers, and insisted on taking the precedence.
+Tancred pleaded the choice of the people and his own promise to protect
+them; but the intrigues of Baldwin changed their humor, and the
+rejection of Tancred by the men of Tarsus was followed by an attempt at
+private war between Tancred and Baldwin, in which the troops of Tancred
+were overborne. So early was the first harvest of murderous discord
+reaped among the holy warriors of the Cross. It was ruin, however, to
+stay where they were; and the main army again began its march, to
+undergo once more the old monotony of hardship and peril.
+
+A very small force would have sufficed to disorganize and rout them as
+they clambered over the defiles of Mount Taurus; nor could Raymond,
+recovering from a terrible illness, or Godfrey, suffering from wounds
+inflicted by a bear, have done much to help them. But for the present
+their enemies were dismayed; and Baldwin, brother of Godfrey, hastened
+with eagerness to obey a summons which besought him to aid the Greek or
+Armenian tyrant of Edessa. As Alexius had done to his brother, so this
+chief welcomed Baldwin as his son; but Baldwin, having once entered into
+the city, cared nothing for the means which had brought him thither, and
+the death of his adoptive father was followed by the establishment at
+Edessa of a Latin principality which lasted for fifty-four, or, as some
+have thought, forty-seven years. Baldwin had anticipated the
+unconditional surrender of Samosata; but the Turkish governor had some
+of the Edessenes in his power, and he refused to give up the city except
+on the payment of ten thousand gold pieces. The Turk shortly afterward
+fell into Baldwin's hands, and was put to death.
+
+Meanwhile the main army of the crusaders was advancing toward the Syrian
+capital (Antioch), that ancient and luxurious city whose fame had gone
+over the whole Roman world for its magnificence, its unbounded wealth,
+its soft delights, and its unholy pleasures. The days of its greatest
+splendor had passed away. Its walls were partially in ruins; its
+buildings were in some parts crumbling away or had already fallen; but
+against assailants utterly ignorant and awkward in all that relates to
+the blockade of cities it was still a formidable position. Nor could
+they invest it until they had passed the iron bridge--so called from its
+iron-plated gates--of nine stone arches, which spanned the stream of the
+Ifrin at a distance of nine miles from the city. This bridge was carried
+by the impetuous charge of Robert of Normandy, aided by the more steady
+efforts of Godfrey; and in the language of an age which delighted in
+round numbers, a hundred thousand warriors hurried across to seize the
+splendid prize which now seemed almost within their grasp.
+
+But the city was in the hands of men who had been long accustomed to
+despise the Greeks, and who had not yet learned to respect the valor of
+the Latins. Preparing himself for a resolute defence, the Seljukian
+governor Baghasian had sent away as useless, if not mischievous, most of
+the Christians within the town; and the crusading chiefs had begun to
+discuss the prudence of postponing all operations till the spring, when
+Raymond of Toulouse with some other chiefs insisted that delay would
+imply fear, and that the imputation of cowardice would insure the
+paralysis of their enterprise. The city was therefore at once invested,
+so far as the forces of the crusaders could suffice to encircle it; and
+a siege began which in the eyes of the military historian must be
+absolutely without interest, and of which the issue was decided by
+paroxysms of fanatical vehemence on the one side, and by lack, not of
+bravery, but of generalship on the other. Of the eastern and northern
+walls the blockade was complete; of the west it was partial; and the
+failure to invest a portion of the western wall, with two out of the
+five gates of the city, left the movements of the Turks in this
+direction free.
+
+But the besiegers were in no hurry to begin the work of death. The
+wealth of the harvest and the vintage spread before them its
+irresistible temptations, and the herds feeding in the rich pastures
+seemed to promise an endless feast. The cattle, the corn, and the wine
+were alike wasted with besotted folly, while the Turks within the walls
+received tidings, it is said, of all that passed in the crusading camp
+from some Greek and Armenian Christians to whom they allowed free egress
+and ingress. Of this knowledge they availed themselves in planning the
+sallies by which they caused great distress to the besiegers, whose
+clumsy engines and devices seemed to produce no result beyond the waste
+of time, and who felt perhaps that they had done something when they
+blocked up the gate of the bridge with huge stones dug from the
+neighboring quarries.
+
+Three months passed away, and the crusaders found themselves not
+conquerors, but in desperate straits from famine. The winter rains had
+turned the land round their camp into a swamp, and lack of food left
+them more and more unable to resist the pestilential diseases which were
+rapidly thinning their numbers. A foraging expedition under Bohemond and
+Tancred filled the camp with food; it was again recklessly wasted. The
+second famine scared away Tatikios, the lieutenant of the Greek emperor
+Alexius; but the crusading chiefs were perhaps still more disgusted by
+the desertion of William of Melun, called "the Carpenter," from the
+sledgehammer blows which he dealt out in battle. Hunger obtained a
+victory even over the hermit Peter, who was stealing away with William
+of Melun, when he with his companion was caught by Tancred and brought
+back to the tent of Bohemond.
+
+For a moment the look of things was changed by the arrival of
+ambassadors from Egypt. To the Fatimite caliph of that country the
+progress of the crusading arms had thus far brought with it but little
+dissatisfaction. The humiliation of the Seljukian Turks could not fail
+to bring gain to himself, if the flood of Latin conquests could be
+checked and turned back in time. His generals besieged Jerusalem and
+Tyre; and when the Fatimite once more ruled in Palestine, his envoys
+hastened to the crusaders' camp to announce the deliverance of the Holy
+Land from its oppressors, to assure to all unarmed and peaceable
+pilgrims a month's unmolested sojourn in Jerusalem, and to promise them
+his aid during their march, on condition that they should acknowledge
+his supremacy within the limits of his Syrian empire.
+
+The arguments and threats of the Caliph were alike thrown away. The
+Latin chiefs disclaimed all interest in the feuds and quarrels of rival
+sultans and in the fortunes of Mahometan sects. God himself had destined
+Jerusalem for the Christians, and if any held it who were not
+Christians, these were usurpers whose resistance must be punished by
+their expulsion or their death. The envoys departed not encouraged by
+this answer, and still more perplexed by the appearance of plenty and by
+the magnificence of a camp in which they had expected to see a terrible
+spectacle of disorder and misery.
+
+The resolute persistence of the besiegers convinced Baghasian of the
+need of reinforcements. These were hastening to him from Caesarea,
+Aleppo, and other places, when they were cut off by Bohemond and
+Raymond, who sent a multitude of heads to the envoys of the Fatimite
+Caliph, and discharged many hundreds from their engines into the city of
+Antioch. The Turks had their opportunity for reprisals when the arrival
+of some Pisan and Genoese ships at the mouth of the Orontes drew off the
+greater part of the besieging army. The crusaders were returning with
+provisions and arms, when their enemies started upon them from an
+ambuscade. The battle was fierce; but the defeat of Raymond, which
+threatened dire disaster, was changed into victory on the arrival of
+Godfrey and the Norman Robert, whose exploits equalled or surpassed, if
+we are to believe the story, even those of Arthur, Lancelot, or
+Tristram. Hundreds, if not thousands, of Turks fell. Their bodies were
+buried by their comrades in the cemetery without the walls: the
+Christians dug them up, severed the heads from the trunks, and paraded
+the ghastly trophies on their pikes, not forgetting to send a goodly
+number to the Egyptian Caliph, by way of showing how his Seljukian
+friends or enemies had fared. The picture is disgusting; but if we shut
+our eyes to these loathsome details, the truth of the history is gone.
+We are dealing with the wars of savages, and it is right that we should
+know this.
+
+The next scene exhibits Godfrey and Bohemond in fierce quarrel about a
+splendid tent, which, being intended as a gift for the former, had been
+seized by an Armenian chief and sent to the latter. But there was now
+more serious business on hand. Rumor spoke of the near approach of a
+Persian army, and the besieged, under the plea of wishing to arrange
+terms of capitulation, obtained a truce which they sought probably only
+for the sake of gaining time. The days passed by, but no offers were
+made; and their disposition was shown by seizing a crusading knight in
+the groves near the city and tearing his body in pieces. The Latins
+returned with increased fury to the siege: but the defence, although
+more feeble, was still protracted, and Bohemond began to feel not only
+that fraud might succeed where force had failed, but that from fraud he
+might reap, not safety merely, but wealth and greatness. His plans were
+laid with a renegade Christian named Phirouz, high in the favor of the
+governor, with whom he had come into contact either during the truce or
+in some other way. By splendid promises he insured the zealous aid of
+his new ally, and then came forward in the council with the assurance
+that he could place the city in their hands, but that he could do this
+only on condition that he should rule in Antioch as Baldwin ruled in
+Edessa. His claim was angrily opposed by the Provençal Raymond; but this
+opposition was overruled, and it was resolved that the plan should be
+carried out at once.
+
+There was need for so doing. Rumors spread within the city that some
+attempt was to be made to betray the place to the besiegers, and hints
+or open accusations pointed out Phirouz as the traitor. Like other
+traitors, the renegade thought it best to anticipate the charge by
+urging that the guards of the towers should on the very next day be
+changed. His proposal was received as indubitable proof of his innocence
+and his faithfulness; but he had made up his mind that Antioch should
+fall that night, and that night by means of a rope ladder Bohemond with
+about sixty followers (the ropes broke before more could ascend) climbed
+up the wall. Seizing ten towers, of which all the guards were killed,
+they opened a gate, and the Christian host rushed in. The banner of
+Bohemond rose on one of the towers; the trumpets sounded for the onset,
+and a carnage began in which at first the assailants took no heed to
+distinguish between the Christian and the Turk. In the awful confusion
+of the moment some of the besieged made their way to the citadel, and
+there shut themselves in, ready to resist to the death. Of the rest few
+escaped; ten thousand, it is said, were massacred. Baghasian with some
+friends passed out beyond the besiegers' lines, but, fainting from loss
+of blood, he fell from his horse, and his companions hurried on. A
+Syrian Christian heard his groans, and striking off his head carried the
+prize to the camp of the conquerors. Phirouz lived to be a second time a
+renegade, and to close his career as a thief.
+
+The victory was for the crusaders a change from famine to abundance; and
+their feasting was accompanied by the wildest riot and the most filthy
+debauchery. But if heedless waste may have been one of the most venial
+of their sins, it was the greatest of their blunders. The reports which
+spoke of the approach of the Persians were not false. The Turks within
+the citadel suddenly found that they were rather besiegers than
+besieged, and that the Christians' were hemmed in by the myriads of
+Kerboga, Prince of Mosul, and the warriors of Kilidje Arslan. The old
+horrors of famine were now repeated, but in greater intensity; and the
+doom of the Latin host seemed now to be sealed.
+
+Stephen, Count of Chartres, had deserted his companions before the fall
+of the city; others now followed his example, and with him set out on
+their return to Europe. In Phrygia, Stephen encountered the emperor
+Alexius, who was marching to the aid of the crusaders, not only with a
+Greek army, but with a force of well-appointed pilgrims who had reached
+Constantinople after the departure of Godfrey and his fellows. The story
+told by Stephen drove out of his head every thought except that of his
+own safety. The order for retreat was given; and the pilgrim warriors,
+not less than the Greeks, were compelled to turn their faces westward.
+
+In Antioch the crusading soldiers were fast sinking into utter despair.
+Discipline had well-nigh come to an end, and so obstinate was their
+refusal to bear arms any longer that Bohemond resolved to burn them out
+of their quarters. These were consumed by the flames, which spread so
+rapidly as to fill him with fear that he had destroyed, not only their
+dwellings, but his whole principality. His experiment brought the men
+back to their duty; but so despondingly was their work done that but for
+some signal succor the end, it was manifest, must soon come. In a
+credulous age such succor at the darkest hour, if obtained at all, will
+generally be obtained through miracle. A Lombard priest came forward, to
+whom St. Ambrose of Milan had declared in a vision that the third year
+of the crusade should see the conquest of Jerusalem; another had seen
+the Saviour himself, attended by his Virgin Mother and the Prince of the
+Apostles, had heard from his lips a stern rebuke of the crusaders for
+yielding to the seductions of pagan women--as if the profession of
+Christianity altered the color and the guilt of a vice--and lastly had
+received the distinct assurance that in five days they should have the
+help which they needed.
+
+The hopes of the crusaders were roused; with hope came a return of
+vigorous energy; and Peter Barthelemy, chaplain to Raymond of Toulouse,
+seized the opportunity for recounting a vision which was to be something
+more than a dream. To him St. Andrew had revealed the fact that in the
+Church of St. Peter lay hidden the steel head of the spear which had
+pierced the side of the Redeemer as he hung upon the cross; and that
+Holy Lance should win them victory over all their enemies as surely as
+the spear which imparted irresistible power to the Knight of the
+Sangreal. After two days of special devotion they were to search for the
+long-lost weapon; on the third day the workmen began to dig, but until
+the sun had set they toiled in vain. The darkness of night made it
+easier for the chaplain to play the part which Sir Walter Scott, in the
+_Antiquary_, assigns to Herman Dousterswivel in the ruins of St. Ruth.
+Barefooted and with a single garment the priest went down into the pit.
+For a time the strokes of his spade were heard, and then the sacred
+relic was found, carefully wrapped in a veil of silk and gold. The
+priest proclaimed his discovery; the people rushed into the church; and
+from the church throughout the city spread the flame of a fierce
+enthusiasm.
+
+Nine or ten months later Peter Barthelemy paid the penalty of his life
+for his fraud or his superstition. A bribe taken by his master Raymond
+brought that chief into ill odor with his comrades, and let loose
+against his chaplain the tongue of Arnold, the chaplain of Bohemond.
+Raymond had traded on fresh visions of his clerk; and Arnold boldly
+attacked him in his citadel by denying the genuineness of the Holy
+Lance. Peter appealed to the ordeal of fire. He passed through the
+flames, as it seemed, unhurt. The bystanders pressed to feel his flesh,
+and were vehement in their rejoicings at the result which vindicated his
+integrity. He had really received fatal injuries. Twelve days afterward
+he died, and Raymond suffered greatly in his dignity and his influence.
+
+The infidel was doomed; but the crusaders resolved to give him one
+chance of escape. Peter the Hermit was sent as their envoy to Kerboga to
+offer the alternative of departure from a land which St. Peter had
+bestowed on the faithful, or of baptism which should leave him master of
+the city and territory of Antioch. The reply was short and decisive. The
+Turk would not embrace an idolatry which he hated and despised, nor
+would he give up soil which belonged to him by right of conquest. The
+report of the hermit raised the spirit of the crusaders to fever heat;
+and on the feast of St. Peter and St. Paul they marched out in twelve
+divisions, in remembrance of the mission of the Twelve Apostles, while
+Raymond of Toulouse remained to prevent the escape of the Turks shut up
+in the citadel. The Holy Lance was borne by the papal legate, Adhemar,
+Bishop of Puy; and the morning air laden with the perfume of roses was
+now regarded as a sign assuring them of the divine favor. They were
+prepared to see good omens in everything; and they went in full
+confidence that departed saints would, as they had been told, take part
+in the battle and smite down the infidel. The fight--one of brute force
+on the Christian side, of some little skill as well as strength on the
+other--had gone on for some time when such help seemed to become
+needful. Tancred had hurried to the aid of Bohemond, who was grievously
+pressed by Kilidje Arslan; and Kerboga was bearing heavily on Godfrey
+and Hugh of Vermandois, when, clothed in white armor and riding on white
+horses, some human forms were seen on the neighboring heights. "The
+saints are coming to your aid," shouted the Bishop of Puy, and the
+people saw in these radiant strangers the martyrs St. George, St.
+Maurice, and St. Theodore.
+
+Without awaiting their nearer approach the crusaders turned on the enemy
+with a force and fury which were now irresistible. Their cavalry could
+do little. Two hundred horses only remained of the sixty thousand which
+had filled the plain a few months before. But the hedge of spears
+advanced like a wall of iron, and the Turks gave way, broke, and fled.
+It was rout, not retreat; and with the crusaders victory was followed by
+the massacre of men, women, and children. The garrison in the citadel at
+once surrendered. Some declared themselves Christians and were baptized;
+those who refused to abandon Islam were taken to the nearest Mohametan
+territory. The city was the prize of Bohemond; and in his keeping it
+remained, although Raymond of Toulouse had made an effort to seize it by
+hoisting his banner on the walls. The work of pillage being ended, the
+churches were cleansed and repaired, and their altars blazed with golden
+spoils taken from the infidel. The Greek Patriarch was again seated on
+his throne; but he held his office at the good pleasure of the Latins,
+and two years later he was made to give place to Bernard, a chaplain of
+the Bishop of Puy.
+
+Ten months had passed away after the conquest of Antioch when the main
+body of the crusading army set out on its march to Jerusalem. They had
+wished to depart at once, but their chiefs dreaded to encounter
+waterless wastes at the end of a Syrian summer, and for the present they
+were content to send Hugh of Vermandois and Baldwin of Hainault as
+envoys to the Greek Emperor, to reproach him with his remissness or his
+want of faith. But the miseries endured by Christians and Turks were the
+pleasantest tidings in the ears of Alexius, for in the weakening of both
+lay his own strength; and he saw with satisfaction the departure of
+Hugh, not for Antioch, but for Europe, whither Stephen of Chartres had
+preceded him.
+
+Winter came, but the chiefs still lingered at Antioch. Some were
+occupied in expeditions against neighboring cities; but a more pressing
+care was the plague which punished the foulness and disorder of the
+pilgrims. A band of fifteen hundred Germans, recently landed in strong
+health and full equipments, were all, it is said, cut off; and among the
+victims the most lamented perhaps was the papal legate Adhemar. A
+feeling of discouragement was again spreading through the army
+generally. The chiefs vainly entreated the Pope to visit the city where
+the disciples of St. Peter first received the Christian name; the people
+were disheartened by the animosities and the selfish or crooked policy
+of their chiefs. Raymond still hankered after the principality of
+Antioch, and insisted that Bohemond and his people should share in the
+last great enterprise of the crusade. More disgraceful than these feuds
+were the scenes witnessed during the siege and after the conquest of
+Marra. Heedlessness and waste soon brought the assailants to devour the
+flesh of dogs and of human beings. The bodies of Turks were torn from
+their sepulchres, ripped up for the gold which they were supposed to
+have swallowed, and the fragments cooked and eaten. Of the besieged many
+slew themselves to avoid falling into the hands of the Christians; to
+some Bohemond, tempted by a large bribe, gave an assurance of safety.
+When the massacre had begun he ordered these to be brought forward. The
+weak and old he slaughtered; the rest he sent to the slave markets of
+Antioch.
+
+A weak attempt made by Alexius to detain the crusaders only spurred them
+to more vigorous efforts. They had already left Antioch, and Laodicea
+was in their hands, when he desired them to await his coming in June.
+The chiefs, remembering the departure of Tatikios with his Byzantine
+troops for Cyprus, retorted that he had broken his compact, and had
+therefore no further claims on their obedience. Hastening on their way,
+they crossed the plain of Berytos (Beyrout), overlooked by the eternal
+snows of Lebanon, along the narrow strip of land whence the great
+Phoenician cities had sent their seamen and their colonists, with all
+the wealth of the East, to the shores of the Adriatic and the gates of
+the Mediterranean. Having reached Jaffa, they turned inland to Ramlah, a
+town sixteen miles only from Jerusalem.
+
+Two days later the crusaders came in sight of the Holy City, the object
+of their long pilgrimage, the cause of wretchedness and death to
+millions. As their eyes rested on the scene hallowed to them through all
+the associations of their faith, the crusaders passed in an instant from
+fierce enthusiasm to a humiliation which showed itself in sighs and
+tears. All fell on their knees, to kiss the sacred earth and to pour
+forth thanksgivings that they had been suffered to look upon the desire
+of their eyes. Putting aside their armor and their weapons, they
+advanced in pilgrim's garb and with bare feet toward the spot which the
+Saviour had trodden in the hours of his agony and his passion.
+
+But before their feelings of devotion could be indulged, there was other
+work to be done. The chiefs took up their posts on those sides from
+which the nature of the ground gave most hope of a successful assault.
+On the northern side were Godfrey and Tancred, Robert of Flanders, and
+Robert of Normandy; on the west Raymond with his Provençals. On the
+fifth day, without siege instruments, with only one ladder, and trusting
+to mere weight, the crusaders made a desperate assault upon the walls.
+Some succeeded in reaching the summit, and the very rashness of their
+attack struck terror for a moment into their enemies. But the garrison
+soon rallied, and the invaders were all driven back or hurled from the
+ramparts. The task, it was manifest, must be undertaken in a more formal
+manner. Siege engines must be made, and the palm and olive of the
+immediate neighborhood would not supply fit materials for their
+construction.
+
+These were obtained from the woods of Shechem, a distance of thirty
+miles; and the work of preparation was carried on under the guidance of
+Gaston of Beam by the crews of some Genoese vessels which had recently
+anchored at Jaffa. So passed away more than thirty days, days of intense
+suffering to the besiegers. At Antioch they had been distressed chiefly
+by famine: in place of this wretchedness they had here the greater
+miseries of thirst. The enemy had carefully destroyed every place which
+might serve as a receptacle of water; and in seeking for it over miles
+of desolate country they were exposed to the harassing attacks of Moslem
+horsemen. Nor had visions and miracles improved the morals or discipline
+of the camp; and the ghost of Adhemar of Puy appeared to rebuke the
+horrible sins which were drawing down upon them the judgments of the
+Almighty. Better service was done by the generosity of Tancred, who made
+up his quarrel with Raymond: and the enthusiasm of the crusaders was
+again roused by the preaching of Arnold and the hermit Peter. The
+narrative of the siege of Jericho in the book of Joshua suggested
+probably the procession in which the clergy singing hymns preceded the
+laity round the walls of the city.
+
+The Saracens on the ramparts mocked their devotions by throwing dirt
+upon crucifixes; but they paid a terrible price for these insults. On
+the next day the final assault began, and was carried on through the day
+with the same monotony of brute force and carnage which marked all the
+operations of this merciless war. The darkness of night brought no rest.
+The actual combat was suspended, but the besieged were incessantly
+occupied in repairing the breaches made by the assailants, while these
+were busied in making their dispositions for the last mortal conflict.
+In the midst of that deadly struggle, when it seemed that the Cross must
+after all go down before the Crescent, a knight was seen on Mount
+Olivet, waving his glistening shield to rouse the champions of the Holy
+Sepulchre to the supreme effort. "It is St. George the Martyr who has
+come again to help us," cried Godfrey, and at his words the crusaders
+started up without a feeling of fatigue and carried everything before
+them.
+
+The day, we are told, was Friday, the hour was three in the afternoon--
+the moment at which the last cry from the cross announced the
+accomplishment of the Saviour's passion--when Letold of Tournay stood,
+the first victorious champion of the Cross, on the walls of Jerusalem.
+Next to him came, we are told, his brother Engelbert; the third was
+Godfrey. Tancred with the two Roberts stormed the gate of St. Stephen;
+the Provençals climbed the ramparts by ladders, and the conquest of
+Jerusalem was achieved. The insults offered a little while ago to the
+crucifixes were avenged by Godfrey's orders in the massacre of hundreds;
+the carnage in the Mosque of Omar swept away the bodies of thousands in
+a deluge of human blood. The Jews were all burnt alive in their
+synagogues. The horses of the crusaders, who rode up to the porch of the
+Temple, were--so the story goes--up to the knees in the loathsome
+stream; and the forms of Christian knights hacking and hewing the bodies
+of the living and the dead furnished a pleasant commentary on the sermon
+of Urban at Clermont.
+
+From the duties of slaughter these disciples of the Lamb of God passed
+to those of devotion. Bareheaded and barefooted, clad in a robe of pure
+white linen, in an ecstasy of joy and thankfulness mingled with profound
+contrition, Godfrey entered the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and knelt
+at the tomb of his Lord. With groans and tears his followers came, each
+in his turn, to offer his praises for the divine mercy which had
+vouchsafed this triumph to the armies of Christendom. With feverish
+earnestness they poured forth the vows which bound them to sin no more,
+and the excitement of prayer and slaughter, perhaps of both combined,
+led them to see everything which might be needed to give effect to the
+closing scene of this appalling tragedy. As the saints had arisen from
+their graves when the Son of Man gave up the ghost on Calvary, so the
+spirits of the pilgrims who had died on the terrible journey came to
+take part in the great thanksgiving. Foremost among them was Adhemar of
+Puy, rejoicing in the prayers for forgiveness and the resolutions of
+repentance which promised a new era of peace upon earth and of good-will
+toward all men.
+
+With departed saints were mingled living men who deserved all the honor
+which might be paid to them. The backsliding of the hermit Peter was
+blotted out of the memory of those who remembered only the fiery
+eloquence which had first called them to their now triumphant
+pilgrimage, and the zeal which had stirred the heart of Christendom to
+cut short the tyranny of the Unbeliever in the birthland of
+Christianity. The assembled throng fell down at his feet, and gave
+thanks to God, who had vouchsafed to them such a teacher. His task was
+done, and in the annals of the time Peter is heard of no more.
+
+On this dreadful day Tancred had spared three hundred captives to whom
+he had given a standard as a pledge of his protection and a guarantee of
+their safety. Such misplaced mercy was a crime in the eyes of the
+crusaders. The massacre of the first day may have been aggravated by the
+ungovernable excitement of victory; but it was resolved that on the next
+day there should be offered up a more solemn and deliberate sacrifice.
+The men whom Tancred had spared were all murdered; and the wrath of
+Tancred was roused, not by their fate, but by an act which called his
+honor into question. The butchery went on with impartial completeness,
+old and young, decrepit men and women, mothers with their infants, boys
+and girls, young men and maidens in the bloom of their vigor, all were
+mowed down, and their bodies mangled until heads and limbs were tossed
+together in awful chaos. A few were hidden away by Raymond of Toulouse;
+his motive, however, was not mercy, but the prospects of gain in the
+slave market. After this great act of faith and devotion the streets of
+the Holy City were washed by Saracen prisoners; but whether these were
+butchered when their work was ended we are not told.
+
+Four centuries and a half had passed away, when these things were done,
+since Omar had entered Jerusalem as a conqueror and knelt outside the
+Church of Constantine, that his followers might not trespass within it
+on the privileges of the Christians. The contrast is at the least marked
+between the Caliph of the Prophet and the children of the Holy Catholic
+Church.
+
+When, the business of the slaughter being ended, the chiefs met to
+choose a king for the realm which they had won with their swords, one
+man only appeared to whom the crown could fitly be offered. Baldwin was
+lord of Edessa; Bohemond ruled at Antioch; Hugh of Vermandois and
+Stephen of Chartres had returned to Europe; Robert of Flanders cared not
+to stay; the Norman Robert had no mind to forfeit the duchy which he had
+mortgaged; and Raymond was discredited by his avarice, and in part also
+by his traffic in the visions of Peter Barthelemy. But in the city where
+his Lord had worn the thorny crown, the veteran leader who had looked on
+ruthless slaughter without blanching and had borne his share in swelling
+the stream of blood would wear no earthly diadem nor take the title of
+king. He would watch over his Master's grave and the interests of his
+worshippers under the humble guise of Baron and Defender of the Holy
+Sepulchre; and as such, a fortnight after his election, Godfrey departed
+to do battle with the hosts of the Fatimite Caliph of Egypt, who now
+felt that the loss of Jerusalem was too high a price for the humiliation
+of his rivals. The conflict took place at Ascalon, and the Fatimite army
+was miserably routed. Godfrey returned to Jerusalem, to hang the sword
+and standard of the Sultan before the Holy Sepulchre and to bid farewell
+to the pilgrims who were now to set out on their homeward journey. He
+retained, with three hundred knights under Tancred, only two thousand
+foot soldiers for the defence of his kingdom; and so ended the first act
+in the great drama of the crusades.
+
+
+
+
+FOUNDATION OF THE ORDER OF KNIGHTS TEMPLARS
+
+A.D. 1118
+
+CHARLES G. ADDISON
+
+
+(Among the military orders of past ages, that of the Knights Templars,
+founded for the defence of the Latin kingdom of Jerusalem, with its
+lofty motive, its superb organization and discipline, and its history
+extending over nearly two centuries, is justly accounted one of the most
+illustrious. At the period when this extraordinary and romantic order
+came into existence, the contrasting spirits of warlike enterprise and
+monastic retirement were drawing men, some from the field to the
+cloister, others from the life of ascetic piety to the scenes of strife.
+There appeared a strange blending of these two tendencies, which indeed
+was the leading characteristic of the time. This union of the religious
+with the militant spirit had been promoted by the enthusiasm of the
+crusades which had already been undertaken, and among the crusaders
+themselves the blended spiritual and military ideal of the holy war had
+its complete development. Let us recall the reasons and the beginnings
+of the crusades themselves.
+
+Upon the legendary discovery of the Holy Sepulchre by Helena, the mother
+of Constantine, about three hundred years after the death of Christ, and
+the consequent erection, as it is said, by her great son--the first
+Christian emperor of Rome--of the magnificent Church of the Holy
+Sepulchre over the sacred spot, a tide of pilgrimage set in toward
+Jerusalem which increased in strength as Christianity gradually spread
+throughout Europe. When in A.D. 637 the Holy City was surrendered to the
+Saracens, the caliph Omar gave guarantees for the security of the
+Christian population. Under this safeguard the pilgrimages to Jerusalem
+continued to increase, until in 1064 the Holy Sepulchre was visited by
+seven thousand pilgrims, led by an archbishop and three bishops. But in
+1065 Jerusalem was taken by the Turcomans, who massacred three thousand
+citizens, and placed the command of the city in savage hands. Terrible
+oppression of the Christians there followed; the Patriarch of Jerusalem
+was dragged by the hair of his head over the sacred pavement of the
+Church of the Holy Sepulchre and cast into a dungeon for ransom;
+extortion, imprisonment, and massacre were indiscriminately visited upon
+the people.
+
+Such were the conditions that aroused the indignant spirit of
+Christendom and prepared it for the cry of Peter the Hermit, which awoke
+the wild enthusiasm of the crusades. When Jerusalem was captured by the
+crusaders under Godfrey of Bouillon in 1099, the zeal of pilgrimage
+burst forth anew. But although Jerusalem was delivered, Palestine was
+still infested with the infidels, who made it as hazardous as before for
+the pilgrims entering there. Some means for their protection must be
+found, and out of this necessity grew the great military order of which
+the following pages treat.)
+
+
+To alleviate the dangers and distresses to which the pilgrim enthusiasts
+were exposed; to guard the honor of the saintly virgins and matrons, and
+to protect the gray hairs of the venerable palmers, nine noble knights
+formed a holy brotherhood-in-arms, and entered into a solemn compact to
+aid one another in clearing the highways of infidels and robbers, and in
+protecting the pilgrims through the passes and defiles of the mountains
+to the Holy City. Warmed with the religious and military fervor of the
+day, and animated by the sacredness of the cause to which they had
+devoted their swords, they called themselves the "Poor Fellow-soldiers
+of Jesus Christ."
+
+They renounced the world and its pleasures, and in the Holy Church of
+the Resurrection, in the presence of the Patriarch of Jerusalem, they
+embraced vows of perpetual chastity, obedience, and poverty, after the
+manner of monks. Uniting in themselves the two most popular qualities of
+the age, devotion and valor, and exercising them in the most popular of
+all enterprises, the protection of the pilgrims and of the road to the
+Holy Sepulchre, they speedily acquired a vast reputation and a splendid
+renown.
+
+At first, we are told, they had no church and no particular place of
+abode, but in the year of our Lord 1118--nineteen years after the
+conquest of Jerusalem by the crusaders--they had rendered such good and
+acceptable service to the Christians that Baldwin II, King of Jerusalem,
+granted them a place of habitation within the sacred enclosure of the
+Temple on Mount Moriah, amid those holy and magnificent structures,
+partly erected by the Christian emperor Justinian and partly built by
+the caliph Omar, which were then exhibited by the monks and priests of
+Jerusalem, whose restless zeal led them to practise on the credulity of
+the pilgrims, and to multiply relics and all objects likely to be sacred
+in their eyes, as the Temple of Solomon, whence the "Poor
+Fellow-soldiers of Jesus Christ" came thenceforth to be known by the
+name of "the Knighthood of the Temple of Solomon."
+
+A few remarks in elucidation of the name "Templars," or "Knights of the
+Temple," may not be unacceptable.
+
+By the Mussulmans the site of the great Jewish Temple on Mount Moriah
+has always been regarded with peculiar veneration. Mahomet, in the first
+year of the publication of the _Koran_, directed his followers, when at
+prayer, to turn their faces toward it, and pilgrimages have constantly
+been made to the holy spot by devout Moslems. On the conquest of
+Jerusalem by the Arabians, it was the first care of the caliph Omar to
+rebuild "the Temple of the Lord." Assisted by the principal chieftains
+of his army, the Commander of the Faithful undertook the pious office of
+clearing the ground with his own hands, and of tracing out the
+foundations of the magnificent mosque which now crowns with its dark and
+swelling dome the elevated summit of Mount Moriah.
+
+This great house of prayer, the most holy Mussulman temple in the world
+after that of Mecca, is erected over the spot where "Solomon began to
+build the house of the Lord at Jerusalem in Mount Moriah, where the Lord
+appeared unto David his father, in the place that David had prepared in
+the threshing-floor of Oman the Jebusite."
+
+It remains to this day in a state of perfect preservation, and is one of
+the finest specimens of Saracenic architecture in existence. It is
+entered by four spacious doorways, each door facing one of the cardinal
+points: the _Bab el D'Jannat_ (or "Gate of the Garden"), on the north;
+the _Bab el Kebla_, (or "Gate of Prayer"), on the south; the _Bab ibn el
+Daoud_ (or "Gate of the Son of David"), on the east; and the _Bab el
+Garbi_, on the west. By the Arabian geographers it is called _Beit
+Allah_ ("the House of God"), also _Beit Almokaddas_ or _Beit Almacdes_
+("the Holy House"). From it Jerusalem derives its Arabic name, _El Kods_
+("the Holy"), _El Schereef_ ("the Noble"), and _El Mobarek_ ("the
+Blessed"); while the governors of the city, instead of the customary
+high-sounding titles of sovereignty and dominion, take the simple title
+of _Hami_ (or "Protectors").
+
+On the conquest of Jerusalem by the crusaders, the crescent was torn
+down from the summit of this famous Mussulman temple, and was replaced
+by an immense golden cross, and the edifice was then consecrated to the
+services of the Christian religion, but retained its simple appellation
+of "the Temple of the Lord." William, Archbishop of Tyre and Chancellor
+of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, gives an interesting account of this famous
+edifice as it existed in his time, during the Latin dominion. He speaks
+of the splendid mosaic work, of the Arabic characters setting forth the
+name of the founder and the cost of the undertaking, and of the famous
+rock under the centre of the dome, which is to this day shown by the
+Moslems as the spot whereon the destroying angel stood, "with his drawn
+sword in his hand stretched out over Jerusalem." This rock, he informs
+us, was left exposed and uncovered for the space of fifteen years after
+the conquest of the Holy City by the crusaders, but was, after that
+period, cased with a handsome altar of white marble, upon which the
+priests daily said mass.
+
+To the south of this holy Mussulman temple, on the extreme edge of the
+summit of Mount Moriah, and resting against the modern walls of the town
+of Jerusalem, stands the venerable Church of the Virgin, erected by the
+emperor Justinian, whose stupendous foundations, remaining to this day,
+fully justify the astonishing description given of the building by
+Procopius. That writer informs us that in order to get a level surface
+for the erection of the edifice, it was necessary, on the east and south
+sides of the hill, to raise up a wall of masonry from the valley below,
+and to construct a vast foundation, partly composed of solid stone and
+partly of arches and pillars. The stones were of such magnitude that
+each block required to be transported in a truck drawn by forty of the
+Emperor's strongest oxen; and to admit of the passage of these trucks it
+was necessary to widen the roads leading to Jerusalem. The forests of
+Lebanon yielded their choicest cedars for the timbers of the roof; and a
+quarry of variegated marble, seasonably discovered in the adjoining
+mountains, furnished the edifice with superb marble columns.
+
+The interior of this interesting structure, which still remains at
+Jerusalem, after a lapse of more than thirteen centuries, in an
+excellent state of preservation, is adorned with six rows of columns,
+from whence spring arches supporting the cedar beams and timbers of the
+roof; and at the end of the building is a round tower, surmounted by a
+dome. The vast stones, the walls of masonry, and the subterranean
+colonnade raised to support the southeast angle of the platform whereon
+the church is erected are truly wonderful, and may still be seen by
+penetrating through a small door and descending several flights of steps
+at the southeast corner of the enclosure. Adjoining the sacred edifice
+the Emperor erected hospitals, or houses of refuge, for travellers, sick
+people, and mendicants of all nations; the foundations whereof, composed
+of handsome Roman masonry, are still visible on either side of the
+southern end of the building.
+
+On the conquest of Jerusalem by the Moslems this venerable church was
+converted into a mosque, and was called D'Jame al Acsa; it was enclosed,
+together with the great Mussulman "Temple of the Lord" erected by the
+caliph Omar, within a large area by a high stone wall, which runs around
+the edge of the summit of Mount Moriah and guards from the profane tread
+of the unbeliever the whole of that sacred ground whereon once stood the
+gorgeous Temple of the wisest of kings.
+
+When the Holy City was taken by the crusaders, the D'Jame al Acsa, with
+the various buildings constructed around it, became the property of the
+kings of Jerusalem, and is denominated by William of Tyre "the Palace,"
+or "Royal House to the south of the Temple of the Lord, vulgarly called
+the 'Temple of Solomon.'" It was this edifice or temple on Mount Moriah
+which was appropriated to the use of the "Poor Fellow-soldiers of Jesus
+Christ," as they had no church and no particular place of abode, and
+from it they derived their name of "Knights Templars."
+
+James of Vitry, Bishop of Acre, who gives an interesting account of the
+holy places, thus speaks of the temple of the Knights Templars: "There
+is, moreover, at Jerusalem another temple of immense spaciousness and
+extent, from which the brethren of the Knighthood of the Temple derive
+their name of 'Templars,' which is called the 'Temple of Solomon,'
+perhaps to distinguish it from the one above described, which is
+specially called the 'Temple of the Lord.'" He moreover informs us in
+his oriental history that "in the 'Temple of the Lord' there is an abbot
+and canons regular; and be it known that the one is the 'Temple of the
+_Lord_,' and the other the 'Temple of the _Chivalry_.' These are
+_clerks_; the others are _knights_."
+
+The canons of the "Temple of the Lord" conceded to the "Poor
+Fellow-soldiers of Jesus Christ" the large court extending between that
+building and the Temple of Solomon; the King, the Patriarch, and the
+prelates of Jerusalem, and the barons of the Latin kingdom assigned them
+various gifts and revenues for their maintenance and support, and, the
+order being now settled in a regular place of abode, the knights soon
+began to entertain more extended views and to seek a larger theatre for
+the exercise of their holy profession.
+
+Their first aim and object had been, as before mentioned, simply to
+protect the poor pilgrims on their journey backward and forward from the
+sea-coast to Jerusalem; but as the hostile tribes of Mussulmans, which
+everywhere surrounded the Latin kingdom, were gradually recovering from
+the stupefying terror into which they had been plunged by the successful
+and exterminating warfare of the first crusaders, and were assuming an
+aggressive and threatening attitude, it was determined that the holy
+warriors of the temple should, in addition to the protection of
+pilgrims, make the defence of the Christian kingdom of Jerusalem, of the
+Eastern Church, and of all the holy places a part of their particular
+profession.
+
+The two most distinguished members of the fraternity were Hugh de Payens
+and Geoffrey de St. Aldemar, or St. Omer, two valiant soldiers of the
+cross, who had fought with great credit and renown at the siege of
+Jerusalem. Hugh de Payens was chosen by the knights to be superior of
+the new religious and military society, by the title of "the Master of
+the Temple"; and he has, in consequence, been generally called the
+founder of the order.
+
+The name and reputation of the Knights Templars speedily spread
+throughout Europe, and various illustrious pilgrims of the Far West
+aspired to become members of the holy fraternity. Among these was Fulk,
+Count of Anjou, who joined the society as a married brother (1120), and
+annually remitted the order thirty pounds of silver. Baldwin, King of
+Jerusalem, foreseeing that great advantages would accrue to the Latin
+kingdom by the increase of the power and numbers of these holy warriors,
+exerted himself to extend the order throughout all Christendom, so that
+he might, by means of so politic an institution, keep alive the holy
+enthusiasm of the West, and draw a constant succor from the bold and
+warlike races of Europe for the support of his Christian throne and
+kingdom.
+
+St. Bernard, the holy abbot of Clairvaux, had been a great admirer of
+the Templars. He wrote a letter to the Count of Champagne, on his
+entering the order (1123), praising the act as one of eminent merit in
+the sight of God; and it was determined to enlist the all-powerful
+influence of this great ecclesiastic in favor of the fraternity. "By a
+vow of poverty and penance, by closing his eyes against the visible
+world, by the refusal of all ecclesiastical dignities, the abbot of
+Clairvaux became the oracle of Europe and the founder of one hundred and
+sixty convents. Princes and pontiffs trembled at the freedom of his
+apostolical censures; France, England, and Milan consulted and obeyed
+his judgment in a schism of the Church; the debt was repaid by the
+gratitude of Innocent II; and his successor, Eugenius III, was the
+friend and disciple of the holy St. Bernard."
+
+To this learned and devout prelate two Knights Templars were despatched
+with the following letter:
+
+"Baldwin, by the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, King of Jerusalem and
+Prince of Antioch, to the venerable Father Bernard, Abbot of Clairvaux;
+health and regard.
+
+"The Brothers of the Temple, whom the Lord hath deigned to raise up, and
+whom by an especial providence he preserves for the defence of this
+kingdom, desiring to obtain from the Holy See the confirmation of their
+institution and a rule for their particular guidance, we have determined
+to send to you the two knights, Andrew and Gondemar, men as much
+distinguished by their military exploits as by the splendor of their
+birth, to obtain from the Pope the approbation of their order, and to
+dispose his holiness to send succor and subsidies against the enemies of
+the faith, reunited in their design to destroy us and to invade our
+Christian territories.
+
+"Well knowing the weight of your mediation with God and his vicar upon
+earth, as well as with the princes and powers of Europe, we have thought
+fit to confide to you these two important matters, whose successful
+issue cannot be otherwise than most agreeable to ourselves. The statutes
+we ask of you should be so ordered and arranged as to be reconcilable
+with the tumult of the camp and the profession of arms; they must, in
+fact, be of such a nature as to obtain favor and popularity with the
+Christian princes.
+
+"Do you then so manage that we may, through you, have the happiness of
+seeing this important affair brought to a successful issue, and address
+for us to Heaven the incense of your prayers."
+
+Soon after the above letter had been despatched to St. Bernard, Hugh de
+Payens himself proceeded to Rome, accompanied by Geoffrey de St. Aldemar
+and four other brothers of the order: namely, Brother Payen de
+Montdidier, Brother Gorall, Brother Geoffrey Bisol, and Brother
+Archambauld de St. Armand. They were received with great honor and
+distinction by Pope Honorius, who warmly approved of the objects and
+designs of the holy fraternity. St. Bernard had, in the mean time, taken
+the affair greatly to heart; he negotiated with the pope, the legate,
+and the bishops of France, and obtained the convocation of a great
+ecclesiastical council at Troyes (1128), which Hugh de Payens and his
+brethren were invited to attend. This council consisted of several
+archbishops, bishops, and abbots, among which last was St. Bernard
+himself. The rules to which the Templars had subjected themselves were
+there described by the master, and to the holy abbot of Clairvaux was
+confided the task of revising and correcting these rules, and of framing
+a code of statutes fit and proper for the governance of the great
+religious and military fraternity of the temple.
+
+_The Rule of the Poor Fellow-soldiers of Jesus Christ and of the Temple
+of Solomon_, arranged by St. Bernard, and sanctioned by the holy Fathers
+of the Council of Troyes, for the government and regulation of the
+monastic and military society of the Temple, is principally of a
+religious character and of an austere and gloomy cast. It is divided
+into seventy-two heads or chapters, and is preceded by a short prologue
+addressed "to all who disdain to follow after their own wills, and
+desire with purity of mind to fight for the most high and true King,"
+exhorting them to put on the armor of obedience, and to associate
+themselves together with piety and humility for the defence of the Holy
+Catholic Church; and to employ a pure diligence, and a steady
+perseverance in the exercise of their sacred profession, so that they
+might share in the happy destiny reserved for the holy warriors who had
+given up their lives for Christ.
+
+The rule enjoins severe devotional exercises, self-mortification,
+fasting, and prayer, and a constant attendance at matins, vespers, and
+on all the services of the Church, "that, being refreshed and satisfied
+with heavenly food, instructed and stablished with heavenly precepts,
+after the consummation of the divine mysteries," none might be afraid of
+the _Fight_, but be prepared for the _Crown_.
+
+If unable to attend the regular service of God, the absent brother is
+for matins to say over thirteen _pater-nosters_, for every hour seven,
+and for vespers nine. When any Templar draweth nigh unto death, the
+chaplains and clerk are to assemble and offer up a solemn mass for his
+soul; the surrounding brethren are to spend the night in prayer, and a
+hundred pater-nosters are to be repeated for the dead brother.
+"Moreover," say the holy Fathers, "we do strictly enjoin you, that with
+divine and most tender charity ye do daily bestow as much meat and drink
+as was given to that brother when alive, unto some poor man for forty
+days."
+
+The brethren are, on all occasions, to speak sparingly and to wear a
+grave and serious deportment. They are to be constant in the exercise of
+charity and almsgiving, to have a watchful care over all sick brethren,
+and to support and sustain all old men. They are not to receive letters
+from their parents, relations, or friends without the license of the
+master, and all gifts are immediately to be taken to the latter or to
+the treasurer, to be disposed of as he may direct. They are, moreover,
+to receive no service or attendance from a woman, and are commanded,
+above all things, to shun feminine kisses.
+
+"This same year (1128) Hugh of the Temple came from Jerusalem to the
+King in Normandy, and the King received him with much honor and gave him
+much treasure in gold and silver, and afterward he sent him into
+England, and there he was well received by all good men, and all gave
+him treasure, and in Scotland also, and they sent in all a great sum in
+gold and silver by him to Jerusalem, and there went with him and after
+him so great a number as never before since the days of Pope Urban."
+Grants of land, as well as of money, were at the same time made to Hugh
+de Payens and his brethren, some of which were shortly afterward
+confirmed by King Stephen on his accession to the throne (1135). Among
+these is a grant of the manor of Bistelesham made to the Templars by
+Count Robert de Ferrara, and a grant of the Church of Langeforde in
+Bedfordshire made by Simon de Wahull and Sibylla his wife and Walter
+their son.
+
+Hugh de Payens, before his departure, placed a Knight Templar at the
+head of the order in England, who was called the prior of the temple and
+was the procurator and viceregent of the master. It was his duty to
+manage the estates granted to the fraternity, and to transmit the
+revenues to Jerusalem. He was also delegated with the power of admitting
+members into the order, subject to the control and direction of the
+master, and was to provide means of transport for such newly-admitted
+brethren to the Far East, to enable them to fulfil the duties of their
+profession. As the houses of the Temple increased in number in England,
+subpriors came to be appointed, and the superior of the order in this
+country was then called the "grand prior," and afterward master, of the
+temple.
+
+Many illustrious knights of the best families in Europe aspired to the
+habit and vows, but, however exalted their rank, they were not received
+within the bosom of the fraternity until they had proved themselves by
+their conduct worthy of such a fellowship. Thus, when Hugh d'Amboise,
+who had harassed and oppressed the people of Marmontier by unjust
+exactions, and had refused to submit to the judicial decision of the
+Count of Anjou, desired to enter the order, Hugh de Payens refused to
+admit him to the vows until he had humbled himself, renounced his
+pretensions, and given perfect satisfaction to those whom he had
+injured. The candidates, moreover, previous to their admission, were
+required to make reparation and satisfaction for all damage done by them
+at any time to churches and to public or private property.
+
+An astonishing enthusiasm was excited throughout Christendom in behalf
+of the Templars; princes and nobles, sovereigns and their subjects, vied
+with each other in heaping gifts and benefits upon them, and scarce a
+will of importance was made without an article in it in their favor.
+Many illustrious persons on their death-beds took the vows, that they
+might be buried in the habit of the order; and sovereigns, quitting the
+government of their kingdoms, enrolled themselves among the holy
+fraternity, and bequeathed even their dominions to the master and the
+brethren of the temple.
+
+Thus, Raymond Berenger, Count of Barcelona and Provence, at a very
+advanced age, abdicating his throne and shaking off the ensigns of royal
+authority, retired to the house of the Templars at Barcelona, and
+pronounced his vows (1130) before Brother Hugh de Rigauld, the prior.
+His infirmities not allowing him to proceed in person to the chief house
+of the order at Jerusalem, he sent vast sums of money thither, and
+immuring himself in a small cell in the temple at Barcelona, he there
+remained in the constant exercise of the religious duties of his
+profession until the day of his death.
+
+At the same period, the emperor Lothair bestowed on the order a large
+portion of his patrimony of Supplinburg; and the year following (1131),
+Alphonso I, King of Navarre and Aragon, also styled Emperor of Spain,
+one of the greatest warriors of the age, by his will declared the
+Knights of the Temple his heirs and successors in the crowns of Navarre
+and Aragon, and a few hours before his death he caused this will to be
+ratified and signed by most of the barons of both kingdoms. The validity
+of this document, however, was disputed, and the claims of the Templars
+were successfully resisted by the nobles of Navarre; but in Aragon they
+obtained, by way of compromise, lands and castles and considerable
+dependencies, a portion of the customs and duties levied throughout the
+kingdom, and the contributions raised from the Moors.
+
+To increase the enthusiasm in favor of the Templars, and still further
+to swell their ranks with the best and bravest of the European chivalry,
+St. Bernard, at the request of Hugh de Payens, took up his powerful pen
+in their behalf. In a famous discourse, _In Praise of the New Chivalry_,
+the holy abbot sets forth, in eloquent and enthusiastic terms, the
+spiritual advantages and blessings enjoyed by the military friars of the
+temple over all other warriors. He draws a curious picture of the
+relative situations and circumstances of the _secular_ soldiery and the
+soldiery of _Christ_, and shows how different in the sight of God are
+the bloodshed and slaughter of the one from that committed by the other.
+
+This extraordinary discourse is written with great spirit; it is
+addressed "To Hugh, Knight of Christ, and Master of the Knighthood of
+Christ," is divided into fourteen parts or chapters, and commences with
+a short prologue. It is curiously illustrative of the spirit of the
+times, and some of its most striking passages will be read with
+interest.
+
+The holy abbot thus pursues his comparison between the soldier of the
+world and the soldier of Christ--the _secular_ and the _religious_
+warrior: "As often as thou who wagest a secular warfare marchest forth
+to battle, it is greatly to be feared lest when thou slayest thine enemy
+in the body, he should destroy thee in the spirit, or lest peradventure
+thou shouldst be at once slain by him both in body and soul. From the
+disposition of the heart, indeed, not by the event of the fight, is to
+be estimated either the jeopardy or the victory of the Christian. If,
+fighting with the desire of killing another, thou shouldst chance to get
+killed thyself, thou diest a manslayer; if, on the other hand, thou
+prevailest, and through a desire of conquest or revenge killest a man,
+thou livest a manslayer.... O unfortunate victory! when in overcoming
+thine adversary thou fallest into sin, and, anger or pride having the
+mastery over thee, in vain thou gloriest over the vanquished....
+
+"What, therefore, is the fruit of this secular, I will not say
+_militia_, but _malitia_, if the slayer committeth a deadly sin, and the
+slain perisheth eternally? Verily, to use the words of the apostle, he
+that plougheth should plough in hope, and he that thresheth should be
+partaker of his hope. Whence, therefore, O soldiers, cometh this so
+stupendous error? What insufferable madness is this--to wage war with so
+great cost and labor, but with no pay except either death or crime? Ye
+cover your horses with silken trappings, and I know not how much fine
+cloth hangs pendent from your coats of mail. Ye paint your spears,
+shields, and saddles; your bridles and spurs are adorned on all sides
+with gold and silver and gems, and with all this pomp, with a shameful
+fury and a reckless insensibility, ye rush on to death. Are these
+military ensigns, or are they not rather the garnishments of women? Can
+it happen that the sharp-pointed sword of the enemy will respect gold,
+will it spare gems, will it be unable to penetrate the silken garment?
+
+"As ye yourselves have often experienced, three things are indispensably
+necessary to the success of the soldier: he must, for example, be bold,
+active, and circumspect; quick in running, prompt in striking; ye,
+however, to the disgust of the eye, nourish your hair after the manner
+of women, ye gather around your footsteps long and flowing vestures, ye
+bury up your delicate and tender hands in ample and wide-spreading
+sleeves. Among you indeed naught provoketh war or awakeneth strife, but
+either an irrational impulse of anger or an insane lust of glory or the
+covetous desire of possessing another man's lands and possessions. In
+such cases it is neither safe to slay nor to be slain.... But the
+soldiers of Christ indeed securely fight the battles of their Lord, in
+no wise fearing sin, either from the slaughter of the enemy or danger
+from their own death. When indeed death is to be given or received for
+Christ, it has naught of crime in it, but much of glory....
+
+"And now for an example, or to the confusion of our soldiers fighting
+not manifestly for God, but for the devil, we will briefly display the
+mode of life of the Knights of Christ, such as it is in the field and in
+the convent, by which means it will be made plainly manifest to what
+extent the soldiery of God and the soldiery of the World differ from one
+another.... The soldiers of Christ live together in common in an
+agreeable but frugal manner, without wives and without children; and
+that nothing may be wanting to evangelical perfection, they dwell
+together without property of any kind, in one house, under one rule,
+careful to preserve the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace. You
+may say that to the whole multitude there is but one heart and one soul,
+as each one in no respect followeth after his own will or desire, but is
+diligent to do the will of the Master. They are never idle nor rambling
+abroad, but, when they are not in the field, that they may not eat their
+bread in idleness, they are fitting and repairing their armor and their
+clothing, or employing themselves in such occupations as the will of the
+Master requireth or their common necessities render expedient. Among
+them there is no distinction of persons; respect is paid to the best and
+most virtuous, not the most noble. They participate in each other's
+honor, they bear one anothers' burdens, that they may fulfil the law of
+Christ.
+
+"An insolent expression, a useless undertaking, immoderate laughter, the
+least murmur or whispering, if found out, passeth not without severe
+rebuke. They detest cards and dice, they shun the sports of the field,
+and take no delight in the ludicrous catching of birds (hawking), which
+men are wont to indulge in. Jesters and soothsayers and story-tellers,
+scurrilous songs, shows, and games, they contemptuously despise and
+abominate as vanities and mad follies. They cut their hair, knowing
+that, according to the apostle, it is not seemly in a man to have long
+hair. They are never combed, seldom washed, but appear rather with rough
+neglected hair, foul with dust, and with skins browned by the sun and
+their coats of mail.
+
+"Moreover, on the approach of battle they fortify themselves with faith
+within and with steel without, and not with gold, so that, armed and not
+adorned, they may strike terror into the enemy, rather than awaken his
+lust of plunder. They strive earnestly to possess strong and swift
+horses, but not garnished with ornaments or decked with trappings,
+thinking of battle and of victory, and not of pomp and show, studying to
+inspire fear rather than admiration....
+
+"Such hath God chosen for his own, and hath collected together as his
+ministers from the ends of the earth, from among the bravest of Israel,
+who indeed vigilantly and faithfully guard the Holy Sepulchre, all armed
+with the sword, and most learned in the art of war....
+
+"There is indeed a temple at Jerusalem in which they dwell together,
+unequal, it is true, as a building, to that ancient and most famous one
+of Solomon, but not inferior in glory. For truly the entire magnificence
+of that consisted in corrupt things, in gold and silver, in carved
+stone, and in a variety of woods; but the whole beauty of this resteth
+in the adornment of an agreeable conversation, in the godly devotion of
+its inmates, and their beautifully ordered mode of life. That was
+admired for its various external beauties, this is venerated for its
+different virtues and sacred actions, as becomes the sanctity of the
+house of God, who delighteth not so much in polished marbles as in
+well-ordered behavior, and regardeth pure minds more than gilded walls.
+The face likewise of this temple is adorned with arms, not with gems,
+and the wall, instead of the ancient golden chapiters, is covered around
+with pendent shields.
+
+"Instead of the ancient candelabra, censers, and lavers, the house is on
+all sides furnished with bridles, saddles, and lances, all which plainly
+demonstrate that the soldiers burn with the same zeal for the house of
+God as that which formerly animated their great Leader, when, vehemently
+enraged, he entered into the Temple, and with that most sacred hand,
+armed not with steel, but with a scourge which he had made of small
+thongs, drove out the merchants, poured out the changers' money, and
+overthrew the tables of them that sold doves; most indignantly
+condemning the pollution of the house of prayer by the making of it a
+place of merchandise.
+
+"The devout army of Christ, therefore, earnestly incited by the example
+of its king, thinking indeed that the holy places are much more
+impiously and insufferably polluted by the infidels than when defiled by
+merchants, abide in the holy house with horses and with arms, so that
+from that, as well as all the other sacred places, all filthy and
+diabolical madness of infidelity being driven out, they may occupy
+themselves by day and by night in honorable and useful offices. They
+emulously honor the temple of God with sedulous and sincere oblations,
+offering sacrifices therein with constant devotion, not indeed of the
+flesh of cattle after the manner of the ancients, but peaceful
+sacrifices, brotherly love, devout obedience, voluntary poverty.
+
+"These things are done perpetually at Jerusalem, and the world is
+aroused, the islands hear, and the nations take heed from afar...."
+
+St. Bernard then congratulates Jerusalem on the advent of the soldiers
+of Christ, and declares that the Holy City will rejoice with a double
+joy in being rid of all her oppressors, the ungodly, the robbers, the
+blasphemers, murderers, perjurers, and adulterers; and in receiving her
+faithful defenders and sweet consolers, under the shadow of whose
+protection "Mount Zion shall rejoice, and the daughters of Judah sing
+for joy."
+
+
+
+
+STEPHEN USURPS THE ENGLISH CROWN
+
+HIS CONFLICTS WITH MATILDA: DECISIVE INFLUENCE OF THE CHURCH
+
+A.D. 1135-1154
+
+CHARLES KNIGHT
+
+
+(William the Conqueror, King of England, was succeeded by his sons
+William Rufus and Henry--on account of his scholarship known as
+Beauclerc. Prince William, Henry's only son, was drowned when starting
+from Normandy for England in 1120. In the absence of male issue Henry
+settled the English and Norman crowns upon his daughter Matilda, and
+demanded an oath of fidelity to her from the barons.
+
+Matilda had been married first to Emperor Henry V of Germany, who died
+in 1125, and secondly to Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou.
+
+Stephen was the son of Adela, daughter of William the Conqueror, who had
+married Stephen, Count of Blois. Stephen, with his brother Henry, had
+been invited to the court of England by their uncle, and had received
+honors, preferments, and riches. Henry becoming an ecclesiast was
+created abbot of Glastonbury and bishop of Winchester. Stephen, among
+other possessions, received the great estate forfeited by Robert Mallet
+in England, and that forfeited by the Earl of Mortaigne in Normandy. By
+his marriage with Matilda, daughter of the Earl of Boulogne, he had
+succeeded also to the territories of his father-in-law. Stephen by
+studied arts and personal qualities became a great favorite with the
+English barons and the people.
+
+The empress Matilda and her husband Geoffrey, unfortunately, were
+unpopular both in England and Normandy, the English barons especially
+viewing with disfavor the prospect of a woman occupying the throne.
+
+Henry Beauclerc died in 1135 at his favorite hunting-seat, the Castle of
+Lions, near Rouen, in Normandy. Stephen, ignoring the oath of fealty to
+the daughter of his benefactor, hastened to England, and,
+notwithstanding some opposition, with the help of his clerical brother
+and other functionaries had himself proclaimed and crowned king. This
+act involved England in years of civil war, anarchy, and wretchedness,
+which ended only with the accession as Henry II of Empress Matilda's
+son, Henry Plantagenet of Anjou.)
+
+
+Of the reign of Stephen, Sir James Mackintosh has said, "It perhaps
+contains the most perfect condensation of all the ills of feudality to
+be found in history." He adds, "The whole narrative would have been
+rejected, as devoid of all likeness to truth, if it had been hazarded in
+fiction." As a picture of "all the ills of feudality," this narrative is
+a picture of the entire social state--the monarchy, the Church, the
+aristocracy, the people--and appears to us, therefore, to demand a more
+careful examination than if the historical interest were chiefly centred
+in the battles and adventures belonging to a disputed succession, and in
+the personal characters of a courageous princess and her knightly rival.
+
+Stephen, Earl of Boulogne, the nephew of King Henry I, was no stranger
+to the country which he aspired to rule. He had lived much in England
+and was a universal favorite. "From his complacency of manners, and his
+readiness to joke, and sit and regale even with low people, he had
+gained so much on their affections as is hardly to be conceived." This
+popular man was at the death-bed of his uncle; but before the royal body
+was borne on the shoulders of nobles from the Castle of Lions to Rouen,
+Stephen was on his road to England. He embarked at Whitsand, undeterred
+by boisterous weather, and landed during a winter storm of thunder and
+lightning. It was a more evil omen when Dover and Canterbury shut their
+gates against him. But he went boldly on to London. There can be no
+doubt that his proceedings were not the result of a sudden impulse, and
+that his usurpation of the crown was successful through a very powerful
+organization. His brother Henry was Bishop of Winchester; and his
+influence with the other dignitaries of the Church was mainly
+instrumental in the election of Stephen to be king, in open disregard of
+the oaths taken a few years before to recognize the succession of
+Matilda and of her son. Between the death of a king and the coronation
+of his successor there was usually a short interval, in which the form
+of election was gone through. But it is held that during that suspension
+of the royal functions there was usually a proclamation of "the king's
+peace," under which all violations of law were punished as if the head
+of the law were in the full exercise of his functions and dignities.
+King Henry I died on the 1st of December, 1135. Stephen was crowned on
+the 26th of December. The death of Henry would probably have been
+generally known in England in a week after the event. There is a
+sufficient proof that this succession was considered doubtful, and,
+consequently, that there was an unusual delay in the proclamation of
+"the king's peace." The Forest Laws were the great grievance of Henry's
+reign. His death was the signal for their violation by the whole body of
+the people. "It was wonderful how so many myriads of wild animals, which
+in large herds before plentifully stocked the country, suddenly
+disappeared, so that out of the vast number scarcely two now could be
+found together. They seemed to be entirely extirpated." According to the
+same authority, "the people also turned to plundering each other without
+mercy"; and "whatever the evil passions suggested in peaceable times,
+now that the opportunity of vengeance presented itself, was quickly
+executed." This is a remarkable condition of a country which, having
+been governed by terror, suddenly passed out of the evils of despotism
+into the greater evils of anarchy. This temporary confusion must have
+contributed to urge on the election of Stephen. By the Londoners he was
+received with acclamations; and the _witan_ chose him for king without
+hesitation, as one who could best fulfil the duties of the office and
+put an end to the dangers of the kingdom.
+
+Stephen succeeded to a vast amount of treasure. All the rents of Henry I
+had been paid in money, instead of in necessaries; and he was rigid in
+enforcing the payment in coin of the best quality. With this possession
+of means, Stephen surrounded himself with troops from Flanders and
+Brittany. The objections to his want of hereditary right appear to have
+been altogether laid aside for a time, in the popularity which he
+derived from his personal qualities and his command of wealth. Strict
+hereditary claims to the choice of the nation had been disregarded since
+the time of the Confessor. The oath to Matilda, it was maintained, had
+been unwillingly given, and even extorted by force. It is easy to
+conceive that, both to Saxon and Norman, the notion of a female
+sovereign would be out of harmony with their ancient traditions and
+their warlike habits. The king was the great military chief, as well as
+the supreme dispenser of justice and guardian of property. The time was
+far distant when the sovereign rule might be held to be most
+beneficially exercised by a wise choice of administrators, civil and
+military; and the power of the crown, being coördinate with other
+powers, strengthening as well as controlling its final authority, might
+be safely and happily exercised by a discreet, energetic, and just
+female. King Stephen vindicated the choice of the nation at the very
+outset of his reign. He went in person against the robbers who were
+ravaging the country. The daughter of "the Lion of Justice" would
+probably have done the same. But more than three hundred years had
+passed since the Lady of Mercia, the sister of Alfred, had asserted the
+courage of her race. Norman and Saxon wanted a king; for though ladies
+defended castles, and showed that firmness and bravery were not the
+exclusive possession of one sex, no thane or baron had yet knelt before
+a queen, and sworn to be her "liege man of life and limb."
+
+The unanimity which appeared to hail the accession of Stephen was soon
+interrupted. David, King of Scotland, had advanced to Carlisle and
+Newcastle, to assert the claim of Matilda which he had sworn to uphold.
+But Stephen came against him with a great army, and for a time there was
+peace. Robert, Earl of Gloucester, the illegitimate son of Henry I, had
+done homage to Stephen; but his allegiance was very doubtful; and the
+general belief that he would renounce his fealty engendered secret
+hostility or open resistance among other powerful barons. Robert of
+Gloucester very soon defied the King's power. Within two years of his
+accession the throne of Stephen was evidently becoming an insecure seat.
+To counteract the power of the great nobles, he made a lavish
+distribution of crown lands to a large number of tenants-in-chief. Some
+of them were called earls; but they had no official charge, as the
+greater barons had, but were mere titular lords, made by the royal
+bounty. All those who held direct from the Crown were called barons; and
+these new barons, who were scattered over the country, had permission
+from the King to build castles. Such permission was extended to many
+other lay barons. The accustomed manor-house of the land proprietor, in
+which he dwelt amid the churls and serfs of his demesne, was now
+replaced by a stone tower, surrounded by a moat and a wall. The wooden
+one-storied homestead, with its thatched roof, shaded by the "toft" of
+ash and elm and maple, was pulled down, and a square fortress with
+loopholes and battlement stood in solitary nakedness upon some bleak
+hill, ugly and defiant. There with a band of armed men--sometimes with a
+wife and children, and not unfrequently with an unhappy victim of his
+licentiousness--the baron lived in gloom and gluttony, till the love of
+excitement, the approach of want, or the call to battle drove him forth.
+His passion for hunting was not always free to be exercised. Venison was
+not everywhere to be obtained without danger even to the powerful and
+lawless. But within a ride of a few miles there was generally corn in
+the barns and herds were in the pastures. The petty baron was almost
+invariably a robber--sometimes on his own account, often in some
+combined adventure of plunder. The spirit of rapine, always too
+prevalent under the strongest government of those times, was now
+universal when the government was fighting for its own existence. Bands
+of marauders sallied forth from the great towns, especially from
+Bristol; and of their proceedings the author of the _Gesta Stephani_
+speaks with the precision of an eye-witness. The Bristolians, under the
+instigation of the Earl of Gloucester, were partisans of the ex-empress
+Matilda; and wherever the King or his adherents had estates they came to
+seize their oxen and sheep, and carried men of substance into Bristol as
+captives, with bandaged eyes and bits in their mouths. From other towns
+as well as Bristol came forth plunderers, with humble gait and courteous
+discourse; who, when they met with a lonely man having the appearance of
+being wealthy, would bear him off to starvation and torture, till they
+had mulcted him to the last farthing. These and other indications of an
+unsettled government took place before the landing of Matilda to assert
+her claims. An invasion of England, by the Scottish King, without regard
+to the previous pacification, was made in 1138. But this attempt,
+although grounded upon the oath which David had sworn to Henry, was
+regarded by the Northumbrians as a national hostility which demanded a
+national resistance. The course of this invasion has been minutely
+described by contemporary chroniclers.
+
+The author of the _Gesta Stephani_ says: "Scotland, also called Albany,
+is a country overspread by extensive moors, but containing flourishing
+woods and pastures, which feed large herds of cows and oxen." Of the
+mountainous regions he says nothing. Describing the natives as savage,
+swift of foot, and lightly armed, he adds, "A confused multitude of this
+people being assembled from the lowlands of Scotland, they were formed
+into an irregular army and marched for England." From the period of the
+Conquest, a large number of Anglo-Saxons had been settled in the
+lowlands; and the border countries of Westmoreland and Cumberland were
+also occupied, to a considerable extent, by the same race. The people of
+Galloway were chiefly of the original British stock. The historians
+describe "the confused multitude" as exercising great cruelties in their
+advance through the country that lies between the Tweed and the Tees;
+and Matthew Paris uses a significant phrase which marks how completely
+they spread over the land. He calls them the "Scottish Ants." The
+Archbishop of York, Thurstan, an aged but vigorous man, collected a
+large army to resist the invaders; and he made a politic appeal to the
+old English nationality, by calling out the population under the banners
+of their Saxon saints. The Bishop of Durham was the leader of this army,
+composed of the Norman chivalry and the English archers. The opposing
+forces met at Northallerton, on the 22d of August, 1138. The
+Anglo-Norman army was gathered round a tall cross, raised on a car, and
+surrounded by the banners of St. Cuthbert and St. Wilfred and St. John
+of Beverley. From this incident the bloody day of Northallerton was
+called "the Battle of the Standard." Hoveden has given an oration made
+by Ralph, Bishop of Durham, in which he addresses the captains as "Brave
+nobles of England, Normans by birth"; and pointing to the enemy, who
+knew not the use of armor, exclaims, "Your head is covered with the
+helmet, your breast with a coat of mail, your legs with greaves, and
+your whole body with the shield." Of the Saxon yeomanry he says nothing.
+Whether the oration be genuine or not, it exhibits the mode in which the
+mass of the people were regarded at that time. Thierry appears to
+consider that the bold attempt of David of Scotland was made in reliance
+upon the support of the Anglo-Saxon race. But it is perfectly clear that
+they bore the brunt of the English battle; and whatever might be their
+wrongs, were not disposed to yield their fields and houses to a fierce
+multitude who came for spoil and for possession. The Scotch fought with
+darts and long spears, and attacked the solid mass of Normans and
+English gathered round the standard. Prince Henry, the son of the King
+of Scotland, made a vigorous onslaught with a body of horse, composed of
+English and Normans attached to his father's household. These were,
+without doubt, especial partisans of the claim to the English crown of
+the ex-empress Matilda; and, as the King of Scotland himself is
+described, were "inflamed with zeal for a just cause."[42] The issue of
+the battle was the signal defeat of the Scottish army, with the loss of
+eleven thousand men upon the field. A peace was concluded with King
+Stephen in the following year.
+
+[Footnote 42: Scott has given a picturesque account of the battle in his
+_Tales of a Grandfather_. Writing, as he often did, from general
+impressions, in describing the gallant charge of Prince Henry, he states
+that he broke the English line "as if it had been a spider's web."
+Hoveden, the historian to whom Scott alludes, applies this strong image
+to the scattering of the men of Lothian: "For the Almighty was offended
+at them, and their strength was rent like a cobweb."]
+
+The issue of the battle of the Standard might have given rest to England
+if Stephen had understood the spirit of his age. In 1139 he engaged in a
+contest more full of peril than the assaults of Scotland or the
+disturbances of Wales. He had been successful against some of the
+disaffected barons. He had besieged and taken Hereford Castle and
+Shrewsbury Castle. Dover Castle had surrendered to his Queen. Robert,
+Earl of Gloucester, kept possession of the castles of Bristol and Leeds;
+and other nobles held out against him in various strong places. London
+and some of the larger towns appear to have steadily clung to his
+government. The influence of the Church, by which he had been chiefly
+raised to sovereignty, had supported him during his four years of
+struggle. But that influence was now to be shaken.
+
+The rapid and steady growth of the ecclesiastical power in England, from
+the period of the Conquest, is one of the most remarkable
+characteristics of that age. This progress we must steadily keep in view
+if we would rightly understand the general condition of society. All the
+great offices of the Church, with scarcely an exception, were filled by
+Normans. The Conqueror sternly resisted any attempts of bishops or
+abbots to control his civil government. The "Red King" misappropriated
+their revenues in many cases. Henry I quarrelled with Anselm about the
+right of investiture, which the Pope declared should not be in the hands
+of any layman, but Henry compromised a difficult question with his usual
+prudence. Whatever difficulties the Church encountered, during seventy
+years, and especially during the whole course of Henry's reign, wealth
+flowed in upon the ecclesiastics, from king and noble, from burgess and
+socman; and every improvement of the country increased the value of
+church possessions. It was not only from the lands of the Crown and the
+manors of earls that bishoprics and monasteries derived their large
+endowments. Henry I founded the Abbey of Reading, but the _mimus_ of
+Henry I built the priory and hospital of St. Bartholomew. This
+"pleasant-witted gentleman," as Stow calls the royal mimus (which Percy
+interprets "minstrel"), having, according to the legend, "diverted the
+palaces of princes with courtly mockeries and triflings" for many years,
+bethought himself at last of more serious matters, and went to do
+penance at Rome. He returned to London; and obtaining a grant of land in
+a part of the King's market of Smithfield, which was a filthy marsh
+where the common gallows stood, there erected the priory, whose Norman
+arches as satisfactorily attest its date as Henry's charter. The piety
+of a court jester in the twelfth century, when the science of medicine
+was wholly empirical, founded one of the most valuable medical schools
+of the nineteenth century. The desire to raise up splendid churches in
+the place of the dilapidated Saxon buildings was a passion with Normans,
+whether clerics or laymen. Ralph Flambard, the bold and unscrupulous
+minister of William II, erected the great priory of Christchurch, in his
+capacity of bishop. But he raised the necessary funds with his usual
+financial vigor. He took the revenues of the canons into his hands, and
+put the canons upon a short allowance till the work was completed. The
+Cistercian order of monks was established in England late in the reign
+of Henry I. Their rule was one of the most severe mortification and of
+the strictest discipline. Their lives were spent in labor and in prayer,
+and their one frugal daily meal was eaten in silence. While other
+religious orders had their splendid abbeys amid large communities, the
+Cistercians humbly asked grants of land in the most solitary places,
+where the recluse could meditate without interruption by his fellow-men,
+amid desolate moors and in the uncultivated gorges of inaccessible
+mountains. In such a barren district Walter l'Espée, who had fought at
+Northallerton, founded Rievaulx Abbey. It was "a solitary place in
+Blakemore," in the midst of hills. The Norman knight had lost his son,
+and here he derived a holy comfort in seeing the monastic buildings rise
+under his munificent care, and the waste lands become fertile under the
+incessant labors of the devoted monks. The ruins of Tintern Abbey and
+Melrose Abbey, whose solemn influences have inspired the poets of our
+own age with thoughts akin to the contemplations of their Cistercian
+founders, belong to a later period of ecclesiastical architecture; for
+the dwellings of the original monks have perished, and the "broken
+arches," and "shafted oriel," the "imagery," and "the scrolls that teach
+thee to live and die," speak of another century, when the Norman
+architecture, like the Norman character, was losing its distinctive
+features and becoming "Early English." We dwell a little upon these
+Norman foundations, to show how completely the Church was spreading
+itself over the land, and asserting its influence in places where man
+had seldom trod, as well as in populous towns, where the great cathedral
+was crowded with earnest votaries, and the lessons of peace were
+proclaimed amid the distractions of unsettled government and the
+oppressions of lordly despotism. Whatever was the misery of the country,
+the ordinary family ties still bound the people to the universal
+Christian church, whether the priest were Norman or English. The
+new-born infant was dipped in the great Norman font, as the children of
+the Confessor's time had been dipped in the ruder Saxon. The same Latin
+office, unintelligible in words, but significant in its import, was said
+and sung when the bride stood at the altar and the father was laid in
+his grave. The vernacular tongue gradually melted into one dialect; and
+the penitent and the confessor were the first to lay aside the great
+distinction of race and country--that of language.
+
+The Norman prelates were men of learning and ability, of taste and
+magnificence; and, whatever might have been the luxury and even vices of
+some among them, the vast revenues of the great sees were not wholly
+devoted to worldly pomp, but were applied to noble uses. After the lapse
+of seven centuries we still tread with reverence those portions of our
+cathedrals in which the early Norman architecture is manifest. There is
+no English cathedral in which we are so completely impressed with the
+massive grandeur of the round-arched style as by Durham. Durham
+Cathedral was commenced in the middle of the reign of Rufus, and the
+building went on through the reign of Henry I. Canterbury was commenced
+by Archbishop Lanfranc, soon after the Conquest, and was enlarged and
+altered in various details, till it was burned in 1174. Some portions of
+the original building remain. Rochester was commenced eleven years after
+the Conquest; and its present nave is an unaltered part of the original
+building. Chichester has nearly the same date of its commencement; and
+the building of this church was continued till its dedication in 1148.
+Norwich was founded in 1094, and its erection was carried forward so
+rapidly that in seven years there were sixty monks here located.
+Winchester is one of the earliest of these noble cathedrals; but its
+Norman feature of the round arch is not the general characteristic of
+the edifice, the original piers having been recased in the pointed
+style, in the reign of Edward III. The dates of these buildings, so
+grand in their conception, so solid in their execution, would be
+sufficient of themselves to show the wealth and activity of the Church
+during the reigns of the Conqueror and his sons. But, during this period
+of seventy years, and in part of the reign of Stephen, the erection of
+monastic buildings was universal in England, as in Continental Europe.
+The crusades gave a most powerful impulse to the religious fervor. In
+the enthusiasm of chivalry, which covered many of its enormities with
+outward acts of piety, vows were frequently made by wealthy nobles that
+they would depart for the Holy Wars. But sometimes the vow was
+inconvenient. The lady of the castle wept at the almost certain perils
+of her lord, and his projects of ambition often kept the lord at home to
+look after his own especial interests. Then the vow to wear the cross
+might be commuted by the foundation of a religious house. Death-bed
+repentance for crimes of violence and a licentious life increased the
+number of these endowments. It has been computed that three hundred
+monastic establishments were founded in England during the reigns of
+Henry I, Stephen, and Henry II.
+
+We have briefly stated these few general facts regarding the outward
+manifestation of the power and the wealth of the Church at this period,
+to show how important an influence it must have exercised upon all
+questions of government. But its organization was of far greater
+importance than the aggregate wealth of the sees and abbeys. The English
+Church, during the troubled reign of Stephen, had become more completely
+under the papal dominion than at any previous period of its history. The
+King attempted, rashly perhaps, but honestly, to interpose some check to
+the ecclesiastical desire for supremacy; but from the hour when he
+entered into a contest with bishops and synods, his reign became one of
+kingly trouble and national misery.
+
+The Norman bishops not only combined in their own persons the functions
+of the priest and of the lawyer, but were often military leaders. As
+barons they had knight-service to perform; and this condition of their
+tenures naturally surrounded them with armed retainers. That this
+anomalous position should have corrupted the ambitious churchman into a
+proud and luxurious lord was almost inevitable. The authority of the
+Crown might have been strong enough to repress the individual
+discontent, or to punish the individual treason, of these great
+prelates; but every one of them was doubly formidable as a member of a
+confederacy over which a foreign head claimed to preside. There were
+three bishops whose intrigues King Stephen had especially to dread at
+the time when an open war for the succession of Matilda was on the point
+of bursting forth. Roger, the Bishop of Salisbury, had been promoted
+from the condition of a parish priest at Caen, to be chaplain,
+secretary, chancellor, and chief justiciary of Henry I. He was
+instrumental in the election of Stephen to the throne; and he was
+rewarded with extravagant gifts, as he had been previously rewarded by
+Henry. Stephen appears to have fostered his rapacity, in the conviction
+that his pride would have a speedier fall; the King often saying, "I
+would give him half England, if he asked for it: till the time be ripe
+he shall tire of asking ere I tire of giving." The time was ripe in
+1139. The Bishop had erected castles at Devizes, at Sherborne, and at
+Malmesbury. King Henry had given him the castle of Salisbury. This lord
+of four castles had powerful auxiliaries in his nephews, the Bishop of
+Lincoln and the Bishop of Ely. Alexander of Lincoln had built the
+castles of Newark and Sleaford, and was almost as powerful as his uncle.
+In July, 1139, a great council was held at Oxford; and thither came
+these three bishops with military and secular pomp, and with an escort
+that became "the wonder of all beholders." A quarrel ensued between the
+retainers of the bishops and those of Alain, Earl of Brittany, about a
+right to quarters; and the quarrel went on to a battle, in which men
+were slain on both sides. The bishops of Salisbury and Lincoln were
+arrested, as breakers of the king's peace. The Bishop of Ely fled to his
+uncle's castle of Devizes. The King, under the advice of the sagacious
+Earl Millent, resolved to dispossess these dangerous prelates of their
+fortresses, which were all finally surrendered. "The bishops, humbled
+and mortified, and stripped of all pomp and vainglory, were reduced to a
+simple ecclesiastical life, and to the possessions belonging to them as
+churchmen." The contemporary who writes this--the author of the _Gesta
+Stephani_--although a decided partisan of Stephen, speaks of this event
+as the result of mad counsels, and a grievous sin that resembled the
+wickedness of the sons of Korah and of Saul. The great body of the
+ecclesiastics were indignant at what they considered an offence to their
+order. The Bishop of Winchester, the brother of Stephen, had become the
+Pope's legate in England, and he summoned the King to attend a synod at
+Winchester. He there produced his authority as legate from Pope
+Innocent, and denounced the arrest of the bishops as a dreadful crime.
+The King had refused to attend the council, but he sent Alberic de Vere,
+"a man deeply versed in legal affairs," to represent him. This advocate
+urged that the Bishop of Lincoln was the author of the tumult at Oxford;
+that whenever Bishop Roger came to court, his people, presuming on his
+power, excited tumults; that the Bishop secretly favored the King's
+enemies, and was ready to join the party of the Empress. The council was
+adjourned, but on a subsequent day came the Archbishop of Rouen, as the
+champion of the King, and contended that it was against the canons that
+the bishops should possess castles; and that even if they had the right,
+they were bound to deliver them up to the will of the King, as the times
+were eventful, and the King was bound to make war for the common
+security. The Archbishop of Rouen reasoned as a statesman; the Bishop of
+Winchester as the Pope's legate. Some of the bishops threatened to
+proceed to Rome; and the King's advocate intimated that if they did so,
+their return might not be so easy. Swords were at last unsheathed. The
+King and the earls were now in open hostility with the legate and the
+bishops. Excommunication of the King was hinted at; but persuasion was
+resorted to. Stephen, according to one authority, made humble
+submission, and thus "abated the rigor of ecclesiastical discipline." If
+he did submit, his submission was too late. Within a month Earl Robert
+and the empress Matilda were in England.
+
+Matilda and the Earl of Gloucester landed at Arundel, where the widow of
+Henry I was dwelling. They had a very small force to support their
+pretensions. The Earl crossed the country to Bristol. "All England was
+struck with alarm, and men's minds were agitated in various ways. Those
+who secretly or openly favored the invaders were roused to more than
+usual activity against the King, while his own partisans were terrified
+as if a thunderbolt had fallen." Stephen invested the castle of Arundel.
+But in the most romantic spirit of chivalry he permitted the Empress to
+pass out, and to set forward to join her brother at Bristol, under a
+safe-conduct. In 1140 the whole kingdom appears to have been subjected
+to the horrors of a partisan warfare. The barons in their castles were
+making a show of "defending their neighborhoods, but, more properly to
+speak, were laying them waste." The legate and the bishops were
+excommunicating the plunderers of churches, but the plunderers laughed
+at their anathemas. Freebooters came over from Flanders, not to practise
+the industrial arts as in the time of Henry I, but to take their part in
+the general pillage. There was frightful scarcity in the country, and
+the ordinary interchange of man with man was unsettled by the debasement
+of the coin. "All things," says Malmesbury, "became venial in England;
+and churches and abbeys were no longer secretly but even publicly
+exposed to sale." All things become venial, under a government too weak
+to repress plunder or to punish corruption. The strong aim to be rich by
+rapine, and the cunning by fraud, when the confusion of a kingdom is
+grown so great that, as is recorded of this period, "the neighbor could
+put no faith in his nearest neighbor, nor the friend in his friend, nor
+the brother in his own brother." The demoralization of anarchy is even
+more terrible than its bloodshed.
+
+The marches and sieges, the revolts and treacheries, of this evil time
+are occasionally varied by incidents which illustrate the state of
+society. Robert Fitz-Herbert, with a detachment of the Earl of
+Gloucester's soldiers, surprised the castle of Devizes, which the King
+had taken from the Bishop of Salisbury. Robert Fitz-Herbert varies the
+atrocities of his fellow-barons, by rubbing his prisoners with honey,
+and exposing them naked to the sun. But Robert, having obtained Devizes,
+refused to admit the Earl of Gloucester to any advantage of its
+possession, and commenced the subjection of the neighborhood on his own
+account. Another crafty baron, John Fitz-Gilbert, held the castle of
+Marlborough; and Robert Fitz-Herbert, having an anxious desire to be
+lord of that castle also, endeavoring to cajole Fitz-Gilbert into the
+admission of his followers, went there as a guest, but was detained as a
+prisoner. Upon this the Earl of Gloucester came in force for revenge
+against his treacherous ally, Fitz-Herbert, and, conducting him to
+Devizes, there hanged him. The surprise of Lincoln Castle, upon which
+the events of 1141 mainly turned, is equally characteristic of the age.
+Ranulf, Earl of Chester, and William de Roumare, his half-brother, were
+avowed friends of King Stephen. But their ambition took a new direction
+for the support of Matilda. The garrison of Lincoln had no apprehension
+of a surprise, and were busy in those sports which hardy men enjoy even
+amid the rougher sport of war. The Countess of Chester and her
+sister-in-law, with a politeness that the ladies of the court of Louis
+le Grand could not excel, paid a visit to the wife of the knight who had
+the defence of the castle. While there, at this pleasant morning call,
+"talking and joking" with the unsuspecting matron, as Ordericus relates,
+the Earl of Chester came in, "without his armor or even his mantle,"
+attended only by three soldiers. His courtesy was as flattering as that
+of his countess and her friend. But his men-at-arms suddenly mastered
+the unprepared guards, and the gates were thrown open to Earl William
+and his numerous followers. The earls, after this stratagem, held the
+castle against the King, who speedily marched to Lincoln. But the Earl
+of Chester contrived to leave the castle, and soon raised a powerful
+army of his own vassals. The Earl of Gloucester joined him with a
+considerable force, and they together advanced to the relief of the
+besieged city. The battle of Lincoln was preceded by a trifling incident
+to which the chroniclers have attached importance. It was the Feast of
+the Purification; and at the mass which was celebrated at the dawn of
+day, when the King was holding a lighted taper in his hand it was
+suddenly extinguished. "This was an omen of sorrow to the King," says
+Hoveden. But another chronicler, the author of the _Gesta Stephain_,
+tells us, in addition, that the wax candle was suddenly relighted; and
+he accordingly argues that this incident was "a token that for his sins
+he should be deprived of his crown, but on his repentance, through God's
+mercy, he should wonderfully and gloriously recover it." The King had
+been more than a month laying siege to the castle, and his army was
+encamped around the city of Lincoln. When it was ascertained that his
+enemies were at hand he was advised to raise the siege and march out to
+strengthen his power by a general levy. He decided upon instant battle.
+He was then exhorted not to fight on the solemn festival of the
+Purification. But his courage was greater than his prudence or his
+piety. He set forth to meet the insurgent earls. The best knights were
+in his army; but the infantry of his rivals was far more numerous.
+Stephen detached a strong body of horse and foot to dispute the passage
+of a ford of the Trent. But Gloucester by an impetuous charge obtained
+possession of the ford, and the battle became general. The King's
+horsemen fled. The desperate bravery of Stephen, and the issue of the
+battle, have been described by Henry of Huntingdon with singular
+animation: "King Stephen, therefore, with his infantry, stood alone in
+the midst of the enemy. These surrounded the royal troops, attacking the
+columns on all sides, as if they were assaulting a castle. Then the
+battle raged terribly round this circle; helmets and swords gleamed as
+they clashed, and the fearful cries and shouts reëchoed from the
+neighboring hills and city walls. The cavalry, furiously charging the
+royal column, slew some and trampled down others; some were made
+prisoners. No respite, no breathing time, was allowed; except in the
+quarter in which the King himself had taken his stand, where the
+assailants recoiled from the unmatched force of his terrible arm. The
+Earl of Chester seeing this, and envious of the glory the King was
+gaining, threw himself upon him with the whole weight of his
+men-at-arms. Even then the King's courage did not fail, but his heavy
+battle-axe gleamed like lightning, striking down some, bearing back
+others. At length it was shattered by repeated blows. Then he drew his
+well-tried sword, with which he wrought wonders, until that too was
+broken. Perceiving which, William de Kaims, a brave soldier, rushed on
+him, and seizing him by his helmet, shouted, 'Here, here, I have taken
+the King!' Others came to his aid, and the King was made prisoner."
+
+After the capture of King Stephen, at this brief but decisive battle, he
+was kept a close prisoner at Bristol Castle. Then commenced what might
+be called the reign of Queen Matilda, which lasted about eight months.
+The defeat of Stephen was the triumph of the greater ecclesiastics. On
+the third Sunday in Lent, 1141, there was a conference on the plain in
+the neighborhood of Winchester--a day dark and rainy, which portended
+disasters. The Bishop of Winchester came forth from his city with all
+the pomp of the pope's legate; and there Matilda swore that in all
+matters of importance, and especially in the bestowal of bishoprics and
+abbeys, she would submit to the Church; and the Bishop and his
+supporters pledged their faith to the Empress on these conditions. After
+Easter, a great council was held at Winchester, which the Bishop called
+as the Pope's vicegerent. The unscrupulous churchman boldly came
+forward, and denounced his brother, inviting the assembly to elect a
+sovereign; and, with an amount of arrogance totally unprecedented, thus
+asserted the notorious untruth that the right of electing a king of
+England principally belonged to the clergy: "The case was yesterday
+agitated before a part of the higher clergy of England, to whose right
+it principally pertains to elect the sovereign, and also to crown him.
+First, then, as is fitting, invoking God's assistance, we elect the
+daughter of that peaceful, that glorious, that rich, that good, and in
+our times incomparable king, as sovereign of England and Normandy, and
+promise her fidelity and support." The Bishop then said to the
+applauding assembly: "We have despatched messengers for the Londoners,
+who, from the importance of their city in England, are almost nobles, as
+it were, to meet us on this business." The next day the Londoners came.
+They were sent, they said, by their fraternity to entreat that their
+lord, the King, might be liberated from captivity. The legate refused
+them, and repeated his oration against his brother. It was a work of
+great difficulty to soothe the minds of the Londoners; and St. John's
+Day had arrived before they would consent to acknowledge Matilda. Many
+parts of the kingdom had then submitted to her government, and she
+entered London with great state. Her nature seems to have been rash and
+imperious. Her first act was to demand subsidies of the citizens; and
+when they said that their wealth was greatly diminished by the troubled
+state of the kingdom, she broke forth into insufferable rage. The
+vigilant queen of Stephen, who kept possession of Kent, now approached
+the city with a numerous force, and by her envoys demanded her husband's
+freedom. Of course her demand was made in vain. She then put forth a
+front of battle. Instead of being crowned at Westminster, the daughter
+of Henry I fled in terror; for "the whole city flew to arms at the
+ringing of the bells, which was the signal for war, and all with one
+accord rose upon the Countess [of Anjou] and her adherents, as swarms of
+wasps issue from their hives."
+
+William Fitzstephen, the biographer of Thomas à Becket, in his
+_Description of London_, supposed to be written about the middle of the
+reign of Henry II, says of this city, "ennobled by her men, graced by
+her arms, and peopled by a multitude of inhabitants," that "in the wars
+under King Stephen there went out to a muster of armed horsemen,
+esteemed fit for war, twenty thousand, and of infantry, sixty thousand."
+In general, the _Description of London_ appears trustworthy, and in some
+instances is supported by other authorities. But this vast number of
+fighting men must, unquestionably, be exaggerated: unless, as Lyttelton
+conjectures, such a muster included the militia of Middlesex, Kent, and
+other counties adjacent to London. Peter of Blois, in the reign of Henry
+II, reckons the inhabitants of the city at forty thousand. That the
+citizens were trained to warlike exercises, and that their manly sports
+nurtured them in the hardihood of military habits, we may well conclude
+from Fitzstephen's account of this community at a little later period
+than that of which we are writing. To the north of the city were pasture
+lands, with streams on whose banks the clack of many mills was pleasing
+to the ear; and beyond was an immense forest, with densely wooded
+thickets, where stags, fallow-deer, boars, and wild bulls had their
+coverts. We have seen that in the charter of Henry I the citizens had
+liberty to hunt through a very extensive district, and hawking was also
+among their free recreations. Football was the favorite game; and the
+boys of the schools, and the various guilds of craftsmen, had each their
+ball. The elder citizens came on horseback to see these contests of the
+young men. Every Sunday in Lent a company with lances and shields went
+out to joust. In the Easter holidays they had river tournaments. During
+the summer the youths exercised themselves in leaping, archery,
+wrestling, stone-throwing, slinging javelins, and fighting with
+bucklers. When the great marsh which washed the walls of the city on the
+north was frozen over, sliding, sledging, and skating were the sports of
+crowds. They had sham fights on the ice, and legs and arms were
+sometimes broken. "But," says Fitzstephen, "youth is an age eager for
+glory and desirous of victory, and so young men engage in counterfeit
+battles, that they may conduct themselves more valiantly in real ones."
+That universal love of hardy sports, which is one of the greatest
+characteristics of England, and from which we derive no little of that
+spirit which keeps our island safe, is not of modern growth. It was one
+of the most important portions of the education of the people seven
+centuries ago.
+
+It was this community, then, so brave, so energetic, so enriched by
+commerce above all the other cities of England, that resolutely abided
+by the fortunes of King Stephen. They had little to dread from any
+hostile assaults of the rival faction; for the city was strongly
+fortified on all sides except to the river; but on that side it was
+secure, after the Tower was built. The palace of Westminster had also a
+breastwork and bastions. After Matilda had taken her hasty departure,
+the indignant Londoners marched out, and they sustained a principal part
+in what has been called "the rout of Winchester," in which Robert, Earl
+of Gloucester, was taken prisoner. The ex-Empress escaped to Devizes.
+The capture of the Earl of Gloucester led to important results. A
+convention was agreed to between the adherents of each party that the
+King should be exchanged for the Earl. Stephen was once more "every inch
+a king." But still there was no peace in the land.
+
+The Bishop of Winchester had again changed his side. In the hour of
+success the empress Matilda had refused the reasonable request that
+Prince Eustace, the son of Stephen, should be put in possession of his
+father's earldom of Boulogne. Malmesbury says, "A misunderstanding arose
+between the legate and the Empress which may be justly considered as the
+melancholy cause of every subsequent evil in England." The chief actors
+in this extraordinary drama present a curious study of human character.
+Matilda, resting her claim to the throne upon her legitimate descent
+from Henry I, who had himself usurped the throne--possessing her
+father's courage and daring, with some of his cruelty--haughty,
+vindictive--furnishes one of the most striking portraits of the proud
+lady of the feudal period, who shrank from no danger by reason of her
+sex, but made the homage of chivalry to woman a powerful instrument for
+enforcing her absolute will. The Earl of Gloucester, the illegitimate
+brother of Matilda, brave, steadfast, of a free and generous nature, a
+sagacious counsellor, a lover of literature, appears to have had few of
+the vices of that age, and most of its elevating qualities. Of Stephen
+it has been said, "He deserves no other reproach than that of having
+embraced the occupation of a captain of banditti." This appears rather a
+harsh judgment from a philosophical writer. Bearing in mind that the
+principle of election prevailed in the choice of a king, whatever was
+the hereditary claim, and seeing how welcome was the advent of Stephen
+when he came, in 1135, to avert the dangers of the kingdom, he merits
+the title of "a captain of banditti" no more than Harold or William the
+Conqueror. After the contests of six years--the victories, the defeats,
+the hostility of the Church, his capture and imprisonment--the
+attachment of the people of the great towns to his person and government
+appears to have been unshaken. When he was defeated at Lincoln, and led
+captive through the city, "the surrounding multitude were moved with
+pity, shedding tears and uttering cries of grief." Ordericus says: "The
+King's disaster filled with grief the clergy and monks and the common
+people; because he was condescending and courteous to those who were
+good and quiet, and if his treacherous nobles had allowed it, he would
+have put an end to their rapacious enterprises, and been a generous
+protector and benevolent friend of the country." The fourth and not
+least remarkable personage of this history is Henry, the Bishop of
+Winchester, and the Pope's legate. At that period, when the functions of
+churchman and statesman were united, we find this man the chief
+instrument for securing the crown for his brother. He subsequently
+becomes the vicegerent of the papal see. Stephen, with more justice than
+discretion, is of opinion that bishops are not doing their duty when
+they build castles, ride about in armor, with crowds of retainers, and
+are not at all scrupulous in appropriating some of the booty of a
+lawless time. From the day when he exhibited his hostility to fighting
+bishops, the Pope's legate was his brother's deadly enemy. But he found
+that the rival whom he had set up was by no means a pliant tool in his
+hands, and he then turned against Matilda. When Stephen had shaken off
+the chains with which he was loaded in Bristol Castle, the Bishop
+summoned a council at Westminster, on his legatine authority; and there
+"by great powers of eloquence, endeavored to extenuate the odium of his
+own conduct"; affirming that he had supported the Empress, "not from
+inclination, but necessity." He then "commanded on the part of God and
+of the Pope, that they should strenuously assist the King, appointed by
+the will of the people, and by the approbation of the Holy See."
+Malmesbury, who records these doings, adds that a layman sent from the
+Empress affirmed that "her coming to England had been effected by the
+legate's frequent letters"; and that "her taking the King, and holding
+him in captivity, had been done principally by his connivance." The
+reign of Stephen is not only "the most perfect condensation of all the
+ills of feudality," but affords a striking picture of the ills which
+befall a people when an ambitious hierarchy, swayed to and fro at the
+will of a foreign power, regards the supremacy of the Church as the one
+great object to be attained, at whatever expense of treachery and
+falsehood, of national degradation and general suffering.
+
+In 1142 the civil war is raging more fiercely than ever. Matilda is at
+Oxford, a fortified city, protected by the Thames, by a wall, and by an
+impregnable castle. Stephen, with a body of veterans, wades across the
+river and enters the city. Matilda and her followers take refuge in the
+keep. For three months the King presses the siege, surrounding the
+fortress on all sides. Famine is approaching to the helpless garrison.
+It is the Christmas season. The country is covered with a deep snow. The
+Thames and the tributary rivers are frozen over. With a small escort
+Matilda contrives to escape, and passes undiscovered through the royal
+posts, on a dark and silent night, when no sound is heard but the clang
+of a trumpet or the challenge of a sentinel. In the course of the night
+she went to Abingdon on foot, and afterwards reached Wallingford on
+horseback. The author of the _Gesta Stephani_ expresses his wonder at
+the marvellous escapes of this courageous woman. The changes of her
+fortune are equally remarkable. After the flight from Oxford the arms of
+the Earl of Gloucester are again successful. Stephen is beaten at
+Wilton, and retreats precipitately with his military brother, the Bishop
+of Winchester. There are now in the autumn of 1142 universal turmoil and
+desolation. Many people emigrate. Others crowd round the sanctuary of
+the churches, and dwell there in mean hovels. Famine is general. Fields
+are white with ripened corn, but the cultivators have fled, and there is
+none to gather the harvest. Cities are deserted and depopulated. Fierce
+foreign mercenaries, for whom the barons have no pay, pillage the farms
+and the monasteries. The bishops, for the most part, rest supine amid
+all this storm of tyranny. When they rouse themselves they increase
+rather than mitigate the miseries of the people. Milo, Earl of Hereford,
+has demanded money of the Bishop of Hereford to pay his troops. The
+Bishop refuses, and Milo seizes his lands and goods. The Bishop then
+pronounces sentence of excommunication against Milo and his adherents,
+and lays an interdict upon the country subject to the Earl's authority.
+We might hastily think that the solemn curse pronounced against a
+nation, or a district, was an unmeaning ceremony, with its "bell, book,
+and candle," to terrify only the weakminded. It was one of the most
+outrageous of the numerous ecclesiastical tyrannies. The consolations of
+religion were eagerly sought for and justly prized by the great body of
+the people, who earnestly believed that a happy future would be a reward
+for the patient endurance of a miserable present. As they were admitted
+to the holy communion, they recognized an acknowledgment of the equality
+of men before the great Father of all. Their marriages were blessed and
+their funerals were hallowed. Under an interdict all the churches were
+shut. No knell was tolled for the dead, for the dead remained unburied.
+No merry peals welcomed the bridal procession, for no couple could be
+joined in wedlock. The awe-stricken mother might have her infant
+baptized, and the dying might receive extreme unction. But all public
+offices of the Church were suspended. If we imagine such a condition of
+society in a village devastated by fire and sword, we may wonder how a
+free government and a Christian church have ever grown up among us.
+
+If Stephen had quietly possessed the throne, and his heir had succeeded
+him, the crowns of England and Normandy would have been disconnected
+before the thirteenth century. Geoffrey of Anjou, while his duchess was
+in England, had become master of Normandy, and its nobles had
+acknowledged his son Henry as their rightful duke. The boy was in
+England, under the protection of the Earl of Gloucester, who attended to
+his education. The great Earl died in 1147. For a few years there had
+been no decided contest between the forces of the King and the Empress.
+After eight years of terrible hostility, and of desperate adventure,
+Matilda left the country. Stephen made many efforts to control the
+license of the barons, but with little effect. He was now engaged in
+another quarrel with the Church. His brother had been superseded as
+legate by Theobald, Archbishop of Canterbury, in consequence of the
+death of the Pope who had supported the Bishop of Winchester. Theobald
+was Stephen's enemy, and his hostility was rendered formidable by his
+alliance with Bigod, the Earl of Norfolk. The Archbishop excommunicated
+Stephen and his adherents, and the King was enforced to submission. In
+1150 Stephen, having been again reconciled to the Church, sought the
+recognition of his son Eustace as the heir to the kingdom. This
+recognition was absolutely refused by the Archbishop, who said that
+Stephen was regarded by the papal see as an usurper. But time was
+preparing a solution of the difficulties of the kingdom. Henry of Anjou
+was grown into manhood. Born in 1133, he had been knighted by his uncle,
+David of Scotland, in 1149. His father died in 1151, and he became not
+only Duke of Normandy, but Earl of Anjou, Touraine, and Maine. In 1152
+he contracted a marriage of ambition with Eleanor, the divorced wife of
+Louis of France, and thus became Lord of Aquitaine and Poitou, which
+Eleanor possessed in her own right. Master of all the western coast of
+France, from the Somme to the Pyrenees, with the exception of Brittany,
+his ambition, thus strengthened by his power, prepared to dispute the
+sovereignty of England with better hopes than ever waited on his
+mother's career. He landed with a well-appointed band of followers in
+1153, and besieged various castles. But no general encounter took place.
+The King and the Duke had a conference, without witnesses, across a
+rivulet, and this meeting prepared the way for a final pacification. The
+negotiators were Henry, the Bishop, on the one part, and Theobald, the
+Archbishop, on the other. Finally Stephen led the Prince in solemn
+procession through the streets of Winchester, "and all the great men of
+the realm, by the King's command, did homage, and pronounced the fealty
+due to their liege lord, to the Duke of Normandy, saving only their
+allegiance to King Stephen during his life." Stephen's son Eustace had
+died during the negotiations. The troublesome reign of Stephen was soon
+after brought to a close. He died on the 25th of October, 1154. His
+constant and heroic queen had died three years before him.
+
+
+
+
+ANTIPAPAL DEMOCRATIC MOVEMENT: ARNOLD OF BRESCIA
+
+ST. BERNARD AND THE SECOND CRUSADE
+
+A.D. 1145-1155
+
+JOHANN A.W. NEANDER
+
+
+(During the first half of the twelfth century--a period marked by
+conflicting spiritual tendencies--in Italy began a work of political and
+religious reform, which has ever since been associated with the name of
+its chief originator and apostle, Arnold of Brescia, so called from his
+native city in Lombardy. He was born about the year 1100, became a
+disciple of Abelard--whose teachings fired him with enthusiasm--and
+entered the priesthood.
+
+Although quite orthodox in doctrine, he rebelled against the
+secularization of the Church--which had given to the pope almost supreme
+power in temporal affairs--and against the worldly disposition and life
+then prevalent among ecclesiastics and monks. His own life was sternly
+simple and ascetic, and this habit had been strongly confirmed by the
+ethical passion which burned in the religious and philosophical
+instructions of Abelard. With the popular religion Arnold had earnest
+sympathy, but he would reduce the clergy to their primitive and
+apostolic poverty, depriving them of individual wealth and of all
+temporal power.
+
+The inspiring idea of Arnold's movement was that of a holy and pure
+church, a renovation of the spiritual order after the pattern of the
+apostolic church. He conformed in dress as well as in his mode of life
+to the principles he taught. The worldly and often corrupt clergy, he
+maintained, were unfit to discharge the priestly functions--they were no
+longer priests, and the secularized Church was no longer the house of
+God.
+
+Arnold dreamed of a great Christian republic and labored to establish
+it, insomuch that his ideal, never realized in concrete form, either in
+church or state, took, and in history has kept, the name of republic.
+His eloquence and sincerity brought him powerful popular support, and
+even a large part of the nobility were won to his side. But of course,
+among those whom his aims condemned or antagonized, there were many who
+spared no pains to place him in an unfavorable light and to bring his
+labors to naught. In the simple story of his career, as here told by the
+great church historian, his figure appears in an attitude of heroism,
+which the pathos of his end can only make the reader more deeply
+appreciate. Through all this agitation is heard the voice of St. Bernard
+urging the religious conscience and better aspiration of the time,
+preaching the Second Crusade, and speeding its eastward march with
+earnest expectation--his high hope doomed to perish with its inglorious
+result.)
+
+
+Arnold's discourses were directly calculated by their tendency to find
+ready entrance into the minds of the laity, before whose eyes the
+worldly lives of the ecclesiastics and monks were constantly present,
+and to create a faction in deadly hostility to the clergy. Superadded to
+this was the inflammable matter already prepared by the collision of the
+spirit of political freedom with the power of the higher clergy. Thus
+Arnold's addresses produced in the minds of the Italian people, quite
+susceptible to such excitements, a prodigious effect, which threatened
+to spread more widely, and Pope Innocent felt himself called upon to
+take preventive measures against it. At the Lateran Council, in the year
+1139, he declared against Arnold's proceedings, and commanded him to
+quit Italy--the scene of the disturbances thus far--and not to return
+again without express permission from the Pope. Arnold, moreover, is
+said to have bound himself by an oath to obey this injunction, which
+probably was expressed in such terms as to leave him free to interpret
+it as referring exclusively to the person of Pope Innocent. If the oath
+was not so expressed, he might afterward have been accused of violating
+that oath. It is to be regretted that the form in which the sentence was
+pronounced against Arnold has not come down to us; but from its very
+character it is evident that he could not have been convicted of any
+false doctrine, since otherwise the Pope would certainly not have
+treated him so mildly--would not have been contented with merely
+banishing him from Italy, since teachers of false doctrine would be
+dangerous to the Church everywhere.
+
+Bernard, moreover, in his letter directed against Arnold, states that he
+was accused before the Pope of being the author of a very bad schism.
+Arnold now betook himself to France, and here he became entangled in the
+quarrels with his old teacher Abelard, to whom he was indebted for the
+first impulse of his mind toward this more serious and free bent of the
+religious spirit. Expelled from France, he directed his steps to
+Switzerland, and sojourned in Zurich. The abbot Bernard thought it
+necessary to caution the Bishop of Constance against him; but the man
+who had been condemned by the Pope found protection there from the papal
+legate, Cardinal Guido, who, indeed, made him a member of his household
+and companion of his table. The abbot Bernard severely censured the
+prelate, on the ground that Arnold's connection with him would
+contribute, without fail, to give importance and influence to that
+dangerous man. This deserves to be noticed on two accounts, for it makes
+it evident what power he could exercise over men's minds, and that no
+false doctrines could be charged to his account.
+
+But independent of Arnold's personal presence, the impulse which he had
+given continued to operate in Italy, and the effects of it extended even
+to Rome. By the papal condemnation, public attention was only more
+strongly drawn to the subject.
+
+The Romans certainly felt no great sympathy for the religious element in
+that serious spirit of reform which animated Arnold; but the political
+movements, which had sprung out of his reforming tendency, found a point
+of attachment in their love of liberty, and their dreams of the ancient
+dominion of Rome over the world. The idea of emancipating themselves
+from the yoke of the Pope, and of reestablishing the old Republic,
+flattered their Roman pride. Espousing the principles of Arnold, they
+required that the Pope, as spiritual head of the Church, should confine
+himself to the administration of spiritual affairs; and they committed
+to a senate the supreme direction of civil affairs.
+
+Innocent could do nothing to stem such a violent current; and he died in
+the midst of these disturbances, in the year 1143. The mild Cardinal
+Guido, the friend of Abelard and Arnold, became his successor, and
+called himself, when pope, Celestine II. By his gentleness, quiet was
+restored for a short time. Perhaps it was the news of the elevation of
+this friendly man to the papal throne that encouraged Arnold himself to
+come to Rome. But Celestine died after six months, and Lucius II was his
+successor. Under his reign the Romans renewed the former agitations with
+more violence; they utterly renounced obedience to the Pope, whom they
+recognized only in his priestly character, and the restored Roman
+Republic sought to strike a league in opposition to the Pope and to
+papacy with the new Emperor, Conrad III.
+
+In the name of the "senate and Roman people," a pompous letter was
+addressed to Conrad. The Emperor was invited to come to Rome, that from
+thence, like Justinian and Constantine, in former days, he might give
+laws to the world.
+
+Caesar should have the things that are Caesar's; the priest the things
+that are the priest's, as Christ ordained when Peter paid the tribute
+money. Long did the tendency awakened by Arnold's principles continue to
+agitate Rome. In the letters written amidst these commotions, by
+individual noblemen of Rome to the Emperor, we perceive a singular
+mixing together of the Arnoldian spirit with the dreams of Roman vanity;
+a radical tendency to the separation of secular from spiritual things
+which if it had been capable enough in itself, and if it could have
+found more points of attachment in the age, would have brought
+destruction on the old theocratical system of the Church. They said that
+the Pope could claim no political sovereignty in Rome; he could not even
+be consecrated without the consent of the Emperor--a rule which had in
+fact been observed till the time of Gregory VII. Men complained of the
+worldliness of the clergy, of their bad lives, of the contradiction
+between their conduct and the teachings of Scripture.
+
+The popes were accused as the instigators of the wars. "The popes," it
+was said, "should no longer unite the cup of the eucharist with the
+sword; it was their vocation to preach, and to confirm what they
+preached by good works. How could those who eagerly grasped at all the
+wealth of this world, and corrupted the true riches of the Church, the
+doctrine of salvation obtained by Christ, by their false doctrines and
+their luxurious living, receive that word of our Lord, 'Blessed are the
+poor in spirit,' when they were poor themselves neither in fact nor in
+disposition?" Even the donative of Constantine to the Roman bishop
+Silvester was declared to be a pitiable fiction. This lie had been so
+clearly exposed that it was obvious to the very day-laborers and to
+women, and that these could put to silence the most learned men if they
+ventured to defend the genuineness of this donative; so that the Pope,
+with his cardinals, no longer dared to appear in public. But Arnold was
+perhaps the only individual in whose case such a tendency was deeply
+rooted in religious conviction; with many it was but a transitory
+intoxication, in which their political interests had become merged for
+the moment.
+
+The pope Lucius II was killed as early as 1145, in the attack on the
+Capitol. A scholar of the great abbot Bernard, the abbot Peter Bernard
+of Pisa, now mounted the papal chair under the name of Eugene III. As
+Eugene honored and loved the abbot Bernard as his spiritual father and
+old preceptor, so the latter took advantage of his relation to the Pope
+to speak the truth to him with a plainness which no other man would
+easily have ventured to use. In congratulating him upon his elevation to
+the papal dignity, he took occasion to exhort him to do away with the
+many abuses which had become so widely spread in the Church by worldly
+influences. "Who will give me the satisfaction," said he in his letter,
+"of beholding the Church of God, before I die, in a condition like that
+in which it was in ancient days, when the apostles threw out their nets,
+not for silver and gold, but for souls? How fervently I wish thou
+mightest inherit the word of that apostle whose episcopal seat thou hast
+acquired, of him who said, 'Thy gold perish with thee.' Oh that all the
+enemies of Zion might tremble before this dreadful word, and shrink back
+abashed! This, thy mother indeed expects and requires of thee, for this
+long and sigh the sons of thy mother, small and great, that every plant
+which our Father in heaven has not planted may be rooted up by thy
+hands." He then alluded to the sudden deaths of the last predecessors of
+the Pope, exhorting him to humility, and reminding him of his
+responsibility. "In all thy works," he wrote, "remember that thou art a
+man; and let the fear of Him who taketh away the breath of rulers be
+ever before thine eyes."
+
+Eugene was soon forced to yield, it is true, to the superior force of
+the insurrectionary spirit in Rome, and in 1146 to take refuge in
+France; but, like Urban and Innocent, he too, from this country,
+attained to the highest triumph of the papal power. Like Innocent, he
+found there, in the abbot Bernard of Clairvaux, a mightier instrument
+for operating on the minds of the age than he could have found in any
+other country; and like Urban, when banished from the ancient seat of
+the papacy, he was enabled to place himself at the head of a crusade
+proclaimed in his name, and undertaken with great enthusiasm; an
+enterprise from which a new impression of sacredness would be reflected
+back upon his own person.
+
+The news of the success which had attended the arms of the Saracens in
+Syria, the defeat of the Christians, the conquest of the ancient
+Christian territory of Edessa, the danger which threatened the new
+Christian kingdom of Jerusalem and the Holy City, had spread alarm among
+the Western nations, and the Pope considered himself bound to summon the
+Christians of the West to the assistance of their hard-pressed brethren
+in the faith and to the recovery of the holy places. By a letter
+directed to the abbot Bernard he commissioned him to exhort the Western
+Christians in his name, that, for penance and forgiveness of sins, they
+should march to the East, to deliver their brethren, or to give up their
+lives for them. Enthusiastic for the cause himself Bernard communicated,
+through the power of the living word and by letters, his enthusiasm to
+the nations. He represented the new crusade as a means furnished by God
+to the multitudes sunk in sin, of calling them to repentance, and of
+paving the way, by devout participation in a pious work, for the
+forgiveness of their sins. Thus, in his letter to the clergy and people
+in East Frankland (Germany), he exhorts them eagerly to lay hold on this
+opportunity; he declares that the Almighty condescended to invite
+murderers, robbers, adulterers, perjurers, and those sunk in other
+crimes, into his service, as well as the righteous. He calls upon them
+to make an end of waging war with one another, and to seek an object for
+their warlike prowess in this holy contest. "Here, brave warrior," he
+exclaims, "thou hast a field where thou mayest fight without danger,
+where victory is glory and death is gain. Take the sign of the cross,
+and thou shalt obtain the forgiveness of all the sins which thou hast
+never confessed with a contrite heart." By Bernard's fiery discourses
+men of all ranks were carried away. In France and in Germany he
+travelled about, conquering by an effort his great bodily infirmities,
+and the living word from his lips produced even mightier effects than
+his letters.
+
+A peculiar charm, and a peculiar power of moving men's minds, must have
+existed in the tones of his voice; to this must be added the
+awe-inspiring effect of his whole appearance, the way in which his whole
+being and the motions of his bodily frame joined in testifying of that
+which seized and inspired him. Thus it admits of being explained how, in
+Germany, even those who understood but little, or in fact nothing, of
+what he said, could be so moved as to shed tears and smite their
+breasts; could, by his own speeches in a foreign language, be more
+strongly affected and agitated than by the immediate interpretation of
+his words by another. From all quarters sick persons were conveyed to
+him by the friends who sought from him a cure; and the power of his
+faith, the confidence he inspired in the minds of men, might sometimes
+produce remarkable effects. With this enthusiasm, however, Bernard
+united a degree of prudence and a discernment of character such as few
+of that age possessed, and such qualities were required to counteract
+the multiform excitements of the wild spirit of fanaticism which mixed
+in with this great ferment of minds.
+
+Thus, he warned the Germans not to suffer themselves to be misled so far
+as to follow certain independent enthusiasts, ignorant of war, who were
+bent on moving forward the bodies of the crusaders prematurely. He held
+up as a warning the example of Peter the Hermit, and declared himself
+very decidedly opposed to the proposition of an abbot who was disposed
+to march with a number of monks to Jerusalem; "for," said he, "fighting
+warriors are more needed there than singing monks." At an assembly held
+at Chartres it was proposed that he himself should take the lead of the
+expedition; but he rejected the proposition at once, declaring that it
+was beyond his power and contrary to his calling. Having, perhaps,
+reason to fear that the Pope might be hurried on, by the shouts of the
+many, to lay upon him some charge to which he did not feel himself
+called, he besought the Pope that he would not make him a victim to
+men's arbitrary will, but that he would inquire, as it was his duty to
+do, how God had determined to dispose of him.
+
+With the preaching of this Second Crusade, as with the invitation to the
+First, was connected an extraordinary awakening. Many who had hitherto
+given themselves up to their unrestrained passions and desires, and
+become strangers to all higher feelings, were seized with compunction.
+Bernard's call to repentance penetrated many a heart; people who had
+lived in all manner of crime were seen following this voice and flocking
+together in troops to receive the badge of the cross. Bishop Otto of
+Freisingen, the historian, who himself took the cross at that time,
+expresses it as his opinion "that every man of sound understanding would
+be forced to acknowledge so sudden and uncommon a change could have been
+produced in no other way than by the right hand of the Lord." The
+provost Gerhoh of Reichersberg, who wrote in the midst of these
+movements, was persuaded that he saw here a work of the Holy Spirit,
+designed to counteract the vices and corruptions which had got the upper
+hand in the Church.
+
+Many who had been awakened to repentance confessed what they had taken
+from others by robbery or fraud, and hastened, before they went to the
+holy war, to seek reconciliation with their enemies. The Christian
+enthusiasm of the German people found utterance in songs in the German
+tongue; and even now the peculiar adaptation of this language to sacred
+poetry began to be remarked. Indecent songs could no longer venture to
+appear abroad.
+
+While some were awakened by Bernard's preaching from a life of crime to
+repentance, and by taking part in the holy war strove to obtain the
+remission of their sins, others again, who though hitherto borne along
+in the current of ordinary worldly pursuits, yet had not given
+themselves up to vice, were filled by Bernard's words with loathing of
+the worldly life, inflamed with a vehement longing after a higher stage
+of Christian perfection, after a life of entire consecration to God.
+They longed rather to enter upon the pilgrimage to the heavenly than to
+an earthly Jerusalem; they resolved to become monks, and would fain have
+the man of God himself, whose words had made so deep an impression on
+their hearts, as their guide in the spiritual life, and commit
+themselves to his directions, in the monastery of Clairvaux. But here
+Bernard showed his prudence and knowledge of mankind; he did not allow
+all to become monks who wished to do so. Many he rejected because he
+perceived they were not fitted for the quiet of the contemplative life,
+but needed to be disciplined by the conflicts and cares of a life of
+action.
+
+As contemporaries themselves acknowledge, these first impressions, in
+the case of many who went to the crusades, were of no permanent
+duration, and their old nature broke forth again the more strongly under
+the manifold temptations to which they were exposed, in proportion to
+the facility with which, through the confidence they reposed in a
+plenary indulgence, without really laying to heart the condition upon
+which it was bestowed, they could flatter themselves with security in
+their sins.
+
+Gerhoh of Reichersberg, in describing the blessed effects of that
+awakening which accompanied the preaching of the crusader, yet says: "We
+doubt not that among so vast a multitude some became in the true sense
+and in all sincerity soldiers of Christ. Some, however, were led to
+embark in the enterprise by various other occasions, concerning whom it
+does not belong to us to judge, but only to Him who alone knows the
+hearts of those who marched to the contest either in the right or not in
+the right spirit. Yet this we do confidently affirm, that to this
+crusade many were called, but few were chosen." And it was said that
+many returned from this expedition, not better, but worse than they
+went. Therefore the monk Cesarius of Heisterbach, who states this, adds:
+"All depends on bearing the yoke of Christ not _one_ year or _two_
+years, but daily, if a man is really intent on doing it in truth, and in
+that sense in which our Lord requires it to be done, in order to follow
+him."
+
+When it turned out, however, that the event did not answer the
+expectations excited by Bernard's enthusiastic confidence, but the
+crusade came to that unfortunate issue which was brought about
+especially by the treachery of the princes and nobles of the Christian
+kingdom in Syria, this was a source of great chagrin to Bernard, who had
+been so active in setting it in motion, and who had inspired such
+confident hopes by his promises. He appeared now in the light of a bad
+prophet, and he was reproached by many with having incited men to engage
+in an enterprise which had cost so much blood to no purpose; but
+Bernard's friends alleged, in his defence, that he had not excited such
+a popular movement single-handed, but as the organ of the Pope, in whose
+name he acted; and they appealed to the facts by which his preaching of
+the cross was proved to be a work of God--to the wonders which attended
+it. Or they ascribed the failure of the undertaking to the bad conduct
+of the crusaders themselves, to the unchristian mode of life which many
+of them led, as one of these friends maintained, in a consoling letter
+to Bernard himself, adding, "God, however, has turned it to good.
+Numbers who, if they had returned home, would have continued to live a
+life of crime, disciplined and purified by many sufferings, have passed
+into the life eternal."
+
+But Bernard himself could not be staggered in his faith by this event.
+In writing to Pope Eugene on this subject, he refers to the
+incomprehensibleness of the divine ways and judgments; to the example of
+Moses, who, although his work carried on its face incontestable evidence
+of being a work of God, yet was not permitted himself to conduct the
+Jews into the Promised Land. As this was owing to the fault of the Jews
+themselves, so too the crusaders had none to blame but themselves for
+the failure of the divine work. "But," says he, "it will be said,
+perhaps, how do we know that this work came from the Lord? What miracle
+dost thou work that we should believe thee? To this question I need not
+give an answer; it is a point on which my modesty asks to be excused
+from speaking. Do you answer," says he to the Pope, "for me and for
+yourself, according to that which you have seen and heard." So firmly
+was Bernard convinced that God had sustained his labors by miracles.
+
+Eugene was at length enabled, in the year 1149, after having for a long
+time excited against himself the indignation of the cardinals by his
+dependence on the French abbot, with the assistance of Roger, King of
+the Sicilies, to return to Rome; where, however, he still had to
+maintain a struggle with the party of Arnold.
+
+The provost Gerhoh finds something to complain of in the fact that the
+Church of St. Peter wore so warlike an aspect that men beheld the tomb
+of the apostle surrounded with bastions and the implements of war.
+
+As Bernard was no longer sufficiently near the Pope to exert on him the
+same immediate personal influence as in times past, he addressed to him
+a voice of admonition and warning, such as the mighty of the earth
+seldom enjoy the privilege of hearing. With the frankness of a love
+which, as he himself expresses it, knew not the master, but recognized
+the son, even under the pontifical robes, he set before him, in his four
+books _On Meditation_, which he sent to him singly at different times,
+the duties of his office, and the faults against which, in order to
+fulfil these duties, he needed especially to guard.
+
+Bernard was penetrated with a conviction that to the Pope, as St.
+Peter's successor, was committed by God a sovereign power of church
+government over all, and responsible to no other tribunal; that to this
+church theocracy, guided by the Pope, the administration even of the
+secular power, though independent within its own peculiar sphere, should
+be subjected, for the service of the kingdom of God; but he also
+perceived, with the deepest pain, how very far the papacy was from
+corresponding to this its idea and destination; what prodigious
+corruption had sprung and continued to spring from the abuse of papal
+authority; he perceived already, with prophetic eye, that this very
+abuse of arbitrary will must eventually bring about the destruction of
+this power. He desired that the Pope should disentangle himself from the
+secular part of his office, and reduce that office within the purely
+spiritual domain; and that, above all, he should learn to govern and
+restrict himself.
+
+But to the close of his life, in the year 1153, Pope Eugene had to
+contend with the turbulent spirit of the Romans and the influences of
+the principles disseminated by Arnold; and this contest was prolonged
+into the reign of his second successor, Adrian IV. Among the people and
+among the nobles, a considerable party had arisen who would concede to
+the Pope no kind of secular dominion. And there seems to have been a
+shade of difference among the members of this party. A mob of the people
+is said to have gone to such an extreme of arrogance as to propose the
+choosing of a new emperor from among the Romans themselves, the
+restoration of a Roman empire independent of the Pope. The other party,
+to which belonged the nobles, were for placing the emperor Frederick I
+at the head of the Roman Republic, and uniting themselves with him in a
+common interest against the Pope. They invited him to receive the
+imperial crown, in the ancient manner, from the "senate and Roman
+people," and not from the heretical and recreant clergy and false monks,
+who acted in contradiction to their calling, exercising lordship despite
+of the evangelical and apostolical doctrine; and in contempt of all
+laws, divine and human, brought the Church of God and the kingdom of the
+world into confusion. Those who pretend that they are the
+representatives of Peter, it was said, in a letter addressed in the
+spirit of this party to the emperor Frederick I, "act in contradiction
+to the doctrines which that apostle teaches in his epistles. How can
+they say with the apostle Peter, 'Lo, we have left all and followed
+thee,' and, 'Silver and gold have I none'? How can our Lord say to such,
+'Ye are the light of the world,' 'the salt of the earth'? Much rather is
+to be applied to them what our Lord says of the salt that has lost its
+savor. 'Eager after earthly riches, they spoil the true riches, from
+which the salvation of the world has proceeded.' How can the saying be
+applied to them, 'Blessed are the poor in spirit'? for they are neither
+poor in spirit nor in fact."
+
+Pope Adrian IV was first enabled, under more favorable circumstances,
+and assisted by the Emperor Frederick I, to deprive the Arnold party of
+its leader, and then to suppress it entirely. It so happened that, in
+the first year of Adrian's reign, 1155, a cardinal, on his way to visit
+the Pope, was attacked and wounded by followers of Arnold. This induced
+the Pope to put all Rome under the interdict, with a view to force the
+expulsion of Arnold and his party. This means did not fail of its
+effect. The people who could not bear the suspension of divine worship,
+now themselves compelled the nobles to bring about the ejection of
+Arnold and his friends. Arnold, on leaving Rome, found protection from
+Italian nobles. By the order, however, of the emperor Frederick, who had
+come into Italy, he was torn from his protectors and surrendered up to
+the papal authority. The Prefect of Rome then took possession of his
+person and caused him to be hanged. His body was burned, and its ashes
+thrown into the Tiber, lest his bones might be preserved as the relics
+of a martyr by the Romans, who were enthusiastically devoted to him.
+Worthy men, who were in other respects zealous defenders of the church
+orthodoxy and of the hierarchy--as, for example, Gerhoh of
+Reichersberg--expressed their disapprobation, first, that Arnold should
+be punished with death on account of the errors which he disseminated;
+secondly, that the sentence of death should proceed from a spiritual
+tribunal, or that such a tribunal should at least have subjected itself
+to that bad appearance.
+
+But on the part of the Roman court it was alleged, in defence of this
+proceeding, that "it was done without the knowledge and contrary to the
+will of the Roman curia." "The Prefect of Rome had forcibly removed
+Arnold from the prison where he was kept, and his servants had put him
+to death in revenge for injuries they had suffered from Arnold's party.
+Arnold, therefore, was executed, not on account of his doctrines, but in
+consequence of tumults excited by himself." It may be a question whether
+this was said with sincerity, or whether, according to the proverb, a
+confession of guilt is not implied in the excuse. But Gerhoh was of the
+opinion that in this case they should at least have done as David did,
+in the case of Abner's death, and, by allowing Arnold to be buried, and
+his death to be mourned over, instead of causing his body to be burned,
+and the remains thrown into the Tiber, washed their hands of the whole
+transaction.
+
+But the idea for which Arnold had contended, and for which he died,
+continued to work in various forms, even after his death--the idea of a
+purification of the Church from the foreign worldly elements with which
+it had become vitiated, of its restoration to its original spiritual
+character.
+
+
+
+
+DECLINE OF THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE: RAVAGES OF ROGER OF SICILY
+
+A.D. 1146
+
+GEORGE FINLAY
+
+
+(From the enthronement of the Commenian dynasty in A.D. 1081, which was
+accomplished through a successful rebellion, attended by shameful
+treachery and rapine, the Byzantine empire, and especially
+Constantinople, its capital, passed through many vicissitudes; but the
+sack of the city by Alexius Commenus, the founder of the line, was
+remembered by the populace to the disadvantage of all his successors;
+the last of whom, Andronicus I, ended his reign in 1185. John, the son
+of Alexius [1118-1143], ruled with discretion and ability, and recovered
+some territory from the Turks.
+
+Manuel I, the son of John [1143-1181], ruled during a period of almost
+constant war, and for a time he held the enemies of the empire in check.
+But he appears to have been more endowed with courage and the spirit of
+enterprise than with good judgment, and his conduct of the empire
+coincided with events that, as seen in history, contributed to its
+decline, which after his death followed rapidly. As this decline is to
+be dated especially from the passing but not ineffectual invasion of
+Roger II, King of Sicily, in 1146, some account of that, together with a
+view of conditions immediately preceding, becomes important in a work
+like this.
+
+The century and a half before Roger's invasion had been a period of
+tranquillity for the distinctively Greek people of the empire, who had
+increased rapidly in numbers and wealth, and were in possession of an
+extensive commerce and many manufactures. Therefore they were perhaps
+the greatest sufferers from the adverse events which befell the State.)
+
+
+The emperor Alexius I had concluded a commercial treaty with Pisa toward
+the end of his reign. Manuel renewed this alliance, and he appears to
+have been the first of the Byzantine emperors who concluded a public
+treaty with Genoa. The pride of the emperors of the Romans--as the
+sovereigns of Constantinople were styled--induced them to treat the
+Italian republics as municipalities still dependent on the Empire of the
+Caesars, of which they had once formed a part; and the rulers both of
+Pisa and Genoa yielded to this assumption of supremacy, and consented to
+appear as vassals and liegemen of the Byzantine emperors, in order to
+participate in the profits which they saw the Venetians gained by
+trading in their dominions.
+
+Several commercial treaties with Pisa and Genoa, as well as with Venice,
+have been preserved. The obligations of the republics are embodied in
+the charter enumerating the concessions granted by the Emperor, and the
+document is called a _chrysobulum_, or golden bull, from the golden seal
+of the Emperor attached to it as the certificate of its authenticity.
+
+In Manuel's treaties with the Genoese and Pisans, the republics bind
+themselves never to engage in hostilities against the empire; but, on
+the contrary, all the subjects of the republics residing in the
+Emperor's dominions become bound to assist him against all assailants;
+they engage to act with their own ships, or to serve on board the
+imperial fleet, for the usual pay granted to Latin mercenaries. They
+promise to offer no impediment to the extension of the empire in Syria,
+reserving to themselves the factories and privileges they already
+possess in any place that may be conquered. They submit their civil and
+criminal affairs to the jurisdiction of the Byzantine courts of justice,
+as was then the case with the Venetians and other foreigners in the
+empire. Acts of piracy and armed violence, unless the criminals were
+taken in the act, were to be reported to the rulers of the republic
+whose subjects had committed the crime, and the Byzantine authorities
+were not to render the innocent traders in the empire responsible for
+the injuries inflicted by these brigands. The republicans engaged to
+observe all the stipulations in their treaties, in defiance of
+ecclesiastical excommunication or the prohibition of any individual,
+crowned or not crowned.
+
+Manuel, in return, granted to the republicans the right of forming a
+factory, erecting a quay for landing their goods, and building a church;
+and the Genoese received their grant in an agreeable position on the
+side of the port opposite Constantinople, where in after-times their
+great colony of Galata was formed. The Emperor promised to send an
+annual of from four hundred to five hundred gold bezants, with two
+pieces of a rich brocade then manufactured only in the Byzantine empire,
+to the republican governments, and sixty bezants, with one piece of
+brocade, to their archbishops. These treaties fixed the duty levied on
+the goods imported or exported from Constantinople by the Italians at 4
+per cent.; but in the other cities of the empire, the Pisans and Genoese
+were to pay the same duties as other Latin traders, excepting, of
+course, the privileged Venetians. These duties generally amounted to 10
+per cent. The republics were expressly excluded, by the Genoese treaty,
+from the Black Sea trade, except when they received a special license
+from the Emperor. In case of shipwreck, the property of the foreigners
+was to be protected by the imperial authorities and respected by the
+people, and every assistance was to be granted to the unfortunate
+sufferers. This humane clause was not new in Byzantine commercial
+treaties, for it is contained in the earliest treaty concluded by
+Alexius I with the Pisans. On the whole, the arrangements for the
+administration of justice in these treaties prove that the Byzantine
+empire still enjoyed a greater degree of order than the rest of Europe.
+
+The state of civilization in the Eastern Empire rendered the public
+finances the moving power of the government, as in the nations of modern
+Europe. This must always tend to the centralization of political
+authority, for the highest branch of the executive will always endeavor
+to dispose of the revenues of the State according to its views of
+necessity. This centralizing policy led Manuel to order all the money
+which the Greek commercial communities had hitherto devoted to
+maintaining local squadrons of galleys for the defence of the islands
+and coasts of the Aegean to be remitted to the treasury at
+Constantinople. The ships were compelled to visit the imperial dockyard
+in the capital to undergo repairs and to receive provisions and pay.
+
+A navy is a most expensive establishment; kings, ministers, and people
+are all very apt to think that when it is not wanted at any particular
+time, the cost of its maintenance may be more profitably applied to
+other objects. Manuel, after he had secured the funds of the Greeks for
+his own treasury, soon left their ships to rot, and the commerce of
+Greece became exposed to the attacks of small squadrons of Italian
+pirates who previously would not have dared to plunder in the
+Archipelago. It may be thought by some that Manuel acted wisely in
+centralizing the naval administration of his empire; but the great
+number, the small size, and the relative position of many of the Greek
+islands with regard to the prevailing winds render the permanent
+establishment of naval stations at several points necessary to prevent
+piracy.
+
+Manuel and Otho ruined the navy of Greece by their unwise measures of
+centralization; Pericles, by prudently centralizing the maritime forces
+of the various states, increased the naval power of Athens, and gave
+additional security to every Greek ship that navigated the sea.
+
+The same fiscal views which induced Manuel to centralize the naval
+administration when it was injurious to the interests of the empire,
+prompted him to act diametrically opposite with regard to the army. The
+emperor John had added greatly to the efficiency of the Byzantine
+military force by improving and centralizing its administration, and he
+left Manuel an excellent army, which rendered the Eastern Empire the
+most powerful state in Europe. But Manuel, from motives of economy,
+abandoned his father's system. Instead of assembling all the military
+forces of the empire annually in camps, where they received pay and were
+subjected to strict discipline, toward the end of his reign he
+distributed even the regular army in cities and provinces, where they
+were quartered far apart, in order that each district, by maintaining a
+certain number of men, might relieve the treasury from the burden of
+their pay and subsistence while they were not on actual service. The
+money thus retained in the central treasury was spent in idle festivals
+at Constantinople, and the troops, dispersed and neglected, became
+careless of their military exercises, and lived in a state of relaxed
+discipline. Other abuses were quickly introduced; resident yeomen,
+shopkeepers, and artisans were enrolled in the legions, with the
+connivance of the officers. The burden of maintaining the troops was in
+this way diminished, but the army was deteriorated.
+
+In other districts, where the divisions were exposed to be called into
+action, or were more directly under central inspection, the effective
+force was kept up at its full complement, but the people were compelled
+to submit to every kind of extortion and tyranny. The tendency of
+absolute power being always to weaken the power of the law, and to
+increase the authority of the executive agents of the sovereign, soon
+manifested its effects in the rapid progress of administrative
+corruption. The Byzantine garrisons in a few years became prototypes of
+the shopkeeping janizaries of the Ottoman empire, and bore no
+resemblance to the feudal militia of Western Europe, which Manuel had
+proposed as the model of his reform. This change produced a rapid
+decline in the military strength of the Byzantine army and accelerated
+the fall of the empire.
+
+For a considerable period the Byzantine emperors had been gradually
+increasing the proportion of foreign mercenaries in their service; this
+practice Manuel carried further than any of his predecessors. Besides
+the usual Varangian, Italian, and German guards, we find large corps of
+Patzinaks, Franks, and Turks enrolled in his armies, and officers of
+these nations occupying situations of the highest rank. A change had
+taken place in the military tactics, caused by the heavy armor and
+powerful horses which the crusaders brought into the field, and by the
+greater personal strength and skill in warlike exercises of the Western
+troops, who had no occupation from infancy but gymnastic exercises and
+athletic amusements. The nobility of the feudal nations expended more
+money on arms and armor than on other luxuries; and this becoming the
+general fashion, the Western troops were much better armed than the
+Byzantine soldiers. War became the profession of the higher ranks, and
+the expense of military undertakings was greatly increased by the
+military classes being completely separated from the rest of society.
+The warlike disposition of Manuel led him to favor the military nobles
+of the West who took service at his court; while his confidence in his
+own power, and in the political superiority of his empire, deluded him
+with the hope of being able to quell the turbulence of the Franks, and
+set bounds to the ambition and power of the popes.
+
+The wars of Manuel were sometimes forced on him by foreign powers, and
+sometimes commenced for temporary objects; but he appears never to have
+formed any fixed idea of the permanent policy which ought to have
+determined the constant employment of all the military resources at his
+command, for the purpose of advancing the interest of his empire and
+giving security to his subjects. His military exploits may be considered
+under three heads: His wars with the Franks, whether in Asia or Europe;
+his wars with the Hungarians and Servians; and his wars with the Turks.
+
+His first operations were against the principality of Antioch. The death
+of John II caused the dispersion of the fine army he had assembled for
+the conquest of Syria; but Manuel sent a portion of that army, and a
+strong fleet, to attack the principality. One of the generals of the
+land forces was Prosuch, a Turkish officer in high favor with his
+father. Raymond of Antioch was no longer the idle gambler he had shown
+himself in the camp of the emperor John; but though he was now
+distinguished by his courage and skill in arms, he was completely
+defeated, and the imperial army carried its ravages up to the very walls
+of Antioch, while the fleet laid waste the coast. Though the Byzantine
+troops retired, the losses of the campaign convinced Raymond that it
+would be impossible to defend Antioch should Manuel take the field in
+person. He therefore hastened to Constantinople, as a suppliant, to sue
+for peace; but Manuel, before admitting him to an audience, required
+that he should repair to the tomb of the emperor John and ask pardon for
+having violated his former promises. When the Hercules of the Franks, as
+Raymond was called, had submitted to this humiliation, he was admitted
+to the imperial presence, swore fealty to the Byzantine empire as Prince
+of Antioch, and became the vassal of the emperor Manuel. The conquest of
+Edessa by the Mahometans, which took place in the month of December,
+1144, rendered the defence of Antioch by the Latins a doubtful
+enterprise, unless they could secure the assistance of the Greeks.
+
+Manuel involved himself in a war with Roger, King of Sicily, which
+perhaps he might have avoided by more prudent conduct. An envoy he had
+sent to the Sicilian court concluded a treaty, which Manuel thought fit
+to disavow with unsuitable violence. This gave the Sicilian King a
+pretext for commencing war, but the real cause of hostilities must be
+sought in the ambition of Roger and the hostile feelings of Manuel.
+Roger was one of the wealthiest princes of his time; he had united under
+his sceptre both Sicily and all the Norman possessions in Southern
+Italy; his ambition was equal to his wealth and power, and he aspired at
+eclipsing the glory of Robert Guiscard and Bohemund by some permanent
+conquests in the Byzantine empire. On the other hand, the renown of
+Roger excited the envy of Manuel, who, proud of his army and confident
+of his own valor and military skill, hoped to reconquer Sicily. His
+passion made him forget that he was surrounded by numerous enemies, who
+would combine to prevent his employing all his forces against one
+adversary. Manuel consequently acted imprudently in revealing his
+hostile intentions; while Roger could direct all his forces against one
+point, and avail himself of Manuel's embarrassments. He commenced
+hostilities by inflicting a blow on the wealth and prosperity of Greece,
+from which it never recovered.
+
+At the commencement of the Second Crusade, when the attention of Manuel
+was anxiously directed to the movements of Louis VII of France, and
+Conrad, Emperor of Germany, Roger, who had collected a powerful fleet at
+Brindisi, for the purpose either of attacking the Byzantine empire or
+transporting the crusaders to Palestine, availed himself of an
+insurrection in Corfu to conclude a convention with the inhabitants, who
+admitted a garrison of one thousand Norman troops into their citadel.
+The Corfutes complained with great reason of the intolerable weight of
+taxation to which they were subjected; of the utter neglect of their
+interests by the central government, which consumed their wealth, and of
+the great abuses which prevailed in the administration of justice; but
+the remedy they adopted, by placing themselves under the rule of foreign
+masters, was not likely to alleviate these evils.
+
+The Sicilian admiral, after landing the Norman garrison at Corfu, sailed
+to Monembasia, then one of the principal commercial cities in the East,
+hoping to gain possession of it without difficulty; but the maritime
+population of this impregnable fortress gave him a warm reception and
+easily repulsed his attack. After plundering the coasts of Euboea and
+Attica, the Sicilian fleet returned to the West, and laid waste
+Acarnania and Etolia; it then entered the Gulf of Corinth, and debarked
+a body of troops at Crissa. This force marched through the country to
+Thebes, plundering every town and village on the way. Thebes offered no
+resistance and was plundered in the most deliberate and barbarous
+manner. The inhabitants were numerous and wealthy. The soil of Boeotia
+is extremely productive, and numerous manufactures established in the
+city of Thebes gave additional value to the abundant produce of
+agricultural industry.
+
+A century had elapsed since the citizens of Thebes had gone out
+valiantly to fight the army of Slavonian rebels in the reign of Michael
+IV (the Paphlagonian), and that defeat had long been forgotten. But all
+military spirit was now dead, and the Thebans had so long lived without
+any fear of invasion that they had forgotten the use of arms. The
+Sicilians found them not only unprepared to offer any resistance, but so
+surprised that they had not even adopted any effectual measures to
+secure or conceal their movable property. The conquerors, secure against
+all danger of interruption, plundered Thebes at their leisure. Not only
+gold, silver, jewels, and church plate were carried off, but even the
+goods found in the warehouses, and the rarest articles of furniture in
+private houses, were transported to the ships. Bales of silk and dyed
+leather were sent off to the fleet as deliberately as if they had been
+legally purchased in time of peace. When all ordinary means of
+collecting booty were exhausted, the citizens were compelled to take an
+oath on the Holy Scriptures that they had not concealed any portion of
+their property; yet many of the wealthiest were dragged away captive, in
+order to profit by their ransom; and many of the most skilful workmen in
+the silk manufactories, for which Thebes had long been famous, were
+pressed on board the fleet to labor at the oar.
+
+From Boeotia the army passed to Corinth. Nicephorus Caluphes, the
+governor, retired into the Acro-Corinth, but the garrison appeared to
+his cowardly heart not strong enough to defend this impregnable
+fortress, and he surrendered it to George Antiochenus, the Sicilian
+admiral, on the first summons. On examining the fortress of which he had
+thus unexpectedly gained possession, the admiral could not help
+exclaiming that he fought under the protection of heaven, for if
+Caluphes had not been more timid than a virgin, Corinth should have
+repulsed every attack.
+
+Corinth was sacked as cruelly as Thebes; men of rank, beautiful women,
+and skilful artisans, with their wives and families, were carried away
+into captivity. Even the relics of St. Theodore were taken from the
+church in which they were preserved; and it was not until the whole
+Sicilian fleet was laden with as much of the wealth of Greece as it was
+capable of transporting that the admiral ordered it to sail. The
+Sicilians did not venture to retain possession of the impregnable
+citadel of Corinth, as it would have been extremely difficult for them
+to keep up their communications with the garrison. This invasion of
+Greece was conducted entirely as a plundering expedition, having for its
+object to inflict the greatest possible injury on the Byzantine empire,
+while it collected the largest possible quantity of booty for the
+Sicilian troops. Corfu was the only conquest of which Roger retained
+possession.
+
+The ruin of the Greek commerce and manufactures has been ascribed to the
+transference of the silk trade from Thebes and Corinth to Palermo, under
+the judicious protection it received from Roger; but it would be more
+correct to say that the injudicious and oppressive financial
+administration of the Byzantine emperors destroyed the commercial
+prosperity and manufacturing industry of the Greeks; while the wise
+liberality and intelligent protection of the Norman kings extended the
+commerce and increased the industry of the Sicilians.
+
+When the Sicilian fleet returned to Palermo, Roger determined to employ
+all the silk manufacturers in their original occupations. He
+consequently collected all their families together, and settled them at
+Palermo, supplying them with the means of exercising their industry with
+profit to themselves, and inducing them to teach his own subjects to
+manufacture the richest brocades and to rival the rarest productions of
+the East.
+
+Roger, unlike most of the monarchs of his age, paid particular attention
+to improving the wealth of his dominions by increasing the prosperity of
+his subjects. During his reign the cultivation of the sugar-cane was
+introduced into Sicily. The conduct of Manuel was very different; when
+he concluded peace with William, the son and successor of Roger, in
+1158, he paid no attention to the commercial interests of his Greek
+subjects; the silk manufactures of Thebes and Corinth were not reclaimed
+and reinstated in their native seats; they were left to exercise their
+industry for the profit of their new prince, while their old sovereign
+would have abandoned them to perish from want. Under such circumstances
+it is not remarkable that the commerce and the manufactures of Greece
+were transferred in the course of another century to Sicily and Italy.
+
+
+
+
+CHRONOLOGY OF UNIVERSAL HISTORY
+
+EMBRACING THE PERIOD COVERED IN THIS VOLUME
+
+A.D. 843-1161
+
+JOHN RUDD, LL.D.
+
+
+Events treated at length are here indicated in large type; the numerals
+following give volume and page.
+
+Separate chronologies of the various nations, and of the careers of
+famous persons, will be found in the INDEX VOLUME, with volume and page
+references showing where the several events are fully treated.
+
+A.D.
+
+843. Messina in Sicily captured by the Saracens.
+
+Feudalism may be said to become an actuality from about this time. See
+"FEUDALISM: ITS FRANKISH BIRTH AND ENGLISH DEVELOPMENT," v, 1.
+
+The Danes--called by Arabian writers "_Magioges_," people of Gog and
+Magog--land at Lisbon from fifty-four ships and carry off a rich booty.
+
+The treaty of Verdun, between the three sons of Louis _le Débonnaire_.
+See "DECAY OF THE FRANKISH EMPIRE," v, 22.
+
+844. Lothair gives the title king of Italy to his son Louis, who is
+crowned at Rome.
+
+Abderrahman fits out a fleet to resist the Danes who have infested the
+neighborhood of Cadiz and Seville.
+
+845. Paris is pillaged for the first time by the Danes or Northmen. See
+"DECAY OF THE FRANKISH EMPIRE," v, 22.
+
+Hamburg is looted and destroyed by the Danes.
+
+846. Rome is attacked by the Saracens, who, after plundering the
+country, lay siege to Gaeta.
+
+Spain afflicted by a great drought and swarms of locusts.
+
+847. A violent storm drives the Saracens from the siege of Gaeta. The
+distress in Spain is relieved by Abderrahman, who remits the taxes and
+constructs aqueducts and fountains.
+
+848. Louis, King of Italy, drives the Saracens out of Beneventum.
+
+Bordeaux is assailed by the Northmen, but they are vigorously repulsed.
+See "DECAY OF THE FRANKISH EMPIRE," v, 22.
+
+Pope Leo IV adds a new quarter to the city of Rome by surrounding the
+Vatican with walls.
+
+849. Birth of Alfred the Great. See "CAREER OF ALFRED THE GREAT," v, 49.
+
+Gottschalk, a German bishop who preached the doctrine of twofold
+predestination, sentenced by the Council of Quincy to be flogged and
+suffer perpetual imprisonment.
+
+The Saracens range at will through the Mediterranean; they are defeated
+at the mouth of the Tiber by the combined fleets of Naples, Gaeta, and
+Amalphi.
+
+On Gallic soil the _benificium_ and practice of commendation is
+specially fostered. See "FEUDALISM: ITS FRANKISH BIRTH AND ENGLISH
+DEVELOPMENT," v, 1.
+
+850. Roric, a nephew of Harold, collects a piratical armament in
+Friesland and attacks adjacent coasts; Lothair grants Durstadt to him to
+secure his own lands.
+
+Pépin strengthens himself in Aquitaine by leagues with the Northmen. See
+"DECAY OF THE FRANKISH EMPIRE," v, 22.
+
+851. Danes ascend the Rhine with 252 ships and plunder Ghent, Cologne,
+Treves, and Aix-la-Chapelle.
+
+Roric, with 350 sail, proceeds up the Thames and pillages Canterbury and
+London, after defeating the King of Mercia; he is at last defeated by
+Ethelwulf, with great slaughter, at Ockley.
+
+852. A revolt against the Moslems in Armenia.
+
+853. Hastings' (the Danish chief) ruse at Tuscany. See "DECAY OF THE
+FRANKISH EMPIRE," v, 22.
+
+855. Death of Lothair, Emperor of the Franks; civil war between his
+sons.
+
+A band of Danes keep the Isle of Sheppey through the winter; their first
+foothold in England.
+
+860. Iceland discovered by the Northmen.
+
+862. Rurik, the Varangian chief, conquers Novgorod and Kiov and lays the
+foundation of the Russian empire.
+
+863. Cyril and Methodius, the "apostles of the Slavs," undertake the
+conversion of the Moravians.
+
+Pope Nicholas deposes Photius and declares Ignatius to be the patriarch
+of Constantinople; Photius in turn excommunicates the Pope.
+
+Charles the Bald founds the County of Flanders.
+
+864. Pope Nicholas asserts his exclusive right to appoint and depose
+bishops; the sovereigns and prelates of France and Germany resist his
+claim.
+
+Christianity first introduced into Russia; it makes little progress.
+
+865. First naval expedition of the Varangians or Russians against
+Constantinople; their fleet is dispersed by a storm.
+
+866. East Anglia invaded by a numerous body of Danes.
+
+Accession of Alfonso the Great of Asturias.
+
+868. Nottingham captured by the Danes; they are besieged by Burhred,
+Alfred, and his brother, who allow them to return to York with their
+booty. See "CAREER OF ALFRED THE GREAT," v, 49.
+
+869. Eighth general council held at Constantinople; the deposition of
+Photius confirmed and all iconoclasts anathematized.
+
+870. Malta captured by the Saracens.
+
+East Anglia captured by the Danes; Edmund, titular king of the country,
+is treacherously slain by them; is afterward canonized.
+
+871. Hincmar, a French prelate, encourages Charles the Bald to resist the
+authority assumed by the Pope over the church of France.
+
+Bari, a Saracen fortress in Southern Italy, is surrendered to the Franks
+and Greeks.
+
+Alfred ascends the throne of Wessex. See "CAREER OF ALFRED THE GREAT,"
+v, 49.
+
+872. Louis of Germany relinquishes to Emperor Louis his portion of
+Lorraine.
+
+873. On the approach of Emperor Louis with an army the Saracens, who
+were besieging Salerno, retire; they land in Calabria and commit great
+depredations.
+
+Locusts lay waste Italy, France, and Germany.
+
+Organs introduced into the churches of Germany.
+
+874. Mercia is conquered by the Danes, who set up Ceolwulf as their
+king.
+
+Iceland is settled by the Danes.
+
+875. Death of Emperor Louis; Charles the Bald and Louis of Germany
+contend for the succession. The former, by granting new privileges to
+the Church of Rome, obtains the support of the Pope, and is acknowledged
+as the king of Italy and emperor of the West.
+
+Alfred, King of Wessex, fits out a fleet and conquers the Danes in a
+great sea battle. See "CAREER OF ALFRED THE GREAT," v, 49.
+
+876. Death of Louis of Germany; division of his kingdom among his three
+sons: Bavaria to Carloman; Saxony to Louis the Stammerer; and East
+France (Franconia and Swabia) to Charles the Fat. Their uncle, Charles
+the Bald, attempts to dispossess them, but is defeated by Louis at
+Andernach.
+
+Rollo, at the head of the Northmen, enters the Seine and makes his first
+settlement in Normandy. See "DECAY OF THE FRANKISH EMPIRE," v, 22.
+
+877. No emperor of the West for three years.
+
+Carloman acquires the crown of Italy; the Pope, who opposes him, is
+driven from Rome by Lambert, Duke of Spoleto, and takes refuge in
+France.
+
+A large traffic in slaves carried on by the Venetians.
+
+Count Boso founds the kingdom of Florence.
+
+878. Alfred defeats a great host of the Danes at Eddington. See "CAREER
+OF ALFRED THE GREAT," v, 49.
+
+Syracuse captured by the Saracens, who become the masters of Sicily.
+
+879. Methodius forbidden by the Pope to perform the services of the
+Church for the Slavonians in their own language.
+
+The kingdom of Cisjurane, Burgundy, founded; it included Provence,
+Dauphiné, and the southern part of Savoy.
+
+880. Germany is ravaged by the Northmen.
+
+Alfred, the English King, defeats the Danes at the battle of Ethandun;
+by treaty he gives them equal rights, and they acknowledge his
+supremacy. See "CAREER OF ALFRED THE GREAT," v, 49.
+
+881. Methodius gets leave to use the Slavonic tongue in the churches.
+Charles the Fat ascends the throne of Italy and Germany; is emperor of
+the West.
+
+882. Albategni, the Arabian astronomer, observes the autumnal equinox,
+September 19th.
+
+883. Alfred sends Singhelm and Athelstan on missions to Rome and the
+Christian church in India.
+
+884. Charles the Fat reunites the Frankish empire of Charlemagne.
+
+885. Siege of Paris by the Northmen. See "DECAY OF THE FRANKISH EMPIRE,"
+v, 22.
+
+886. Alfred the Great said to have founded the University of Oxford.
+
+887. Deposition of Charles the Fat; Arnulf, natural son of Carloman of
+Bavaria, elected by the nobles.
+
+888. Death of Charles the Fat; final disruption of the Frankish empire;
+the crown of France in dispute between the Count of Paris, Eudes, and
+Charles the Simple. See "DECAY OF THE FRANKISH EMPIRE," v, 22.
+
+Founding of the kingdom of Transjurane, Burgundy, which includes the
+northern part of Savoy and all Switzerland between the Reuss and the
+Jura.
+
+Alfred the Great begins his translations from Latin into Anglo-Saxon.
+See "AUGUSTINE'S MISSIONARY WORK IN ENGLAND," iv, 182.
+
+890. Southern Italy constituted a province of the Greek empire and
+called Lombardia.
+
+891. King Arnulf, of Germany, defeats the Northmen or Danes at Louvain.
+
+894. Arnulf becomes emperor of Germany.
+
+Hungarians (Magyars) cross the Carpathians and occupy the plains of the
+Theiss.
+
+895. Rome is captured by Emperor Arnulf of Germany; he is crowned
+emperor of the West.
+
+896. Pope Stephen VII declares the election of his predecessor,
+Formosus, invalid; disinters his body and has it thrown in the Tiber.
+
+897. Pope Stephen imprisoned and strangled.
+
+Alfred constructs a powerful navy and defeats Hastings the Dane. See
+"CAREER OF ALFRED THE GREAT," v, 49.
+
+899. Accession of Louis the Child, on the death of Arnulf, to the German
+throne.
+
+900. Hungarians ravage Northern Italy.
+
+901. Death of Alfred the Great, King of England; his son, Edward the
+Elder, succeeds.
+
+904. Russians, with a large naval force, attack Constantinople, and the
+Saracens Thessalonica.
+
+907. Bavaria desolated by the Hungarians.
+
+909. Founding of the Fatimite caliphate in Africa. See "CONQUEST OF
+EGYPT BY THE FATIMITES," v, 94.
+
+911. End of the Carlovingian line in Germany. See "HENRY THE FOWLER
+FOUNDS THE SAXON LINE OF GERMAN KINGS," v, 82.
+
+912. Rollo, converted to Christianity, takes the name of Robert and
+receives from Peter the Simple the province afterward called Normandy,
+of which he is the first duke. See "DECAY OF THE FRANKISH EMPIRE," v,
+22.
+
+913. Igor, son of Rurik, by the death of his guardian, Oleg, is invested
+with the government of Russia.
+
+Bodies of Hungarians and Slavs make inroads on German territory. See
+"HENRY THE FOWLER FOUNDS THE SAXON LINE OF GERMAN KINGS," v, 82.
+
+914. John X elected pope through the intrigues of Theodora.
+
+916. Berengar is crowned emperor of the West, in Italy.
+
+918. Death of Conrad, the King of Germany. See "HENRY THE FOWLER FOUNDS
+THE SAXON LINE OF GERMAN KINGS," v, 82.
+
+919. Founding of the Danish kingdom of Dublin, Ireland. "HENRY THE
+FOWLER FOUNDS THE SAXON LINE OF GERMAN KINGS." See v, 82.
+
+923. Rudolph of Burgundy disputes with Charles the Simple for the crown
+of France.
+
+924. Germany is overrun and devastated by the Hungarians. Death of
+Berengar, upon which the imperial title lapses.
+
+925. Edward the Elder is succeeded by his son Athelstan, in England.
+
+926. Henry the Fowler conquers the Slavonians; he establishes the
+margravate of Brandenburg.
+
+928. Guido and Marozia usurp supreme temporal power in Rome and confine
+Pope John X in prison, where he dies. (Date uncertain.)
+
+929. Charles the Simple dies in captivity at Péronne.
+
+Abu Taher, the Carmathian leader, plunders Mecca and massacres the
+pilgrims.
+
+930. Prague is besieged by Henry the Fowler, who becomes superior lord
+of Bohemia; his son, Otho, marries Eadgith, sister of Athelstan, King of
+England.
+
+931. Marozia still rules in Rome; she makes her son pope John XI.
+
+932. Hugh marries Marozia and is expelled from Rome by her son Alberic,
+who confines his mother, and his brother, Pope John, in St. Angelo and
+governs the city.
+
+933. Henry the Fowler is victorious over the Hungarians at Merseburg.
+See "HENRY THE FOWLER FOUNDS THE SAXON LINE OF GERMAN KINGS," v, 82.
+
+Union of Cis- and Transjurane Burgundy into one realm, the kingdom of
+Arles.
+
+Saracens invade Castile and are defeated at Uxama.
+
+936. Death of Henry the Fowler; accession of Otho the Great in Germany
+and of Louis _d'Outre-Mer_ in France. Louis was given the surname for
+having been in exile in England, whence he was recalled to the crown.
+
+From this time chivalry may be said to arise. See "GROWTH AND DECADENCE
+OF CHIVALRY," v, 109.
+
+937. Confederation of Scots and Irish with the Danes of Northumberland,
+totally defeated by Athelstan, at Brunanburh.
+
+France is invaded by the Hungarians.
+
+939. The Marquis of Istria levies imposts on Venetian merchants, the
+repeal of which is enforced by the Doge suspending all intercourse
+between the two states.
+
+940. Death of King Athelstan; his brother Edmund succeeds to the English
+throne.
+
+941. Constantinople attacked by the Russians under Igor; they are
+repelled by Romanus.
+
+945. Death of Igor; his widow, Olga, governs the Russians during the
+minority of their son Swatoslaus.
+
+Cumberland and Westmoreland, England, granted as a fief to Malcolm, King
+of Scotland.
+
+946. Edmund, who had conquered Mercia and the "Five Boroughs" of the
+Danish confederacy, England, slain by an outlaw; his brother Edred
+succeeds.
+
+951. Otho the Great marches an army in to Italy; he dethrones Berengar
+for cruelly ill-treating Adelaide.
+
+952. Otho restores Italy to Berengar and his son; they do homage to him
+at the Diet of Augsburg.
+
+955. Otho vanquishes the Hungarians on the Lech; he afterward conquers
+the Slavonians.
+
+Olga, the Russian Princess, baptized at Constantinople; she carries back
+into her own country some beginnings of civilization.
+
+956. Many provinces, including Armenia, recovered from the Saracens by
+the Eastern Empire.
+
+959. St. Dunstan made archbishop of Canterbury on the accession of
+Edgar.
+
+961. Berengar finally dethroned by Otho the Great; the sovereignty of
+Italy passes from Charlemagne's descendants to German rulers.
+
+962. Otho the Great, master of Italy; his coronation as emperor of the
+Romans by Pope John XII; establishment of the Holy Roman Empire of the
+German nation.
+
+963. Nicephorus Phocas defeats the Saracens and recovers the former
+provinces of the empire as far as the Euphrates.
+
+Al Hakem, Caliph of Cordova, famous as a patron of literature and
+learning, and who is said to have collected a library of 600,000
+volumes, employs agents in Africa and Arabia to purchase or copy
+manuscripts.
+
+King Edgar, England, defeats the Welsh and exacts an annual tribute of
+three hundred wolves' heads.
+
+964. Pope Leo VIII is expelled; John XII reinstated, he dies soon after;
+Rome is besieged and captured by the Emperor, after a revolt encouraged
+by Berengar.
+
+966. After 328 years' subjection Antioch is recovered from the Saracens.
+
+Bulgaria invaded by the Russians, who also extend their dominion to the
+Black Sea.
+
+Miecislas, ruler of Poland, embraces Christianity.
+
+969. Kahira (now Cairo) built by the Fatimites, who establish a
+caliphate in Egypt. See "CONQUEST OF EGYPT BY THE FATIMITES," v, 94.
+
+Nicephorus Phocas, Emperor of the East, murdered by John Zimisces, who
+succeeds.
+
+971. All munitions of war and arms are by the Venetians forbidden to be
+sold by their merchants to the Saracens.
+
+973. On the death of his father, Otho the Great, Otho II ascends the
+throne of the German empire. His Empress, Theophania, introduces Greek
+customs and manners into Germany.
+
+976. Henry, Duke of Bavaria, defeated by Otho II and deposed, takes
+refuge in Bohemia.
+
+Death of Al Hakem; his reign the most glorious of the Saracenic dominion
+in Spain.
+
+Commotion in Venice; the Doge attempts to introduce mercenary troops and
+is slain; his palace, St. Mark's, and other churches burned.
+
+978. Otho II makes a victorious movement into France.
+
+979. King Edward the Martyr assassinated by command of his
+mother-in-law, Elfrida; Ethelred the Unready succeeds. (Date uncertain.)
+
+980. Theophania urges her husband, Otho II, to claim the Greek provinces
+in Italy; he advances with his army to Ravenna.
+
+Vladimir obtains the assistance of the sea-kings, defeats his brother,
+Jaropolk, puts him to death, and becomes sole ruler of Russia.
+
+982. Saracens of Africa are invited by the Greek emperors to join them
+in opposing Otho; battle of Basientello, total defeat of Otho; he is
+taken prisoner, but escapes by swimming.
+
+983. Eric the Red, a Norseman, first visits Greenland, which he thus
+names, and afterward settles. See "LEIF ERICSON DISCOVERS AMERICA," v,
+141.
+
+Death of Otho II; Otho III succeeds to the throne of Germany under the
+regency of his mother, Theophania.
+
+987. Death of Louis V, the last of the Carlovingian line; Hugh Capet is
+elected king of France; this inaugurates the Capetian dynasty.
+
+988. Vladimir the Great of Russia embraces Christianity. See "CONVERSION
+OF VLADIMIR THE GREAT," v, 128.
+
+989. Sedition in Rome; Empress Theophania arrives there and suppresses
+it.
+
+In Germany rural counts and barons commence their depredations on the
+properties of their neighbors.
+
+Learned men from all parts of the East flock to Cordova, Almansor, the
+Saracen regent, having set apart a fund to promote literature.
+
+991. Archbishop Gerbert, of Rheims, introduces the use of Arabic
+numerals, which he had learned at Cordova.
+
+Ipswich and Maldon, England, ravaged by the Danes; a tribute raised for
+them by means of the "Danegild" tax.
+
+994. Hugh Capet maintains Gerbert in the see of Rheims, against the
+opposition of the Pope.
+
+With a fleet of ninety-four ships the kings of Norway and Denmark attack
+London; they are beaten off by the citizens.
+
+996. Death of Hugh Capet; his son Robert succeeds.
+
+997. Venetians conquer the coast and islands of the Adriatic as far as
+Ragusa; their Doge styles himself duke of Dalmatia.
+
+Death of Gejza, first Christian prince of Hungary.
+
+Insurrection of peasants in Normandy.
+
+998. Crescentius, having usurped power in Rome and expelled the Pope, is
+defeated, captured, and put to death by Otho III.
+
+1000. Leif Ericson and Biorn discover America. See "LEIF ERICSON
+DISCOVERS AMERICA," v, 141.
+
+Otho III and Boleslas the Valiant, King of Poland, meet at Gnesen.
+
+Expectation of the end of the world causes the sowing of seed and other
+agricultural work to be neglected; famine ensues therefrom.
+
+Duke Stephen of Hungary receives the royal title from Pope Sylvester II.
+
+First invasion of India by Mahmud. See "MAHOMETANS IN INDIA," v, 151.
+
+1002. Massacre of Danes in England; the Day of St. Brice.
+
+Henry, Duke of Bavaria, elected king of Germany on the death of Otho
+III.
+
+1003. Sweyn of Denmark invades England to avenge the massacre of his
+people.
+
+1013. After various repulses and successes Sweyn takes nearly the whole
+of England; King Ethelred and his Queen flee to her brother Richard,
+Duke of Normandy.
+
+Imperial coronation of Henry II.
+
+1014. Death of Sweyn. Ethelred returns to England; he battles with the
+Danes, under Sweyn's son, Canute, who is driven from the country.
+
+King Brian, the Brian Boroimhe or Boru, the most famous of Irish kings,
+defeats the Danes at the battle of Clontarf, but perishes in the
+conflict.
+
+1016. Pope Benedict VIII repulses the Saracens at Luni, Tuscany; they
+besiege Salerno and are defeated by the aid of a band of Norman pilgrims
+returning from Jerusalem.
+
+Edmund "Ironsides," the English King, assassinated. See "CANUTE BECOMES
+KING OF ENGLAND," v, 164.
+
+1017. Swatopolk, Grand Duke of Russia, defeated by his brother,
+Jaroslav, Prince of Novgorod, seeks an asylum in Poland.
+
+All England acknowledges Canute as king. See "CANUTE BECOMES KING OF
+ENGLAND," v, 164.
+
+1018. Complete destruction of the Bulgarian realm by the Eastern emperor
+Basil II.
+
+Swatopolk finally expelled from Russia by Jaroslav, who becomes ruler.
+
+1020. Death of Firdusi, a famous Persian poet.
+
+1022. Guido Aretinus invents the staff, and is the first to adopt as
+names for the notes of the musical scale the initial syllables of the
+hemistichs of a hymn in honor of St. John the Baptist.
+
+1024. Death of the emperor Henry II of Germany; the Franconian dynasty
+inaugurated by Conrad II.
+
+1027. Conrad II crowned emperor at Rome; Canute of England and Rudolph
+of Burgundy attend the ceremony.
+
+Schleswig is formally ceded to Denmark by Conrad II.
+
+1028. Canute invades Norway; he conquers King Olaf and annexes his
+dominions. See "CANUTE BECOMES KING OF ENGLAND," v, 164.
+
+1031. End of the Ommiad caliphate of Cordova; Spain divided by the
+Moorish chiefs into many states.
+
+1033. Institution of the "Truce of God." A suspension of private feuds
+observed in England, France, Italy, and elsewhere. Such a truce provided
+that these feuds should cease on all the more important church festivals
+and fasts, from Thursday evening to Monday morning, during Lent, or
+similar occasions.
+
+Castile created an independent kingdom by Sancho the Great, King of
+Navarre.
+
+Conrad II extends his dominion over the Arletan territories.
+
+1035. Death of King Canute; his sons, Hardicanute in Denmark, Harold in
+England, and Sweyn in Norway, succeed him. See "CANUTE BECOMES KING OF
+ENGLAND," v, 164.
+
+Aragon created an independent kingdom.
+
+1037. Avicenna, Arabian physician and scholar, dies. (Date uncertain.)
+
+Harold becomes king of all England.
+
+1039. Murder of King Duncan, of Scotland, by Macbeth, who succeeds.
+
+1042. End of the Danish rule in England; Hardicanute succeeded by Edward
+the Confessor.
+
+1045. Ferdinand of Castile exacts tribute from his Moorish neighbors.
+
+1046. Henry III holds a council at Sutri on the question of the papacy.
+See "HENRY III DEPOSES THE SIMONIACAL POPES," v, 177.
+
+1047. Count Guelf given the duchy Carinthia by Emperor Henry III.
+
+1048. On the death of Clement II, the deposed Pope again intrudes
+himself. See "HENRY III DEPOSES THE SIMONIACAL POPES," v, 177.
+
+1049. Hildebrand, the monk, assumes charge of the patrimony of St.
+Peter, at Rome.
+
+1050. Bérenger of Tours condemned and imprisoned for denying the
+doctrine of transubstantiation.
+
+1051. William of Normandy visits England; he confers with Edward the
+Confessor.
+
+1052. Archbishop Robert, with the Norman bishops and nobles, driven out
+of England.
+
+1053. In Italy the Norman conquests of that country are conferred on
+them as a fief of the Church.
+
+1054. Separation of the Greek and Latin churches. See "DISSENSION AND
+SEPARATION OF THE GREEK AND ROMAN CHURCHES," v, 189.
+
+1055. Togrul Beg drives the Buyides from Bagdad and establishes his
+authority there.
+
+1056. Death of Emperor Henry III; his son, Henry IV, is elected king
+under the regency of his mother, Agnes.
+
+Malcolm defeats Macbeth, King of Scotland, at Dunsinane.
+
+1057. Harold, son of Earl Godwin, is designated heir to the throne of
+England. See "NORMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND," v, 204.
+
+1059. Nicholas II and the Council of Rome decree that future popes shall
+be elected by the college of cardinals, but confirmed by the people and
+clergy of Rome and the emperor.
+
+1060. King Andrew slain in battle by his brother, Bela, who ascends the
+throne of Hungary.
+
+1061. Robert Guiscard and his brother Roger, at the head of the Normans,
+engage in the conquest of Sicily from the Saracens.
+
+1062. The Archbishop of Cologne, Anno, assumes the reins of government
+after seizing the young emperor Henry IV.
+
+1066. Death of Edward the Confessor, who is succeeded by Harold II. The
+Norwegians invade England; they are defeated by Harold. William, Duke of
+Normandy, invades and conquers England. See "NORMAN CONQUEST OF
+ENGLAND," v, 204.
+
+1067. Council of Mantua; Hildebrand denies the imperial right to
+interfere in the election of a pope.
+
+1068. Carrier pigeons are employed by the Saracens to convey
+intelligence to the besieged in Palermo.
+
+1069. Morocco founded by Abu-Bekr, Ameer of Lantuna.
+
+1071. Alp Arslan, the Seljuk Sultan, defeats and captures the Eastern
+Emperor, Romanus Diogenes.
+
+1072. Palermo is taken by the Normans, who reduce the whole of Sicily.
+
+1073. Lissa, taken by the Normans, is recovered by the Venetians.
+
+Hildebrand elected pope; he takes the name of Gregory VII; the sale of
+church benefices in Germany forbidden by him. See "TRIUMPHS OF
+HILDEBRAND," v, 231.
+
+1074. Gregory VII suggests the first idea of a general crusade against
+the Turks.
+
+1075. Lay investiture prohibited by a council called by Gregory VII. See
+"TRIUMPHS OF HILDEBRAND," v, 231.
+
+1076. Atziz, Malek Shah's lieutenant, conquers Syria from the Fatimites
+of Egypt, and takes Jerusalem.
+
+Christian pilgrims are persecuted by the Seljukian Turks.
+
+Henry IV, Emperor of Germany, holds a council at Rome which deposes
+Gregory VII. In union with the German princes the Pope deposes the
+Emperor.
+
+1077. Pope Gregory exacts an annual tribute from Alfonso, King of
+Castile.
+
+At Canossa Henry IV humbles himself before the Pope and is absolved. See
+"TRIUMPHS OF HILDEBRAND," v, 231.
+
+1079. Boleslas of Poland excommunicated by Gregory and expelled by his
+subjects.
+
+1080. Henry IV convenes a council which deposes Gregory VII; it elects
+Guibert, Antipope Clement III, in his stead.
+
+End of the war between Henry and Rudolph of Saxony caused by the death
+of the latter.
+
+1081. Constantinople captured by Alexis Comnenus, who is placed by his
+soldiers on the Byzantine throne.
+
+1084. Gregory VII is besieged in the castle of St. Angelo; Robert
+Guiscard delivers the Pope. See "TRIUMPHS OF HILDEBRAND," v, 231.
+
+1085. Death of Gregory VII, in exile at Salerno; the papacy vacant till
+the following year.
+
+Conquest of Toledo from the Moors by Alfonso of Castile.
+
+1086. "COMPLETION OF THE DOMESDAY BOOK." See v, 242.
+
+The Mahometans of Spain invite the chief of the Almoravides to assist
+them. See "DECLINE OF THE MOORISH POWER IN SPAIN," v, 256.
+
+1087. King William of England invades France; he dies at Rouen. His
+eldest son, Robert, inherits Normandy; his second son, William Rufus,
+secures the throne of England.
+
+1088. Yussef is called into Spain by the Moorish princes; their
+jealousies and discords render his assistance unavailing. See "DECLINE
+OF THE MOORISH POWER IN SPAIN," v, 256.
+
+1089. Henry IV excommunicated by Pope Urban II. A violent earthquake in
+England.
+
+The disease known as St. Anthony's fire breaks out in Lorraine.
+
+1090. Hasan, Subah of Nishapur, collects a band of Carmathians who are
+named after him, "Assassins."
+
+William Rufus, King of England, invades Normandy and captures St.
+Valery.
+
+1091. Yussef conquers Seville and Almeria, sends Almoatamad to Africa,
+and becomes supreme ruler in Mahometan Spain. See "DECLINE OF THE
+MOORISH POWER IN SPAIN," v, 256.
+
+1092. Guibert's party hold the castle of St. Angelo; Guibert's title to
+the papacy is still asserted by Henry IV.
+
+Complete disruption of the empire of the Seljuks follows the death of
+Shah Malek.
+
+1093. King Malcolm of Scotland invades England; he is killed near
+Alnwick, by Roger de Mowbray.
+
+1094. Sancho, King of Aragon and Navarre, falls in battle; he is
+succeeded by his son Pedro.
+
+Peter the Hermit goes on his pilgrimage to Jerusalem. See "THE FIRST
+CRUSADE," v, 276.
+
+1095. Philip and Henry again excommunicated by Pope Urban II.
+
+Henry of Besangon marries Theresa, daughter of Alfonso the Valiant, who
+erects Portugal into a county for his son-in-law.
+
+1096. Aphdal, the Fatimite, expels the sons of Ortok from Jerusalem.
+
+Movement of the first crusading armies; massacre of Jews in Europe. See
+"THE FIRST CRUSADE," v, 276.
+
+1097. William Rufus expels Archbishop Anselm, from England in defiance
+of the papal legate.
+
+Emperor Henry IV protects the German Jews.
+
+Death of Albert Azzo, Marquis of Lombardy, more than 100 years old; he
+was father of Guelf IV, the progenitor of the Brunswick family,
+afterward one of the English royal lines.
+
+The crusaders take Nicaea; the Eastern emperor Alexius, suspicious of
+the crusaders, obtains the city of Nicasa for himself. See "THE FIRST
+CRUSADE," v, 276.
+
+1098. Edgar, son of Malcolm, seated on the throne of Scotland by Edgar
+Atheling with an English army.
+
+Pope Urban II holds a council at Bari to condemn the doctrines of the
+Greek Church.
+
+1099. Jerusalem captured by the crusaders. See "THE FIRST CRUSADE," v,
+276.
+
+Founding of the order of the Knights Hospitallers; Gerard of Jerusalem
+the first provost or grand master.
+
+Coronation of Henry V, second son of the Emperor, as king of the Romans.
+
+1100. New antipopes arise on the death of Guibert (Clement III), one of
+whom assumes the name of Sylvester IV.
+
+William Rufus accidentally slain; Henry I becomes king of England; he
+renews the laws of Edward the Confessor and unites the Saxon and Norman
+races by his marriage with Matilda, granddaughter of Edmund "Ironside."
+
+1101. Robert, Duke of Normandy, invades England and makes war on his
+brother, Henry I.
+
+Guelf, Duke of Bavaria, and William, Duke of Aquitaine, conduct a large
+body of crusaders to the East. United with those who set out in the
+preceding year, they are met by Kilidsch Arslan, on entering Asia Minor,
+and are cut to pieces or dispersed.
+
+1102. Pope Paschal II obtains from Matilda a deed of gift of all her
+states to the Church.
+
+Coloman, King of Hungary, conquers Croatia and Dalmatia.
+
+1103. Yussef's son Ali recognized as heir to the thrones of Spain and
+Africa.
+
+1104. Baldwin, King of Jerusalem, defeats the Turks and captures Acre.
+
+Emperor Henry IV faces a rebellion of his son, incited by the papal
+party.
+
+1105. Interview between Emperor Henry and his son at Elbingen; a diet is
+called to be held at Mainz for the settlement of their dispute.
+
+The English, under King Henry, take Caen and Bayeux in Normandy.
+
+Defeat of the Turks in an attempt to retake Jerusalem; Bohemond, Prince
+of Tarentum, who had taken Antioch from the Turks, made prisoner.
+
+1106. King Henry I overthrows Duke Robert, who is captured, and secures
+Normandy.
+
+Death of Henry IV and accession of his son Henry V to the German throne;
+the new Emperor asserts his right to appoint bishops.
+
+1108. Death of Philip, King of France; Louis VI, the Fat, succeeds.
+
+1109. Baldwin, King of Jerusalem, assisted by a Venetian fleet, captures
+Tripoli.
+
+Portugal declared independent and the hereditary succession established
+in Count Henry's family.
+
+1111. Emperor Henry V enters Rome; bloody contests between his soldiers
+and the people. Pope Paschal II, a prisoner, resigns the right of
+investiture and crowns the Emperor.
+
+1113. Death of Swatopolk, Duke of Russia; his brother Vladimir succeeds.
+
+1114. War in Wales; King Henry I erects castles there to secure his
+conquests.
+
+1117. The Doge of Venice falls at Zara in defending Dalmatia against the
+Hungarians.
+
+1118. "FOUNDATION OF THE ORDER OF KNIGHTS TEMPLAR." See v, 301.
+
+On the death of Paschal II the cardinals elect Gelasius II; the Emperor
+appoints the Archbishop of Braga to assume the papal dignity under the
+name of Gregory VIII. The factions afterward known as the Guelfs and
+Ghibellines arose from this event.
+
+1119. Battle of Noyon, by which Henry I reestablishes his ascendency in
+Normandy.
+
+Defeat of the Turks at Antioch by King Baldwin II and the Knights
+Hospitallers.
+
+Henry I resists the papal claim to investiture in England; banishment of
+Thurstan, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+
+1120. Sinking of the White Ship (_La Blanche Nef_), in which Prince
+William, son of Henry I, was lost. The King is said to have "never
+smiled again" after the receipt of the news.
+
+1121. Siege of Sutri by the army of Pope Calixtus II, and surrender of
+Antipope Gregory.
+
+1122. Henry V and Calixtus II compromise, at the Diet of Worms, the
+dispute respecting the right of investiture.
+
+Baldwin, King of Jerusalem, and Jocelyn de Courtenay made prisoners by
+the Turks.
+
+Abelard, a noted French theologian, accused of heresy at the Council of
+Soissons, is condemned to burn his writings.
+
+1123. Ninth general council; First Lateran Council.
+
+War renewed in Normandy by the rebellion of certain powerful barons;
+Henry I, King of England, takes their castles.
+
+1124. A rich Pisan convoy, on its voyage from Sardinia, captured by the
+Genoese.
+
+1125. Death of the emperor Henry V of Germany, which ends the Franconian
+dynasty; the Duke of Saxony, Lothair II, elected his successor; he
+declares war against the Hohenstaufens.
+
+Punishment of the mintmen in England for issuing base coin.
+
+1126. King Henry leaves Normandy and takes his prisoners to England.
+
+1127. Marriage of Henry's daughter, Matilda, to Geoffrey Plantagenet;
+she is acknowledged by the English barons as heiress to her father's
+throne. See "STEPHEN USURPS THE ENGLISH CROWN," v, 317.
+
+Death of William, Duke of Apulia; Roger II, Great Count of Sicily,
+succeeds. This unites the Norman conquests in Italy with Sicily; the
+Pope excommunicates him.
+
+1128. Conrad, Duke of Franconia, of the Hohenstaufen house, crowned king
+of Italy at Milan, in opposition to Lothair II; he is excommunicated by
+the Pope.
+
+Roger II overcomes the papal resistance and is formally acknowledged
+duke of Apulia and Calabria.
+
+1129. King Henry of England releases his Norman prisoners and restores
+their lands to them.
+
+1130. On the death of Pope Honorius II the cardinals divide into two
+factions, one of which elects Innocent II, and the other the antipope
+Anacletus II. The latter gains possession of the Lateran and is there
+consecrated; Innocent takes refuge in France.
+
+1131. Birth of Maimonides, who, next to Moses, is believed to have had
+the greatest influence on Jewish thought. (Date uncertain.)
+
+1132. Lothair II goes to Rome in support of Pope Innocent II against
+Antipope Anacletus II; he expels Conrad.
+
+Wool-spinning is introduced into England by the Flemings at Worstead;
+hence the name "worsted."
+
+1133. Lothair conducts Innocent to Rome and is there crowned emperor by
+him.
+
+1134. Aragon and Navarre choose separate sovereigns, who are protected
+by Alfonso the Noble, King of Castile.
+
+1135. Death of Henry I of England; Stephen usurps the throne. See
+"STEPHEN USURPS THE ENGLISH CROWN," v, 317.
+
+A copy of Justinian's _Pandects_ said to have been discovered at Amalfi.
+
+The house of Hohenstaufen forced into submission by Lothair.
+
+1136. Lothair marches into Italy with a large army; the cities make
+submission.
+
+Matilda resists Stephen's usurpation of the English crown, and invades
+Normandy.
+
+1137. Death of Louis VI; his son, Louis VII, succeeds to the French
+crown.
+
+1138. David I of Scotland defeated at the Battle of the Standard. See
+"STEPHEN USURPS THE ENGLISH CROWN," v, 317.
+
+Conrad, Duke of Franconia, elected emperor of Germany; he founds the
+Hohenstaufen dynasty. From his castle of Wiblingen his party takes the
+name of Ghibellines; his opponent, Henry Guelf, is put under the ban of
+the empire, hence the papal party were called Guelfs.
+
+1139. Pope Innocent II taken prisoner by Roger; a treaty of peace
+confirms Roger's title. Arnold of Brescia is banished Italy. See
+"ANTI-PAPAL DEMOCRATIC MOVEMENT," v, 340.
+
+Robert, Earl of Gloucester, a natural son of Henry I, promises
+assistance to Matilda in her war against King Stephen of England. See
+"STEPHEN USURPS THE ENGLISH CROWN," v, 317.
+
+1140. Conrad III defeats the forces of Guelf VI, uncle of Henry the
+Lion, while attempting to gain possession of Bavaria.
+
+1141. Battle of Lincoln; King Stephen defeated and carried prisoner to
+Bristol. See "STEPHEN USURPS THE ENGLISH CROWN," v, 317.
+
+1142. Henry the Lion is invested with the duchy of Saxony by Conrad III.
+His rival, Albert the Bear, created margrave of Brandenburg.
+
+1143. Geisa, King of Hungary, invites German emigrants to join the
+colony of that people in Transylvania.
+
+1144. Edessa, Turkey, stormed and captured by Zenghi, Sultan of Aleppo.
+
+1145. Arnold of Brescia initiates the antipapal democratic movement. See
+"ANTIPAPAL DEMOCRATIC MOVEMENT," v, 340.
+
+Disruption of the Almoravide kingdom in Spain.
+
+1146. Prince Henry inherits Anjou and Maine; Normandy submits to him.
+
+St. Bernard, at the instance of Pope Eugenius, preaches a crusade for
+the protection of the Holy Land against Noureddin, Sultan of Aleppo.
+
+Byzantium is ravaged by Roger, King of Sicily. See "DECLINE OF THE
+BYZANTINE EMPIRE," v, 353.
+
+Crusaders and mobs massacre Jews in Germany.
+
+1147. Louis VII of France and Emperor Conrad III lead the Second
+Crusade.
+
+Lisbon, after being taken from the Moors, is made the capital of
+Portugal.
+
+Moscow, Russia, is founded by the Prince of Suzdal, Dolgoucki.
+
+1148. Unsuccessful sieges of Damascus and Ascalon by the crusaders.
+
+1149. Louis, returning by sea from his crusade, is captured by the
+Greeks, and rescued by the Sicilian fleet.
+
+1150. Victory of Manuel, the Byzantine Emperor, over the Servians, who
+become vassals of that empire.
+
+1151. Manuel invades Hungary, crosses the Danube, grants a truce to
+Geisa, and carries a large booty to Constantinople.
+
+1152. Death of Conrad III; Frederick I, Barbarossa, elected emperor.
+
+1153. Treaty by King Stephen and Henry Plantagenet concerning the
+succession of the English crown. See "STEPHEN USURPS THE ENGLISH CROWN,"
+v, 317.
+
+1154. A large portion of France united with the crown of England on the
+accession of Henry II, who founds the Plantagenet line, following
+Stephen's death.
+
+The first Italian expedition of Frederick Barbarossa.
+
+Pope Adrian IV, by a bull, grants Ireland to the English crown.
+
+1155. Frederick reëstablishes the papal rule in Rome. Pope Adrian IV
+orders the execution of Arnold. See "ANTIPAPAL DEMOCRATIC MOVEMENT," v,
+340.
+
+1156. Henry the Lion, of the Guelf line, has Bavaria restored to him.
+Austria erected into a duchy.
+
+1157. Pope Adrian, in a letter to the German Emperor, asserts Germany to
+be a papal benefice; Frederick resists the claim.
+
+Poland is compelled by Emperor Frederick I to pay him homage.
+
+1158. Eric IX of Sweden conquers the coast of Finland and builds Abo.
+
+Frederick I, Barbarossa, a second time invades Italy; he captures Milan.
+
+1159. Election of Pope Alexander III; Frederick I creates an anti-pope,
+Victor IV.
+
+War ensues between Henry II of England and Louis VII of France; the
+former claiming the county of Toulouse, Southern France.
+
+1160. Emperor Frederick I calls the Council of Pavia; it declares Victor
+to be pope; Alexander excommunicates them all.
+
+1161. Peace concluded between Henry II and Louis VII; they acknowledge
+Alexander as pope. The kings of Denmark, Norway, Bohemia, and Hungary
+declare in favor of Victor.
+
+Henry II limits the papal authority in England.
+
+END OF VOLUME V
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GREAT EVENTS BY FAMOUS
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+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume
+5, by Various, Edited by Rossiter Johnson</h1>
+<pre>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a href = "https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 5</p>
+<p>Author: Various</p>
+<p>Release Date: November 20, 2003 [eBook #10151]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Chatacter set encoding: iso-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GREAT EVENTS BY FAMOUS HISTORIANS, VOLUME 5***</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h3>E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Gwidon Naskrent, David King,<br>
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team</h3>
+
+<hr class="full">
+<br>
+<h1>THE GREAT EVENTS BY FAMOUS HISTORIANS</h1>
+<center>A COMPREHENSIVE AND READABLE ACCOUNT OF THE WORLD'S
+HISTORY. EMPHASIZING THE MORE IMPORTANT EVENTS, AND PRESENTING
+THESE AS COMPLETE NARRATIVES IN THE MASTER-WORDS OF THE MOST
+EMINENT HISTORIANS</center>
+<br>
+<center>
+NON-SECTARIAN&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;NON-PARTISAN&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;NON-SECTIONAL</center>
+<br>
+<center>ON THE PLAN EVOLVED FROM A CONSENSUS OF OPINIONS GATHERED
+FROM THE MOST DISTINGUISHED SCHOLARS OF AMERICA AND EUROPE.
+INCLUDING BRIEF INTRODUCTIONS BY SPECIALISTS TO CONNECT AND EXPLAIN
+THE CELEBRATED NARRATIVES. ARRANGED CHRONOLOGICALLY. WITH THOROUGH
+INDICES, BIBLIOGRAPHIES. CHRONOLOGIES, AND COURSES OF
+READING</center>
+<br>
+<center>SUPERVISING EDITOR</center>
+<center>ROSSITER JOHNSON, LL.D.</center>
+<br>
+<center>LITERARY EDITORS</center>
+<center>CHARLES F. HORNE, Ph.D.</center>
+<center>JOHN RUDD, LL.D.</center>
+<center>DIRECTING EDITOR</center>
+<center>WALTER F. AUSTIN, LL.M.</center>
+<center>With a staff of specialists</center>
+<hr>
+<a name="TOC"><!-- TOC --></a>
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+<p>VOLUME V</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_1">An Outline Narrative of the Great Events</a>,
+CHARLES F. HORNE</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_2">Feudalism: Its Frankish Birth and English
+Development (9th to 12th Century)</a>, WILLIAM STUBBS</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_3">Decay of the Frankish Empire Division into
+Modern France, Germany, and Italy (A.D. 843-911)</a>,
+FRAN&Ccedil;OIS P. G. GUIZOT</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_4">Career of Alfred the Great (A.D.
+871-901)</a>, THOMAS HUGHES, JOHN R. GREEN</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_5">Henry the Fowler Founds the Saxon Line of
+German Kings, Origin of the German Burghers or Middle Classes (A.D.
+911-936)</a>, WOLFGANG MENZEL</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_6">Conquest of Egypt by the Fatimites (A.D.
+969)</a>, STANLEY LANE-POOLE</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_7">Growth and Decadence of Chivalry (10th to
+15th Century)</a>, L&Eacute;ON GAUTIER</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_8">Conversion of Vladimir the Great,
+Introduction of Christianity into Russia (A.D. 988-1015)</a>, A. N.
+MOURAVIEFF</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_9">Leif Ericson Discovers America (A.D.
+1000)</a>, CHARLES C. RAFN, SAGA OF ERIC THE RED</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_10">Mahometans In India, Bloody Invasions under
+Mahmud (A.D. 1000)</a>, ALEXANDER DOW</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_11">Canute Becomes King of England (A.D.
+1017)</a>, DAVID HUME</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_12">Henry III Deposes the Popes (A.D. 1048), The
+German Empire Controls the Papacy</a>, FERDINAND GREGOROVIUS,
+JOSEPH DARRAS</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_13">Dissension and Separation of the Greek and
+Roman Churches (A.D. 1054)</a>, HENRY F. TOZER, JOSEPH DEHARBE</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_14">Norman Conquest of England, Battle of
+Hastings (A.D. 1066)</a>, SIR EDWARD S. CREASY</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_15">Triumphs of Hildebrand, "The Turning-point
+of the Middle Ages", Henry IV Begs for Mercy at Canossa (A.D.
+1073-1085)</a>, ARTHUR R. PENNINGTON, ARTAUD DE MONTOR</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_16">Completion of the Domesday Book (A.D.
+1086)</a>, CHARLES KNIGHT</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_17">Decline of the Moorish Power in Spain,
+Growth and Decay of the Almoravide and Almohade Dynasties (A.D.
+1086-1214)</a>, S.A. DUNHAM</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_18">The First Crusade (A.D. 1096-1099)</a>, SIR
+GEORGE W. COX</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_19">Foundation of the Order of Knights Templars
+(A.D. 1118)</a>, CHARLES G. ADDISON</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_20">Stephen Usurps the English Crown, His
+Conflicts with Matilda, Decisive Influence of the Church (A.D.
+1135-1154)</a>, CHARLES KNIGHT</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_21">Antipapal Democratic Movement, Arnold of
+Brescia, St. Bernard and the Second Crusade (A.D. 1145-1155)</a>,
+JOHANN A. W. NEANDER</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_22">Decline of the Byzantine Empire, Ravages of
+Roger of Sicily (A.D. 1146)</a>, GEORGE FINLAY</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_23">Universal Chronology (A.D. 843-1161)</a>,
+JOHN RUDD</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_1"><!-- RULE4 1 --></a>
+<h2>AN OUTLINE NARRATIVE</h2>
+<center>TRACING BRIEFLY THE CAUSES, CONNECTIONS, AND CONSEQUENCES
+OF THE GREAT EVENTS</center>
+<center>(FROM CHARLEMAGNE TO FREDERICK BARBAROSSA)</center>
+<br>
+<center>CHARLES F. HORNE</center>
+<p>The three centuries which follow the downfall of the empire of
+Charlemagne laid the foundations of modern Europe, and made of it a
+world wholly different, politically, socially, and religiously,
+from that which had preceded it. In the careers of Greece and Rome
+we saw exemplified the results of two sharply opposing tendencies
+of the Aryan mind, the one toward individualism and separation, the
+other toward self-subordination and union.</p>
+<p>In the time of Charlemagne's splendid successes it appeared
+settled that the second of these tendencies was to guide the
+Teutonic Aryans, that the Europe of the future was to be a single
+empire, ever pushing out its borders as Rome had done, ever
+subduing its weaker neighbors, until the "Teutonic peace" should be
+substituted for the shattered "Roman peace," soldiers should be
+needed only for the duties of police, and a whole civilized world
+again obey the rule of a single man.</p>
+<p>Instead of this, the race has since followed a destiny of
+separation. Europe is divided into many countries, each of them a
+vast camp bristling with armies and arsenals. Civilization has
+continued hag-ridden by war even to our own day, and, during at
+least seven hundred of the years that followed Charlemagne, mankind
+made no greater progress in the arts and sciences than the ancients
+had sometimes achieved in a single century. We do indeed believe
+that at last we have entered on an age of rapid advance, that
+individualism has justified itself. The wider personal liberty of
+to-day is worth all that the race has suffered for it. Yet the
+retardation of wellnigh a thousand years has surely been a giant
+price to pay.</p>
+<center>DOWNFALL OF CHARLEMAGNE'S EMPIRE</center>
+<p>This mighty change in the course of Teutonic destiny, this
+breakdown of the Frankish empire, was wrought by two destroying
+forces, one from within, one from without. From within came the
+insubordination, the still savage love of combat, the natural
+turbulence of the race. It is conceivable that, had Charlemagne
+been followed on the throne by a son and then a grandson as mighty
+as he and his immediate ancestors, the course of the whole broad
+earth would have been altered. The Franks would have grown
+accustomed to obey; further conquest abroad would have insured
+peace at home; the imperial power would have become strong as in
+Roman days, when the most feeble emperors could not be shaken. But
+the descendants of Charlemagne sank into a decline. He himself had
+directed the fighting energy of the Franks against foreign enemies.
+His son and successor had no taste for war, and so allowed his idle
+subjects time to quarrel with him and with one another. The next
+generation, under the grandsons of Charlemagne, devoted their
+entire lives to repeated and furious civil wars, in which the
+empire fell apart, the flower of the Frankish race perished, and
+the strength of its dominion was sapped to nothingness.[<a href=
+"#note-1">1</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-1"><!-- Note Anchor 1 --></a>[Footnote 1: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_3">Decay of Frankish Empire</a></i>, page
+22.]</p>
+<p>There were three of these grandsons, and, when their struggle
+had left them thoroughly exhausted, they divided the empire into
+three. Their treaty of Verdun (843) is often quoted as beginning
+the modern kingdoms of Germany, France, and Italy. The division was
+in some sense a natural one, emphasized by differences of language
+and of race. Italy was peopled by descendants of the ancient
+Italians, with a thin intermingling of Goths and Lombards; France
+held half-Romanized Gauls, with a very considerable percentage of
+the Frankish blood; while Germany was far more barbaric than the
+other regions. Its people, whether Frank or Saxon, were all pure
+Teuton, and still spoke in their Teutonic or German tongue.</p>
+<p>The Franks themselves, however, did not regard this as a
+breaking of their empire. They looked on it as merely a family
+affair, an arrangement made for the convenience of government among
+the descendants of the great Charles. So firm had been that mighty
+hero's grasp upon the national imagination, that the Franks
+accepted as matter of course that his family should bear rule, and
+rallied round the various worthless members of it with rather
+pathetic loyalty, fighting for them one against the other,
+reuniting and redividing the various fragments of the empire, until
+the feeble Carlovingian race died out completely.</p>
+<p>It is thus evident that there was a strong tendency toward union
+among the Franks. But there was also an outside influence to
+disrupt their empire. Charlemagne had not carried far enough their
+career of conquest. He subdued the Teutons within the limits of
+Germany, but he did not reach their weaker Scandinavian brethren to
+the north, the Danes and Norsemen. He chastised the Avars, a vague
+non-Aryan people east of Germany, but he could not make provision
+against future Asiatic swarms. He humbled the Arabs in Spain, but
+he did not break their African dominion. From all these sources, as
+the Franks grew weaker instead of stronger, their lands became
+exposed to new invasion.</p>
+<center>THE LAST INVADERS</center>
+<p>Let us take a moment to trace the fortunes of these outside
+races, though the main destiny of the future still lay with
+Teutonic Europe.</p>
+<p>In speaking of the followers of Mahomet, we might perhaps at
+this period better drop the term Arabs, and call them Saracens.
+They were thus known to the Christians; and their conquests had
+drawn in their train so many other peoples that in truth there was
+little pure Arab blood left among them. The Saracens, then, had
+begun to lose somewhat of their intense fanaticism. Feuds broke out
+among them. Different chiefs established different kingdoms or
+"caliphates," whose dominion became political rather than
+religious. Spain had one ruler, Egypt[<a href="#note-2">2</a>]
+another, Asia a third. In the eleventh century an army of Saracens
+invaded India[<a href="#note-3">3</a>] and added that strange and
+ancient land to their domain. Europe they had failed to conquer;
+but their fleets commanded the Mediterranean. They held all its
+islands, Sicily, Crete, Sardinia, and Corsica. They plundered the
+coast towns of France and Italy. There was a Saracenic ravaging of
+Rome.</p>
+<p><a name="note-2"><!-- Note Anchor 2 --></a>[Footnote 2: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_6">Conquest of Egypt by the Fatimites</a></i>,
+page 94.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-3"><!-- Note Anchor 3 --></a>[Footnote 3: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_10">Mahometans in India</a></i>, page 151.]</p>
+<p>On the whole, however, the wave of Mahometan conquest receded.
+In Spain the remnants of the Christian population, Visigoths,
+Romans, and still older peoples, pressed their way down from their
+old-time, secret mountain retreats and began driving the Saracens
+southward.[<a href="#note-4">4</a>] The decaying Roman Empire of
+the East still resisted the Mahometan attack; Constantinople
+remained a splendid city, type and picture of what the ancient
+world had been.</p>
+<p><a name="note-4"><!-- Note Anchor 4 --></a>[Footnote 4: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_17">Decline of the Moorish Power in
+Spain</a></i>, page 296.]</p>
+<p>While the Saracens were thus laying waste the Frankish empire
+along its Mediterranean coasts, a more dangerous enemy was
+assailing it from the east. Toward the end of the ninth century the
+Magyars, an Asiatic, Turanian people, burst on Europe, as the Huns
+had done five centuries before. Indeed, the Christians called these
+later comers Huns also, and told of them the same extravagant tales
+of terror. The land which the Magyars settled was called Hungary.
+They dwell there and possess it even to this day, the only instance
+of a Turanian people having permanently established themselves in
+an Aryan continent and at the expense of Aryan neighbors.</p>
+<p>From Hungary the Magyars soon advanced to the German border
+line, and made fierce plundering inroads upon the more civilized
+regions beyond. They came on horseback, so that the slower Teutons
+could never gather quickly enough to resist them. The marauding
+parties, as they learned the wealth and weakness of this new land,
+grew bigger, until at length they were armies, and defeated the
+German Franks in pitched battles, and spread desolation through all
+the country. They returned now every year. Their ravages extended
+even to the Rhine and to the ancient Gallic land beyond. The
+Frankish empire seemed doomed to re&euml;nact, in a smaller, far
+more savage way, the fate of Rome.</p>
+<p>Yet more widespread in destruction, more important in result
+than the raids of either Saracens or Magyars, were those of the
+Scandinavians or Northmen. These, the latest, and perhaps therefore
+the finest, flower of the Teutonic stock, are closer to us and
+hence better known than the early Goths or Franks. Shut off in
+their cold northern peninsulas and islands, they had grown more
+slowly, it may be, than their southern brethren. Now they burst
+suddenly on the world with spectacular dramatic effect, wild,
+fierce, and splendid conquerors, as keen of intellect and quick of
+wit as they were strong of arm and daring of adventure.</p>
+<p>We see them first as sea-robbers, pirates, venturing even in
+Charlemagne's time to plunder the German and French coasts. One
+tribe of them, the Danes, had already been harrying England and
+Ireland. Only Alfred,[<a href="#note-5">5</a>] by heroic exertions,
+saved a fragment of his kingdom from them. Later, under
+Canute,[<a href="#note-6">6</a>] they become its kings. The
+Northmen penetrate Russia and appear as rulers of the strange
+Slavic tribes there; they settle in Iceland, Greenland, and even
+distant and unknown America.[<a href="#note-7">7</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-5"><!-- Note Anchor 5 --></a>[Footnote 5: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_4">Career of Alfred the Great</a></i>.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-6"><!-- Note Anchor 6 --></a>[Footnote 6: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_11">Canute Becomes King of England</a></i>.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-7"><!-- Note Anchor 7 --></a>[Footnote 7:
+<i><a href="#RULE4_9">Leif Ericson Discovers America</a></i>.]</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, after Charlemagne's death they become a main factor
+in the downfall of his empire. Year after year their little ships
+plunder the undefended French coast, until it is abandoned to them
+and becomes a desert. They build winter camps at the river mouths,
+so that in the spring they need lose less time and can hurry inland
+after their retreating prey. Sudden in attack, strong in defence,
+they venture hundreds of miles up the winding waterways. Paris is
+twice attacked by them and must fight for life. They penetrate so
+far up the Loire as to burn Orleans.</p>
+<p>It was under stress of all these assaults that the Franks, grown
+too feeble to defend themselves as Charlemagne would have done, by
+marching out and pursuing the invaders to their own homes,
+developed instead a system of defence which made the Middle Ages
+what they were. All central authority seemed lost; each little
+community was left to defend itself as best it might. So the local
+chieftain built himself a rude fortress, which in time became a
+towered castle; and thither the people fled in time of danger. Each
+man looked up to and swore faith to this, his own chief, his
+immediate protector, and took little thought of a distant and
+feeble king or emperor. Occasionally, of course, a stronger lord or
+king bestirred himself, and demanded homage of these various petty
+chieftains. They gave him such service as they wished or as they
+must. This was the "feudal system."[<a href="#note-8">8</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-8"><!-- Note Anchor 8 --></a>[Footnote 8: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_2">Feudalism: Its Frankish Birth and English
+Development</a></i>.]</p>
+<p>The inclination of each lesser lord was obviously to assert as
+much independence as he could. He naturally objected to paying
+money or service without benefit received; and he could see no good
+that this "overlord" did for him or for his district. It seemed
+likely at this time that instead of being divided into three
+kingdoms, the Frankish empire would split into thousands of little
+castled states.</p>
+<p>That is, it seemed so, after the various marauding nations were
+disposed of. The Northmen were pacified by presenting them outright
+with the coast lands they had most harried. Their great leader,
+Rolf, accepted the territory with some vague and ill-kept promise
+of vassalage to the French King, and with a very firmly held
+determination that he would let no pirates ravage his land or cross
+it to reach others. So the French coast became Normandy, and the
+Northmen learned the tongue and manners of their new home, and
+softened their harsh name to "Norman," even as they softened their
+harsh ways, and rapidly became the most able and most cultured of
+Frenchmen.</p>
+<p>As for the Saracens, being unprogressive and no longer
+enthusiastic, they grew ever feebler, while the Italian cities,
+being Aryan and left to themselves, grew strong. At length their
+fleets met those of the Saracens on equal terms, and defeated them,
+and gradually wrested from them the control of the Mediterranean.
+Invaders were thus everywhere met as they came, locally. There was
+no general gathering of the Frankish forces against them.</p>
+<p>The repulse of the Huns proved the hardest matter of all.
+Fortunately for the Germans, their line of Carlovingian emperors
+died out. So the various dukes and counts, practically each an
+independent sovereign, met and elected a king from among
+themselves, not really to rule them, but to enable them to unite
+against the Huns. After their first elected king had been soundly
+beaten by one of his dukes, he died, and in their next choice they
+had the luck to light upon a leader really great. Henry the Fowler,
+more honorably known as Henry the City-builder,[<a href=
+"#note-9">9</a>] taught them how to defeat their foe.</p>
+<p><a name="note-9"><!-- Note Anchor 9 --></a>[Footnote 9: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_5">Henry the Fowler Founds the Saxon Line of
+German Kings</a></i>.]</p>
+<p>Much to the disgust of his simple and war-hardened comrades, he
+first sent to the Hungarians and purchased peace and paid them
+tribute. Having thus secured a temporary respite, Henry encouraged
+and aided his people in building walled cities all along the
+frontier. He also planned to meet the invaders on equal terms by
+training his warriors to fight on horseback. He instituted
+tournaments and created an order of knighthood, and is thus
+generally regarded as the founder of chivalry, that fairest fruit
+of mediaeval times, which did so much to preserve honor and
+tenderness and respect for womankind.[<a href=
+"#note-10">10</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-10"><!-- Note Anchor 10 --></a>[Footnote 10: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_7">Growth and Decadence of
+Chivalry</a></i>.]</p>
+<p>When he felt all prepared, Henry deliberately defied and
+insulted the Hungarians, and so provoked from them a combined
+national invasion, which he met and completely overthrew in the
+battle of Merseburg (933). A generation later the Huns felt
+themselves strong enough to try again; but Henry's son, Otto the
+Great, repeated the chastisement. He then formed a boundary colony
+or "East-mark" from which sprang Austria; and this border kingdom
+was always able to keep the weakened Huns in check.</p>
+<p>At the same time there was growing up in Russia a Slavic
+civilization, which received Christianity[<a href=
+"#note-11">11</a>] from the South as it had received Teutonic
+dominion from the North, and so developed along very similar lines
+to Western Europe. The Russian states served as a barrier against
+later Asiatic hordes; and this, combined with the civilizing of the
+last remnants of the Scandinavians in the North, and the fading of
+Saracenic power in the South, left the tottering civilization of
+the West free from further barbarian invasion. We shall find
+destruction threatened again in later ages by Tartar and by Turk;
+but the intruders never reach beyond the frontier. The Teutons and
+the half-Romanized ancients with whom they had assimilated were
+left to work out their own problems. All the ingredients, even to
+the last, the Northmen, had been poured into the caldron. There
+remains to see what the intermingling has brought forth.</p>
+<p><a name="note-11"><!-- Note Anchor 11 --></a>[Footnote 11: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_8">Conversion of Vladimir the
+Great</a></i>.]</p>
+<center>FEUDAL EUROPE</center>
+<p>We have here, then, somewhere about the middle of the tenth
+century, a date which may be regarded as marking a distinctly new
+era. The ceaseless work of social organization and improvement,
+which seems so strong an instinct of the Aryan mind, had been
+recommenced again and again from under repeated deluges of
+barbarism. To-day for nearly a thousand years it has progressed
+uninterrupted, except by disturbances from within; nor does it
+appear possible, with our present knowledge of science and of the
+remoter corners of the globe, that our civilization will ever again
+be even menaced by the other races.</p>
+<p>Chronologists frequently adopt as a convenient starting-point
+for this modern development the year 962, in which Otto the Great,
+conqueror of the Huns, felt himself strong enough to march a German
+army to Rome and assume there the title of emperor, which had been
+long in abeyance. To be sure, there was still an Emperor of the
+East in Constantinople, but nobody thought of him; and, to be sure,
+the power of Otto and the later emperors was purely German, with
+scarce a pretence of extending beyond their own country and
+sometimes Italy. Yet here was at least one restored influence that
+made toward unity and, by its own devious and erratic ways, toward
+peace.</p>
+<p>It must not be supposed, of course, that there was no more war.
+But, as it became a private affair between relatives, or at least
+acquaintances, its ravages were greatly reduced. It was accepted as
+the "pastime of gentlemen," "the sport of kings;" and though we may
+quote the phrases to-day with kindling sarcasm, yet they open a
+very different vision from that of the older inroads by unknown
+hordes, frenzied with the passion and the purpose of the brute. The
+usefulness of the common people was recognized, and they were
+allowed to continue to live and cultivate the ground; while all the
+great dukes and even the lesser nobles, having secured as many
+castles as possible, intrenched themselves in their strongholds and
+defied all comers.</p>
+<p>They asserted their right of "private war" and attacked each
+other upon every conceivable provocation, whether it were the
+disputed succession to some vast estate or the ravage spread by a
+reckless cow in a foreign field. Indeed, it is not always easy to
+distinguish these private wars from mere robberies or plundering
+expeditions; and it is not probable that the wild barons exercised
+any very delicate discrimination. Even Otto the Great had little
+real influence or authority over such lords as these. His immediate
+successors found themselves with even less.</p>
+<p>In short, it was the golden age of feudalism, of the individual
+feudal lords. In Italy there was no central authority whatever, nor
+among the little Christian states gradually arising in Spain. In
+France and England the title of king was but a name. France was
+really composed of a dozen or more independent counties and
+dukedoms. For a while its lords elected a king as the Germans did;
+and gradually the title became hereditary in the Capet family, the
+counts of Paris, who had fought most valiantly against the
+Northmen. But the entire power of these so-called kings lay in
+their own estates, in the fact that they were counts of Paris, and
+by marriage or by force were slowly adding new possessions to their
+old. Any other noble might have been equally fortunate in his
+investments, and wrested from them their purely honorary title. In
+fact, there was more than once a king of Aquitaine.</p>
+<p>Yet, in 1066, William the Conqueror was able to form for a
+moment a strong and centralized monarchy in England.[<a href=
+"#note-12">12</a>] With him we reach the period of the second
+Northmen, or now Norman, outbreak. The marauders had grown
+polished, but not peaceful, in their French home. They had become
+more numerous and more restless, until we find them again taking to
+their ships and seeking newer lands to master. Only they go now as
+a civilizing as well as a devastating influence.</p>
+<p><a name="note-12"><!-- Note Anchor 12 --></a>[Footnote 12: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_14">Norman Conquest of England</a></i>.]</p>
+<p>Most famed of their undertakings, of course, was William's
+Conquest of England. But we find them also sailing along the
+Spanish coast, entering the Mediterranean, seizing the Balearic
+Isles, making out of Sicily and most of Southern Italy a kingdom
+which lasted until 1860, and finally ravaging the Eastern Empire,
+and entering Constantinople itself.[<a href="#note-13">13</a>] Last
+and mightiest of the wandering races, they accomplished what all
+their predecessors had failed to do.</p>
+<p><a name="note-13"><!-- Note Anchor 13 --></a>[Footnote 13: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_22">Decline of the Byzantine Empire</a></i>,
+page 353.]</p>
+<p>In England, William, with the shrewdness of his race, recognized
+the tendencies of the age, and erected a state so planned that
+there could be no question as to who was master. He gave fiefs
+liberally to his followers; but he took care that the gifts should
+be in small and scattered parcels. No one man controlled any region
+sufficiently extensive to give him the faintest chance of defying
+the King. William had the famous <i>Domesday Book</i>[<a href=
+"#note-14">14</a>] compiled, that he might know just what every
+freeman in his dominions owned and for what he could be held
+accountable. The England of the later days of the Conqueror seemed
+far advanced upon our modern ways.</p>
+<p><a name="note-14"><!-- Note Anchor 14 --></a>[Footnote 14: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_16">Completion of the Domesday Book</a></i>,
+page 242.]</p>
+<p>But what can one man, however able and advanced, do against the
+current of his age? History shows us constantly that the great
+reformers have been those who felt and followed the general feeling
+of their times, who became mouthpieces for the great mass of
+thought and effort behind them, not those who struggled against the
+tide. William's successors failed to comprehend what he had done,
+or why. By the time of Stephen (1135)[<a href="#note-15">15</a>] we
+find the barons of England wellnigh as powerful as those of other
+lands. A civil war arises in which Stephen and his rival Matilda
+are scarce more than pawns upon the board. The lords shift sides at
+will, retreat to safety in their strong castles, plunder the common
+folk, and make private war quite as they please.</p>
+<p><a name="note-15"><!-- Note Anchor 15 --></a>[Footnote 15: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_20">Stephen Usurps the English Crown</a></i>,
+page 317.]</p>
+<p>If any sage before the reign of the Emperor Barbarossa, that is,
+before the middle of the twelfth century, had studied to predict
+the course of society, he would probably have said that the empire
+was wholly destroyed, and that the principle of separation was
+becoming ever more insistent, that even kings were mere fading
+relics of the past, and that the future world would soon see every
+lordship an independent state.</p>
+<center>THE CONDITION OF SOCIETY UNDER FEUDALISM</center>
+<p>Amid all this turmoil of the upper classes, one would like much
+to know what was the condition, what the lives, of the common
+people. Unfortunately, the data are very slight. We see dimly the
+peasant staring from his field as the armed knights ride by; we see
+him fleeing to the shelter of the forests before more savage
+bandits. We see the people of the cities drawing together, building
+walls around their towns, and defying in their turn their so-called
+"overlords." We see Henry the City-builder thus become champion of
+the lower classes, despite the strenuous warning of his
+conservative and not wholly disinterested barons. We see shadowy
+troops of armed merchants drift along the unsafe roads. And, most
+interesting perhaps of all, we see one Arnold of Brescia,[<a href=
+"#note-16">16</a>] an Italian monk, advocating a democracy,
+actually urging a return to what he supposed early Rome to have
+been, a government by the masses. Arnold, too, you see, was in
+advance of his time. He was executed by the advice of even so good
+and wise a man as St. Bernard. But the principle of modern life was
+there, the germ seems to have been planted. These humble people of
+the cities, "citizens," grow to be rulers of the world.</p>
+<p><a name="note-16"><!-- Note Anchor 16 --></a>[Footnote 16: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_21">Antipapal Democratic Movement</a></i> page
+340.]</p>
+<p>There was a revival, too, of learning in this quieter age.
+Schools and universities become clearly visible. Abelard teaches at
+the great University of Paris, lectures to "forty thousand
+students," if one chooses to believe in such carrying power of his
+voice, or such radiating power of his influence at second hand
+through those who heard.</p>
+<p>The arts spring up, great cathedrals are begun, the wonder and
+despair of even twentieth-century resources. Royal ladies work on
+tapestries, queer things in their way, but certainly not barbaric.
+Musical notation is improved. Manuscripts are gorgeously illumined.
+Paintings and mosaics, though of the crudest, reappear on
+long-barren walls. Civilization begins to advance with increasing
+stride.</p>
+<center>THE INFLUENCE OF CHRISTIANITY</center>
+<p>Of all the influences that through these wandering and desolate
+ages had sustained humanity and helped it onward, the mightiest has
+been left to speak of last. It was Christianity, a Christianity
+which had by now taken definite form as the Roman Catholic Church.
+Strongest of all the institutions bequeathed by the ancient empire
+to her conquerors was this Church. Indeed, it has been said that
+Rome had influenced Christianity quite as much as Christianity did
+Rome. The legal-minded Romans insisted on the laying out of exact
+doctrines and creeds, on the building of a definite organization, a
+priesthood, a hierarchy. They lent the weight of law to what had
+been but individual belief and impulse. Thus the Church grew hard
+and strong.</p>
+<p>In the same manner that the early emperors had ordered the
+persecution of Christianity, so the later ones ordered the
+persecution of heathendom, nor had the Church grown civilized or
+Christian enough to oppose this method of conversion. Luckily for
+all parties, however, the heathen were scarce sufficiently
+enthusiastic to insist on martyrdom, and so the persecuting spirit
+which man ultimately imparted to even the purest of religions
+remained latent.</p>
+<p>With the downfall of Rome there came another interval in which
+the Church was weak, and was trampled on by barbarians, and was
+heroic. Then the bishops of Rome joined forces with P&eacute;pin
+and Charlemagne. Christianity became physically powerful again. The
+Saxons were converted by the sword. So, also, in Henry the Fowler's
+time, were the Slavic Wends. These Roman bishops, or "popes," were
+accepted unquestioned throughout Western Europe as the leaders of a
+militant Christianity, a position never after denied them until the
+sixteenth century. In the East, however, the bishops of
+Constantinople insisted on an equal, if not higher, authority, and
+so the two churches broke apart.[<a href="#note-17">17</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-17"><!-- Note Anchor 17 --></a>[Footnote 17: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_13">Dissension and Separation of the Greek and
+Roman Churches</a></i>.]</p>
+<p>In the West, Christianity undoubtedly did great good. Its
+teachings, though applied by often fallible instruments and in
+blundering ways, yet never completely lost sight of their own
+higher meanings of mercy and peace. From the Abbey of Cluny
+originated that quaint mediaeval idea of the "truce of God," by
+which nobles were very widely persuaded to restrict their private
+wars to the middle of the week, and reserve at least Friday,
+Saturday, and Sunday as days of brotherly love and religious
+devotion. The Church also, from very early days, founded
+monasteries, wherein learning and the knowledge of the past were
+kept alive, where pity continued to exist, where the oppressed
+found refuge. It is from these monasteries that all the arts and
+scholarship of the eleventh century begin dimly to emerge.</p>
+<p>Moreover, the fact that the Teutons were all of a common
+religion undoubtedly held them much closer together, made them more
+merciful among themselves, more nearly a unit against the outside
+world. Perhaps in this respect more important even than the
+religion was the Church; that is, the hierarchy, the vast army of
+monks and priests, abbots and bishops, spread over all kingdoms,
+yet looking always toward Rome. Here at least was one common centre
+for Western civilization, one mighty influence that all men
+acknowledged, that all to some faint extent obeyed.</p>
+<center>THE GROWTH OF THE PAPACY</center>
+<p>The power thus concentrating in the Roman papacy made the office
+one to attract eager ambition. It has a political history of its
+own. At first the Christian populace that continued to dwell in
+Rome despite the repeated spoliations, elected, from among
+themselves, their own pope or bishop, regarding him not only as
+their spiritual guide, but as their earthly leader and protector
+also. Naturally, in their distress, they chose the very ablest man
+they could, their wisest and their noblest. It was no pleasant task
+being pope in those dark days; and sometimes the bravest shrank
+from the position.</p>
+<p>But centuries of war and self-defence developed a Roman populace
+more fierce and savage and degenerate, while the growing importance
+of their pope beyond the city's walls brought wealth and splendor
+to his office. The result was that some very unsaintly popes were
+elected amid unseemly squabbles. The conditions surrounding the
+high office became so bad that they were felt as a disgrace
+throughout all Christendom; and in 1046 the German emperor Henry
+III took upon himself to depose three fiercely contending Romans,
+each claiming to be pope. He appointed in their stead a candidate
+of his own, not a dweller in the city at all, but a German. Henry,
+therefore, must have considered the duties of the pope as bishop of
+the Romans to be far less important than his duties as head of the
+Church outside of Rome.[<a href="#note-18">18</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-18"><!-- Note Anchor 18 --></a>[Footnote 18: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_12">Henry III Deposes the Popes</a></i>.]</p>
+<p>So necessary had this interference by the Emperor become that it
+was everywhere approved. Yet as he continued to appoint pope after
+pope, churchmen realized that in the hands of an evil emperor this
+method of securing their head might prove quite as dangerous and
+unsatisfactory as the former one. So the Church took the matter in
+hand and declared that a conclave of its own highest officials
+should thereafter choose the man who was to lead them.</p>
+<p>Under this surely more suitable arrangement, the papal office
+rose at once in dignity. It was held for a time by true leaders,
+earnest prelates of the highest worth and ability. We have said
+that the rank of the bishop of Rome as head of the Church had never
+been seriously questioned among the Teutons; but now the popes
+asserted a political authority as well. They regarded themselves,
+theoretically, as supreme heads of the entire Christian world. They
+claimed and even partly exercised the right to create and depose
+kings and emperors. To such a supremacy as this, however, the
+Teutons were still too rude and warlike to submit. Much is made of
+the fact that the Emperor Henry IV was compelled to come as a
+suppliant to Pope Gregory at Canossa, 1077.[<a href=
+"#note-19">19</a>] But this submission was only forced on him by
+quarrels with his barons, who welcomed the Pope as a chance ally.
+It proved the power of feudalism rather than that of religion.
+Still we may trace here the beginnings of a later day when spirit
+was really to dominate bodily force, when ideas should prove
+stronger than swords.</p>
+<p><a name="note-19"><!-- Note Anchor 19 --></a>[Footnote 19: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_15">Triumphs of Hildebrand</a></i>.]</p>
+<center>THE FIRST CRUSADE</center>
+<p>Under these aroused and able popes, the Western world was
+stirred to the first widespread religious enthusiasm since the
+ancient days of persecution. Jerusalem, long in the hands of a
+tolerant sect of Saracens who welcomed the coming of Christian
+worshippers as a source of revenue, was captured in 1075 by another
+more fanatic Mahometan sect, and word came back to Europe that
+pilgrimage was stopped.</p>
+<p>The crusades followed. A great mass of warriors from every
+nation of the West, men who certainly had never intended to go on
+pilgrimage themselves, were roused to what seems a somewhat
+perverse anger of religious devotion. Under the lead of Godfrey of
+Bouillon they marched eastward, saw the wonders of Constantinople,
+marvellous indeed to their ruder eyes, defeated the sultans of Asia
+Minor and of Antioch, and ended by storming Jerusalem, and erecting
+there a Christian kingdom where Mahometanism had ruled for nearly
+five hundred years.[<a href="#note-20">20</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-20"><!-- Note Anchor 20 --></a>[Footnote 20: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_18">The First Crusade</a></i>, page 276.]</p>
+<p>Of course, a great flow of pilgrims followed them. Religious
+orders of knighthood were formed[<a href="#note-21">21</a>] to help
+defend the shrine of Christ and to extend Christian conquest
+farther through the surrounding regions. Travel began again.
+Europe, after having forgotten Asia for seven centuries, was
+introduced once more to its languor, its splendor, and its vices.
+The Aryan peoples had at last filled full their little world of
+Western Europe. They had reached among themselves a state of law
+and union, confused and weak, perhaps, yet secure enough to enable
+them once more to overflow their boundaries and become again the
+aggressive, intrusive race we have seen them in earlier days.</p>
+<p><a name="note-21"><!-- Note Anchor 21 --></a>[Footnote 21: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_19">Foundation of the Order of Knights
+Templars</a></i>, page 301.]</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_2"><!-- RULE4 2 --></a>
+<h2>FEUDALISM: ITS FRANKISH BIRTH AND ENGLISH DEVELOPMENT</h2>
+<center>NINTH TO TWELFTH CENTURY</center>
+<br>
+<center>WILLIAM STUBBS</center>
+<p class="intro">That social system&mdash;however varying in
+different times and places&mdash;in which ownership of land is the
+basis of authority is known in history as feudalism. From the time
+of Clovis, the Frankish King, who died in A.D. 511, the progress of
+the Franks in civilization was slow, and for more than two
+centuries they spent their energies mainly in useless wars. But
+Charles Martel and his son, P&eacute;pin the Short&mdash;the latter
+dying in 768&mdash;built up a kingdom which Charlemagne erected
+into a powerful empire. Under the predecessors of Charlemagne the
+beginnings of feudalism, which are very obscure, may be said
+vaguely to appear. Charles Martel had to buy the services of his
+nobles by granting them lands, and although he and P&eacute;pin
+strengthened the royal power, which Charlemagne still further
+increased, under the weak rulers who followed them the forces of
+the incipient feudalism again became active, and the State was
+divided into petty countships and dukedoms almost independent of
+the king.</p>
+<p class="intro">The gift of land by the king in return for feudal
+services was called a feudal grant, and the land so given was
+termed a "feud" or "fief." In the course of time fiefs became
+hereditary. Lands were also sometimes usurped or otherwise obtained
+by subjects, who thereby became feudal lords. By a process called
+"subinfeudation," lands were granted in parcels to other men by
+those who received them from the king or otherwise, and by these
+lower landholders to others again; and as the first recipient
+became the vassal of the king and the suzerain of the man who held
+next below him, there was created a regular descending scale of
+such vassalage and suzerainty, in which each man's allegiance was
+directly due to his feudal lord, and not to the king himself. From
+the king down to the lowest landholder all were bound together by
+obligation of service and defence; the lord to protect his vassal,
+the vassal to do service to his lord.</p>
+<p class="intro">These are the essential features of the social
+system which, from its early growth under the later Carlovingians
+in the ninth century, spread over Europe and reached its highest
+development in the twelfth century. At a time midway between these
+periods it was carried by the Norman Conquest into England. The
+history of this system of distinctly Frankish origin&mdash;a
+knowledge of which is absolutely essential to a proper
+understanding of history and the evolution of our present social
+system&mdash;is told by Stubbs with that discernment and
+thoroughness of analysis which have given him his rank as one of
+the few masterly writers in this field.</p>
+<p>Feudalism had grown up from two great sources&mdash;the
+<i>beneficium</i>, and the practice of commendation&mdash;and had
+been specially fostered on Gallic soil by the existence of a
+subject population which admitted of any amount of extension in the
+methods of dependence.</p>
+<p>The beneficiary system originated partly in gifts of land made
+by the kings out of their own estates to their kinsmen and
+servants, with a special undertaking to be faithful; partly in the
+surrender by land-owners of their estates to churches or powerful
+men, to be received back again and held by them as tenants for rent
+or service. By the latter arrangement the weaker man obtained the
+protection of the stronger, and he who felt himself insecure placed
+his title under the defence of the church.</p>
+<p>By the practice of commendation, on the other hand, the inferior
+put himself under the personal care of a lord, but without altering
+his title or divesting himself of his right to his estate; he
+became a vassal and did homage. The placing of his hands between
+those of his lord was the typical act by which the connection was
+formed; and the oath of fealty was taken at the same time. The
+union of the beneficiary tie with that of commendation completed
+the idea of feudal obligation&mdash;the twofold engagement: that of
+the lord, to defend; and that of the vassal, to be faithful. A
+third ingredient was supplied by the grants of immunity by which in
+the Frank empire, as in England, the possession of land was united
+with the right of judicature; the dwellers on a feudal property
+were placed under the tribunal of the lord, and the rights which
+had belonged to the nation or to its chosen head were devolved upon
+the receiver of a fief. The rapid spread of the system thus
+originated, and the assimilation of all other tenures to it, may be
+regarded as the work of the tenth century; but as early as A.D. 877
+Charles the Bald recognized the hereditary character of all
+benefices; and from that year the growth of strictly feudal
+jurisprudence may be held to date.</p>
+<p>The system testifies to the country and causes of its birth. The
+beneficium is partly of Roman, partly of German origin; in the
+Roman system the usufruct&mdash;the occupation of land belonging to
+another person&mdash;involved no diminution of status; in the
+Germanic system he who tilled land that was not his own was
+imperfectly free; the reduction of a large Roman population to
+dependence placed the two classes on a level, and conduced to the
+wide extension of the institution.</p>
+<p>Commendation, on the other hand, may have had a Gallic or Celtic
+origin, and an analogy only with the Roman clientship. The German
+<i>comitatus</i>, which seems to have ultimately merged its
+existence in one or other of these developments, is of course to be
+carefully distinguished in its origin from them. The tie of the
+benefice or of commendation could be formed between any two persons
+whatever; none but the king could have <i>antrustions</i>. But the
+comitatus of Anglo-Saxon history preserved a more distinct
+existence, and this perhaps was one of the causes that
+distinguished the later Anglo-Saxon system most definitely from the
+feudalism of the Frank empire.</p>
+<p>The process by which the machinery of government became
+feudalized, although rapid, was gradual.</p>
+<p>The weakness of the Carlovingian kings and emperors gave room
+for the speedy development of disruptive tendencies in a territory
+so extensive and so little consolidated. The duchies and counties
+of the eighth and ninth centuries were still official magistracies,
+the holders of which discharged the functions of imperial judges or
+generals. Such officers were of course men whom the kings could
+trust, in most cases Franks, courtiers or kinsmen, who at an
+earlier date would have been <i>comites</i> or antrustions, and who
+were provided for by feudal benefices. The official magistracy had
+in itself the tendency to become hereditary, and when the benefice
+was recognized as heritable, the provincial governorship became so
+too. But the provincial governor had many opportunities of
+improving his position, especially if he could identify himself
+with the manners and aspirations of the people he ruled. By
+marriage or inheritance he might accumulate in his family not only
+the old allodial estates which, especially on German soil, still
+continued to subsist, but the traditions and local loyalties which
+were connected with the possession of them. So in a few years the
+Frank magistrate could unite in his own person the beneficiary
+endowment, the imperial deputation, and the headship of the nation
+over which he presided. And then it was only necessary for the
+central power to be a little weakened, and the independence of duke
+or count was limited by his homage and fealty alone, that is, by
+obligations that depended on conscience only for their
+fulfilment.</p>
+<p>It is in Germany that the disruptive tendency most distinctly
+takes the political form; Saxony and Bavaria assert their national
+independence under Swabian and Saxon dukes who have identified the
+interests of their subjects with their own. In France, where the
+ancient tribal divisions had been long obsolete, and where the
+existence of the allod involved little or no feeling of loyalty,
+the process was simpler still; the provincial rulers aimed at
+practical rather than political sovereignty; the people were too
+weak to have any aspirations at all. The disruption was due more to
+the abeyance of central attraction than to any centrifugal force
+existing in the provinces. But the result was the same; feudal
+government, a graduated system of jurisdiction based on land
+tenure, in which every lord judged, taxed, and commanded the class
+next below him, of which abject slavery formed the lowest, and
+irresponsible tyranny the highest grade, and private war, private
+coinage, private prisons, took the place of the imperial
+institutions of government.</p>
+<p>This was the social system which William the Conqueror and his
+barons had been accustomed to see at work in France. One part of
+it&mdash;the feudal tenure of land&mdash;was perhaps the only kind
+of tenure which they could understand; the king was the original
+lord, and every title issued mediately or immediately from him. The
+other part, the governmental system of feudalism, was the point on
+which sooner or later the duke and his barons were sure to differ.
+Already the incompatibility of the system with the existence of the
+strong central power had been exemplified in Normandy, where the
+strength of the dukes had been tasked to maintain their hold on the
+castles and to enforce their own high justice. Much more difficult
+would England be to retain in Norman hands if the new king allowed
+himself to be fettered by the French system.</p>
+<p>On the other hand the Norman barons would fain rise a step in
+the social scale answering to that by which their duke had become a
+king; and they aspired to the same independence which they had seen
+enjoyed by the counts of Southern and Eastern France. Nor was the
+aspiration on their part altogether unreasonable; they had joined
+in the Conquest rather as sharers in the great adventure than as
+mere vassals of the duke, whose birth they despised as much as they
+feared his strength. William, however, was wise and wary as well as
+strong. While, by the insensible process of custom, or rather by
+the mere assumption that feudal tenure of land was the only lawful
+and reasonable one, the Frankish system of tenure was substituted
+for the Anglo-Saxon, the organization of government on the same
+basis was not equally a matter of course.</p>
+<p>The Conqueror himself was too strong to suffer that organization
+to become formidable in his reign, but neither the brutal force of
+William Rufus nor the heavy and equal pressure of the government of
+Henry I could extinguish the tendency toward it. It was only after
+it had, under Stephen, broken out into anarchy and plunged the
+whole nation in misery; when the great houses founded by the barons
+of the Conquest had suffered forfeiture or extinction; when the
+Normans had become Englishmen under the legal and constitutional
+reforms of Henry II&mdash;that the royal authority, in close
+alliance with the nation, was enabled to put an end to the
+evil.</p>
+<p>William the Conqueror claimed the crown of England as the chosen
+heir of Edward the Confessor. It was a claim which the English did
+not admit, and of which the Normans saw the fallacy, but which he
+himself consistently maintained and did his best to justify. In
+that claim he saw not only the justification of the Conquest in the
+eyes of the church, but his great safeguard against the jealous and
+aggressive host by whose aid he had realized it; therefore,
+immediately after the battle of Hastings he proceeded to seek the
+national recognition of its validity. He obtained it from the
+divided and dismayed <i>witan</i> with no great trouble, and was
+crowned by the archbishop of York&mdash;the most influential and
+patriotic among them&mdash;binding himself by the constitutional
+promises of justice and good laws. Standing before the altar at
+Westminster, "in the presence of the clergy and people he promised
+with an oath that he would defend God's holy churches and their
+rulers; that he would, moreover, rule the whole people subject to
+him with righteousness and royal providence; would enact and hold
+fast right law and utterly forbid rapine and unrighteous
+judgments." The form of election and acceptance was regularly
+observed and the legal position of the new King completed before he
+went forth to finish the Conquest.</p>
+<p>Had it not been for this the Norman host might have fairly
+claimed a division of the land such as the Danes had made in the
+ninth century. But to the people who had recognized William it was
+but just that the chance should be given them of retaining what was
+their own. Accordingly, when the lands of all those who had fought
+for Harold were confiscated, those who were willing to acknowledge
+William were allowed to redeem theirs, either paying money at once
+or giving hostages for the payment. That under this redemption lay
+the idea of a new title to the lands redeemed may be regarded as
+questionable. The feudal lawyer might take one view, and the
+plundered proprietor another. But if charters of confirmation or
+regrant were generally issued on the occasion to those who were
+willing to redeem, there can be no doubt that, as soon as the
+feudal law gained general acceptance, these would be regarded as
+conveying a feudal title. What to the English might be a mere
+payment of <i>fyrdwite</i>, or composition for a recognized
+offence, might to the Normans seem equivalent to forfeiture and
+restoration.</p>
+<p>But however this was, the process of confiscation and
+redistribution of lands under the new title began from the moment
+of the coronation. The next few years, occupied in the reduction of
+Western and Northern England, added largely to the stock of
+divisible estates. The tyranny of Odo of Bayeux and William
+Fitzosbern, which provoked attempts at rebellion in 1067; the stand
+made by the house of Godwin in Devonshire in 1068; the attempts of
+Mercia and Northumbria to shake off the Normans in 1069 and 1070;
+the last struggle for independence in 1071, in which Edwin and
+Morcar finally fell; the conspiracy of the Norman earls in 1074, in
+consequence of which Waltheof perished&mdash;all tended to the same
+result.</p>
+<p>After each effort the royal hand was laid on more heavily; more
+and more land changed owners, and with the change of owners the
+title changed. The complicated and unintelligible irregularities of
+the Anglo-Saxon tenures were exchanged for the simple and uniform
+feudal theory. The fifteen hundred tenants-in-chief of <i>Domesday
+Book</i> take the place of the countless land-owners of King
+Edward's time, and the loose, unsystematic arrangements which had
+grown up in the confusion of title, tenure, and jurisdiction were
+replaced by systematic custom. The change was effected without any
+legislative act, simply by the process of transfer under
+circumstances in which simplicity and uniformity were an absolute
+necessity. It was not the change from allodial to feudal so much as
+from confusion to order. The actual amount of dispossession was no
+doubt greatest in the higher ranks; the smaller owners may to a
+large extent have remained in a mediatized position on their
+estates; but even <i>Domesday</i>, with all its fulness and
+accuracy, cannot be supposed to enumerate all the changes of the
+twenty eventful years that followed the battle of Hastings. It is
+enough for our purpose to ascertain that a universal assimilation
+of title followed the general changes of ownership. The king of
+<i>Domesday</i> is the supreme landlord; all the land of the
+nation, the old folkland, has become the king's; and all private
+land is held mediately or immediately of him; all holders are bound
+to their lords by homage and fealty, either actually demanded or
+understood to be demandable, in every case of transfer by
+inheritance or otherwise.</p>
+<p>The result of this process is partly legal and partly
+constitutional or political. The legal result is the introduction
+of an elaborate system of customs, tenures, rights, duties,
+profits, and jurisdictions. The constitutional result is the
+creation of several intermediate links between the body of the
+nation and the king, in the place of or side by side with the duty
+of allegiance.</p>
+<p>On the former of these points we have very insufficient data;
+for we are quite in the dark as to the development of feudal law in
+Normandy before the invasion, and may be reasonably inclined to
+refer some at least of the peculiarities of English feudal law to
+the leaven of the system which it superseded. Nor is it easy to
+reduce the organization described in <i>Domesday</i> to strict
+conformity with feudal law as it appears later, especially with the
+general prevalence of military tenure.</p>
+<p>The growth of knighthood is a subject on which the greatest
+obscurity prevails, and the most probable explanation of its
+existence in England&mdash;the theory that it is a translation into
+Norman forms of the <i>thegnage</i> of the Anglo-Saxon
+law&mdash;can only be stated as probable.</p>
+<p>Between the picture drawn in <i>Domesday</i> and the state of
+affairs which the charter of Henry I was designed to remedy, there
+is a difference which the short interval of time will not account
+for, and which testifies to the action of some skilful organizing
+hand working with neither justice nor mercy, hardening and
+sharpening all lines and points to the perfecting of a strong
+government.</p>
+<p>It is unnecessary to recapitulate here all the points in which
+the Anglo-Saxon institutions were already approaching the feudal
+model; it may be assumed that the actual obligation of military
+service was much the same in both systems, and that even the amount
+of land which was bound to furnish a mounted warrior was the same
+however the conformity may have been produced. The <i>heriot</i> of
+the English earl or <i>thegn</i> was in close resemblance with the
+<i>relief</i> of the Norman count or knight. But however close the
+resemblance, something was now added that made the two identical.
+The change of the heriot to the relief implies a suspension of
+ownership, and carries with it the custom of "livery of seisin."
+The heriot was the payment of a debt from the dead man to his lord;
+his son succeeded him by allodial right. The relief was paid by the
+heir before he could obtain his father's lands; between the death
+of the father and livery of seisin to the son the right of the
+"overlord" had entered; the ownership was to a certain extent
+resumed, and the succession of the heir took somewhat of the
+character of a new grant. The right of wardship also became in the
+same way a re&euml;ntry, by the lord, on the profits of the estate
+of the minor, instead of being, as before, a protection, by the
+head of the kin, of the indefeasible rights of the heir, which it
+was the duty of the whole community to maintain.</p>
+<p>There can be no doubt that the military tenure&mdash;the most
+prominent feature of historical feudalism&mdash;was itself
+introduced by the same gradual process which we have assumed in the
+case of the feudal usages in general. We have no light on the point
+from any original grant made by the Conqueror to a lay follower,
+but judging by the grants made to the churches we cannot suppose it
+probable that such gifts were made on any expressed condition, or
+accepted with a distinct pledge to provide a certain contingent of
+knights for the king's service. The obligation of national defence
+was incumbent, as of old, on all land-owners, and the customary
+service of one fully armed man for each five hides of land was
+probably the rate at which the newly endowed follower of the king
+would be expected to discharge his duty. The wording of the
+<i>Domesday</i> survey does not imply that in this respect the new
+military service differed from the old; the land is marked out, not
+into knights' fees, but into hides, and the number of knights to be
+furnished by a particular feudatory would be ascertained by
+inquiring the number of hides that he held, without apportioning
+the particular acres that were to support the particular
+knight.</p>
+<p>It would undoubtedly be on the estates of the lay vassals that a
+more definite usage would first be adopted, and knights bound by
+feudal obligations to their lords receive a definite estate from
+them. Our earliest information, however, on this as on most points
+of tenure, is derived from the notices of ecclesiastical practice.
+Lanfranc, we are told, turned the <i>drengs</i>, the rent-paying
+tenants of his archiepiscopal estates, into knights for the defence
+of the country; he enfeoffed a certain number of knights who
+performed the military service due from the archiepiscopal barony.
+This had been done before the <i>Domesday</i> survey, and almost
+necessarily implies that a like measure had been taken by the lay
+vassals. Lanfranc likewise maintained ten knights to answer for the
+military service due from the convent of Christ Church, which made
+over to him, in consideration of the relief, land worth two hundred
+pounds annually. The value of the knight's fee must already have
+been fixed at twenty pounds a year.</p>
+<p>In the reign of William Rufus the abbot of Ramsey obtained a
+charter which exempted his monastery from the service of ten
+knights due from it on festivals, substituting the obligation to
+furnish three knights to perform service on the north of the
+Thames&mdash;a proof that the lands of that house had not yet been
+divided into knights' fees. In the next reign, we may
+infer&mdash;from the favor granted by the King to the knights who
+defended their lands <i>per loricas</i> (that is, by the hauberk)
+that their demesne lands shall be exempt from pecuniary
+taxation&mdash;that the process of definite military infeudation
+had largely advanced. But it was not even yet forced on the
+clerical or monastic estates. When, in 1167, the abbot of Milton,
+in Dorset, was questioned as to the number of knights' fees for
+which he had to account, he replied that all the services due from
+his monastery were discharged out of the demesne; but he added that
+in the reign of Henry I, during a vacancy in the abbacy, Bishop
+Roger, of Salisbury, had enfeoffed two knights out of the abbey
+lands. He had, however, subsequently reversed the act and had
+restored the lands, whose tenure had been thus altered, to their
+original condition of rent-paying estate or "socage."</p>
+<p>The very term "the new feoffment," which was applied to the
+knights' fees created between the death of Henry I and the year in
+which the account preserved in the <i>Black Book</i> of the
+exchequer was taken, proves that the process was going on for
+nearly a hundred years, and that the form in which the knights'
+fees appear when called on by Henry II for "scutage" was most
+probably the result of a series of compositions by which the great
+vassals relieved their lands from a general burden by carving out
+particular estates, the holders of which performed the services due
+from the whole; it was a matter of convenience and not of
+tyrannical pressure. The statement of Ordericus Vitalis that the
+Conqueror "distributed lands to his knights in such fashion that
+the kingdom of England should have forever sixty thousand knights,
+and furnish them at the king's command according to the occasion,"
+must be regarded as one of the many numerical exaggerations of the
+early historians. The officers of the exchequer in the twelfth
+century were quite unable to fix the number of existing knights'
+fees.</p>
+<p>It cannot even be granted that a definite area of land was
+necessary to constitute a knight's fee; for although at a later
+period and in local computations we may find four or five hides
+adopted as a basis of calculation, where the extent of the
+particular knight's fee is given exactly, it affords no ground for
+such a conclusion. In the <i>Liber Niger</i> we find knights' fees
+of two hides and a half, of two hides, of four, five, and six
+hides. Geoffrey Ridel states that his father held one hundred and
+eighty-four <i>carucates</i> and a <i>virgate</i>, for which the
+service of fifteen knights was due, but that no knights' fees had
+been carved out of it, the obligation lying equally on every
+carucate. The archbishop of York had far more knights than his
+tenure required. It is impossible to avoid the conclusion that the
+extent of a knight's fee was determined by rent or valuation rather
+than acreage, and that the common quantity was really expressed in
+the twenty <i>librates</i>, the twenty pounds' worth of annual
+value which until the reign of Edward I was the qualification for
+knighthood.</p>
+<p>It is most probable that no regular account of the knights' fees
+was ever taken until they became liable to taxation, either in the
+form of <i>auxilium militum</i> under Henry I, or in that of
+scutage under his grandson. The facts, however, which are here
+adduced, preclude the possibility of referring this portion of the
+feudal innovations to the direct legislation of the Conqueror. It
+may be regarded as a secondary question whether the knighthood here
+referred to was completed by the investiture with knightly arms and
+the honorable accolade. The ceremonial of knighthood was practised
+by the Normans, whereas the evidence that the English had retained
+the primitive practice of investing the youthful warrior is
+insufficient; yet it would be rash to infer that so early as this,
+if indeed it ever was the case, every possessor of a knight's fee
+received formal initiation before he assumed his spurs. But every
+such analogy would make the process of transition easier and
+prevent the necessity of any general legislative act of change.</p>
+<p>It has been maintained that a formal and definitive act, forming
+the initial point of the feudalization of England, is to be found
+in a clause of the laws, as they are called, of the Conqueror;
+which directs that every freeman shall affirm, by covenant and
+oath, that "he will be faithful to King William within England and
+without, will join him in preserving his lands and honor with all
+fidelity, and defend him against his enemies." But this injunction
+is little more than the demand of the oath of allegiance which had
+been taken to the Anglo-Saxon kings and is here required not of
+every feudal dependent of the King, but of every freeman or
+freeholder whatsoever.</p>
+<p>In that famous council of Salisbury of 1086, which was summoned
+immediately after the making of the <i>Domesday</i> survey, we
+learn from the <i>Chronicle</i> that there came to the King "all
+his witan, and all the landholders of substance in England whose
+vassals soever they were, and they all submitted to him, and became
+his men and swore oaths of allegiance that they would be faithful
+to him against all others." In this act have been seen the formal
+acceptance and date of the introduction of feudalism, but it has a
+very different meaning. The oath described is the oath of
+allegiance, combined with the act of homage, and obtained from all
+land-owners, whoever their feudal lord might be. It is a measure of
+precaution taken against the disintegrating power of feudalism,
+providing a direct tie between the sovereign and all freeholders
+which no inferior relation existing between them and the mesne
+lords would justify them in breaking. The real importance of the
+passage as bearing on the date of the introduction of feudal tenure
+is merely that it shows the system to have already become
+consolidated; all the land-owners of the kingdom had already
+become, somehow or other, vassals, either of the king or of some
+tenant under him. The lesson may be learned from the fact of the
+<i>Domesday</i> survey.</p>
+<p>The introduction of such a system would necessarily have effects
+far wider than the mere modification of the law of tenure; it might
+be regarded as a means of consolidating and concentrating the whole
+machinery of government; legislation, taxation, judicature, and
+military defence were all capable of being organized on the feudal
+principle, and might have been so had the moral and political
+results been in harmony with the legal. But its tendency when
+applied to governmental machinery is disruptive. The great feature
+of the Conqueror's policy is his defeat of that tendency. Guarding
+against it he obtained recognition as the King of the nation and,
+so far as he could understand them and the attitude of the nation
+allowed, he maintained the usages of the nation. He kept up the
+popular institutions of the hundred court and the shire court. He
+confirmed the laws which had been in use in King Edward's days,
+with the additions which he himself made for the benefit, as he
+especially tells us, of the English.</p>
+<p>We are told, on what seems to be the highest legal authority of
+the next century, that he issued in his fourth year a commission of
+inquiry into the national customs, and obtained from sworn
+representatives of each county a declaration of the laws under
+which they wished to live. The compilation that bears his name is
+very little more than a reissue of the code of Canute; and this
+proceeding helped greatly to reconcile the English people to his
+rule. Although the oppressions of his later years were far heavier
+than the measures taken to secure the immediate success of the
+Conquest, all the troubles of the kingdom after 1075, in his sons'
+reigns as well as in his own, proceeded from the insubordination of
+the Normans, not from the attempts of the English to dethrone the
+king. Very early they learned that, if their interest was not the
+king's, at least their enemies were his enemies; hence they are
+invariably found on the royal side against the feudatories.</p>
+<p>This accounts for the maintenance of the national force of
+defence, over and above the feudal army. The <i>fyrd</i> of the
+English, the general armament of the men of the counties and
+hundreds, was not abolished at the Conquest, but subsisted even
+through the reigns of William Rufus and Henry I, to be reformed and
+reconstituted under Henry II; and in each reign it gave proof of
+its strength and faithfulness. The <i>witenagemot</i> itself
+retained the ancient form, the bishops and abbots formed a chief
+part of it, instead of being, as in Normandy, so insignificant an
+element that their very participation in deliberation has been
+doubted. The king sat crowned three times in the year in the old
+royal towns of Westminster, Winchester, and Gloucester, hearing the
+complaints of his people, and executing such justice as his
+knowledge of their law and language and his own imperious will
+allowed. In all this there is no violent innovation, only such
+gradual essential changes as twenty eventful years of new actors
+and new principles must bring, however insensibly the people
+themselves&mdash;passing away and being replaced by their
+children&mdash;may be educated to endurance.</p>
+<p>It would be wrong to impute to the Conqueror any intention of
+deceiving the nation by maintaining its official forms while
+introducing new principles and a new race of administrators. What
+he saw required change he changed with a high hand. But not the
+less surely did the change of administrators involve a change of
+custom, both in the church and in the state. The bishops,
+ealdormen, and sheriffs of English birth were replaced by Normans;
+not unreasonably, perhaps, considering the necessity of preserving
+the balance of the state. With the change of officials came a sort
+of amalgamation or duplication of titles; the ealdorman or earl
+became the <i>comes</i> or count; the sheriff became the
+<i>vicecomes</i>; the office in each case receiving the name of
+that which corresponded most closely with it in Normandy itself.
+With the amalgamation of titles came an importation of new
+principles and possibly new functions; for the Norman count and
+viscount had not exactly the same customs as the earls and
+sheriffs. And this ran up into the highest grades of organization;
+the King's court of counsellors was composed of his feudal tenants;
+the ownership of land was now the qualification for the
+witenagemot, instead of wisdom; the earldoms became fiefs instead
+of magistracies, and even the bishops had to accept the status of
+barons. There was a very certain danger that the mere change of
+persons might bring in the whole machinery of hereditary
+magistracies, and that king and people might be edged out of the
+administration of justice, taxation, and other functions of supreme
+or local independence.</p>
+<p>Against this it was most important to guard; as the Conqueror
+learned from the events of the first year of his reign, when the
+severe rule of Odo and William Fitzosbern had provoked
+Herefordshire. Ralph Guader, Roger Montgomery, and Hugh of
+Avranches filled the places of Edwin and Morcar and the brothers of
+Harold. But the conspiracy of the earls in 1074 opened William's
+eyes to the danger of this proceeding, and from that time onward he
+governed the provinces through sheriffs immediately dependent on
+himself, avoiding the foreign plan of appointing hereditary counts,
+as well as the English custom of ruling by viceregal ealdormen. He
+was, however, very sparing in giving earldoms at all, and inclined
+to confine the title to those who were already counts in Normandy
+or in France.</p>
+<p>To this plan there were some marked exceptions, which may be
+accounted for either on the ground that the arrangements had been
+completed before the need of watchfulness was impressed on the King
+by the treachery of the Normans, or on that of the exigencies of
+national defence. In these cases he created, or suffered the
+continuance of, great palatine jurisdictions; earldoms in which the
+earls were endowed with the superiority of whole counties, so that
+all the land-owners held feudally of them, in which they received
+the whole profits of the courts and exercised all the "regalia" or
+royal rights, nominated the sheriffs, held their own councils, and
+acted as independent princes except in the owing of homage and
+fealty to the King. Two of these palatinates, the earldom of
+Chester and the bishopric of Durham, retained much of their
+character to our own days. A third, the palatinate of Bishop Odo in
+Kent, if it were really a jurisdiction of the same sort, came to an
+end when Odo forfeited the confidence of his brother and nephew. A
+fourth, the earldom of Shropshire, which is not commonly counted
+among the palatine jurisdictions, but which possessed under the
+Montgomery earls all the characteristics of such a dignity, was
+confiscated after the treason of Robert of Belesme by Henry I.
+These had been all founded before the conspiracy of 1074; they were
+also, like the later lordships of the marches, a part of the
+national defence; Chester and Shropshire kept the Welsh marches in
+order, Kent was the frontier exposed to attacks from Picardy, and
+Durham, the patrimony of St. Cuthbert, lay as a sacred boundary
+between England and Scotland; Northumberland and Cumberland were
+still a debatable ground between the two kingdoms. Chester was held
+by its earls as freely by the sword as the King held England by the
+crown; no lay vassal in the county held of the King, all of the
+earl. In Shropshire there were only five lay tenants <i>in
+capite</i> besides Roger Montgomery; in Kent, Bishop Odo held an
+enormous proportion of the manors, but the nature of his
+jurisdiction is not very clear, and its duration is too short to
+make it of much importance. If William founded any earldoms at all
+after 1074 (which may be doubted), he did it on a very different
+scale.</p>
+<p>The hereditary sheriffdoms he did not guard against with equal
+care. The Norman viscounties were hereditary, and there was some
+risk that the English ones would become so too; and with the worst
+consequences, for the English counties were much larger than the
+bailiwicks of the Norman viscount, and the authority of the
+sheriff, when he was relieved from the company of the ealdorman,
+and was soon to lose that of the bishop, would have no check except
+the direct control of the King. If William perceived this, it was
+too late to prevent it entirely; some of the sheriffdoms became
+hereditary, and continued to be so long after the abuse had become
+constitutionally dangerous.</p>
+<p>The independence of the greater feudatories was still further
+limited by the principle, which the Conqueror seems to have
+observed, of avoiding the accumulation in any one hand of a great
+number of contiguous estates. The rule is not without some
+important exceptions, and it may have been suggested by the
+diversity of occasions on which the fiefs were bestowed, but the
+result is one which William must have foreseen. An insubordinate
+baron whose strength lay in twelve different counties would have to
+rouse the suspicions and perhaps to defy the arms of twelve
+powerful sheriffs, before he could draw his forces to a head. In
+his manorial courts, scattered and unconnected, he could set up no
+central tribunal, nor even force a new custom upon his tenants, nor
+could he attempt oppression on any extensive scale. By such
+limitation the people were protected and the central power
+secured.</p>
+<p>Yet the changes of ownership, even thus guarded, wrought other
+changes. It is not to be supposed that the Norman baron, when he
+had received his fief, proceeded to carve it out into demesne and
+tenants' land as if he were making a new settlement in an
+uninhabited country. He might indeed build his castle and enclose
+his chase with very little respect to the rights of his weaker
+neighbors, but he did not attempt any such radical change as the
+legal theory of the creation of manors seems to presume. The name
+"manor" is of Norman origin: but the estate to which it was given
+existed, in its essential character, long before the Conquest; it
+received a new name as the shire also did, but neither the one nor
+the other was created by this change. The local jurisdictions of
+the thegns who had grants of <i>sac</i> and <i>soc</i>, or who
+exercised judicial functions among their free neighbors, were
+identical with the manorial jurisdictions of the new owners.</p>
+<p>It may be conjectured with great probability that in many cases
+the weaker freemen, who had either willingly or under constraint
+attended the courts of their great neighbors, were now, under the
+general infusion of feudal principle, regarded as holding their
+lands of them as lords; it is not less probable that in a great
+number of grants the right to suit and service from small
+land-owners passed from the king to the receiver of the fief as a
+matter of course; but it is certain that even before the Conquest
+such a proceeding was not uncommon; Edward the Confessor had
+transferred to St. Augustine's monastery a number of allodiaries in
+Kent, and every such measure in the case of a church must have had
+its parallel in similar grants to laymen. The manorial system
+brought in a number of new names; and perhaps a duplication of
+offices. The <i>gerefa</i> of the old thegn, or of the ancient
+township, was replaced, as president of the courts, by a Norman
+steward or seneschal; and the <i>bydel</i> of the old system by the
+bailiff of the new; but the gerefa and bydel still continued to
+exist in a subordinate capacity as the <i>grave</i> or reeve and
+the <i>bedell</i>; and when the lord's steward takes his place in
+the county court, the reeve and four men of the township are there
+also. The common of the township may be treated as the lord's
+waste, but the townsmen do not lose their customary share.</p>
+<p>The changes that take place in the state have their resulting
+analogies in every village, but no new England is created; new
+forms displace but do not destroy the old, and old rights remain,
+although changed in title and forced into symmetry with a new legal
+and pseudo-historical theory. The changes may not seem at first
+sight very oppressive, but they opened the way for oppression; the
+forms they had introduced tended, under the spirit of Norman
+legality and feudal selfishness, to become hard realities, and in
+the profound miseries of Stephen's reign the people learned how
+completely the new theory left them at the mercy of their lords;
+nor were all the reforms of his successor more stringent or the
+struggles of the century that followed a whit more impassioned than
+were necessary to protect the English yeoman from the men who lived
+upon his strength.</p>
+<p>In attempting thus to estimate the real amount of change
+introduced by the feudalism of the Conquest, many points of further
+interest have been touched upon, to which it is necessary to recur
+only so far as to give them their proper place in a more general
+view of the reformed organization. The Norman king is still the
+king of the nation. He has become the supreme landlord; all estates
+are held of him mediately or immediately, but he still demands the
+allegiance of all his subjects. The oath which he exacted at
+Salisbury in 1086, and which is embodied in the semi-legal form
+already quoted, was a modification of the oath taken to Edmund, and
+was intended to set the general obligation of obedience to the king
+in its proper relation to the new tie of homage and fealty by which
+the tenant was bound to his lord.</p>
+<p>All men continued to be primarily the king's men, and the public
+peace to be his peace. Their lords might demand their service to
+fulfil their own obligations, but the king could call them to the
+<i>fyrd</i>, summon them to his courts, and tax them without the
+intervention of their lords; and to the king they could look for
+protection against all foes. Accordingly the king could rely on the
+help of the bulk of the free people in all struggles with his
+feudatories, and the people, finding that their connection with
+their lords would be no excuse for unfaithfulness to the king, had
+a further inducement to adhere to the more permanent
+institutions.</p>
+<p>In the department of law the direct changes introduced by the
+Conquest were not great. Much that is regarded as peculiarly Norman
+was developed upon English soil, and although originated and
+systematized by Norman lawyers, contained elements which would have
+worked in a very different way in Normandy. Even the vestiges of
+Carlovingian practice which appear in the inquests of the Norman
+reigns are modified by English usage. The great inquest of all, the
+<i>Domesday</i> survey, may owe its principle to a foreign source;
+the oath of the reporters may be Norman, but the machinery that
+furnishes the jurors is native; "the king's barons inquire by the
+oath of the sheriff of the shire, and of all the barons and their
+Frenchmen, and of the whole hundred, the priest, the reeve, and six
+<i>ceorls</i> of every township."</p>
+<p>The institution of the collective Frank pledge, which recent
+writers incline to treat as a Norman innovation, is so distinctly
+colored by English custom that it has been generally regarded as
+purely indigenous. If it were indeed a precaution taken by the new
+rulers against the avoidance of justice by the absconding or
+harboring of criminals, it fell with ease into the usages and even
+the legal terms which had been common for other similar purposes
+since the reign of Athelstan. The trial by battle, which on clearer
+evidence seems to have been brought in by the Normans, is a relic
+of old Teutonic jurisprudence, the absence of which from the
+Anglo-Saxon courts is far more curious than its introduction from
+abroad.</p>
+<p>The organization of jurisdiction required and underwent no great
+change in these respects. The Norman lord who undertook the office
+of sheriff had, as we have seen, more unrestricted power than the
+sheriffs of old. He was the king's representative in all matters
+judicial, military, and financial in his shire, and had many
+opportunities of tyrannizing in each of those departments: but he
+introduced no new machinery. From him, or from the courts of which
+he was the presiding officer, appeal lay to the king alone; but the
+king was often absent from England and did not understand the
+language of his subjects. In his absence the administration was
+intrusted to a <i>judiciar</i>, a regent, or lieutenant, of the
+kingdom; and the convenience being once ascertained of having a
+minister who could in the whole kingdom represent the king, as the
+sheriff did in the shire, the judiciar became a permanent
+functionary. This, however, cannot be certainly affirmed of the
+reign of the Conqueror, who, when present at Christmas, Easter, and
+Whitsuntide, held great courts of justice as well as for other
+purposes of state; and the legal importance of the office belongs
+to a later stage. The royal court, containing the tenants-in-chief
+of the crown, both lay and clerical, and entering into all the
+functions of the witenagemot, was the supreme council of the
+nation, with the advice and consent of which the King legislated,
+taxed, and judged.</p>
+<p>In the one authentic monument of William's jurisprudence, the
+act which removed the bishops from the secular courts and
+recognized their spiritual jurisdictions, he tells us that he acts
+"with the common council and counsel of the archbishops, bishops,
+abbots, and all the princes of the kingdom." The ancient summary of
+his laws contained in the <i>Textus Roffensis</i> is entitled
+"<i>What William, King of the English, with his Princes enacted
+after the Conquest of England</i>"; and the same form is preserved
+in the tradition of his confirming the ancient laws reported to him
+by the representatives of the shires. The <i>Anglo-Saxon
+Chronicle</i> enumerates the classes of men who attended his great
+courts: "There were with him all the great men over all England,
+archbishops and bishops, abbots and earls, thegns and knights."</p>
+<p>The great suit between Lanfranc as Archbishop of Canterbury and
+Odo as Earl of Kent, which is perhaps the best reported trial of
+the reign, was tried in the county court of Kent before the King's
+representative, Gosfrid, bishop of Coutances; whose presence and
+that of most of the great men of the kingdom seem to have made it a
+witenagemot. The archbishop pleaded the cause of his Church in a
+session of three days on Pennenden Heath; the aged South-Saxon
+bishop, Ethelric, was brought by the King's command to declare the
+ancient customs of the laws; and with him several other Englishmen
+skilled in ancient laws and customs. All these good and wise men
+supported the archbishop's claim, and the decision was agreed on
+and determined by the whole county. The sentence was laid before
+the King, and confirmed by him. Here we have probably a good
+instance of the principle universally adopted; all the lower
+machinery of the court was retained entire, but the presence of the
+Norman justiciar and barons gave it an additional authority, a more
+direct connection with the king, and the appearance at least of a
+joint tribunal.</p>
+<p>The principle of amalgamating the two laws and nationalities by
+superimposing the better consolidated Norman superstructure on the
+better consolidated English substructure, runs through the whole
+policy.</p>
+<p>The English system was strong in the cohesion of its lower
+organism, the association of individuals in the township, in the
+hundred, and in the shire; the Norman system was strong in its
+higher ranges, in the close relation to the Crown of the
+tenants-in-chief whom the King had enriched. On the other hand, the
+English system was weak in the higher organization, and the Normans
+in England had hardly any subordinate organization at all. The
+strongest elements of both were brought together.</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_3"><!-- RULE4 3 --></a>
+<h2>DECAY OF THE FRANKISH EMPIRE</h2>
+<center>DIVISION INTO MODERN FRANCE, GERMANY, AND ITALY</center>
+<center>A.D. 843-911</center>
+<br>
+<center>FRAN&Ccedil;OIS P.G. GUIZOT</center>
+<p class="intro">The period with which the following article deals
+may be said to mark the end of distinctively Frankish history. A
+striking mixture of races entered into the formation of this
+people, and the beginnings of the great modern nations into which
+the Frankish empire was divided brought to them varied elements of
+strength and a diversity of constituents that were to be commingled
+in new national characters and careers.</p>
+<p class="intro">In 840 Charles the Bald became King of France, and
+his reign, both as king and afterward as emperor, continued for
+thirty-seven years, during which he proved himself to be lacking in
+those qualities which his responsibilities and the wants of his
+people demanded. He had great obstacles to contend against; for
+besides the ambitions of various districts for separate
+nationality, which led to insurrections in many quarters, Greek
+pirates ravaged the South, where the Saracens also wrought havoc,
+while in the North and West the Northmen burned and pillaged,
+laying waste a wide region and leaving many towns in ruins.</p>
+<p class="intro">It was an age of turbulence in Europe, and the
+violence of predatory invaders brought woes upon many peoples. On
+the east of Charles' empire the Hungarians, successors of the Huns,
+began to threaten. In the midst of all these distractions and
+dangers, assailed by enemies without and within, Charles found it a
+task far beyond his abilities to construct a state upon foundations
+of unity. He bore many titles and held several crowns, but his
+actual dominion was narrowly restricted, and his nominal subjects
+were in a state of political subdivision almost amounting to
+dismemberment. After various futile efforts during his later years
+to unify his empire, Charles died from an illness which seized him
+in 877, on his return to France from a fruitless campaign of
+subjugation and pillage in Italy. In the subsequent division of the
+empire, according to the terms of the treaty of Verdun, the several
+portions included Italy, the nucleus of France, and that of the
+present Germany.</p>
+<p class="intro">Already suffering from the devastating expeditions
+of the Norse or Northmen, the Carlovingian empire, now weakened by
+division, became an easier prey for the invaders. Emboldened by
+success, the Northmen at length commenced to settle in the regions
+they invaded, no longer returning, as formerly, to their northern
+homes in winter. Among chieftains of the early Norman invaders who
+settled in France was Hastings, who became Count of Chartres; later
+came Rou, Rolf, or Rollo the Rover, to whom Charles the Simple of
+France gave Normandy, whence sprang the conquerors and rulers of
+England, who laid the foundation of the English-speaking nations of
+today.</p>
+<p>The first of Charlemagne's grand designs, the territorial
+security of the Gallo-Frankish and Christian dominion, was
+accomplished. In the East and the North, the Germanic and Asiatic
+populations, which had so long upset it, were partly arrested at
+its frontiers, partly incorporated regularly in its midst. In the
+South, the Mussulman populations which, in the eighth century, had
+appeared so near overwhelming it, were powerless to deal it any
+heavy blow. Substantially France was founded. But what had become
+of Charlemagne's second grand design, the resuscitation of the
+Roman Empire at the hands of the barbarians that had conquered it
+and become Christians?</p>
+<p>Let us leave Louis the Debonair his traditional name, although
+it is not an exact rendering of that which was given him by his
+contemporaries. They called him Louis the Pious. And so, indeed, he
+was, sincerely and even scrupulously pious; but he was still more
+weak than pious, as weak in heart and character as in mind; as
+destitute of ruling ideas as of strength of will, fluctuating at
+the mercy of transitory impressions or surrounding influences or
+positional embarrassments. The name of <i>D&eacute;bonnaire</i> is
+suited to him; it expresses his moral worth and his political
+incapacity both at once.</p>
+<p>As king of Aquitaine in the time of Charlemagne, Louis made
+himself esteemed and loved; his justice, his suavity, his probity,
+and his piety were pleasing to the people, and his weaknesses
+disappeared under the strong hand of his father. When he became
+emperor, he began his reign by a reaction against the excesses,
+real or supposed, of the preceding reign. Charlemagne's morals were
+far from regular, and he troubled himself but little about the
+license prevailing in his family or his palace. At a distance, he
+ruled with a tight and heavy hand. Louis established at his court,
+for his sisters as well as his servants, austere regulations. He
+restored to the subjugated Saxons certain of the rights of which
+Charlemagne had deprived them. He sent out everywhere his
+commissioners with orders to listen to complaints and redress
+grievances, and to mitigate his father's rule, which was rigorous
+in its application and yet insufficient to repress disturbance,
+notwithstanding its preventive purpose and its watchful
+supervision.</p>
+<p>Almost simultaneously with his accession, Louis committed an act
+more serious and compromising. He had, by his wife Hermengarde,
+three sons, Lothair, P&eacute;pin, and Louis, aged respectively
+nineteen, eleven, and eight. In 817, Louis summoned at
+Aix-la-Chapelle the general assembly of his dominions; and there,
+while declaring that "neither to those who were wisely minded nor
+to himself did it appear expedient to break up, for the love he
+bare his sons and by the will of man, the unity of the empire,
+preserved by God himself," he had resolved to share with his eldest
+son, Lothair, the imperial throne. Lothair was in fact crowned
+emperor; and his two brothers, P&eacute;pin and Louis, were crowned
+king, "in order that they might reign, after their father's death
+and under their brother and lord, Lothair, to wit: P&eacute;pin,
+over Aquitaine and a great part of Southern Gaul and of Burgundy;
+Louis, beyond the Rhine, over Bavaria and the divers peoples in the
+east of Germany." The rest of Gaul and of Germany, as well as the
+kingdom of Italy, was to belong to Lothair, Emperor and head of the
+Frankish monarchy, to whom his brothers would have to repair year
+by year to come to an understanding with him and receive his
+instructions. The last-named kingdom, the most considerable of the
+three, remained under the direct government of Louis the Debonair,
+and at the same time of his son Lothair, sharing the title of
+emperor. The two other sons, P&eacute;pin and Louis, entered,
+notwithstanding their childhood, upon immediate possession, the one
+of Aquitaine and the other of Bavaria, under the superior authority
+of their father and their brother, the joint emperors.</p>
+<p>Charlemagne had vigorously maintained the unity of the empire,
+for all that he had delegated to two of his sons, P&eacute;pin and
+Louis, the government of Italy and Aquitaine with the title of
+king. Louis the Debonair, while regulating beforehand the division
+of his dominion, likewise desired, as he said, to maintain the
+unity of the empire. But he forgot that he was no Charlemagne.</p>
+<p>It was not long before numerous mournful experiences showed to
+what extent the unity of the empire required personal superiority
+in the emperor, and how rapid would be the decay of the fabric when
+there remained nothing but the title of the founder.</p>
+<p>In 816 Pope Stephen IV came to France to consecrate Louis the
+Debonair emperor. Many a time already the popes had rendered the
+Frankish kings this service and honor. The Franks had been proud to
+see their King, Charlemagne, protecting Adrian I against the
+Lombards; then crowned emperor at Rome by Leo III, and then having
+his two sons, P&eacute;pin and Louis, crowned at Rome, by the same
+Pope, kings respectively of Italy and of Aquitaine. On these
+different occasions Charlemagne, while testifying the most profound
+respect for the Pope, had, in his relations with him, always taken
+care to preserve, together with his political greatness, all his
+personal dignity. But when, in 816, the Franks saw Louis the Pious
+not only go out of Rheims to meet Stephen IV, but prostrate
+himself, from head to foot, and rise only when the Pope held out a
+hand to him, the spectators felt saddened and humiliated at the
+sight of their Emperor in the posture of a penitent monk.</p>
+<p>Several insurrections burst out in the empire; the first among
+the Basques of Aquitaine; the next in Italy, where Bernard, son of
+P&eacute;pin, having, after his father's death, become king in 812,
+with the consent of his grandfather Charlemagne, could not quietly
+see his kingdom pass into the hands of his cousin Lothair at the
+orders of his uncle Louis. These two attempts were easily
+repressed, but the third was more serious. It took place in
+Brittany among those populations of Armorica who were still buried
+in their woods, and were excessively jealous of their independence.
+In 818 they took for king one of their principal chieftains, named
+Morvan; and, not confining themselves to a refusal of all tribute
+to the King of the Franks, they renewed their ravages upon the
+Frankish territories bordering on their frontier. Louis was at that
+time holding a general assembly of his dominions at
+Aix-la-Chapelle; and Count Lantbert, commandant of the marches of
+Brittany, came and reported to him what was going on. A Frankish
+monk, named Ditcar, happened to be at the assembly: he was a man of
+piety and sense, a friend of peace, and, moreover, with some
+knowledge of the Breton king Morvan, as his monastery had property
+in the neighborhood. Him the Emperor commissioned to convey to the
+King his grievances and his demands. After some days' journey the
+monk passed the frontier and arrived at a vast space enclosed on
+one side by a noble river, and on all the others by forests and
+swamps, hedges and ditches. In the middle of this space was a large
+dwelling, which was Morvan's. Ditcar found it full of warriors, the
+King having, no doubt, some expedition on hand. The monk announced
+himself as a messenger from the Emperor of the Franks. The style of
+announcement caused some confusion at first, to the Briton, who,
+however, hastened to conceal his emotion under an air of good-will
+and joyousness, to impose upon his comrades. The latter were got
+rid of; and the King remained alone with the monk, who explained
+the object of his mission. He descanted upon the power of the
+emperor Louis, recounted his complaints, and warned the Briton,
+kindly and in a private capacity, of the danger of his situation, a
+danger so much the greater in that he and his people would meet
+with the less consideration, seeing that they kept up the religion
+of their pagan forefathers. Morvan gave attentive ear to this
+sermon, with his eyes fixed on the ground, and his foot tapping it
+from time to time. Ditcar thought he had succeeded; but an incident
+supervened. It was the hour when Morvan's wife was accustomed to
+come and look for him ere they retired to the nuptial couch. She
+appeared, eager to know who the stranger was, what he had come for,
+what he had said, what answer he had received. She preluded her
+questions with oglings and caresses; she kissed the knees, the
+hands, the beard, and the face of the King, testifying her desire
+to be alone with him. "O King and glory of the mighty Britons, dear
+spouse of mine! what tidings bringeth this stranger? Is it peace,
+or is it war?"</p>
+<p>"This stranger," answered Morvan, with a smile, "is an envoy of
+the Franks; but bring he peace or bring he war is the affair of men
+alone; as for thee, content thee with thy woman's duties."
+Thereupon Ditcar, perceiving that he was countered, said to Morvan:
+"Sir King, 'tis time that I return; tell me what answer I am to
+take back to my sovereign."</p>
+<p>"Leave me this night to take thought thereon," replied the
+Breton chief, with a wavering air. When the morning came, Ditcar
+presented himself once more to Morvan, whom he found up, but still
+half drunk and full of very different sentiments from those of the
+night before. It required some effort, stupefied and tottering as
+he was with the effects of wine and the pleasures of the night, to
+say to Ditcar: "Go back to thy King, and tell him from me that my
+land was never his, and that I owe him naught of tribute or
+submission. Let him reign over the Franks; as for me, I reign over
+the Britons. If he will bring war on me, he will find me ready to
+pay him back."</p>
+<p>The monk returned to Louis the Debonair and rendered account of
+his mission. War was resolved upon, and the Emperor collected his
+troops&mdash;Alemannians, Saxons, Thuringians, Burgundians, and
+Aquitanians, without counting Franks or Gallo-Romans. They began
+their march, moving upon Vannes; Louis was at their head, and the
+Empress accompanied him, but he left her, already ill and fatigued,
+at Angers. The Franks entered the country of the Britons, searched
+the woods and morasses, found no armed men in the open country, but
+encountered them in scattered and scanty companies, at the entrance
+of all the defiles, on the heights commanding pathways, and
+wherever men could hide themselves and await the moment for
+appearing unexpectedly. The Franks heard them, from amid the
+heather and the brushwood, uttering shrill cries, to give warning
+one to another or to alarm the enemy. The Franks advanced
+cautiously, and at last arrived at the entrance of the thick wood
+which surrounded Morvan's abode. He had not yet set out with the
+pick of the warriors he had about him; but, at the approach of the
+Franks, he summoned his wife and his domestics, and said to them:
+"Defend ye well this house and these woods; as for me, I am going
+to march forward to collect my people; after which to return, but
+not without booty and spoils." He put on his armor, took a javelin
+in each hand, and mounted his horse. "Thou seest," said he to his
+wife, "these javelins I brandish: I will bring them back to thee
+this very day dyed with the blood of Franks. Farewell." Setting out
+he pierced, followed by his men, through the thickness of the
+forest, and advanced to meet the Franks.</p>
+<p>The battle began. The large numbers of the Franks who covered
+the ground for some distance dismayed the Britons, and many of them
+fled, seeking where they might hide themselves. Morvan, beside
+himself with rage and at the head of his most devoted followers,
+rushed down upon the Franks as if to demolish them at a single
+stroke; and many fell beneath his blows. He singled out a warrior
+of inferior grade, toward whom he made at a gallop, and, insulting
+him by word of mouth, after the ancient fashion of the Celtic
+warriors, cried: "Frank, I am going to give thee my first present,
+a present which I have been keeping for thee a long while, and
+which I hope thou wilt bear in mind;" and launched at him a javelin
+which the other received on his shield. "Proud Briton," replied the
+Frank, "I have received thy present, and I am going to give thee
+mine." He dug both spurs into his horse's sides and galloped down
+upon Morvan, who, clad though he was in a coat of mail, fell
+pierced by the thrust of a lance. The Frank had but time to
+dismount and cut off his head when he fell himself, mortally
+wounded by one of Morvan's young warriors, but not without having,
+in his turn, dealt the other his deathblow. It spreads on all sides
+that Morvan is dead; and the Franks come thronging to the scene of
+the encounter. There is picked up and passed from hand to hand a
+head all bloody and fearfully disfigured. Ditcar the monk is called
+to see it, and to say whether it is that of Morvan; but he has to
+wash the mass of disfigurement, and to partially adjust the hair,
+before he can pronounce that it is really Morvan's. There is then
+no more doubt; resistance is now impossible; the widow, the family
+and the servants of Morvan arrive, are brought before Louis the
+Debonair, accept all the conditions imposed upon them, and the
+Franks withdraw with the boast that Brittany is henceforth their
+tributary.</p>
+<p>On arriving at Angers, Louis found the empress Hermengarde
+dying; and two days afterward she was dead. He had a tender heart
+which was not proof against sorrow; and he testified a desire to
+abdicate and turn monk. But he was dissuaded from his purpose; for
+it was easy to influence his resolutions. A little later, he was
+advised to marry again, and he yielded. Several princesses were
+introduced; and he chose Judith of Bavaria, daughter of Count Welf
+(Guelf), a family already powerful and in later times celebrated.
+Judith was young, beautiful, witty, ambitious, and skilled in the
+art of making the gift of pleasing subserve the passion for ruling.
+Louis, during his expedition into Brittany, had just witnessed the
+fatal result of a woman's empire over her husband; he was destined
+himself to offer a more striking and more long-lived example of it.
+In 823, he had, by his new empress Judith, a son, whom he called
+Charles, and who was hereafter to be known as Charles the Bald.
+This son became his mother's ruling, if not exclusive, passion, and
+the source of his father's woes. His birth could not fail to cause
+ill-temper and mistrust in Louis' three sons by Hermengarde, who
+were already kings. They had but a short time previously received
+the first proof of their father's weakness. In 822, Louis,
+repenting of his severity toward his nephew, Bernard of Italy,
+whose eyes he had caused to be put out as a punishment for
+rebellion, and who had died in consequence, considered himself
+bound to perform at Attigny, in the church and before the people, a
+solemn act of penance; which was creditable to his honesty and
+piety, but the details left upon the minds of the beholders an
+impression unfavorable to the Emperor's dignity and authority. In
+829, during an assembly held at Worms, he, yielding to his wife's
+entreaties, and doubtless also to his own yearnings toward his
+youngest son, set at naught the solemn act whereby, in 817, he had
+shared his dominions among his three elder sons; and took away from
+two of them, in Burgundy and Alemannia, some of the territories he
+had assigned to them, and gave them to the boy Charles for his
+share. Lothair, P&eacute;pin, and Louis thereupon revolted. Court
+rivalries were added to family differences. The Emperor had
+summoned to his side a young southron, Bernard by name, duke of
+Septimania and son of Count William of Toulouse, who had gallantly
+fought the Saracens. He made him his chief chamberlain and his
+favorite counsellor. Bernard was bold, ambitious, vain, imperious,
+and restless. He removed his rivals from court, and put in their
+places his own creatures. He was accused not only of abusing the
+Emperor's favor, but even of carrying on a guilty intrigue with the
+empress Judith. There grew up against him, and, by consequence,
+against the Emperor, the Empress, and their youngest son, a
+powerful opposition, in which certain ecclesiastics, and, among
+them, Wala, abbot of Corbie, cousin-german and but lately one of
+the privy counsellors of Charlemagne, joined eagerly. Some had at
+heart the unity of the empire, which Louis was breaking up more and
+more; others were concerned for the spiritual interests of the
+Church, which Louis, in spite of his piety and by reason of his
+weakness, often permitted to be attacked. Thus strengthened, the
+conspirators considered themselves certain of success. They had the
+empress Judith carried off and shut up in the convent of St.
+Radegonde at Poitiers; and Louis in person came to deliver himself
+up to them at Compi&egrave;gne, where they were assembled. There
+they passed a decree to the effect that the power and title of
+emperor were transferred from Louis to Lothair, his eldest son;
+that the act whereby a share of the empire had but lately been
+assigned to Charles was annulled; and that the act of 817, which
+had regulated the partition of Louis' dominions after his death,
+was once more in force. But soon there was a burst of reaction in
+favor of the Emperor; Lothair's two brothers, jealous of his late
+elevation, made overtures to their father; the ecclesiastics were a
+little ashamed at being mixed up in a revolt; the people felt pity
+for the poor, honest Emperor; and a general assembly, meeting at
+Nimeguen, abolished the acts of Compi&egrave;gne, and restored to
+Louis his title and his power. But it was not long before there was
+revolt again, originating this time with P&eacute;pin, King of
+Aquitaine. Louis fought him, and gave Aquitaine to Charles the
+Bald. The alliance between the three sons of Hermengarde was at
+once renewed; they raised an army; the Emperor marched against them
+with his; and the two hosts met between Colmar and B&acirc;le, in a
+place called <i>le Champ rouge</i> ("the Field of Red").
+Negotiations were set on foot; and Louis was called upon to leave
+his wife Judith and his son Charles, and put himself under the
+guardianship of his elder sons. He refused; but, just when the
+conflict was about to commence, desertion took place in Louis'
+army; most of the prelates, laics, and men-at-arms who had
+accompanied him passed over to the camp of Lothair; and the "Field
+of Red" became the "Field of Falsehood" (<i>le Champ du
+Mensonge</i>). Louis, left almost alone, ordered his attendants to
+withdraw, "being unwilling," he said, "that any one of them should
+lose life or limb on his account," and surrendered to his sons.
+They received him with great demonstrations of respect, but without
+relinquishing the prosecution of their enterprise. Lothair hastily
+collected an assembly, which proclaimed him Emperor, with the
+addition of divers territories to the kingdoms of Aquitaine and
+Bavaria: and, three months afterward, another assembly, meeting at
+Compi&egrave;gne, declared the emperor Louis to have forfeited the
+crown, "for having, by his faults and incapacity, suffered to sink
+so sadly low the empire which had been raised to grandeur and
+brought into unity by Charlemagne and his predecessors." Louis
+submitted to this decision; himself read out aloud, in the Church
+of St. M&eacute;dard at Soissons, but not quite unresistingly, a
+confession, in eight articles, of his faults, and, laying his
+baldric upon the altar, stripped off his royal robe, and received
+from the hands of Ebbo, archbishop of Rheims, the gray vestment of
+a penitent.</p>
+<p>Lothair considered his father dethroned for good, and himself
+henceforth sole Emperor; but he was mistaken. For years longer the
+scenes which have just been described kept repeating themselves
+again and again; rivalries and secret plots began once more between
+the three victorious brothers and their partisans; popular feeling
+revived in favor of Louis; a large portion of the clergy shared it;
+several counts of Neustria and Burgundy appeared in arms, in the
+name of the deposed Emperor; and the seductive and able Judith came
+afresh upon the scene, and gained over to the cause of her husband
+and her son a multitude of friends. In 834, two assemblies, one
+meeting at St. Denis and the other at Thionville, annulled all the
+acts of the assembly of Compi&egrave;gne, and for the third time
+put Louis in possession of the imperial title and power. He
+displayed no violence in his use of it; but he was growing more and
+more irresolute and weak, when, in 838, the second of his
+rebellious sons, P&eacute;pin, king of Aquitaine, died suddenly.
+Louis, ever under the sway of Judith, speedily convoked at Worms,
+in 839, once more and for the last time, a general assembly,
+whereat, leaving his son Louis of Bavaria reduced to his kingdom in
+Eastern Europe, he divided the rest of his dominions into two
+nearly equal parts, separated by the course of the Meuse and the
+Rhone. Between these two parts he left the choice to Lothair, who
+took the eastern portion, promising at the same time to guarantee
+the western portion to his younger brother Charles. Louis the
+Germanic protested against this partition, and took up arms to
+resist it. His father, the Emperor, set himself in motion toward
+the Rhine, to reduce him to submission; but, on arriving close to
+Mayence, he caught a violent fever, and died on the 20th of June,
+840, at the castle Ingelheim, on a little island in the river. His
+last acts were a fresh proof of his goodness toward even his
+rebellious sons and of his solicitude for his last-born. He sent to
+Louis the Germanic his pardon, and to Lothair the golden crown and
+sword, at the same time bidding him fulfil his father's wishes on
+behalf of Charles and Judith.</p>
+<p>There is no telling whether, in the credulousness of his good
+nature, Louis had, at his dying hour, any great confidence in the
+appeal he made to his son Lothair, and in the impression which
+would be produced on his other son, Louis of Bavaria, by the pardon
+bestowed. The prayers of the dying are of little avail against
+violent passions and barbaric manners. Scarcely was Louis the
+Debonair dead, when Lothair was already conspiring against young
+Charles, and was in secret alliance, for his despoilment, with
+P&eacute;pin II, the late King of Aquitaine's son, who had taken up
+arms for the purpose of seizing his father's kingdom, in the
+possession of which his grandfather Louis had not been pleased to
+confirm him. Charles suddenly learned that his mother Judith was on
+the point of being besieged in Poitiers by the Aquitanians; and, in
+spite of the friendly protestations sent to him by Lothair, it was
+not long before he discovered the plot formed against him. He was
+not wanting in shrewdness or energy; and, having first provided for
+his mother's safety, he set about forming an alliance, in the cause
+of their common interests, with his other brother, Louis the
+Germanic, who was equally in danger from the ambition of Lothair.
+The historians of the period do not say what negotiator was
+employed by Charles on this distant and delicate mission; but
+several circumstances indicate that the empress Judith herself
+undertook it; that she went in quest of the King of Bavaria; and
+that it was she who, with her accustomed grace and address,
+determined him to make common cause with his youngest against their
+eldest brother. Divers incidents retarded for a whole year the
+outburst of this family plot, and of the war of which it was the
+precursor. The position of the young king Charles appeared for some
+time a very bad one; but "certain chieftains," says the historian
+Nithard, "faithful to his mother and to him, and having nothing
+more to lose than life or limb, chose rather to die gloriously than
+to betray their King." The arrival of Louis the Germanic with his
+troops helped to swell the forces and increase the confidence of
+Charles; and it was on the 21st of June, 841, exactly a year after
+the death of Louis the Debonair, that the two armies, that of
+Lothair and P&eacute;pin on the one side, and that of Charles the
+Bald and Louis the Germanic on the other, stood face to face in the
+neighborhood of the village of Fontenailles, six leagues from
+Auxerre, on the rivulet of Audries. Never, according to such
+evidence as is forthcoming, since the battle on the plains of
+Ch&acirc;lons against the Huns, and that of Poitiers against the
+Saracens, had so great masses of men been engaged. "There would be
+nothing untruthlike," says that scrupulous authority, M. Fauriel,
+"in putting the whole number of combatants at three hundred
+thousand; and there is nothing to show that either of the two
+armies was much less numerous than the other." However that may be,
+the leaders hesitated for four days to come to blows; and while
+they were hesitating, the old favorite, not only of Louis the
+Debonair, but also, according to several chroniclers, of the
+empress Judith, held himself aloof with his troops in the vicinity,
+having made equal promise of assistance to both sides, and waiting,
+to govern his decision, for the prospect afforded by the first
+conflict. The battle began on the 25th of June, at daybreak, and
+was at first in favor of Lothair; but the troops of Charles the
+Bald recovered the advantage which had been lost by those of Louis
+the Germanic, and the action was soon nothing but a terribly simple
+scene of carnage between enormous masses of men, charging hand to
+hand, again and again, with a front extending over a couple of
+leagues. Before midday the slaughter, the plunder, the spoliation
+of the dead&mdash;all was over; the victory of Charles and Louis
+was complete; the victors had retired to their camp, and there
+remained nothing on the field of battle but corpses in thick heaps
+or a long line, according as they had fallen in the disorder of
+flight or steadily fighting in their ranks.... "Accursed be this
+day!" cries Angilbert, one of Lothair's officers, in rough Latin
+verse; "be it unnumbered in the return of the year, but wiped out
+of all remembrance! Be it unlit by the light of the sun! Be it
+without either dawn or twilight! Accursed, also, be this night,
+this awful night in which fell the brave, the most expert in
+battle! Eye ne'er hath seen more fearful slaughter: in streams of
+blood fell Christian men; the linen vestments of the dead did
+whiten the champaign even as it is whitened by the birds of
+autumn!"</p>
+<p>In spite of this battle, which appeared a decisive one, Lothair
+made zealous efforts to continue the struggle; he scoured the
+countries wherein he hoped to find partisans; to the Saxons he
+promised the unrestricted re&euml;stablishment of their pagan
+worship, and several of the Saxon tribes responded to his appeal.
+Louis the Germanic and Charles the Bald, having information of
+these preliminaries, resolved to solemnly renew their alliance and,
+seven months after their victory at Fontenailles, in February, 842,
+they repaired both of them, each with his army, to Argentaria, on
+the right bank of the Rhine, between B&acirc;le and Strasburg, and
+there, at an open-air meeting, Louis first, addressing the
+chieftains about him in the German tongue, said: "Ye all know how
+often, since our father's death, Lothair hath attacked us, in order
+to destroy us, this my brother and me. Having never been able, as
+brothers and Christians, or in any just way, to obtain peace from
+him, we were constrained to appeal to the judgment of God. Lothair
+was beaten and retired, whither he could, with his following; for
+we, restrained by paternal affection and moved with compassion for
+Christian people, were unwilling to pursue them to extermination.
+Neither then nor aforetime did we demand aught else save that each
+of us should be maintained in his rights. But he, rebelling against
+the judgment of God, ceaseth not to attack us as enemies, this my
+brother and me; and he destroyeth our peoples with fire and pillage
+and the sword. That is the cause which hath united us afresh; and,
+as we trow that ye doubt the soundness of our alliance and our
+fraternal union, we have resolved to bind ourselves afresh by this
+oath in your presence, being led thereto by no prompting of wicked
+covetousness, but only that we may secure our common advantage in
+case that, by your aid, God should cause us to obtain peace. If,
+then, I violate&mdash;which God forbid&mdash;this oath that I am
+about to take to my brother, I hold you all quit of submission to
+me and of the faith ye have sworn to me."</p>
+<p>Charles repeated this speech, word for word, to his own troops,
+in the Romance language, in that idiom derived from a mixture of
+Latin and of the tongues of ancient Gaul, and spoken, thenceforth,
+with varieties of dialect and pronunciation, in nearly all parts of
+Frankish Gaul. After this address, Louis pronounced and Charles
+repeated after him, each in his own tongue, the oath couched in
+these terms: "For the love of God, for the Christian people and for
+our common weal, from this day forth and so long as God shall grant
+me power and knowledge, I will defend this my brother and will be
+an aid to him in everything, as one ought to defend his brother,
+provided that he do likewise unto me; and I will never make with
+Lothair any covenant which may be, to my knowledge, to the damage
+of this my brother."</p>
+<p>When the two brothers had thus sworn, the two armies, officers
+and men, took, in their turn, a similar oath, going bail, in a
+mass, for the engagements of their kings. Then they took up their
+quarters, all of them, for some time, between Worms and Mayence,
+and followed up their political proceeding with military
+f&ecirc;tes, precursors of the knightly tournaments of the Middle
+Ages. "A place of meeting was fixed," says the contemporary
+historian Nithard, "at a spot suitable for this kind of exercises.
+Here were drawn up, on one side, a certain number of combatants,
+Saxons, Vasconians, Austrasians, or Britons; there were ranged, on
+the opposite side, an equal number of warriors, and the two
+divisions advanced, each against the other, as if to attack. One of
+them, with their bucklers at their backs, took to flight as if to
+seek, in the main body, shelter against those who were pursuing
+them; then suddenly, facing about, they dashed out in pursuit of
+those before whom they had just been flying. This sport lasted
+until the two kings, appearing with all the youth of their suites,
+rode up at a gallop, brandishing their spears and chasing first one
+lot and then the other. It was a fine sight to see so much temper
+among so many valiant folk, for, great as was the number and the
+mixture of different nationalities, no one was insulted or
+maltreated, though the contrary is often the case among men in
+small numbers and known one to another."</p>
+<p>After four or five months of tentative measures or of incidents
+which taught both parties that they could not, either of them, hope
+to completely destroy their opponents, the two allied brothers
+received at Verdun, whither they had repaired to concert their next
+movement, a messenger from Lothair, with peaceful proposals which
+they were unwilling to reject. The principal was that, with the
+exception of Italy, Aquitaine, and Bavaria, to be secured without
+dispute to their then possessors, the Frankish empire should be
+divided into three portions, that the arbiters elected to preside
+over the partition should swear to make it as equal as possible,
+and that Lothair should have his choice, with the title of emperor.
+About mid-June, 842, the three brothers met on an island of the
+Sa&ocirc;ne, near Ch&acirc;lons, where they began to discuss the
+questions which divided them; but it was not till more than a year
+after, in August, 843, that assembling, all three of them, with
+their umpires, at Verdun, they at last came to an agreement about
+the partition of the Frankish empire, save the three countries
+which it had been beforehand agreed to accept. Louis kept all the
+provinces of Germany of which he was already in possession, and
+received besides, on the left bank of the Rhine, the towns of
+Mayence, Worms, and Spire, with the territory appertaining to them.
+Lothair, for his part, had the eastern belt of Gaul, bounded on one
+side by the Rhine and the Alps, on the other by the courses of the
+Meuse, the Sa&ocirc;ne, and the Rhone, starting from the confluence
+of the two latter rivers, and, further, the country comprised
+between the Meuse and the Scheldt, together with certain countships
+lying to the west of that river. To Charles fell all the rest of
+Gaul: Vasconia or Biscaye, Septimania, the marshes of Spain, beyond
+the Pyrenees; and the other countries of Southern Gaul which had
+enjoyed hitherto, under the title of the kingdom of Aquitaine, a
+special government subordinated to the general government of the
+empire, but distinct from it, lost this last remnant of their
+Gallo-Roman nationality, and became integral portions of Frankish
+Gaul, which fell by partition to Charles the Bald, and formed one
+and the same kingdom under one and the same king.</p>
+<p>Thus fell through and disappeared, in 843, by virtue of the
+treaty of Verdun, the second of Charlemagne's grand designs, the
+resuscitation of the Roman Empire by means of the Frankish and
+Christian masters of Gaul. The name of <i>emperor</i> still
+retained a certain value in the minds of the people, and still
+remained an object of ambition to princes; but the empire was
+completely abolished, and, in its stead, sprang up three kingdoms,
+independent one of another, without any necessary connection or
+relation. One of the three was thenceforth France.</p>
+<p>In this great event are comprehended two facts: the
+disappearance of the empire and the formation of the three kingdoms
+which took its place. The first is easily explained. The
+resuscitation of the Roman Empire had been a dream of ambition and
+ignorance on the part of a great man, but a barbarian. Political
+unity and central, absolute power had been the essential
+characteristics of that empire. They became introduced and
+established, through a long succession of ages, on the ruins of the
+splendid Roman Republic destroyed by its own dissensions, under
+favor of the still great influence of the old Roman senate though
+fallen from its high estate, and beneath the guardianship of the
+Roman legions and Imperial praetorians. Not one of these
+conditions, not one of these forces, was to be met with in the
+Roman world reigned over by Charlemagne. The nation of the Franks
+and Charlemagne himself were but of yesterday; the new Emperor had
+neither ancient senate to hedge at the same time that it obeyed
+him, nor old bodies of troops to support him. Political unity and
+absolute power were repugnant alike to the intellectual and the
+social condition, to the national manners and personal sentiments
+of the victorious barbarians. The necessity of placing their
+conquests beyond the reach of a new swarm of barbarians and the
+personal ascendency of Charlemagne were the only things which gave
+his government a momentary gleam of success in the way of unity and
+of factitious despotism under the name of empire. In 814
+Charlemagne had made territorial security an accomplished fact; but
+the personal power he had exercised disappeared with him. The new
+Gallo-Frankish community recovered, under the mighty but gradual
+influence of Christianity, its proper and natural course, producing
+disruption into different local communities and bold struggles for
+individual liberties, either one with another, or against whosoever
+tried to become their master.</p>
+<p>As for the second fact, the formation of the three kingdoms
+which were the issue of the treaty of Verdun, various explanations
+have been given of it. This distribution of certain peoples of
+Western Europe into three distinct and independent groups,
+Italians, Germans, and French, has been attributed at one time to a
+diversity of histories and manners; at another to geographical
+causes and to what is called the rule of natural frontiers; and
+oftener still to a spirit of nationality and to differences of
+language. Let none of these causes be gainsaid; they all exercised
+some sort of influence, but they are all incomplete in themselves
+and far too redolent of theoretical system. It is true that
+Germany, France, and Italy began at that time to emerge from the
+chaos into which they had been plunged by barbaric invasion and the
+conquests of Charlemagne, and to form themselves into quite
+distinct nations; but there were, in each of the kingdoms of
+Lothair, of Louis the Germanic, and of Charles the Bald,
+populations widely differing in race, language, manners, and
+geographical affinity, and it required many great events and the
+lapse of many centuries to bring about the degree of national unity
+they now possess. To say nothing touching the agency of individual
+and independent forces, which is always considerable, although so
+many men of intellect ignore it in the present day, what would have
+happened, had any one of the three new kings, Lothair, or Louis the
+Germanic, or Charles the Bald, been a second Charlemagne, as
+Charlemagne had been a second Charles Martel? Who can say that, in
+such a case, the three kingdoms would have taken the form they took
+in 843?</p>
+<p>Happily or unhappily, it was not so; none of Charlemagne's
+successors was capable of exercising on the events of his time, by
+virtue of his brain and his own will, any notable influence.</p>
+<p>Attempts at foreign invasion of France were renewed very often
+and in many parts of Gallo-Frankish territory during the whole
+duration of the Carlovingian dynasty, and, even though they failed,
+they caused the population of the kingdom to suffer from cruel
+ravages. Charlemagne, even after his successes against the
+different barbaric invaders, had foreseen the evils which would be
+inflicted on France by the most formidable and most determined of
+them, the Northmen, coming by sea and landing on the coast. The
+most closely contemporaneous and most given to detail of his
+chroniclers, the monk of St. Gall, tells in prolix and pompous but
+evidently heartfelt and sincere terms the tale of the great
+Emperor's farsightedness.</p>
+<p>"Charles, who was ever astir," says he, "arrived by mere hap and
+unexpectedly in a certain town of Narbonnese Gaul. While he was at
+dinner and was as yet unrecognized of any, some corsairs of the
+Northmen came to ply their piracies in the very port. When their
+vessels were descried, they were supposed to be Jewish traders
+according to some, African according to others, and British in the
+opinion of others; but the gifted monarch, perceiving by the build
+and lightness of the craft, that they bare not merchandise but
+foes, said to his own folk, 'These vessels be not laden with
+merchandise, but manned with cruel foes.' At these words all the
+Franks, in rivalry one with another, run to their ships, but
+uselessly; for the Northmen, indeed, hearing that yonder was he
+whom it was still their wont to call Charles the 'Hammer,'[<a href=
+"#note-22">22</a>] feared lest all their fleet should be taken or
+destroyed in the port, and they avoided, by a flight of
+inconceivable rapidity, not only the glaives, but even the eyes of
+those who were pursuing them.</p>
+<p>"Pious Charles, however, a prey to well-grounded fear, rose up
+from table, stationed himself at a window looking eastward, and
+there remained a long while, and his eyes were filled with tears.
+As none durst question him, this warlike prince explained to the
+grandees who were about his person the cause of his movement and of
+his tears: 'Know ye, my lieges, wherefore I weep so bitterly? Of a
+surety I fear not lest these fellows should succeed in injuring me
+by their miserable piracies; but it grieveth me deeply that, while
+I live, they should have been nigh to touching at this shore, and I
+am a prey to violent sorrow when I foresee what evils they will
+heap upon my descendants and their people.'"</p>
+<p><a name="note-22"><!-- Note Anchor 22 --></a>[Footnote 22: After
+his grandfather, Charles Martel.]</p>
+<p>The forecast and the dejection of Charles were not unreasonable.
+It will be found that there is special mention made, in the
+chronicles of the ninth and tenth centuries, of forty-seven
+incursions into France of Norwegian, Danish, Swedish, and Irish
+pirates, all comprised under the name of Northmen; and doubtless
+many other incursions of less gravity have left no trace in
+history. "The Northmen," says Fauriel, "descended from the north to
+the south by a sort of natural gradation or ladder. The Scheldt was
+the first river by the mouth of which they penetrated inland; the
+Seine was the second; the Loire the third. The advance was
+threatening for the countries traversed by the Garonne; and it was
+in 844 that vessels freighted with Northmen for the first time
+ascended this last river to a considerable distance inland, and
+there took immense booty. The following year they pillaged and
+burnt Saintes. In 846 they got as far as Limoges. The inhabitants,
+finding themselves unable to make head against the dauntless
+pirates, abandoned their hearths, together with all they had not
+time to carry away. Encouraged by these successes the Northmen
+reappeared next year upon the coasts and in the rivers of
+Aquitaine, and they attempted to take Bordeaux, whence they were
+valorously repulsed by the inhabitants; but in 848, having once
+more laid siege to that city, they were admitted into it at night
+by the Jews, who were there in great force; the city was given up
+to plunder and conflagration; a portion of the people was scattered
+abroad, and the rest put to the sword."</p>
+<p>The monasteries and churches, wherein they hoped to find
+treasures, were the favorite object of the Northmen's enterprises;
+in particular, they plundered, at the gates of Paris, the abbey of
+St. Germain des Pr&eacute;s and that of St. Denis, whence they
+carried off the abbot, who could not purchase his freedom save by a
+heavy ransom. They penetrated more than once into Paris itself, and
+subjected many of its quarters to contributions or pillage. The
+populations grew into the habit of suffering and fleeing; and the
+local lords, and even the kings, made arrangement sometimes with
+the pirates either for saving the royal domains from the ravages,
+or for having their own share therein. In 850 P&eacute;pin, King of
+Aquitaine, and brother of Charles the Bald, came to an
+understanding with the Northmen who had ascended the Garonne and
+were threatening Toulouse. "They arrived under his guidance," says
+Fauriel, "they laid siege to it, took it and plundered it, not
+halfwise, not hastily, as folks who feared to be surprised, but
+leisurely, with all security, by virtue of a treaty of alliance
+with one of the kings of the country. Throughout Aquitaine there
+was but one cry of indignation against P&eacute;pin, and the
+popularity of Charles was increased in proportion to all the horror
+inspired by the ineffable misdeed of his adversary. Charles the
+Bald himself, if he did not ally himself, as P&eacute;pin did, with
+the invaders, took scarce any interest in the fate of the
+populations and scarcely more trouble to protect them, for Hincmar,
+archbishop of Rheims, wrote to him in 859: 'Many folks say that you
+are incessantly repeating that it is not for you to mix yourself up
+with these depredations and robberies, and that everyone has but to
+defend himself as best he may.'"</p>
+<p>In the middle and during the last half of the ninth century, a
+chief of the Northmen, named Hastenc or Hastings, appeared several
+times over on the coasts and in the rivers of France, with numerous
+vessels and a following. He had also with him, say the chronicles,
+a young Norwegian or Danish prince, Bioern, called "Ironsides,"
+whom he had educated, and who had preferred sharing the fortunes of
+his governor to living quietly with the King, his father. After
+several expeditions into Western France, Hastings became the theme
+of terrible and very probably fabulous stories. He extended his
+cruises, they say, to the Mediterranean, and, having arrived at the
+coasts of Tuscany, within sight of a city which in his ignorance he
+took for Rome, he resolved to pillage it; but, not feeling strong
+enough to attack it by assault, he sent to the bishop to say he was
+very ill, felt a wish to become a Christian, and begged to be
+baptized. Some days afterward his comrades spread a report that he
+was dead, and claimed for him the honors of a solemn burial. The
+bishop consented; the coffin of Hastings was carried into the
+church, attended by a large number of his followers, without
+visible weapons; but, in the middle of the ceremony, Hastings
+suddenly leaped up, sword in hand, from his coffin; his followers
+displayed the weapons they had concealed, closed the doors, slew
+the priests, pillaged the ecclesiastical treasures, and
+re&euml;mbarked before the very eyes of the stupefied population,
+to go and resume, on the coasts of France, their incursions and
+their ravages.</p>
+<p>Whether they were true or false, these rumors of bold artifices
+and distant expeditions on the part of Hastings aggravated the
+dismay inspired by his appearance. He penetrated into the interior
+of the country, took possession of Chartres, and appeared before
+Paris, where Charles the Bald, intrenched at St. Denis, was
+deliberating with his prelates and barons as to how he might resist
+the Northmen or treat with them. The chronicle says that the barons
+advised resistance, but that the King preferred negotiation, and
+sent the abbot of St. Denis, "the which was an exceeding wise man,"
+to Hastings, who, "after long parley and by reason of large gifts
+and promises," consented to stop his cruisings, to become a
+Christian, and to settle in the countship of Chartres, "which the
+King gave him as an hereditary possession, with all its
+appurtenances." According to other accounts, it was only some years
+later, under the young king Louis III, grandson of Charles the
+Bald, that Hastings was induced, either by reverses or by payment
+of money, to cease from his piracies and accept in recompense the
+countship of Chartres. Whatever may have been the date, he was, it
+is believed, the first chieftain of the Northmen who renounced a
+life of adventure and plunder, to become, in France, a great landed
+proprietor and a count of the King's.</p>
+<p>A greater chieftain of the Northmen than Hastings was soon to
+follow his example, and found Normandy in France; but before Rolf,
+that is, Rollo, came and gave the name of his race to a French
+province, the piratical Northmen were again to attempt a greater
+blow against France and to suffer a great reverse.</p>
+<p>In November, 885, under the reign of Charles the Fat, after
+having, for more than forty years, irregularly ravaged France, they
+resolved to unite their forces in order at length to obtain
+possession of Paris, whose outskirts they had so often pillaged
+without having been able to enter the heart of the place. Two
+bodies of troops were set in motion: one, under the command of
+Rollo, who was already famous among his comrades, marched on Rouen;
+the other went right up the course of the Seine, under the orders
+of Siegfried, whom the Northmen called their king. Rollo took
+Rouen, and pushed on at once for Paris. Duke Renaud, general of the
+Gallo-Frankish troops, went to encounter him on the banks of the
+Eure, and sent to him, to sound his intentions, Hastings, the newly
+made count of Chartres. "Valiant warriors," said Hastings to Rollo,
+"whence come ye? What seek ye here? What is the name of your lord
+and master? Tell us this; for we be sent unto you by the King of
+the Franks." "We be Danes," answered Rollo, "and all be equally
+masters among us. We be come to drive out the inhabitants of this
+land, and to subject it as our own country. But who art thou, thou
+who speakest so glibly?" "Ye have sometime heard tell of one
+Hastings, who, issuing forth from among you, came hither with much
+shipping and made desert a great part of the kingdom of the
+Franks?" "Yes," said Rollo, "we have heard tell of him; Hastings
+began well and ended ill." "Will ye yield you to King Charles?"
+asked Hastings. "We yield," was the answer, "to none; all that we
+shall take by our arms we will keep as our right. Go and tell this,
+if thou wilt, to the King, whose envoy thou boastest to be."</p>
+<p>Hastings returned to the Gallo-Frankish army, and Rollo prepared
+to march on Paris. Hastings had gone back somewhat troubled in
+mind. Now there was among the Franks one Count Tetbold (Thibault),
+who greatly coveted the countship of Chartres, and he said to
+Hastings: "Why slumberest thou softly? Knowest thou not that King
+Charles doth purpose thy death by cause of all the Christian blood
+that thou didst aforetime unjustly shed? Bethink thee of all the
+evil thou hast done him, by reason whereof he purposeth to drive
+thee from his land. Take heed to thyself that thou be not smitten
+unawares." Hastings, dismayed, at once sold to Tetbold the town of
+Chartres, and, removing all that belonged to him, departed to go
+and resume, for all that appears, his old course of life.</p>
+<p>On the 25th of November, 885, all the forces of the Northmen
+formed a junction before Paris; seven hundred huge barks covered
+two leagues of the Seine, bringing, it is said, more than thirty
+thousand men. The chieftains were astonished at sight of the new
+fortifications of the city, a double wall of circumvallation, the
+bridges crowned with towers, and in the environs the ramparts of
+the abbeys of St. Denis and St. Germain solidly rebuilt. Siegfried
+hesitated to attack a town so well defended. He demanded to enter
+alone and have an interview with the bishop, Gozlin. "Take pity on
+thyself and thy flock," said he to him; "let us pass through the
+city; we will in no wise touch the town; we will do our best to
+preserve, for thee and Count Eudes, all your possessions." "This
+city," replied the bishop, "hath been confided unto us by the
+emperor Charles, king and ruler, under God, of the powers of the
+earth. He hath confided it unto us, not that it should cause the
+ruin but the salvation of the kingdom. If peradventure these walls
+had been confided to thy keeping as they have been to mine, wouldst
+thou do as thou biddest me?"</p>
+<p>"If ever I do so," answered Siegfried, "may my head be condemned
+to fall by the sword and serve as food to the dogs! But if thou
+yield not to our prayers, so soon as the sun shall commence his
+course our armies will launch upon thee their poisoned arrows; and
+when the sun shall end his course, they will give thee over to all
+the horrors of famine; and this will they do from year to
+year."</p>
+<p>The bishop, however, persisted, without further discussion;
+being as certain of Count Eudes as he was of himself. Eudes, who
+was young and but recently made Count of Paris, was the eldest son
+of Robert the Strong, Count of Anjou, of the same line as
+Charlemagne, and but lately slain in battle against the Northmen.
+Paris had for defenders two heroes, one of the Church and the other
+of the empire: the faith of the Christian and the fealty of the
+vassal; the conscientiousness of the priest and the honor of the
+warrior.</p>
+<p>The siege lasted thirteen months, whiles pushed vigorously
+forward with eight several assaults, whiles maintained by close
+investment, and with all the alternations of success and reverse,
+all the intermixture of brilliant daring and obscure sufferings
+that can occur when the assailants are determined and the defenders
+devoted. Not only a contemporary but an eye-witness, Abbo, a monk
+of St. Germain des Pr&egrave;s, has recounted the details in a long
+poem, wherein the writer, devoid of talent, adds nothing to the
+simple representation of events; it is history itself which gives
+to Abbo's poem a high degree of interest. We do not possess, in
+reference to these continual struggles of the Northmen with the
+Gallo-Frankish populations, any other document which is equally
+precise and complete, or which could make us so well acquainted
+with all the incidents, all the phases of this irregular warfare
+between two peoples, one without a government, the other without a
+country. The bishop, Gozlin, died during the siege. Count Eudes
+quitted Paris for a time to go and beg aid of the Emperor; but the
+Parisians soon saw him reappear on the heights of Montmartre with
+three battalions of troops, and he re&euml;ntered the town,
+spurring on his horse and striking right and left with his
+battle-axe through the ranks of the dumfounded besiegers. The
+struggle was prolonged throughout the summer; and when, in
+November, 886, Charles the Fat at last appeared before Paris, "with
+a large army of all nations," it was to purchase the retreat of the
+Northmen at the cost of a heavy ransom, and by allowing them to go
+and winter in Burgundy, "whereof the inhabitants obeyed not the
+Emperor."</p>
+<p>Some months afterward, in 887, Charles the Fat was deposed, at a
+diet held on the banks of the Rhine, by the grandees of Germanic
+France; and Arnulf, a natural son of Carloman, the brother of Louis
+III, was proclaimed emperor in his stead. At the same time Count
+Eudes, the gallant defender of Paris, was elected King at
+Compi&egrave;gne, and crowned by the archbishop of Sens. Guy, Duke
+of Spoleto, descended from Charlemagne in the female line, hastened
+to France and was declared king at Langres by the bishop of that
+town, but returned with precipitation to Italy, seeing no chance of
+maintaining himself in his French kingship. Elsewhere Boso, Duke of
+Arles, became King of Provence, and the Burgundian Count Rudolph
+had himself crowned at St. Maurice, in the Valais, King of
+transjuran Burgundy. There was still in France a legitimate
+Carlovingian, a son of Louis the Stutterer, who was hereafter to
+become Charles the Simple; but being only a child, he had been
+rejected or completely forgotten, and, in the interval that was to
+elapse ere his time should arrive, kings were being made in all
+directions.</p>
+<p>In the midst of this confusion the Northmen, though they kept at
+a distance from Paris, pursued in Western France their cruising and
+plundering. In Rollo they had a chieftain far superior to his
+vagabond predecessors. Though he still led the same life that they
+had, he displayed therein other faculties, other inclinations,
+other views. In his youth he had made an expedition to England, and
+had there contracted a real friendship with the wise king Alfred
+the Great. During a campaign in Friesland he had taken prisoner
+Rainier, Count of Hainault; and Alberade, Countess of Brabant, made
+a request to Rollo for her husband's release, offering in return to
+set free twelve captains of the Northmen, her prisoners, and to
+give up all the gold she possessed. Rollo took only half the gold,
+and restored to the countess her husband. When, in 885, he became
+master of Rouen, instead of devastating the city after the fashion
+of his kind, he respected the buildings, had the walls repaired,
+and humored the inhabitants. In spite of his violent and
+extortionate practices where he met with obstinate resistance,
+there were to be discerned in him symptoms of more noble sentiments
+and of an instinctive leaning toward order, civilization, and
+government. After the deposition of Charles the Fat and during the
+reign of Eudes, a lively struggle was maintained between the
+Frankish King and the chieftain of the Northmen, who had neither of
+them forgotten their early encounters. They strove, one against the
+other, with varied fortunes; Eudes succeeded in beating the
+Northmen at Montfaucon, but was beaten in Vermandois by another
+band, commanded, it is said, by the veteran Hastings, sometime
+Count of Chartres.</p>
+<p>Rollo, too, had his share at one time of success, at another of
+reverse; but he made himself master of several important towns,
+showed a disposition to treat the quiet populations gently, and
+made a fresh trip to England, during which he renewed friendly
+relations with her King, Athelstan, the successor of Alfred the
+Great. He thus became, from day to day, more reputable as well as
+more formidable in France, insomuch that Eudes himself was obliged
+to have recourse, in dealing with him, to negotiations and
+presents. When, in 898, Eudes was dead, and Charles the Simple, at
+hardly nineteen years of age, had been recognized sole King of
+France, the ascendency of Rollo became such that the necessity of
+treating with him was clear. In 911 Charles, by the advice of his
+councillors and, among them, of Robert, brother of the late king
+Eudes, who had himself become Count of Paris and Duke of France,
+sent to the chieftain of the Northmen Franco, Archbishop of Rouen,
+with orders to offer him the cession of a considerable portion of
+Neustria and the hand of his young daughter Gis&egrave;le, on
+condition that he became a Christian and acknowledged himself the
+King's vassal. Rollo, by the advice of his comrades, received these
+overtures with a good grace and agreed to a truce for three months,
+during which they might treat about peace. On the day fixed
+Charles, accompanied by Duke Robert, and Rollo, surrounded by his
+warriors, repaired to St. Clair-sur-Epte, on the opposite banks of
+the river, and exchanged numerous messages. Charles offered Rollo
+Flanders, which the Northman refused, considering it too swampy; as
+to the maritime portion of Neustria he would not be contented with
+it; it was, he said, covered with forests, and had become quite a
+stranger to the ploughshare by reason of the Northmen's incessant
+incursions. He demanded the addition of territories taken from
+Brittany, and that the princes of that province, B&eacute;renger
+and Alan, lords, respectively, of Redon and Dol, should take the
+oath of fidelity to him. When matters had been arranged on this
+basis, "the bishops told Rollo that he who received such a gift as
+the duchy of Normandy was bound to kiss the King's foot. 'Never,'
+quoth Rollo, 'will I bend the knee before the knees of any, and I
+will kiss the foot of none.' At the solicitation of the Franks he
+then ordered one of his warriors to kiss the King's foot. The
+Northman, remaining bolt upright, took hold of the King's foot,
+raised it to his mouth, and so made the King fall backward, which
+caused great bursts of laughter and much disturbance among the
+throng. Then the King and all the grandees who were about him,
+prelates, abbots, dukes, and counts, swore, in the name of the
+Catholic faith, that they would protect the patrician Rollo in his
+life, his members, and his folk, and would guarantee to him the
+possession of the aforesaid land, to him and his descendants
+forever; after which the King, well satisfied, returned to his
+domains; and Rollo departed with Duke Robert for the town of
+Rouen."</p>
+<p>The dignity of Charles the Simple had no reason to be well
+satisfied; but the great political question which, a century
+before, caused Charlemagne such lively anxiety was solved; the most
+dangerous, the most incessantly renewed of all foreign invasions,
+those of the Northmen, ceased to threaten France. The vagabond
+pirates had a country to cultivate and defend; the Northmen were
+becoming French.</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_4"><!-- RULE4 4 --></a>
+<h2>CAREER OF ALFRED THE GREAT</h2>
+<center>A.D. 871-901</center>
+<br>
+<center>T. HUGHES</center>
+<center>J.R. GREEN</center>
+<p class="intro">Alfred the Great was the grandson of Egbert, King
+of the West Saxons, who during a reign of thirty-seven years
+consolidated in the Saxon heptarchy the seven Teutonic kingdoms
+into which Anglia or England had been divided, since the expulsion
+of the Britons by the Saxons about 585. In the latter part of
+Egbert's reign the Danish Northmen appeared in the estuaries and
+rivers of England, sacking and burning the towns along their banks.
+Ethelwulf who had been made King of Kent in 828, and succeeded his
+father Egbert as King of Anglia in 837, was early occupied in
+resisting and repelling attacks along his coasts, and by several
+successful pitched battles with the Danish invaders obtained
+comparative freedom from their visits for eight years. Ethelwulf
+had married Osburga, the daughter of Oslac his cup-bearer, and had
+a daughter and five sons, of whom Alfred, the youngest, was born in
+849. Part of Alfred's childhood was spent in Rome. At
+Compi&egrave;gne and Verberie among his playmates were Charles, the
+boy king of Aquitaine, and Judith, children of the French king
+Charles the Bald. Judith at fourteen years of age became
+Ethelwulf's second wife, and when the old King died two years
+later, to the amazement and scandal of the nation married her
+stepson Ethelbald.</p>
+<p class="intro">According to Ethelwulf's will, Ethelbald became
+King of Wessex, Ethelbert, the second son, King of Kent, while
+Ethelred and Alfred were to be in the line of succession to
+Ethelbald. Ethelbald died in 860, and Judith returned to France,
+subsequently marrying Baldwin, Count of Flanders. Ethelbert as
+successor joined the kingdoms of Wessex and Kent. Alfred lived at
+the court of Ethelbert, and became noted for the intelligence and
+studious activities which were to make his future reign the
+conspicuous epoch in English history, so brilliantly commemorated a
+thousand years after his death in 901, in the millenary celebrated
+in Winchester and its neighborhood in 1901.</p>
+<p class="intro">Ethelbert died in 866 and was succeeded by
+Ethelred. In 868 Alfred married Elswitha, the daughter of Ethelred
+Mucil of Mercia. Meanwhile the Danes had resumed their predatory
+excursions, and in the winter of 870-871 Ethelred accompanied by
+Alfred attacked them at Reading, but after an initial victory was
+repulsed. Four days later, Ethelred and Alfred with their forces
+were attacked on Ashdown near White Horse Hill; after a heavy
+slaughter the Danes were out to flight. The Danes, however,
+reinforced by Guthrum with new troops from over the sea, within a
+fortnight resumed offensive operations, and at Merton, two months
+later, Ethelred was mortally wounded. He died almost immediately
+after the battle, and "at the age of twenty-three Alfred ascended
+the throne of his fathers, which was tottering, as it seemed, to
+its fall."</p>
+<center>THOMAS HUGHES</center>
+<p>The throne of the West Saxons was not an inheritance to be
+desired in the year 871, when Alfred succeeded his gallant brother.
+It descended on him without comment or ceremony, as a matter of
+course. There was not even an assembly of the witan to declare the
+succession as in ordinary times. With Guthrum and Hinguar in their
+intrenched camp at the confluence of the Thames and Kennet, and
+fresh bands of marauders sailing up the former river, and
+constantly swelling the ranks of the pagan army during these summer
+months, there was neither time nor heart among the wise men of the
+West Saxons for strict adherence to the letter of the constitution,
+however venerable. The succession had already been settled by the
+Great Council, when they formally accepted the provisions of
+Ethelwulf's will, that his three sons should succeed, to the
+exclusion of the children of any one of them.</p>
+<p>The idea of strict hereditary succession has taken so strong a
+hold of us English in later times that it is necessary constantly
+to insist that our old English kingship was elective. Alfred's
+title was based on election; and so little was the idea of
+usurpation, or of any wrong done to the two infant sons of
+Ethelred, connected with his accession, that even the lineal
+descendant of one of those sons, in his chronicle of that eventful
+year, does not pause to notice the fact that Ethelred left
+children. He is writing to his "beloved cousin Matilda," to
+instruct her in the things which he had received from ancient
+traditions, "of the history of our race down to these two kings
+from whom we have our origin." "The fourth son of Ethelwulf," he
+writes, "was Ethelred, who, after the death of Ethelbert, succeeded
+to the kingdom, and was also my grandfather's grandfather. The
+fifth was Alfred, who succeeded after all the others to the whole
+sovereignty, and was your grandfather's grandfather." And so passes
+on to the next facts, without a word as to the claims of his own
+lineal ancestor, though he had paused in his narrative at this
+point for the special purpose of introducing a little family
+episode.</p>
+<p>When Alfred had buried his brother in the cloisters of Wimborne
+Minster, and had time to look out from his Dorsetshire
+resting-place, and take stock of the immediate prospects and work
+which lay before him, we can well believe that those historians are
+right who have told us that for the moment he lost heart and hope,
+and suffered himself to doubt whether God would by his hand deliver
+the afflicted nation from its terrible straits. In the eight
+pitched battles which we find by the <i>Saxon Chronicle</i> (Asser
+giving seven only) had already been fought with the pagan army, the
+flower of the youth of these parts of the West Saxon kingdom must
+have fallen. The other Teutonic kingdoms of the island, of which he
+was overlord, and so bound to defend, had ceased to exist except in
+name, or lay utterly powerless, like Mercia, awaiting their doom.
+Kent, Sussex, and Surrey, which were now an integral part of the
+royal inheritance of his own family, were at the mercy of his
+enemies, and he without a hope of striking a blow for them. London
+had been pillaged, and was in ruins. Even in Wessex proper,
+Berkshire and Hampshire, with parts of Wilts and Dorset, had been
+crossed and recrossed by marauding bands, in whose track only
+smoking ruins and dead bodies were found. "The land was as the
+garden of Eden before them, and behind them a desolate wilderness."
+These bands were at this very moment on foot, striking into new
+districts farther to the southwest than they had yet reached. If
+the rich lands of Somersetshire and Devonshire, and the yet
+unplundered parts of Wilts and Dorset, are to be saved, it must be
+by prompt and decisive fighting, and it is time for a king to be in
+the field. But it is a month from his brother's death before Alfred
+can gather men enough round his standard to take the field openly.
+Even then, when he fights, it is "almost against his will," for his
+ranks are sadly thin, and the whole pagan army are before him, at
+Wilton near Salisbury. The action would seem to have been brought
+on by the impetuosity of Alfred's own men, whose spirit was still
+unbroken, and their confidence in their young King enthusiastic.
+There was a long and fierce fight as usual, during the earlier part
+of which the Saxons had the advantage, though greatly
+outnumbered.</p>
+<p>But again we get glimpses of the old trap of a feigned flight
+and ambuscade, into which they fell, and so again lose "possession
+of the place of death," the ultimate test of victory. "This year,"
+says the <i>Saxon Chronicle</i>, "nine general battles were fought
+against the army in the kingdom south of the Thames; besides which
+Alfred, the king's brother, and single aldermen and king's thanes,
+oftentimes made attacks on them, which were not counted; and within
+the year one king and nine jarls [earls] were slain." Wilton was
+the last of these general actions, and not long afterward, probably
+in the autumn, Alfred made peace with the pagans, on condition that
+they should quit Wessex at once.</p>
+<p>They were probably allowed to carry off whatever spoils they may
+have been able to accumulate in their Reading camp, but I can find
+no authority for believing that Alfred fell into the fatal and
+humiliating mistake of either paying them anything or giving
+hostages or promising tribute. This young King, who, as crown
+prince, led the West Saxons up the slopes at Ashdown, when Bagsac,
+the two Sidrocs, and the rest were killed, and who has very much
+their own way of fighting&mdash;going into the clash of arms "when
+the hard steel rings upon the high helmets," and "the beasts of
+prey have ample spoil," like a veritable child of Odin&mdash;is
+clearly one whom it is best to let alone, at any rate so long as
+easy plunder and rich lands are to be found elsewhere, without such
+poison-mad fighting for every herd of cattle and rood of ground.
+Indeed, I think the careful reader may trace from the date of
+Ashdown a decided unwillingness on the part of the Danes to meet
+Alfred, except when they could catch him at disastrous odds. They
+succeeded, indeed, for a time in overrunning almost the whole of
+his kingdom, in driving him an exile for a few wretched weeks to
+the shelter of his own forests; but whenever he was once fairly in
+the field they preferred taking refuge in strong places, and
+offering treaties and hostages to the actual arbitrament of
+battle.</p>
+<p>So the pagan army quitted Reading, and wintered in 872 in the
+neighborhood of London, at which place they received proposals from
+Buhred, King of the Mercians, Alfred's brother-in-law, and for a
+money payment pass him and his people contemptuously by for the
+time, making some kind of treaty of peace with them, and go
+northward into what has now become their own country. They winter
+in Lincolnshire, gathering fresh strength during 873 from the
+never-failing sources of supply across the narrow seas. Again,
+however, in this year of ominous rest they renew their sham peace
+with poor Buhred and his Mercians, who thus manage to tide it over
+another winter. In 874, however, their time has come. In the
+spring, the pagan army under the three kings, Guthrum, Oskytal, and
+Amund, burst into Mercia. In this one only of the English Teutonic
+kingdoms they find neither fighting nor suffering hero to cross
+their way, and leave behind for a thousand years the memory of a
+noble end, cut out there in some half-dozen lines of an old
+chronicler, but full of life and inspiration to this day for all
+Englishmen. The whole country is overrun, and reduced under pagan
+rule, without a blow struck, so far as we know, and within the
+year.</p>
+<p>Poor Buhred, titular King of the Mercians, who has made believe
+to rule this English kingdom these twenty-two years&mdash;who in
+his time has marched with his father-in-law Ethelwulf across North
+Wales&mdash;has beleaguered Nottingham with his brothers-in-law,
+Ethelred and Alfred, six years back, not without show of
+manhood&mdash;sees for his part nothing for it under such
+circumstances but to get away as swiftly as possible, as many
+so-called kings have done before him, and since. The West Saxon
+court is no place for him, quite other views of kingship prevailing
+in those parts. So the poor Buhred breaks away from his anchors,
+leaving his wife Ethelswitha even, in his haste, to take refuge
+with her brother; or is it that the heart of the daughter of the
+race of Cerdic swells against leaving the land which her sires had
+won, the people they had planted there, in the moment of sorest
+need? In any case Buhred drifts away alone across into France, and
+so toward the winter to Rome. There he dies at once&mdash;about
+Christmas-time, 874&mdash;of shame and sorrow probably, or of a
+broken heart as we say; at any rate having this kingly gift left in
+him, that he cannot live and look on the ruin of his people, as St.
+Edmund's brother Edwold is doing in these same years, "near a clear
+well at Carnelia, in Dorsetshire," doing the hermit business there
+on bread and water.</p>
+<p>The English in Rome bury away poor Buhred, with all the honors,
+in the Church of St. Mary's, to which the English schools rebuilt
+by his father-in-law Ethelwulf were attached. Ethelswitha visited,
+or started to visit, the tomb years later, we are told, in 888,
+when Mercia had risen to new life under her great brother's rule.
+Through these same months Guthrum, Oskytal, and the rest are
+wintering at Repton, after destroying there the cloister where the
+kingly line of Mercia lie; disturbing perhaps the bones of the
+great Offa, whom Charlemagne had to treat as an equal.</p>
+<p>Neither of the pagan kings is inclined at this time to settle in
+Mercia; so, casting about what to do with it, they light on "a
+certain foolish man," a king's thane, one Ceolwulf, and set him up
+as a sort of King Popinjay. From this Ceolwulf they take hostages
+for the payment of yearly tribute&mdash;to be wrung out of these
+poor Mercians on pain of dethronement&mdash;and for the surrender
+of the kingdom to them on whatever day they would have it back
+again. Foolish king's thanes, turned into King Popinjays by pagans,
+and left to play at government on such terms, are not pleasant or
+profitable objects in such times as these of one thousand years
+since&mdash;or indeed in any times, for the matter of that. So let
+us finish with Ceolwulf, just noting that a year or two later his
+pagan lords seem to have found much of the spoil of monasteries,
+and the pickings of earl and churl, of folkland and bookland,
+sticking to his fingers, instead of finding its way to their
+coffers. This was far from their meaning in setting him up in the
+high places of Mercia. So they strip him and thrust him out, and he
+dies in beggary.</p>
+<p>This, then, is the winter's work of the great pagan army at
+Repton, Alfred watching them and their work doubtless with keen
+eye&mdash;not without misgivings too at their numbers, swollen
+again to terrible proportions since they sailed away down Thames
+after Wilton fight. It will take years yet before the gaps in the
+fighting strength of Wessex, left by those nine pitched battles,
+and other smaller fights, will be filled by the crop of youths
+passing from childhood to manhood. An anxious thought, that, for a
+young king.</p>
+<p>The pagans, however, are not yet ready for another throw for
+Wessex; and so when Mercia is sucked dry for the present, and will
+no longer suitably maintain so great a host, they again sever.
+Halfdene, who would seem to have joined them recently, takes a
+large part of the army away with him northward. Settling his
+head-quarters by the river Tyne, he subdues all the land, and
+"ofttimes spoils the Picts and the Strathclyde Britons." Among
+other holy places in those parts, Halfdene visits the Isle of
+Lindisfarne, hoping perhaps in his pagan soul not only to commit
+ordinary sacrilege in the holy places there, which is every-day
+work for the like of him, but even to lay impious hands on, and to
+treat with indignity, the remains of that holy man St. Cuthbert,
+who has become, in due course, patron and guardian saint of
+hunters, and of that scourge of pagans, Alfred the West Saxon. If
+such were his thoughts, he is disappointed of his sacrilege; for
+Bishop Eardulf and Abbot Eadred&mdash;devout and strenuous
+persons&mdash;having timely warning of his approach, carry away the
+sainted body from Lindisfarne, and for nine years hide with it up
+and down the distracted northern counties, now here, now there,
+moving that sacred treasure from place to place until this
+bitterness is overpast, and holy persons and things, dead or
+living, are no longer in danger, and the bodies of saints may rest
+safely in fixed shrines; the pagan armies and disorderly persons of
+all kinds having been converted or suppressed in the mean time; for
+which good deed the royal Alfred&mdash;in whose calendar St.
+Cuthbert, patron of huntsmen, stands very high&mdash;will surely
+warmly befriend them hereafter, when he has settled his accounts
+with many persons and things. From the time of this incursion of
+Halfdene, Northumbria may be considered once more a settled state,
+but a Danish, not a Saxon one.</p>
+<p>The rest and greater part of the army, under Guthrum, Oskytal,
+and Amund, on leaving Repton, strike southeast, through what was
+"Landlord" Edmund's country, to Cambridge, where, in their usual
+heathen way, they pass the winter of 875.</p>
+<p>The downfall, exile, and death of his brother-in-law in 874 must
+have warned Alfred, if he had any need of warning, that no treaty
+could bind these foemen, and that he had nothing to look for but
+the same measure as soon as the pagan leaders felt themselves
+strong enough to mete it out to him and Wessex. In the following
+year we accordingly find him on the alert, and taking action in a
+new direction. These heathen pirates, he sees, fight his people at
+terrible advantage by reason of their command of the sea. This
+enables them to choose their own point of attack, not only along
+the sea-coast, but up every river as far as their light galleys can
+swim; to retreat unmolested, at their own time, whenever the
+fortune of war turns against them; to bring reinforcements of men
+and supplies to the scene of action without fear of hindrance. His
+Saxons have long since given up their seafaring habits. They have
+become before all things an agricultural people, drawing almost
+everything they need from their own soil. The few foreign tastes
+they have are supplied by foreign traders. However, if Wessex is to
+be made safe the sea-kings must be met on their own element; and
+so, with what expenditure of patience and money and encouraging
+words and example we may easily conjecture, the young King gets
+together a small fleet, and himself takes command of it. We have no
+clew to the point on the south coast where the admiral of twenty
+five fights his first naval action, but know only that in the
+summer of 875 he is cruising with his fleet, and meets seven tall
+ships of the enemy. One of these he captures, and the rest make off
+after a hard fight&mdash;no small encouragement to the sailor King,
+who has thus for another year saved Saxon homesteads from
+devastation by fire and sword.</p>
+<p>The second wave of invasion had now at last gathered weight and
+volume enough, and broke on the King and people of the West
+Saxons.</p>
+<p>The year 876 was still young when the whole pagan army, which
+had wintered at and about Cambridge, marched to their ships and put
+to sea. Guthrum was in command, with the other two kings, Anketel
+and Amund, as his lieutenants, under whom was a host as formidable
+as that which had marched across Mercia through forest and waste,
+and sailed up the Thames five years before to the assault of
+Reading. There must have been some few days of harassing suspense,
+for we cannot suppose that Alfred was not aware of the movements of
+his terrible foes. Probably his new fleet cruised off the south
+coast on the watch for them, and all up the Thames there were
+gloomy watchings and forebodings of a repetition of the evil days
+of 871. But the suspense was soon over. Passing by the Thames'
+mouth, and through Dover Straits, the pagan fleet sailed, and
+westward still past many tempting harbors and rivers' mouths, until
+they came off the coast of Dorsetshire. There they land at Wareham,
+and seize and fortify the neck of land between the rivers Frome and
+Piddle, on which stood, when they landed, a fortress of the West
+Saxons and a monastery of holy virgins. Fortress and monastery fell
+into the hands of the Danes, who set to work at once to throw up
+earthworks and otherwise fortify a space large enough to contain
+their army, and all spoil brought in by marauding bands from this
+hitherto unplundered country. This fortified camp was soon very
+strong, except on the western side, upon which Alfred shortly
+appeared with a body of horsemen and such other troops as could be
+gathered hastily together. The detachment of the pagans, who were
+already out pillaging the whole neighborhood, fell back apparently
+before him, concentrating on the Wareham camp. Before its outworks
+Alfred paused. He is too experienced a soldier now to risk at the
+outset of a campaign such a disaster as that which he and Ethelred
+had sustained in their attempt to assault the camp at Reading in
+871. He is just strong enough to keep the pagans within their
+lines, but has no margin to spare. So he sits down before the camp,
+but no battle is fought, neither he nor Guthrum caring to bring
+matters to that issue. Soon negotiations are commenced, and again a
+treaty is made.</p>
+<p>On this occasion Alfred would seem to have taken special pains
+to bind his faithless foe. All the holy relics which could be
+procured from holy places in the neighborhood were brought
+together, that he himself and his people might set the example of
+pledging themselves in the most solemn manner known to Christian
+men. Then a holy ring or bracelet, smeared with the blood of beasts
+sacrificed to Woden, was placed on a heathen altar. Upon this
+Guthrum and his fellow kings and earls swore on behalf of the army
+that they would quit the King's country and give hostages. Such an
+oath had never been sworn by Danish leader on English soil before.
+It was the most solemn known to them. They would seem also to have
+sworn on Alfred's relics, as an extra proof of their sincerity for
+this once, and their hostages "from among the most renowned men in
+the army" were duly handed over. Alfred now relaxed his watch, even
+if he did not withdraw with the main body of his army, leaving his
+horse to see that the terms of the treaty were performed, and to
+watch the Wareham camp until the departure of the pagan host. But
+neither oath on sacred ring, nor the risk to their hostages,
+weighed with Guthrum and his followers when any advantage was to be
+gained by treachery. They steal out of the camp by night, surprise
+and murder the Saxon horsemen, seize the horses, and strike across
+the country, the mounted men leading, to Exeter, but leaving a
+sufficient garrison to hold Wareham for the present. They surprise
+and get possession of the western capital, and there settle down to
+pass the winter. Rollo, fiercest of the vikings, is said by Asser
+to have passed the winter with them in their Exeter quarters on his
+way to Normandy; but whether the great robber himself were here or
+not, it is certain that the channel swarmed with pirate fleets, who
+could put in to Wareham or Exeter at their discretion, and find a
+safe stronghold in either place from which to carry fire and sword
+through the unhappy country.</p>
+<p>Alfred had vainly endeavored to overtake the march to Exeter in
+the autumn of 876, and, failing in the pursuit, had disbanded his
+own troops as usual, allowing them to go to their own homes until
+the spring. Before he could be afoot again in the spring of 877 the
+main body of the pagans at Exeter had made that city too strong for
+any attempt at assault, so the King and his troops could do no more
+than beleaguer it on the land side, as he had done at Wareham. But
+Guthrum could laugh at all efforts of his great antagonist, and
+wait in confidence the sure disbanding of the Saxon troops at
+harvest time, so long as his ships held the sea.</p>
+<p>Supplies were running short in Exeter, but the Exe was open and
+communications going on with Wareham. It is arranged that the camp
+there shall be broken up, and the whole garrison with their spoil
+shall join head-quarters. One hundred and twenty Danish war-galleys
+are freighted, and beat down channel, but are baffled by adverse
+winds for nearly a month. They and all their supplies may be looked
+for any day in the Exe when the wind changes. Alfred, from his camp
+before Exeter, sends to his little fleet to put to sea. He cannot
+himself be with them as in their first action, for he knows well
+that Guthrum will seize the first moment of his absence to sally
+from Exeter, break the Saxon lines, and scatter his army in roving
+bands over Devonshire, on their way back to the eastern kingdom.
+The Saxon fleet puts out, manned itself, as some say, partly with
+sea-robbers, hired to fight their own people. However manned, it
+attacks bravely a portion of the pirates. But a mightier power than
+the fleet fought for Alfred at this crisis. First a dense fog and
+then a great storm came on, bursting on the south coast with such
+fury that the pagans lost no less than one hundred of their chief
+ships off Swanage, as mighty a deliverance perhaps for
+England&mdash;though the memory of it is nearly forgotten&mdash;as
+that which began in the same seas seven hundred years later, when
+Drake and the sea-kings of the sixteenth century were hanging on
+the rear of the Spanish <i>armada</i> along the Devon and Dorset
+coasts, while the beacons blazed up all over England and the whole
+nation flew to arms.</p>
+<p>The destruction of the fleet decided the fate of the siege of
+Exeter. Once more negotiations are opened by the pagans; once more
+Alfred, fearful of driving them to extremities, listens, treats,
+and finally accepts oaths and more hostages, acknowledging probably
+in sorrow to himself that he can for the moment do no better. And
+on this occasion Guthrum, being caught far from home, and without
+supplies or ships, "keeps the peace well," moving as we conjecture,
+watched jealously by Alfred, on the shortest line across Devon and
+Somerset to some ford in the Avon, and so across into Mercia, where
+he arrives during harvest, and billets his army on Ceolwulf,
+camping them for the winter about the city of Gloster. Here they
+run up huts for themselves, and make some pretense of permanent
+settlement on the Severn, dividing large tracts of land among those
+who cared to take them.</p>
+<p>The campaigns of 876-77 are generally looked upon as disastrous
+ones for the Saxon arms, but this view is certainly not supported
+by the chroniclers. It is true that both at Wareham and Exeter the
+pagans broke new ground, and secured their position, from which no
+doubt they did sore damage in the neighboring districts, but we can
+trace in these years none of the old ostentatious daring and thirst
+for battle with Alfred. Whenever he appears the pirate bands draw
+back at once into their strongholds, and, exhausted as great part
+of Wessex must have been by the constant strain, the West Saxons
+show no signs yet of falling from their gallant King. If he can no
+longer collect in a week such an army as fought at Ashdown, he can
+still, without much delay, bring to his side a sufficient force to
+hem the pagans in and keep them behind their ramparts.</p>
+<p>But the nature of the service was telling sadly on the resources
+of the kingdom south of the Thames. To the Saxons there came no new
+levies, while from the north and east of England, as well as from
+over the sea, Guthrum was ever drawing to his standard wandering
+bands of sturdy Northmen. The most important of these
+reinforcements came to him from an unexpected quarter this autumn.
+We have not heard for some years of Hubba, the brother of Hinguar,
+the younger of the two vikings who planned and led the first great
+invasion in 868. Perhaps he may have resented the arrival of
+Guthrum and other kings in the following years, to whom he had to
+give place. Whatever may have been the cause, he seems to have gone
+off on his own account: carrying with him the famous raven
+standard, to do his appointed work in these years on other coasts
+under its ominous shade.</p>
+<p>This "war flag which they call raven" was a sacred object to the
+Northmen. When Hinguar and Hubba had heard of the death of their
+father, Regnar Lodbrog, and had resolved to avenge him, while they
+were calling together their followers, their three sisters in one
+day wove for them this war-flag, in the midst of which was
+portrayed the figure of a raven. Whenever the flag went before them
+into battle, if they were to win the day the sacred raven would
+rouse itself and stretch its wings; but if defeat awaited them, the
+flag would hang round its staff and the bird remain motionless.
+This wonder had been proved in many a fight, so the wild pagans who
+fought under the standard of Regnar's children believed. It was a
+power in itself, and Hubba and a strong fleet were with it.</p>
+<p>They had appeared in the Bristol Channel in this autumn of 877,
+and had ruthlessly slaughtered and spoiled the people of South
+Wales. Here they propose to winter; but, as the country is wild
+mountain for the most part, and the people very poor, they will
+remain no longer than they can help. Already a large part of the
+army about Gloster are getting restless. The story of their march
+from Devonshire, through rich districts of Wessex yet unplundered,
+goes round among the new-comers. Guthrum has no power, probably no
+will, to keep them to their oaths. In the early winter a joint
+attack is planned by him and Hubba on the West Saxon territory. By
+Christmas they are strong enough to take the field, and so in
+midwinter, shortly after Twelfth Night, the camp at Gloster breaks
+up, and the army "stole away to Chippenham," recrossing the Avon
+once more into Wessex, under Guthrum. The fleet, after a short
+delay, crosses to the Devonshire coast, under Hubba, in thirty
+war-ships.</p>
+<p>And now at last the courage of the West Saxons gives way. The
+surprise is complete. Wiltshire is at the mercy of the pagans, who,
+occupying the royal burgh of Chippenham as headquarters, overrun
+the whole district, drive many of the inhabitants "beyond the sea
+for want of the necessaries of life," and reduce to subjection all
+those that remain. Alfred is at his post, but for the moment can
+make no head against them. His own strong heart and trust in God
+are left him, and with them and a scanty band of followers he
+disappears into the forest of Selwood, which then stretched away
+from the confines of Wiltshire for thirty miles to the west. East
+Somerset, now one of the fairest and richest of English counties,
+was then for the most part thick wood and tangled swamp, but
+miserable as the lodging is it is welcome for the time to the King.
+In the first months of 878 Selwood Forest holds in its recesses the
+hope of England.</p>
+<p>It is at this point, as is natural enough, that romance has been
+most busy, and it has become impossible to disentangle the actual
+facts from monkish legend and Saxon ballad. In happier times Alfred
+was in the habit himself of talking over the events of his
+wandering life pleasantly with his courtiers, and there is no
+reason to doubt that the foundation of most of the stories still
+current rests on those conversations of the truth-loving King,
+noted down by Bishop Asser and others.</p>
+<p>The best known of these is, of course, the story of the cakes.
+In the depths of the Saxon forests there were always a few
+neatherds and swineherds, scattered up and down, living in rough
+huts enough, we may be sure, and occupied with the care of the
+cattle and herds of their masters. Among these in Selwood was a
+neatherd of the King, a faithful man, to whom the secret of
+Alfred's disguise was intrusted, and who kept it even from his
+wife. To this man's hut the King came one day alone, and, sitting
+himself down by the burning logs on the hearth, began mending his
+bow and arrows. The neatherd's wife had just finished her baking,
+and having other household matters to attend to, confided her
+loaves to the King, a poor tired-looking body, who might be glad of
+the warmth, and could make himself useful by turning the batch, and
+so earn his share while she got on with other business. But Alfred
+worked away at his weapons, thinking of anything but the good
+housewife's batch of loaves, which in due course were not only
+done, but rapidly burning to a cinder. At this moment the
+neatherd's wife comes back, and flying to the hearth to rescue the
+bread, cries out: "Drat the man! never to turn the loaves when you
+see them burning. I'ze warrant you ready enough to eat them when
+they are done." But besides the King's faithful neatherd, whose
+name is not preserved, there are other churls in the forest, who
+must be Alfred's comrades just now if he will have any. And even
+here he has an eye for a good man, and will lose no opportunity to
+help one to the best of his power. Such a one he finds in a certain
+swineherd called Denewulf, whom he gets to know, a thoughtful Saxon
+man, minding his charge there in the oak woods. The rough churl, or
+thrall, we know not which, has great capacity, as Alfred soon finds
+out, and desire to learn. So the King goes to work upon Denewulf
+under the oak trees, when the swine will let him, and is well
+satisfied with the results of his teaching and the progress of his
+pupil.</p>
+<p>But in those miserable days the commonest necessaries of life
+were hard enough to come by for the King and his few companions,
+and for his wife and family, who soon joined him in the forest,
+even if they were not with him from the first. The poor foresters
+cannot maintain them, nor are this band of exiles the men to live
+on the poor. So Alfred and his comrades are soon out foraging on
+the borders of the forest, and getting what subsistence they can
+from the pagans, or from the Christians who had submitted to their
+yoke. So we may imagine them dragging on life till near Easter,
+when a gleam of good news comes tip from the west, to gladden the
+hearts and strengthen the arms of these poor men in the depths of
+Selwood.</p>
+<p>Soon after Guthrum and the main body of the pagans moved from
+Gloster, southward, the viking Hubba, as had been agreed, sailed
+with thirty ships-of-war from his winter quarters on the South
+Welsh coast, and landed in Devon. The news of the catastrophe at
+Chippenham, and of the disappearance of the King, was no doubt
+already known in the West; and in the face of it Odda the alderman
+cannot gather strength to meet the pagan in the open field. But he
+is a brave and true man, and will make no terms with the spoilers;
+so, with other faithful thanes of King Alfred and their followers,
+he throws himself into a castle or fort called Cynwith, or Cynuit,
+there to abide whatever issue of this business God shall send them.
+Hubba, with the war-flag Raven, and a host laden with the spoil of
+rich Devon vales, appear in due course before the place. It is not
+strong naturally, and has only "walls in our own fashion," meaning
+probably rough earthworks. But there are resolute men behind them,
+and on the whole Hubba declines the assault, and sits down before
+the place. There is no spring of water, he hears, within the Saxon
+lines, and they are otherwise wholly unprepared for a siege. A few
+days will no doubt settle the matter, and the sword or slavery will
+be the portion of Odda and the rest of Alfred's men; meantime there
+is spoil enough in the camp from Devonshire homesteads, which brave
+men can revel in round the war-flag Raven, while they watch the
+Saxon ramparts. Odda, however, has quite other views than death
+from thirst, or surrender. Before any stress comes, early one
+morning he and his whole force sally out over their earthworks, and
+from the first "cut down the pagans in great numbers": eight
+hundred and forty warriors&mdash;some say twelve hundred&mdash;with
+Hubba himself are slain before Cynuit fort; the rest, few in
+number, escape to their ships. The war-flag Raven is left in the
+hands of Odda and the men of Devon.</p>
+<p>This is the news which comes to Alfred, Ethelnoth the alderman
+of Somerset, Denewulf the swineherd, and the rest of the Selwood
+Forest group, some time before Easter. These men of Devonshire, it
+seems, are still stanch, and ready to peril their lives against the
+pagan. No doubt up and down Wessex, thrashed and trodden out as the
+nation is by this time, there are other good men and true, who will
+neither cross the sea nor the Welsh marches nor make terms with the
+pagan; some sprinkling of men who will yet set life at stake, for
+faith in Christ and love of England. If these can only be rallied,
+who can say what may follow? So, in the lengthening days of spring,
+council is held in Selwood, and there will have been Easter
+services in some chapel or hermitage in the forest, or, at any
+rate, in some quiet glade. The "day of days" will surely have had
+its voice of hope for this poor remnant. Christ is risen and
+reigns; and it is not in these heathen Danes, or in all the
+Northmen who ever sailed across the sea, to put back his kingdom or
+to enslave those whom he has freed.</p>
+<p>The result is that, far away from the eastern boundary of the
+forest, on a rising ground&mdash;hill it can scarcely be
+called&mdash;surrounded by dangerous marshes formed by the little
+rivers Thone and Parret, fordable only in summer, and even then
+dangerous to all who have not the secret, a small fortified camp is
+thrown up under Alfred's eye, by Ethelnoth and the Somersetshire
+men, where he can once again raise his standard. The spot has been
+chosen by the King with the utmost care, for it is his last throw.
+He names it the Etheling's <i>eig</i> or island, "Athelney."
+Probably his young son, the Etheling of England, is there among the
+first, with his mother and his grandmother Eadburgha, the widow of
+Ethelred Mucil, the venerable lady whom Asser saw in later years,
+and who has now no country but her daughter's. There are, as has
+been reckoned, some two acres of hard ground on the island, and
+around vast brakes of alder-bush, full of deer and other game.</p>
+<p>Here the Somersetshire men can keep up constant communication
+with him, and a small army grows together. They are soon strong
+enough to make forays into the open country, and in many skirmishes
+they cut off parties of the pagans and supplies. "For, even when
+overthrown and cast down," says Malmesbury, "Alfred had always to
+be fought with; so, then when one would esteem him altogether worn
+down and broken, like a snake slipping from the hand of him who
+would grasp it, he would suddenly flash out again from his
+hiding-places, rising up to smite his foes in the height of their
+insolent confidence, and never more hard to beat than after a
+flight."</p>
+<p>But it was still a trying life at Athelney. Followers came in
+slowly, and provender and supplies of all kinds are hard to wring
+from the pagan, and harder still to take from Christian men. One
+day, while it was yet so cold that the water was still frozen, the
+King's people had gone out "to get them fish or fowl, or some such
+purveyance as they sustained themselves withal." No one was left in
+the royal hut for the moment but himself, and his mother-in-law
+Eadburgha. The King&mdash;after his constant wont whensoever he had
+opportunity&mdash;was reading from the Psalms of David, out of the
+Manual which he carried always in his bosom. At this moment a poor
+man appeared at the door and begged for a morsel of bread "for
+Christ his sake." Whereupon the King, receiving the stranger as a
+brother, called to his mother-in-law to give him to eat. Eadburgha
+replied that there was but one loaf in their store, and a little
+wine in a pitcher, a provision wholly insufficient for his own
+family and people. But the King bade her nevertheless to give the
+stranger part of the last loaf, which she accordingly did. But when
+he had been served the stranger was no more seen, and the loaf
+remained whole, and the pitcher full to the brim. Alfred, meantime,
+had turned to his reading, over which he fell asleep, and dreamt
+that St. Cuthbert of Lindisfarne stood by him, and told him it was
+he who had been his guest, and that God had seen his afflictions
+and those of his people, which were now about to end, in token
+whereof his people would return that day from their expedition with
+a great take of fish. The King awakening, and being much impressed
+with his dream, called to his mother-in-law and recounted it to
+her, who thereupon assured him that she too had been overcome with
+sleep and had had the same dream. And while they yet talked
+together on what had happened so strangely to them, their servants
+come in, bringing fish enough, as it seemed to them, to have fed an
+army.</p>
+<p>The monkish legend goes on to tell that on the next morning the
+King crossed to the mainland in a boat, and wound his horn thrice,
+which drew to him before noon five hundred men. What we may think
+of the story and the dream, as Sir John Spelman says, "is not here
+very much material," seeing that, whether we deem it natural or
+supernatural, "the one as well as the other serves at God's
+appointment, by raising or dejecting of the mind with hopes or
+fears, to lead man to the resolution of those things whereof he has
+before ordained the event."</p>
+<p>Alfred, we may be sure, was ready to accept and be thankful for
+any help, let it come from whence it might, and soon after Easter
+it was becoming clear that the time is at hand for more than
+skirmishing expeditions. Through all the neighboring counties word
+is spreading that their hero King is alive and on foot again, and
+that there will be another chance for brave men ere long of meeting
+once more these scourges of the land under his leading.</p>
+<p>A popular legend is found in the later chroniclers which relates
+that at this crisis of his fortunes Alfred, not daring to rely on
+any evidence but that of his own senses as to the numbers,
+disposition, and discipline of the pagan army, assumed the garb of
+a minstrel and with one attendant visited the camp of Guthrum. Here
+he stayed, "showing tricks and making sport," until he had
+penetrated to the King's tents, and learned all that he wished to
+know. After satisfying himself as to the chances of a sudden
+attack, he returns to Athelney, and, the time having come for a
+great effort, if his people will but make it, sends round
+messengers to the aldermen and king's thanes of neighboring shires,
+giving them a tryst for the seventh week after Easter, the second
+week in May.</p>
+<p>On or about the 12th of May, 878, King Alfred left his island in
+the great wood, and his wife and children and such household gods
+[sic] as he had gathered round him there, and came publicly forth
+among his people once more, riding to Egbert's Stone&mdash;probably
+Brixton&mdash;on the east of Selwood, a distance of twenty-six
+miles. Here met him the men of the neighboring shires&mdash;Odda,
+no doubt, with his men of Devonshire, full of courage and hope
+after their recent triumph; the men of Somersetshire, under their
+brave and faithful alderman Ethelnoth; and the men of Wilts and
+Hants, such of them at least as had not fled the country or made
+submission to the enemy. "And when they saw their King alive after
+such great tribulation, they received him, as he merited, with joy
+and acclamation." The gathering had been so carefully planned by
+Alfred and the nobles who had been in conference or correspondence
+with him at Athelney that the Saxon host was organized and ready
+for immediate action on the very day of muster. Whether Alfred had
+been his own spy we cannot tell, but it is plain that he knew well
+what was passing in the pagan camp, and how necessary swiftness and
+secrecy were to the success of his attack.</p>
+<p>Local traditions cannot be much relied upon for events which
+took place a thousand years ago, but where there is clearly nothing
+improbable in them they are at least worth mentioning. We may note,
+then, that according to Somersetshire tradition, first collected by
+Dr. Giles&mdash;himself a Somersetshire man, and one who, besides
+his <i>Life of Alfred</i> and other excellent works bearing on the
+time, is the author of the <i>Harmony of the Chroniclers</i>,
+published by the Alfred Committee in 1852&mdash;the signal for the
+actual gathering of the West Saxons at Egbert's Stone was given by
+a beacon lighted on the top of Stourton hill, where Alfred's Tower
+now stands. Such a beacon would be hidden from the Danes, who must
+have been encamped about Westbury, by the range of the Wiltshire
+hills, while it would be visible to the west over the low country
+toward the Bristol Channel, and to the south far into
+Dorsetshire.</p>
+<p>Not an hour was lost by Alfred at the place of muster. The bands
+which came together there were composed of men well used to arms,
+each band under its own alderman, or reeve. The small army he had
+himself been disciplining at Athelney, and training in skirmishes
+during the last few months, would form a reliable centre on which
+the rest would have to form as best they could. So after one day's
+halt he breaks up his camp at Egbert's Stone and marches to Aeglea,
+now called Clay hill, an important height, commanding the vale to
+the north of Westbury, which the Danish army were now occupying.
+The day's march of the army would be a short five miles. Here the
+annals record that St. Neot, his kinsman, appeared to him, and
+promised that on the morrow his misfortunes would end.</p>
+<p>There are still traces of rude earthworks round the top of Clay
+hill, which are said to have been thrown up by Alfred's army at
+this time. If there had been time for such a work, it would
+undoubtedly have been a wise step, as a fortified encampment here
+would have served Alfred in good stead in case of a reverse. But
+the few hours during which the army halted on Clay hill would have
+been quite too short time for such an undertaking, which, moreover,
+would have exhausted the troops. It is more likely that the
+earthworks, which are of the oldest type, similar to those at White
+Horse hill, above Ashdown, were there long before Alfred's arrival
+in May, 878. After resting one night on Clay hill, Alfred led out
+his men in close order of battle against the pagan host, which lay
+at Ethandune. There has been much doubt among the antiquaries as to
+the site of Ethandune, but Dr. Giles and others have at length
+established the claims of Edington, a village seven miles from Clay
+hill, on the northeast, to the spot where the strength of the
+second wave of pagan invasion was utterly broken and rolled back
+weak and helpless from the rock of the West Saxon kingdom.</p>
+<p>Sir John Spelman, relying apparently only on the authority of
+Nicholas Harpesfeld's <i>Ecclesiastical History of England</i>,
+puts a speech into Alfred's mouth, which he is supposed to have
+delivered before the battle of Edington. He tells them that the
+great sufferings of the land had been yet far short of what their
+sins had deserved. That God had only dealt with them as a loving
+Father, and was now about to succor them, having already stricken
+their foe with fear and astonishment, and given him, on the other
+hand, much encouragement by dreams and otherwise. That they had to
+do with pirates and robbers, who had broken faith with them over
+and over again; and the issue they had to try that day was whether
+Christ's faith or heathenism was henceforth to be established in
+England.</p>
+<p>There is no trace of any such speech in the <i>Saxon
+Chronicle</i> or Asser, and the one reported does not ring like
+that of Judas Maccabaeus. That Alfred's soul was on fire that
+morning, on finding himself once more at the head of a force he
+could rely on, and before the enemy he had met so often, we may be
+sure enough, but shall never know how the fire kindled into speech,
+if indeed it did so at all. In such supreme moments many of the
+strongest men have no word to say&mdash;keep all their heat
+within.</p>
+<p>Nor have we any clew to the numbers who fought on either side at
+Ethandune, or indeed in any of Alfred's battles. In the
+<i>Chronicles</i> there are only a few vague and general
+statements, from which little can be gathered. The most precise of
+them is that in the <i>Saxon Chronicle</i>, which gives eight
+hundred and forty as the number of men who were slain, as we heard,
+with Hubba before Cynuit fort, in Devonshire, earlier in this same
+year. Such a death-roll, in an action in which only a small
+detachment of the pagan army was engaged, would lead to the
+conclusion that the armies were far larger than one would expect.
+On the other hand, it is difficult to imagine how any large bodies
+of men could find subsistence in a small country, which was the
+seat of so devastating a war, and in which so much land remained
+still unreclaimed. But whatever the power on either side amounted
+to we may be quite sure that it had been exerted to the utmost to
+bring as large a force as possible into line at Ethandune.</p>
+<p>Guthrum fought to protect Chippenham, his base of operations,
+some sixteen miles in his rear, and all the accumulated plunder of
+the busy months which had passed since Twelfth Night; and it is
+clear that his men behaved with the most desperate gallantry. The
+fight began at noon&mdash;one chronicler says at sunrise, but the
+distance makes this impossible unless Alfred marched in the
+night&mdash;and lasted through the greater part of the day. Warned
+by many previous disasters the Saxons never broke their close
+order, and so, though greatly outnumbered, hurled back again and
+again the onslaughts of the Northmen. At last Alfred and his Saxons
+prevailed, and smote his pagan foes with a very great slaughter,
+and pursued them up to their fortified camp on Bratton hill or
+Edge, into which the great body of the fugitives threw themselves.
+All who were left outside were slain, and the great spoil was all
+recovered. The camp may still be seen, called Bratton Castle, with
+its double ditches and deep trenches, and barrow in the midst sixty
+yards long, and its two entrances guarded by mounds. It contains
+more than twenty acres, and commands the whole country side. There
+can be little doubt that this camp, and not Chippenham, which is
+sixteen miles away, was the last refuge of Guthrum and the great
+northern army on Saxon soil.</p>
+<p>So, in three days from the breaking up of his little camp at
+Athelney, Alfred was once more King of all England south of the
+Thames; for this army of pagans, shut up within their earthworks on
+Bratton Edge, are little better than a broken and disorderly
+rabble, with no supplies and no chance of succor from any quarter.
+Nevertheless he will make sure of them, and above all will guard
+jealously against any such mishap as that of 876, when they stole
+out of Wareham, murdered the horsemen he had left to watch them,
+and got away to Exeter. So Bratton camp is strictly besieged by
+Alfred with his whole power.</p>
+<p>Guthrum, the destroyer, and now the King of East Anglia, the
+strongest and ablest of all the Northmen who had ever landed in
+England, is now at last fairly in Alfred's power. At Reading,
+Wareham, Exeter, he had always held a fortified camp, on a river
+easily navigable by the Danish war-ships, where he might look for
+speedy succor or whence at the worst he might hope to escape to the
+sea. But now he, with the remains of his army, is shut up in an
+inland fort with no ships on the Avon, the nearest river, even if
+they could cut their way out and reach it, and no hopes of
+reinforcements overland. Halfdene is the nearest viking who might
+be called to the rescue, and he, in Northumbria, is far too
+distant. It is a matter of a few days only, for food runs short at
+once in the besieged camp. In former years, or against any other
+enemy, Guthrum would probably have preferred to sally out and cut
+his way through the Saxon lines, or die sword in hand as a son of
+Odin should. Whether it were that the wild spirit in him is
+thoroughly broken for the time by the unexpected defeat at
+Ethandune, or that long residence in a Christian land and contact
+with Christian subjects have shaken his faith in his own gods, or
+that he has learned to measure and appreciate the strength and
+nobleness of the man he had so often deceived, at any rate for the
+time Guthrum is subdued. At the end of fourteen days he sends to
+Alfred, suing humbly for terms of any kind; offering on the part of
+the army as many hostages as may be required, without asking for
+any in return; once again giving solemn pledges to quit Wessex for
+good; and, above all, declaring his own readiness to receive
+baptism. If it had not been for the last proposal, we may doubt
+whether even Alfred would have allowed the ruthless foes with whom
+he and his people had fought so often, and with such varying
+success, to escape now. Over and over again they had sworn to him,
+and broken their oaths the moment it suited their purpose; had
+given hostages, and left them to their fate. In all English
+kingdoms they had now for ten years been destroying and pillaging
+the houses of God and slaying even women and children. They had
+driven his sister's husband from the throne of Mercia, and had
+grievously tortured the martyr Edmund. If ever foe deserved no
+mercy, Guthrum and his army were the men.</p>
+<p>When David smote the children of Moab, he "measured them with a
+line, casting them down to the ground; even with two lines measured
+he to put to death, and with one full line to keep alive." When he
+took Rabbah of the children of Ammon, "he brought forth the people
+that were therein, and put them under saws and under harrows of
+iron, and under axes of iron, and made them pass through the
+brick-kiln." That was the old Hebrew method, even under King David,
+and in the ninth century Christianity had as yet done little to
+soften the old heathen custom of "woe to the vanquished."
+Charlemagne's proselytizing campaigns had been as merciless as
+Mahomet's. But there is about this English King a divine patience,
+the rarest of all virtues in those who are set in high places. He
+accepts Guthrum's proffered terms at once, rejoicing over the
+chance of adding these fierce heathen warriors to the church of his
+Master, by an act of mercy which even they must feel. And so the
+remnant of the army are allowed to march out of their fortified
+camp, and to recross the Avon into Mercia, not quite five months
+after the day of their winter attack and the seizing of Chippenham.
+The northern army went away to Cirencester, where they stayed over
+the winter, and then returning into East Anglia settled down there,
+and Alfred and Wessex hear no more of them. Never was triumph more
+complete or better deserved; and in all history there is no
+instance of more noble use of victory than this. The West Saxon
+army was not at once disbanded. Alfred led them back to Athelney,
+where he had left his wife and children; and while they are there,
+seven weeks after the surrender, Guthrum and thirty of the bravest
+of his followers arrive to make good their pledge.</p>
+<p>The ceremony of baptism was performed at Wedmore, a royal
+residence which had probably escaped the fate of Chippenham, and
+still contained a church. Here Guthrum and his thirty nobles were
+sworn in, the soldiers of a greater King than Woden, and the white
+linen cloth, the sign of their new faith, was bound round their
+heads. Alfred himself was godfather to the viking, giving him the
+Christian name of Athelstan; and the chrism-loosing, or unbinding
+of the sacramental cloths, was performed on the eighth day by
+Ethelnoth, the faithful alderman of Somersetshire. After the
+religious ceremony there still remained the task of settling the
+terms upon which the victors and vanquished were hereafter to live
+together side by side in the same island; for Alfred had the
+wisdom, even in his enemy's humiliation, to accept the accomplished
+fact, and to acknowledge East Anglia as a Danish kingdom. The
+Witenagemot had been summoned to Wedmore, and was sitting there,
+and with their advice the treaty was then made, from which,
+according to some historians, English history begins.</p>
+<p>We have still the text of the two documents which together
+contain Alfred and Guthrum's peace, or the treaty of Wedmore; the
+first and shorter being probably the articles hastily agreed on
+before the capitulation of the Danish army at Chippenham; the
+latter the final terms settled between Alfred and his witan, and
+Guthrum and his thirty nobles, after mature deliberation and
+conference at Wedmore, but not formally executed until some years
+later.</p>
+<p>The shorter one, that made at the capitulation, runs as
+follows:</p>
+<p>"ALFRED AND GUTHRUM'S PEACE.&mdash;This is the peace that King
+Alfred and King Guthrum, and the witan of all the English nation,
+and all the people that are in East Anglia have all ordained, and
+with oaths confirmed, for themselves and their descendants, as well
+for born as unborn, who reck of God's mercy or of ours.</p>
+<p>"First, concerning our land boundaries. These are upon the
+Thames, and then upon the Lea, and along the Lea unto its source,
+then straight to Bedford, then up the Ouse to Watling Street.</p>
+<p>"Then there is this: if a man be slain we reckon all equally
+dear, English and Dane, at eight half marks of pure gold, except
+the churl who dwells on gavel land and their leisings, they are
+also equally dear at two hundred shillings. And if a king's thane
+be accused of manslaughter, if he desire to clear himself, let him
+do so before twelve king's thanes. If any man accuse a man who is
+of less degree than king's thane, let him clear himself with eleven
+of his equals and one king's thane. And so in every suit which be
+for more than four mancuses; and if he dare not, let him pay for it
+threefold, as it may be valued.</p>
+<p>"<i>Of Warrantors</i>.&mdash;And that every man know his
+warrantor, for men, and for horses, and for oxen.</p>
+<p>"And we all ordained, on that day that the oaths were sworn,
+that neither bondman nor freeman might go to the army without
+leave, nor any of them to us. But if it happen that any of them
+from necessity will have traffic with us, or we with them, for
+cattle or goods, that is to be allowed on this wise: that hostages
+be given in pledge of peace, and as evidence whereby it may be
+known that the party has a clean book."</p>
+<p>By the treaty Alfred is thus established as King of the whole of
+England south of the Thames; of all the old kingdom of Essex south
+of the Lea, including London, Hertford, and St. Albans; of the
+whole of the great kingdom of Mercia, which lay to the west of
+Watling Street, and of so much to the east as lay south of the
+Ouse. That he should have regained so much proves the straits to
+which he had brought the northern army, who would have to give up
+all their new settlements round Gloster. That he should have
+resigned so much of the kingdom which had acknowledged his
+grandfather, father, and brothers as overlords proves how
+formidable his foe still was, even in defeat, and how thoroughly
+the northeastern parts of the island had by this time been settled
+by the Danes.</p>
+<p>The remainder of the short treaty would seem simply to be
+provisional, and intended to settle the relations between Alfred's
+subjects and the army while it remained within the limits of the
+new Saxon kingdom. Many of the soldiers would have to break up
+their homes in Glostershire; and, with this view, the halt at
+Cirencester is allowed, where, as we have already heard, they rest
+until the winter. While they remain in the Saxon kingdom there is
+to be no distinction between Saxon and Dane. The were-gild, or
+life-ransom, is to be the same in each case for men of like rank;
+and all suits for more than four mancuses (about twenty-four
+shillings) are to be tried by a jury of peers of the accused. On
+the other hand, only necessary communications are to be allowed
+between the northern army and the people; and where there must be
+trading, fair and peaceful dealing is to be insured by the giving
+of hostages. This last provision, and the clause declaring that
+each man shall know his warrantor, inserted in a five-clause
+treaty, where nothing but what the contracting parties must hold to
+be of the very first importance would find place, are another
+curious proof of the care with which our ancestors, and all
+Germanic tribes, guarded against social isolation&mdash;the
+doctrine that one man has nothing to do with another&mdash;a
+doctrine which the great body of their descendants, under the
+leading of Schultze, Delitzsch, and others, seem likely to
+repudiate with equal emphasis in these latter days, both in Germany
+and England.</p>
+<p>Thus, in July, 878, the foundations of the new kingdom of
+England were laid, for new it undoubtedly became when the treaty of
+Wedmore was signed. The Danish nation, no longer strangers and
+enemies, are recognized by the heir of Cerdic as lawful owners of
+the full half of England. Having achieved which result, Guthrum and
+the rest of the new converts leave the Saxon camp and return to
+Cirencester at the end of twelve days, loaded with such gifts as it
+was still in the power of their conquerors to bestow: and Alfred
+was left in peace, to turn to a greater and more arduous task than
+any he had yet encountered.</p>
+<center>JOHN RICHARD GREEN</center>
+<p>Alfred was the noblest as he was the most complete embodiment of
+all that is great, all that is lovable, in the English temper. He
+combined as no other man has ever combined its practical energy,
+its patient and enduring force, its profound sense of duty, the
+reserve and self-control that steady in it a wide outlook and a
+restless daring, its temperance and fairness, its frank geniality,
+its sensitiveness to action, its poetic tenderness, its deep and
+passionate religion. Religion, indeed, was the groundwork of
+Alfred's character. His temper was instinct with piety. Everywhere
+throughout his writings that remain to us the name of God, the
+thought of God, stir him to outbursts of ecstatic adoration.</p>
+<p>But he was no mere saint. He felt none of that scorn of the
+world about him which drove the nobler souls of his day to
+monastery or hermitage. Vexed as he was by sickness and constant
+pain, his temper took no touch of asceticism. His rare geniality, a
+peculiar elasticity and mobility of nature, gave color and charm to
+his life. A sunny frankness and openness of spirit breathe in the
+pleasant chat of his books, and what he was in his books he showed
+himself in his daily converse. Alfred was in truth an artist, and
+both the lights and shadows of his life were those of the artistic
+temperament. His love of books, his love of strangers, his
+questionings of travellers and scholars, betray an imaginative
+restlessness that longs to break out of the narrow world of
+experience which hemmed him in. At one time he jots down news of a
+voyage to the unknown seas of the north. At another he listens to
+tidings which his envoys bring back from the churches of
+Malabar.</p>
+<p>And side by side with this restless outlook of the artistic
+nature he showed its tenderness and susceptibility, its vivid
+apprehension of unseen danger, its craving for affection, its
+sensitiveness to wrong. It was with himself rather than with his
+reader that he communed as thoughts of the foe without, of
+ingratitude and opposition within, broke the calm pages of Gregory
+or Boethius.</p>
+<p>"Oh, what a happy man was he," he cries once, "that man that had
+a naked sword hanging over his head from a single thread; so as to
+me it always did!" "Desirest thou power?" he asks at another time.
+"But thou shalt never obtain it without sorrows&mdash;sorrows from
+strange folk, and yet keener sorrows from thine own kindred."
+"Hardship and sorrow!" he breaks out again; "not a king but would
+wish to be without these if he could. But I know that he
+cannot!"</p>
+<p>The loneliness which breathes in words like these has often
+begotten in great rulers a cynical contempt of men and the
+judgments of men. But cynicism found no echo in the large and
+sympathetic temper of Alfred. He not only longed for the love of
+his subjects, but for the remembrance of "generations" to come. Nor
+did his inner gloom or anxiety check for an instant his vivid and
+versatile activity. To the scholars he gathered round him he seemed
+the very type of a scholar, snatching every hour he could find to
+read or listen to books read to him. The singers of his court found
+in him a brother singer, gathering the old songs of his people to
+teach them to his children, breaking his renderings from the Latin
+with simple verse, solacing himself in hours of depression with the
+music of the Psalms.</p>
+<p>He passed from court and study to plan buildings and instruct
+craftsmen in gold work, to teach even falconers and dog-keepers
+their business. But all this versatility and ingenuity was
+controlled by a cool good sense. Alfred was a thorough man of
+business. He was careful of detail, laborious, methodical. He
+carried in his bosom a little handbook in which he noted things as
+they struck him&mdash;now a bit of family genealogy, now a prayer,
+now such a story as that of Ealdhelm playing minstrel on the
+bridge. Each hour of the day had its appointed task; there was the
+same order in the division of his revenue and in the arrangement of
+his court.</p>
+<p>Wide, however, and various as was the King's temper, its range
+was less wonderful than its harmony. Of the narrowness, of the want
+of proportion, of the predominance of one quality over another
+which go commonly with an intensity of moral purpose Alfred showed
+not a trace. Scholar and soldier, artist and man of business, poet
+and saint, his character kept that perfect balance which charms us
+in no other Englishman save Shakespeare. But full and harmonious as
+his temper was, it was the temper of a king. Every power was bent
+to the work of rule. His practical energy found scope for itself in
+the material and administrative restoration of the wasted land.</p>
+<p>His intellectual activity breathed fresh life into education and
+literature. His capacity for inspiring trust and affection drew the
+hearts of Englishmen to a common centre, and began the upbuilding
+of a new England. And all was guided, controlled, ennobled by a
+single aim. "So long as I have lived," said the King as life closed
+about him, "I have striven to live worthily." Little by little men
+came to know what such a life of worthiness meant. Little by little
+they came to recognize in Alfred a ruler of higher and nobler stamp
+than the world had seen. Never had it seen a king who lived solely
+for the good of his people. Never had it seen a ruler who set aside
+every personal aim to devote himself solely to the welfare of those
+whom he ruled. It was this grand self-mastery that gave him his
+power over the men about him. Warrior and conqueror as he was, they
+saw him set aside at thirty the warrior's dream of conquest; and
+the self-renouncement of Wedmore struck the keynote of his reign.
+But still more is it this height and singleness of purpose, this
+absolute concentration of the noblest faculties to the noblest aim,
+that lifts Alfred out of the narrow bounds of Wessex.</p>
+<p>If the sphere of his action seems too small to justify the
+comparison of him with the few whom the world owns as its greatest
+men, he rises to their level in the moral grandeur of his life. And
+it is this which has hallowed his memory among his own English
+people. "I desire," said the King in some of his latest words, "I
+desire to leave to the men that come after me a remembrance of me
+in good works."</p>
+<p>His aim has been more than fulfilled. His memory has come down
+to us with a living distinctness through the mists of exaggeration
+and legend which time gathered round it. The instinct of the people
+has clung to him with a singular affection. The love which he won a
+thousand years ago has lingered round his name from that day to
+this. While every other name of those earlier times has all but
+faded from the recollection of Englishmen, that of Alfred remains
+familiar to every English child.</p>
+<p>The secret of Alfred's government lay in his own vivid energy.
+He could hardly have chosen braver or more active helpers than
+those whom he employed both in his political and in his educational
+efforts. The children whom he trained to rule proved the ablest
+rulers of their time. But at the outset of his reign he stood
+alone, and what work was to be done was done by the King himself.
+His first efforts were directed to the material restoration of his
+realm. The burnt and wasted country saw its towns built again,
+forts erected in positions of danger, new abbeys founded, the
+machinery of justice and government restored, the laws codified and
+amended. Still more strenuous were Alfred's efforts for its moral
+and intellectual restoration. Even in Mercia and Northumbria the
+pirate's sword had left few survivors of the schools of Egbert or
+Bede, and matters were even worse in Wessex, which had been as yet
+the most ignorant of the English kingdoms.</p>
+<p>"When I began to reign," said Alfred, "I cannot remember one
+priest south of the Thames who could render his service-book into
+English." For instructors indeed he could find only a few Mercian
+prelates and priests, with one Welsh bishop, Asser.</p>
+<p>"Formerly," the King writes bitterly, "men came hither from
+foreign lands to seek for instruction, and now when we desire it we
+can only obtain it from abroad." But his mind was far from being
+prisoned within his own island. He sent a Norwegian shipmaster to
+explore the White Sea, and Wulfstan to trace the coast of Esthonia;
+envoys bore his presents to the churches of India and Jerusalem,
+and an annual mission carried Peter's pence to Rome.</p>
+<p>But it was with the Franks that his intercourse was closest, and
+it was from them that he drew the scholars to aid him in his work
+of education. A scholar named Grimbald came from St. Omer to
+preside over his new abbey at Winchester; and John, the old Saxon,
+was fetched from the abbey of Corbey to rule a monastery and school
+that Alfred's gratitude for his deliverance from the Danes raised
+in the marshes of Athelney. The real work, however, to be done was
+done, not by these teachers, but by the King himself. Alfred
+established a school for the young nobles in his court, and it was
+to the need of books for these scholars in their own tongue that we
+owe his most remarkable literary effort.</p>
+<p>He took his books as he found them&mdash;they were the popular
+manuals of his age&mdash;the <i>Consolation of Boethius</i>, the
+<i>Pastoral</i> of Pope Gregory, the compilation of Orosius, then
+the one accessible handbook of universal history, and the history
+of his own people by Bede. He translated these works into English,
+but he was far more than a translator, he was an editor for the
+people. Here he omitted, there he expanded. He enriched Orosius by
+a sketch of the new geographical discoveries in the north. He gave
+a West Saxon form to his selections from Bede. In one place he
+stops to explain his theory of government, his wish for a thicker
+population, his conception of national welfare as consisting in a
+due balance of priest, soldier, and churl. The mention of Nero
+spurs him to an outbreak on the abuses of power. The cold
+providence of Boethius gives way to an enthusiastic acknowledgment
+of the goodness of God.</p>
+<p>As he writes, his large-hearted nature flings off its royal
+mantle, and he talks as a man to men. "Do not blame me," he prays
+with a charming simplicity, "if any know Latin better than I, for
+every man must say what he says and do what he does according to
+his ability."</p>
+<p>But simple as was his aim, Alfred changed the whole front of our
+literature. Before him, England possessed in her own tongue one
+great poem and a train of ballads and battle-songs. Prose she had
+none. The mighty roll of the prose books that fill her libraries
+begins with the translations of Alfred, and above all with the
+chronicle of his reign. It seems likely that the King's rendering
+of Bede's history gave the first impulse toward the compilation of
+what is known as the English or <i>Anglo-Saxon Chronicle</i>, which
+was certainly thrown into its present form during his reign. The
+meagre lists of the kings of Wessex and the bishops of Winchester,
+which had been preserved from older times, were roughly expanded
+into a national history by insertions from Bede; but it is when it
+reaches the reign of Alfred that the chronicle suddenly widens into
+the vigorous narrative, full of life and originality, that marks
+the gift of a new power to the English tongue. Varying as it does
+from age to age in historic value, it remains the first vernacular
+history of any Teutonic people, and, save for the Gothic
+translations of Ulfilas, the earliest and most venerable monument
+of Teutonic prose.</p>
+<p>But all this literary activity was only a part of that general
+upbuilding of Wessex by which Alfred was preparing for a fresh
+contest with the stranger. He knew that the actual winning back of
+the Danelagh must be a work of the sword, and through these long
+years of peace he was busy with the creation of such a force as
+might match that of the Northmen. A fleet grew out of the little
+squadron which Alfred had been forced to man with Frisian
+seamen.</p>
+<p>The national <i>fyrd</i> or levy of all freemen at the King's
+call was reorganized. It was now divided into two halves, one of
+which served in the field while the other guarded its own
+<i>burhs</i> (burghs or boroughs) and townships, and served to
+relieve its fellow when the men's forty days of service were ended.
+A more disciplined military force was provided by subjecting all
+owners of five hides of land to "thane-service," a step which
+recognized the change that had now substituted the <i>thegn</i> for
+the <i>eorl</i> and in which we see the beginning of a feudal
+system. How effective these measures were was seen when the new
+resistance they met on the Continent drove the Northmen to a fresh
+attack on Britain.</p>
+<p>In 893 a large fleet steered for the Andredsweald, while the
+sea-king Hasting entered the Thames. Alfred held both at bay
+through the year till the men of the Danelagh rose at their
+comrades' call. Wessex stood again front to front with the
+Northmen. But the King's measures had made the realm strong enough
+to set aside its old policy of defence for one of vigorous attack.
+His son Edward and his son-in-law Ethelred, whom he had set as
+ealdorman[<a href="#note-23">23</a>] over what remained of Mercia,
+showed themselves as skilful and active as the King.</p>
+<p><a name="note-23"><!-- Note Anchor 23 --></a>[Footnote 23:
+Primitive of alderman; in this period, a chieftain, lord, or earl;
+subsequently, the chief magistrate of a territorial district, as of
+a county or province.]</p>
+<p>The aim of the Northmen was to rouse again the hostility of the
+Welsh, but while Alfred held Exeter against their fleet, Edward and
+Ethelred caught their army near the Severn and overthrew it with a
+vast slaughter at Buttington. The destruction of their camp on the
+Lea by the united English forces ended the war; in 897 Hasting
+again withdrew across the Channel, and the Danelagh made peace. It
+was with the peace he had won still about him that Alfred died in
+901; and warrior as his son Edward had shown himself, he clung to
+his father's policy of rest.</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_5"><!-- RULE4 5 --></a>
+<h2>HENRY THE FOWLER FOUNDS THE SAXON LINE OF GERMAN KINGS</h2>
+<center>ORIGIN OF THE GERMAN BURGHERS OR MIDDLE CLASSES</center>
+<center>A.D. 911-936</center>
+<br>
+<center>WOLFGANG MENZEL</center>
+<p class="intro">The famous treaty of Verdun (843) was the
+culmination of a series of civil wars between the descendants of
+Charlemagne. By it the great empire which Charlemagne had built up
+was divided among his three grandsons, Lothair, Charles the Bald,
+and Louis. With this treaty the history of the Franks closes, and
+Germany and France take their places, along with Italy, as distinct
+and separate nations.</p>
+<p class="intro">The Teutonic kingdom, or Germany, fell to Louis.
+On his death, in 876, after an uneventful reign, he was succeeded
+by his sons Charles the Fat, Carloman, and Louis. The latter two
+dying, Charles the Fat became sole King of Germany. A little later
+he became ruler of Italy, and was crowned emperor by the pope. Then
+he was invited by the West Franks to become their king. Thus almost
+the whole empire of the great Charlemagne was reunited in the hands
+of Charles the Fat. However, his people soon became disgusted with
+his weak efforts in the treatment of a series of invasions by the
+Northmen, and he was deposed in 887. He died the next year, and the
+Carlovingian empire fell to pieces, never to be united again.</p>
+<p class="intro">Charles the Fat was succeeded in Germany by his
+nephew, Arnulf, who also took possession of Italy and was crowned
+emperor by the pope, though his power in Italy was merely nominal.
+On his death in 889 his second son, Ludwig (Louis III) the child,
+became king in Germany.</p>
+<p class="intro">The race of Charlemagne in Germany ended in 911 by
+the death of Ludwig. Though a mere child he had been enthroned
+through the intrigues of Otto, Duke of Saxony, and Hatto,
+Archbishop of Mayence, who virtually governed the empire during
+Ludwig's short reign.</p>
+<p class="intro">The empire at that time was composed of various
+nations, each under the rule of a powerful duke. The bond of union
+between these nations was slight. The dukes were constantly waging
+war against each other, and these internal dissensions greatly
+weakened the central government.</p>
+<p class="intro">At the same time the empire was exposed to the
+incursions of the Magyars or Hungarians, whose wholesale
+depredations and cruelties so dismayed the child-king that he
+concluded a treaty of peace with the invaders and consented to pay
+them a ten-years' tribute.</p>
+<p class="intro">The Germans were deeply sensible of the dishonor
+incurred by this ignominious tribute, and of the dangers of their
+internal dissensions. They longed for a stronger government, and on
+the death of Ludwig the crown was offered to Otto of Saxony, the
+strongest of the dukes. He declined in favor of Conrad, Duke of
+Franconia, a descendant in the female line from Charlemagne. But
+Conrad's rule was weak, and during his short reign of seven years
+civil war continued, part of the time with Henry the Fowler, son of
+Duke Otto (who died in 912), owing to Conrad's attempt to separate
+Thuringia from Saxony in order to weaken Henry's ducal power. The
+empire also was again invaded by the Slavs and Hungarians.</p>
+<p class="intro">Conrad died without male issue in 918, whereupon
+the Germans elected as emperor Henry the Fowler, who thus became
+the first of the Saxon dynasty in Germany, and proved himself to be
+the wisest and most vigorous sovereign who had ruled in Germany
+since the days of Charlemagne.</p>
+<p>The extinction of the Carlovingian line did not sever the bond
+of union that existed between the different nations of Germany,
+although a contention arose between them concerning the election of
+the new emperor, each claiming that privilege for itself; and as
+the increase of the ducal power had naturally led to a wider
+distinction between them, the diet convoked for the purpose
+represented nations instead of classes. There were consequently
+four nations and four votes: the Franks under Duke Conrad, whose
+authority, nevertheless, could not compete with that of the now
+venerable Hatto, Archbishop of Mayence, who may be said to have
+been, at that period, the pope in Germany; the Saxons,
+Frieslanders, Thuringians, and some of the subdued Slavi, under
+Duke Otto; the Swabians, with Switzerland and Elsace, under
+different <i>grafs</i>, who, as the immediate officers of the
+crown, were named <i>kammerboten</i>, in order to distinguish them
+from the grafs nominated by the dukes; the Bavarians, with the
+Tyrolese and some of the subdued eastern Slavi, under Duke Arnulf
+the Bad, the son of the brave duke Luitpold. The Lothringians
+formed a fifth nation, under their duke Regingar, but were at that
+period incorporated with France.</p>
+<p>The first impulse of the diet was to bestow the crown on the
+most powerful among the different competitors, and it was
+accordingly offered to Otto of Saxony, who not only possessed the
+most extensive territory and the most warlike subjects, but whose
+authority, having descended to him from his father and grandfather,
+was also the most firmly secured. But both Otto and his ancient
+ally, the bishop Hatto, had found the system they had hitherto
+pursued, of reigning in the name of an imbecile monarch, so greatly
+conducive to their interest that they were disinclined to abandon
+it. Otto was a man who mistook the prudence inculcated by private
+interest for wisdom, and his mind, narrow as the limits of his
+dukedom, and solely intent upon the interests of his family, was
+incapable of the comprehensive views requisite in a German emperor,
+and indifferent to the welfare of the great body of the nation. The
+examples of Boso, of Odo, of Rudolph of Upper Burgundy, and of
+Berenger, who, favored by the difference in descent of the people
+they governed, had all succeeded in severing themselves from the
+empire, were ever present to his imagination, and he believed that
+as, on the other side of the Rhine, the Frank, the Burgundian, and
+the Lombard severally obeyed an independent sovereign, the East
+Frank, the Saxon, the Swabian, and the Bavarian, on this side of
+the Rhine, were also desirous of asserting a similar independence,
+and that it would be easier and less hazardous to found a
+hereditary dukedom in a powerful and separate state than to
+maintain the imperial dignity, undermined, as it was, by universal
+hostility.</p>
+<p>The influence of Hatto and the consent of Otto placed Conrad,
+Duke of Franconia, on the imperial throne. Sprung from a newly
+risen family, a mere creature of the bishop, his nobility as a
+feudal lord only dating from the period of the Babenberg feud, he
+was regarded by the Church as a pliable tool and by the dukes as
+little to be feared. His weakness was quickly demonstrated by his
+inability to retain the rich allods of the Carlovingian dynasty as
+heir to the imperial crown, and his being constrained to share them
+with the rest of the dukes; he was, nevertheless, more fully
+sensible of the dignity and of the duties of his station than those
+to whom he owed his election probably expected. His first step was
+to recall Regingar of Lothringia, who was oppressed by France, to
+his allegiance as vassal of the empire.</p>
+<p>Otto died in 912, and his son Henry, a high-spirited youth, who
+had greatly distinguished himself against the Slavi, ere long
+quarrelled with the aged bishop Hatto. According to the legendary
+account, the bishop sent him a golden chain so skilfully contrived
+as to strangle its wearer. The truth is that the ancient family
+feud between the house of Conrad and that of Otto, which was
+connected with the Babenbergers, again broke out, and that the
+Emperor attempted again to separate Thuringia, which Otto had
+governed since the death of Burkhard, from Saxony, in order to
+hinder the overpreponderance of that ducal house. Hatto, it is
+probable, counselled this step, as a considerable portion of
+Thuringia belonged to the diocese of Mayence, and a collision
+between him and the duke was therefore unavoidable. Henry flew to
+arms, and expelled the adherents of the bishop from Thuringia,
+which forced the Emperor to take the field in the name of the
+empire against his haughty vassal. This unfortunate civil war was a
+signal for a fresh irruption of the Slavi and Hungarians. During
+this year the Bohemians and Sorbi also made an inroad into
+Thuringia and Bavaria, and in 913 the Hungarians advanced as far as
+Swabia, but being surprised near Oetting by the Bavarians under
+Arnulf, who on this occasion bloodily avenged his father's death,
+and by the Swabians under the kammerboten Erchanger and Berthold,
+they were all, with the exception of thirty of their number, cut to
+pieces. Arnulf subsequently embraced a contrary line of policy,
+married the daughter of Geisa, King of Hungary, and entered into a
+confederacy with the Hungarian and the Swabian kammerboten, for the
+purpose of founding an independent state in the south of Germany,
+where he had already strengthened himself by the appointment of
+several markgrafs, Rudiger of Pechlarn in Austria, Rathold in
+Carinthia, and Berthold in the Tyrol. He then instigated all the
+enemies of the empire simultaneously to attack the Franks and
+Saxons, at that crisis at war with each other, in 915, and while
+the Danes under Gorm the Old, and the Obotrites, destroyed Hamburg,
+immense hordes of Hungarians, Bohemians, and Sorbi laid the country
+waste as far as Bremen.</p>
+<p>The Emperor was, meanwhile, engaged with the Saxons. On one
+occasion Henry narrowly escaped being taken prisoner, being merely
+saved by the stratagem of his faithful servant, Thiatmar, who
+caused the Emperor to retreat by falsely announcing to him the
+arrival of a body of auxiliaries. At length a pitched battle was
+fought near Merseburg, in 915, between Henry and Eberhard, the
+Emperor's brother, in which the Franks[<a href="#note-24">24</a>]
+were defeated, and the superiority of the Saxons remained,
+henceforward, unquestioned for more than a century. The Emperor was
+forced to negotiate with the victor, whom he induced to protect the
+northern frontiers of the empire while he applied himself in person
+to the re&euml;stablishment of order in the south.</p>
+<p><a name="note-24"><!-- Note Anchor 24 --></a>[Footnote 24: So
+great a slaughter took place that the Saxons said on the
+occasion:</p>
+<p class="poetry">"'Twere difficult to find a hell<br>
+Where so many Franks might dwell!"]</p>
+<p>In Swabia, Salomon, Bishop of Constance, who was supported by
+the commonalty, adhered to the imperial cause, while the
+kammerboten were unable to palliate their treason, and were
+gradually driven to extremities. Erchanger, relying upon aid from
+Arnulf and the Hungarians, usurped the ducal crown and took the
+bishop prisoner. Salomon's extreme popularity filled him with such
+rage that he caused the feet of some shepherds, who threw
+themselves on their knees as the captured prelate passed by, to be
+chopped off. His wife, Bertha, terror-stricken at the rashness of
+her husband, and foreseeing his destruction, received the prisoner
+with every demonstration of humility, and secretly aided his
+escape. He no sooner reappeared than the people flocked in
+thousands around him. "<i>Heil Herro! Heil Liebo!</i>" ("Hail,
+master! Hail, beloved one!") they shouted, and in their zeal
+attacked and defeated the traitors and their adherents. Berthold
+vainly defended himself in his mountain stronghold of Hohentwiel.
+The people so urgently demanded the death of these traitors to
+their country that the Emperor convoked a general assembly at
+Albingen in Swabia, sentenced Erchanger and Berthold to be publicly
+beheaded, and nominated Burkhard, in 917, whose father and uncle
+had been assassinated by order of Erchanger, as successor to the
+ducal throne. Arnulf withdrew to his fortress at Salzburg, and
+quietly awaited more favorable times. His name was branded with
+infamy by the people, who henceforth affixed to it the epithet of
+"the Bad," and the <i>Nibelungenlied</i> has perpetuated his
+detested memory.</p>
+<p>Conrad died in 918 without issue. On his death-bed, mindful only
+of the welfare of the empire, he proved himself deserving even by
+his latest act of the crown he had so worthily worn, by charging
+his brother Eberhard to forget the ancient feud between their
+houses, and to deliver the crown with his own hands to his enemy,
+the free-spirited Henry, whom he judged alone capable of meeting
+all the exigencies of the State. Eberhard obeyed his brother's
+injunctions, and the princes respected the will of their dying
+sovereign.</p>
+<p>The princes, with the exception of Burkhard and of Arnulf,
+assembled at Fritzlar, elected the absent Henry king, and
+despatched an embassy to inform him of their decision. It is said
+that the young duke was at the time among the Harz Mountains, and
+that the ambassadors found him in the homely attire of a sportsman
+in the fowling floor. He obeyed the call of the nation without
+delay and without manifesting surprise. The error he had committed
+in rebelling against the State, it was his firm purpose to atone
+for by his conduct as emperor. Of a lofty and majestic stature,
+although slight and youthful in form, powerful and active in
+person, with a commanding and penetrating glance, his very
+appearance attracted popular favor; besides these personal
+advantages, he was prudent and learned, and possessed a mind
+replete with intelligence. The influence of such a monarch on the
+progressive development of society in Germany could not fail of
+producing results fully equalling the improvements introduced by
+Charlemagne.</p>
+<p>The youthful Henry, the first of the Saxon line, was proclaimed
+king of Germany at Fritzlar, in 919, by the majority of votes, and,
+according to ancient custom, raised upon the shield. The Archbishop
+of Mayence offered to anoint him according to the usual ceremony,
+but Henry refused, alleging that he was content to owe his election
+to the grace of God and to the piety of the German princes, and
+that he left the ceremony of anointment to those who wished to be
+still more pious.</p>
+<p>Before Henry could pursue his more elevated projects, the assent
+of the southern Germans, who had not acknowledged the choice of
+their northern compatriots, had to be gained. Burkhard of Swabia,
+who had asserted his independence, and who was at that time
+carrying on a bitter feud with Rudolph, King of Burgundy, whom he
+had defeated, in 919, in a bloody engagement near Winterthur, was
+the first against whom he directed the united forces of the empire,
+in whose name he, at the same time, offered him peace and pardon.
+Burkhard, seeing himself constrained to yield, took the oath of
+fealty to the new-elected King at Worms, but continued to act with
+almost his former unlimited authority in Swabia, and even undertook
+an expedition into Italy in favor of Rudolph, with whom he had
+become reconciled. The Italians, enraged at the wantonness with
+which he mocked them, assassinated him. Henry bestowed the dukedom
+of Swabia on Hermann, one of his relations, to whom he gave
+Burkhard's widow in marriage. He also bestowed a portion of the
+south of Alemannia on King Rudolph in order to win him over, and in
+return received from him the holy lance with which the side of the
+Saviour had been pierced as he hung on the cross. Finding it no
+longer possible to dissolve the dukedoms and great fiefs, Henry, in
+order to strengthen the unity of the empire, introduced the novel
+policy of bestowing the dukedoms, as they fell vacant, on his
+relations and personal adherents, and of allying the rest of the
+dukes with himself by intermarriage, thus uniting the different
+powerful houses in the State into one family.</p>
+<p>Bavaria still remained in an unsettled state. Arnulf the Bad,
+leagued with the Hungarians, against whom Henry had great designs,
+had still much in his power, and Henry, resolved at any price to
+dissolve this dangerous alliance, not only concluded peace with
+this traitor on that condition, but also married his son Henry to
+Judith, Arnulf's daughter, in 921. Arnulf deprived the rich
+churches of great part of their treasures, and was consequently
+abhorred by the clergy, the chroniclers of those times, who,
+chiefly on that account, depicted his character in such unfavorable
+colors.</p>
+<p>In France, Charles the Simple was still the tool and jest of the
+vassals. His most dangerous enemy was Robert, Count of Paris,
+brother to Odo, the late King. Both solicited aid from Henry, but
+in a battle that shortly ensued near Soissons, Count Robert losing
+his life and Charles being defeated, Rudolph of Burgundy, one of
+Boso's nephews, set himself up as king of France, and imprisoned
+Charles the Simple, who craved assistance from the German monarch,
+to whom he promised to perform homage as his liege lord. Henry,
+meanwhile, contented himself with expelling Rudolph from
+Lotharingia, and, after taking possession of Metz, bestowed that
+dukedom upon Gisilbrecht, the son of Regingar, and reincorporated
+it with the empire. These successes now roused the apprehensions of
+the Hungarians, who again poured their invading hordes across the
+frontier. In 926 they plundered St. Gall, but were routed near
+Seckingen by the peasantry, headed by the country people of
+Hirminger, who had been roused by alarm fires; and again in Alsace,
+by Count Liutfried: another horde was cut to pieces near Bleiburg,
+in Carinthia, by Eberhard and the Count of Meran. The Hungarian
+King, probably Zoldan, was, by chance, taken prisoner during an
+incursion by the Germans, a circumstance turned by Henry to a very
+judicious use. He restored the captured prince to liberty, and also
+agreed to pay him a yearly tribute, on condition of his entering
+into a solemn truce for nine years. The experience of earlier times
+had taught Henry that a completely new organization was necessary
+in the management of military affairs in Germany before this
+dangerous enemy could be rendered innoxious, and, as an undertaking
+of this nature required time, he prudently resolved to incur a
+seeming disgrace by means of which he in fact secured the honor of
+the State. During this interval of nine years he aimed at bringing
+the other enemies of the empire, more particularly the Slavi, into
+subjection, and making preparations for an expedition against
+Hungary by which her power should receive a fatal blow.</p>
+<p>In the mean time Gisilbrecht, the youthful Duke of Lotharingia,
+again rebelled, but was besieged and taken prisoner in Zuelpich by
+Henry, who, struck by his noble appearance, restored to him his
+dukedom, and bestowed upon him his daughter, Gerberga, in marriage.
+Rudolph of France also sued for peace, being hard pressed by his
+powerful rival, Hugo the Great or Wise, the son of Robert. Charles
+the Simple was, on Henry's demand, restored to liberty, but quickly
+fell anew into the power of his faithless vassals.</p>
+<p>Peace was now established throughout the empire, and afforded
+Henry an opportunity for turning his attention to the introduction
+of measures, in the interior economy of the State, calculated to
+obviate for the future the dangers that had hitherto threatened it
+from without. The best expedient against the irruptions of the
+Hungarians appeared to him to be the circumvallation of the most
+important districts, the erection of forts and of fortified cities.
+The most important point, however, was to place the garrisons
+immediately under him as citizens of the State, commanded by his
+immediate officers, instead of their being indirectly governed by
+the feudal aristocracy and by the clergy. As these garrisons were
+intended not only for the protection of the walls, but also for
+open warfare, he had them trained to fight in rank and file, and
+formed them into a body of infantry, whose solid masses were
+calculated to withstand the furious onset of the Hungarian horse.
+These garrisons were solely composed of the ancient freemen, and
+the whole measure was, in fact, merely a reform of the ancient
+<i>arrier-ban</i>, which no longer sufficed for the protection of
+the State, and whose deficiency had long been supplied by the
+addition of vassals under the command of their temporal or
+spiritual lieges, and by the mercenaries or bodyguards of the
+emperors. The ancient class of freemen, who originally composed the
+arrier-ban, had been gradually converted into feudal vassals; but
+they were at that time still so numerous as to enable Henry to give
+them a completely new military organization, which at once secured
+to them their freedom, hitherto endangered by the preponderating
+power of the feudal aristocracy, and rendered them a powerful
+support to the throne. By collecting them into the cities, he
+afforded them a secure retreat against the attempts of the grafs,
+dukes, abbots, and bishops, and created for himself a body of
+trusty friends, of whom it would naturally be expected that they
+would ever side with the Emperor against the nobility.</p>
+<p>This new regulation appears to have been founded on the ancient
+mode of division. At first, out of every nine freemen&mdash;which
+recalls the <i>decania</i>&mdash;one only was placed within the new
+fortress, and the remaining eight were bound&mdash;perhaps on
+account of their ancient association into corporations or
+guilds&mdash;to nourish and support him; but the remaining freemen,
+in the neighborhood of the new cities, appear to have been also
+gradually collected within their walls, and to have committed the
+cultivation of their lands in the vicinity to their bondmen.
+However that may be, the ancient class of freemen completely
+disappeared as the cities increased in importance, and it was only
+among the wild mountains, where no cities sprang up, that the
+<i>centen</i> or cantons and whole districts or <i>gauen</i> of
+free peasantry were to be met with.</p>
+<p>Henry's original intention in the introduction of this new
+system was, it is evident, solely to provide a military force
+answering to the exigencies of the State; still there is no reason
+to suppose him blind to the great political advantage to be derived
+from the formation of an independent class of citizens; and that he
+had in reality premeditated a civil as well as a military
+reformation may be concluded from the fact of his having
+established fairs, markets, and public assemblies, which, of
+themselves, would be closely connected with civil industry, within
+the walls of the cities; and, even if these trading warriors were
+at first merely feudatories of the Emperor, they must naturally in
+the end have formed a class of free citizens, the more so as,
+attracted within the cities by the advantages offered to them,
+their number rapidly and annually increased.</p>
+<p>The same military reasons which induced the emperor Henry to
+enroll the ancient freemen into a regular corps of infantry, and to
+form them into a civil corporation, caused him also to metamorphose
+the feudal aristocracy into a regular troop of cavalry and a
+knightly institution. The wild disorder with which the mounted
+vassals of the empire, the dukes, grafs, bishops, and abbots, each
+distinguished by his own banner, rushed to the attack, or vied with
+each other in the fury of the assault, was now changed by Henry,
+who was well versed in every knightly art, to the disciplined
+manoeuvres of the line, and to that of fighting in close ranks, so
+well calculated to withstand the furious onset of their Hungarian
+foe. The discipline necessary for carrying these new military
+tactics into practice among a nobility habituated to license could
+alone be enforced by motives of honor, and Henry accordingly formed
+a chivalric institution, which gave rise to new manners and to an
+enthusiasm that imparted a new character to the age. The
+tournament&mdash;from the ancient verb <i>turnen</i>, to wrestle or
+fight, a public contest in every species of warfare, carried on by
+the knights in the presence of noble dames and maidens, whose favor
+they sought to gain by their prowess, and which chiefly consisted
+of tilting and jousting either singly or in troops, the day
+concluding with a banquet and a dance&mdash;was then instituted. In
+these tournaments the ancient heroism of the Germans revived; they
+were in reality founded upon the ancient pagan legends of the
+heroes who carried on an eternal contest in their Walhalla, in
+order to win the smiles of the Walkyren, now represented by earth's
+well-born dames.</p>
+<p>The ancient spirit of brotherhood in arms, which had been almost
+quenched by that of self-interest, by the desire of acquiring
+feudal possessions, by the slavish subjection of the vassals under
+their lieges, and by the intrigues of the bishops, who intermeddled
+with all feudal matters, also reappeared. A great universal society
+of Christian knights, bound to the observance of peculiar laws,
+whose highest aim was to fight only for God&mdash;before long also
+for the ladies&mdash;and who swore never to make use of
+dishonorable means for success, but solely to live and to die for
+honor, was formed; an innovation which, although merely military in
+its origin, speedily became of political importance, for, by means
+of this knightly honor, the little vassal of a minor lord was no
+longer viewed as a mere underling, but as a confederate in the
+great universal chivalric fraternity. There were also many freemen
+who sometimes gained their livelihood by offering their services to
+different courts, or by robbing on the highways, and who were too
+proud to serve on foot; Henry offered them free pardon, and formed
+them into a body of light cavalry. In the cities the free citizens,
+who were originally intended only to serve as foot soldiery, appear
+ere long to have formed themselves into mounted troops, and to have
+created a fresh body of infantry out of their artificers and
+apprentices. It is certain that every freeman could pretend to
+knighthood.</p>
+<p>Although the chivalric regulations ascribed to the emperor
+Henry, and to his most distinguished vassals, may not be genuine,
+they offer nevertheless infallible proofs of the most ancient
+spirit of knighthood. Henry ordained that no one should be created
+a knight who either by word or by deed injured the holy Church; the
+Pfalzgraf Conrad added, "no one who either by word or by deed
+injured the holy German empire"; Hermann of Swabia, "no one who
+injured a woman or a maiden"; Berthold, the brother of Arnulf of
+Bavaria, "no one who had ever deceived another or had broken his
+word"; Conrad of Franconia, "no one who had ever run away from the
+field of battle." These appear to have been, in fact, the first
+chivalric laws, for they spring from the spirit of the times, while
+all the regulations concerning nobility of birth, the number of
+ancestors, the exclusion of all those who were engaged in trade,
+etc., are, it is evident from their very nature, of a much later
+origin.</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_6"><!-- RULE4 6 --></a>
+<h2>CONQUEST OF EGYPT BY THE FATIMITES</h2>
+<center>A.D. 969</center>
+<br>
+<center>STANLEY LANE-POOLE</center>
+<p class="intro">It was the fate of the religion which Mahomet
+founded, as it has been of other great systems, to undergo many
+sectarian divisions, and to be used as the instrument of conquest
+and political power. When Islam had somewhat departed from the
+character which it first manifested in moral sternness and fiery
+zeal, and had established itself in various parts of the world on a
+basis of commerce or of science, rather than that of its original
+inspiration, various off shoots of the faith began to assume
+prominence. Among the sects which sprang up was one that claimed to
+represent the true succession of Mahomet. This sect was itself the
+result of a schism among the adherents of one of the two principal
+divisions of the Moslems&mdash;the Shiahs. They maintained that
+Ali, a relation and the adopted son of Mahomet and husband of his
+daughter Fatima, was the first legitimate imam or successor of the
+prophet. They regarded the other and greater division&mdash;the
+Sunnites, who recognized the first three caliphs, Abu-Bekr, Omar,
+and Othman&mdash;as usurpers. Ali was the fourth caliph, and the
+Sunnites in turn looked upon his followers, the Shiahs, as
+heretics.</p>
+<p class="intro">The schism among the Shiahs grew out of the claim
+of the schismatics that the legitimate imam or successor of the
+Prophet must be in the line of descent from Ali. The sixth imam,
+Jaffer, upon the death of his eldest son, Ismail, appointed another
+son, Moussa or Moses, his heir; but a large body of the Shiahs
+denied the right of Jaffer to make a new nomination, declaring the
+imamate to be strictly hereditary. They formed a new party of
+Ismailians, and in 908 a chief of this sect, Mahomet, surnamed
+el-Mahdi, or the Leader&mdash;a title of the Shiahs for their
+imams&mdash;revolted in Africa. He called himself a descendant of
+Ismail and claimed to be the legitimate imam. He aimed at the
+temporal power of a caliph, and soon established a rival caliphate
+in Africa, where he had obtained a considerable sovereignty. The
+dynasty thus begun assumed the name of Fatimites in honor of
+Fatima. The fourth caliph of this line, El-Moizz, conquered Egypt
+about 969, founded the modern Cairo, and made it his capital. The
+claims of the Egyptian caliphate were heralded throughout all
+Islam, and its rule was rapidly extended into Syria and Arabia. It
+played an important part in the history of the Crusades, but in
+1171 was abolished by the famous Saladin, and Egypt was restored to
+the obedience which it had formerly owned to Bagdad. The Bagdad
+caliphs, called Abbassides&mdash;claiming descent from Abbas, the
+uncle of Mahomet&mdash;remained rulers of Egypt until 1517, or
+until within twenty years of the death of the last Abbasside.</p>
+<p>Three hundred and thirty years had passed since the Saracens
+first invaded the valley of the Nile. The people, with traditional
+docility, had liberally adopted the religion of their rulers, and
+the Moslems now formed the great majority of the population. Arabs
+and natives had blended into much the same race that we now call
+Egyptians; but so far the mixture had not produced any conspicuous
+men. The few commanding figures among the governors, Ibn-Tulun, the
+Ikshid, Kafur, were foreigners, and even these were but a step
+above the stereotyped official. They essayed no great extension of
+their dominions; they did not try to extinguish their dangerous
+neighbors the schismatic Fatimites; and though they possessed and
+used fleets, they ventured upon no excursions against Europe.</p>
+<p>The great revolution which had swept over North Africa, and now
+spread to Egypt, arose out of the old controversy over the
+legitimacy of the caliphate. The prophet Mahomet died without
+definitely naming a successor, and thereby bequeathed an
+interminable quarrel to his followers. The principle of election,
+thus introduced, raised the first three caliphs, Abu-Bekr, Omar,
+Othman, to the <i>cathedra</i> at Medina; but a strong minority
+held that the "divine right" rested with Ali, the "Lion of God,"
+first convert to Islam, husband of the prophet's daughter Fatima,
+and father of Mahomet's only male descendants. When Ali in turn
+became the fourth caliph, he was the mark for jealousy, intrigue,
+and at length assassination; his sons, the grandsons of the
+Prophet, were excluded from the succession; his family were cruelly
+persecuted by their successful rivals, the Ommiad usurpers; and the
+tragedy of Kerbela and the murder of Hoseyn set the seal of
+martyrdom on the holy family and stirred a passionate enthusiasm
+which still rouses intense excitement in the annual representations
+of the Persian passion play.</p>
+<p>The rent thus opened in Islam was never closed. The ostracism of
+Ali "laid the foundation of the grand interminable schism which has
+divided the Mahometan Church, and equally destroyed the practice of
+charity among the members of their common creed and endangered the
+speculative truths of doctrine."</p>
+<p>The descendants of Ali, though almost universally devoid of the
+qualities of great leaders, possessed the persistence and devotion
+of martyrs, and their sufferings heightened the fanatical
+enthusiasm of their supporters. All attempts to recover the
+temporal power having proved vain, the Alides fell back upon the
+spiritual authority of the successive candidates of the holy
+family, whom they proclaimed to be the imams or spiritual leaders
+of the faithful. This doctrine of the imamate gradually acquired a
+more mystical meaning, supported by an allegorical interpretation
+of the <i>Koran</i>; and a mysterious influence was ascribed to the
+imam, who, though hidden from mortal eye, on account of the
+persecution of his enemies, would soon come forward publicly in the
+character of the ever-expected <i>mahdi</i>, sweep away the
+corruptions of the heretical caliphate, and revive the majesty of
+the pure lineage of the prophet. All Mahometans believe in a coming
+mahdi, a messiah, who shall restore right and prepare for the
+second advent of Mahomet and the tribunal of the last day; but the
+Shiahs turned the expectation to special account. They taught that
+the true Imam, though invisible to mortal sight, is ever living;
+they predicted the mahdi's speedy appearance, and kept their
+adherents on the alert to take up arms in his service. With a view
+to his coming they organized a pervasive conspiracy, instituted a
+secret society with carefully graduated stages of initiation, used
+the doctrines of all religions and sects as weapons in the
+propaganda, and sent missionaries throughout the provinces of Islam
+to increase the numbers of the initiates and pave the way for the
+great revolution. We see their partial success in the ravages of
+the Karmathians, who were the true parents of the Fatimites. The
+leaders and chief missionaries had really nothing in common with
+Mahometanism. Among themselves they were frankly atheists. Their
+objects were political, and they used religion in any form, and
+adapted it in all modes, to secure proselytes, to whom they
+imparted only so much of their doctrine as they were able to bear.
+These men were furnished with "an armory of proselytism" as
+perfect, perhaps, as any known to history: they had appeals to
+enthusiasm, and arguments for the reason, and "fuel for the
+fiercest passions of the people and times in which they moved."
+Their real aim was not religious or constructive, but pure
+nihilism. They used the claim of the family of Ali, not because
+they believed in any divine right or any caliphate, but because
+some flag had to be flourished in order to rouse the people.</p>
+<p>One of these missionaries, disguised as a merchant, journeyed
+back to Barbary in 893, with some Berber pilgrims who had performed
+the sacred ceremonies at Mecca. He was welcomed by the great tribe
+of the Kitama, and rapidly acquired an extraordinary influence over
+the Berbers&mdash;a race prone to superstition, and easily
+impressed by the mysterious rites of initiation and the emotional
+doctrines of the propagandist, the wrongs of the prophetic house,
+and the approaching triumph of the Mahdi. Barbary had never been
+much attached to the caliphate, and for a century it had been
+practically independent under the Aglabite dynasty, the barbarous
+excesses of whose later sovereigns had alienated their subjects.
+Alides, moreover, had established themselves, in the dynasty of the
+Idrisides, in Morocco since the end of the eighth century. The land
+was in every respect ripe for revolution, and the success of
+Abu-Abdallah esh-Shii, the new missionary, was extraordinarily
+rapid. In a few years he had a following of two hundred thousand
+armed men, and after a series of battles he drove Ziyadat-Allah,
+the last Aglabite prince, out of the country in 908. The missionary
+then proclaimed the imam Obeid-Allah as the true caliph and
+spiritual head of Islam. Whether this Obeid-Allah was really a
+descendant of Ali or not, he had been carefully prepared for the
+role, and reached Barbary in disguise, with the greatest mystery
+and some difficulty, pursued by the suspicions of the Bagdad
+caliph, who, in great alarm, sent repeated orders for his arrest.
+Indeed, the victorious missionary had to rescue his spiritual chief
+from a sordid prison at Sigilmasa. Then humbly prostrating himself
+before him, he hailed him as the expected mahdi, and in January,
+910, he was duly prayed for in the mosque of Kayrawan as "the Imam
+'Obeid-Allah el-Mahdi, Commander of the Faithful.'"</p>
+<p>The missionary's Berber proselytes were too numerous to
+encourage resistance, and the few who indulged the luxury of
+conscientious scruples were killed or imprisoned. El-Mahdi, indeed,
+appeared so secure in power that he excited the jealousy of his
+discoverer.</p>
+<p>Abu-Abdallah, the missionary, now found himself nobody, where a
+month before he had been supreme. The Fatimite restoration was to
+him only a means to an end; he had used Obeid-Allah's title as an
+engine of revolution, intending to proceed to the furthest lengths
+of his philosophy, to a complete social and political anarchy, the
+destruction of Islam, community of lands and women, and all the
+delight of unshackled license. Instead of this, his creature had
+absorbed his power, and all such designs were made void. He began
+to hatch treason and to hint doubts as to the genuineness of the
+Mahdi, who, as he truly represented, according to prophecy, ought
+to work miracles and show other proofs of his divine mission.
+People began to ask for a "sign." In reply, the Mahdi had the
+missionary murdered.</p>
+<p>The first Fatimite caliph, though without experience, was so
+vigorous a ruler that he could dispense with the dangerous support
+of his discoverer. He held the throne for a quarter of a century
+and established his authority, more or less continuously, over the
+Arab and Berber tribes and settled cities from the frontier of
+Egypt to the province of Fez (Fas) in Morocco, received the
+allegiance of the Mahometan governor of Sicily, and twice
+despatched expeditions into Egypt, which he would probably have
+permanently conquered if he had not been hampered by perpetual
+insurrections in Barbary. Distant governors, and often whole tribes
+of Berbers, were constantly in revolt, and the disastrous famine of
+928-929, coupled with the Asiatic plague which his troops had
+brought back with them from Egypt, led to general disturbances and
+insurrections which fully occupied the later years of his reign.
+The western provinces, from Tahart and Nakur to Fez and beyond,
+frequently threw off all show of allegiance. His authority was
+founded more on fear than on religious enthusiasm, though zeal for
+the Alide cause had its share in his original success. The new
+"Eastern doctrines," as they were called, were enforced at the
+sword's point, and frightful examples were made of those who
+ventured to tread in the old paths. Nor were the freethinkers of
+the large towns, who shared the missionary's esoteric principles,
+encouraged; for outwardly, at least, the Mahdi was strictly a
+Moslem. When people at Kayrawan began to put in practice the
+missionary's advanced theories, to scoff at all the rules of Islam,
+to indulge in free love, pig's flesh, and wine, they were sternly
+brought to order. The mysterious powers expected of a mahdi were
+sedulously rumored among the credulous Berbers, though no miracles
+were actually exhibited; and the obedience of the conquered
+provinces was secured by horrible outrages and atrocities, of which
+the terrified people dared not provoke a repetition at the hands of
+the Mahdi's savage generals.</p>
+<p>His eldest son Abul-Kasim, who had twice led expeditions into
+Egypt, succeeded to the caliphate with the title of El-Kaim,
+934-946. He began his reign with warlike vigor. He sent out a fleet
+in 934 or 935, which harried the southern coast of France,
+blockaded and took Genoa, and coasted along Calabria, massacring
+and plundering, burning the shipping, and carrying off slaves
+wherever it touched. At the same time he despatched a third army
+against Egypt; but the firm hand of the Ikshid now held the
+government, and his brother, Obeid-Allah, with fifteen thousand
+horse, drove the enemy out of Alexandria and gave them a crushing
+defeat on their way home. But for the greater part of his reign
+El-Kaim was on the defensive, fighting for existence against the
+usurpation of one Abu-Yezid, who repudiated Shiism, cursed the
+Mahdi and his successor, stirred up most of Morocco and Barbary
+against El-Kaim, drove him out of his capital, and went near to
+putting an end to the Fatimite caliphate.</p>
+<p>It was only after seven years of uninterrupted civil war that
+this formidable insurrection died out, under the firm but politic
+management of the third caliph, El-Mansur (946-953), a brave man
+who knew both when to strike and when to be generous. Abu-Yezid was
+at last run to earth, and his body was skinned and stuffed with
+straw, and exposed in a cage with a couple of ludicrous apes as a
+warning to the disaffected.</p>
+<p>The Fatimites so far wear a brutal and barbarous character. They
+do not seem to have encouraged literature or learning; but this is
+partly explained by the fact that culture belonged chiefly to the
+orthodox caliphate; and its learned men could have no dealings with
+the heretical pretender. The city of Kayrawan, which dates from the
+Arab conquest in the eighth century, preserves the remains of some
+noble buildings, but of their other capitals or royal residences no
+traces of art or architecture remain to bear witness to the taste
+of their founders. Each began to decay as soon as its successor was
+built.</p>
+<p>With the fourth caliph, however, El-Moizz, the conqueror of
+Egypt, 953-975, the Fatimites entered upon a new phase.</p>
+<p>El-Moizz was a man of politic temper, a born statesman, able to
+grasp the conditions of success and to take advantage of every
+point in his favor. He was also highly educated, and not only wrote
+Arabic poetry and delighted in its literature, but studied Greek,
+mastered Berber and Sudani dialects, and is even said to have
+taught himself Slavonic in order to converse with his slaves from
+Eastern Europe. His eloquence was such as to move his audience to
+tears. To prudent statesmanship he added a large generosity, and
+his love of justice was among his noblest qualities. So far as
+outward acts could show, he was a strict Moslem of the Shiah sect,
+and the statement of his adversaries that he was really an atheist
+seems to rest merely upon the belief that all the Fatimites adopted
+the esoteric doctrines of the Ismailian missionaries.</p>
+<p>When he ascended the throne in April, 953, he had already a
+policy, and he lost no time in carrying it into execution. He first
+made a progress through his dominions, visiting each town,
+investigating its needs, and providing for its peace and
+prosperity. He bearded the rebels in their mountain fastnesses,
+till they laid down their arms and fell at his feet. He conciliated
+the chiefs and governors with presents and appointments, and was
+rewarded by their loyalty.</p>
+<p>At the head of his ministers he set Gawhar "the Roman," a slave
+from the Eastern Empire, who had risen to the post of secretary to
+the late Caliph, and was now by his son promoted to the rank of
+<i>wazir</i> commander of the forces. He was sent in 958 to bring
+the ever-refractory Maghreb (Morocco) to allegiance. The expedition
+was entirely successful, Sigilmasa and Fez were taken, and Gawhar
+reached the shore of the Atlantic.</p>
+<p>Jars of live fish and sea-weed reached the capital, and proved
+to the Caliph that his empire touched the ocean, the "limitless
+limit" of the world. All the African littoral, from the Atlantic to
+the frontier of Egypt&mdash;with the single exception of Spanish
+Ceuta&mdash;now peaceably admitted the sway of the Fatimite
+Caliph.</p>
+<p>The result was due partly to the exhaustion caused by the long
+struggle during the preceding reigns, partly to the politic
+concessions and personal influence of the able young ruler. He was
+liberal and conciliatory toward different provinces, but to the
+Arabs of the capital he was severe. Kayrawan teemed with
+disaffected folk, sheiks, and theologians bitterly hostile to the
+heretical "orientalism" of the Fatimites, and always ready to
+excite a tumult. Moizz was resolved to give them no chance, and one
+of his repressive measures was the curfew. At sunset a trumpet
+sounded, and anyone found abroad after that was liable to lose not
+only his way, but his head. So long as they were quiet, however, he
+used the people justly, and sought to impress them in his favor. In
+a singular interview, recorded by Makrisi, he exhibited himself to
+a deputation of sheiks, dressed in the utmost simplicity, and
+seated before his writing materials in a plain room, surrounded by
+books. He wished to disabuse them of the idea that he led in
+private a life of luxury and self-indulgence.</p>
+<p>"You see what employs me when I am alone," he said; "I read
+letters that come to me from the lands of the East and the West,
+and answer them with my own hand; I deny myself all the pleasures
+of the world, and I seek only to protect your lives, multiply your
+children, shame your rivals, and daunt your enemies." Then he gave
+them much good advice, and especially recommended them to keep to
+one wife.</p>
+<p>"One woman is enough for one man. If you straitly observe what I
+have ordained," he concluded, "I trust that God will, through you,
+procure our conquest of the East in like manner as he has
+vouchsafed us the West."</p>
+<p>The conquest of Egypt was indeed the aim of his life. To rule
+over tumultuous Arab and Berber tribes in a poor country formed no
+fit ambition for a man of his capacity. Egypt, its wealth, its
+commerce, its great port, and its docile population&mdash;these
+were his dream.</p>
+<p>For two years he had been digging wells and building rest-houses
+on the road to Alexandria. The West was now outwardly quiet, and
+between Egypt and any hope of succor from the eastern caliphate
+stood the ravaging armies of the Karmatis. Egypt itself was in
+helpless disorder. The great Kafur was dead, and its nominal ruler
+was a child. Ibn-Furat, the <i>wazir</i>, had made himself
+obnoxious to the people by arrests and extortions. The very
+soldiery was in revolt, and the Turkish retainers of the court
+mutinied, plundered the wazir's palace, and even opened
+negotiations with Moizz. Hoseyn, the nephew of the Ikshid,
+attempted to restore public order, but after three months of
+vacillating and unpopular government he returned to his own
+province in Palestine to make terms with the Karmatis. Famine, the
+result of the exceptionally low Nile of 967, added to the misery of
+the country; plague, as usual, followed in the steps of famine;
+over six hundred thousand people died in and around Fustat, and the
+wretched inhabitants began in despair to migrate to happier
+lands.</p>
+<p>All these matters were fully reported to Moizz by the renegade
+Jew Yakub Killis, a former favorite of Kafur, who had been driven
+from Egypt by the jealous exactions of the wazir, Ibn-Furat, and
+who was perfectly familiar with the political and financial state
+of the Nile valley. His representations confirmed the Fatimite
+Caliph's resolve; the Arab tribes were summoned to his standard; an
+immense treasure was collected, all of which was spent in the
+campaign; gratuities were lavishly distributed to the army, and at
+the head of over one hundred thousand men, all well mounted and
+armed, accompanied by a thousand camels and a mob of horses
+carrying money, stores, and ammunition, Gawhar marched from
+Kayrawan in February, 969. The Caliph himself reviewed the troops.
+The marshal kissed his hand and his horse's shoe. All the princes,
+emirs, and courtiers passed reverently on foot before the honored
+leader of the conquering army, who, as a last proof of favor,
+received the gift of his master's own robes and charger. The
+governors of all the towns on the route had orders to come on foot
+to Gawhar's stirrup, and one of them vainly offered a large bribe
+to be excused the indignity.</p>
+<p>The approach of this overwhelming force filled the Egyptian
+ministers with consternation, and they thought only of obtaining
+favorable terms. A deputation of notables, headed by Abu-Giafar
+Moslem, a <i>sherif</i>, or descendant of the Prophet's family,
+waited upon Gawhar near Alexandria, and demanded a capitulation.
+The general consented without reserve, and in a conciliatory letter
+granted all they asked. But they had reckoned without their host;
+the troops at Fustat would not listen to such humiliation, and
+there was a strong war party among the citizens, to which some of
+the ministers leaned. The city prepared for resistance, and
+skirmishes took place with Gawhar's army, which had meanwhile
+arrived at the opposite town of Giza in July. Forcing the passage
+of the river, with the help of some boats supplied by Egyptian
+soldiers, the invaders fell upon the imposing army drawn up on the
+other bank, and totally defeated them. The troops deserted Fustat
+in a panic, and the women of the city, running out of their houses,
+implored the sherif to intercede with the conqueror.</p>
+<p>Gawhar, like his master, always disposed to a politic leniency,
+renewed his former promises, and granted a complete amnesty to all
+who submitted. The overjoyed populace cut off the heads of some of
+the refractory leaders, in their enthusiasm, and sent them to the
+camp in pleasing token of allegiance. A herald, bearing a white
+flag, rode through the streets of Fustat proclaiming the amnesty
+and forbidding pillage, and on August the 5th the Fatimite army,
+with full pomp of drums and banners, entered the capital.</p>
+<p>That very night Gawhar laid the foundations of a new city, or
+rather fortified palace, destined for the reception of his
+sovereign. He was encamped on the sandy waste which stretched
+northeast of Fustat on the road to Heliopolis, and there, at a
+distance of about a mile from the river, he marked out the
+boundaries of the new capital. There were no buildings, save the
+old "Convent of the Bones," nor any cultivation except the
+beautiful park called "Kafur's Garden," to obstruct his plans. A
+square, somewhat less than a mile each way, was pegged out with
+poles, and the Maghrabi astrologers, in whom Moizz reposed
+extravagant faith, consulted together to determine the auspicious
+moment for the opening ceremony. Bells were hung on ropes from pole
+to pole, and at the signal of the sages their ringing was to
+announce the precise moment when the laborers were to turn the
+first sod. The calculations of the astrologers were, however,
+anticipated by a raven, who perched on one of the ropes and set the
+bells jingling, upon which every mattock was struck into the earth,
+and the trenches were opened. It was an unlucky hour; the planet
+Mars (El-Kahir) was in the ascendant; but it could not be undone,
+and the place was accordingly named after the hostile planet,
+El-Kahira, "the Martial" or "Triumphant," in the hope that the
+sinister omen might be turned to a triumphant issue. Cairo, as
+Kahira has come to be called, may fairly be said to have outlived
+all astrological prejudices. The name of the Abbasside caliph was
+at once expunged from the Friday prayers at the old mosque of Amr
+at Fustat; the black Abbasside robes were proscribed, and the
+preacher, in pure white, recited the Khutba for the imam Moizz,
+emir el-muminin, and invoked blessings on his ancestors Ali and
+Fatima and all their holy family. The call to prayer from the
+minarets was adapted to Shiah taste. The joyful news was sent to
+the Fatimite Caliph on swift dromedaries, together with the heads
+of the slain. Coins were struck with the special formulas of the
+Fatimite creed&mdash;"Ali is the noblest of [God's] delegates, the
+wazir of the best of apostles"; "the Imam Maadd calls men to
+profess the unity of the Eternal"&mdash;in addition to the usual
+dogmas of the Mahometan faith. For two centuries the mosques and
+the mint proclaimed the shibboleth of the Shiahs.</p>
+<p>Gawhar set himself at once to restore tranquillity and alleviate
+the sufferings of the famine-stricken people. Moizz had providently
+sent grain ships to relieve their distress, and as the price of
+bread nevertheless remained at famine rates, Gawhar publicly
+flogged the millers, established a central corn-exchange, and
+compelled everyone to sell his corn there under the eye of a
+government inspector. In spite of his efforts the famine lasted for
+two years; plague spread alarmingly, insomuch that the corpses
+could not be buried fast enough, and were thrown into the Nile; and
+it was not till the winter of 971-972 that plenty returned and the
+pest disappeared. As usual, the viceroy took a personal part in all
+public functions. Every Saturday he sat in court, assisted by the
+wazir Ibn-Furat, the cadi, and skilled lawyers, to hear causes and
+petitions and to administer justice. To secure impartiality, he
+appointed to every department of state an Egyptian and a Maghrabi
+officer. His firm and equitable rule insured peace and order; and
+the great palace he was building, and the new mosque, the Azhar,
+which he founded in 970 and finished in 972, not only added to the
+beauty of the capital, but gave employment to innumerable
+craftsmen.</p>
+<p>The inhabitants of Egypt accepted the new <i>regime</i> with
+their habitual phlegm. An Ikshidi officer in the Bashmur district
+of Lower Egypt did, indeed, incite the people to rebellion, but his
+fate was not such as to encourage others. He was chased out of
+Egypt, captured on the coast of Palestine, and then, it is gravely
+recorded, he was given sesame oil to drink for a month, till his
+skin stripped off, whereupon it was stuffed with straw and hung up
+on a beam, as a reminder to him who would be admonished. With this
+brief exception we read of no riots, no sectarian risings, and the
+general surrender was complete when the remaining partisans of the
+deposed dynasty, to the number of five thousand, laid down their
+arms. An embassy sent to George, King of Nubia, to invite him to
+embrace Islam, and to exact the customary tribute, was received
+with courtesy, and the money, but not the conversion, was arranged.
+The holy cities of Mecca and Medina in the Higaz, where the gold of
+Moizz had been prudently distributed some years before, responded
+to his generosity and success by proclaiming his supremacy in the
+mosques; the Hamdanide prince who held Northern Syria paid similar
+homage to the Fatimite Caliph at Aleppo, where the Abbassides had
+hitherto been recognized. Southern Syria, however, which had formed
+part of the Ikshid's kingdom, did not submit to the usurpers
+without a struggle. Hoseyn was still independent at Ramla, and
+Gawhar's lieutenant, Giafar ben Fellah, was obliged to give him
+battle. Hoseyn was defeated and exposed bareheaded to the insults
+of the mob at Fustat, to be finally sent, with the rest of the
+family of Ikshid, to a Barbary jail. Damascus, the home of
+orthodoxy, was taken by Giafar, not without a struggle, and the
+Fatimite doctrine was there published, to the indignation and
+disgust of the Sunnite population.</p>
+<p>A worse plague than the Fatimite conquest soon afflicted Syria.
+The Karmati leader, Hasan ben Ahmad, surnamed El-Asam, finding the
+blackmail, which he had lately received out of the revenues of
+Damascus, suddenly stopped, resolved to extort it by force of arms.
+The Fatimites indeed sprang from the same movement, and their
+founder professed the same political and irreligious philosophy as
+Hasan himself; but this did not stand in his way, and his knowledge
+of their origin made him the less disposed to render homage to the
+sacred pretensions of the new imams, whom he contemptuously
+designated as the spawn of the quacks, charlatans, and the enemies
+of Islam. He tried to enlist the support of the Abbasside Caliph,
+but El-Muti replied that Fatimis and Karmatis were all one to him,
+and he would have nothing to do with either. The Buweyhid prince of
+Irak, however, supplied Hasan with arms and money; Abu-Taghlib, the
+Hamdanide ruler of Rahba on the Euphrates, contributed men; and,
+supported by the Arab tribes of Okeyl, Tavy, and others, Hasan
+marched upon Damascus, where the Fatimites were routed, and their
+general, Giafar, killed. Moizz was forthwith publicly cursed from
+the pulpit in the Syrian capital, to the qualified satisfaction of
+the inhabitants, who had to pay handsomely for the pleasure.</p>
+<p>Hasan next marched to Ramla, and thence, leaving the Fatimite
+army of eleven thousand men shut up in Jaffa, invaded Egypt. His
+troops surprised Kulzum at the head of the Red Sea, and Farama
+(Pelusium), near the Mediterranean, at the two ends of the Egyptian
+frontier. Tinnis declared against the Fatimites, and Hasan appeared
+at Heliopolis in October, 971. Gawhar had already intrenched the
+new capital with a deep ditch, leaving but one entrance, which he
+closed with an iron gate. He armed the Egyptians as well as the
+African troops, and a spy was set to watch the wazir Ibn-Furat,
+lest he should be guilty of treachery. The sherifs of the family of
+Ali were summoned to the camp, as hostages for the good behavior of
+the inhabitants. Meanwhile, the officers of the enemy were
+liberally tempted with bribes. Two months they lay before Cairo,
+and then, after an indecisive engagement, Hasan stormed the gate,
+forced his way across the ditch, and attacked the Egyptians on
+their own ground. The result was a severe repulse, and Hasan
+retreated, under cover of night, to Kulzum, leaving his camp and
+baggage to be plundered by the Fatimites, who were only balked of a
+sanguinary pursuit by the intervention of night. The Egyptian
+volunteers displayed unexpected valor in the fight, and many of the
+partisans of the late dynasty, who were with the enemy, were made
+prisoners.</p>
+<p>Thus the serious danger, which went near to cutting short the
+Fatimite occupation of Egypt, was not only resolutely met, but even
+turned into an advantage. There was no more intriguing on behalf of
+the Ikshidids; Tinnis was recovered from its temporary defection
+and occupied by the reinforcements which Moizz had hurriedly
+despatched under Ibn-Ammar to the succor of Gawhar; and the Karmati
+fleet, which attempted to recover this fort, was obliged to slip
+anchor, abandoning seven ships and five hundred prisoners. Jaffa,
+which still held out resolutely against the besieging Arabs, was
+now relieved by the despatch of African troops from Cairo, who
+brought back the garrison, but did not dare to hold the post. The
+enemy fell back upon Damascus, and the leaders fell out among
+themselves.</p>
+<p>The Karmati chief was not crushed, however, by his defeat. In
+the following year he was collecting ships and Arabs for a fresh
+invasion. Gawhar, who had long urged his master to come and protect
+his conquest, now pointed out the extreme danger of a second attack
+from an enemy which had already succeeded in boldly forcing his way
+to the gate of Cairo. Moizz had delayed his journey, because he
+could not safely trust his western provinces in his absence; but on
+the receipt of this grave news, he appointed Yusuf Bulugin ben
+Zeyri, of the Berber tribe of Sanhaga, to act as his deputy in
+Barbary, left Sardaniya&mdash;the Fontainebleau of Kayrawan, as
+Mansuriya was its Versailles&mdash;in November, 972, and making a
+leisurely progress, by way of Kabis, Tripolis, Agdabiya, and Barka,
+reached Alexandria in the following May. Here the Caliph received a
+deputation, consisting of the cadi of Fustat and other eminent
+persons, whom he moved to tears by his eloquent and virtuous
+discourse. A month later he was encamped in the gardens of the
+monastery near Giza, where he was reverently welcomed by his
+devoted servant, Gawhar, content to efface himself in his master's
+shadow.</p>
+<p>The entry of the new Caliph into his new capital was a solemn
+spectacle. With him were all his sons and brothers and kinsfolk,
+and before him were borne the coffins of his ancestors. Fustat was
+illuminated and decked for his reception; but Moizz would not enter
+the old capital of the usurping caliphs. He crossed from Roda by
+Gawhar's new bridge, and proceeded direct to the palace-city of
+Cairo. Here he threw himself on his face and gave thanks to
+God.</p>
+<p>There was yet an ordeal to be gone through before he could
+regard himself as safe. Egypt was the home of many undoubted
+sherifs or descendants of Ali, and these, headed by a
+representative of the distinguished Tabataba family, came boldly to
+examine his credentials. Moizz must prove his title to the holy
+imamate inherited from Ali, to the satisfaction of these experts in
+genealogy. According to the story, the Caliph called a great
+assembly of the people, and invited the sherifs to appear; then,
+half drawing his sword, he said:</p>
+<p>"Here is my pedigree," and scattering gold among the spectators,
+added, "and there is my proof."</p>
+<p>It was perhaps the best argument he could produce. The sherifs
+could only protest their entire satisfaction at this convincing
+evidence; and it is at any rate certain that, whatever they thought
+of the Caliph's claim, they did not contest it. The capital was
+placarded with his name, and the praises of Ali and Moizz were
+acclaimed by the people, who flocked to his first public audience.
+Among the presents offered him, that of Gawhar was especially
+splendid, and its costliness illustrates the colossal wealth
+acquired by the Fatimites. It included five hundred horses with
+saddles and bridles encrusted with gold, amber, and precious
+stones; tents of silk and cloth of gold, borne on Bactrian camels;
+dromedaries, mules, and camels of burden; filigree coffers full of
+gold and silver vessels; gold-mounted swords; caskets of chased
+silver containing precious stones; a turban set with jewels, and
+nine hundred boxes filled with samples of all the goods that Egypt
+produced.</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_7"><!-- RULE4 7 --></a>
+<h2>GROWTH AND DECADENCE OF CHIVALRY</h2>
+<center>TENTH TO FIFTEENTH CENTURY</center>
+<br>
+<center>L&Eacute;ON GAUTIER</center>
+<p class="intro">Writers on the history of chivalry are unable to
+refer its origin to any definite time or place; and even specific
+definition of chivalry is seldom attempted by careful students.
+They rather give us, as does Gautier in the picturesque account
+which follows, some recognized starting-point, and for definition
+content themselves with characterization of the spirit and aims of
+chivalry, analysis of its methods, and the story of its rise and
+fall.</p>
+<p class="intro">Chivalry was not an official institution that came
+into existence by the decree of a sovereign. Although religious in
+its original elements and impulses, there was nothing in its origin
+to remind us of the foundation of a religious order. It would be
+useless to search for the place of its birth or for the name of its
+founder. It was born everywhere at once, and has been everywhere at
+the same time the natural effect of the same aspirations and the
+same needs. "There was a moment when people everywhere felt the
+necessity of tempering the ardor of old German blood, and of giving
+to their ill-regulated passions an ideal. Hence chivalry!"</p>
+<p class="intro">Yet chivalry arose from a German custom which was
+idealized by the Christian church; and chivalry was more an ideal
+than an institution. It was "the Christian form of the military
+profession; the knight was the Christian soldier." True, the
+profession and mission of the church meant the spread of peace and
+the hatred of war, she holding with her Master that "they who take
+the sword shall perish with the sword." Her thought was formulated
+by St. Augustine: "He who can think of war and can support it
+without great sorrow is truly dead to human feelings." "It is
+necessary," he says, "to submit to war, but to wish for peace." The
+church did, however, look upon war as a divine means of punishment
+and of expiation, for individuals and nations. And the eloquent
+Bossuet showed the church's view of war as the terrestrial
+preparation for the Kingdom of God, and described how empires fall
+upon one another to form a foundation whereon to build the church.
+In the light of such interpretations the church availed herself of
+the militant auxiliary known as chivalry.</p>
+<p class="intro">Along with the religious impulse that animated it,
+chivalry bore, throughout its purer course, the character of
+knightliness which it received from Teutonic sources. How the fine
+sentiments and ennobling customs of the Teutonic nations,
+particularly with respect to the gallantry and generosity of the
+male toward the female sex, grew into beautiful combination with
+the rule of protecting the weak and defenceless everywhere, and how
+these elements were blended with the spirit of religious devotion
+which entered into the organization and practices of chivalry,
+forms one of the most fascinating features in the study of its
+development; and this gentler side, no less than its sterner
+aspects, is faithfully presented in the brilliant examination of
+Gautier. And the heroic sentiment and action which inspired and
+accomplished the sacred warfare of the Crusades are not less
+admirably depicted in these pages; while in his summary of the
+decline of chivalry Gautier has perhaps never been surpassed for
+penetrating insight and lucid exposition.</p>
+<p>There is a sentence of Tacitus&mdash;the celebrated passage in
+the <i>Germania</i>&mdash;that refers to a German rite in which we
+really find all the military elements of the future chivalry. The
+scene took place beneath the shade of an old forest. The barbarous
+tribe is assembled, and one feels that a solemn ceremony is in
+preparation. Into the midst of the assembly advances a very young
+man, whom you can picture to yourself with sea-green eyes, long
+fair hair, and perhaps some tattooing. A chief of the tribe is
+present, who without delay places gravely in the hands of the young
+man a <i>framea</i> and a buckler. Failing a sovereign ruler, it is
+the father of the youth, or some relative, who undertakes this
+delivery of weapons. "Such is the 'virile robe' of these people,"
+as Tacitus well puts it; "such is the first honor of their youth.
+Till then the young man was only one in a family; he becomes by
+this rite a member of the Republic. <i>Ante hoc domus pars videtur:
+mox rei publicae</i>. This sword and buckler he will never abandon,
+for the Germans in all their acts, whether public or private, are
+always armed. So, the ceremony finished, the assembly separates,
+and the tribe reckons a <i>miles</i>&mdash;a warrior&mdash;the
+more. That is all!"</p>
+<p>The solemn handing of arms to the young German&mdash;such is the
+first germ of chivalry which Christianity was one day to animate
+into life. "<i>Vestigium vetus creandi equites seu milites</i>." It
+is with reason that Sainte-Palaye comments in the very same way
+upon the text of the <i>Germania</i>, and that a scholar of our own
+days exclaims with more than scientific exactness, "The true origin
+of <i>miles</i> is this bestowal of arms which among the Germans
+marks the entry into civil life."</p>
+<p>No other origin will support the scrutiny of the critic, and he
+will not find anyone now to support the theory of Roman origin with
+Sainte-Marie, or that of the Arabian origin with Beaumont. There
+only remains to explain in this place the term knight (chevalier),
+but it is well known to be derived from <i>caballus</i>, which
+primarily signifies a beast of burden, a pack-horse, and has ended
+by signifying a war-horse. The knight, also, has always preserved
+the name of <i>miles</i> in the Latin tongue of the Middle Ages, in
+which chivalry is always called <i>militia</i>. Nothing can be
+clearer than this.</p>
+<p>We do not intend to go further, however, without replying to two
+objections, which are not without weight, and which we do not wish
+to leave behind us unanswered.</p>
+<p>In a certain number of Latin books of the Middle Ages we find,
+to describe chivalry, an expression which the "Romanists" oppose
+triumphantly to us, and of which the Romish origin cannot seriously
+be doubted. When it is intended to signify that a knight has been
+created, it is stated that the individual has been girt with the
+<i>cingulum militare</i>. Here we find ourselves in full Roman
+parlance, and the word signified certain terms which described
+admission into military service, the release from this service, and
+the degradation of the legionary. When St. Martin left the militia,
+his action was qualified as <i>solutio cinguli</i>, and at all
+those who act like him the insulting expression <i>militaribus
+zonis discincti</i> is cast. The girdle which sustains the sword of
+the Roman officer&mdash;<i>cingulum zona</i>, or rather
+<i>cinctorium</i>&mdash;as also the baldric, from <i>balteus</i>,
+passed over the shoulder and was intended to support the weapon of
+the common soldier. "You perceive quite well," say our adversaries,
+"that we have to do with a Roman costume." Two very simple
+observations will, perhaps, suffice to get to the bottom of such a
+specious argument: The first is that the Germans in early times
+wore, in imitation of the Romans, "a wide belt ornamented with
+bosses of metal," a baldric, by which their swords were suspended
+on the left side; and the second is that the chroniclers of old
+days, who wrote in Latin and affected the classic style, very
+naturally adopted the word <i>cingulum</i> in all its acceptations,
+and made use of this Latin paraphrasis&mdash;<i>cingulo militari
+decorare</i>&mdash;to express this solemn adoption of the sword.
+This evidently German custom was always one of the principal rites
+of the collation of chivalry. There is then nothing more in it than
+a somewhat vague reminiscence of a Roman custom with a very natural
+conjunction of terms which has always been the habit of a literary
+people.</p>
+<p>To sum up, the word is Roman, but the thing itself is German.
+Between the <i>militia</i> of the Romans and the chivalry of the
+Middle Ages there is really nothing in common but the military
+profession considered generally. The official admittance of the
+Roman soldier to an army hierarchically organized in no way
+resembled the admission of a new knight into a sort of military
+college and the "pink of society." As we read further the
+singularly primitive and barbarous ritual of the service of
+knightly reception in the twelfth century, one is persuaded that
+the words exhale a German odor, and have nothing Roman about them.
+But there is another argument, and one which would appear decisive.
+The Roman legionary could not, as a rule, withdraw from the
+service; he could not avoid the baldric. The youthful knight of the
+Middle Ages, on the contrary, was always free to arm himself or not
+as he pleased, just as other cavaliers are at liberty to leave or
+join their ranks. The principal characteristic of the knightly
+service, and one which separates it most decidedly from the Roman
+<i>militia</i>, was its freedom of action.</p>
+<p>One very specious objection is made as regards feudalism, which
+some clear-minded people obstinately confound with chivalry. This
+was the favorite theory of Montalembert. Now there are two kinds of
+feudalism, which the old feudalists put down very clearly in two
+words now out of date&mdash;"fiefs of dignity" and "fiefs simple."
+About the middle of the ninth century, the dukes and counts made
+themselves independent of the central power, and declared that
+people owed the same allegiance to them as they did to the emperor
+or the king. Such were the acts of the "fiefs of dignity," and we
+may at once allow that they had nothing in common with chivalry.
+The "fiefs simple," then, remained.</p>
+<p>In the Merovingian period we find a certain number of small
+proprietors, called <i>vassi</i>, commending themselves to other
+men more powerful and more rich, who were called <i>seniores</i>.
+To his senior who made him a present of land the <i>vassus</i> owed
+assistance and fidelity. It is true that as early as the reign of
+Charlemagne he followed him to war, but it must be noted that it
+was to the emperor, to the central power, that he actually rendered
+military service. There was nothing very particular in this, but
+the time was approaching when things would be altered. Toward the
+middle of the ninth century we find a large number of men falling
+"on their knees" before other men! What are they about? They are
+"recommending" themselves, but, in plainer terms, "Protect us and
+we will be your men." And they added: "It is to you and to you only
+that we intend in future to render military service; but in
+exchange you must protect the land we possess&mdash;defend what you
+will in time concede to us; and defend <i>us</i> ourselves." These
+people on their knees were "vassals" at the feet of their "lords";
+and the fief was generally only a grant of land conceded in
+exchange for military service.</p>
+<p>Feudalism of this nature has nothing in common with
+chivalry.</p>
+<p>If we consider chivalry in fact as a kind of privileged body
+into which men were received on certain conditions and with a
+certain ritual, it is important to observe that every vassal is not
+necessarily a cavalier. There were vassals who, with the object of
+averting the cost of initiation or for other reasons, remained
+<i>damoiseaux</i>, or pages, all their lives. The majority, of
+course, did nothing of the kind; but all could do so, and a great
+many did.</p>
+<p>On the other hand we see conferred the dignity of chivalry upon
+insignificant people who had never held fiefs, who owed to no one
+any fealty, and to whom no one owed any.</p>
+<p>We cannot repeat too often that it was not the cavalier (or
+knight), it was the <i>vassal</i> who owed military service, or
+<i>ost</i>, to the <i>seigneur</i>, or lord; and the service <i>in
+curte</i> or <i>court</i>: it was the vassal, not the knight, who
+owed to the "lord" relief, "aid," homage.</p>
+<p>The feudal system soon became hereditary. Chivalry, on the
+contrary, has never been hereditary, and a special rite has always
+been necessary to create a knight. In default of all other
+arguments this would be sufficient.</p>
+<p>But if, instead of regarding chivalry as an institution, we
+consider it as an ideal, the doubt is not really more admissible.
+It is here that, in the eyes of a philosophic historian, chivalry
+is clearly distinct from feudalism. If the western world in the
+ninth century had <i>not</i> been feudalized, chivalry would
+nevertheless have come into existence; and, notwithstanding
+everything, it would have come to light in Christendom; for
+chivalry is nothing more than the Christianized form of military
+service, the armed <i>force</i> in the service of the unarmed
+Truth; and it was inevitable that at some time or other it must
+have sprung, living and fully armed, from the brain of the church,
+as Minerva did from the brain of Jupiter.</p>
+<p>Feudalism, on the contrary, is not of Christian origin at all.
+It is a particular form of government, and of society, which has
+scarcely been less rigorous for the church than other forms of
+society and government. Feudalism has disputed with the church over
+and over again, while chivalry has protected her a hundred times.
+Feudalism is force&mdash;chivalry is the brake.</p>
+<p>Let us look at Godfrey de Bouillon. The fact that he owed homage
+to any suzerain, the fact that he exacted service from such and
+such vassals, are questions which concern feudal rights, and have
+nothing to do with chivalry. But if I contemplate him in battle
+beneath the walls of Jerusalem; if I am a spectator of his entry
+into the Holy City; if I see him ardent, brave, powerful and pure,
+valiant and gentle, humble and proud, refusing to wear the golden
+crown in the Holy City where Jesus wore the crown of thorns, I am
+not then anxious&mdash;I am not curious&mdash;to learn from whom he
+holds his fief, or to know the names of his vassals; and I exclaim,
+"There is the knight!" And how many knights, what chivalrous
+virtues, have existed in the Christian world since feudalism has
+ceased to exist!</p>
+<p>The adoption of arms in the German fashion remains the true
+origin of chivalry; and the Franks have handed down this custom to
+us&mdash;a custom perpetuated to a comparatively modern period.
+This simple, almost rude rite so decidedly marked the line of civil
+life in the code of manners of people of German origin, that under
+the Carlovingians we still find numerous traces of it. In 791
+Louis, eldest son of Charlemagne, was only thirteen years old, and
+yet he had worn the crown of Aquitaine for three years upon his
+"baby brow." The king of the Franks felt that it was time to bestow
+upon this child the military consecration which would more quickly
+assure him of the respect of his people. He summoned him to
+Ingelheim, then to Ratisbon, and solemnly girded him with the sword
+which "makes men." He did not trouble himself about the framea or
+the buckler&mdash;the sword occupied the first place. It will
+retain it for a long time.</p>
+<p>In 838 at Kiersy we have a similar scene. This time it is old
+Louis who, full of sadness and nigh to death, bestows upon his son
+Charles, whom he loved so well, the "virile arms"&mdash;that is to
+say, the sword. Then immediately afterward he put upon his brow the
+crown of "Neustria." Charles was fifteen years old.</p>
+<p>These examples are not numerous, but their importance is
+decisive, and they carry us to the time when the church came to
+intervene positively in the education of the German <i>miles</i>.
+The time was rough, and it is not easy to picture a more distracted
+period than that in the ninth and tenth centuries. The great idea
+of the Roman Empire no longer, in the minds of the people,
+coincided with the idea of the Frankish kingdom, but rather
+inclined, so to speak, to the side of Germany, where it tended to
+fix itself. Countries were on the way to be formed, and people were
+asking to which country they could best belong. Independent
+kingdoms were founded which had no precedents and were not destined
+to have a long life. The Saracens were for the last time harassing
+the southern French coasts, but it was not so with the Norman
+pirates, for they did not cease for a single year to ravage the
+littoral which is now represented by the Picardy and Normandy
+coasts, until the day it became necessary to cede the greater part
+of it to them. People were fighting everywhere more or
+less&mdash;family against family&mdash;man to man. No road was
+safe, the churches were burned, there was universal terror, and
+everyone sought protection. The king had no longer strength to
+resist anyone, and the counts made themselves kings. The sun of the
+realm was set, and one had to look at the stars for light. As soon
+as the people perceived a strong man-at-arms, resolute, defiant,
+well established in his wooden keep, well fortified within the
+lines of his hedge, behind his palisade of dead branches, or within
+his barriers of planks; well posted on his hill, against his rock,
+or on his hillock, and dominating all the surrounding
+country&mdash;as soon as they saw this each said to him, "I am your
+man"; and all these weak ones grouped themselves around the strong
+one, who next day proceeded to wage war with his neighbors. Thence
+supervened a terrible series of private wars. Everyone was fighting
+or thinking of fighting.</p>
+<p>In addition to this, the still green memory of the grand figure
+of Charlemagne and the old empire, and I can't tell what imperial
+splendors, were still felt in the air of great cities; all hearts
+throbbed at the mere thought of the Saracens and the Holy
+Sepulchre; the crusade gathered strength of preparation far in
+advance, in the rage and indignation of all the Christian race; all
+eyes were turned toward Jerusalem, and in the midst of so many
+disbandments and so much darkness, the unity of the church survived
+fallen majesty!</p>
+<p>It was then, it was in that horrible hour&mdash;the decisive
+epoch in our history&mdash;that the church undertook the education
+of the Christian soldier; and it was at that time, by a resolute
+step, she found the feudal baron in his rude wooden citadel, and
+proposed to him an ideal. This ideal was chivalry!</p>
+<p>That chivalry may be considered a great military confraternity
+as well as an eighth sacrament, will be conceded. But, before
+familiarizing themselves with these ideals, the rough spirits of
+the ninth, tenth, and eleventh centuries had to learn the
+principles of them. The chivalrous ideal was not conceived "all of
+a piece," and certainly it did not triumph without sustained
+effort; so it was by degrees, and very slowly, that the church
+succeeded in inoculating the almost animal intelligence and the
+untrained minds of our ancestors with so many virtues.</p>
+<p>In the hands of the church, which wished to mould him into a
+Christian knight, the feudal baron was a very intractable
+individual. No one could be more brutal or more barbarous than he.
+Our more ancient ballads&mdash;those which are founded on the
+traditions of the ninth and tenth centuries&mdash;supply us with a
+portrait which does not appear exaggerated. I know nothing in this
+sense more terrible than <i>Raoul de Cambrai</i>, and the hero of
+this old poem would pass for a type of a half-civilized savage.
+This Raoul was a kind of Sioux or other redskin, who only wanted
+tattoo and feathers in his hair to be complete. Even a redskin is a
+believer, or superstitious to some extent, while Raoul defied the
+Deity himself. The savage respects his mother, as a rule; but Raoul
+laughed at his mother, who cursed him. Behold him as he invaded the
+Vermandois, contrary to all the rights of legitimate heirs. He
+pillaged, burned, and slew in all directions: he was everywhere
+pitiless, cruel, horrible. But at Origni he appears in all his
+ferocity. "You will erect my tent in the church, you will make my
+bed before the altar, and put my hawks on the golden crucifix." Now
+that church belonged to a convent. What did that signify to him? He
+burned the convent, he burned the church, he burned the nuns! Among
+them was the mother of his most faithful servitor,
+Bernier&mdash;his most devoted companion and friend&mdash;almost
+his brother! but he burned her with the others. Then, when the
+flames were still burning, he sat himself down, on a fast-day, to
+feast amid the scenes of his sanguinary exploits&mdash;defying God
+and man, his hands steeped in blood, his face lifted to heaven.
+That was the kind of soldier, the savage of the tenth century, whom
+the church had to educate!</p>
+<p>Unfortunately this Raoul de Cambrai is not a unique specimen; he
+was not the only one who had uttered this ferocious speech: "I
+shall not be happy until I see your heart cut out of your body."
+Aubri de Bourguignon was not less cruel, and took no trouble to
+curb his passions. Had he the right to massacre? He knew nothing
+about that, but meanwhile he continued to kill. "Bah!" he would
+say, "it is always an enemy the less." On one occasion he slew his
+four cousins. He was as sensual as cruel. His thick-skinned
+savagery did not appear to feel either shame or remorse; he was
+strong and had a weighty hand&mdash;that was sufficient. Ogier was
+scarcely any better, but notwithstanding all the glory attaching to
+his name, I know nothing more saddening than the final episode of
+the rude poem attributed to Raimbert of Paris. The son of Ogier,
+Baudouinet, had been slain by the son of Charlemagne, who called
+himself Charlot. Ogier did nothing but breathe vengeance, and would
+not agree to assist Christendom against the Saracen invaders unless
+the unfortunate Charlot was delivered to him. He wanted to kill
+him, he determined to kill him, and he rejoiced over it in
+anticipation. In vain did Charlot humble himself before this brute,
+and endeavor to pacify him by the sincerity of his repentance; in
+vain the old Emperor himself prayed most earnestly to God; in vain
+the venerable Naimes, the Nestor of our ballads, offered to serve
+Ogier all the rest of his life, and begged the Dane "not to forget
+the Saviour, who was born of the Virgin at Bethlehem." All their
+devotion and prayers were unavailing. Ogier, pitiless, placed one
+of his heavy hands on the youthful head, and with the other drew
+his sword, his terrible sword "Courtain." Nothing less than the
+intervention of an angel from heaven could have put an end to this
+terrible scene in which all the savagery of the German forests was
+displayed.</p>
+<p>The majority of these early heroes had no other shibboleth than
+"I am going to separate the head from the trunk!" It was their
+war-cry. But if you desire something more frightful still,
+something more "primitive," you have only to open the
+<i>Loherains</i> at hazard, and read a few stanzas of that raging
+ballad of "derring-do," and you will almost fancy you are perusing
+one of those pages in which Livingstone describes in such indignant
+terms the manners of some tribe in Central Africa. Read this:
+"Begue struck Isore upon his black helmet through the golden
+circlet, cutting him to the chine; then he plunged into his body
+his sword Flamberge with the golden hilt; took the heart out with
+both hands, and threw it, still warm, at the head of William,
+saying, 'There is your cousin's heart; you can salt and roast it.'"
+Here words fail us; it would be too tame to say with Goedecke,
+"These heroes act like the forces of nature, in the manner of the
+hurricane which knows no pity." We must use more indignant terms
+than these, for we are truly amid cannibals. Once again we say,
+there was the warrior, there was the savage whom the church had to
+elevate and educate!</p>
+<p>Such is the point of departure of this wonderful progress; such
+are the refractory elements out of which chivalry and the knight
+have been fashioned.</p>
+<p>The point of departure is Raoul of Cambrai burning Origni. The
+point of arrival is Girard of Roussillon falling one day at the
+feet of an old priest and expiating his former pride by twenty-two
+years of penitence. These two episodes embrace many centuries
+between them.</p>
+<p>A very interesting study might be made of the gradual
+transformation from the redskin to the knight; it might be shown
+how, and at what period of history, each of the virtues of chivalry
+penetrated victoriously into the undisciplined souls of these
+brutal warriors who were our ancestors; it might be determined at
+what moment the church became strong enough to impose upon our
+knights the great duties of defending it and of loving one
+another.</p>
+<p>This victory was attained in a certain number of cases
+undoubtedly toward the end of the eleventh century: and the knight
+appears to us perfected, finished, radiant, in the most ancient
+edition of the <i>Chanson of Roland</i>, which is considered to
+have been produced between 1066 and 1095.</p>
+<p>It is scarcely necessary to observe that chivalry was no longer
+in course of establishment when Pope Urban II threw with a powerful
+hand the whole of the Christian West upon the East, where the Tomb
+of Christ was in possession of the Infidel.</p>
+<p>In legendary lore the embodiment of chivalry is Roland: in
+history it is Godfrey de Bouillon. There are no more worthy names
+than these.</p>
+<p>The decadence of chivalry&mdash;and when one is speaking of
+human institutions, sooner or later this word must be
+used&mdash;perhaps set in sooner than historians can believe. We
+need not attach too much importance to the grumblings of certain
+poets, who complain of their time with an evidently exaggerated
+bitterness, and we do not care for our own part to take literally
+the testimony of the unknown author of <i>La Vie de Saint
+Alexis</i>, who exclaims&mdash;about the middle of the eleventh
+century&mdash;that everything is degenerate and all is lost! Thus:
+"In olden times the world was good. Justice and love were springs
+of action in it. People then had faith, which has disappeared from
+amongst us. The world is entirely changed. The world has lost its
+healthy color. It is pale&mdash;it has grown old. It is growing
+worse, and will soon cease altogether."</p>
+<p>The poet exaggerates in a very singular manner the evil which he
+perceives around him, and one might aver that, far from bordering
+upon old age, chivalry was then almost in the very zenith of its
+glory. The twelfth century was its apogee, and it was not until the
+thirteenth that it manifested the first symptoms of decay.</p>
+<p>"<i>Li maus est moult want</i>" exclaims the author of
+<i>Godfrey de Bouillon</i>, and he adds, sadly, "<i>Tos li biens
+est fin&eacute;s</i>."</p>
+<p>He was more correct in speaking thus than was the author of
+<i>Saint Alexis</i> in his complainings, for the decadence of
+chivalry actually commenced in his time. And it is not unreasonable
+to inquire into the causes of its decay.</p>
+<p><i>The Romance of the Round Table</i>, which in the opinion of
+prepossessed or thoughtless critics appears so profoundly
+chivalrous, may be considered one of the works which hastened the
+downfall of chivalry. We are aware that by this seeming paradox we
+shall probably scandalize some of our readers, who look upon these
+adventurous cavaliers as veritable knights. What does it matter?
+<i>Avienne que puet</i>. The heroes of our <i>chansons de geste</i>
+are really the authorized representatives and types of the society
+of their time, and not those fine adventure-seeking individuals who
+have been so brilliantly sketched by the pencil of Cr&eacute;tien
+de Troyes.</p>
+<p>It is true, however, that this charming and delicate spirit did
+not give, in his works, an accurate idea of his century and
+generation. We do not say that he embellished all he touched, but
+only that he enlivened it. Notwithstanding all that one could say
+about it, this school introduced the old Gaelic spirit into a
+poetry which had been till then chiefly Christian or German. Our
+epic poems are of German origin, and the <i>Table Round</i> is of
+Celtic origin. Sensual and light, witty and delicate, descriptive
+and charming, these pleasing romances are never masculine, and
+become too often effeminate and effeminating. They sing always, or
+nearly so, the same theme. By lovely pasturages clothed with
+beautiful flowers, the air full of birds, a young knight proceeds
+in search of the unknown, and through a series of adventures whose
+only fault is that they resemble one another somewhat too
+closely.</p>
+<p>We find insolent defiances, magnificent duels, enchanted
+castles, tender love-scenes, mysterious talismans. The marvellous
+mingles with the supernatural, magicians with saints, fairies with
+angels. The whole is written in a style essentially French, and it
+must be confessed in clear, polished, and chastened
+language&mdash;perfect!</p>
+<p>But we must not forget, as we said just now, that this poetry,
+so greatly attractive, began as early as the twelfth century to be
+the mode universally; and let us not forget that it was at the same
+period that the <i>Percevalde Gallois</i> and <i>Aliscans,
+Cleomad&egrave;s</i>, and the <i>Couronnement Looys</i> were
+written. The two schools have coexisted for many centuries: both
+camps have enjoyed the favor of the public. But in such a struggle
+it was all too easy to decide to which of them the victory would
+eventually incline. The ladies decided it, and no doubt the greater
+number of them wept over the perusal of <i>Erec</i> or <i>Enid</i>
+more than over that of the <i>Covenant Vivien</i> or <i>Raoul de
+Cambrai</i>.</p>
+<p>When the grand century of the Middle Ages had closed, when the
+blatant thirteenth century commenced, the sentimental had already
+gained the advantage over our old classic <i>chansons</i>; and the
+new school, the romantic set of the <i>Table Round</i>, triumphed!
+Unfortunately, they also triumphed in their manners; and they were
+the knights of the Round Table who, with the Valois, seated
+themselves upon the throne of France.</p>
+<p>In this way temerity replaced true courage; so good, polite
+manners replaced heroic rudeness; so foolish generosity replaced
+the charitable austerity of the early chivalry. It was the love of
+the unforeseen even in the military art; the rage for
+adventure&mdash;even in politics. We know whither this strategy and
+these theatrical politics led us, and that Joan of Arc and
+Providence were required to drag us out of the consequences.</p>
+<p>The other causes of the decadence of the spirit of chivalry are
+more difficult to determine. There is one of them which has not,
+perhaps, been sufficiently brought to light, and this is&mdash;will
+it be believed?&mdash;the exdevelopment of certain orders of
+chivalry! This statement requires some explanation.</p>
+<p>We must confess that we are enthusiastic, passionate admirers of
+these grand military orders which were formed at the commencement
+of the twelfth century. There have never been their like in the
+world, and it was only given to Christianity to display to us such
+a spectacle. To give to one single soul the double ideal of the
+soldier and the monk, to impose upon him this double charge, to fix
+in one these two conditions and in one only these two duties, to
+cause to spring from the earth I cannot tell how many thousands of
+men who voluntarily accepted this burden, and who were not crushed
+by it&mdash;that is a problem which one might have been pardoned
+for thinking insoluble. We have not sufficiently considered it. We
+have not pictured to ourselves with sufficient vividness the
+Templars and the Hospitallers in the midst of one of those great
+battles in the Holy Land in which the fate of the world was in the
+balance.</p>
+<p>No: painters have not sufficiently portrayed them in the arid
+plains of Asia forming an incomparable squadron in the midst of the
+battle. One might talk forever and yet not say too much about the
+charge of the Cuirassiers at Reichshoffen; but how many times did
+the Hospitaller knights and the Templars charge in similar fashion?
+Those soldier-monks, in truth, invented a new idea of courage.
+Unfortunately they were not always fighting, and peace troubled
+some of them. They became too rich, and their riches lowered them
+in the eyes of men and before heaven. We do not intend to adopt all
+the calumnies which have been circulated concerning the Templars,
+but it is difficult not to admit that many of these accusations had
+some foundation. The Hospitallers, at any rate, have given no
+ground for such attacks. They, thank heaven, remained undefiled, if
+not poor, and were an honor to that chivalry which others had
+compromised and emasculated.</p>
+<p>But when all is said, that which best became chivalry, the spice
+which preserved it the most surely, was poverty!</p>
+<p>Love of riches had not only attacked the chivalrous orders, but
+in a very short space of time all knights caught the infection.
+Sensuality and enjoyment had penetrated into their castles.
+"Scarcely had they received the knightly baldric before they
+commenced to break the commandments and to pillage the poor. When
+it became necessary to go to war, their sumpter-horses were laden
+with wine, and not with weapons; with leathern bottles instead of
+swords; with spits instead of lances. One might have fancied, in
+truth, that they were going out to dinner, and not to fight. It is
+true their shields were beautifully gilt, but they were kept in a
+virgin and unused condition. Chivalrous combats were represented
+upon their bucklers and their saddles, certainly; but that was
+all!"</p>
+<p>Now who is it who writes thus? It is not, as one might fancy, an
+author of the fifteenth century&mdash;it is a writer of the
+twelfth; and the greatest satirist, somewhat excessive and unjust
+in his statements, the Christian Juvenal whom we have just quoted,
+was none other than Peter of Blois.</p>
+<p>A hundred other witnesses might be cited in support of these
+indignant words. But if there is some exaggeration in them, we are
+compelled to confess that there is a considerable substratum of
+truth also.</p>
+<p>These abuses&mdash;which wealth engendered, which more than one
+poet has stigmatized&mdash;attracted, in the fourteenth century,
+the attention of an important individual, a person whose name
+occupies a worthy place in literature and history. Philip of
+Mezi&egrave;res, chancellor of Cyprus under Peter of Lusignan, was
+a true knight, who one day conceived the idea of reforming
+chivalry. Now the way he found most feasible in accomplishing his
+object, in arriving at such a difficult and complex reform, was to
+found a new order of chivalry himself, to which he gave the
+high-sounding title of "the Chivalry of the Passion of Christ."</p>
+<p>The decadence of chivalry is attested, alas! by the very
+character of the reformers by which this well-meaning Utopian
+attempted to oppose it. The good knight complains of the great
+advances of sensuality, and permits and advises the marriage of all
+knights. He complains of the accursed riches which the Hospitallers
+themselves were putting to a bad use, and forbade them in his
+<i>Institutions</i>; but nevertheless the luxurious habits of his
+time had an influence upon his mind, and he permitted his knights
+to wear the most extravagant costumes, and the dignitaries of his
+order to adopt the most high-sounding titles. There was something
+mystical in all this conception, and something theatrical in all
+this agency. It is hardly necessary to add that the "Chivalry of
+the Passion" was only a beautiful dream, originating in a generous
+mind. Notwithstanding the adherence of some brilliant personages,
+the order never attained to more than a theoretical organization,
+and had only a fictitious foundation. The idea of the deliverance
+of the Holy Sepulchre from the Infidel was hardly the object of the
+fifteenth-century chivalry; for the struggle between France and
+England then was engaging the most courageous warriors and the most
+practised swords. Decay hurried on apace!</p>
+<p>This was not the only cause of such a fatal falling away. The
+portals of chivalry had been opened to too many unworthy
+candidates. It had been made vulgar! In consequence of having
+become so cheap the grand title of "knight" was degraded. Eustace
+Deschamps, in his fine, straightforward way, states the scandal
+boldly and "lashes" it with his tongue. He says: "Picture to
+yourself the fact that the degree of knighthood is about to be
+conferred now upon babies of eight and ten years old."</p>
+<p>Well might this excellent man exclaim in another place:
+"Disorders always go on gathering strength, and even incomparable
+knights like Du Guesclin and Bayard cannot arrest the fatal course
+of the institution toward ruin." Chivalry was destined to
+disappear.</p>
+<p>It is very important that one should make one's self acquainted
+with the true character of such a downfall. France and England in
+the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries still boasted many high-bred
+knights. They exchanged the most superb defiances, the most
+audacious challenges, and proceeded from one country to another to
+run each other through the body proudly. The Beaumanoirs, who drank
+their blood, abounded. It was a question who would engage himself
+in the most incredible pranks; who would commit the most daring
+folly! They tell us afterward of the beautiful passages of arms,
+the grand feats performed, and the inimitable Froissart is the most
+charming of all these narrators, who make their readers as
+chivalrous as themselves.</p>
+<p>But we must tell everything: among these knights in beautiful
+armor there was a band of adventurers who never observed, and who
+could not understand, certain commandments of the ancient chivalry.
+The laxity of luxury had everywhere replaced the rigorous
+enactments of the old manliness, and even warriors themselves loved
+their ease too much. The religious sentiment was not the dominant
+one in their minds, in which the idea of a crusade now never
+entered. They had not sufficient respect for the weakness of the
+Church nor for other failings. They no longer felt themselves the
+champions of the good and the enemies of evil. Their sense of
+justice had become warped, as had love for their great native
+land.</p>
+<p>Again, what they termed "the license of camps" had grown very
+much worse; and we know in what condition Joan of Arc found the
+army of the King. Blasphemy and ribaldry in every quarter. The
+noble girl swept away these pests, but the effect of her action was
+not long-lived. She was the person to reestablish chivalry, which
+in her found the purity of its now-effaced type; but she died too
+soon, and had not sufficient imitators.</p>
+<p>There were, after her time, many chivalrous souls, and, thank
+heaven, there are still some among us; but the old institution is
+no longer with us. The events which we have had the misfortune to
+witness do not give us any ground to hope that chivalry, extinct
+and dead, will rise again to-morrow to light and life.</p>
+<p>In St. Louis' time, caricature and parody&mdash;they were
+low-class forces, but forces nevertheless&mdash;had already
+commenced the work of destruction. We are in possession of an
+abominable little poem of the thirteenth century, which is nothing
+but a scatological pamphlet directed against chivalry. This ignoble
+<i>Audigier</i>, the author of which is the basest of men, is not
+the only attack which one may disinter from amid the literature of
+that period. If one wishes to draw up a really complete list it
+would be necessary to include the <i>jabliaux</i>&mdash;the
+<i>Renart</i> and the <i>Rose</i>, which constitute the most
+anti-chivalrous&mdash;I had nearly written the most
+Voltairian&mdash;works that I am acquainted with. The thread is
+easy enough to follow from the twelfth century down to the author
+of <i>Don Quixote</i>&mdash;which I do not confound with its
+infamous predecessors&mdash;to Cervantes, whose work has been
+fatal, but whose mind was elevated.</p>
+<p>However that may be, parody and the parodists were themselves a
+cause of decay. They weakened morals. Gallic-like, they popularized
+little <i>bourgeois</i> sentiments, narrow-minded, satirical
+sentiments; they inoculated manly souls with contempt for such
+great things as one performs disinterestedly. This disdain is a
+sure element of decay, and we may regard it as an announcement of
+death.</p>
+<p>Against the knights who, here and there, showed themselves
+unworthy and degenerate, was put in practice the terrible apparatus
+of degradation. Modern historians of chivalry have not failed to
+describe in detail all the rites of this solemn punishment, and we
+have presented to us a scene which is well calculated to excite the
+imagination of the most matter-of-fact, and to make the most timid
+heart swell.</p>
+<p>The knight judicially condemned to submit to this shame was
+first conducted to a scaffold, where they broke or trod under foot
+all his weapons. He saw his shield, with device effaced, turned
+upside down and trailed in the mud. Priests, after reciting prayers
+for the vigil of the dead, pronounced over his head the psalm,
+"<i>Deus laudem meam</i>," which contains terrible maledictions
+against traitors. The herald of arms who carried out this sentence
+took from the hands of the pursuivant of arms a basin full of dirty
+water, and threw it all over the head of the recreant knight in
+order to wash away the sacred character which had been conferred
+upon him by the accolade. The guilty one, degraded in this way, was
+subsequently thrown upon a hurdle, or upon a stretcher, covered
+with a mortuary cloak, and finally carried to the church, where
+they repeated the same prayers and the same ceremonies as for the
+dead.</p>
+<p>This was really terrible, even if somewhat theatrical, and it is
+easy to see that this complicated ritual contained only a very few
+ancient elements. In the twelfth century the ceremonial of
+degradation was infinitely more simple. The spurs were hacked off
+close to the heels of the guilty knight. Nothing could be more
+summary or more significant. Such a person was publicly denounced
+as unworthy to ride on horseback, and consequently quite unworthy
+to be a knight. The more ancient and chivalrous, the less
+theatrical is it. It is so in many other institutions in the
+histories of all nations.</p>
+<p>That such a penalty may have prevented a certain number of
+treasons and forfeitures we willingly admit, but one cannot expect
+it to preserve all the whole body of chivalry from that decadence
+from which no institution of human establishment can escape.</p>
+<p>Notwithstanding inevitable weaknesses and accidents, the
+Decalogue of Chivalry has none the less been regnant in some
+millions of souls which it has made pure and great. These ten
+commandments have been the rules and the reins of youthful
+generations, who without them would have been wild and
+undisciplined. This legislation, in fact&mdash;which, to tell the
+truth, is only one of the chapters of the great Catholic
+Code&mdash;has raised the moral level of humanity.</p>
+<p>Besides, chivalry is not yet quite dead. No doubt, the ritual of
+chivalry, the solemn reception, the order itself, and the ancient
+oaths, no longer exist. No doubt, among these grand commandments
+there are many which are known only to the erudite, and which the
+world is unacquainted with. The Catholic Faith is no longer the
+essence of modern chivalry; the Church is no longer seated on the
+throne around which the old knights stand with their drawn swords;
+Islam is no longer the hereditary enemy; we have another which
+threatens us nearer home; widows and orphans have need rather of
+the tongues of advocates than of the iron weapon of the knights;
+there are no more duties toward liege-lords to be fulfilled; and we
+even do not want any kind of superior lord at all; <i>largesse</i>
+is now confounded with charity; and the becoming hatred of
+evil-doing is no longer our chief, our best, passion!</p>
+<p>But whatever we may do there still remains to us, in the marrow,
+a certain leaven of chivalry which preserves us from death. There
+are still in the world an immense number of fine souls&mdash;strong
+and upright souls&mdash;who hate all that is small and mean, who
+know and who practise all the delicate promptings of honor, and who
+prefer death to an unworthy action or to a lie!</p>
+<p>That is what we owe to chivalry, that is what it has bequeathed
+to us. On the day when these last vestiges of such a grand past are
+effaced from our souls&mdash;we shall cease to exist!</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_8"><!-- RULE4 8 --></a>
+<h2>CONVERSION OF VLADIMIR THE GREAT</h2>
+<center>INTRODUCTION OF CHRISTIANITY INTO RUSSIA</center>
+<center>A.D. 988-1015</center>
+<br>
+<center>A. N. MOURAVIEFF</center>
+<p class="intro">According to early Greek and Roman writers, Russia
+in their time was inhabited by Scythians and Sarmatians. The Greeks
+established commercial relations with the most southerly tribes. In
+the fourth and fifth centuries, during the migrations of the
+nations, Russia was invaded by Goths, Alans, Huns, Avars, and
+Bulgarians, who, however, made no settlements. They were followed
+by the Slavs, who are looked upon as the Sarmatians already
+mentioned.</p>
+<p class="intro">The Slavs settled as far north as the upper Volga.
+The chief settlements were Novgorod and Kieff, which became the
+capitals of independent principalities, Novgorod especially
+becoming an important commercial and trading centre.</p>
+<p class="intro">The commerce northward through the Baltic was
+subject to the attacks of the Scandinavian Northmen, known as
+Varangians. They demanded tribute of the Slavs, and on its refusal
+attacked and captured Novgorod. A little later Novgorod established
+its independence as a republic; but within a few years we find this
+section controlled by a Varangian tribe from Rus, a district of
+Sweden. This tribe was led by three brothers, Ruric the Peaceful,
+Sineous the Victorious, and Trouvor the Faithful, who settled and
+ruled in different parts of the country.</p>
+<p class="intro">In 864, on the death of his brothers, Ruric
+consolidated their territories with his, assumed the title of grand
+prince, peaceably took possession of Novgorod and made it his
+capital, naming the country Russia, after his native place.</p>
+<p class="intro">With the advent of the Varangians the authentic
+history of Russia begins. The millenary of that event was
+celebrated in 1862 at Novgorod, as the foundation of the Russian
+empire.</p>
+<p class="intro">Ruric died in 879. In the next hundred years his
+successors conquered many neighboring lands and added them to the
+empire. Kieff became the capital. Numerous invasions into the
+territory of the Greek empire were made and Constantinople was
+frequently attacked, resulting sometimes in repulse, and at others
+in exacting heavy tribute from the Eastern Emperor. Treaties were
+executed and a gradual growth of commerce and intercourse between
+the Greeks and Russians took place. Olga, the famous and popular
+widow of Ruric's son, Igor, became a Christian and was baptized in
+Constantinople in 955, and during the rest of her life lent her
+powerful influence to the spread of the faith. And though her son,
+the emperor Sviatoslaf, remained a pagan throughout his reign,
+Christianity continued to grow, and the general Christianization of
+Russia during the reign of her grandson, Vladimir, was aided
+materially by the great example of the good queen Olga.</p>
+<p class="intro">In 970 Sviatoslaf divided his empire among his
+three sons, Iaropolk I, Oleg, and Vladimir. After the death of
+Sviatoslaf in 972 civil war began between the three brothers. Oleg
+was killed and Vladimir fled to Sweden. In 980, supported by a
+force of Varangians, Vladimir returned, captured Novgorod and
+Kieff, and put Iaropolk to death. Under Vladimir, later known as
+Vladimir the Great, Russia increased in importance, and
+civilization was enhanced by the spread of Christianity through the
+missionary efforts of the Greek Church, now the Holy, Orthodox,
+Catholic, Apostolic, Oriental Church. It is, therefore, not strange
+that the Russian prelates were distinguished by their loyalty and
+fidelity to the Greek Church throughout the continued conflicts
+between it and the Roman Church which resulted in their separation
+in 1054.</p>
+<p class="intro">In the fifteenth century, with the consent of the
+patriarchate of Constantinople, the Orthodox Graeco-Russian Church
+assumed national independence, and became the state church; and
+after the establishment of Mahometanism in Constantinople, since
+its capture by Mahomet II in 1453, the reigning Czar of Russia has
+come to be regarded not only as the temporal and spiritual head of
+the Greek Church by the great mass of adherents which form the bulk
+of the population in Russia, but also as the champion of all the
+followers of the church in Greece and throughout the orient.</p>
+<p class="intro">The story of the introduction of Christianity into
+Russia presents an interesting psychological study of the growth
+and development of the religious sentiment inherent in man&mdash;be
+he never so brutalized and barbarous. Notwithstanding its display
+of national pride and bias, pardonable in a native historian,
+Mouravieff's account is exceedingly interesting.</p>
+<p>The Russian Church, like the other orthodox churches of the
+East, had an apostle for its founder. St. Andrew, the first called
+of the Twelve, hailed with his blessing long beforehand the
+destined introduction of Christianity into our country; ascending
+up and penetrating by the Dnieper into the deserts of Scythia, he
+planted the first cross on the hills of Kieff. "See you," said he
+to his disciples, "these hills? On these hills shall shine the
+light of divine grace. There shall be here a great city, and God
+shall have in it many churches to his name."</p>
+<p>Such are the words of the holy Nestor, the monk and annalist of
+the Pechersky monastery, that point from whence Christian Russia
+has sprung.</p>
+<p>But it was only after an interval of nine centuries that the
+rays of divine light beamed upon Russia from the walls of
+Byzantium, in which city the same apostle, St. Andrew, had
+appointed Stachys to be the first bishop, and so committed, as it
+were, to him and to his successors, in the spirit of prescience,
+the charge of that wide region in which he had himself preached
+Christ. Hence the indissoluble connection of the Russian with the
+Greek Church, and the dependence of her metropolitans during six
+centuries upon the patriarchal throne of Constantinople, until,
+with its consent, she obtained her own equality and independence in
+that which was accorded to her native primates.</p>
+<p>The Bulgarians of the Danube, the Moravians, and the Slavonians
+of Illyria had been already enlightened by holy baptism about the
+middle of the ninth century, during the reign of the Greek emperor
+Michael and the patriarchate of the illustrious Photius. St. Cyril
+and St. Methodius, two learned Greek brothers, translated into the
+Slavonic the New Testament and the books used in divine service,
+and according to some accounts even the whole Bible.</p>
+<p>This translation of the Word of God became afterward a most
+blessed instrument for the conversion of the Russians, for the
+missionaries were by it enabled to expound the truths of the Gospel
+to the heathens in their native dialect, and so win for them a
+readier entrance to their hearts.</p>
+<p>Oskold and Dir, two princes of Kieff and the companions of
+Ruric, were the first of the Russians who embraced Christianity. In
+the year 866 they made their appearance in armed vessels before the
+walls of Constantinople when the Emperor was absent, and threw the
+Greek capital into no little alarm and confusion. Tradition reports
+that "The patriarch Photius took the virginal robe of the Mother of
+God from the Blachern Church, and plunged it beneath the waves of
+the strait, when the sea immediately boiled up from underneath and
+wrecked the vessels of the heathen. Struck with awe, they believed
+in that God who had smitten them, and became the first-fruits of
+their people to the Lord." The hymn of victory of the Greek Church,
+"To the protecting Conductress," in honor of the most holy Virgin,
+has remained a memorial of this triumph, and even now concludes the
+<i>Office for the First Hour</i> in the daily <i>Matins</i>; for
+that was, indeed, the first hour of salvation to the land of
+Russia.</p>
+<p>It is probable that on their return to their own country the
+princes of Kieff sowed there the seeds of Christianity; for, eighty
+years afterward, on occasion of a conference for peace between the
+prince Igor and certain Byzantine ambassadors, we find mention
+already of a "Church of the Prophet Elias" in Kieff where the
+Christian Varangians swore to the observance of the treaty.
+Constantine Porphyrogenitus and other Greek annalists even relate
+that in the lifetime of Oskold there was a bishop sent to the
+Russians by the emperor Basil the Macedonian, and the patriarch St.
+Ignatius, and that he made many converts, chiefly "in consequence
+of the miraculous preservation of a volume of the Gospels, which
+was thrown publicly into the flames and taken out after some time
+unconsumed." Also in Condinus, <i>Catalogue of Sees Subject to the
+Patriarch of Constantinople</i>, the metropolitical see of Russia
+appears as early as the year 891.</p>
+<p>Lastly, it is certain that many of the Varangians who served in
+the imperial bodyguard were Christians, and that the Greek
+sovereigns never lost sight of any opportunity of converting them
+to their own faith, by which they hoped to soften their savage
+manners. When the emperor Leo was concluding a peace with Oleg, he
+showed not only his own treasures to the ambassadors of the Russian
+prince, but also the splendor of the churches, the holy relics, the
+precious <i>icons</i>, and the "Instruments of the Passion of our
+Lord," if by any means they might catch from them the spirit of the
+faith.</p>
+<p>Some such influences as these, while Christianity as yet was
+only struggling for an uncertain existence at Kieff, produced in
+good time their effect on the wisest of the daughters of the
+Slavonians, the widowed princess Olga, who governed Russia during
+the minority of her son Sviatoslaf. She undertook a voyage to
+Constantinople for no other end than to obtain a knowledge of the
+true God, and there she received baptism at the hands of the
+patriarch Polyeuctes; the emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitus
+himself, who admired her wisdom, being her godfather. Nestor draws
+an affecting picture of the patriarch foretelling to the newly
+illumined princess the blessings which were to descend by her means
+on future generations of the Russians, while Olga, now become
+Helena by baptism&mdash;that she might resemble both in name and
+deed the mother of Constantine the Great&mdash;stood meekly bowing
+down her head and drinking in, as a sponge that is thirsty of
+moisture, the instructions of the prelate concerning the canons of
+the Church, fasting, prayer, almsgiving, and continence, all which
+she observed with exactness on her return to her own country.</p>
+<p>Although, in spite of all her entreaties, the fierce and warlike
+prince Sviatoslaf persisted in refusing to humble his proud heart
+under the meek yoke of Christ, he had still so much affection for
+his mother as not to persecute such as agreed with her in religion,
+but even to allow them freely to make open profession of their
+faith under the protection of that princess. He confided his
+children to her care during his incessant military expeditions, and
+so enabled her to confirm the saving impressions of Christianity
+among the people who respected her, and to instil them into the
+mind of her young grandson Vladimir; for nothing sinks so deep into
+the heart as the simple-and affectionate words of a mother. The
+princess had with her a priest named Gregory, whom she had brought
+from Constantinople, and by him she was buried after her death in
+the spot which she had herself appointed, without any of the usual
+pagan ceremonies. The people, by whom she had been surnamed "the
+Wise" during life, began to bless her for a saint after her death,
+when they came themselves to follow the example of this "Morning
+Star" which had risen and gone before to lead Russia into the path
+of salvation.</p>
+<p>Nowhere has Christianity ever been less persecuted at its first
+introduction than in our own country. The <i>Chronicle</i> speaks
+of only two Christian martyrs, the Varangians Theodore and John,
+who were put to death by the fury of the people because one of
+them, from natural affection, had refused to give up his son when
+he had been devoted by the prince Vladimir to be offered as a
+sacrifice to Peroun.</p>
+<p>Probably the very zeal of this prince for the heathen deities,
+to whom he set up statues and multiplied altars, may have inspired
+the neighboring nations with the desire of converting so powerful a
+ruler to their respective creeds; and thus his blind impulse toward
+the Deity, which was unknown to him, received a true direction. The
+Mahometan Bulgarians were the first to send ambassadors to him,
+with the offer of their faith; but the mercy of
+Providence&mdash;for so it plainly was&mdash;inspired him to give
+them a decided refusal on the ground that he did not choose to
+comply with some of their regulations; though else a sensual
+religion might well have enticed a man who was given up to the
+indulgence of his passions.</p>
+<p>The Chazarian Jews flattered themselves with the hope of
+attracting the Prince by boasting of their religion and the ancient
+glory of Jerusalem. "But where," demanded the wise grandson of
+Olga, "is your country?"</p>
+<p>"It is ruined by the wrath of God for the sins of our fathers,"
+was their answer. Vladimir then said that he had no mind to embrace
+the law of a people whom God had abandoned. There came also western
+doctors from Germany, who would have persuaded Vladimir to embrace
+Christianity, but their Christianity seemed strange to him; for
+Russia had hitherto no acquaintance but with Byzantium.</p>
+<p>"Return home," he said; "our ancestors did not receive this
+religion from you."</p>
+<p>A Greek embassy had the best success of them all. A certain
+philosopher, a monk named Constantine, after having exposed the
+insufficiency of other religions, eloquently set before the Prince
+those judgments of God which are in the world, the redemption of
+the human race by the blood of Christ, and the retribution of the
+life to come. His discourse powerfully affected the heathen
+monarch, who was burdened with the heavy sins of a tumultuous
+youth; and this was particularly the case when the monk pointed out
+to him on an icon, which represented the last judgment, the
+different lot of the just and of the wicked.</p>
+<p>"Good to these on the right hand, but woe to those on the left!"
+exclaimed Vladimir, deeply affected. But sensual nature still
+struggled in him against heavenly truth. Having dismissed the
+missionary, or ambassador, with presents, he still hesitated to
+decide, and wished first to examine further concerning the faith,
+in concert with the elders of his council, that all Russia might
+have a share in his conversion. The council of the Prince decided
+to send chosen men to make their observations on each religion on
+the spot where it was professed; and this public agreement explains
+in some degree the sudden and general acceptance of Christianity
+which shortly after followed in Russia. It is probable that not
+only the chiefs, but the common people also, were expecting and
+ready for the change.</p>
+<p>The Greek emperors did not fail to profit by this favorable
+opportunity, and the patriarch himself in person celebrated the
+divine liturgy in the Church of St. Sophia with the utmost possible
+magnificence before the astonished ambassadors of Vladimir. The
+sublimity and splendor of the service struck them; but we do not
+ascribe to the mere external impression that softening of the
+hearts of these heathens, on which depended the conversion of a
+whole nation. From the very earliest times of the Church,
+extraordinary signs of God's power have constantly gone
+hand-in-hand with that apparent weakness of man by which the Gospel
+was preached; and so also the <i>Byzantine Chronicle</i> relates of
+the Russian ambassadors, "That during the Divine liturgy, at the
+time of carrying the Holy Gifts in procession to the throne or
+altar and singing the cherubic hymn, the eyes of their spirits were
+opened, and they saw, as in an ecstasy, glittering youths who
+joined in singing the hymn of the 'Thrice Holy.'"</p>
+<p>Being thus fully persuaded of the truth of the orthodox faith,
+they returned to their own country already Christians in heart, and
+without saying a word before the Prince in favor of the other
+religions, they declared thus concerning the Greek: "When we stood
+in the temple we did not know where we were, for there is nothing
+else like it upon earth: there in truth God has his dwelling with
+men; and we can never forget the beauty we saw there. No one who
+has once tasted sweets will afterward take that which is bitter;
+nor can we now any longer abide in heathenism."</p>
+<p>Then the <i>boyars</i> said to Vladimir: "If the religion of the
+Greeks had not been good, your grandmother Olga, who was the wisest
+of women, would not have embraced it."</p>
+<p>The weight of the name of Olga decided her grandson, and he said
+no more in answer than these words: "Where shall we be
+baptized?"</p>
+<p>But Vladimir, led by a sense which had not yet been purged by
+Greece, thought it best to follow the custom of his ancestors, who
+made warlike descents upon Constantinople, and so win to himself,
+sword in hand, his new religion. He embarked his warriors on board
+their vessels and attacked Cherson in the Taurid, a city which was
+subject to the emperors Basil and Constantine.</p>
+<p>After a long and unsuccessful siege a certain priest, named
+Anastasius, by means of an arrow shot from the town, informed the
+Prince that the fate of the besieged depended upon his cutting off
+the aqueducts, which supplied them with water. Vladimir in great
+joy made a vow that he would be baptized if he gained possession of
+the town; and he did gain possession of it. Then he sent to
+Constantinople to demand from the Greek Emperor the hand of their
+sister Anna, and they in answer proposed as a condition that he
+should embrace Christianity; for though they themselves desired an
+alliance with so powerful a prince, they at the same time took care
+to follow the prudent and pious policy of their predecessors, who
+had ever sought to bring their fierce neighbors under the
+humanizing influence of the faith. The Prince declared his consent;
+because, in his own words, he had "long since examined and
+conceived a love for the Greek law."</p>
+<p>It was her faith alone which influenced the princess to
+sacrifice herself at once for the temporal interests of her own
+country and for the eternal welfare of a strange people.
+Accompanied by a venerable body of clergy, she sailed for Cherson,
+and on her arrival induced the Prince to hasten his baptism. "For
+it was so ordered," says the pious annalist, "by the wisdom of God,
+that the sight of the Prince was at that time much affected by a
+complaint of the eyes, but at the moment that the Bishop of Cherson
+laid his hands upon him, when he had risen up out of the bath of
+regeneration, Vladimir suddenly received not only spiritual
+illumination, but also the bodily sight of his eyes, and cried out,
+'Now I have seen the true God!'"</p>
+<p>Many of the Prince's suite were so struck by his miraculous
+recovery that they followed his example and were baptized in like
+manner; and these were doubtless afterward zealous for the
+introduction of Christianity into their country. The baptism and
+marriage of Vladimir were both celebrated in the Church of the Most
+Holy Mother of God; and hence, no doubt, arose his peculiar zeal
+for the most pure Virgin, to whose honor he afterward erected a
+cathedral church in his own city of Kieff. In Cherson itself he
+built a church, in the name of his angel or patron St. Basil; and
+taking with him the relics of St. Clement, Bishop of Rome, and his
+disciple Thebas, with church vessels and ornaments and icons, he
+restored the city to be again under the power of the emperors, and
+returned to Kieff, accompanied by the princess, their daughter, and
+her Greek ecclesiastics.</p>
+<p>Nestor makes no mention of any of the bishops and priests from
+Constantinople and Cherson who followed in the train of the Prince,
+excepting only of one, Anastasius, the priest who had rendered him
+such good service during the siege; but the <i>Books of the
+Genealogies</i> give the name of Michael, a Syrian by birth, and of
+six other bishops who were sent together with him to Cherson by the
+patriarch Nicholas Chrysoberges. Some have ventured to suppose that
+Michael was the name of the bishop of the times of Oskold; but
+Nestor says nothing about him, and this much only is certain, that
+he stands the first in the list of the metropolitans of Russia.</p>
+<p>After his return to Kieff the "Great Prince" caused his twelve
+sons to be baptized, and proceeded to destroy the monuments of
+heathenism. He ordered Peroun to be thrown into the Dnieper. The
+people at first followed their idol, as it was borne down the
+stream, but were soon quieted when they saw that the statue had no
+power to help itself.</p>
+<p>And now Vladimir, being surrounded and supported by believers in
+his own domestic circle, and encouraged by seeing that his boyars
+and suite were prepared and ready to embrace the faith, made a
+proclamation to the people, "That whoever, on the morrow, should
+not repair to the river, whether rich or poor, he should hold him
+for his enemy." At the call of their respected lord all the
+multitude of the citizens in troops, with their wives and children,
+flocked to the Dnieper; and without any manner of opposition
+received holy baptism as a nation from the Greek bishops and
+priests. Nestor draws a touching picture of this baptism of a whole
+people at once: "Some stood in the water up to their necks, others
+up to their breasts, holding their young children in their arms;
+the priests read the prayers from the shore, naming at once whole
+companies by the same name." He who was the means of thus bringing
+them to salvation, filled with a transport of joy at the affecting
+sight, cried out to the Lord, offering and commending into his
+hands himself and his people: "O great God! who hast made heaven
+and earth, look down upon these thy new people. Grant them, O Lord,
+to know thee the true God, as thou hast been made known to
+Christian lands, and confirm in them a true and unfailing faith;
+and assist me, O Lord, against my enemy that opposes me, that,
+trusting in thee and in thy power, I may overcome all his
+wiles."</p>
+<p>Vladimir erected the first church&mdash;that of St. Basil, after
+whom he was named&mdash;on the very mount which had formerly been
+sacred to Peroun, adjoining his own palace. Thus was Russia
+enlightened.</p>
+<p>So sudden and ready a conversion of the inhabitants of Kieff
+might well seem improbable&mdash;that is, unless effected by
+violence&mdash;did we not attend to the fact that the Russians had
+been gradually becoming enlightened ever since the times of Oskold,
+for more than a hundred years, by means of commerce, treaties of
+peace, and relations of every kind with the Greeks, as well as with
+the Bulgarians and Slavonians of kindred origin with ourselves, who
+had already been long in possession of the Holy Scriptures in their
+own language. The constant endeavors of the Greek emperors for the
+conversion of the Russians by means of their ambassadors and
+preachers, the tolerance of the princes, the example and protection
+of Olga, and the very delay and hesitation of Vladimir in selecting
+his religion must have favorably disposed the minds of the people
+toward it; especially if it be true, as has been asserted, that
+Russia had already had a bishop in the time of Oskold. In a similar
+way, though under different circumstances, in the vast Roman
+Empire, the conversion of Constantine the Great suddenly rendered
+Christianity the dominant religion, because, in fact, it had long
+before penetrated among all ranks of his subjects.</p>
+<p>Vladimir engaged zealously in building churches throughout the
+towns and villages of his dominions, and sent priests to preach in
+them. He also founded many towns all around Kieff, and so
+propagated and confirmed the Christian religion in the neighborhood
+of the capital, from whence the new colonies were sent forth.
+Neither was he slow in establishing schools, into which he brought
+together the children of the boyars, sometimes even in spite of the
+unwillingness of their rude parents. In the mean time the
+Metropolitan with his bishops made progresses into the interior of
+Russia, to the cities of Rostoff and Novgorod, everywhere baptizing
+and instructing the people. Vladimir himself, for the same good
+end, went in company with other bishops to the district of Souzdal
+and to Volhynia. The boyars on the Volga and some of the
+Pechenegian princes embraced the gospel of salvation together with
+his subjects, and rejoiced to be admitted to holy baptism.</p>
+<p>The pious Prince wished to see in his own capital a magnificent
+temple in honor of the birth of the most holy Virgin, to be a
+likeness and memorial of that at Cherson, in which he himself had
+been baptized; and the year after his conversion he sent to Greece
+for builders, and laid the foundation of the first stone cathedral
+in Russia, on the very same spot where the Varangian martyrs had
+suffered. But the first metropolitan was not to live to its
+completion; only his holy remains were buried in it, and were
+thence translated afterward to the Pechersky Lavra. Another
+metropolitan, Leontius, a Greek by birth, sent by the same
+patriarch Nicholas, consecrated the new temple, to the great
+satisfaction of Vladimir, who made a vow to endow it with the tenth
+part of all his revenues; and from hence it was called "the
+Cathedral of the Tithes."</p>
+<p>These tithes, according to the ordinance ascribed to Prince
+Vladimir, consisted of the fixed quota of corn, cattle, and the
+profits of trade, for the support of the clergy and the poor; and
+besides this there was a further tithe collected from every cause
+which was tried; for the right of judging causes was granted to the
+bishops and the metropolitan, and they judged according to the
+Nomocanon. The canons of the holy councils and the Greek
+ecclesiastical laws, together with the Holy Scriptures, were taken,
+from the very first, as the basis of all ecclesiastical
+administration in Russia; and together with them there came into
+use some portions also of the civil law of the Greeks, through the
+influence of the Church. The care of the new temple and the
+collection of tithes for its support were intrusted to a native of
+Cherson named Anastasius, who enjoyed the confidence of Vladimir
+and his successors.</p>
+<p>The light of Christianity had now been diffused throughout the
+whole of Russia; but still the faith was nowhere as yet firmly
+established, because there were no bishops regularly settled in the
+towns. The metropolitan Leontius formed the first five dioceses,
+and appointed Joachim of Cherson to be Bishop of Novgorod,
+Theodorus of Rostoff, Neophytus of Chernigoff, Stephen the
+Volhynian of Vladimir, and Nicetas of Belgorod. Assisted by
+Dobrina, the uncle of the "Great Prince," who had long governed in
+Novgorod, the new bishop Joachim threw the statue of Peroun into
+the Volkoff, and broke down the idolatrous altars without any
+opposition on the part of the citizens; for they, too, like the
+inhabitants of Kieff, from their comparative degree of civilization
+and from their relations of intercourse with the Greeks, were in
+all probability already favorably disposed for the reception of
+Christianity. Tradition asserts that even as far back as the time
+of St. Olga the hermits Sergius and Germanus lived upon the
+desolate island of Balaam in the lake Ladoga, and that from thence
+St. Abramius went forth to preach Christ to the savage inhabitants
+of Rostoff.</p>
+<p>The attempt to found a diocese at Rostoff was less successful.
+The first two bishops, Theodore and Hilarion, were driven away by
+the fierce tribes of the forest district of Meri, who held
+obstinately to their idols in spite of the zeal of St. Abramius. It
+cost the two succeeding bishops, St. Leontius and St. Isaiah, many
+years of extraordinary labor and exertion, attended frequently by
+persecutions, before they at length succeeded in establishing
+Christianity in that savage region, from whence it spread itself by
+degrees into all the surrounding districts.</p>
+<p>Thus Vladimir, having piously observed the commandments of
+Christ during the course of his long reign, had the consolation of
+seeing before his death the fruits of his own conversion in all the
+wide extent of his dominions. He departed this life in peace at
+Kieff, and was soon reckoned with his grandmother Olga among the
+guardian saints of Russia. John, the third metropolitan, who had
+been sent from Constantinople upon the death of Leontius, buried
+the Prince in the Church of the Tithes, which he had built, near
+the tomb of the Grecian princess, his wife, and the uncorrupted
+relics of St. Olga were translated to the same spot.</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_9"><!-- RULE4 9 --></a>
+<h2>LEIF ERICSON DISCOVERS AMERICA</h2>
+<center>A.D. 1000</center>
+<br>
+<center>CHARLES C. RAFN</center>
+<center>SAGA OF ERIC THE RED</center>
+<p class="intro">Besides the Northmen or Norsemen, those ancient
+Scandinavians celebrated in history for their adventurous exploits
+at sea, the Chinese and the Welsh have laid claim to the discovery
+of North America at periods much earlier than that of Columbus and
+the Cabots. But to the Norse sailors alone is it generally agreed
+that credit for that achievement is probably due. Associated with
+their supposed arrival and sojourn on the coast of what is now New
+England, about A.D. 1000, the "Round Tower" or "Old Stone Mill" at
+Newport, R.I., the mysterious inscription on the "Dighton Rock" in
+Massachusetts, and the "Skeleton in Armor" dug up at Fall River,
+Mass., and made the subject of a ballad by Longfellow, have figured
+prominently in the discussion of this pre-Columbian discovery. But
+these conjectural evidences are no longer regarded as having any
+connection with historical probability or as dating back to the
+time of the Northmen.</p>
+<p class="intro">It is considered, however, to be pretty certain
+that at the end of the tenth century or at the beginning of the
+eleventh the Northmen reached the shores of North America. About
+that time, it is known, they settled Iceland, and from there a
+colony went to Greenland, where they long remained. From there,
+either by design or by accident, some of them, it is supposed, may
+have reached the coast of Labrador, and thence sailed down until
+they came to the region which they named Vinland. From there they
+sent home glowing accounts to their countrymen in the northern
+lands, who came in larger numbers to join them in the New
+World.</p>
+<p class="intro">About the middle of the nineteenth century great
+interest among students of this subject was aroused by a work
+written by Prof. C.C. Rafn, of the Royal Society of Northern
+Antiquaries, Copenhagen. In this work&mdash;<i>Antiquitates
+Americanae</i>&mdash;the proofs of this visit of the Northmen to
+the shores of North America were convincingly set forth. In the
+same work the Icelandic sagas, written in the fourteenth century,
+and containing the original accounts of the Northmen's voyages to
+Vinland, were first brought prominently before modern scholars.
+Although many other writings on the voyages have since appeared,
+the great work of Rafn still holds its place of authority, very
+little in the way of new material having been brought to light. The
+portion of his narrative which follows covers the main facts of the
+history, and the translation from the saga furnishes an excellent
+example of its quaint and simple narration.</p>
+<center>CHARLES C. RAFN</center>
+<p>Eric The Red, in the spring of 986, emigrated from Iceland to
+Greenland, formed a settlement there, and fixed his residence at
+Brattalid in Ericsfiord. Among others who accompanied him was
+Heriulf Bardson, who established himself at Heriulfsnes.</p>
+<p>Biarne, the son of the latter, was at that time absent on a
+trading voyage to Norway; but in the course of the summer returning
+to Eyrar, in Iceland, and finding that his father had taken his
+departure, this bold navigator resolved "still to spend the
+following winter, like all the preceding ones, with his father,"
+although neither he nor any of his people had ever navigated the
+Greenland sea.</p>
+<p>They set sail, but met with northerly winds and fogs, and, after
+many days' sailing, knew not whither they had been carried. At
+length when the weather again cleared up, they saw a land which was
+without mountains, overgrown with wood, and having many gentle
+elevations. As this land did not correspond to the descriptions of
+Greenland, they left it on the larboard hand, and continued sailing
+two days, when they saw another land, which was flat and overgrown
+with wood.</p>
+<p>From thence they stood out to sea, and sailed three days with a
+southwest wind, when they saw a third land, which was high and
+mountainous and covered with icebergs (glaciers). They coasted
+along the shore and saw that it was an island.</p>
+<p>They did not go on shore, as Biarne did not find the country to
+be inviting. Bearing away from this island, they stood out to sea
+with the same wind, and, after four days' sailing with fresh gales,
+they reached Heriulfsnes, in Greenland.</p>
+<p>Some time after this, probably in the year 994, Biarne paid a
+visit to Eric, Earl of Norway, and told him of his voyage and of
+the unknown lands he had discovered. He was blamed by many for not
+having examined these countries more accurately.</p>
+<p>On his return to Greenland there was much talk about undertaking
+a voyage of discovery. Leif, a son of Eric the Red, bought Biarne's
+ship, and equipped it with a crew of thirty-five men, among whom
+was a German, of the name of Tyrker, who had long resided with his
+father, and who had been very fond of Leif in his childhood. In the
+year 1000 they commenced the projected voyage, and came first to
+the land which Biarne had seen last. They cast anchor and went on
+shore. No grass was seen; but everywhere in this country were vast
+ice mountains (glaciers), and the intermediate space between these
+and the shore was, as it were, one uniform plain of slate
+(<i>hella</i>). The country appearing to them destitute of good
+qualities, they called it Hellu-Land.</p>
+<p>They put out to sea, and came to another land, where they also
+went on shore. The country was very level and covered with woods;
+and wheresoever they went there were cliffs of white sand
+(<i>sand-ar hvitir</i>), and a low coast (<i>o-soe-bratt</i>). They
+called the country Mark Land (woodland). From thence they again
+stood out to sea, with a northeast wind, and continued sailing for
+two days before they made land again. They then came to an island
+which lay to the eastward of the mainland. They sailed westward in
+waters where there was much ground left dry at ebb tide.</p>
+<p>Afterward they went on shore at a place where a river, issuing
+from a lake, fell into the sea. They brought their ship into the
+river, and from thence into the lake, where they cast anchor. Here
+they constructed some temporary log huts; but later, when they had
+made up their mind to winter there, they built large houses,
+afterward called Leifs-Budir (Leif's-booths).</p>
+<p>When the buildings were completed Leif divided his people into
+two companies, who were by turns employed in keeping watch at the
+houses, and in making small excursions for the purpose of exploring
+the country in the vicinity. His instructions to them were that
+they should not go to a greater distance than that they might
+return in the course of the same evening, and that they should not
+separate from one another.</p>
+<p>Leif took his turn also, joining the exploring party the one
+day, and remaining at the houses the other.</p>
+<p>It so happened that one day the German, Tyrker, was missing.
+Leif accordingly went out with twelve men in search of him, but
+they had not gone far from their houses when they met him coming
+toward them. When Leif inquired why he had been so long absent, he
+at first answered in German, but they did not understand what he
+said. He then said to them in the Norse tongue: "I did not go much
+farther, yet I have a discovery to acquaint you with: I have found
+vines and grapes."</p>
+<p>He added by way of confirmation that he had been born in a
+country where there were plenty of vines. They had now two
+occupations: namely, to hew timber for loading the ship, and
+collect grapes; with these last they filled the ship's longboat.
+Leif gave a name to the country, and called it Vinland (Vineland).
+In the spring they sailed again from thence, and returned to
+Greenland.</p>
+<p>Leif's Vineland voyage was now a subject of frequent
+conversation in Greenland, and his brother Thorwald was of opinion
+that the country had not been sufficiently explored. He,
+accordingly, borrowed Leif's ship, and, aided by his brother's
+counsel and directions, commenced a voyage in the year 1002. He
+arrived at Leif's-booths, in Vineland, where they spent the winter,
+he and his crew employing themselves in fishing. In the spring of
+1003 Thorwald sent a party in the ship's long-boat on a voyage of
+discovery southward. They found the country beautiful and well
+wooded, with but little space between the woods and the sea; there
+were likewise extensive ranges of white sand, and many islands and
+shallows.</p>
+<p>They found no traces of men having been there before them,
+excepting on an island lying to westward, where they found a wooden
+shed. They did not return to Leif's-booths until the fall. In the
+following summer, 1004, Thorwald sailed eastward with the large
+ship, and then northward past a remarkable headland enclosing a
+bay, and which was opposite to another headland. They called it
+Kial-Ar-Nes (Keel Cape).</p>
+<p>From thence they sailed along the eastern coast of the land,
+into the nearest firths, to a promontory which there projected, and
+which was everywhere overgrown with wood. There Thorwald went
+ashore with all his companions. He was so pleased with this place
+that he exclaimed: "This is beautiful! and here I should like well
+to fix my dwelling!" Afterward, when they were preparing to go on
+board, they observed on the sandy beach, within the promontory,
+three hillocks, and repairing hither they found three canoes, under
+each of which were three Skrellings (Esquimaux). They came to blows
+with the latter and killed eight, but the ninth escaped with his
+canoe. Afterward a countless number issued forth against them from
+the interior of the bay.</p>
+<p>They endeavored to protect themselves by raising battle-screens
+on the ship's side. The Skrellings continued shooting at them for a
+while and then retired. Thorwald was wounded by an arrow under the
+arm, and finding that the wound was mortal he said: "I now advise
+you to prepare for your departure as soon as possible, but me ye
+shall bring to the promontory, where I thought it good to dwell; it
+may be that it was a prophetic word that fell from my mouth about
+my abiding there for a season; there shall ye bury me, and plant a
+cross at my head, and another at my feet, and call the place
+Kross-a-Ness (Crossness) in all time coming." He died, and they did
+as he had ordered. Afterward they returned to their companions at
+Leif's-booths, and spent the winter there; but in the spring of
+1005 they sailed again to Greenland, having important intelligence
+to communicate to Leif.</p>
+<p>Thorstein, Eric's third son, had resolved to proceed to
+Vine-land to fetch his brother's body. He fitted out the same ship,
+and selected twenty-five strong and able-bodied men for his crew;
+his wife, Gudrida, also went along with him. They were tossed about
+the ocean during the whole summer, and knew not whither they were
+driven; but at the close of the first week of winter they landed at
+Lysufiord, in the western settlement of Greenland.</p>
+<p>There Thorstein died during the winter; and in the spring
+Gudrida returned again to Ericsfiord.</p>
+<center>SAGA OF ERIC THE RED</center>
+<p>There was a man named Thorwald; he was a son of Asvald, Ulf's
+son, Eyxna-Thori's son. His son's name was Eric. He and his father
+went from Jaederen to Iceland, on account of manslaughter, and
+settled on Hornstrandir, and dwelt at Draugar. There Thorwald died,
+and Eric then married Thorheld, a daughter of Jorund, Atli's son,
+and Thorbiorg the sheep-chested, who had been married before to
+Thorbiorn of the Haukadal family.</p>
+<p>Eric then removed from the north, and cleared land in Haukadal,
+and dwelt at Ericsstadir, by Vatnshorn. Then Eric's thralls caused
+a landslide on Valthiof's farm, Valthiofsstadir. Eyiolf the Foul,
+Valthiof's kinsman, slew the thralls near Skeidsbrekkur, above
+Vatnshorn. For this Eric killed Eyiolf the Foul, and he also killed
+Duelling-Hrafn, at Leikskalar.</p>
+<p>Geirstein and Odd of Jorva, Eyiolf's kinsmen, conducted the
+prosecution for the slaying of their kinsmen, and Eric was in
+consequence banished from Haukadal. He then took possession of
+Brokey and Eyxney, and dwelt at Tradir on Sudrey the first winter.
+It was at this time that he loaned Thorgest his outer dais-boards.
+Eric afterward went to Eyxney, and dwelt at Ericsstad. He then
+demanded his outer dais-boards, but did not obtain them.</p>
+<p>Eric then carried the outer dais-boards away from Breidabolstad,
+and Thorgest gave chase. They came to blows a short distance from
+the farm of Drangar. There two of Thorgest's sons were killed, and
+certain other men besides. After this each of them retained a
+considerable body of men with him at his home. Styr gave Eric his
+support, as did also Eyiolf of Sviney, Thorbiorn, Vifil's son, and
+the sons of Thorbrand of Alptafirth; while Thorgest was backed by
+the sons of Thord the Yeller, and Thorgeir of Hitardal, Aslak of
+Langadal, and his son, Illugi. Eric and his people were condemned
+to outlawry at Thorsness-thing. He equipped his ship for a voyage
+in Ericsvag; while Eyiolf concealed him in Dimunarvag, when
+Thorgest and his people were searching for him among the islands.
+He said to them that it was his intention to go in search of that
+land which Gunnbiorn, son of Ulf the Crow, saw when he was driven
+out of his course, westward across the main, and discovered
+Gunnviorns-skerries.</p>
+<p>He told them that he would return again to his friends if he
+should succeed in finding that country. Thorbiorn and Eyiolf and
+Styr accompanied Eric out beyond the islands, and they parted with
+the greatest friendliness. Eric said to them that he would render
+them similar aid, so far as it might be within his power, if they
+should ever stand in need of his help.</p>
+<p>Eric sailed out to sea, from Snaefells-iokul, and arrived at
+that ice mountain which is called Blacksark. Thence he sailed to
+the southward that he might ascertain whether there was habitable
+country in that direction. He passed the first winter at Ericsey,
+near the middle of the western settlement.</p>
+<p>In the following spring he proceeded to Ericsfirth, and selected
+a site there for his homestead. That summer he explored the western
+uninhabited region, remaining there for a long time, and assigning
+many local names there. The second winter he spent at Ericsholms,
+beyond Hvarfsgnipa. But the third summer he sailed northward to
+Snaefell, and into Hrafnsfirth. He believed then that he had
+reached the head of Ericsfirth; he turned back then, and remained
+the third winter at Ericsey, at the mouth of Ericsfirth.</p>
+<p>The following summer he sailed to Iceland and landed in
+Breidafirth. He remained that winter with Ingolf at Holmlatr. In
+the spring he and Thorgest fought together, and Eric was defeated;
+after this a reconciliation was effected between them.</p>
+<p>That summer Eric set out to colonize the land which he had
+discovered, and which he called Greenland, because, he said, men
+would be the more readily persuaded thither if the land had a good
+name. Eric was married to a woman named Thorhild, and had two sons;
+one of these was named Thorstein, and the other Leif. They were
+both promising men. Thorstein lived at home with his father, and
+there was not at that time a man in Greenland who was accounted of
+so great promise as he.</p>
+<p>Leif had sailed to Norway, where he was at the court of King
+Olaf Tryggvason. When Leif sailed from Greenland, in the summer,
+they were driven out of their course to the Hebrides. It was late
+before they got fair winds thence, and they remained there far into
+the summer.</p>
+<p>Leif became enamoured of a certain woman, whose name was
+Thorgunna. She was a woman of fine family, and Leif observed that
+she was possessed of rare intelligence. When Leif was preparing for
+his departure, Thorgunna asked to be permitted to accompany him.
+Leif inquired whether she had in this the approval of her kinsmen.
+She replied that she did not care for it. Leif responded that he
+did not deem it the part of wisdom to abduct so high-born a woman
+in a strange country, "and we so few in number." "It is by no means
+certain that thou shalt find this to be the better decision," said
+Thorgunna. "I shall put it to the proof, notwithstanding," said
+Leif. "Then I tell thee," said Thorgunna, "that I foresee that I
+shall give birth to a male child; and though thou give this no
+heed, yet will I rear the boy, and send him to thee in Greenland
+when he shall be fit to take his place with other men. And I
+foresee that thou will get as much profit of this son as is thy due
+from this our parting; moreover, I mean to come to Greenland myself
+before the end comes."</p>
+<p>Leif gave her a gold finger-ring, a Greenland Wadmal mantle, and
+a belt of walrus tusk.</p>
+<p>This boy came to Greenland, and was called Thorgils. Leif
+acknowledged his paternity, and some men will have it that this
+Thorgils came to Iceland in the summer before the Froda-wonder.
+However, this Thorgils was afterward in Greenland, and there seemed
+to be something not altogether natural about him before the end
+came. Leif and his companions sailed away from the Hebrides, and
+arrived in Norway in the autumn.</p>
+<p>Leif went to the court of King Olaf Tryggvason. He was well
+received by the King, who felt that he could see that Leif was a
+man of great accomplishments. Upon one occasion the King came to
+speech with Leif, and asked him, "Is it thy purpose to sail to
+Greenland in the summer?"</p>
+<p>"It is my purpose," said Leif, "if it be your will."</p>
+<p>"I believe it will be well," answered the King, "and thither
+thou shalt go upon my errand, to proclaim Christianity there."</p>
+<p>Leif replied that the King should decide, but gave it as his
+belief that it would be difficult to carry this mission to a
+successful issue in Greenland. The King replied that he knew of no
+man who would be better fitted for this undertaking; "and in thy
+hands the cause will surely prosper."</p>
+<p>"This can only be," said Leif, "if I enjoy the grace of your
+protection."</p>
+<p>Leif put to sea when his ship was ready for the voyage. For a
+long time he was tossed about upon the ocean, and came upon lands
+of which he had previously had no knowledge. There were self-sown
+wheat-fields and vines growing there. There were also those trees
+there which are called "mansur," and of all these they took
+specimens. Some of the timbers were so large that they were used in
+building. Leif found men upon a wreck, and took them home with him,
+and procured quarters for them all during the winter. In this wise
+he showed his nobleness and goodness, since he introduced
+Christianity into the country, and saved the men from the wreck;
+and he was called Leif "the Lucky" ever after.</p>
+<p>Leif landed in Ericsfirth, and then went home to Brattahlid; he
+was well received by everyone. He soon proclaimed Christianity
+throughout the land, and the Catholic faith, and announced King
+Olaf Tryggvason's messages to the people, telling them how much
+excellence and how great glory accompanied this faith.</p>
+<p>Eric was slow in forming the determination to forsake his old
+belief, but Thiodhild embraced the faith promptly, and caused a
+church to be built at some distance from the house. This building
+was called Thiodhild's church, and there she and those persons who
+had accepted Christianity&mdash;and there were many&mdash;were wont
+to offer their prayers.</p>
+<p>At this time there began to be much talk about a voyage of
+exploration to that country which Leif had discovered. The leader
+of this expedition was Thorstein Ericsson, who was a good man and
+an intelligent, and blessed with many friends. Eric was likewise
+invited to join them, for the men believed that his luck and
+foresight would be of great furtherance. He was slow in deciding,
+but did not say nay when his friends besought him to go. They
+thereupon equipped that ship in which Thorbiorn had come out, and
+twenty men were selected for the expedition. They took little cargo
+with them, naught else save their weapons and provisions.</p>
+<p>On that morning when Eric set out from his home he took with him
+a little chest containing gold and silver; he hid this treasure and
+then went his way. He had proceeded but a short distance, however,
+when he fell from his horse and broke his ribs and dislocated his
+shoulder, whereat he cried, "Ai, ai!" By reason of this accident he
+sent his wife word that she should procure the treasure which he
+had concealed&mdash;for to the hiding of the treasure he attributed
+his misfortune. Thereafter they sailed cheerily out of Ericsfirth,
+in high spirits over their plan. They were long tossed about upon
+the ocean, and could not lay the course they wished.</p>
+<p>They came in sight of Iceland, and likewise saw birds from the
+Irish coast. Their ship was, in sooth, driven hither and thither
+over the sea. In autumn they turned back, worn out by toil and
+exposure to the elements, and exhausted by their labors, and
+arrived at Ericsfirth at the very beginning of winter.</p>
+<p>Then said Eric: "More cheerful were we in the summer, when we
+put out of the firth, but we still live, and it might have been
+much worse."</p>
+<p>Thorstein answers: "It will be a princely deed to endeavor to
+look well after the wants of all these men who are now in need, and
+to make provision for them during the winter." Eric answers: "It is
+ever true, as it is said, that 'It is never clear ere the winter
+comes,' and so it must be here. We will act now upon thy counsel in
+this matter."</p>
+<p>All of the men who were not otherwise provided for accompanied
+the father and son. They landed thereupon, and went home to
+Brattahlid, where they remained throughout the winter.</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_10"><!-- RULE4 10 --></a>
+<h2>MAHOMETANS IN INDIA</h2>
+<center>BLOODY INVASIONS UNDER MAHMUD A.D. 1000</center>
+<br>
+<center>ALEXANDER DOW</center>
+<p class="intro">While Buddhism was giving place to Hinduism in
+India a new faith had arisen in Arabia. Mahomet, born A.D. 570,
+created a conquering religion, and died in 632. Within a hundred
+years after his death, his followers had invaded the countries of
+Asia as far as the Hindu Kush. Here their progress was stayed, and
+Islam had to consolidate itself during three more centuries before
+it grew strong enough to grasp the rich prize of India. But almost
+from the first the Arabs had fixed eager eyes upon that wealthy
+empire, and several premature inroads foretold the coming
+storm.</p>
+<p class="intro">About fifteen years after the death of the
+Prophet, Othman sent a naval expedition to Thana and Broach on the
+Bombay coast. Other raids toward Sind took place in 662 and 664,
+with no lasting results.</p>
+<p class="intro">Hinduism was for a time submerged, but never
+drowned, by the tide of Mahometan conquest, which set steadily
+toward India about A.D. 1000. At the present day the south of India
+remains almost entirely Hindu. By far the greater number of the
+Indian feudatory chiefs are still under Brahman influence. But in
+the northwest, where the first waves of invasion have always
+broken, about one-third of the population now profess Islam. The
+upper valley of the Ganges boasts a succession of Mussulman
+capitals; and in the swamps of Lower Bengal the bulk of the
+non-Aryan or aboriginal population have become converts to the
+Mahometan religion. The Mussulmans now make fifty-seven millions of
+the total of two hundred and eighty-eight millions in India.</p>
+<p class="intro">The armies of Islam had carried the crescent
+throughout Asia west of the Hindu Kush, and through Africa and
+Southern Europe, to distant Spain and France, before they obtained
+a foothold in the Punjab.</p>
+<p class="intro">The brilliant attempt in 711 to found a lasting
+Mahometan dynasty in Sind failed. Three centuries later, the utmost
+efforts of a series of Mussulman invaders from the northwest only
+succeeded in annexing a small portion of the frontier Punjab
+provinces.</p>
+<p class="intro">The popular notion that India fell an easy prey to
+the Mussulmans is opposed to the historical facts. Mahometan rule
+in India consists of a series of invasions and partial conquests,
+during eleven centuries from Othman's raid, about A.D. 647, to
+Ahmad Shah's tempest of devastation in 1761.</p>
+<p class="intro">At no time was Islam triumphant throughout all
+India. Hindu dynasties always ruled over a large area.</p>
+<p class="intro">The first collision between Hinduism and Islam on
+the Punjab frontier was the act of the Hindus. In 977 Jaipal, the
+Hindu chief of Lahore, annoyed by Afghan raids, led his troops
+through the mountains against the Mahometan kingdom of Ghazni, in
+Afghanistan. Subuktigin, the Ghaznivide prince, after severe
+fighting, took advantage of a hurricane to cut off the retreat of
+the Hindus through the pass. He allowed them, however, to return to
+India, on the surrender of fifty elephants and the promise of one
+million <i>dirhams</i> (about $125,000).</p>
+<p class="intro">In 997 Subuktigin died, and was succeeded by his
+son, Mahmud of Ghazni, aged sixteen. This valiant monarch, surnamed
+"the Great," reigned for thirty-three years, and extended his
+father's little Afghan kingdom into a great Mahometan sovereignty,
+stretching from Persia on the west to far within the Punjab on the
+east.</p>
+<p>Mahmud was born about the year 357 of the Hegira&mdash;or 350,
+according to some authorities&mdash;and, as astrologers say, with
+many happy omens expressed in the horoscope of his life.
+Subuktigin, being asleep at the time of his birth, dreamed that he
+beheld a green tree springing forth from his chimney, which threw
+its shadow over the face of the earth and screened from the storms
+of heaven the whole animal creation. This indeed was verified by
+the justice of Mahmud; for, if we can believe the poet, in his
+reign the wolf and the sheep drank together at the same brook.</p>
+<p>When Mahmud had settled his dispute with his brother Ismail, he
+hastened to Balik, from whence he sent an ambassador to Munsur,
+Emperor of Bokhara, to whom the family of Ghazni still pretended to
+owe allegiance, complaining of the indignity which he met with in
+the appointment of Buktusin to the government of Khorassan, a
+country so long in possession of his father. It was returned to him
+for answer that he was already in possession of the territories of
+Balik, Turmuz, and Herat, which was part of the empire, and that
+there was a necessity to divide the favors of Bokhara among her
+friends. Buktusin, it was also insinuated, had been a faithful and
+good servant; which seemed to throw a reflection upon the family of
+Ghazni, who had rendered themselves independent in the governments
+they held of the royal house of Samania. Mahmud, not discouraged by
+this answer, sent Hasan Jemmavi with rich presents to the court of
+Bokhara, and a letter in the following terms: "That he hoped the
+pure spring of friendship, which had flowed in the time of his
+father, should not now be polluted with the ashes of indignity, nor
+Mahmud be reduced to the necessity of divesting himself of that
+obedience which he had hitherto paid to the imperial family of
+Samania."</p>
+<p>When Hasan delivered his embassy, his capacity and elocution
+appeared so great to the Emperor, that, desirous to gain him over
+to his interest by any means, he bribed him at last with the honors
+of the wazirate, but never returned an answer to Mahmud. That
+prince having received information of this transaction, through
+necessity turned his face toward Nishapur, and marched to Murgab.
+Buktusin, in the mean time, treacherously entered into a
+confederacy with Faek, and, forming a conspiracy in the camp of
+Munsur, seized upon the person of that prince and cruelly put out
+his eyes. Abdul, the younger brother of Munsur, who was but a boy,
+was advanced by the traitors to the throne. Being, however, afraid
+of the resentment of Mahmud, the conspirators hastened to Merv,
+whither they were pursued by the King with great expedition.
+Finding themselves, upon their march, hard pressed in the rear by
+Mahmud, they halted and gave him battle. But the sin of ingratitude
+had darkened the face of their fortune, so that the breeze of
+victory blew upon the standards of the King of Ghazni.</p>
+<p>Faek carried off the young King, and fled to Bokhara, and
+Buktusin was not heard of for some time, but at length he found his
+way to his fellows in iniquity and began to collect his scattered
+troops. Faek, in the mean time, fell ill and soon afterward
+expired. Elak, the Usbek King, seizing upon the opportunity offered
+him by that event, marched with an army from Kashgar to Bokhara and
+deprived Abdul-Mallek and his adherents of life and empire at the
+same time. Thus perished the last of the house of Samania, which
+had reigned for the space of one hundred and twenty-seven
+years.</p>
+<p>The Emperor of Ghazni, at this juncture, employed himself in
+settling the government of the provinces of Balik and Khorassan,
+the affairs of which he regulated in such an able manner that the
+fame thereof reached the ears of the Caliph of Bagdad, the
+illustrious Al-Kadar Balla, of the noble house of Abbas. The Caliph
+sent him a rich dress of honor, such as he had never before
+bestowed on any king, and dignified Mahmud with the titles of the
+Protector of the State and Treasurer of Fortune. In the end of the
+month Zikada, in the year of the Hegira 390, Mahmud hastened from
+the city of Balak to Herat, and from Herat to Sistan, where he
+defeated Khaliph, the son of Achmet, the governor of that province
+of the extinguished family of Bokhara, and returned to Ghazni. He
+then turned his face toward India, took many forts and provinces,
+in which, having appointed his own governors, he returned to his
+dominions where he "spread the carpet of justice so smoothly upon
+the face of the earth that the love of him, and loyalty, gained a
+place in every heart."</p>
+<p>Having negotiated a treaty with Elak the Usbek, the province of
+Maver-ul-nere was ceded to him, for which he made an ample return
+in presents of great value; and the closest friendship and
+familiarity, for a long time, existed between the kings.</p>
+<p>Mahmud made a vow to heaven that if ever he should be blessed
+with tranquillity in his own dominions he would turn his arms
+against the idolaters of Hindustan. He marched in the year 391 (Ad
+Hegira) from Ghazni with ten thousand of his chosen horse, and came
+to Peshawur, where Jipal, the Indian prince of Lahore, with twelve
+thousand horse and thirty thousand foot, supported by three hundred
+chain-elephants, opposed him. On Saturday, the 8th of the month
+Mohirrim, in the year 392 of the Hegira, an obstinate battle
+ensued, in which the Emperor was victorious; Jipal, with fifteen of
+his principal officers, was taken prisoner, and five thousand of
+his troops lay dead upon the field. Mahmud in this action acquired
+great wealth and fame, for round the neck of Jipal alone were found
+sixteen strings of jewels, each of which was valued at one hundred
+and eighty thousand rupees.</p>
+<p>After this victory, the Emperor marched from Peshawur, and
+investing the fort of Batandi, reduced it, releasing his prisoners
+upon the payment of a large ransom, and the further stipulation of
+an annual tribute, then returned to Ghazni. It was in those days a
+custom of the Hindus that whatever rajah was twice defeated by the
+Moslems should be, by that disgrace, rendered ineligible for
+further command. Jipal, in compliance with this custom, having
+raised his son to the government, ordered a funeral pile to be
+prepared, upon which he sacrificed himself to his gods.</p>
+<p>A year later, Mahmud again marched into Sistan, and brought
+Kaliph, who had mismanaged his government, prisoner to Ghazni.
+Finding that the tribute from Hindustan had not been paid, in the
+year A.H. 395 he directed his march toward the city of Battea, and,
+leaving the boundaries of Multan, arrived at Tahera, which was
+fortified with an exceeding high wall and a deep, broad ditch.
+Tahera was at that time governed by a prince called Bakhera, who
+had, in the pride of power and wealth, greatly troubled the
+Mahometan governors whom Mahmud had delegated to rule in Hindustan.
+Bakhera had also refused to pay his proportion of the tribute to
+Annandpal, the son of Jipal, of whom he held his authority.</p>
+<p>When Mahmud entered the territories of Bakhera, that prince
+called out his troops to receive him, and, taking possession of a
+strong position, engaged the Mahometan army for the space of three
+days; in which time they suffered so much that they were on the
+point of abandoning the attack. But on the fourth day, Mahmud
+appeared at the head of his troops, and addressed them at length,
+encouraging them to win glory. He concluded by telling them that
+this day he had devoted himself to conquest or to death. Bakhera,
+on his part, invoked the gods at the temple, and prepared, with his
+former resolution, to repel the enemy. The Mahometans charged with
+their usual impetuosity, but were repulsed with great slaughter;
+yet returning with fresh courage and redoubled rage, the attack was
+continued until the evening, when Mahmud, turning his face to the
+holy Kaaba, invoked the aid of the Prophet in the presence of his
+army.</p>
+<p>"Advance! advance!" cried then the King. "Our prayers have found
+favor with God!"</p>
+<p>Immediately a great shout arose among the host, and the Moslems,
+pressing forward as if they courted death, obliged the enemy to
+give ground, and pursued them in full retreat to the gates of the
+city.</p>
+<p>The Emperor having next morning invested the place, gave orders
+to make preparations for filling up the ditch, which task in a few
+days was nearly completed. Bakhera, finding he could not long
+defend the city, determined to leave only a small garrison for its
+defence; and accordingly, one night, he marched out with the rest
+of his troops, and took position in a wood on the banks of the
+Indus. Mahmud, being informed of his retreat, detached part of his
+army to pursue him. Bakhera, by this time, was deserted by fortune
+and consequently by most of his friends; he found himself
+surrounded by the Mahometans and attempted in vain to force his way
+through them. When just on the point of being taken prisoner, he
+turned his sword against his breast, while the most of his
+adherents were slaughtered in attempting to avenge his death.
+Mahmud, in the mean time, had taken Tahera by assault; and found
+there one hundred and twenty elephants, many slaves, and much
+plunder. He annexed the town and its dependencies to his own
+dominions, and returned victorious to Ghazni.</p>
+<p>In the year A.H. 396 he formed the design of reconquering
+Multan, which had revolted from his rule. Achmet Lodi, the regent
+of Multan, had formerly acknowledged the suzerainty of Mahmud, and
+after him his grandson Daud, till the expedition against Bakhera,
+when Daud withdrew his allegiance. The King marched in the
+beginning of the spring, with a great army from Ghazni, and was met
+by Annandpal, the son of Jipal, Prince of Lahore, in the hills of
+Peshawur, whom he defeated and obliged to fly into Cashmere.
+Annandpal had entered into an alliance with Daud; and as there were
+two passes only by which the Mahometans could enter Multan,
+Annandpal had taken upon himself to secure that by the way of
+Peshawur, which Mahmud chanced to take. The Sultan, returning from
+the pursuit, entered Multan by the way of Betanda, which was his
+first intention. When Daud received intelligence of the fate of
+Annandpal, thinking himself too weak to keep the field, he shut
+himself up in his fortified place and humbly solicited forgiveness
+for his fault, promising to pay a large tribute and in the future
+to obey implicitly the Sultan's command. Mahmud received him again
+as a vassal, and prepared to return to Ghazni, when news was
+brought to him from Arsallah, who commanded at Herat, that Elak,
+the King of Kashgar, had invaded his realm with an army. The King
+hastened to settle the affairs of Hindustan, which he put into the
+hands of Shokpal, a Hindu prince who had resided with Abu-Ali,
+governor of Peshawur, and had turned Mussulman, taking the name of
+Zab Sais.</p>
+<p>The particulars of the war of Mahmud with Elak are these: It has
+already been mentioned that an uncommon friendship had existed
+between this Elak, the Usbek king of Kashgar, a kingdom in Tartary,
+and Mahmud. The Emperor himself was married to the daughter of
+Elak, but some factious men about the two courts, by
+misrepresentations of the princes to one another, changed their
+former friendship to enmity. When Mahmud therefore marched into
+Hindustan, and had left the field of Khorassan almost destitute of
+troops, Elak took advantage of the opportunity, and resolved to
+appropriate that province to himself. To accomplish his design he
+ordered his general-in-chief Sapastagi, with a large force, to
+enter Khorassan; and Jaffir Taghi at the same time was appointed to
+command in the territory of Balak. Arsallah, the governor of Herat,
+being informed of these motions, hastened to Ghazni, that he might
+secure the capital. In the mean time the chiefs of Khorassan,
+finding themselves deserted and being in no condition to oppose the
+enemy, submitted themselves to Sapastagi, the general of Elak.</p>
+<p>But Mahmud, having by great marches reached Ghazni, flowed
+onward like a torrent with his army toward Balak. Taghi, who had by
+this time possessed himself of the place, fled toward Turmuz at his
+approach. The Emperor then detached Arsallah with a great part of
+his army to drive Sapastagi out of Khorassan; and he also, upon the
+approach of the troops of Ghazni, abandoned Herat, and marched
+toward Maber-ul-nere.</p>
+<p>The King of Kashgar, seeing the bad state of his affairs,
+solicited the aid of Kudar, King of Chuton, a province of Tartary,
+on the confines of China, and that prince marched to join him with
+fifty thousand horse. Strengthened by this alliance, he crossed,
+with the confederate armies, the river Gaon, which was five
+parasangs from Balak, and opposed himself to the camp of Mahmud.
+That monarch immediately drew up his army in order of battle,
+giving the command of the centre to his brother, the noble Nasir,
+supported by Abu-Nasir, governor of Gorgan, and by Abdallah, a
+chief of reputation in arms. The right wing he committed to the
+care of Alta Sash, an old experienced officer, while the left was
+the charge of the valiant Arsallah, a chief of the Afghans. The
+front of his line he strengthened with five hundred
+chain-elephants, with open spaces behind them, to facilitate their
+retreat in case of a defeat.</p>
+<p>The King of Kashgar posted himself in the centre, the noble
+Kudir led the right, and Taghi the left. The armies advanced to the
+charge. The shouts of warriors, the neighing of horses, and the
+clashing of arms reached the broad arch of heaven, while dust
+obscured the face of day.</p>
+<p>Elak, advancing with some chosen squadrons, threw the centre of
+Mahmud's army into disorder. Mahmud, perceiving the enemy's
+progress, leaped from his horse, and, kissing the ground, invoked
+the aid of the Almighty. He then mounted an elephant-of-war,
+encouraged his troops, and made a violent assault upon Elak. The
+elephant seizing the standard-bearer of the enemy, folded his trunk
+around him and tossed him aloft in the air. He then surged forward
+like a mountain removed from its base by an earthquake, and trod
+the enemy under his feet like locusts. When the troops of Ghazni
+saw their King forcing his way alone through the enemy's ranks they
+rushed forward with headlong impetuosity and drove the enemy with
+great slaughter before them. Elak, abandoned by fortune and his
+army, turned his face to fly. He crossed the river with a few of
+his surviving friends, never afterward appearing in the field to
+dispute the victory with Mahmud.</p>
+<p>The King after this triumph marched two days after the runaways.
+On the third night a great storm of wind and snow overtook the
+Ghaznian army in the desert. The King's tents were pitched with
+much difficulty, while the army was obliged to lie in the snow.
+Mahmud, having ordered great fires to be kindled around his tents,
+they became so warm that many of the courtiers began to take off
+their upper garments; when a facetious chief, whose name was Dalk,
+came in shivering with the cold, at which the King, observing,
+said: "Go out, Dalk, and tell the Winter that he may burst his
+cheeks with blustering, for here we value not his resentment." Dalk
+went out accordingly, and, returning in a short time, kissed the
+ground, and thus addressed the King: "I have delivered the King's
+message to Winter, but the Surly Season replied that if his hands
+cannot tear the skirts of Royalty and hurt the attendants of the
+King, yet he will so use his power to-night on his army that in the
+morning Mahmud will be obliged to saddle his own horses."</p>
+<p>The King smiled at this reply, but it presently rendered him
+more thoughtful and he determined to proceed no farther. In the
+morning some hundreds of men and horses were found to have perished
+with the cold. Mahmud at the same time received advices from India,
+that Zab Sais, the renegade Hindu, had thrown off his allegiance,
+and, returning to his former religion, expelled all the officers
+who had been appointed by the King, from their respective
+departments. The King immediately determined to punish this
+renegade, and with great expedition advanced toward India. He sent
+on a part of his cavalry in front, which, coming unexpectedly upon
+Zab Sais, defeated him and brought him prisoner to the King. The
+rebel was fined four lacs of rupees, of which Mahmud made a present
+to his treasurer, and made Zab Sais a prisoner for life.</p>
+<p>Mahmud, having thus settled his affairs in India, returned in
+autumn to Ghazni, where he remained for the winter in peace. But in
+the spring of the year A.H. 399 Annandpal, sovereign of Lahore,
+began to raise disturbance in Multan, so that the King was obliged
+to undertake another expedition into those parts, with a great
+army, to correct the Indians. Annandpal, hearing of his intentions,
+sent ambassadors everywhere to request the assistance of the other
+princes of Hindustan, who considered the extirpation of the Moslems
+from India as a meritorious and political as well as a religious
+action.</p>
+<p>Accordingly the princes of Ugin, Gualier, Callinger, Kannoge,
+Delhi, and Ajmere entered into a confederacy, and, collecting their
+forces, advanced toward the heads of the Indus, with the greatest
+army that had been for some centuries seen upon the field in India.
+The two armies came in sight of one another in a great plain near
+the confines of the province of Peshawur. They remained there
+encamped forty days without action: but the troops of the idolaters
+daily increased in number. They were joined by the Gakers, and
+other tribes with their armies, and surrounded the Mahometans, who,
+fearing a general assault, were obliged to intrench themselves.</p>
+<p>The King, having thus secured himself, ordered a thousand
+archers to the front, to endeavor to provoke the enemy to advance
+to the intrenchments. The archers accordingly were attacked by the
+Gakers, who, notwithstanding all the King could do, pursued the
+retreating bowmen within the trenches, where a dreadful scene of
+carnage ensued on both sides, in which five thousand Moslems in a
+few minutes were slain. The enemy's soldiers being now cut down as
+fast as they advanced, the attack grew weaker, when suddenly the
+elephant which carried the Prince of Lahore, who was chief in
+command, took fright at the report of a gun (<i>sic</i>), and
+turned tail in flight.</p>
+<p>This circumstance struck the Hindus with a panic, for, thinking
+they were deserted by their general, they immediately followed the
+example. Abdallah, with six thousand Arabian horse, and Arsallah,
+with ten thousand Turks, Afghans, and Chilligis, pursued the enemy
+for two days and nights; so that twenty thousand Hindus were killed
+in their flight&mdash;in addition to the great multitude that fell
+on the field of battle.</p>
+<p>Thirty elephants, with much rich plunder, were brought to the
+King, who, to establish the faith, marched against the Hindus of
+Nagrakot, breaking down their idols and destroying their temples.
+There was at that time, in the territory of Nagrakot, a strong fort
+called Bima, which Mahmud invested after having destroyed the
+country round about with fire and sword. Bima was built by a prince
+of the same name, on the top of a steep mountain; and here the
+Hindus&mdash;on account of its strength&mdash;had deposited the
+wealth consecrated to their idols in all the neighboring kingdoms;
+so that in this fort, it was said, there was a greater quantity of
+gold, silver, precious stones, and pearls than ever had been
+collected in the royal treasury of any prince on earth.</p>
+<p>Mahmud invested the place with such expedition that the Hindus
+had not time to send troops into it for its defence&mdash;the
+greater part of the garrison having been sent to the field. Those
+within consisted, for the most part, of priests, who being adverse
+to the bloody business of war, in a few days solicited permission
+to capitulate. Their request being granted, they opened the gates
+and fell upon their faces before Mahmud, who with a few of his
+officers and attendants immediately entered and took possession of
+the place.</p>
+<p>In Bima were found: seven hundred thousand <i>dinars</i>; seven
+hundred maunds of gold and silver plate; forty maunds of pure gold
+in ingots; two thousand maunds of silver bullion, and twenty maunds
+of various jewels set, which had been collecting from the time of
+Bima. With this immense treasure the King returned to Ghazni, and
+in the year A.H. 400 held a magnificent festival, where he
+displayed to the people his wealth in golden thrones, and in other
+rich receptacles, in a great plain without the city of Ghazni; and
+after the feast every individual received a princely gift.</p>
+<p>In the following year Mahmud led his army toward Ghor. The
+native prince of that country, Mahomet of the Sur tribe of Afghans,
+with ten thousand troops, opposed him. The King, finding that the
+troops of Ghor defended themselves in their intrenchments with such
+obstinacy, commanded his army to make a feint of retreating, to
+lure the enemy out of their fortified camp, which manoeuvre proved
+successful. The Ghorians, being deceived, pursued the army of
+Ghazni to the plain, where the King, facing round with his troops,
+attacked them with great impetuosity. Mahomet was taken prisoner
+and brought to the King; but in his despair he had taken poison,
+which he always kept under his ring, and died in a few hours. His
+country was annexed to the dominion of Ghazni. Some historians
+affirm that neither the sovereigns of Ghor nor its inhabitants were
+Mussulmans till after this victory; while others of good credit
+assure us that they were converted many years before, even so early
+as the time of the famous Ali, the son-in-law of the Prophet.</p>
+<p>Mahmud, in the same year, was under the necessity of marching
+again to Multan, which had revolted; but having soon reduced it,
+and cut off a great number of the chiefs, he brought Daud, the son
+of Nazir, the rebellious governor, prisoner to Ghazni, and
+imprisoned him in the fort of Gorci for life.</p>
+<p>In the year A.H. 402, the passion of war fermenting in the mind
+of Mahmud, he resolved upon the conquest of Tannasar, in the
+kingdom of Hindustan. It had reached the ears of the King that
+Tannasar was held in the same veneration by idolaters as Mecca was
+by the Mahometans; that there they had set up a great number of
+idols, the chief of which they called Jug Sum. This Jug Sum, they
+pretended to say, existed when as yet the world existed not. When
+the King reached the country about the five branches of the Indus,
+he desired that&mdash;according to the treaty that existed between
+himself and Annandpal&mdash;he should not be disturbed by his march
+through that country. He accordingly sent an embassy to Annandpal,
+advising him of his intentions, and desiring him to send guards for
+the protection of his towns and villages, which he, the King, would
+take care should not be molested by the followers of his camp.</p>
+<p>Annandpal agreed to this proposal, and prepared an entertainment
+for the reception of the King, issuing an order for all his
+subjects to supply the royal camp with every necessary of life. In
+the mean time he sent his brother with two thousand horse to meet
+the King and deliver this message:</p>
+<p>"That he was the subject and slave of the King; but that he
+begged permission to acquaint his Majesty that Tannasar was the
+principal place of worship of the inhabitants of that country; that
+if it was a virtue required by the religion of Mahmud to destroy
+the religion of others, he had already acquitted himself of that
+duty to his God in the destruction of the temple of Nagracot; but
+if he should be pleased to alter his resolution against Tannasar,
+Annandpal would undertake that the amount of the revenues of that
+country should be annually paid to Mahmud, to reimburse the expense
+of his expedition: that besides, he, on his own part, would present
+him with fifty elephants, and jewels to a considerable amount."</p>
+<p>The King replied: "That in the Mahometan religion it was an
+established tenet that the more the glory of the Prophet was
+exalted, and the more his followers exerted themselves in the
+subversion of idolatry, the greater would be their reward in
+heaven; that therefore it was his firm resolution, with the
+assistance of God, to root out the abominable worship of idols from
+the land of India: why then should he spare Tannasar?"</p>
+<p>When this news reached the Indian king of Delhi, he prepared to
+oppose the invaders, sending messages all over Hindustan to
+acquaint the rajahs that Mahmud, without any reason or provocation,
+was marching with an innumerable army to destroy Tannasar, which
+was under his immediate protection: that if a dam was not
+expeditiously raised against this roaring torrent, the country of
+Hindustan would soon be overwhelmed in ruin, and the tree of
+prosperity rooted up; that therefore it was advisable for them to
+join their forces at Tannasar, to oppose with united strength the
+impending danger. But Mahmud reached Tannasar before they could
+take any measure for its defence, plundered the city and broke the
+idols, sending Jug Sum to Ghazni, where he was soon stripped of his
+ornaments. He then ordered his head to be struck off and his body
+to be thrown on the highway. According to the account of the
+historian Hago Mahomet of Kandahar, there was a ruby found in one
+of the temples which weighed four hundred and fifty miskals!</p>
+<p>Mahmud, after these transactions at Tannasar, proceeded to
+Delhi, which he also took, and wanted greatly to annex to his
+dominions, but his nobles told him that it was impossible to keep
+the rajahship of Delhi till he had entirely subjected Multan to
+Mahometan rule, destroyed the power and exterminated the family of
+Annandpal, Prince of Lahore, which lay between Delhi and the
+northern dominions of Mahmud. The King approved of this counsel,
+and immediately determined to proceed no further against that
+country, till he had accomplished the reduction of Multan and
+Annandpal. But that prince behaved with so much policy and
+hospitality that he changed the purpose of the King, who returned
+to Ghazni. He brought to Ghazni forty thousand captives and much
+wealth, so that that city could now be hardly distinguished in
+riches from India itself.</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_11"><!-- RULE4 11 --></a>
+<h2>CANUTE BECOMES KING OF ENGLAND</h2>
+<center>A.D. 1017</center>
+<br>
+<center>DAVID HUME</center>
+<p class="intro">After the success of King Alfred over the Danes in
+the last quarter of the ninth century, England enjoyed a
+considerable respite from the invasions of the bold ravagers who
+had caused great suffering and loss to the country. This immunity
+of England seems to have been partly due to the fact that the
+Danish adventurers had gained a foothold in the north of France,
+where they found all the employment they needed in maintaining
+their establishments. Under the reign of Edward the
+Elder&mdash;chosen to succeed Alfred&mdash;the English enjoyed an
+interval of comparative peace and industry. During this time and
+under the following reigns, known as those of the Six Boy-Kings,
+the social side of life had an opportunity to develop from a
+semi-barbarous to a more civilized state. The bare and rough walls
+of hall and court were screened by tapestry hangings, often of
+silk, and elaborately ornamented with birds and flowers or scenes
+from the battlefield or the chase. Chairs and tables were skilfully
+carved and inlaid with different woods and, among the wealthier
+nobility, often decorated with gold and silver. Knives and spoons
+were now used at table&mdash;the fork was to come many long years
+later; golden ornaments were worn; and a variety of dishes were
+fashioned, often of precious metals, brass, and even bone. The
+bedstead became a household article, no longer looked upon with
+superstitious awe; and musical instruments&mdash;principally of the
+harp pattern&mdash;began to find favor in their eyes, and were
+passed round from hand to hand, like the drinking-bowl, at their
+rude festivals.</p>
+<p class="intro">But toward the end of a century following the
+victories of Alfred the Danes again threatened an invasion, and in
+981-991 they made several landings, in the latter year overrunning
+much territory. King Ethelred (the "Unready") procured their
+departure by bribery, which led the Danes to repeat their visit the
+next year, following it up by a descent in force under King Sweyn
+of Denmark and Olaf of Norway. They defeated the English in battle
+and ravaged a great part of the country, exacting as before ruinous
+contributions from the already impoverished people. After the siege
+and taking of London, 1011-1013, the flight of the cowardly
+Ethelred to the court of Normandy, the sudden death of Sweyn, who
+had been but a few months before proclaimed King of England, and
+the return of Ethelred to his throne, Canute, the son of Sweyn,
+claimed the crown and ravaged the land in the manner and custom of
+his race. The complications and strife engendered by the rival
+claims of the Dane and Edmund ("Ironside"), son of Ethelred, and
+which ended in the triumph of Canute and the complete subjugation
+of England, are hereinafter narrated by Hume, the English
+historian.</p>
+<p>The Danes had been established during a longer period in England
+than in France; and though the similarity of their original
+language to that of the Saxons invited them to a more early
+coalition with the natives, they had hitherto found so little
+example of civilized manners among the English that they retained
+all their ancient ferocity, and valued themselves only on their
+national character of military bravery. The recent as well as more
+ancient achievements of their countrymen tended to support this
+idea; and the English princes, particularly Athelstan and Edgar,
+sensible of that superiority, had been accustomed to keep in pay
+bodies of Danish troops, who were quartered about the country and
+committed many violences upon the inhabitants. These mercenaries
+had attained to such a height of luxury, according to the old
+English writers, that they combed their hair once a day, bathed
+themselves once a week, changed their clothes frequently; and by
+all these arts of effeminacy, as well as by their military
+character, had rendered themselves so agreeable to the fair sex
+that they debauched the wives and daughters of the English and
+dishonored many families. But what most provoked the inhabitants
+was that, instead of defending them against invaders, they were
+ever ready to betray them to the foreign Danes, and to associate
+themselves with all straggling parties of that nation.</p>
+<p>The animosity between the inhabitants of English and Danish race
+had, from these repeated injuries, risen to a great height, when
+Ethelred (1002), from a policy incident to weak princes, embraced
+the cruel resolution of massacring the latter throughout all his
+dominions. Secret orders were despatched to commence the execution
+everywhere on the same day, and the festival of St. Brice, which
+fell on a Sunday, the day on which the Danes usually bathed
+themselves, was chosen for that purpose. It is needless to repeat
+the accounts transmitted concerning the barbarity of this massacre:
+the rage of the populace, excited by so many injuries, sanctioned
+by authority, and stimulated by example, distinguished not between
+innocence and guilt, spared neither sex nor age, and was not
+satiated without the tortures as well as death of the unhappy
+victims. Even Gunhilda, sister to the King of Denmark, who had
+married Earl Paling and had embraced Christianity, was, by the
+advice of Edric, Earl of Wilts, seized and condemned to death by
+Ethelred, after seeing her husband and children butchered before
+her face. This unhappy princess foretold, in the agonies of
+despair, that her murder would soon be avenged by the total ruin of
+the English nation.</p>
+<p>Never was prophecy better fulfilled, and never did barbarous
+policy prove more fatal to the authors. Sweyn and his Danes, who
+wanted but a pretence for invading the English, appeared off the
+western coast, and threatened to take full revenge for the
+slaughter of their countrymen. Exeter fell first into their hands,
+from the negligence or treachery of Earl Hugh, a Norman, who had
+been made governor by the interest of Queen Emma. They began to
+spread their devastations over the country, when the English,
+sensible what outrages they must now expect from their barbarous
+and offended enemy, assembled more early and in greater numbers
+than usual, and made an appearance of vigorous resistance. But all
+these preparations were frustrated by the treachery of Duke Alfric,
+who was intrusted with the command, and who, feigning sickness,
+refused to lead the army against the Danes, till it was dispirited
+and at last dissipated by his fatal misconduct. Alfric soon after
+died, and Edric, a greater traitor than he, who had married the
+King's daughter and had acquired a total ascendant over him,
+succeeded Alfric in the government of Mercia and in the command of
+the English armies. A great famine, proceeding partly from the bad
+seasons, partly from the decay of agriculture, added to all the
+other miseries of the inhabitants. The country, wasted by the
+Danes, harassed by the fruitless expeditions of its own forces, was
+reduced to the utmost desolation, and at last submitted (1007) to
+the infamy of purchasing a precarious peace from the enemy by the
+payment of thirty thousand pounds.</p>
+<p>The English endeavored to employ this interval in making
+preparations against the return of the Danes, which they had reason
+soon to expect. A law was made, ordering the proprietors of eight
+hides of land to provide each a horseman and a complete suit of
+armor, and those of three hundred and ten hides to equip a ship for
+the defence of the coast. When this navy was assembled, which must
+have consisted of near eight hundred vessels, all hopes of its
+success were disappointed by the factions, animosities, and
+dissensions of the nobility. Edric had impelled his brother
+Brightric to prefer an accusation of treason against Wolfnoth,
+governor of Sussex, the father of the famous earl Godwin; and that
+nobleman, well acquainted with the malevolence as well as power of
+his enemy, found no means of safety but in deserting with twenty
+ships to the Danes. Brightric pursued him with a fleet of eighty
+sail; but his ships being shattered in a tempest, and stranded on
+the coast, he was suddenly attacked by Wolfnoth, and all his
+vessels burned and destroyed. The imbecility of the King was little
+capable of repairing this misfortune. The treachery of Edric
+frustrated every plan for future defence; and the English navy,
+disconcerted, discouraged, and divided, was at last scattered into
+its several harbors.</p>
+<p>It is almost impossible, or would be tedious, to relate
+particularly all the miseries to which the English were henceforth
+exposed. We hear of nothing but the sacking and burning of towns;
+the devastation of the open country; the appearance of the enemy in
+every quarter of the kingdom; their cruel diligence in discovering
+any corner which had not been ransacked by their former violence.
+The broken and disjointed narration of the ancient historians is
+here well adapted to the nature of the war, which was conducted by
+such sudden inroads as would have been dangerous even to a united
+and well-governed kingdom, but proved fatal where nothing but a
+general consternation and mutual diffidence and dissension
+prevailed. The governors of one province refused to march to the
+assistance of another, and were at last terrified from assembling
+their forces for the defence of their own province. General
+councils were summoned; but either no resolution was taken or none
+was carried into execution. And the only expedient in which the
+English agreed was the base and imprudent one of buying a new peace
+from the Danes, by the payment of forty-eight thousand pounds.</p>
+<p>This measure did not bring them even that short interval of
+repose which they had expected from it. The Danes, disregarding all
+engagements, continued their devastations and hostilities; levied a
+new contribution of eight thousand pounds upon the county of Kent
+alone; murdered the Archbishop of Canterbury, who had refused to
+countenance this exaction; and the English nobility found no other
+resource than that of submitting everywhere to the Danish monarch,
+swearing allegiance to him, and delivering him hostages for their
+fidelity. Ethelred, equally afraid of the violence of the enemy and
+the treachery of his own subjects, fled into Normandy (1013),
+whither he had sent before him Queen Emma and her two sons, Alfred
+and Edward. Richard received his unhappy guests with a generosity
+that does honor to his memory.</p>
+<p>The King had not been above six weeks in Normandy when he heard
+of the death of Sweyn, who expired at Gainsborough before he had
+time to establish himself in his new-acquired dominions. The
+English prelates and nobility, taking advantage of this event, sent
+over a deputation to Normandy, inviting Ethelred to return to them,
+expressing a desire of being again governed by their native prince,
+and intimating their hopes that, being now tutored by experience,
+he would avoid all those errors which had been attended with such
+misfortunes to himself and to his people. But the misconduct of
+Ethelred was incurable; and on his resuming the government, he
+discovered the same incapacity, indolence, cowardice, and credulity
+which had so often exposed him to the insults of his enemies. His
+son-in-law Edric, notwithstanding his repeated treasons, retained
+such influence at court as to instil into the King jealousies of
+Sigefert and Morcar, two of the chief nobles of Mercia. Edric
+allured them into his house, where he murdered them; while Ethelred
+participated in the infamy of the action by confiscating their
+estates and thrusting into a convent the widow of Sigefert. She was
+a woman of singular beauty and merit; and in a visit which was paid
+her, during her confinement, by Prince Edmund, the King's eldest
+son, she inspired him with so violent an affection that he released
+her from the convent, and soon after married her without the
+consent of his father.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the English found in Canute, the son and successor of
+Sweyn, an enemy no less terrible than the prince from whom death
+had so lately delivered them. He ravaged the eastern coast with
+merciless fury, and put ashore all the English hostages at
+Sandwich, after having cut off their hands and noses. He was
+obliged, by the necessity of his affairs, to make a voyage to
+Denmark; but, returning soon after, he continued his depredations
+along the southern coast. He even broke into the counties of
+Dorset, Wilts, and Somerset, where an army was assembled against
+him, under the command of Prince Edmund and Duke Edric. The latter
+still continued his perfidious machinations, and, after endeavoring
+in vain to get the prince into his power, he found means to
+disperse the army, and he then openly deserted to Canute with forty
+vessels.</p>
+<p>Notwithstanding this misfortune Edmund was not disconcerted,
+but, assembling all the force of England, was in a condition to
+give battle to the enemy. The King had had such frequent experience
+of perfidy among his subjects that he had lost all confidence in
+them: he remained at London, pretending sickness, but really from
+apprehensions that they intended to buy their peace by delivering
+him into the hands of his enemies. The army called aloud for their
+sovereign to march at their head against the Danes; and, on his
+refusal to take the field, they were so discouraged that those vast
+preparations became ineffectual for the defence of the kingdom.
+Edmund, deprived of all regular supplies to maintain his soldiers,
+was obliged to commit equal ravages with those which were practised
+by the Danes; and, after making some fruitless expeditions into the
+north, which had submitted entirely to Canute's power, he retired
+to London, determined there to maintain to the last extremity the
+small remains of English liberty. He here found everything in
+confusion by the death of the King, who expired after an unhappy
+and inglorious reign of thirty-five years (1016). He left two sons
+by his first marriage, Edmund, who succeeded him, and Edwy, whom
+Canute afterward murdered. His two sons by the second marriage,
+Alfred and Edward, were, immediately upon Ethelred's death,
+conveyed into Normandy by Queen Emma.</p>
+<p>Edmund, who received the name of "Ironside" from his hardy
+valor, possessed courage and abilities sufficient to have prevented
+his country from sinking into those calamities, but not to raise it
+from that abyss of misery into which it had already fallen. Among
+the other misfortunes of the English, treachery and disaffection
+had crept in among the nobility and prelates; and Edmund found no
+better expedient for stopping the further progress of these fatal
+evils than to lead his army instantly into the field, and to employ
+them against the common enemy. After meeting with some success at
+Gillingham, he prepared himself to decide, in one general
+engagement, the fate of his crown; and at Scoerston, in the county
+of Gloucester, he offered battle to the enemy, who were commanded
+by Canute and Edric. Fortune, in the beginning of the day, declared
+for him; but Edric, having cut off the head of one Osmer, whose
+countenance resembled that of Edmund, fixed it on a spear, carried
+it through the ranks in triumph, and called aloud to the English
+that it was time to fly; for, behold! the head of their sovereign.
+And though Edmund, observing the consternation of the troops, took
+off his helmet, and showed himself to them, the utmost he could
+gain by his activity and valor was to leave the victory undecided.
+Edric now took a surer method to ruin him, by pretending to desert
+to him; and as Edmund was well acquainted with his power, and
+probably knew no other of the chief nobility in whom he could
+repose more confidence, he was obliged, notwithstanding the
+repeated perfidy of the man, to give him a considerable command in
+the army. A battle soon after ensued at Assington, in Essex, where
+Edric, flying in the beginning of the day, occasioned the total
+defeat of the English, followed by a great slaughter of the
+nobility. The indefatigable Edmund, however, had still resources.
+Assembling a new army at Gloucester, he was again in condition to
+dispute the field, when the Danish and English nobility, equally
+harassed with those convulsions, obliged their kings to come to a
+compromise and to divide the kingdom between them by treaty. Canute
+reserved to himself the northern division, consisting of Mercia,
+East Anglia, and Northumberland, which he had entirely subdued. The
+southern parts were left to Edmund. This prince survived the treaty
+about a month. He was murdered at Oxford by two of his
+chamberlains, accomplices of Edric, who thereby made way for the
+succession of Canute the Dane to the crown of England.</p>
+<p>The English, who had been unable to defend their country and
+maintain their independency under so active and brave a prince as
+Edmund, could after his death expect nothing but total subjection
+from Canute, who, active and brave himself, and at the head of a
+great force, was ready to take advantage of the minority of Edwin
+and Edward, the two sons of Edmund. Yet this conqueror, who was
+commonly so little scrupulous, showed himself anxious to cover his
+injustice under plausible pretences. Before he seized the dominions
+of the English princes, he summoned a general assembly of the
+states in order to fix the succession of the kingdom. He here
+suborned some nobles to depose that, in the treaty of Gloucester,
+it had been verbally agreed, either to name Canute, in case of
+Edmund's death, successor to his dominions or tutor to his
+children&mdash;for historians vary in this particular; and that
+evidence, supported by the great power of Canute, determined the
+states immediately to put the Danish monarch in possession of the
+government. Canute, jealous of the two princes, but sensible that
+he should render himself extremely odious if he ordered them to be
+despatched in England, sent them abroad to his ally, the King of
+Sweden, whom he desired, as soon as they arrived at his court, to
+free him, by their death, from all further anxiety. The Swedish
+monarch was too generous to comply with the request; but being
+afraid of drawing on himself a quarrel with Canute, by protecting
+the young princes, he sent them to Solomon, King of Hungary, to be
+educated in his court. The elder, Edwin, was afterward married to
+the sister of the King of Hungary; but the English prince dying
+without issue, Solomon gave his sister-in-law, Agatha, daughter of
+the emperor Henry II, in marriage to Edward, the younger brother;
+and she bore him Edgar, Atheling, Margaret, afterward Queen of
+Scotland, and Christina, who retired into a convent.</p>
+<p>Canute, though he had reached the great point of his ambition in
+obtaining possession of the English crown, was obliged at first to
+make great sacrifices to it; and to gratify the chief of the
+nobility, by bestowing on them the most extensive governments and
+jurisdictions. He created Thurkill Earl or Duke of East
+Anglia&mdash;for these titles were then nearly of the same
+import&mdash;Yric of Northumberland, and Edric of Mercia; reserving
+only to himself the administration of Wessex. But seizing afterward
+a favorable opportunity, he expelled Thurkill and Yric from their
+governments, and banished them the kingdom; he put to death many of
+the English nobility, on whose fidelity he could not rely, and whom
+he hated on account of their disloyalty to their native prince. And
+even the traitor Edric, having had the assurance to reproach him
+with his services, was condemned to be executed and his body to be
+thrown into the Thames; a suitable reward for his multiplied acts
+of perfidy and rebellion.</p>
+<p>Canute also found himself obliged, in the beginning of his
+reign, to load the people with heavy taxes in order to reward his
+Danish followers: he exacted from them at one time the sum of
+seventy-two thousand pounds, besides eleven thousand which he
+levied on London alone. He was probably willing, from political
+motives, to mulct severely that city, on account of the affection
+which it had borne to Edmund and the resistance which it had made
+to the Danish power in two obstinate sieges.[<a href=
+"#note-25">25</a>] But these rigors were imputed to necessity; and
+Canute, like a wise prince, was determined that the English, now
+deprived of all their dangerous leaders, should be reconciled to
+the Danish yoke, by the justice and impartiality of his
+administration. He sent back to Denmark as many of his followers as
+he could safely spare; he restored the Saxon customs in a general
+assembly of the states; he made no distinction between Danes and
+English in the distribution of justice; and he took care, by a
+strict execution of law, to protect the lives and properties of all
+his people. The Danes were gradually incorporated with his new
+subjects; and both were glad to obtain a little respite from those
+multiplied calamities from which the one, no less than the other,
+had, in their fierce contest for power, experienced such fatal
+consequences.</p>
+<p><a name="note-25"><!-- Note Anchor 25 --></a>[Footnote 25: In
+one of these sieges Canute diverted the course of the Thames, and
+by that means brought his ships above London bridge.]</p>
+<p>The removal of Edmund's children into so distant a country as
+Hungary was, next to their death, regarded by Canute as the
+greatest security to his government: he had no further anxiety,
+except with regard to Alfred and Edward, who were protected and
+supported by their uncle Richard, Duke of Normandy. Richard even
+fitted out a great armament, in order to restore the English
+princes to the throne of their ancestors; and though the navy was
+dispersed by a storm, Canute saw the danger to which he was exposed
+from the enmity of so warlike a people as the Normans. In order to
+acquire the friendship of the duke, he paid his addresses to Queen
+Emma, sister of that prince, and promised that he would leave the
+children whom he should have by that marriage in possession of the
+Crown of England. Richard complied with his demand and sent over
+Emma to England, where she was soon after married to Canute. The
+English, though they disapproved of her espousing the mortal enemy
+of her former husband and his family, were pleased to find at court
+a sovereign to whom they were accustomed, and who had already
+formed connections with them; and thus Canute, besides securing, by
+this marriage, the alliance of Normandy, gradually acquired, by the
+same means, the confidence of his own subjects. The Norman prince
+did not long survive the marriage of Emma; and he left the
+inheritance of the duchy to his eldest son of the same name, who,
+dying a year after him without children, was succeeded by his
+brother Robert, a man of valor and abilities.</p>
+<p>Canute, having settled his power in England beyond all danger of
+a revolution, made a voyage to Denmark, in order to resist the
+attacks of the King of Sweden; and he carried along with him a
+great body of the English, under the command of Earl Godwin. This
+nobleman had here an opportunity of performing a service, by which
+he both reconciled the King's mind to the English nation and,
+gaining to himself the friendship of his sovereign, laid the
+foundation of that immense fortune which he acquired to his family.
+He was stationed next the Swedish camp, and observing a favorable
+opportunity, which he was obliged suddenly to seize, he attacked
+the enemy in the night, drove them from their trenches, threw them
+into disorder, pursued his advantage, and obtained a decisive
+victory over them. Next morning Canute, seeing the English camp
+entirely abandoned, imagined that those disaffected troops had
+deserted to the enemy: he was agreeably surprised to find that they
+were at that time engaged in pursuit of the discomfited Swedes. He
+was so pleased with this success, and with the manner of obtaining
+it, that he bestowed his daughter in marriage upon Godwin, and
+treated him ever after with entire confidence and regard.</p>
+<p>In another voyage, which he made afterward to Denmark, Canute
+attacked Norway, and, expelling the just but unwarlike Olaus, kept
+possession of his kingdom till the death of that prince. He had now
+by his conquests and valor attained the utmost height of grandeur:
+having leisure from wars and intrigues, he felt the unsatisfactory
+nature of all human enjoyments; and equally weary of the glories
+and turmoils of this life, he began to cast his view toward that
+future existence, which it is so natural for the human mind,
+whether satiated by prosperity or disgusted with adversity, to make
+the object of its attention. Unfortunately, the spirit which
+prevailed in that age gave a wrong direction to his devotion:
+instead of making compensation to those whom he had injured by his
+former acts of violence, he employed himself entirely in those
+exercises of piety which the monks represented as the most
+meritorious. He built churches, he endowed monasteries, he enriched
+the ecclesiastics, and he bestowed revenues for the support of
+chantries at Assington and other places, where he appointed prayers
+to be said for the souls of those who had there fallen in battle
+against him. He even undertook a pilgrimage to Rome, where he
+resided a considerable time: besides obtaining from the pope some
+privileges for the English school erected there, he engaged all the
+princes through whose dominions he was obliged to pass to desist
+from those heavy impositions and tolls which they were accustomed
+to exact from the English pilgrims. By this spirit of devotion, no
+less than by his equitable and politic administration, he gained,
+in a good measure, the affections of his subjects.</p>
+<p>Canute, the greatest and most powerful monarch of his time,
+sovereign of Denmark and Norway, as well as of England, could not
+fail of meeting with adulation from his courtiers; a tribute which
+is liberally paid even to the meanest and weakest princes. Some of
+his flatterers, breaking out one day in admiration of his grandeur,
+exclaimed that everything was possible for him; upon which the
+monarch, it is said, ordered his chair to be set on the sea-shore
+while the tide was rising; and as the waters approached, he
+commanded them to retire, and to obey the voice of him who was lord
+of the ocean. He feigned to sit some time in expectation of their
+submission; but when the sea still advanced toward him, and began
+to wash him with its billows, he turned to his courtiers, and
+remarked to them that every creature in the universe was feeble and
+impotent, and that power resided with one Being alone, in whose
+hands were all the elements of nature; who could say to the ocean,
+"Thus far shalt thou go, and no farther," and who could level with
+his nod the most towering piles of human pride and ambition.</p>
+<p>The only memorable action which Canute performed after his
+return from Rome was an expedition against Malcolm, King of
+Scotland. During the reign of Ethelred, a tax of a shilling a hide
+had been imposed on all the lands of England. It was commonly
+called <i>danegelt</i>; because the revenue had been employed
+either in buying peace with the Danes or in making preparations
+against the inroads of that hostile nation. That monarch had
+required that the same tax should be paid by Cumberland, which was
+held by the Scots; but Malcolm, a warlike prince, told him that as
+he was always able to repulse the Danes by his own power, he would
+neither submit to buy peace of his enemies nor pay others for
+resisting them. Ethelred, offended at this reply, which contained a
+secret reproach on his own conduct, undertook an expedition against
+Cumberland; but though he committed ravages upon the country, he
+could never bring Malcolm to a temper more humble or submissive.
+Canute, after his accession, summoned the Scottish King to
+acknowledge himself a vassal for Cumberland to the Crown of
+England; but Malcolm refused compliance, on pretence that he owed
+homage to those princes only who inherited that kingdom by right of
+blood. Canute was not of a temper to bear this insult; and the King
+of Scotland soon found that the sceptre was in very different hands
+from those of the feeble and irresolute Ethelred. Upon Canute's
+appearing on the frontiers with a formidable army, Malcolm agreed
+that his grandson and heir, Duncan, whom he put in possession of
+Cumberland, should make the submissions required, and that the
+heirs of Scotland should always acknowledge themselves vassals to
+England for that province.</p>
+<p>Canute passed four years in peace after this enterprise, and he
+died at Shaftesbury; leaving three sons, Sweyn, Harold, and
+Hardicanute. Sweyn, whom he had by his first marriage with Alfwen,
+daughter of the Earl of Hampshire, was crowned in Norway;
+Hardicanute, whom Emma had borne him, was in possession of Denmark;
+Harold, who was of the same marriage with Sweyn, was at that time
+in England.</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_12"><!-- RULE4 12 --></a>
+<h2>HENRY III DEPOSES THE POPES</h2>
+<center>THE GERMAN EMPIRE CONTROLS THE PAPACY</center>
+<center>A.D. 1048</center>
+<br>
+<center>FERDINAND GREGOROVIUS</center>
+<center>JOSEPH E. DARRAS</center>
+<p class="intro">After the extinction of the Carlovingian line,
+A.D. 887, and the division of the empire, the Church of Rome and
+the Christian world fell into a highly demoralized state,
+attributable to the destitution to which ecclesiastical bodies were
+reduced by the frequent predations of bands of robbers, the
+immorality of the priesthood, and the power of electing the popes
+falling into the hands of intriguing and licentious patrician
+females, whom aspirants to the holy see were not ashamed to bribe
+for their favors. So depraved had the general spirit of the age
+become that Pope Boniface VII, A.D. 974, robbed St. Peter's Church
+and its treasury and fled to Constantinople; while Pope John XVIII,
+A.D. 1003, was prevented, by general indignation only, from
+accepting a sum of money from Emperor Basil to recognize the right
+of the Greek patriarch to the title of "Universal Bishop."</p>
+<p class="intro">A child, son of one of the old noble houses, was
+consecrated pope as Benedict IX, A.D. 1033, according to some
+authorities, at the age of ten or twelve years. He became noted for
+his profligacy and was driven from his throne, the Romans electing,
+as Pope Sylvester III, John, Bishop of Sabina, who is said to have
+paid a high price for the dignity. Benedict, however, regained the
+papal seat shortly afterward, and drove Sylvester into a refuge,
+but later sold the office to John Gratianus, Arch-priest of Rome,
+who as Gregory VI made laudable attempts to effect a general
+reformation. He failed in his efforts, and a chaotic state ensued;
+three popes claiming the triple tiara and reigning in Rome: Gregory
+at the Vatican, Benedict in the Lateran, and Sylvester in the
+Church of Santa Maria Maggiore.</p>
+<p class="intro">On the invitation of the Roman people, Henry the
+Black, the young and zealous Emperor of Germany, repaired to Italy
+in 1045 and summoned a great ecclesiastical council at Sutri, which
+passed a decree deposing the three papal claimants. The same
+council elected to the tiara the German bishop of Bamberg, who
+reigned in the holy see as Clement II. One of his first ceremonies,
+carried out with all the gorgeous pomp of the Roman Church, was the
+imperial coronation of Henry and his wife Agnes.</p>
+<p class="intro">But Henry's action, while "it dragged the Church
+out of the slough it had fallen into," startled the ecclesiastical
+world, and was a prelude to the struggle between pope and emperor
+which, under St. Hildebrand, Pope Gregory VII, culminated in the
+independent establishment of the pontificate and papal power.</p>
+<center>FERDINAND GREGOROVIUS</center>
+<p>Henry III, the son and successor of Conrad, was young, vigorous,
+and God-fearing; a noble prince called, like Charles and Otto the
+Great, to restore Rome, to deliver it from tyrants, and to reform
+the almost annihilated Church. For the papacy had been still
+further dishonored by Benedict IX. It seemed as if a demon from
+hell, in the disguise of a priest, occupied the chair of Peter and
+profaned the sacred mysteries of religion by his insolent
+courses.</p>
+<p>Benedict IX, restored in 1038, protected by his brother Gregory,
+who ruled the city as senator of the Romans, led unchecked the life
+of a Turkish sultan in the palace of the Lateran. He and his family
+filled Rome with robbery and murder; all lawful conditions had
+ceased. Toward the end of 1044, or in the beginning of the
+following year, the populace at length rose in furious revolt; the
+Pope fled, but his vassals defended the Leonina against the attacks
+of the Romans. The Trasteverines remained faithful to Benedict, and
+he summoned friends and adherents; Count Gerard of Galeria advanced
+with a numerous body of horse to the Saxon gate and repulsed the
+Romans. An earthquake added to the horrors in the revolted city.
+The ancient chronicle which relates these events does not tell us
+whether Trastevere was taken by assault after a three-days'
+struggle, but merely relates that the Romans unanimously renounced
+Benedict, and elected Bishop John of the Sabina to the papacy as
+Sylvester III. John also owed his elevation to the gold with which
+he bribed the rebels and their leader, Girardo de Saxo. This
+powerful Roman had first promised his daughter in marriage to the
+Pope, and afterward refused her; for the Pope had not hesitated, in
+all seriousness, to sue for the hand of a Roman lady, a relative of
+his own. Her father lured him on with the hope of winning her, but
+required that Benedict should in the first place resign the
+tiara.</p>
+<p>The Pope, burning with passion, consented and fulfilled his
+promise during the revolt of the Romans. He was mastered by the
+demon of sensuality; it was reported by the superstitious that he
+associated with devils in the woods and attracted women by means of
+spells. It was asserted that books of magic, with which he had
+conjured demons, had been found in the Lateran. His banishment
+meanwhile aroused the haughty spirit of his house, and anger at
+Gerard's treacherous conduct proved a further incentive to revenge.
+His numerous adherents still held St. Angelo, and his gold acquired
+him new friends. After a forty-nine days' reign, Sylvester III was
+driven from the apostolic chair, which the Tusculan reascended in
+March, 1045.</p>
+<p>Benedict now ruled for some time in Rome, while Sylvester III
+found safety either within some fortified monument in the city or
+in some Sabine fortress, and continued to call himself pope. A
+beneficent darkness veils the horrors of this year. Hated by the
+Romans, insecure on his throne, in constant terror of the renewal
+of the revolution, Benedict eventually found himself obliged to
+abdicate. The abbot Bartholomew of Grotta Ferrata urged him to the
+step, but he unblushingly sold the papacy for money like a piece of
+merchandise. In exchange for a considerable income, that is to say,
+for the revenue of "Peter's pence" from England, he made over his
+papal dignities by a formal contract to John Gratianus, a rich
+archpriest of the Church of St. John at the Latin gate, on May 1,
+1045.</p>
+<p>Could the holiest office in Christendom be more deeply outraged
+than by a sale such as this? And yet so general was the traffic in
+ecclesiastical dignities throughout the world that when a pope
+finally sold the chair of Peter the scandal did not strike society
+as specially heinous.</p>
+<p>John Gratian, or Gregory VI, set aside the canon law with a
+defiant courage which perhaps was only understood by the minority
+of his compatriots; he bought the papacy in order to wrest it from
+the hands of a criminal, and this remarkable Pope, although
+regarded as an idiot in that terrible period, was possibly an
+earnest and high-minded man. Scarcely had Peter Damian knowledge of
+this traffic when he wrote to Gregory VI on his elevation,
+rejoicing that the dove with the olive branch had returned to the
+ark. The Saint may have known the Pope personally and have been
+persuaded of his spiritual virtues. Even the chroniclers of the
+time, who represent him&mdash;assuredly with injustice&mdash;as so
+rude and simple that he was obliged to appoint a representative,
+are unable to fasten any crime upon him. The Cluniacs in France and
+the congregations of Italy all hailed his elevation as the
+beginning of a better time, and side by side with this simonist
+Pope a young and brave monk suddenly appears, who, after the heroic
+exertions of a lifetime, was to raise the degenerate papacy to a
+height hitherto undreamed of. Hildebrand first issues from
+obscurity by the side of Gregory VI; he became the Pope's chaplain,
+and this fact alone proves that Gregory was no idiot. How far
+Hildebrand's activity already extended, whether he had any share in
+Gregory's illegal elevation, we do not know; but in the
+"representative" spoken of by the chronicles, we may easily
+recognize the gifted young monk who was Gregory's counsellor, and
+who later took the name of Gregory VII in grateful recollection of
+his predecessor.</p>
+<p>While Benedict IX pursued his wild career in Tusculum or Rome,
+Gregory VI remained Pope for nearly two years. His desire was to
+save the Church, which stood in need of a drastic reform&mdash;and
+which soon afterward obtained it. The papacy, lately a hereditary
+fief of the counts of Tusculum, was utterly ruined; the <i>dominium
+temporale</i>, the ominous gift of the Carlovingians, the box of
+Pandora in the hands of the Pope from which a thousand evils had
+arisen, had disappeared, since the Church could scarcely command
+the fortresses in the immediate neighborhood of the city. A hundred
+lords, the captains or vassals of the Pope, stood ready to fall
+upon Rome; every road was infested with robbers, every pilgrim was
+robbed; within the city the churches lay in ruins, while the
+priests caroused. Daily assassinations made the streets insecure.
+Roman nobles, sword in hand, forced their way into St. Peter's
+itself to snatch the gifts which pious hands still placed upon the
+altar.</p>
+<p>The chronicler who describes this state of things extols Gregory
+for having repressed it. The captains, it is true, besieged the
+city, but the Pope boldly assembled the militia, restored a degree
+of order, and even conquered several fortresses in the district.
+Sylvester had apparently made an attempt on Rome; he was, however,
+defeated by Gregory's energy. The short and dark period of
+Gregory's pontificate was terrible, and his severity toward the
+robbers soon made him hated by the nobles and even by the equally
+rapacious cardinals.</p>
+<p>Whatever he may have done under the influence of French and
+Italian monks to rescue the Church from its state of barbarous
+confusion, it was&mdash;as in the time of Otto the Great&mdash;by
+the German dictatorship alone that it could be saved. The exertions
+of Gregory VI soon ceased to bear any result; his means were
+exhausted, and his opponents gradually overpowered him. So utter
+was the state of anarchy that it is said that all three popes lived
+in the city at the same time: one in the Lateran, a second in St.
+Peter's, and a third in Santa Maria Maggiore.</p>
+<p>The eyes of the better citizens at length turned to the King of
+Germany. The archdeacon Peter convoked a synod without consulting
+Gregory, and it was here resolved urgently to invite Henry to come
+and take the imperial crown and raise the Church from the ruin into
+which it had fallen.</p>
+<p>Henry, coming from Augsburg, crossed the Brenner, and arrived at
+Verona in September, 1046, accompanied by a great army and filled
+with the ardent desire of becoming the reformer of the Church. No
+enemy opposed him, the bishops and dukes, among them the powerful
+margrave Boniface of Tuscany, did homage without delay. The Roman
+situation was provisionally discussed at a great synod in Pavia.
+Gregory VI now hastened to meet the King at Piacenza, where he
+hoped to gain the monarch to his side. Henry, however, dismissed
+him with the explanation that his fate and that of the antipopes
+would be canonically decided by a council.</p>
+<p>Shortly before Christmas he assembled one thousand and forty-six
+bishops and Roman clergy at Sutri. The three popes were summoned,
+and Gregory and Sylvester III actually appeared. Sylvester was
+deposed from his pontificate and condemned to penance in a
+monastery. Gregory VI, however, gave the council cause to doubt its
+competence to judge him. Gregory, who was an upright man, or one at
+least conscious of good intentions, consented publicly to describe
+the circumstances of his elevation, and was thereby forced to
+condemn himself as guilty of simony and unworthy of the papal
+office. He quietly laid down the insignia of the papacy, and his
+renunciation did him honor. Henry, with the bishops and the
+margrave Boniface, immediately started for the city, which did not
+shut its gates against him; for Benedict II had hid himself in
+Tusculum, and his brothers did not venture on any resistance. Rome,
+weary of the Tusculum horrors, joyfully accepted the German King as
+her deliverer. Never afterward was a king of Germany received with
+such glad acclamations by the Roman people; never again did any
+other effect such great results or achieve the like changes. With
+the Roman expedition of Henry III begins a new epoch in the history
+of the city, and more especially of the Church. It seemed as if the
+waters of the deluge had subsided, and as if men from the ark had
+landed on the rock of Peter to give new races and new laws to a new
+world. What law, that stern and terrible power which kills, binds,
+and holds together, signifies in human affairs, has indeed been
+experienced by few periods so fully as by that with which we have
+now to deal.</p>
+<p>A synod, assembled in St. Peter's on December 23d, again
+pronounced all three popes deposed, and a canonical pope had
+consequently to be elected. Like Otto III before his coronation,
+Henry had also at his side a man who was to wear the tiara and to
+confer the crown upon himself.</p>
+<p>Adalbert of Hamburg and Bremen having refused the papacy, the
+King chose Suidger of Bamberg. The royal command was all that was
+required to place the candidate on the sacred chair. Henry,
+however, would not violate any of the canonical forms. As King of
+Germany he possessed no right either over that city or yet over the
+papal election. The right must first be conferred upon him, and
+this was done by a treaty which he had already concluded with the
+Romans at Sutri. "Roman Signors," said Henry at the second sitting
+of the synod on December 24th, "however thoughtless your conduct
+may hitherto have been, I still accord you liberty to elect a pope
+according to ancient custom; choose from among this assembly whom
+you will."</p>
+<p>The Romans replied: "When the royal majesty is present, the
+assent to the election does not belong to us, and, when it is
+lacking, you are represented by your <i>patricius</i>. For in the
+affairs of the republic the patricius is not patricius of the pope,
+but of the emperor. We admit that we have been so thoughtless as to
+appoint idiots as popes. It now behooves your imperial power to
+give the Roman republic the benefit of law, the ornament of
+manners, and to lend the arm of protection to the Church."</p>
+<p>The senators of the year 1046, who so meekly surrendered the
+valuable right to the German King, heeded not the shades of Alberic
+and the three Crescentii; since these&mdash;their
+patricians&mdash;would have accused them of treason.</p>
+<p>The Romans of these days were, however, ready for any sacrifice
+so that they obtained freedom from the Tusculum tyranny. Nothing
+more clearly shows the utter depth of their exhaustion and the
+extent of their sufferings than the light surrender of a right
+which it had formerly cost Otto the Great such repeated efforts to
+extort from the city. Rome made the humiliating confession that she
+possessed no priest worthy of the papacy, that the clergy in the
+city were rude and utter simonists. All other circumstances,
+moreover, forbade the election of a Roman or even of an Italian to
+the papacy.</p>
+<p>The Romans besought Henry to give them a good pope; he presented
+the Bishop of Bamberg to the assenting clergy, and led the
+reluctant candidate to the apostolic chair. Clement II, consecrated
+on Christmas Day, 1046, immediately placed the imperial crown on
+Henry's head and on that of his wife Agnes. There were still many
+Romans who had been eye-witnesses of like transactions&mdash;that
+is to say, of papal election and imperial coronation following one
+the other in immediate succession&mdash;in the case of Otto III and
+Henry V; who, as they now saw the second German pope mount the
+chair of Peter, may have recalled the fact that the first had only
+lived a few sad years in Rome and had died in misery.</p>
+<p>The coronation of Henry III was performed under such significant
+conditions and in such perfect tranquillity that it offers the most
+fitting opportunity for describing in a few sentences the
+ceremonial of the imperial coronation.</p>
+<p>Since Charles the Great, these repeated ceremonies, with the
+more frequent coronations or Lateran processions of the popes,
+formed the most brilliant spectacle in Rome.</p>
+<p>When the Emperor-elect approached with his wife and retinue, he
+first took an oath to the Romans, at the little bridge on the
+Neronian Field, faithfully to observe the rights and usages of the
+city. On the day of the coronation he made his entrance through the
+Porta Castella close to St. Angelo and here repeated the oath. The
+clergy and the corporations of Rome greeted him at the Church of
+Santa Maria Traspontina, on a legendary site called the Terebinthus
+of Nero. The solemn procession then advanced to the steps of the
+cathedral. Senators walked by the side of the King, the prefect of
+the city carried the naked sword before him, and his chamberlains
+scattered money.</p>
+<p>Arrived at the steps he dismounted from his horse and,
+accompanied by his retinue, ascended to the platform where the
+Pope, surrounded by the higher clergy, awaited him sitting. The
+King stooped to kiss the Pope's foot, tendered the oath to be an
+upright protector of the Church, received from the Pope the kiss of
+peace, and was adopted by him as the son of the Church. With solemn
+song both King and Pope entered the Church of Santa Maria in Turri,
+beside the steps of St. Peter's, and here the King was formally
+made canon of the cathedral. He then advanced, conducted by the
+Lateran count of the palace and by the <i>primicerius</i> of the
+judges, to the silver door of the cathedral, where he prayed, and
+the Bishop of Albano delivered the first oration.</p>
+<p>Innumerable mystic ceremonies awaited the King in St. Peter's
+itself. Here, a short way from the entrance, was the <i>rota
+porphyretica</i>, a round porphyry stone inserted in the pavement,
+on which the King and Pope knelt. The imperial candidate here made
+his profession of faith, the Cardinal-bishop of Portus placed
+himself in the middle of the rota and pronounced the second
+oration. The King was then draped in new vestments, was made a
+cleric in the sacristy by the Pope, was clad with tunic, dalmatica,
+pluviale, mitre and sandals, and was then led to the altar of St.
+Maurice, whither his wife, after similar but less fatiguing
+ceremonies, accompanied him. The Bishop of Ostia here anointed the
+King on the right arm and neck and delivered the third oration.</p>
+<p>If the Emperor-elect were fitted by the dignity of his calling,
+then the solemnity of the function, the mystic and tedious pomp,
+the magnificent monotone of prayer and song in the ancient
+cathedral, hallowed by so many exalted memories, must have stirred
+his inmost soul. The pinnacle of all human ambition, the crown of
+Charles the Great, lay glittering before his longing eyes on the
+altar of the Prince of the Apostles. The Pope, however, first
+placed a ring on the finger of the Anointed, as symbol of the
+faith, the permanence and strength of his Catholic rule; with
+similar formul&aelig; girt him with the sword, and finally placed
+the crown upon his head. "Take," he said, "the symbol of fame, the
+diadem of royalty, the crown, the empire, in the name of the
+Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost; renounce the archfiend
+and all sins, be upright and merciful, and live in such pious love
+that thou mayest hereafter receive the everlasting crown in company
+with the saints, from our Lord Jesus Christ."</p>
+<p>The church resounded with the Gloria and the Laudes: "Life and
+victory to the Emperor, to the Roman and the German army," and with
+the endless acclamations of the rude soldiers who hailed their King
+in German, Slav, and Romance tongues.</p>
+<p>The Emperor divested himself of the symbols of the empire, and
+now ministered to the Pope as subdeacon at mass. The Count Palatine
+afterward removed the sandals, and put the red imperial boots with
+the spurs of St. Maurice upon him. Whereupon the entire procession,
+accompanied by the Pope, left the church and advanced along the
+so-called "Triumphal Way," through the flower-bedecked city, amid
+the ringing of all the bells, to the Lateran. At special stations
+were posted clergy singing praises, and the <i>schol&aelig;</i> or
+guilds placed to salute the Emperor as he passed. Chamberlains
+scattered money before and behind the procession, and all the
+schol&aelig; and the officials of the palace received the
+<i>presbyterium</i> or customary present of money. A banquet closed
+the solemnities in the papal palace.</p>
+<p>Such are merely the barest outlines of an imperial coronation of
+this period. The ceremonies, borrowed from Byzantine pomp, had been
+established since Charles the Great, and had remained essentially
+the same, although, in the course of time, many details had been
+altered and others had been introduced. The magnificence of these
+spectacles is no longer rivalled by the pageantry of our days. The
+multitudes of dukes and counts, of bishops and abbots, knights and
+nobles with their retinues, the splendor of their attire, the
+strangeness of their faces and their tongues, the martial array of
+warriors, the mystic magnificence of the papacy with all its orders
+in such picturesque costume, the aspect of secular Rome, of judges
+and senators, of consuls and <i>duces</i>, of the militia with
+their banners, in curious, motley, fantastic attire; lastly, as the
+sublime scene of the drama, the stern, gloomy, ruinous city,
+through which the procession solemnly advanced&mdash;all combined
+to produce a picture of such mighty and universal historic interest
+that even a Roman accustomed to the pomp of Trajan's period could
+not have beheld it without feelings of astonishment.</p>
+<p>These coronation processions restored to the city its character
+of metropolis. The Romans of the time might flatter themselves that
+the emperors whom they elected still ruled the universe. The
+strangers who flocked to the city freely distributed their gold,
+and the hungry populace could live for weeks on the proceeds of the
+coronation.</p>
+<center>J.E. DARRAS</center>
+<p>The accession of Gregory VI was the harbinger of an epoch of
+moral renaissance. The wise Pontiff, whose glory it had been to
+free the Church from a disgraceful yoke, proved himself worthy of
+the sovereign power, as much by the zeal with which he wielded as
+by the noble disinterestedness with which he resigned it. He found
+the temporal domains of the Church so far diminished that they
+hardly furnished the Pope with the means of an honorable
+maintenance. As guardian of the rights of the Church, he hurled an
+excommunication against the usurpers. The infuriated plunderers
+marched upon Rome with an armed force. The Pope also raised troops,
+took possession of St. Peter's church, drove out the wretches who
+stole the offerings laid upon the tombs of the Apostles, took back
+several estates belonging to the domain of the Church, and secured
+the safety of the roads, upon which pilgrims no longer ventured to
+travel except in caravans. This policy displeased the Romans, who
+had now become habituated to plunder. Their complaints induced
+Henry III, King of Germany, to hurry to Italy, and to summon a
+council at Sutri, during the Christmas festival, to inquire whether
+the election of Gregory should be regarded as simoniacal. The Pope
+and the clergy entertained the sincere conviction that they were
+justified in bringing about, even by means of money, the abdication
+of the unworthy Benedict, thus to end the scandal which so foully
+disgraced the Holy See. As opinions were divided on this point,
+Gregory VI, to set all doubts at rest, stripped himself, with his
+own hands, of the Pontifical vestments, and gave up to the bishops
+his pastoral staff. Having given to the world this noble example of
+self-denial, Gregory withdrew to the monastery of Cluny, bearing
+with him the consciousness of a great duty done. He died in that
+holy solitude in the odor of sanctity.</p>
+<p>The see left vacant by the magnanimous humility of Gregory VI
+was bestowed, by general consent, upon Suidger, bishop of Bamberg,
+whom King Henry had brought with him to Rome. The new Pope, whose
+elevation was due only to universally known and acknowledged
+virtues, took the name of Clement II, and was crowned on
+Christmas-Day (A.D. 1046); in the same solemnity he bestowed the
+imperial title and crown upon Henry III, and his queen, Agnes,
+daughter of William, duke of Aquitaine.</p>
+<p>The Emperor Henry, during his sojourn in Rome, sent for St.
+Peter Damian to assist the Pope by his counsels. The illustrious
+religious thus wrote to the Pontiff, in excuse for not complying:
+"Notwithstanding the Emperor's request, so expressive of his
+benevolence in my regard, I cannot devote to journeys the time
+which I have promised to consecrate to God in solitude. I send the
+imperial letter in order that your Holiness may decide, if it
+become necessary. My soul is weighed down with grief when I see the
+churches of our provinces plunged into shameful confusion through
+the fault of bad bishops and abbots. What does it profit us to
+learn that the Holy See has been brought out from darkness into the
+light, if we still remain buried in the same gloom of ignominy? But
+we hope that you are destined to be the savior of Israel. Labor
+then, Most Holy Father, once more to raise up the kingdom of
+justice, and use the vigor of discipline to humble the wicked and
+to raise the courage of the good."</p>
+<p>On his return to Germany, Henry took the Pope with him. The city
+of Beneventum refused to open its gates to the Sovereign Pontiff,
+who, at the Emperor's request, pronounced against it a sentence of
+excommunication. Clement made but a short visit to his native land,
+and hastened back to Rome. His apostolic zeal led him to visit, in
+person, the churches of Umbria, the deplorable condition of which
+he had learned from the letter of St. Peter Damian. On reaching the
+monastery of St. Thomas of Aposello, he was seized with a mortal
+disease, before having accomplished the object of his journey. His
+last thought was for his beloved church of Bamberg, to which he
+sent, from his dying couch, a confirmation of all its former
+privileges, assuring it, in the most touching terms, of his
+unchanging affection.</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_13"><!-- RULE4 13 --></a>
+<h2>DISSENSION AND SEPARATION OF THE GREEK AND ROMAN CHURCHES</h2>
+<center>A.D. 1054</center>
+<br>
+<center>HENRY FANSHAWE TOZER</center>
+<center>JOSEPH DEHARBE</center>
+<p class="intro">In the division of the Greek Catholic Church from
+that at Rome, Protestant writers see a very natural and legitimate
+separation of two equal powers. Roman Catholics, regarding the
+Papal supremacy as established from the beginning, treat the
+division as a plot by evil and malignant men. Both viewpoints are
+here given.</p>
+<p class="intro">The Eastern&mdash;or Greek Christian&mdash;Church,
+now known as the Holy Orthodox, Catholic, Apostolic, Oriental
+Church, first assumed individuality at Ephesus, and in the
+catechetical school of Alexandria, which flourished after A.D. 180.
+It early came into conflict with the Western or Roman Church: "the
+Eastern Church enacting creeds, and the Western Church
+discipline."</p>
+<p class="intro">In the third century, Dionysius, Bishop of Rome,
+accused the Patriarch of Alexandria of error in points of faith,
+but the Patriarch vindicated his orthodoxy. Eastern monachism arose
+about 300; the Church of Armenia was founded about the same year;
+and the Church of Georgia or Iberia in 340.</p>
+<p class="intro">Constantine the Great caused Christianity to be
+recognized throughout the Roman Empire, and in 325 convened the
+first ecumenical or general Council at Nicaea (Nice), when Arius,
+excommunicated for heresy by a provincial synod at Alexandria in
+321, defended his views, but was condemned. Arianism long
+maintained a theological and political importance in the East and
+among the Goths and other nations converted by Arian missionaries.
+In A.D. 330, Constantine removed the capital of the Roman Empire to
+Constantinople, and thence dates the definite establishment of the
+Greek Church and the serious rivalry with the Roman Church over
+claims of preeminence, differences of doctrine and ritual, charges
+of heresy and inter-excommunications, which ended in the final
+separation of the churches in 1054.</p>
+<p class="intro">In A.D. 461, the churches of Egypt, Syria, and
+Armenia separated from the Church of Constantinople, over the
+Monophysite controversy on the single divine or single compound
+nature of the Son; in 634 the struggle with Mahometanism began; in
+676 the Maronites of Lebanon formed a strong sect, which, in 1182,
+joined the Roman Church. In 988, Vladimir the Great of Russia
+founded the Gr&aelig;co-Russian Church, in which the Greek Church
+found a refuge, when Mahometanism was established at
+Constantinople, after its capture by the Turks in 1453.</p>
+<center>HENRY FANSHAWE TOZER</center>
+<p>The separation of the Eastern and Western churches, which
+finally took place in the year 1054, was due to the operation of
+influences which had been at work for several centuries before.
+From very early times a tendency to divergence existed, arising
+from the tone of thought of the dominant races in the two, the more
+speculative Greeks being chiefly occupied with purely theological
+questions, while the more practical Roman mind devoted itself
+rather to subjects connected with the nature and destiny of man. In
+differences such as these there was nothing irreconcilable: the
+members of both communions professed the same forms of belief,
+rested their faith on the same divine persons, were guided by the
+same standard of morals, and were animated by the same hopes and
+fears; and they were bound by the first principles of their
+religion to maintain unity with one another. But in societies, as
+in individuals, inherent diversity of character is liable to be
+intensified by time, and thus counteracts the natural bonds of
+sympathy, and prevents the two sides from seeing one another's
+point of view. In this way it co&ouml;perates with and aggravates
+the force of other causes of disunion, which adverse circumstances
+may generate. Such causes there were in the present instance,
+political, ecclesiastical, and theological; and the nature of these
+it may be well for us to consider, before proceeding to narrate the
+history of the disruption.</p>
+<p>The office of bishop of Rome assumed to some extent a political
+character as early as the time of the first Christian emperors. By
+them this prelate was constituted a sort of secretary of state for
+Christian affairs, and was employed as a central authority for
+communicating with the bishops in the provinces; so that after a
+while he acted as minister of religion and public instruction. As
+the civil and military power of the Western Empire declined, the
+extent of this authority increased; and by the time when Italy was
+annexed to the Empire of the East, in the reign of Justinian, the
+popes had become the political chiefs of Roman society. Nominally,
+indeed, they were subject to the exarch of Ravenna, as vicegerent
+of the Emperor at Constantinople, but in reality the inhabitants of
+Western Europe were more disposed to look to the spiritual
+potentate in the Imperial city as representing the traditions of
+ancient Rome.</p>
+<p>The political rivalry that was thus engendered was sharpened by
+the traditional jealousy of Rome and Constantinople, which had
+existed ever since the new capital had been erected on the shores
+of the Bosporus. Then followed struggles for administrative
+superiority between the popes and the exarchs, culminating in the
+shameful maltreatment and banishment of Martin I by the emperor
+Constans&mdash;an event which the See of Rome could never
+forget.</p>
+<p>The attempt to enforce iconoclasm in Central Italy was
+influential in causing the loss of that province to the Empire; and
+even after the Byzantine rule had ceased there, the controversy
+about images tended to keep alive the antagonism, because, although
+that question was once and again settled in favor of the
+maintenance of images, yet many of the emperors, in whose persons
+the power of the East was embodied, were foremost in advocating
+their destruction. Indeed, from first to last, owing to the close
+connection of church and state in the Byzantine empire, the
+unpopularity of the latter in Western Europe was shared by the
+former. To this must be added the contempt for one another's
+character which had arisen among the adherents of the two churches,
+for the Easterns had learned to regard the people of the West as
+ignorant and barbarous, and were esteemed by them in turn as
+mendacious and unmanly.</p>
+<p>In ecclesiastical matters also the differences were of long
+standing. These related to questions of jurisdiction between the
+two patriarchates. Up to the eighth century, the patriarchate of
+the West included a number of provinces on the eastern side of the
+Adriatic&mdash;Illyricum, Dacia, Macedonia, and Greece. But Leo the
+Isaurian, who probably foresaw that Italy would ere long cease to
+form part of his dominions, and was unwilling that these important
+territories should own spiritual allegiance to one who was not his
+subject, altered this arrangement, and transferred the jurisdiction
+over them to the Patriarch of Constantinople. Against this measure
+the bishops of Rome did not fail to protest, and demands for their
+restoration were made up to the time of the final schism. A further
+ecclesiastical question, which in part depended on this, was that
+of the Church of the Bulgarians. The prince Bogoris had swayed to
+and fro in his inclinations between the two churches, and had
+ultimately given his allegiance to that of the East; but the
+controversy did not end there. According to the ancient territorial
+arrangement the Danubian provinces were made subject to the
+archbishopric of Thessalonica, and that city was included within
+the Western patriarchate; and on this ground Bulgaria was claimed
+by the Roman see as falling within that area. The matter was
+several times pressed on the attention of the Greek Church,
+especially on the occasion of the council held at Constantinople in
+879, but in vain. The Eastern prelates replied evasively, saying
+that to determine the boundaries of dioceses was a matter which
+belonged to the sovereign. The Emperor, for his part, had good
+reason for not yielding, for by so doing he would not only have
+admitted into a neighboring country an agency which would soon have
+been employed for political purposes to his disadvantage, but would
+have justified the assumption on which the demand rested, viz.,
+that the pope had a right to claim the provinces which his
+predecessors had lost. Thus this point of difference also remained
+open, as a source of irritation between the two churches.</p>
+<p>But behind these questions another of far greater magnitude was
+coming into view, that of the papal supremacy. From being in the
+first instance the head of the Christian church in the old Imperial
+city, and afterward Patriarch of the West, and <i>primus inter
+pares</i> in relation to the other spiritual heads of Christendom,
+the bishop of Rome had gradually claimed, on the strength of his
+occupying the <i>cathedra Petri</i>, a position which approximated
+more and more to that of supremacy over the whole Church. This
+claim had never been admitted in the East, but the appeals which
+were made from Constantinople to his judgment and authority, both
+at the time of the iconoclastic controversy and subsequently, lent
+some countenance to its validity.</p>
+<p>But the great advance was made in the pontificate of Nicholas I
+(858-867), who promulgated, or at least recognized, the <i>False
+Decretals</i>. This famous compilation, which is now universally
+acknowledged to be spurious, and can be shown to be the work of
+that period, contains, among other documents, letters and decrees
+of the early bishops of Rome, in which the organization and
+discipline of the Church from the earliest time are set forth, and
+the whole system is shown to have depended on the supremacy of the
+popes. The newly discovered collection was recognized as genuine by
+Nicholas, and was accepted by the Western Church. The effect of
+this was at once to formulate all the claims which had before been
+vaguely asserted, and to give them the authority of unbroken
+tradition. The result to Christendom at large was in the highest
+degree momentous. It was impossible for future popes to recede from
+them, and equally impossible for other churches which valued their
+independence to acknowledge them. The last attempt on the part of
+the Eastern Church to arrange a compromise in this matter was made
+by the emperor Basil II, a potentate who both by his conquests and
+the vigor of his administration might rightly claim to negotiate
+with others on equal terms. By him it was proposed (A.D. 1024) that
+the Eastern Church should recognize the honorary primacy of the
+Western patriarch, and that he in turn should acknowledge the
+internal independence of the Eastern Church. These terms were
+rejected, and from that moment it was clear that the separation of
+the two branches of Christendom was only a question of time.</p>
+<p>Already in the papacy of Nicholas I a rupture had occurred in
+connection with the dispute between the rival patriarchs of
+Constantinople, Ignatius and Photius. The former of these prelates,
+who was son of the emperor Michael I, and a man of high character
+and a devout opponent of iconoclasm, was appointed, through the
+influence of Theodora, the restorer of images, in the reign of her
+son, Michael the Drunkard. But the uncle of the Emperor, the Caesar
+Bardas, who was a man of flagrantly immoral life, had divorced his
+own wife, and was living publicly with his son's widow. For this
+incestuous connection Ignatius repelled him from the communion.
+Fired with indignation at this insult, the Caesar determined to
+ruin both the Patriarch and his patroness, the Empress-mother, and
+with this view persuaded the Emperor to free himself from the
+trammels of his mother's influence by forcing her to take monastic
+vows. To this step Ignatius would not consent, because it was
+forbidden by the laws of the Church that any should enter on the
+monastic life except of their own free will. In consequence of his
+resistance a charge of treasonable correspondence was invented
+against him, and when he refused to resign his office he was
+deposed (857). Photius, who was chosen to succeed him, was the most
+learned man of his age, and like his rival, unblemished in
+character and a supporter of images, but boundless in ambition. He
+was a layman at the time of his appointment, but in six days he
+passed through the inferior orders which led up to the
+patriarchate. Still, the party that remained faithful to Ignatius
+numbered many adherents, and therefore Photius thought it well to
+enlist the support of the Bishop of Rome on his side. An embassy
+was therefore sent to inform Pope Nicholas that the late Patriarch
+had voluntarily retired, and that Photius had been lawfully chosen,
+and had undertaken the office with great reluctance. In answer to
+this appeal the Pope despatched two legates to Constantinople, and
+Ignatius was summoned to appear before a council at which they were
+present. He was condemned, but appealed to the Pope in person.</p>
+<p>On the return of the legates to Rome it was discovered that they
+had received bribes, and thereupon Nicholas, whose judgment,
+however imperious, was ever on the side of the oppressed, called
+together a synod of the Roman Church, and refused his consent to
+the deposition of Ignatius. To this effect he wrote to the
+authorities of the Eastern Church, calling upon them at the same
+time to concur in the decrees of the apostolic see; but
+subsequently, having obtained full information as to the harsh
+treatment to which the deposed Patriarch had been subjected, he
+excommunicated Photius, and commanded the restoration of Ignatius
+"by the power committed to him by Christ through St. Peter."</p>
+<p>These denunciations produced no effect on the Emperor and the
+new Patriarch, and a correspondence between Michael and Nicholas,
+couched in violent language, continued at intervals for several
+years. At last, in consequence of a renewed demand on the part of
+the Pope that Ignatius and Photius should be sent to Rome for
+judgment, the latter prelate, whose ability and eloquence had
+obtained great influence for him, summoned a council at
+Constantinople in the year 867, to decree the
+counter-excommunication of the Western Patriarch. Of the eight
+articles which were drawn up on this occasion for the incrimination
+of the Church of Rome, all but two relate to trivial matters, such
+as the observance of Saturday as a fast, and the shaving of their
+beards by the clergy. The two important ones deal with the doctrine
+of the Procession of the Holy Spirit, and the enforced celibacy of
+the clergy.</p>
+<p>The condemnation of the Western Church on these grounds was
+voted, and a messenger was despatched to bear the defiance to Rome;
+but ere he reached his destination he was recalled, in consequence
+of a revolution in the palace at Constantinople. The author of
+this, Basil the Macedonian, the founder of the most important
+dynasty that ever occupied the throne of the Eastern Empire, had
+for some time been associated in the government with the emperor
+Michael; but at length, being fearful for his own safety, he
+resolved to put his colleague out of the way, and assassinated him
+during one of his fits of drunkenness.</p>
+<p>It is said that in consequence of this crime Photius refused to
+admit him to the communion; anyhow, one of the first acts of Basil
+was to depose Photius. A council, hostile to him, was now
+assembled, and was attended by the legates of the new pope, Hadrian
+II (869). By this Ignatius was restored to his former dignity,
+while Photius was degraded and his ordinations were declared void.
+So violent was the animosity displayed against him that he was
+dragged before the assembly by the Emperor's guard, and his
+condemnation was written in the sacramental wine. During the ten
+years which elapsed between his restoration and his death Ignatius
+continued to enjoy his high position in peace, but for Photius
+other vicissitudes were in store.</p>
+<p>On the removal of his rival, so strangely did opinion sway to
+and fro at this time in the empire, the current of feeling set
+strongly in favor of the learned exile. He was recalled, and his
+reinstatement was ratified by a council (879). But with the death
+of Basil the Macedonian (886), he again fell from power, for the
+successor of that Emperor, Leo the Philosopher, ignominiously
+removed him, in order to confer the dignity on his brother Stephen.
+He passed the remainder of his life in honorable retirement, and by
+his death the chief obstacle in the way of reconcilement with the
+Roman Church was removed. It is consoling to learn, when reading of
+the unhappy rivalry of the two men so superior to the ordinary run
+of Byzantine prelates, that they never shared the passions of their
+respective partisans, but retained a mutual regard for one
+another.</p>
+<p>We have now to consider the doctrinal questions which were in
+dispute between the two churches. Far the most important of these
+was that relating to the addition of the <i>Filioque</i> clause to
+the Nicene Creed. In the first draft of the Creed, as promulgated
+by the council of Nicaea, the article relating to the Holy Spirit
+ran simply thus: "I believe in the Holy Ghost." But in the Second
+General Council, that of Constantinople, which condemned the heresy
+of Macedonius, it was thought advisable to state more explicitly
+the doctrine of the Church on this subject, and among other
+affirmations the clause was added, "who proceedeth from the
+Father." Again, at the next general council, at Ephesus, it was
+ordered that it should not be lawful to make any addition to the
+Creed, as ratified by the Council of Constantinople. The followers
+of the Western Church, however, generally taught that the Spirit
+proceeds from the Son as well as from the Father, while those of
+the East preferred to use the expression, "the Spirit of Christ,
+proceeding from the Father, and receiving of the Son," or,
+"proceeding from the Father through the Son." It was in the
+churches of Spain and France that the <i>Filioque</i> clause was
+first introduced into the Creed and thus recited in the services,
+but the addition was not at once approved at Rome. Pope Leo III,
+early in the ninth century, not only expressed his disapproval of
+this departure from the original form, but, in order to show his
+sense of the importance of adhering to the traditional practice,
+caused the Creed of Constantinople to be engraved on silver plates,
+both in Greek and Latin, and thus to be publicly set forth in the
+Church. The first pontiff who authorized the addition was Nicholas
+I, and against this Photius protested, both during the lifetime of
+that Pope and also in the time of John VIII, when it was condemned
+by the council held at Constantinople in 879, which is called by
+the Greeks the Eighth General Council. It is clear from what we
+have already seen that Photius was prepared to seize on <i>any</i>
+point of disagreement in order to throw it in the teeth of his
+opponents, but in this matter the Eastern Church had a real
+grievance to complain of. The Nicene Creed was to them what it was
+not to the Western Church, their only creed, and the authority of
+the councils, by which its form and wording were determined, stood
+far higher in their estimation. To add to the one and to disregard
+the other were, at least in their judgment, the violation of a
+sacred compact.</p>
+<p>The other question, which, if not actually one of doctrine, had
+come to be regarded as such, was that of the <i>azyma</i>, that is,
+the use of unfermented bread in the celebration of the eucharist.
+As far as one can judge from the doubtful evidence on the subject,
+it seems probable that ordinary, that is, leavened bread, was
+generally used in the church for this purpose until the seventh or
+eighth century, when unleavened bread began to be employed in the
+West, on the ground that it was used in the original institution of
+the sacrament, which took place during the Feast of the Passover.
+In the Eastern Church this change was never admitted. It seems
+strange that so insignificant a matter of observance should have
+been erected into a question of the first importance between the
+two communions, but the reason of this is not far to seek. The fact
+is that, whereas the weighty matters of dispute&mdash;the doctrine
+of the Procession of the Holy Spirit, and the papal claims to
+supremacy&mdash;required some knowledge and reflection in order
+rightly to understand their bearings, the use of leavened or
+unleavened bread was a matter within the range of all, and those
+who were on the lookout for a ground of antagonism found it here
+ready to hand.</p>
+<p>In the story of the conversion of the Russian Vladimir we are
+told that the Greek missionary who expounded to him the religious
+views of the Eastern Church, when combating the claims of the
+emissaries of the Roman communion, remarked: "They celebrate the
+mass with unleavened bread; therefore they have not the true
+religion." Still, even Photius, when raking together the most
+minute points of difference between him and his adversaries, did
+not introduce this one. It was reserved for a hot-headed partisan
+at a later period to bring forward as a subject of public
+discussion.</p>
+<p>This was Michael Cerularius, Patriarch of Constantinople, with
+whose name the Great Schism will forever be associated.</p>
+<p>The circumstances which led up to that event are as follows: For
+a century and a half from the death of Photius the controversy
+slumbered, though no advance was made toward an understanding with
+respect to the points at issue. In Italy, and even at Rome,
+churches and monasteries were tolerated in which the Greek rite was
+maintained, and similar freedom was allowed to the Latins resident
+in the Greek empire. But this tacit compact was broken in 1053 by
+the patriarch Michael, who, in his passionate antagonism to
+everything Western, gave orders that all the churches in
+Constantinople in which worship was celebrated according to the
+Roman rite should be closed. At the same time&mdash;aroused,
+perhaps, in some measure by the progress of the Normans in
+conquering Apulia, which tended to interfere with the jurisdiction
+still exercised by the Eastern Church in that province&mdash;he
+joined with Leo, the archbishop of Achrida and metropolitan of
+Bulgaria, in addressing a letter to the Bishop of Trani in Southern
+Italy, containing a violent attack on the Latin Church, in which
+the question of the azyma was put prominently forward.</p>
+<p>Directions were further given for circulating this missive among
+the Western clergy. It happened that at the time when the letter
+arrived at Trani, Cardinal Humbert, a vigorous champion of
+ecclesiastical rights, was residing in that city, and he translated
+it into Latin and communicated it to Pope Leo IX. In answer, the
+Pope addressed a remonstrance to the Patriarch, in which, without
+entering into the specific charges that he had brought forward, he
+contrasted the security of the Roman See in matters of doctrine,
+arising from the guidance which was guaranteed to it through St.
+Peter, with the liability of the Eastern Church to fall into error,
+and pointedly referred to the more Christian spirit manifested by
+his own communion in tolerating those from whose opinions they
+differed. Afterward, at the commencement of 1054, in compliance
+with a request from the emperor Constantine Monomachus, who was
+anxious on political grounds to avoid a rupture, he sent three
+legates to Constantinople to arrange the terms of an agreement.
+These were Frederick of Lorraine, Chancellor of the Roman Church;
+Peter, Archbishop of Amalfi, and Cardinal Humbert.</p>
+<p>The legates were welcomed by the Emperor, but they unwisely
+adopted a lofty tone toward the haughty Patriarch, who
+thenceforward avoided all communication with them, declaring that
+on a matter which so seriously affected the whole Eastern Church he
+could take no steps without consulting the other patriarchs.
+Humbert now published an argumentative reply to Michael's letter to
+the Pope, in the form of a dialogue between two members of the
+Greek and Latin churches, in which the charges brought against his
+own communion were discussed <i>seriatim</i>, and especially those
+relating to fasting on Saturday and the use of unleavened bread in
+the eucharist. A rejoinder to this appeared from the pen of a monk
+of the monastery of Studium, Nicetas Pectoratus, in which the
+enforced celibacy of the Western clergy, on which Photius had
+before animadverted, was severely criticised. The Cardinal retorted
+in intemperate language, and so entirely had the legates secured
+the support of Constantine that Nicetas' work was committed to the
+flames, and he was forced to recant what he had said against the
+Roman Church. But the Patriarch was immovable, and for the moment
+he occupied a stronger position than the Emperor, who desired to
+conciliate him. At last the patience of the legates was exhausted,
+and on July 16, 1054, they proceeded to the Church of St. Sophia,
+and deposited on the altar, which was prepared for the celebration
+of the eucharist, a document containing a fierce anathema, by which
+Michael Cerularius and his adherents were condemned. After their
+departure they were for a moment recalled, because the Patriarch
+expressed a desire to confer with them; but this Constantine would
+not permit, fearing some act of violence on the part of the people.
+They then finally left Constantinople, and from that time to the
+present all communion has been broken off between the two great
+branches of Christendom.</p>
+<p>The breach thus made was greatly widened at the period of the
+crusades. However serious may have been the alienation between the
+East and West at the time of their separation, it is clear that the
+Greeks were not regarded by the Latins as a mere heretical sect,
+for one of the primary objects with which the First Crusade was
+undertaken was the deliverance of the Eastern Empire from the
+attacks of the Mahometans. But the familiarity which arose from the
+presence of the crusaders on Greek soil ripened the seeds of mutual
+dislike and distrust. As long as negotiations between the two
+parties took place at a distance, the differences, however
+irreconcilable they might be in principle, did not necessarily
+bring them into open antagonism, whereas their more intimate
+acquaintance with one another produced personal and national
+ill-will. The people of the West now appeared more than ever
+barbarous and overbearing, and the Court of Constantinople more
+than ever senile and designing. The crafty policy of Alexius
+Comnenus in transferring his allies with all speed into Asia, and
+declining to take the lead in the expedition, was almost justified
+by the necessity of delivering his subjects from these unwelcome
+visitors and avoiding further embarrassments. But the iniquitous
+Fourth Crusade (1204) produced an ineradicable feeling of animosity
+in the minds of the Byzantine people. The memory of the barbarities
+of that time, when many Greeks died as martyrs at the stake for
+their religious convictions, survives at the present day in various
+places bordering on the Aegean, in legends which relate that they
+were formerly destroyed by the Pope of Rome.</p>
+<p>Still, the anxiety of the Eastern emperors to maintain their
+position by means of political support from Western Europe brought
+it to pass that proposals for reunion were made on several
+occasions. The final attempt at reconciliation was made when the
+Greek empire was reduced to the direst straits, and its rulers were
+prepared to purchase the aid of Western Europe against the Ottomans
+by almost any sacrifice. Accordingly, application was made to Pope
+Eugenius IV, and by him the representatives of the Eastern Church
+were invited to attend the council which was summoned to meet at
+Ferrara in 1438. The Emperor, John Palaeologus and the Greek
+patriarch Joseph proceeded thither.</p>
+<p>The Emperor, however, on his return home, soon discovered that
+his pilgrimage to the West had been lost labor. Pope Eugenius,
+indeed, provided him with two galleys and a guard of three hundred
+men, equipped at his own expense, but the hoped-for succors from
+Western Europe did not arrive. His own subjects were completely
+alienated by the betrayal of their cherished faith; the clergy who
+favored the union were regarded as traitors. John Palaeologus
+himself did not survive to see the final catastrophe; but
+Constantinople was captured by the Turks, and the Empire of the
+East ceased to exist.</p>
+<center>JOSEPH DEHARBE</center>
+<p>The bonds so often and so painfully knit between the Eastern and
+Western churches were destined at last to be completely torn
+asunder, and the truth of our Lord's words, "Who is not for Me, is
+against Me," was again to be proved. The Greek schism places
+strikingly before our eyes the fate of such churches as supinely
+yield their rights and independence, and submit willingly to State
+tyranny. In the year 857 the wicked Bardas, uncle to the reigning
+Emperor, who wielded an almost absolute power and disregarded all
+laws, human and divine, unjustly banished from his See, Ignatius,
+the rightful patriarch of Constantinople, and placed in his stead
+the learned, but worthless, Photius. Such bishops as refused to
+recognize the intruder (who had received all the orders in six days
+from an excommunicated bishop) were deposed, imprisoned and
+exiled.</p>
+<p>Photius tried, by cruel ill-treatment, to force the aged
+Ignatius to abdicate, and by a well-contrived fabrication
+endeavored to obtain the support of Pope Nicholas I. When, however,
+this great Pope learned the true facts of the case from the
+imprisoned Ignatius, he assembled a synod in Rome in 864, by which
+Photius and all the bishops whom he had consecrated were deposed.
+Fired by ambition, Photius now threw off all concealments. He
+summoned the bishops of his own party, laid various charges against
+the Roman Church, and in his inconsiderate rage ended by
+anathematising the holy Father. Pope Nicholas, in a most powerful
+letter, exhorted the Emperor Michael III to set bounds to the
+disorders of Photius, warning him that a fearful judgment would
+await him if the faithful were misled and so many believers caused
+to swerve from the right path. It was not, however, till the reign
+of his successor that Photius was banished and the much-tried St.
+Ignatius restored to his rights.</p>
+<p>To remedy the evil brought about by Photius, the eighth general
+council was held in Constantinople, at the desire of St. Ignatius
+and the Emperor, and presided over by the legates of Pope Adrian.
+Photius, when called upon to answer for himself, having nothing to
+say in his own defence, excused his silence by the example of our
+Lord, who also was silent when accused. The fathers were filled
+with indignation at this blasphemous speech, and his guilt having
+been fully proved, they cried unanimously: "Anathema on Photius,
+promoted through court favor! Anathema to the tyrant Photius, to
+the inventor of lies, to the new Judas! Anathema on all his
+followers and protectors! Everlasting glory to the most holy Roman
+Pope Nicholas! Long life to Adrian, the holy Father in Rome!" At
+the next sitting of the council, a collection of spurious and
+falsified writings, together with the acts of the synod which
+Photius had held against Pope Nicholas, and which were filled with
+lies and invective and had forged signatures appended to them, were
+publicly burned in the church. But hardly had Ignatius died in the
+year 879, when the crafty Photius, who knew well how to ingratiate
+himself with the Emperor, reascended the ill-fated chair and began
+afresh his old courses. His rule did not last long. He was again
+deposed and banished to a monastery, where he died about the year
+891. His death, however, in nowise healed the wounds which he had
+inflicted on the Eastern Church. His party survived him. He had
+filled most of the Greek sees with men of his own cast, and had
+illegally bestowed benefices on great numbers of priests. These all
+harbored a deep-seated dislike towards Rome, and only awaited a
+favorable opportunity to renew the breach with her. Thus that
+sectarian spirit which Photius had kindled continued to smoulder on
+like a spark beneath the ashes, and spread itself wider and wider,
+as well among the worst sort of the clergy as among the fickle and
+discontented population.</p>
+<p>It was after all this that the patriarchs of Constantinople
+attempted to make themselves fully independent of the West. The
+splendor of the imperial city of Byzantium was a constant
+incitement to their desire for freedom, and they were certain for
+the most part of being supported in their endeavors by the
+emperors. As early as the time of Pope Gregory the Great, the
+patriarch John the Faster had taken on himself the title of
+"Oecumenical," or universal bishop, whilst Gregory, in apostolic
+humility, chose that of "Servant of the servants of God." It was in
+the middle of the eleventh century that a complete separation was
+accomplished. The universally recognized precedence of the See of
+Peter was intolerable to the ambitious spirit of the patriarch
+Michael Cerularius. To aid him in casting off the hated yoke, he
+circulated, like Photius, a document in which the Western Church
+was loaded with invective and all manner of accusations laid to her
+charge. The celibacy of the secular clergy, the use of unleavened
+bread for the sacrifice, fasting on Saturdays, the shaving of
+beards, the omission of the Alleluia in Lent, were all brought
+forward as causes of offence. These complaints were at once
+answered by Pope St. Leo IX, who tried, in a most eloquent letter,
+to bring the deluded patriarch to reason. He reminded him of the
+sanctity and inviolability of the unity of Christ's Church, the
+folly and presumption of his attempting to direct the successor of
+Peter, whom Christ had Himself confirmed in the faith, and pointed
+out to him with what ingratitude and contempt he was treating the
+Roman Church, the mother and guardian of all the churches. Lastly,
+he urged upon the patriarch to set aside all discord and pride, and
+to allow divine mercy and peace to prevail instead of strife. But
+the paternal words were spoken in vain, and the legates also who
+were sent by the Pope to Constantinople were powerless to move the
+obduracy of the patriarch. He persistently refused all
+communication with them by speech or writing. Having therefore
+formally laid their complaints in the most distinct terms before
+the Emperor and Senate, they proceeded to extremities. On the 16th
+of July, 1054, they appeared in the church of St. Sophia at the
+beginning of divine service, and declared solemnly that all their
+endeavors to re-establish peace and union had been defeated by
+Cerularius. They then laid the bull of excommunication on the high
+altar and left the church, shaking, as they did so, the dust from
+off their feet, and exclaiming in the deepest grief, "God sees it;
+He will judge." Thus was the unhappy schism between the East and
+the West accomplished.</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_14"><!-- RULE4 14 --></a>
+<h2>NORMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND</h2>
+<center>BATTLE OF HASTINGS</center>
+<center>A.D. 1066</center>
+<br>
+<center>SIR EDWARD SHEPHERD CREASY</center>
+<p class="intro">Toward the end of the reign of Edward the
+Confessor the claims of three rival competitors for the English
+crown were persistently urged. These claimants were Harald
+Hardrada, King of Norway, whose claim was based upon an alleged
+compact of King Hardicanute with King Magnus, Harald's predecessor;
+Duke William of Normandy, and the Saxon Harold, son of Godwin, Earl
+of Wessex. This Harold, born about 1022, became Earl of East Anglia
+about 1045; was banished with his father by Edward the Confessor in
+1051, and restored with his father in 1052; succeeded his father as
+Earl of Wessex in 1053&mdash;relinquishing the earldom of East
+Anglia&mdash;and from 1053 to 1066 was chief minister of
+Edward.</p>
+<p class="intro">Harold&mdash;probably in 1064&mdash;being
+shipwrecked on the coast of Normandy, became a guest and virtual
+prisoner of William, Duke of Normandy, by whom the Saxon was forced
+to take an oath that he would marry William's daughter and assist
+him in obtaining the crown of England; William then allowed Harold
+to return to his country. Upon the death of Edward the
+Confessor&mdash;January 5, 1066&mdash;an assembly of thanes and
+prelates and leading citizens of London declared that Harold should
+be their king. His accession as Harold II dates from the day after
+Edward's death. Harold justified himself on the ground that his
+oath to William of Normandy was taken under constraint.</p>
+<p class="intro">William published his protest against what he
+called the bad faith of Harold, and proclaimed his purpose to
+assert his rights by the sword. He also obtained the countenance of
+the Pope, whose authority Harold refused to recognize. A banner,
+blessed by the Pope for the invasion of England, was sent to
+William from the Holy See, and the clergy of the Continent upheld
+his enterprise as being the Cause of God. Thus supported by the
+spiritual power, then wielding vast influence, William proceeded to
+gather "the most remarkable and formidable armament which the
+western nations had witnessed." With this following he entered upon
+an undertaking the speedy and complete success of which, in the
+single and decisive battle of Hastings, was fruitful in historic
+results such as are seldom so traceable to definite causes and
+events. "No one who appreciates the influence of England and her
+empire upon the destinies of the world will ever rank that victory
+as one of secondary importance."</p>
+<p>All the adventurous spirits of Christendom flocked to the holy
+banner, under which Duke William, the most renowned knight and
+sagest general of the age, promised to lead them to glory and
+wealth in the fair domains of England. His army was filled with the
+chivalry of Continental Europe, all eager to save their souls by
+fighting at the Pope's bidding, eager to signalize their valor in
+so great an enterprise, and eager also for the pay and the plunder
+which William liberally promised. But the Normans themselves were
+the pith and the flower of the army, and William himself was the
+strongest, the sagest, and the fiercest spirit of them all.</p>
+<p>Throughout the spring and summer of 1066 all the seaports of
+Normandy, Picardy, and Brittany rang with the busy sound of
+preparation. On the opposite side of the Channel King Harold
+collected the army and the fleet with which he hoped to crush the
+southern invaders. But the unexpected attack of King Harald
+Hardrada of Norway upon another part of England disconcerted the
+skilful measures which the Saxon had taken against the menacing
+armada of Duke William.</p>
+<p>Harold's renegade brother, Earl Tostig, had excited the Norse
+King to this enterprise, the importance of which has naturally been
+eclipsed by the superior interest attached to the victorious
+expedition of Duke William, but which was on a scale of grandeur
+which the Scandinavian ports had rarely, if ever, before witnessed.
+Hardrada's fleet consisted of two hundred warships and three
+hundred other vessels, and all the best warriors of Norway were in
+his host. He sailed first to the Orkneys, where many of the
+islanders joined him, and then to Yorkshire. After a severe
+conflict near York he completely routed Earls Edwin and Morcar, the
+governors of Northumbria. The city of York opened its gates, and
+all the country, from the Tyne to the Humber, submitted to him.</p>
+<p>The tidings of the defeat of Edwin and Morcar compelled Harold
+to leave his position on the southern coast and move instantly
+against the Norwegians. By a remarkably rapid march he reached
+Yorkshire in four days, and took the Norse King and his
+confederates by surprise. Nevertheless, the battle which ensued,
+and which was fought near Stamford Bridge, was desperate, and was
+long doubtful. Unable to break the ranks of the Norwegian phalanx
+by force, Harold at length tempted them to quit their close order
+by a pretended flight. Then the English columns burst in among
+them, and a carnage ensued the extent of which may be judged of by
+the exhaustion and inactivity of Norway for a quarter of a century
+afterward. King Harald Hardrada and all the flower of his nobility
+perished on the 25th of September, 1066, at Stamford Bridge, a
+battle which was a Flodden to Norway.</p>
+<p>Harold's victory was splendid; but he had bought it dearly by
+the fall of many of his best officers and men, and still more
+dearly by the opportunity which Duke William had gained of
+effecting an unopposed landing on the Sussex coast. The whole of
+William's shipping had assembled at the mouth of the Dive, a little
+river between the Seine and the Orne, as early as the middle of
+August. The army which he had collected amounted to fifty thousand
+knights and ten thousand soldiers of inferior degree. Many of the
+knights were mounted, but many must have served on foot, as it is
+hardly possible to believe that William could have found transports
+for the conveyance of fifty thousand war-horses across the
+Channel.</p>
+<p>For a long time the winds were adverse, and the Duke employed
+the interval that passed before he could set sail in completing the
+organization in and improving the discipline of his army, which he
+seems to have brought into the same state of perfection as was
+seven centuries and a half afterward the boast of another army
+assembled on the same coast, and which Napoleon designed for a
+similar descent upon England.</p>
+<p>It was not till the approach of the equinox that the wind veered
+from the northeast to the west, and gave the Normans an opportunity
+of quitting the weary shores of the Dive. They eagerly embarked and
+set sail, but the wind soon freshened to a gale, and drove them
+along the French coast to St. Valery, where the greater part of
+them found shelter; but many of their vessels were wrecked, and the
+whole coast of Normandy was strewn with the bodies of the
+drowned.</p>
+<p>William's army began to grow discouraged and averse to the
+enterprise, which the very elements thus seemed to fight against;
+though, in reality, the northeast wind, which had cooped them so
+long at the mouth of the Dive, and the western gale, which had
+forced them into St. Valery, were the best possible friends to the
+invaders. They prevented the Normans from crossing the Channel
+until the Saxon King and his army of defence had been called away
+from the Sussex coast to encounter Harald Hardrada in Yorkshire;
+and also until a formidable English fleet, which by King Harold's
+orders had been cruising in the Channel to intercept the Normans,
+had been obliged to disperse temporarily for the purpose of
+refitting and taking in fresh stores of provisions.</p>
+<p>Duke William used every expedient to reanimate the drooping
+spirits of his men at St. Valery; and at last he caused the body of
+the patron saint of the place to be exhumed and carried in solemn
+procession, while the whole assemblage of soldiers, mariners, and
+appurtenant priests implored the saint's intercession for a change
+of wind. That very night the wind veered, and enabled the mediaeval
+Agamemnon to quit his Aulis.</p>
+<p>With full sails, and a following southern breeze, the Norman
+armada left the French shores and steered for England. The invaders
+crossed an undefended sea, and found an undefended coast. It was in
+Pevensey Bay, in Sussex, at Bulverhithe, between the castle of
+Pevensey and Hastings, that the last conquerors of this island
+landed on the 29th of September, 1066.</p>
+<p>Harold was at York, rejoicing over his recent victory, which had
+delivered England from her ancient Scandinavian foes, and
+resettling the government of the counties which Harald Hardrada had
+overrun, when the tidings reached him that Duke William of Normandy
+and his host had landed on the Sussex shore. Harold instantly
+hurried southward to meet this long-expected enemy. The severe loss
+which his army had sustained in the battle with the Norwegians must
+have made it impossible for many of his veteran troops to accompany
+him in his forced march to London, and thence to Sussex. He halted
+at the capital only six days, and during that time gave orders for
+collecting forces from the southern and midland counties, and also
+directed his fleet to reassemble off the Sussex coast. Harold was
+well received in London, and his summons to arms was promptly
+obeyed by citizen, by thane, by socman, and by ceorl, for he had
+shown himself, during his brief reign, a just and wise king,
+affable to all men, active for the good of his country, and, in the
+words of the old historian, sparing himself from no fatigue by land
+or by sea. He might have gathered a much more numerous army than
+that of William; but his recent victory had made him overconfident,
+and he was irritated by the reports of the country being ravaged by
+the invaders. As soon, therefore, as he had collected a small army
+in London he marched off toward the coast, pressing forward as
+rapidly as his men could traverse Surrey and Sussex, in the hope of
+taking the Normans unawares, as he had recently, by a similar
+forced march, succeeded in surprising the Norwegians. But he had
+now to deal with a foe equally brave with Harald Hardrada and far
+more skilful and wary.</p>
+<p>The old Norman chroniclers describe the preparations of William
+on his landing with a graphic vigor, which would be wholly lost by
+transfusing their racy Norman couplets and terse Latin prose into
+the current style of modern history. It is best to follow them
+closely, though at the expense of much quaintness and occasional
+uncouthness of expression. They tell us how Duke William's own ship
+was the first of the Norman fleet. It was called the <i>Mora</i>,
+and was the gift of his duchess Matilda. On the head of the ship,
+in the front, which mariners call the prow, there was a brazen
+child bearing an arrow with a bended bow. His face was turned
+toward England, and thither he looked, as though he was about to
+shoot. The breeze became soft and sweet, and the sea was smooth for
+their landing. The ships ran on dry land, and each ranged by the
+other's side. There you might see the good sailors, the sergeants,
+and squires sally forth and unload the ships; cast the anchors,
+haul the ropes, bear out shields and saddles, and land the
+war-horses and the palfreys. The archers came forth and touched
+land the first, each with his bow strung, and with his quiver full
+of arrows slung at his side. All were shaven and shorn; and all
+clad in short garments, ready to attack, to shoot, to wheel about
+and skirmish. All stood well equipped and of good courage for the
+fight; and they scoured the whole shore, but found not an armed man
+there. After the archers had thus gone forth, the knights landed
+all armed, with their hauberks on, their shields slung at their
+necks, and their helmets laced. They formed together on the shore,
+each armed and mounted on his war-horse; all had their swords
+girded on, and rode forward into the country with their lances
+raised. Then the carpenters landed, who had great axes in their
+hands, and planes and adzes hung at their sides. They took counsel
+together, and sought for a good spot to place a castle on. They had
+brought with them in the fleet three wooden castles from Normandy
+in pieces, all ready for framing together, and they took the
+materials of one of these out of the ships, all shaped and pierced
+to receive the pins which they had brought cut and ready in large
+barrels; and before evening had set in they had finished a good
+fort on the English ground, and there they placed their stores. All
+then ate and drank enough, and were right glad that they were
+ashore.</p>
+<p>When Duke William himself landed, as he stepped on the shore he
+slipped and fell forward upon his two hands. Forthwith all raised a
+loud cry of distress. "An evil sign," said they, "is here." But he
+cried out lustily: "See, my lords, by the splendor of God,[<a href=
+"#note-26">26</a>] I have taken possession of England with both my
+hands. It is now mine, and what is mine is yours."</p>
+<p><a name="note-26"><!-- Note Anchor 26 --></a>[Footnote 26:
+William's customary oath.]</p>
+<p>The next day they marched along the sea-shore to Hastings. Near
+that place the Duke fortified a camp, and set up the two other
+wooden castles. The foragers, and those who looked out for booty,
+seized all the clothing and provisions they could find, lest what
+had been brought by the ships should fail them. And the English
+were to be seen fleeing before them, driving off their cattle, and
+quitting their houses. Many took shelter in burying-places, and
+even there they were in grievous alarm.</p>
+<p>Besides the marauders from the Norman camp, strong bodies of
+cavalry were detached by William into the country, and these, when
+Harold and his army made their rapid march from London southward,
+fell back in good order upon the main body of the Normans, and
+reported that the Saxon King was rushing on like a madman. But
+Harold, when he found that his hopes of surprising his adversary
+were vain, changed his tactics, and halted about seven miles from
+the Norman lines. He sent some spies, who spoke the French
+language, to examine the number and preparations of the enemy, who,
+on their return, related with astonishment that there were more
+priests in William's camp than there were fighting men in the
+English army. They had mistaken for priests all the Norman soldiers
+who had short hair and shaven chins, for the English laymen were
+then accustomed to wear long hair and mustaches. Harold, who knew
+the Norman usages, smiled at their words, and said, "Those whom you
+have seen in such numbers are not priests, but stout soldiers, as
+they will soon make us feel."</p>
+<p>Harold's army was far inferior in number to that of the Normans,
+and some of his captains advised him to retreat upon London and lay
+waste the country, so as to starve down the strength of the
+invaders. The policy thus recommended was unquestionably the
+wisest, for the Saxon fleet had now reassembled, and intercepted
+all William's communications with Normandy; and as soon as his
+stores of provisions were exhausted, he must have moved forward
+upon London, where Harold, at the head of the full military
+strength of the kingdom, could have defied his assault, and
+probably might have witnessed his rival's destruction by famine and
+disease, without having to strike a single blow. But Harold's bold
+blood was up, and his kindly heart could not endure to inflict on
+the South Saxon subjects even the temporary misery of wasting the
+country. "He would not burn houses and villages, neither would he
+take away the substance, of his people."</p>
+<p>Harold's brothers, Gurth and Leofwine, were with him in the
+camp, and Gurth endeavored to persuade him to absent himself from
+the battle. The incident shows how well devised had been William's
+scheme of binding Harold by the oath on the holy relics.</p>
+<p>"My brother," said the young Saxon prince, "thou canst not deny
+that either by force or free will thou hast made Duke William an
+oath on the bodies of saints. Why then risk thyself in the battle
+with a perjury upon thee? To us, who have sworn nothing, this is a
+holy and a just war, for we are fighting for our country. Leave us
+then alone to fight this battle, and he who has the right will
+win."</p>
+<p>Harold replied that he would not look on while others risked
+their lives for him. Men would hold him a coward, and blame him for
+sending his best friends where he dared not go himself. He
+resolved, therefore, to fight, and to fight in person; but he was
+still too good a general to be the assailant in the action; and he
+posted his army with great skill along a ridge of rising ground
+which opened southward, and was covered on the back by an extensive
+wood. He strengthened his position by a palisade of stakes and
+osier hurdles, and there he said he would defend himself against
+whoever should seek him.</p>
+<p>The ruins of Battle Abbey at this hour attest the place where
+Harold's army was posted; and the high altar of the abbey stood on
+the very spot where Harold's own standard was planted during the
+fight, and where the carnage was the thickest. Immediately after
+his victory William vowed to build an abbey on the site; and a fair
+and stately pile soon rose there, where for many ages the monks
+prayed and said masses for the souls of those who were slain in the
+battle, whence the abbey took its name. Before that time the place
+was called Senlac. Little of the ancient edifice now remains; but
+it is easy to trace in the park and the neighborhood the scenes of
+the chief incidents in the action; and it is impossible to deny the
+generalship shown by Harold in stationing his men, especially when
+we bear in mind that he was deficient in cavalry, the arm in which
+his adversary's main strength consisted.</p>
+<p>William's only chance of safety lay in bringing on a general
+engagement; and he joyfully advanced his army from their camp on
+the hill over Hastings, nearer to the Saxon position. But he
+neglected no means of weakening his opponent, and renewed his
+summonses and demands on Harold with an ostentatious air of
+sanctity and moderation.</p>
+<p>"A monk, named Hugues Maigrot, came in William's name to call
+upon the Saxon King to do one of three things&mdash;either to
+resign his royalty in favor of William, or to refer it to the
+arbitration of the pope to decide which of the two ought to be
+king, or let it be determined by the issue of a single combat.
+Harold abruptly replied, 'I will not resign my title, I will not
+refer it to the pope, nor will I accept the single combat.' He was
+far from being deficient in bravery; but he was no more at liberty
+to stake the crown which he had received from a whole people in the
+chance of a duel than to deposit it in the hands of an Italian
+priest. William, not at all ruffled by the Saxon's refusal, but
+steadily pursuing the course of his calculated measures, sent the
+Norman monk again, after giving him these instructions: 'Go and
+tell Harold that if he will keep his former compact with me, I will
+leave to him all the country which is beyond the Humber, and will
+give his brother Gurth all the lands which Godwin held. If he still
+persist in refusing my offers, then thou shalt tell him, before all
+his people, that he is a perjurer and a liar; that he and all who
+shall support him are excommunicated by the mouth of the Pope, and
+that the bull to that effect is in my hands.'</p>
+<p>"Hugues Maigrot delivered this message in a solemn tone; and the
+Norman chronicle says that at the word <i>excommunication</i> the
+English chiefs looked at one another as if some great danger were
+impending. One of them then spoke as follows: 'We must fight,
+whatever may be the danger to us; for what we have to consider is
+not whether we shall accept and receive a new lord, as if our king
+were dead; the case is quite otherwise. The Norman has given our
+lands to his captains, to his knights, to all his people, the
+greater part of whom have already done homage to him for them: they
+will all look for their gift if their duke become our king; and he
+himself is bound to deliver up to them our goods, our wives, and
+our daughters: all is promised to them beforehand. They come, not
+only to ruin us, but to ruin our descendants also, and to take from
+us the country of our ancestors. And what shall we do&mdash;whither
+shall we go, when we have no longer a country?' The English
+promised, by a unanimous oath, to make neither peace nor truce nor
+treaty with the invader, but to die or drive away the Normans."</p>
+<p>The 13th of October was occupied in these negotiations, and at
+night the Duke announced to his men that the next day would be the
+day of battle. That night is said to have been passed by the two
+armies in very different manners. The Saxon soldiers spent it in
+joviality, singing their national songs, and draining huge horns of
+ale and wine round their campfires. The Normans, when they had
+looked to their arms and horses, confessed themselves to the
+priests, with whom their camp was thronged, and received the
+sacrament by thousands at a time.</p>
+<p>On Saturday, the 14th of October, was fought the great
+battle.</p>
+<p>It is not difficult to compose a narrative of its principal
+incidents from the historical information which we possess,
+especially if aided by an examination of the ground. But it is far
+better to adopt the spirit-stirring words of the old chroniclers,
+who wrote while the recollections of the battle were yet fresh, and
+while the feelings and prejudices of the combatants yet glowed in
+the bosoms of living men.</p>
+<p>Robert Wace, the Norman poet, who presented his <i>Roman de
+Rou</i> to Henry II, is the most picturesque and animated of the
+old writers, and from him we can obtain a more vivid and full
+description of the conflict than even the most brilliant
+romance-writer of the present time can supply. We have also an
+antique memorial of the battle more to be relied on than either
+chronicler or poet (and which confirms Wace's narrative remarkably)
+in the celebrated Bayeux tapestry, which represents the principal
+scenes of Duke William's expedition and of the circumstances
+connected with it, in minute though occasionally grotesque details,
+and which was undoubtedly the production of the same age in which
+the battle took place, whether we admit or reject the legend that
+Queen Matilda and the ladies of her court wrought it with their own
+hands in honor of the royal Conqueror.</p>
+<p>Let us therefore suffer the old Norman chronicler to transport
+our imaginations to the fair Sussex scenery northwest of Hastings,
+as it appeared on that October morning. The Norman host is pouring
+forth from its tents, and each troop and each company is forming
+fast under the banner of its leader. The masses have been sung,
+which were finished betimes in the morning; the barons have all
+assembled round Duke William; and the Duke has ordered that the
+army shall be formed in three divisions, so as to make the attack
+upon the Saxon position in three places.</p>
+<p>The Duke stood on a hill where he could best see his men; the
+barons surrounded him, and he spake to them proudly. He told them
+how he trusted them, and how all that he gained should be theirs,
+and how sure he felt of conquest, for in all the world there was
+not so brave an army or such good men and true as were then forming
+around him. Then they cheered him in turn, and cried out: "'You
+will not see one coward; none here will fear to die for love of
+you, if need be.' And he answered them: 'I thank you well. For
+God's sake, spare not; strike hard at the beginning; stay not to
+take spoil; all the booty shall be in common, and there will be
+plenty for everyone. There will be no safety in asking quarter or
+in flight; the English will never love or spare a Norman. Felons
+they were, and felons they are; false they were, and false they
+will be. Show no weakness toward them, for they will have no pity
+on you; neither the coward for running well, nor the bold man for
+smiting well, will be the better liked by the English, nor will any
+be the more spared on either account. You may fly to the sea, but
+you can fly no farther; you will find neither ships nor bridge
+there; there will be no sailors to receive you, and the English
+will overtake you there and slay you in your shame. More of you
+will die in flight than in battle. Then, as flight will not secure
+you, fight and you will conquer. I have no doubt of the victory; we
+are come for glory; the victory is in our hands, and we may make
+sure of obtaining it if we so please.'</p>
+<p>"As the Duke was speaking thus and would yet have spoken more,
+William Fitzosbern rode up with his horse all coated with iron.
+'Sire,' said he, 'we tarry here too long; let us all arm ourselves.
+<i>Allons! allons!</i>'</p>
+<p>"Then all went to their tents and armed themselves as they best
+might; and the Duke was very busy, giving everyone his orders; and
+he was courteous to all the vassals, giving away many arms and
+horses to them. When he prepared to arm himself, he called first
+for his hauberk, and a man brought it on his arm and placed it
+before him, but in putting his head in, to get it on, he unawares
+turned it the wrong way, with the back part in front. He soon
+changed it; but when he saw that those who stood by were sorely
+alarmed, he said: 'I have seen many a man who if such a thing had
+happened to him would not have borne arms or entered the field the
+same day; but I never believed in omens, and I never will. I trust
+in God, for he does in all things his pleasure, and ordains what is
+to come to pass according to his will. I have never liked
+fortune-tellers, nor believed in diviners, but I commend myself to
+Our Lady. Let not this mischance give you trouble. The hauberk
+which was turned wrong, and then set right by me, signifies that a
+change will arise out of the matter which we are now stirring. You
+shall see the name of duke changed into king. Yea, a king shall I
+be, who hitherto have been but duke.'</p>
+<p>"Then he crossed himself, and straightway took his hauberk,
+stooped his head and put it on aright, and laced his helmet, and
+girt on his sword, which a varlet brought him. Then the Duke called
+for his good horse&mdash;a better could not be found. It had been
+sent him by a king of Spain, out of very great friendship. Neither
+arms nor the press of fighting men did it fear if its lord spurred
+it on. Walter Giffard brought it. The Duke stretched out his hand,
+took the reins, put foot in stirrup, and mounted, and the good
+horse pawed, pranced, reared himself up, and curvetted.</p>
+<p>"The Viscount of Toarz saw how the Duke bore himself in arms and
+said to his people that were around him: 'Never have I seen a man
+so fairly armed, nor one who rode so gallantly, or bore his arms or
+became his hauberk so well; neither any one who bore his lance so
+gracefully or sat his horse and managed him so nobly. There is no
+such knight under heaven! a fair count he is, and fair king he will
+be. Let him fight and he shall overcome; shame be to the man who
+shall fail him!'</p>
+<p>"Then the Duke called for the standard which the Pope had sent
+him, and, he who bore it having unfolded it, the Duke took it and
+called to Raoul de Conches. 'Bear my standard,' said he, 'for I
+would not but do you right; by right and by ancestry your line are
+standard-bearers of Normandy, and very good knights have they all
+been.' But Raoul said that he would serve the Duke that day in
+other guise, and would fight the English with his hand as long as
+life should last.</p>
+<p>"Then the Duke bade Walter Giffard bear the standard. But he was
+old and white-headed, and bade the Duke give the standard to some
+younger and stronger man to carry. Then the Duke said fiercely, 'By
+the splendor of God, my lords, I think you mean to betray and fail
+me in this great need.' 'Sire,' said Giffart, 'not so! we have done
+no treason, nor do I refuse from any felony toward you; but I have
+to lead a great chivalry, both hired men and the men of my fief.
+Never had I such good means of serving you as I now have; and, if
+God please, I will serve you; if need be I will die for you, and
+will give my own heart for yours.'</p>
+<p>"'By my faith,' quoth the Duke, 'I always loved thee, and now I
+love thee more; if I survive this day, thou shalt be the better for
+it all thy days.' Then he called out a knight, whom he had heard
+much praised, Tosteins Fitz-Rou le Blanc by name, whose abode was
+at Bec-en-Caux. To him he delivered the standard; and Tosteins took
+it right cheerfully, and bowed low to him in thanks, and bore it
+gallantly and with good heart. His kindred still have quittance of
+all service for their inheritance on this account, and their heirs
+are entitled so to hold their inheritance forever.</p>
+<p>"William sat on his war-horse, and called out Rogier, whom they
+call De Montgomeri. 'I rely much on you,' said he; 'lead your men
+thitherward and attack them from that side. William, the son of
+Osbern the seneschal, a right good vassal, shall go with you and
+help in the attack, and you shall have the men of Boilogne and Poix
+and all my soldiers. Alain Fergert and Ameri shall attack on the
+other side; they shall lead the Poitevins and the Bretons and all
+the barons of Maine; and I, with my own great men, my friends and
+kindred, will fight in the middle throng, where the battle shall be
+the hottest.'</p>
+<p>"The barons and knights and men-at-arms were all now armed; the
+foot-soldiers were well equipped, each bearing bow and sword; on
+their heads were caps, and to their feet were bound buskins. Some
+had good hides which they had bound round their bodies; and many
+were clad in frocks, and had quivers and bows hung to their
+girdles. The knights had hauberks and swords, boots of steel, and
+shining helmets; shields at their necks, and in their hands lances.
+And all had their cognizances, so that each might know his fellow,
+and Norman might not strike Norman, nor Frenchman kill his
+countryman by mistake. Those on foot led the way, with serried
+ranks, bearing their bows. The knights rode next, supporting the
+archers from behind. Thus both horse and foot kept their course and
+order of march as they began, in close ranks at a gentle pace, that
+the one might not pass or separate from the other. All went firmly
+and compactly, bearing themselves gallantly.</p>
+<p>"Harold had summoned his men, earls, barons, and vavasors, from
+the castles and the cities, from the ports, the villages and
+boroughs. The peasants were also called together from the villages,
+bearing such arms as they found; clubs and great picks, iron forks
+and stakes. The English had enclosed the place where Harold was
+with his friends and the barons of the country whom he had summoned
+and called together.</p>
+<p>"Those of London had come at once, and those of Kent, of
+Hertfort, and of Essesse; those of Sur&eacute;e and Susesse, of St.
+Edmund and Sufoc; of Norwis and Norfoc; of Cantorbierre and
+Stanfort, Bedefort and Hundetone. The men of Northanton also came;
+and those of Eurowic and Bokinkeham, of Bed and Notinkeham,
+Lindesie and Nichole. There came also from the west all who heard
+the summons; and very many were to be seen coming from Salebiere
+and Dorset, from Bat and from Sumerset. Many came, too, from about
+Glocestre, and many from Wirecestre, from Wincestre, Hontesire and
+Brichesire; and many more from other counties that we have not
+named, and cannot, indeed, recount. All who could bear arms, and
+had learned the news of the Duke's arrival, came to defend the
+land. But none came from beyond Humbre, for they had other business
+upon their hands, the Danes and Tosti having much damaged and
+weakened them.</p>
+<p>"Harold knew that the Normans would come and attack him hand to
+hand, so he had early enclosed the field in which he had placed his
+men. He made them arm early and range themselves for the battle, he
+himself having put on arms and equipments that became such a lord.
+The Duke, he said, ought to seek him, as he wanted to conquer
+England; and it became him to abide the attack who had to defend
+the land. He commanded the people, and counselled his barons to
+keep themselves all together and defend themselves in a body, for
+if they once separated, they would with difficulty recover
+themselves. 'The Normans,' said he, 'are good vassals, valiant on
+foot and on horseback; good knights are they on horseback and well
+used to battle; all is lost if they once penetrate our ranks. They
+have brought long lances and swords, but you have pointed lances
+and keen-edged bills; and I do not expect that their arms can stand
+against yours. Cleave whenever you can; it will be ill done if you
+spare aught.'</p>
+<p>"The English had built up a fence before them with their shields
+and with ash and other wood, and had well joined and wattled in the
+whole work, so as not to leave even a crevice; and thus they had a
+barricade in their front through which any Norman who would attack
+them must first pass. Being covered in this way by their shields
+and barricades, their aim was to defend themselves; and if they had
+remained steady for that purpose, they would not have been
+conquered that day; for every Norman who made his way in lost his
+life in dishonor, either by hatchet or bill, by club or other
+weapon.</p>
+<p>"They wore short and close hauberks, and helmets that hung over
+their garments. King Harold issued orders, and made proclamation
+round, that all should be ranged with their faces toward the enemy,
+and that no one should move from where he was, so that whoever came
+might find them ready; and that whatever anyone, be he Norman or
+other, should do, each should do his best to defend his own place.
+Then he ordered the men of Kent to go where the Normans were likely
+to make the attack; for they say that the men of Kent are entitled
+to strike first; and that whenever the king goes to battle, the
+first blow belongs to them. The right of the men of London is to
+guard the king's body, to place themselves around him, and to guard
+his standard; and they were accordingly placed by the standard to
+watch and defend it.</p>
+<p>"When Harold had made all ready, and given his orders, he came
+into the midst of the English and dismounted by the side of the
+standard; Leofwine and Gurth, his brothers, were with him; and
+around him he had barons enough, as he stood by his standard, which
+was, in truth, a noble one, sparkling with gold and precious
+stones. After the victory William sent it to the Pope, to prove and
+commemorate his great conquest and glory. The English stood in
+close ranks, ready and eager for the fight; and they, moreover,
+made a fosse, which went across the field, guarding one side of
+their army.</p>
+<p>"Meanwhile the Normans appeared advancing over the ridge of a
+rising ground, and the first division of their troops moved onward
+along the hill and across a valley. And presently another division,
+still larger, came in sight, close following upon the first, and
+they were led toward another part of the field, forming together as
+the first body had done. And while Harold saw and examined them,
+and was pointing them out to Gurth, a fresh company came in sight,
+covering all the plain; and in the midst of them was raised the
+standard that came from Rome.</p>
+<p>"Near it was the Duke, and the best men and greatest strength of
+the army were there. The good knights, the good vassals, and brave
+warriors were there; and there were gathered together the gentle
+barons, the good archers, and the men-at-arms, whose duty it was to
+guard the Duke, and range themselves around him. The youths and
+common herd of the camp, whose business was not to join in the
+battle, but to take care of the harness and stores, moved off
+toward a rising ground. The priests and the clerks also ascended a
+hill, there to offer up prayers to God, and watch the event of the
+battle.</p>
+<p>"The English stood firm on foot in close ranks, and carried
+themselves right boldly. Each man had his hauberk on, with his
+sword girt, and his shield at his neck. Great hatchets were also
+slung at their necks, with which they expected to strike heavy
+blows.</p>
+<p>"The Normans brought on the three divisions of their army to
+attack at different places. They set out in three companies, and in
+three companies did they fight. The first and second had come up,
+and then advanced the third, which was the greatest; with that came
+the Duke with his own men, and all moved boldly forward.</p>
+<p>"As soon as the two armies were in full view of each other,
+great noise and tumult arose. You might hear the sound of many
+trumpets, of bugles, and of horns; and then you might see men
+ranging themselves in line, lifting their shields, raising their
+lances, bending their bows, handling their arrows, ready for
+assault and defence.</p>
+<p>"The English stood steady to their post, the Normans still moved
+on; and when they drew near, the English were to be seen stirring
+to and fro; were going and coming; troops ranging themselves in
+order; some with their color rising, others turning pale; some
+making ready their arms, others raising their shields; the brave
+man rousing himself to fight, the coward trembling at the approach
+of danger.</p>
+<p>"Then Taillefer, who sang right well, rode, mounted on a swift
+horse, before the Duke, singing of Charlemagne and of Roland, of
+Oliver, and the peers who died in Roncesvalles. And when they drew
+nigh to the English,</p>
+<p>"'A boon, sire!' cried Taillefer; 'I have long served you, and
+you owe me for all such service. To-day, so please you, you shall
+repay it. I ask as my guerdon, and beseech you for it earnestly,
+that you will allow me to strike the first blow in the battle!' And
+the Duke answered, 'I grant it.'</p>
+<p>"Then Taillefer put his horse to a gallop, charging before all
+the rest, and struck an Englishman dead, driving his lance below
+the breast into his body, and stretching him upon the ground. Then
+he drew his sword, and struck another, crying out, 'Come on, come
+on! What do ye, sirs? lay on, lay on!' At the second blow he struck
+the English pushed forward, and surrounded, and slew him. Forthwith
+arose the noise and cry of war, and on either side the people put
+themselves in motion.</p>
+<p>"The Normans moved on to the assault, and the English defended
+themselves well. Some were striking, others urging onward; all were
+bold and cast aside fear. And now, behold, that battle was gathered
+whereof the fame is yet mighty.</p>
+<p>"Loud and far resounded the bray of the horns and the shocks of
+the lances, the mighty strokes of maces and the quick clashing of
+swords. One while the Englishmen rushed on, another while they fell
+back; one while the men from over sea charged onward, and again at
+other times retreated. The Normans shouted, '<i>Dex Aie</i>,' the
+English people, 'Out.' Then came the cunning manoeuvres, the rude
+shocks and strokes of the lance and blows of the swords, among the
+sergeants and soldiers, both English and Norman.</p>
+<p>"When the English fall, the Normans shout. Each side taunts and
+defies the other, yet neither knoweth what the other saith; and the
+Normans say the English bark, because they understand not their
+speech.</p>
+<p>"Some wax strong, others weak: the brave exult, but the cowards
+tremble, as men who are sore dismayed. The Normans press on the
+assault, and the English defend their post well; they pierce the
+hauberks and cleave the shields, receive and return mighty blows.
+Again, some press forward, others yield; and thus, in various ways,
+the struggle proceeds. In the plain was a fosse, which the Normans
+had now behind them, having passed it in the fight without
+regarding it. But the English charged and drove the Normans before
+them till they made them fall back upon this fosse, overthrowing
+into it horses and men. Many were to be seen falling therein,
+rolling one over the others, with their faces to the earth, and
+unable to rise. Many of the English also, whom the Normans drew
+down along with them, died there. At no time during the day's
+battle did so many Normans die as perished in that fosse. So those
+said who saw the dead.</p>
+<p>"The varlets who were set to guard the harness began to abandon
+it as they saw the loss of the Frenchmen when thrown back upon the
+fosse without power to recover themselves. Being greatly alarmed at
+seeing the difficulty in restoring order, they began to quit the
+harness, and sought around, not knowing where to find shelter. Then
+Duke William's brother, Odo, the good priest, the Bishop of Bayeux,
+galloped up and said to them: 'Stand fast! stand fast! be quiet and
+move not! fear nothing; for, if God please, we shall conquer yet.'
+So they took courage and rested where they were; and Odo returned
+galloping back to where the battle was most fierce, and was of
+great service on that day. He had put a hauberk on over a white
+aube, wide in the body, with the sleeve tight, and sat on a white
+horse, so that all might recognize him. In his hand he held a mace,
+and wherever he saw most need he held up and stationed the knights,
+and often urged them on to assault and strike the enemy.</p>
+<p>"From nine o'clock in the morning, when the combat began, till
+three o'clock came, the battle was up and down, this way and that,
+and no one knew who would conquer and win the land. Both sides
+stood so firm and fought so well that no one could guess which
+would prevail. The Norman archers with their bows shot thickly upon
+the English; but they covered themselves with their shields, so
+that the arrows could not reach their bodies nor do any mischief,
+how true so ever was their aim or however well they shot. Then the
+Normans determined to shoot their arrows upward into the air, so
+that they might fall on their enemies' heads and strike their
+faces. The archers adopted this scheme and shot up into the air
+toward the English; and the arrows, in falling, struck their heads
+and faces and put out the eyes of many; and all feared to open
+their eyes or leave their faces unguarded.</p>
+<p>"The arrows now flew thicker than rain before the wind; fast
+sped the shafts that the English call 'wibetes.' Then it was that
+an arrow, that had been thus shot upward, struck Harold above his
+right eye, and put it out. In his agony he drew the arrow and threw
+it away, breaking it with his hands; and the pain to his head was
+so great that he leaned upon his shield. So the English were wont
+to say, and still say to the French, that the arrow was well shot
+which was so sent up against their King, and that the archer won
+them great glory who thus put out Harold's eye.</p>
+<p>"The Normans saw that the English defended themselves well, and
+were so strong in their position that they could do little against
+them. So they consulted together privily, and arranged to draw off,
+and pretend to flee, till the English should pursue and scatter
+themselves over the field; for they saw that if they could once get
+their enemies to break their ranks, they might be attacked and
+discomfited much more easily. As they had said, so they did. The
+Normans by little and little fled, the English following them. As
+the one fell back, the other pressed after; and when the Frenchmen
+retreated, the English thought and cried out that the men of France
+fled and would never return.</p>
+<p>"Thus they were deceived by the pretended flight, and great
+mischief thereby befell them; for if they had not moved from their
+position, it is not likely that they would have been conquered at
+all; but, like fools, they broke their lines and pursued.</p>
+<p>"The Normans were to be seen following up their stratagem,
+retreating slowly so as to draw the English farther on. As they
+still flee, the English pursue; they push out their lances and
+stretch forth their hatchets, following the Normans as they go,
+rejoicing in the success of their scheme, and scattering themselves
+over the plain. And the English meantime jeered and insulted their
+foes with words. 'Cowards,' they cried, 'you came hither in an evil
+hour, wanting our lands and seeking to seize our property; fools
+that ye were to come! Normandy is too far off, and you will not
+easily reach it. It is of little use to run back; unless you can
+cross the sea at a leap or can drink it dry, your sons and
+daughters are lost to you.'</p>
+<p>"The Normans bore it all; but, in fact, they knew not what the
+English said: their language seemed like the baying of dogs, which
+they could not understand. At length they stopped and turned round,
+determined to recover their ranks; and the barons might be heard
+crying, '<i>Dex Aie</i>!' for a halt. Then the Normans resumed
+their former position, turning their faces toward the enemy; and
+their men were to be seen facing round and rushing onward to a
+fresh <i>m&ecirc;l&eacute;e</i>, the one party assaulting the
+other; this man striking, another pressing onward. One hits,
+another misses; one flies, another pursues; one is aiming a stroke,
+while another discharges his blow. Norman strives with Englishman
+again, and aims his blows afresh. One flies, another pursues
+swiftly: the combatants are many, the plain wide, the battle and
+the <i>m&ecirc;l&eacute;e</i> fierce. On every hand they fight
+hard, the blows are heavy, and the struggle becomes fierce.</p>
+<p>"The Normans were playing their part well, when an English
+knight came rushing up, having in his company a hundred men
+furnished with various arms. He wielded a northern hatchet with the
+blade a full foot long, and was well armed after his manner, being
+tall, bold, and of noble carriage. In the front of the battle,
+where the Normans thronged most, he came bounding on swifter than
+the stag, many Normans falling before him and his company.</p>
+<p>"He rushed straight upon a Norman who was armed and riding on a
+war-horse, and tried with his hatchet of steel to cleave his
+helmet; but the blow miscarried, and the sharp blade glanced down
+before the saddle-bow, driving through the horse's neck down to the
+ground, so that both horse and master fell together to the earth. I
+know not whether the Englishman struck another blow; but the
+Normans who saw the stroke were astonished and about to abandon the
+assault, when Roger de Montgomeri came galloping up, with his lance
+set, and, heeding not the long-handled axe which the Englishman
+wielded aloft, struck him down and left him stretched on the
+ground. Then Roger cried out, 'Frenchmen, strike! the day is ours!'
+And again a fierce <i>m&ecirc;l&eacute;e</i> was to be seen, with
+many a blow of lance and sword; the English still defending
+themselves, killing the horses and cleaving the shields.</p>
+<p>"There was a French soldier of noble mien who sat his horse
+gallantly. He spied two Englishmen who were also carrying
+themselves boldly. They were both men of great worth and had become
+companions in arms and fought together, the one protecting the
+other. They bore two long and broad bills and did great mischief to
+the Normans, killing both horses and men.</p>
+<p>"The French soldier looked at them and their bills and was sore
+alarmed, for he was afraid of losing his good horse, the best that
+he had, and would willingly have turned to some other quarter if it
+would not have looked like cowardice. He soon, however, recovered
+his courage, and, spurring his horse, gave him the bridle and
+galloped swiftly forward. Fearing the two bills, he raised his
+shield, and struck one of the Englishmen with his lance on the
+breast, so that the iron passed out at his back. At the moment that
+he fell the lance broke, and the Frenchman seized the mace that
+hung at his right side, and struck the other Englishman a blow that
+completely fractured his skull.</p>
+<p>"On the other side was an Englishman who much annoyed the
+French, continually assaulting them with a keen-edged hatchet. He
+had a helmet made of wood, which he had fastened down to his coat
+and laced round his neck, so that no blows could reach his head.
+The ravage he was making was seen by a gallant Norman knight, who
+rode a horse that neither fire nor water could stop in its career
+when its master urged it on. The knight spurred, and his horse
+carried him on well till he charged the Englishman, striking him
+over the helmet so that it fell down over his eyes; and as he
+stretched out his hand to raise it and uncover his face, the Norman
+cut off his right hand, so that his hatchet fell to the ground.
+Another Norman sprang forward and eagerly seized the prize with
+both his hands, but he kept it little space and paid dearly for it,
+for as he stooped to pick up the hatchet an Englishman with his
+long-handled axe struck him over the back, breaking all his bones,
+so that his entrails and lungs gushed forth. The knight of the good
+horse meantime returned without injury; but on his way he met
+another Englishman and bore him down under his horse, wounding him
+grievously and trampling him altogether under foot.</p>
+<p>"And now might be heard the loud clang and cry of battle and the
+clashing of lances. The English stood firm in their barricades, and
+shivered the lances, beating them into pieces with their bills and
+maces. The Normans drew their swords and hewed down the barricades,
+and the English, in great trouble, fell back upon their standard,
+where were collected the maimed and wounded.</p>
+<p>"There were many knights of Chauz who jousted and made attacks.
+The English knew not how to joust, or bear arms on horseback, but
+fought with hatchets and bills. A man, when he wanted to strike
+with one of their hatchets, was obliged to hold it with both his
+hands, and could not at the same time, as it seems to me, both
+cover himself and strike with any freedom.</p>
+<p>"The English fell back toward the standard, which was upon a
+rising ground, and the Normans followed them across the valley,
+attacking them on foot and horseback. Then Hue de Mortemer, with
+the Sires D'Auviler, D'Onebac, and St. Cler, rode up and charged,
+overthrowing many.</p>
+<p>"Robert Fitz Erneis fixed his lance, took his shield, and,
+galloping toward the standard, with his keen-edged sword struck an
+Englishman who was in front, killed him, and then drawing back his
+sword, attacked many others, and pushed straight for the standard,
+trying to beat it down; but the English surrounded it and killed
+him with their bills. He was found on the spot, when they afterward
+sought for him, dead and lying at the standard's foot.</p>
+<p>"Duke William pressed close upon the English with his lance,
+striving hard to reach the standard with the great troop he led,
+and seeking earnestly for Harold, on whose account the whole war
+was. The Normans follow their lord, and press around him; they ply
+their blows upon the English, and these defend themselves stoutly,
+striving hard with their enemies, returning blow for blow.</p>
+<p>"One of them was a man of great strength, a wrestler, who did
+great mischief to the Normans with his hatchet; all feared him, for
+he struck down a great many Normans. The Duke spurred on his horse,
+and aimed a blow at him, but he stooped, and so escaped the stroke;
+then jumping on one side, he lifted his hatchet aloft, and as the
+Duke bent to avoid the blow, the Englishman boldly struck him on
+the head and beat in his helmet, though without doing much injury.
+He was very near falling, however; but, bearing on his stirrups, he
+recovered himself immediately; and when he thought to have revenged
+himself upon the churl by killing him, he had escaped, dreading the
+Duke's blow. He ran back in among the English, but he was not safe
+even there; for the Normans, seeing him, pursued and caught him,
+and having pierced him through and through with their lances, left
+him dead on the ground.</p>
+<p>"Where the throng of the battle was greatest, the men of Kent
+and Essex fought wondrously well, and made the Normans again
+retreat, but without doing them much injury. And when the Duke saw
+his men fall back and the English triumphing over them, his spirit
+rose high, and he seized his shield and his lance, which a vassal
+handed to him, and took his post by his standard.</p>
+<p>"Then those who kept close guard by him and rode where he rode,
+being about a thousand armed men, came and rushed with closed ranks
+upon the English, and, with the weight of their good horses, and
+the blows the knights gave, broke the press of the enemy, and
+scattered the crowd before them, the good Duke leading them on in
+front. Many pursued and many fled; many were the Englishmen who
+fell around, and were trampled under the horses, crawling upon the
+earth, and not able to rise. Many of the richest and noblest men
+fell in the rout, but still the English rallied in places, smote
+down those whom they reached, and maintained the combat the best
+they could, beating down the men and killing the horses. One
+Englishman watched the Duke, and plotted to kill him; he would have
+struck him with his lance, but he could not, for the Duke struck
+him first, and felled him to the earth.</p>
+<p>"Loud was now the clamor and great the slaughter; many a soul
+then quitted the body it inhabited. The living marched over the
+heaps of dead, and each side was weary of striking. He charged on
+who could, and he who could no longer strike still pushed forward.
+The strong struggled with the strong; some failed, others
+triumphed; the cowards fell back, the brave pressed on; and sad was
+his fate who fell in the midst, for he had little chance of rising
+again; and many in truth fell who never rose at all, being crushed
+under the throng.</p>
+<p>"And now the Normans had pressed on so far that at last they had
+reached the standard. There Harold had remained, defending himself
+to the utmost; but he was sorely wounded in his eye by the arrow,
+and suffered grievous pain from the blow. An armed man came in the
+throng of the battle, and struck him on the ventail of his helmet,
+and beat him to the ground; and as he sought to recover himself a
+knight beat him down again, striking him on the thick of his thigh,
+down to the bone.</p>
+<p>"Gurth saw the English falling around, and that there was no
+remedy. He saw his race hastening to ruin, and despaired of any
+aid; he would have fled, but could not, for the throng continually
+increased. And the Duke pushed on till he reached him, and struck
+him with great force. Whether he died of that blow I know not, but
+it was said that he fell under it and rose no more.</p>
+<p>"The standard was beaten down, the golden standard was taken,
+and Harold and the rest of his friends were slain; but there was so
+much eagerness, and throng of so many around, seeking to kill him,
+that I know not who it was that slew him.</p>
+<p>"The English were in great trouble at having lost their King and
+at the Duke's having conquered and beat down the standard; but they
+still fought on, and defended themselves long, and in fact till the
+day drew to a close. Then it clearly appeared to all that the
+standard was lost, and the news had spread throughout the army that
+Harold, for certain, was dead; and all saw that there was no longer
+any hope, so they left the field, and those fled who could.</p>
+<p>"William fought well; many an assault did he lead, many a blow
+did he give, and many receive, and many fell dead under his hand.
+Two horses were killed under him, and he took a third when
+necessary, so that he fell not to the ground and lost not a drop of
+blood. But whatever anyone did, and whoever lived or died, this is
+certain that William conquered and that many of the English fled
+from the field, and many died on the spot. Then he returned thanks
+to God, and in his pride ordered his standard to be brought and set
+up on high, where the English standard had stood; and that was the
+signal of his having conquered, and beaten down the standard. And
+he ordered his tent to be raised on the spot among the dead, and
+had his meat brought thither, and his supper prepared there.</p>
+<p>"Then he took off his armor; and the barons and knights, pages
+and squires came, when he had unstrung his shield; and they took
+the helmet from his head and the hauberk from his back, and saw the
+heavy blows upon his shield and how his helmet was dinted in. And
+all greatly wondered and said: 'Such a baron (<i>ber</i>) never
+bestrode war-horse nor dealt such blows nor did such feats of arms;
+neither has there been on earth such a knight since Rollant and
+Oliver.'</p>
+<p>"Thus they lauded and extolled him greatly and rejoiced in what
+they saw, but grieving also for their friends who were slain in the
+battle. And the Duke stood meanwhile among them, of noble stature
+and mien, and rendered thanks to the King of Glory, through whom he
+had the victory, and thanked the knights around him, mourning also
+frequently for the dead. And he ate and drank among the dead, and
+made his bed that night upon the field.</p>
+<p>"The morrow was Sunday; and those who had slept upon the field
+of battle, keeping watch around and suffering great fatigue,
+bestirred themselves at break of day and sought out and buried such
+of the bodies of their dead friends as they might find. The noble
+ladies of the land also came, some to seek their husbands, and
+others their fathers, sons, or brothers. They bore the bodies to
+their villages and interred them at the churches; and the clerks
+and priests of the country were ready, and at the request of their
+friends took the bodies that were found, and prepared graves and
+lay them therein.</p>
+<p>"King Harold was carried and buried at Varham; but I know not
+who it was that bore him thither, neither do I know who buried him.
+Many remained on the field, and many had fled in the night."</p>
+<p>Such is a Norman account of the battle of Hastings, which does
+full justice to the valor of the Saxons as well as to the skill and
+bravery of the victors. It is indeed evident that the loss of the
+battle by the English was owing to the wound which Harold received
+in the afternoon, and which must have incapacitated him from
+effective command. When we remember that he had himself just won
+the battle of Stamford Bridge over Harald Hardrada by the manoeuvre
+of a feigned flight, it is impossible to suppose that he could be
+deceived by the same stratagem on the part of the Normans at
+Hastings. But his men, when deprived of his control, would very
+naturally be led by their inconsiderate ardor into the pursuit that
+proved so fatal to them. All the narratives of the battle, however
+much they vary as to the precise time and manner of Harold's fall,
+eulogize the generalship and the personal prowess which he
+displayed until the fatal arrow struck him. The skill with which he
+had posted his army was proved both by the slaughter which it cost
+the Normans to force the position, and also by the desperate rally
+which some of the Saxons made after the battle in the forest in the
+rear, in which they cut off a large number of the pursuing Normans.
+This circumstance is particularly mentioned by William of
+Poictiers, the Conqueror's own chaplain. Indeed, if Harold or
+either of his brothers had survived, the remains of the English
+army might have formed again in the wood, and could at least have
+effected an orderly retreat and prolonged the war. But both Gurth
+and Leofwine, and all the bravest thanes of Southern England, lay
+dead on Senlac, around their fallen King and the fallen standard of
+their country. The exact number that perished on the Saxons' side
+is unknown; but we read that, on the side of the victors, out of
+sixty thousand men who had been engaged, no less than a fourth
+perished; so well had the English billmen "plyed the ghastly blow,"
+and so sternly had the Saxon battle-axe cloven Norman's casque and
+mail. The old historian Daniel justly as well as forcibly remarks:
+"Thus was tried, by the great assize of God's judgment in battle,
+the right of power between the English and Norman nations; a battle
+the most memorable of all others, and, however miserably lost, yet
+most nobly fought on the part of England."</p>
+<p>Many a pathetic legend was told in after years respecting the
+discovery and the burial of the corpse of our last Saxon King. The
+main circumstances, though they seem to vary, are perhaps
+reconcilable. Two of the monks of Waltham Abbey, which Harold had
+founded a little time before his election to the throne, had
+accompanied him to the battle. On the morning after the slaughter
+they begged and gained permission of the Conqueror to search for
+the body of their benefactor. The Norman soldiery and camp
+followers had stripped and gashed the slain, and the two monks
+vainly strove to recognize from among the mutilated and gory heaps
+around them the features of their former King. They sent for
+Harold's mistress, Edith, surnamed "the Fair," and "the
+Swan-necked," to aid them. The eye of love proved keener than the
+eye of gratitude, and the Saxon lady even in that Aceldama knew her
+Harold.</p>
+<p>The King's mother now sought the victorious Norman, and begged
+the dead body of her son. But William at first answered, in his
+wrath and the hardness of his heart, that a man who had been false
+to his word and his religion should have no other sepulchre than
+the sand of the shore. He added, with a sneer: "Harold mounted
+guard on the coast while he was alive; he may continue his guard
+now he is dead." The taunt was an unintentional eulogy; and a grave
+washed by the spray of the Sussex waves would have been the noblest
+burial-place for the martyr of Saxon freedom. But Harold's mother
+was urgent in her lamentations and her prayers; the Conqueror
+relented: like Achilles, he gave up the dead body of his fallen foe
+to a parent's supplications, and the remains of King Harold were
+deposited with regal honors in Waltham Abbey.</p>
+<p>On Christmas Day in the same year William the Conqueror was
+crowned, at London, King of England.</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_15"><!-- RULE4 15 --></a>
+<h2>TRIUMPHS OF HILDEBRAND</h2>
+<center>"THE TURNING-POINT OF THE MIDDLE AGES:"</center>
+<center>HENRY IV BEGS FOR MERCY AT CANOSSA</center>
+<center>A.D. 1073-1085</center>
+<br>
+<center>ARTHUR R. PENNINGTON</center>
+<center>ARTAUD DE MONTOR</center>
+<p class="intro">If during the pontificate of Innocent III
+(1198-1216) the papal power attained its greatest height, yet under
+one of his predecessors the chair of St. Peter became a throne of
+almost absolute supremacy. This mighty pontiff, Gregory VII, whose
+real name, Hildebrand, indicates his German descent, was
+born&mdash;the son of a carpenter&mdash;in Tuscany, about 1020. He
+became a monk of the Benedictine order, and was educated at the
+abbey of Cluny in France. In 1044 he went to Rome, called by a
+papal election, and there saw abuses which from that moment he
+fixed his mind upon striving to abolish. In 1048 he was again in
+Rome and soon rose to the rank of cardinal.</p>
+<p class="intro">For many years Hildebrand was the real director of
+papal policy, and long before his election as pope, in 1073, he
+worked to accomplish the reforms that distinguish his pontificate,
+which continued till his death, in 1085.</p>
+<p class="intro">As a part of the Holy Roman Empire, Italy held a
+dual relation to the emperor and the pope. Between the Roman
+pontiffs and the secular heads of the Empire the struggle for
+supremacy had been long and often bitter. At the time of
+Hildebrand's active appearance the papacy was in a state of
+degradation which demoralized the Church itself.</p>
+<p class="intro">Long before his elevation to the papal chair
+Hildebrand's efforts had met with much success, and the power of
+the holy see was gradually increased. Independently of the Emperor,
+whose will had hitherto governed the papal elections, in
+1058&mdash;chiefly through the influence of Hildebrand&mdash;Pope
+Nicholas II was chosen by a new method, and from that time the
+choice of popes has been made by the sacred college of
+cardinals.</p>
+<p class="intro">Hildebrand reluctantly accepted the office of
+pope; but having entered upon the task which he knew to be so
+formidable, he pursued it with such energy, courage, and success as
+to make his pontificate one of the most memorable in the annals of
+the Church. Of his greatest contests within the ecclesiastical
+jurisdiction&mdash;over the celibacy of the clergy and
+simony&mdash;as well as of those with the Imperial power
+represented by Henry IV&mdash;the "War of Investitures"&mdash;the
+following account will be found to present the essential features
+with a clearness and comprehensiveness which are seldom seen in the
+relation of matter so complex and in a narrative so concise. The
+differing viewpoints are also instructive, as presented by
+Pennington of the Church of England, and Artaud, the standard Roman
+Catholic authority.</p>
+<center>ARTHUR R. PENNINGTON</center>
+<p>The time had come when Hildebrand was to receive the reward of
+the important services which he had rendered to the holy see. He
+had been the ruling spirit under five popes&mdash;Leo, Victor,
+Stephen, Nicholas, and Alexander&mdash;four of whom were indebted
+to him for their election. But now he must himself be raised to the
+papal throne.</p>
+<p>The clergy were assembled in the Lateran Church to celebrate the
+obsequies of Alexander. Hildebrand, as archdeacon, was performing
+the service. Suddenly, in the midst of the requiem for the
+departed, a shout was heard which seemed to come as if by
+inspiration from the assembled multitude: "Hildebrand is Pope! St.
+Peter chooses the archdeacon Hildebrand!"</p>
+<p>From the funeral procession Hildebrand flew to the pulpit, and
+with impassioned gestures seemed to be imploring silence. The
+storm, however, did not cease till one of the cardinals, in the
+name of the sacred college, declared that they had unanimously
+elected him whom the people had chosen. Arrayed in scarlet robes,
+crowned with the papal tiara, Gregory VII ascended the chair of St.
+Peter.</p>
+<p>The Pope very soon made known the course which he should pursue.
+He issued a prohibition against the marriage of the clergy, and in
+a council at Rome abolished the right of investiture.[<a href=
+"#note-27">27</a>] He was determined to redress the wrongs of
+society. He had seen oppression laying waste the fairest provinces
+of Europe, he had seen many princes, goaded on by the revengeful
+passions of their nature, flinging wide their standard to the
+winds, and dipping their hands in the blood of those who, if
+Christianity be not a fable, were their very brothers. A
+magnificent vision rose up before him. He would rule the world by
+religion; he would be the caesar of the spiritual monarchy. He and
+a council of prelates, annually assembled at Rome, would constitute
+a tribunal from whose judgment there should be no appeal, empowered
+to hold the supreme mediation in matters relating to the interests
+of the body politic, to settle contested successions to kingdoms;
+and to compel men to cease from their dissensions.</p>
+<p><a name="note-27"><!-- Note Anchor 27 --></a>[Footnote 27: That
+is, the right of the civil power to grant church offices at will,
+and to invest ecclesiastics with symbols of their offices and
+receive their oaths of fealty.]</p>
+<p>The civil power was to pledge itself to be prompt in the
+execution of their decrees against those who despised their
+authority. But if the decisions of those judges were to carry
+weight, they must be men of unblemished integrity. The purity of
+their ermine must be altogether unsullied. The sale of the highest
+spiritual offices by the prince, who had deprived the clergy and
+people of their right to elect them, which had stained the hands of
+the Church and undermined its power, must be altogether forbidden.
+Elections must be free. The custom of investiture by sovereigns
+with the ring and crozier, which had rendered the hierarchy and
+clergy the creatures of their will, must be forbidden.</p>
+<p>The clergy must possess an absolute exemption from the criminal
+justice of the state. They must recognize but one ruler, the pope,
+who disposed of them indirectly through the bishops or directly in
+cases of exemption, and used them as tools for the execution of his
+behests. In fact, they were to constitute a vast army, exclusively
+devoted to the service of an ecclesiastical monarch.</p>
+<p>They must be unconnected by marriage with the world around them,
+that they might be bound more closely to one another and to their
+head; that they might be saved from the temptation of restless
+projects for the advancement of their families, which have caused
+so much scandal in the world; and that they might give an exalted
+idea of their sanctity, inasmuch as, in order that they might give
+themselves to prayer and the ministry of the Word, they would
+forego that connubial bliss, the portion of those,</p>
+<p class="poetry">"The happiest of their kind,<br>
+Whom gentler stars unite and in one fate<br>
+Their hearts, their fortunes,<br>
+and their beings blend."</p>
+<p>The marriage of the clergy was everywhere more or less repugnant
+to the general feeling of Christendom. The rise and progress of
+asceticism in the Church had their source in human nature, and its
+growth was quickened by a reaction from the immorality of paganism.
+The general effect on the position of the clergy was to compel them
+to keep progress with the prevailing movement. Men consecrated to
+the service of Jehovah must rise superior to the common herd of
+their fellow-creatures.</p>
+<p>By a decree of Pope Siricius at the end of the fourth century
+marriage was interdicted to all priests and deacons. This decree
+was, however, very imperfectly observed during the following
+centuries. The general feeling was, however, at this time very
+strongly against the married clergy. But throughout the spiritual
+realm of Hildebrand in Italy, from Calabria to the Alps, the clergy
+had risen up in rebellion against him and the popes his
+predecessors when they attempted to coerce them into celibacy. We
+believe that this opposition, much more than the strife as to
+investitures, was the cause of the strong feeling, almost
+unprecedented, which existed against Gregory VII.</p>
+<p>We must now show that Gregory enforced his views as to
+investitures. This part of our subject is important, because it
+gave occasion for the assertion that the pope could depose the Holy
+Roman emperor and the king of Italy, if he should find him morally
+or physically disqualified for fulfilling the condition on which
+his appointment depended&mdash;that he should defend him from his
+enemies. Henry IV, at the beginning of his reign only ten years of
+age, was at this time Emperor.[<a href="#note-28">28</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-28"><!-- Note Anchor 28 --></a>[Footnote 28: That
+is, Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, which included the
+German-speaking people of Europe, and also, in theory at least,
+Italy.]</p>
+<p>One day, as he was standing by the Rhine, a galley with silken
+streamers appeared, into which he was invited to enter. After he
+had been gliding for some time down the stream, he found that he
+was a prisoner. The archbishops of Milan and Cologne, with other
+powerful lords, having consigned him to a degrading captivity,
+administered, in his name, the government of the empire. By
+affording him every means of vicious indulgence, they were only too
+successful in corrupting a noble and generous nature. Very soon he
+was guilty of crimes, and plunged into excesses which seemed to cry
+aloud for vengeance.</p>
+<p>The Pope saw that the time had come for the execution of his
+designs. Henry had been guilty of the grossest simony. The
+spiritual dignities had been openly sold to the highest bidder. He
+saw also that, while the clergy took the oath of fealty to the
+monarch and were invested by him with the ring and crozier, he
+could not establish the superiority of the spiritual to the
+temporal jurisdiction. He therefore summoned a council at the
+Lateran (1075), which issued a decree against lay investitures. The
+Pope, having thus declared war against the Emperor, proceeded to
+fill up certain vacant bishoprics, and to suspend bishops, both in
+Germany and Italy, who had been guilty of simony. He also cited
+Henry before him to answer for his simony, crimes, and
+excesses.</p>
+<p>This citation is alleged to have given occasion for an attempted
+crime, supposed to have been sanctioned by Henry, which may show us
+that while the Pope was asserting a right to rule over the nations,
+he could not rule in his own city. On Christmas Eve, 1075, the city
+of Rome was visited with a violent tempest. Darkness brooded over
+the land. The inhabitants thought that the day of judgment was at
+hand. In the midst of this war of the elements two processions were
+seen advancing toward the Church of Santa Maria Maggiore. At the
+head of one of them was Hildebrand, leading his priests to worship
+at a shrine. At the head of the other was Cencius, a Roman noble.
+In one of the pauses in the roar of the tempest, when the Pope was
+heard blessing his flock, the arm of Cencius grasped his person,
+and the sword of a ruffian inflicted a wound on his forehead. Bound
+with cords, the Pope was removed to a mansion in the city, from
+which he was the next day to be removed to exile or to death. A
+sword was aimed at the Pontiff's bosom, when the cries of a fierce
+multitude, threatening to burn down the house, arrested the arm of
+the assassin. An arrow, discharged from below, reached and slew the
+latter. Cencius fell at the Pope's feet, a suppliant for pardon and
+for life. The Pontiff immediately pardoned him. Then, amid the
+acclamations of the Roman people, Gregory proceeded to complete the
+interrupted solemnities at Santa Maria Maggiore.</p>
+<p>The war between Henry and the Pope continued. Henry summoned a
+synod at Worms in January, 1076, which decreed the deposition of
+the Pope. The envoy charged to convey this sentence appeared in the
+council chamber of the Lateran in February, before an assembly
+consisting of the mightiest in the land, whom the Pope had summoned
+to sit in judgment on Henry. With flashing eyes and in a voice of
+thunder he directed the Pope to descend from the chair of St.
+Peter. Cries of indignation rang through the hall, and a hundred
+swords were seen leaping from their scabbards to inflict vengeance
+on the daring intruder. The Pope, with difficulty, stilled the
+angry tumult. Then, rising with calm dignity, amid the breathless
+silence of the assembled multitude, he uttered that dread anathema
+which "shuts paradise and opens hell," and absolved the subjects of
+Henry from their allegiance.</p>
+<p>The inhabitants of Europe were struck dumb with amazement when
+they witnessed this exercise of papal prerogative. They thought
+that the powerful arm of Henry would have been raised to smite down
+the audacious Hildebrand. The Pope, however, well knew that Henry
+had by his excesses alienated from himself the affections of his
+subjects. The sentence gave a pretext to many of his nobility to
+withdraw from their allegiance. Awed by spiritual terrors, his
+attendants fell away from him as if he had been smitten by a
+leprosy. An assembly was now summoned at Trebur, in obedience to a
+requisition from the Pope, at which it was decreed that, if the
+Emperor continued excommunicate on the 23d of February, 1077, his
+crown should be given to another. The theory of the Holy Roman
+Empire had thus become a practical reality. The vassal of Otho had
+reduced the successor of Otho to vassalage. A great pope had wrung
+from the superstition and reverence of mankind a spiritual empire,
+which, it was hoped, would extend its sway to earth's remotest
+boundaries.</p>
+<center>ARTAUD DE MONTOR</center>
+<p>Gregory made it an invariable rule to act at the outset with
+gentleness. "No one," says he, "reaches the highest rank at a
+single spring; great edifices rise gradually." Certain of his
+strength, he chose to employ conciliation. He especially sought to
+convince Henry, but the excesses in which that prince wallowed were
+so abominable that his subjects in all parts, and especially the
+great, revolted against him. In 1076, Gregory assembled a council,
+which pronounced the excommunication of the King, with all the
+terrible consequences attendant upon it.</p>
+<p>History shows several emperors of the East excommunicated by
+preceding popes: Arcadius, by Innocent I; Anastasius, by Saint
+Symmachus; and Leo the Isaurian, by Gregory II and Gregory III.</p>
+<p>The decree of the same council set forth that the throne vacated
+by Henry was adjudged to Rudolph, duke of Swabia, already created
+king of Germany by the electors of the empire.</p>
+<p>Before the election of Rudolph, Gregory had declared that he
+would repair to Germany. King Henry, on his part, promised to come
+into Italy. The Pope left Rome with an escort furnished by the
+countess of Tuscany, daughter of Boniface, marquis of Tuscany. The
+march of Gregory was a triumph. Amidst that escort he reached
+Vercelli. It was feared by some that Henry would make his
+appearance at the head of an army, but he had not that intention.
+The Pope, nevertheless, deemed it best to retire into the fortress
+of Canossa, belonging to the Countess Matilda, in order that he
+might be secure from all violence.</p>
+<p>Henry had spent nearly two months at Spires in a profound and
+melancholy solitude. The weight of the excommunication oppressed
+him with a thousand griefs. Weary of that state of uncertainty, and
+still, as ever, tricky and hypocritical, he conceived the idea of
+winning over the Pope by an apparent piety, and of satisfying his
+requirements by a brief humiliation; moreover, the decree of
+excommunication declared that it should be withdrawn if the King
+appeared before the Pope within a year from the date of the decree.
+The winter was severe. After running a thousand dangers, the King
+and his queen arrived at Turin, and proceeded to Placentia. Thence
+the prince announced that he would proceed to Canossa, by way of
+Reggio.</p>
+<p>The Countess Matilda met him with Hugo, Bishop of Cluny. She
+wished to restore harmony between the Pope and the King. Gregory
+seemed to desire that Henry should return to Augsburg, to be judged
+by the Diet. The envoys of the King at Canossa replied: "Henry does
+not fear being judged; he knows that the Pope will protect
+innocence and justice; but the anniversary of the excommunication
+is at hand, and if the excommunication be not removed, the King,
+<i>according to the laws of the land</i>, will lose his right to
+the crown. The prince humbly requests the Holy Father to raise the
+interdict, and to restore him to the communion of the Church. He is
+ready to give every satisfaction that the Pope shall require; to
+present himself at such place and at such time as the Pope shall
+order; to meet his accusers, and to commit himself entirely to the
+decision of the head of the Church."</p>
+<p>Henry, says Voigt, having received permission to advance, was
+not long on the way. The fortress had triple inclosures; Henry was
+conducted into the second; his retinue remained outside the first.
+He had laid aside the insignia of royalty; nothing announced his
+rank. All day long, Henry, bareheaded, clad in penitential garb,
+and fasting from morning till night, awaited the sentence of the
+sovereign pontiff. He thus waited during a second and a third day.
+During the intervening time he had not ceased to negotiate. On the
+morrow, Matilda interceded with the Pope on behalf of Henry, and
+the conditions of the treaty were settled. The prince promised to
+give satisfaction to the complaints made against him by his
+subjects, and he took an oath, in which his sureties joined. When
+those oaths were taken, the pontiff gave the King the benediction
+and the apostolic peace, and celebrated Mass.</p>
+<p>After the consecration of the host, the Pope called Henry and
+all present, and still holding the host in his hand, said to the
+King: "We have received letters from you and those of your party,
+in which we are accused of having usurped the Holy See by simony,
+and of having, both before and since our episcopacy, committed
+crimes which, according to the canons, excluded us from holy
+orders.</p>
+<p>"Although we could justify ourselves by the testimony of those
+who have known our manner of life from our childhood, and who were
+the authors of our promotion to the episcopacy, nevertheless, to do
+away with all kind of scandal, we will appeal to the judgment, not
+of men, but of God. Let the body of our Lord Jesus Christ, that we
+are about to take, be this day a proof of our innocence. We pray
+the Almighty to dispel all suspicion, if we are innocent, and to
+cause us suddenly to die, if we are guilty."</p>
+<p>Then turning towards the King, Gregory again spoke: "Dear son,
+do also as you have seen us do. The German princes have daily
+accused you to us of a great number of crimes, for which those
+nobles maintain that you ought to be interdicted, during your whole
+life, not only from royalty and all public function, but also from
+all ecclesiastical communion, and from all commerce of civil life.
+They urgently demand that you be judged, and you know how uncertain
+are all human judgments. Do, then, as we advise, and if you feel
+that you are innocent, deliver the Church from this scandal, and
+yourself from this embarrassment. Take this other portion of the
+host, that this proof of your innocence may close the lips of your
+enemies, and engage us to be your most ardent defender, to
+reconcile you with the nobles, and forever to terminate the civil
+war."</p>
+<p>This address astonished the King. Going apart with his
+confidants, he tremblingly consulted as to what he could do to
+avoid so terrible a test. At length, having somewhat recovered his
+calmness, he said to the Pope, that as those nobles who remained
+faithful were, for the most part, absent, as well as those who
+accused him, the latter would give little faith to what he might do
+in his own justification, unless it were done in their presence.
+For that reason, he asked that the test should be postponed to the
+day of the sitting of the general diet, and the Pope consented.</p>
+<p>When the Pope had finished Mass, he invited the King to dinner,
+treated him with much attention, and dismissed him in peace to his
+own people, who had remained outside the castle. Henry, on his
+return to his nobles, was not well received. Henry, as Voigt shows,
+soon became alarmed at their disapprobation, which originated only
+in a feeling of wounded complicity and ambitious views, which could
+not hope for success after the victory gained by Gregory.</p>
+<p>Henry, hearing himself accused of weakness, thought to deliver
+himself from so much annoyance by a bold perjury; and he endeavored
+to draw Gregory and Matilda into a snare. Warned by faithful
+friends, they did not visit the King as had been agreed; and that
+new wrong determined Gregory to suspend his departure for the Diet
+of Augsburg. No one, not even the pious Matilda, now dared to speak
+of a reconciliation.</p>
+<p>Henry held at Brescia, in 1080, a pseudo council of the bishops
+devoted to him; and there he caused Guibert, Archbishop of Ravenna,
+an avowed enemy of Gregory, to be elected as Pope; and he deposed
+Gregory, although he was recognized as the legitimate pope by the
+whole Catholic world, with the exception of the bishops in revolt,
+under the direction of Henry. On learning this, Gregory celebrated
+at Rome, in the year 1080, a regular council, in which he again
+excommunicated Henry, and especially the antipope, whom he would
+never absolve.</p>
+<center>ARTHUR PENNINGTON</center>
+<p>The war continued. Henry's rival for the empire, Rudolph of
+Swabia, was supported by many German partisans, especially by the
+Saxons. He was defeated with great loss at Fladenheim. The skill
+and courage of the Saxon commander, however, turned a defeat into a
+victory. Emboldened by this victory, Gregory excommunicated Henry,
+and "gave, granted, and conceded" that Rudolph might rule the
+Italian and German empires. With the sanction of thirty bishops, an
+antipope, Guibert, was elected at Brixen. The war raged with
+undiminished violence. The Saxons, the only power in alliance with
+the Romans, gained a victory over Henry in Germany at the very same
+time when Matilda's forces fled before his army in the Mantuan
+territory. Matilda had lately granted all her hereditary states to
+Gregory and his successors forever. Before the summer of the year
+1080 the citizens of Rome saw the forces of Henry in the Campagna.
+The siege of Rome continued for three years. The capture of the
+city was imminent, when the forces of Robert Guiscard, the Norman,
+came to the rescue of the Pope.</p>
+<p>Nicholas II had bestowed on Robert Guiscard the investiture of
+the duchies of Apulia and Calabria; Sicily also, the conquest of
+which his brother Richard was meditating, being prospectively added
+to Robert's dominions. The oath taken by Robert Guiscard on this
+occasion bound him to be the devoted defender of the pontificate.
+He now became a friend indeed. A hasty retreat saved the forces of
+Henry from the impending danger. The Pope returned in triumph to
+the Lateran. But within a few hours he heard from the streets the
+clash of arms and the loud shouts of the combatants. A fierce
+contest was raging between the soldiers of Robert and the citizens
+who espoused the cause of Henry. A conflagration was kindled, which
+at length destroyed three-fourths of the city. Gregory, perhaps
+conscience-stricken when he thought of the wars he had kindled,
+sought, in the castle of Salerno, from the Normans the security
+which he could no longer expect among his own subjects. He soon
+found that the hand of death was upon him. He summoned round his
+bed the bishops and cardinals who had accompanied him in his flight
+from Rome. He maintained the truth of the principles for which he
+had always contended. He forgave and blessed his enemies, with the
+exception of the antipope and the Emperor. He had received the
+transubstantiated elements. The final unction had been given to
+him. He then prepared himself to die. Anxious to catch the last
+words from that tongue, to the utterances of which they had always
+listened with intense delight, his followers were bending over him,
+when, collecting his powers for one last effort, he said, in an
+indignant tone, "I have loved righteousness and hated iniquity,
+and, therefore, I die in exile."</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_16"><!-- RULE4 16 --></a>
+<h2>COMPLETION OF THE DOMESDAY BOOK</h2>
+<center>A.D. 1086</center>
+<br>
+<center>CHARLES KNIGHT</center>
+<p class="intro">When William the Conqueror had been some years
+established in his English realm, he found himself confronted with
+a feudal baronage largely composed of men who had gone with him
+from Normandy, where many of them had reluctantly bowed to his
+command. They were jealous of the royal power and eager for
+military and judicial independence within their own manors. The
+Conqueror met this situation with the skill of political genius. He
+granted large estates to the nobles, but so widely scattered as to
+render union of the great land-owners and hereditary attachment of
+great areas of population to separate feudal lords impossible. He
+caused under-tenants to be bound to their lords by the same
+conditions of service which bound the lords to the crown, to which
+each sub-tenant swore direct fealty. William also strengthened his
+position as king by means of a new military organization and by his
+control of the judicial and administrative systems of the kingdom.
+By the abolition of the four great earldoms of the realm he struck
+a final blow at the ambition of the greater nobles for independent
+power. By this stroke he made the shire the largest unit of local
+government. By his control of the national revenues he secured a
+great financial power in his own hands.</p>
+<p class="intro">A large part of the manors were burdened with
+special dues to the crown, and for the purpose of ascertaining and
+recording these William sent into each county commissioners to make
+a survey, whose inquiries were recorded in the <i>Domesday
+Book</i>, so called because its decision was regarded as final.
+This book, in Norman-French, contains the results of his survey of
+England made in 1085-1086, and consists of two volumes in vellum, a
+large folio of three hundred and eighty-two pages, and a quarto of
+four hundred and fifty pages. For a long time it was kept under
+three locks in the exchequer with the King's seal, and is now kept
+in the Public Record Office. In 1783 the British Government issued
+a fac-simile edition of it, in two folio volumes, printed from
+types specially made for the purpose. It is one of the principal
+sources for the political and social history of the time.</p>
+<p class="intro">The <i>Domesday Book</i> contains a record of the
+ownership, extent, and value of the lands of England at the time of
+the survey, at the time of their bestowal when granted by the King,
+and at the time of a previous survey under Edward the Confessor. Of
+the detailed registrations of tenants, defendants, live stock,
+etc., as well, as of contemporary social features of the English
+people, the following account presents interesting pictures.</p>
+<p>The survey contained in the <i>Domesday Book</i> extended to all
+England, with the exception of Northumberland, Cumberland,
+Westmoreland, and Durham. All the country between the Tees and the
+Tyne was held by the Bishop of Durham; and he was reputed a count
+palatine, having a separate government. The other three northern
+counties were probably so devastated that they were purposely
+omitted. Let us first see, from the information of <i>Domesday
+Book</i>, by "what men" the land was occupied.</p>
+<p>First, we have barons and we have thanes. The barons were the
+Norman nobles; the thanes, the Saxon. These were included under the
+general designation of <i>liberi homines</i>, free men; which term
+included all the freeholders of a manor. Many of these were tenants
+of the King "<i>in capite</i>"&mdash;that is, they held their
+possessions direct from the Crown. Others of these had placed
+themselves under the protection of some lord, as the defender of
+their persons and estates, they paying some stipend or performing
+some service. In the <i>Register</i> there are also <i>liberae
+feminae</i>, free women. Next to the free class were the
+<i>sochemanni</i> or "socmen," a class of inferior land-owners, who
+held lands under a lord, and owed suit and service in the lord's
+court, but whose tenure was permanent. They sometimes performed
+services in husbandry; but those services, as well as their
+payments, were defined.</p>
+<p>Descending in the scale, we come to the <i>villani</i>. These
+were allowed to occupy land at the will of the lord, upon the
+condition of performing services, uncertain in their amount and
+often of the meanest nature. But they could acquire no property in
+lands or goods; and they were subject to many exactions and
+oppressions. There are entries in <i>Domesday Book</i> which show
+that the villani were not altogether bondmen, but represented the
+Saxon "churl." The lowest class were <i>servi</i>, slaves; the
+class corresponding with the Saxon <i>theow</i>. By a degradation
+in the condition of the villani, and the elevation of that of the
+servi, the two classes were brought gradually nearer together; till
+at last the military oppression of the Normans, thrusting down all
+degrees of tenants and servants into one common slavery, or at
+least into strict dependence, one name was adopted for both of them
+as a generic term, that of <i>villeins regardant</i>.</p>
+<p>Of the subdivisions of these great classes, the <i>Register</i>
+of 1085 affords us some particulars. We find that some of the
+nobles are described as <i>milites</i>, soldiers; and sometimes the
+milites are classed with the inferior orders of tenantry. Many of
+the chief tenants are distinguished by their offices. We have among
+these the great regal officers, such as they existed in the Saxon
+times&mdash;the <i>camerarius</i> and <i>cubicularius</i>, from
+whom we have our lord chamberlain; the <i>dapifer</i>, or lord
+steward; the <i>pincerna</i>, or chief butler; the constable, and
+the treasurer. We have the hawkkeepers, and the bowkeepers; the
+providers of the king's carriages, and his standard-bearers. We
+have lawmen, and legates, and mediciners. We have foresters and
+hunters.</p>
+<p>Coming to the inferior officers and artificers, we have
+carpenters, smiths, goldsmiths, farriers, potters, ditchers,
+launders, armorers, fishermen, millers, bakers, salters, tailors,
+and barbers. We have mariners, moneyers, minstrels, and watchmen.
+Of rural occupations we have the beekeepers, ploughmen, shepherds,
+neatherds, goatherds, and swineherds. Here is a population in which
+there is a large division of labor. The freemen, tenants, villeins,
+slaves, are laboring and deriving sustenance from arable land,
+meadow, common pasture, wood, and water. The grain-growing land is,
+of course, carefully registered as to its extent and value, and so
+the meadow and pasture. An equal exactness is bestowed upon the
+woods. It was not that the timber was of great commercial value, in
+a country which possessed such insufficient means of transport; but
+that the acorns and beech-mast, upon which great herds of swine
+subsisted, were of essential importance to keep up the supply of
+food. We constantly find such entries as "a wood for pannage of
+fifty hogs." There are woods described which will feed a hundred,
+two hundred, three hundred hogs; and on the Bishop of London's
+demesne at Fulham a thousand hogs could fatten. The value of a tree
+was determined by the number of hogs that could lie under it, in
+the Saxon time; and in this survey of the Norman period, we find
+entries of useless woods, and woods without pannage, which to some
+extent were considered identical. In some of the woods there were
+patches of cultivated ground, as the entries show, where the tenant
+had cleared the dense undergrowth and had his corn land and his
+meadows. Even the fen lands were of value, for their rents were
+paid in eels.</p>
+<p>There is only mention of five forests in this record, Windsor,
+Gravelings (Wiltshire), Winburn, Whichwood, and the New Forest.
+Undoubtedly there were many more, but being no objects of
+assessment they are passed over. It would be difficult not to
+associate the memory of the Conqueror with the New Forest, and not
+to believe that his unbridled will was here the cause of great
+misery and devastation. Ordericus Vitalis says, speaking of the
+death of William's second son, Richard: "Learn now, my reader, why
+the forest in which the young prince was slain received the name of
+the New Forest. That part of the country was extremely populous
+from early times, and full of well-inhabited hamlets and farms. A
+numerous population cultivated Hampshire with unceasing industry,
+so that the southern part of the district plentifully supplied
+Winchester with the products of the land. When William I ascended
+the throne of Albion, being a great lover of forests, he laid waste
+more than sixty parishes, compelling the inhabitants to emigrate to
+other places, and substituted beasts of the chase for human beings,
+that he might satisfy his ardor for hunting." There is probably
+some exaggeration in the statement of the country being "extremely
+populous from early times." This was an old woody district, called
+Ytene. No forest was artificially planted, as Voltaire has
+imagined; but the chases were opened through the ancient thickets,
+and hamlets and solitary cottages were demolished.</p>
+<p>It is a curious fact that some woodland spots in the New Forest
+have still names with the terminations of <i>ham</i> and
+<i>ton</i>. There are many evidences of the former existence of
+human abodes in places now solitary; yet we doubt whether this part
+of the district plentifully supplied Winchester with food, as
+Ordericus relates; for it is a sterile district, in most places,
+fitted for little else than the growth of timber. The lower lands
+are marsh, and the upper are sand. The Conqueror, says the <i>Saxon
+Chronicle</i>, "so much loved the high deer as if he had been their
+father." The first of the Norman kings, and his immediate
+successors, would not be very scrupulous about the depopulation of
+a district if the presence of men interfered with their pleasures.
+But Thierry thinks that the extreme severity of the Forest Laws was
+chiefly enforced to prevent the assemblage of Saxons in those vast
+wooded spaces which were now included in the royal demesnes.</p>
+<p>All these extensive tracts were, more or less, retreats for the
+dispossessed and the discontented. The Normans, under pretence of
+preserving the stag and the hare, could tyrannize with a pretended
+legality over the dwellers in these secluded places; and thus
+William might have driven the Saxon people of Ytene to emigrate,
+and have destroyed their cottages, as much from a possible fear of
+their association as from his own love of "the high deer." Whatever
+was the motive, there were devastation and misery. <i>Domesday</i>
+shows that in the district of the New Forest certain manors were
+afforested after the Conquest; cultivated portions, in which the
+Sabbath bell was heard. William of Jumi&egrave;ges, the Conqueror's
+own chaplain, says, speaking of the deaths of Richard and Rufus:
+"There were many who held that the two sons of William the King
+perished by the judgment of God in these woods, since for the
+<i>extension</i> of the forest he had destroyed many inhabited
+<i>places (villas) and churches within its circuit</i>." It appears
+that in the time of Edward the Confessor about seventeen thousand
+acres of this district had been afforested; but that the cultivated
+parts remaining had then an estimated value of three hundred and
+sixty-three pounds. After the afforestation by the Conqueror, the
+cultivated parts yielded only one hundred and twenty-nine
+pounds.</p>
+<p>The grants of land to huntsmen (<i>venatores</i>) are common in
+Hampshire, as in other parts of England; and it appears to have
+been the duty of an especial officer to stall the deer&mdash;that
+is, to drive them with his troop of followers from all parts to the
+centre of a circle, gradually contracting, where they were to stand
+for the onslaught of the hunters. In the survey many parks are
+enumerated. The word hay (<i>haia</i>), which is still found in
+some of our counties, meant an enclosed part of a wood to which the
+deer were driven.</p>
+<p>In the seventeenth century this mode of hunting upon a large
+scale, by stalling the deer&mdash;this mimic war&mdash;was common
+in Scotland. Taylor, called the "Water Poet," was present at such a
+gathering, and has described the scene with a minuteness which may
+help us to form a picture of the Norman hunters: "Five or six
+hundred men do rise early in the morning, and they do disperse
+themselves divers ways; and seven, eight, or ten miles' compass,
+they do bring or chase in the deer in many herds&mdash;two, three,
+or four hundred in a herd&mdash;to such a place as the noblemen
+shall appoint them; then, when the day is come, the lords and
+gentlemen of their companies do ride or go to the said places,
+sometimes wading up to the middle through bourns and rivers; and
+then they being come to the place, do lie down on the ground till
+those foresaid scouts, which are called the 'tinkhelt,' do bring
+down the deer. Then, after we had stayed there three hours or
+thereabouts, we might perceive the deer appear on the hills round
+about us&mdash;their heads making a show like a wood&mdash;which
+being followed close by the tinkhelt, are chased down into the
+valley where we lay; then all the valley on each side being waylaid
+with a hundred couple of strong Irish greyhounds, they are let
+loose as occasion serves upon the herd of deer, that with dogs,
+guns, arrows, dirks, and daggers, in the space of two hours
+fourscore fat deer were slain."</p>
+<p><i>Domesday</i> affords indubitable proof of the culture of the
+vine in England. There are thirty-eight entries of vineyards in the
+southern and eastern counties. Many gardens are enumerated. Mills
+are registered with great distinctness; for they were invariably
+the property of the lords of the manors, lay or ecclesiastical; and
+the tenants could only grind at the lord's mill. Wherever we find a
+mill specified in <i>Domesday</i>, there we generally find a mill
+now. At Arundel, for example, we see what rent was paid by a mill;
+and there still stands at Arundel an old mill whose foundations
+might have been laid before the Conquest. Salt works are repeatedly
+mentioned. They were either works upon the coast for procuring
+marine salt by evaporation, or were established in the localities
+of inland salt springs. The salt works of Cheshire were the most
+numerous, and were called "wiches." Hence the names of some places,
+such as Middlewich and Nantwich. The revenue from mines offers some
+curious facts. No mention of tin is to be found in Cornwall. The
+ravages of Saxon and Dane, and the constant state of hostility
+between races, had destroyed much of that mineral industry which
+existed in the Roman times. A century and a half after the Conquest
+had elapsed before the Norman kings had a revenue from the Cornish
+iron mines. Iron forges were registered, and lumps of hammered iron
+are stated to have been paid as rent. Lead works are found only
+upon the king's demesne in Derbyshire.</p>
+<p>Fisheries are important sources of rent. Payments of eels are
+enumerated by hundreds and thousands. Herrings appear to have been
+consumed in vast numbers in the monasteries. Sandwich yielded forty
+thousand annually to Christ Church in Canterbury. Kent, Sussex, and
+Norfolk appear to have been the great seats of this fishery. The
+Severn and the Wye had their salmon fisheries, whose produce king,
+bishop, and lord were glad to receive as rent. There was a weir for
+Thames fish at Mortlake. The religious houses had their
+<i>piscinae</i> and <i>vivaria</i>&mdash;their stews and
+fish-pools.</p>
+<p><i>Domesday</i> affords us many curious glimpses of the
+condition of the people in cities and burghs. For the most part
+they seem to have preserved their ancient customs. London,
+Winchester, and several other important places are not mentioned in
+the record. We shall very briefly notice a few indications of the
+state of society. Dover was an important place, for it supplied the
+king with twenty ships for fifteen days in a year, each vessel
+having twenty-one men on board. Dover could therefore command the
+service of four hundred and twenty mariners. Every burgess in Lewes
+compounded for a payment of twenty shillings when the king fitted
+out a fleet to keep the sea.</p>
+<p>At Oxford the king could command the services of twenty
+burgesses whenever he went on an expedition; or they might compound
+for their services by a payment of twenty pounds. Oxford was a
+considerable place at this period. It contained upward of seven
+hundred houses; but four hundred and seventy-eight were so
+desolated that they could pay no dues. Hereford was the king's
+demesne; and the honor of being his immediate tenants appears to
+have been qualified by considerable exactions. When he went to war,
+and when he went to hunt, men were to be ready for his service. If
+the wife of a burgher brewed his ale, he paid tenpence. The smith
+who kept a forge had to make nails from the king's iron. In
+Hereford, as in other cities, there were moneyers, or coiners.
+There were seven at Hereford, who were bound to coin as much of the
+king's silver into pence as he demanded. At Cambridge the burgesses
+were compelled to lend the sheriff their ploughs. Leicester was
+bound to find the king a hawk or to pay ten pounds; while a sumpter
+or baggage-horse was compounded for at one pound.</p>
+<p>At Warwick there were two hundred and twenty-five houses on
+which the king and his barons claimed tax; and nineteen houses
+belonged to free burgesses. The dues were paid in honey and corn.
+In Shrewsbury there were two hundred and fifty-two houses belonging
+to burgesses; but the burgesses complained that they were called
+upon to pay as much tax as in the time of the Confessor, although
+Earl Roger had taken possession of extensive lands for building his
+castle. Chester was a port in which the king had his dues upon
+every cargo, and where he had fines whenever a trader was detected
+in using a false measure. The fraudulent female brewer of
+adulterated beer was placed in the cucking-stool, a degradation
+afterward reserved for scolds.</p>
+<p>This city has a more particular notice as to laws and customs in
+the time of the Confessor than any other place in the survey.
+Particular care seems to have been taken against fire. The owner of
+a house on fire not only paid a fine to the king, but forfeited two
+shillings to his nearest neighbor. Marten skins appear to have been
+a great article of trade in this city. No stranger could cart goods
+within a particular part of the city without being subjected to a
+forfeiture of four shillings or two oxen to the bishop. We find, as
+might be expected, no mention of that peculiar architecture of
+Chester called the "Rows," which has so puzzled antiquarian
+writers. The probability is that in a place so exposed to the
+attacks of the Welsh they were intended for defence. The low
+streets in which the Rows are situated have the road considerably
+beneath them, like the cutting of a railway; and from the covered
+way of the Rows an enemy in the road beneath might be assailed with
+great advantage.</p>
+<p>In the civil wars of Charles I the possession of the Rows by the
+Royalists, or Parliamentary troops, was fiercely contested. Of
+their antiquity there is no doubt. They probably belong to the same
+period as the Castle. The wall of Chester and the bridge were kept
+in repair, according to the survey, by the service of one laborer
+for every hide of land in the county. It is to be remarked that in
+all the cities and burghs the inhabitants are described as
+belonging to the king or a bishop or a baron. Many, even in the
+most privileged places, were attached to particular manors.</p>
+<p>The <i>Domesday</i> survey shows that in some towns there was an
+admixture of Norman and English burgesses; and it is clear that
+they were so settled after the Conquest, for a distinction is made
+between the old customary dues of the place and those the foreigner
+should pay. The foreigner had to bear a small addition to the
+ancient charge. No doubt the Norman clung to many of the habits of
+his own land; and the Saxon unwillingly parted with those of the
+locality in which his fathers had lived. But their manners were
+gradually assimilated. The Normans grew fond of the English beer,
+and the English adopted the Norman dress.</p>
+<p>The survey of 1085 affords the most complete evidence of the
+extent to which the Normans had possessed themselves of the landed
+property of the country. The ancient demesnes of the crown
+consisted of fourteen hundred and twenty-two manors. But the king
+had confiscated the properties of Godwin, Harold, Algar, Edwin,
+Morcar, and other great Saxon earls; and his revenues thus became
+enormous. Ordericus Vitalis states, with a minuteness that seems to
+imply the possession of official information, that "the king
+himself received daily one-and-sixty pounds thirty thousand pence
+and three farthings sterling money from his regular revenues in
+England alone, independently of presents, fines for offences, and
+many other matters which constantly enrich a royal treasury." The
+numbers of manors held by the favorites of the Conqueror would
+appear incredible, if we did not know that these great nobles were
+grasping and unscrupulous; indulging the grossest sensuality with a
+pretence of refinement; limited in their perpetration of injustice
+only by the extent of their power; and so blinded by their pride as
+to call their plunder their inheritance. Ten Norman chiefs who held
+under the crown are enumerated in the survey as possessing two
+thousand eight hundred and twenty manors.</p>
+<p>This enormous transfer of property did not take place without
+the most formidable resistance, but when a period of tranquillity
+arrived came the era of castle-building. The Saxons had their rude
+fortresses and intrenched earthworks. But solid walls of stone, for
+defence and residence, were to become the local seats of regal and
+baronial domination. <i>Domesday</i> contains notices of forty-nine
+castles; but only one is mentioned as having existed in the time of
+Edward the Confessor. Some which the Conqueror is known to have
+built are not noticed in the survey. Among these is the White Tower
+of London. The site of Rochester Castle is mentioned. These two
+buildings are associated by our old antiquaries as being erected by
+the same architect. Stow says: "I find in a fair register-book of
+the acts of the bishops of Rochester, set down by Edmund of
+Hadenham, that William I, surnamed Conqueror, builded the Tower of
+London, to wit, the great white and square tower there, about the
+year of Christ 1078, appointing Gundulph, then Bishop of Rochester,
+to be principal surveyor and overseer of that work, who was for
+that time lodged in the house of Edmere, a burghess of London." The
+chapel in the White Tower is a remarkable specimen of early Norman
+architecture.</p>
+<p>The keep of Rochester Castle, so picturesquely situated on the
+Medway, was not a mere fortress without domestic convenience. Here
+we still look upon the remains of sculptured columns and arches. We
+see where there were spacious fireplaces in the walls, and how each
+of four floors was served with water by a well. The third story
+contains the most ornamental portions of the building. In the
+<i>Domesday</i> enumeration of castles, we have repeated mention of
+houses destroyed and lands wasted, for their erection. At Cambridge
+twenty-seven houses are recorded to have been thus demolished. This
+was the fortress to overawe the fen districts. At Lincoln a hundred
+and sixty-six mansions were destroyed, "on account of the
+castle."</p>
+<p>In the ruins of all these castles we may trace their general
+plan. There were an outer court, an inner court, and a keep. Round
+the whole area was a wall, with parapets and loopholes. The
+entrance was defended by an outwork or barbacan. The prodigious
+strength of the keep is the most remarkable characteristic of these
+fortresses; and thus many of these towers remain, stripped of every
+interior fitting by time, but as untouched in their solid
+construction as the mounts upon which they stand. We ascend the
+steep steps which lead to the ruined keep of Carisbrook, with all
+our historical associations directed to the confinement of Charles
+I in this castle. But this fortress was registered in <i>Domesday
+Book</i>. Five centuries and a half had elapsed between William I
+and James I. The Norman keep was out of harmony with the principles
+of the seventeenth century, as much as the feudal prerogatives to
+which Charles unhappily clung.</p>
+<p>We have thus enumerated some of the more prominent statistics of
+this ancient survey, which are truly as much matter of history as
+the events of this beginning of the Norman period. There is one
+more feature of this <i>Domesday Book</i> which we cannot pass
+over. The number of parish churches in England in the eleventh
+century will, in some degree, furnish an indication of the amount
+of religious instruction. By some most extraordinary exaggeration,
+the number of these churches has been stated to be above forty-five
+thousand. In <i>Domesday</i> the number enumerated is a little
+above seventeen hundred. No doubt this enumeration is extremely
+imperfect. Very nearly half of all the churches put down are found
+in Lincolnshire, Norfolk, and Suffolk. The <i>Register</i>, in some
+cases, gives the amount of land with which the church was endowed.
+Bosham, in Sussex, the estate of Harold, had, in the time of King
+Edward, a hundred and twelve hides of land. At the date of the
+survey it had sixty-five hides. This was an enormous endowment.
+Some churches had five acres only; some fifty; some a hundred. Some
+are without land altogether. But, whether the endowment be large or
+small, here is the evidence of a church planted upon the same
+foundation as the monarchy, that of territorial possessions.</p>
+<p>The politic ruler of England had, in the completion of
+<i>Domesday Book</i>, possessed himself of the most perfect
+instrument for the profitable administration of his government. He
+was no longer working in the dark, whether he called out soldiers
+or levied taxes. He had carried through a great measure, rapidly,
+and with a minuteness which puts to shame some of our clumsy modern
+statistics. But the Conqueror did not want his books for the
+gratification of official curiosity. He went to work when he knew
+how many tenants-in-chief he could command, and how many men they
+could bring into the field. He instituted the great feudal
+principle of knight-service. His ordinance is in these words: "We
+command that all earls, barons, knights, sergeants, and freemen be
+always provided with horses and arms as they ought, and that they
+be always ready to perform to us their whole service, in manner as
+they owe it to us of right for their fees and tenements, and as we
+have appointed to them by the common council of our whole kingdom,
+and as we have granted to them in fee with right of
+inheritance."</p>
+<p>These words, "in fee, with right of inheritance," leave no doubt
+that the great vassals of the crown were absolute proprietors, and
+that all their subvassals had the same right of holding in
+perpetuity. The estate, however, reverted to the crown if the race
+of the original feoffee became extinct, and in cases, also, of
+felony and treason. When Alain of Bretagne, who commanded the rear
+of the army at the battle of Hastings, and who had received four
+hundred and forty-two manors, bowed before the King at Salisbury,
+at the great council in 1085, and swore to be true to him against
+all manner of men, he also brought with him his principal
+<i>land-sittende</i> men (land-owners), who also bowed before the
+King and became his men. They had previously taken the oath of
+fealty to Alain of Bretagne, and engaged to perform all the customs
+and services due to him for their lands and tenements. Alain, and
+his men, were proprietors, but with very unequal rights. Alain, by
+his tenure, was bound to provide for the King as many armed
+horsemen as the vast extent of his estates demanded. But all those
+whom he had enfeoffed, or made proprietors, upon his four hundred
+and forty-two manors, were each bound to contribute a proportionate
+number. When the free service of forty days was to be enforced, the
+great earl had only to send round to his vassals, and the men were
+at his command.</p>
+<p>By this organization, which was universal throughout the
+kingdom, sixty thousand cavalry could, with little delay, be called
+into the field. Those who held by this military service had their
+allotments divided into so many knights' fees, and each knight's
+fee was to furnish one mounted and armed soldier. The great vassals
+retained a portion of their land as their demesnes, having tenants
+who paid rents and performed services not military. But, under any
+circumstances, the vassal of the crown was bound to perform his
+whole free service with men and horses and arms. It is perfectly
+clear that this wonderful organization rendered the whole system of
+government one great confederacy, in which the small proprietors,
+tenants, and villeins had not a chance of independence; and that
+their condition could only be ameliorated by those gradual changes
+which result from a long intercourse between the strong and the
+weak, in which power relaxes its severity and becomes
+protection.</p>
+<p>In the ordinance in which the King commanded "free service" he
+also says, "we will that all the freemen of the kingdom possess
+their lands in peace, free from all tallage and unjust exaction."
+This, unhappily for the freemen, was little more than a theory
+under the Norman kings. There were various modes of making legal
+exaction the source of the grossest injustice. When the heir of an
+estate entered into possession he had to pay a "relief," or
+<i>heriot</i>, to the lord. This soon became a source of oppression
+in the crown; and enormous sums were exacted from the great
+vassals. The lord was not more sparing of his men. He had another
+mode of extortion. He demanded "aid" on many occasions, such as the
+marriage of his eldest daughter, or when he made his eldest son a
+knight. The estate of inheritance, which looks so generous and
+equitable an arrangement, was a perpetual grievance; for the
+possessor could neither transmit his property by will nor transfer
+it by sale. The heir, however remote in blood, was the only
+legitimate successor.</p>
+<p>The feudal obligation to the lord was, in many other ways, a
+fruitful source of tyranny, which lasted up to the time of the
+Stuarts. If the heir were a minor, the lord entered into possession
+of the estate without any accountability. If it descended to a
+female, the lord could compel her to marry according to his will,
+or could prevent her marrying. During a long period all these
+harassing obligations connected with property were upheld. The
+crown and the nobles were equally interested in their enforcement;
+and there can be little doubt that, though the great vassals
+sometimes suffered under these feudal obligations to the king, the
+inferior tenants had a much greater amount of oppression to endure
+at the hands of their immediate lords. But if the freemen were
+oppressed in the tenure of their property, we can scarcely expect
+that the landless man had not much more to suffer. If he committed
+an offence in the Saxon time, he paid a "mulct"; if in the Norman,
+he was subjected to an <i>amerciament</i>. His whole personal
+estate was at the mercy of the lord.</p>
+<p>Having thus obtained a general notion of the system of society
+established in less than twenty years after the Conquest, we see
+that there was nothing wanting to complete the most entire
+subjection of the great body of the nation. What had been wanting
+was accomplished in the practical working out of the theory that
+the entire land of the country belonged to the King. It was now
+established that every tenant-in-chief should do homage to the
+king; that every superior tenant should do homage to his lord; that
+every villein should be the bondman of the free; and that every
+slave should, without any property however limited and insecure, be
+the absolute chattel of some master. The whole system was connected
+with military service. This was the feudal system. There was some
+resemblance to it in parts of the Saxon organization; but under
+that organization there was so much of freedom in the allodial or
+free tenure of land that a great deal of other freedom went with
+it. The casting-off of the chains of feudality was the labor of six
+centuries.</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_17"><!-- RULE4 17 --></a>
+<h2>DECLINE OF THE MOORISH POWER IN SPAIN</h2>
+<center>GROWTH AND DECAY OF THE ALMORAVIDE AND ALMOHADE
+DYNASTIES</center>
+<center>A.D. 1086-1214</center>
+<br>
+<center>S.A. DUNHAM</center>
+<p class="intro">During the early part of the eleventh century the
+western caliphate, which with its splendid capital of Cordova had
+flourished for almost three hundred years, entered upon a decline
+that was the beginning of its final dissolution. By A.D. 1020 the
+local governors openly asserted their independence of Cordova and
+assumed the title of kings. Conspicuous among them was Mahomet ben
+Ismail ben Abid, the <i>wali</i> of Seville.</p>
+<p class="intro">While these petty rulers were determined to
+renounce allegiance to Cordova, it was resolved at that capital to
+elect a sovereign to subdue them and restore the ancient splendor
+of the empire. The choice fell upon Gehwar ben Mahomet, who soon
+established a degree of tranquillity and commercial prosperity
+unknown for many years. But he failed to re&euml;stablish the
+supremacy of Cordova, which capital Mahomet of Seville was
+preparing to invade when he died. His son, Mahomet Almoateded,
+having subdued Southern Andalusia, became the ally of Mahomet, son
+and successor of Gehwar on the throne of Cordova; but he betrayed
+the latter under pretence of aiding him against his enemies, and
+usurped the sovereignty.</p>
+<p class="intro">On the death of Mahomet Almoateded, his son
+Mahomet succeeded him at Cordova. He was already King of Seville,
+and as he soon occupied many other cities he became the most
+independent and powerful sovereign of Mahometan Spain. His chief
+rival, Yahia Alkadia, King of Toledo, was so contemptible to his
+people that they expelled him. He appealed for aid to Alfonso VI,
+King of Leon (Alfonso of Castile); but that Christian soldier was
+persuaded by Mahomet to oppose, instead of assisting, Yahia. The
+latter was restored to his throne by the King of Badajoz, but
+Alfonso invested Toledo and, after a three-years' siege, reduced
+the city, in A.D. 1085. In the history of the events directly
+following the capitulation it is shown how costly to himself was
+the alliance of Mahomet with Alfonso, and how it played its part in
+the coming of his coreligionists from Africa to his assistance, and
+finally, as it proved, to his own undoing and the supplanting of
+the power he represented in the Mahometan government of Spain.</p>
+<p>The fall of Toledo, however it might have been foreseen by the
+Mahometans, filled them with equal dismay and indignation. As
+Mahomet was too formidable to be openly assailed, they turned their
+vociferations of anger against his <i>hagib</i>, whom they accused
+of betraying the faith of Islam. Alarmed at the universal outcry,
+Mahomet was not sorry that he could devolve the heavy load of
+responsibility on the shoulders of his minister. The latter fled;
+but though he procured a temporary asylum from several princes, he
+was at length seized by the emissaries of his offended master; was
+brought, first to Cordova, next to Seville; confined within the
+walls of a dungeon; and soon beheaded by the royal hand of Mahomet.
+Thus was a servant of the King sacrificed for no other reason than
+that he had served that King too well.</p>
+<p>The conquest of Toledo was far from satisfying the ambition of
+Alfonso: he rapidly seized on the fortresses of Madrid, Maqueda,
+Guadalaxara, and established his dominion on both banks of the
+Tagus. Mahomet now began seriously to repent his treaty with the
+Christian, and to tremble even for his own possessions. He vainly
+endeavored to divert his ally from the projects of aggrandizement
+which that ally had evidently formed. The kings of Badajoz and
+Saragossa became tributaries to the latter; nay, if any reliance is
+to be placed on either Christian or Arabic historians,[<a href=
+"#note-29">29</a>] the King of Seville himself was subjected to the
+same humiliation. However this may have been, Mahomet saw that
+unless he leagued himself with those whose subjugation had hitherto
+been his constant object&mdash;the princes of his faith&mdash;his
+and their destruction was inevitable. The magnitude of the danger
+compelled him to solicit their alliance.</p>
+<p><a name="note-29"><!-- Note Anchor 29 --></a>[Footnote 29:
+Cond&eacute; gives the translation of two letters&mdash;one from
+Alfonso to Mahomet, distinguished for a tone of superiority and
+even of arrogance, which could arise only from the confidence felt
+by the writer in his own strength; the other from Mahomet to
+Alfonso, containing a defiance. The latter begins:</p>
+<p>"To the proud enemy of Allah, Alfonso ben Sancho, who calls
+himself lord of both nations and both laws. May God confound his
+arrogance, and prosper those who walk in the right way!"</p>
+<p>One passage of the same letter says: "Fatigued with war, we were
+willing to offer thee an annual tribute; but this does not satisfy
+thee: thou wishest us to deliver into thine hands our towns and
+fortresses; but are we thy subjects, that thou makest such demands,
+or hast thou ever subdued us? Thine injustice has roused us from
+our lethargy," etc.]</p>
+<p>As the King of Saragossa was too much in fear of the Christians
+to enter into any league against them, and as the one of Valencia
+(Yahia) reigned only at the pleasure of Alfonso, the sovereigns of
+Badajoz, Almeria, and Granada were the only powers on whose
+co&ouml;peration he could calculate (he had annihilated the
+authority of several petty kings). He invited those princes to send
+their representatives to Seville, to consult as to the measures
+necessary to protect their threatened independence. The invitation
+was readily accepted. On the day appointed, Mahomet, with his son
+Al Raxid and a considerable number of his <i>wazirs</i> and
+<i>cadis</i>, was present at the deliberations. The danger was so
+imminent&mdash;the force of the Christians was so augmented, and
+that of the Moslems so weakened&mdash;that such resistance as
+Mahometan Spain alone could offer seemed hopeless. With this
+conviction in their hearts, two of the most influential cadis
+proposed an appeal to the celebrated African conqueror, Yussef ben
+Taxfin, whose arm alone seemed able to preserve the faith of Islam
+in the Peninsula.</p>
+<p>The proposal was received with general applause by all present:
+they did not make the very obvious reflection that when a nation
+admits into its bosom an ally more powerful than itself, it admits
+at the same time a conqueror. The wali of Malaga alone, Abdallah
+ben Zagut, had courage to oppose the dangerous embassy under
+consideration: "You mean to call in the aid of the Almoravides! Are
+you ignorant that these fierce inhabitants of the desert resemble
+their own native tigers? Suffer them not, I beseech you, to enter
+the fertile plains of Andulasia and Granada! Doubtless they would
+break the iron sceptre which Alfonso intends for us; but you would
+still be doomed to wear the chains of slavery. Do you not know that
+Yussef has taken all the cities of Almagreb; that he has subdued
+the powerful tribes of the east and west; that he has everywhere
+substituted despotism for liberty and independence?" The aged Zagut
+spoke in vain: he was even accused of being a secret partisan of
+the Christian; and the embassy was decreed.</p>
+<p>But Zagut was not the only one who foresaw the catastrophe to
+which that embassy must inevitably lead: Al Raxid shared the same
+prophetic feeling. In reply to his father, who, after the
+separation of the assembly, expatiated on the absolute necessity of
+soliciting the alliance of Aben Taxfin as the only measure capable
+of saving the rest of Mahometan Spain from the yoke of Alfonso, he
+said: "This Aben Taxfin, who has subdued all that he pleased, will
+serve us as he has already served the people of Almagreb and
+Mauritania&mdash;he will expel us from our country!"</p>
+<p>"Anything," rejoined the father, "rather than Andalusia should
+become the prey of the Christians! Dost thou wish the Mussulmans to
+curse me? I would rather become an humble shepherd, a driver of
+Yussef's camels, than reign dependent on these Christian dogs! But
+my trust is in Allah."</p>
+<p>"May Allah protect both thee and thy people!" replied Al Raxid,
+mournfully, who saw that the die of fate was cast.</p>
+<p>The course of this history must be interrupted for a moment,
+while the origin and exploits of this formidable African are
+recorded.</p>
+<p>Beyond the chain of Mount Atlas, in the deserts of ancient
+Getulia, dwelt two tribes of Arabian descent&mdash;both, probably,
+of the greater one of Zanhaga, so illustrious in Arabian history.
+At what time they had been expelled, or had voluntarily exiled
+themselves, from their native Yemen, they knew not; but tradition
+taught them that they had been located in the African deserts from
+ages immemorial. Their life was passed under the tent; their only
+possessions were their camels and their freedom. Yahia ben Ibrahim,
+belonging to one of these tribes&mdash;that of Gudala&mdash;made
+the pilgrimage of Mecca. On his return through the province of
+Cairwan he became acquainted with Abu-Amram, a famous
+<i>alfaqui</i>, originally of Fez. Being questioned by his new
+friend as to the religion and manners of his countrymen, he replied
+that they were sunk in ignorance, both from their isolated
+situation in the desert and from their want of teachers; he added,
+however, that they were strangers to cruelty, and that they would
+be willing enough to receive instruction from any quarter. He even
+entreated the alfaqui to allow some one of his disciples to
+accompany him into his native country; but none of those disciples
+was willing to undertake so long and perilous a journey, and it was
+not without considerable difficulty that Abdallah ben Yassim, the
+disciple of another alfaqui, was persuaded to accompany the
+patriotic Yahia.</p>
+<p>Abdallah was one of those ruling minds which, fortunately for
+the peace of society, nature so seldom produces. Seeing his
+enthusiastic reception by the tribe of Gudala, and the influence he
+was sure of maintaining over it, he formed the design of founding a
+sovereignty in the heart of these vast regions. Under the pretext
+that to diffuse a holy religion and useful knowledge was among the
+most imperative of duties, he prevailed on his obedient disciples
+to make war on the kindred tribe of Lamtuna. That tribe submitted,
+acknowledging his spiritual authority, and zealously assisted him
+in his great purpose of gaining proselytes by the sword. His
+ambition naturally increased with his success: in a short time he
+had reduced, in a similar manner, the isolated tribes around him.
+To his valiant followers of Lamtuna he now gave the name of
+<i>Muraditins</i>, or <i>Almoravides</i>,[<a href=
+"#note-30">30</a>] which signifies men consecrated to the service
+of God.</p>
+<p><a name="note-30"><!-- Note Anchor 30 --></a>[Footnote 30: This
+Moslem dynasty, founded about 1050, ruled in Africa, and afterward
+in Spain, until 1147, when it was overthrown and succeeded by that
+of the Almohades.]</p>
+<p>The whole country of Darah was gradually subdued by this new
+apostle, and his authority was acknowledged over a region extensive
+enough to form a respectable kingdom. But though he exercised all
+the rights of sovereignty, he prudently abstained from assuming the
+title: he left to the emir of Lamtuna the ostensible exercise of
+temporal power; and when, in A.D. 1058, that emir fell in battle,
+he nominated Abu-Bekr ben Omar to the vacant dignity. His own
+death, which was that of a warrior, left Abu-Bekr in possession of
+an undivided sovereignty. The power and consequently the reputation
+of the emir, spread far and wide, and numbers flocked from distant
+provinces to share in the advantages of religion and plunder. His
+native plains were now too narrow for the ambition of Abu-Bekr, who
+crossed the chain of Mount Atlas, and fixed his residence in the
+city of Agmat, between those mountains and the sea.</p>
+<p>But even this place was soon too confined for his increased
+subjects, and he looked round for a site on which he might lay the
+foundations of a great city, the destined metropolis of a great
+empire. One was at length found; and the city of Morocco began to
+rear its head from the valley of Eylana. Before, however, his great
+work was half completed, he received intelligence that the tribe of
+Gudala had declared a deadly war against that of Lamtuna; and that
+the ruin of one at least of the hostile people was to be
+apprehended. As he belonged to the latter, he naturally trembled
+for the fate of his kindred; and at the head of his cavalry he
+departed for his native deserts, leaving the superintendence of the
+buildings and the command of the army, during his absence, to his
+cousin, Yussef ben Taxfin.</p>
+<p>The person and character of Yussef are drawn in the most
+favorable colors by the Arabian writers. We are told that his
+stature was tall and noble, his countenance prepossessing, his eye
+dark and piercing, his beard long, his tone of voice harmonious,
+his whole frame, which no sickness ever assailed, strong, robust,
+and familiar with fatigue; that his mind corresponded with his
+outward appearance, his generosity, his care of the poor, his
+sobriety, his justice, his religious zeal, yet freedom from
+intolerance, rendering him the admiration of foreigners and the
+love of his own people. But whatever were his other virtues, it
+will be seen that gratitude, honor, and good faith were not among
+the number. Scarcely had his kinsman left the city, than, in
+pursuance of the design he had formed of usurping the supreme
+authority, he began to win the affection of the troops, partly by
+his gifts and partly by that winning affability of manner which he
+could easily assume. How well he succeeded will soon appear. Nor
+was his success in war less agreeable to so fierce and martial a
+people as the Almoravides. The Berbers who inhabited the defiles of
+Mount Atlas, and who, animated by the spirit of independence so
+characteristic of mountaineers, endeavored to vindicate their
+natural liberty, were quickly subdued by him.</p>
+<p>But his policy was still superior. He had long loved, or at
+least long aspired to the hope of marrying, the beautiful Zainab,
+sister of Abu-Bekr; but the fear of a repulse from the proud chief
+of his family had caused him to smother his inclination. He now
+disdained to supplicate for that chief's consent: he married the
+lady, and from that moment proceeded boldly in his projects of
+ambition. Having put the finishing touch to his magnificent city of
+Morocco, he transferred thither the seat of his empire; and by the
+encouragement he afforded to individuals of all nations who chose
+to settle there, he soon filled it with a prosperous and numerous
+population. The augmentation of his army was his next great object;
+and so well did he succeed in it that on his departure, in a
+hostile expedition against Fez, he found his troops exceeded one
+hundred thousand. With so formidable a force, he had little
+difficulty in rapidly extending his conquests.</p>
+<p>Yussef had just completed the subjugation of Fez when Abu-Bekr
+returned from the desert and encamped in the vicinity of Agmat. He
+was soon made acquainted&mdash;probably common report had
+acquainted him long before&mdash;with the usurpation of his
+kinsman. With a force so far inferior to his rival's, and still
+more with the conviction that the hearts of the people were weaned
+from him, he might well hesitate as to the course he should adopt.
+His greatest mortification was to hear his own horsemen, whom
+curiosity drew into Morocco, loud in the praises of Yussef, whose
+liberality to the army was the theme of universal admiration, and
+whose service for that reason many avowed their intention of
+embracing. He now feared that his power was at an end, yet he
+resolved to have an interview with his cousin.</p>
+<p>The two chiefs met about half-way between Morocco and
+Agmat,[<a href="#note-31">31</a>] and after a formal salutation
+took their seats on the same carpet. The appearance of Yussef's
+formidable guard, the alacrity with which he was obeyed, and the
+grandeur which surrounded him convinced Abu-Bekr that the throne of
+the usurper was too firmly established to be shaken. The poor emir,
+so far from demanding the restitution of his rights, durst not even
+utter one word of complaint; on the contrary, he pretended that he
+had long renounced empire, and that his only wish was to pass the
+remainder of his days in the retirement of the desert. With equal
+hypocrisy Yussef humbly thanked him for his abdication; the sheiks
+and walis were summoned to witness the renewed declaration of the
+emir, after which the two princes separated. The following day,
+however, Abu-Bekr received a magnificent present from
+Yussef,[<a href="#note-32">32</a>] who, indeed, continued to send
+him one every year to the period of his death.</p>
+<p><a name="note-31"><!-- Note Anchor 31 --></a>[Footnote 31: The
+distance is about ten or twelve leagues.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-32"><!-- Note Anchor 32 --></a>[Footnote 32: This
+present is made to consist of twenty-five thousand crowns of gold,
+seventy horses of the best breed, all splendidly accoutred, one
+hundred and fifty mules, one hundred magnificent turbans with as
+many costly habits, four hundred common turbans, two hundred white
+mantles, one thousand pieces of rich stuffs, two hundred pieces of
+fine linen, one hundred and fifty black slaves, twenty beautiful
+young maidens, with a considerable quantity of perfumes, corn, and
+cattle. Such a gift was worthy of royalty. In a similar situation a
+modern English sovereign would probably have sent&mdash;one hundred
+pounds.]</p>
+<p>Yussef, who, though he had refused to receive the title of
+<i>almumenin</i>, which he considered as properly belonging to the
+Caliph of the East, had just exchanged his humble one of emir for
+those of <i>almuzlemin</i>, or prince of the believers, and of
+<i>nazaradin</i>, or defender of the faith, when the letters of
+Mahomet reached him. A similar application from Omar, King of
+Badajoz, he had disregarded, not because he was indifferent to the
+glory of serving his religion, still less to the advantage of
+extending his conquests, but because he had not then sufficiently
+consolidated his power. Now, however, he was in peaceful possession
+of an extended empire, and he assembled his chiefs to hear their
+sentiments on an expedition which he had resolved to undertake. All
+immediately exclaimed that war should be undertaken in defence of
+the tottering throne of Islam. Before, however, he returned a final
+answer to the King of Seville, he insisted that the fortress of
+Algeziras should be placed in his hands, on the pretence that if
+fortune were unpropitious he should have some place to which he
+might retreat. That Mahomet should have been so blind as to not
+perceive the designs involved in the insidious proposal is almost
+enough to make one agree with the Arabic historians that destiny
+had decreed he should fall by his own measures. The place was not
+only surrendered to the artful Moor, but Mahomet himself went to
+Morocco to hasten the departure of Yussef. He was assured of speedy
+succor and induced to return. He was soon followed by the ambitious
+African, at the head of a mighty armament.</p>
+<p>Alfonso was besieging Saragossa, which he had every expectation
+of reducing, when intelligence reached him of Yussef's
+disembarkation. He resolved to meet the approaching storm. At the
+head of all the forces he could muster he advanced toward
+Andalusia, and encountered Yussef on the plains of Zalaca, between
+Badajoz and Merida. As the latter was a strict observer of the
+outward forms of his religion, he summoned the Christian King by
+letter to embrace the faith of the Prophet or consent to pay an
+annual tribute or prepare for immediate battle. "I am told," added
+the writer, "that thou wishest for vessels to carry the war into my
+kingdom; I spare thee the trouble of the voyage. Allah brings thee
+into my presence that I may punish thy presumption and pride!" The
+indignant Christian trampled the letter under foot, and at the same
+time said to the messenger: "Tell thy master what thou hast seen!
+Tell him also not to hide himself during the action: let him meet
+me face to face!" The two armies engaged the 13th day of the moon
+Regeb, A.H. 479.[<a href="#note-33">33</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-33"><!-- Note Anchor 33 --></a>[Footnote 33:
+October 23, A.D. 1086.]</p>
+<p>The onset of Alfonso at the head of the Christian cavalry was so
+fierce that the ranks of the Almoravides were thrown into
+confusion; not less successful was Sancho, King of Navarre, against
+the Andalusians, who retreated toward Badajoz. But the troops of
+Seville kept the field, and fought with desperate valor: they
+would, however, have given way, had not Yussef at this critical
+moment advanced with his reserve and his own guard, consisting of
+his bravest troops, and assailed the Christians in the rear and
+flanks. This unexpected movement decided the fortune of the day.
+Alfonso was severely wounded and compelled to retreat, but not
+until nightfall, nor until he had displayed a valor worthy of the
+greatest heroes. Though his own loss was severe, amounting,
+according to the Arabians, to twenty-four thousand men, that of the
+enemy could scarcely be inferior, when we consider that this
+victory had no result; Yussef was evidently too much weakened to
+profit by it.</p>
+<p>Not long after the battle, Yussef being called to Africa by the
+death of a son, the command of the Almoravides devolved on Syr ben
+Abu-Bekr, the ablest of his generals. That general advanced
+northward, and seized some insignificant fortresses; but the
+advantage was but temporary, and was more than counterbalanced by
+the disasters of the following year. The King of Saragossa,
+Abu-Giafar, had hoped that the defeat of Zalaca would prevent the
+Christians from attacking him; but that of his allies, the
+Mahometan princes, in the neighborhood, and the taking of Huesca by
+the King of Navarre, convinced him how fallacious was his fancied
+security. Seeing that no advantage whatever had accrued from his
+former expedition, Yussef now proclaimed the Alhiged, or holy war,
+and invited all the Andalusian princes to join him. In A.D. 1088,
+he again disembarked at Algeziras and joined the confederates. But
+this present demonstration of force proved as useless as the
+preceding: it ended in nothing; owing partly to the dissensions of
+Mahometans, and partly to the activity of the Christians, who not
+only rendered abortive the measures of the enemy, but gained some
+signal advantages over them. Yussef was forced to retreat on
+Almeida. Whether through the distrust of the Mahometan princes, who
+appear to have penetrated his intention of subjecting them to his
+empire, or through his apprehension of Alfonso, he again returned
+to Africa, to procure new and more considerable levies. In A.D.
+1091 he landed a third time at Algeziras, not so much with the view
+of humbling the Christian King as of executing the perfidious
+design he had so long harbored. For form's sake, indeed, he
+invested Toledo, but he could have entertained no expectation of
+reducing it; and when he perceived that the Andalusian princes
+refused to join him, he eagerly left that city, and proceeded to
+secure far dearer and easier interests: he openly threw off the
+mask, and commenced his career of spoliation.</p>
+<p>The King of Granada, Abdallah ben Balkin, was the first victim
+to African perfidy. In the conviction that he must be overwhelmed
+if resistance were offered, he left his city to welcome Yussef. His
+submission was vain: he was instantly loaded with chains, and with
+his family sent to Agmat. Timur ben Balkin, brother of Abdallah,
+was in the same violent manner despoiled of Malaga. Mahomet now
+perceived the grievous error which he had committed, and the
+prudent foresight of his son Al Raxid. "Did not I tell thee," said
+the latter, mournfully, "what the consequences would be; that we
+should be driven from our palace and country?"</p>
+<p>"Thou wert indeed a true prophet," replied the self-accused
+father; "but what power could avert the decrees of fate?"</p>
+<p>It seemed as if fate had indeed resolved that this well-meaning
+but misguided prince should fall by his own obstinacy; for though
+his son advised him to seek the alliance of Alfonso, he refused to
+do so until that alliance could no longer avail him. He himself
+seemed to think that the knell of his departing greatness was about
+to sound; and the most melancholy images were present to his fancy,
+even in sleep. "One night," says an Arabic historian, "he heard in
+a dream his ruin predicted by one of his sons: he awoke, and the
+same verses were repeated:</p>
+<p>"'Once, Fortune carried thee in her car of triumph and thy name
+was by renown spread to the ends of the earth. Now, the same renown
+conveys only thy sighs. Days and nights pass away, and like them
+the enjoyments of the world; thy greatness has vanished like a
+dream!'"</p>
+<p>But if Mahomet was superstitious&mdash;if he felt that fate had
+doomed him, and that resistance would be useless&mdash;he resolved
+not to fall ignobly. His defence was indeed heroic; but it was
+vain, even though Alfonso sent him an aid of twenty thousand men:
+his cities fell one by one; Seville was constrained to capitulate:
+he and his family were thrown into prison until a ship was prepared
+to convey them into Africa, whither their perfidious ally had
+retired some weeks before. His conduct in this melancholy reverse
+of fortune is represented as truly great. Not a sigh escaped him,
+except for the innocent companions of his misfortune, especially
+for his son, Al Raxid, whose virtues and talents deserved a better
+destiny. Surrounded by the best beloved of his wives, by his
+daughters, and his four surviving sons, he endeavored to console
+them as they wept on seeing his royal hands oppressed with fetters,
+and still more when the ship conveyed all from the shores of Spain.
+"My children and friends," said the suffering monarch, "let us
+learn to support our lot with resignation! In this state of being
+our enjoyments are but lent us, to be resumed when heaven sees fit.
+Joy and sorrow, pleasure and pain, closely follow each other; but
+the noble heart is above the inconstancy of fortune!"</p>
+<p>The royal party disembarked at Ceuta, and were conveyed to
+Agmat, to be confined in a fortress. We are told that on their
+journey a compassionate poet presented the fallen King with a copy
+of verses deploring his misfortunes, and that he rewarded the poet
+with thirty-six pieces of gold&mdash;the only money he had left,
+from his once exhaustless riches. He had little apprehension of
+what was to follow&mdash;that Yussef would leave him without
+support; that his future life was to be passed in penury; nay, that
+his daughters would be compelled to earn his subsistence and their
+own by the labor of their hands. Yet even in that indigent
+condition, says Aben Lebuna, and through the sadness which covered
+their countenances, there was something about them which revealed
+their high origin. The unfortunate monarch outlived the loss of his
+crown and liberty about four years.</p>
+<p>After the fall of Mahomet, the general of Yussef had little
+difficulty in subduing the princes of Andalusia. Valencia next
+received the African yoke. The King of Saragossa was more
+fortunate. He sent ambassadors to Yussef, bearing rich presents,
+and proposing an alliance with a common league against the
+Christians. "My dominions," said Abu-Giafar, "are the only barrier
+between thee and the Christian princes. Hitherto my predecessors
+and myself have withstood all their efforts; with thy succor I
+shall fear them still less." Yussef accepted the proposal; a treaty
+of alliance was made; and the army of Abu-Giafar was reinforced by
+a considerable body of Amoravides, A.H. 486, with whom he repelled
+an invasion of Sancho, King of Aragon. A third division of the
+Africans, which marched to destroy the sovereignty of Algarve and
+Badajoz, was no less successful. Badajoz capitulated; but, in
+violation of the treaty, the dethroned Omar, with two of his sons,
+was surrounded and assassinated by a body of cavalry, as he was
+unsuspiciously journeying from the scene of his past prosperity in
+search of another asylum. A third son was placed in close
+confinement.</p>
+<p>Thus ended the petty kingdoms of Andalusia, after a stormy
+existence of about sixty years.</p>
+<p>For some years after the usurpation of Yussef, peace appears to
+have existed in Spain between the Mahometans and the Christians.
+Fearing a new irruption of Africans, Alfonso contented himself with
+fortifying Toledo; and Yussef felt little inclination to renew the
+war with one whose prowess he had so fatally experienced. But
+Christian Spain was, at one moment, near the brink of ruin. The
+passion for the crusades was no less ardently felt by the Spaniards
+than by other nations of Europe; thousands of the best warriors
+were preparing to depart for the Holy Land, as if there were more
+merit in contending with the infidels, in a remote region, for a
+barren sepulchre, than at home for the dearest interests of
+man&mdash;for honor, patriotism, and religion. Fortunately for
+Spain, Pope Pascal II, in answer to the representations of Alfonso,
+declared that the proper post of every Spaniard was at home, and
+there were his true enemies. Soon afterward Yussef returned to
+Morocco, where he died on the 3d day of the moon Muharram, A.H.
+500, after living one hundred Arabian or about ninety-seven
+Christian years.</p>
+<p>In A.H. 514 the empire of the Almoravides was tottering to its
+fall. It had never been agreeable to the Mahometans of Spain, whose
+manners, from their intercourse with a civilized people, were
+comparatively refined. The sheiks of Lamtuna were so many
+insupportable tyrants; the Jews, the universal agents for the
+collection of the revenues, were here, as in Poland, the most
+pitiless extortioners; every savage from the desert looked with
+contempt on the milder inhabitant of the Peninsula. The domination
+of these strangers was indeed so odious that, except for the
+divisions between Alfonso and his ambitious queen Donna Urraca, who
+was sovereign in her own right, all Andalusia might speedily have
+been subjected to Christian rule. Alfonso, the King of Aragon, fell
+at the siege of Fraga about A.D. 1109, but the Almoravides met an
+equally valiant foe in his son and successor, Alfonso Raymond, King
+of Leon and Castile.</p>
+<p>After a period of about forty years, during which the Christians
+were steadily increasing their dominions, Coria and Mora and other
+Mahometan strongholds were acquired by Alfonso, now styled the
+"Emperor"; and almost every contest between the two natural enemies
+had turned to the advantage of the Christians. So long, indeed, as
+the walis were eager only to preserve or to extend their authority,
+independent of each other and of every superior, this success need
+not surprise us&mdash;we may rather be surprised that the
+Mahometans were allowed to retain any footing in the Peninsula.
+Probably they would at this time have been driven from it but for
+the seasonable arrival of the victorious Almohades. Both Christians
+and Africans now contended for the superiority. While the troops of
+Alfonso reduced Baeza, and, with a Mahometan ally, even Cordova,
+Malaga, and Seville acknowledged Abu Amram; Calatrava and Almeria
+next fell to the Christian Emperor, about the same time that Lisbon
+and the neighboring towns received Don Enrique, the new sovereign
+of Portugal. Most of these conquests, however, were subsequently
+recovered by the Almohades. Being reinforced by a new army from
+Africa, the latter pursued their successes with greater vigor. They
+reduced Cordova, which was held by an ally of Alfonso; defeated,
+and forever paralyzed, the expiring efforts of the Almoravides; and
+proclaimed their Emperor Abdelmumen as sovereign of all Mahometan
+Spain.</p>
+<p>Notwithstanding the destructive wars which had prevailed for
+nearly a century, neither Moors nor Christians had acquired much
+advantage by them. From the reduction of Saragossa to the present
+time, the victory, indeed, had generally declared for the
+Christians; but their conquests, with the exception of Lisbon and a
+few fortresses in Central Spain, were lost almost as soon as
+gained; and the same fate attended the equally transient successes
+of the Mahometans. The reasons why the former did not permanently
+extend their territories, were their internal dissensions; while
+Leon was at war with Castile, or Castile with Leon, or either with
+Aragon, we need not wonder that the united Almoravides, or their
+successors the Almohades, should sometimes triumph; but those
+triumphs were sure to be followed by reverses whenever not all, but
+any one, of the Christian states was at liberty to assail its
+natural enemy. The Christians, when at peace among themselves, were
+always too many for their Mahometan neighbors, even when the latter
+were aided by the whole power of Western Africa.</p>
+<p>In A.H. 572 (about A.D. 1179) the King of Castile reduced
+Caenza, and the Moors were defeated before Toledo. The following
+year the Portuguese were no less successful before Abrantes, which
+the Africans had besieged. These disasters roused the wrath of
+Yussef abu Yagur (son and successor of Abdulmumen who died A.H. 558
+= A.D. 1165); but as an obscure rebellion required his presence at
+that time in Mauritania, he did not land in Spain until A.H. 580.
+He marched without delay against Santarem, which his soldiers had
+vainly besieged some years before. Wishing to divide the Portuguese
+force, he one night sent an order to his son Cid Abu Ishac, who lay
+encamped near him, to march with the Andalusian cavalry on Lisbon.
+The officer who carried the order instead of Lisbon named Seville;
+the whole Moslem army were sure that some disaster was impending,
+and that the siege was to be raised; before morning the camp was
+deserted, the guard alone of Yussef remaining. While he despatched
+orders to recall the alarmed fugitives, the Christians, who were
+soon aware of the retreat, issued from the walls, surrounded and
+massacred the guard. Yussef defended himself like a hero: six of
+the advancing assailants he laid low, before the same fate was
+inflicted on himself. The merciless carnage of the Christians
+spared not even his female attendants. At this moment two companies
+of cavalry arrived, and, finding their monarch dying, furiously
+charged the Christians, whom they soon put to flight. In a few
+hours the whole army returned, and, inspired with the same hope of
+vengeance, they stormed and took the place, and put every living
+creature to the sword.</p>
+<p>Yacub ben Yussef, from his victories afterward named Almansor,
+who was then in Spain, was immediately declared successor to his
+father. For some years he was not personally opposed to the
+Christians, though his walis carried on a desultory indecisive war;
+he was long detained in Africa, first in quelling some domestic
+commotions, and afterward by severe illness. He was scarcely
+recovered, when the intelligence that the Christians were making
+insulting irruptions to the very outworks of Algeziras made him
+resolve on punishing their audacity. His preparations were of the
+most formidable description. In A.H. 591 he landed in Andalusia,
+and proceeded toward Valencia, where the Christian army then lay.
+There Alfonso VIII, King of Castile, was awaiting the expected
+reinforcements from his allies, the kings of Leon and Navarre. Both
+armies pitched their tents on the plains of Alarcon. The following
+day the Christians commenced the attack, and with so much
+impetuosity that the centre was soon broken. But an Andalusian
+chief conducted a strong body of his men against Alfonso, who with
+the reserve occupied the hill above the plain. While the struggle
+was in all its fury, Yacub and his division took the Christians in
+flank. The result was fatal to the Castilian army, which,
+discouraged at what it considered a new enemy, gave way in every
+direction. Alfonso, preferring an honorable death to the shame of
+defeat, prepared to plunge into the heart of the Mahometan
+squadrons, when his nobles surrounded him and forced him from the
+field. His loss must have been immense, amounting probably to
+twenty thousand men. With a generosity very rare in a Mahometan,
+and still more in an African, Yacub restored his prisoners to
+liberty&mdash;an action for which, we are informed, he received few
+thanks from his followers. Alfonso retreated to Toledo just as the
+King of Leon arrived with the promised reinforcement.</p>
+<p>After this signal victory Yacub rapidly reduced Calatrava,
+Guadalaxara, Madrid and Esalona, Salamanca, etc. Toledo, too, he
+invested, but in vain. He returned to Africa, caused his son
+Mahomet to be declared <i>wali alhadi</i>, and died, the 22d day of
+the moon Regeb, A.H. 595.[<a href="#note-34">34</a>] He left behind
+him the character of an able, a valiant, a liberal, a just, and
+even magnanimous prince&mdash;of one who labored more for the real
+welfare of his people than any other potentate of his age. He was,
+beyond doubt, the greatest and best of the Almohades.</p>
+<p><a name="note-34"><!-- Note Anchor 34 --></a>[Footnote 34: May
+19, 1199.]</p>
+<p>The character of Mahomet Abu Abdallah, surnamed Alnassir, was
+very different from that of his great father. Absorbed in
+effeminate pleasures, he paid little attention to the internal
+administration of his empire or to the welfare of his people. Yet
+he was not insensible to martial fame; and he accordingly showed no
+indisposition to forsake his harem for the field. After quelling
+two inconsiderable rebellions, he prepared to punish the audacity
+of Alfonso of Castile, who made destructive inroads into Andalusia.
+Much as the world had been astounded at the preparations of his
+grandfather Yussef, they were not surpassed by his own, if, as we
+are credibly informed, one alone of the five divisions of his army
+amounted to one hundred and sixty thousand men. It is certain that
+a year was required for the assembling of this vast armament, that
+two months were necessary to convey it across the straits, and that
+all Christian Europe was filled with alarm at its disembarkation.
+Innocent III proclaimed a crusade to Spain; and Rodrigo of Toledo,
+the celebrated historian, accompanied by several prelates, went
+from one court to another, to rouse the Christian princes. While
+the kings of Aragon and Navarre[<a href="#note-35">35</a>] promised
+to unite their forces with their brother of Castile to repel the
+common danger, great numbers of volunteers from Portugal[<a href=
+"#note-36">36</a>] and Southern France hastened to the general
+rendezvous at Toledo, the Pope ordered fasting, prayers, and
+processions to be made, to propitiate the favor of heaven, and to
+avert from Christendom the greatest danger that had threatened it
+since the days of the emir Abderahman.</p>
+<p><a name="note-35"><!-- Note Anchor 35 --></a>[Footnote 35:
+Sancho, King of Navarre, is justly accused of backwardness at least
+in joining the Christian alliance. He even sought that of Yacub and
+Mahomet, on condition that his own states should be spared, or
+perhaps amplified at the expense of his neighbors. If the Arabian
+writers are correct, he privately waited on Mahomet in Seville; but
+the result of the interview is unknown.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-36"><!-- Note Anchor 36 --></a>[Footnote 36: The
+King of Portugal was not present in this campaign, confidently as
+the contrary has been asserted by most historians.&mdash;<i>La
+Cl&eacute;de: Histoire G&eacute;n&eacute;rale de Portugal</i>,
+ii.]</p>
+<p>Mahomet opened the campaign of A.H. 608 by the siege of
+Salvatierra, a strong but not important fortress of Estremadura,
+defended by the knights of Calatrava. That he should waste his
+forces on objects so incommensurate with their extent proves how
+little he was qualified to wield them. The place stood out for
+several months, and did not surrender until the Emperor had
+sustained a heavy loss, nor until the season was too far advanced
+to permit any advantage to be derived from this partial success. By
+suspending the execution of his great design until the following
+season, he allowed Alfonso time to prepare for the contest. The
+following June, the kings of Leon and Castile having assembled at
+Toledo, and been joined by a considerable number of foreign
+volunteers, the Christian army advanced toward the south. That of
+the infidels lay in the neighborhood of Baeza, and extended to the
+Sierra Morena.</p>
+<p>On July 12th, A.H. 608, the crusaders reached the mountainous
+chain which divides New Castile from Andalusia. They found not only
+the passes, but the summits of the mountains, occupied by the
+Almohades. To force a passage was impossible; and they even
+deliberated on retreating, so as to draw out, if possible, the
+enemy from positions so formidable, when a shepherd entered the
+camp of Alfonso and proposed to conduct the Christian army, by a
+path unknown to both armies, to the summit of this elevated
+chain&mdash;by a path, too, which would be invisible to the enemy's
+outposts. A few companies having accompanied the man and found him
+equally faithful and well informed, the whole army silently
+ascended and intrenched themselves on the summit, the level of
+which was extensive enough to contain them all. Below appeared the
+wide-spread tents of the Moslems, whose surprise was great on
+perceiving the heights thus occupied by the crusaders. For two days
+the latter, whose fatigues had been harassing, kept their position;
+but on the third day they descended into the plains of Tolosa,
+which were about to be immortalized by their valor. Their right
+wing was led by the King of Navarre, their left by the King of
+Aragon, while Alfonso took his station in the centre. Mahomet had
+drawn up his army in a similar manner; but, with a strong body of
+reserve, he occupied an elevation well defended besides by vast
+iron chains, which surrounded his impenetrable guard.[<a href=
+"#note-37">37</a>] In one hand he held a useless scimitar, in the
+other the <i>Koran</i>. The attack was made by the Christian centre
+against that of the Mahometans; and immediately the two wings moved
+against those of the enemy. The African centre, which consisted of
+the one hundred and sixty thousand volunteers, made a determined
+stand; and though it was broken, it soon rallied, on being
+reinforced from the reserve. At one time, indeed, the superiority
+of numbers was so great on the part of the Moslems that the troops
+of Alfonso appeared about to give way. At this moment that King,
+addressing the archbishop Rodrigo, who was with him, said, "Let us
+die here, prelate!" and he prepared to rush amid the dense ranks of
+the enemy. The prelate, however, and a Castilian general, retained
+him by the bridle of his horse, representing the rashness of his
+purpose, and advising him to reinforce his weak points by new
+succors. Accordingly those succors, among which were the vassals
+with the pennon of the archbishop, advanced to support the sinking
+Castilians. This manoeuvre decided the fortune of the day.[<a href=
+"#note-38">38</a>] The Mahometan centre, after a sharp conflict,
+was again broken, this time irretrievably, and a way opened to the
+intrenchments of the Emperor. Seeing the success of their allies,
+the two wings charged their opponents with double fury and
+triumphed likewise. But the Africans[<a href="#note-39">39</a>]
+rallied round Mahomet, and presented a mass deep and formidable to
+the conquerors. Rodrigo, with his brother prelate, the Archbishop
+of Narbonne, now incited the Christians to overcome this last
+obstacle: both intrepidly accompanied the van of the centre. The
+struggle was terrific, but short; myriads of the barbarians fell;
+the boundary was first broken down by the King of Navarre; the
+Castilians and Aragonese followed; all opponents were massacred or
+fled; and the victors began to ascend the eminence on which Mahomet
+still remained. Seeing the total destruction or flight of his vast
+host, the Emperor sorrowfully exclaimed, "Allah alone is just and
+powerful; the devil is false and wicked!" Scarcely had he uttered
+the truism, when an Alarab approached, leading by the hand a strong
+but nimble mule. "Prince of the faithful!" said the African, "how
+long wilt thou remain here? Dost thou not perceive that thy Moslems
+flee? The will of Allah be done! Mount this mule, which is fleeter
+than the bird of heaven, or even the arrow which strikes it; never
+yet did she fail her rider; away! for on thy safety depends that of
+us all!" Mahomet mounted the beast, while the Alarab ascended the
+Emperor's horse, and both soon outstripped not only the pursuers
+but the fugitives. The carnage of the latter was dreadful until
+darkness put an end to it. The victors now occupied the tents of
+the Mahometans, while the two martial prelates sounded the <i>Te
+Deum</i> for the most splendid success which had shone on the
+banners of the Christians since the time of Charles Martel. The
+loss of the Africans, even according to the Arabian writers, who
+admit that the centre was wholly destroyed, could not fall short of
+one hundred and sixty thousand men.[<a href="#note-40">40</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-37"><!-- Note Anchor 37 --></a>[Footnote 37: These
+chains are not mentioned by the Arabs; but what can be expected
+from their brevity?]</p>
+<p><a name="note-38"><!-- Note Anchor 38 --></a>[Footnote 38: The
+standard-bearer of Rodrigo, don Domingo Pasquel, canon of Toledo,
+showed that he was well fitted to serve the church militant; he
+twice carried his banner through the heart of the Mahometan
+forces.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-39"><!-- Note Anchor 39 --></a>[Footnote 39: The
+Arabian account says that the Andalusians were the first to
+flee.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-40"><!-- Note Anchor 40 --></a>[Footnote 40: Of
+this great battle we have an account by four eye-witnesses: 1, By
+King Alfonso, in a letter to the Pope; 2, by the historian Rodrigo
+of Toledo; 3, by Arnaud, Archbishop of Narbonne; 4, by the author
+of the <i>Annals of Toledo</i>.]</p>
+<p>The reduction of several towns, from Tolosa to Baeza,
+immediately followed this glorious victory&mdash;a victory in which
+Don Alfonso nobly redeemed his failure in the field of
+Zalaca&mdash;and which, in its immediate consequences, involved the
+ruin of the Mahometan empire in Spain. After an unsuccessful
+attempt on Ubeda, as the hot season was raging, the allies returned
+to Toledo, satisfied that the power of Mahomet was forever broken.
+That Emperor, indeed, did not long survive his disaster. Having
+precipitately fled to Morocco, he abandoned himself to licentious
+pleasures, left the cares of government to his son, or rather his
+ministers, and died on the 10th day of the moon Shaffan, A.H. 610
+(A.D. 1214), not without suspicion of poison.</p>
+<p>By recent writers of Spain the number of slain on the part of
+the Africans was two hundred thousand; on that of the Christians,
+twenty-five individuals only. Of course the whole campaign is
+represented as miraculous; and, indeed, actual miracles are
+recorded&mdash;which we have neither space nor inclination to
+notice.]</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_18"><!-- RULE4 18 --></a>
+<h2>THE FIRST CRUSADE</h2>
+<center>A.D. 1096-1099</center>
+<br>
+<center>SIR GEORGE W. COX</center>
+<p class="intro">Religious feeling in the eleventh century rose to
+a great pitch of enthusiasm, and led men of various nations, with
+still more various motives and aims in worldly affairs, to pursue
+one common end with their whole heart. Between the years 1096 and
+1270 these attempts of Christian nations to rescue the Holy Land
+from the "Infidels," as the Mahometans were called, added a wholly
+new character of human enterprise to the world's history.</p>
+<p class="intro">At the time&mdash;in the middle of the eleventh
+century&mdash;when the Seljuks, a Turkish tribe of Western Asia,
+had overrun Syria and Asia Minor, throwing the East into a state of
+anarchy, Europe was beginning to adopt modes of settled order.
+Through the Byzantine empire great numbers of pilgrims for
+centuries had passed to visit Palestine. With the improved
+condition of the western nations, which led to an extension of
+commerce in the East, the pilgrimage to that part of the world
+acquired a new importance. As early as 1064 a caravan of seven
+thousand pilgrims made their way to the neighborhood of Jerusalem,
+where they narrowly escaped destruction by the Bedouins, their
+rescue being effected by a Saracen emir.</p>
+<p class="intro">In 1070 the Seljuks took possession of Jerusalem,
+inflicting hardships on the pilgrims by intolerable exactions,
+insult, and plunder. Besides outraging Christian sentiment, they
+ruined the commerce of the western nations. Throughout Europe arose
+the cry for vengeance, and men's minds were fully prepared for an
+attempt to conquer Palestine when their leaders began to preach the
+sacred duty of delivering the Holy Sepulchre from the hands of the
+infidels.</p>
+<p class="intro">At the Council of Clermont, in 1094, Pope Urban II
+depicted the miseries of Christians in Palestine, and, with a power
+of eloquence unsurpassed in his day, called upon those who heard
+him to wipe off from the face of the earth the impurities which
+caused them, and to lift their oppressed fellow-Christians from the
+depths into which they had been trampled. He urged them to take up
+arms in the service of the Cross, at the same time setting before
+them the temporal, no less than the spiritual, advantages that
+would accrue from the conquest of a land "flowing with milk and
+honey," and which, he said, should be divided among them. He
+likewise offered them full pardon for all their sins.</p>
+<p class="intro">The enthusiasm of his hearers burst all bounds,
+and with one voice they cried: "God wills it! God wills it!" To all
+parts of Europe the fervor spread. The Pope was powerfully aided by
+an earnest and eloquent&mdash;if ignorant&mdash;monk, Peter the
+Hermit, of Amiens, who declared that he would rouse the martial
+spirit of Europe in the cause, and he himself was the
+first&mdash;with whatsoever of misguided zeal&mdash;to lead the way
+to the Holy Land.</p>
+<p class="intro">The crusades are so called from the simple
+circumstance that the badge chosen for the movement was the cross,
+which Pope Urban bade the Christian warriors wear on their breasts
+or on their shoulders, as the sign of Him who died for the
+salvation of their souls, and as the pledge of a vow that could
+never be recalled.</p>
+<p>In the enterprise to which Latin Christendom stood committed,
+the several nations or countries of Europe took equal parts; or,
+rather, no <i>nation</i>, as such, took any part in it at all; and
+in this fact we have the explanation of that want of coherent
+action, and even decent or average generalship, which is commonly
+seen in national undertakings. For the crusade there was no attempt
+at a commissariat, no care for a base of supplies; and the
+crusading hosts were a collection of individual adventurers who
+either went without making any provisions for their journey or
+provided for their own needs and those of their followers from
+their own resources. The number of these adventurers was naturally
+determined by the political conditions of the country from which
+they came. In Italy the struggle between the pope and the antipope
+went far toward chilling enthusiasm; and the recruits for the
+crusading army came chiefly from the Normans who had followed
+Robert Guiscard to the sunny southern lands. The Spaniards were
+busied with a crusade nearer home, and were already pushing back to
+the south the Mahometan dominion which had once threatened to pass
+the barriers of the Pyrenees and carry the Crescent to the shores
+of the Baltic Sea. About ten years before the council of Clermont
+the Moslem dynasty of Toledo had been expelled by Alfonso, King of
+Galicia: the kingdom of Cordova had fallen twenty years earlier
+(1065), and while Peter the Hermit was hurrying hither and thither
+through the countries of Northern Europe, the Christians of Spain
+were winning victories in Murcia, and the land was ringing with the
+exploits of the dauntless Cid, Ruy Diaz de Bivar. By the Germans
+the summons to the rescue of the Holy Sepulchre was received with
+comparative coldness; the partisans of emperors, who had been
+humbled to the dust by the predecessors of Urban, if not by
+himself, were not vehemently eager to obey it. The bishops of
+Salzburg, Passau, and Strasburg, the aged duke Guelph of Bavaria,
+had undertaken the toilsome and perilous journey: not one of them
+saw their homes again, and their death in the distant East was not
+regarded by their countrymen as an encouragement to follow their
+example. In England the English were too much weighed down by the
+miseries of the Conquest, the Normans too much occupied in
+strengthening their position, and the King, William the Red, more
+ready to take advantage of the needs of his brother Robert than to
+incur any risks of his own. The great movement came from the lands
+extending from the Scheldt to the Pyrenees. Franks and Normans
+alike made ready with impetuous haste for the great adventure; and
+tens of thousands, who could not wait for the formation of
+something like a regular army, hurried away, under leaders as
+frantic as themselves, to their inevitable doom.</p>
+<p>Little more than half the time allowed for the gathering of the
+crusaders had passed away, when a crowd of some sixty thousand men
+and women, neither caring nor thinking about the means by which
+their ends could be attained, insisted that the hermit Peter should
+lead them at once to the Holy City. Mere charity may justify the
+belief that some even among these may have been folk of decent
+lives moved by the earnest conviction that their going to Jerusalem
+would do some good; that the vast majority looked upon their vow as
+a license for the commission of any sin, there can be no moral
+doubt; that they exhibited not a single quality needed for the
+successful prosecution of their enterprise is absolutely certain.
+With a foolhardiness equal to his ignorance Peter undertook the
+task, in which he was aided by Walter the Penniless, a man with
+some pretensions to the soldier-like character. But the utter
+disorder of this motley host made it impossible for them to journey
+long together. At Cologne they parted company; and fifteen thousand
+under the penniless Walter made their way to the frontiers of
+Hungary, while Peter led onward a host which swelled gradually on
+the march to about forty thousand.</p>
+<p>Another army or horde of perhaps twenty thousand marched under
+the guidance of Emico, Count of Leiningen, a third under that of
+the monk Gottschalk, a man not notorious for the purity or
+disinterestedness of his motives. Behind these came a rabble, it is
+said, of two hundred thousand men, women, and children, preceded by
+a goose and a goat, or, as some have supposed, by banners on which,
+as symbols of the mysterious faith of Gnostics and Paulicians, the
+likeness of these animals was painted. In this vile horde no
+pretence was kept up of order or of decency. Sinning freely, it
+would seem, that grace might abound, they plundered and harried the
+lands through which they marched, while three thousand horsemen,
+headed by some counts and gentlemen, were not too dignified to act
+as their attendants and to share their spoil.</p>
+<p>But if they had no scruple in robbing Christians, their delight
+was to prove the reality of their mission as soldiers of the cross
+by plundering, torturing, and slaying Jews. The crusade against the
+Turk was interpreted as a crusade directed not less explicitly
+against the descendants of those who had crucified the Redeemer.
+The streets of Verdun and Treves and of the great cities on the
+Rhine ran red with the blood of their victims; and if some saved
+their lives by pretended conversions, many more cheated their
+persecutors by throwing their property and their persons either
+into the rivers or into the consuming fires.</p>
+<p>A space of six hundred miles lay between the Austrian frontier
+and Constantinople; and across the dreary waste the followers of
+Walter the Penniless struggled on, destitute of money, and rousing
+the hostility of the inhabitants whom they robbed and ill-used. In
+Bulgaria their misdeeds provoked reprisals which threatened their
+destruction; and none perhaps would have reached Constantinople if
+the imperial commander at Naissos had not rescued them from their
+enemies, supplied them with food, and guarded them through the
+remainder of their journey. These succors involved some costs; and
+the costs were paid by the sale of unarmed men among the pilgrims,
+and especially of the women and children, who were seized to
+provide the necessary funds. Of those who formed the train of the
+hermit Peter, seven thousand only, it is said, reached
+Constantinople.</p>
+<p>Of such a rabble rout the emperor Alexius[<a href=
+"#note-41">41</a>] needed not to be afraid. He had already seen and
+encountered far larger armies of Normans, Turks, and Romans; and he
+now extended to this vanguard of the hosts of Latin Christendom a
+hospitality which was almost immediately abused. They had refused
+to comply with his request that they should quietly await the
+arrival of their fellow-crusaders; and consulting the safety of his
+people not less than his own, he induced them to cross the
+Bosporus, and pitch their camp on Asiatic soil, the land which they
+had come to wrest from the unbelievers.</p>
+<p><a name="note-41"><!-- Note Anchor 41 --></a>[Footnote 41: Head
+of the Byzantine empire.]</p>
+<p>Alexius wished simply to be rid of their presence: they had to
+deal with an enemy still more crafty and formidable in the
+Seljukian sultan David. The vagrants whom Peter and Walter had
+brought thus far on the road to Jerusalem were scattered about the
+land in search of food; and it was no hard task for David to cheat
+the main body with the false tidings that their companions had
+carried the walls of Nice, and were revelling in the pleasures and
+spoils of his capital. The doomed horde rushed into the plain which
+fronts the city; and a vast heap of bones alone remained to tell
+the story of the great catastrophe, when the forces which might
+more legitimately claim the name of an army passed the spot where
+the Seljukian had entrapped and crushed his victims. In this wild
+expedition not less, it is said, than three hundred thousand human
+beings had already paid the penalty of their lives.</p>
+<p>Still the First Crusade was destined to accomplish more than any
+of the seven or eight crusades which followed it; and this measure
+of success it achieved probably because none of the great European
+sovereigns took part in it. The task of setting up a Latin kingdom
+in Palestine was to be achieved by princes of the second order.</p>
+<p>Of these the foremost and the most deservedly illustrious was
+Godfrey, of Bouillon in the Ardennes, a kinsman of the counts of
+Boulogne, and Duke of Lotharingen (Lorraine). In the service of the
+emperor Henry IV, the enemy or the victim of Hildebrand, he had
+been the first to mount the walls of Rome and cleave his way into
+the city; he might now hope that his crusading vow would be
+accepted as an atonement for his sacrilege. Speaking the Frank and
+Teutonic dialects with equal ease, he exercised by his bravery, his
+wisdom, and the uprightness of his life an influence which brought
+to his standard, it is said, not less than eighty thousand infantry
+and ten thousand horsemen, together with his brothers Baldwin and
+Eustace, Count of Boulogne.</p>
+<p>Among the most conspicuous of Godfrey's colleagues was Hugh,
+Count of Vermandois. With him may be placed the Norman duke Robert,
+whose carelessness had lost him the crown of England, and who had
+now pawned his duchy for a pittance scarcely less paltry than that
+for which Esau bartered away his birthright. The number of the
+great chiefs who led the pilgrims from Northern Europe is completed
+with the names of Robert, Count of Flanders, and of Stephen, Count
+of Chartres, Troyes, and Blois.</p>
+<p>Foremost, by virtue of his title and office, among the leaders
+of the southern bands was the papal legate Adhemar (Aymer) Bishop
+of Puy&mdash;a leader rather as guiding the counsels of the army
+than as gathering soldiers under his banner.</p>
+<p>A hundred thousand horse and foot attested, we are told, the
+greatness, the wealth, and the zeal of Raymond, Count of Toulouse,
+lord of Auvergne and Languedoc, who had grown old in warfare.</p>
+<p>Less tinged with the fanatical enthusiasm of his comrades, and
+certainly more cool and deliberate in his ambition, Bohemond, son
+of Robert Guiscard, looked to the crusade as a means by which he
+might regain the vast regions extending from the Dalmatian coast to
+the northern shores of the Aegean. Nay, if we are to believe
+William of Malmesbury, he urged Urban to set forward the enterprise
+for the very purpose, partly, of thus recovering what he was
+pleased to regard as his inheritance, and in part of enabling the
+Pontiff to suppress all opposition in Rome. Guiscard had left his
+Apulian domains to a younger son, and Bohemond was resolved, it
+would seem, to add to his principality of Tarentum a kingdom which
+would make him a formidable rival of the Eastern Emperor.</p>
+<p>Far above Bohemond rises his cousin Tancred, the son of the
+marquis Odo, surnamed the Good, and of Emma, the sister of Robert
+Guiscard.</p>
+<p>In Tancred was seen the embodiment of those peculiar sentiments
+and modes of thought which gave birth to the crusades, and to which
+the crusades in their turn imparted marvellous strength and
+splendor.</p>
+<p>The miserable remnant of three thousand men who escaped from the
+field of blood before the city of the Seljukian sultan found a
+refuge in Byzantine territory about the time when the better
+appointed armies of the crusaders were setting off on their
+eastward journey. The most disciplined of these troops set out with
+a vast following from the banks of the Meuse and the Moselle under
+Godfrey of Bouillon, who led them safely and without opposition to
+the Hungarian border. Here the armies of Hungary barred the way
+against the advance of a host at whose hands they dreaded a
+repetition of the havoc wrought by the lawless bands of Peter the
+Hermit and his self-chosen colleagues. Three weeks passed away in
+vain attempts to get over the difficulty. The Hungarian King
+demanded as a hostage Baldwin, the brother of the general: the
+demand was refused, and Godfrey put him to shame by surrendering
+himself. He asked only for a free passage and a free market; but
+although these were granted, it was not in his power to prevent
+some disorder and some depredations as his army or horde passed
+through the country. The mischief might have been much worse, had
+not the Hungarian cavalry, acting professedly as a friendly escort,
+but really as cautious warders, kept close to the crusading
+hosts.</p>
+<p>At length they reached the gates of Philippopolis, and here
+Godfrey learned that Hugh of Vermandois, whose coming had been
+announced to the Greek emperor Alexius by four-and-twenty knights
+in golden armor, and who styled himself the brother of the king of
+kings and lord of all the Frankish hosts, was a prisoner within the
+walls of Constantinople. With Robert of Normandy and Robert of
+Flanders, with Stephen of Chartres and some lesser chiefs, Hugh had
+chosen to make his way through Italy; and the charms of that
+voluptuous land had a greater effect, it seems, in breaking up and
+corrupting their forces than the delights of Capua had in weakening
+the soldiers of Hannibal.</p>
+<p>With little regard to order, the chiefs determined to cross the
+sea as best they might. Hugh embarked at Bari; and if we may
+believe Anna Comnena, the historian and the worshipper of her
+father Alexius, his fleet was broken by a tempest which shattered
+his own ship on the coast between Palos and Dyrrhachium (Durazzo),
+of which John Comnenus, the nephew of the Emperor, was at this time
+the governor. The Frank chief was here detained until the good
+pleasure of Alexius should be known. That wary and cunning prince
+saw at once how much might be made of his prisoner, who was by his
+orders conducted with careful respect and ceremony to the capital.
+Kept here really as a hostage, but welcomed to outward seeming as a
+friend, Hugh was so completely won by the charm of manner which
+Alexius well knew how and when to put on, that, paying him homage
+and declaring himself his man, he promised to do what he could to
+induce others to follow his example.</p>
+<p>From Philippopolis Godfrey sent ambassadors to Alexius,
+demanding the immediate surrender of Hugh. The request was refused,
+and Godfrey resumed his march, treating the land through which he
+passed as an enemy's country, until by way of Adrianople he at
+length appeared before the walls of the capital at Christmastide,
+1096. The fears of Alexius were aroused by the sight of a host so
+vast and so formidable: they quickened into terror as he thought of
+the armies which were still on their way under the command of
+Bohemond and Tancred. Of Godfrey, beyond the fact of his mission as
+a crusader, he knew little or nothing; but in Bohemond he saw one
+who claimed as his inheritance no small portion of his empire. This
+gathering of myriads, whom a false step on his part might convert
+into open enemies, was the result of his own entreaties urged
+through his envoys before Urban II in the Council of Piacenza; and
+his mind was divided between a feverish anxiety to hurry them on to
+their destination and so to rid himself of their hateful presence,
+and the desire to retain a hold not only on the crusading chiefs
+but on any conquests which they might make in Syria.</p>
+<p>Hugh was sent back to Godfrey's camp; but the quarrel was
+patched up, rather than ended. It was easier to rouse suspicion and
+jealousy than to restore friendship. But it was of the first
+importance for Alexius that he should secure the homage of the
+princes already gathered round his capital before the arrival of
+his ancient enemy Bohemond. In this he succeeded, and a compact was
+made by which Alexius pledged them his word that he would supply
+them with food and aid them in their eastward march, and would
+protect all pilgrims passing through his dominions. On the other
+hand the crusading chiefs, as already subjects of other sovereigns,
+gave their fealty to the Emperor as their liege lord only for the
+time during which they might remain within his borders, and
+undertook to restore to him such of their conquests as had been
+recently wrested from the empire.</p>
+<p>The policy and the bribes of Alexius had overcome the opposition
+of Bohemond. He was to experience a stouter resistance from Raymond
+of Toulouse, who, though he had been the first to enlist, was the
+last to set out on his crusade.</p>
+<p>The Count of Toulouse scarcely regarded himself as the vassal
+even of the French King. He was ready, he said, to be the friend of
+Alexius on equal terms; but he would not declare himself to be his
+man. On this point he was immovable, although Bohemond tried the
+effect of a threat (which was never forgiven), that if the quarrel
+came to blows, he should be found on the side of the Emperor. But
+Alexius soon saw that in Raymond he had to deal with an enthusiast
+as sincere and persistent as Godfrey. He took his measures
+accordingly, winning the heart of the old warrior, although he
+failed to compel his obedience.</p>
+<p>While Alexius was busied in dealing with Godfrey and Raymond,
+Bohemond and Tancred, he was not less anxiously occupied with the
+task of sending across the Bosporus the swarms which might soon
+become an army of devouring locusts round his own capital. It was
+easier to give them a welcome than to get rid of them: and more
+than two months had passed since Christmas, when the followers of
+Godfrey found themselves on the soil of Asia.</p>
+<p>Godfrey's men had no sooner been landed on the eastern side of
+the Bosporus than all the vessels which had transported them were
+brought back to the western shore. With great astuteness, and at
+the cost of large gifts, Alexius in like manner freed the
+neighborhood of his capital from the invading multitudes. As fast
+as they came they were hurried across, and the Emperor breathed
+more freely when, on the Feast of Pentecost, not a single Latin
+pilgrim remained on the European shore.</p>
+<p>The danger of conflict had throughout been imminent; and the
+danger arose, not so much from the fact that the crusaders were
+armed men, marching through the country of professed allies, but
+from the thorough antagonism between Greeks and Latins in modes of
+thought and habits of life. Nor must we forget the vast gulf which
+separated the Eastern from the Western clergy. The clergy of the
+West despised their brethren of the East for their cowardly
+submission to the secular arm. These, in their turn, shrunk with
+horror from the sight of bishops, priests, and monks riding with
+blood-stained weapons over fields of battle, and exhibiting at
+other times an ignorance equal to their ferocity.</p>
+<p>The strength and valor of the crusaders were soon to be tested.
+They were now face to face with the Turks, on whose cowardice Urban
+II had enlarged with so much complacency before the Council of
+Clermont. The sultan David, or Kilidje Arslan, placed his family
+and treasures in his capital city of Nice and retreated with fifty
+thousand horsemen to the mountains, whence he swooped down from
+time to time on the outposts of the Christians. By these his city
+was formally invested; and for seven weeks it was assailed to
+little purpose by the old instruments of Roman warfare, while some
+of the besiegers shot their weapons from the hill on which were
+mouldering the bones of the fanatic followers of Peter. It was
+protected to the west by the Askanian lake, and so long as the
+Turks had command of this lake they felt themselves safe. But
+Alexius sent thither on sledges a large number of boats, and the
+city, subjected to a double blockade, submitted to the Emperor, who
+was in no way anxious to see the crusaders masters of the place.
+The crusaders were making ready for the last assault, when they saw
+the imperial banner floating on the walls. Their disappointment at
+the escape of the miscreants, or unbelievers, for so they delighted
+to speak of them, was vented in threats which seemed to bode a
+renewal of the old troubles; but Alexius, with gifts, which added
+force to his words, professed that his only desire now, as it had
+been, was to forward them safely on their journey. Nor had they to
+go many stages before they found themselves again confronted with
+their adversary.</p>
+<p>The conflict took place near the Phrygian Dorylaion, and seemed
+at first to portend dire defeat to the crusaders. More than once
+the issue of the day seemed to be turned by the indomitable
+personal bravery of the Norman Robert, of Tancred, and of Bohemond;
+and when even those seemed likely to be borne down, they received
+timely succors from Godfrey, and Hugh of Vermandois, from Bishop
+Adhemar of Puy and from Raymond, Count of Toulouse. Still the Turks
+held out, and it seemed likely that they would long hold out, when
+the appearance of the last division of Raymond's army filled them
+with the fear that a new host was upon them.</p>
+<p>The crusaders had won a considerable victory. Three thousand
+knights belonging to the enemy had been slain, and Kilidje Arslan
+was hurrying away to enlist the services of his kinsmen. Meanwhile
+the Latin hosts were sweeping onward. Hundreds died from the heat,
+and dogs or goats took the place of the baggage-horses which had
+perished. At length Tancred with his troop found himself before
+Tarsus, the birthplace and the home of that single-hearted apostle
+who long ago had preached a gospel strangely unlike the creed of
+the crusaders. Following rapidly behind him, Baldwin saw with keen
+jealousy the banner of the Italian chief floating on its towers,
+and insisted on taking the precedence. Tancred pleaded the choice
+of the people and his own promise to protect them; but the
+intrigues of Baldwin changed their humor, and the rejection of
+Tancred by the men of Tarsus was followed by an attempt at private
+war between Tancred and Baldwin, in which the troops of Tancred
+were overborne. So early was the first harvest of murderous discord
+reaped among the holy warriors of the Cross. It was ruin, however,
+to stay where they were; and the main army again began its march,
+to undergo once more the old monotony of hardship and peril.</p>
+<p>A very small force would have sufficed to disorganize and rout
+them as they clambered over the defiles of Mount Taurus; nor could
+Raymond, recovering from a terrible illness, or Godfrey, suffering
+from wounds inflicted by a bear, have done much to help them. But
+for the present their enemies were dismayed; and Baldwin, brother
+of Godfrey, hastened with eagerness to obey a summons which
+besought him to aid the Greek or Armenian tyrant of Edessa. As
+Alexius had done to his brother, so this chief welcomed Baldwin as
+his son; but Baldwin, having once entered into the city, cared
+nothing for the means which had brought him thither, and the death
+of his adoptive father was followed by the establishment at Edessa
+of a Latin principality which lasted for fifty-four, or, as some
+have thought, forty-seven years. Baldwin had anticipated the
+unconditional surrender of Samosata; but the Turkish governor had
+some of the Edessenes in his power, and he refused to give up the
+city except on the payment of ten thousand gold pieces. The Turk
+shortly afterward fell into Baldwin's hands, and was put to
+death.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the main army of the crusaders was advancing toward
+the Syrian capital (Antioch), that ancient and luxurious city whose
+fame had gone over the whole Roman world for its magnificence, its
+unbounded wealth, its soft delights, and its unholy pleasures. The
+days of its greatest splendor had passed away. Its walls were
+partially in ruins; its buildings were in some parts crumbling away
+or had already fallen; but against assailants utterly ignorant and
+awkward in all that relates to the blockade of cities it was still
+a formidable position. Nor could they invest it until they had
+passed the iron bridge&mdash;so called from its iron-plated
+gates&mdash;of nine stone arches, which spanned the stream of the
+Ifrin at a distance of nine miles from the city. This bridge was
+carried by the impetuous charge of Robert of Normandy, aided by the
+more steady efforts of Godfrey; and in the language of an age which
+delighted in round numbers, a hundred thousand warriors hurried
+across to seize the splendid prize which now seemed almost within
+their grasp.</p>
+<p>But the city was in the hands of men who had been long
+accustomed to despise the Greeks, and who had not yet learned to
+respect the valor of the Latins. Preparing himself for a resolute
+defence, the Seljukian governor Baghasian had sent away as useless,
+if not mischievous, most of the Christians within the town; and the
+crusading chiefs had begun to discuss the prudence of postponing
+all operations till the spring, when Raymond of Toulouse with some
+other chiefs insisted that delay would imply fear, and that the
+imputation of cowardice would insure the paralysis of their
+enterprise. The city was therefore at once invested, so far as the
+forces of the crusaders could suffice to encircle it; and a siege
+began which in the eyes of the military historian must be
+absolutely without interest, and of which the issue was decided by
+paroxysms of fanatical vehemence on the one side, and by lack, not
+of bravery, but of generalship on the other. Of the eastern and
+northern walls the blockade was complete; of the west it was
+partial; and the failure to invest a portion of the western wall,
+with two out of the five gates of the city, left the movements of
+the Turks in this direction free.</p>
+<p>But the besiegers were in no hurry to begin the work of death.
+The wealth of the harvest and the vintage spread before them its
+irresistible temptations, and the herds feeding in the rich
+pastures seemed to promise an endless feast. The cattle, the corn,
+and the wine were alike wasted with besotted folly, while the Turks
+within the walls received tidings, it is said, of all that passed
+in the crusading camp from some Greek and Armenian Christians to
+whom they allowed free egress and ingress. Of this knowledge they
+availed themselves in planning the sallies by which they caused
+great distress to the besiegers, whose clumsy engines and devices
+seemed to produce no result beyond the waste of time, and who felt
+perhaps that they had done something when they blocked up the gate
+of the bridge with huge stones dug from the neighboring
+quarries.</p>
+<p>Three months passed away, and the crusaders found themselves not
+conquerors, but in desperate straits from famine. The winter rains
+had turned the land round their camp into a swamp, and lack of food
+left them more and more unable to resist the pestilential diseases
+which were rapidly thinning their numbers. A foraging expedition
+under Bohemond and Tancred filled the camp with food; it was again
+recklessly wasted. The second famine scared away Tatikios, the
+lieutenant of the Greek emperor Alexius; but the crusading chiefs
+were perhaps still more disgusted by the desertion of William of
+Melun, called "the Carpenter," from the sledgehammer blows which he
+dealt out in battle. Hunger obtained a victory even over the hermit
+Peter, who was stealing away with William of Melun, when he with
+his companion was caught by Tancred and brought back to the tent of
+Bohemond.</p>
+<p>For a moment the look of things was changed by the arrival of
+ambassadors from Egypt. To the Fatimite caliph of that country the
+progress of the crusading arms had thus far brought with it but
+little dissatisfaction. The humiliation of the Seljukian Turks
+could not fail to bring gain to himself, if the flood of Latin
+conquests could be checked and turned back in time. His generals
+besieged Jerusalem and Tyre; and when the Fatimite once more ruled
+in Palestine, his envoys hastened to the crusaders' camp to
+announce the deliverance of the Holy Land from its oppressors, to
+assure to all unarmed and peaceable pilgrims a month's unmolested
+sojourn in Jerusalem, and to promise them his aid during their
+march, on condition that they should acknowledge his supremacy
+within the limits of his Syrian empire.</p>
+<p>The arguments and threats of the Caliph were alike thrown away.
+The Latin chiefs disclaimed all interest in the feuds and quarrels
+of rival sultans and in the fortunes of Mahometan sects. God
+himself had destined Jerusalem for the Christians, and if any held
+it who were not Christians, these were usurpers whose resistance
+must be punished by their expulsion or their death. The envoys
+departed not encouraged by this answer, and still more perplexed by
+the appearance of plenty and by the magnificence of a camp in which
+they had expected to see a terrible spectacle of disorder and
+misery.</p>
+<p>The resolute persistence of the besiegers convinced Baghasian of
+the need of reinforcements. These were hastening to him from
+Caesarea, Aleppo, and other places, when they were cut off by
+Bohemond and Raymond, who sent a multitude of heads to the envoys
+of the Fatimite Caliph, and discharged many hundreds from their
+engines into the city of Antioch. The Turks had their opportunity
+for reprisals when the arrival of some Pisan and Genoese ships at
+the mouth of the Orontes drew off the greater part of the besieging
+army. The crusaders were returning with provisions and arms, when
+their enemies started upon them from an ambuscade. The battle was
+fierce; but the defeat of Raymond, which threatened dire disaster,
+was changed into victory on the arrival of Godfrey and the Norman
+Robert, whose exploits equalled or surpassed, if we are to believe
+the story, even those of Arthur, Lancelot, or Tristram. Hundreds,
+if not thousands, of Turks fell. Their bodies were buried by their
+comrades in the cemetery without the walls: the Christians dug them
+up, severed the heads from the trunks, and paraded the ghastly
+trophies on their pikes, not forgetting to send a goodly number to
+the Egyptian Caliph, by way of showing how his Seljukian friends or
+enemies had fared. The picture is disgusting; but if we shut our
+eyes to these loathsome details, the truth of the history is gone.
+We are dealing with the wars of savages, and it is right that we
+should know this.</p>
+<p>The next scene exhibits Godfrey and Bohemond in fierce quarrel
+about a splendid tent, which, being intended as a gift for the
+former, had been seized by an Armenian chief and sent to the
+latter. But there was now more serious business on hand. Rumor
+spoke of the near approach of a Persian army, and the besieged,
+under the plea of wishing to arrange terms of capitulation,
+obtained a truce which they sought probably only for the sake of
+gaining time. The days passed by, but no offers were made; and
+their disposition was shown by seizing a crusading knight in the
+groves near the city and tearing his body in pieces. The Latins
+returned with increased fury to the siege: but the defence,
+although more feeble, was still protracted, and Bohemond began to
+feel not only that fraud might succeed where force had failed, but
+that from fraud he might reap, not safety merely, but wealth and
+greatness. His plans were laid with a renegade Christian named
+Phirouz, high in the favor of the governor, with whom he had come
+into contact either during the truce or in some other way. By
+splendid promises he insured the zealous aid of his new ally, and
+then came forward in the council with the assurance that he could
+place the city in their hands, but that he could do this only on
+condition that he should rule in Antioch as Baldwin ruled in
+Edessa. His claim was angrily opposed by the Proven&ccedil;al
+Raymond; but this opposition was overruled, and it was resolved
+that the plan should be carried out at once.</p>
+<p>There was need for so doing. Rumors spread within the city that
+some attempt was to be made to betray the place to the besiegers,
+and hints or open accusations pointed out Phirouz as the traitor.
+Like other traitors, the renegade thought it best to anticipate the
+charge by urging that the guards of the towers should on the very
+next day be changed. His proposal was received as indubitable proof
+of his innocence and his faithfulness; but he had made up his mind
+that Antioch should fall that night, and that night by means of a
+rope ladder Bohemond with about sixty followers (the ropes broke
+before more could ascend) climbed up the wall. Seizing ten towers,
+of which all the guards were killed, they opened a gate, and the
+Christian host rushed in. The banner of Bohemond rose on one of the
+towers; the trumpets sounded for the onset, and a carnage began in
+which at first the assailants took no heed to distinguish between
+the Christian and the Turk. In the awful confusion of the moment
+some of the besieged made their way to the citadel, and there shut
+themselves in, ready to resist to the death. Of the rest few
+escaped; ten thousand, it is said, were massacred. Baghasian with
+some friends passed out beyond the besiegers' lines, but, fainting
+from loss of blood, he fell from his horse, and his companions
+hurried on. A Syrian Christian heard his groans, and striking off
+his head carried the prize to the camp of the conquerors. Phirouz
+lived to be a second time a renegade, and to close his career as a
+thief.</p>
+<p>The victory was for the crusaders a change from famine to
+abundance; and their feasting was accompanied by the wildest riot
+and the most filthy debauchery. But if heedless waste may have been
+one of the most venial of their sins, it was the greatest of their
+blunders. The reports which spoke of the approach of the Persians
+were not false. The Turks within the citadel suddenly found that
+they were rather besiegers than besieged, and that the Christians'
+were hemmed in by the myriads of Kerboga, Prince of Mosul, and the
+warriors of Kilidje Arslan. The old horrors of famine were now
+repeated, but in greater intensity; and the doom of the Latin host
+seemed now to be sealed.</p>
+<p>Stephen, Count of Chartres, had deserted his companions before
+the fall of the city; others now followed his example, and with him
+set out on their return to Europe. In Phrygia, Stephen encountered
+the emperor Alexius, who was marching to the aid of the crusaders,
+not only with a Greek army, but with a force of well-appointed
+pilgrims who had reached Constantinople after the departure of
+Godfrey and his fellows. The story told by Stephen drove out of his
+head every thought except that of his own safety. The order for
+retreat was given; and the pilgrim warriors, not less than the
+Greeks, were compelled to turn their faces westward.</p>
+<p>In Antioch the crusading soldiers were fast sinking into utter
+despair. Discipline had well-nigh come to an end, and so obstinate
+was their refusal to bear arms any longer that Bohemond resolved to
+burn them out of their quarters. These were consumed by the flames,
+which spread so rapidly as to fill him with fear that he had
+destroyed, not only their dwellings, but his whole principality.
+His experiment brought the men back to their duty; but so
+despondingly was their work done that but for some signal succor
+the end, it was manifest, must soon come. In a credulous age such
+succor at the darkest hour, if obtained at all, will generally be
+obtained through miracle. A Lombard priest came forward, to whom
+St. Ambrose of Milan had declared in a vision that the third year
+of the crusade should see the conquest of Jerusalem; another had
+seen the Saviour himself, attended by his Virgin Mother and the
+Prince of the Apostles, had heard from his lips a stern rebuke of
+the crusaders for yielding to the seductions of pagan
+women&mdash;as if the profession of Christianity altered the color
+and the guilt of a vice&mdash;and lastly had received the distinct
+assurance that in five days they should have the help which they
+needed.</p>
+<p>The hopes of the crusaders were roused; with hope came a return
+of vigorous energy; and Peter Barthelemy, chaplain to Raymond of
+Toulouse, seized the opportunity for recounting a vision which was
+to be something more than a dream. To him St. Andrew had revealed
+the fact that in the Church of St. Peter lay hidden the steel head
+of the spear which had pierced the side of the Redeemer as he hung
+upon the cross; and that Holy Lance should win them victory over
+all their enemies as surely as the spear which imparted
+irresistible power to the Knight of the Sangreal. After two days of
+special devotion they were to search for the long-lost weapon; on
+the third day the workmen began to dig, but until the sun had set
+they toiled in vain. The darkness of night made it easier for the
+chaplain to play the part which Sir Walter Scott, in the
+<i>Antiquary</i>, assigns to Herman Dousterswivel in the ruins of
+St. Ruth. Barefooted and with a single garment the priest went down
+into the pit. For a time the strokes of his spade were heard, and
+then the sacred relic was found, carefully wrapped in a veil of
+silk and gold. The priest proclaimed his discovery; the people
+rushed into the church; and from the church throughout the city
+spread the flame of a fierce enthusiasm.</p>
+<p>Nine or ten months later Peter Barthelemy paid the penalty of
+his life for his fraud or his superstition. A bribe taken by his
+master Raymond brought that chief into ill odor with his comrades,
+and let loose against his chaplain the tongue of Arnold, the
+chaplain of Bohemond. Raymond had traded on fresh visions of his
+clerk; and Arnold boldly attacked him in his citadel by denying the
+genuineness of the Holy Lance. Peter appealed to the ordeal of
+fire. He passed through the flames, as it seemed, unhurt. The
+bystanders pressed to feel his flesh, and were vehement in their
+rejoicings at the result which vindicated his integrity. He had
+really received fatal injuries. Twelve days afterward he died, and
+Raymond suffered greatly in his dignity and his influence.</p>
+<p>The infidel was doomed; but the crusaders resolved to give him
+one chance of escape. Peter the Hermit was sent as their envoy to
+Kerboga to offer the alternative of departure from a land which St.
+Peter had bestowed on the faithful, or of baptism which should
+leave him master of the city and territory of Antioch. The reply
+was short and decisive. The Turk would not embrace an idolatry
+which he hated and despised, nor would he give up soil which
+belonged to him by right of conquest. The report of the hermit
+raised the spirit of the crusaders to fever heat; and on the feast
+of St. Peter and St. Paul they marched out in twelve divisions, in
+remembrance of the mission of the Twelve Apostles, while Raymond of
+Toulouse remained to prevent the escape of the Turks shut up in the
+citadel. The Holy Lance was borne by the papal legate, Adhemar,
+Bishop of Puy; and the morning air laden with the perfume of roses
+was now regarded as a sign assuring them of the divine favor. They
+were prepared to see good omens in everything; and they went in
+full confidence that departed saints would, as they had been told,
+take part in the battle and smite down the infidel. The
+fight&mdash;one of brute force on the Christian side, of some
+little skill as well as strength on the other&mdash;had gone on for
+some time when such help seemed to become needful. Tancred had
+hurried to the aid of Bohemond, who was grievously pressed by
+Kilidje Arslan; and Kerboga was bearing heavily on Godfrey and Hugh
+of Vermandois, when, clothed in white armor and riding on white
+horses, some human forms were seen on the neighboring heights. "The
+saints are coming to your aid," shouted the Bishop of Puy, and the
+people saw in these radiant strangers the martyrs St. George, St.
+Maurice, and St. Theodore.</p>
+<p>Without awaiting their nearer approach the crusaders turned on
+the enemy with a force and fury which were now irresistible. Their
+cavalry could do little. Two hundred horses only remained of the
+sixty thousand which had filled the plain a few months before. But
+the hedge of spears advanced like a wall of iron, and the Turks
+gave way, broke, and fled. It was rout, not retreat; and with the
+crusaders victory was followed by the massacre of men, women, and
+children. The garrison in the citadel at once surrendered. Some
+declared themselves Christians and were baptized; those who refused
+to abandon Islam were taken to the nearest Mohametan territory. The
+city was the prize of Bohemond; and in his keeping it remained,
+although Raymond of Toulouse had made an effort to seize it by
+hoisting his banner on the walls. The work of pillage being ended,
+the churches were cleansed and repaired, and their altars blazed
+with golden spoils taken from the infidel. The Greek Patriarch was
+again seated on his throne; but he held his office at the good
+pleasure of the Latins, and two years later he was made to give
+place to Bernard, a chaplain of the Bishop of Puy.</p>
+<p>Ten months had passed away after the conquest of Antioch when
+the main body of the crusading army set out on its march to
+Jerusalem. They had wished to depart at once, but their chiefs
+dreaded to encounter waterless wastes at the end of a Syrian
+summer, and for the present they were content to send Hugh of
+Vermandois and Baldwin of Hainault as envoys to the Greek Emperor,
+to reproach him with his remissness or his want of faith. But the
+miseries endured by Christians and Turks were the pleasantest
+tidings in the ears of Alexius, for in the weakening of both lay
+his own strength; and he saw with satisfaction the departure of
+Hugh, not for Antioch, but for Europe, whither Stephen of Chartres
+had preceded him.</p>
+<p>Winter came, but the chiefs still lingered at Antioch. Some were
+occupied in expeditions against neighboring cities; but a more
+pressing care was the plague which punished the foulness and
+disorder of the pilgrims. A band of fifteen hundred Germans,
+recently landed in strong health and full equipments, were all, it
+is said, cut off; and among the victims the most lamented perhaps
+was the papal legate Adhemar. A feeling of discouragement was again
+spreading through the army generally. The chiefs vainly entreated
+the Pope to visit the city where the disciples of St. Peter first
+received the Christian name; the people were disheartened by the
+animosities and the selfish or crooked policy of their chiefs.
+Raymond still hankered after the principality of Antioch, and
+insisted that Bohemond and his people should share in the last
+great enterprise of the crusade. More disgraceful than these feuds
+were the scenes witnessed during the siege and after the conquest
+of Marra. Heedlessness and waste soon brought the assailants to
+devour the flesh of dogs and of human beings. The bodies of Turks
+were torn from their sepulchres, ripped up for the gold which they
+were supposed to have swallowed, and the fragments cooked and
+eaten. Of the besieged many slew themselves to avoid falling into
+the hands of the Christians; to some Bohemond, tempted by a large
+bribe, gave an assurance of safety. When the massacre had begun he
+ordered these to be brought forward. The weak and old he
+slaughtered; the rest he sent to the slave markets of Antioch.</p>
+<p>A weak attempt made by Alexius to detain the crusaders only
+spurred them to more vigorous efforts. They had already left
+Antioch, and Laodicea was in their hands, when he desired them to
+await his coming in June. The chiefs, remembering the departure of
+Tatikios with his Byzantine troops for Cyprus, retorted that he had
+broken his compact, and had therefore no further claims on their
+obedience. Hastening on their way, they crossed the plain of
+Berytos (Beyrout), overlooked by the eternal snows of Lebanon,
+along the narrow strip of land whence the great Phoenician cities
+had sent their seamen and their colonists, with all the wealth of
+the East, to the shores of the Adriatic and the gates of the
+Mediterranean. Having reached Jaffa, they turned inland to Ramlah,
+a town sixteen miles only from Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>Two days later the crusaders came in sight of the Holy City, the
+object of their long pilgrimage, the cause of wretchedness and
+death to millions. As their eyes rested on the scene hallowed to
+them through all the associations of their faith, the crusaders
+passed in an instant from fierce enthusiasm to a humiliation which
+showed itself in sighs and tears. All fell on their knees, to kiss
+the sacred earth and to pour forth thanksgivings that they had been
+suffered to look upon the desire of their eyes. Putting aside their
+armor and their weapons, they advanced in pilgrim's garb and with
+bare feet toward the spot which the Saviour had trodden in the
+hours of his agony and his passion.</p>
+<p>But before their feelings of devotion could be indulged, there
+was other work to be done. The chiefs took up their posts on those
+sides from which the nature of the ground gave most hope of a
+successful assault. On the northern side were Godfrey and Tancred,
+Robert of Flanders, and Robert of Normandy; on the west Raymond
+with his Proven&ccedil;als. On the fifth day, without siege
+instruments, with only one ladder, and trusting to mere weight, the
+crusaders made a desperate assault upon the walls. Some succeeded
+in reaching the summit, and the very rashness of their attack
+struck terror for a moment into their enemies. But the garrison
+soon rallied, and the invaders were all driven back or hurled from
+the ramparts. The task, it was manifest, must be undertaken in a
+more formal manner. Siege engines must be made, and the palm and
+olive of the immediate neighborhood would not supply fit materials
+for their construction.</p>
+<p>These were obtained from the woods of Shechem, a distance of
+thirty miles; and the work of preparation was carried on under the
+guidance of Gaston of Beam by the crews of some Genoese vessels
+which had recently anchored at Jaffa. So passed away more than
+thirty days, days of intense suffering to the besiegers. At Antioch
+they had been distressed chiefly by famine: in place of this
+wretchedness they had here the greater miseries of thirst. The
+enemy had carefully destroyed every place which might serve as a
+receptacle of water; and in seeking for it over miles of desolate
+country they were exposed to the harassing attacks of Moslem
+horsemen. Nor had visions and miracles improved the morals or
+discipline of the camp; and the ghost of Adhemar of Puy appeared to
+rebuke the horrible sins which were drawing down upon them the
+judgments of the Almighty. Better service was done by the
+generosity of Tancred, who made up his quarrel with Raymond: and
+the enthusiasm of the crusaders was again roused by the preaching
+of Arnold and the hermit Peter. The narrative of the siege of
+Jericho in the book of Joshua suggested probably the procession in
+which the clergy singing hymns preceded the laity round the walls
+of the city.</p>
+<p>The Saracens on the ramparts mocked their devotions by throwing
+dirt upon crucifixes; but they paid a terrible price for these
+insults. On the next day the final assault began, and was carried
+on through the day with the same monotony of brute force and
+carnage which marked all the operations of this merciless war. The
+darkness of night brought no rest. The actual combat was suspended,
+but the besieged were incessantly occupied in repairing the
+breaches made by the assailants, while these were busied in making
+their dispositions for the last mortal conflict. In the midst of
+that deadly struggle, when it seemed that the Cross must after all
+go down before the Crescent, a knight was seen on Mount Olivet,
+waving his glistening shield to rouse the champions of the Holy
+Sepulchre to the supreme effort. "It is St. George the Martyr who
+has come again to help us," cried Godfrey, and at his words the
+crusaders started up without a feeling of fatigue and carried
+everything before them.</p>
+<p>The day, we are told, was Friday, the hour was three in the
+afternoon&mdash;the moment at which the last cry from the cross
+announced the accomplishment of the Saviour's passion&mdash;when
+Letold of Tournay stood, the first victorious champion of the
+Cross, on the walls of Jerusalem. Next to him came, we are told,
+his brother Engelbert; the third was Godfrey. Tancred with the two
+Roberts stormed the gate of St. Stephen; the Proven&ccedil;als
+climbed the ramparts by ladders, and the conquest of Jerusalem was
+achieved. The insults offered a little while ago to the crucifixes
+were avenged by Godfrey's orders in the massacre of hundreds; the
+carnage in the Mosque of Omar swept away the bodies of thousands in
+a deluge of human blood. The Jews were all burnt alive in their
+synagogues. The horses of the crusaders, who rode up to the porch
+of the Temple, were&mdash;so the story goes&mdash;up to the knees
+in the loathsome stream; and the forms of Christian knights hacking
+and hewing the bodies of the living and the dead furnished a
+pleasant commentary on the sermon of Urban at Clermont.</p>
+<p>From the duties of slaughter these disciples of the Lamb of God
+passed to those of devotion. Bareheaded and barefooted, clad in a
+robe of pure white linen, in an ecstasy of joy and thankfulness
+mingled with profound contrition, Godfrey entered the Church of the
+Holy Sepulchre and knelt at the tomb of his Lord. With groans and
+tears his followers came, each in his turn, to offer his praises
+for the divine mercy which had vouchsafed this triumph to the
+armies of Christendom. With feverish earnestness they poured forth
+the vows which bound them to sin no more, and the excitement of
+prayer and slaughter, perhaps of both combined, led them to see
+everything which might be needed to give effect to the closing
+scene of this appalling tragedy. As the saints had arisen from
+their graves when the Son of Man gave up the ghost on Calvary, so
+the spirits of the pilgrims who had died on the terrible journey
+came to take part in the great thanksgiving. Foremost among them
+was Adhemar of Puy, rejoicing in the prayers for forgiveness and
+the resolutions of repentance which promised a new era of peace
+upon earth and of good-will toward all men.</p>
+<p>With departed saints were mingled living men who deserved all
+the honor which might be paid to them. The backsliding of the
+hermit Peter was blotted out of the memory of those who remembered
+only the fiery eloquence which had first called them to their now
+triumphant pilgrimage, and the zeal which had stirred the heart of
+Christendom to cut short the tyranny of the Unbeliever in the
+birthland of Christianity. The assembled throng fell down at his
+feet, and gave thanks to God, who had vouchsafed to them such a
+teacher. His task was done, and in the annals of the time Peter is
+heard of no more.</p>
+<p>On this dreadful day Tancred had spared three hundred captives
+to whom he had given a standard as a pledge of his protection and a
+guarantee of their safety. Such misplaced mercy was a crime in the
+eyes of the crusaders. The massacre of the first day may have been
+aggravated by the ungovernable excitement of victory; but it was
+resolved that on the next day there should be offered up a more
+solemn and deliberate sacrifice. The men whom Tancred had spared
+were all murdered; and the wrath of Tancred was roused, not by
+their fate, but by an act which called his honor into question. The
+butchery went on with impartial completeness, old and young,
+decrepit men and women, mothers with their infants, boys and girls,
+young men and maidens in the bloom of their vigor, all were mowed
+down, and their bodies mangled until heads and limbs were tossed
+together in awful chaos. A few were hidden away by Raymond of
+Toulouse; his motive, however, was not mercy, but the prospects of
+gain in the slave market. After this great act of faith and
+devotion the streets of the Holy City were washed by Saracen
+prisoners; but whether these were butchered when their work was
+ended we are not told.</p>
+<p>Four centuries and a half had passed away, when these things
+were done, since Omar had entered Jerusalem as a conqueror and
+knelt outside the Church of Constantine, that his followers might
+not trespass within it on the privileges of the Christians. The
+contrast is at the least marked between the Caliph of the Prophet
+and the children of the Holy Catholic Church.</p>
+<p>When, the business of the slaughter being ended, the chiefs met
+to choose a king for the realm which they had won with their
+swords, one man only appeared to whom the crown could fitly be
+offered. Baldwin was lord of Edessa; Bohemond ruled at Antioch;
+Hugh of Vermandois and Stephen of Chartres had returned to Europe;
+Robert of Flanders cared not to stay; the Norman Robert had no mind
+to forfeit the duchy which he had mortgaged; and Raymond was
+discredited by his avarice, and in part also by his traffic in the
+visions of Peter Barthelemy. But in the city where his Lord had
+worn the thorny crown, the veteran leader who had looked on
+ruthless slaughter without blanching and had borne his share in
+swelling the stream of blood would wear no earthly diadem nor take
+the title of king. He would watch over his Master's grave and the
+interests of his worshippers under the humble guise of Baron and
+Defender of the Holy Sepulchre; and as such, a fortnight after his
+election, Godfrey departed to do battle with the hosts of the
+Fatimite Caliph of Egypt, who now felt that the loss of Jerusalem
+was too high a price for the humiliation of his rivals. The
+conflict took place at Ascalon, and the Fatimite army was miserably
+routed. Godfrey returned to Jerusalem, to hang the sword and
+standard of the Sultan before the Holy Sepulchre and to bid
+farewell to the pilgrims who were now to set out on their homeward
+journey. He retained, with three hundred knights under Tancred,
+only two thousand foot soldiers for the defence of his kingdom; and
+so ended the first act in the great drama of the crusades.</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_19"><!-- RULE4 19 --></a>
+<h2>FOUNDATION OF THE ORDER OF KNIGHTS TEMPLARS</h2>
+<center>A.D. 1118</center>
+<br>
+<center>CHARLES G. ADDISON</center>
+<p class="intro">Among the military orders of past ages, that of
+the Knights Templars, founded for the defence of the Latin kingdom
+of Jerusalem, with its lofty motive, its superb organization and
+discipline, and its history extending over nearly two centuries, is
+justly accounted one of the most illustrious. At the period when
+this extraordinary and romantic order came into existence, the
+contrasting spirits of warlike enterprise and monastic retirement
+were drawing men, some from the field to the cloister, others from
+the life of ascetic piety to the scenes of strife. There appeared a
+strange blending of these two tendencies, which indeed was the
+leading characteristic of the time. This union of the religious
+with the militant spirit had been promoted by the enthusiasm of the
+crusades which had already been undertaken, and among the crusaders
+themselves the blended spiritual and military ideal of the holy war
+had its complete development. Let us recall the reasons and the
+beginnings of the crusades themselves.</p>
+<p class="intro">Upon the legendary discovery of the Holy Sepulchre
+by Helena, the mother of Constantine, about three hundred years
+after the death of Christ, and the consequent erection, as it is
+said, by her great son&mdash;the first Christian emperor of
+Rome&mdash;of the magnificent Church of the Holy Sepulchre over the
+sacred spot, a tide of pilgrimage set in toward Jerusalem which
+increased in strength as Christianity gradually spread throughout
+Europe. When in A.D. 637 the Holy City was surrendered to the
+Saracens, the caliph Omar gave guarantees for the security of the
+Christian population. Under this safeguard the pilgrimages to
+Jerusalem continued to increase, until in 1064 the Holy Sepulchre
+was visited by seven thousand pilgrims, led by an archbishop and
+three bishops. But in 1065 Jerusalem was taken by the Turcomans,
+who massacred three thousand citizens, and placed the command of
+the city in savage hands. Terrible oppression of the Christians
+there followed; the Patriarch of Jerusalem was dragged by the hair
+of his head over the sacred pavement of the Church of the Holy
+Sepulchre and cast into a dungeon for ransom; extortion,
+imprisonment, and massacre were indiscriminately visited upon the
+people.</p>
+<p class="intro">Such were the conditions that aroused the
+indignant spirit of Christendom and prepared it for the cry of
+Peter the Hermit, which awoke the wild enthusiasm of the crusades.
+When Jerusalem was captured by the crusaders under Godfrey of
+Bouillon in 1099, the zeal of pilgrimage burst forth anew. But
+although Jerusalem was delivered, Palestine was still infested with
+the infidels, who made it as hazardous as before for the pilgrims
+entering there. Some means for their protection must be found, and
+out of this necessity grew the great military order of which the
+following pages treat.</p>
+<p>To alleviate the dangers and distresses to which the pilgrim
+enthusiasts were exposed; to guard the honor of the saintly virgins
+and matrons, and to protect the gray hairs of the venerable
+palmers, nine noble knights formed a holy brotherhood-in-arms, and
+entered into a solemn compact to aid one another in clearing the
+highways of infidels and robbers, and in protecting the pilgrims
+through the passes and defiles of the mountains to the Holy City.
+Warmed with the religious and military fervor of the day, and
+animated by the sacredness of the cause to which they had devoted
+their swords, they called themselves the "Poor Fellow-soldiers of
+Jesus Christ."</p>
+<p>They renounced the world and its pleasures, and in the Holy
+Church of the Resurrection, in the presence of the Patriarch of
+Jerusalem, they embraced vows of perpetual chastity, obedience, and
+poverty, after the manner of monks. Uniting in themselves the two
+most popular qualities of the age, devotion and valor, and
+exercising them in the most popular of all enterprises, the
+protection of the pilgrims and of the road to the Holy Sepulchre,
+they speedily acquired a vast reputation and a splendid renown.</p>
+<p>At first, we are told, they had no church and no particular
+place of abode, but in the year of our Lord 1118&mdash;nineteen
+years after the conquest of Jerusalem by the crusaders&mdash;they
+had rendered such good and acceptable service to the Christians
+that Baldwin II, King of Jerusalem, granted them a place of
+habitation within the sacred enclosure of the Temple on Mount
+Moriah, amid those holy and magnificent structures, partly erected
+by the Christian emperor Justinian and partly built by the caliph
+Omar, which were then exhibited by the monks and priests of
+Jerusalem, whose restless zeal led them to practise on the
+credulity of the pilgrims, and to multiply relics and all objects
+likely to be sacred in their eyes, as the Temple of Solomon, whence
+the "Poor Fellow-soldiers of Jesus Christ" came thenceforth to be
+known by the name of "the Knighthood of the Temple of Solomon."</p>
+<p>A few remarks in elucidation of the name "Templars," or "Knights
+of the Temple," may not be unacceptable.</p>
+<p>By the Mussulmans the site of the great Jewish Temple on Mount
+Moriah has always been regarded with peculiar veneration. Mahomet,
+in the first year of the publication of the <i>Koran</i>, directed
+his followers, when at prayer, to turn their faces toward it, and
+pilgrimages have constantly been made to the holy spot by devout
+Moslems. On the conquest of Jerusalem by the Arabians, it was the
+first care of the caliph Omar to rebuild "the Temple of the Lord."
+Assisted by the principal chieftains of his army, the Commander of
+the Faithful undertook the pious office of clearing the ground with
+his own hands, and of tracing out the foundations of the
+magnificent mosque which now crowns with its dark and swelling dome
+the elevated summit of Mount Moriah.</p>
+<p>This great house of prayer, the most holy Mussulman temple in
+the world after that of Mecca, is erected over the spot where
+"Solomon began to build the house of the Lord at Jerusalem in Mount
+Moriah, where the Lord appeared unto David his father, in the place
+that David had prepared in the threshing-floor of Oman the
+Jebusite."</p>
+<p>It remains to this day in a state of perfect preservation, and
+is one of the finest specimens of Saracenic architecture in
+existence. It is entered by four spacious doorways, each door
+facing one of the cardinal points: the <i>Bab el D'Jannat</i> (or
+"Gate of the Garden"), on the north; the <i>Bab el Kebla</i>, (or
+"Gate of Prayer"), on the south; the <i>Bab ibn el Daoud</i> (or
+"Gate of the Son of David"), on the east; and the <i>Bab el
+Garbi</i>, on the west. By the Arabian geographers it is called
+<i>Beit Allah</i> ("the House of God"), also <i>Beit Almokaddas</i>
+or <i>Beit Almacdes</i> ("the Holy House"). From it Jerusalem
+derives its Arabic name, <i>El Kods</i> ("the Holy"), <i>El
+Schereef</i> ("the Noble"), and <i>El Mobarek</i> ("the Blessed");
+while the governors of the city, instead of the customary
+high-sounding titles of sovereignty and dominion, take the simple
+title of <i>Hami</i> (or "Protectors").</p>
+<p>On the conquest of Jerusalem by the crusaders, the crescent was
+torn down from the summit of this famous Mussulman temple, and was
+replaced by an immense golden cross, and the edifice was then
+consecrated to the services of the Christian religion, but retained
+its simple appellation of "the Temple of the Lord." William,
+Archbishop of Tyre and Chancellor of the Kingdom of Jerusalem,
+gives an interesting account of this famous edifice as it existed
+in his time, during the Latin dominion. He speaks of the splendid
+mosaic work, of the Arabic characters setting forth the name of the
+founder and the cost of the undertaking, and of the famous rock
+under the centre of the dome, which is to this day shown by the
+Moslems as the spot whereon the destroying angel stood, "with his
+drawn sword in his hand stretched out over Jerusalem." This rock,
+he informs us, was left exposed and uncovered for the space of
+fifteen years after the conquest of the Holy City by the crusaders,
+but was, after that period, cased with a handsome altar of white
+marble, upon which the priests daily said mass.</p>
+<p>To the south of this holy Mussulman temple, on the extreme edge
+of the summit of Mount Moriah, and resting against the modern walls
+of the town of Jerusalem, stands the venerable Church of the
+Virgin, erected by the emperor Justinian, whose stupendous
+foundations, remaining to this day, fully justify the astonishing
+description given of the building by Procopius. That writer informs
+us that in order to get a level surface for the erection of the
+edifice, it was necessary, on the east and south sides of the hill,
+to raise up a wall of masonry from the valley below, and to
+construct a vast foundation, partly composed of solid stone and
+partly of arches and pillars. The stones were of such magnitude
+that each block required to be transported in a truck drawn by
+forty of the Emperor's strongest oxen; and to admit of the passage
+of these trucks it was necessary to widen the roads leading to
+Jerusalem. The forests of Lebanon yielded their choicest cedars for
+the timbers of the roof; and a quarry of variegated marble,
+seasonably discovered in the adjoining mountains, furnished the
+edifice with superb marble columns.</p>
+<p>The interior of this interesting structure, which still remains
+at Jerusalem, after a lapse of more than thirteen centuries, in an
+excellent state of preservation, is adorned with six rows of
+columns, from whence spring arches supporting the cedar beams and
+timbers of the roof; and at the end of the building is a round
+tower, surmounted by a dome. The vast stones, the walls of masonry,
+and the subterranean colonnade raised to support the southeast
+angle of the platform whereon the church is erected are truly
+wonderful, and may still be seen by penetrating through a small
+door and descending several flights of steps at the southeast
+corner of the enclosure. Adjoining the sacred edifice the Emperor
+erected hospitals, or houses of refuge, for travellers, sick
+people, and mendicants of all nations; the foundations whereof,
+composed of handsome Roman masonry, are still visible on either
+side of the southern end of the building.</p>
+<p>On the conquest of Jerusalem by the Moslems this venerable
+church was converted into a mosque, and was called D'Jame al Acsa;
+it was enclosed, together with the great Mussulman "Temple of the
+Lord" erected by the caliph Omar, within a large area by a high
+stone wall, which runs around the edge of the summit of Mount
+Moriah and guards from the profane tread of the unbeliever the
+whole of that sacred ground whereon once stood the gorgeous Temple
+of the wisest of kings.</p>
+<p>When the Holy City was taken by the crusaders, the D'Jame al
+Acsa, with the various buildings constructed around it, became the
+property of the kings of Jerusalem, and is denominated by William
+of Tyre "the Palace," or "Royal House to the south of the Temple of
+the Lord, vulgarly called the 'Temple of Solomon.'" It was this
+edifice or temple on Mount Moriah which was appropriated to the use
+of the "Poor Fellow-soldiers of Jesus Christ," as they had no
+church and no particular place of abode, and from it they derived
+their name of "Knights Templars."</p>
+<p>James of Vitry, Bishop of Acre, who gives an interesting account
+of the holy places, thus speaks of the temple of the Knights
+Templars: "There is, moreover, at Jerusalem another temple of
+immense spaciousness and extent, from which the brethren of the
+Knighthood of the Temple derive their name of 'Templars,' which is
+called the 'Temple of Solomon,' perhaps to distinguish it from the
+one above described, which is specially called the 'Temple of the
+Lord.'" He moreover informs us in his oriental history that "in the
+'Temple of the Lord' there is an abbot and canons regular; and be
+it known that the one is the 'Temple of the <i>Lord</i>,' and the
+other the 'Temple of the <i>Chivalry</i>.' These are <i>clerks</i>;
+the others are <i>knights</i>."</p>
+<p>The canons of the "Temple of the Lord" conceded to the "Poor
+Fellow-soldiers of Jesus Christ" the large court extending between
+that building and the Temple of Solomon; the King, the Patriarch,
+and the prelates of Jerusalem, and the barons of the Latin kingdom
+assigned them various gifts and revenues for their maintenance and
+support, and, the order being now settled in a regular place of
+abode, the knights soon began to entertain more extended views and
+to seek a larger theatre for the exercise of their holy
+profession.</p>
+<p>Their first aim and object had been, as before mentioned, simply
+to protect the poor pilgrims on their journey backward and forward
+from the sea-coast to Jerusalem; but as the hostile tribes of
+Mussulmans, which everywhere surrounded the Latin kingdom, were
+gradually recovering from the stupefying terror into which they had
+been plunged by the successful and exterminating warfare of the
+first crusaders, and were assuming an aggressive and threatening
+attitude, it was determined that the holy warriors of the temple
+should, in addition to the protection of pilgrims, make the defence
+of the Christian kingdom of Jerusalem, of the Eastern Church, and
+of all the holy places a part of their particular profession.</p>
+<p>The two most distinguished members of the fraternity were Hugh
+de Payens and Geoffrey de St. Aldemar, or St. Omer, two valiant
+soldiers of the cross, who had fought with great credit and renown
+at the siege of Jerusalem. Hugh de Payens was chosen by the knights
+to be superior of the new religious and military society, by the
+title of "the Master of the Temple"; and he has, in consequence,
+been generally called the founder of the order.</p>
+<p>The name and reputation of the Knights Templars speedily spread
+throughout Europe, and various illustrious pilgrims of the Far West
+aspired to become members of the holy fraternity. Among these was
+Fulk, Count of Anjou, who joined the society as a married brother
+(1120), and annually remitted the order thirty pounds of silver.
+Baldwin, King of Jerusalem, foreseeing that great advantages would
+accrue to the Latin kingdom by the increase of the power and
+numbers of these holy warriors, exerted himself to extend the order
+throughout all Christendom, so that he might, by means of so
+politic an institution, keep alive the holy enthusiasm of the West,
+and draw a constant succor from the bold and warlike races of
+Europe for the support of his Christian throne and kingdom.</p>
+<p>St. Bernard, the holy abbot of Clairvaux, had been a great
+admirer of the Templars. He wrote a letter to the Count of
+Champagne, on his entering the order (1123), praising the act as
+one of eminent merit in the sight of God; and it was determined to
+enlist the all-powerful influence of this great ecclesiastic in
+favor of the fraternity. "By a vow of poverty and penance, by
+closing his eyes against the visible world, by the refusal of all
+ecclesiastical dignities, the abbot of Clairvaux became the oracle
+of Europe and the founder of one hundred and sixty convents.
+Princes and pontiffs trembled at the freedom of his apostolical
+censures; France, England, and Milan consulted and obeyed his
+judgment in a schism of the Church; the debt was repaid by the
+gratitude of Innocent II; and his successor, Eugenius III, was the
+friend and disciple of the holy St. Bernard."</p>
+<p>To this learned and devout prelate two Knights Templars were
+despatched with the following letter:</p>
+<p>"Baldwin, by the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, King of
+Jerusalem and Prince of Antioch, to the venerable Father Bernard,
+Abbot of Clairvaux; health and regard.</p>
+<p>"The Brothers of the Temple, whom the Lord hath deigned to raise
+up, and whom by an especial providence he preserves for the defence
+of this kingdom, desiring to obtain from the Holy See the
+confirmation of their institution and a rule for their particular
+guidance, we have determined to send to you the two knights, Andrew
+and Gondemar, men as much distinguished by their military exploits
+as by the splendor of their birth, to obtain from the Pope the
+approbation of their order, and to dispose his holiness to send
+succor and subsidies against the enemies of the faith, reunited in
+their design to destroy us and to invade our Christian
+territories.</p>
+<p>"Well knowing the weight of your mediation with God and his
+vicar upon earth, as well as with the princes and powers of Europe,
+we have thought fit to confide to you these two important matters,
+whose successful issue cannot be otherwise than most agreeable to
+ourselves. The statutes we ask of you should be so ordered and
+arranged as to be reconcilable with the tumult of the camp and the
+profession of arms; they must, in fact, be of such a nature as to
+obtain favor and popularity with the Christian princes.</p>
+<p>"Do you then so manage that we may, through you, have the
+happiness of seeing this important affair brought to a successful
+issue, and address for us to Heaven the incense of your
+prayers."</p>
+<p>Soon after the above letter had been despatched to St. Bernard,
+Hugh de Payens himself proceeded to Rome, accompanied by Geoffrey
+de St. Aldemar and four other brothers of the order: namely,
+Brother Payen de Montdidier, Brother Gorall, Brother Geoffrey
+Bisol, and Brother Archambauld de St. Armand. They were received
+with great honor and distinction by Pope Honorius, who warmly
+approved of the objects and designs of the holy fraternity. St.
+Bernard had, in the mean time, taken the affair greatly to heart;
+he negotiated with the pope, the legate, and the bishops of France,
+and obtained the convocation of a great ecclesiastical council at
+Troyes (1128), which Hugh de Payens and his brethren were invited
+to attend. This council consisted of several archbishops, bishops,
+and abbots, among which last was St. Bernard himself. The rules to
+which the Templars had subjected themselves were there described by
+the master, and to the holy abbot of Clairvaux was confided the
+task of revising and correcting these rules, and of framing a code
+of statutes fit and proper for the governance of the great
+religious and military fraternity of the temple.</p>
+<p><i>The Rule of the Poor Fellow-soldiers of Jesus Christ and of
+the Temple of Solomon</i>, arranged by St. Bernard, and sanctioned
+by the holy Fathers of the Council of Troyes, for the government
+and regulation of the monastic and military society of the Temple,
+is principally of a religious character and of an austere and
+gloomy cast. It is divided into seventy-two heads or chapters, and
+is preceded by a short prologue addressed "to all who disdain to
+follow after their own wills, and desire with purity of mind to
+fight for the most high and true King," exhorting them to put on
+the armor of obedience, and to associate themselves together with
+piety and humility for the defence of the Holy Catholic Church; and
+to employ a pure diligence, and a steady perseverance in the
+exercise of their sacred profession, so that they might share in
+the happy destiny reserved for the holy warriors who had given up
+their lives for Christ.</p>
+<p>The rule enjoins severe devotional exercises,
+self-mortification, fasting, and prayer, and a constant attendance
+at matins, vespers, and on all the services of the Church, "that,
+being refreshed and satisfied with heavenly food, instructed and
+stablished with heavenly precepts, after the consummation of the
+divine mysteries," none might be afraid of the <i>Fight</i>, but be
+prepared for the <i>Crown</i>.</p>
+<p>If unable to attend the regular service of God, the absent
+brother is for matins to say over thirteen <i>pater-nosters</i>,
+for every hour seven, and for vespers nine. When any Templar
+draweth nigh unto death, the chaplains and clerk are to assemble
+and offer up a solemn mass for his soul; the surrounding brethren
+are to spend the night in prayer, and a hundred pater-nosters are
+to be repeated for the dead brother. "Moreover," say the holy
+Fathers, "we do strictly enjoin you, that with divine and most
+tender charity ye do daily bestow as much meat and drink as was
+given to that brother when alive, unto some poor man for forty
+days."</p>
+<p>The brethren are, on all occasions, to speak sparingly and to
+wear a grave and serious deportment. They are to be constant in the
+exercise of charity and almsgiving, to have a watchful care over
+all sick brethren, and to support and sustain all old men. They are
+not to receive letters from their parents, relations, or friends
+without the license of the master, and all gifts are immediately to
+be taken to the latter or to the treasurer, to be disposed of as he
+may direct. They are, moreover, to receive no service or attendance
+from a woman, and are commanded, above all things, to shun feminine
+kisses.</p>
+<p>"This same year (1128) Hugh of the Temple came from Jerusalem to
+the King in Normandy, and the King received him with much honor and
+gave him much treasure in gold and silver, and afterward he sent
+him into England, and there he was well received by all good men,
+and all gave him treasure, and in Scotland also, and they sent in
+all a great sum in gold and silver by him to Jerusalem, and there
+went with him and after him so great a number as never before since
+the days of Pope Urban." Grants of land, as well as of money, were
+at the same time made to Hugh de Payens and his brethren, some of
+which were shortly afterward confirmed by King Stephen on his
+accession to the throne (1135). Among these is a grant of the manor
+of Bistelesham made to the Templars by Count Robert de Ferrara, and
+a grant of the Church of Langeforde in Bedfordshire made by Simon
+de Wahull and Sibylla his wife and Walter their son.</p>
+<p>Hugh de Payens, before his departure, placed a Knight Templar at
+the head of the order in England, who was called the prior of the
+temple and was the procurator and viceregent of the master. It was
+his duty to manage the estates granted to the fraternity, and to
+transmit the revenues to Jerusalem. He was also delegated with the
+power of admitting members into the order, subject to the control
+and direction of the master, and was to provide means of transport
+for such newly-admitted brethren to the Far East, to enable them to
+fulfil the duties of their profession. As the houses of the Temple
+increased in number in England, subpriors came to be appointed, and
+the superior of the order in this country was then called the
+"grand prior," and afterward master, of the temple.</p>
+<p>Many illustrious knights of the best families in Europe aspired
+to the habit and vows, but, however exalted their rank, they were
+not received within the bosom of the fraternity until they had
+proved themselves by their conduct worthy of such a fellowship.
+Thus, when Hugh d'Amboise, who had harassed and oppressed the
+people of Marmontier by unjust exactions, and had refused to submit
+to the judicial decision of the Count of Anjou, desired to enter
+the order, Hugh de Payens refused to admit him to the vows until he
+had humbled himself, renounced his pretensions, and given perfect
+satisfaction to those whom he had injured. The candidates,
+moreover, previous to their admission, were required to make
+reparation and satisfaction for all damage done by them at any time
+to churches and to public or private property.</p>
+<p>An astonishing enthusiasm was excited throughout Christendom in
+behalf of the Templars; princes and nobles, sovereigns and their
+subjects, vied with each other in heaping gifts and benefits upon
+them, and scarce a will of importance was made without an article
+in it in their favor. Many illustrious persons on their death-beds
+took the vows, that they might be buried in the habit of the order;
+and sovereigns, quitting the government of their kingdoms, enrolled
+themselves among the holy fraternity, and bequeathed even their
+dominions to the master and the brethren of the temple.</p>
+<p>Thus, Raymond Berenger, Count of Barcelona and Provence, at a
+very advanced age, abdicating his throne and shaking off the
+ensigns of royal authority, retired to the house of the Templars at
+Barcelona, and pronounced his vows (1130) before Brother Hugh de
+Rigauld, the prior. His infirmities not allowing him to proceed in
+person to the chief house of the order at Jerusalem, he sent vast
+sums of money thither, and immuring himself in a small cell in the
+temple at Barcelona, he there remained in the constant exercise of
+the religious duties of his profession until the day of his
+death.</p>
+<p>At the same period, the emperor Lothair bestowed on the order a
+large portion of his patrimony of Supplinburg; and the year
+following (1131), Alphonso I, King of Navarre and Aragon, also
+styled Emperor of Spain, one of the greatest warriors of the age,
+by his will declared the Knights of the Temple his heirs and
+successors in the crowns of Navarre and Aragon, and a few hours
+before his death he caused this will to be ratified and signed by
+most of the barons of both kingdoms. The validity of this document,
+however, was disputed, and the claims of the Templars were
+successfully resisted by the nobles of Navarre; but in Aragon they
+obtained, by way of compromise, lands and castles and considerable
+dependencies, a portion of the customs and duties levied throughout
+the kingdom, and the contributions raised from the Moors.</p>
+<p>To increase the enthusiasm in favor of the Templars, and still
+further to swell their ranks with the best and bravest of the
+European chivalry, St. Bernard, at the request of Hugh de Payens,
+took up his powerful pen in their behalf. In a famous discourse,
+<i>In Praise of the New Chivalry</i>, the holy abbot sets forth, in
+eloquent and enthusiastic terms, the spiritual advantages and
+blessings enjoyed by the military friars of the temple over all
+other warriors. He draws a curious picture of the relative
+situations and circumstances of the <i>secular</i> soldiery and the
+soldiery of <i>Christ</i>, and shows how different in the sight of
+God are the bloodshed and slaughter of the one from that committed
+by the other.</p>
+<p>This extraordinary discourse is written with great spirit; it is
+addressed "To Hugh, Knight of Christ, and Master of the Knighthood
+of Christ," is divided into fourteen parts or chapters, and
+commences with a short prologue. It is curiously illustrative of
+the spirit of the times, and some of its most striking passages
+will be read with interest.</p>
+<p>The holy abbot thus pursues his comparison between the soldier
+of the world and the soldier of Christ&mdash;the <i>secular</i> and
+the <i>religious</i> warrior: "As often as thou who wagest a
+secular warfare marchest forth to battle, it is greatly to be
+feared lest when thou slayest thine enemy in the body, he should
+destroy thee in the spirit, or lest peradventure thou shouldst be
+at once slain by him both in body and soul. From the disposition of
+the heart, indeed, not by the event of the fight, is to be
+estimated either the jeopardy or the victory of the Christian. If,
+fighting with the desire of killing another, thou shouldst chance
+to get killed thyself, thou diest a manslayer; if, on the other
+hand, thou prevailest, and through a desire of conquest or revenge
+killest a man, thou livest a manslayer.... O unfortunate victory!
+when in overcoming thine adversary thou fallest into sin, and,
+anger or pride having the mastery over thee, in vain thou gloriest
+over the vanquished....</p>
+<p>"What, therefore, is the fruit of this secular, I will not say
+<i>militia</i>, but <i>malitia</i>, if the slayer committeth a
+deadly sin, and the slain perisheth eternally? Verily, to use the
+words of the apostle, he that plougheth should plough in hope, and
+he that thresheth should be partaker of his hope. Whence,
+therefore, O soldiers, cometh this so stupendous error? What
+insufferable madness is this&mdash;to wage war with so great cost
+and labor, but with no pay except either death or crime? Ye cover
+your horses with silken trappings, and I know not how much fine
+cloth hangs pendent from your coats of mail. Ye paint your spears,
+shields, and saddles; your bridles and spurs are adorned on all
+sides with gold and silver and gems, and with all this pomp, with a
+shameful fury and a reckless insensibility, ye rush on to death.
+Are these military ensigns, or are they not rather the garnishments
+of women? Can it happen that the sharp-pointed sword of the enemy
+will respect gold, will it spare gems, will it be unable to
+penetrate the silken garment?</p>
+<p>"As ye yourselves have often experienced, three things are
+indispensably necessary to the success of the soldier: he must, for
+example, be bold, active, and circumspect; quick in running, prompt
+in striking; ye, however, to the disgust of the eye, nourish your
+hair after the manner of women, ye gather around your footsteps
+long and flowing vestures, ye bury up your delicate and tender
+hands in ample and wide-spreading sleeves. Among you indeed naught
+provoketh war or awakeneth strife, but either an irrational impulse
+of anger or an insane lust of glory or the covetous desire of
+possessing another man's lands and possessions. In such cases it is
+neither safe to slay nor to be slain.... But the soldiers of Christ
+indeed securely fight the battles of their Lord, in no wise fearing
+sin, either from the slaughter of the enemy or danger from their
+own death. When indeed death is to be given or received for Christ,
+it has naught of crime in it, but much of glory....</p>
+<p>"And now for an example, or to the confusion of our soldiers
+fighting not manifestly for God, but for the devil, we will briefly
+display the mode of life of the Knights of Christ, such as it is in
+the field and in the convent, by which means it will be made
+plainly manifest to what extent the soldiery of God and the
+soldiery of the World differ from one another.... The soldiers of
+Christ live together in common in an agreeable but frugal manner,
+without wives and without children; and that nothing may be wanting
+to evangelical perfection, they dwell together without property of
+any kind, in one house, under one rule, careful to preserve the
+unity of the spirit in the bond of peace. You may say that to the
+whole multitude there is but one heart and one soul, as each one in
+no respect followeth after his own will or desire, but is diligent
+to do the will of the Master. They are never idle nor rambling
+abroad, but, when they are not in the field, that they may not eat
+their bread in idleness, they are fitting and repairing their armor
+and their clothing, or employing themselves in such occupations as
+the will of the Master requireth or their common necessities render
+expedient. Among them there is no distinction of persons; respect
+is paid to the best and most virtuous, not the most noble. They
+participate in each other's honor, they bear one anothers' burdens,
+that they may fulfil the law of Christ.</p>
+<p>"An insolent expression, a useless undertaking, immoderate
+laughter, the least murmur or whispering, if found out, passeth not
+without severe rebuke. They detest cards and dice, they shun the
+sports of the field, and take no delight in the ludicrous catching
+of birds (hawking), which men are wont to indulge in. Jesters and
+soothsayers and story-tellers, scurrilous songs, shows, and games,
+they contemptuously despise and abominate as vanities and mad
+follies. They cut their hair, knowing that, according to the
+apostle, it is not seemly in a man to have long hair. They are
+never combed, seldom washed, but appear rather with rough neglected
+hair, foul with dust, and with skins browned by the sun and their
+coats of mail.</p>
+<p>"Moreover, on the approach of battle they fortify themselves
+with faith within and with steel without, and not with gold, so
+that, armed and not adorned, they may strike terror into the enemy,
+rather than awaken his lust of plunder. They strive earnestly to
+possess strong and swift horses, but not garnished with ornaments
+or decked with trappings, thinking of battle and of victory, and
+not of pomp and show, studying to inspire fear rather than
+admiration....</p>
+<p>"Such hath God chosen for his own, and hath collected together
+as his ministers from the ends of the earth, from among the bravest
+of Israel, who indeed vigilantly and faithfully guard the Holy
+Sepulchre, all armed with the sword, and most learned in the art of
+war....</p>
+<p>"There is indeed a temple at Jerusalem in which they dwell
+together, unequal, it is true, as a building, to that ancient and
+most famous one of Solomon, but not inferior in glory. For truly
+the entire magnificence of that consisted in corrupt things, in
+gold and silver, in carved stone, and in a variety of woods; but
+the whole beauty of this resteth in the adornment of an agreeable
+conversation, in the godly devotion of its inmates, and their
+beautifully ordered mode of life. That was admired for its various
+external beauties, this is venerated for its different virtues and
+sacred actions, as becomes the sanctity of the house of God, who
+delighteth not so much in polished marbles as in well-ordered
+behavior, and regardeth pure minds more than gilded walls. The face
+likewise of this temple is adorned with arms, not with gems, and
+the wall, instead of the ancient golden chapiters, is covered
+around with pendent shields.</p>
+<p>"Instead of the ancient candelabra, censers, and lavers, the
+house is on all sides furnished with bridles, saddles, and lances,
+all which plainly demonstrate that the soldiers burn with the same
+zeal for the house of God as that which formerly animated their
+great Leader, when, vehemently enraged, he entered into the Temple,
+and with that most sacred hand, armed not with steel, but with a
+scourge which he had made of small thongs, drove out the merchants,
+poured out the changers' money, and overthrew the tables of them
+that sold doves; most indignantly condemning the pollution of the
+house of prayer by the making of it a place of merchandise.</p>
+<p>"The devout army of Christ, therefore, earnestly incited by the
+example of its king, thinking indeed that the holy places are much
+more impiously and insufferably polluted by the infidels than when
+defiled by merchants, abide in the holy house with horses and with
+arms, so that from that, as well as all the other sacred places,
+all filthy and diabolical madness of infidelity being driven out,
+they may occupy themselves by day and by night in honorable and
+useful offices. They emulously honor the temple of God with
+sedulous and sincere oblations, offering sacrifices therein with
+constant devotion, not indeed of the flesh of cattle after the
+manner of the ancients, but peaceful sacrifices, brotherly love,
+devout obedience, voluntary poverty.</p>
+<p>"These things are done perpetually at Jerusalem, and the world
+is aroused, the islands hear, and the nations take heed from
+afar...."</p>
+<p>St. Bernard then congratulates Jerusalem on the advent of the
+soldiers of Christ, and declares that the Holy City will rejoice
+with a double joy in being rid of all her oppressors, the ungodly,
+the robbers, the blasphemers, murderers, perjurers, and adulterers;
+and in receiving her faithful defenders and sweet consolers, under
+the shadow of whose protection "Mount Zion shall rejoice, and the
+daughters of Judah sing for joy."</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_20"><!-- RULE4 20 --></a>
+<h2>STEPHEN USURPS THE ENGLISH CROWN</h2>
+<center>HIS CONFLICTS WITH MATILDA: DECISIVE INFLUENCE OF THE
+CHURCH</center>
+<center>A.D. 1135-1154</center>
+<br>
+<center>CHARLES KNIGHT</center>
+<p class="intro">William the Conqueror, King of England, was
+succeeded by his sons William Rufus and Henry&mdash;on account of
+his scholarship known as Beauclerc. Prince William, Henry's only
+son, was drowned when starting from Normandy for England in 1120.
+In the absence of male issue Henry settled the English and Norman
+crowns upon his daughter Matilda, and demanded an oath of fidelity
+to her from the barons.</p>
+<p class="intro">Matilda had been married first to Emperor Henry V
+of Germany, who died in 1125, and secondly to Geoffrey Plantagenet,
+Count of Anjou.</p>
+<p class="intro">Stephen was the son of Adela, daughter of William
+the Conqueror, who had married Stephen, Count of Blois. Stephen,
+with his brother Henry, had been invited to the court of England by
+their uncle, and had received honors, preferments, and riches.
+Henry becoming an ecclesiast was created abbot of Glastonbury and
+bishop of Winchester. Stephen, among other possessions, received
+the great estate forfeited by Robert Mallet in England, and that
+forfeited by the Earl of Mortaigne in Normandy. By his marriage
+with Matilda, daughter of the Earl of Boulogne, he had succeeded
+also to the territories of his father-in-law. Stephen by studied
+arts and personal qualities became a great favorite with the
+English barons and the people.</p>
+<p class="intro">The empress Matilda and her husband Geoffrey,
+unfortunately, were unpopular both in England and Normandy, the
+English barons especially viewing with disfavor the prospect of a
+woman occupying the throne.</p>
+<p class="intro">Henry Beauclerc died in 1135 at his favorite
+hunting-seat, the Castle of Lions, near Rouen, in Normandy.
+Stephen, ignoring the oath of fealty to the daughter of his
+benefactor, hastened to England, and, notwithstanding some
+opposition, with the help of his clerical brother and other
+functionaries had himself proclaimed and crowned king. This act
+involved England in years of civil war, anarchy, and wretchedness,
+which ended only with the accession as Henry II of Empress
+Matilda's son, Henry Plantagenet of Anjou.</p>
+<p>Of the reign of Stephen, Sir James Mackintosh has said, "It
+perhaps contains the most perfect condensation of all the ills of
+feudality to be found in history." He adds, "The whole narrative
+would have been rejected, as devoid of all likeness to truth, if it
+had been hazarded in fiction." As a picture of "all the ills of
+feudality," this narrative is a picture of the entire social
+state&mdash;the monarchy, the Church, the aristocracy, the
+people&mdash;and appears to us, therefore, to demand a more careful
+examination than if the historical interest were chiefly centred in
+the battles and adventures belonging to a disputed succession, and
+in the personal characters of a courageous princess and her
+knightly rival.</p>
+<p>Stephen, Earl of Boulogne, the nephew of King Henry I, was no
+stranger to the country which he aspired to rule. He had lived much
+in England and was a universal favorite. "From his complacency of
+manners, and his readiness to joke, and sit and regale even with
+low people, he had gained so much on their affections as is hardly
+to be conceived." This popular man was at the death-bed of his
+uncle; but before the royal body was borne on the shoulders of
+nobles from the Castle of Lions to Rouen, Stephen was on his road
+to England. He embarked at Whitsand, undeterred by boisterous
+weather, and landed during a winter storm of thunder and lightning.
+It was a more evil omen when Dover and Canterbury shut their gates
+against him. But he went boldly on to London. There can be no doubt
+that his proceedings were not the result of a sudden impulse, and
+that his usurpation of the crown was successful through a very
+powerful organization. His brother Henry was Bishop of Winchester;
+and his influence with the other dignitaries of the Church was
+mainly instrumental in the election of Stephen to be king, in open
+disregard of the oaths taken a few years before to recognize the
+succession of Matilda and of her son. Between the death of a king
+and the coronation of his successor there was usually a short
+interval, in which the form of election was gone through. But it is
+held that during that suspension of the royal functions there was
+usually a proclamation of "the king's peace," under which all
+violations of law were punished as if the head of the law were in
+the full exercise of his functions and dignities. King Henry I died
+on the 1st of December, 1135. Stephen was crowned on the 26th of
+December. The death of Henry would probably have been generally
+known in England in a week after the event. There is a sufficient
+proof that this succession was considered doubtful, and,
+consequently, that there was an unusual delay in the proclamation
+of "the king's peace." The Forest Laws were the great grievance of
+Henry's reign. His death was the signal for their violation by the
+whole body of the people. "It was wonderful how so many myriads of
+wild animals, which in large herds before plentifully stocked the
+country, suddenly disappeared, so that out of the vast number
+scarcely two now could be found together. They seemed to be
+entirely extirpated." According to the same authority, "the people
+also turned to plundering each other without mercy"; and "whatever
+the evil passions suggested in peaceable times, now that the
+opportunity of vengeance presented itself, was quickly executed."
+This is a remarkable condition of a country which, having been
+governed by terror, suddenly passed out of the evils of despotism
+into the greater evils of anarchy. This temporary confusion must
+have contributed to urge on the election of Stephen. By the
+Londoners he was received with acclamations; and the <i>witan</i>
+chose him for king without hesitation, as one who could best fulfil
+the duties of the office and put an end to the dangers of the
+kingdom.</p>
+<p>Stephen succeeded to a vast amount of treasure. All the rents of
+Henry I had been paid in money, instead of in necessaries; and he
+was rigid in enforcing the payment in coin of the best quality.
+With this possession of means, Stephen surrounded himself with
+troops from Flanders and Brittany. The objections to his want of
+hereditary right appear to have been altogether laid aside for a
+time, in the popularity which he derived from his personal
+qualities and his command of wealth. Strict hereditary claims to
+the choice of the nation had been disregarded since the time of the
+Confessor. The oath to Matilda, it was maintained, had been
+unwillingly given, and even extorted by force. It is easy to
+conceive that, both to Saxon and Norman, the notion of a female
+sovereign would be out of harmony with their ancient traditions and
+their warlike habits. The king was the great military chief, as
+well as the supreme dispenser of justice and guardian of property.
+The time was far distant when the sovereign rule might be held to
+be most beneficially exercised by a wise choice of administrators,
+civil and military; and the power of the crown, being
+co&ouml;rdinate with other powers, strengthening as well as
+controlling its final authority, might be safely and happily
+exercised by a discreet, energetic, and just female. King Stephen
+vindicated the choice of the nation at the very outset of his
+reign. He went in person against the robbers who were ravaging the
+country. The daughter of "the Lion of Justice" would probably have
+done the same. But more than three hundred years had passed since
+the Lady of Mercia, the sister of Alfred, had asserted the courage
+of her race. Norman and Saxon wanted a king; for though ladies
+defended castles, and showed that firmness and bravery were not the
+exclusive possession of one sex, no thane or baron had yet knelt
+before a queen, and sworn to be her "liege man of life and
+limb."</p>
+<p>The unanimity which appeared to hail the accession of Stephen
+was soon interrupted. David, King of Scotland, had advanced to
+Carlisle and Newcastle, to assert the claim of Matilda which he had
+sworn to uphold. But Stephen came against him with a great army,
+and for a time there was peace. Robert, Earl of Gloucester, the
+illegitimate son of Henry I, had done homage to Stephen; but his
+allegiance was very doubtful; and the general belief that he would
+renounce his fealty engendered secret hostility or open resistance
+among other powerful barons. Robert of Gloucester very soon defied
+the King's power. Within two years of his accession the throne of
+Stephen was evidently becoming an insecure seat. To counteract the
+power of the great nobles, he made a lavish distribution of crown
+lands to a large number of tenants-in-chief. Some of them were
+called earls; but they had no official charge, as the greater
+barons had, but were mere titular lords, made by the royal bounty.
+All those who held direct from the Crown were called barons; and
+these new barons, who were scattered over the country, had
+permission from the King to build castles. Such permission was
+extended to many other lay barons. The accustomed manor-house of
+the land proprietor, in which he dwelt amid the churls and serfs of
+his demesne, was now replaced by a stone tower, surrounded by a
+moat and a wall. The wooden one-storied homestead, with its
+thatched roof, shaded by the "toft" of ash and elm and maple, was
+pulled down, and a square fortress with loopholes and battlement
+stood in solitary nakedness upon some bleak hill, ugly and defiant.
+There with a band of armed men&mdash;sometimes with a wife and
+children, and not unfrequently with an unhappy victim of his
+licentiousness&mdash;the baron lived in gloom and gluttony, till
+the love of excitement, the approach of want, or the call to battle
+drove him forth. His passion for hunting was not always free to be
+exercised. Venison was not everywhere to be obtained without danger
+even to the powerful and lawless. But within a ride of a few miles
+there was generally corn in the barns and herds were in the
+pastures. The petty baron was almost invariably a
+robber&mdash;sometimes on his own account, often in some combined
+adventure of plunder. The spirit of rapine, always too prevalent
+under the strongest government of those times, was now universal
+when the government was fighting for its own existence. Bands of
+marauders sallied forth from the great towns, especially from
+Bristol; and of their proceedings the author of the <i>Gesta
+Stephani</i> speaks with the precision of an eye-witness. The
+Bristolians, under the instigation of the Earl of Gloucester, were
+partisans of the ex-empress Matilda; and wherever the King or his
+adherents had estates they came to seize their oxen and sheep, and
+carried men of substance into Bristol as captives, with bandaged
+eyes and bits in their mouths. From other towns as well as Bristol
+came forth plunderers, with humble gait and courteous discourse;
+who, when they met with a lonely man having the appearance of being
+wealthy, would bear him off to starvation and torture, till they
+had mulcted him to the last farthing. These and other indications
+of an unsettled government took place before the landing of Matilda
+to assert her claims. An invasion of England, by the Scottish King,
+without regard to the previous pacification, was made in 1138. But
+this attempt, although grounded upon the oath which David had sworn
+to Henry, was regarded by the Northumbrians as a national hostility
+which demanded a national resistance. The course of this invasion
+has been minutely described by contemporary chroniclers.</p>
+<p>The author of the <i>Gesta Stephani</i> says: "Scotland, also
+called Albany, is a country overspread by extensive moors, but
+containing flourishing woods and pastures, which feed large herds
+of cows and oxen." Of the mountainous regions he says nothing.
+Describing the natives as savage, swift of foot, and lightly armed,
+he adds, "A confused multitude of this people being assembled from
+the lowlands of Scotland, they were formed into an irregular army
+and marched for England." From the period of the Conquest, a large
+number of Anglo-Saxons had been settled in the lowlands; and the
+border countries of Westmoreland and Cumberland were also occupied,
+to a considerable extent, by the same race. The people of Galloway
+were chiefly of the original British stock. The historians describe
+"the confused multitude" as exercising great cruelties in their
+advance through the country that lies between the Tweed and the
+Tees; and Matthew Paris uses a significant phrase which marks how
+completely they spread over the land. He calls them the "Scottish
+Ants." The Archbishop of York, Thurstan, an aged but vigorous man,
+collected a large army to resist the invaders; and he made a
+politic appeal to the old English nationality, by calling out the
+population under the banners of their Saxon saints. The Bishop of
+Durham was the leader of this army, composed of the Norman chivalry
+and the English archers. The opposing forces met at Northallerton,
+on the 22d of August, 1138. The Anglo-Norman army was gathered
+round a tall cross, raised on a car, and surrounded by the banners
+of St. Cuthbert and St. Wilfred and St. John of Beverley. From this
+incident the bloody day of Northallerton was called "the Battle of
+the Standard." Hoveden has given an oration made by Ralph, Bishop
+of Durham, in which he addresses the captains as "Brave nobles of
+England, Normans by birth"; and pointing to the enemy, who knew not
+the use of armor, exclaims, "Your head is covered with the helmet,
+your breast with a coat of mail, your legs with greaves, and your
+whole body with the shield." Of the Saxon yeomanry he says nothing.
+Whether the oration be genuine or not, it exhibits the mode in
+which the mass of the people were regarded at that time. Thierry
+appears to consider that the bold attempt of David of Scotland was
+made in reliance upon the support of the Anglo-Saxon race. But it
+is perfectly clear that they bore the brunt of the English battle;
+and whatever might be their wrongs, were not disposed to yield
+their fields and houses to a fierce multitude who came for spoil
+and for possession. The Scotch fought with darts and long spears,
+and attacked the solid mass of Normans and English gathered round
+the standard. Prince Henry, the son of the King of Scotland, made a
+vigorous onslaught with a body of horse, composed of English and
+Normans attached to his father's household. These were, without
+doubt, especial partisans of the claim to the English crown of the
+ex-empress Matilda; and, as the King of Scotland himself is
+described, were "inflamed with zeal for a just cause."[<a href=
+"#note-42">42</a>] The issue of the battle was the signal defeat of
+the Scottish army, with the loss of eleven thousand men upon the
+field. A peace was concluded with King Stephen in the following
+year.</p>
+<p><a name="note-42"><!-- Note Anchor 42 --></a>[Footnote 42: Scott
+has given a picturesque account of the battle in his <i>Tales of a
+Grandfather</i>. Writing, as he often did, from general
+impressions, in describing the gallant charge of Prince Henry, he
+states that he broke the English line "as if it had been a spider's
+web." Hoveden, the historian to whom Scott alludes, applies this
+strong image to the scattering of the men of Lothian: "For the
+Almighty was offended at them, and their strength was rent like a
+cobweb."]</p>
+<p>The issue of the battle of the Standard might have given rest to
+England if Stephen had understood the spirit of his age. In 1139 he
+engaged in a contest more full of peril than the assaults of
+Scotland or the disturbances of Wales. He had been successful
+against some of the disaffected barons. He had besieged and taken
+Hereford Castle and Shrewsbury Castle. Dover Castle had surrendered
+to his Queen. Robert, Earl of Gloucester, kept possession of the
+castles of Bristol and Leeds; and other nobles held out against him
+in various strong places. London and some of the larger towns
+appear to have steadily clung to his government. The influence of
+the Church, by which he had been chiefly raised to sovereignty, had
+supported him during his four years of struggle. But that influence
+was now to be shaken.</p>
+<p>The rapid and steady growth of the ecclesiastical power in
+England, from the period of the Conquest, is one of the most
+remarkable characteristics of that age. This progress we must
+steadily keep in view if we would rightly understand the general
+condition of society. All the great offices of the Church, with
+scarcely an exception, were filled by Normans. The Conqueror
+sternly resisted any attempts of bishops or abbots to control his
+civil government. The "Red King" misappropriated their revenues in
+many cases. Henry I quarrelled with Anselm about the right of
+investiture, which the Pope declared should not be in the hands of
+any layman, but Henry compromised a difficult question with his
+usual prudence. Whatever difficulties the Church encountered,
+during seventy years, and especially during the whole course of
+Henry's reign, wealth flowed in upon the ecclesiastics, from king
+and noble, from burgess and socman; and every improvement of the
+country increased the value of church possessions. It was not only
+from the lands of the Crown and the manors of earls that bishoprics
+and monasteries derived their large endowments. Henry I founded the
+Abbey of Reading, but the <i>mimus</i> of Henry I built the priory
+and hospital of St. Bartholomew. This "pleasant-witted gentleman,"
+as Stow calls the royal mimus (which Percy interprets "minstrel"),
+having, according to the legend, "diverted the palaces of princes
+with courtly mockeries and triflings" for many years, bethought
+himself at last of more serious matters, and went to do penance at
+Rome. He returned to London; and obtaining a grant of land in a
+part of the King's market of Smithfield, which was a filthy marsh
+where the common gallows stood, there erected the priory, whose
+Norman arches as satisfactorily attest its date as Henry's charter.
+The piety of a court jester in the twelfth century, when the
+science of medicine was wholly empirical, founded one of the most
+valuable medical schools of the nineteenth century. The desire to
+raise up splendid churches in the place of the dilapidated Saxon
+buildings was a passion with Normans, whether clerics or laymen.
+Ralph Flambard, the bold and unscrupulous minister of William II,
+erected the great priory of Christchurch, in his capacity of
+bishop. But he raised the necessary funds with his usual financial
+vigor. He took the revenues of the canons into his hands, and put
+the canons upon a short allowance till the work was completed. The
+Cistercian order of monks was established in England late in the
+reign of Henry I. Their rule was one of the most severe
+mortification and of the strictest discipline. Their lives were
+spent in labor and in prayer, and their one frugal daily meal was
+eaten in silence. While other religious orders had their splendid
+abbeys amid large communities, the Cistercians humbly asked grants
+of land in the most solitary places, where the recluse could
+meditate without interruption by his fellow-men, amid desolate
+moors and in the uncultivated gorges of inaccessible mountains. In
+such a barren district Walter l'Esp&eacute;e, who had fought at
+Northallerton, founded Rievaulx Abbey. It was "a solitary place in
+Blakemore," in the midst of hills. The Norman knight had lost his
+son, and here he derived a holy comfort in seeing the monastic
+buildings rise under his munificent care, and the waste lands
+become fertile under the incessant labors of the devoted monks. The
+ruins of Tintern Abbey and Melrose Abbey, whose solemn influences
+have inspired the poets of our own age with thoughts akin to the
+contemplations of their Cistercian founders, belong to a later
+period of ecclesiastical architecture; for the dwellings of the
+original monks have perished, and the "broken arches," and "shafted
+oriel," the "imagery," and "the scrolls that teach thee to live and
+die," speak of another century, when the Norman architecture, like
+the Norman character, was losing its distinctive features and
+becoming "Early English." We dwell a little upon these Norman
+foundations, to show how completely the Church was spreading itself
+over the land, and asserting its influence in places where man had
+seldom trod, as well as in populous towns, where the great
+cathedral was crowded with earnest votaries, and the lessons of
+peace were proclaimed amid the distractions of unsettled government
+and the oppressions of lordly despotism. Whatever was the misery of
+the country, the ordinary family ties still bound the people to the
+universal Christian church, whether the priest were Norman or
+English. The new-born infant was dipped in the great Norman font,
+as the children of the Confessor's time had been dipped in the
+ruder Saxon. The same Latin office, unintelligible in words, but
+significant in its import, was said and sung when the bride stood
+at the altar and the father was laid in his grave. The vernacular
+tongue gradually melted into one dialect; and the penitent and the
+confessor were the first to lay aside the great distinction of race
+and country&mdash;that of language.</p>
+<p>The Norman prelates were men of learning and ability, of taste
+and magnificence; and, whatever might have been the luxury and even
+vices of some among them, the vast revenues of the great sees were
+not wholly devoted to worldly pomp, but were applied to noble uses.
+After the lapse of seven centuries we still tread with reverence
+those portions of our cathedrals in which the early Norman
+architecture is manifest. There is no English cathedral in which we
+are so completely impressed with the massive grandeur of the
+round-arched style as by Durham. Durham Cathedral was commenced in
+the middle of the reign of Rufus, and the building went on through
+the reign of Henry I. Canterbury was commenced by Archbishop
+Lanfranc, soon after the Conquest, and was enlarged and altered in
+various details, till it was burned in 1174. Some portions of the
+original building remain. Rochester was commenced eleven years
+after the Conquest; and its present nave is an unaltered part of
+the original building. Chichester has nearly the same date of its
+commencement; and the building of this church was continued till
+its dedication in 1148. Norwich was founded in 1094, and its
+erection was carried forward so rapidly that in seven years there
+were sixty monks here located. Winchester is one of the earliest of
+these noble cathedrals; but its Norman feature of the round arch is
+not the general characteristic of the edifice, the original piers
+having been recased in the pointed style, in the reign of Edward
+III. The dates of these buildings, so grand in their conception, so
+solid in their execution, would be sufficient of themselves to show
+the wealth and activity of the Church during the reigns of the
+Conqueror and his sons. But, during this period of seventy years,
+and in part of the reign of Stephen, the erection of monastic
+buildings was universal in England, as in Continental Europe. The
+crusades gave a most powerful impulse to the religious fervor. In
+the enthusiasm of chivalry, which covered many of its enormities
+with outward acts of piety, vows were frequently made by wealthy
+nobles that they would depart for the Holy Wars. But sometimes the
+vow was inconvenient. The lady of the castle wept at the almost
+certain perils of her lord, and his projects of ambition often kept
+the lord at home to look after his own especial interests. Then the
+vow to wear the cross might be commuted by the foundation of a
+religious house. Death-bed repentance for crimes of violence and a
+licentious life increased the number of these endowments. It has
+been computed that three hundred monastic establishments were
+founded in England during the reigns of Henry I, Stephen, and Henry
+II.</p>
+<p>We have briefly stated these few general facts regarding the
+outward manifestation of the power and the wealth of the Church at
+this period, to show how important an influence it must have
+exercised upon all questions of government. But its organization
+was of far greater importance than the aggregate wealth of the sees
+and abbeys. The English Church, during the troubled reign of
+Stephen, had become more completely under the papal dominion than
+at any previous period of its history. The King attempted, rashly
+perhaps, but honestly, to interpose some check to the
+ecclesiastical desire for supremacy; but from the hour when he
+entered into a contest with bishops and synods, his reign became
+one of kingly trouble and national misery.</p>
+<p>The Norman bishops not only combined in their own persons the
+functions of the priest and of the lawyer, but were often military
+leaders. As barons they had knight-service to perform; and this
+condition of their tenures naturally surrounded them with armed
+retainers. That this anomalous position should have corrupted the
+ambitious churchman into a proud and luxurious lord was almost
+inevitable. The authority of the Crown might have been strong
+enough to repress the individual discontent, or to punish the
+individual treason, of these great prelates; but every one of them
+was doubly formidable as a member of a confederacy over which a
+foreign head claimed to preside. There were three bishops whose
+intrigues King Stephen had especially to dread at the time when an
+open war for the succession of Matilda was on the point of bursting
+forth. Roger, the Bishop of Salisbury, had been promoted from the
+condition of a parish priest at Caen, to be chaplain, secretary,
+chancellor, and chief justiciary of Henry I. He was instrumental in
+the election of Stephen to the throne; and he was rewarded with
+extravagant gifts, as he had been previously rewarded by Henry.
+Stephen appears to have fostered his rapacity, in the conviction
+that his pride would have a speedier fall; the King often saying,
+"I would give him half England, if he asked for it: till the time
+be ripe he shall tire of asking ere I tire of giving." The time was
+ripe in 1139. The Bishop had erected castles at Devizes, at
+Sherborne, and at Malmesbury. King Henry had given him the castle
+of Salisbury. This lord of four castles had powerful auxiliaries in
+his nephews, the Bishop of Lincoln and the Bishop of Ely. Alexander
+of Lincoln had built the castles of Newark and Sleaford, and was
+almost as powerful as his uncle. In July, 1139, a great council was
+held at Oxford; and thither came these three bishops with military
+and secular pomp, and with an escort that became "the wonder of all
+beholders." A quarrel ensued between the retainers of the bishops
+and those of Alain, Earl of Brittany, about a right to quarters;
+and the quarrel went on to a battle, in which men were slain on
+both sides. The bishops of Salisbury and Lincoln were arrested, as
+breakers of the king's peace. The Bishop of Ely fled to his uncle's
+castle of Devizes. The King, under the advice of the sagacious Earl
+Millent, resolved to dispossess these dangerous prelates of their
+fortresses, which were all finally surrendered. "The bishops,
+humbled and mortified, and stripped of all pomp and vainglory, were
+reduced to a simple ecclesiastical life, and to the possessions
+belonging to them as churchmen." The contemporary who writes
+this&mdash;the author of the <i>Gesta Stephani</i>&mdash;although a
+decided partisan of Stephen, speaks of this event as the result of
+mad counsels, and a grievous sin that resembled the wickedness of
+the sons of Korah and of Saul. The great body of the ecclesiastics
+were indignant at what they considered an offence to their order.
+The Bishop of Winchester, the brother of Stephen, had become the
+Pope's legate in England, and he summoned the King to attend a
+synod at Winchester. He there produced his authority as legate from
+Pope Innocent, and denounced the arrest of the bishops as a
+dreadful crime. The King had refused to attend the council, but he
+sent Alberic de Vere, "a man deeply versed in legal affairs," to
+represent him. This advocate urged that the Bishop of Lincoln was
+the author of the tumult at Oxford; that whenever Bishop Roger came
+to court, his people, presuming on his power, excited tumults; that
+the Bishop secretly favored the King's enemies, and was ready to
+join the party of the Empress. The council was adjourned, but on a
+subsequent day came the Archbishop of Rouen, as the champion of the
+King, and contended that it was against the canons that the bishops
+should possess castles; and that even if they had the right, they
+were bound to deliver them up to the will of the King, as the times
+were eventful, and the King was bound to make war for the common
+security. The Archbishop of Rouen reasoned as a statesman; the
+Bishop of Winchester as the Pope's legate. Some of the bishops
+threatened to proceed to Rome; and the King's advocate intimated
+that if they did so, their return might not be so easy. Swords were
+at last unsheathed. The King and the earls were now in open
+hostility with the legate and the bishops. Excommunication of the
+King was hinted at; but persuasion was resorted to. Stephen,
+according to one authority, made humble submission, and thus
+"abated the rigor of ecclesiastical discipline." If he did submit,
+his submission was too late. Within a month Earl Robert and the
+empress Matilda were in England.</p>
+<p>Matilda and the Earl of Gloucester landed at Arundel, where the
+widow of Henry I was dwelling. They had a very small force to
+support their pretensions. The Earl crossed the country to Bristol.
+"All England was struck with alarm, and men's minds were agitated
+in various ways. Those who secretly or openly favored the invaders
+were roused to more than usual activity against the King, while his
+own partisans were terrified as if a thunderbolt had fallen."
+Stephen invested the castle of Arundel. But in the most romantic
+spirit of chivalry he permitted the Empress to pass out, and to set
+forward to join her brother at Bristol, under a safe-conduct. In
+1140 the whole kingdom appears to have been subjected to the
+horrors of a partisan warfare. The barons in their castles were
+making a show of "defending their neighborhoods, but, more properly
+to speak, were laying them waste." The legate and the bishops were
+excommunicating the plunderers of churches, but the plunderers
+laughed at their anathemas. Freebooters came over from Flanders,
+not to practise the industrial arts as in the time of Henry I, but
+to take their part in the general pillage. There was frightful
+scarcity in the country, and the ordinary interchange of man with
+man was unsettled by the debasement of the coin. "All things," says
+Malmesbury, "became venial in England; and churches and abbeys were
+no longer secretly but even publicly exposed to sale." All things
+become venial, under a government too weak to repress plunder or to
+punish corruption. The strong aim to be rich by rapine, and the
+cunning by fraud, when the confusion of a kingdom is grown so great
+that, as is recorded of this period, "the neighbor could put no
+faith in his nearest neighbor, nor the friend in his friend, nor
+the brother in his own brother." The demoralization of anarchy is
+even more terrible than its bloodshed.</p>
+<p>The marches and sieges, the revolts and treacheries, of this
+evil time are occasionally varied by incidents which illustrate the
+state of society. Robert Fitz-Herbert, with a detachment of the
+Earl of Gloucester's soldiers, surprised the castle of Devizes,
+which the King had taken from the Bishop of Salisbury. Robert
+Fitz-Herbert varies the atrocities of his fellow-barons, by rubbing
+his prisoners with honey, and exposing them naked to the sun. But
+Robert, having obtained Devizes, refused to admit the Earl of
+Gloucester to any advantage of its possession, and commenced the
+subjection of the neighborhood on his own account. Another crafty
+baron, John Fitz-Gilbert, held the castle of Marlborough; and
+Robert Fitz-Herbert, having an anxious desire to be lord of that
+castle also, endeavoring to cajole Fitz-Gilbert into the admission
+of his followers, went there as a guest, but was detained as a
+prisoner. Upon this the Earl of Gloucester came in force for
+revenge against his treacherous ally, Fitz-Herbert, and, conducting
+him to Devizes, there hanged him. The surprise of Lincoln Castle,
+upon which the events of 1141 mainly turned, is equally
+characteristic of the age. Ranulf, Earl of Chester, and William de
+Roumare, his half-brother, were avowed friends of King Stephen. But
+their ambition took a new direction for the support of Matilda. The
+garrison of Lincoln had no apprehension of a surprise, and were
+busy in those sports which hardy men enjoy even amid the rougher
+sport of war. The Countess of Chester and her sister-in-law, with a
+politeness that the ladies of the court of Louis le Grand could not
+excel, paid a visit to the wife of the knight who had the defence
+of the castle. While there, at this pleasant morning call, "talking
+and joking" with the unsuspecting matron, as Ordericus relates, the
+Earl of Chester came in, "without his armor or even his mantle,"
+attended only by three soldiers. His courtesy was as flattering as
+that of his countess and her friend. But his men-at-arms suddenly
+mastered the unprepared guards, and the gates were thrown open to
+Earl William and his numerous followers. The earls, after this
+stratagem, held the castle against the King, who speedily marched
+to Lincoln. But the Earl of Chester contrived to leave the castle,
+and soon raised a powerful army of his own vassals. The Earl of
+Gloucester joined him with a considerable force, and they together
+advanced to the relief of the besieged city. The battle of Lincoln
+was preceded by a trifling incident to which the chroniclers have
+attached importance. It was the Feast of the Purification; and at
+the mass which was celebrated at the dawn of day, when the King was
+holding a lighted taper in his hand it was suddenly extinguished.
+"This was an omen of sorrow to the King," says Hoveden. But another
+chronicler, the author of the <i>Gesta Stephain</i>, tells us, in
+addition, that the wax candle was suddenly relighted; and he
+accordingly argues that this incident was "a token that for his
+sins he should be deprived of his crown, but on his repentance,
+through God's mercy, he should wonderfully and gloriously recover
+it." The King had been more than a month laying siege to the
+castle, and his army was encamped around the city of Lincoln. When
+it was ascertained that his enemies were at hand he was advised to
+raise the siege and march out to strengthen his power by a general
+levy. He decided upon instant battle. He was then exhorted not to
+fight on the solemn festival of the Purification. But his courage
+was greater than his prudence or his piety. He set forth to meet
+the insurgent earls. The best knights were in his army; but the
+infantry of his rivals was far more numerous. Stephen detached a
+strong body of horse and foot to dispute the passage of a ford of
+the Trent. But Gloucester by an impetuous charge obtained
+possession of the ford, and the battle became general. The King's
+horsemen fled. The desperate bravery of Stephen, and the issue of
+the battle, have been described by Henry of Huntingdon with
+singular animation: "King Stephen, therefore, with his infantry,
+stood alone in the midst of the enemy. These surrounded the royal
+troops, attacking the columns on all sides, as if they were
+assaulting a castle. Then the battle raged terribly round this
+circle; helmets and swords gleamed as they clashed, and the fearful
+cries and shouts re&euml;choed from the neighboring hills and city
+walls. The cavalry, furiously charging the royal column, slew some
+and trampled down others; some were made prisoners. No respite, no
+breathing time, was allowed; except in the quarter in which the
+King himself had taken his stand, where the assailants recoiled
+from the unmatched force of his terrible arm. The Earl of Chester
+seeing this, and envious of the glory the King was gaining, threw
+himself upon him with the whole weight of his men-at-arms. Even
+then the King's courage did not fail, but his heavy battle-axe
+gleamed like lightning, striking down some, bearing back others. At
+length it was shattered by repeated blows. Then he drew his
+well-tried sword, with which he wrought wonders, until that too was
+broken. Perceiving which, William de Kaims, a brave soldier, rushed
+on him, and seizing him by his helmet, shouted, 'Here, here, I have
+taken the King!' Others came to his aid, and the King was made
+prisoner."</p>
+<p>After the capture of King Stephen, at this brief but decisive
+battle, he was kept a close prisoner at Bristol Castle. Then
+commenced what might be called the reign of Queen Matilda, which
+lasted about eight months. The defeat of Stephen was the triumph of
+the greater ecclesiastics. On the third Sunday in Lent, 1141, there
+was a conference on the plain in the neighborhood of
+Winchester&mdash;a day dark and rainy, which portended disasters.
+The Bishop of Winchester came forth from his city with all the pomp
+of the pope's legate; and there Matilda swore that in all matters
+of importance, and especially in the bestowal of bishoprics and
+abbeys, she would submit to the Church; and the Bishop and his
+supporters pledged their faith to the Empress on these conditions.
+After Easter, a great council was held at Winchester, which the
+Bishop called as the Pope's vicegerent. The unscrupulous churchman
+boldly came forward, and denounced his brother, inviting the
+assembly to elect a sovereign; and, with an amount of arrogance
+totally unprecedented, thus asserted the notorious untruth that the
+right of electing a king of England principally belonged to the
+clergy: "The case was yesterday agitated before a part of the
+higher clergy of England, to whose right it principally pertains to
+elect the sovereign, and also to crown him. First, then, as is
+fitting, invoking God's assistance, we elect the daughter of that
+peaceful, that glorious, that rich, that good, and in our times
+incomparable king, as sovereign of England and Normandy, and
+promise her fidelity and support." The Bishop then said to the
+applauding assembly: "We have despatched messengers for the
+Londoners, who, from the importance of their city in England, are
+almost nobles, as it were, to meet us on this business." The next
+day the Londoners came. They were sent, they said, by their
+fraternity to entreat that their lord, the King, might be liberated
+from captivity. The legate refused them, and repeated his oration
+against his brother. It was a work of great difficulty to soothe
+the minds of the Londoners; and St. John's Day had arrived before
+they would consent to acknowledge Matilda. Many parts of the
+kingdom had then submitted to her government, and she entered
+London with great state. Her nature seems to have been rash and
+imperious. Her first act was to demand subsidies of the citizens;
+and when they said that their wealth was greatly diminished by the
+troubled state of the kingdom, she broke forth into insufferable
+rage. The vigilant queen of Stephen, who kept possession of Kent,
+now approached the city with a numerous force, and by her envoys
+demanded her husband's freedom. Of course her demand was made in
+vain. She then put forth a front of battle. Instead of being
+crowned at Westminster, the daughter of Henry I fled in terror; for
+"the whole city flew to arms at the ringing of the bells, which was
+the signal for war, and all with one accord rose upon the Countess
+[of Anjou] and her adherents, as swarms of wasps issue from their
+hives."</p>
+<p>William Fitzstephen, the biographer of Thomas &agrave; Becket,
+in his <i>Description of London</i>, supposed to be written about
+the middle of the reign of Henry II, says of this city, "ennobled
+by her men, graced by her arms, and peopled by a multitude of
+inhabitants," that "in the wars under King Stephen there went out
+to a muster of armed horsemen, esteemed fit for war, twenty
+thousand, and of infantry, sixty thousand." In general, the
+<i>Description of London</i> appears trustworthy, and in some
+instances is supported by other authorities. But this vast number
+of fighting men must, unquestionably, be exaggerated: unless, as
+Lyttelton conjectures, such a muster included the militia of
+Middlesex, Kent, and other counties adjacent to London. Peter of
+Blois, in the reign of Henry II, reckons the inhabitants of the
+city at forty thousand. That the citizens were trained to warlike
+exercises, and that their manly sports nurtured them in the
+hardihood of military habits, we may well conclude from
+Fitzstephen's account of this community at a little later period
+than that of which we are writing. To the north of the city were
+pasture lands, with streams on whose banks the clack of many mills
+was pleasing to the ear; and beyond was an immense forest, with
+densely wooded thickets, where stags, fallow-deer, boars, and wild
+bulls had their coverts. We have seen that in the charter of Henry
+I the citizens had liberty to hunt through a very extensive
+district, and hawking was also among their free recreations.
+Football was the favorite game; and the boys of the schools, and
+the various guilds of craftsmen, had each their ball. The elder
+citizens came on horseback to see these contests of the young men.
+Every Sunday in Lent a company with lances and shields went out to
+joust. In the Easter holidays they had river tournaments. During
+the summer the youths exercised themselves in leaping, archery,
+wrestling, stone-throwing, slinging javelins, and fighting with
+bucklers. When the great marsh which washed the walls of the city
+on the north was frozen over, sliding, sledging, and skating were
+the sports of crowds. They had sham fights on the ice, and legs and
+arms were sometimes broken. "But," says Fitzstephen, "youth is an
+age eager for glory and desirous of victory, and so young men
+engage in counterfeit battles, that they may conduct themselves
+more valiantly in real ones." That universal love of hardy sports,
+which is one of the greatest characteristics of England, and from
+which we derive no little of that spirit which keeps our island
+safe, is not of modern growth. It was one of the most important
+portions of the education of the people seven centuries ago.</p>
+<p>It was this community, then, so brave, so energetic, so enriched
+by commerce above all the other cities of England, that resolutely
+abided by the fortunes of King Stephen. They had little to dread
+from any hostile assaults of the rival faction; for the city was
+strongly fortified on all sides except to the river; but on that
+side it was secure, after the Tower was built. The palace of
+Westminster had also a breastwork and bastions. After Matilda had
+taken her hasty departure, the indignant Londoners marched out, and
+they sustained a principal part in what has been called "the rout
+of Winchester," in which Robert, Earl of Gloucester, was taken
+prisoner. The ex-Empress escaped to Devizes. The capture of the
+Earl of Gloucester led to important results. A convention was
+agreed to between the adherents of each party that the King should
+be exchanged for the Earl. Stephen was once more "every inch a
+king." But still there was no peace in the land.</p>
+<p>The Bishop of Winchester had again changed his side. In the hour
+of success the empress Matilda had refused the reasonable request
+that Prince Eustace, the son of Stephen, should be put in
+possession of his father's earldom of Boulogne. Malmesbury says, "A
+misunderstanding arose between the legate and the Empress which may
+be justly considered as the melancholy cause of every subsequent
+evil in England." The chief actors in this extraordinary drama
+present a curious study of human character. Matilda, resting her
+claim to the throne upon her legitimate descent from Henry I, who
+had himself usurped the throne&mdash;possessing her father's
+courage and daring, with some of his cruelty&mdash;haughty,
+vindictive&mdash;furnishes one of the most striking portraits of
+the proud lady of the feudal period, who shrank from no danger by
+reason of her sex, but made the homage of chivalry to woman a
+powerful instrument for enforcing her absolute will. The Earl of
+Gloucester, the illegitimate brother of Matilda, brave, steadfast,
+of a free and generous nature, a sagacious counsellor, a lover of
+literature, appears to have had few of the vices of that age, and
+most of its elevating qualities. Of Stephen it has been said, "He
+deserves no other reproach than that of having embraced the
+occupation of a captain of banditti." This appears rather a harsh
+judgment from a philosophical writer. Bearing in mind that the
+principle of election prevailed in the choice of a king, whatever
+was the hereditary claim, and seeing how welcome was the advent of
+Stephen when he came, in 1135, to avert the dangers of the kingdom,
+he merits the title of "a captain of banditti" no more than Harold
+or William the Conqueror. After the contests of six years&mdash;the
+victories, the defeats, the hostility of the Church, his capture
+and imprisonment&mdash;the attachment of the people of the great
+towns to his person and government appears to have been unshaken.
+When he was defeated at Lincoln, and led captive through the city,
+"the surrounding multitude were moved with pity, shedding tears and
+uttering cries of grief." Ordericus says: "The King's disaster
+filled with grief the clergy and monks and the common people;
+because he was condescending and courteous to those who were good
+and quiet, and if his treacherous nobles had allowed it, he would
+have put an end to their rapacious enterprises, and been a generous
+protector and benevolent friend of the country." The fourth and not
+least remarkable personage of this history is Henry, the Bishop of
+Winchester, and the Pope's legate. At that period, when the
+functions of churchman and statesman were united, we find this man
+the chief instrument for securing the crown for his brother. He
+subsequently becomes the vicegerent of the papal see. Stephen, with
+more justice than discretion, is of opinion that bishops are not
+doing their duty when they build castles, ride about in armor, with
+crowds of retainers, and are not at all scrupulous in appropriating
+some of the booty of a lawless time. From the day when he exhibited
+his hostility to fighting bishops, the Pope's legate was his
+brother's deadly enemy. But he found that the rival whom he had set
+up was by no means a pliant tool in his hands, and he then turned
+against Matilda. When Stephen had shaken off the chains with which
+he was loaded in Bristol Castle, the Bishop summoned a council at
+Westminster, on his legatine authority; and there "by great powers
+of eloquence, endeavored to extenuate the odium of his own
+conduct"; affirming that he had supported the Empress, "not from
+inclination, but necessity." He then "commanded on the part of God
+and of the Pope, that they should strenuously assist the King,
+appointed by the will of the people, and by the approbation of the
+Holy See." Malmesbury, who records these doings, adds that a layman
+sent from the Empress affirmed that "her coming to England had been
+effected by the legate's frequent letters"; and that "her taking
+the King, and holding him in captivity, had been done principally
+by his connivance." The reign of Stephen is not only "the most
+perfect condensation of all the ills of feudality," but affords a
+striking picture of the ills which befall a people when an
+ambitious hierarchy, swayed to and fro at the will of a foreign
+power, regards the supremacy of the Church as the one great object
+to be attained, at whatever expense of treachery and falsehood, of
+national degradation and general suffering.</p>
+<p>In 1142 the civil war is raging more fiercely than ever. Matilda
+is at Oxford, a fortified city, protected by the Thames, by a wall,
+and by an impregnable castle. Stephen, with a body of veterans,
+wades across the river and enters the city. Matilda and her
+followers take refuge in the keep. For three months the King
+presses the siege, surrounding the fortress on all sides. Famine is
+approaching to the helpless garrison. It is the Christmas season.
+The country is covered with a deep snow. The Thames and the
+tributary rivers are frozen over. With a small escort Matilda
+contrives to escape, and passes undiscovered through the royal
+posts, on a dark and silent night, when no sound is heard but the
+clang of a trumpet or the challenge of a sentinel. In the course of
+the night she went to Abingdon on foot, and afterwards reached
+Wallingford on horseback. The author of the <i>Gesta Stephani</i>
+expresses his wonder at the marvellous escapes of this courageous
+woman. The changes of her fortune are equally remarkable. After the
+flight from Oxford the arms of the Earl of Gloucester are again
+successful. Stephen is beaten at Wilton, and retreats precipitately
+with his military brother, the Bishop of Winchester. There are now
+in the autumn of 1142 universal turmoil and desolation. Many people
+emigrate. Others crowd round the sanctuary of the churches, and
+dwell there in mean hovels. Famine is general. Fields are white
+with ripened corn, but the cultivators have fled, and there is none
+to gather the harvest. Cities are deserted and depopulated. Fierce
+foreign mercenaries, for whom the barons have no pay, pillage the
+farms and the monasteries. The bishops, for the most part, rest
+supine amid all this storm of tyranny. When they rouse themselves
+they increase rather than mitigate the miseries of the people.
+Milo, Earl of Hereford, has demanded money of the Bishop of
+Hereford to pay his troops. The Bishop refuses, and Milo seizes his
+lands and goods. The Bishop then pronounces sentence of
+excommunication against Milo and his adherents, and lays an
+interdict upon the country subject to the Earl's authority. We
+might hastily think that the solemn curse pronounced against a
+nation, or a district, was an unmeaning ceremony, with its "bell,
+book, and candle," to terrify only the weakminded. It was one of
+the most outrageous of the numerous ecclesiastical tyrannies. The
+consolations of religion were eagerly sought for and justly prized
+by the great body of the people, who earnestly believed that a
+happy future would be a reward for the patient endurance of a
+miserable present. As they were admitted to the holy communion,
+they recognized an acknowledgment of the equality of men before the
+great Father of all. Their marriages were blessed and their
+funerals were hallowed. Under an interdict all the churches were
+shut. No knell was tolled for the dead, for the dead remained
+unburied. No merry peals welcomed the bridal procession, for no
+couple could be joined in wedlock. The awe-stricken mother might
+have her infant baptized, and the dying might receive extreme
+unction. But all public offices of the Church were suspended. If we
+imagine such a condition of society in a village devastated by fire
+and sword, we may wonder how a free government and a Christian
+church have ever grown up among us.</p>
+<p>If Stephen had quietly possessed the throne, and his heir had
+succeeded him, the crowns of England and Normandy would have been
+disconnected before the thirteenth century. Geoffrey of Anjou,
+while his duchess was in England, had become master of Normandy,
+and its nobles had acknowledged his son Henry as their rightful
+duke. The boy was in England, under the protection of the Earl of
+Gloucester, who attended to his education. The great Earl died in
+1147. For a few years there had been no decided contest between the
+forces of the King and the Empress. After eight years of terrible
+hostility, and of desperate adventure, Matilda left the country.
+Stephen made many efforts to control the license of the barons, but
+with little effect. He was now engaged in another quarrel with the
+Church. His brother had been superseded as legate by Theobald,
+Archbishop of Canterbury, in consequence of the death of the Pope
+who had supported the Bishop of Winchester. Theobald was Stephen's
+enemy, and his hostility was rendered formidable by his alliance
+with Bigod, the Earl of Norfolk. The Archbishop excommunicated
+Stephen and his adherents, and the King was enforced to submission.
+In 1150 Stephen, having been again reconciled to the Church, sought
+the recognition of his son Eustace as the heir to the kingdom. This
+recognition was absolutely refused by the Archbishop, who said that
+Stephen was regarded by the papal see as an usurper. But time was
+preparing a solution of the difficulties of the kingdom. Henry of
+Anjou was grown into manhood. Born in 1133, he had been knighted by
+his uncle, David of Scotland, in 1149. His father died in 1151, and
+he became not only Duke of Normandy, but Earl of Anjou, Touraine,
+and Maine. In 1152 he contracted a marriage of ambition with
+Eleanor, the divorced wife of Louis of France, and thus became Lord
+of Aquitaine and Poitou, which Eleanor possessed in her own right.
+Master of all the western coast of France, from the Somme to the
+Pyrenees, with the exception of Brittany, his ambition, thus
+strengthened by his power, prepared to dispute the sovereignty of
+England with better hopes than ever waited on his mother's career.
+He landed with a well-appointed band of followers in 1153, and
+besieged various castles. But no general encounter took place. The
+King and the Duke had a conference, without witnesses, across a
+rivulet, and this meeting prepared the way for a final
+pacification. The negotiators were Henry, the Bishop, on the one
+part, and Theobald, the Archbishop, on the other. Finally Stephen
+led the Prince in solemn procession through the streets of
+Winchester, "and all the great men of the realm, by the King's
+command, did homage, and pronounced the fealty due to their liege
+lord, to the Duke of Normandy, saving only their allegiance to King
+Stephen during his life." Stephen's son Eustace had died during the
+negotiations. The troublesome reign of Stephen was soon after
+brought to a close. He died on the 25th of October, 1154. His
+constant and heroic queen had died three years before him.</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_21"><!-- RULE4 21 --></a>
+<h2>ANTIPAPAL DEMOCRATIC MOVEMENT: ARNOLD OF BRESCIA</h2>
+<center>ST. BERNARD AND THE SECOND CRUSADE</center>
+<center>A.D. 1145-1155</center>
+<br>
+<center>JOHANN A.W. NEANDER</center>
+<p class="intro">During the first half of the twelfth
+century&mdash;a period marked by conflicting spiritual
+tendencies&mdash;in Italy began a work of political and religious
+reform, which has ever since been associated with the name of its
+chief originator and apostle, Arnold of Brescia, so called from his
+native city in Lombardy. He was born about the year 1100, became a
+disciple of Abelard&mdash;whose teachings fired him with
+enthusiasm&mdash;and entered the priesthood.</p>
+<p class="intro">Although quite orthodox in doctrine, he rebelled
+against the secularization of the Church&mdash;which had given to
+the pope almost supreme power in temporal affairs&mdash;and against
+the worldly disposition and life then prevalent among ecclesiastics
+and monks. His own life was sternly simple and ascetic, and this
+habit had been strongly confirmed by the ethical passion which
+burned in the religious and philosophical instructions of Abelard.
+With the popular religion Arnold had earnest sympathy, but he would
+reduce the clergy to their primitive and apostolic poverty,
+depriving them of individual wealth and of all temporal power.</p>
+<p class="intro">The inspiring idea of Arnold's movement was that
+of a holy and pure church, a renovation of the spiritual order
+after the pattern of the apostolic church. He conformed in dress as
+well as in his mode of life to the principles he taught. The
+worldly and often corrupt clergy, he maintained, were unfit to
+discharge the priestly functions&mdash;they were no longer priests,
+and the secularized Church was no longer the house of God.</p>
+<p class="intro">Arnold dreamed of a great Christian republic and
+labored to establish it, insomuch that his ideal, never realized in
+concrete form, either in church or state, took, and in history has
+kept, the name of republic. His eloquence and sincerity brought him
+powerful popular support, and even a large part of the nobility
+were won to his side. But of course, among those whom his aims
+condemned or antagonized, there were many who spared no pains to
+place him in an unfavorable light and to bring his labors to
+naught. In the simple story of his career, as here told by the
+great church historian, his figure appears in an attitude of
+heroism, which the pathos of his end can only make the reader more
+deeply appreciate. Through all this agitation is heard the voice of
+St. Bernard urging the religious conscience and better aspiration
+of the time, preaching the Second Crusade, and speeding its
+eastward march with earnest expectation&mdash;his high hope doomed
+to perish with its inglorious result.</p>
+<p>Arnold's discourses were directly calculated by their tendency
+to find ready entrance into the minds of the laity, before whose
+eyes the worldly lives of the ecclesiastics and monks were
+constantly present, and to create a faction in deadly hostility to
+the clergy. Superadded to this was the inflammable matter already
+prepared by the collision of the spirit of political freedom with
+the power of the higher clergy. Thus Arnold's addresses produced in
+the minds of the Italian people, quite susceptible to such
+excitements, a prodigious effect, which threatened to spread more
+widely, and Pope Innocent felt himself called upon to take
+preventive measures against it. At the Lateran Council, in the year
+1139, he declared against Arnold's proceedings, and commanded him
+to quit Italy&mdash;the scene of the disturbances thus
+far&mdash;and not to return again without express permission from
+the Pope. Arnold, moreover, is said to have bound himself by an
+oath to obey this injunction, which probably was expressed in such
+terms as to leave him free to interpret it as referring exclusively
+to the person of Pope Innocent. If the oath was not so expressed,
+he might afterward have been accused of violating that oath. It is
+to be regretted that the form in which the sentence was pronounced
+against Arnold has not come down to us; but from its very character
+it is evident that he could not have been convicted of any false
+doctrine, since otherwise the Pope would certainly not have treated
+him so mildly&mdash;would not have been contented with merely
+banishing him from Italy, since teachers of false doctrine would be
+dangerous to the Church everywhere.</p>
+<p>Bernard, moreover, in his letter directed against Arnold, states
+that he was accused before the Pope of being the author of a very
+bad schism. Arnold now betook himself to France, and here he became
+entangled in the quarrels with his old teacher Abelard, to whom he
+was indebted for the first impulse of his mind toward this more
+serious and free bent of the religious spirit. Expelled from
+France, he directed his steps to Switzerland, and sojourned in
+Zurich. The abbot Bernard thought it necessary to caution the
+Bishop of Constance against him; but the man who had been condemned
+by the Pope found protection there from the papal legate, Cardinal
+Guido, who, indeed, made him a member of his household and
+companion of his table. The abbot Bernard severely censured the
+prelate, on the ground that Arnold's connection with him would
+contribute, without fail, to give importance and influence to that
+dangerous man. This deserves to be noticed on two accounts, for it
+makes it evident what power he could exercise over men's minds, and
+that no false doctrines could be charged to his account.</p>
+<p>But independent of Arnold's personal presence, the impulse which
+he had given continued to operate in Italy, and the effects of it
+extended even to Rome. By the papal condemnation, public attention
+was only more strongly drawn to the subject.</p>
+<p>The Romans certainly felt no great sympathy for the religious
+element in that serious spirit of reform which animated Arnold; but
+the political movements, which had sprung out of his reforming
+tendency, found a point of attachment in their love of liberty, and
+their dreams of the ancient dominion of Rome over the world. The
+idea of emancipating themselves from the yoke of the Pope, and of
+reestablishing the old Republic, flattered their Roman pride.
+Espousing the principles of Arnold, they required that the Pope, as
+spiritual head of the Church, should confine himself to the
+administration of spiritual affairs; and they committed to a senate
+the supreme direction of civil affairs.</p>
+<p>Innocent could do nothing to stem such a violent current; and he
+died in the midst of these disturbances, in the year 1143. The mild
+Cardinal Guido, the friend of Abelard and Arnold, became his
+successor, and called himself, when pope, Celestine II. By his
+gentleness, quiet was restored for a short time. Perhaps it was the
+news of the elevation of this friendly man to the papal throne that
+encouraged Arnold himself to come to Rome. But Celestine died after
+six months, and Lucius II was his successor. Under his reign the
+Romans renewed the former agitations with more violence; they
+utterly renounced obedience to the Pope, whom they recognized only
+in his priestly character, and the restored Roman Republic sought
+to strike a league in opposition to the Pope and to papacy with the
+new Emperor, Conrad III.</p>
+<p>In the name of the "senate and Roman people," a pompous letter
+was addressed to Conrad. The Emperor was invited to come to Rome,
+that from thence, like Justinian and Constantine, in former days,
+he might give laws to the world.</p>
+<p>Caesar should have the things that are Caesar's; the priest the
+things that are the priest's, as Christ ordained when Peter paid
+the tribute money. Long did the tendency awakened by Arnold's
+principles continue to agitate Rome. In the letters written amidst
+these commotions, by individual noblemen of Rome to the Emperor, we
+perceive a singular mixing together of the Arnoldian spirit with
+the dreams of Roman vanity; a radical tendency to the separation of
+secular from spiritual things which if it had been capable enough
+in itself, and if it could have found more points of attachment in
+the age, would have brought destruction on the old theocratical
+system of the Church. They said that the Pope could claim no
+political sovereignty in Rome; he could not even be consecrated
+without the consent of the Emperor&mdash;a rule which had in fact
+been observed till the time of Gregory VII. Men complained of the
+worldliness of the clergy, of their bad lives, of the contradiction
+between their conduct and the teachings of Scripture.</p>
+<p>The popes were accused as the instigators of the wars. "The
+popes," it was said, "should no longer unite the cup of the
+eucharist with the sword; it was their vocation to preach, and to
+confirm what they preached by good works. How could those who
+eagerly grasped at all the wealth of this world, and corrupted the
+true riches of the Church, the doctrine of salvation obtained by
+Christ, by their false doctrines and their luxurious living,
+receive that word of our Lord, 'Blessed are the poor in spirit,'
+when they were poor themselves neither in fact nor in disposition?"
+Even the donative of Constantine to the Roman bishop Silvester was
+declared to be a pitiable fiction. This lie had been so clearly
+exposed that it was obvious to the very day-laborers and to women,
+and that these could put to silence the most learned men if they
+ventured to defend the genuineness of this donative; so that the
+Pope, with his cardinals, no longer dared to appear in public. But
+Arnold was perhaps the only individual in whose case such a
+tendency was deeply rooted in religious conviction; with many it
+was but a transitory intoxication, in which their political
+interests had become merged for the moment.</p>
+<p>The pope Lucius II was killed as early as 1145, in the attack on
+the Capitol. A scholar of the great abbot Bernard, the abbot Peter
+Bernard of Pisa, now mounted the papal chair under the name of
+Eugene III. As Eugene honored and loved the abbot Bernard as his
+spiritual father and old preceptor, so the latter took advantage of
+his relation to the Pope to speak the truth to him with a plainness
+which no other man would easily have ventured to use. In
+congratulating him upon his elevation to the papal dignity, he took
+occasion to exhort him to do away with the many abuses which had
+become so widely spread in the Church by worldly influences. "Who
+will give me the satisfaction," said he in his letter, "of
+beholding the Church of God, before I die, in a condition like that
+in which it was in ancient days, when the apostles threw out their
+nets, not for silver and gold, but for souls? How fervently I wish
+thou mightest inherit the word of that apostle whose episcopal seat
+thou hast acquired, of him who said, 'Thy gold perish with thee.'
+Oh that all the enemies of Zion might tremble before this dreadful
+word, and shrink back abashed! This, thy mother indeed expects and
+requires of thee, for this long and sigh the sons of thy mother,
+small and great, that every plant which our Father in heaven has
+not planted may be rooted up by thy hands." He then alluded to the
+sudden deaths of the last predecessors of the Pope, exhorting him
+to humility, and reminding him of his responsibility. "In all thy
+works," he wrote, "remember that thou art a man; and let the fear
+of Him who taketh away the breath of rulers be ever before thine
+eyes."</p>
+<p>Eugene was soon forced to yield, it is true, to the superior
+force of the insurrectionary spirit in Rome, and in 1146 to take
+refuge in France; but, like Urban and Innocent, he too, from this
+country, attained to the highest triumph of the papal power. Like
+Innocent, he found there, in the abbot Bernard of Clairvaux, a
+mightier instrument for operating on the minds of the age than he
+could have found in any other country; and like Urban, when
+banished from the ancient seat of the papacy, he was enabled to
+place himself at the head of a crusade proclaimed in his name, and
+undertaken with great enthusiasm; an enterprise from which a new
+impression of sacredness would be reflected back upon his own
+person.</p>
+<p>The news of the success which had attended the arms of the
+Saracens in Syria, the defeat of the Christians, the conquest of
+the ancient Christian territory of Edessa, the danger which
+threatened the new Christian kingdom of Jerusalem and the Holy
+City, had spread alarm among the Western nations, and the Pope
+considered himself bound to summon the Christians of the West to
+the assistance of their hard-pressed brethren in the faith and to
+the recovery of the holy places. By a letter directed to the abbot
+Bernard he commissioned him to exhort the Western Christians in his
+name, that, for penance and forgiveness of sins, they should march
+to the East, to deliver their brethren, or to give up their lives
+for them. Enthusiastic for the cause himself Bernard communicated,
+through the power of the living word and by letters, his enthusiasm
+to the nations. He represented the new crusade as a means furnished
+by God to the multitudes sunk in sin, of calling them to
+repentance, and of paving the way, by devout participation in a
+pious work, for the forgiveness of their sins. Thus, in his letter
+to the clergy and people in East Frankland (Germany), he exhorts
+them eagerly to lay hold on this opportunity; he declares that the
+Almighty condescended to invite murderers, robbers, adulterers,
+perjurers, and those sunk in other crimes, into his service, as
+well as the righteous. He calls upon them to make an end of waging
+war with one another, and to seek an object for their warlike
+prowess in this holy contest. "Here, brave warrior," he exclaims,
+"thou hast a field where thou mayest fight without danger, where
+victory is glory and death is gain. Take the sign of the cross, and
+thou shalt obtain the forgiveness of all the sins which thou hast
+never confessed with a contrite heart." By Bernard's fiery
+discourses men of all ranks were carried away. In France and in
+Germany he travelled about, conquering by an effort his great
+bodily infirmities, and the living word from his lips produced even
+mightier effects than his letters.</p>
+<p>A peculiar charm, and a peculiar power of moving men's minds,
+must have existed in the tones of his voice; to this must be added
+the awe-inspiring effect of his whole appearance, the way in which
+his whole being and the motions of his bodily frame joined in
+testifying of that which seized and inspired him. Thus it admits of
+being explained how, in Germany, even those who understood but
+little, or in fact nothing, of what he said, could be so moved as
+to shed tears and smite their breasts; could, by his own speeches
+in a foreign language, be more strongly affected and agitated than
+by the immediate interpretation of his words by another. From all
+quarters sick persons were conveyed to him by the friends who
+sought from him a cure; and the power of his faith, the confidence
+he inspired in the minds of men, might sometimes produce remarkable
+effects. With this enthusiasm, however, Bernard united a degree of
+prudence and a discernment of character such as few of that age
+possessed, and such qualities were required to counteract the
+multiform excitements of the wild spirit of fanaticism which mixed
+in with this great ferment of minds.</p>
+<p>Thus, he warned the Germans not to suffer themselves to be
+misled so far as to follow certain independent enthusiasts,
+ignorant of war, who were bent on moving forward the bodies of the
+crusaders prematurely. He held up as a warning the example of Peter
+the Hermit, and declared himself very decidedly opposed to the
+proposition of an abbot who was disposed to march with a number of
+monks to Jerusalem; "for," said he, "fighting warriors are more
+needed there than singing monks." At an assembly held at Chartres
+it was proposed that he himself should take the lead of the
+expedition; but he rejected the proposition at once, declaring that
+it was beyond his power and contrary to his calling. Having,
+perhaps, reason to fear that the Pope might be hurried on, by the
+shouts of the many, to lay upon him some charge to which he did not
+feel himself called, he besought the Pope that he would not make
+him a victim to men's arbitrary will, but that he would inquire, as
+it was his duty to do, how God had determined to dispose of
+him.</p>
+<p>With the preaching of this Second Crusade, as with the
+invitation to the First, was connected an extraordinary awakening.
+Many who had hitherto given themselves up to their unrestrained
+passions and desires, and become strangers to all higher feelings,
+were seized with compunction. Bernard's call to repentance
+penetrated many a heart; people who had lived in all manner of
+crime were seen following this voice and flocking together in
+troops to receive the badge of the cross. Bishop Otto of
+Freisingen, the historian, who himself took the cross at that time,
+expresses it as his opinion "that every man of sound understanding
+would be forced to acknowledge so sudden and uncommon a change
+could have been produced in no other way than by the right hand of
+the Lord." The provost Gerhoh of Reichersberg, who wrote in the
+midst of these movements, was persuaded that he saw here a work of
+the Holy Spirit, designed to counteract the vices and corruptions
+which had got the upper hand in the Church.</p>
+<p>Many who had been awakened to repentance confessed what they had
+taken from others by robbery or fraud, and hastened, before they
+went to the holy war, to seek reconciliation with their enemies.
+The Christian enthusiasm of the German people found utterance in
+songs in the German tongue; and even now the peculiar adaptation of
+this language to sacred poetry began to be remarked. Indecent songs
+could no longer venture to appear abroad.</p>
+<p>While some were awakened by Bernard's preaching from a life of
+crime to repentance, and by taking part in the holy war strove to
+obtain the remission of their sins, others again, who though
+hitherto borne along in the current of ordinary worldly pursuits,
+yet had not given themselves up to vice, were filled by Bernard's
+words with loathing of the worldly life, inflamed with a vehement
+longing after a higher stage of Christian perfection, after a life
+of entire consecration to God. They longed rather to enter upon the
+pilgrimage to the heavenly than to an earthly Jerusalem; they
+resolved to become monks, and would fain have the man of God
+himself, whose words had made so deep an impression on their
+hearts, as their guide in the spiritual life, and commit themselves
+to his directions, in the monastery of Clairvaux. But here Bernard
+showed his prudence and knowledge of mankind; he did not allow all
+to become monks who wished to do so. Many he rejected because he
+perceived they were not fitted for the quiet of the contemplative
+life, but needed to be disciplined by the conflicts and cares of a
+life of action.</p>
+<p>As contemporaries themselves acknowledge, these first
+impressions, in the case of many who went to the crusades, were of
+no permanent duration, and their old nature broke forth again the
+more strongly under the manifold temptations to which they were
+exposed, in proportion to the facility with which, through the
+confidence they reposed in a plenary indulgence, without really
+laying to heart the condition upon which it was bestowed, they
+could flatter themselves with security in their sins.</p>
+<p>Gerhoh of Reichersberg, in describing the blessed effects of
+that awakening which accompanied the preaching of the crusader, yet
+says: "We doubt not that among so vast a multitude some became in
+the true sense and in all sincerity soldiers of Christ. Some,
+however, were led to embark in the enterprise by various other
+occasions, concerning whom it does not belong to us to judge, but
+only to Him who alone knows the hearts of those who marched to the
+contest either in the right or not in the right spirit. Yet this we
+do confidently affirm, that to this crusade many were called, but
+few were chosen." And it was said that many returned from this
+expedition, not better, but worse than they went. Therefore the
+monk Cesarius of Heisterbach, who states this, adds: "All depends
+on bearing the yoke of Christ not <i>one</i> year or <i>two</i>
+years, but daily, if a man is really intent on doing it in truth,
+and in that sense in which our Lord requires it to be done, in
+order to follow him."</p>
+<p>When it turned out, however, that the event did not answer the
+expectations excited by Bernard's enthusiastic confidence, but the
+crusade came to that unfortunate issue which was brought about
+especially by the treachery of the princes and nobles of the
+Christian kingdom in Syria, this was a source of great chagrin to
+Bernard, who had been so active in setting it in motion, and who
+had inspired such confident hopes by his promises. He appeared now
+in the light of a bad prophet, and he was reproached by many with
+having incited men to engage in an enterprise which had cost so
+much blood to no purpose; but Bernard's friends alleged, in his
+defence, that he had not excited such a popular movement
+single-handed, but as the organ of the Pope, in whose name he
+acted; and they appealed to the facts by which his preaching of the
+cross was proved to be a work of God&mdash;to the wonders which
+attended it. Or they ascribed the failure of the undertaking to the
+bad conduct of the crusaders themselves, to the unchristian mode of
+life which many of them led, as one of these friends maintained, in
+a consoling letter to Bernard himself, adding, "God, however, has
+turned it to good. Numbers who, if they had returned home, would
+have continued to live a life of crime, disciplined and purified by
+many sufferings, have passed into the life eternal."</p>
+<p>But Bernard himself could not be staggered in his faith by this
+event. In writing to Pope Eugene on this subject, he refers to the
+incomprehensibleness of the divine ways and judgments; to the
+example of Moses, who, although his work carried on its face
+incontestable evidence of being a work of God, yet was not
+permitted himself to conduct the Jews into the Promised Land. As
+this was owing to the fault of the Jews themselves, so too the
+crusaders had none to blame but themselves for the failure of the
+divine work. "But," says he, "it will be said, perhaps, how do we
+know that this work came from the Lord? What miracle dost thou work
+that we should believe thee? To this question I need not give an
+answer; it is a point on which my modesty asks to be excused from
+speaking. Do you answer," says he to the Pope, "for me and for
+yourself, according to that which you have seen and heard." So
+firmly was Bernard convinced that God had sustained his labors by
+miracles.</p>
+<p>Eugene was at length enabled, in the year 1149, after having for
+a long time excited against himself the indignation of the
+cardinals by his dependence on the French abbot, with the
+assistance of Roger, King of the Sicilies, to return to Rome;
+where, however, he still had to maintain a struggle with the party
+of Arnold.</p>
+<p>The provost Gerhoh finds something to complain of in the fact
+that the Church of St. Peter wore so warlike an aspect that men
+beheld the tomb of the apostle surrounded with bastions and the
+implements of war.</p>
+<p>As Bernard was no longer sufficiently near the Pope to exert on
+him the same immediate personal influence as in times past, he
+addressed to him a voice of admonition and warning, such as the
+mighty of the earth seldom enjoy the privilege of hearing. With the
+frankness of a love which, as he himself expresses it, knew not the
+master, but recognized the son, even under the pontifical robes, he
+set before him, in his four books <i>On Meditation</i>, which he
+sent to him singly at different times, the duties of his office,
+and the faults against which, in order to fulfil these duties, he
+needed especially to guard.</p>
+<p>Bernard was penetrated with a conviction that to the Pope, as
+St. Peter's successor, was committed by God a sovereign power of
+church government over all, and responsible to no other tribunal;
+that to this church theocracy, guided by the Pope, the
+administration even of the secular power, though independent within
+its own peculiar sphere, should be subjected, for the service of
+the kingdom of God; but he also perceived, with the deepest pain,
+how very far the papacy was from corresponding to this its idea and
+destination; what prodigious corruption had sprung and continued to
+spring from the abuse of papal authority; he perceived already,
+with prophetic eye, that this very abuse of arbitrary will must
+eventually bring about the destruction of this power. He desired
+that the Pope should disentangle himself from the secular part of
+his office, and reduce that office within the purely spiritual
+domain; and that, above all, he should learn to govern and restrict
+himself.</p>
+<p>But to the close of his life, in the year 1153, Pope Eugene had
+to contend with the turbulent spirit of the Romans and the
+influences of the principles disseminated by Arnold; and this
+contest was prolonged into the reign of his second successor,
+Adrian IV. Among the people and among the nobles, a considerable
+party had arisen who would concede to the Pope no kind of secular
+dominion. And there seems to have been a shade of difference among
+the members of this party. A mob of the people is said to have gone
+to such an extreme of arrogance as to propose the choosing of a new
+emperor from among the Romans themselves, the restoration of a
+Roman empire independent of the Pope. The other party, to which
+belonged the nobles, were for placing the emperor Frederick I at
+the head of the Roman Republic, and uniting themselves with him in
+a common interest against the Pope. They invited him to receive the
+imperial crown, in the ancient manner, from the "senate and Roman
+people," and not from the heretical and recreant clergy and false
+monks, who acted in contradiction to their calling, exercising
+lordship despite of the evangelical and apostolical doctrine; and
+in contempt of all laws, divine and human, brought the Church of
+God and the kingdom of the world into confusion. Those who pretend
+that they are the representatives of Peter, it was said, in a
+letter addressed in the spirit of this party to the emperor
+Frederick I, "act in contradiction to the doctrines which that
+apostle teaches in his epistles. How can they say with the apostle
+Peter, 'Lo, we have left all and followed thee,' and, 'Silver and
+gold have I none'? How can our Lord say to such, 'Ye are the light
+of the world,' 'the salt of the earth'? Much rather is to be
+applied to them what our Lord says of the salt that has lost its
+savor. 'Eager after earthly riches, they spoil the true riches,
+from which the salvation of the world has proceeded.' How can the
+saying be applied to them, 'Blessed are the poor in spirit'? for
+they are neither poor in spirit nor in fact."</p>
+<p>Pope Adrian IV was first enabled, under more favorable
+circumstances, and assisted by the Emperor Frederick I, to deprive
+the Arnold party of its leader, and then to suppress it entirely.
+It so happened that, in the first year of Adrian's reign, 1155, a
+cardinal, on his way to visit the Pope, was attacked and wounded by
+followers of Arnold. This induced the Pope to put all Rome under
+the interdict, with a view to force the expulsion of Arnold and his
+party. This means did not fail of its effect. The people who could
+not bear the suspension of divine worship, now themselves compelled
+the nobles to bring about the ejection of Arnold and his friends.
+Arnold, on leaving Rome, found protection from Italian nobles. By
+the order, however, of the emperor Frederick, who had come into
+Italy, he was torn from his protectors and surrendered up to the
+papal authority. The Prefect of Rome then took possession of his
+person and caused him to be hanged. His body was burned, and its
+ashes thrown into the Tiber, lest his bones might be preserved as
+the relics of a martyr by the Romans, who were enthusiastically
+devoted to him. Worthy men, who were in other respects zealous
+defenders of the church orthodoxy and of the hierarchy&mdash;as,
+for example, Gerhoh of Reichersberg&mdash;expressed their
+disapprobation, first, that Arnold should be punished with death on
+account of the errors which he disseminated; secondly, that the
+sentence of death should proceed from a spiritual tribunal, or that
+such a tribunal should at least have subjected itself to that bad
+appearance.</p>
+<p>But on the part of the Roman court it was alleged, in defence of
+this proceeding, that "it was done without the knowledge and
+contrary to the will of the Roman curia." "The Prefect of Rome had
+forcibly removed Arnold from the prison where he was kept, and his
+servants had put him to death in revenge for injuries they had
+suffered from Arnold's party. Arnold, therefore, was executed, not
+on account of his doctrines, but in consequence of tumults excited
+by himself." It may be a question whether this was said with
+sincerity, or whether, according to the proverb, a confession of
+guilt is not implied in the excuse. But Gerhoh was of the opinion
+that in this case they should at least have done as David did, in
+the case of Abner's death, and, by allowing Arnold to be buried,
+and his death to be mourned over, instead of causing his body to be
+burned, and the remains thrown into the Tiber, washed their hands
+of the whole transaction.</p>
+<p>But the idea for which Arnold had contended, and for which he
+died, continued to work in various forms, even after his
+death&mdash;the idea of a purification of the Church from the
+foreign worldly elements with which it had become vitiated, of its
+restoration to its original spiritual character.</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_22"><!-- RULE4 22 --></a>
+<h2>DECLINE OF THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE: RAVAGES OF ROGER OF
+SICILY</h2>
+<center>A.D. 1146</center>
+<br>
+<center>GEORGE FINLAY</center>
+<p class="intro">From the enthronement of the Commenian dynasty in
+A.D. 1081, which was accomplished through a successful rebellion,
+attended by shameful treachery and rapine, the Byzantine empire,
+and especially Constantinople, its capital, passed through many
+vicissitudes; but the sack of the city by Alexius Commenus, the
+founder of the line, was remembered by the populace to the
+disadvantage of all his successors; the last of whom, Andronicus I,
+ended his reign in 1185. John, the son of Alexius (1118-1143),
+ruled with discretion and ability, and recovered some territory
+from the Turks.</p>
+<p class="intro">Manuel I, the son of John (1143-1181), ruled
+during a period of almost constant war, and for a time he held the
+enemies of the empire in check. But he appears to have been more
+endowed with courage and the spirit of enterprise than with good
+judgment, and his conduct of the empire coincided with events that,
+as seen in history, contributed to its decline, which after his
+death followed rapidly. As this decline is to be dated especially
+from the passing but not ineffectual invasion of Roger II, King of
+Sicily, in 1146, some account of that, together with a view of
+conditions immediately preceding, becomes important in a work like
+this.</p>
+<p class="intro">The century and a half before Roger's invasion had
+been a period of tranquillity for the distinctively Greek people of
+the empire, who had increased rapidly in numbers and wealth, and
+were in possession of an extensive commerce and many manufactures.
+Therefore they were perhaps the greatest sufferers from the adverse
+events which befell the State.</p>
+<p>The emperor Alexius I had concluded a commercial treaty with
+Pisa toward the end of his reign. Manuel renewed this alliance, and
+he appears to have been the first of the Byzantine emperors who
+concluded a public treaty with Genoa. The pride of the emperors of
+the Romans&mdash;as the sovereigns of Constantinople were
+styled&mdash;induced them to treat the Italian republics as
+municipalities still dependent on the Empire of the Caesars, of
+which they had once formed a part; and the rulers both of Pisa and
+Genoa yielded to this assumption of supremacy, and consented to
+appear as vassals and liegemen of the Byzantine emperors, in order
+to participate in the profits which they saw the Venetians gained
+by trading in their dominions.</p>
+<p>Several commercial treaties with Pisa and Genoa, as well as with
+Venice, have been preserved. The obligations of the republics are
+embodied in the charter enumerating the concessions granted by the
+Emperor, and the document is called a <i>chrysobulum</i>, or golden
+bull, from the golden seal of the Emperor attached to it as the
+certificate of its authenticity.</p>
+<p>In Manuel's treaties with the Genoese and Pisans, the republics
+bind themselves never to engage in hostilities against the empire;
+but, on the contrary, all the subjects of the republics residing in
+the Emperor's dominions become bound to assist him against all
+assailants; they engage to act with their own ships, or to serve on
+board the imperial fleet, for the usual pay granted to Latin
+mercenaries. They promise to offer no impediment to the extension
+of the empire in Syria, reserving to themselves the factories and
+privileges they already possess in any place that may be conquered.
+They submit their civil and criminal affairs to the jurisdiction of
+the Byzantine courts of justice, as was then the case with the
+Venetians and other foreigners in the empire. Acts of piracy and
+armed violence, unless the criminals were taken in the act, were to
+be reported to the rulers of the republic whose subjects had
+committed the crime, and the Byzantine authorities were not to
+render the innocent traders in the empire responsible for the
+injuries inflicted by these brigands. The republicans engaged to
+observe all the stipulations in their treaties, in defiance of
+ecclesiastical excommunication or the prohibition of any
+individual, crowned or not crowned.</p>
+<p>Manuel, in return, granted to the republicans the right of
+forming a factory, erecting a quay for landing their goods, and
+building a church; and the Genoese received their grant in an
+agreeable position on the side of the port opposite Constantinople,
+where in after-times their great colony of Galata was formed. The
+Emperor promised to send an annual of from four hundred to five
+hundred gold bezants, with two pieces of a rich brocade then
+manufactured only in the Byzantine empire, to the republican
+governments, and sixty bezants, with one piece of brocade, to their
+archbishops. These treaties fixed the duty levied on the goods
+imported or exported from Constantinople by the Italians at 4 per
+cent.; but in the other cities of the empire, the Pisans and
+Genoese were to pay the same duties as other Latin traders,
+excepting, of course, the privileged Venetians. These duties
+generally amounted to 10 per cent. The republics were expressly
+excluded, by the Genoese treaty, from the Black Sea trade, except
+when they received a special license from the Emperor. In case of
+shipwreck, the property of the foreigners was to be protected by
+the imperial authorities and respected by the people, and every
+assistance was to be granted to the unfortunate sufferers. This
+humane clause was not new in Byzantine commercial treaties, for it
+is contained in the earliest treaty concluded by Alexius I with the
+Pisans. On the whole, the arrangements for the administration of
+justice in these treaties prove that the Byzantine empire still
+enjoyed a greater degree of order than the rest of Europe.</p>
+<p>The state of civilization in the Eastern Empire rendered the
+public finances the moving power of the government, as in the
+nations of modern Europe. This must always tend to the
+centralization of political authority, for the highest branch of
+the executive will always endeavor to dispose of the revenues of
+the State according to its views of necessity. This centralizing
+policy led Manuel to order all the money which the Greek commercial
+communities had hitherto devoted to maintaining local squadrons of
+galleys for the defence of the islands and coasts of the Aegean to
+be remitted to the treasury at Constantinople. The ships were
+compelled to visit the imperial dockyard in the capital to undergo
+repairs and to receive provisions and pay.</p>
+<p>A navy is a most expensive establishment; kings, ministers, and
+people are all very apt to think that when it is not wanted at any
+particular time, the cost of its maintenance may be more profitably
+applied to other objects. Manuel, after he had secured the funds of
+the Greeks for his own treasury, soon left their ships to rot, and
+the commerce of Greece became exposed to the attacks of small
+squadrons of Italian pirates who previously would not have dared to
+plunder in the Archipelago. It may be thought by some that Manuel
+acted wisely in centralizing the naval administration of his
+empire; but the great number, the small size, and the relative
+position of many of the Greek islands with regard to the prevailing
+winds render the permanent establishment of naval stations at
+several points necessary to prevent piracy.</p>
+<p>Manuel and Otho ruined the navy of Greece by their unwise
+measures of centralization; Pericles, by prudently centralizing the
+maritime forces of the various states, increased the naval power of
+Athens, and gave additional security to every Greek ship that
+navigated the sea.</p>
+<p>The same fiscal views which induced Manuel to centralize the
+naval administration when it was injurious to the interests of the
+empire, prompted him to act diametrically opposite with regard to
+the army. The emperor John had added greatly to the efficiency of
+the Byzantine military force by improving and centralizing its
+administration, and he left Manuel an excellent army, which
+rendered the Eastern Empire the most powerful state in Europe. But
+Manuel, from motives of economy, abandoned his father's system.
+Instead of assembling all the military forces of the empire
+annually in camps, where they received pay and were subjected to
+strict discipline, toward the end of his reign he distributed even
+the regular army in cities and provinces, where they were quartered
+far apart, in order that each district, by maintaining a certain
+number of men, might relieve the treasury from the burden of their
+pay and subsistence while they were not on actual service. The
+money thus retained in the central treasury was spent in idle
+festivals at Constantinople, and the troops, dispersed and
+neglected, became careless of their military exercises, and lived
+in a state of relaxed discipline. Other abuses were quickly
+introduced; resident yeomen, shopkeepers, and artisans were
+enrolled in the legions, with the connivance of the officers. The
+burden of maintaining the troops was in this way diminished, but
+the army was deteriorated.</p>
+<p>In other districts, where the divisions were exposed to be
+called into action, or were more directly under central inspection,
+the effective force was kept up at its full complement, but the
+people were compelled to submit to every kind of extortion and
+tyranny. The tendency of absolute power being always to weaken the
+power of the law, and to increase the authority of the executive
+agents of the sovereign, soon manifested its effects in the rapid
+progress of administrative corruption. The Byzantine garrisons in a
+few years became prototypes of the shopkeeping janizaries of the
+Ottoman empire, and bore no resemblance to the feudal militia of
+Western Europe, which Manuel had proposed as the model of his
+reform. This change produced a rapid decline in the military
+strength of the Byzantine army and accelerated the fall of the
+empire.</p>
+<p>For a considerable period the Byzantine emperors had been
+gradually increasing the proportion of foreign mercenaries in their
+service; this practice Manuel carried further than any of his
+predecessors. Besides the usual Varangian, Italian, and German
+guards, we find large corps of Patzinaks, Franks, and Turks
+enrolled in his armies, and officers of these nations occupying
+situations of the highest rank. A change had taken place in the
+military tactics, caused by the heavy armor and powerful horses
+which the crusaders brought into the field, and by the greater
+personal strength and skill in warlike exercises of the Western
+troops, who had no occupation from infancy but gymnastic exercises
+and athletic amusements. The nobility of the feudal nations
+expended more money on arms and armor than on other luxuries; and
+this becoming the general fashion, the Western troops were much
+better armed than the Byzantine soldiers. War became the profession
+of the higher ranks, and the expense of military undertakings was
+greatly increased by the military classes being completely
+separated from the rest of society. The warlike disposition of
+Manuel led him to favor the military nobles of the West who took
+service at his court; while his confidence in his own power, and in
+the political superiority of his empire, deluded him with the hope
+of being able to quell the turbulence of the Franks, and set bounds
+to the ambition and power of the popes.</p>
+<p>The wars of Manuel were sometimes forced on him by foreign
+powers, and sometimes commenced for temporary objects; but he
+appears never to have formed any fixed idea of the permanent policy
+which ought to have determined the constant employment of all the
+military resources at his command, for the purpose of advancing the
+interest of his empire and giving security to his subjects. His
+military exploits may be considered under three heads: His wars
+with the Franks, whether in Asia or Europe; his wars with the
+Hungarians and Servians; and his wars with the Turks.</p>
+<p>His first operations were against the principality of Antioch.
+The death of John II caused the dispersion of the fine army he had
+assembled for the conquest of Syria; but Manuel sent a portion of
+that army, and a strong fleet, to attack the principality. One of
+the generals of the land forces was Prosuch, a Turkish officer in
+high favor with his father. Raymond of Antioch was no longer the
+idle gambler he had shown himself in the camp of the emperor John;
+but though he was now distinguished by his courage and skill in
+arms, he was completely defeated, and the imperial army carried its
+ravages up to the very walls of Antioch, while the fleet laid waste
+the coast. Though the Byzantine troops retired, the losses of the
+campaign convinced Raymond that it would be impossible to defend
+Antioch should Manuel take the field in person. He therefore
+hastened to Constantinople, as a suppliant, to sue for peace; but
+Manuel, before admitting him to an audience, required that he
+should repair to the tomb of the emperor John and ask pardon for
+having violated his former promises. When the Hercules of the
+Franks, as Raymond was called, had submitted to this humiliation,
+he was admitted to the imperial presence, swore fealty to the
+Byzantine empire as Prince of Antioch, and became the vassal of the
+emperor Manuel. The conquest of Edessa by the Mahometans, which
+took place in the month of December, 1144, rendered the defence of
+Antioch by the Latins a doubtful enterprise, unless they could
+secure the assistance of the Greeks.</p>
+<p>Manuel involved himself in a war with Roger, King of Sicily,
+which perhaps he might have avoided by more prudent conduct. An
+envoy he had sent to the Sicilian court concluded a treaty, which
+Manuel thought fit to disavow with unsuitable violence. This gave
+the Sicilian King a pretext for commencing war, but the real cause
+of hostilities must be sought in the ambition of Roger and the
+hostile feelings of Manuel. Roger was one of the wealthiest princes
+of his time; he had united under his sceptre both Sicily and all
+the Norman possessions in Southern Italy; his ambition was equal to
+his wealth and power, and he aspired at eclipsing the glory of
+Robert Guiscard and Bohemund by some permanent conquests in the
+Byzantine empire. On the other hand, the renown of Roger excited
+the envy of Manuel, who, proud of his army and confident of his own
+valor and military skill, hoped to reconquer Sicily. His passion
+made him forget that he was surrounded by numerous enemies, who
+would combine to prevent his employing all his forces against one
+adversary. Manuel consequently acted imprudently in revealing his
+hostile intentions; while Roger could direct all his forces against
+one point, and avail himself of Manuel's embarrassments. He
+commenced hostilities by inflicting a blow on the wealth and
+prosperity of Greece, from which it never recovered.</p>
+<p>At the commencement of the Second Crusade, when the attention of
+Manuel was anxiously directed to the movements of Louis VII of
+France, and Conrad, Emperor of Germany, Roger, who had collected a
+powerful fleet at Brindisi, for the purpose either of attacking the
+Byzantine empire or transporting the crusaders to Palestine,
+availed himself of an insurrection in Corfu to conclude a
+convention with the inhabitants, who admitted a garrison of one
+thousand Norman troops into their citadel. The Corfutes complained
+with great reason of the intolerable weight of taxation to which
+they were subjected; of the utter neglect of their interests by the
+central government, which consumed their wealth, and of the great
+abuses which prevailed in the administration of justice; but the
+remedy they adopted, by placing themselves under the rule of
+foreign masters, was not likely to alleviate these evils.</p>
+<p>The Sicilian admiral, after landing the Norman garrison at
+Corfu, sailed to Monembasia, then one of the principal commercial
+cities in the East, hoping to gain possession of it without
+difficulty; but the maritime population of this impregnable
+fortress gave him a warm reception and easily repulsed his attack.
+After plundering the coasts of Euboea and Attica, the Sicilian
+fleet returned to the West, and laid waste Acarnania and Etolia; it
+then entered the Gulf of Corinth, and debarked a body of troops at
+Crissa. This force marched through the country to Thebes,
+plundering every town and village on the way. Thebes offered no
+resistance and was plundered in the most deliberate and barbarous
+manner. The inhabitants were numerous and wealthy. The soil of
+Boeotia is extremely productive, and numerous manufactures
+established in the city of Thebes gave additional value to the
+abundant produce of agricultural industry.</p>
+<p>A century had elapsed since the citizens of Thebes had gone out
+valiantly to fight the army of Slavonian rebels in the reign of
+Michael IV (the Paphlagonian), and that defeat had long been
+forgotten. But all military spirit was now dead, and the Thebans
+had so long lived without any fear of invasion that they had
+forgotten the use of arms. The Sicilians found them not only
+unprepared to offer any resistance, but so surprised that they had
+not even adopted any effectual measures to secure or conceal their
+movable property. The conquerors, secure against all danger of
+interruption, plundered Thebes at their leisure. Not only gold,
+silver, jewels, and church plate were carried off, but even the
+goods found in the warehouses, and the rarest articles of furniture
+in private houses, were transported to the ships. Bales of silk and
+dyed leather were sent off to the fleet as deliberately as if they
+had been legally purchased in time of peace. When all ordinary
+means of collecting booty were exhausted, the citizens were
+compelled to take an oath on the Holy Scriptures that they had not
+concealed any portion of their property; yet many of the wealthiest
+were dragged away captive, in order to profit by their ransom; and
+many of the most skilful workmen in the silk manufactories, for
+which Thebes had long been famous, were pressed on board the fleet
+to labor at the oar.</p>
+<p>From Boeotia the army passed to Corinth. Nicephorus Caluphes,
+the governor, retired into the Acro-Corinth, but the garrison
+appeared to his cowardly heart not strong enough to defend this
+impregnable fortress, and he surrendered it to George Antiochenus,
+the Sicilian admiral, on the first summons. On examining the
+fortress of which he had thus unexpectedly gained possession, the
+admiral could not help exclaiming that he fought under the
+protection of heaven, for if Caluphes had not been more timid than
+a virgin, Corinth should have repulsed every attack.</p>
+<p>Corinth was sacked as cruelly as Thebes; men of rank, beautiful
+women, and skilful artisans, with their wives and families, were
+carried away into captivity. Even the relics of St. Theodore were
+taken from the church in which they were preserved; and it was not
+until the whole Sicilian fleet was laden with as much of the wealth
+of Greece as it was capable of transporting that the admiral
+ordered it to sail. The Sicilians did not venture to retain
+possession of the impregnable citadel of Corinth, as it would have
+been extremely difficult for them to keep up their communications
+with the garrison. This invasion of Greece was conducted entirely
+as a plundering expedition, having for its object to inflict the
+greatest possible injury on the Byzantine empire, while it
+collected the largest possible quantity of booty for the Sicilian
+troops. Corfu was the only conquest of which Roger retained
+possession.</p>
+<p>The ruin of the Greek commerce and manufactures has been
+ascribed to the transference of the silk trade from Thebes and
+Corinth to Palermo, under the judicious protection it received from
+Roger; but it would be more correct to say that the injudicious and
+oppressive financial administration of the Byzantine emperors
+destroyed the commercial prosperity and manufacturing industry of
+the Greeks; while the wise liberality and intelligent protection of
+the Norman kings extended the commerce and increased the industry
+of the Sicilians.</p>
+<p>When the Sicilian fleet returned to Palermo, Roger determined to
+employ all the silk manufacturers in their original occupations. He
+consequently collected all their families together, and settled
+them at Palermo, supplying them with the means of exercising their
+industry with profit to themselves, and inducing them to teach his
+own subjects to manufacture the richest brocades and to rival the
+rarest productions of the East.</p>
+<p>Roger, unlike most of the monarchs of his age, paid particular
+attention to improving the wealth of his dominions by increasing
+the prosperity of his subjects. During his reign the cultivation of
+the sugar-cane was introduced into Sicily. The conduct of Manuel
+was very different; when he concluded peace with William, the son
+and successor of Roger, in 1158, he paid no attention to the
+commercial interests of his Greek subjects; the silk manufactures
+of Thebes and Corinth were not reclaimed and reinstated in their
+native seats; they were left to exercise their industry for the
+profit of their new prince, while their old sovereign would have
+abandoned them to perish from want. Under such circumstances it is
+not remarkable that the commerce and the manufactures of Greece
+were transferred in the course of another century to Sicily and
+Italy.</p>
+<hr>
+<a name="RULE4_23"><!-- RULE4 23 --></a>
+<h2>CHRONOLOGY OF UNIVERSAL HISTORY</h2>
+<center>EMBRACING THE PERIOD COVERED IN THIS VOLUME</center>
+<center>A.D. 843-1161</center>
+<br>
+<center>JOHN RUDD, LL.D.</center>
+<p>Events treated at length are here indicated in large type; the
+numerals following give volume and page.</p>
+<p>Separate chronologies of the various nations, and of the careers
+of famous persons, will be found in the INDEX VOLUME, with volume
+and page references showing where the several events are fully
+treated.</p>
+<center>A.D.</center>
+<p>843. Messina in Sicily captured by the Saracens.</p>
+<p>Feudalism may be said to become an actuality from about this
+time. See "<a href="#RULE4_2">FEUDALISM: ITS FRANKISH BIRTH AND
+ENGLISH DEVELOPMENT</a>," v, 1.</p>
+<p>The Danes&mdash;called by Arabian writers "<i>Magioges</i>,"
+people of Gog and Magog&mdash;land at Lisbon from fifty-four ships
+and carry off a rich booty.</p>
+<p>The treaty of Verdun, between the three sons of Louis <i>le
+D&eacute;bonnaire</i>. See "<a href="#RULE4_3">DECAY OF THE
+FRANKISH EMPIRE</a>," v, 22.</p>
+<p>844. Lothair gives the title king of Italy to his son Louis, who
+is crowned at Rome.</p>
+<p>Abderrahman fits out a fleet to resist the Danes who have
+infested the neighborhood of Cadiz and Seville.</p>
+<p>845. Paris is pillaged for the first time by the Danes or
+Northmen. See "<a href="#RULE4_3">DECAY OF THE FRANKISH
+EMPIRE</a>," v, 22.</p>
+<p>Hamburg is looted and destroyed by the Danes.</p>
+<p>846. Rome is attacked by the Saracens, who, after plundering the
+country, lay siege to Gaeta.</p>
+<p>Spain afflicted by a great drought and swarms of locusts.</p>
+<p>847. A violent storm drives the Saracens from the siege of
+Gaeta. The distress in Spain is relieved by Abderrahman, who remits
+the taxes and constructs aqueducts and fountains.</p>
+<p>848. Louis, King of Italy, drives the Saracens out of
+Beneventum.</p>
+<p>Bordeaux is assailed by the Northmen, but they are vigorously
+repulsed. See "<a href="#RULE4_3">DECAY OF THE FRANKISH
+EMPIRE</a>," v, 22.</p>
+<p>Pope Leo IV adds a new quarter to the city of Rome by
+surrounding the Vatican with walls.</p>
+<p>849. Birth of Alfred the Great. See "<a href="#RULE4_4">CAREER
+OF ALFRED THE GREAT</a>," v, 49.</p>
+<p>Gottschalk, a German bishop who preached the doctrine of twofold
+predestination, sentenced by the Council of Quincy to be flogged
+and suffer perpetual imprisonment.</p>
+<p>The Saracens range at will through the Mediterranean; they are
+defeated at the mouth of the Tiber by the combined fleets of
+Naples, Gaeta, and Amalphi.</p>
+<p>On Gallic soil the <i>benificium</i> and practice of
+commendation is specially fostered. See "<a href=
+"#RULE4_2">FEUDALISM: ITS FRANKISH BIRTH AND ENGLISH
+DEVELOPMENT</a>," v, 1.</p>
+<p>850. Roric, a nephew of Harold, collects a piratical armament in
+Friesland and attacks adjacent coasts; Lothair grants Durstadt to
+him to secure his own lands.</p>
+<p>P&eacute;pin strengthens himself in Aquitaine by leagues with
+the Northmen. See "<a href="#RULE4_3">DECAY OF THE FRANKISH
+EMPIRE</a>," v, 22.</p>
+<p>851. Danes ascend the Rhine with 252 ships and plunder Ghent,
+Cologne, Treves, and Aix-la-Chapelle.</p>
+<p>Roric, with 350 sail, proceeds up the Thames and pillages
+Canterbury and London, after defeating the King of Mercia; he is at
+last defeated by Ethelwulf, with great slaughter, at Ockley.</p>
+<p>852. A revolt against the Moslems in Armenia.</p>
+<p>853. Hastings' (the Danish chief) ruse at Tuscany. See "<a href=
+"#RULE4_3">DECAY OF THE FRANKISH EMPIRE</a>," v, 22.</p>
+<p>855. Death of Lothair, Emperor of the Franks; civil war between
+his sons.</p>
+<p>A band of Danes keep the Isle of Sheppey through the winter;
+their first foothold in England.</p>
+<p>860. Iceland discovered by the Northmen.</p>
+<p>862. Rurik, the Varangian chief, conquers Novgorod and Kiov and
+lays the foundation of the Russian empire.</p>
+<p>863. Cyril and Methodius, the "apostles of the Slavs," undertake
+the conversion of the Moravians.</p>
+<p>Pope Nicholas deposes Photius and declares Ignatius to be the
+patriarch of Constantinople; Photius in turn excommunicates the
+Pope.</p>
+<p>Charles the Bald founds the County of Flanders.</p>
+<p>864. Pope Nicholas asserts his exclusive right to appoint and
+depose bishops; the sovereigns and prelates of France and Germany
+resist his claim.</p>
+<p>Christianity first introduced into Russia; it makes little
+progress.</p>
+<p>865. First naval expedition of the Varangians or Russians
+against Constantinople; their fleet is dispersed by a storm.</p>
+<p>866. East Anglia invaded by a numerous body of Danes.</p>
+<p>Accession of Alfonso the Great of Asturias.</p>
+<p>868. Nottingham captured by the Danes; they are besieged by
+Burhred, Alfred, and his brother, who allow them to return to York
+with their booty. See "<a href="#RULE4_4">CAREER OF ALFRED THE
+GREAT</a>," v, 49.</p>
+<p>869. Eighth general council held at Constantinople; the
+deposition of Photius confirmed and all iconoclasts
+anathematized.</p>
+<p>870. Malta captured by the Saracens.</p>
+<p>East Anglia captured by the Danes; Edmund, titular king of the
+country, is treacherously slain by them; is afterward
+canonized.</p>
+<p>871. Hincmar, a French prelate, encourages Charles the Bald to
+resist the authority assumed by the Pope over the church of
+France.</p>
+<p>Bari, a Saracen fortress in Southern Italy, is surrendered to
+the Franks and Greeks.</p>
+<p>Alfred ascends the throne of Wessex. See "<a href=
+"#RULE4_4">CAREER OF ALFRED THE GREAT</a>," v, 49.</p>
+<p>872. Louis of Germany relinquishes to Emperor Louis his portion
+of Lorraine.</p>
+<p>873. On the approach of Emperor Louis with an army the Saracens,
+who were besieging Salerno, retire; they land in Calabria and
+commit great depredations.</p>
+<p>Locusts lay waste Italy, France, and Germany.</p>
+<p>Organs introduced into the churches of Germany.</p>
+<p>874. Mercia is conquered by the Danes, who set up Ceolwulf as
+their king.</p>
+<p>Iceland is settled by the Danes.</p>
+<p>875. Death of Emperor Louis; Charles the Bald and Louis of
+Germany contend for the succession. The former, by granting new
+privileges to the Church of Rome, obtains the support of the Pope,
+and is acknowledged as the king of Italy and emperor of the
+West.</p>
+<p>Alfred, King of Wessex, fits out a fleet and conquers the Danes
+in a great sea battle. See "<a href="#RULE4_4">CAREER OF ALFRED THE
+GREAT</a>," v, 49.</p>
+<p>876. Death of Louis of Germany; division of his kingdom among
+his three sons: Bavaria to Carloman; Saxony to Louis the Stammerer;
+and East France (Franconia and Swabia) to Charles the Fat. Their
+uncle, Charles the Bald, attempts to dispossess them, but is
+defeated by Louis at Andernach.</p>
+<p>Rollo, at the head of the Northmen, enters the Seine and makes
+his first settlement in Normandy. See "<a href="#RULE4_3">DECAY OF
+THE FRANKISH EMPIRE</a>," v, 22.</p>
+<p>877. No emperor of the West for three years.</p>
+<p>Carloman acquires the crown of Italy; the Pope, who opposes him,
+is driven from Rome by Lambert, Duke of Spoleto, and takes refuge
+in France.</p>
+<p>A large traffic in slaves carried on by the Venetians.</p>
+<p>Count Boso founds the kingdom of Florence.</p>
+<p>878. Alfred defeats a great host of the Danes at Eddington. See
+"<a href="#RULE4_4">CAREER OF ALFRED THE GREAT</a>," v, 49.</p>
+<p>Syracuse captured by the Saracens, who become the masters of
+Sicily.</p>
+<p>879. Methodius forbidden by the Pope to perform the services of
+the Church for the Slavonians in their own language.</p>
+<p>The kingdom of Cisjurane, Burgundy, founded; it included
+Provence, Dauphin&eacute;, and the southern part of Savoy.</p>
+<p>880. Germany is ravaged by the Northmen.</p>
+<p>Alfred, the English King, defeats the Danes at the battle of
+Ethandun; by treaty he gives them equal rights, and they
+acknowledge his supremacy. See "<a href="#RULE4_4">CAREER OF ALFRED
+THE GREAT</a>," v, 49.</p>
+<p>881. Methodius gets leave to use the Slavonic tongue in the
+churches. Charles the Fat ascends the throne of Italy and Germany;
+is emperor of the West.</p>
+<p>882. Albategni, the Arabian astronomer, observes the autumnal
+equinox, September 19th.</p>
+<p>883. Alfred sends Singhelm and Athelstan on missions to Rome and
+the Christian church in India.</p>
+<p>884. Charles the Fat reunites the Frankish empire of
+Charlemagne.</p>
+<p>885. Siege of Paris by the Northmen. See "<a href=
+"#RULE4_3">DECAY OF THE FRANKISH EMPIRE</a>," v, 22.</p>
+<p>886. Alfred the Great said to have founded the University of
+Oxford.</p>
+<p>887. Deposition of Charles the Fat; Arnulf, natural son of
+Carloman of Bavaria, elected by the nobles.</p>
+<p>888. Death of Charles the Fat; final disruption of the Frankish
+empire; the crown of France in dispute between the Count of Paris,
+Eudes, and Charles the Simple. See "<a href="#RULE4_3">DECAY OF THE
+FRANKISH EMPIRE</a>," v, 22.</p>
+<p>Founding of the kingdom of Transjurane, Burgundy, which includes
+the northern part of Savoy and all Switzerland between the Reuss
+and the Jura.</p>
+<p>Alfred the Great begins his translations from Latin into
+Anglo-Saxon. See "AUGUSTINE'S MISSIONARY WORK IN ENGLAND," iv,
+182.</p>
+<p>890. Southern Italy constituted a province of the Greek empire
+and called Lombardia.</p>
+<p>891. King Arnulf, of Germany, defeats the Northmen or Danes at
+Louvain.</p>
+<p>894. Arnulf becomes emperor of Germany.</p>
+<p>Hungarians (Magyars) cross the Carpathians and occupy the plains
+of the Theiss.</p>
+<p>895. Rome is captured by Emperor Arnulf of Germany; he is
+crowned emperor of the West.</p>
+<p>896. Pope Stephen VII declares the election of his predecessor,
+Formosus, invalid; disinters his body and has it thrown in the
+Tiber.</p>
+<p>897. Pope Stephen imprisoned and strangled.</p>
+<p>Alfred constructs a powerful navy and defeats Hastings the Dane.
+See "<a href="#RULE4_4">CAREER OF ALFRED THE GREAT</a>," v, 49.</p>
+<p>899. Accession of Louis the Child, on the death of Arnulf, to
+the German throne.</p>
+<p>900. Hungarians ravage Northern Italy.</p>
+<p>901. Death of Alfred the Great, King of England; his son, Edward
+the Elder, succeeds.</p>
+<p>904. Russians, with a large naval force, attack Constantinople,
+and the Saracens Thessalonica.</p>
+<p>907. Bavaria desolated by the Hungarians.</p>
+<p>909. Founding of the Fatimite caliphate in Africa. See "<a href=
+"#RULE4_6">CONQUEST OF EGYPT BY THE FATIMITES</a>," v, 94.</p>
+<p>911. End of the Carlovingian line in Germany. See "<a href=
+"#RULE4_5">HENRY THE FOWLER FOUNDS THE SAXON LINE OF GERMAN
+KINGS</a>," v, 82.</p>
+<p>912. Rollo, converted to Christianity, takes the name of Robert
+and receives from Peter the Simple the province afterward called
+Normandy, of which he is the first duke. See "<a href=
+"#RULE4_3">DECAY OF THE FRANKISH EMPIRE</a>," v, 22.</p>
+<p>913. Igor, son of Rurik, by the death of his guardian, Oleg, is
+invested with the government of Russia.</p>
+<p>Bodies of Hungarians and Slavs make inroads on German territory.
+See "<a href="#RULE4_5">HENRY THE FOWLER FOUNDS THE SAXON LINE OF
+GERMAN KINGS</a>," v, 82.</p>
+<p>914. John X elected pope through the intrigues of Theodora.</p>
+<p>916. Berengar is crowned emperor of the West, in Italy.</p>
+<p>918. Death of Conrad, the King of Germany. See "<a href=
+"#RULE4_5">HENRY THE FOWLER FOUNDS THE SAXON LINE OF GERMAN
+KINGS</a>," v, 82.</p>
+<p>919. Founding of the Danish kingdom of Dublin, Ireland.
+"<a href="#RULE4_5">HENRY THE FOWLER FOUNDS THE SAXON LINE OF
+GERMAN KINGS</a>." See v, 82.</p>
+<p>923. Rudolph of Burgundy disputes with Charles the Simple for
+the crown of France.</p>
+<p>924. Germany is overrun and devastated by the Hungarians. Death
+of Berengar, upon which the imperial title lapses.</p>
+<p>925. Edward the Elder is succeeded by his son Athelstan, in
+England.</p>
+<p>926. Henry the Fowler conquers the Slavonians; he establishes
+the margravate of Brandenburg.</p>
+<p>928. Guido and Marozia usurp supreme temporal power in Rome and
+confine Pope John X in prison, where he dies. (Date uncertain.)</p>
+<p>929. Charles the Simple dies in captivity at P&eacute;ronne.</p>
+<p>Abu Taher, the Carmathian leader, plunders Mecca and massacres
+the pilgrims.</p>
+<p>930. Prague is besieged by Henry the Fowler, who becomes
+superior lord of Bohemia; his son, Otho, marries Eadgith, sister of
+Athelstan, King of England.</p>
+<p>931. Marozia still rules in Rome; she makes her son pope John
+XI.</p>
+<p>932. Hugh marries Marozia and is expelled from Rome by her son
+Alberic, who confines his mother, and his brother, Pope John, in
+St. Angelo and governs the city.</p>
+<p>933. Henry the Fowler is victorious over the Hungarians at
+Merseburg. See "<a href="#RULE4_5">HENRY THE FOWLER FOUNDS THE
+SAXON LINE OF GERMAN KINGS</a>," v, 82.</p>
+<p>Union of Cis- and Transjurane Burgundy into one realm, the
+kingdom of Arles.</p>
+<p>Saracens invade Castile and are defeated at Uxama.</p>
+<p>936. Death of Henry the Fowler; accession of Otho the Great in
+Germany and of Louis <i>d'Outre-Mer</i> in France. Louis was given
+the surname for having been in exile in England, whence he was
+recalled to the crown.</p>
+<p>From this time chivalry may be said to arise. See "<a href=
+"#RULE4_7">GROWTH AND DECADENCE OF CHIVALRY</a>," v, 109.</p>
+<p>937. Confederation of Scots and Irish with the Danes of
+Northumberland, totally defeated by Athelstan, at Brunanburh.</p>
+<p>France is invaded by the Hungarians.</p>
+<p>939. The Marquis of Istria levies imposts on Venetian merchants,
+the repeal of which is enforced by the Doge suspending all
+intercourse between the two states.</p>
+<p>940. Death of King Athelstan; his brother Edmund succeeds to the
+English throne.</p>
+<p>941. Constantinople attacked by the Russians under Igor; they
+are repelled by Romanus.</p>
+<p>945. Death of Igor; his widow, Olga, governs the Russians during
+the minority of their son Swatoslaus.</p>
+<p>Cumberland and Westmoreland, England, granted as a fief to
+Malcolm, King of Scotland.</p>
+<p>946. Edmund, who had conquered Mercia and the "Five Boroughs" of
+the Danish confederacy, England, slain by an outlaw; his brother
+Edred succeeds.</p>
+<p>951. Otho the Great marches an army in to Italy; he dethrones
+Berengar for cruelly ill-treating Adelaide.</p>
+<p>952. Otho restores Italy to Berengar and his son; they do homage
+to him at the Diet of Augsburg.</p>
+<p>955. Otho vanquishes the Hungarians on the Lech; he afterward
+conquers the Slavonians.</p>
+<p>Olga, the Russian Princess, baptized at Constantinople; she
+carries back into her own country some beginnings of
+civilization.</p>
+<p>956. Many provinces, including Armenia, recovered from the
+Saracens by the Eastern Empire.</p>
+<p>959. St. Dunstan made archbishop of Canterbury on the accession
+of Edgar.</p>
+<p>961. Berengar finally dethroned by Otho the Great; the
+sovereignty of Italy passes from Charlemagne's descendants to
+German rulers.</p>
+<p>962. Otho the Great, master of Italy; his coronation as emperor
+of the Romans by Pope John XII; establishment of the Holy Roman
+Empire of the German nation.</p>
+<p>963. Nicephorus Phocas defeats the Saracens and recovers the
+former provinces of the empire as far as the Euphrates.</p>
+<p>Al Hakem, Caliph of Cordova, famous as a patron of literature
+and learning, and who is said to have collected a library of
+600,000 volumes, employs agents in Africa and Arabia to purchase or
+copy manuscripts.</p>
+<p>King Edgar, England, defeats the Welsh and exacts an annual
+tribute of three hundred wolves' heads.</p>
+<p>964. Pope Leo VIII is expelled; John XII reinstated, he dies
+soon after; Rome is besieged and captured by the Emperor, after a
+revolt encouraged by Berengar.</p>
+<p>966. After 328 years' subjection Antioch is recovered from the
+Saracens.</p>
+<p>Bulgaria invaded by the Russians, who also extend their dominion
+to the Black Sea.</p>
+<p>Miecislas, ruler of Poland, embraces Christianity.</p>
+<p>969. Kahira (now Cairo) built by the Fatimites, who establish a
+caliphate in Egypt. See "<a href="#RULE4_6">CONQUEST OF EGYPT BY
+THE FATIMITES</a>," v, 94.</p>
+<p>Nicephorus Phocas, Emperor of the East, murdered by John
+Zimisces, who succeeds.</p>
+<p>971. All munitions of war and arms are by the Venetians
+forbidden to be sold by their merchants to the Saracens.</p>
+<p>973. On the death of his father, Otho the Great, Otho II ascends
+the throne of the German empire. His Empress, Theophania,
+introduces Greek customs and manners into Germany.</p>
+<p>976. Henry, Duke of Bavaria, defeated by Otho II and deposed,
+takes refuge in Bohemia.</p>
+<p>Death of Al Hakem; his reign the most glorious of the Saracenic
+dominion in Spain.</p>
+<p>Commotion in Venice; the Doge attempts to introduce mercenary
+troops and is slain; his palace, St. Mark's, and other churches
+burned.</p>
+<p>978. Otho II makes a victorious movement into France.</p>
+<p>979. King Edward the Martyr assassinated by command of his
+mother-in-law, Elfrida; Ethelred the Unready succeeds. (Date
+uncertain.)</p>
+<p>980. Theophania urges her husband, Otho II, to claim the Greek
+provinces in Italy; he advances with his army to Ravenna.</p>
+<p>Vladimir obtains the assistance of the sea-kings, defeats his
+brother, Jaropolk, puts him to death, and becomes sole ruler of
+Russia.</p>
+<p>982. Saracens of Africa are invited by the Greek emperors to
+join them in opposing Otho; battle of Basientello, total defeat of
+Otho; he is taken prisoner, but escapes by swimming.</p>
+<p>983. Eric the Red, a Norseman, first visits Greenland, which he
+thus names, and afterward settles. See "<a href="#RULE4_9">LEIF
+ERICSON DISCOVERS AMERICA</a>," v, 141.</p>
+<p>Death of Otho II; Otho III succeeds to the throne of Germany
+under the regency of his mother, Theophania.</p>
+<p>987. Death of Louis V, the last of the Carlovingian line; Hugh
+Capet is elected king of France; this inaugurates the Capetian
+dynasty.</p>
+<p>988. Vladimir the Great of Russia embraces Christianity. See
+"<a href="#RULE4_8">CONVERSION OF VLADIMIR THE GREAT</a>," v,
+128.</p>
+<p>989. Sedition in Rome; Empress Theophania arrives there and
+suppresses it.</p>
+<p>In Germany rural counts and barons commence their depredations
+on the properties of their neighbors.</p>
+<p>Learned men from all parts of the East flock to Cordova,
+Almansor, the Saracen regent, having set apart a fund to promote
+literature.</p>
+<p>991. Archbishop Gerbert, of Rheims, introduces the use of Arabic
+numerals, which he had learned at Cordova.</p>
+<p>Ipswich and Maldon, England, ravaged by the Danes; a tribute
+raised for them by means of the "Danegild" tax.</p>
+<p>994. Hugh Capet maintains Gerbert in the see of Rheims, against
+the opposition of the Pope.</p>
+<p>With a fleet of ninety-four ships the kings of Norway and
+Denmark attack London; they are beaten off by the citizens.</p>
+<p>996. Death of Hugh Capet; his son Robert succeeds.</p>
+<p>997. Venetians conquer the coast and islands of the Adriatic as
+far as Ragusa; their Doge styles himself duke of Dalmatia.</p>
+<p>Death of Gejza, first Christian prince of Hungary.</p>
+<p>Insurrection of peasants in Normandy.</p>
+<p>998. Crescentius, having usurped power in Rome and expelled the
+Pope, is defeated, captured, and put to death by Otho III.</p>
+<p>1000. Leif Ericson and Biorn discover America. See "<a href=
+"#RULE4_9">LEIF ERICSON DISCOVERS AMERICA</a>," v, 141.</p>
+<p>Otho III and Boleslas the Valiant, King of Poland, meet at
+Gnesen.</p>
+<p>Expectation of the end of the world causes the sowing of seed
+and other agricultural work to be neglected; famine ensues
+therefrom.</p>
+<p>Duke Stephen of Hungary receives the royal title from Pope
+Sylvester II.</p>
+<p>First invasion of India by Mahmud. See "<a href=
+"#RULE4_10">MAHOMETANS IN INDIA</a>," v, 151.</p>
+<p>1002. Massacre of Danes in England; the Day of St. Brice.</p>
+<p>Henry, Duke of Bavaria, elected king of Germany on the death of
+Otho III.</p>
+<p>1003. Sweyn of Denmark invades England to avenge the massacre of
+his people.</p>
+<p>1013. After various repulses and successes Sweyn takes nearly
+the whole of England; King Ethelred and his Queen flee to her
+brother Richard, Duke of Normandy.</p>
+<p>Imperial coronation of Henry II.</p>
+<p>1014. Death of Sweyn. Ethelred returns to England; he battles
+with the Danes, under Sweyn's son, Canute, who is driven from the
+country.</p>
+<p>King Brian, the Brian Boroimhe or Boru, the most famous of Irish
+kings, defeats the Danes at the battle of Clontarf, but perishes in
+the conflict.</p>
+<p>1016. Pope Benedict VIII repulses the Saracens at Luni, Tuscany;
+they besiege Salerno and are defeated by the aid of a band of
+Norman pilgrims returning from Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>Edmund "Ironsides," the English King, assassinated. See
+"<a href="#RULE4_11">CANUTE BECOMES KING OF ENGLAND</a>," v,
+164.</p>
+<p>1017. Swatopolk, Grand Duke of Russia, defeated by his brother,
+Jaroslav, Prince of Novgorod, seeks an asylum in Poland.</p>
+<p>All England acknowledges Canute as king. See "<a href=
+"#RULE4_11">CANUTE BECOMES KING OF ENGLAND</a>," v, 164.</p>
+<p>1018. Complete destruction of the Bulgarian realm by the Eastern
+emperor Basil II.</p>
+<p>Swatopolk finally expelled from Russia by Jaroslav, who becomes
+ruler.</p>
+<p>1020. Death of Firdusi, a famous Persian poet.</p>
+<p>1022. Guido Aretinus invents the staff, and is the first to
+adopt as names for the notes of the musical scale the initial
+syllables of the hemistichs of a hymn in honor of St. John the
+Baptist.</p>
+<p>1024. Death of the emperor Henry II of Germany; the Franconian
+dynasty inaugurated by Conrad II.</p>
+<p>1027. Conrad II crowned emperor at Rome; Canute of England and
+Rudolph of Burgundy attend the ceremony.</p>
+<p>Schleswig is formally ceded to Denmark by Conrad II.</p>
+<p>1028. Canute invades Norway; he conquers King Olaf and annexes
+his dominions. See "<a href="#RULE4_11">CANUTE BECOMES KING OF
+ENGLAND</a>," v, 164.</p>
+<p>1031. End of the Ommiad caliphate of Cordova; Spain divided by
+the Moorish chiefs into many states.</p>
+<p>1033. Institution of the "Truce of God." A suspension of private
+feuds observed in England, France, Italy, and elsewhere. Such a
+truce provided that these feuds should cease on all the more
+important church festivals and fasts, from Thursday evening to
+Monday morning, during Lent, or similar occasions.</p>
+<p>Castile created an independent kingdom by Sancho the Great, King
+of Navarre.</p>
+<p>Conrad II extends his dominion over the Arletan territories.</p>
+<p>1035. Death of King Canute; his sons, Hardicanute in Denmark,
+Harold in England, and Sweyn in Norway, succeed him. See "<a href=
+"#RULE4_11">CANUTE BECOMES KING OF ENGLAND</a>," v, 164.</p>
+<p>Aragon created an independent kingdom.</p>
+<p>1037. Avicenna, Arabian physician and scholar, dies. (Date
+uncertain.)</p>
+<p>Harold becomes king of all England.</p>
+<p>1039. Murder of King Duncan, of Scotland, by Macbeth, who
+succeeds.</p>
+<p>1042. End of the Danish rule in England; Hardicanute succeeded
+by Edward the Confessor.</p>
+<p>1045. Ferdinand of Castile exacts tribute from his Moorish
+neighbors.</p>
+<p>1046. Henry III holds a council at Sutri on the question of the
+papacy. See "<a href="#RULE4_12">HENRY III DEPOSES THE POPES</a>,"
+v, 177.</p>
+<p>1047. Count Guelf given the duchy Carinthia by Emperor Henry
+III.</p>
+<p>1048. On the death of Clement II, the deposed Pope again
+intrudes himself. See "<a href="#RULE4_12">HENRY III DEPOSES THE
+POPES</a>," v, 177.</p>
+<p>1049. Hildebrand, the monk, assumes charge of the patrimony of
+St. Peter, at Rome.</p>
+<p>1050. B&eacute;renger of Tours condemned and imprisoned for
+denying the doctrine of transubstantiation.</p>
+<p>1051. William of Normandy visits England; he confers with Edward
+the Confessor.</p>
+<p>1052. Archbishop Robert, with the Norman bishops and nobles,
+driven out of England.</p>
+<p>1053. In Italy the Norman conquests of that country are
+conferred on them as a fief of the Church.</p>
+<p>1054. Separation of the Greek and Latin churches. See "<a href=
+"#RULE4_13">DISSENSION AND SEPARATION OF THE GREEK AND ROMAN
+CHURCHES</a>," v, 189.</p>
+<p>1055. Togrul Beg drives the Buyides from Bagdad and establishes
+his authority there.</p>
+<p>1056. Death of Emperor Henry III; his son, Henry IV, is elected
+king under the regency of his mother, Agnes.</p>
+<p>Malcolm defeats Macbeth, King of Scotland, at Dunsinane.</p>
+<p>1057. Harold, son of Earl Godwin, is designated heir to the
+throne of England. See "<a href="#RULE4_14">NORMAN CONQUEST OF
+ENGLAND</a>," v, 204.</p>
+<p>1059. Nicholas II and the Council of Rome decree that future
+popes shall be elected by the college of cardinals, but confirmed
+by the people and clergy of Rome and the emperor.</p>
+<p>1060. King Andrew slain in battle by his brother, Bela, who
+ascends the throne of Hungary.</p>
+<p>1061. Robert Guiscard and his brother Roger, at the head of the
+Normans, engage in the conquest of Sicily from the Saracens.</p>
+<p>1062. The Archbishop of Cologne, Anno, assumes the reins of
+government after seizing the young emperor Henry IV.</p>
+<p>1066. Death of Edward the Confessor, who is succeeded by Harold
+II. The Norwegians invade England; they are defeated by Harold.
+William, Duke of Normandy, invades and conquers England. See
+"<a href="#RULE4_14">NORMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND</a>," v, 204.</p>
+<p>1067. Council of Mantua; Hildebrand denies the imperial right to
+interfere in the election of a pope.</p>
+<p>1068. Carrier pigeons are employed by the Saracens to convey
+intelligence to the besieged in Palermo.</p>
+<p>1069. Morocco founded by Abu-Bekr, Ameer of Lantuna.</p>
+<p>1071. Alp Arslan, the Seljuk Sultan, defeats and captures the
+Eastern Emperor, Romanus Diogenes.</p>
+<p>1072. Palermo is taken by the Normans, who reduce the whole of
+Sicily.</p>
+<p>1073. Lissa, taken by the Normans, is recovered by the
+Venetians.</p>
+<p>Hildebrand elected pope; he takes the name of Gregory VII; the
+sale of church benefices in Germany forbidden by him. See "<a href=
+"#RULE4_15">TRIUMPHS OF HILDEBRAND</a>," v, 231.</p>
+<p>1074. Gregory VII suggests the first idea of a general crusade
+against the Turks.</p>
+<p>1075. Lay investiture prohibited by a council called by Gregory
+VII. See "<a href="#RULE4_15">TRIUMPHS OF HILDEBRAND</a>," v,
+231.</p>
+<p>1076. Atziz, Malek Shah's lieutenant, conquers Syria from the
+Fatimites of Egypt, and takes Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>Christian pilgrims are persecuted by the Seljukian Turks.</p>
+<p>Henry IV, Emperor of Germany, holds a council at Rome which
+deposes Gregory VII. In union with the German princes the Pope
+deposes the Emperor.</p>
+<p>1077. Pope Gregory exacts an annual tribute from Alfonso, King
+of Castile.</p>
+<p>At Canossa Henry IV humbles himself before the Pope and is
+absolved. See "<a href="#RULE4_15">TRIUMPHS OF HILDEBRAND</a>," v,
+231.</p>
+<p>1079. Boleslas of Poland excommunicated by Gregory and expelled
+by his subjects.</p>
+<p>1080. Henry IV convenes a council which deposes Gregory VII; it
+elects Guibert, Antipope Clement III, in his stead.</p>
+<p>End of the war between Henry and Rudolph of Saxony caused by the
+death of the latter.</p>
+<p>1081. Constantinople captured by Alexis Comnenus, who is placed
+by his soldiers on the Byzantine throne.</p>
+<p>1084. Gregory VII is besieged in the castle of St. Angelo;
+Robert Guiscard delivers the Pope. See "<a href=
+"#RULE4_15">TRIUMPHS OF HILDEBRAND</a>," v, 231.</p>
+<p>1085. Death of Gregory VII, in exile at Salerno; the papacy
+vacant till the following year.</p>
+<p>Conquest of Toledo from the Moors by Alfonso of Castile.</p>
+<p>1086. "<a href="#RULE4_16">COMPLETION OF THE DOMESDAY BOOK</a>."
+See v, 242.</p>
+<p>The Mahometans of Spain invite the chief of the Almoravides to
+assist them. See "<a href="#RULE4_17">DECLINE OF THE MOORISH POWER
+IN SPAIN</a>," v, 256.</p>
+<p>1087. King William of England invades France; he dies at Rouen.
+His eldest son, Robert, inherits Normandy; his second son, William
+Rufus, secures the throne of England.</p>
+<p>1088. Yussef is called into Spain by the Moorish princes; their
+jealousies and discords render his assistance unavailing. See
+"<a href="#RULE4_17">DECLINE OF THE MOORISH POWER IN SPAIN</a>," v,
+256.</p>
+<p>1089. Henry IV excommunicated by Pope Urban II. A violent
+earthquake in England.</p>
+<p>The disease known as St. Anthony's fire breaks out in
+Lorraine.</p>
+<p>1090. Hasan, Subah of Nishapur, collects a band of Carmathians
+who are named after him, "Assassins."</p>
+<p>William Rufus, King of England, invades Normandy and captures
+St. Valery.</p>
+<p>1091. Yussef conquers Seville and Almeria, sends Almoatamad to
+Africa, and becomes supreme ruler in Mahometan Spain. See "<a href=
+"#RULE4_17">DECLINE OF THE MOORISH POWER IN SPAIN</a>," v, 256.</p>
+<p>1092. Guibert's party hold the castle of St. Angelo; Guibert's
+title to the papacy is still asserted by Henry IV.</p>
+<p>Complete disruption of the empire of the Seljuks follows the
+death of Shah Malek.</p>
+<p>1093. King Malcolm of Scotland invades England; he is killed
+near Alnwick, by Roger de Mowbray.</p>
+<p>1094. Sancho, King of Aragon and Navarre, falls in battle; he is
+succeeded by his son Pedro.</p>
+<p>Peter the Hermit goes on his pilgrimage to Jerusalem. See
+"<a href="#RULE4_18">THE FIRST CRUSADE</a>," v, 276.</p>
+<p>1095. Philip and Henry again excommunicated by Pope Urban
+II.</p>
+<p>Henry of Besangon marries Theresa, daughter of Alfonso the
+Valiant, who erects Portugal into a county for his son-in-law.</p>
+<p>1096. Aphdal, the Fatimite, expels the sons of Ortok from
+Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>Movement of the first crusading armies; massacre of Jews in
+Europe. See "<a href="#RULE4_18">THE FIRST CRUSADE</a>," v,
+276.</p>
+<p>1097. William Rufus expels Archbishop Anselm, from England in
+defiance of the papal legate.</p>
+<p>Emperor Henry IV protects the German Jews.</p>
+<p>Death of Albert Azzo, Marquis of Lombardy, more than 100 years
+old; he was father of Guelf IV, the progenitor of the Brunswick
+family, afterward one of the English royal lines.</p>
+<p>The crusaders take Nicaea; the Eastern emperor Alexius,
+suspicious of the crusaders, obtains the city of Nicasa for
+himself. See "<a href="#RULE4_18">THE FIRST CRUSADE</a>," v,
+276.</p>
+<p>1098. Edgar, son of Malcolm, seated on the throne of Scotland by
+Edgar Atheling with an English army.</p>
+<p>Pope Urban II holds a council at Bari to condemn the doctrines
+of the Greek Church.</p>
+<p>1099. Jerusalem captured by the crusaders. See "<a href=
+"#RULE4_18">THE FIRST CRUSADE</a>," v, 276.</p>
+<p>Founding of the order of the Knights Hospitallers; Gerard of
+Jerusalem the first provost or grand master.</p>
+<p>Coronation of Henry V, second son of the Emperor, as king of the
+Romans.</p>
+<p>1100. New antipopes arise on the death of Guibert (Clement III),
+one of whom assumes the name of Sylvester IV.</p>
+<p>William Rufus accidentally slain; Henry I becomes king of
+England; he renews the laws of Edward the Confessor and unites the
+Saxon and Norman races by his marriage with Matilda, granddaughter
+of Edmund "Ironside."</p>
+<p>1101. Robert, Duke of Normandy, invades England and makes war on
+his brother, Henry I.</p>
+<p>Guelf, Duke of Bavaria, and William, Duke of Aquitaine, conduct
+a large body of crusaders to the East. United with those who set
+out in the preceding year, they are met by Kilidsch Arslan, on
+entering Asia Minor, and are cut to pieces or dispersed.</p>
+<p>1102. Pope Paschal II obtains from Matilda a deed of gift of all
+her states to the Church.</p>
+<p>Coloman, King of Hungary, conquers Croatia and Dalmatia.</p>
+<p>1103. Yussef's son Ali recognized as heir to the thrones of
+Spain and Africa.</p>
+<p>1104. Baldwin, King of Jerusalem, defeats the Turks and captures
+Acre.</p>
+<p>Emperor Henry IV faces a rebellion of his son, incited by the
+papal party.</p>
+<p>1105. Interview between Emperor Henry and his son at Elbingen; a
+diet is called to be held at Mainz for the settlement of their
+dispute.</p>
+<p>The English, under King Henry, take Caen and Bayeux in
+Normandy.</p>
+<p>Defeat of the Turks in an attempt to retake Jerusalem; Bohemond,
+Prince of Tarentum, who had taken Antioch from the Turks, made
+prisoner.</p>
+<p>1106. King Henry I overthrows Duke Robert, who is captured, and
+secures Normandy.</p>
+<p>Death of Henry IV and accession of his son Henry V to the German
+throne; the new Emperor asserts his right to appoint bishops.</p>
+<p>1108. Death of Philip, King of France; Louis VI, the Fat,
+succeeds.</p>
+<p>1109. Baldwin, King of Jerusalem, assisted by a Venetian fleet,
+captures Tripoli.</p>
+<p>Portugal declared independent and the hereditary succession
+established in Count Henry's family.</p>
+<p>1111. Emperor Henry V enters Rome; bloody contests between his
+soldiers and the people. Pope Paschal II, a prisoner, resigns the
+right of investiture and crowns the Emperor.</p>
+<p>1113. Death of Swatopolk, Duke of Russia; his brother Vladimir
+succeeds.</p>
+<p>1114. War in Wales; King Henry I erects castles there to secure
+his conquests.</p>
+<p>1117. The Doge of Venice falls at Zara in defending Dalmatia
+against the Hungarians.</p>
+<p>1118. "<a href="#RULE4_19">FOUNDATION OF THE ORDER OF KNIGHTS
+TEMPLAR</a>." See v, 301.</p>
+<p>On the death of Paschal II the cardinals elect Gelasius II; the
+Emperor appoints the Archbishop of Braga to assume the papal
+dignity under the name of Gregory VIII. The factions afterward
+known as the Guelfs and Ghibellines arose from this event.</p>
+<p>1119. Battle of Noyon, by which Henry I reestablishes his
+ascendency in Normandy.</p>
+<p>Defeat of the Turks at Antioch by King Baldwin II and the
+Knights Hospitallers.</p>
+<p>Henry I resists the papal claim to investiture in England;
+banishment of Thurstan, Archbishop of Canterbury.</p>
+<p>1120. Sinking of the White Ship (<i>La Blanche Nef</i>), in
+which Prince William, son of Henry I, was lost. The King is said to
+have "never smiled again" after the receipt of the news.</p>
+<p>1121. Siege of Sutri by the army of Pope Calixtus II, and
+surrender of Antipope Gregory.</p>
+<p>1122. Henry V and Calixtus II compromise, at the Diet of Worms,
+the dispute respecting the right of investiture.</p>
+<p>Baldwin, King of Jerusalem, and Jocelyn de Courtenay made
+prisoners by the Turks.</p>
+<p>Abelard, a noted French theologian, accused of heresy at the
+Council of Soissons, is condemned to burn his writings.</p>
+<p>1123. Ninth general council; First Lateran Council.</p>
+<p>War renewed in Normandy by the rebellion of certain powerful
+barons; Henry I, King of England, takes their castles.</p>
+<p>1124. A rich Pisan convoy, on its voyage from Sardinia, captured
+by the Genoese.</p>
+<p>1125. Death of the emperor Henry V of Germany, which ends the
+Franconian dynasty; the Duke of Saxony, Lothair II, elected his
+successor; he declares war against the Hohenstaufens.</p>
+<p>Punishment of the mintmen in England for issuing base coin.</p>
+<p>1126. King Henry leaves Normandy and takes his prisoners to
+England.</p>
+<p>1127. Marriage of Henry's daughter, Matilda, to Geoffrey
+Plantagenet; she is acknowledged by the English barons as heiress
+to her father's throne. See "<a href="#RULE4_20">STEPHEN USURPS THE
+ENGLISH CROWN</a>," v, 317.</p>
+<p>Death of William, Duke of Apulia; Roger II, Great Count of
+Sicily, succeeds. This unites the Norman conquests in Italy with
+Sicily; the Pope excommunicates him.</p>
+<p>1128. Conrad, Duke of Franconia, of the Hohenstaufen house,
+crowned king of Italy at Milan, in opposition to Lothair II; he is
+excommunicated by the Pope.</p>
+<p>Roger II overcomes the papal resistance and is formally
+acknowledged duke of Apulia and Calabria.</p>
+<p>1129. King Henry of England releases his Norman prisoners and
+restores their lands to them.</p>
+<p>1130. On the death of Pope Honorius II the cardinals divide into
+two factions, one of which elects Innocent II, and the other the
+antipope Anacletus II. The latter gains possession of the Lateran
+and is there consecrated; Innocent takes refuge in France.</p>
+<p>1131. Birth of Maimonides, who, next to Moses, is believed to
+have had the greatest influence on Jewish thought. (Date
+uncertain.)</p>
+<p>1132. Lothair II goes to Rome in support of Pope Innocent II
+against Antipope Anacletus II; he expels Conrad.</p>
+<p>Wool-spinning is introduced into England by the Flemings at
+Worstead; hence the name "worsted."</p>
+<p>1133. Lothair conducts Innocent to Rome and is there crowned
+emperor by him.</p>
+<p>1134. Aragon and Navarre choose separate sovereigns, who are
+protected by Alfonso the Noble, King of Castile.</p>
+<p>1135. Death of Henry I of England; Stephen usurps the throne.
+See "<a href="#RULE4_20">STEPHEN USURPS THE ENGLISH CROWN</a>," v,
+317.</p>
+<p>A copy of Justinian's <i>Pandects</i> said to have been
+discovered at Amalfi.</p>
+<p>The house of Hohenstaufen forced into submission by Lothair.</p>
+<p>1136. Lothair marches into Italy with a large army; the cities
+make submission.</p>
+<p>Matilda resists Stephen's usurpation of the English crown, and
+invades Normandy.</p>
+<p>1137. Death of Louis VI; his son, Louis VII, succeeds to the
+French crown.</p>
+<p>1138. David I of Scotland defeated at the Battle of the
+Standard. See "<a href="#RULE4_20">STEPHEN USURPS THE ENGLISH
+CROWN</a>," v, 317.</p>
+<p>Conrad, Duke of Franconia, elected emperor of Germany; he founds
+the Hohenstaufen dynasty. From his castle of Wiblingen his party
+takes the name of Ghibellines; his opponent, Henry Guelf, is put
+under the ban of the empire, hence the papal party were called
+Guelfs.</p>
+<p>1139. Pope Innocent II taken prisoner by Roger; a treaty of
+peace confirms Roger's title. Arnold of Brescia is banished Italy.
+See "<a href="#RULE4_21">ANTI-PAPAL DEMOCRATIC MOVEMENT</a>," v,
+340.</p>
+<p>Robert, Earl of Gloucester, a natural son of Henry I, promises
+assistance to Matilda in her war against King Stephen of England.
+See "<a href="#RULE4_20">STEPHEN USURPS THE ENGLISH CROWN</a>," v,
+317.</p>
+<p>1140. Conrad III defeats the forces of Guelf VI, uncle of Henry
+the Lion, while attempting to gain possession of Bavaria.</p>
+<p>1141. Battle of Lincoln; King Stephen defeated and carried
+prisoner to Bristol. See "<a href="#RULE4_20">STEPHEN USURPS THE
+ENGLISH CROWN</a>," v, 317.</p>
+<p>1142. Henry the Lion is invested with the duchy of Saxony by
+Conrad III. His rival, Albert the Bear, created margrave of
+Brandenburg.</p>
+<p>1143. Geisa, King of Hungary, invites German emigrants to join
+the colony of that people in Transylvania.</p>
+<p>1144. Edessa, Turkey, stormed and captured by Zenghi, Sultan of
+Aleppo.</p>
+<p>1145. Arnold of Brescia initiates the antipapal democratic
+movement. See "<a href="#RULE4_21">ANTIPAPAL DEMOCRATIC
+MOVEMENT</a>," v, 340.</p>
+<p>Disruption of the Almoravide kingdom in Spain.</p>
+<p>1146. Prince Henry inherits Anjou and Maine; Normandy submits to
+him.</p>
+<p>St. Bernard, at the instance of Pope Eugenius, preaches a
+crusade for the protection of the Holy Land against Noureddin,
+Sultan of Aleppo.</p>
+<p>Byzantium is ravaged by Roger, King of Sicily. See "<a href=
+"#RULE4_22">DECLINE OF THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE</a>," v, 353.</p>
+<p>Crusaders and mobs massacre Jews in Germany.</p>
+<p>1147. Louis VII of France and Emperor Conrad III lead the Second
+Crusade.</p>
+<p>Lisbon, after being taken from the Moors, is made the capital of
+Portugal.</p>
+<p>Moscow, Russia, is founded by the Prince of Suzdal,
+Dolgoucki.</p>
+<p>1148. Unsuccessful sieges of Damascus and Ascalon by the
+crusaders.</p>
+<p>1149. Louis, returning by sea from his crusade, is captured by
+the Greeks, and rescued by the Sicilian fleet.</p>
+<p>1150. Victory of Manuel, the Byzantine Emperor, over the
+Servians, who become vassals of that empire.</p>
+<p>1151. Manuel invades Hungary, crosses the Danube, grants a truce
+to Geisa, and carries a large booty to Constantinople.</p>
+<p>1152. Death of Conrad III; Frederick I, Barbarossa, elected
+emperor.</p>
+<p>1153. Treaty by King Stephen and Henry Plantagenet concerning
+the succession of the English crown. See "<a href=
+"#RULE4_20">STEPHEN USURPS THE ENGLISH CROWN</a>," v, 317.</p>
+<p>1154. A large portion of France united with the crown of England
+on the accession of Henry II, who founds the Plantagenet line,
+following Stephen's death.</p>
+<p>The first Italian expedition of Frederick Barbarossa.</p>
+<p>Pope Adrian IV, by a bull, grants Ireland to the English
+crown.</p>
+<p>1155. Frederick re&euml;stablishes the papal rule in Rome. Pope
+Adrian IV orders the execution of Arnold. See "<a href=
+"#RULE4_21">ANTIPAPAL DEMOCRATIC MOVEMENT</a>," v, 340.</p>
+<p>1156. Henry the Lion, of the Guelf line, has Bavaria restored to
+him. Austria erected into a duchy.</p>
+<p>1157. Pope Adrian, in a letter to the German Emperor, asserts
+Germany to be a papal benefice; Frederick resists the claim.</p>
+<p>Poland is compelled by Emperor Frederick I to pay him
+homage.</p>
+<p>1158. Eric IX of Sweden conquers the coast of Finland and builds
+Abo.</p>
+<p>Frederick I, Barbarossa, a second time invades Italy; he
+captures Milan.</p>
+<p>1159. Election of Pope Alexander III; Frederick I creates an
+anti-pope, Victor IV.</p>
+<p>War ensues between Henry II of England and Louis VII of France;
+the former claiming the county of Toulouse, Southern France.</p>
+<p>1160. Emperor Frederick I calls the Council of Pavia; it
+declares Victor to be pope; Alexander excommunicates them all.</p>
+<p>1161. Peace concluded between Henry II and Louis VII; they
+acknowledge Alexander as pope. The kings of Denmark, Norway,
+Bohemia, and Hungary declare in favor of Victor.</p>
+<p>Henry II limits the papal authority in England.</p>
+<center>END OF VOLUME V</center>
+<br>
+<hr class="full">
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GREAT EVENTS BY FAMOUS HISTORIANS, VOLUME 5***</p>
+<p>******* This file should be named 10151-h.txt or 10151-h.zip *******</p>
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+</pre>
+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/old/10151.txt b/old/10151.txt
new file mode 100644
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--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/10151.txt
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume
+5, by Various, Edited by Rossiter Johnson
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 5
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: November 20, 2003 [eBook #10151]
+
+Language: English
+
+Chatacter set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GREAT EVENTS BY FAMOUS
+HISTORIANS, VOLUME 5***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Gwidon Naskrent, David King, and the
+Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+THE GREAT EVENTS
+
+BY
+
+FAMOUS HISTORIANS
+
+
+A COMPREHENSIVE AND READABLE ACCOUNT OF THE WORLD'S HISTORY. EMPHASIZING
+THE MORE IMPORTANT EVENTS, AND PRESENTING THESE AS COMPLETE NARRATIVES
+IN THE MASTER-WORDS OF THE MOST EMINENT HISTORIANS
+
+
+NON-SECTARIAN NON-PARTISAN NON-SECTIONAL
+
+
+ON THE PLAN EVOLVED FROM A CONSENSUS OF OPINIONS GATHERED FROM THE MOST
+DISTINGUISHED SCHOLARS OF AMERICA AND EUROPE. INCLUDING BRIEF
+INTRODUCTIONS BY SPECIALISTS TO CONNECT AND EXPLAIN THE CELEBRATED
+NARRATIVES. ARRANGED CHRONOLOGICALLY. WITH THOROUGH INDICES,
+BIBLIOGRAPHIES. CHRONOLOGIES, AND COURSES OF READING
+
+
+SUPERVISING EDITOR
+
+ROSSITER JOHNSON, LL.D.
+
+
+LITERARY EDITORS
+
+CHARLES F. HORNE, Ph.D.
+
+JOHN RUDD, LL.D.
+
+
+DIRECTING EDITOR
+
+WALTER F. AUSTIN, LL.M.
+
+
+With a staff of specialists
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+VOLUME V
+
+An Outline Narrative of the Great Events
+CHARLES F. HORNE
+
+Feudalism: Its Frankish Birth and English Development
+(9th to 12th Century)
+WILLIAM STUBBS
+
+Decay of the Frankish Empire
+Division into Modern France, Germany, and Italy
+(A.D. 843-911)
+FRANCOIS P. G. GUIZOT
+
+Career of Alfred the Great (A.D. 871-901)
+THOMAS HUGHES
+JOHN R. GREEN
+
+Henry the Fowler Founds the Saxon Line of German Kings
+Origin of the German Burghers or Middle Classes (A.D. 911-936)
+WOLFGANG MENZEL
+
+Conquest of Egypt by the Fatimites (A.D. 969)
+STANLEY LANE-POOLE
+
+Growth and Decadence of Chivalry (10th to 15th Century)
+LEON GAUTIER
+
+Conversion of Vladimir the Great
+Introduction of Christianity into Russia (A.D. 988-1015)
+A. N. MOURAVIEFF
+
+Leif Ericson Discovers America (A.D. 1000)
+CHARLES C. RAFN
+SAGA OF ERIC THE RED
+
+Mahometans In India
+Bloody Invasions under Mahmud (A.D. 1000)
+ALEXANDER DOW
+
+Canute Becomes King of England (A.D. 1017)
+DAVID HUME
+
+Henry III Deposes the Popes (A.D. 1048)
+The German Empire Controls the Papacy
+FERDINAND GREGOROVIUS
+JOSEPH DARRAS
+
+Dissension and Separation of the Greek and Roman
+Churches (A.D. 1054)
+HENRY F. TOZER
+JOSEPH DEHARBE
+
+Norman Conquest of England
+Battle of Hastings (A.D. 1066)
+SIR EDWARD S. CREASY
+
+Triumphs of Hildebrand
+"The Turning-point of the Middle Ages"
+Henry IV Begs for Mercy at Canossa (A.D. 1073-1085)
+ARTHUR R. PENNINGTON
+ARTAUD DE MONTOR
+
+Completion of the Domesday Book (A.D. 1086)
+CHARLES KNIGHT
+
+Decline of the Moorish Power in Spain
+Growth and Decay of the Almoravide and Almohade
+Dynasties (A.D. 1086-1214)
+S.A. DUNHAM
+
+The First Crusade (A.D. 1096-1099)
+SIR GEORGE W. COX
+
+Foundation of the Order of Knights Templars (A.D. 1118)
+CHARLES G. ADDISON
+
+Stephen Usurps the English Crown
+His Conflicts with Matilda
+Decisive Influence of the Church (A.D. 1135-1154)
+CHARLES KNIGHT
+
+Antipapal Democratic Movement
+Arnold of Brescia
+St. Bernard and the Second Crusade (A.D. 1145-1155)
+JOHANN A. W. NEANDER
+
+Decline of the Byzantine Empire
+Ravages of Roger of Sicily (A.D. 1146)
+GEORGE FINLAY
+
+Universal Chronology (A.D. 843-1161)
+JOHN RUDD
+
+
+
+
+AN OUTLINE NARRATIVE
+
+TRACING BRIEFLY THE CAUSES, CONNECTIONS, AND CONSEQUENCES OF
+
+THE GREAT EVENTS
+
+(FROM CHARLEMAGNE TO FREDERICK BARBAROSSA)
+
+CHARLES F. HORNE
+
+
+The three centuries which follow the downfall of the empire of
+Charlemagne laid the foundations of modern Europe, and made of it a
+world wholly different, politically, socially, and religiously, from
+that which had preceded it. In the careers of Greece and Rome we saw
+exemplified the results of two sharply opposing tendencies of the Aryan
+mind, the one toward individualism and separation, the other toward
+self-subordination and union.
+
+In the time of Charlemagne's splendid successes it appeared settled that
+the second of these tendencies was to guide the Teutonic Aryans, that
+the Europe of the future was to be a single empire, ever pushing out its
+borders as Rome had done, ever subduing its weaker neighbors, until the
+"Teutonic peace" should be substituted for the shattered "Roman peace,"
+soldiers should be needed only for the duties of police, and a whole
+civilized world again obey the rule of a single man.
+
+Instead of this, the race has since followed a destiny of separation.
+Europe is divided into many countries, each of them a vast camp
+bristling with armies and arsenals. Civilization has continued
+hag-ridden by war even to our own day, and, during at least seven
+hundred of the years that followed Charlemagne, mankind made no greater
+progress in the arts and sciences than the ancients had sometimes
+achieved in a single century. We do indeed believe that at last we have
+entered on an age of rapid advance, that individualism has justified
+itself. The wider personal liberty of to-day is worth all that the race
+has suffered for it. Yet the retardation of wellnigh a thousand years
+has surely been a giant price to pay.
+
+
+DOWNFALL OF CHARLEMAGNE'S EMPIRE
+
+This mighty change in the course of Teutonic destiny, this breakdown of
+the Frankish empire, was wrought by two destroying forces, one from
+within, one from without. From within came the insubordination, the
+still savage love of combat, the natural turbulence of the race. It is
+conceivable that, had Charlemagne been followed on the throne by a son
+and then a grandson as mighty as he and his immediate ancestors, the
+course of the whole broad earth would have been altered. The Franks
+would have grown accustomed to obey; further conquest abroad would have
+insured peace at home; the imperial power would have become strong as in
+Roman days, when the most feeble emperors could not be shaken. But the
+descendants of Charlemagne sank into a decline. He himself had directed
+the fighting energy of the Franks against foreign enemies. His son and
+successor had no taste for war, and so allowed his idle subjects time to
+quarrel with him and with one another. The next generation, under the
+grandsons of Charlemagne, devoted their entire lives to repeated and
+furious civil wars, in which the empire fell apart, the flower of the
+Frankish race perished, and the strength of its dominion was sapped to
+nothingness.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: See _Decay of Frankish Empire_, page 22.]
+
+There were three of these grandsons, and, when their struggle had left
+them thoroughly exhausted, they divided the empire into three. Their
+treaty of Verdun (843) is often quoted as beginning the modern kingdoms
+of Germany, France, and Italy. The division was in some sense a natural
+one, emphasized by differences of language and of race. Italy was
+peopled by descendants of the ancient Italians, with a thin
+intermingling of Goths and Lombards; France held half-Romanized Gauls,
+with a very considerable percentage of the Frankish blood; while Germany
+was far more barbaric than the other regions. Its people, whether Frank
+or Saxon, were all pure Teuton, and still spoke in their Teutonic or
+German tongue.
+
+The Franks themselves, however, did not regard this as a breaking of
+their empire. They looked on it as merely a family affair, an
+arrangement made for the convenience of government among the descendants
+of the great Charles. So firm had been that mighty hero's grasp upon the
+national imagination, that the Franks accepted as matter of course that
+his family should bear rule, and rallied round the various worthless
+members of it with rather pathetic loyalty, fighting for them one
+against the other, reuniting and redividing the various fragments of the
+empire, until the feeble Carlovingian race died out completely.
+
+It is thus evident that there was a strong tendency toward union among
+the Franks. But there was also an outside influence to disrupt their
+empire. Charlemagne had not carried far enough their career of conquest.
+He subdued the Teutons within the limits of Germany, but he did not
+reach their weaker Scandinavian brethren to the north, the Danes and
+Norsemen. He chastised the Avars, a vague non-Aryan people east of
+Germany, but he could not make provision against future Asiatic swarms.
+He humbled the Arabs in Spain, but he did not break their African
+dominion. From all these sources, as the Franks grew weaker instead of
+stronger, their lands became exposed to new invasion.
+
+
+THE LAST INVADERS
+
+Let us take a moment to trace the fortunes of these outside races,
+though the main destiny of the future still lay with Teutonic Europe.
+
+In speaking of the followers of Mahomet, we might perhaps at this period
+better drop the term Arabs, and call them Saracens. They were thus known
+to the Christians; and their conquests had drawn in their train so many
+other peoples that in truth there was little pure Arab blood left among
+them. The Saracens, then, had begun to lose somewhat of their intense
+fanaticism. Feuds broke out among them. Different chiefs established
+different kingdoms or "caliphates," whose dominion became political
+rather than religious. Spain had one ruler, Egypt[2] another, Asia a
+third. In the eleventh century an army of Saracens invaded India[3] and
+added that strange and ancient land to their domain. Europe they had
+failed to conquer; but their fleets commanded the Mediterranean. They
+held all its islands, Sicily, Crete, Sardinia, and Corsica. They
+plundered the coast towns of France and Italy. There was a Saracenic
+ravaging of Rome.
+
+[Footnote 2: See _Conquest of Egypt by the Fatimites_, page 94.]
+
+[Footnote 3: See _Mahometans in India_, page 151.]
+
+On the whole, however, the wave of Mahometan conquest receded. In Spain
+the remnants of the Christian population, Visigoths, Romans, and still
+older peoples, pressed their way down from their old-time, secret
+mountain retreats and began driving the Saracens southward.[4] The
+decaying Roman Empire of the East still resisted the Mahometan attack;
+Constantinople remained a splendid city, type and picture of what the
+ancient world had been.
+
+[Footnote 4: See _Decline of the Moorish Power in Spain_, page 296.]
+
+While the Saracens were thus laying waste the Frankish empire along its
+Mediterranean coasts, a more dangerous enemy was assailing it from the
+east. Toward the end of the ninth century the Magyars, an Asiatic,
+Turanian people, burst on Europe, as the Huns had done five centuries
+before. Indeed, the Christians called these later comers Huns also, and
+told of them the same extravagant tales of terror. The land which the
+Magyars settled was called Hungary. They dwell there and possess it even
+to this day, the only instance of a Turanian people having permanently
+established themselves in an Aryan continent and at the expense of Aryan
+neighbors.
+
+From Hungary the Magyars soon advanced to the German border line, and
+made fierce plundering inroads upon the more civilized regions beyond.
+They came on horseback, so that the slower Teutons could never gather
+quickly enough to resist them. The marauding parties, as they learned
+the wealth and weakness of this new land, grew bigger, until at length
+they were armies, and defeated the German Franks in pitched battles, and
+spread desolation through all the country. They returned now every year.
+Their ravages extended even to the Rhine and to the ancient Gallic land
+beyond. The Frankish empire seemed doomed to reenact, in a smaller, far
+more savage way, the fate of Rome.
+
+Yet more widespread in destruction, more important in result than the
+raids of either Saracens or Magyars, were those of the Scandinavians or
+Northmen. These, the latest, and perhaps therefore the finest, flower of
+the Teutonic stock, are closer to us and hence better known than the
+early Goths or Franks. Shut off in their cold northern peninsulas and
+islands, they had grown more slowly, it may be, than their southern
+brethren. Now they burst suddenly on the world with spectacular dramatic
+effect, wild, fierce, and splendid conquerors, as keen of intellect and
+quick of wit as they were strong of arm and daring of adventure.
+
+We see them first as sea-robbers, pirates, venturing even in
+Charlemagne's time to plunder the German and French coasts. One tribe of
+them, the Danes, had already been harrying England and Ireland. Only
+Alfred,[5] by heroic exertions, saved a fragment of his kingdom from
+them. Later, under Canute,[6] they become its kings. The Northmen
+penetrate Russia and appear as rulers of the strange Slavic tribes
+there; they settle in Iceland, Greenland, and even distant and unknown
+America.[7]
+
+[Footnote 5: See _Career of Alfred the Great_.]
+
+[Footnote 6: See _Canute Becomes King of England_.]
+
+[Footnote 7: _Leif Ericson Discovers America_.]
+
+Meanwhile, after Charlemagne's death they become a main factor in the
+downfall of his empire. Year after year their little ships plunder the
+undefended French coast, until it is abandoned to them and becomes a
+desert. They build winter camps at the river mouths, so that in the
+spring they need lose less time and can hurry inland after their
+retreating prey. Sudden in attack, strong in defence, they venture
+hundreds of miles up the winding waterways. Paris is twice attacked by
+them and must fight for life. They penetrate so far up the Loire as to
+burn Orleans.
+
+It was under stress of all these assaults that the Franks, grown too
+feeble to defend themselves as Charlemagne would have done, by marching
+out and pursuing the invaders to their own homes, developed instead a
+system of defence which made the Middle Ages what they were. All central
+authority seemed lost; each little community was left to defend itself
+as best it might. So the local chieftain built himself a rude fortress,
+which in time became a towered castle; and thither the people fled in
+time of danger. Each man looked up to and swore faith to this, his own
+chief, his immediate protector, and took little thought of a distant and
+feeble king or emperor. Occasionally, of course, a stronger lord or king
+bestirred himself, and demanded homage of these various petty
+chieftains. They gave him such service as they wished or as they must.
+This was the "feudal system."[8]
+
+[Footnote 8: See _Feudalism: Its Frankish Birth and English
+Development_.]
+
+The inclination of each lesser lord was obviously to assert as much
+independence as he could. He naturally objected to paying money or
+service without benefit received; and he could see no good that this
+"overlord" did for him or for his district. It seemed likely at this
+time that instead of being divided into three kingdoms, the Frankish
+empire would split into thousands of little castled states.
+
+That is, it seemed so, after the various marauding nations were disposed
+of. The Northmen were pacified by presenting them outright with the
+coast lands they had most harried. Their great leader, Rolf, accepted
+the territory with some vague and ill-kept promise of vassalage to the
+French King, and with a very firmly held determination that he would let
+no pirates ravage his land or cross it to reach others. So the French
+coast became Normandy, and the Northmen learned the tongue and manners
+of their new home, and softened their harsh name to "Norman," even as
+they softened their harsh ways, and rapidly became the most able and
+most cultured of Frenchmen.
+
+As for the Saracens, being unprogressive and no longer enthusiastic,
+they grew ever feebler, while the Italian cities, being Aryan and left
+to themselves, grew strong. At length their fleets met those of the
+Saracens on equal terms, and defeated them, and gradually wrested from
+them the control of the Mediterranean. Invaders were thus everywhere met
+as they came, locally. There was no general gathering of the Frankish
+forces against them.
+
+The repulse of the Huns proved the hardest matter of all. Fortunately
+for the Germans, their line of Carlovingian emperors died out. So the
+various dukes and counts, practically each an independent sovereign, met
+and elected a king from among themselves, not really to rule them, but
+to enable them to unite against the Huns. After their first elected king
+had been soundly beaten by one of his dukes, he died, and in their next
+choice they had the luck to light upon a leader really great. Henry the
+Fowler, more honorably known as Henry the City-builder,[9] taught them
+how to defeat their foe.
+
+[Footnote 9: See _Henry the Fowler Founds the Saxon Line of German
+Kings_.]
+
+Much to the disgust of his simple and war-hardened comrades, he first
+sent to the Hungarians and purchased peace and paid them tribute. Having
+thus secured a temporary respite, Henry encouraged and aided his people
+in building walled cities all along the frontier. He also planned to
+meet the invaders on equal terms by training his warriors to fight on
+horseback. He instituted tournaments and created an order of knighthood,
+and is thus generally regarded as the founder of chivalry, that fairest
+fruit of mediaeval times, which did so much to preserve honor and
+tenderness and respect for womankind.[10]
+
+[Footnote 10: See _Growth and Decadence of Chivalry_.]
+
+When he felt all prepared, Henry deliberately defied and insulted the
+Hungarians, and so provoked from them a combined national invasion,
+which he met and completely overthrew in the battle of Merseburg (933).
+A generation later the Huns felt themselves strong enough to try again;
+but Henry's son, Otto the Great, repeated the chastisement. He then
+formed a boundary colony or "East-mark" from which sprang Austria; and
+this border kingdom was always able to keep the weakened Huns in check.
+
+At the same time there was growing up in Russia a Slavic civilization,
+which received Christianity[11] from the South as it had received
+Teutonic dominion from the North, and so developed along very similar
+lines to Western Europe. The Russian states served as a barrier against
+later Asiatic hordes; and this, combined with the civilizing of the last
+remnants of the Scandinavians in the North, and the fading of Saracenic
+power in the South, left the tottering civilization of the West free
+from further barbarian invasion. We shall find destruction threatened
+again in later ages by Tartar and by Turk; but the intruders never reach
+beyond the frontier. The Teutons and the half-Romanized ancients with
+whom they had assimilated were left to work out their own problems. All
+the ingredients, even to the last, the Northmen, had been poured into
+the caldron. There remains to see what the intermingling has brought
+forth.
+
+[Footnote 11: See _Conversion of Vladimir the Great_.]
+
+
+FEUDAL EUROPE
+
+We have here, then, somewhere about the middle of the tenth century, a
+date which may be regarded as marking a distinctly new era. The
+ceaseless work of social organization and improvement, which seems so
+strong an instinct of the Aryan mind, had been recommenced again and
+again from under repeated deluges of barbarism. To-day for nearly a
+thousand years it has progressed uninterrupted, except by disturbances
+from within; nor does it appear possible, with our present knowledge of
+science and of the remoter corners of the globe, that our civilization
+will ever again be even menaced by the other races.
+
+Chronologists frequently adopt as a convenient starting-point for this
+modern development the year 962, in which Otto the Great, conqueror of
+the Huns, felt himself strong enough to march a German army to Rome and
+assume there the title of emperor, which had been long in abeyance. To
+be sure, there was still an Emperor of the East in Constantinople, but
+nobody thought of him; and, to be sure, the power of Otto and the later
+emperors was purely German, with scarce a pretence of extending beyond
+their own country and sometimes Italy. Yet here was at least one
+restored influence that made toward unity and, by its own devious and
+erratic ways, toward peace.
+
+It must not be supposed, of course, that there was no more war. But, as
+it became a private affair between relatives, or at least acquaintances,
+its ravages were greatly reduced. It was accepted as the "pastime of
+gentlemen," "the sport of kings;" and though we may quote the phrases
+to-day with kindling sarcasm, yet they open a very different vision from
+that of the older inroads by unknown hordes, frenzied with the passion
+and the purpose of the brute. The usefulness of the common people was
+recognized, and they were allowed to continue to live and cultivate the
+ground; while all the great dukes and even the lesser nobles, having
+secured as many castles as possible, intrenched themselves in their
+strongholds and defied all comers.
+
+They asserted their right of "private war" and attacked each other upon
+every conceivable provocation, whether it were the disputed succession
+to some vast estate or the ravage spread by a reckless cow in a foreign
+field. Indeed, it is not always easy to distinguish these private wars
+from mere robberies or plundering expeditions; and it is not probable
+that the wild barons exercised any very delicate discrimination. Even
+Otto the Great had little real influence or authority over such lords as
+these. His immediate successors found themselves with even less.
+
+In short, it was the golden age of feudalism, of the individual feudal
+lords. In Italy there was no central authority whatever, nor among the
+little Christian states gradually arising in Spain. In France and
+England the title of king was but a name. France was really composed of
+a dozen or more independent counties and dukedoms. For a while its lords
+elected a king as the Germans did; and gradually the title became
+hereditary in the Capet family, the counts of Paris, who had fought most
+valiantly against the Northmen. But the entire power of these so-called
+kings lay in their own estates, in the fact that they were counts of
+Paris, and by marriage or by force were slowly adding new possessions to
+their old. Any other noble might have been equally fortunate in his
+investments, and wrested from them their purely honorary title. In fact,
+there was more than once a king of Aquitaine.
+
+Yet, in 1066, William the Conqueror was able to form for a moment a
+strong and centralized monarchy in England.[12] With him we reach the
+period of the second Northmen, or now Norman, outbreak. The marauders
+had grown polished, but not peaceful, in their French home. They had
+become more numerous and more restless, until we find them again taking
+to their ships and seeking newer lands to master. Only they go now as a
+civilizing as well as a devastating influence.
+
+[Footnote 12: See _Norman Conquest of England_.]
+
+Most famed of their undertakings, of course, was William's Conquest of
+England. But we find them also sailing along the Spanish coast, entering
+the Mediterranean, seizing the Balearic Isles, making out of Sicily and
+most of Southern Italy a kingdom which lasted until 1860, and finally
+ravaging the Eastern Empire, and entering Constantinople itself.[13]
+Last and mightiest of the wandering races, they accomplished what all
+their predecessors had failed to do.
+
+[Footnote 13: See _Decline of the Byzantine Empire_, page 353.]
+
+In England, William, with the shrewdness of his race, recognized the
+tendencies of the age, and erected a state so planned that there could
+be no question as to who was master. He gave fiefs liberally to his
+followers; but he took care that the gifts should be in small and
+scattered parcels. No one man controlled any region sufficiently
+extensive to give him the faintest chance of defying the King. William
+had the famous _Domesday Book_[14] compiled, that he might know just
+what every freeman in his dominions owned and for what he could be held
+accountable. The England of the later days of the Conqueror seemed far
+advanced upon our modern ways.
+
+[Footnote 14: See _Completion of the Domesday Book_, page 242.]
+
+But what can one man, however able and advanced, do against the current
+of his age? History shows us constantly that the great reformers have
+been those who felt and followed the general feeling of their times, who
+became mouthpieces for the great mass of thought and effort behind them,
+not those who struggled against the tide. William's successors failed to
+comprehend what he had done, or why. By the time of Stephen (1135)[15]
+we find the barons of England wellnigh as powerful as those of other
+lands. A civil war arises in which Stephen and his rival Matilda are
+scarce more than pawns upon the board. The lords shift sides at will,
+retreat to safety in their strong castles, plunder the common folk, and
+make private war quite as they please.
+
+[Footnote 15: See _Stephen Usurps the English Crown_, page 317.]
+
+If any sage before the reign of the Emperor Barbarossa, that is, before
+the middle of the twelfth century, had studied to predict the course of
+society, he would probably have said that the empire was wholly
+destroyed, and that the principle of separation was becoming ever more
+insistent, that even kings were mere fading relics of the past, and that
+the future world would soon see every lordship an independent state.
+
+
+THE CONDITION OF SOCIETY UNDER FEUDALISM
+
+Amid all this turmoil of the upper classes, one would like much to know
+what was the condition, what the lives, of the common people.
+Unfortunately, the data are very slight. We see dimly the peasant
+staring from his field as the armed knights ride by; we see him fleeing
+to the shelter of the forests before more savage bandits. We see the
+people of the cities drawing together, building walls around their
+towns, and defying in their turn their so-called "overlords." We see
+Henry the City-builder thus become champion of the lower classes,
+despite the strenuous warning of his conservative and not wholly
+disinterested barons. We see shadowy troops of armed merchants drift
+along the unsafe roads. And, most interesting perhaps of all, we see one
+Arnold of Brescia,[16] an Italian monk, advocating a democracy, actually
+urging a return to what he supposed early Rome to have been, a
+government by the masses. Arnold, too, you see, was in advance of his
+time. He was executed by the advice of even so good and wise a man as
+St. Bernard. But the principle of modern life was there, the germ seems
+to have been planted. These humble people of the cities, "citizens,"
+grow to be rulers of the world.
+
+[Footnote 16: See _Antipapal Democratic Movement_ page 340.]
+
+There was a revival, too, of learning in this quieter age. Schools and
+universities become clearly visible. Abelard teaches at the great
+University of Paris, lectures to "forty thousand students," if one
+chooses to believe in such carrying power of his voice, or such
+radiating power of his influence at second hand through those who heard.
+
+The arts spring up, great cathedrals are begun, the wonder and despair
+of even twentieth-century resources. Royal ladies work on tapestries,
+queer things in their way, but certainly not barbaric. Musical notation
+is improved. Manuscripts are gorgeously illumined. Paintings and
+mosaics, though of the crudest, reappear on long-barren walls.
+Civilization begins to advance with increasing stride.
+
+
+THE INFLUENCE OF CHRISTIANITY
+
+Of all the influences that through these wandering and desolate ages had
+sustained humanity and helped it onward, the mightiest has been left to
+speak of last. It was Christianity, a Christianity which had by now
+taken definite form as the Roman Catholic Church. Strongest of all the
+institutions bequeathed by the ancient empire to her conquerors was this
+Church. Indeed, it has been said that Rome had influenced Christianity
+quite as much as Christianity did Rome. The legal-minded Romans insisted
+on the laying out of exact doctrines and creeds, on the building of a
+definite organization, a priesthood, a hierarchy. They lent the weight
+of law to what had been but individual belief and impulse. Thus the
+Church grew hard and strong.
+
+In the same manner that the early emperors had ordered the persecution
+of Christianity, so the later ones ordered the persecution of
+heathendom, nor had the Church grown civilized or Christian enough to
+oppose this method of conversion. Luckily for all parties, however, the
+heathen were scarce sufficiently enthusiastic to insist on martyrdom,
+and so the persecuting spirit which man ultimately imparted to even the
+purest of religions remained latent.
+
+With the downfall of Rome there came another interval in which the
+Church was weak, and was trampled on by barbarians, and was heroic. Then
+the bishops of Rome joined forces with Pepin and Charlemagne.
+Christianity became physically powerful again. The Saxons were converted
+by the sword. So, also, in Henry the Fowler's time, were the Slavic
+Wends. These Roman bishops, or "popes," were accepted unquestioned
+throughout Western Europe as the leaders of a militant Christianity, a
+position never after denied them until the sixteenth century. In the
+East, however, the bishops of Constantinople insisted on an equal, if
+not higher, authority, and so the two churches broke apart.[17]
+
+[Footnote 17: See _Dissension and Separation of the Greek and Roman
+Churches_.]
+
+In the West, Christianity undoubtedly did great good. Its teachings,
+though applied by often fallible instruments and in blundering ways, yet
+never completely lost sight of their own higher meanings of mercy and
+peace. From the Abbey of Cluny originated that quaint mediaeval idea of
+the "truce of God," by which nobles were very widely persuaded to
+restrict their private wars to the middle of the week, and reserve at
+least Friday, Saturday, and Sunday as days of brotherly love and
+religious devotion. The Church also, from very early days, founded
+monasteries, wherein learning and the knowledge of the past were kept
+alive, where pity continued to exist, where the oppressed found refuge.
+It is from these monasteries that all the arts and scholarship of the
+eleventh century begin dimly to emerge.
+
+Moreover, the fact that the Teutons were all of a common religion
+undoubtedly held them much closer together, made them more merciful
+among themselves, more nearly a unit against the outside world. Perhaps
+in this respect more important even than the religion was the Church;
+that is, the hierarchy, the vast army of monks and priests, abbots and
+bishops, spread over all kingdoms, yet looking always toward Rome. Here
+at least was one common centre for Western civilization, one mighty
+influence that all men acknowledged, that all to some faint extent
+obeyed.
+
+
+THE GROWTH OF THE PAPACY
+
+The power thus concentrating in the Roman papacy made the office one to
+attract eager ambition. It has a political history of its own. At first
+the Christian populace that continued to dwell in Rome despite the
+repeated spoliations, elected, from among themselves, their own pope or
+bishop, regarding him not only as their spiritual guide, but as their
+earthly leader and protector also. Naturally, in their distress, they
+chose the very ablest man they could, their wisest and their noblest. It
+was no pleasant task being pope in those dark days; and sometimes the
+bravest shrank from the position.
+
+But centuries of war and self-defence developed a Roman populace more
+fierce and savage and degenerate, while the growing importance of their
+pope beyond the city's walls brought wealth and splendor to his office.
+The result was that some very unsaintly popes were elected amid unseemly
+squabbles. The conditions surrounding the high office became so bad that
+they were felt as a disgrace throughout all Christendom; and in 1046 the
+German emperor Henry III took upon himself to depose three fiercely
+contending Romans, each claiming to be pope. He appointed in their stead
+a candidate of his own, not a dweller in the city at all, but a German.
+Henry, therefore, must have considered the duties of the pope as bishop
+of the Romans to be far less important than his duties as head of the
+Church outside of Rome.[18]
+
+[Footnote 18: See _Henry III Deposes the Popes_.]
+
+So necessary had this interference by the Emperor become that it was
+everywhere approved. Yet as he continued to appoint pope after pope,
+churchmen realized that in the hands of an evil emperor this method of
+securing their head might prove quite as dangerous and unsatisfactory as
+the former one. So the Church took the matter in hand and declared that
+a conclave of its own highest officials should thereafter choose the man
+who was to lead them.
+
+Under this surely more suitable arrangement, the papal office rose at
+once in dignity. It was held for a time by true leaders, earnest
+prelates of the highest worth and ability. We have said that the rank of
+the bishop of Rome as head of the Church had never been seriously
+questioned among the Teutons; but now the popes asserted a political
+authority as well. They regarded themselves, theoretically, as supreme
+heads of the entire Christian world. They claimed and even partly
+exercised the right to create and depose kings and emperors. To such a
+supremacy as this, however, the Teutons were still too rude and warlike
+to submit. Much is made of the fact that the Emperor Henry IV was
+compelled to come as a suppliant to Pope Gregory at Canossa, 1077.[19]
+But this submission was only forced on him by quarrels with his barons,
+who welcomed the Pope as a chance ally. It proved the power of feudalism
+rather than that of religion. Still we may trace here the beginnings of
+a later day when spirit was really to dominate bodily force, when ideas
+should prove stronger than swords.
+
+[Footnote 19: See _Triumphs of Hildebrand_.]
+
+
+THE FIRST CRUSADE
+
+Under these aroused and able popes, the Western world was stirred to the
+first widespread religious enthusiasm since the ancient days of
+persecution. Jerusalem, long in the hands of a tolerant sect of Saracens
+who welcomed the coming of Christian worshippers as a source of revenue,
+was captured in 1075 by another more fanatic Mahometan sect, and word
+came back to Europe that pilgrimage was stopped.
+
+The crusades followed. A great mass of warriors from every nation of the
+West, men who certainly had never intended to go on pilgrimage
+themselves, were roused to what seems a somewhat perverse anger of
+religious devotion. Under the lead of Godfrey of Bouillon they marched
+eastward, saw the wonders of Constantinople, marvellous indeed to their
+ruder eyes, defeated the sultans of Asia Minor and of Antioch, and ended
+by storming Jerusalem, and erecting there a Christian kingdom where
+Mahometanism had ruled for nearly five hundred years.[20]
+
+[Footnote 20: See _The First Crusade_, page 276.]
+
+Of course, a great flow of pilgrims followed them. Religious orders of
+knighthood were formed[21] to help defend the shrine of Christ and to
+extend Christian conquest farther through the surrounding regions.
+Travel began again. Europe, after having forgotten Asia for seven
+centuries, was introduced once more to its languor, its splendor, and
+its vices. The Aryan peoples had at last filled full their little world
+of Western Europe. They had reached among themselves a state of law and
+union, confused and weak, perhaps, yet secure enough to enable them once
+more to overflow their boundaries and become again the aggressive,
+intrusive race we have seen them in earlier days.
+
+[Footnote 21: See _Foundation of the Order of Knights Templars_, page
+301.]
+
+
+
+
+FEUDALISM: ITS FRANKISH BIRTH AND ENGLISH DEVELOPMENT
+
+NINTH TO TWELFTH CENTURY
+
+WILLIAM STUBBS
+
+
+(That social system--however varying in different times and places--in
+which ownership of land is the basis of authority is known in history as
+feudalism. From the time of Clovis, the Frankish King, who died in A.D.
+511, the progress of the Franks in civilization was slow, and for more
+than two centuries they spent their energies mainly in useless wars. But
+Charles Martel and his son, Pepin the Short--the latter dying in
+768--built up a kingdom which Charlemagne erected into a powerful
+empire. Under the predecessors of Charlemagne the beginnings of
+feudalism, which are very obscure, may be said vaguely to appear.
+Charles Martel had to buy the services of his nobles by granting them
+lands, and although he and Pepin strengthened the royal power, which
+Charlemagne still further increased, under the weak rulers who followed
+them the forces of the incipient feudalism again became active, and the
+State was divided into petty countships and dukedoms almost independent
+of the king.
+
+The gift of land by the king in return for feudal services was called a
+feudal grant, and the land so given was termed a "feud" or "fief." In
+the course of time fiefs became hereditary. Lands were also sometimes
+usurped or otherwise obtained by subjects, who thereby became feudal
+lords. By a process called "subinfeudation," lands were granted in
+parcels to other men by those who received them from the king or
+otherwise, and by these lower landholders to others again; and as the
+first recipient became the vassal of the king and the suzerain of the
+man who held next below him, there was created a regular descending
+scale of such vassalage and suzerainty, in which each man's allegiance
+was directly due to his feudal lord, and not to the king himself. From
+the king down to the lowest landholder all were bound together by
+obligation of service and defence; the lord to protect his vassal, the
+vassal to do service to his lord.
+
+These are the essential features of the social system which, from its
+early growth under the later Carlovingians in the ninth century, spread
+over Europe and reached its highest development in the twelfth century.
+At a time midway between these periods it was carried by the Norman
+Conquest into England. The history of this system of distinctly Frankish
+origin--a knowledge of which is absolutely essential to a proper
+understanding of history and the evolution of our present social
+system--is told by Stubbs with that discernment and thoroughness of
+analysis which have given him his rank as one of the few masterly
+writers in this field.)
+
+
+Feudalism had grown up from two great sources--the _beneficium_, and the
+practice of commendation--and had been specially fostered on Gallic soil
+by the existence of a subject population which admitted of any amount of
+extension in the methods of dependence.
+
+The beneficiary system originated partly in gifts of land made by the
+kings out of their own estates to their kinsmen and servants, with a
+special undertaking to be faithful; partly in the surrender by
+land-owners of their estates to churches or powerful men, to be received
+back again and held by them as tenants for rent or service. By the
+latter arrangement the weaker man obtained the protection of the
+stronger, and he who felt himself insecure placed his title under the
+defence of the church.
+
+By the practice of commendation, on the other hand, the inferior put
+himself under the personal care of a lord, but without altering his
+title or divesting himself of his right to his estate; he became a
+vassal and did homage. The placing of his hands between those of his
+lord was the typical act by which the connection was formed; and the
+oath of fealty was taken at the same time. The union of the beneficiary
+tie with that of commendation completed the idea of feudal obligation--
+the twofold engagement: that of the lord, to defend; and that of the
+vassal, to be faithful. A third ingredient was supplied by the grants of
+immunity by which in the Frank empire, as in England, the possession of
+land was united with the right of judicature; the dwellers on a feudal
+property were placed under the tribunal of the lord, and the rights
+which had belonged to the nation or to its chosen head were devolved
+upon the receiver of a fief. The rapid spread of the system thus
+originated, and the assimilation of all other tenures to it, may be
+regarded as the work of the tenth century; but as early as A.D. 877
+Charles the Bald recognized the hereditary character of all benefices;
+and from that year the growth of strictly feudal jurisprudence may be
+held to date.
+
+The system testifies to the country and causes of its birth. The
+beneficium is partly of Roman, partly of German origin; in the Roman
+system the usufruct--the occupation of land belonging to another
+person--involved no diminution of status; in the Germanic system he who
+tilled land that was not his own was imperfectly free; the reduction of
+a large Roman population to dependence placed the two classes on a
+level, and conduced to the wide extension of the institution.
+
+Commendation, on the other hand, may have had a Gallic or Celtic origin,
+and an analogy only with the Roman clientship. The German _comitatus_,
+which seems to have ultimately merged its existence in one or other of
+these developments, is of course to be carefully distinguished in its
+origin from them. The tie of the benefice or of commendation could be
+formed between any two persons whatever; none but the king could have
+_antrustions_. But the comitatus of Anglo-Saxon history preserved a more
+distinct existence, and this perhaps was one of the causes that
+distinguished the later Anglo-Saxon system most definitely from the
+feudalism of the Frank empire.
+
+The process by which the machinery of government became feudalized,
+although rapid, was gradual.
+
+The weakness of the Carlovingian kings and emperors gave room for the
+speedy development of disruptive tendencies in a territory so extensive
+and so little consolidated. The duchies and counties of the eighth and
+ninth centuries were still official magistracies, the holders of which
+discharged the functions of imperial judges or generals. Such officers
+were of course men whom the kings could trust, in most cases Franks,
+courtiers or kinsmen, who at an earlier date would have been _comites_
+or antrustions, and who were provided for by feudal benefices. The
+official magistracy had in itself the tendency to become hereditary, and
+when the benefice was recognized as heritable, the provincial
+governorship became so too. But the provincial governor had many
+opportunities of improving his position, especially if he could identify
+himself with the manners and aspirations of the people he ruled. By
+marriage or inheritance he might accumulate in his family not only the
+old allodial estates which, especially on German soil, still continued
+to subsist, but the traditions and local loyalties which were connected
+with the possession of them. So in a few years the Frank magistrate
+could unite in his own person the beneficiary endowment, the imperial
+deputation, and the headship of the nation over which he presided. And
+then it was only necessary for the central power to be a little
+weakened, and the independence of duke or count was limited by his
+homage and fealty alone, that is, by obligations that depended on
+conscience only for their fulfilment.
+
+It is in Germany that the disruptive tendency most distinctly takes the
+political form; Saxony and Bavaria assert their national independence
+under Swabian and Saxon dukes who have identified the interests of their
+subjects with their own. In France, where the ancient tribal divisions
+had been long obsolete, and where the existence of the allod involved
+little or no feeling of loyalty, the process was simpler still; the
+provincial rulers aimed at practical rather than political sovereignty;
+the people were too weak to have any aspirations at all. The disruption
+was due more to the abeyance of central attraction than to any
+centrifugal force existing in the provinces. But the result was the
+same; feudal government, a graduated system of jurisdiction based on
+land tenure, in which every lord judged, taxed, and commanded the class
+next below him, of which abject slavery formed the lowest, and
+irresponsible tyranny the highest grade, and private war, private
+coinage, private prisons, took the place of the imperial institutions of
+government.
+
+This was the social system which William the Conqueror and his barons
+had been accustomed to see at work in France. One part of it--the feudal
+tenure of land--was perhaps the only kind of tenure which they could
+understand; the king was the original lord, and every title issued
+mediately or immediately from him. The other part, the governmental
+system of feudalism, was the point on which sooner or later the duke and
+his barons were sure to differ. Already the incompatibility of the
+system with the existence of the strong central power had been
+exemplified in Normandy, where the strength of the dukes had been tasked
+to maintain their hold on the castles and to enforce their own high
+justice. Much more difficult would England be to retain in Norman hands
+if the new king allowed himself to be fettered by the French system.
+
+On the other hand the Norman barons would fain rise a step in the social
+scale answering to that by which their duke had become a king; and they
+aspired to the same independence which they had seen enjoyed by the
+counts of Southern and Eastern France. Nor was the aspiration on their
+part altogether unreasonable; they had joined in the Conquest rather as
+sharers in the great adventure than as mere vassals of the duke, whose
+birth they despised as much as they feared his strength. William,
+however, was wise and wary as well as strong. While, by the insensible
+process of custom, or rather by the mere assumption that feudal tenure
+of land was the only lawful and reasonable one, the Frankish system of
+tenure was substituted for the Anglo-Saxon, the organization of
+government on the same basis was not equally a matter of course.
+
+The Conqueror himself was too strong to suffer that organization to
+become formidable in his reign, but neither the brutal force of William
+Rufus nor the heavy and equal pressure of the government of Henry I
+could extinguish the tendency toward it. It was only after it had, under
+Stephen, broken out into anarchy and plunged the whole nation in misery;
+when the great houses founded by the barons of the Conquest had suffered
+forfeiture or extinction; when the Normans had become Englishmen under
+the legal and constitutional reforms of Henry II--that the royal
+authority, in close alliance with the nation, was enabled to put an end
+to the evil.
+
+William the Conqueror claimed the crown of England as the chosen heir of
+Edward the Confessor. It was a claim which the English did not admit,
+and of which the Normans saw the fallacy, but which he himself
+consistently maintained and did his best to justify. In that claim he
+saw not only the justification of the Conquest in the eyes of the
+church, but his great safeguard against the jealous and aggressive host
+by whose aid he had realized it; therefore, immediately after the battle
+of Hastings he proceeded to seek the national recognition of its
+validity. He obtained it from the divided and dismayed _witan_ with no
+great trouble, and was crowned by the archbishop of York--the most
+influential and patriotic among them--binding himself by the
+constitutional promises of justice and good laws. Standing before the
+altar at Westminster, "in the presence of the clergy and people he
+promised with an oath that he would defend God's holy churches and their
+rulers; that he would, moreover, rule the whole people subject to him
+with righteousness and royal providence; would enact and hold fast right
+law and utterly forbid rapine and unrighteous judgments." The form of
+election and acceptance was regularly observed and the legal position of
+the new King completed before he went forth to finish the Conquest.
+
+Had it not been for this the Norman host might have fairly claimed a
+division of the land such as the Danes had made in the ninth century.
+But to the people who had recognized William it was but just that the
+chance should be given them of retaining what was their own.
+Accordingly, when the lands of all those who had fought for Harold were
+confiscated, those who were willing to acknowledge William were allowed
+to redeem theirs, either paying money at once or giving hostages for the
+payment. That under this redemption lay the idea of a new title to the
+lands redeemed may be regarded as questionable. The feudal lawyer might
+take one view, and the plundered proprietor another. But if charters of
+confirmation or regrant were generally issued on the occasion to those
+who were willing to redeem, there can be no doubt that, as soon as the
+feudal law gained general acceptance, these would be regarded as
+conveying a feudal title. What to the English might be a mere payment of
+_fyrdwite_, or composition for a recognized offence, might to the
+Normans seem equivalent to forfeiture and restoration.
+
+But however this was, the process of confiscation and redistribution of
+lands under the new title began from the moment of the coronation. The
+next few years, occupied in the reduction of Western and Northern
+England, added largely to the stock of divisible estates. The tyranny of
+Odo of Bayeux and William Fitzosbern, which provoked attempts at
+rebellion in 1067; the stand made by the house of Godwin in Devonshire
+in 1068; the attempts of Mercia and Northumbria to shake off the Normans
+in 1069 and 1070; the last struggle for independence in 1071, in which
+Edwin and Morcar finally fell; the conspiracy of the Norman earls in
+1074, in consequence of which Waltheof perished--all tended to the same
+result.
+
+After each effort the royal hand was laid on more heavily; more and more
+land changed owners, and with the change of owners the title changed.
+The complicated and unintelligible irregularities of the Anglo-Saxon
+tenures were exchanged for the simple and uniform feudal theory. The
+fifteen hundred tenants-in-chief of _Domesday Book_ take the place of
+the countless land-owners of King Edward's time, and the loose,
+unsystematic arrangements which had grown up in the confusion of title,
+tenure, and jurisdiction were replaced by systematic custom. The change
+was effected without any legislative act, simply by the process of
+transfer under circumstances in which simplicity and uniformity were an
+absolute necessity. It was not the change from allodial to feudal so
+much as from confusion to order. The actual amount of dispossession was
+no doubt greatest in the higher ranks; the smaller owners may to a large
+extent have remained in a mediatized position on their estates; but even
+_Domesday_, with all its fulness and accuracy, cannot be supposed to
+enumerate all the changes of the twenty eventful years that followed the
+battle of Hastings. It is enough for our purpose to ascertain that a
+universal assimilation of title followed the general changes of
+ownership. The king of _Domesday_ is the supreme landlord; all the land
+of the nation, the old folkland, has become the king's; and all private
+land is held mediately or immediately of him; all holders are bound to
+their lords by homage and fealty, either actually demanded or understood
+to be demandable, in every case of transfer by inheritance or otherwise.
+
+The result of this process is partly legal and partly constitutional or
+political. The legal result is the introduction of an elaborate system
+of customs, tenures, rights, duties, profits, and jurisdictions. The
+constitutional result is the creation of several intermediate links
+between the body of the nation and the king, in the place of or side by
+side with the duty of allegiance.
+
+On the former of these points we have very insufficient data; for we are
+quite in the dark as to the development of feudal law in Normandy before
+the invasion, and may be reasonably inclined to refer some at least of
+the peculiarities of English feudal law to the leaven of the system
+which it superseded. Nor is it easy to reduce the organization described
+in _Domesday_ to strict conformity with feudal law as it appears later,
+especially with the general prevalence of military tenure.
+
+The growth of knighthood is a subject on which the greatest obscurity
+prevails, and the most probable explanation of its existence in
+England--the theory that it is a translation into Norman forms of the
+_thegnage_ of the Anglo-Saxon law--can only be stated as probable.
+
+Between the picture drawn in _Domesday_ and the state of affairs which
+the charter of Henry I was designed to remedy, there is a difference
+which the short interval of time will not account for, and which
+testifies to the action of some skilful organizing hand working with
+neither justice nor mercy, hardening and sharpening all lines and points
+to the perfecting of a strong government.
+
+It is unnecessary to recapitulate here all the points in which the
+Anglo-Saxon institutions were already approaching the feudal model; it
+may be assumed that the actual obligation of military service was much
+the same in both systems, and that even the amount of land which was
+bound to furnish a mounted warrior was the same however the conformity
+may have been produced. The _heriot_ of the English earl or _thegn_ was
+in close resemblance with the _relief_ of the Norman count or knight.
+But however close the resemblance, something was now added that made the
+two identical. The change of the heriot to the relief implies a
+suspension of ownership, and carries with it the custom of "livery of
+seisin." The heriot was the payment of a debt from the dead man to his
+lord; his son succeeded him by allodial right. The relief was paid by
+the heir before he could obtain his father's lands; between the death of
+the father and livery of seisin to the son the right of the "overlord"
+had entered; the ownership was to a certain extent resumed, and the
+succession of the heir took somewhat of the character of a new grant.
+The right of wardship also became in the same way a reentry, by the
+lord, on the profits of the estate of the minor, instead of being, as
+before, a protection, by the head of the kin, of the indefeasible rights
+of the heir, which it was the duty of the whole community to maintain.
+
+There can be no doubt that the military tenure--the most prominent
+feature of historical feudalism--was itself introduced by the same
+gradual process which we have assumed in the case of the feudal usages
+in general. We have no light on the point from any original grant made
+by the Conqueror to a lay follower, but judging by the grants made to
+the churches we cannot suppose it probable that such gifts were made on
+any expressed condition, or accepted with a distinct pledge to provide a
+certain contingent of knights for the king's service. The obligation of
+national defence was incumbent, as of old, on all land-owners, and the
+customary service of one fully armed man for each five hides of land was
+probably the rate at which the newly endowed follower of the king would
+be expected to discharge his duty. The wording of the _Domesday_ survey
+does not imply that in this respect the new military service differed
+from the old; the land is marked out, not into knights' fees, but into
+hides, and the number of knights to be furnished by a particular
+feudatory would be ascertained by inquiring the number of hides that he
+held, without apportioning the particular acres that were to support the
+particular knight.
+
+It would undoubtedly be on the estates of the lay vassals that a more
+definite usage would first be adopted, and knights bound by feudal
+obligations to their lords receive a definite estate from them. Our
+earliest information, however, on this as on most points of tenure, is
+derived from the notices of ecclesiastical practice. Lanfranc, we are
+told, turned the _drengs_, the rent-paying tenants of his archiepiscopal
+estates, into knights for the defence of the country; he enfeoffed a
+certain number of knights who performed the military service due from
+the archiepiscopal barony. This had been done before the _Domesday_
+survey, and almost necessarily implies that a like measure had been
+taken by the lay vassals. Lanfranc likewise maintained ten knights to
+answer for the military service due from the convent of Christ Church,
+which made over to him, in consideration of the relief, land worth two
+hundred pounds annually. The value of the knight's fee must already have
+been fixed at twenty pounds a year.
+
+In the reign of William Rufus the abbot of Ramsey obtained a charter
+which exempted his monastery from the service of ten knights due from it
+on festivals, substituting the obligation to furnish three knights to
+perform service on the north of the Thames--a proof that the lands of
+that house had not yet been divided into knights' fees. In the next
+reign, we may infer--from the favor granted by the King to the knights
+who defended their lands _per loricas_ (that is, by the hauberk) that
+their demesne lands shall be exempt from pecuniary taxation--that the
+process of definite military infeudation had largely advanced. But it
+was not even yet forced on the clerical or monastic estates. When, in
+1167, the abbot of Milton, in Dorset, was questioned as to the number of
+knights' fees for which he had to account, he replied that all the
+services due from his monastery were discharged out of the demesne; but
+he added that in the reign of Henry I, during a vacancy in the abbacy,
+Bishop Roger, of Salisbury, had enfeoffed two knights out of the abbey
+lands. He had, however, subsequently reversed the act and had restored
+the lands, whose tenure had been thus altered, to their original
+condition of rent-paying estate or "socage."
+
+The very term "the new feoffment," which was applied to the knights'
+fees created between the death of Henry I and the year in which the
+account preserved in the _Black Book_ of the exchequer was taken, proves
+that the process was going on for nearly a hundred years, and that the
+form in which the knights' fees appear when called on by Henry II for
+"scutage" was most probably the result of a series of compositions by
+which the great vassals relieved their lands from a general burden by
+carving out particular estates, the holders of which performed the
+services due from the whole; it was a matter of convenience and not of
+tyrannical pressure. The statement of Ordericus Vitalis that the
+Conqueror "distributed lands to his knights in such fashion that the
+kingdom of England should have forever sixty thousand knights, and
+furnish them at the king's command according to the occasion," must be
+regarded as one of the many numerical exaggerations of the early
+historians. The officers of the exchequer in the twelfth century were
+quite unable to fix the number of existing knights' fees.
+
+It cannot even be granted that a definite area of land was necessary to
+constitute a knight's fee; for although at a later period and in local
+computations we may find four or five hides adopted as a basis of
+calculation, where the extent of the particular knight's fee is given
+exactly, it affords no ground for such a conclusion. In the _Liber
+Niger_ we find knights' fees of two hides and a half, of two hides, of
+four, five, and six hides. Geoffrey Ridel states that his father held
+one hundred and eighty-four _carucates_ and a _virgate_, for which the
+service of fifteen knights was due, but that no knights' fees had been
+carved out of it, the obligation lying equally on every carucate. The
+archbishop of York had far more knights than his tenure required. It is
+impossible to avoid the conclusion that the extent of a knight's fee was
+determined by rent or valuation rather than acreage, and that the common
+quantity was really expressed in the twenty _librates_, the twenty
+pounds' worth of annual value which until the reign of Edward I was the
+qualification for knighthood.
+
+It is most probable that no regular account of the knights' fees was
+ever taken until they became liable to taxation, either in the form of
+_auxilium militum_ under Henry I, or in that of scutage under his
+grandson. The facts, however, which are here adduced, preclude the
+possibility of referring this portion of the feudal innovations to the
+direct legislation of the Conqueror. It may be regarded as a secondary
+question whether the knighthood here referred to was completed by the
+investiture with knightly arms and the honorable accolade. The
+ceremonial of knighthood was practised by the Normans, whereas the
+evidence that the English had retained the primitive practice of
+investing the youthful warrior is insufficient; yet it would be rash to
+infer that so early as this, if indeed it ever was the case, every
+possessor of a knight's fee received formal initiation before he assumed
+his spurs. But every such analogy would make the process of transition
+easier and prevent the necessity of any general legislative act of
+change.
+
+It has been maintained that a formal and definitive act, forming the
+initial point of the feudalization of England, is to be found in a
+clause of the laws, as they are called, of the Conqueror; which directs
+that every freeman shall affirm, by covenant and oath, that "he will be
+faithful to King William within England and without, will join him in
+preserving his lands and honor with all fidelity, and defend him against
+his enemies." But this injunction is little more than the demand of the
+oath of allegiance which had been taken to the Anglo-Saxon kings and is
+here required not of every feudal dependent of the King, but of every
+freeman or freeholder whatsoever.
+
+In that famous council of Salisbury of 1086, which was summoned
+immediately after the making of the _Domesday_ survey, we learn from the
+_Chronicle_ that there came to the King "all his witan, and all the
+landholders of substance in England whose vassals soever they were, and
+they all submitted to him, and became his men and swore oaths of
+allegiance that they would be faithful to him against all others." In
+this act have been seen the formal acceptance and date of the
+introduction of feudalism, but it has a very different meaning. The oath
+described is the oath of allegiance, combined with the act of homage,
+and obtained from all land-owners, whoever their feudal lord might be.
+It is a measure of precaution taken against the disintegrating power of
+feudalism, providing a direct tie between the sovereign and all
+freeholders which no inferior relation existing between them and the
+mesne lords would justify them in breaking. The real importance of the
+passage as bearing on the date of the introduction of feudal tenure is
+merely that it shows the system to have already become consolidated; all
+the land-owners of the kingdom had already become, somehow or other,
+vassals, either of the king or of some tenant under him. The lesson may
+be learned from the fact of the _Domesday_ survey.
+
+The introduction of such a system would necessarily have effects far
+wider than the mere modification of the law of tenure; it might be
+regarded as a means of consolidating and concentrating the whole
+machinery of government; legislation, taxation, judicature, and military
+defence were all capable of being organized on the feudal principle, and
+might have been so had the moral and political results been in harmony
+with the legal. But its tendency when applied to governmental machinery
+is disruptive. The great feature of the Conqueror's policy is his defeat
+of that tendency. Guarding against it he obtained recognition as the
+King of the nation and, so far as he could understand them and the
+attitude of the nation allowed, he maintained the usages of the nation.
+He kept up the popular institutions of the hundred court and the shire
+court. He confirmed the laws which had been in use in King Edward's
+days, with the additions which he himself made for the benefit, as he
+especially tells us, of the English.
+
+We are told, on what seems to be the highest legal authority of the next
+century, that he issued in his fourth year a commission of inquiry into
+the national customs, and obtained from sworn representatives of each
+county a declaration of the laws under which they wished to live. The
+compilation that bears his name is very little more than a reissue of
+the code of Canute; and this proceeding helped greatly to reconcile the
+English people to his rule. Although the oppressions of his later years
+were far heavier than the measures taken to secure the immediate success
+of the Conquest, all the troubles of the kingdom after 1075, in his
+sons' reigns as well as in his own, proceeded from the insubordination
+of the Normans, not from the attempts of the English to dethrone the
+king. Very early they learned that, if their interest was not the
+king's, at least their enemies were his enemies; hence they are
+invariably found on the royal side against the feudatories.
+
+This accounts for the maintenance of the national force of defence, over
+and above the feudal army. The _fyrd_ of the English, the general
+armament of the men of the counties and hundreds, was not abolished at
+the Conquest, but subsisted even through the reigns of William Rufus and
+Henry I, to be reformed and reconstituted under Henry II; and in each
+reign it gave proof of its strength and faithfulness. The _witenagemot_
+itself retained the ancient form, the bishops and abbots formed a chief
+part of it, instead of being, as in Normandy, so insignificant an
+element that their very participation in deliberation has been doubted.
+The king sat crowned three times in the year in the old royal towns of
+Westminster, Winchester, and Gloucester, hearing the complaints of his
+people, and executing such justice as his knowledge of their law and
+language and his own imperious will allowed. In all this there is no
+violent innovation, only such gradual essential changes as twenty
+eventful years of new actors and new principles must bring, however
+insensibly the people themselves--passing away and being replaced by
+their children--may be educated to endurance.
+
+It would be wrong to impute to the Conqueror any intention of deceiving
+the nation by maintaining its official forms while introducing new
+principles and a new race of administrators. What he saw required change
+he changed with a high hand. But not the less surely did the change of
+administrators involve a change of custom, both in the church and in the
+state. The bishops, ealdormen, and sheriffs of English birth were
+replaced by Normans; not unreasonably, perhaps, considering the
+necessity of preserving the balance of the state. With the change of
+officials came a sort of amalgamation or duplication of titles; the
+ealdorman or earl became the _comes_ or count; the sheriff became the
+_vicecomes_; the office in each case receiving the name of that which
+corresponded most closely with it in Normandy itself. With the
+amalgamation of titles came an importation of new principles and
+possibly new functions; for the Norman count and viscount had not
+exactly the same customs as the earls and sheriffs. And this ran up into
+the highest grades of organization; the King's court of counsellors was
+composed of his feudal tenants; the ownership of land was now the
+qualification for the witenagemot, instead of wisdom; the earldoms
+became fiefs instead of magistracies, and even the bishops had to accept
+the status of barons. There was a very certain danger that the mere
+change of persons might bring in the whole machinery of hereditary
+magistracies, and that king and people might be edged out of the
+administration of justice, taxation, and other functions of supreme or
+local independence.
+
+Against this it was most important to guard; as the Conqueror learned
+from the events of the first year of his reign, when the severe rule of
+Odo and William Fitzosbern had provoked Herefordshire. Ralph Guader,
+Roger Montgomery, and Hugh of Avranches filled the places of Edwin and
+Morcar and the brothers of Harold. But the conspiracy of the earls in
+1074 opened William's eyes to the danger of this proceeding, and from
+that time onward he governed the provinces through sheriffs immediately
+dependent on himself, avoiding the foreign plan of appointing hereditary
+counts, as well as the English custom of ruling by viceregal ealdormen.
+He was, however, very sparing in giving earldoms at all, and inclined to
+confine the title to those who were already counts in Normandy or in
+France.
+
+To this plan there were some marked exceptions, which may be accounted
+for either on the ground that the arrangements had been completed before
+the need of watchfulness was impressed on the King by the treachery of
+the Normans, or on that of the exigencies of national defence. In these
+cases he created, or suffered the continuance of, great palatine
+jurisdictions; earldoms in which the earls were endowed with the
+superiority of whole counties, so that all the land-owners held feudally
+of them, in which they received the whole profits of the courts and
+exercised all the "regalia" or royal rights, nominated the sheriffs,
+held their own councils, and acted as independent princes except in the
+owing of homage and fealty to the King. Two of these palatinates, the
+earldom of Chester and the bishopric of Durham, retained much of their
+character to our own days. A third, the palatinate of Bishop Odo in
+Kent, if it were really a jurisdiction of the same sort, came to an end
+when Odo forfeited the confidence of his brother and nephew. A fourth,
+the earldom of Shropshire, which is not commonly counted among the
+palatine jurisdictions, but which possessed under the Montgomery earls
+all the characteristics of such a dignity, was confiscated after the
+treason of Robert of Belesme by Henry I. These had been all founded
+before the conspiracy of 1074; they were also, like the later lordships
+of the marches, a part of the national defence; Chester and Shropshire
+kept the Welsh marches in order, Kent was the frontier exposed to
+attacks from Picardy, and Durham, the patrimony of St. Cuthbert, lay as
+a sacred boundary between England and Scotland; Northumberland and
+Cumberland were still a debatable ground between the two kingdoms.
+Chester was held by its earls as freely by the sword as the King held
+England by the crown; no lay vassal in the county held of the King, all
+of the earl. In Shropshire there were only five lay tenants _in capite_
+besides Roger Montgomery; in Kent, Bishop Odo held an enormous
+proportion of the manors, but the nature of his jurisdiction is not very
+clear, and its duration is too short to make it of much importance. If
+William founded any earldoms at all after 1074 (which may be doubted),
+he did it on a very different scale.
+
+The hereditary sheriffdoms he did not guard against with equal care. The
+Norman viscounties were hereditary, and there was some risk that the
+English ones would become so too; and with the worst consequences, for
+the English counties were much larger than the bailiwicks of the Norman
+viscount, and the authority of the sheriff, when he was relieved from
+the company of the ealdorman, and was soon to lose that of the bishop,
+would have no check except the direct control of the King. If William
+perceived this, it was too late to prevent it entirely; some of the
+sheriffdoms became hereditary, and continued to be so long after the
+abuse had become constitutionally dangerous.
+
+The independence of the greater feudatories was still further limited by
+the principle, which the Conqueror seems to have observed, of avoiding
+the accumulation in any one hand of a great number of contiguous
+estates. The rule is not without some important exceptions, and it may
+have been suggested by the diversity of occasions on which the fiefs
+were bestowed, but the result is one which William must have foreseen.
+An insubordinate baron whose strength lay in twelve different counties
+would have to rouse the suspicions and perhaps to defy the arms of
+twelve powerful sheriffs, before he could draw his forces to a head. In
+his manorial courts, scattered and unconnected, he could set up no
+central tribunal, nor even force a new custom upon his tenants, nor
+could he attempt oppression on any extensive scale. By such limitation
+the people were protected and the central power secured.
+
+Yet the changes of ownership, even thus guarded, wrought other changes.
+It is not to be supposed that the Norman baron, when he had received his
+fief, proceeded to carve it out into demesne and tenants' land as if he
+were making a new settlement in an uninhabited country. He might indeed
+build his castle and enclose his chase with very little respect to the
+rights of his weaker neighbors, but he did not attempt any such radical
+change as the legal theory of the creation of manors seems to presume.
+The name "manor" is of Norman origin: but the estate to which it was
+given existed, in its essential character, long before the Conquest; it
+received a new name as the shire also did, but neither the one nor the
+other was created by this change. The local jurisdictions of the thegns
+who had grants of _sac_ and _soc_, or who exercised judicial functions
+among their free neighbors, were identical with the manorial
+jurisdictions of the new owners.
+
+It may be conjectured with great probability that in many cases the
+weaker freemen, who had either willingly or under constraint attended
+the courts of their great neighbors, were now, under the general
+infusion of feudal principle, regarded as holding their lands of them as
+lords; it is not less probable that in a great number of grants the
+right to suit and service from small land-owners passed from the king to
+the receiver of the fief as a matter of course; but it is certain that
+even before the Conquest such a proceeding was not uncommon; Edward the
+Confessor had transferred to St. Augustine's monastery a number of
+allodiaries in Kent, and every such measure in the case of a church must
+have had its parallel in similar grants to laymen. The manorial system
+brought in a number of new names; and perhaps a duplication of offices.
+The _gerefa_ of the old thegn, or of the ancient township, was replaced,
+as president of the courts, by a Norman steward or seneschal; and the
+_bydel_ of the old system by the bailiff of the new; but the gerefa and
+bydel still continued to exist in a subordinate capacity as the _grave_
+or reeve and the _bedell_; and when the lord's steward takes his place
+in the county court, the reeve and four men of the township are there
+also. The common of the township may be treated as the lord's waste, but
+the townsmen do not lose their customary share.
+
+The changes that take place in the state have their resulting analogies
+in every village, but no new England is created; new forms displace but
+do not destroy the old, and old rights remain, although changed in title
+and forced into symmetry with a new legal and pseudo-historical theory.
+The changes may not seem at first sight very oppressive, but they opened
+the way for oppression; the forms they had introduced tended, under the
+spirit of Norman legality and feudal selfishness, to become hard
+realities, and in the profound miseries of Stephen's reign the people
+learned how completely the new theory left them at the mercy of their
+lords; nor were all the reforms of his successor more stringent or the
+struggles of the century that followed a whit more impassioned than were
+necessary to protect the English yeoman from the men who lived upon his
+strength.
+
+In attempting thus to estimate the real amount of change introduced by
+the feudalism of the Conquest, many points of further interest have been
+touched upon, to which it is necessary to recur only so far as to give
+them their proper place in a more general view of the reformed
+organization. The Norman king is still the king of the nation. He has
+become the supreme landlord; all estates are held of him mediately or
+immediately, but he still demands the allegiance of all his subjects.
+The oath which he exacted at Salisbury in 1086, and which is embodied in
+the semi-legal form already quoted, was a modification of the oath taken
+to Edmund, and was intended to set the general obligation of obedience
+to the king in its proper relation to the new tie of homage and fealty
+by which the tenant was bound to his lord.
+
+All men continued to be primarily the king's men, and the public peace
+to be his peace. Their lords might demand their service to fulfil their
+own obligations, but the king could call them to the _fyrd_, summon them
+to his courts, and tax them without the intervention of their lords; and
+to the king they could look for protection against all foes. Accordingly
+the king could rely on the help of the bulk of the free people in all
+struggles with his feudatories, and the people, finding that their
+connection with their lords would be no excuse for unfaithfulness to the
+king, had a further inducement to adhere to the more permanent
+institutions.
+
+In the department of law the direct changes introduced by the Conquest
+were not great. Much that is regarded as peculiarly Norman was developed
+upon English soil, and although originated and systematized by Norman
+lawyers, contained elements which would have worked in a very different
+way in Normandy. Even the vestiges of Carlovingian practice which appear
+in the inquests of the Norman reigns are modified by English usage. The
+great inquest of all, the _Domesday_ survey, may owe its principle to a
+foreign source; the oath of the reporters may be Norman, but the
+machinery that furnishes the jurors is native; "the king's barons
+inquire by the oath of the sheriff of the shire, and of all the barons
+and their Frenchmen, and of the whole hundred, the priest, the reeve,
+and six _ceorls_ of every township."
+
+The institution of the collective Frank pledge, which recent writers
+incline to treat as a Norman innovation, is so distinctly colored by
+English custom that it has been generally regarded as purely indigenous.
+If it were indeed a precaution taken by the new rulers against the
+avoidance of justice by the absconding or harboring of criminals, it
+fell with ease into the usages and even the legal terms which had been
+common for other similar purposes since the reign of Athelstan. The
+trial by battle, which on clearer evidence seems to have been brought in
+by the Normans, is a relic of old Teutonic jurisprudence, the absence of
+which from the Anglo-Saxon courts is far more curious than its
+introduction from abroad.
+
+The organization of jurisdiction required and underwent no great change
+in these respects. The Norman lord who undertook the office of sheriff
+had, as we have seen, more unrestricted power than the sheriffs of old.
+He was the king's representative in all matters judicial, military, and
+financial in his shire, and had many opportunities of tyrannizing in
+each of those departments: but he introduced no new machinery. From him,
+or from the courts of which he was the presiding officer, appeal lay to
+the king alone; but the king was often absent from England and did not
+understand the language of his subjects. In his absence the
+administration was intrusted to a _judiciar_, a regent, or lieutenant,
+of the kingdom; and the convenience being once ascertained of having a
+minister who could in the whole kingdom represent the king, as the
+sheriff did in the shire, the judiciar became a permanent functionary.
+This, however, cannot be certainly affirmed of the reign of the
+Conqueror, who, when present at Christmas, Easter, and Whitsuntide, held
+great courts of justice as well as for other purposes of state; and the
+legal importance of the office belongs to a later stage. The royal
+court, containing the tenants-in-chief of the crown, both lay and
+clerical, and entering into all the functions of the witenagemot, was
+the supreme council of the nation, with the advice and consent of which
+the King legislated, taxed, and judged.
+
+In the one authentic monument of William's jurisprudence, the act which
+removed the bishops from the secular courts and recognized their
+spiritual jurisdictions, he tells us that he acts "with the common
+council and counsel of the archbishops, bishops, abbots, and all the
+princes of the kingdom." The ancient summary of his laws contained in
+the _Textus Roffensis_ is entitled "_What William, King of the English,
+with his Princes enacted after the Conquest of England_"; and the same
+form is preserved in the tradition of his confirming the ancient laws
+reported to him by the representatives of the shires. The _Anglo-Saxon
+Chronicle_ enumerates the classes of men who attended his great courts:
+"There were with him all the great men over all England, archbishops and
+bishops, abbots and earls, thegns and knights."
+
+The great suit between Lanfranc as Archbishop of Canterbury and Odo as
+Earl of Kent, which is perhaps the best reported trial of the reign, was
+tried in the county court of Kent before the King's representative,
+Gosfrid, bishop of Coutances; whose presence and that of most of the
+great men of the kingdom seem to have made it a witenagemot. The
+archbishop pleaded the cause of his Church in a session of three days on
+Pennenden Heath; the aged South-Saxon bishop, Ethelric, was brought by
+the King's command to declare the ancient customs of the laws; and with
+him several other Englishmen skilled in ancient laws and customs. All
+these good and wise men supported the archbishop's claim, and the
+decision was agreed on and determined by the whole county. The sentence
+was laid before the King, and confirmed by him. Here we have probably a
+good instance of the principle universally adopted; all the lower
+machinery of the court was retained entire, but the presence of the
+Norman justiciar and barons gave it an additional authority, a more
+direct connection with the king, and the appearance at least of a joint
+tribunal.
+
+The principle of amalgamating the two laws and nationalities by
+superimposing the better consolidated Norman superstructure on the
+better consolidated English substructure, runs through the whole policy.
+
+The English system was strong in the cohesion of its lower organism, the
+association of individuals in the township, in the hundred, and in the
+shire; the Norman system was strong in its higher ranges, in the close
+relation to the Crown of the tenants-in-chief whom the King had
+enriched. On the other hand, the English system was weak in the higher
+organization, and the Normans in England had hardly any subordinate
+organization at all. The strongest elements of both were brought
+together.
+
+
+
+
+DECAY OF THE FRANKISH EMPIRE
+
+DIVISION INTO MODERN FRANCE, GERMANY, AND ITALY
+
+A.D. 843-911
+
+FRANCOIS P.G. GUIZOT
+
+
+(The period with which the following article deals may be said to mark
+the end of distinctively Frankish history. A striking mixture of races
+entered into the formation of this people, and the beginnings of the
+great modern nations into which the Frankish empire was divided brought
+to them varied elements of strength and a diversity of constituents that
+were to be commingled in new national characters and careers.
+
+In 840 Charles the Bald became King of France, and his reign, both as
+king and afterward as emperor, continued for thirty-seven years, during
+which he proved himself to be lacking in those qualities which his
+responsibilities and the wants of his people demanded. He had great
+obstacles to contend against; for besides the ambitions of various
+districts for separate nationality, which led to insurrections in many
+quarters, Greek pirates ravaged the South, where the Saracens also
+wrought havoc, while in the North and West the Northmen burned and
+pillaged, laying waste a wide region and leaving many towns in ruins.
+
+It was an age of turbulence in Europe, and the violence of predatory
+invaders brought woes upon many peoples. On the east of Charles' empire
+the Hungarians, successors of the Huns, began to threaten. In the midst
+of all these distractions and dangers, assailed by enemies without and
+within, Charles found it a task far beyond his abilities to construct a
+state upon foundations of unity. He bore many titles and held several
+crowns, but his actual dominion was narrowly restricted, and his nominal
+subjects were in a state of political subdivision almost amounting to
+dismemberment. After various futile efforts during his later years to
+unify his empire, Charles died from an illness which seized him in 877,
+on his return to France from a fruitless campaign of subjugation and
+pillage in Italy. In the subsequent division of the empire, according to
+the terms of the treaty of Verdun, the several portions included Italy,
+the nucleus of France, and that of the present Germany.
+
+Already suffering from the devastating expeditions of the Norse or
+Northmen, the Carlovingian empire, now weakened by division, became an
+easier prey for the invaders. Emboldened by success, the Northmen at
+length commenced to settle in the regions they invaded, no longer
+returning, as formerly, to their northern homes in winter. Among
+chieftains of the early Norman invaders who settled in France was
+Hastings, who became Count of Chartres; later came Rou, Rolf, or Rollo
+the Rover, to whom Charles the Simple of France gave Normandy, whence
+sprang the conquerors and rulers of England, who laid the foundation of
+the English-speaking nations of today.)
+
+
+The first of Charlemagne's grand designs, the territorial security of
+the Gallo-Frankish and Christian dominion, was accomplished. In the East
+and the North, the Germanic and Asiatic populations, which had so long
+upset it, were partly arrested at its frontiers, partly incorporated
+regularly in its midst. In the South, the Mussulman populations which,
+in the eighth century, had appeared so near overwhelming it, were
+powerless to deal it any heavy blow. Substantially France was founded.
+But what had become of Charlemagne's second grand design, the
+resuscitation of the Roman Empire at the hands of the barbarians that
+had conquered it and become Christians?
+
+Let us leave Louis the Debonair his traditional name, although it is not
+an exact rendering of that which was given him by his contemporaries.
+They called him Louis the Pious. And so, indeed, he was, sincerely and
+even scrupulously pious; but he was still more weak than pious, as weak
+in heart and character as in mind; as destitute of ruling ideas as of
+strength of will, fluctuating at the mercy of transitory impressions or
+surrounding influences or positional embarrassments. The name of
+_Debonnaire_ is suited to him; it expresses his moral worth and his
+political incapacity both at once.
+
+As king of Aquitaine in the time of Charlemagne, Louis made himself
+esteemed and loved; his justice, his suavity, his probity, and his piety
+were pleasing to the people, and his weaknesses disappeared under the
+strong hand of his father. When he became emperor, he began his reign by
+a reaction against the excesses, real or supposed, of the preceding
+reign. Charlemagne's morals were far from regular, and he troubled
+himself but little about the license prevailing in his family or his
+palace. At a distance, he ruled with a tight and heavy hand. Louis
+established at his court, for his sisters as well as his servants,
+austere regulations. He restored to the subjugated Saxons certain of the
+rights of which Charlemagne had deprived them. He sent out everywhere
+his commissioners with orders to listen to complaints and redress
+grievances, and to mitigate his father's rule, which was rigorous in its
+application and yet insufficient to repress disturbance, notwithstanding
+its preventive purpose and its watchful supervision.
+
+Almost simultaneously with his accession, Louis committed an act more
+serious and compromising. He had, by his wife Hermengarde, three sons,
+Lothair, Pepin, and Louis, aged respectively nineteen, eleven, and
+eight. In 817, Louis summoned at Aix-la-Chapelle the general assembly of
+his dominions; and there, while declaring that "neither to those who
+were wisely minded nor to himself did it appear expedient to break up,
+for the love he bare his sons and by the will of man, the unity of the
+empire, preserved by God himself," he had resolved to share with his
+eldest son, Lothair, the imperial throne. Lothair was in fact crowned
+emperor; and his two brothers, Pepin and Louis, were crowned king, "in
+order that they might reign, after their father's death and under their
+brother and lord, Lothair, to wit: Pepin, over Aquitaine and a great
+part of Southern Gaul and of Burgundy; Louis, beyond the Rhine, over
+Bavaria and the divers peoples in the east of Germany." The rest of Gaul
+and of Germany, as well as the kingdom of Italy, was to belong to
+Lothair, Emperor and head of the Frankish monarchy, to whom his brothers
+would have to repair year by year to come to an understanding with him
+and receive his instructions. The last-named kingdom, the most
+considerable of the three, remained under the direct government of Louis
+the Debonair, and at the same time of his son Lothair, sharing the title
+of emperor. The two other sons, Pepin and Louis, entered,
+notwithstanding their childhood, upon immediate possession, the one of
+Aquitaine and the other of Bavaria, under the superior authority of
+their father and their brother, the joint emperors.
+
+Charlemagne had vigorously maintained the unity of the empire, for all
+that he had delegated to two of his sons, Pepin and Louis, the
+government of Italy and Aquitaine with the title of king. Louis the
+Debonair, while regulating beforehand the division of his dominion,
+likewise desired, as he said, to maintain the unity of the empire. But
+he forgot that he was no Charlemagne.
+
+It was not long before numerous mournful experiences showed to what
+extent the unity of the empire required personal superiority in the
+emperor, and how rapid would be the decay of the fabric when there
+remained nothing but the title of the founder.
+
+In 816 Pope Stephen IV came to France to consecrate Louis the Debonair
+emperor. Many a time already the popes had rendered the Frankish kings
+this service and honor. The Franks had been proud to see their King,
+Charlemagne, protecting Adrian I against the Lombards; then crowned
+emperor at Rome by Leo III, and then having his two sons, Pepin and
+Louis, crowned at Rome, by the same Pope, kings respectively of Italy
+and of Aquitaine. On these different occasions Charlemagne, while
+testifying the most profound respect for the Pope, had, in his relations
+with him, always taken care to preserve, together with his political
+greatness, all his personal dignity. But when, in 816, the Franks saw
+Louis the Pious not only go out of Rheims to meet Stephen IV, but
+prostrate himself, from head to foot, and rise only when the Pope held
+out a hand to him, the spectators felt saddened and humiliated at the
+sight of their Emperor in the posture of a penitent monk.
+
+Several insurrections burst out in the empire; the first among the
+Basques of Aquitaine; the next in Italy, where Bernard, son of Pepin,
+having, after his father's death, become king in 812, with the consent
+of his grandfather Charlemagne, could not quietly see his kingdom pass
+into the hands of his cousin Lothair at the orders of his uncle Louis.
+These two attempts were easily repressed, but the third was more
+serious. It took place in Brittany among those populations of Armorica
+who were still buried in their woods, and were excessively jealous of
+their independence. In 818 they took for king one of their principal
+chieftains, named Morvan; and, not confining themselves to a refusal of
+all tribute to the King of the Franks, they renewed their ravages upon
+the Frankish territories bordering on their frontier. Louis was at that
+time holding a general assembly of his dominions at Aix-la-Chapelle; and
+Count Lantbert, commandant of the marches of Brittany, came and reported
+to him what was going on. A Frankish monk, named Ditcar, happened to be
+at the assembly: he was a man of piety and sense, a friend of peace,
+and, moreover, with some knowledge of the Breton king Morvan, as his
+monastery had property in the neighborhood. Him the Emperor commissioned
+to convey to the King his grievances and his demands. After some days'
+journey the monk passed the frontier and arrived at a vast space
+enclosed on one side by a noble river, and on all the others by forests
+and swamps, hedges and ditches. In the middle of this space was a large
+dwelling, which was Morvan's. Ditcar found it full of warriors, the King
+having, no doubt, some expedition on hand. The monk announced himself as
+a messenger from the Emperor of the Franks. The style of announcement
+caused some confusion at first, to the Briton, who, however, hastened to
+conceal his emotion under an air of good-will and joyousness, to impose
+upon his comrades. The latter were got rid of; and the King remained
+alone with the monk, who explained the object of his mission. He
+descanted upon the power of the emperor Louis, recounted his complaints,
+and warned the Briton, kindly and in a private capacity, of the danger
+of his situation, a danger so much the greater in that he and his people
+would meet with the less consideration, seeing that they kept up the
+religion of their pagan forefathers. Morvan gave attentive ear to this
+sermon, with his eyes fixed on the ground, and his foot tapping it from
+time to time. Ditcar thought he had succeeded; but an incident
+supervened. It was the hour when Morvan's wife was accustomed to come
+and look for him ere they retired to the nuptial couch. She appeared,
+eager to know who the stranger was, what he had come for, what he had
+said, what answer he had received. She preluded her questions with
+oglings and caresses; she kissed the knees, the hands, the beard, and
+the face of the King, testifying her desire to be alone with him. "O
+King and glory of the mighty Britons, dear spouse of mine! what tidings
+bringeth this stranger? Is it peace, or is it war?"
+
+"This stranger," answered Morvan, with a smile, "is an envoy of the
+Franks; but bring he peace or bring he war is the affair of men alone;
+as for thee, content thee with thy woman's duties." Thereupon Ditcar,
+perceiving that he was countered, said to Morvan: "Sir King, 'tis time
+that I return; tell me what answer I am to take back to my sovereign."
+
+"Leave me this night to take thought thereon," replied the Breton chief,
+with a wavering air. When the morning came, Ditcar presented himself
+once more to Morvan, whom he found up, but still half drunk and full of
+very different sentiments from those of the night before. It required
+some effort, stupefied and tottering as he was with the effects of wine
+and the pleasures of the night, to say to Ditcar: "Go back to thy King,
+and tell him from me that my land was never his, and that I owe him
+naught of tribute or submission. Let him reign over the Franks; as for
+me, I reign over the Britons. If he will bring war on me, he will find
+me ready to pay him back."
+
+The monk returned to Louis the Debonair and rendered account of his
+mission. War was resolved upon, and the Emperor collected his
+troops--Alemannians, Saxons, Thuringians, Burgundians, and Aquitanians,
+without counting Franks or Gallo-Romans. They began their march, moving
+upon Vannes; Louis was at their head, and the Empress accompanied him,
+but he left her, already ill and fatigued, at Angers. The Franks entered
+the country of the Britons, searched the woods and morasses, found no
+armed men in the open country, but encountered them in scattered and
+scanty companies, at the entrance of all the defiles, on the heights
+commanding pathways, and wherever men could hide themselves and await
+the moment for appearing unexpectedly. The Franks heard them, from amid
+the heather and the brushwood, uttering shrill cries, to give warning
+one to another or to alarm the enemy. The Franks advanced cautiously,
+and at last arrived at the entrance of the thick wood which surrounded
+Morvan's abode. He had not yet set out with the pick of the warriors he
+had about him; but, at the approach of the Franks, he summoned his wife
+and his domestics, and said to them: "Defend ye well this house and
+these woods; as for me, I am going to march forward to collect my
+people; after which to return, but not without booty and spoils." He put
+on his armor, took a javelin in each hand, and mounted his horse. "Thou
+seest," said he to his wife, "these javelins I brandish: I will bring
+them back to thee this very day dyed with the blood of Franks.
+Farewell." Setting out he pierced, followed by his men, through the
+thickness of the forest, and advanced to meet the Franks.
+
+The battle began. The large numbers of the Franks who covered the ground
+for some distance dismayed the Britons, and many of them fled, seeking
+where they might hide themselves. Morvan, beside himself with rage and
+at the head of his most devoted followers, rushed down upon the Franks
+as if to demolish them at a single stroke; and many fell beneath his
+blows. He singled out a warrior of inferior grade, toward whom he made
+at a gallop, and, insulting him by word of mouth, after the ancient
+fashion of the Celtic warriors, cried: "Frank, I am going to give thee
+my first present, a present which I have been keeping for thee a long
+while, and which I hope thou wilt bear in mind;" and launched at him a
+javelin which the other received on his shield. "Proud Briton," replied
+the Frank, "I have received thy present, and I am going to give thee
+mine." He dug both spurs into his horse's sides and galloped down upon
+Morvan, who, clad though he was in a coat of mail, fell pierced by the
+thrust of a lance. The Frank had but time to dismount and cut off his
+head when he fell himself, mortally wounded by one of Morvan's young
+warriors, but not without having, in his turn, dealt the other his
+deathblow. It spreads on all sides that Morvan is dead; and the Franks
+come thronging to the scene of the encounter. There is picked up and
+passed from hand to hand a head all bloody and fearfully disfigured.
+Ditcar the monk is called to see it, and to say whether it is that of
+Morvan; but he has to wash the mass of disfigurement, and to partially
+adjust the hair, before he can pronounce that it is really Morvan's.
+There is then no more doubt; resistance is now impossible; the widow,
+the family and the servants of Morvan arrive, are brought before Louis
+the Debonair, accept all the conditions imposed upon them, and the
+Franks withdraw with the boast that Brittany is henceforth their
+tributary.
+
+On arriving at Angers, Louis found the empress Hermengarde dying; and
+two days afterward she was dead. He had a tender heart which was not
+proof against sorrow; and he testified a desire to abdicate and turn
+monk. But he was dissuaded from his purpose; for it was easy to
+influence his resolutions. A little later, he was advised to marry
+again, and he yielded. Several princesses were introduced; and he chose
+Judith of Bavaria, daughter of Count Welf (Guelf), a family already
+powerful and in later times celebrated. Judith was young, beautiful,
+witty, ambitious, and skilled in the art of making the gift of pleasing
+subserve the passion for ruling. Louis, during his expedition into
+Brittany, had just witnessed the fatal result of a woman's empire over
+her husband; he was destined himself to offer a more striking and more
+long-lived example of it. In 823, he had, by his new empress Judith, a
+son, whom he called Charles, and who was hereafter to be known as
+Charles the Bald. This son became his mother's ruling, if not exclusive,
+passion, and the source of his father's woes. His birth could not fail
+to cause ill-temper and mistrust in Louis' three sons by Hermengarde,
+who were already kings. They had but a short time previously received
+the first proof of their father's weakness. In 822, Louis, repenting of
+his severity toward his nephew, Bernard of Italy, whose eyes he had
+caused to be put out as a punishment for rebellion, and who had died in
+consequence, considered himself bound to perform at Attigny, in the
+church and before the people, a solemn act of penance; which was
+creditable to his honesty and piety, but the details left upon the minds
+of the beholders an impression unfavorable to the Emperor's dignity and
+authority. In 829, during an assembly held at Worms, he, yielding to his
+wife's entreaties, and doubtless also to his own yearnings toward his
+youngest son, set at naught the solemn act whereby, in 817, he had
+shared his dominions among his three elder sons; and took away from two
+of them, in Burgundy and Alemannia, some of the territories he had
+assigned to them, and gave them to the boy Charles for his share.
+Lothair, Pepin, and Louis thereupon revolted. Court rivalries were added
+to family differences. The Emperor had summoned to his side a young
+southron, Bernard by name, duke of Septimania and son of Count William
+of Toulouse, who had gallantly fought the Saracens. He made him his
+chief chamberlain and his favorite counsellor. Bernard was bold,
+ambitious, vain, imperious, and restless. He removed his rivals from
+court, and put in their places his own creatures. He was accused not
+only of abusing the Emperor's favor, but even of carrying on a guilty
+intrigue with the empress Judith. There grew up against him, and, by
+consequence, against the Emperor, the Empress, and their youngest son, a
+powerful opposition, in which certain ecclesiastics, and, among them,
+Wala, abbot of Corbie, cousin-german and but lately one of the privy
+counsellors of Charlemagne, joined eagerly. Some had at heart the unity
+of the empire, which Louis was breaking up more and more; others were
+concerned for the spiritual interests of the Church, which Louis, in
+spite of his piety and by reason of his weakness, often permitted to be
+attacked. Thus strengthened, the conspirators considered themselves
+certain of success. They had the empress Judith carried off and shut up
+in the convent of St. Radegonde at Poitiers; and Louis in person came to
+deliver himself up to them at Compiegne, where they were assembled.
+There they passed a decree to the effect that the power and title of
+emperor were transferred from Louis to Lothair, his eldest son; that the
+act whereby a share of the empire had but lately been assigned to
+Charles was annulled; and that the act of 817, which had regulated the
+partition of Louis' dominions after his death, was once more in force.
+But soon there was a burst of reaction in favor of the Emperor;
+Lothair's two brothers, jealous of his late elevation, made overtures to
+their father; the ecclesiastics were a little ashamed at being mixed up
+in a revolt; the people felt pity for the poor, honest Emperor; and a
+general assembly, meeting at Nimeguen, abolished the acts of Compiegne,
+and restored to Louis his title and his power. But it was not long
+before there was revolt again, originating this time with Pepin, King of
+Aquitaine. Louis fought him, and gave Aquitaine to Charles the Bald. The
+alliance between the three sons of Hermengarde was at once renewed; they
+raised an army; the Emperor marched against them with his; and the two
+hosts met between Colmar and Bale, in a place called _le Champ rouge_
+("the Field of Red"). Negotiations were set on foot; and Louis was
+called upon to leave his wife Judith and his son Charles, and put
+himself under the guardianship of his elder sons. He refused; but, just
+when the conflict was about to commence, desertion took place in Louis'
+army; most of the prelates, laics, and men-at-arms who had accompanied
+him passed over to the camp of Lothair; and the "Field of Red" became
+the "Field of Falsehood" (_le Champ du Mensonge_). Louis, left almost
+alone, ordered his attendants to withdraw, "being unwilling," he said,
+"that any one of them should lose life or limb on his account," and
+surrendered to his sons. They received him with great demonstrations of
+respect, but without relinquishing the prosecution of their enterprise.
+Lothair hastily collected an assembly, which proclaimed him Emperor,
+with the addition of divers territories to the kingdoms of Aquitaine and
+Bavaria: and, three months afterward, another assembly, meeting at
+Compiegne, declared the emperor Louis to have forfeited the crown, "for
+having, by his faults and incapacity, suffered to sink so sadly low the
+empire which had been raised to grandeur and brought into unity by
+Charlemagne and his predecessors." Louis submitted to this decision;
+himself read out aloud, in the Church of St. Medard at Soissons, but not
+quite unresistingly, a confession, in eight articles, of his faults,
+and, laying his baldric upon the altar, stripped off his royal robe, and
+received from the hands of Ebbo, archbishop of Rheims, the gray vestment
+of a penitent.
+
+Lothair considered his father dethroned for good, and himself henceforth
+sole Emperor; but he was mistaken. For years longer the scenes which
+have just been described kept repeating themselves again and again;
+rivalries and secret plots began once more between the three victorious
+brothers and their partisans; popular feeling revived in favor of Louis;
+a large portion of the clergy shared it; several counts of Neustria and
+Burgundy appeared in arms, in the name of the deposed Emperor; and the
+seductive and able Judith came afresh upon the scene, and gained over to
+the cause of her husband and her son a multitude of friends. In 834, two
+assemblies, one meeting at St. Denis and the other at Thionville,
+annulled all the acts of the assembly of Compiegne, and for the third
+time put Louis in possession of the imperial title and power. He
+displayed no violence in his use of it; but he was growing more and more
+irresolute and weak, when, in 838, the second of his rebellious sons,
+Pepin, king of Aquitaine, died suddenly. Louis, ever under the sway of
+Judith, speedily convoked at Worms, in 839, once more and for the last
+time, a general assembly, whereat, leaving his son Louis of Bavaria
+reduced to his kingdom in Eastern Europe, he divided the rest of his
+dominions into two nearly equal parts, separated by the course of the
+Meuse and the Rhone. Between these two parts he left the choice to
+Lothair, who took the eastern portion, promising at the same time to
+guarantee the western portion to his younger brother Charles. Louis the
+Germanic protested against this partition, and took up arms to resist
+it. His father, the Emperor, set himself in motion toward the Rhine, to
+reduce him to submission; but, on arriving close to Mayence, he caught a
+violent fever, and died on the 20th of June, 840, at the castle
+Ingelheim, on a little island in the river. His last acts were a fresh
+proof of his goodness toward even his rebellious sons and of his
+solicitude for his last-born. He sent to Louis the Germanic his pardon,
+and to Lothair the golden crown and sword, at the same time bidding him
+fulfil his father's wishes on behalf of Charles and Judith.
+
+There is no telling whether, in the credulousness of his good nature,
+Louis had, at his dying hour, any great confidence in the appeal he made
+to his son Lothair, and in the impression which would be produced on his
+other son, Louis of Bavaria, by the pardon bestowed. The prayers of the
+dying are of little avail against violent passions and barbaric manners.
+Scarcely was Louis the Debonair dead, when Lothair was already
+conspiring against young Charles, and was in secret alliance, for his
+despoilment, with Pepin II, the late King of Aquitaine's son, who had
+taken up arms for the purpose of seizing his father's kingdom, in the
+possession of which his grandfather Louis had not been pleased to
+confirm him. Charles suddenly learned that his mother Judith was on the
+point of being besieged in Poitiers by the Aquitanians; and, in spite of
+the friendly protestations sent to him by Lothair, it was not long
+before he discovered the plot formed against him. He was not wanting in
+shrewdness or energy; and, having first provided for his mother's
+safety, he set about forming an alliance, in the cause of their common
+interests, with his other brother, Louis the Germanic, who was equally
+in danger from the ambition of Lothair. The historians of the period do
+not say what negotiator was employed by Charles on this distant and
+delicate mission; but several circumstances indicate that the empress
+Judith herself undertook it; that she went in quest of the King of
+Bavaria; and that it was she who, with her accustomed grace and address,
+determined him to make common cause with his youngest against their
+eldest brother. Divers incidents retarded for a whole year the outburst
+of this family plot, and of the war of which it was the precursor. The
+position of the young king Charles appeared for some time a very bad
+one; but "certain chieftains," says the historian Nithard, "faithful to
+his mother and to him, and having nothing more to lose than life or
+limb, chose rather to die gloriously than to betray their King." The
+arrival of Louis the Germanic with his troops helped to swell the forces
+and increase the confidence of Charles; and it was on the 21st of June,
+841, exactly a year after the death of Louis the Debonair, that the two
+armies, that of Lothair and Pepin on the one side, and that of Charles
+the Bald and Louis the Germanic on the other, stood face to face in the
+neighborhood of the village of Fontenailles, six leagues from Auxerre,
+on the rivulet of Audries. Never, according to such evidence as is
+forthcoming, since the battle on the plains of Chalons against the Huns,
+and that of Poitiers against the Saracens, had so great masses of men
+been engaged. "There would be nothing untruthlike," says that scrupulous
+authority, M. Fauriel, "in putting the whole number of combatants at
+three hundred thousand; and there is nothing to show that either of the
+two armies was much less numerous than the other." However that may be,
+the leaders hesitated for four days to come to blows; and while they
+were hesitating, the old favorite, not only of Louis the Debonair, but
+also, according to several chroniclers, of the empress Judith, held
+himself aloof with his troops in the vicinity, having made equal promise
+of assistance to both sides, and waiting, to govern his decision, for
+the prospect afforded by the first conflict. The battle began on the
+25th of June, at daybreak, and was at first in favor of Lothair; but the
+troops of Charles the Bald recovered the advantage which had been lost
+by those of Louis the Germanic, and the action was soon nothing but a
+terribly simple scene of carnage between enormous masses of men,
+charging hand to hand, again and again, with a front extending over a
+couple of leagues. Before midday the slaughter, the plunder, the
+spoliation of the dead--all was over; the victory of Charles and Louis
+was complete; the victors had retired to their camp, and there remained
+nothing on the field of battle but corpses in thick heaps or a long
+line, according as they had fallen in the disorder of flight or steadily
+fighting in their ranks.... "Accursed be this day!" cries Angilbert, one
+of Lothair's officers, in rough Latin verse; "be it unnumbered in the
+return of the year, but wiped out of all remembrance! Be it unlit by the
+light of the sun! Be it without either dawn or twilight! Accursed, also,
+be this night, this awful night in which fell the brave, the most expert
+in battle! Eye ne'er hath seen more fearful slaughter: in streams of
+blood fell Christian men; the linen vestments of the dead did whiten the
+champaign even as it is whitened by the birds of autumn!"
+
+In spite of this battle, which appeared a decisive one, Lothair made
+zealous efforts to continue the struggle; he scoured the countries
+wherein he hoped to find partisans; to the Saxons he promised the
+unrestricted reestablishment of their pagan worship, and several of the
+Saxon tribes responded to his appeal. Louis the Germanic and Charles the
+Bald, having information of these preliminaries, resolved to solemnly
+renew their alliance and, seven months after their victory at
+Fontenailles, in February, 842, they repaired both of them, each with
+his army, to Argentaria, on the right bank of the Rhine, between Bale
+and Strasburg, and there, at an open-air meeting, Louis first,
+addressing the chieftains about him in the German tongue, said: "Ye all
+know how often, since our father's death, Lothair hath attacked us, in
+order to destroy us, this my brother and me. Having never been able, as
+brothers and Christians, or in any just way, to obtain peace from him,
+we were constrained to appeal to the judgment of God. Lothair was beaten
+and retired, whither he could, with his following; for we, restrained by
+paternal affection and moved with compassion for Christian people, were
+unwilling to pursue them to extermination. Neither then nor aforetime
+did we demand aught else save that each of us should be maintained in
+his rights. But he, rebelling against the judgment of God, ceaseth not
+to attack us as enemies, this my brother and me; and he destroyeth our
+peoples with fire and pillage and the sword. That is the cause which
+hath united us afresh; and, as we trow that ye doubt the soundness of
+our alliance and our fraternal union, we have resolved to bind ourselves
+afresh by this oath in your presence, being led thereto by no prompting
+of wicked covetousness, but only that we may secure our common advantage
+in case that, by your aid, God should cause us to obtain peace. If,
+then, I violate--which God forbid--this oath that I am about to take to
+my brother, I hold you all quit of submission to me and of the faith ye
+have sworn to me."
+
+Charles repeated this speech, word for word, to his own troops, in the
+Romance language, in that idiom derived from a mixture of Latin and of
+the tongues of ancient Gaul, and spoken, thenceforth, with varieties of
+dialect and pronunciation, in nearly all parts of Frankish Gaul. After
+this address, Louis pronounced and Charles repeated after him, each in
+his own tongue, the oath couched in these terms: "For the love of God,
+for the Christian people and for our common weal, from this day forth
+and so long as God shall grant me power and knowledge, I will defend
+this my brother and will be an aid to him in everything, as one ought to
+defend his brother, provided that he do likewise unto me; and I will
+never make with Lothair any covenant which may be, to my knowledge, to
+the damage of this my brother."
+
+When the two brothers had thus sworn, the two armies, officers and men,
+took, in their turn, a similar oath, going bail, in a mass, for the
+engagements of their kings. Then they took up their quarters, all of
+them, for some time, between Worms and Mayence, and followed up their
+political proceeding with military fetes, precursors of the knightly
+tournaments of the Middle Ages. "A place of meeting was fixed," says the
+contemporary historian Nithard, "at a spot suitable for this kind of
+exercises. Here were drawn up, on one side, a certain number of
+combatants, Saxons, Vasconians, Austrasians, or Britons; there were
+ranged, on the opposite side, an equal number of warriors, and the two
+divisions advanced, each against the other, as if to attack. One of
+them, with their bucklers at their backs, took to flight as if to seek,
+in the main body, shelter against those who were pursuing them; then
+suddenly, facing about, they dashed out in pursuit of those before whom
+they had just been flying. This sport lasted until the two kings,
+appearing with all the youth of their suites, rode up at a gallop,
+brandishing their spears and chasing first one lot and then the other.
+It was a fine sight to see so much temper among so many valiant folk,
+for, great as was the number and the mixture of different nationalities,
+no one was insulted or maltreated, though the contrary is often the case
+among men in small numbers and known one to another."
+
+After four or five months of tentative measures or of incidents which
+taught both parties that they could not, either of them, hope to
+completely destroy their opponents, the two allied brothers received at
+Verdun, whither they had repaired to concert their next movement, a
+messenger from Lothair, with peaceful proposals which they were
+unwilling to reject. The principal was that, with the exception of
+Italy, Aquitaine, and Bavaria, to be secured without dispute to their
+then possessors, the Frankish empire should be divided into three
+portions, that the arbiters elected to preside over the partition should
+swear to make it as equal as possible, and that Lothair should have his
+choice, with the title of emperor. About mid-June, 842, the three
+brothers met on an island of the Saone, near Chalons, where they began
+to discuss the questions which divided them; but it was not till more
+than a year after, in August, 843, that assembling, all three of them,
+with their umpires, at Verdun, they at last came to an agreement about
+the partition of the Frankish empire, save the three countries which it
+had been beforehand agreed to accept. Louis kept all the provinces of
+Germany of which he was already in possession, and received besides, on
+the left bank of the Rhine, the towns of Mayence, Worms, and Spire, with
+the territory appertaining to them. Lothair, for his part, had the
+eastern belt of Gaul, bounded on one side by the Rhine and the Alps, on
+the other by the courses of the Meuse, the Saone, and the Rhone,
+starting from the confluence of the two latter rivers, and, further, the
+country comprised between the Meuse and the Scheldt, together with
+certain countships lying to the west of that river. To Charles fell all
+the rest of Gaul: Vasconia or Biscaye, Septimania, the marshes of Spain,
+beyond the Pyrenees; and the other countries of Southern Gaul which had
+enjoyed hitherto, under the title of the kingdom of Aquitaine, a special
+government subordinated to the general government of the empire, but
+distinct from it, lost this last remnant of their Gallo-Roman
+nationality, and became integral portions of Frankish Gaul, which fell
+by partition to Charles the Bald, and formed one and the same kingdom
+under one and the same king.
+
+Thus fell through and disappeared, in 843, by virtue of the treaty of
+Verdun, the second of Charlemagne's grand designs, the resuscitation of
+the Roman Empire by means of the Frankish and Christian masters of Gaul.
+The name of _emperor_ still retained a certain value in the minds of the
+people, and still remained an object of ambition to princes; but the
+empire was completely abolished, and, in its stead, sprang up three
+kingdoms, independent one of another, without any necessary connection
+or relation. One of the three was thenceforth France.
+
+In this great event are comprehended two facts: the disappearance of the
+empire and the formation of the three kingdoms which took its place. The
+first is easily explained. The resuscitation of the Roman Empire had
+been a dream of ambition and ignorance on the part of a great man, but a
+barbarian. Political unity and central, absolute power had been the
+essential characteristics of that empire. They became introduced and
+established, through a long succession of ages, on the ruins of the
+splendid Roman Republic destroyed by its own dissensions, under favor of
+the still great influence of the old Roman senate though fallen from its
+high estate, and beneath the guardianship of the Roman legions and
+Imperial praetorians. Not one of these conditions, not one of these
+forces, was to be met with in the Roman world reigned over by
+Charlemagne. The nation of the Franks and Charlemagne himself were but
+of yesterday; the new Emperor had neither ancient senate to hedge at the
+same time that it obeyed him, nor old bodies of troops to support him.
+Political unity and absolute power were repugnant alike to the
+intellectual and the social condition, to the national manners and
+personal sentiments of the victorious barbarians. The necessity of
+placing their conquests beyond the reach of a new swarm of barbarians
+and the personal ascendency of Charlemagne were the only things which
+gave his government a momentary gleam of success in the way of unity and
+of factitious despotism under the name of empire. In 814 Charlemagne had
+made territorial security an accomplished fact; but the personal power
+he had exercised disappeared with him. The new Gallo-Frankish community
+recovered, under the mighty but gradual influence of Christianity, its
+proper and natural course, producing disruption into different local
+communities and bold struggles for individual liberties, either one with
+another, or against whosoever tried to become their master.
+
+As for the second fact, the formation of the three kingdoms which were
+the issue of the treaty of Verdun, various explanations have been given
+of it. This distribution of certain peoples of Western Europe into three
+distinct and independent groups, Italians, Germans, and French, has been
+attributed at one time to a diversity of histories and manners; at
+another to geographical causes and to what is called the rule of natural
+frontiers; and oftener still to a spirit of nationality and to
+differences of language. Let none of these causes be gainsaid; they all
+exercised some sort of influence, but they are all incomplete in
+themselves and far too redolent of theoretical system. It is true that
+Germany, France, and Italy began at that time to emerge from the chaos
+into which they had been plunged by barbaric invasion and the conquests
+of Charlemagne, and to form themselves into quite distinct nations; but
+there were, in each of the kingdoms of Lothair, of Louis the Germanic,
+and of Charles the Bald, populations widely differing in race, language,
+manners, and geographical affinity, and it required many great events
+and the lapse of many centuries to bring about the degree of national
+unity they now possess. To say nothing touching the agency of individual
+and independent forces, which is always considerable, although so many
+men of intellect ignore it in the present day, what would have happened,
+had any one of the three new kings, Lothair, or Louis the Germanic, or
+Charles the Bald, been a second Charlemagne, as Charlemagne had been a
+second Charles Martel? Who can say that, in such a case, the three
+kingdoms would have taken the form they took in 843?
+
+Happily or unhappily, it was not so; none of Charlemagne's successors
+was capable of exercising on the events of his time, by virtue of his
+brain and his own will, any notable influence.
+
+Attempts at foreign invasion of France were renewed very often and in
+many parts of Gallo-Frankish territory during the whole duration of the
+Carlovingian dynasty, and, even though they failed, they caused the
+population of the kingdom to suffer from cruel ravages. Charlemagne,
+even after his successes against the different barbaric invaders, had
+foreseen the evils which would be inflicted on France by the most
+formidable and most determined of them, the Northmen, coming by sea and
+landing on the coast. The most closely contemporaneous and most given to
+detail of his chroniclers, the monk of St. Gall, tells in prolix and
+pompous but evidently heartfelt and sincere terms the tale of the great
+Emperor's farsightedness.
+
+"Charles, who was ever astir," says he, "arrived by mere hap and
+unexpectedly in a certain town of Narbonnese Gaul. While he was at
+dinner and was as yet unrecognized of any, some corsairs of the Northmen
+came to ply their piracies in the very port. When their vessels were
+descried, they were supposed to be Jewish traders according to some,
+African according to others, and British in the opinion of others; but
+the gifted monarch, perceiving by the build and lightness of the craft,
+that they bare not merchandise but foes, said to his own folk, 'These
+vessels be not laden with merchandise, but manned with cruel foes.' At
+these words all the Franks, in rivalry one with another, run to their
+ships, but uselessly; for the Northmen, indeed, hearing that yonder was
+he whom it was still their wont to call Charles the 'Hammer,'[22] feared
+lest all their fleet should be taken or destroyed in the port, and they
+avoided, by a flight of inconceivable rapidity, not only the glaives,
+but even the eyes of those who were pursuing them.
+
+"Pious Charles, however, a prey to well-grounded fear, rose up from
+table, stationed himself at a window looking eastward, and there
+remained a long while, and his eyes were filled with tears. As none
+durst question him, this warlike prince explained to the grandees who
+were about his person the cause of his movement and of his tears: 'Know
+ye, my lieges, wherefore I weep so bitterly? Of a surety I fear not lest
+these fellows should succeed in injuring me by their miserable piracies;
+but it grieveth me deeply that, while I live, they should have been nigh
+to touching at this shore, and I am a prey to violent sorrow when I
+foresee what evils they will heap upon my descendants and their
+people.'"
+
+[Footnote 22: After his grandfather, Charles Martel.]
+
+The forecast and the dejection of Charles were not unreasonable. It will
+be found that there is special mention made, in the chronicles of the
+ninth and tenth centuries, of forty-seven incursions into France of
+Norwegian, Danish, Swedish, and Irish pirates, all comprised under the
+name of Northmen; and doubtless many other incursions of less gravity
+have left no trace in history. "The Northmen," says Fauriel, "descended
+from the north to the south by a sort of natural gradation or ladder.
+The Scheldt was the first river by the mouth of which they penetrated
+inland; the Seine was the second; the Loire the third. The advance was
+threatening for the countries traversed by the Garonne; and it was in
+844 that vessels freighted with Northmen for the first time ascended
+this last river to a considerable distance inland, and there took
+immense booty. The following year they pillaged and burnt Saintes. In
+846 they got as far as Limoges. The inhabitants, finding themselves
+unable to make head against the dauntless pirates, abandoned their
+hearths, together with all they had not time to carry away. Encouraged
+by these successes the Northmen reappeared next year upon the coasts and
+in the rivers of Aquitaine, and they attempted to take Bordeaux, whence
+they were valorously repulsed by the inhabitants; but in 848, having
+once more laid siege to that city, they were admitted into it at night
+by the Jews, who were there in great force; the city was given up to
+plunder and conflagration; a portion of the people was scattered abroad,
+and the rest put to the sword."
+
+The monasteries and churches, wherein they hoped to find treasures, were
+the favorite object of the Northmen's enterprises; in particular, they
+plundered, at the gates of Paris, the abbey of St. Germain des Pres and
+that of St. Denis, whence they carried off the abbot, who could not
+purchase his freedom save by a heavy ransom. They penetrated more than
+once into Paris itself, and subjected many of its quarters to
+contributions or pillage. The populations grew into the habit of
+suffering and fleeing; and the local lords, and even the kings, made
+arrangement sometimes with the pirates either for saving the royal
+domains from the ravages, or for having their own share therein. In 850
+Pepin, King of Aquitaine, and brother of Charles the Bald, came to an
+understanding with the Northmen who had ascended the Garonne and were
+threatening Toulouse. "They arrived under his guidance," says Fauriel,
+"they laid siege to it, took it and plundered it, not halfwise, not
+hastily, as folks who feared to be surprised, but leisurely, with all
+security, by virtue of a treaty of alliance with one of the kings of the
+country. Throughout Aquitaine there was but one cry of indignation
+against Pepin, and the popularity of Charles was increased in proportion
+to all the horror inspired by the ineffable misdeed of his adversary.
+Charles the Bald himself, if he did not ally himself, as Pepin did, with
+the invaders, took scarce any interest in the fate of the populations
+and scarcely more trouble to protect them, for Hincmar, archbishop of
+Rheims, wrote to him in 859: 'Many folks say that you are incessantly
+repeating that it is not for you to mix yourself up with these
+depredations and robberies, and that everyone has but to defend himself
+as best he may.'"
+
+In the middle and during the last half of the ninth century, a chief of
+the Northmen, named Hastenc or Hastings, appeared several times over on
+the coasts and in the rivers of France, with numerous vessels and a
+following. He had also with him, say the chronicles, a young Norwegian
+or Danish prince, Bioern, called "Ironsides," whom he had educated, and
+who had preferred sharing the fortunes of his governor to living quietly
+with the King, his father. After several expeditions into Western
+France, Hastings became the theme of terrible and very probably fabulous
+stories. He extended his cruises, they say, to the Mediterranean, and,
+having arrived at the coasts of Tuscany, within sight of a city which in
+his ignorance he took for Rome, he resolved to pillage it; but, not
+feeling strong enough to attack it by assault, he sent to the bishop to
+say he was very ill, felt a wish to become a Christian, and begged to be
+baptized. Some days afterward his comrades spread a report that he was
+dead, and claimed for him the honors of a solemn burial. The bishop
+consented; the coffin of Hastings was carried into the church, attended
+by a large number of his followers, without visible weapons; but, in the
+middle of the ceremony, Hastings suddenly leaped up, sword in hand, from
+his coffin; his followers displayed the weapons they had concealed,
+closed the doors, slew the priests, pillaged the ecclesiastical
+treasures, and reembarked before the very eyes of the stupefied
+population, to go and resume, on the coasts of France, their incursions
+and their ravages.
+
+Whether they were true or false, these rumors of bold artifices and
+distant expeditions on the part of Hastings aggravated the dismay
+inspired by his appearance. He penetrated into the interior of the
+country, took possession of Chartres, and appeared before Paris, where
+Charles the Bald, intrenched at St. Denis, was deliberating with his
+prelates and barons as to how he might resist the Northmen or treat with
+them. The chronicle says that the barons advised resistance, but that
+the King preferred negotiation, and sent the abbot of St. Denis, "the
+which was an exceeding wise man," to Hastings, who, "after long parley
+and by reason of large gifts and promises," consented to stop his
+cruisings, to become a Christian, and to settle in the countship of
+Chartres, "which the King gave him as an hereditary possession, with all
+its appurtenances." According to other accounts, it was only some years
+later, under the young king Louis III, grandson of Charles the Bald,
+that Hastings was induced, either by reverses or by payment of money, to
+cease from his piracies and accept in recompense the countship of
+Chartres. Whatever may have been the date, he was, it is believed, the
+first chieftain of the Northmen who renounced a life of adventure and
+plunder, to become, in France, a great landed proprietor and a count of
+the King's.
+
+A greater chieftain of the Northmen than Hastings was soon to follow his
+example, and found Normandy in France; but before Rolf, that is, Rollo,
+came and gave the name of his race to a French province, the piratical
+Northmen were again to attempt a greater blow against France and to
+suffer a great reverse.
+
+In November, 885, under the reign of Charles the Fat, after having, for
+more than forty years, irregularly ravaged France, they resolved to
+unite their forces in order at length to obtain possession of Paris,
+whose outskirts they had so often pillaged without having been able to
+enter the heart of the place. Two bodies of troops were set in motion:
+one, under the command of Rollo, who was already famous among his
+comrades, marched on Rouen; the other went right up the course of the
+Seine, under the orders of Siegfried, whom the Northmen called their
+king. Rollo took Rouen, and pushed on at once for Paris. Duke Renaud,
+general of the Gallo-Frankish troops, went to encounter him on the banks
+of the Eure, and sent to him, to sound his intentions, Hastings, the
+newly made count of Chartres. "Valiant warriors," said Hastings to
+Rollo, "whence come ye? What seek ye here? What is the name of your lord
+and master? Tell us this; for we be sent unto you by the King of the
+Franks." "We be Danes," answered Rollo, "and all be equally masters
+among us. We be come to drive out the inhabitants of this land, and to
+subject it as our own country. But who art thou, thou who speakest so
+glibly?" "Ye have sometime heard tell of one Hastings, who, issuing
+forth from among you, came hither with much shipping and made desert a
+great part of the kingdom of the Franks?" "Yes," said Rollo, "we have
+heard tell of him; Hastings began well and ended ill." "Will ye yield
+you to King Charles?" asked Hastings. "We yield," was the answer, "to
+none; all that we shall take by our arms we will keep as our right. Go
+and tell this, if thou wilt, to the King, whose envoy thou boastest to
+be."
+
+Hastings returned to the Gallo-Frankish army, and Rollo prepared to
+march on Paris. Hastings had gone back somewhat troubled in mind. Now
+there was among the Franks one Count Tetbold (Thibault), who greatly
+coveted the countship of Chartres, and he said to Hastings: "Why
+slumberest thou softly? Knowest thou not that King Charles doth purpose
+thy death by cause of all the Christian blood that thou didst aforetime
+unjustly shed? Bethink thee of all the evil thou hast done him, by
+reason whereof he purposeth to drive thee from his land. Take heed to
+thyself that thou be not smitten unawares." Hastings, dismayed, at once
+sold to Tetbold the town of Chartres, and, removing all that belonged to
+him, departed to go and resume, for all that appears, his old course of
+life.
+
+On the 25th of November, 885, all the forces of the Northmen formed a
+junction before Paris; seven hundred huge barks covered two leagues of
+the Seine, bringing, it is said, more than thirty thousand men. The
+chieftains were astonished at sight of the new fortifications of the
+city, a double wall of circumvallation, the bridges crowned with towers,
+and in the environs the ramparts of the abbeys of St. Denis and St.
+Germain solidly rebuilt. Siegfried hesitated to attack a town so well
+defended. He demanded to enter alone and have an interview with the
+bishop, Gozlin. "Take pity on thyself and thy flock," said he to him;
+"let us pass through the city; we will in no wise touch the town; we
+will do our best to preserve, for thee and Count Eudes, all your
+possessions." "This city," replied the bishop, "hath been confided unto
+us by the emperor Charles, king and ruler, under God, of the powers of
+the earth. He hath confided it unto us, not that it should cause the
+ruin but the salvation of the kingdom. If peradventure these walls had
+been confided to thy keeping as they have been to mine, wouldst thou do
+as thou biddest me?"
+
+"If ever I do so," answered Siegfried, "may my head be condemned to fall
+by the sword and serve as food to the dogs! But if thou yield not to our
+prayers, so soon as the sun shall commence his course our armies will
+launch upon thee their poisoned arrows; and when the sun shall end his
+course, they will give thee over to all the horrors of famine; and this
+will they do from year to year."
+
+The bishop, however, persisted, without further discussion; being as
+certain of Count Eudes as he was of himself. Eudes, who was young and
+but recently made Count of Paris, was the eldest son of Robert the
+Strong, Count of Anjou, of the same line as Charlemagne, and but lately
+slain in battle against the Northmen. Paris had for defenders two
+heroes, one of the Church and the other of the empire: the faith of the
+Christian and the fealty of the vassal; the conscientiousness of the
+priest and the honor of the warrior.
+
+The siege lasted thirteen months, whiles pushed vigorously forward with
+eight several assaults, whiles maintained by close investment, and with
+all the alternations of success and reverse, all the intermixture of
+brilliant daring and obscure sufferings that can occur when the
+assailants are determined and the defenders devoted. Not only a
+contemporary but an eye-witness, Abbo, a monk of St. Germain des Pres,
+has recounted the details in a long poem, wherein the writer, devoid of
+talent, adds nothing to the simple representation of events; it is
+history itself which gives to Abbo's poem a high degree of interest. We
+do not possess, in reference to these continual struggles of the
+Northmen with the Gallo-Frankish populations, any other document which
+is equally precise and complete, or which could make us so well
+acquainted with all the incidents, all the phases of this irregular
+warfare between two peoples, one without a government, the other without
+a country. The bishop, Gozlin, died during the siege. Count Eudes
+quitted Paris for a time to go and beg aid of the Emperor; but the
+Parisians soon saw him reappear on the heights of Montmartre with three
+battalions of troops, and he reentered the town, spurring on his horse
+and striking right and left with his battle-axe through the ranks of the
+dumfounded besiegers. The struggle was prolonged throughout the summer;
+and when, in November, 886, Charles the Fat at last appeared before
+Paris, "with a large army of all nations," it was to purchase the
+retreat of the Northmen at the cost of a heavy ransom, and by allowing
+them to go and winter in Burgundy, "whereof the inhabitants obeyed not
+the Emperor."
+
+Some months afterward, in 887, Charles the Fat was deposed, at a diet
+held on the banks of the Rhine, by the grandees of Germanic France; and
+Arnulf, a natural son of Carloman, the brother of Louis III, was
+proclaimed emperor in his stead. At the same time Count Eudes, the
+gallant defender of Paris, was elected King at Compiegne, and crowned by
+the archbishop of Sens. Guy, Duke of Spoleto, descended from Charlemagne
+in the female line, hastened to France and was declared king at Langres
+by the bishop of that town, but returned with precipitation to Italy,
+seeing no chance of maintaining himself in his French kingship.
+Elsewhere Boso, Duke of Arles, became King of Provence, and the
+Burgundian Count Rudolph had himself crowned at St. Maurice, in the
+Valais, King of transjuran Burgundy. There was still in France a
+legitimate Carlovingian, a son of Louis the Stutterer, who was hereafter
+to become Charles the Simple; but being only a child, he had been
+rejected or completely forgotten, and, in the interval that was to
+elapse ere his time should arrive, kings were being made in all
+directions.
+
+In the midst of this confusion the Northmen, though they kept at a
+distance from Paris, pursued in Western France their cruising and
+plundering. In Rollo they had a chieftain far superior to his vagabond
+predecessors. Though he still led the same life that they had, he
+displayed therein other faculties, other inclinations, other views. In
+his youth he had made an expedition to England, and had there contracted
+a real friendship with the wise king Alfred the Great. During a campaign
+in Friesland he had taken prisoner Rainier, Count of Hainault; and
+Alberade, Countess of Brabant, made a request to Rollo for her husband's
+release, offering in return to set free twelve captains of the Northmen,
+her prisoners, and to give up all the gold she possessed. Rollo took
+only half the gold, and restored to the countess her husband. When, in
+885, he became master of Rouen, instead of devastating the city after
+the fashion of his kind, he respected the buildings, had the walls
+repaired, and humored the inhabitants. In spite of his violent and
+extortionate practices where he met with obstinate resistance, there
+were to be discerned in him symptoms of more noble sentiments and of an
+instinctive leaning toward order, civilization, and government. After
+the deposition of Charles the Fat and during the reign of Eudes, a
+lively struggle was maintained between the Frankish King and the
+chieftain of the Northmen, who had neither of them forgotten their early
+encounters. They strove, one against the other, with varied fortunes;
+Eudes succeeded in beating the Northmen at Montfaucon, but was beaten in
+Vermandois by another band, commanded, it is said, by the veteran
+Hastings, sometime Count of Chartres.
+
+Rollo, too, had his share at one time of success, at another of reverse;
+but he made himself master of several important towns, showed a
+disposition to treat the quiet populations gently, and made a fresh trip
+to England, during which he renewed friendly relations with her King,
+Athelstan, the successor of Alfred the Great. He thus became, from day
+to day, more reputable as well as more formidable in France, insomuch
+that Eudes himself was obliged to have recourse, in dealing with him, to
+negotiations and presents. When, in 898, Eudes was dead, and Charles the
+Simple, at hardly nineteen years of age, had been recognized sole King
+of France, the ascendency of Rollo became such that the necessity of
+treating with him was clear. In 911 Charles, by the advice of his
+councillors and, among them, of Robert, brother of the late king Eudes,
+who had himself become Count of Paris and Duke of France, sent to the
+chieftain of the Northmen Franco, Archbishop of Rouen, with orders to
+offer him the cession of a considerable portion of Neustria and the hand
+of his young daughter Gisele, on condition that he became a Christian
+and acknowledged himself the King's vassal. Rollo, by the advice of his
+comrades, received these overtures with a good grace and agreed to a
+truce for three months, during which they might treat about peace. On
+the day fixed Charles, accompanied by Duke Robert, and Rollo, surrounded
+by his warriors, repaired to St. Clair-sur-Epte, on the opposite banks
+of the river, and exchanged numerous messages. Charles offered Rollo
+Flanders, which the Northman refused, considering it too swampy; as to
+the maritime portion of Neustria he would not be contented with it; it
+was, he said, covered with forests, and had become quite a stranger to
+the ploughshare by reason of the Northmen's incessant incursions. He
+demanded the addition of territories taken from Brittany, and that the
+princes of that province, Berenger and Alan, lords, respectively, of
+Redon and Dol, should take the oath of fidelity to him. When matters had
+been arranged on this basis, "the bishops told Rollo that he who
+received such a gift as the duchy of Normandy was bound to kiss the
+King's foot. 'Never,' quoth Rollo, 'will I bend the knee before the
+knees of any, and I will kiss the foot of none.' At the solicitation of
+the Franks he then ordered one of his warriors to kiss the King's foot.
+The Northman, remaining bolt upright, took hold of the King's foot,
+raised it to his mouth, and so made the King fall backward, which caused
+great bursts of laughter and much disturbance among the throng. Then the
+King and all the grandees who were about him, prelates, abbots, dukes,
+and counts, swore, in the name of the Catholic faith, that they would
+protect the patrician Rollo in his life, his members, and his folk, and
+would guarantee to him the possession of the aforesaid land, to him and
+his descendants forever; after which the King, well satisfied, returned
+to his domains; and Rollo departed with Duke Robert for the town of
+Rouen."
+
+The dignity of Charles the Simple had no reason to be well satisfied;
+but the great political question which, a century before, caused
+Charlemagne such lively anxiety was solved; the most dangerous, the most
+incessantly renewed of all foreign invasions, those of the Northmen,
+ceased to threaten France. The vagabond pirates had a country to
+cultivate and defend; the Northmen were becoming French.
+
+
+
+
+CAREER OF ALFRED THE GREAT
+
+A.D. 871-901
+
+T. HUGHES
+
+J.R. GREEN
+
+
+(Alfred the Great was the grandson of Egbert, King of the West Saxons,
+who during a reign of thirty-seven years consolidated in the Saxon
+heptarchy the seven Teutonic kingdoms into which Anglia or England had
+been divided, since the expulsion of the Britons by the Saxons about
+585. In the latter part of Egbert's reign the Danish Northmen appeared
+in the estuaries and rivers of England, sacking and burning the towns
+along their banks. Ethelwulf who had been made King of Kent in 828, and
+succeeded his father Egbert as King of Anglia in 837, was early occupied
+in resisting and repelling attacks along his coasts, and by several
+successful pitched battles with the Danish invaders obtained comparative
+freedom from their visits for eight years. Ethelwulf had married
+Osburga, the daughter of Oslac his cup-bearer, and had a daughter and
+five sons, of whom Alfred, the youngest, was born in 849. Part of
+Alfred's childhood was spent in Rome. At Compiegne and Verberie among
+his playmates were Charles, the boy king of Aquitaine, and Judith,
+children of the French king Charles the Bald. Judith at fourteen years
+of age became Ethelwulf's second wife, and when the old King died two
+years later, to the amazement and scandal of the nation married her
+stepson Ethelbald.
+
+According to Ethelwulf's will, Ethelbald became King of Wessex,
+Ethelbert, the second son, King of Kent, while Ethelred and Alfred were
+to be in the line of succession to Ethelbald. Ethelbald died in 860, and
+Judith returned to France, subsequently marrying Baldwin, Count of
+Flanders. Ethelbert as successor joined the kingdoms of Wessex and Kent.
+Alfred lived at the court of Ethelbert, and became noted for the
+intelligence and studious activities which were to make his future reign
+the conspicuous epoch in English history, so brilliantly commemorated a
+thousand years after his death in 901, in the millenary celebrated in
+Winchester and its neighborhood in 1901.
+
+Ethelbert died in 866 and was succeeded by Ethelred. In 868 Alfred
+married Elswitha, the daughter of Ethelred Mucil of Mercia. Meanwhile
+the Danes had resumed their predatory excursions, and in the winter of
+870-871 Ethelred accompanied by Alfred attacked them at Reading, but
+after an initial victory was repulsed. Four days later, Ethelred and
+Alfred with their forces were attacked on Ashdown near White Horse Hill;
+after a heavy slaughter the Danes were out to flight. The Danes,
+however, reinforced by Guthrum with new troops from over the sea, within
+a fortnight resumed offensive operations, and at Merton, two months
+later, Ethelred was mortally wounded. He died almost immediately after
+the battle, and "at the age of twenty-three Alfred ascended the throne
+of his fathers, which was tottering, as it seemed, to its fall.")
+
+
+THOMAS HUGHES
+
+The throne of the West Saxons was not an inheritance to be desired in
+the year 871, when Alfred succeeded his gallant brother. It descended on
+him without comment or ceremony, as a matter of course. There was not
+even an assembly of the witan to declare the succession as in ordinary
+times. With Guthrum and Hinguar in their intrenched camp at the
+confluence of the Thames and Kennet, and fresh bands of marauders
+sailing up the former river, and constantly swelling the ranks of the
+pagan army during these summer months, there was neither time nor heart
+among the wise men of the West Saxons for strict adherence to the letter
+of the constitution, however venerable. The succession had already been
+settled by the Great Council, when they formally accepted the provisions
+of Ethelwulf's will, that his three sons should succeed, to the
+exclusion of the children of any one of them.
+
+The idea of strict hereditary succession has taken so strong a hold of
+us English in later times that it is necessary constantly to insist that
+our old English kingship was elective. Alfred's title was based on
+election; and so little was the idea of usurpation, or of any wrong done
+to the two infant sons of Ethelred, connected with his accession, that
+even the lineal descendant of one of those sons, in his chronicle of
+that eventful year, does not pause to notice the fact that Ethelred left
+children. He is writing to his "beloved cousin Matilda," to instruct her
+in the things which he had received from ancient traditions, "of the
+history of our race down to these two kings from whom we have our
+origin." "The fourth son of Ethelwulf," he writes, "was Ethelred, who,
+after the death of Ethelbert, succeeded to the kingdom, and was also my
+grandfather's grandfather. The fifth was Alfred, who succeeded after all
+the others to the whole sovereignty, and was your grandfather's
+grandfather." And so passes on to the next facts, without a word as to
+the claims of his own lineal ancestor, though he had paused in his
+narrative at this point for the special purpose of introducing a little
+family episode.
+
+When Alfred had buried his brother in the cloisters of Wimborne Minster,
+and had time to look out from his Dorsetshire resting-place, and take
+stock of the immediate prospects and work which lay before him, we can
+well believe that those historians are right who have told us that for
+the moment he lost heart and hope, and suffered himself to doubt whether
+God would by his hand deliver the afflicted nation from its terrible
+straits. In the eight pitched battles which we find by the _Saxon
+Chronicle_ (Asser giving seven only) had already been fought with the
+pagan army, the flower of the youth of these parts of the West Saxon
+kingdom must have fallen. The other Teutonic kingdoms of the island, of
+which he was overlord, and so bound to defend, had ceased to exist
+except in name, or lay utterly powerless, like Mercia, awaiting their
+doom. Kent, Sussex, and Surrey, which were now an integral part of the
+royal inheritance of his own family, were at the mercy of his enemies,
+and he without a hope of striking a blow for them. London had been
+pillaged, and was in ruins. Even in Wessex proper, Berkshire and
+Hampshire, with parts of Wilts and Dorset, had been crossed and
+recrossed by marauding bands, in whose track only smoking ruins and dead
+bodies were found. "The land was as the garden of Eden before them, and
+behind them a desolate wilderness." These bands were at this very moment
+on foot, striking into new districts farther to the southwest than they
+had yet reached. If the rich lands of Somersetshire and Devonshire, and
+the yet unplundered parts of Wilts and Dorset, are to be saved, it must
+be by prompt and decisive fighting, and it is time for a king to be in
+the field. But it is a month from his brother's death before Alfred can
+gather men enough round his standard to take the field openly. Even
+then, when he fights, it is "almost against his will," for his ranks are
+sadly thin, and the whole pagan army are before him, at Wilton near
+Salisbury. The action would seem to have been brought on by the
+impetuosity of Alfred's own men, whose spirit was still unbroken, and
+their confidence in their young King enthusiastic. There was a long and
+fierce fight as usual, during the earlier part of which the Saxons had
+the advantage, though greatly outnumbered.
+
+But again we get glimpses of the old trap of a feigned flight and
+ambuscade, into which they fell, and so again lose "possession of the
+place of death," the ultimate test of victory. "This year," says the
+_Saxon Chronicle_, "nine general battles were fought against the army in
+the kingdom south of the Thames; besides which Alfred, the king's
+brother, and single aldermen and king's thanes, oftentimes made attacks
+on them, which were not counted; and within the year one king and nine
+jarls [earls] were slain." Wilton was the last of these general actions,
+and not long afterward, probably in the autumn, Alfred made peace with
+the pagans, on condition that they should quit Wessex at once.
+
+They were probably allowed to carry off whatever spoils they may have
+been able to accumulate in their Reading camp, but I can find no
+authority for believing that Alfred fell into the fatal and humiliating
+mistake of either paying them anything or giving hostages or promising
+tribute. This young King, who, as crown prince, led the West Saxons up
+the slopes at Ashdown, when Bagsac, the two Sidrocs, and the rest were
+killed, and who has very much their own way of fighting--going into the
+clash of arms "when the hard steel rings upon the high helmets," and
+"the beasts of prey have ample spoil," like a veritable child of
+Odin--is clearly one whom it is best to let alone, at any rate so long
+as easy plunder and rich lands are to be found elsewhere, without such
+poison-mad fighting for every herd of cattle and rood of ground. Indeed,
+I think the careful reader may trace from the date of Ashdown a decided
+unwillingness on the part of the Danes to meet Alfred, except when they
+could catch him at disastrous odds. They succeeded, indeed, for a time
+in overrunning almost the whole of his kingdom, in driving him an exile
+for a few wretched weeks to the shelter of his own forests; but whenever
+he was once fairly in the field they preferred taking refuge in strong
+places, and offering treaties and hostages to the actual arbitrament of
+battle.
+
+So the pagan army quitted Reading, and wintered in 872 in the
+neighborhood of London, at which place they received proposals from
+Buhred, King of the Mercians, Alfred's brother-in-law, and for a money
+payment pass him and his people contemptuously by for the time, making
+some kind of treaty of peace with them, and go northward into what has
+now become their own country. They winter in Lincolnshire, gathering
+fresh strength during 873 from the never-failing sources of supply
+across the narrow seas. Again, however, in this year of ominous rest
+they renew their sham peace with poor Buhred and his Mercians, who thus
+manage to tide it over another winter. In 874, however, their time has
+come. In the spring, the pagan army under the three kings, Guthrum,
+Oskytal, and Amund, burst into Mercia. In this one only of the English
+Teutonic kingdoms they find neither fighting nor suffering hero to cross
+their way, and leave behind for a thousand years the memory of a noble
+end, cut out there in some half-dozen lines of an old chronicler, but
+full of life and inspiration to this day for all Englishmen. The whole
+country is overrun, and reduced under pagan rule, without a blow struck,
+so far as we know, and within the year.
+
+Poor Buhred, titular King of the Mercians, who has made believe to rule
+this English kingdom these twenty-two years--who in his time has marched
+with his father-in-law Ethelwulf across North Wales--has beleaguered
+Nottingham with his brothers-in-law, Ethelred and Alfred, six years
+back, not without show of manhood--sees for his part nothing for it
+under such circumstances but to get away as swiftly as possible, as many
+so-called kings have done before him, and since. The West Saxon court is
+no place for him, quite other views of kingship prevailing in those
+parts. So the poor Buhred breaks away from his anchors, leaving his wife
+Ethelswitha even, in his haste, to take refuge with her brother; or is
+it that the heart of the daughter of the race of Cerdic swells against
+leaving the land which her sires had won, the people they had planted
+there, in the moment of sorest need? In any case Buhred drifts away
+alone across into France, and so toward the winter to Rome. There he
+dies at once--about Christmas-time, 874--of shame and sorrow probably,
+or of a broken heart as we say; at any rate having this kingly gift left
+in him, that he cannot live and look on the ruin of his people, as St.
+Edmund's brother Edwold is doing in these same years, "near a clear well
+at Carnelia, in Dorsetshire," doing the hermit business there on bread
+and water.
+
+The English in Rome bury away poor Buhred, with all the honors, in the
+Church of St. Mary's, to which the English schools rebuilt by his
+father-in-law Ethelwulf were attached. Ethelswitha visited, or started
+to visit, the tomb years later, we are told, in 888, when Mercia had
+risen to new life under her great brother's rule. Through these same
+months Guthrum, Oskytal, and the rest are wintering at Repton, after
+destroying there the cloister where the kingly line of Mercia lie;
+disturbing perhaps the bones of the great Offa, whom Charlemagne had to
+treat as an equal.
+
+Neither of the pagan kings is inclined at this time to settle in Mercia;
+so, casting about what to do with it, they light on "a certain foolish
+man," a king's thane, one Ceolwulf, and set him up as a sort of King
+Popinjay. From this Ceolwulf they take hostages for the payment of
+yearly tribute--to be wrung out of these poor Mercians on pain of
+dethronement--and for the surrender of the kingdom to them on whatever
+day they would have it back again. Foolish king's thanes, turned into
+King Popinjays by pagans, and left to play at government on such terms,
+are not pleasant or profitable objects in such times as these of one
+thousand years since--or indeed in any times, for the matter of that. So
+let us finish with Ceolwulf, just noting that a year or two later his
+pagan lords seem to have found much of the spoil of monasteries, and the
+pickings of earl and churl, of folkland and bookland, sticking to his
+fingers, instead of finding its way to their coffers. This was far from
+their meaning in setting him up in the high places of Mercia. So they
+strip him and thrust him out, and he dies in beggary.
+
+This, then, is the winter's work of the great pagan army at Repton,
+Alfred watching them and their work doubtless with keen eye--not without
+misgivings too at their numbers, swollen again to terrible proportions
+since they sailed away down Thames after Wilton fight. It will take
+years yet before the gaps in the fighting strength of Wessex, left by
+those nine pitched battles, and other smaller fights, will be filled by
+the crop of youths passing from childhood to manhood. An anxious
+thought, that, for a young king.
+
+The pagans, however, are not yet ready for another throw for Wessex; and
+so when Mercia is sucked dry for the present, and will no longer
+suitably maintain so great a host, they again sever. Halfdene, who would
+seem to have joined them recently, takes a large part of the army away
+with him northward. Settling his head-quarters by the river Tyne, he
+subdues all the land, and "ofttimes spoils the Picts and the Strathclyde
+Britons." Among other holy places in those parts, Halfdene visits the
+Isle of Lindisfarne, hoping perhaps in his pagan soul not only to commit
+ordinary sacrilege in the holy places there, which is every-day work for
+the like of him, but even to lay impious hands on, and to treat with
+indignity, the remains of that holy man St. Cuthbert, who has become, in
+due course, patron and guardian saint of hunters, and of that scourge of
+pagans, Alfred the West Saxon. If such were his thoughts, he is
+disappointed of his sacrilege; for Bishop Eardulf and Abbot
+Eadred--devout and strenuous persons--having timely warning of his
+approach, carry away the sainted body from Lindisfarne, and for nine
+years hide with it up and down the distracted northern counties, now
+here, now there, moving that sacred treasure from place to place until
+this bitterness is overpast, and holy persons and things, dead or
+living, are no longer in danger, and the bodies of saints may rest
+safely in fixed shrines; the pagan armies and disorderly persons of all
+kinds having been converted or suppressed in the mean time; for which
+good deed the royal Alfred--in whose calendar St. Cuthbert, patron of
+huntsmen, stands very high--will surely warmly befriend them hereafter,
+when he has settled his accounts with many persons and things. From the
+time of this incursion of Halfdene, Northumbria may be considered once
+more a settled state, but a Danish, not a Saxon one.
+
+The rest and greater part of the army, under Guthrum, Oskytal, and
+Amund, on leaving Repton, strike southeast, through what was "Landlord"
+Edmund's country, to Cambridge, where, in their usual heathen way, they
+pass the winter of 875.
+
+The downfall, exile, and death of his brother-in-law in 874 must have
+warned Alfred, if he had any need of warning, that no treaty could bind
+these foemen, and that he had nothing to look for but the same measure
+as soon as the pagan leaders felt themselves strong enough to mete it
+out to him and Wessex. In the following year we accordingly find him on
+the alert, and taking action in a new direction. These heathen pirates,
+he sees, fight his people at terrible advantage by reason of their
+command of the sea. This enables them to choose their own point of
+attack, not only along the sea-coast, but up every river as far as their
+light galleys can swim; to retreat unmolested, at their own time,
+whenever the fortune of war turns against them; to bring reinforcements
+of men and supplies to the scene of action without fear of hindrance.
+His Saxons have long since given up their seafaring habits. They have
+become before all things an agricultural people, drawing almost
+everything they need from their own soil. The few foreign tastes they
+have are supplied by foreign traders. However, if Wessex is to be made
+safe the sea-kings must be met on their own element; and so, with what
+expenditure of patience and money and encouraging words and example we
+may easily conjecture, the young King gets together a small fleet, and
+himself takes command of it. We have no clew to the point on the south
+coast where the admiral of twenty five fights his first naval action,
+but know only that in the summer of 875 he is cruising with his fleet,
+and meets seven tall ships of the enemy. One of these he captures, and
+the rest make off after a hard fight--no small encouragement to the
+sailor King, who has thus for another year saved Saxon homesteads from
+devastation by fire and sword.
+
+The second wave of invasion had now at last gathered weight and volume
+enough, and broke on the King and people of the West Saxons.
+
+The year 876 was still young when the whole pagan army, which had
+wintered at and about Cambridge, marched to their ships and put to sea.
+Guthrum was in command, with the other two kings, Anketel and Amund, as
+his lieutenants, under whom was a host as formidable as that which had
+marched across Mercia through forest and waste, and sailed up the Thames
+five years before to the assault of Reading. There must have been some
+few days of harassing suspense, for we cannot suppose that Alfred was
+not aware of the movements of his terrible foes. Probably his new fleet
+cruised off the south coast on the watch for them, and all up the Thames
+there were gloomy watchings and forebodings of a repetition of the evil
+days of 871. But the suspense was soon over. Passing by the Thames'
+mouth, and through Dover Straits, the pagan fleet sailed, and westward
+still past many tempting harbors and rivers' mouths, until they came off
+the coast of Dorsetshire. There they land at Wareham, and seize and
+fortify the neck of land between the rivers Frome and Piddle, on which
+stood, when they landed, a fortress of the West Saxons and a monastery
+of holy virgins. Fortress and monastery fell into the hands of the
+Danes, who set to work at once to throw up earthworks and otherwise
+fortify a space large enough to contain their army, and all spoil
+brought in by marauding bands from this hitherto unplundered country.
+This fortified camp was soon very strong, except on the western side,
+upon which Alfred shortly appeared with a body of horsemen and such
+other troops as could be gathered hastily together. The detachment of
+the pagans, who were already out pillaging the whole neighborhood, fell
+back apparently before him, concentrating on the Wareham camp. Before
+its outworks Alfred paused. He is too experienced a soldier now to risk
+at the outset of a campaign such a disaster as that which he and
+Ethelred had sustained in their attempt to assault the camp at Reading
+in 871. He is just strong enough to keep the pagans within their lines,
+but has no margin to spare. So he sits down before the camp, but no
+battle is fought, neither he nor Guthrum caring to bring matters to that
+issue. Soon negotiations are commenced, and again a treaty is made.
+
+On this occasion Alfred would seem to have taken special pains to bind
+his faithless foe. All the holy relics which could be procured from holy
+places in the neighborhood were brought together, that he himself and
+his people might set the example of pledging themselves in the most
+solemn manner known to Christian men. Then a holy ring or bracelet,
+smeared with the blood of beasts sacrificed to Woden, was placed on a
+heathen altar. Upon this Guthrum and his fellow kings and earls swore on
+behalf of the army that they would quit the King's country and give
+hostages. Such an oath had never been sworn by Danish leader on English
+soil before. It was the most solemn known to them. They would seem also
+to have sworn on Alfred's relics, as an extra proof of their sincerity
+for this once, and their hostages "from among the most renowned men in
+the army" were duly handed over. Alfred now relaxed his watch, even if
+he did not withdraw with the main body of his army, leaving his horse to
+see that the terms of the treaty were performed, and to watch the
+Wareham camp until the departure of the pagan host. But neither oath on
+sacred ring, nor the risk to their hostages, weighed with Guthrum and
+his followers when any advantage was to be gained by treachery. They
+steal out of the camp by night, surprise and murder the Saxon horsemen,
+seize the horses, and strike across the country, the mounted men
+leading, to Exeter, but leaving a sufficient garrison to hold Wareham
+for the present. They surprise and get possession of the western
+capital, and there settle down to pass the winter. Rollo, fiercest of
+the vikings, is said by Asser to have passed the winter with them in
+their Exeter quarters on his way to Normandy; but whether the great
+robber himself were here or not, it is certain that the channel swarmed
+with pirate fleets, who could put in to Wareham or Exeter at their
+discretion, and find a safe stronghold in either place from which to
+carry fire and sword through the unhappy country.
+
+Alfred had vainly endeavored to overtake the march to Exeter in the
+autumn of 876, and, failing in the pursuit, had disbanded his own troops
+as usual, allowing them to go to their own homes until the spring.
+Before he could be afoot again in the spring of 877 the main body of the
+pagans at Exeter had made that city too strong for any attempt at
+assault, so the King and his troops could do no more than beleaguer it
+on the land side, as he had done at Wareham. But Guthrum could laugh at
+all efforts of his great antagonist, and wait in confidence the sure
+disbanding of the Saxon troops at harvest time, so long as his ships
+held the sea.
+
+Supplies were running short in Exeter, but the Exe was open and
+communications going on with Wareham. It is arranged that the camp there
+shall be broken up, and the whole garrison with their spoil shall join
+head-quarters. One hundred and twenty Danish war-galleys are freighted,
+and beat down channel, but are baffled by adverse winds for nearly a
+month. They and all their supplies may be looked for any day in the Exe
+when the wind changes. Alfred, from his camp before Exeter, sends to his
+little fleet to put to sea. He cannot himself be with them as in their
+first action, for he knows well that Guthrum will seize the first moment
+of his absence to sally from Exeter, break the Saxon lines, and scatter
+his army in roving bands over Devonshire, on their way back to the
+eastern kingdom. The Saxon fleet puts out, manned itself, as some say,
+partly with sea-robbers, hired to fight their own people. However
+manned, it attacks bravely a portion of the pirates. But a mightier
+power than the fleet fought for Alfred at this crisis. First a dense fog
+and then a great storm came on, bursting on the south coast with such
+fury that the pagans lost no less than one hundred of their chief ships
+off Swanage, as mighty a deliverance perhaps for England--though the
+memory of it is nearly forgotten--as that which began in the same seas
+seven hundred years later, when Drake and the sea-kings of the sixteenth
+century were hanging on the rear of the Spanish _armada_ along the Devon
+and Dorset coasts, while the beacons blazed up all over England and the
+whole nation flew to arms.
+
+The destruction of the fleet decided the fate of the siege of Exeter.
+Once more negotiations are opened by the pagans; once more Alfred,
+fearful of driving them to extremities, listens, treats, and finally
+accepts oaths and more hostages, acknowledging probably in sorrow to
+himself that he can for the moment do no better. And on this occasion
+Guthrum, being caught far from home, and without supplies or ships,
+"keeps the peace well," moving as we conjecture, watched jealously by
+Alfred, on the shortest line across Devon and Somerset to some ford in
+the Avon, and so across into Mercia, where he arrives during harvest,
+and billets his army on Ceolwulf, camping them for the winter about the
+city of Gloster. Here they run up huts for themselves, and make some
+pretense of permanent settlement on the Severn, dividing large tracts of
+land among those who cared to take them.
+
+The campaigns of 876-77 are generally looked upon as disastrous ones for
+the Saxon arms, but this view is certainly not supported by the
+chroniclers. It is true that both at Wareham and Exeter the pagans broke
+new ground, and secured their position, from which no doubt they did
+sore damage in the neighboring districts, but we can trace in these
+years none of the old ostentatious daring and thirst for battle with
+Alfred. Whenever he appears the pirate bands draw back at once into
+their strongholds, and, exhausted as great part of Wessex must have been
+by the constant strain, the West Saxons show no signs yet of falling
+from their gallant King. If he can no longer collect in a week such an
+army as fought at Ashdown, he can still, without much delay, bring to
+his side a sufficient force to hem the pagans in and keep them behind
+their ramparts.
+
+But the nature of the service was telling sadly on the resources of the
+kingdom south of the Thames. To the Saxons there came no new levies,
+while from the north and east of England, as well as from over the sea,
+Guthrum was ever drawing to his standard wandering bands of sturdy
+Northmen. The most important of these reinforcements came to him from an
+unexpected quarter this autumn. We have not heard for some years of
+Hubba, the brother of Hinguar, the younger of the two vikings who
+planned and led the first great invasion in 868. Perhaps he may have
+resented the arrival of Guthrum and other kings in the following years,
+to whom he had to give place. Whatever may have been the cause, he seems
+to have gone off on his own account: carrying with him the famous raven
+standard, to do his appointed work in these years on other coasts under
+its ominous shade.
+
+This "war flag which they call raven" was a sacred object to the
+Northmen. When Hinguar and Hubba had heard of the death of their father,
+Regnar Lodbrog, and had resolved to avenge him, while they were calling
+together their followers, their three sisters in one day wove for them
+this war-flag, in the midst of which was portrayed the figure of a
+raven. Whenever the flag went before them into battle, if they were to
+win the day the sacred raven would rouse itself and stretch its wings;
+but if defeat awaited them, the flag would hang round its staff and the
+bird remain motionless. This wonder had been proved in many a fight, so
+the wild pagans who fought under the standard of Regnar's children
+believed. It was a power in itself, and Hubba and a strong fleet were
+with it.
+
+They had appeared in the Bristol Channel in this autumn of 877, and had
+ruthlessly slaughtered and spoiled the people of South Wales. Here they
+propose to winter; but, as the country is wild mountain for the most
+part, and the people very poor, they will remain no longer than they can
+help. Already a large part of the army about Gloster are getting
+restless. The story of their march from Devonshire, through rich
+districts of Wessex yet unplundered, goes round among the new-comers.
+Guthrum has no power, probably no will, to keep them to their oaths. In
+the early winter a joint attack is planned by him and Hubba on the West
+Saxon territory. By Christmas they are strong enough to take the field,
+and so in midwinter, shortly after Twelfth Night, the camp at Gloster
+breaks up, and the army "stole away to Chippenham," recrossing the Avon
+once more into Wessex, under Guthrum. The fleet, after a short delay,
+crosses to the Devonshire coast, under Hubba, in thirty war-ships.
+
+And now at last the courage of the West Saxons gives way. The surprise
+is complete. Wiltshire is at the mercy of the pagans, who, occupying the
+royal burgh of Chippenham as headquarters, overrun the whole district,
+drive many of the inhabitants "beyond the sea for want of the
+necessaries of life," and reduce to subjection all those that remain.
+Alfred is at his post, but for the moment can make no head against them.
+His own strong heart and trust in God are left him, and with them and a
+scanty band of followers he disappears into the forest of Selwood, which
+then stretched away from the confines of Wiltshire for thirty miles to
+the west. East Somerset, now one of the fairest and richest of English
+counties, was then for the most part thick wood and tangled swamp, but
+miserable as the lodging is it is welcome for the time to the King. In
+the first months of 878 Selwood Forest holds in its recesses the hope of
+England.
+
+It is at this point, as is natural enough, that romance has been most
+busy, and it has become impossible to disentangle the actual facts from
+monkish legend and Saxon ballad. In happier times Alfred was in the
+habit himself of talking over the events of his wandering life
+pleasantly with his courtiers, and there is no reason to doubt that the
+foundation of most of the stories still current rests on those
+conversations of the truth-loving King, noted down by Bishop Asser and
+others.
+
+The best known of these is, of course, the story of the cakes. In the
+depths of the Saxon forests there were always a few neatherds and
+swineherds, scattered up and down, living in rough huts enough, we may
+be sure, and occupied with the care of the cattle and herds of their
+masters. Among these in Selwood was a neatherd of the King, a faithful
+man, to whom the secret of Alfred's disguise was intrusted, and who kept
+it even from his wife. To this man's hut the King came one day alone,
+and, sitting himself down by the burning logs on the hearth, began
+mending his bow and arrows. The neatherd's wife had just finished her
+baking, and having other household matters to attend to, confided her
+loaves to the King, a poor tired-looking body, who might be glad of the
+warmth, and could make himself useful by turning the batch, and so earn
+his share while she got on with other business. But Alfred worked away
+at his weapons, thinking of anything but the good housewife's batch of
+loaves, which in due course were not only done, but rapidly burning to a
+cinder. At this moment the neatherd's wife comes back, and flying to the
+hearth to rescue the bread, cries out: "Drat the man! never to turn the
+loaves when you see them burning. I'ze warrant you ready enough to eat
+them when they are done." But besides the King's faithful neatherd,
+whose name is not preserved, there are other churls in the forest, who
+must be Alfred's comrades just now if he will have any. And even here he
+has an eye for a good man, and will lose no opportunity to help one to
+the best of his power. Such a one he finds in a certain swineherd called
+Denewulf, whom he gets to know, a thoughtful Saxon man, minding his
+charge there in the oak woods. The rough churl, or thrall, we know not
+which, has great capacity, as Alfred soon finds out, and desire to
+learn. So the King goes to work upon Denewulf under the oak trees, when
+the swine will let him, and is well satisfied with the results of his
+teaching and the progress of his pupil.
+
+But in those miserable days the commonest necessaries of life were hard
+enough to come by for the King and his few companions, and for his wife
+and family, who soon joined him in the forest, even if they were not
+with him from the first. The poor foresters cannot maintain them, nor
+are this band of exiles the men to live on the poor. So Alfred and his
+comrades are soon out foraging on the borders of the forest, and getting
+what subsistence they can from the pagans, or from the Christians who
+had submitted to their yoke. So we may imagine them dragging on life
+till near Easter, when a gleam of good news comes tip from the west, to
+gladden the hearts and strengthen the arms of these poor men in the
+depths of Selwood.
+
+Soon after Guthrum and the main body of the pagans moved from Gloster,
+southward, the viking Hubba, as had been agreed, sailed with thirty
+ships-of-war from his winter quarters on the South Welsh coast, and
+landed in Devon. The news of the catastrophe at Chippenham, and of the
+disappearance of the King, was no doubt already known in the West; and
+in the face of it Odda the alderman cannot gather strength to meet the
+pagan in the open field. But he is a brave and true man, and will make
+no terms with the spoilers; so, with other faithful thanes of King
+Alfred and their followers, he throws himself into a castle or fort
+called Cynwith, or Cynuit, there to abide whatever issue of this
+business God shall send them. Hubba, with the war-flag Raven, and a host
+laden with the spoil of rich Devon vales, appear in due course before
+the place. It is not strong naturally, and has only "walls in our own
+fashion," meaning probably rough earthworks. But there are resolute men
+behind them, and on the whole Hubba declines the assault, and sits down
+before the place. There is no spring of water, he hears, within the
+Saxon lines, and they are otherwise wholly unprepared for a siege. A few
+days will no doubt settle the matter, and the sword or slavery will be
+the portion of Odda and the rest of Alfred's men; meantime there is
+spoil enough in the camp from Devonshire homesteads, which brave men can
+revel in round the war-flag Raven, while they watch the Saxon ramparts.
+Odda, however, has quite other views than death from thirst, or
+surrender. Before any stress comes, early one morning he and his whole
+force sally out over their earthworks, and from the first "cut down the
+pagans in great numbers": eight hundred and forty warriors--some say
+twelve hundred--with Hubba himself are slain before Cynuit fort; the
+rest, few in number, escape to their ships. The war-flag Raven is left
+in the hands of Odda and the men of Devon.
+
+This is the news which comes to Alfred, Ethelnoth the alderman of
+Somerset, Denewulf the swineherd, and the rest of the Selwood Forest
+group, some time before Easter. These men of Devonshire, it seems, are
+still stanch, and ready to peril their lives against the pagan. No doubt
+up and down Wessex, thrashed and trodden out as the nation is by this
+time, there are other good men and true, who will neither cross the sea
+nor the Welsh marches nor make terms with the pagan; some sprinkling of
+men who will yet set life at stake, for faith in Christ and love of
+England. If these can only be rallied, who can say what may follow? So,
+in the lengthening days of spring, council is held in Selwood, and there
+will have been Easter services in some chapel or hermitage in the
+forest, or, at any rate, in some quiet glade. The "day of days" will
+surely have had its voice of hope for this poor remnant. Christ is risen
+and reigns; and it is not in these heathen Danes, or in all the Northmen
+who ever sailed across the sea, to put back his kingdom or to enslave
+those whom he has freed.
+
+The result is that, far away from the eastern boundary of the forest, on
+a rising ground--hill it can scarcely be called--surrounded by dangerous
+marshes formed by the little rivers Thone and Parret, fordable only in
+summer, and even then dangerous to all who have not the secret, a small
+fortified camp is thrown up under Alfred's eye, by Ethelnoth and the
+Somersetshire men, where he can once again raise his standard. The spot
+has been chosen by the King with the utmost care, for it is his last
+throw. He names it the Etheling's _eig_ or island, "Athelney." Probably
+his young son, the Etheling of England, is there among the first, with
+his mother and his grandmother Eadburgha, the widow of Ethelred Mucil,
+the venerable lady whom Asser saw in later years, and who has now no
+country but her daughter's. There are, as has been reckoned, some two
+acres of hard ground on the island, and around vast brakes of
+alder-bush, full of deer and other game.
+
+Here the Somersetshire men can keep up constant communication with him,
+and a small army grows together. They are soon strong enough to make
+forays into the open country, and in many skirmishes they cut off
+parties of the pagans and supplies. "For, even when overthrown and cast
+down," says Malmesbury, "Alfred had always to be fought with; so, then
+when one would esteem him altogether worn down and broken, like a snake
+slipping from the hand of him who would grasp it, he would suddenly
+flash out again from his hiding-places, rising up to smite his foes in
+the height of their insolent confidence, and never more hard to beat
+than after a flight."
+
+But it was still a trying life at Athelney. Followers came in slowly,
+and provender and supplies of all kinds are hard to wring from the
+pagan, and harder still to take from Christian men. One day, while it
+was yet so cold that the water was still frozen, the King's people had
+gone out "to get them fish or fowl, or some such purveyance as they
+sustained themselves withal." No one was left in the royal hut for the
+moment but himself, and his mother-in-law Eadburgha. The King--after his
+constant wont whensoever he had opportunity--was reading from the Psalms
+of David, out of the Manual which he carried always in his bosom. At
+this moment a poor man appeared at the door and begged for a morsel of
+bread "for Christ his sake." Whereupon the King, receiving the stranger
+as a brother, called to his mother-in-law to give him to eat. Eadburgha
+replied that there was but one loaf in their store, and a little wine in
+a pitcher, a provision wholly insufficient for his own family and
+people. But the King bade her nevertheless to give the stranger part of
+the last loaf, which she accordingly did. But when he had been served
+the stranger was no more seen, and the loaf remained whole, and the
+pitcher full to the brim. Alfred, meantime, had turned to his reading,
+over which he fell asleep, and dreamt that St. Cuthbert of Lindisfarne
+stood by him, and told him it was he who had been his guest, and that
+God had seen his afflictions and those of his people, which were now
+about to end, in token whereof his people would return that day from
+their expedition with a great take of fish. The King awakening, and
+being much impressed with his dream, called to his mother-in-law and
+recounted it to her, who thereupon assured him that she too had been
+overcome with sleep and had had the same dream. And while they yet
+talked together on what had happened so strangely to them, their
+servants come in, bringing fish enough, as it seemed to them, to have
+fed an army.
+
+The monkish legend goes on to tell that on the next morning the King
+crossed to the mainland in a boat, and wound his horn thrice, which drew
+to him before noon five hundred men. What we may think of the story and
+the dream, as Sir John Spelman says, "is not here very much material,"
+seeing that, whether we deem it natural or supernatural, "the one as
+well as the other serves at God's appointment, by raising or dejecting
+of the mind with hopes or fears, to lead man to the resolution of those
+things whereof he has before ordained the event."
+
+Alfred, we may be sure, was ready to accept and be thankful for any
+help, let it come from whence it might, and soon after Easter it was
+becoming clear that the time is at hand for more than skirmishing
+expeditions. Through all the neighboring counties word is spreading that
+their hero King is alive and on foot again, and that there will be
+another chance for brave men ere long of meeting once more these
+scourges of the land under his leading.
+
+A popular legend is found in the later chroniclers which relates that at
+this crisis of his fortunes Alfred, not daring to rely on any evidence
+but that of his own senses as to the numbers, disposition, and
+discipline of the pagan army, assumed the garb of a minstrel and with
+one attendant visited the camp of Guthrum. Here he stayed, "showing
+tricks and making sport," until he had penetrated to the King's tents,
+and learned all that he wished to know. After satisfying himself as to
+the chances of a sudden attack, he returns to Athelney, and, the time
+having come for a great effort, if his people will but make it, sends
+round messengers to the aldermen and king's thanes of neighboring
+shires, giving them a tryst for the seventh week after Easter, the
+second week in May.
+
+On or about the 12th of May, 878, King Alfred left his island in the
+great wood, and his wife and children and such household gods [sic] as
+he had gathered round him there, and came publicly forth among his
+people once more, riding to Egbert's Stone--probably Brixton--on the
+east of Selwood, a distance of twenty-six miles. Here met him the men of
+the neighboring shires--Odda, no doubt, with his men of Devonshire, full
+of courage and hope after their recent triumph; the men of
+Somersetshire, under their brave and faithful alderman Ethelnoth; and
+the men of Wilts and Hants, such of them at least as had not fled the
+country or made submission to the enemy. "And when they saw their King
+alive after such great tribulation, they received him, as he merited,
+with joy and acclamation." The gathering had been so carefully planned
+by Alfred and the nobles who had been in conference or correspondence
+with him at Athelney that the Saxon host was organized and ready for
+immediate action on the very day of muster. Whether Alfred had been his
+own spy we cannot tell, but it is plain that he knew well what was
+passing in the pagan camp, and how necessary swiftness and secrecy were
+to the success of his attack.
+
+Local traditions cannot be much relied upon for events which took place
+a thousand years ago, but where there is clearly nothing improbable in
+them they are at least worth mentioning. We may note, then, that
+according to Somersetshire tradition, first collected by Dr.
+Giles--himself a Somersetshire man, and one who, besides his _Life of
+Alfred_ and other excellent works bearing on the time, is the author of
+the _Harmony of the Chroniclers_, published by the Alfred Committee in
+1852--the signal for the actual gathering of the West Saxons at Egbert's
+Stone was given by a beacon lighted on the top of Stourton hill, where
+Alfred's Tower now stands. Such a beacon would be hidden from the Danes,
+who must have been encamped about Westbury, by the range of the
+Wiltshire hills, while it would be visible to the west over the low
+country toward the Bristol Channel, and to the south far into
+Dorsetshire.
+
+Not an hour was lost by Alfred at the place of muster. The bands which
+came together there were composed of men well used to arms, each band
+under its own alderman, or reeve. The small army he had himself been
+disciplining at Athelney, and training in skirmishes during the last few
+months, would form a reliable centre on which the rest would have to
+form as best they could. So after one day's halt he breaks up his camp
+at Egbert's Stone and marches to Aeglea, now called Clay hill, an
+important height, commanding the vale to the north of Westbury, which
+the Danish army were now occupying. The day's march of the army would be
+a short five miles. Here the annals record that St. Neot, his kinsman,
+appeared to him, and promised that on the morrow his misfortunes would
+end.
+
+There are still traces of rude earthworks round the top of Clay hill,
+which are said to have been thrown up by Alfred's army at this time. If
+there had been time for such a work, it would undoubtedly have been a
+wise step, as a fortified encampment here would have served Alfred in
+good stead in case of a reverse. But the few hours during which the army
+halted on Clay hill would have been quite too short time for such an
+undertaking, which, moreover, would have exhausted the troops. It is
+more likely that the earthworks, which are of the oldest type, similar
+to those at White Horse hill, above Ashdown, were there long before
+Alfred's arrival in May, 878. After resting one night on Clay hill,
+Alfred led out his men in close order of battle against the pagan host,
+which lay at Ethandune. There has been much doubt among the antiquaries
+as to the site of Ethandune, but Dr. Giles and others have at length
+established the claims of Edington, a village seven miles from Clay
+hill, on the northeast, to the spot where the strength of the second
+wave of pagan invasion was utterly broken and rolled back weak and
+helpless from the rock of the West Saxon kingdom.
+
+Sir John Spelman, relying apparently only on the authority of Nicholas
+Harpesfeld's _Ecclesiastical History of England_, puts a speech into
+Alfred's mouth, which he is supposed to have delivered before the battle
+of Edington. He tells them that the great sufferings of the land had
+been yet far short of what their sins had deserved. That God had only
+dealt with them as a loving Father, and was now about to succor them,
+having already stricken their foe with fear and astonishment, and given
+him, on the other hand, much encouragement by dreams and otherwise. That
+they had to do with pirates and robbers, who had broken faith with them
+over and over again; and the issue they had to try that day was whether
+Christ's faith or heathenism was henceforth to be established in
+England.
+
+There is no trace of any such speech in the _Saxon Chronicle_ or Asser,
+and the one reported does not ring like that of Judas Maccabaeus. That
+Alfred's soul was on fire that morning, on finding himself once more at
+the head of a force he could rely on, and before the enemy he had met so
+often, we may be sure enough, but shall never know how the fire kindled
+into speech, if indeed it did so at all. In such supreme moments many of
+the strongest men have no word to say--keep all their heat within.
+
+Nor have we any clew to the numbers who fought on either side at
+Ethandune, or indeed in any of Alfred's battles. In the _Chronicles_
+there are only a few vague and general statements, from which little can
+be gathered. The most precise of them is that in the _Saxon Chronicle_,
+which gives eight hundred and forty as the number of men who were slain,
+as we heard, with Hubba before Cynuit fort, in Devonshire, earlier in
+this same year. Such a death-roll, in an action in which only a small
+detachment of the pagan army was engaged, would lead to the conclusion
+that the armies were far larger than one would expect. On the other
+hand, it is difficult to imagine how any large bodies of men could find
+subsistence in a small country, which was the seat of so devastating a
+war, and in which so much land remained still unreclaimed. But whatever
+the power on either side amounted to we may be quite sure that it had
+been exerted to the utmost to bring as large a force as possible into
+line at Ethandune.
+
+Guthrum fought to protect Chippenham, his base of operations, some
+sixteen miles in his rear, and all the accumulated plunder of the busy
+months which had passed since Twelfth Night; and it is clear that his
+men behaved with the most desperate gallantry. The fight began at
+noon--one chronicler says at sunrise, but the distance makes this
+impossible unless Alfred marched in the night--and lasted through the
+greater part of the day. Warned by many previous disasters the Saxons
+never broke their close order, and so, though greatly outnumbered,
+hurled back again and again the onslaughts of the Northmen. At last
+Alfred and his Saxons prevailed, and smote his pagan foes with a very
+great slaughter, and pursued them up to their fortified camp on Bratton
+hill or Edge, into which the great body of the fugitives threw
+themselves. All who were left outside were slain, and the great spoil
+was all recovered. The camp may still be seen, called Bratton Castle,
+with its double ditches and deep trenches, and barrow in the midst sixty
+yards long, and its two entrances guarded by mounds. It contains more
+than twenty acres, and commands the whole country side. There can be
+little doubt that this camp, and not Chippenham, which is sixteen miles
+away, was the last refuge of Guthrum and the great northern army on
+Saxon soil.
+
+So, in three days from the breaking up of his little camp at Athelney,
+Alfred was once more King of all England south of the Thames; for this
+army of pagans, shut up within their earthworks on Bratton Edge, are
+little better than a broken and disorderly rabble, with no supplies and
+no chance of succor from any quarter. Nevertheless he will make sure of
+them, and above all will guard jealously against any such mishap as that
+of 876, when they stole out of Wareham, murdered the horsemen he had
+left to watch them, and got away to Exeter. So Bratton camp is strictly
+besieged by Alfred with his whole power.
+
+Guthrum, the destroyer, and now the King of East Anglia, the strongest
+and ablest of all the Northmen who had ever landed in England, is now at
+last fairly in Alfred's power. At Reading, Wareham, Exeter, he had
+always held a fortified camp, on a river easily navigable by the Danish
+war-ships, where he might look for speedy succor or whence at the worst
+he might hope to escape to the sea. But now he, with the remains of his
+army, is shut up in an inland fort with no ships on the Avon, the
+nearest river, even if they could cut their way out and reach it, and no
+hopes of reinforcements overland. Halfdene is the nearest viking who
+might be called to the rescue, and he, in Northumbria, is far too
+distant. It is a matter of a few days only, for food runs short at once
+in the besieged camp. In former years, or against any other enemy,
+Guthrum would probably have preferred to sally out and cut his way
+through the Saxon lines, or die sword in hand as a son of Odin should.
+Whether it were that the wild spirit in him is thoroughly broken for the
+time by the unexpected defeat at Ethandune, or that long residence in a
+Christian land and contact with Christian subjects have shaken his faith
+in his own gods, or that he has learned to measure and appreciate the
+strength and nobleness of the man he had so often deceived, at any rate
+for the time Guthrum is subdued. At the end of fourteen days he sends to
+Alfred, suing humbly for terms of any kind; offering on the part of the
+army as many hostages as may be required, without asking for any in
+return; once again giving solemn pledges to quit Wessex for good; and,
+above all, declaring his own readiness to receive baptism. If it had not
+been for the last proposal, we may doubt whether even Alfred would have
+allowed the ruthless foes with whom he and his people had fought so
+often, and with such varying success, to escape now. Over and over again
+they had sworn to him, and broken their oaths the moment it suited their
+purpose; had given hostages, and left them to their fate. In all English
+kingdoms they had now for ten years been destroying and pillaging the
+houses of God and slaying even women and children. They had driven his
+sister's husband from the throne of Mercia, and had grievously tortured
+the martyr Edmund. If ever foe deserved no mercy, Guthrum and his army
+were the men.
+
+When David smote the children of Moab, he "measured them with a line,
+casting them down to the ground; even with two lines measured he to put
+to death, and with one full line to keep alive." When he took Rabbah of
+the children of Ammon, "he brought forth the people that were therein,
+and put them under saws and under harrows of iron, and under axes of
+iron, and made them pass through the brick-kiln." That was the old
+Hebrew method, even under King David, and in the ninth century
+Christianity had as yet done little to soften the old heathen custom of
+"woe to the vanquished." Charlemagne's proselytizing campaigns had been
+as merciless as Mahomet's. But there is about this English King a divine
+patience, the rarest of all virtues in those who are set in high places.
+He accepts Guthrum's proffered terms at once, rejoicing over the chance
+of adding these fierce heathen warriors to the church of his Master, by
+an act of mercy which even they must feel. And so the remnant of the
+army are allowed to march out of their fortified camp, and to recross
+the Avon into Mercia, not quite five months after the day of their
+winter attack and the seizing of Chippenham. The northern army went away
+to Cirencester, where they stayed over the winter, and then returning
+into East Anglia settled down there, and Alfred and Wessex hear no more
+of them. Never was triumph more complete or better deserved; and in all
+history there is no instance of more noble use of victory than this. The
+West Saxon army was not at once disbanded. Alfred led them back to
+Athelney, where he had left his wife and children; and while they are
+there, seven weeks after the surrender, Guthrum and thirty of the
+bravest of his followers arrive to make good their pledge.
+
+The ceremony of baptism was performed at Wedmore, a royal residence
+which had probably escaped the fate of Chippenham, and still contained a
+church. Here Guthrum and his thirty nobles were sworn in, the soldiers
+of a greater King than Woden, and the white linen cloth, the sign of
+their new faith, was bound round their heads. Alfred himself was
+godfather to the viking, giving him the Christian name of Athelstan; and
+the chrism-loosing, or unbinding of the sacramental cloths, was
+performed on the eighth day by Ethelnoth, the faithful alderman of
+Somersetshire. After the religious ceremony there still remained the
+task of settling the terms upon which the victors and vanquished were
+hereafter to live together side by side in the same island; for Alfred
+had the wisdom, even in his enemy's humiliation, to accept the
+accomplished fact, and to acknowledge East Anglia as a Danish kingdom.
+The Witenagemot had been summoned to Wedmore, and was sitting there, and
+with their advice the treaty was then made, from which, according to
+some historians, English history begins.
+
+We have still the text of the two documents which together contain
+Alfred and Guthrum's peace, or the treaty of Wedmore; the first and
+shorter being probably the articles hastily agreed on before the
+capitulation of the Danish army at Chippenham; the latter the final
+terms settled between Alfred and his witan, and Guthrum and his thirty
+nobles, after mature deliberation and conference at Wedmore, but not
+formally executed until some years later.
+
+The shorter one, that made at the capitulation, runs as follows:
+
+"ALFRED AND GUTHRUM'S PEACE.--This is the peace that King Alfred and
+King Guthrum, and the witan of all the English nation, and all the
+people that are in East Anglia have all ordained, and with oaths
+confirmed, for themselves and their descendants, as well for born as
+unborn, who reck of God's mercy or of ours.
+
+"First, concerning our land boundaries. These are upon the Thames, and
+then upon the Lea, and along the Lea unto its source, then straight to
+Bedford, then up the Ouse to Watling Street.
+
+"Then there is this: if a man be slain we reckon all equally dear,
+English and Dane, at eight half marks of pure gold, except the churl who
+dwells on gavel land and their leisings, they are also equally dear at
+two hundred shillings. And if a king's thane be accused of manslaughter,
+if he desire to clear himself, let him do so before twelve king's
+thanes. If any man accuse a man who is of less degree than king's thane,
+let him clear himself with eleven of his equals and one king's thane.
+And so in every suit which be for more than four mancuses; and if he
+dare not, let him pay for it threefold, as it may be valued.
+
+"_Of Warrantors_.--And that every man know his warrantor, for men, and
+for horses, and for oxen.
+
+"And we all ordained, on that day that the oaths were sworn, that
+neither bondman nor freeman might go to the army without leave, nor any
+of them to us. But if it happen that any of them from necessity will
+have traffic with us, or we with them, for cattle or goods, that is to
+be allowed on this wise: that hostages be given in pledge of peace, and
+as evidence whereby it may be known that the party has a clean book."
+
+By the treaty Alfred is thus established as King of the whole of England
+south of the Thames; of all the old kingdom of Essex south of the Lea,
+including London, Hertford, and St. Albans; of the whole of the great
+kingdom of Mercia, which lay to the west of Watling Street, and of so
+much to the east as lay south of the Ouse. That he should have regained
+so much proves the straits to which he had brought the northern army,
+who would have to give up all their new settlements round Gloster. That
+he should have resigned so much of the kingdom which had acknowledged
+his grandfather, father, and brothers as overlords proves how formidable
+his foe still was, even in defeat, and how thoroughly the northeastern
+parts of the island had by this time been settled by the Danes.
+
+The remainder of the short treaty would seem simply to be provisional,
+and intended to settle the relations between Alfred's subjects and the
+army while it remained within the limits of the new Saxon kingdom. Many
+of the soldiers would have to break up their homes in Glostershire; and,
+with this view, the halt at Cirencester is allowed, where, as we have
+already heard, they rest until the winter. While they remain in the
+Saxon kingdom there is to be no distinction between Saxon and Dane. The
+were-gild, or life-ransom, is to be the same in each case for men of
+like rank; and all suits for more than four mancuses (about twenty-four
+shillings) are to be tried by a jury of peers of the accused. On the
+other hand, only necessary communications are to be allowed between the
+northern army and the people; and where there must be trading, fair and
+peaceful dealing is to be insured by the giving of hostages. This last
+provision, and the clause declaring that each man shall know his
+warrantor, inserted in a five-clause treaty, where nothing but what the
+contracting parties must hold to be of the very first importance would
+find place, are another curious proof of the care with which our
+ancestors, and all Germanic tribes, guarded against social
+isolation--the doctrine that one man has nothing to do with another--a
+doctrine which the great body of their descendants, under the leading of
+Schultze, Delitzsch, and others, seem likely to repudiate with equal
+emphasis in these latter days, both in Germany and England.
+
+Thus, in July, 878, the foundations of the new kingdom of England were
+laid, for new it undoubtedly became when the treaty of Wedmore was
+signed. The Danish nation, no longer strangers and enemies, are
+recognized by the heir of Cerdic as lawful owners of the full half of
+England. Having achieved which result, Guthrum and the rest of the new
+converts leave the Saxon camp and return to Cirencester at the end of
+twelve days, loaded with such gifts as it was still in the power of
+their conquerors to bestow: and Alfred was left in peace, to turn to a
+greater and more arduous task than any he had yet encountered.
+
+
+JOHN RICHARD GREEN
+
+Alfred was the noblest as he was the most complete embodiment of all
+that is great, all that is lovable, in the English temper. He combined
+as no other man has ever combined its practical energy, its patient and
+enduring force, its profound sense of duty, the reserve and self-control
+that steady in it a wide outlook and a restless daring, its temperance
+and fairness, its frank geniality, its sensitiveness to action, its
+poetic tenderness, its deep and passionate religion. Religion, indeed,
+was the groundwork of Alfred's character. His temper was instinct with
+piety. Everywhere throughout his writings that remain to us the name of
+God, the thought of God, stir him to outbursts of ecstatic adoration.
+
+But he was no mere saint. He felt none of that scorn of the world about
+him which drove the nobler souls of his day to monastery or hermitage.
+Vexed as he was by sickness and constant pain, his temper took no touch
+of asceticism. His rare geniality, a peculiar elasticity and mobility of
+nature, gave color and charm to his life. A sunny frankness and openness
+of spirit breathe in the pleasant chat of his books, and what he was in
+his books he showed himself in his daily converse. Alfred was in truth
+an artist, and both the lights and shadows of his life were those of the
+artistic temperament. His love of books, his love of strangers, his
+questionings of travellers and scholars, betray an imaginative
+restlessness that longs to break out of the narrow world of experience
+which hemmed him in. At one time he jots down news of a voyage to the
+unknown seas of the north. At another he listens to tidings which his
+envoys bring back from the churches of Malabar.
+
+And side by side with this restless outlook of the artistic nature he
+showed its tenderness and susceptibility, its vivid apprehension of
+unseen danger, its craving for affection, its sensitiveness to wrong. It
+was with himself rather than with his reader that he communed as
+thoughts of the foe without, of ingratitude and opposition within, broke
+the calm pages of Gregory or Boethius.
+
+"Oh, what a happy man was he," he cries once, "that man that had a naked
+sword hanging over his head from a single thread; so as to me it always
+did!" "Desirest thou power?" he asks at another time. "But thou shalt
+never obtain it without sorrows--sorrows from strange folk, and yet
+keener sorrows from thine own kindred." "Hardship and sorrow!" he breaks
+out again; "not a king but would wish to be without these if he could.
+But I know that he cannot!"
+
+The loneliness which breathes in words like these has often begotten in
+great rulers a cynical contempt of men and the judgments of men. But
+cynicism found no echo in the large and sympathetic temper of Alfred. He
+not only longed for the love of his subjects, but for the remembrance of
+"generations" to come. Nor did his inner gloom or anxiety check for an
+instant his vivid and versatile activity. To the scholars he gathered
+round him he seemed the very type of a scholar, snatching every hour he
+could find to read or listen to books read to him. The singers of his
+court found in him a brother singer, gathering the old songs of his
+people to teach them to his children, breaking his renderings from the
+Latin with simple verse, solacing himself in hours of depression with
+the music of the Psalms.
+
+He passed from court and study to plan buildings and instruct craftsmen
+in gold work, to teach even falconers and dog-keepers their business.
+But all this versatility and ingenuity was controlled by a cool good
+sense. Alfred was a thorough man of business. He was careful of detail,
+laborious, methodical. He carried in his bosom a little handbook in
+which he noted things as they struck him--now a bit of family genealogy,
+now a prayer, now such a story as that of Ealdhelm playing minstrel on
+the bridge. Each hour of the day had its appointed task; there was the
+same order in the division of his revenue and in the arrangement of his
+court.
+
+Wide, however, and various as was the King's temper, its range was less
+wonderful than its harmony. Of the narrowness, of the want of
+proportion, of the predominance of one quality over another which go
+commonly with an intensity of moral purpose Alfred showed not a trace.
+Scholar and soldier, artist and man of business, poet and saint, his
+character kept that perfect balance which charms us in no other
+Englishman save Shakespeare. But full and harmonious as his temper was,
+it was the temper of a king. Every power was bent to the work of rule.
+His practical energy found scope for itself in the material and
+administrative restoration of the wasted land.
+
+His intellectual activity breathed fresh life into education and
+literature. His capacity for inspiring trust and affection drew the
+hearts of Englishmen to a common centre, and began the upbuilding of a
+new England. And all was guided, controlled, ennobled by a single aim.
+"So long as I have lived," said the King as life closed about him, "I
+have striven to live worthily." Little by little men came to know what
+such a life of worthiness meant. Little by little they came to recognize
+in Alfred a ruler of higher and nobler stamp than the world had seen.
+Never had it seen a king who lived solely for the good of his people.
+Never had it seen a ruler who set aside every personal aim to devote
+himself solely to the welfare of those whom he ruled. It was this grand
+self-mastery that gave him his power over the men about him. Warrior and
+conqueror as he was, they saw him set aside at thirty the warrior's
+dream of conquest; and the self-renouncement of Wedmore struck the
+keynote of his reign. But still more is it this height and singleness of
+purpose, this absolute concentration of the noblest faculties to the
+noblest aim, that lifts Alfred out of the narrow bounds of Wessex.
+
+If the sphere of his action seems too small to justify the comparison of
+him with the few whom the world owns as its greatest men, he rises to
+their level in the moral grandeur of his life. And it is this which has
+hallowed his memory among his own English people. "I desire," said the
+King in some of his latest words, "I desire to leave to the men that
+come after me a remembrance of me in good works."
+
+His aim has been more than fulfilled. His memory has come down to us
+with a living distinctness through the mists of exaggeration and legend
+which time gathered round it. The instinct of the people has clung to
+him with a singular affection. The love which he won a thousand years
+ago has lingered round his name from that day to this. While every other
+name of those earlier times has all but faded from the recollection of
+Englishmen, that of Alfred remains familiar to every English child.
+
+The secret of Alfred's government lay in his own vivid energy. He could
+hardly have chosen braver or more active helpers than those whom he
+employed both in his political and in his educational efforts. The
+children whom he trained to rule proved the ablest rulers of their time.
+But at the outset of his reign he stood alone, and what work was to be
+done was done by the King himself. His first efforts were directed to
+the material restoration of his realm. The burnt and wasted country saw
+its towns built again, forts erected in positions of danger, new abbeys
+founded, the machinery of justice and government restored, the laws
+codified and amended. Still more strenuous were Alfred's efforts for its
+moral and intellectual restoration. Even in Mercia and Northumbria the
+pirate's sword had left few survivors of the schools of Egbert or Bede,
+and matters were even worse in Wessex, which had been as yet the most
+ignorant of the English kingdoms.
+
+"When I began to reign," said Alfred, "I cannot remember one priest
+south of the Thames who could render his service-book into English." For
+instructors indeed he could find only a few Mercian prelates and
+priests, with one Welsh bishop, Asser.
+
+"Formerly," the King writes bitterly, "men came hither from foreign
+lands to seek for instruction, and now when we desire it we can only
+obtain it from abroad." But his mind was far from being prisoned within
+his own island. He sent a Norwegian shipmaster to explore the White Sea,
+and Wulfstan to trace the coast of Esthonia; envoys bore his presents to
+the churches of India and Jerusalem, and an annual mission carried
+Peter's pence to Rome.
+
+But it was with the Franks that his intercourse was closest, and it was
+from them that he drew the scholars to aid him in his work of education.
+A scholar named Grimbald came from St. Omer to preside over his new
+abbey at Winchester; and John, the old Saxon, was fetched from the abbey
+of Corbey to rule a monastery and school that Alfred's gratitude for his
+deliverance from the Danes raised in the marshes of Athelney. The real
+work, however, to be done was done, not by these teachers, but by the
+King himself. Alfred established a school for the young nobles in his
+court, and it was to the need of books for these scholars in their own
+tongue that we owe his most remarkable literary effort.
+
+He took his books as he found them--they were the popular manuals of his
+age--the _Consolation of Boethius_, the _Pastoral_ of Pope Gregory, the
+compilation of Orosius, then the one accessible handbook of universal
+history, and the history of his own people by Bede. He translated these
+works into English, but he was far more than a translator, he was an
+editor for the people. Here he omitted, there he expanded. He enriched
+Orosius by a sketch of the new geographical discoveries in the north. He
+gave a West Saxon form to his selections from Bede. In one place he
+stops to explain his theory of government, his wish for a thicker
+population, his conception of national welfare as consisting in a due
+balance of priest, soldier, and churl. The mention of Nero spurs him to
+an outbreak on the abuses of power. The cold providence of Boethius
+gives way to an enthusiastic acknowledgment of the goodness of God.
+
+As he writes, his large-hearted nature flings off its royal mantle, and
+he talks as a man to men. "Do not blame me," he prays with a charming
+simplicity, "if any know Latin better than I, for every man must say
+what he says and do what he does according to his ability."
+
+But simple as was his aim, Alfred changed the whole front of our
+literature. Before him, England possessed in her own tongue one great
+poem and a train of ballads and battle-songs. Prose she had none. The
+mighty roll of the prose books that fill her libraries begins with the
+translations of Alfred, and above all with the chronicle of his reign.
+It seems likely that the King's rendering of Bede's history gave the
+first impulse toward the compilation of what is known as the English or
+_Anglo-Saxon Chronicle_, which was certainly thrown into its present
+form during his reign. The meagre lists of the kings of Wessex and the
+bishops of Winchester, which had been preserved from older times, were
+roughly expanded into a national history by insertions from Bede; but it
+is when it reaches the reign of Alfred that the chronicle suddenly
+widens into the vigorous narrative, full of life and originality, that
+marks the gift of a new power to the English tongue. Varying as it does
+from age to age in historic value, it remains the first vernacular
+history of any Teutonic people, and, save for the Gothic translations of
+Ulfilas, the earliest and most venerable monument of Teutonic prose.
+
+But all this literary activity was only a part of that general
+upbuilding of Wessex by which Alfred was preparing for a fresh contest
+with the stranger. He knew that the actual winning back of the Danelagh
+must be a work of the sword, and through these long years of peace he
+was busy with the creation of such a force as might match that of the
+Northmen. A fleet grew out of the little squadron which Alfred had been
+forced to man with Frisian seamen.
+
+The national _fyrd_ or levy of all freemen at the King's call was
+reorganized. It was now divided into two halves, one of which served in
+the field while the other guarded its own _burhs_ (burghs or boroughs)
+and townships, and served to relieve its fellow when the men's forty
+days of service were ended. A more disciplined military force was
+provided by subjecting all owners of five hides of land to
+"thane-service," a step which recognized the change that had now
+substituted the _thegn_ for the _eorl_ and in which we see the beginning
+of a feudal system. How effective these measures were was seen when the
+new resistance they met on the Continent drove the Northmen to a fresh
+attack on Britain.
+
+In 893 a large fleet steered for the Andredsweald, while the sea-king
+Hasting entered the Thames. Alfred held both at bay through the year
+till the men of the Danelagh rose at their comrades' call. Wessex stood
+again front to front with the Northmen. But the King's measures had made
+the realm strong enough to set aside its old policy of defence for one
+of vigorous attack. His son Edward and his son-in-law Ethelred, whom he
+had set as ealdorman[23] over what remained of Mercia, showed themselves
+as skilful and active as the King.
+
+[Footnote 23: Primitive of alderman; in this period, a chieftain, lord,
+or earl; subsequently, the chief magistrate of a territorial district,
+as of a county or province.]
+
+The aim of the Northmen was to rouse again the hostility of the Welsh,
+but while Alfred held Exeter against their fleet, Edward and Ethelred
+caught their army near the Severn and overthrew it with a vast slaughter
+at Buttington. The destruction of their camp on the Lea by the united
+English forces ended the war; in 897 Hasting again withdrew across the
+Channel, and the Danelagh made peace. It was with the peace he had won
+still about him that Alfred died in 901; and warrior as his son Edward
+had shown himself, he clung to his father's policy of rest.
+
+
+
+
+HENRY THE FOWLER FOUNDS THE SAXON LINE OF GERMAN KINGS
+
+ORIGIN OF THE GERMAN BURGHERS OR MIDDLE CLASSES
+
+A.D. 911-936
+
+WOLFGANG MENZEL
+
+
+(The famous treaty of Verdun [843] was the culmination of a series of
+civil wars between the descendants of Charlemagne. By it the great
+empire which Charlemagne had built up was divided among his three
+grandsons, Lothair, Charles the Bald, and Louis. With this treaty the
+history of the Franks closes, and Germany and France take their places,
+along with Italy, as distinct and separate nations.
+
+The Teutonic kingdom, or Germany, fell to Louis. On his death, in 876,
+after an uneventful reign, he was succeeded by his sons Charles the Fat,
+Carloman, and Louis. The latter two dying, Charles the Fat became sole
+King of Germany. A little later he became ruler of Italy, and was
+crowned emperor by the pope. Then he was invited by the West Franks to
+become their king. Thus almost the whole empire of the great Charlemagne
+was reunited in the hands of Charles the Fat. However, his people soon
+became disgusted with his weak efforts in the treatment of a series of
+invasions by the Northmen, and he was deposed in 887. He died the next
+year, and the Carlovingian empire fell to pieces, never to be united
+again.
+
+Charles the Fat was succeeded in Germany by his nephew, Arnulf, who also
+took possession of Italy and was crowned emperor by the pope, though his
+power in Italy was merely nominal. On his death in 889 his second son,
+Ludwig [Louis III] the child, became king in Germany.
+
+The race of Charlemagne in Germany ended in 911 by the death of Ludwig.
+Though a mere child he had been enthroned through the intrigues of Otto,
+Duke of Saxony, and Hatto, Archbishop of Mayence, who virtually governed
+the empire during Ludwig's short reign.
+
+The empire at that time was composed of various nations, each under the
+rule of a powerful duke. The bond of union between these nations was
+slight. The dukes were constantly waging war against each other, and
+these internal dissensions greatly weakened the central government.
+
+At the same time the empire was exposed to the incursions of the Magyars
+or Hungarians, whose wholesale depredations and cruelties so dismayed
+the child-king that he concluded a treaty of peace with the invaders and
+consented to pay them a ten-years' tribute.
+
+The Germans were deeply sensible of the dishonor incurred by this
+ignominious tribute, and of the dangers of their internal dissensions.
+They longed for a stronger government, and on the death of Ludwig the
+crown was offered to Otto of Saxony, the strongest of the dukes. He
+declined in favor of Conrad, Duke of Franconia, a descendant in the
+female line from Charlemagne. But Conrad's rule was weak, and during his
+short reign of seven years civil war continued, part of the time with
+Henry the Fowler, son of Duke Otto [who died in 912], owing to Conrad's
+attempt to separate Thuringia from Saxony in order to weaken Henry's
+ducal power. The empire also was again invaded by the Slavs and
+Hungarians.
+
+Conrad died without male issue in 918, whereupon the Germans elected as
+emperor Henry the Fowler, who thus became the first of the Saxon dynasty
+in Germany, and proved himself to be the wisest and most vigorous
+sovereign who had ruled in Germany since the days of Charlemagne.)
+
+
+The extinction of the Carlovingian line did not sever the bond of union
+that existed between the different nations of Germany, although a
+contention arose between them concerning the election of the new
+emperor, each claiming that privilege for itself; and as the increase of
+the ducal power had naturally led to a wider distinction between them,
+the diet convoked for the purpose represented nations instead of
+classes. There were consequently four nations and four votes: the Franks
+under Duke Conrad, whose authority, nevertheless, could not compete with
+that of the now venerable Hatto, Archbishop of Mayence, who may be said
+to have been, at that period, the pope in Germany; the Saxons,
+Frieslanders, Thuringians, and some of the subdued Slavi, under Duke
+Otto; the Swabians, with Switzerland and Elsace, under different
+_grafs_, who, as the immediate officers of the crown, were named
+_kammerboten_, in order to distinguish them from the grafs nominated by
+the dukes; the Bavarians, with the Tyrolese and some of the subdued
+eastern Slavi, under Duke Arnulf the Bad, the son of the brave duke
+Luitpold. The Lothringians formed a fifth nation, under their duke
+Regingar, but were at that period incorporated with France.
+
+The first impulse of the diet was to bestow the crown on the most
+powerful among the different competitors, and it was accordingly offered
+to Otto of Saxony, who not only possessed the most extensive territory
+and the most warlike subjects, but whose authority, having descended to
+him from his father and grandfather, was also the most firmly secured.
+But both Otto and his ancient ally, the bishop Hatto, had found the
+system they had hitherto pursued, of reigning in the name of an imbecile
+monarch, so greatly conducive to their interest that they were
+disinclined to abandon it. Otto was a man who mistook the prudence
+inculcated by private interest for wisdom, and his mind, narrow as the
+limits of his dukedom, and solely intent upon the interests of his
+family, was incapable of the comprehensive views requisite in a German
+emperor, and indifferent to the welfare of the great body of the nation.
+The examples of Boso, of Odo, of Rudolph of Upper Burgundy, and of
+Berenger, who, favored by the difference in descent of the people they
+governed, had all succeeded in severing themselves from the empire, were
+ever present to his imagination, and he believed that as, on the other
+side of the Rhine, the Frank, the Burgundian, and the Lombard severally
+obeyed an independent sovereign, the East Frank, the Saxon, the Swabian,
+and the Bavarian, on this side of the Rhine, were also desirous of
+asserting a similar independence, and that it would be easier and less
+hazardous to found a hereditary dukedom in a powerful and separate state
+than to maintain the imperial dignity, undermined, as it was, by
+universal hostility.
+
+The influence of Hatto and the consent of Otto placed Conrad, Duke of
+Franconia, on the imperial throne. Sprung from a newly risen family, a
+mere creature of the bishop, his nobility as a feudal lord only dating
+from the period of the Babenberg feud, he was regarded by the Church as
+a pliable tool and by the dukes as little to be feared. His weakness was
+quickly demonstrated by his inability to retain the rich allods of the
+Carlovingian dynasty as heir to the imperial crown, and his being
+constrained to share them with the rest of the dukes; he was,
+nevertheless, more fully sensible of the dignity and of the duties of
+his station than those to whom he owed his election probably expected.
+His first step was to recall Regingar of Lothringia, who was oppressed
+by France, to his allegiance as vassal of the empire.
+
+Otto died in 912, and his son Henry, a high-spirited youth, who had
+greatly distinguished himself against the Slavi, ere long quarrelled
+with the aged bishop Hatto. According to the legendary account, the
+bishop sent him a golden chain so skilfully contrived as to strangle its
+wearer. The truth is that the ancient family feud between the house of
+Conrad and that of Otto, which was connected with the Babenbergers,
+again broke out, and that the Emperor attempted again to separate
+Thuringia, which Otto had governed since the death of Burkhard, from
+Saxony, in order to hinder the overpreponderance of that ducal house.
+Hatto, it is probable, counselled this step, as a considerable portion
+of Thuringia belonged to the diocese of Mayence, and a collision between
+him and the duke was therefore unavoidable. Henry flew to arms, and
+expelled the adherents of the bishop from Thuringia, which forced the
+Emperor to take the field in the name of the empire against his haughty
+vassal. This unfortunate civil war was a signal for a fresh irruption of
+the Slavi and Hungarians. During this year the Bohemians and Sorbi also
+made an inroad into Thuringia and Bavaria, and in 913 the Hungarians
+advanced as far as Swabia, but being surprised near Oetting by the
+Bavarians under Arnulf, who on this occasion bloodily avenged his
+father's death, and by the Swabians under the kammerboten Erchanger and
+Berthold, they were all, with the exception of thirty of their number,
+cut to pieces. Arnulf subsequently embraced a contrary line of policy,
+married the daughter of Geisa, King of Hungary, and entered into a
+confederacy with the Hungarian and the Swabian kammerboten, for the
+purpose of founding an independent state in the south of Germany, where
+he had already strengthened himself by the appointment of several
+markgrafs, Rudiger of Pechlarn in Austria, Rathold in Carinthia, and
+Berthold in the Tyrol. He then instigated all the enemies of the empire
+simultaneously to attack the Franks and Saxons, at that crisis at war
+with each other, in 915, and while the Danes under Gorm the Old, and the
+Obotrites, destroyed Hamburg, immense hordes of Hungarians, Bohemians,
+and Sorbi laid the country waste as far as Bremen.
+
+The Emperor was, meanwhile, engaged with the Saxons. On one occasion
+Henry narrowly escaped being taken prisoner, being merely saved by the
+stratagem of his faithful servant, Thiatmar, who caused the Emperor to
+retreat by falsely announcing to him the arrival of a body of
+auxiliaries. At length a pitched battle was fought near Merseburg, in
+915, between Henry and Eberhard, the Emperor's brother, in which the
+Franks[24] were defeated, and the superiority of the Saxons remained,
+henceforward, unquestioned for more than a century. The Emperor was
+forced to negotiate with the victor, whom he induced to protect the
+northern frontiers of the empire while he applied himself in person to
+the reestablishment of order in the south.
+
+[Footnote 24: So great a slaughter took place that the Saxons said on
+the occasion:
+
+ "'Twere difficult to find a hell
+ Where so many Franks might dwell!"]
+
+In Swabia, Salomon, Bishop of Constance, who was supported by the
+commonalty, adhered to the imperial cause, while the kammerboten were
+unable to palliate their treason, and were gradually driven to
+extremities. Erchanger, relying upon aid from Arnulf and the Hungarians,
+usurped the ducal crown and took the bishop prisoner. Salomon's extreme
+popularity filled him with such rage that he caused the feet of some
+shepherds, who threw themselves on their knees as the captured prelate
+passed by, to be chopped off. His wife, Bertha, terror-stricken at the
+rashness of her husband, and foreseeing his destruction, received the
+prisoner with every demonstration of humility, and secretly aided his
+escape. He no sooner reappeared than the people flocked in thousands
+around him. "_Heil Herro! Heil Liebo!_" ("Hail, master! Hail, beloved
+one!") they shouted, and in their zeal attacked and defeated the
+traitors and their adherents. Berthold vainly defended himself in his
+mountain stronghold of Hohentwiel. The people so urgently demanded the
+death of these traitors to their country that the Emperor convoked a
+general assembly at Albingen in Swabia, sentenced Erchanger and Berthold
+to be publicly beheaded, and nominated Burkhard, in 917, whose father
+and uncle had been assassinated by order of Erchanger, as successor to
+the ducal throne. Arnulf withdrew to his fortress at Salzburg, and
+quietly awaited more favorable times. His name was branded with infamy
+by the people, who henceforth affixed to it the epithet of "the Bad,"
+and the _Nibelungenlied_ has perpetuated his detested memory.
+
+Conrad died in 918 without issue. On his death-bed, mindful only of the
+welfare of the empire, he proved himself deserving even by his latest
+act of the crown he had so worthily worn, by charging his brother
+Eberhard to forget the ancient feud between their houses, and to deliver
+the crown with his own hands to his enemy, the free-spirited Henry, whom
+he judged alone capable of meeting all the exigencies of the State.
+Eberhard obeyed his brother's injunctions, and the princes respected the
+will of their dying sovereign.
+
+The princes, with the exception of Burkhard and of Arnulf, assembled at
+Fritzlar, elected the absent Henry king, and despatched an embassy to
+inform him of their decision. It is said that the young duke was at the
+time among the Harz Mountains, and that the ambassadors found him in the
+homely attire of a sportsman in the fowling floor. He obeyed the call of
+the nation without delay and without manifesting surprise. The error he
+had committed in rebelling against the State, it was his firm purpose to
+atone for by his conduct as emperor. Of a lofty and majestic stature,
+although slight and youthful in form, powerful and active in person,
+with a commanding and penetrating glance, his very appearance attracted
+popular favor; besides these personal advantages, he was prudent and
+learned, and possessed a mind replete with intelligence. The influence
+of such a monarch on the progressive development of society in Germany
+could not fail of producing results fully equalling the improvements
+introduced by Charlemagne.
+
+The youthful Henry, the first of the Saxon line, was proclaimed king of
+Germany at Fritzlar, in 919, by the majority of votes, and, according to
+ancient custom, raised upon the shield. The Archbishop of Mayence
+offered to anoint him according to the usual ceremony, but Henry
+refused, alleging that he was content to owe his election to the grace
+of God and to the piety of the German princes, and that he left the
+ceremony of anointment to those who wished to be still more pious.
+
+Before Henry could pursue his more elevated projects, the assent of the
+southern Germans, who had not acknowledged the choice of their northern
+compatriots, had to be gained. Burkhard of Swabia, who had asserted his
+independence, and who was at that time carrying on a bitter feud with
+Rudolph, King of Burgundy, whom he had defeated, in 919, in a bloody
+engagement near Winterthur, was the first against whom he directed the
+united forces of the empire, in whose name he, at the same time, offered
+him peace and pardon. Burkhard, seeing himself constrained to yield,
+took the oath of fealty to the new-elected King at Worms, but continued
+to act with almost his former unlimited authority in Swabia, and even
+undertook an expedition into Italy in favor of Rudolph, with whom he had
+become reconciled. The Italians, enraged at the wantonness with which he
+mocked them, assassinated him. Henry bestowed the dukedom of Swabia on
+Hermann, one of his relations, to whom he gave Burkhard's widow in
+marriage. He also bestowed a portion of the south of Alemannia on King
+Rudolph in order to win him over, and in return received from him the
+holy lance with which the side of the Saviour had been pierced as he
+hung on the cross. Finding it no longer possible to dissolve the
+dukedoms and great fiefs, Henry, in order to strengthen the unity of the
+empire, introduced the novel policy of bestowing the dukedoms, as they
+fell vacant, on his relations and personal adherents, and of allying the
+rest of the dukes with himself by intermarriage, thus uniting the
+different powerful houses in the State into one family.
+
+Bavaria still remained in an unsettled state. Arnulf the Bad, leagued
+with the Hungarians, against whom Henry had great designs, had still
+much in his power, and Henry, resolved at any price to dissolve this
+dangerous alliance, not only concluded peace with this traitor on that
+condition, but also married his son Henry to Judith, Arnulf's daughter,
+in 921. Arnulf deprived the rich churches of great part of their
+treasures, and was consequently abhorred by the clergy, the chroniclers
+of those times, who, chiefly on that account, depicted his character in
+such unfavorable colors.
+
+In France, Charles the Simple was still the tool and jest of the
+vassals. His most dangerous enemy was Robert, Count of Paris, brother to
+Odo, the late King. Both solicited aid from Henry, but in a battle that
+shortly ensued near Soissons, Count Robert losing his life and Charles
+being defeated, Rudolph of Burgundy, one of Boso's nephews, set himself
+up as king of France, and imprisoned Charles the Simple, who craved
+assistance from the German monarch, to whom he promised to perform
+homage as his liege lord. Henry, meanwhile, contented himself with
+expelling Rudolph from Lotharingia, and, after taking possession of
+Metz, bestowed that dukedom upon Gisilbrecht, the son of Regingar, and
+reincorporated it with the empire. These successes now roused the
+apprehensions of the Hungarians, who again poured their invading hordes
+across the frontier. In 926 they plundered St. Gall, but were routed
+near Seckingen by the peasantry, headed by the country people of
+Hirminger, who had been roused by alarm fires; and again in Alsace, by
+Count Liutfried: another horde was cut to pieces near Bleiburg, in
+Carinthia, by Eberhard and the Count of Meran. The Hungarian King,
+probably Zoldan, was, by chance, taken prisoner during an incursion by
+the Germans, a circumstance turned by Henry to a very judicious use. He
+restored the captured prince to liberty, and also agreed to pay him a
+yearly tribute, on condition of his entering into a solemn truce for
+nine years. The experience of earlier times had taught Henry that a
+completely new organization was necessary in the management of military
+affairs in Germany before this dangerous enemy could be rendered
+innoxious, and, as an undertaking of this nature required time, he
+prudently resolved to incur a seeming disgrace by means of which he in
+fact secured the honor of the State. During this interval of nine years
+he aimed at bringing the other enemies of the empire, more particularly
+the Slavi, into subjection, and making preparations for an expedition
+against Hungary by which her power should receive a fatal blow.
+
+In the mean time Gisilbrecht, the youthful Duke of Lotharingia, again
+rebelled, but was besieged and taken prisoner in Zuelpich by Henry, who,
+struck by his noble appearance, restored to him his dukedom, and
+bestowed upon him his daughter, Gerberga, in marriage. Rudolph of France
+also sued for peace, being hard pressed by his powerful rival, Hugo the
+Great or Wise, the son of Robert. Charles the Simple was, on Henry's
+demand, restored to liberty, but quickly fell anew into the power of his
+faithless vassals.
+
+Peace was now established throughout the empire, and afforded Henry an
+opportunity for turning his attention to the introduction of measures,
+in the interior economy of the State, calculated to obviate for the
+future the dangers that had hitherto threatened it from without. The
+best expedient against the irruptions of the Hungarians appeared to him
+to be the circumvallation of the most important districts, the erection
+of forts and of fortified cities. The most important point, however, was
+to place the garrisons immediately under him as citizens of the State,
+commanded by his immediate officers, instead of their being indirectly
+governed by the feudal aristocracy and by the clergy. As these garrisons
+were intended not only for the protection of the walls, but also for
+open warfare, he had them trained to fight in rank and file, and formed
+them into a body of infantry, whose solid masses were calculated to
+withstand the furious onset of the Hungarian horse. These garrisons were
+solely composed of the ancient freemen, and the whole measure was, in
+fact, merely a reform of the ancient _arrier-ban_, which no longer
+sufficed for the protection of the State, and whose deficiency had long
+been supplied by the addition of vassals under the command of their
+temporal or spiritual lieges, and by the mercenaries or bodyguards of
+the emperors. The ancient class of freemen, who originally composed the
+arrier-ban, had been gradually converted into feudal vassals; but they
+were at that time still so numerous as to enable Henry to give them a
+completely new military organization, which at once secured to them
+their freedom, hitherto endangered by the preponderating power of the
+feudal aristocracy, and rendered them a powerful support to the throne.
+By collecting them into the cities, he afforded them a secure retreat
+against the attempts of the grafs, dukes, abbots, and bishops, and
+created for himself a body of trusty friends, of whom it would naturally
+be expected that they would ever side with the Emperor against the
+nobility.
+
+This new regulation appears to have been founded on the ancient mode of
+division. At first, out of every nine freemen--which recalls the
+_decania_--one only was placed within the new fortress, and the
+remaining eight were bound--perhaps on account of their ancient
+association into corporations or guilds--to nourish and support him; but
+the remaining freemen, in the neighborhood of the new cities, appear to
+have been also gradually collected within their walls, and to have
+committed the cultivation of their lands in the vicinity to their
+bondmen. However that may be, the ancient class of freemen completely
+disappeared as the cities increased in importance, and it was only among
+the wild mountains, where no cities sprang up, that the _centen_ or
+cantons and whole districts or _gauen_ of free peasantry were to be met
+with.
+
+Henry's original intention in the introduction of this new system was,
+it is evident, solely to provide a military force answering to the
+exigencies of the State; still there is no reason to suppose him blind
+to the great political advantage to be derived from the formation of an
+independent class of citizens; and that he had in reality premeditated a
+civil as well as a military reformation may be concluded from the fact
+of his having established fairs, markets, and public assemblies, which,
+of themselves, would be closely connected with civil industry, within
+the walls of the cities; and, even if these trading warriors were at
+first merely feudatories of the Emperor, they must naturally in the end
+have formed a class of free citizens, the more so as, attracted within
+the cities by the advantages offered to them, their number rapidly and
+annually increased.
+
+The same military reasons which induced the emperor Henry to enroll the
+ancient freemen into a regular corps of infantry, and to form them into
+a civil corporation, caused him also to metamorphose the feudal
+aristocracy into a regular troop of cavalry and a knightly institution.
+The wild disorder with which the mounted vassals of the empire, the
+dukes, grafs, bishops, and abbots, each distinguished by his own banner,
+rushed to the attack, or vied with each other in the fury of the
+assault, was now changed by Henry, who was well versed in every knightly
+art, to the disciplined manoeuvres of the line, and to that of fighting
+in close ranks, so well calculated to withstand the furious onset of
+their Hungarian foe. The discipline necessary for carrying these new
+military tactics into practice among a nobility habituated to license
+could alone be enforced by motives of honor, and Henry accordingly
+formed a chivalric institution, which gave rise to new manners and to an
+enthusiasm that imparted a new character to the age. The tournament--
+from the ancient verb _turnen_, to wrestle or fight, a public contest in
+every species of warfare, carried on by the knights in the presence of
+noble dames and maidens, whose favor they sought to gain by their
+prowess, and which chiefly consisted of tilting and jousting either
+singly or in troops, the day concluding with a banquet and a dance--was
+then instituted. In these tournaments the ancient heroism of the Germans
+revived; they were in reality founded upon the ancient pagan legends of
+the heroes who carried on an eternal contest in their Walhalla, in order
+to win the smiles of the Walkyren, now represented by earth's well-born
+dames.
+
+The ancient spirit of brotherhood in arms, which had been almost
+quenched by that of self-interest, by the desire of acquiring feudal
+possessions, by the slavish subjection of the vassals under their
+lieges, and by the intrigues of the bishops, who intermeddled with all
+feudal matters, also reappeared. A great universal society of Christian
+knights, bound to the observance of peculiar laws, whose highest aim was
+to fight only for God--before long also for the ladies--and who swore
+never to make use of dishonorable means for success, but solely to live
+and to die for honor, was formed; an innovation which, although merely
+military in its origin, speedily became of political importance, for, by
+means of this knightly honor, the little vassal of a minor lord was no
+longer viewed as a mere underling, but as a confederate in the great
+universal chivalric fraternity. There were also many freemen who
+sometimes gained their livelihood by offering their services to
+different courts, or by robbing on the highways, and who were too proud
+to serve on foot; Henry offered them free pardon, and formed them into a
+body of light cavalry. In the cities the free citizens, who were
+originally intended only to serve as foot soldiery, appear ere long to
+have formed themselves into mounted troops, and to have created a fresh
+body of infantry out of their artificers and apprentices. It is certain
+that every freeman could pretend to knighthood.
+
+Although the chivalric regulations ascribed to the emperor Henry, and to
+his most distinguished vassals, may not be genuine, they offer
+nevertheless infallible proofs of the most ancient spirit of knighthood.
+Henry ordained that no one should be created a knight who either by word
+or by deed injured the holy Church; the Pfalzgraf Conrad added, "no one
+who either by word or by deed injured the holy German empire"; Hermann
+of Swabia, "no one who injured a woman or a maiden"; Berthold, the
+brother of Arnulf of Bavaria, "no one who had ever deceived another or
+had broken his word"; Conrad of Franconia, "no one who had ever run away
+from the field of battle." These appear to have been, in fact, the first
+chivalric laws, for they spring from the spirit of the times, while all
+the regulations concerning nobility of birth, the number of ancestors,
+the exclusion of all those who were engaged in trade, etc., are, it is
+evident from their very nature, of a much later origin.
+
+
+
+
+CONQUEST OF EGYPT BY THE FATIMITES
+
+A.D. 969
+
+STANLEY LANE-POOLE
+
+
+(It was the fate of the religion which Mahomet founded, as it has been
+of other great systems, to undergo many sectarian divisions, and to be
+used as the instrument of conquest and political power. When Islam had
+somewhat departed from the character which it first manifested in moral
+sternness and fiery zeal, and had established itself in various parts of
+the world on a basis of commerce or of science, rather than that of its
+original inspiration, various off shoots of the faith began to assume
+prominence. Among the sects which sprang up was one that claimed to
+represent the true succession of Mahomet. This sect was itself the
+result of a schism among the adherents of one of the two principal
+divisions of the Moslems--the Shiahs. They maintained that Ali, a
+relation and the adopted son of Mahomet and husband of his daughter
+Fatima, was the first legitimate imam or successor of the prophet. They
+regarded the other and greater division--the Sunnites, who recognized
+the first three caliphs, Abu-Bekr, Omar, and Othman--as usurpers. Ali
+was the fourth caliph, and the Sunnites in turn looked upon his
+followers, the Shiahs, as heretics.
+
+The schism among the Shiahs grew out of the claim of the schismatics
+that the legitimate imam or successor of the Prophet must be in the line
+of descent from Ali. The sixth imam, Jaffer, upon the death of his
+eldest son, Ismail, appointed another son, Moussa or Moses, his heir;
+but a large body of the Shiahs denied the right of Jaffer to make a new
+nomination, declaring the imamate to be strictly hereditary. They formed
+a new party of Ismailians, and in 908 a chief of this sect, Mahomet,
+surnamed el-Mahdi, or the Leader--a title of the Shiahs for their
+imams--revolted in Africa. He called himself a descendant of Ismail and
+claimed to be the legitimate imam. He aimed at the temporal power of a
+caliph, and soon established a rival caliphate in Africa, where he had
+obtained a considerable sovereignty. The dynasty thus begun assumed the
+name of Fatimites in honor of Fatima. The fourth caliph of this line,
+El-Moizz, conquered Egypt about 969, founded the modern Cairo, and made
+it his capital. The claims of the Egyptian caliphate were heralded
+throughout all Islam, and its rule was rapidly extended into Syria and
+Arabia. It played an important part in the history of the Crusades, but
+in 1171 was abolished by the famous Saladin, and Egypt was restored to
+the obedience which it had formerly owned to Bagdad. The Bagdad caliphs,
+called Abbassides--claiming descent from Abbas, the uncle of
+Mahomet--remained rulers of Egypt until 1517, or until within twenty
+years of the death of the last Abbasside.)
+
+
+Three hundred and thirty years had passed since the Saracens first
+invaded the valley of the Nile. The people, with traditional docility,
+had liberally adopted the religion of their rulers, and the Moslems now
+formed the great majority of the population. Arabs and natives had
+blended into much the same race that we now call Egyptians; but so far
+the mixture had not produced any conspicuous men. The few commanding
+figures among the governors, Ibn-Tulun, the Ikshid, Kafur, were
+foreigners, and even these were but a step above the stereotyped
+official. They essayed no great extension of their dominions; they did
+not try to extinguish their dangerous neighbors the schismatic
+Fatimites; and though they possessed and used fleets, they ventured upon
+no excursions against Europe.
+
+The great revolution which had swept over North Africa, and now spread
+to Egypt, arose out of the old controversy over the legitimacy of the
+caliphate. The prophet Mahomet died without definitely naming a
+successor, and thereby bequeathed an interminable quarrel to his
+followers. The principle of election, thus introduced, raised the first
+three caliphs, Abu-Bekr, Omar, Othman, to the _cathedra_ at Medina; but
+a strong minority held that the "divine right" rested with Ali, the
+"Lion of God," first convert to Islam, husband of the prophet's daughter
+Fatima, and father of Mahomet's only male descendants. When Ali in turn
+became the fourth caliph, he was the mark for jealousy, intrigue, and at
+length assassination; his sons, the grandsons of the Prophet, were
+excluded from the succession; his family were cruelly persecuted by
+their successful rivals, the Ommiad usurpers; and the tragedy of Kerbela
+and the murder of Hoseyn set the seal of martyrdom on the holy family
+and stirred a passionate enthusiasm which still rouses intense
+excitement in the annual representations of the Persian passion play.
+
+The rent thus opened in Islam was never closed. The ostracism of Ali
+"laid the foundation of the grand interminable schism which has divided
+the Mahometan Church, and equally destroyed the practice of charity
+among the members of their common creed and endangered the speculative
+truths of doctrine."
+
+The descendants of Ali, though almost universally devoid of the
+qualities of great leaders, possessed the persistence and devotion of
+martyrs, and their sufferings heightened the fanatical enthusiasm of
+their supporters. All attempts to recover the temporal power having
+proved vain, the Alides fell back upon the spiritual authority of the
+successive candidates of the holy family, whom they proclaimed to be the
+imams or spiritual leaders of the faithful. This doctrine of the imamate
+gradually acquired a more mystical meaning, supported by an allegorical
+interpretation of the _Koran_; and a mysterious influence was ascribed
+to the imam, who, though hidden from mortal eye, on account of the
+persecution of his enemies, would soon come forward publicly in the
+character of the ever-expected _mahdi_, sweep away the corruptions of
+the heretical caliphate, and revive the majesty of the pure lineage of
+the prophet. All Mahometans believe in a coming mahdi, a messiah, who
+shall restore right and prepare for the second advent of Mahomet and the
+tribunal of the last day; but the Shiahs turned the expectation to
+special account. They taught that the true Imam, though invisible to
+mortal sight, is ever living; they predicted the mahdi's speedy
+appearance, and kept their adherents on the alert to take up arms in his
+service. With a view to his coming they organized a pervasive
+conspiracy, instituted a secret society with carefully graduated stages
+of initiation, used the doctrines of all religions and sects as weapons
+in the propaganda, and sent missionaries throughout the provinces of
+Islam to increase the numbers of the initiates and pave the way for the
+great revolution. We see their partial success in the ravages of the
+Karmathians, who were the true parents of the Fatimites. The leaders and
+chief missionaries had really nothing in common with Mahometanism. Among
+themselves they were frankly atheists. Their objects were political, and
+they used religion in any form, and adapted it in all modes, to secure
+proselytes, to whom they imparted only so much of their doctrine as they
+were able to bear. These men were furnished with "an armory of
+proselytism" as perfect, perhaps, as any known to history: they had
+appeals to enthusiasm, and arguments for the reason, and "fuel for the
+fiercest passions of the people and times in which they moved." Their
+real aim was not religious or constructive, but pure nihilism. They used
+the claim of the family of Ali, not because they believed in any divine
+right or any caliphate, but because some flag had to be flourished in
+order to rouse the people.
+
+One of these missionaries, disguised as a merchant, journeyed back to
+Barbary in 893, with some Berber pilgrims who had performed the sacred
+ceremonies at Mecca. He was welcomed by the great tribe of the Kitama,
+and rapidly acquired an extraordinary influence over the Berbers--a race
+prone to superstition, and easily impressed by the mysterious rites of
+initiation and the emotional doctrines of the propagandist, the wrongs
+of the prophetic house, and the approaching triumph of the Mahdi.
+Barbary had never been much attached to the caliphate, and for a century
+it had been practically independent under the Aglabite dynasty, the
+barbarous excesses of whose later sovereigns had alienated their
+subjects. Alides, moreover, had established themselves, in the dynasty
+of the Idrisides, in Morocco since the end of the eighth century. The
+land was in every respect ripe for revolution, and the success of
+Abu-Abdallah esh-Shii, the new missionary, was extraordinarily rapid. In
+a few years he had a following of two hundred thousand armed men, and
+after a series of battles he drove Ziyadat-Allah, the last Aglabite
+prince, out of the country in 908. The missionary then proclaimed the
+imam Obeid-Allah as the true caliph and spiritual head of Islam. Whether
+this Obeid-Allah was really a descendant of Ali or not, he had been
+carefully prepared for the role, and reached Barbary in disguise, with
+the greatest mystery and some difficulty, pursued by the suspicions of
+the Bagdad caliph, who, in great alarm, sent repeated orders for his
+arrest. Indeed, the victorious missionary had to rescue his spiritual
+chief from a sordid prison at Sigilmasa. Then humbly prostrating himself
+before him, he hailed him as the expected mahdi, and in January, 910, he
+was duly prayed for in the mosque of Kayrawan as "the Imam 'Obeid-Allah
+el-Mahdi, Commander of the Faithful.'"
+
+The missionary's Berber proselytes were too numerous to encourage
+resistance, and the few who indulged the luxury of conscientious
+scruples were killed or imprisoned. El-Mahdi, indeed, appeared so secure
+in power that he excited the jealousy of his discoverer.
+
+Abu-Abdallah, the missionary, now found himself nobody, where a month
+before he had been supreme. The Fatimite restoration was to him only a
+means to an end; he had used Obeid-Allah's title as an engine of
+revolution, intending to proceed to the furthest lengths of his
+philosophy, to a complete social and political anarchy, the destruction
+of Islam, community of lands and women, and all the delight of
+unshackled license. Instead of this, his creature had absorbed his
+power, and all such designs were made void. He began to hatch treason
+and to hint doubts as to the genuineness of the Mahdi, who, as he truly
+represented, according to prophecy, ought to work miracles and show
+other proofs of his divine mission. People began to ask for a "sign." In
+reply, the Mahdi had the missionary murdered.
+
+The first Fatimite caliph, though without experience, was so vigorous a
+ruler that he could dispense with the dangerous support of his
+discoverer. He held the throne for a quarter of a century and
+established his authority, more or less continuously, over the Arab and
+Berber tribes and settled cities from the frontier of Egypt to the
+province of Fez (Fas) in Morocco, received the allegiance of the
+Mahometan governor of Sicily, and twice despatched expeditions into
+Egypt, which he would probably have permanently conquered if he had not
+been hampered by perpetual insurrections in Barbary. Distant governors,
+and often whole tribes of Berbers, were constantly in revolt, and the
+disastrous famine of 928-929, coupled with the Asiatic plague which his
+troops had brought back with them from Egypt, led to general
+disturbances and insurrections which fully occupied the later years of
+his reign. The western provinces, from Tahart and Nakur to Fez and
+beyond, frequently threw off all show of allegiance. His authority was
+founded more on fear than on religious enthusiasm, though zeal for the
+Alide cause had its share in his original success. The new "Eastern
+doctrines," as they were called, were enforced at the sword's point, and
+frightful examples were made of those who ventured to tread in the old
+paths. Nor were the freethinkers of the large towns, who shared the
+missionary's esoteric principles, encouraged; for outwardly, at least,
+the Mahdi was strictly a Moslem. When people at Kayrawan began to put in
+practice the missionary's advanced theories, to scoff at all the rules
+of Islam, to indulge in free love, pig's flesh, and wine, they were
+sternly brought to order. The mysterious powers expected of a mahdi were
+sedulously rumored among the credulous Berbers, though no miracles were
+actually exhibited; and the obedience of the conquered provinces was
+secured by horrible outrages and atrocities, of which the terrified
+people dared not provoke a repetition at the hands of the Mahdi's savage
+generals.
+
+His eldest son Abul-Kasim, who had twice led expeditions into Egypt,
+succeeded to the caliphate with the title of El-Kaim, 934-946. He began
+his reign with warlike vigor. He sent out a fleet in 934 or 935, which
+harried the southern coast of France, blockaded and took Genoa, and
+coasted along Calabria, massacring and plundering, burning the shipping,
+and carrying off slaves wherever it touched. At the same time he
+despatched a third army against Egypt; but the firm hand of the Ikshid
+now held the government, and his brother, Obeid-Allah, with fifteen
+thousand horse, drove the enemy out of Alexandria and gave them a
+crushing defeat on their way home. But for the greater part of his reign
+El-Kaim was on the defensive, fighting for existence against the
+usurpation of one Abu-Yezid, who repudiated Shiism, cursed the Mahdi and
+his successor, stirred up most of Morocco and Barbary against El-Kaim,
+drove him out of his capital, and went near to putting an end to the
+Fatimite caliphate.
+
+It was only after seven years of uninterrupted civil war that this
+formidable insurrection died out, under the firm but politic management
+of the third caliph, El-Mansur (946-953), a brave man who knew both when
+to strike and when to be generous. Abu-Yezid was at last run to earth,
+and his body was skinned and stuffed with straw, and exposed in a cage
+with a couple of ludicrous apes as a warning to the disaffected.
+
+The Fatimites so far wear a brutal and barbarous character. They do not
+seem to have encouraged literature or learning; but this is partly
+explained by the fact that culture belonged chiefly to the orthodox
+caliphate; and its learned men could have no dealings with the heretical
+pretender. The city of Kayrawan, which dates from the Arab conquest in
+the eighth century, preserves the remains of some noble buildings, but
+of their other capitals or royal residences no traces of art or
+architecture remain to bear witness to the taste of their founders. Each
+began to decay as soon as its successor was built.
+
+With the fourth caliph, however, El-Moizz, the conqueror of Egypt,
+953-975, the Fatimites entered upon a new phase.
+
+El-Moizz was a man of politic temper, a born statesman, able to grasp
+the conditions of success and to take advantage of every point in his
+favor. He was also highly educated, and not only wrote Arabic poetry and
+delighted in its literature, but studied Greek, mastered Berber and
+Sudani dialects, and is even said to have taught himself Slavonic in
+order to converse with his slaves from Eastern Europe. His eloquence was
+such as to move his audience to tears. To prudent statesmanship he added
+a large generosity, and his love of justice was among his noblest
+qualities. So far as outward acts could show, he was a strict Moslem of
+the Shiah sect, and the statement of his adversaries that he was really
+an atheist seems to rest merely upon the belief that all the Fatimites
+adopted the esoteric doctrines of the Ismailian missionaries.
+
+When he ascended the throne in April, 953, he had already a policy, and
+he lost no time in carrying it into execution. He first made a progress
+through his dominions, visiting each town, investigating its needs, and
+providing for its peace and prosperity. He bearded the rebels in their
+mountain fastnesses, till they laid down their arms and fell at his
+feet. He conciliated the chiefs and governors with presents and
+appointments, and was rewarded by their loyalty.
+
+At the head of his ministers he set Gawhar "the Roman," a slave from the
+Eastern Empire, who had risen to the post of secretary to the late
+Caliph, and was now by his son promoted to the rank of _wazir_ commander
+of the forces. He was sent in 958 to bring the ever-refractory Maghreb
+(Morocco) to allegiance. The expedition was entirely successful,
+Sigilmasa and Fez were taken, and Gawhar reached the shore of the
+Atlantic.
+
+Jars of live fish and sea-weed reached the capital, and proved to the
+Caliph that his empire touched the ocean, the "limitless limit" of the
+world. All the African littoral, from the Atlantic to the frontier of
+Egypt--with the single exception of Spanish Ceuta--now peaceably
+admitted the sway of the Fatimite Caliph.
+
+The result was due partly to the exhaustion caused by the long struggle
+during the preceding reigns, partly to the politic concessions and
+personal influence of the able young ruler. He was liberal and
+conciliatory toward different provinces, but to the Arabs of the capital
+he was severe. Kayrawan teemed with disaffected folk, sheiks, and
+theologians bitterly hostile to the heretical "orientalism" of the
+Fatimites, and always ready to excite a tumult. Moizz was resolved to
+give them no chance, and one of his repressive measures was the curfew.
+At sunset a trumpet sounded, and anyone found abroad after that was
+liable to lose not only his way, but his head. So long as they were
+quiet, however, he used the people justly, and sought to impress them in
+his favor. In a singular interview, recorded by Makrisi, he exhibited
+himself to a deputation of sheiks, dressed in the utmost simplicity, and
+seated before his writing materials in a plain room, surrounded by
+books. He wished to disabuse them of the idea that he led in private a
+life of luxury and self-indulgence.
+
+"You see what employs me when I am alone," he said; "I read letters that
+come to me from the lands of the East and the West, and answer them with
+my own hand; I deny myself all the pleasures of the world, and I seek
+only to protect your lives, multiply your children, shame your rivals,
+and daunt your enemies." Then he gave them much good advice, and
+especially recommended them to keep to one wife.
+
+"One woman is enough for one man. If you straitly observe what I have
+ordained," he concluded, "I trust that God will, through you, procure
+our conquest of the East in like manner as he has vouchsafed us the
+West."
+
+The conquest of Egypt was indeed the aim of his life. To rule over
+tumultuous Arab and Berber tribes in a poor country formed no fit
+ambition for a man of his capacity. Egypt, its wealth, its commerce, its
+great port, and its docile population--these were his dream.
+
+For two years he had been digging wells and building rest-houses on the
+road to Alexandria. The West was now outwardly quiet, and between Egypt
+and any hope of succor from the eastern caliphate stood the ravaging
+armies of the Karmatis. Egypt itself was in helpless disorder. The great
+Kafur was dead, and its nominal ruler was a child. Ibn-Furat, the
+_wazir_, had made himself obnoxious to the people by arrests and
+extortions. The very soldiery was in revolt, and the Turkish retainers
+of the court mutinied, plundered the wazir's palace, and even opened
+negotiations with Moizz. Hoseyn, the nephew of the Ikshid, attempted to
+restore public order, but after three months of vacillating and
+unpopular government he returned to his own province in Palestine to
+make terms with the Karmatis. Famine, the result of the exceptionally
+low Nile of 967, added to the misery of the country; plague, as usual,
+followed in the steps of famine; over six hundred thousand people died
+in and around Fustat, and the wretched inhabitants began in despair to
+migrate to happier lands.
+
+All these matters were fully reported to Moizz by the renegade Jew Yakub
+Killis, a former favorite of Kafur, who had been driven from Egypt by
+the jealous exactions of the wazir, Ibn-Furat, and who was perfectly
+familiar with the political and financial state of the Nile valley. His
+representations confirmed the Fatimite Caliph's resolve; the Arab tribes
+were summoned to his standard; an immense treasure was collected, all of
+which was spent in the campaign; gratuities were lavishly distributed to
+the army, and at the head of over one hundred thousand men, all well
+mounted and armed, accompanied by a thousand camels and a mob of horses
+carrying money, stores, and ammunition, Gawhar marched from Kayrawan in
+February, 969. The Caliph himself reviewed the troops. The marshal
+kissed his hand and his horse's shoe. All the princes, emirs, and
+courtiers passed reverently on foot before the honored leader of the
+conquering army, who, as a last proof of favor, received the gift of his
+master's own robes and charger. The governors of all the towns on the
+route had orders to come on foot to Gawhar's stirrup, and one of them
+vainly offered a large bribe to be excused the indignity.
+
+The approach of this overwhelming force filled the Egyptian ministers
+with consternation, and they thought only of obtaining favorable terms.
+A deputation of notables, headed by Abu-Giafar Moslem, a _sherif_, or
+descendant of the Prophet's family, waited upon Gawhar near Alexandria,
+and demanded a capitulation. The general consented without reserve, and
+in a conciliatory letter granted all they asked. But they had reckoned
+without their host; the troops at Fustat would not listen to such
+humiliation, and there was a strong war party among the citizens, to
+which some of the ministers leaned. The city prepared for resistance,
+and skirmishes took place with Gawhar's army, which had meanwhile
+arrived at the opposite town of Giza in July. Forcing the passage of the
+river, with the help of some boats supplied by Egyptian soldiers, the
+invaders fell upon the imposing army drawn up on the other bank, and
+totally defeated them. The troops deserted Fustat in a panic, and the
+women of the city, running out of their houses, implored the sherif to
+intercede with the conqueror.
+
+Gawhar, like his master, always disposed to a politic leniency, renewed
+his former promises, and granted a complete amnesty to all who
+submitted. The overjoyed populace cut off the heads of some of the
+refractory leaders, in their enthusiasm, and sent them to the camp in
+pleasing token of allegiance. A herald, bearing a white flag, rode
+through the streets of Fustat proclaiming the amnesty and forbidding
+pillage, and on August the 5th the Fatimite army, with full pomp of
+drums and banners, entered the capital.
+
+That very night Gawhar laid the foundations of a new city, or rather
+fortified palace, destined for the reception of his sovereign. He was
+encamped on the sandy waste which stretched northeast of Fustat on the
+road to Heliopolis, and there, at a distance of about a mile from the
+river, he marked out the boundaries of the new capital. There were no
+buildings, save the old "Convent of the Bones," nor any cultivation
+except the beautiful park called "Kafur's Garden," to obstruct his
+plans. A square, somewhat less than a mile each way, was pegged out with
+poles, and the Maghrabi astrologers, in whom Moizz reposed extravagant
+faith, consulted together to determine the auspicious moment for the
+opening ceremony. Bells were hung on ropes from pole to pole, and at the
+signal of the sages their ringing was to announce the precise moment
+when the laborers were to turn the first sod. The calculations of the
+astrologers were, however, anticipated by a raven, who perched on one of
+the ropes and set the bells jingling, upon which every mattock was
+struck into the earth, and the trenches were opened. It was an unlucky
+hour; the planet Mars (El-Kahir) was in the ascendant; but it could not
+be undone, and the place was accordingly named after the hostile planet,
+El-Kahira, "the Martial" or "Triumphant," in the hope that the sinister
+omen might be turned to a triumphant issue. Cairo, as Kahira has come to
+be called, may fairly be said to have outlived all astrological
+prejudices. The name of the Abbasside caliph was at once expunged from
+the Friday prayers at the old mosque of Amr at Fustat; the black
+Abbasside robes were proscribed, and the preacher, in pure white,
+recited the Khutba for the imam Moizz, emir el-muminin, and invoked
+blessings on his ancestors Ali and Fatima and all their holy family. The
+call to prayer from the minarets was adapted to Shiah taste. The joyful
+news was sent to the Fatimite Caliph on swift dromedaries, together with
+the heads of the slain. Coins were struck with the special formulas of
+the Fatimite creed--"Ali is the noblest of [God's] delegates, the wazir
+of the best of apostles"; "the Imam Maadd calls men to profess the unity
+of the Eternal"--in addition to the usual dogmas of the Mahometan faith.
+For two centuries the mosques and the mint proclaimed the shibboleth of
+the Shiahs.
+
+Gawhar set himself at once to restore tranquillity and alleviate the
+sufferings of the famine-stricken people. Moizz had providently sent
+grain ships to relieve their distress, and as the price of bread
+nevertheless remained at famine rates, Gawhar publicly flogged the
+millers, established a central corn-exchange, and compelled everyone to
+sell his corn there under the eye of a government inspector. In spite of
+his efforts the famine lasted for two years; plague spread alarmingly,
+insomuch that the corpses could not be buried fast enough, and were
+thrown into the Nile; and it was not till the winter of 971-972 that
+plenty returned and the pest disappeared. As usual, the viceroy took a
+personal part in all public functions. Every Saturday he sat in court,
+assisted by the wazir Ibn-Furat, the cadi, and skilled lawyers, to hear
+causes and petitions and to administer justice. To secure impartiality,
+he appointed to every department of state an Egyptian and a Maghrabi
+officer. His firm and equitable rule insured peace and order; and the
+great palace he was building, and the new mosque, the Azhar, which he
+founded in 970 and finished in 972, not only added to the beauty of the
+capital, but gave employment to innumerable craftsmen.
+
+The inhabitants of Egypt accepted the new _regime_ with their habitual
+phlegm. An Ikshidi officer in the Bashmur district of Lower Egypt did,
+indeed, incite the people to rebellion, but his fate was not such as to
+encourage others. He was chased out of Egypt, captured on the coast of
+Palestine, and then, it is gravely recorded, he was given sesame oil to
+drink for a month, till his skin stripped off, whereupon it was stuffed
+with straw and hung up on a beam, as a reminder to him who would be
+admonished. With this brief exception we read of no riots, no sectarian
+risings, and the general surrender was complete when the remaining
+partisans of the deposed dynasty, to the number of five thousand, laid
+down their arms. An embassy sent to George, King of Nubia, to invite him
+to embrace Islam, and to exact the customary tribute, was received with
+courtesy, and the money, but not the conversion, was arranged. The holy
+cities of Mecca and Medina in the Higaz, where the gold of Moizz had
+been prudently distributed some years before, responded to his
+generosity and success by proclaiming his supremacy in the mosques; the
+Hamdanide prince who held Northern Syria paid similar homage to the
+Fatimite Caliph at Aleppo, where the Abbassides had hitherto been
+recognized. Southern Syria, however, which had formed part of the
+Ikshid's kingdom, did not submit to the usurpers without a struggle.
+Hoseyn was still independent at Ramla, and Gawhar's lieutenant, Giafar
+ben Fellah, was obliged to give him battle. Hoseyn was defeated and
+exposed bareheaded to the insults of the mob at Fustat, to be finally
+sent, with the rest of the family of Ikshid, to a Barbary jail.
+Damascus, the home of orthodoxy, was taken by Giafar, not without a
+struggle, and the Fatimite doctrine was there published, to the
+indignation and disgust of the Sunnite population.
+
+A worse plague than the Fatimite conquest soon afflicted Syria. The
+Karmati leader, Hasan ben Ahmad, surnamed El-Asam, finding the
+blackmail, which he had lately received out of the revenues of Damascus,
+suddenly stopped, resolved to extort it by force of arms. The Fatimites
+indeed sprang from the same movement, and their founder professed the
+same political and irreligious philosophy as Hasan himself; but this did
+not stand in his way, and his knowledge of their origin made him the
+less disposed to render homage to the sacred pretensions of the new
+imams, whom he contemptuously designated as the spawn of the quacks,
+charlatans, and the enemies of Islam. He tried to enlist the support of
+the Abbasside Caliph, but El-Muti replied that Fatimis and Karmatis were
+all one to him, and he would have nothing to do with either. The
+Buweyhid prince of Irak, however, supplied Hasan with arms and money;
+Abu-Taghlib, the Hamdanide ruler of Rahba on the Euphrates, contributed
+men; and, supported by the Arab tribes of Okeyl, Tavy, and others, Hasan
+marched upon Damascus, where the Fatimites were routed, and their
+general, Giafar, killed. Moizz was forthwith publicly cursed from the
+pulpit in the Syrian capital, to the qualified satisfaction of the
+inhabitants, who had to pay handsomely for the pleasure.
+
+Hasan next marched to Ramla, and thence, leaving the Fatimite army of
+eleven thousand men shut up in Jaffa, invaded Egypt. His troops
+surprised Kulzum at the head of the Red Sea, and Farama (Pelusium), near
+the Mediterranean, at the two ends of the Egyptian frontier. Tinnis
+declared against the Fatimites, and Hasan appeared at Heliopolis in
+October, 971. Gawhar had already intrenched the new capital with a deep
+ditch, leaving but one entrance, which he closed with an iron gate. He
+armed the Egyptians as well as the African troops, and a spy was set to
+watch the wazir Ibn-Furat, lest he should be guilty of treachery. The
+sherifs of the family of Ali were summoned to the camp, as hostages for
+the good behavior of the inhabitants. Meanwhile, the officers of the
+enemy were liberally tempted with bribes. Two months they lay before
+Cairo, and then, after an indecisive engagement, Hasan stormed the gate,
+forced his way across the ditch, and attacked the Egyptians on their own
+ground. The result was a severe repulse, and Hasan retreated, under
+cover of night, to Kulzum, leaving his camp and baggage to be plundered
+by the Fatimites, who were only balked of a sanguinary pursuit by the
+intervention of night. The Egyptian volunteers displayed unexpected
+valor in the fight, and many of the partisans of the late dynasty, who
+were with the enemy, were made prisoners.
+
+Thus the serious danger, which went near to cutting short the Fatimite
+occupation of Egypt, was not only resolutely met, but even turned into
+an advantage. There was no more intriguing on behalf of the Ikshidids;
+Tinnis was recovered from its temporary defection and occupied by the
+reinforcements which Moizz had hurriedly despatched under Ibn-Ammar to
+the succor of Gawhar; and the Karmati fleet, which attempted to recover
+this fort, was obliged to slip anchor, abandoning seven ships and five
+hundred prisoners. Jaffa, which still held out resolutely against the
+besieging Arabs, was now relieved by the despatch of African troops from
+Cairo, who brought back the garrison, but did not dare to hold the post.
+The enemy fell back upon Damascus, and the leaders fell out among
+themselves.
+
+The Karmati chief was not crushed, however, by his defeat. In the
+following year he was collecting ships and Arabs for a fresh invasion.
+Gawhar, who had long urged his master to come and protect his conquest,
+now pointed out the extreme danger of a second attack from an enemy
+which had already succeeded in boldly forcing his way to the gate of
+Cairo. Moizz had delayed his journey, because he could not safely trust
+his western provinces in his absence; but on the receipt of this grave
+news, he appointed Yusuf Bulugin ben Zeyri, of the Berber tribe of
+Sanhaga, to act as his deputy in Barbary, left Sardaniya--the
+Fontainebleau of Kayrawan, as Mansuriya was its Versailles--in November,
+972, and making a leisurely progress, by way of Kabis, Tripolis,
+Agdabiya, and Barka, reached Alexandria in the following May. Here the
+Caliph received a deputation, consisting of the cadi of Fustat and other
+eminent persons, whom he moved to tears by his eloquent and virtuous
+discourse. A month later he was encamped in the gardens of the monastery
+near Giza, where he was reverently welcomed by his devoted servant,
+Gawhar, content to efface himself in his master's shadow.
+
+The entry of the new Caliph into his new capital was a solemn spectacle.
+With him were all his sons and brothers and kinsfolk, and before him
+were borne the coffins of his ancestors. Fustat was illuminated and
+decked for his reception; but Moizz would not enter the old capital of
+the usurping caliphs. He crossed from Roda by Gawhar's new bridge, and
+proceeded direct to the palace-city of Cairo. Here he threw himself on
+his face and gave thanks to God.
+
+There was yet an ordeal to be gone through before he could regard
+himself as safe. Egypt was the home of many undoubted sherifs or
+descendants of Ali, and these, headed by a representative of the
+distinguished Tabataba family, came boldly to examine his credentials.
+Moizz must prove his title to the holy imamate inherited from Ali, to
+the satisfaction of these experts in genealogy. According to the story,
+the Caliph called a great assembly of the people, and invited the
+sherifs to appear; then, half drawing his sword, he said:
+
+"Here is my pedigree," and scattering gold among the spectators, added,
+"and there is my proof."
+
+It was perhaps the best argument he could produce. The sherifs could
+only protest their entire satisfaction at this convincing evidence; and
+it is at any rate certain that, whatever they thought of the Caliph's
+claim, they did not contest it. The capital was placarded with his name,
+and the praises of Ali and Moizz were acclaimed by the people, who
+flocked to his first public audience. Among the presents offered him,
+that of Gawhar was especially splendid, and its costliness illustrates
+the colossal wealth acquired by the Fatimites. It included five hundred
+horses with saddles and bridles encrusted with gold, amber, and precious
+stones; tents of silk and cloth of gold, borne on Bactrian camels;
+dromedaries, mules, and camels of burden; filigree coffers full of gold
+and silver vessels; gold-mounted swords; caskets of chased silver
+containing precious stones; a turban set with jewels, and nine hundred
+boxes filled with samples of all the goods that Egypt produced.
+
+
+
+
+GROWTH AND DECADENCE OF CHIVALRY
+
+TENTH TO FIFTEENTH CENTURY
+
+LEON GAUTIER
+
+
+(Writers on the history of chivalry are unable to refer its origin to
+any definite time or place; and even specific definition of chivalry is
+seldom attempted by careful students. They rather give us, as does
+Gautier in the picturesque account which follows, some recognized
+starting-point, and for definition content themselves with
+characterization of the spirit and aims of chivalry, analysis of its
+methods, and the story of its rise and fall.
+
+Chivalry was not an official institution that came into existence by the
+decree of a sovereign. Although religious in its original elements and
+impulses, there was nothing in its origin to remind us of the foundation
+of a religious order. It would be useless to search for the place of its
+birth or for the name of its founder. It was born everywhere at once,
+and has been everywhere at the same time the natural effect of the same
+aspirations and the same needs. "There was a moment when people
+everywhere felt the necessity of tempering the ardor of old German
+blood, and of giving to their ill-regulated passions an ideal. Hence
+chivalry!"
+
+Yet chivalry arose from a German custom which was idealized by the
+Christian church; and chivalry was more an ideal than an institution. It
+was "the Christian form of the military profession; the knight was the
+Christian soldier." True, the profession and mission of the church meant
+the spread of peace and the hatred of war, she holding with her Master
+that "they who take the sword shall perish with the sword." Her thought
+was formulated by St. Augustine: "He who can think of war and can
+support it without great sorrow is truly dead to human feelings." "It is
+necessary," he says, "to submit to war, but to wish for peace." The
+church did, however, look upon war as a divine means of punishment and
+of expiation, for individuals and nations. And the eloquent Bossuet
+showed the church's view of war as the terrestrial preparation for the
+Kingdom of God, and described how empires fall upon one another to form
+a foundation whereon to build the church. In the light of such
+interpretations the church availed herself of the militant auxiliary
+known as chivalry.
+
+Along with the religious impulse that animated it, chivalry bore,
+throughout its purer course, the character of knightliness which it
+received from Teutonic sources. How the fine sentiments and ennobling
+customs of the Teutonic nations, particularly with respect to the
+gallantry and generosity of the male toward the female sex, grew into
+beautiful combination with the rule of protecting the weak and
+defenceless everywhere, and how these elements were blended with the
+spirit of religious devotion which entered into the organization and
+practices of chivalry, forms one of the most fascinating features in the
+study of its development; and this gentler side, no less than its
+sterner aspects, is faithfully presented in the brilliant examination of
+Gautier. And the heroic sentiment and action which inspired and
+accomplished the sacred warfare of the Crusades are not less admirably
+depicted in these pages; while in his summary of the decline of chivalry
+Gautier has perhaps never been surpassed for penetrating insight and
+lucid exposition.)
+
+
+There is a sentence of Tacitus--the celebrated passage in the
+_Germania_--that refers to a German rite in which we really find all the
+military elements of the future chivalry. The scene took place beneath
+the shade of an old forest. The barbarous tribe is assembled, and one
+feels that a solemn ceremony is in preparation. Into the midst of the
+assembly advances a very young man, whom you can picture to yourself
+with sea-green eyes, long fair hair, and perhaps some tattooing. A chief
+of the tribe is present, who without delay places gravely in the hands
+of the young man a _framea_ and a buckler. Failing a sovereign ruler, it
+is the father of the youth, or some relative, who undertakes this
+delivery of weapons. "Such is the 'virile robe' of these people," as
+Tacitus well puts it; "such is the first honor of their youth. Till then
+the young man was only one in a family; he becomes by this rite a member
+of the Republic. _Ante hoc domus pars videtur: mox rei publicae_. This
+sword and buckler he will never abandon, for the Germans in all their
+acts, whether public or private, are always armed. So, the ceremony
+finished, the assembly separates, and the tribe reckons a _miles_--a
+warrior--the more. That is all!"
+
+The solemn handing of arms to the young German--such is the first germ
+of chivalry which Christianity was one day to animate into life.
+"_Vestigium vetus creandi equites seu milites_." It is with reason that
+Sainte-Palaye comments in the very same way upon the text of the
+_Germania_, and that a scholar of our own days exclaims with more than
+scientific exactness, "The true origin of _miles_ is this bestowal of
+arms which among the Germans marks the entry into civil life."
+
+No other origin will support the scrutiny of the critic, and he will not
+find anyone now to support the theory of Roman origin with Sainte-Marie,
+or that of the Arabian origin with Beaumont. There only remains to
+explain in this place the term knight (chevalier), but it is well known
+to be derived from _caballus_, which primarily signifies a beast of
+burden, a pack-horse, and has ended by signifying a war-horse. The
+knight, also, has always preserved the name of _miles_ in the Latin
+tongue of the Middle Ages, in which chivalry is always called _militia_.
+Nothing can be clearer than this.
+
+We do not intend to go further, however, without replying to two
+objections, which are not without weight, and which we do not wish to
+leave behind us unanswered.
+
+In a certain number of Latin books of the Middle Ages we find, to
+describe chivalry, an expression which the "Romanists" oppose
+triumphantly to us, and of which the Romish origin cannot seriously be
+doubted. When it is intended to signify that a knight has been created,
+it is stated that the individual has been girt with the _cingulum
+militare_. Here we find ourselves in full Roman parlance, and the word
+signified certain terms which described admission into military service,
+the release from this service, and the degradation of the legionary.
+When St. Martin left the militia, his action was qualified as _solutio
+cinguli_, and at all those who act like him the insulting expression
+_militaribus zonis discincti_ is cast. The girdle which sustains the
+sword of the Roman officer--_cingulum zona_, or rather _cinctorium_--as
+also the baldric, from _balteus_, passed over the shoulder and was
+intended to support the weapon of the common soldier. "You perceive
+quite well," say our adversaries, "that we have to do with a Roman
+costume." Two very simple observations will, perhaps, suffice to get to
+the bottom of such a specious argument: The first is that the Germans in
+early times wore, in imitation of the Romans, "a wide belt ornamented
+with bosses of metal," a baldric, by which their swords were suspended
+on the left side; and the second is that the chroniclers of old days,
+who wrote in Latin and affected the classic style, very naturally
+adopted the word _cingulum_ in all its acceptations, and made use of
+this Latin paraphrasis--_cingulo militari decorare_--to express this
+solemn adoption of the sword. This evidently German custom was always
+one of the principal rites of the collation of chivalry. There is then
+nothing more in it than a somewhat vague reminiscence of a Roman custom
+with a very natural conjunction of terms which has always been the habit
+of a literary people.
+
+To sum up, the word is Roman, but the thing itself is German. Between
+the _militia_ of the Romans and the chivalry of the Middle Ages there is
+really nothing in common but the military profession considered
+generally. The official admittance of the Roman soldier to an army
+hierarchically organized in no way resembled the admission of a new
+knight into a sort of military college and the "pink of society." As we
+read further the singularly primitive and barbarous ritual of the
+service of knightly reception in the twelfth century, one is persuaded
+that the words exhale a German odor, and have nothing Roman about them.
+But there is another argument, and one which would appear decisive. The
+Roman legionary could not, as a rule, withdraw from the service; he
+could not avoid the baldric. The youthful knight of the Middle Ages, on
+the contrary, was always free to arm himself or not as he pleased, just
+as other cavaliers are at liberty to leave or join their ranks. The
+principal characteristic of the knightly service, and one which
+separates it most decidedly from the Roman _militia_, was its freedom of
+action.
+
+One very specious objection is made as regards feudalism, which some
+clear-minded people obstinately confound with chivalry. This was the
+favorite theory of Montalembert. Now there are two kinds of feudalism,
+which the old feudalists put down very clearly in two words now out of
+date--"fiefs of dignity" and "fiefs simple." About the middle of the
+ninth century, the dukes and counts made themselves independent of the
+central power, and declared that people owed the same allegiance to them
+as they did to the emperor or the king. Such were the acts of the "fiefs
+of dignity," and we may at once allow that they had nothing in common
+with chivalry. The "fiefs simple," then, remained.
+
+In the Merovingian period we find a certain number of small proprietors,
+called _vassi_, commending themselves to other men more powerful and
+more rich, who were called _seniores_. To his senior who made him a
+present of land the _vassus_ owed assistance and fidelity. It is true
+that as early as the reign of Charlemagne he followed him to war, but it
+must be noted that it was to the emperor, to the central power, that he
+actually rendered military service. There was nothing very particular in
+this, but the time was approaching when things would be altered. Toward
+the middle of the ninth century we find a large number of men falling
+"on their knees" before other men! What are they about? They are
+"recommending" themselves, but, in plainer terms, "Protect us and we
+will be your men." And they added: "It is to you and to you only that we
+intend in future to render military service; but in exchange you must
+protect the land we possess--defend what you will in time concede to us;
+and defend _us_ ourselves." These people on their knees were "vassals"
+at the feet of their "lords"; and the fief was generally only a grant of
+land conceded in exchange for military service.
+
+Feudalism of this nature has nothing in common with chivalry.
+
+If we consider chivalry in fact as a kind of privileged body into which
+men were received on certain conditions and with a certain ritual, it is
+important to observe that every vassal is not necessarily a cavalier.
+There were vassals who, with the object of averting the cost of
+initiation or for other reasons, remained _damoiseaux_, or pages, all
+their lives. The majority, of course, did nothing of the kind; but all
+could do so, and a great many did.
+
+On the other hand we see conferred the dignity of chivalry upon
+insignificant people who had never held fiefs, who owed to no one any
+fealty, and to whom no one owed any.
+
+We cannot repeat too often that it was not the cavalier (or knight), it
+was the _vassal_ who owed military service, or _ost_, to the _seigneur_,
+or lord; and the service _in curte_ or _court_: it was the vassal, not
+the knight, who owed to the "lord" relief, "aid," homage.
+
+The feudal system soon became hereditary. Chivalry, on the contrary, has
+never been hereditary, and a special rite has always been necessary to
+create a knight. In default of all other arguments this would be
+sufficient.
+
+But if, instead of regarding chivalry as an institution, we consider it
+as an ideal, the doubt is not really more admissible. It is here that,
+in the eyes of a philosophic historian, chivalry is clearly distinct
+from feudalism. If the western world in the ninth century had _not_ been
+feudalized, chivalry would nevertheless have come into existence; and,
+notwithstanding everything, it would have come to light in Christendom;
+for chivalry is nothing more than the Christianized form of military
+service, the armed _force_ in the service of the unarmed Truth; and it
+was inevitable that at some time or other it must have sprung, living
+and fully armed, from the brain of the church, as Minerva did from the
+brain of Jupiter.
+
+Feudalism, on the contrary, is not of Christian origin at all. It is a
+particular form of government, and of society, which has scarcely been
+less rigorous for the church than other forms of society and government.
+Feudalism has disputed with the church over and over again, while
+chivalry has protected her a hundred times. Feudalism is force--chivalry
+is the brake.
+
+Let us look at Godfrey de Bouillon. The fact that he owed homage to any
+suzerain, the fact that he exacted service from such and such vassals,
+are questions which concern feudal rights, and have nothing to do with
+chivalry. But if I contemplate him in battle beneath the walls of
+Jerusalem; if I am a spectator of his entry into the Holy City; if I see
+him ardent, brave, powerful and pure, valiant and gentle, humble and
+proud, refusing to wear the golden crown in the Holy City where Jesus
+wore the crown of thorns, I am not then anxious--I am not curious--to
+learn from whom he holds his fief, or to know the names of his vassals;
+and I exclaim, "There is the knight!" And how many knights, what
+chivalrous virtues, have existed in the Christian world since feudalism
+has ceased to exist!
+
+The adoption of arms in the German fashion remains the true origin of
+chivalry; and the Franks have handed down this custom to us--a custom
+perpetuated to a comparatively modern period. This simple, almost rude
+rite so decidedly marked the line of civil life in the code of manners
+of people of German origin, that under the Carlovingians we still find
+numerous traces of it. In 791 Louis, eldest son of Charlemagne, was only
+thirteen years old, and yet he had worn the crown of Aquitaine for three
+years upon his "baby brow." The king of the Franks felt that it was time
+to bestow upon this child the military consecration which would more
+quickly assure him of the respect of his people. He summoned him to
+Ingelheim, then to Ratisbon, and solemnly girded him with the sword
+which "makes men." He did not trouble himself about the framea or the
+buckler--the sword occupied the first place. It will retain it for a
+long time.
+
+In 838 at Kiersy we have a similar scene. This time it is old Louis who,
+full of sadness and nigh to death, bestows upon his son Charles, whom he
+loved so well, the "virile arms"--that is to say, the sword. Then
+immediately afterward he put upon his brow the crown of "Neustria."
+Charles was fifteen years old.
+
+These examples are not numerous, but their importance is decisive, and
+they carry us to the time when the church came to intervene positively
+in the education of the German _miles_. The time was rough, and it is
+not easy to picture a more distracted period than that in the ninth and
+tenth centuries. The great idea of the Roman Empire no longer, in the
+minds of the people, coincided with the idea of the Frankish kingdom,
+but rather inclined, so to speak, to the side of Germany, where it
+tended to fix itself. Countries were on the way to be formed, and people
+were asking to which country they could best belong. Independent
+kingdoms were founded which had no precedents and were not destined to
+have a long life. The Saracens were for the last time harassing the
+southern French coasts, but it was not so with the Norman pirates, for
+they did not cease for a single year to ravage the littoral which is now
+represented by the Picardy and Normandy coasts, until the day it became
+necessary to cede the greater part of it to them. People were fighting
+everywhere more or less--family against family--man to man. No road was
+safe, the churches were burned, there was universal terror, and everyone
+sought protection. The king had no longer strength to resist anyone, and
+the counts made themselves kings. The sun of the realm was set, and one
+had to look at the stars for light. As soon as the people perceived a
+strong man-at-arms, resolute, defiant, well established in his wooden
+keep, well fortified within the lines of his hedge, behind his palisade
+of dead branches, or within his barriers of planks; well posted on his
+hill, against his rock, or on his hillock, and dominating all the
+surrounding country--as soon as they saw this each said to him, "I am
+your man"; and all these weak ones grouped themselves around the strong
+one, who next day proceeded to wage war with his neighbors. Thence
+supervened a terrible series of private wars. Everyone was fighting or
+thinking of fighting.
+
+In addition to this, the still green memory of the grand figure of
+Charlemagne and the old empire, and I can't tell what imperial
+splendors, were still felt in the air of great cities; all hearts
+throbbed at the mere thought of the Saracens and the Holy Sepulchre; the
+crusade gathered strength of preparation far in advance, in the rage and
+indignation of all the Christian race; all eyes were turned toward
+Jerusalem, and in the midst of so many disbandments and so much
+darkness, the unity of the church survived fallen majesty!
+
+It was then, it was in that horrible hour--the decisive epoch in our
+history--that the church undertook the education of the Christian
+soldier; and it was at that time, by a resolute step, she found the
+feudal baron in his rude wooden citadel, and proposed to him an ideal.
+This ideal was chivalry!
+
+That chivalry may be considered a great military confraternity as well
+as an eighth sacrament, will be conceded. But, before familiarizing
+themselves with these ideals, the rough spirits of the ninth, tenth, and
+eleventh centuries had to learn the principles of them. The chivalrous
+ideal was not conceived "all of a piece," and certainly it did not
+triumph without sustained effort; so it was by degrees, and very slowly,
+that the church succeeded in inoculating the almost animal intelligence
+and the untrained minds of our ancestors with so many virtues.
+
+In the hands of the church, which wished to mould him into a Christian
+knight, the feudal baron was a very intractable individual. No one could
+be more brutal or more barbarous than he. Our more ancient
+ballads--those which are founded on the traditions of the ninth and
+tenth centuries--supply us with a portrait which does not appear
+exaggerated. I know nothing in this sense more terrible than _Raoul de
+Cambrai_, and the hero of this old poem would pass for a type of a
+half-civilized savage. This Raoul was a kind of Sioux or other redskin,
+who only wanted tattoo and feathers in his hair to be complete. Even a
+redskin is a believer, or superstitious to some extent, while Raoul
+defied the Deity himself. The savage respects his mother, as a rule; but
+Raoul laughed at his mother, who cursed him. Behold him as he invaded
+the Vermandois, contrary to all the rights of legitimate heirs. He
+pillaged, burned, and slew in all directions: he was everywhere
+pitiless, cruel, horrible. But at Origni he appears in all his ferocity.
+"You will erect my tent in the church, you will make my bed before the
+altar, and put my hawks on the golden crucifix." Now that church
+belonged to a convent. What did that signify to him? He burned the
+convent, he burned the church, he burned the nuns! Among them was the
+mother of his most faithful servitor, Bernier--his most devoted
+companion and friend--almost his brother! but he burned her with the
+others. Then, when the flames were still burning, he sat himself down,
+on a fast-day, to feast amid the scenes of his sanguinary
+exploits--defying God and man, his hands steeped in blood, his face
+lifted to heaven. That was the kind of soldier, the savage of the tenth
+century, whom the church had to educate!
+
+Unfortunately this Raoul de Cambrai is not a unique specimen; he was not
+the only one who had uttered this ferocious speech: "I shall not be
+happy until I see your heart cut out of your body." Aubri de Bourguignon
+was not less cruel, and took no trouble to curb his passions. Had he the
+right to massacre? He knew nothing about that, but meanwhile he
+continued to kill. "Bah!" he would say, "it is always an enemy the
+less." On one occasion he slew his four cousins. He was as sensual as
+cruel. His thick-skinned savagery did not appear to feel either shame or
+remorse; he was strong and had a weighty hand--that was sufficient.
+Ogier was scarcely any better, but notwithstanding all the glory
+attaching to his name, I know nothing more saddening than the final
+episode of the rude poem attributed to Raimbert of Paris. The son of
+Ogier, Baudouinet, had been slain by the son of Charlemagne, who called
+himself Charlot. Ogier did nothing but breathe vengeance, and would not
+agree to assist Christendom against the Saracen invaders unless the
+unfortunate Charlot was delivered to him. He wanted to kill him, he
+determined to kill him, and he rejoiced over it in anticipation. In vain
+did Charlot humble himself before this brute, and endeavor to pacify him
+by the sincerity of his repentance; in vain the old Emperor himself
+prayed most earnestly to God; in vain the venerable Naimes, the Nestor
+of our ballads, offered to serve Ogier all the rest of his life, and
+begged the Dane "not to forget the Saviour, who was born of the Virgin
+at Bethlehem." All their devotion and prayers were unavailing. Ogier,
+pitiless, placed one of his heavy hands on the youthful head, and with
+the other drew his sword, his terrible sword "Courtain." Nothing less
+than the intervention of an angel from heaven could have put an end to
+this terrible scene in which all the savagery of the German forests was
+displayed.
+
+The majority of these early heroes had no other shibboleth than "I am
+going to separate the head from the trunk!" It was their war-cry. But if
+you desire something more frightful still, something more "primitive,"
+you have only to open the _Loherains_ at hazard, and read a few stanzas
+of that raging ballad of "derring-do," and you will almost fancy you are
+perusing one of those pages in which Livingstone describes in such
+indignant terms the manners of some tribe in Central Africa. Read this:
+"Begue struck Isore upon his black helmet through the golden circlet,
+cutting him to the chine; then he plunged into his body his sword
+Flamberge with the golden hilt; took the heart out with both hands, and
+threw it, still warm, at the head of William, saying, 'There is your
+cousin's heart; you can salt and roast it.'" Here words fail us; it
+would be too tame to say with Goedecke, "These heroes act like the
+forces of nature, in the manner of the hurricane which knows no pity."
+We must use more indignant terms than these, for we are truly amid
+cannibals. Once again we say, there was the warrior, there was the
+savage whom the church had to elevate and educate!
+
+Such is the point of departure of this wonderful progress; such are the
+refractory elements out of which chivalry and the knight have been
+fashioned.
+
+The point of departure is Raoul of Cambrai burning Origni. The point of
+arrival is Girard of Roussillon falling one day at the feet of an old
+priest and expiating his former pride by twenty-two years of penitence.
+These two episodes embrace many centuries between them.
+
+A very interesting study might be made of the gradual transformation
+from the redskin to the knight; it might be shown how, and at what
+period of history, each of the virtues of chivalry penetrated
+victoriously into the undisciplined souls of these brutal warriors who
+were our ancestors; it might be determined at what moment the church
+became strong enough to impose upon our knights the great duties of
+defending it and of loving one another.
+
+This victory was attained in a certain number of cases undoubtedly
+toward the end of the eleventh century: and the knight appears to us
+perfected, finished, radiant, in the most ancient edition of the
+_Chanson of Roland_, which is considered to have been produced between
+1066 and 1095.
+
+It is scarcely necessary to observe that chivalry was no longer in
+course of establishment when Pope Urban II threw with a powerful hand
+the whole of the Christian West upon the East, where the Tomb of Christ
+was in possession of the Infidel.
+
+In legendary lore the embodiment of chivalry is Roland: in history it is
+Godfrey de Bouillon. There are no more worthy names than these.
+
+The decadence of chivalry--and when one is speaking of human
+institutions, sooner or later this word must be used--perhaps set in
+sooner than historians can believe. We need not attach too much
+importance to the grumblings of certain poets, who complain of their
+time with an evidently exaggerated bitterness, and we do not care for
+our own part to take literally the testimony of the unknown author of
+_La Vie de Saint Alexis_, who exclaims--about the middle of the eleventh
+century--that everything is degenerate and all is lost! Thus: "In olden
+times the world was good. Justice and love were springs of action in it.
+People then had faith, which has disappeared from amongst us. The world
+is entirely changed. The world has lost its healthy color. It is
+pale--it has grown old. It is growing worse, and will soon cease
+altogether."
+
+The poet exaggerates in a very singular manner the evil which he
+perceives around him, and one might aver that, far from bordering upon
+old age, chivalry was then almost in the very zenith of its glory. The
+twelfth century was its apogee, and it was not until the thirteenth that
+it manifested the first symptoms of decay.
+
+"_Li maus est moult want_" exclaims the author of _Godfrey de Bouillon_,
+and he adds, sadly, "_Tos li biens est fines_."
+
+He was more correct in speaking thus than was the author of _Saint
+Alexis_ in his complainings, for the decadence of chivalry actually
+commenced in his time. And it is not unreasonable to inquire into the
+causes of its decay.
+
+_The Romance of the Round Table_, which in the opinion of prepossessed
+or thoughtless critics appears so profoundly chivalrous, may be
+considered one of the works which hastened the downfall of chivalry. We
+are aware that by this seeming paradox we shall probably scandalize some
+of our readers, who look upon these adventurous cavaliers as veritable
+knights. What does it matter? _Avienne que puet_. The heroes of our
+_chansons de geste_ are really the authorized representatives and types
+of the society of their time, and not those fine adventure-seeking
+individuals who have been so brilliantly sketched by the pencil of
+Cretien de Troyes.
+
+It is true, however, that this charming and delicate spirit did not
+give, in his works, an accurate idea of his century and generation. We
+do not say that he embellished all he touched, but only that he
+enlivened it. Notwithstanding all that one could say about it, this
+school introduced the old Gaelic spirit into a poetry which had been
+till then chiefly Christian or German. Our epic poems are of German
+origin, and the _Table Round_ is of Celtic origin. Sensual and light,
+witty and delicate, descriptive and charming, these pleasing romances
+are never masculine, and become too often effeminate and effeminating.
+They sing always, or nearly so, the same theme. By lovely pasturages
+clothed with beautiful flowers, the air full of birds, a young knight
+proceeds in search of the unknown, and through a series of adventures
+whose only fault is that they resemble one another somewhat too closely.
+
+We find insolent defiances, magnificent duels, enchanted castles, tender
+love-scenes, mysterious talismans. The marvellous mingles with the
+supernatural, magicians with saints, fairies with angels. The whole is
+written in a style essentially French, and it must be confessed in
+clear, polished, and chastened language--perfect!
+
+But we must not forget, as we said just now, that this poetry, so
+greatly attractive, began as early as the twelfth century to be the mode
+universally; and let us not forget that it was at the same period that
+the _Percevalde Gallois_ and _Aliscans, Cleomades_, and the
+_Couronnement Looys_ were written. The two schools have coexisted for
+many centuries: both camps have enjoyed the favor of the public. But in
+such a struggle it was all too easy to decide to which of them the
+victory would eventually incline. The ladies decided it, and no doubt
+the greater number of them wept over the perusal of _Erec_ or _Enid_
+more than over that of the _Covenant Vivien_ or _Raoul de Cambrai_.
+
+When the grand century of the Middle Ages had closed, when the blatant
+thirteenth century commenced, the sentimental had already gained the
+advantage over our old classic _chansons_; and the new school, the
+romantic set of the _Table Round_, triumphed! Unfortunately, they also
+triumphed in their manners; and they were the knights of the Round Table
+who, with the Valois, seated themselves upon the throne of France.
+
+In this way temerity replaced true courage; so good, polite manners
+replaced heroic rudeness; so foolish generosity replaced the charitable
+austerity of the early chivalry. It was the love of the unforeseen even
+in the military art; the rage for adventure--even in politics. We know
+whither this strategy and these theatrical politics led us, and that
+Joan of Arc and Providence were required to drag us out of the
+consequences.
+
+The other causes of the decadence of the spirit of chivalry are more
+difficult to determine. There is one of them which has not, perhaps,
+been sufficiently brought to light, and this is--will it be
+believed?--the exdevelopment of certain orders of chivalry! This
+statement requires some explanation.
+
+We must confess that we are enthusiastic, passionate admirers of these
+grand military orders which were formed at the commencement of the
+twelfth century. There have never been their like in the world, and it
+was only given to Christianity to display to us such a spectacle. To
+give to one single soul the double ideal of the soldier and the monk, to
+impose upon him this double charge, to fix in one these two conditions
+and in one only these two duties, to cause to spring from the earth I
+cannot tell how many thousands of men who voluntarily accepted this
+burden, and who were not crushed by it--that is a problem which one
+might have been pardoned for thinking insoluble. We have not
+sufficiently considered it. We have not pictured to ourselves with
+sufficient vividness the Templars and the Hospitallers in the midst of
+one of those great battles in the Holy Land in which the fate of the
+world was in the balance.
+
+No: painters have not sufficiently portrayed them in the arid plains of
+Asia forming an incomparable squadron in the midst of the battle. One
+might talk forever and yet not say too much about the charge of the
+Cuirassiers at Reichshoffen; but how many times did the Hospitaller
+knights and the Templars charge in similar fashion? Those soldier-monks,
+in truth, invented a new idea of courage. Unfortunately they were not
+always fighting, and peace troubled some of them. They became too rich,
+and their riches lowered them in the eyes of men and before heaven. We
+do not intend to adopt all the calumnies which have been circulated
+concerning the Templars, but it is difficult not to admit that many of
+these accusations had some foundation. The Hospitallers, at any rate,
+have given no ground for such attacks. They, thank heaven, remained
+undefiled, if not poor, and were an honor to that chivalry which others
+had compromised and emasculated.
+
+But when all is said, that which best became chivalry, the spice which
+preserved it the most surely, was poverty!
+
+Love of riches had not only attacked the chivalrous orders, but in a
+very short space of time all knights caught the infection. Sensuality
+and enjoyment had penetrated into their castles. "Scarcely had they
+received the knightly baldric before they commenced to break the
+commandments and to pillage the poor. When it became necessary to go to
+war, their sumpter-horses were laden with wine, and not with weapons;
+with leathern bottles instead of swords; with spits instead of lances.
+One might have fancied, in truth, that they were going out to dinner,
+and not to fight. It is true their shields were beautifully gilt, but
+they were kept in a virgin and unused condition. Chivalrous combats were
+represented upon their bucklers and their saddles, certainly; but that
+was all!"
+
+Now who is it who writes thus? It is not, as one might fancy, an author
+of the fifteenth century--it is a writer of the twelfth; and the
+greatest satirist, somewhat excessive and unjust in his statements, the
+Christian Juvenal whom we have just quoted, was none other than Peter of
+Blois.
+
+A hundred other witnesses might be cited in support of these indignant
+words. But if there is some exaggeration in them, we are compelled to
+confess that there is a considerable substratum of truth also.
+
+These abuses--which wealth engendered, which more than one poet has
+stigmatized--attracted, in the fourteenth century, the attention of an
+important individual, a person whose name occupies a worthy place in
+literature and history. Philip of Mezieres, chancellor of Cyprus under
+Peter of Lusignan, was a true knight, who one day conceived the idea of
+reforming chivalry. Now the way he found most feasible in accomplishing
+his object, in arriving at such a difficult and complex reform, was to
+found a new order of chivalry himself, to which he gave the
+high-sounding title of "the Chivalry of the Passion of Christ."
+
+The decadence of chivalry is attested, alas! by the very character of
+the reformers by which this well-meaning Utopian attempted to oppose it.
+The good knight complains of the great advances of sensuality, and
+permits and advises the marriage of all knights. He complains of the
+accursed riches which the Hospitallers themselves were putting to a bad
+use, and forbade them in his _Institutions_; but nevertheless the
+luxurious habits of his time had an influence upon his mind, and he
+permitted his knights to wear the most extravagant costumes, and the
+dignitaries of his order to adopt the most high-sounding titles. There
+was something mystical in all this conception, and something theatrical
+in all this agency. It is hardly necessary to add that the "Chivalry of
+the Passion" was only a beautiful dream, originating in a generous mind.
+Notwithstanding the adherence of some brilliant personages, the order
+never attained to more than a theoretical organization, and had only a
+fictitious foundation. The idea of the deliverance of the Holy Sepulchre
+from the Infidel was hardly the object of the fifteenth-century
+chivalry; for the struggle between France and England then was engaging
+the most courageous warriors and the most practised swords. Decay
+hurried on apace!
+
+This was not the only cause of such a fatal falling away. The portals of
+chivalry had been opened to too many unworthy candidates. It had been
+made vulgar! In consequence of having become so cheap the grand title of
+"knight" was degraded. Eustace Deschamps, in his fine, straightforward
+way, states the scandal boldly and "lashes" it with his tongue. He says:
+"Picture to yourself the fact that the degree of knighthood is about to
+be conferred now upon babies of eight and ten years old."
+
+Well might this excellent man exclaim in another place: "Disorders
+always go on gathering strength, and even incomparable knights like Du
+Guesclin and Bayard cannot arrest the fatal course of the institution
+toward ruin." Chivalry was destined to disappear.
+
+It is very important that one should make one's self acquainted with the
+true character of such a downfall. France and England in the fourteenth
+and fifteenth centuries still boasted many high-bred knights. They
+exchanged the most superb defiances, the most audacious challenges, and
+proceeded from one country to another to run each other through the body
+proudly. The Beaumanoirs, who drank their blood, abounded. It was a
+question who would engage himself in the most incredible pranks; who
+would commit the most daring folly! They tell us afterward of the
+beautiful passages of arms, the grand feats performed, and the
+inimitable Froissart is the most charming of all these narrators, who
+make their readers as chivalrous as themselves.
+
+But we must tell everything: among these knights in beautiful armor
+there was a band of adventurers who never observed, and who could not
+understand, certain commandments of the ancient chivalry. The laxity of
+luxury had everywhere replaced the rigorous enactments of the old
+manliness, and even warriors themselves loved their ease too much. The
+religious sentiment was not the dominant one in their minds, in which
+the idea of a crusade now never entered. They had not sufficient respect
+for the weakness of the Church nor for other failings. They no longer
+felt themselves the champions of the good and the enemies of evil. Their
+sense of justice had become warped, as had love for their great native
+land.
+
+Again, what they termed "the license of camps" had grown very much
+worse; and we know in what condition Joan of Arc found the army of the
+King. Blasphemy and ribaldry in every quarter. The noble girl swept away
+these pests, but the effect of her action was not long-lived. She was
+the person to reestablish chivalry, which in her found the purity of its
+now-effaced type; but she died too soon, and had not sufficient
+imitators.
+
+There were, after her time, many chivalrous souls, and, thank heaven,
+there are still some among us; but the old institution is no longer with
+us. The events which we have had the misfortune to witness do not give
+us any ground to hope that chivalry, extinct and dead, will rise again
+to-morrow to light and life.
+
+In St. Louis' time, caricature and parody--they were low-class forces,
+but forces nevertheless--had already commenced the work of destruction.
+We are in possession of an abominable little poem of the thirteenth
+century, which is nothing but a scatological pamphlet directed against
+chivalry. This ignoble _Audigier_, the author of which is the basest of
+men, is not the only attack which one may disinter from amid the
+literature of that period. If one wishes to draw up a really complete
+list it would be necessary to include the _jabliaux_--the _Renart_ and
+the _Rose_, which constitute the most anti-chivalrous--I had nearly
+written the most Voltairian--works that I am acquainted with. The thread
+is easy enough to follow from the twelfth century down to the author of
+_Don Quixote_--which I do not confound with its infamous predecessors--
+to Cervantes, whose work has been fatal, but whose mind was elevated.
+
+However that may be, parody and the parodists were themselves a cause of
+decay. They weakened morals. Gallic-like, they popularized little
+_bourgeois_ sentiments, narrow-minded, satirical sentiments; they
+inoculated manly souls with contempt for such great things as one
+performs disinterestedly. This disdain is a sure element of decay, and
+we may regard it as an announcement of death.
+
+Against the knights who, here and there, showed themselves unworthy and
+degenerate, was put in practice the terrible apparatus of degradation.
+Modern historians of chivalry have not failed to describe in detail all
+the rites of this solemn punishment, and we have presented to us a scene
+which is well calculated to excite the imagination of the most
+matter-of-fact, and to make the most timid heart swell.
+
+The knight judicially condemned to submit to this shame was first
+conducted to a scaffold, where they broke or trod under foot all his
+weapons. He saw his shield, with device effaced, turned upside down and
+trailed in the mud. Priests, after reciting prayers for the vigil of the
+dead, pronounced over his head the psalm, "_Deus laudem meam_," which
+contains terrible maledictions against traitors. The herald of arms who
+carried out this sentence took from the hands of the pursuivant of arms
+a basin full of dirty water, and threw it all over the head of the
+recreant knight in order to wash away the sacred character which had
+been conferred upon him by the accolade. The guilty one, degraded in
+this way, was subsequently thrown upon a hurdle, or upon a stretcher,
+covered with a mortuary cloak, and finally carried to the church, where
+they repeated the same prayers and the same ceremonies as for the dead.
+
+This was really terrible, even if somewhat theatrical, and it is easy to
+see that this complicated ritual contained only a very few ancient
+elements. In the twelfth century the ceremonial of degradation was
+infinitely more simple. The spurs were hacked off close to the heels of
+the guilty knight. Nothing could be more summary or more significant.
+Such a person was publicly denounced as unworthy to ride on horseback,
+and consequently quite unworthy to be a knight. The more ancient and
+chivalrous, the less theatrical is it. It is so in many other
+institutions in the histories of all nations.
+
+That such a penalty may have prevented a certain number of treasons and
+forfeitures we willingly admit, but one cannot expect it to preserve all
+the whole body of chivalry from that decadence from which no institution
+of human establishment can escape.
+
+Notwithstanding inevitable weaknesses and accidents, the Decalogue of
+Chivalry has none the less been regnant in some millions of souls which
+it has made pure and great. These ten commandments have been the rules
+and the reins of youthful generations, who without them would have been
+wild and undisciplined. This legislation, in fact--which, to tell the
+truth, is only one of the chapters of the great Catholic Code--has
+raised the moral level of humanity.
+
+Besides, chivalry is not yet quite dead. No doubt, the ritual of
+chivalry, the solemn reception, the order itself, and the ancient oaths,
+no longer exist. No doubt, among these grand commandments there are many
+which are known only to the erudite, and which the world is unacquainted
+with. The Catholic Faith is no longer the essence of modern chivalry;
+the Church is no longer seated on the throne around which the old
+knights stand with their drawn swords; Islam is no longer the hereditary
+enemy; we have another which threatens us nearer home; widows and
+orphans have need rather of the tongues of advocates than of the iron
+weapon of the knights; there are no more duties toward liege-lords to be
+fulfilled; and we even do not want any kind of superior lord at all;
+_largesse_ is now confounded with charity; and the becoming hatred of
+evil-doing is no longer our chief, our best, passion!
+
+But whatever we may do there still remains to us, in the marrow, a
+certain leaven of chivalry which preserves us from death. There are
+still in the world an immense number of fine souls--strong and upright
+souls--who hate all that is small and mean, who know and who practise
+all the delicate promptings of honor, and who prefer death to an
+unworthy action or to a lie!
+
+That is what we owe to chivalry, that is what it has bequeathed to us.
+On the day when these last vestiges of such a grand past are effaced
+from our souls--we shall cease to exist!
+
+
+
+
+CONVERSION OF VLADIMIR THE GREAT
+
+INTRODUCTION OF CHRISTIANITY INTO RUSSIA
+
+A.D. 988-1015
+
+A. N. MOURAVIEFF
+
+
+(According to early Greek and Roman writers, Russia in their time was
+inhabited by Scythians and Sarmatians. The Greeks established commercial
+relations with the most southerly tribes. In the fourth and fifth
+centuries, during the migrations of the nations, Russia was invaded by
+Goths, Alans, Huns, Avars, and Bulgarians, who, however, made no
+settlements. They were followed by the Slavs, who are looked upon as the
+Sarmatians already mentioned.
+
+The Slavs settled as far north as the upper Volga. The chief settlements
+were Novgorod and Kieff, which became the capitals of independent
+principalities, Novgorod especially becoming an important commercial and
+trading centre.
+
+The commerce northward through the Baltic was subject to the attacks of
+the Scandinavian Northmen, known as Varangians. They demanded tribute of
+the Slavs, and on its refusal attacked and captured Novgorod. A little
+later Novgorod established its independence as a republic; but within a
+few years we find this section controlled by a Varangian tribe from Rus,
+a district of Sweden. This tribe was led by three brothers, Ruric the
+Peaceful, Sineous the Victorious, and Trouvor the Faithful, who settled
+and ruled in different parts of the country.
+
+In 864, on the death of his brothers, Ruric consolidated their
+territories with his, assumed the title of grand prince, peaceably took
+possession of Novgorod and made it his capital, naming the country
+Russia, after his native place.
+
+With the advent of the Varangians the authentic history of Russia
+begins. The millenary of that event was celebrated in 1862 at Novgorod,
+as the foundation of the Russian empire.
+
+Ruric died in 879. In the next hundred years his successors conquered
+many neighboring lands and added them to the empire. Kieff became the
+capital. Numerous invasions into the territory of the Greek empire were
+made and Constantinople was frequently attacked, resulting sometimes in
+repulse, and at others in exacting heavy tribute from the Eastern
+Emperor. Treaties were executed and a gradual growth of commerce and
+intercourse between the Greeks and Russians took place. Olga, the famous
+and popular widow of Ruric's son, Igor, became a Christian and was
+baptized in Constantinople in 955, and during the rest of her life lent
+her powerful influence to the spread of the faith. And though her son,
+the emperor Sviatoslaf, remained a pagan throughout his reign,
+Christianity continued to grow, and the general Christianization of
+Russia during the reign of her grandson, Vladimir, was aided materially
+by the great example of the good queen Olga.
+
+In 970 Sviatoslaf divided his empire among his three sons, Iaropolk I,
+Oleg, and Vladimir. After the death of Sviatoslaf in 972 civil war began
+between the three brothers. Oleg was killed and Vladimir fled to Sweden.
+In 980, supported by a force of Varangians, Vladimir returned, captured
+Novgorod and Kieff, and put Iaropolk to death. Under Vladimir, later
+known as Vladimir the Great, Russia increased in importance, and
+civilization was enhanced by the spread of Christianity through the
+missionary efforts of the Greek Church, now the Holy, Orthodox,
+Catholic, Apostolic, Oriental Church. It is, therefore, not strange that
+the Russian prelates were distinguished by their loyalty and fidelity to
+the Greek Church throughout the continued conflicts between it and the
+Roman Church which resulted in their separation in 1054.
+
+In the fifteenth century, with the consent of the patriarchate of
+Constantinople, the Orthodox Graeco-Russian Church assumed national
+independence, and became the state church; and after the establishment
+of Mahometanism in Constantinople, since its capture by Mahomet II in
+1453, the reigning Czar of Russia has come to be regarded not only as
+the temporal and spiritual head of the Greek Church by the great mass of
+adherents which form the bulk of the population in Russia, but also as
+the champion of all the followers of the church in Greece and throughout
+the orient.
+
+The story of the introduction of Christianity into Russia presents an
+interesting psychological study of the growth and development of the
+religious sentiment inherent in man--be he never so brutalized and
+barbarous. Notwithstanding its display of national pride and bias,
+pardonable in a native historian, Mouravieff's account is exceedingly
+interesting.)
+
+
+The Russian Church, like the other orthodox churches of the East, had an
+apostle for its founder. St. Andrew, the first called of the Twelve,
+hailed with his blessing long beforehand the destined introduction of
+Christianity into our country; ascending up and penetrating by the
+Dnieper into the deserts of Scythia, he planted the first cross on the
+hills of Kieff. "See you," said he to his disciples, "these hills? On
+these hills shall shine the light of divine grace. There shall be here a
+great city, and God shall have in it many churches to his name."
+
+Such are the words of the holy Nestor, the monk and annalist of the
+Pechersky monastery, that point from whence Christian Russia has sprung.
+
+But it was only after an interval of nine centuries that the rays of
+divine light beamed upon Russia from the walls of Byzantium, in which
+city the same apostle, St. Andrew, had appointed Stachys to be the first
+bishop, and so committed, as it were, to him and to his successors, in
+the spirit of prescience, the charge of that wide region in which he had
+himself preached Christ. Hence the indissoluble connection of the
+Russian with the Greek Church, and the dependence of her metropolitans
+during six centuries upon the patriarchal throne of Constantinople,
+until, with its consent, she obtained her own equality and independence
+in that which was accorded to her native primates.
+
+The Bulgarians of the Danube, the Moravians, and the Slavonians of
+Illyria had been already enlightened by holy baptism about the middle of
+the ninth century, during the reign of the Greek emperor Michael and the
+patriarchate of the illustrious Photius. St. Cyril and St. Methodius,
+two learned Greek brothers, translated into the Slavonic the New
+Testament and the books used in divine service, and according to some
+accounts even the whole Bible.
+
+This translation of the Word of God became afterward a most blessed
+instrument for the conversion of the Russians, for the missionaries were
+by it enabled to expound the truths of the Gospel to the heathens in
+their native dialect, and so win for them a readier entrance to their
+hearts.
+
+Oskold and Dir, two princes of Kieff and the companions of Ruric, were
+the first of the Russians who embraced Christianity. In the year 866
+they made their appearance in armed vessels before the walls of
+Constantinople when the Emperor was absent, and threw the Greek capital
+into no little alarm and confusion. Tradition reports that "The
+patriarch Photius took the virginal robe of the Mother of God from the
+Blachern Church, and plunged it beneath the waves of the strait, when
+the sea immediately boiled up from underneath and wrecked the vessels of
+the heathen. Struck with awe, they believed in that God who had smitten
+them, and became the first-fruits of their people to the Lord." The hymn
+of victory of the Greek Church, "To the protecting Conductress," in
+honor of the most holy Virgin, has remained a memorial of this triumph,
+and even now concludes the _Office for the First Hour_ in the daily
+_Matins_; for that was, indeed, the first hour of salvation to the land
+of Russia.
+
+It is probable that on their return to their own country the princes of
+Kieff sowed there the seeds of Christianity; for, eighty years
+afterward, on occasion of a conference for peace between the prince Igor
+and certain Byzantine ambassadors, we find mention already of a "Church
+of the Prophet Elias" in Kieff where the Christian Varangians swore to
+the observance of the treaty. Constantine Porphyrogenitus and other
+Greek annalists even relate that in the lifetime of Oskold there was a
+bishop sent to the Russians by the emperor Basil the Macedonian, and the
+patriarch St. Ignatius, and that he made many converts, chiefly "in
+consequence of the miraculous preservation of a volume of the Gospels,
+which was thrown publicly into the flames and taken out after some time
+unconsumed." Also in Condinus, _Catalogue of Sees Subject to the
+Patriarch of Constantinople_, the metropolitical see of Russia appears
+as early as the year 891.
+
+Lastly, it is certain that many of the Varangians who served in the
+imperial bodyguard were Christians, and that the Greek sovereigns never
+lost sight of any opportunity of converting them to their own faith, by
+which they hoped to soften their savage manners. When the emperor Leo
+was concluding a peace with Oleg, he showed not only his own treasures
+to the ambassadors of the Russian prince, but also the splendor of the
+churches, the holy relics, the precious _icons_, and the "Instruments of
+the Passion of our Lord," if by any means they might catch from them the
+spirit of the faith.
+
+Some such influences as these, while Christianity as yet was only
+struggling for an uncertain existence at Kieff, produced in good time
+their effect on the wisest of the daughters of the Slavonians, the
+widowed princess Olga, who governed Russia during the minority of her
+son Sviatoslaf. She undertook a voyage to Constantinople for no other
+end than to obtain a knowledge of the true God, and there she received
+baptism at the hands of the patriarch Polyeuctes; the emperor
+Constantine Porphyrogenitus himself, who admired her wisdom, being her
+godfather. Nestor draws an affecting picture of the patriarch
+foretelling to the newly illumined princess the blessings which were to
+descend by her means on future generations of the Russians, while Olga,
+now become Helena by baptism--that she might resemble both in name and
+deed the mother of Constantine the Great--stood meekly bowing down her
+head and drinking in, as a sponge that is thirsty of moisture, the
+instructions of the prelate concerning the canons of the Church,
+fasting, prayer, almsgiving, and continence, all which she observed with
+exactness on her return to her own country.
+
+Although, in spite of all her entreaties, the fierce and warlike prince
+Sviatoslaf persisted in refusing to humble his proud heart under the
+meek yoke of Christ, he had still so much affection for his mother as
+not to persecute such as agreed with her in religion, but even to allow
+them freely to make open profession of their faith under the protection
+of that princess. He confided his children to her care during his
+incessant military expeditions, and so enabled her to confirm the saving
+impressions of Christianity among the people who respected her, and to
+instil them into the mind of her young grandson Vladimir; for nothing
+sinks so deep into the heart as the simple-and affectionate words of a
+mother. The princess had with her a priest named Gregory, whom she had
+brought from Constantinople, and by him she was buried after her death
+in the spot which she had herself appointed, without any of the usual
+pagan ceremonies. The people, by whom she had been surnamed "the Wise"
+during life, began to bless her for a saint after her death, when they
+came themselves to follow the example of this "Morning Star" which had
+risen and gone before to lead Russia into the path of salvation.
+
+Nowhere has Christianity ever been less persecuted at its first
+introduction than in our own country. The _Chronicle_ speaks of only two
+Christian martyrs, the Varangians Theodore and John, who were put to
+death by the fury of the people because one of them, from natural
+affection, had refused to give up his son when he had been devoted by
+the prince Vladimir to be offered as a sacrifice to Peroun.
+
+Probably the very zeal of this prince for the heathen deities, to whom
+he set up statues and multiplied altars, may have inspired the
+neighboring nations with the desire of converting so powerful a ruler to
+their respective creeds; and thus his blind impulse toward the Deity,
+which was unknown to him, received a true direction. The Mahometan
+Bulgarians were the first to send ambassadors to him, with the offer of
+their faith; but the mercy of Providence--for so it plainly
+was--inspired him to give them a decided refusal on the ground that he
+did not choose to comply with some of their regulations; though else a
+sensual religion might well have enticed a man who was given up to the
+indulgence of his passions.
+
+The Chazarian Jews flattered themselves with the hope of attracting the
+Prince by boasting of their religion and the ancient glory of Jerusalem.
+"But where," demanded the wise grandson of Olga, "is your country?"
+
+"It is ruined by the wrath of God for the sins of our fathers," was
+their answer. Vladimir then said that he had no mind to embrace the law
+of a people whom God had abandoned. There came also western doctors from
+Germany, who would have persuaded Vladimir to embrace Christianity, but
+their Christianity seemed strange to him; for Russia had hitherto no
+acquaintance but with Byzantium.
+
+"Return home," he said; "our ancestors did not receive this religion
+from you."
+
+A Greek embassy had the best success of them all. A certain philosopher,
+a monk named Constantine, after having exposed the insufficiency of
+other religions, eloquently set before the Prince those judgments of God
+which are in the world, the redemption of the human race by the blood of
+Christ, and the retribution of the life to come. His discourse
+powerfully affected the heathen monarch, who was burdened with the heavy
+sins of a tumultuous youth; and this was particularly the case when the
+monk pointed out to him on an icon, which represented the last judgment,
+the different lot of the just and of the wicked.
+
+"Good to these on the right hand, but woe to those on the left!"
+exclaimed Vladimir, deeply affected. But sensual nature still struggled
+in him against heavenly truth. Having dismissed the missionary, or
+ambassador, with presents, he still hesitated to decide, and wished
+first to examine further concerning the faith, in concert with the
+elders of his council, that all Russia might have a share in his
+conversion. The council of the Prince decided to send chosen men to make
+their observations on each religion on the spot where it was professed;
+and this public agreement explains in some degree the sudden and general
+acceptance of Christianity which shortly after followed in Russia. It is
+probable that not only the chiefs, but the common people also, were
+expecting and ready for the change.
+
+The Greek emperors did not fail to profit by this favorable opportunity,
+and the patriarch himself in person celebrated the divine liturgy in the
+Church of St. Sophia with the utmost possible magnificence before the
+astonished ambassadors of Vladimir. The sublimity and splendor of the
+service struck them; but we do not ascribe to the mere external
+impression that softening of the hearts of these heathens, on which
+depended the conversion of a whole nation. From the very earliest times
+of the Church, extraordinary signs of God's power have constantly gone
+hand-in-hand with that apparent weakness of man by which the Gospel was
+preached; and so also the _Byzantine Chronicle_ relates of the Russian
+ambassadors, "That during the Divine liturgy, at the time of carrying
+the Holy Gifts in procession to the throne or altar and singing the
+cherubic hymn, the eyes of their spirits were opened, and they saw, as
+in an ecstasy, glittering youths who joined in singing the hymn of the
+'Thrice Holy.'"
+
+Being thus fully persuaded of the truth of the orthodox faith, they
+returned to their own country already Christians in heart, and without
+saying a word before the Prince in favor of the other religions, they
+declared thus concerning the Greek: "When we stood in the temple we did
+not know where we were, for there is nothing else like it upon earth:
+there in truth God has his dwelling with men; and we can never forget
+the beauty we saw there. No one who has once tasted sweets will
+afterward take that which is bitter; nor can we now any longer abide in
+heathenism."
+
+Then the _boyars_ said to Vladimir: "If the religion of the Greeks had
+not been good, your grandmother Olga, who was the wisest of women, would
+not have embraced it."
+
+The weight of the name of Olga decided her grandson, and he said no more
+in answer than these words: "Where shall we be baptized?"
+
+But Vladimir, led by a sense which had not yet been purged by Greece,
+thought it best to follow the custom of his ancestors, who made warlike
+descents upon Constantinople, and so win to himself, sword in hand, his
+new religion. He embarked his warriors on board their vessels and
+attacked Cherson in the Taurid, a city which was subject to the emperors
+Basil and Constantine.
+
+After a long and unsuccessful siege a certain priest, named Anastasius,
+by means of an arrow shot from the town, informed the Prince that the
+fate of the besieged depended upon his cutting off the aqueducts, which
+supplied them with water. Vladimir in great joy made a vow that he would
+be baptized if he gained possession of the town; and he did gain
+possession of it. Then he sent to Constantinople to demand from the
+Greek Emperor the hand of their sister Anna, and they in answer proposed
+as a condition that he should embrace Christianity; for though they
+themselves desired an alliance with so powerful a prince, they at the
+same time took care to follow the prudent and pious policy of their
+predecessors, who had ever sought to bring their fierce neighbors under
+the humanizing influence of the faith. The Prince declared his consent;
+because, in his own words, he had "long since examined and conceived a
+love for the Greek law."
+
+It was her faith alone which influenced the princess to sacrifice
+herself at once for the temporal interests of her own country and for
+the eternal welfare of a strange people. Accompanied by a venerable body
+of clergy, she sailed for Cherson, and on her arrival induced the Prince
+to hasten his baptism. "For it was so ordered," says the pious annalist,
+"by the wisdom of God, that the sight of the Prince was at that time
+much affected by a complaint of the eyes, but at the moment that the
+Bishop of Cherson laid his hands upon him, when he had risen up out of
+the bath of regeneration, Vladimir suddenly received not only spiritual
+illumination, but also the bodily sight of his eyes, and cried out, 'Now
+I have seen the true God!'"
+
+Many of the Prince's suite were so struck by his miraculous recovery
+that they followed his example and were baptized in like manner; and
+these were doubtless afterward zealous for the introduction of
+Christianity into their country. The baptism and marriage of Vladimir
+were both celebrated in the Church of the Most Holy Mother of God; and
+hence, no doubt, arose his peculiar zeal for the most pure Virgin, to
+whose honor he afterward erected a cathedral church in his own city of
+Kieff. In Cherson itself he built a church, in the name of his angel or
+patron St. Basil; and taking with him the relics of St. Clement, Bishop
+of Rome, and his disciple Thebas, with church vessels and ornaments and
+icons, he restored the city to be again under the power of the emperors,
+and returned to Kieff, accompanied by the princess, their daughter, and
+her Greek ecclesiastics.
+
+Nestor makes no mention of any of the bishops and priests from
+Constantinople and Cherson who followed in the train of the Prince,
+excepting only of one, Anastasius, the priest who had rendered him such
+good service during the siege; but the _Books of the Genealogies_ give
+the name of Michael, a Syrian by birth, and of six other bishops who
+were sent together with him to Cherson by the patriarch Nicholas
+Chrysoberges. Some have ventured to suppose that Michael was the name of
+the bishop of the times of Oskold; but Nestor says nothing about him,
+and this much only is certain, that he stands the first in the list of
+the metropolitans of Russia.
+
+After his return to Kieff the "Great Prince" caused his twelve sons to
+be baptized, and proceeded to destroy the monuments of heathenism. He
+ordered Peroun to be thrown into the Dnieper. The people at first
+followed their idol, as it was borne down the stream, but were soon
+quieted when they saw that the statue had no power to help itself.
+
+And now Vladimir, being surrounded and supported by believers in his own
+domestic circle, and encouraged by seeing that his boyars and suite were
+prepared and ready to embrace the faith, made a proclamation to the
+people, "That whoever, on the morrow, should not repair to the river,
+whether rich or poor, he should hold him for his enemy." At the call of
+their respected lord all the multitude of the citizens in troops, with
+their wives and children, flocked to the Dnieper; and without any manner
+of opposition received holy baptism as a nation from the Greek bishops
+and priests. Nestor draws a touching picture of this baptism of a whole
+people at once: "Some stood in the water up to their necks, others up to
+their breasts, holding their young children in their arms; the priests
+read the prayers from the shore, naming at once whole companies by the
+same name." He who was the means of thus bringing them to salvation,
+filled with a transport of joy at the affecting sight, cried out to the
+Lord, offering and commending into his hands himself and his people: "O
+great God! who hast made heaven and earth, look down upon these thy new
+people. Grant them, O Lord, to know thee the true God, as thou hast been
+made known to Christian lands, and confirm in them a true and unfailing
+faith; and assist me, O Lord, against my enemy that opposes me, that,
+trusting in thee and in thy power, I may overcome all his wiles."
+
+Vladimir erected the first church--that of St. Basil, after whom he was
+named--on the very mount which had formerly been sacred to Peroun,
+adjoining his own palace. Thus was Russia enlightened.
+
+So sudden and ready a conversion of the inhabitants of Kieff might well
+seem improbable--that is, unless effected by violence--did we not attend
+to the fact that the Russians had been gradually becoming enlightened
+ever since the times of Oskold, for more than a hundred years, by means
+of commerce, treaties of peace, and relations of every kind with the
+Greeks, as well as with the Bulgarians and Slavonians of kindred origin
+with ourselves, who had already been long in possession of the Holy
+Scriptures in their own language. The constant endeavors of the Greek
+emperors for the conversion of the Russians by means of their
+ambassadors and preachers, the tolerance of the princes, the example and
+protection of Olga, and the very delay and hesitation of Vladimir in
+selecting his religion must have favorably disposed the minds of the
+people toward it; especially if it be true, as has been asserted, that
+Russia had already had a bishop in the time of Oskold. In a similar way,
+though under different circumstances, in the vast Roman Empire, the
+conversion of Constantine the Great suddenly rendered Christianity the
+dominant religion, because, in fact, it had long before penetrated among
+all ranks of his subjects.
+
+Vladimir engaged zealously in building churches throughout the towns and
+villages of his dominions, and sent priests to preach in them. He also
+founded many towns all around Kieff, and so propagated and confirmed the
+Christian religion in the neighborhood of the capital, from whence the
+new colonies were sent forth. Neither was he slow in establishing
+schools, into which he brought together the children of the boyars,
+sometimes even in spite of the unwillingness of their rude parents. In
+the mean time the Metropolitan with his bishops made progresses into the
+interior of Russia, to the cities of Rostoff and Novgorod, everywhere
+baptizing and instructing the people. Vladimir himself, for the same
+good end, went in company with other bishops to the district of Souzdal
+and to Volhynia. The boyars on the Volga and some of the Pechenegian
+princes embraced the gospel of salvation together with his subjects, and
+rejoiced to be admitted to holy baptism.
+
+The pious Prince wished to see in his own capital a magnificent temple
+in honor of the birth of the most holy Virgin, to be a likeness and
+memorial of that at Cherson, in which he himself had been baptized; and
+the year after his conversion he sent to Greece for builders, and laid
+the foundation of the first stone cathedral in Russia, on the very same
+spot where the Varangian martyrs had suffered. But the first
+metropolitan was not to live to its completion; only his holy remains
+were buried in it, and were thence translated afterward to the Pechersky
+Lavra. Another metropolitan, Leontius, a Greek by birth, sent by the
+same patriarch Nicholas, consecrated the new temple, to the great
+satisfaction of Vladimir, who made a vow to endow it with the tenth part
+of all his revenues; and from hence it was called "the Cathedral of the
+Tithes."
+
+These tithes, according to the ordinance ascribed to Prince Vladimir,
+consisted of the fixed quota of corn, cattle, and the profits of trade,
+for the support of the clergy and the poor; and besides this there was a
+further tithe collected from every cause which was tried; for the right
+of judging causes was granted to the bishops and the metropolitan, and
+they judged according to the Nomocanon. The canons of the holy councils
+and the Greek ecclesiastical laws, together with the Holy Scriptures,
+were taken, from the very first, as the basis of all ecclesiastical
+administration in Russia; and together with them there came into use
+some portions also of the civil law of the Greeks, through the influence
+of the Church. The care of the new temple and the collection of tithes
+for its support were intrusted to a native of Cherson named Anastasius,
+who enjoyed the confidence of Vladimir and his successors.
+
+The light of Christianity had now been diffused throughout the whole of
+Russia; but still the faith was nowhere as yet firmly established,
+because there were no bishops regularly settled in the towns. The
+metropolitan Leontius formed the first five dioceses, and appointed
+Joachim of Cherson to be Bishop of Novgorod, Theodorus of Rostoff,
+Neophytus of Chernigoff, Stephen the Volhynian of Vladimir, and Nicetas
+of Belgorod. Assisted by Dobrina, the uncle of the "Great Prince," who
+had long governed in Novgorod, the new bishop Joachim threw the statue
+of Peroun into the Volkoff, and broke down the idolatrous altars without
+any opposition on the part of the citizens; for they, too, like the
+inhabitants of Kieff, from their comparative degree of civilization and
+from their relations of intercourse with the Greeks, were in all
+probability already favorably disposed for the reception of
+Christianity. Tradition asserts that even as far back as the time of St.
+Olga the hermits Sergius and Germanus lived upon the desolate island of
+Balaam in the lake Ladoga, and that from thence St. Abramius went forth
+to preach Christ to the savage inhabitants of Rostoff.
+
+The attempt to found a diocese at Rostoff was less successful. The first
+two bishops, Theodore and Hilarion, were driven away by the fierce
+tribes of the forest district of Meri, who held obstinately to their
+idols in spite of the zeal of St. Abramius. It cost the two succeeding
+bishops, St. Leontius and St. Isaiah, many years of extraordinary labor
+and exertion, attended frequently by persecutions, before they at length
+succeeded in establishing Christianity in that savage region, from
+whence it spread itself by degrees into all the surrounding districts.
+
+Thus Vladimir, having piously observed the commandments of Christ during
+the course of his long reign, had the consolation of seeing before his
+death the fruits of his own conversion in all the wide extent of his
+dominions. He departed this life in peace at Kieff, and was soon
+reckoned with his grandmother Olga among the guardian saints of Russia.
+John, the third metropolitan, who had been sent from Constantinople upon
+the death of Leontius, buried the Prince in the Church of the Tithes,
+which he had built, near the tomb of the Grecian princess, his wife, and
+the uncorrupted relics of St. Olga were translated to the same spot.
+
+
+
+
+LEIF ERICSON DISCOVERS AMERICA
+
+A.D. 1000
+
+CHARLES C. RAFN
+
+SAGA OF ERIC THE RED
+
+
+(Besides the Northmen or Norsemen, those ancient Scandinavians
+celebrated in history for their adventurous exploits at sea, the Chinese
+and the Welsh have laid claim to the discovery of North America at
+periods much earlier than that of Columbus and the Cabots. But to the
+Norse sailors alone is it generally agreed that credit for that
+achievement is probably due. Associated with their supposed arrival and
+sojourn on the coast of what is now New England, about A.D. 1000, the
+"Round Tower" or "Old Stone Mill" at Newport, R.I., the mysterious
+inscription on the "Dighton Rock" in Massachusetts, and the "Skeleton in
+Armor" dug up at Fall River, Mass., and made the subject of a ballad by
+Longfellow, have figured prominently in the discussion of this
+pre-Columbian discovery. But these conjectural evidences are no longer
+regarded as having any connection with historical probability or as
+dating back to the time of the Northmen.
+
+It is considered, however, to be pretty certain that at the end of the
+tenth century or at the beginning of the eleventh the Northmen reached
+the shores of North America. About that time, it is known, they settled
+Iceland, and from there a colony went to Greenland, where they long
+remained. From there, either by design or by accident, some of them, it
+is supposed, may have reached the coast of Labrador, and thence sailed
+down until they came to the region which they named Vinland. From there
+they sent home glowing accounts to their countrymen in the northern
+lands, who came in larger numbers to join them in the New World.
+
+About the middle of the nineteenth century great interest among students
+of this subject was aroused by a work written by Prof. C.C. Rafn, of the
+Royal Society of Northern Antiquaries, Copenhagen. In this work--
+_Antiquitates Americanae_--the proofs of this visit of the Northmen to
+the shores of North America were convincingly set forth. In the same
+work the Icelandic sagas, written in the fourteenth century, and
+containing the original accounts of the Northmen's voyages to Vinland,
+were first brought prominently before modern scholars. Although many
+other writings on the voyages have since appeared, the great work of
+Rafn still holds its place of authority, very little in the way of new
+material having been brought to light. The portion of his narrative
+which follows covers the main facts of the history, and the translation
+from the saga furnishes an excellent example of its quaint and simple
+narration.)
+
+
+CHARLES C. RAFN
+
+Eric The Red, in the spring of 986, emigrated from Iceland to Greenland,
+formed a settlement there, and fixed his residence at Brattalid in
+Ericsfiord. Among others who accompanied him was Heriulf Bardson, who
+established himself at Heriulfsnes.
+
+Biarne, the son of the latter, was at that time absent on a trading
+voyage to Norway; but in the course of the summer returning to Eyrar, in
+Iceland, and finding that his father had taken his departure, this bold
+navigator resolved "still to spend the following winter, like all the
+preceding ones, with his father," although neither he nor any of his
+people had ever navigated the Greenland sea.
+
+They set sail, but met with northerly winds and fogs, and, after many
+days' sailing, knew not whither they had been carried. At length when
+the weather again cleared up, they saw a land which was without
+mountains, overgrown with wood, and having many gentle elevations. As
+this land did not correspond to the descriptions of Greenland, they left
+it on the larboard hand, and continued sailing two days, when they saw
+another land, which was flat and overgrown with wood.
+
+From thence they stood out to sea, and sailed three days with a
+southwest wind, when they saw a third land, which was high and
+mountainous and covered with icebergs (glaciers). They coasted along the
+shore and saw that it was an island.
+
+They did not go on shore, as Biarne did not find the country to be
+inviting. Bearing away from this island, they stood out to sea with the
+same wind, and, after four days' sailing with fresh gales, they reached
+Heriulfsnes, in Greenland.
+
+Some time after this, probably in the year 994, Biarne paid a visit to
+Eric, Earl of Norway, and told him of his voyage and of the unknown
+lands he had discovered. He was blamed by many for not having examined
+these countries more accurately.
+
+On his return to Greenland there was much talk about undertaking a
+voyage of discovery. Leif, a son of Eric the Red, bought Biarne's ship,
+and equipped it with a crew of thirty-five men, among whom was a German,
+of the name of Tyrker, who had long resided with his father, and who had
+been very fond of Leif in his childhood. In the year 1000 they commenced
+the projected voyage, and came first to the land which Biarne had seen
+last. They cast anchor and went on shore. No grass was seen; but
+everywhere in this country were vast ice mountains (glaciers), and the
+intermediate space between these and the shore was, as it were, one
+uniform plain of slate (_hella_). The country appearing to them
+destitute of good qualities, they called it Hellu-Land.
+
+They put out to sea, and came to another land, where they also went on
+shore. The country was very level and covered with woods; and
+wheresoever they went there were cliffs of white sand (_sand-ar
+hvitir_), and a low coast (_o-soe-bratt_). They called the country Mark
+Land (woodland). From thence they again stood out to sea, with a
+northeast wind, and continued sailing for two days before they made land
+again. They then came to an island which lay to the eastward of the
+mainland. They sailed westward in waters where there was much ground
+left dry at ebb tide.
+
+Afterward they went on shore at a place where a river, issuing from a
+lake, fell into the sea. They brought their ship into the river, and
+from thence into the lake, where they cast anchor. Here they constructed
+some temporary log huts; but later, when they had made up their mind to
+winter there, they built large houses, afterward called Leifs-Budir
+(Leif's-booths).
+
+When the buildings were completed Leif divided his people into two
+companies, who were by turns employed in keeping watch at the houses,
+and in making small excursions for the purpose of exploring the country
+in the vicinity. His instructions to them were that they should not go
+to a greater distance than that they might return in the course of the
+same evening, and that they should not separate from one another.
+
+Leif took his turn also, joining the exploring party the one day, and
+remaining at the houses the other.
+
+It so happened that one day the German, Tyrker, was missing. Leif
+accordingly went out with twelve men in search of him, but they had not
+gone far from their houses when they met him coming toward them. When
+Leif inquired why he had been so long absent, he at first answered in
+German, but they did not understand what he said. He then said to them
+in the Norse tongue: "I did not go much farther, yet I have a discovery
+to acquaint you with: I have found vines and grapes."
+
+He added by way of confirmation that he had been born in a country where
+there were plenty of vines. They had now two occupations: namely, to hew
+timber for loading the ship, and collect grapes; with these last they
+filled the ship's longboat. Leif gave a name to the country, and called
+it Vinland (Vineland). In the spring they sailed again from thence, and
+returned to Greenland.
+
+Leif's Vineland voyage was now a subject of frequent conversation in
+Greenland, and his brother Thorwald was of opinion that the country had
+not been sufficiently explored. He, accordingly, borrowed Leif's ship,
+and, aided by his brother's counsel and directions, commenced a voyage
+in the year 1002. He arrived at Leif's-booths, in Vineland, where they
+spent the winter, he and his crew employing themselves in fishing. In
+the spring of 1003 Thorwald sent a party in the ship's long-boat on a
+voyage of discovery southward. They found the country beautiful and well
+wooded, with but little space between the woods and the sea; there were
+likewise extensive ranges of white sand, and many islands and shallows.
+
+They found no traces of men having been there before them, excepting on
+an island lying to westward, where they found a wooden shed. They did
+not return to Leif's-booths until the fall. In the following summer,
+1004, Thorwald sailed eastward with the large ship, and then northward
+past a remarkable headland enclosing a bay, and which was opposite to
+another headland. They called it Kial-Ar-Nes (Keel Cape).
+
+From thence they sailed along the eastern coast of the land, into the
+nearest firths, to a promontory which there projected, and which was
+everywhere overgrown with wood. There Thorwald went ashore with all his
+companions. He was so pleased with this place that he exclaimed: "This
+is beautiful! and here I should like well to fix my dwelling!"
+Afterward, when they were preparing to go on board, they observed on the
+sandy beach, within the promontory, three hillocks, and repairing hither
+they found three canoes, under each of which were three Skrellings
+(Esquimaux). They came to blows with the latter and killed eight, but
+the ninth escaped with his canoe. Afterward a countless number issued
+forth against them from the interior of the bay.
+
+They endeavored to protect themselves by raising battle-screens on the
+ship's side. The Skrellings continued shooting at them for a while and
+then retired. Thorwald was wounded by an arrow under the arm, and
+finding that the wound was mortal he said: "I now advise you to prepare
+for your departure as soon as possible, but me ye shall bring to the
+promontory, where I thought it good to dwell; it may be that it was a
+prophetic word that fell from my mouth about my abiding there for a
+season; there shall ye bury me, and plant a cross at my head, and
+another at my feet, and call the place Kross-a-Ness (Crossness) in all
+time coming." He died, and they did as he had ordered. Afterward they
+returned to their companions at Leif's-booths, and spent the winter
+there; but in the spring of 1005 they sailed again to Greenland, having
+important intelligence to communicate to Leif.
+
+Thorstein, Eric's third son, had resolved to proceed to Vine-land to
+fetch his brother's body. He fitted out the same ship, and selected
+twenty-five strong and able-bodied men for his crew; his wife, Gudrida,
+also went along with him. They were tossed about the ocean during the
+whole summer, and knew not whither they were driven; but at the close of
+the first week of winter they landed at Lysufiord, in the western
+settlement of Greenland.
+
+There Thorstein died during the winter; and in the spring Gudrida
+returned again to Ericsfiord.
+
+
+SAGA OF ERIC THE RED
+
+There was a man named Thorwald; he was a son of Asvald, Ulf's son,
+Eyxna-Thori's son. His son's name was Eric. He and his father went from
+Jaederen to Iceland, on account of manslaughter, and settled on
+Hornstrandir, and dwelt at Draugar. There Thorwald died, and Eric then
+married Thorheld, a daughter of Jorund, Atli's son, and Thorbiorg the
+sheep-chested, who had been married before to Thorbiorn of the Haukadal
+family.
+
+Eric then removed from the north, and cleared land in Haukadal, and
+dwelt at Ericsstadir, by Vatnshorn. Then Eric's thralls caused a
+landslide on Valthiof's farm, Valthiofsstadir. Eyiolf the Foul,
+Valthiof's kinsman, slew the thralls near Skeidsbrekkur, above
+Vatnshorn. For this Eric killed Eyiolf the Foul, and he also killed
+Duelling-Hrafn, at Leikskalar.
+
+Geirstein and Odd of Jorva, Eyiolf's kinsmen, conducted the prosecution
+for the slaying of their kinsmen, and Eric was in consequence banished
+from Haukadal. He then took possession of Brokey and Eyxney, and dwelt
+at Tradir on Sudrey the first winter. It was at this time that he loaned
+Thorgest his outer dais-boards. Eric afterward went to Eyxney, and dwelt
+at Ericsstad. He then demanded his outer dais-boards, but did not obtain
+them.
+
+Eric then carried the outer dais-boards away from Breidabolstad, and
+Thorgest gave chase. They came to blows a short distance from the farm
+of Drangar. There two of Thorgest's sons were killed, and certain other
+men besides. After this each of them retained a considerable body of men
+with him at his home. Styr gave Eric his support, as did also Eyiolf of
+Sviney, Thorbiorn, Vifil's son, and the sons of Thorbrand of Alptafirth;
+while Thorgest was backed by the sons of Thord the Yeller, and Thorgeir
+of Hitardal, Aslak of Langadal, and his son, Illugi. Eric and his people
+were condemned to outlawry at Thorsness-thing. He equipped his ship for
+a voyage in Ericsvag; while Eyiolf concealed him in Dimunarvag, when
+Thorgest and his people were searching for him among the islands. He
+said to them that it was his intention to go in search of that land
+which Gunnbiorn, son of Ulf the Crow, saw when he was driven out of his
+course, westward across the main, and discovered Gunnviorns-skerries.
+
+He told them that he would return again to his friends if he should
+succeed in finding that country. Thorbiorn and Eyiolf and Styr
+accompanied Eric out beyond the islands, and they parted with the
+greatest friendliness. Eric said to them that he would render them
+similar aid, so far as it might be within his power, if they should ever
+stand in need of his help.
+
+Eric sailed out to sea, from Snaefells-iokul, and arrived at that ice
+mountain which is called Blacksark. Thence he sailed to the southward
+that he might ascertain whether there was habitable country in that
+direction. He passed the first winter at Ericsey, near the middle of the
+western settlement.
+
+In the following spring he proceeded to Ericsfirth, and selected a site
+there for his homestead. That summer he explored the western uninhabited
+region, remaining there for a long time, and assigning many local names
+there. The second winter he spent at Ericsholms, beyond Hvarfsgnipa. But
+the third summer he sailed northward to Snaefell, and into Hrafnsfirth.
+He believed then that he had reached the head of Ericsfirth; he turned
+back then, and remained the third winter at Ericsey, at the mouth of
+Ericsfirth.
+
+The following summer he sailed to Iceland and landed in Breidafirth. He
+remained that winter with Ingolf at Holmlatr. In the spring he and
+Thorgest fought together, and Eric was defeated; after this a
+reconciliation was effected between them.
+
+That summer Eric set out to colonize the land which he had discovered,
+and which he called Greenland, because, he said, men would be the more
+readily persuaded thither if the land had a good name. Eric was married
+to a woman named Thorhild, and had two sons; one of these was named
+Thorstein, and the other Leif. They were both promising men. Thorstein
+lived at home with his father, and there was not at that time a man in
+Greenland who was accounted of so great promise as he.
+
+Leif had sailed to Norway, where he was at the court of King Olaf
+Tryggvason. When Leif sailed from Greenland, in the summer, they were
+driven out of their course to the Hebrides. It was late before they got
+fair winds thence, and they remained there far into the summer.
+
+Leif became enamoured of a certain woman, whose name was Thorgunna. She
+was a woman of fine family, and Leif observed that she was possessed of
+rare intelligence. When Leif was preparing for his departure, Thorgunna
+asked to be permitted to accompany him. Leif inquired whether she had in
+this the approval of her kinsmen. She replied that she did not care for
+it. Leif responded that he did not deem it the part of wisdom to abduct
+so high-born a woman in a strange country, "and we so few in number."
+"It is by no means certain that thou shalt find this to be the better
+decision," said Thorgunna. "I shall put it to the proof,
+notwithstanding," said Leif. "Then I tell thee," said Thorgunna, "that I
+foresee that I shall give birth to a male child; and though thou give
+this no heed, yet will I rear the boy, and send him to thee in Greenland
+when he shall be fit to take his place with other men. And I foresee
+that thou will get as much profit of this son as is thy due from this
+our parting; moreover, I mean to come to Greenland myself before the end
+comes."
+
+Leif gave her a gold finger-ring, a Greenland Wadmal mantle, and a belt
+of walrus tusk.
+
+This boy came to Greenland, and was called Thorgils. Leif acknowledged
+his paternity, and some men will have it that this Thorgils came to
+Iceland in the summer before the Froda-wonder. However, this Thorgils
+was afterward in Greenland, and there seemed to be something not
+altogether natural about him before the end came. Leif and his
+companions sailed away from the Hebrides, and arrived in Norway in the
+autumn.
+
+Leif went to the court of King Olaf Tryggvason. He was well received by
+the King, who felt that he could see that Leif was a man of great
+accomplishments. Upon one occasion the King came to speech with Leif,
+and asked him, "Is it thy purpose to sail to Greenland in the summer?"
+
+"It is my purpose," said Leif, "if it be your will."
+
+"I believe it will be well," answered the King, "and thither thou shalt
+go upon my errand, to proclaim Christianity there."
+
+Leif replied that the King should decide, but gave it as his belief that
+it would be difficult to carry this mission to a successful issue in
+Greenland. The King replied that he knew of no man who would be better
+fitted for this undertaking; "and in thy hands the cause will surely
+prosper."
+
+"This can only be," said Leif, "if I enjoy the grace of your
+protection."
+
+Leif put to sea when his ship was ready for the voyage. For a long time
+he was tossed about upon the ocean, and came upon lands of which he had
+previously had no knowledge. There were self-sown wheat-fields and vines
+growing there. There were also those trees there which are called
+"mansur," and of all these they took specimens. Some of the timbers were
+so large that they were used in building. Leif found men upon a wreck,
+and took them home with him, and procured quarters for them all during
+the winter. In this wise he showed his nobleness and goodness, since he
+introduced Christianity into the country, and saved the men from the
+wreck; and he was called Leif "the Lucky" ever after.
+
+Leif landed in Ericsfirth, and then went home to Brattahlid; he was well
+received by everyone. He soon proclaimed Christianity throughout the
+land, and the Catholic faith, and announced King Olaf Tryggvason's
+messages to the people, telling them how much excellence and how great
+glory accompanied this faith.
+
+Eric was slow in forming the determination to forsake his old belief,
+but Thiodhild embraced the faith promptly, and caused a church to be
+built at some distance from the house. This building was called
+Thiodhild's church, and there she and those persons who had accepted
+Christianity--and there were many--were wont to offer their prayers.
+
+At this time there began to be much talk about a voyage of exploration
+to that country which Leif had discovered. The leader of this expedition
+was Thorstein Ericsson, who was a good man and an intelligent, and
+blessed with many friends. Eric was likewise invited to join them, for
+the men believed that his luck and foresight would be of great
+furtherance. He was slow in deciding, but did not say nay when his
+friends besought him to go. They thereupon equipped that ship in which
+Thorbiorn had come out, and twenty men were selected for the expedition.
+They took little cargo with them, naught else save their weapons and
+provisions.
+
+On that morning when Eric set out from his home he took with him a
+little chest containing gold and silver; he hid this treasure and then
+went his way. He had proceeded but a short distance, however, when he
+fell from his horse and broke his ribs and dislocated his shoulder,
+whereat he cried, "Ai, ai!" By reason of this accident he sent his wife
+word that she should procure the treasure which he had concealed--for to
+the hiding of the treasure he attributed his misfortune. Thereafter they
+sailed cheerily out of Ericsfirth, in high spirits over their plan. They
+were long tossed about upon the ocean, and could not lay the course they
+wished.
+
+They came in sight of Iceland, and likewise saw birds from the Irish
+coast. Their ship was, in sooth, driven hither and thither over the sea.
+In autumn they turned back, worn out by toil and exposure to the
+elements, and exhausted by their labors, and arrived at Ericsfirth at
+the very beginning of winter.
+
+Then said Eric: "More cheerful were we in the summer, when we put out of
+the firth, but we still live, and it might have been much worse."
+
+Thorstein answers: "It will be a princely deed to endeavor to look well
+after the wants of all these men who are now in need, and to make
+provision for them during the winter." Eric answers: "It is ever true,
+as it is said, that 'It is never clear ere the winter comes,' and so it
+must be here. We will act now upon thy counsel in this matter."
+
+All of the men who were not otherwise provided for accompanied the
+father and son. They landed thereupon, and went home to Brattahlid,
+where they remained throughout the winter.
+
+
+
+
+MAHOMETANS IN INDIA
+
+BLOODY INVASIONS UNDER MAHMUD A.D. 1000
+
+ALEXANDER DOW
+
+
+(While Buddhism was giving place to Hinduism in India a new faith had
+arisen in Arabia. Mahomet, born A.D. 570, created a conquering religion,
+and died in 632. Within a hundred years after his death, his followers
+had invaded the countries of Asia as far as the Hindu Kush. Here their
+progress was stayed, and Islam had to consolidate itself during three
+more centuries before it grew strong enough to grasp the rich prize of
+India. But almost from the first the Arabs had fixed eager eyes upon
+that wealthy empire, and several premature inroads foretold the coming
+storm.
+
+About fifteen years after the death of the Prophet, Othman sent a naval
+expedition to Thana and Broach on the Bombay coast. Other raids toward
+Sind took place in 662 and 664, with no lasting results.
+
+Hinduism was for a time submerged, but never drowned, by the tide of
+Mahometan conquest, which set steadily toward India about A.D. 1000. At
+the present day the south of India remains almost entirely Hindu. By far
+the greater number of the Indian feudatory chiefs are still under
+Brahman influence. But in the northwest, where the first waves of
+invasion have always broken, about one-third of the population now
+profess Islam. The upper valley of the Ganges boasts a succession of
+Mussulman capitals; and in the swamps of Lower Bengal the bulk of the
+non-Aryan or aboriginal population have become converts to the Mahometan
+religion. The Mussulmans now make fifty-seven millions of the total of
+two hundred and eighty-eight millions in India.
+
+The armies of Islam had carried the crescent throughout Asia west of the
+Hindu Kush, and through Africa and Southern Europe, to distant Spain and
+France, before they obtained a foothold in the Punjab.
+
+The brilliant attempt in 711 to found a lasting Mahometan dynasty in
+Sind failed. Three centuries later, the utmost efforts of a series of
+Mussulman invaders from the northwest only succeeded in annexing a small
+portion of the frontier Punjab provinces.
+
+The popular notion that India fell an easy prey to the Mussulmans is
+opposed to the historical facts. Mahometan rule in India consists of a
+series of invasions and partial conquests, during eleven centuries from
+Othman's raid, about A.D. 647, to Ahmad Shah's tempest of devastation in
+1761.
+
+At no time was Islam triumphant throughout all India. Hindu dynasties
+always ruled over a large area.
+
+The first collision between Hinduism and Islam on the Punjab frontier
+was the act of the Hindus. In 977 Jaipal, the Hindu chief of Lahore,
+annoyed by Afghan raids, led his troops through the mountains against
+the Mahometan kingdom of Ghazni, in Afghanistan. Subuktigin, the
+Ghaznivide prince, after severe fighting, took advantage of a hurricane
+to cut off the retreat of the Hindus through the pass. He allowed them,
+however, to return to India, on the surrender of fifty elephants and the
+promise of one million _dirhams_ [about $125,000].
+
+In 997 Subuktigin died, and was succeeded by his son, Mahmud of Ghazni,
+aged sixteen. This valiant monarch, surnamed "the Great," reigned for
+thirty-three years, and extended his father's little Afghan kingdom into
+a great Mahometan sovereignty, stretching from Persia on the west to far
+within the Punjab on the east.)
+
+
+Mahmud was born about the year 357 of the Hegira--or 350, according to
+some authorities--and, as astrologers say, with many happy omens
+expressed in the horoscope of his life. Subuktigin, being asleep at the
+time of his birth, dreamed that he beheld a green tree springing forth
+from his chimney, which threw its shadow over the face of the earth and
+screened from the storms of heaven the whole animal creation. This
+indeed was verified by the justice of Mahmud; for, if we can believe the
+poet, in his reign the wolf and the sheep drank together at the same
+brook.
+
+When Mahmud had settled his dispute with his brother Ismail, he hastened
+to Balik, from whence he sent an ambassador to Munsur, Emperor of
+Bokhara, to whom the family of Ghazni still pretended to owe allegiance,
+complaining of the indignity which he met with in the appointment of
+Buktusin to the government of Khorassan, a country so long in possession
+of his father. It was returned to him for answer that he was already in
+possession of the territories of Balik, Turmuz, and Herat, which was
+part of the empire, and that there was a necessity to divide the favors
+of Bokhara among her friends. Buktusin, it was also insinuated, had been
+a faithful and good servant; which seemed to throw a reflection upon the
+family of Ghazni, who had rendered themselves independent in the
+governments they held of the royal house of Samania. Mahmud, not
+discouraged by this answer, sent Hasan Jemmavi with rich presents to the
+court of Bokhara, and a letter in the following terms: "That he hoped
+the pure spring of friendship, which had flowed in the time of his
+father, should not now be polluted with the ashes of indignity, nor
+Mahmud be reduced to the necessity of divesting himself of that
+obedience which he had hitherto paid to the imperial family of Samania."
+
+When Hasan delivered his embassy, his capacity and elocution appeared so
+great to the Emperor, that, desirous to gain him over to his interest by
+any means, he bribed him at last with the honors of the wazirate, but
+never returned an answer to Mahmud. That prince having received
+information of this transaction, through necessity turned his face
+toward Nishapur, and marched to Murgab. Buktusin, in the mean time,
+treacherously entered into a confederacy with Faek, and, forming a
+conspiracy in the camp of Munsur, seized upon the person of that prince
+and cruelly put out his eyes. Abdul, the younger brother of Munsur, who
+was but a boy, was advanced by the traitors to the throne. Being,
+however, afraid of the resentment of Mahmud, the conspirators hastened
+to Merv, whither they were pursued by the King with great expedition.
+Finding themselves, upon their march, hard pressed in the rear by
+Mahmud, they halted and gave him battle. But the sin of ingratitude had
+darkened the face of their fortune, so that the breeze of victory blew
+upon the standards of the King of Ghazni.
+
+Faek carried off the young King, and fled to Bokhara, and Buktusin was
+not heard of for some time, but at length he found his way to his
+fellows in iniquity and began to collect his scattered troops. Faek, in
+the mean time, fell ill and soon afterward expired. Elak, the Usbek
+King, seizing upon the opportunity offered him by that event, marched
+with an army from Kashgar to Bokhara and deprived Abdul-Mallek and his
+adherents of life and empire at the same time. Thus perished the last of
+the house of Samania, which had reigned for the space of one hundred and
+twenty-seven years.
+
+The Emperor of Ghazni, at this juncture, employed himself in settling
+the government of the provinces of Balik and Khorassan, the affairs of
+which he regulated in such an able manner that the fame thereof reached
+the ears of the Caliph of Bagdad, the illustrious Al-Kadar Balla, of the
+noble house of Abbas. The Caliph sent him a rich dress of honor, such as
+he had never before bestowed on any king, and dignified Mahmud with the
+titles of the Protector of the State and Treasurer of Fortune. In the
+end of the month Zikada, in the year of the Hegira 390, Mahmud hastened
+from the city of Balak to Herat, and from Herat to Sistan, where he
+defeated Khaliph, the son of Achmet, the governor of that province of
+the extinguished family of Bokhara, and returned to Ghazni. He then
+turned his face toward India, took many forts and provinces, in which,
+having appointed his own governors, he returned to his dominions where
+he "spread the carpet of justice so smoothly upon the face of the earth
+that the love of him, and loyalty, gained a place in every heart."
+
+Having negotiated a treaty with Elak the Usbek, the province of
+Maver-ul-nere was ceded to him, for which he made an ample return in
+presents of great value; and the closest friendship and familiarity, for
+a long time, existed between the kings.
+
+Mahmud made a vow to heaven that if ever he should be blessed with
+tranquillity in his own dominions he would turn his arms against the
+idolaters of Hindustan. He marched in the year 391 (Ad Hegira) from
+Ghazni with ten thousand of his chosen horse, and came to Peshawur,
+where Jipal, the Indian prince of Lahore, with twelve thousand horse and
+thirty thousand foot, supported by three hundred chain-elephants,
+opposed him. On Saturday, the 8th of the month Mohirrim, in the year 392
+of the Hegira, an obstinate battle ensued, in which the Emperor was
+victorious; Jipal, with fifteen of his principal officers, was taken
+prisoner, and five thousand of his troops lay dead upon the field.
+Mahmud in this action acquired great wealth and fame, for round the neck
+of Jipal alone were found sixteen strings of jewels, each of which was
+valued at one hundred and eighty thousand rupees.
+
+After this victory, the Emperor marched from Peshawur, and investing the
+fort of Batandi, reduced it, releasing his prisoners upon the payment of
+a large ransom, and the further stipulation of an annual tribute, then
+returned to Ghazni. It was in those days a custom of the Hindus that
+whatever rajah was twice defeated by the Moslems should be, by that
+disgrace, rendered ineligible for further command. Jipal, in compliance
+with this custom, having raised his son to the government, ordered a
+funeral pile to be prepared, upon which he sacrificed himself to his
+gods.
+
+A year later, Mahmud again marched into Sistan, and brought Kaliph, who
+had mismanaged his government, prisoner to Ghazni. Finding that the
+tribute from Hindustan had not been paid, in the year A.H. 395 he
+directed his march toward the city of Battea, and, leaving the
+boundaries of Multan, arrived at Tahera, which was fortified with an
+exceeding high wall and a deep, broad ditch. Tahera was at that time
+governed by a prince called Bakhera, who had, in the pride of power and
+wealth, greatly troubled the Mahometan governors whom Mahmud had
+delegated to rule in Hindustan. Bakhera had also refused to pay his
+proportion of the tribute to Annandpal, the son of Jipal, of whom he
+held his authority.
+
+When Mahmud entered the territories of Bakhera, that prince called out
+his troops to receive him, and, taking possession of a strong position,
+engaged the Mahometan army for the space of three days; in which time
+they suffered so much that they were on the point of abandoning the
+attack. But on the fourth day, Mahmud appeared at the head of his
+troops, and addressed them at length, encouraging them to win glory. He
+concluded by telling them that this day he had devoted himself to
+conquest or to death. Bakhera, on his part, invoked the gods at the
+temple, and prepared, with his former resolution, to repel the enemy.
+The Mahometans charged with their usual impetuosity, but were repulsed
+with great slaughter; yet returning with fresh courage and redoubled
+rage, the attack was continued until the evening, when Mahmud, turning
+his face to the holy Kaaba, invoked the aid of the Prophet in the
+presence of his army.
+
+"Advance! advance!" cried then the King. "Our prayers have found favor
+with God!"
+
+Immediately a great shout arose among the host, and the Moslems,
+pressing forward as if they courted death, obliged the enemy to give
+ground, and pursued them in full retreat to the gates of the city.
+
+The Emperor having next morning invested the place, gave orders to make
+preparations for filling up the ditch, which task in a few days was
+nearly completed. Bakhera, finding he could not long defend the city,
+determined to leave only a small garrison for its defence; and
+accordingly, one night, he marched out with the rest of his troops, and
+took position in a wood on the banks of the Indus. Mahmud, being
+informed of his retreat, detached part of his army to pursue him.
+Bakhera, by this time, was deserted by fortune and consequently by most
+of his friends; he found himself surrounded by the Mahometans and
+attempted in vain to force his way through them. When just on the point
+of being taken prisoner, he turned his sword against his breast, while
+the most of his adherents were slaughtered in attempting to avenge his
+death. Mahmud, in the mean time, had taken Tahera by assault; and found
+there one hundred and twenty elephants, many slaves, and much plunder.
+He annexed the town and its dependencies to his own dominions, and
+returned victorious to Ghazni.
+
+In the year A.H. 396 he formed the design of reconquering Multan, which
+had revolted from his rule. Achmet Lodi, the regent of Multan, had
+formerly acknowledged the suzerainty of Mahmud, and after him his
+grandson Daud, till the expedition against Bakhera, when Daud withdrew
+his allegiance. The King marched in the beginning of the spring, with a
+great army from Ghazni, and was met by Annandpal, the son of Jipal,
+Prince of Lahore, in the hills of Peshawur, whom he defeated and obliged
+to fly into Cashmere. Annandpal had entered into an alliance with Daud;
+and as there were two passes only by which the Mahometans could enter
+Multan, Annandpal had taken upon himself to secure that by the way of
+Peshawur, which Mahmud chanced to take. The Sultan, returning from the
+pursuit, entered Multan by the way of Betanda, which was his first
+intention. When Daud received intelligence of the fate of Annandpal,
+thinking himself too weak to keep the field, he shut himself up in his
+fortified place and humbly solicited forgiveness for his fault,
+promising to pay a large tribute and in the future to obey implicitly
+the Sultan's command. Mahmud received him again as a vassal, and
+prepared to return to Ghazni, when news was brought to him from
+Arsallah, who commanded at Herat, that Elak, the King of Kashgar, had
+invaded his realm with an army. The King hastened to settle the affairs
+of Hindustan, which he put into the hands of Shokpal, a Hindu prince who
+had resided with Abu-Ali, governor of Peshawur, and had turned
+Mussulman, taking the name of Zab Sais.
+
+The particulars of the war of Mahmud with Elak are these: It has already
+been mentioned that an uncommon friendship had existed between this
+Elak, the Usbek king of Kashgar, a kingdom in Tartary, and Mahmud. The
+Emperor himself was married to the daughter of Elak, but some factious
+men about the two courts, by misrepresentations of the princes to one
+another, changed their former friendship to enmity. When Mahmud
+therefore marched into Hindustan, and had left the field of Khorassan
+almost destitute of troops, Elak took advantage of the opportunity, and
+resolved to appropriate that province to himself. To accomplish his
+design he ordered his general-in-chief Sapastagi, with a large force, to
+enter Khorassan; and Jaffir Taghi at the same time was appointed to
+command in the territory of Balak. Arsallah, the governor of Herat,
+being informed of these motions, hastened to Ghazni, that he might
+secure the capital. In the mean time the chiefs of Khorassan, finding
+themselves deserted and being in no condition to oppose the enemy,
+submitted themselves to Sapastagi, the general of Elak.
+
+But Mahmud, having by great marches reached Ghazni, flowed onward like a
+torrent with his army toward Balak. Taghi, who had by this time
+possessed himself of the place, fled toward Turmuz at his approach. The
+Emperor then detached Arsallah with a great part of his army to drive
+Sapastagi out of Khorassan; and he also, upon the approach of the troops
+of Ghazni, abandoned Herat, and marched toward Maber-ul-nere.
+
+The King of Kashgar, seeing the bad state of his affairs, solicited the
+aid of Kudar, King of Chuton, a province of Tartary, on the confines of
+China, and that prince marched to join him with fifty thousand horse.
+Strengthened by this alliance, he crossed, with the confederate armies,
+the river Gaon, which was five parasangs from Balak, and opposed himself
+to the camp of Mahmud. That monarch immediately drew up his army in
+order of battle, giving the command of the centre to his brother, the
+noble Nasir, supported by Abu-Nasir, governor of Gorgan, and by
+Abdallah, a chief of reputation in arms. The right wing he committed to
+the care of Alta Sash, an old experienced officer, while the left was
+the charge of the valiant Arsallah, a chief of the Afghans. The front of
+his line he strengthened with five hundred chain-elephants, with open
+spaces behind them, to facilitate their retreat in case of a defeat.
+
+The King of Kashgar posted himself in the centre, the noble Kudir led
+the right, and Taghi the left. The armies advanced to the charge. The
+shouts of warriors, the neighing of horses, and the clashing of arms
+reached the broad arch of heaven, while dust obscured the face of day.
+
+Elak, advancing with some chosen squadrons, threw the centre of Mahmud's
+army into disorder. Mahmud, perceiving the enemy's progress, leaped from
+his horse, and, kissing the ground, invoked the aid of the Almighty. He
+then mounted an elephant-of-war, encouraged his troops, and made a
+violent assault upon Elak. The elephant seizing the standard-bearer of
+the enemy, folded his trunk around him and tossed him aloft in the air.
+He then surged forward like a mountain removed from its base by an
+earthquake, and trod the enemy under his feet like locusts. When the
+troops of Ghazni saw their King forcing his way alone through the
+enemy's ranks they rushed forward with headlong impetuosity and drove
+the enemy with great slaughter before them. Elak, abandoned by fortune
+and his army, turned his face to fly. He crossed the river with a few of
+his surviving friends, never afterward appearing in the field to dispute
+the victory with Mahmud.
+
+The King after this triumph marched two days after the runaways. On the
+third night a great storm of wind and snow overtook the Ghaznian army in
+the desert. The King's tents were pitched with much difficulty, while
+the army was obliged to lie in the snow. Mahmud, having ordered great
+fires to be kindled around his tents, they became so warm that many of
+the courtiers began to take off their upper garments; when a facetious
+chief, whose name was Dalk, came in shivering with the cold, at which
+the King, observing, said: "Go out, Dalk, and tell the Winter that he
+may burst his cheeks with blustering, for here we value not his
+resentment." Dalk went out accordingly, and, returning in a short time,
+kissed the ground, and thus addressed the King: "I have delivered the
+King's message to Winter, but the Surly Season replied that if his hands
+cannot tear the skirts of Royalty and hurt the attendants of the King,
+yet he will so use his power to-night on his army that in the morning
+Mahmud will be obliged to saddle his own horses."
+
+The King smiled at this reply, but it presently rendered him more
+thoughtful and he determined to proceed no farther. In the morning some
+hundreds of men and horses were found to have perished with the cold.
+Mahmud at the same time received advices from India, that Zab Sais, the
+renegade Hindu, had thrown off his allegiance, and, returning to his
+former religion, expelled all the officers who had been appointed by the
+King, from their respective departments. The King immediately determined
+to punish this renegade, and with great expedition advanced toward
+India. He sent on a part of his cavalry in front, which, coming
+unexpectedly upon Zab Sais, defeated him and brought him prisoner to the
+King. The rebel was fined four lacs of rupees, of which Mahmud made a
+present to his treasurer, and made Zab Sais a prisoner for life.
+
+Mahmud, having thus settled his affairs in India, returned in autumn to
+Ghazni, where he remained for the winter in peace. But in the spring of
+the year A.H. 399 Annandpal, sovereign of Lahore, began to raise
+disturbance in Multan, so that the King was obliged to undertake another
+expedition into those parts, with a great army, to correct the Indians.
+Annandpal, hearing of his intentions, sent ambassadors everywhere to
+request the assistance of the other princes of Hindustan, who considered
+the extirpation of the Moslems from India as a meritorious and political
+as well as a religious action.
+
+Accordingly the princes of Ugin, Gualier, Callinger, Kannoge, Delhi, and
+Ajmere entered into a confederacy, and, collecting their forces,
+advanced toward the heads of the Indus, with the greatest army that had
+been for some centuries seen upon the field in India. The two armies
+came in sight of one another in a great plain near the confines of the
+province of Peshawur. They remained there encamped forty days without
+action: but the troops of the idolaters daily increased in number. They
+were joined by the Gakers, and other tribes with their armies, and
+surrounded the Mahometans, who, fearing a general assault, were obliged
+to intrench themselves.
+
+The King, having thus secured himself, ordered a thousand archers to the
+front, to endeavor to provoke the enemy to advance to the intrenchments.
+The archers accordingly were attacked by the Gakers, who,
+notwithstanding all the King could do, pursued the retreating bowmen
+within the trenches, where a dreadful scene of carnage ensued on both
+sides, in which five thousand Moslems in a few minutes were slain. The
+enemy's soldiers being now cut down as fast as they advanced, the attack
+grew weaker, when suddenly the elephant which carried the Prince of
+Lahore, who was chief in command, took fright at the report of a gun
+(_sic_), and turned tail in flight.
+
+This circumstance struck the Hindus with a panic, for, thinking they
+were deserted by their general, they immediately followed the example.
+Abdallah, with six thousand Arabian horse, and Arsallah, with ten
+thousand Turks, Afghans, and Chilligis, pursued the enemy for two days
+and nights; so that twenty thousand Hindus were killed in their
+flight--in addition to the great multitude that fell on the field of
+battle.
+
+Thirty elephants, with much rich plunder, were brought to the King, who,
+to establish the faith, marched against the Hindus of Nagrakot, breaking
+down their idols and destroying their temples. There was at that time,
+in the territory of Nagrakot, a strong fort called Bima, which Mahmud
+invested after having destroyed the country round about with fire and
+sword. Bima was built by a prince of the same name, on the top of a
+steep mountain; and here the Hindus--on account of its strength--had
+deposited the wealth consecrated to their idols in all the neighboring
+kingdoms; so that in this fort, it was said, there was a greater
+quantity of gold, silver, precious stones, and pearls than ever had been
+collected in the royal treasury of any prince on earth.
+
+Mahmud invested the place with such expedition that the Hindus had not
+time to send troops into it for its defence--the greater part of the
+garrison having been sent to the field. Those within consisted, for the
+most part, of priests, who being adverse to the bloody business of war,
+in a few days solicited permission to capitulate. Their request being
+granted, they opened the gates and fell upon their faces before Mahmud,
+who with a few of his officers and attendants immediately entered and
+took possession of the place.
+
+In Bima were found: seven hundred thousand _dinars_; seven hundred
+maunds of gold and silver plate; forty maunds of pure gold in ingots;
+two thousand maunds of silver bullion, and twenty maunds of various
+jewels set, which had been collecting from the time of Bima. With this
+immense treasure the King returned to Ghazni, and in the year A.H. 400
+held a magnificent festival, where he displayed to the people his wealth
+in golden thrones, and in other rich receptacles, in a great plain
+without the city of Ghazni; and after the feast every individual
+received a princely gift.
+
+In the following year Mahmud led his army toward Ghor. The native prince
+of that country, Mahomet of the Sur tribe of Afghans, with ten thousand
+troops, opposed him. The King, finding that the troops of Ghor defended
+themselves in their intrenchments with such obstinacy, commanded his
+army to make a feint of retreating, to lure the enemy out of their
+fortified camp, which manoeuvre proved successful. The Ghorians, being
+deceived, pursued the army of Ghazni to the plain, where the King,
+facing round with his troops, attacked them with great impetuosity.
+Mahomet was taken prisoner and brought to the King; but in his despair
+he had taken poison, which he always kept under his ring, and died in a
+few hours. His country was annexed to the dominion of Ghazni. Some
+historians affirm that neither the sovereigns of Ghor nor its
+inhabitants were Mussulmans till after this victory; while others of
+good credit assure us that they were converted many years before, even
+so early as the time of the famous Ali, the son-in-law of the Prophet.
+
+Mahmud, in the same year, was under the necessity of marching again to
+Multan, which had revolted; but having soon reduced it, and cut off a
+great number of the chiefs, he brought Daud, the son of Nazir, the
+rebellious governor, prisoner to Ghazni, and imprisoned him in the fort
+of Gorci for life.
+
+In the year A.H. 402, the passion of war fermenting in the mind of
+Mahmud, he resolved upon the conquest of Tannasar, in the kingdom of
+Hindustan. It had reached the ears of the King that Tannasar was held in
+the same veneration by idolaters as Mecca was by the Mahometans; that
+there they had set up a great number of idols, the chief of which they
+called Jug Sum. This Jug Sum, they pretended to say, existed when as yet
+the world existed not. When the King reached the country about the five
+branches of the Indus, he desired that--according to the treaty that
+existed between himself and Annandpal--he should not be disturbed by his
+march through that country. He accordingly sent an embassy to Annandpal,
+advising him of his intentions, and desiring him to send guards for the
+protection of his towns and villages, which he, the King, would take
+care should not be molested by the followers of his camp.
+
+Annandpal agreed to this proposal, and prepared an entertainment for the
+reception of the King, issuing an order for all his subjects to supply
+the royal camp with every necessary of life. In the mean time he sent
+his brother with two thousand horse to meet the King and deliver this
+message:
+
+"That he was the subject and slave of the King; but that he begged
+permission to acquaint his Majesty that Tannasar was the principal place
+of worship of the inhabitants of that country; that if it was a virtue
+required by the religion of Mahmud to destroy the religion of others, he
+had already acquitted himself of that duty to his God in the destruction
+of the temple of Nagracot; but if he should be pleased to alter his
+resolution against Tannasar, Annandpal would undertake that the amount
+of the revenues of that country should be annually paid to Mahmud, to
+reimburse the expense of his expedition: that besides, he, on his own
+part, would present him with fifty elephants, and jewels to a
+considerable amount."
+
+The King replied: "That in the Mahometan religion it was an established
+tenet that the more the glory of the Prophet was exalted, and the more
+his followers exerted themselves in the subversion of idolatry, the
+greater would be their reward in heaven; that therefore it was his firm
+resolution, with the assistance of God, to root out the abominable
+worship of idols from the land of India: why then should he spare
+Tannasar?"
+
+When this news reached the Indian king of Delhi, he prepared to oppose
+the invaders, sending messages all over Hindustan to acquaint the rajahs
+that Mahmud, without any reason or provocation, was marching with an
+innumerable army to destroy Tannasar, which was under his immediate
+protection: that if a dam was not expeditiously raised against this
+roaring torrent, the country of Hindustan would soon be overwhelmed in
+ruin, and the tree of prosperity rooted up; that therefore it was
+advisable for them to join their forces at Tannasar, to oppose with
+united strength the impending danger. But Mahmud reached Tannasar before
+they could take any measure for its defence, plundered the city and
+broke the idols, sending Jug Sum to Ghazni, where he was soon stripped
+of his ornaments. He then ordered his head to be struck off and his body
+to be thrown on the highway. According to the account of the historian
+Hago Mahomet of Kandahar, there was a ruby found in one of the temples
+which weighed four hundred and fifty miskals!
+
+Mahmud, after these transactions at Tannasar, proceeded to Delhi, which
+he also took, and wanted greatly to annex to his dominions, but his
+nobles told him that it was impossible to keep the rajahship of Delhi
+till he had entirely subjected Multan to Mahometan rule, destroyed the
+power and exterminated the family of Annandpal, Prince of Lahore, which
+lay between Delhi and the northern dominions of Mahmud. The King
+approved of this counsel, and immediately determined to proceed no
+further against that country, till he had accomplished the reduction of
+Multan and Annandpal. But that prince behaved with so much policy and
+hospitality that he changed the purpose of the King, who returned to
+Ghazni. He brought to Ghazni forty thousand captives and much wealth, so
+that that city could now be hardly distinguished in riches from India
+itself.
+
+
+
+
+CANUTE BECOMES KING OF ENGLAND
+
+A.D. 1017
+
+DAVID HUME
+
+
+(After the success of King Alfred over the Danes in the last quarter of
+the ninth century, England enjoyed a considerable respite from the
+invasions of the bold ravagers who had caused great suffering and loss
+to the country. This immunity of England seems to have been partly due
+to the fact that the Danish adventurers had gained a foothold in the
+north of France, where they found all the employment they needed in
+maintaining their establishments. Under the reign of Edward the
+Elder--chosen to succeed Alfred--the English enjoyed an interval of
+comparative peace and industry. During this time and under the following
+reigns, known as those of the Six Boy-Kings, the social side of life had
+an opportunity to develop from a semi-barbarous to a more civilized
+state. The bare and rough walls of hall and court were screened by
+tapestry hangings, often of silk, and elaborately ornamented with birds
+and flowers or scenes from the battlefield or the chase. Chairs and
+tables were skilfully carved and inlaid with different woods and, among
+the wealthier nobility, often decorated with gold and silver. Knives and
+spoons were now used at table--the fork was to come many long years
+later; golden ornaments were worn; and a variety of dishes were
+fashioned, often of precious metals, brass, and even bone. The bedstead
+became a household article, no longer looked upon with superstitious
+awe; and musical instruments--principally of the harp pattern--began to
+find favor in their eyes, and were passed round from hand to hand, like
+the drinking-bowl, at their rude festivals.
+
+But toward the end of a century following the victories of Alfred the
+Danes again threatened an invasion, and in 981-991 they made several
+landings, in the latter year overrunning much territory. King Ethelred
+[the "Unready"] procured their departure by bribery, which led the Danes
+to repeat their visit the next year, following it up by a descent in
+force under King Sweyn of Denmark and Olaf of Norway. They defeated the
+English in battle and ravaged a great part of the country, exacting as
+before ruinous contributions from the already impoverished people. After
+the siege and taking of London, 1011-1013, the flight of the cowardly
+Ethelred to the court of Normandy, the sudden death of Sweyn, who had
+been but a few months before proclaimed King of England, and the return
+of Ethelred to his throne, Canute, the son of Sweyn, claimed the crown
+and ravaged the land in the manner and custom of his race. The
+complications and strife engendered by the rival claims of the Dane and
+Edmund ["Ironside"], son of Ethelred, and which ended in the triumph of
+Canute and the complete subjugation of England, are hereinafter narrated
+by Hume, the English historian.)
+
+
+The Danes had been established during a longer period in England than in
+France; and though the similarity of their original language to that of
+the Saxons invited them to a more early coalition with the natives, they
+had hitherto found so little example of civilized manners among the
+English that they retained all their ancient ferocity, and valued
+themselves only on their national character of military bravery. The
+recent as well as more ancient achievements of their countrymen tended
+to support this idea; and the English princes, particularly Athelstan
+and Edgar, sensible of that superiority, had been accustomed to keep in
+pay bodies of Danish troops, who were quartered about the country and
+committed many violences upon the inhabitants. These mercenaries had
+attained to such a height of luxury, according to the old English
+writers, that they combed their hair once a day, bathed themselves once
+a week, changed their clothes frequently; and by all these arts of
+effeminacy, as well as by their military character, had rendered
+themselves so agreeable to the fair sex that they debauched the wives
+and daughters of the English and dishonored many families. But what most
+provoked the inhabitants was that, instead of defending them against
+invaders, they were ever ready to betray them to the foreign Danes, and
+to associate themselves with all straggling parties of that nation.
+
+The animosity between the inhabitants of English and Danish race had,
+from these repeated injuries, risen to a great height, when Ethelred
+(1002), from a policy incident to weak princes, embraced the cruel
+resolution of massacring the latter throughout all his dominions. Secret
+orders were despatched to commence the execution everywhere on the same
+day, and the festival of St. Brice, which fell on a Sunday, the day on
+which the Danes usually bathed themselves, was chosen for that purpose.
+It is needless to repeat the accounts transmitted concerning the
+barbarity of this massacre: the rage of the populace, excited by so many
+injuries, sanctioned by authority, and stimulated by example,
+distinguished not between innocence and guilt, spared neither sex nor
+age, and was not satiated without the tortures as well as death of the
+unhappy victims. Even Gunhilda, sister to the King of Denmark, who had
+married Earl Paling and had embraced Christianity, was, by the advice of
+Edric, Earl of Wilts, seized and condemned to death by Ethelred, after
+seeing her husband and children butchered before her face. This unhappy
+princess foretold, in the agonies of despair, that her murder would soon
+be avenged by the total ruin of the English nation.
+
+Never was prophecy better fulfilled, and never did barbarous policy
+prove more fatal to the authors. Sweyn and his Danes, who wanted but a
+pretence for invading the English, appeared off the western coast, and
+threatened to take full revenge for the slaughter of their countrymen.
+Exeter fell first into their hands, from the negligence or treachery of
+Earl Hugh, a Norman, who had been made governor by the interest of Queen
+Emma. They began to spread their devastations over the country, when the
+English, sensible what outrages they must now expect from their
+barbarous and offended enemy, assembled more early and in greater
+numbers than usual, and made an appearance of vigorous resistance. But
+all these preparations were frustrated by the treachery of Duke Alfric,
+who was intrusted with the command, and who, feigning sickness, refused
+to lead the army against the Danes, till it was dispirited and at last
+dissipated by his fatal misconduct. Alfric soon after died, and Edric, a
+greater traitor than he, who had married the King's daughter and had
+acquired a total ascendant over him, succeeded Alfric in the government
+of Mercia and in the command of the English armies. A great famine,
+proceeding partly from the bad seasons, partly from the decay of
+agriculture, added to all the other miseries of the inhabitants. The
+country, wasted by the Danes, harassed by the fruitless expeditions of
+its own forces, was reduced to the utmost desolation, and at last
+submitted (1007) to the infamy of purchasing a precarious peace from the
+enemy by the payment of thirty thousand pounds.
+
+The English endeavored to employ this interval in making preparations
+against the return of the Danes, which they had reason soon to expect. A
+law was made, ordering the proprietors of eight hides of land to provide
+each a horseman and a complete suit of armor, and those of three hundred
+and ten hides to equip a ship for the defence of the coast. When this
+navy was assembled, which must have consisted of near eight hundred
+vessels, all hopes of its success were disappointed by the factions,
+animosities, and dissensions of the nobility. Edric had impelled his
+brother Brightric to prefer an accusation of treason against Wolfnoth,
+governor of Sussex, the father of the famous earl Godwin; and that
+nobleman, well acquainted with the malevolence as well as power of his
+enemy, found no means of safety but in deserting with twenty ships to
+the Danes. Brightric pursued him with a fleet of eighty sail; but his
+ships being shattered in a tempest, and stranded on the coast, he was
+suddenly attacked by Wolfnoth, and all his vessels burned and destroyed.
+The imbecility of the King was little capable of repairing this
+misfortune. The treachery of Edric frustrated every plan for future
+defence; and the English navy, disconcerted, discouraged, and divided,
+was at last scattered into its several harbors.
+
+It is almost impossible, or would be tedious, to relate particularly all
+the miseries to which the English were henceforth exposed. We hear of
+nothing but the sacking and burning of towns; the devastation of the
+open country; the appearance of the enemy in every quarter of the
+kingdom; their cruel diligence in discovering any corner which had not
+been ransacked by their former violence. The broken and disjointed
+narration of the ancient historians is here well adapted to the nature
+of the war, which was conducted by such sudden inroads as would have
+been dangerous even to a united and well-governed kingdom, but proved
+fatal where nothing but a general consternation and mutual diffidence
+and dissension prevailed. The governors of one province refused to march
+to the assistance of another, and were at last terrified from assembling
+their forces for the defence of their own province. General councils
+were summoned; but either no resolution was taken or none was carried
+into execution. And the only expedient in which the English agreed was
+the base and imprudent one of buying a new peace from the Danes, by the
+payment of forty-eight thousand pounds.
+
+This measure did not bring them even that short interval of repose which
+they had expected from it. The Danes, disregarding all engagements,
+continued their devastations and hostilities; levied a new contribution
+of eight thousand pounds upon the county of Kent alone; murdered the
+Archbishop of Canterbury, who had refused to countenance this exaction;
+and the English nobility found no other resource than that of submitting
+everywhere to the Danish monarch, swearing allegiance to him, and
+delivering him hostages for their fidelity. Ethelred, equally afraid of
+the violence of the enemy and the treachery of his own subjects, fled
+into Normandy (1013), whither he had sent before him Queen Emma and her
+two sons, Alfred and Edward. Richard received his unhappy guests with a
+generosity that does honor to his memory.
+
+The King had not been above six weeks in Normandy when he heard of the
+death of Sweyn, who expired at Gainsborough before he had time to
+establish himself in his new-acquired dominions. The English prelates
+and nobility, taking advantage of this event, sent over a deputation to
+Normandy, inviting Ethelred to return to them, expressing a desire of
+being again governed by their native prince, and intimating their hopes
+that, being now tutored by experience, he would avoid all those errors
+which had been attended with such misfortunes to himself and to his
+people. But the misconduct of Ethelred was incurable; and on his
+resuming the government, he discovered the same incapacity, indolence,
+cowardice, and credulity which had so often exposed him to the insults
+of his enemies. His son-in-law Edric, notwithstanding his repeated
+treasons, retained such influence at court as to instil into the King
+jealousies of Sigefert and Morcar, two of the chief nobles of Mercia.
+Edric allured them into his house, where he murdered them; while
+Ethelred participated in the infamy of the action by confiscating their
+estates and thrusting into a convent the widow of Sigefert. She was a
+woman of singular beauty and merit; and in a visit which was paid her,
+during her confinement, by Prince Edmund, the King's eldest son, she
+inspired him with so violent an affection that he released her from the
+convent, and soon after married her without the consent of his father.
+
+Meanwhile the English found in Canute, the son and successor of Sweyn,
+an enemy no less terrible than the prince from whom death had so lately
+delivered them. He ravaged the eastern coast with merciless fury, and
+put ashore all the English hostages at Sandwich, after having cut off
+their hands and noses. He was obliged, by the necessity of his affairs,
+to make a voyage to Denmark; but, returning soon after, he continued his
+depredations along the southern coast. He even broke into the counties
+of Dorset, Wilts, and Somerset, where an army was assembled against him,
+under the command of Prince Edmund and Duke Edric. The latter still
+continued his perfidious machinations, and, after endeavoring in vain to
+get the prince into his power, he found means to disperse the army, and
+he then openly deserted to Canute with forty vessels.
+
+Notwithstanding this misfortune Edmund was not disconcerted, but,
+assembling all the force of England, was in a condition to give battle
+to the enemy. The King had had such frequent experience of perfidy among
+his subjects that he had lost all confidence in them: he remained at
+London, pretending sickness, but really from apprehensions that they
+intended to buy their peace by delivering him into the hands of his
+enemies. The army called aloud for their sovereign to march at their
+head against the Danes; and, on his refusal to take the field, they were
+so discouraged that those vast preparations became ineffectual for the
+defence of the kingdom. Edmund, deprived of all regular supplies to
+maintain his soldiers, was obliged to commit equal ravages with those
+which were practised by the Danes; and, after making some fruitless
+expeditions into the north, which had submitted entirely to Canute's
+power, he retired to London, determined there to maintain to the last
+extremity the small remains of English liberty. He here found everything
+in confusion by the death of the King, who expired after an unhappy and
+inglorious reign of thirty-five years (1016). He left two sons by his
+first marriage, Edmund, who succeeded him, and Edwy, whom Canute
+afterward murdered. His two sons by the second marriage, Alfred and
+Edward, were, immediately upon Ethelred's death, conveyed into Normandy
+by Queen Emma.
+
+Edmund, who received the name of "Ironside" from his hardy valor,
+possessed courage and abilities sufficient to have prevented his country
+from sinking into those calamities, but not to raise it from that abyss
+of misery into which it had already fallen. Among the other misfortunes
+of the English, treachery and disaffection had crept in among the
+nobility and prelates; and Edmund found no better expedient for stopping
+the further progress of these fatal evils than to lead his army
+instantly into the field, and to employ them against the common enemy.
+After meeting with some success at Gillingham, he prepared himself to
+decide, in one general engagement, the fate of his crown; and at
+Scoerston, in the county of Gloucester, he offered battle to the enemy,
+who were commanded by Canute and Edric. Fortune, in the beginning of the
+day, declared for him; but Edric, having cut off the head of one Osmer,
+whose countenance resembled that of Edmund, fixed it on a spear, carried
+it through the ranks in triumph, and called aloud to the English that it
+was time to fly; for, behold! the head of their sovereign. And though
+Edmund, observing the consternation of the troops, took off his helmet,
+and showed himself to them, the utmost he could gain by his activity and
+valor was to leave the victory undecided. Edric now took a surer method
+to ruin him, by pretending to desert to him; and as Edmund was well
+acquainted with his power, and probably knew no other of the chief
+nobility in whom he could repose more confidence, he was obliged,
+notwithstanding the repeated perfidy of the man, to give him a
+considerable command in the army. A battle soon after ensued at
+Assington, in Essex, where Edric, flying in the beginning of the day,
+occasioned the total defeat of the English, followed by a great
+slaughter of the nobility. The indefatigable Edmund, however, had still
+resources. Assembling a new army at Gloucester, he was again in
+condition to dispute the field, when the Danish and English nobility,
+equally harassed with those convulsions, obliged their kings to come to
+a compromise and to divide the kingdom between them by treaty. Canute
+reserved to himself the northern division, consisting of Mercia, East
+Anglia, and Northumberland, which he had entirely subdued. The southern
+parts were left to Edmund. This prince survived the treaty about a
+month. He was murdered at Oxford by two of his chamberlains, accomplices
+of Edric, who thereby made way for the succession of Canute the Dane to
+the crown of England.
+
+The English, who had been unable to defend their country and maintain
+their independency under so active and brave a prince as Edmund, could
+after his death expect nothing but total subjection from Canute, who,
+active and brave himself, and at the head of a great force, was ready to
+take advantage of the minority of Edwin and Edward, the two sons of
+Edmund. Yet this conqueror, who was commonly so little scrupulous,
+showed himself anxious to cover his injustice under plausible pretences.
+Before he seized the dominions of the English princes, he summoned a
+general assembly of the states in order to fix the succession of the
+kingdom. He here suborned some nobles to depose that, in the treaty of
+Gloucester, it had been verbally agreed, either to name Canute, in case
+of Edmund's death, successor to his dominions or tutor to his
+children--for historians vary in this particular; and that evidence,
+supported by the great power of Canute, determined the states
+immediately to put the Danish monarch in possession of the government.
+Canute, jealous of the two princes, but sensible that he should render
+himself extremely odious if he ordered them to be despatched in England,
+sent them abroad to his ally, the King of Sweden, whom he desired, as
+soon as they arrived at his court, to free him, by their death, from all
+further anxiety. The Swedish monarch was too generous to comply with the
+request; but being afraid of drawing on himself a quarrel with Canute,
+by protecting the young princes, he sent them to Solomon, King of
+Hungary, to be educated in his court. The elder, Edwin, was afterward
+married to the sister of the King of Hungary; but the English prince
+dying without issue, Solomon gave his sister-in-law, Agatha, daughter of
+the emperor Henry II, in marriage to Edward, the younger brother; and
+she bore him Edgar, Atheling, Margaret, afterward Queen of Scotland, and
+Christina, who retired into a convent.
+
+Canute, though he had reached the great point of his ambition in
+obtaining possession of the English crown, was obliged at first to make
+great sacrifices to it; and to gratify the chief of the nobility, by
+bestowing on them the most extensive governments and jurisdictions. He
+created Thurkill Earl or Duke of East Anglia--for these titles were then
+nearly of the same import--Yric of Northumberland, and Edric of Mercia;
+reserving only to himself the administration of Wessex. But seizing
+afterward a favorable opportunity, he expelled Thurkill and Yric from
+their governments, and banished them the kingdom; he put to death many
+of the English nobility, on whose fidelity he could not rely, and whom
+he hated on account of their disloyalty to their native prince. And even
+the traitor Edric, having had the assurance to reproach him with his
+services, was condemned to be executed and his body to be thrown into
+the Thames; a suitable reward for his multiplied acts of perfidy and
+rebellion.
+
+Canute also found himself obliged, in the beginning of his reign, to
+load the people with heavy taxes in order to reward his Danish
+followers: he exacted from them at one time the sum of seventy-two
+thousand pounds, besides eleven thousand which he levied on London
+alone. He was probably willing, from political motives, to mulct
+severely that city, on account of the affection which it had borne to
+Edmund and the resistance which it had made to the Danish power in two
+obstinate sieges.[25] But these rigors were imputed to necessity; and
+Canute, like a wise prince, was determined that the English, now
+deprived of all their dangerous leaders, should be reconciled to the
+Danish yoke, by the justice and impartiality of his administration. He
+sent back to Denmark as many of his followers as he could safely spare;
+he restored the Saxon customs in a general assembly of the states; he
+made no distinction between Danes and English in the distribution of
+justice; and he took care, by a strict execution of law, to protect the
+lives and properties of all his people. The Danes were gradually
+incorporated with his new subjects; and both were glad to obtain a
+little respite from those multiplied calamities from which the one, no
+less than the other, had, in their fierce contest for power, experienced
+such fatal consequences.
+
+[Footnote 25: In one of these sieges Canute diverted the course of the
+Thames, and by that means brought his ships above London bridge.]
+
+The removal of Edmund's children into so distant a country as Hungary
+was, next to their death, regarded by Canute as the greatest security to
+his government: he had no further anxiety, except with regard to Alfred
+and Edward, who were protected and supported by their uncle Richard,
+Duke of Normandy. Richard even fitted out a great armament, in order to
+restore the English princes to the throne of their ancestors; and though
+the navy was dispersed by a storm, Canute saw the danger to which he was
+exposed from the enmity of so warlike a people as the Normans. In order
+to acquire the friendship of the duke, he paid his addresses to Queen
+Emma, sister of that prince, and promised that he would leave the
+children whom he should have by that marriage in possession of the Crown
+of England. Richard complied with his demand and sent over Emma to
+England, where she was soon after married to Canute. The English, though
+they disapproved of her espousing the mortal enemy of her former husband
+and his family, were pleased to find at court a sovereign to whom they
+were accustomed, and who had already formed connections with them; and
+thus Canute, besides securing, by this marriage, the alliance of
+Normandy, gradually acquired, by the same means, the confidence of his
+own subjects. The Norman prince did not long survive the marriage of
+Emma; and he left the inheritance of the duchy to his eldest son of the
+same name, who, dying a year after him without children, was succeeded
+by his brother Robert, a man of valor and abilities.
+
+Canute, having settled his power in England beyond all danger of a
+revolution, made a voyage to Denmark, in order to resist the attacks of
+the King of Sweden; and he carried along with him a great body of the
+English, under the command of Earl Godwin. This nobleman had here an
+opportunity of performing a service, by which he both reconciled the
+King's mind to the English nation and, gaining to himself the friendship
+of his sovereign, laid the foundation of that immense fortune which he
+acquired to his family. He was stationed next the Swedish camp, and
+observing a favorable opportunity, which he was obliged suddenly to
+seize, he attacked the enemy in the night, drove them from their
+trenches, threw them into disorder, pursued his advantage, and obtained
+a decisive victory over them. Next morning Canute, seeing the English
+camp entirely abandoned, imagined that those disaffected troops had
+deserted to the enemy: he was agreeably surprised to find that they were
+at that time engaged in pursuit of the discomfited Swedes. He was so
+pleased with this success, and with the manner of obtaining it, that he
+bestowed his daughter in marriage upon Godwin, and treated him ever
+after with entire confidence and regard.
+
+In another voyage, which he made afterward to Denmark, Canute attacked
+Norway, and, expelling the just but unwarlike Olaus, kept possession of
+his kingdom till the death of that prince. He had now by his conquests
+and valor attained the utmost height of grandeur: having leisure from
+wars and intrigues, he felt the unsatisfactory nature of all human
+enjoyments; and equally weary of the glories and turmoils of this life,
+he began to cast his view toward that future existence, which it is so
+natural for the human mind, whether satiated by prosperity or disgusted
+with adversity, to make the object of its attention. Unfortunately, the
+spirit which prevailed in that age gave a wrong direction to his
+devotion: instead of making compensation to those whom he had injured by
+his former acts of violence, he employed himself entirely in those
+exercises of piety which the monks represented as the most meritorious.
+He built churches, he endowed monasteries, he enriched the
+ecclesiastics, and he bestowed revenues for the support of chantries at
+Assington and other places, where he appointed prayers to be said for
+the souls of those who had there fallen in battle against him. He even
+undertook a pilgrimage to Rome, where he resided a considerable time:
+besides obtaining from the pope some privileges for the English school
+erected there, he engaged all the princes through whose dominions he was
+obliged to pass to desist from those heavy impositions and tolls which
+they were accustomed to exact from the English pilgrims. By this spirit
+of devotion, no less than by his equitable and politic administration,
+he gained, in a good measure, the affections of his subjects.
+
+Canute, the greatest and most powerful monarch of his time, sovereign of
+Denmark and Norway, as well as of England, could not fail of meeting
+with adulation from his courtiers; a tribute which is liberally paid
+even to the meanest and weakest princes. Some of his flatterers,
+breaking out one day in admiration of his grandeur, exclaimed that
+everything was possible for him; upon which the monarch, it is said,
+ordered his chair to be set on the sea-shore while the tide was rising;
+and as the waters approached, he commanded them to retire, and to obey
+the voice of him who was lord of the ocean. He feigned to sit some time
+in expectation of their submission; but when the sea still advanced
+toward him, and began to wash him with its billows, he turned to his
+courtiers, and remarked to them that every creature in the universe was
+feeble and impotent, and that power resided with one Being alone, in
+whose hands were all the elements of nature; who could say to the ocean,
+"Thus far shalt thou go, and no farther," and who could level with his
+nod the most towering piles of human pride and ambition.
+
+The only memorable action which Canute performed after his return from
+Rome was an expedition against Malcolm, King of Scotland. During the
+reign of Ethelred, a tax of a shilling a hide had been imposed on all
+the lands of England. It was commonly called _danegelt_; because the
+revenue had been employed either in buying peace with the Danes or in
+making preparations against the inroads of that hostile nation. That
+monarch had required that the same tax should be paid by Cumberland,
+which was held by the Scots; but Malcolm, a warlike prince, told him
+that as he was always able to repulse the Danes by his own power, he
+would neither submit to buy peace of his enemies nor pay others for
+resisting them. Ethelred, offended at this reply, which contained a
+secret reproach on his own conduct, undertook an expedition against
+Cumberland; but though he committed ravages upon the country, he could
+never bring Malcolm to a temper more humble or submissive. Canute, after
+his accession, summoned the Scottish King to acknowledge himself a
+vassal for Cumberland to the Crown of England; but Malcolm refused
+compliance, on pretence that he owed homage to those princes only who
+inherited that kingdom by right of blood. Canute was not of a temper to
+bear this insult; and the King of Scotland soon found that the sceptre
+was in very different hands from those of the feeble and irresolute
+Ethelred. Upon Canute's appearing on the frontiers with a formidable
+army, Malcolm agreed that his grandson and heir, Duncan, whom he put in
+possession of Cumberland, should make the submissions required, and that
+the heirs of Scotland should always acknowledge themselves vassals to
+England for that province.
+
+Canute passed four years in peace after this enterprise, and he died at
+Shaftesbury; leaving three sons, Sweyn, Harold, and Hardicanute. Sweyn,
+whom he had by his first marriage with Alfwen, daughter of the Earl of
+Hampshire, was crowned in Norway; Hardicanute, whom Emma had borne him,
+was in possession of Denmark; Harold, who was of the same marriage with
+Sweyn, was at that time in England.
+
+
+
+
+HENRY III DEPOSES THE POPE
+
+THE GERMAN EMPIRE CONTROLS THE PAPACY
+
+A.D. 1048
+
+FERDINAND GREGOROVIUS
+
+JOSEPH E. DARRAS
+
+
+(After the extinction of the Carlovingian line, A.D. 887, and the
+division of the empire, the Church of Rome and the Christian world fell
+into a highly demoralized state, attributable to the destitution to
+which ecclesiastical bodies were reduced by the frequent predations of
+bands of robbers, the immorality of the priesthood, and the power of
+electing the popes falling into the hands of intriguing and licentious
+patrician females, whom aspirants to the holy see were not ashamed to
+bribe for their favors. So depraved had the general spirit of the age
+become that Pope Boniface VII, A.D. 974, robbed St. Peter's Church and
+its treasury and fled to Constantinople; while Pope John XVIII, A.D.
+1003, was prevented, by general indignation only, from accepting a sum
+of money from Emperor Basil to recognize the right of the Greek
+patriarch to the title of "Universal Bishop."
+
+A child, son of one of the old noble houses, was consecrated pope as
+Benedict IX, A.D. 1033, according to some authorities, at the age of ten
+or twelve years. He became noted for his profligacy and was driven from
+his throne, the Romans electing, as Pope Sylvester III, John, Bishop of
+Sabina, who is said to have paid a high price for the dignity. Benedict,
+however, regained the papal seat shortly afterward, and drove Sylvester
+into a refuge, but later sold the office to John Gratianus, Arch-priest
+of Rome, who as Gregory VI made laudable attempts to effect a general
+reformation. He failed in his efforts, and a chaotic state ensued; three
+popes claiming the triple tiara and reigning in Rome: Gregory at the
+Vatican, Benedict in the Lateran, and Sylvester in the Church of Santa
+Maria Maggiore.
+
+On the invitation of the Roman people, Henry the Black, the young and
+zealous Emperor of Germany, repaired to Italy in 1045 and summoned a
+great ecclesiastical council at Sutri, which passed a decree deposing
+the three papal claimants. The same council elected to the tiara the
+German bishop of Bamberg, who reigned in the holy see as Clement II. One
+of his first ceremonies, carried out with all the gorgeous pomp of the
+Roman Church, was the imperial coronation of Henry and his wife Agnes.
+
+But Henry's action, while "it dragged the Church out of the slough it
+had fallen into," startled the ecclesiastical world, and was a prelude
+to the struggle between pope and emperor which, under St. Hildebrand,
+Pope Gregory VII, culminated in the independent establishment of the
+pontificate and papal power.)
+
+
+FERDINAND GREGOROVIUS
+
+Henry III, the son and successor of Conrad, was young, vigorous, and
+God-fearing; a noble prince called, like Charles and Otto the Great, to
+restore Rome, to deliver it from tyrants, and to reform the almost
+annihilated Church. For the papacy had been still further dishonored by
+Benedict IX. It seemed as if a demon from hell, in the disguise of a
+priest, occupied the chair of Peter and profaned the sacred mysteries of
+religion by his insolent courses.
+
+Benedict IX, restored in 1038, protected by his brother Gregory, who
+ruled the city as senator of the Romans, led unchecked the life of a
+Turkish sultan in the palace of the Lateran. He and his family filled
+Rome with robbery and murder; all lawful conditions had ceased. Toward
+the end of 1044, or in the beginning of the following year, the populace
+at length rose in furious revolt; the Pope fled, but his vassals
+defended the Leonina against the attacks of the Romans. The
+Trasteverines remained faithful to Benedict, and he summoned friends and
+adherents; Count Gerard of Galeria advanced with a numerous body of
+horse to the Saxon gate and repulsed the Romans. An earthquake added to
+the horrors in the revolted city. The ancient chronicle which relates
+these events does not tell us whether Trastevere was taken by assault
+after a three-days' struggle, but merely relates that the Romans
+unanimously renounced Benedict, and elected Bishop John of the Sabina to
+the papacy as Sylvester III. John also owed his elevation to the gold
+with which he bribed the rebels and their leader, Girardo de Saxo. This
+powerful Roman had first promised his daughter in marriage to the Pope,
+and afterward refused her; for the Pope had not hesitated, in all
+seriousness, to sue for the hand of a Roman lady, a relative of his own.
+Her father lured him on with the hope of winning her, but required that
+Benedict should in the first place resign the tiara.
+
+The Pope, burning with passion, consented and fulfilled his promise
+during the revolt of the Romans. He was mastered by the demon of
+sensuality; it was reported by the superstitious that he associated with
+devils in the woods and attracted women by means of spells. It was
+asserted that books of magic, with which he had conjured demons, had
+been found in the Lateran. His banishment meanwhile aroused the haughty
+spirit of his house, and anger at Gerard's treacherous conduct proved a
+further incentive to revenge. His numerous adherents still held St.
+Angelo, and his gold acquired him new friends. After a forty-nine days'
+reign, Sylvester III was driven from the apostolic chair, which the
+Tusculan reascended in March, 1045.
+
+Benedict now ruled for some time in Rome, while Sylvester III found
+safety either within some fortified monument in the city or in some
+Sabine fortress, and continued to call himself pope. A beneficent
+darkness veils the horrors of this year. Hated by the Romans, insecure
+on his throne, in constant terror of the renewal of the revolution,
+Benedict eventually found himself obliged to abdicate. The abbot
+Bartholomew of Grotta Ferrata urged him to the step, but he unblushingly
+sold the papacy for money like a piece of merchandise. In exchange for a
+considerable income, that is to say, for the revenue of "Peter's pence"
+from England, he made over his papal dignities by a formal contract to
+John Gratianus, a rich archpriest of the Church of St. John at the Latin
+gate, on May 1, 1045.
+
+Could the holiest office in Christendom be more deeply outraged than by
+a sale such as this? And yet so general was the traffic in
+ecclesiastical dignities throughout the world that when a pope finally
+sold the chair of Peter the scandal did not strike society as specially
+heinous.
+
+John Gratian, or Gregory VI, set aside the canon law with a defiant
+courage which perhaps was only understood by the minority of his
+compatriots; he bought the papacy in order to wrest it from the hands of
+a criminal, and this remarkable Pope, although regarded as an idiot in
+that terrible period, was possibly an earnest and high-minded man.
+Scarcely had Peter Damian knowledge of this traffic when he wrote to
+Gregory VI on his elevation, rejoicing that the dove with the olive
+branch had returned to the ark. The Saint may have known the Pope
+personally and have been persuaded of his spiritual virtues. Even the
+chroniclers of the time, who represent him--assuredly with injustice--as
+so rude and simple that he was obliged to appoint a representative, are
+unable to fasten any crime upon him. The Cluniacs in France and the
+congregations of Italy all hailed his elevation as the beginning of a
+better time, and side by side with this simonist Pope a young and brave
+monk suddenly appears, who, after the heroic exertions of a lifetime,
+was to raise the degenerate papacy to a height hitherto undreamed of.
+Hildebrand first issues from obscurity by the side of Gregory VI; he
+became the Pope's chaplain, and this fact alone proves that Gregory was
+no idiot. How far Hildebrand's activity already extended, whether he had
+any share in Gregory's illegal elevation, we do not know; but in the
+"representative" spoken of by the chronicles, we may easily recognize
+the gifted young monk who was Gregory's counsellor, and who later took
+the name of Gregory VII in grateful recollection of his predecessor.
+
+While Benedict IX pursued his wild career in Tusculum or Rome, Gregory
+VI remained Pope for nearly two years. His desire was to save the
+Church, which stood in need of a drastic reform--and which soon
+afterward obtained it. The papacy, lately a hereditary fief of the
+counts of Tusculum, was utterly ruined; the _dominium temporale_, the
+ominous gift of the Carlovingians, the box of Pandora in the hands of
+the Pope from which a thousand evils had arisen, had disappeared, since
+the Church could scarcely command the fortresses in the immediate
+neighborhood of the city. A hundred lords, the captains or vassals of
+the Pope, stood ready to fall upon Rome; every road was infested with
+robbers, every pilgrim was robbed; within the city the churches lay in
+ruins, while the priests caroused. Daily assassinations made the streets
+insecure. Roman nobles, sword in hand, forced their way into St. Peter's
+itself to snatch the gifts which pious hands still placed upon the
+altar.
+
+The chronicler who describes this state of things extols Gregory for
+having repressed it. The captains, it is true, besieged the city, but
+the Pope boldly assembled the militia, restored a degree of order, and
+even conquered several fortresses in the district. Sylvester had
+apparently made an attempt on Rome; he was, however, defeated by
+Gregory's energy. The short and dark period of Gregory's pontificate was
+terrible, and his severity toward the robbers soon made him hated by the
+nobles and even by the equally rapacious cardinals.
+
+Whatever he may have done under the influence of French and Italian
+monks to rescue the Church from its state of barbarous confusion, it
+was--as in the time of Otto the Great--by the German dictatorship alone
+that it could be saved. The exertions of Gregory VI soon ceased to bear
+any result; his means were exhausted, and his opponents gradually
+overpowered him. So utter was the state of anarchy that it is said that
+all three popes lived in the city at the same time: one in the Lateran,
+a second in St. Peter's, and a third in Santa Maria Maggiore.
+
+The eyes of the better citizens at length turned to the King of Germany.
+The archdeacon Peter convoked a synod without consulting Gregory, and it
+was here resolved urgently to invite Henry to come and take the imperial
+crown and raise the Church from the ruin into which it had fallen.
+
+Henry, coming from Augsburg, crossed the Brenner, and arrived at Verona
+in September, 1046, accompanied by a great army and filled with the
+ardent desire of becoming the reformer of the Church. No enemy opposed
+him, the bishops and dukes, among them the powerful margrave Boniface of
+Tuscany, did homage without delay. The Roman situation was provisionally
+discussed at a great synod in Pavia. Gregory VI now hastened to meet the
+King at Piacenza, where he hoped to gain the monarch to his side. Henry,
+however, dismissed him with the explanation that his fate and that of
+the antipopes would be canonically decided by a council.
+
+Shortly before Christmas he assembled one thousand and forty-six bishops
+and Roman clergy at Sutri. The three popes were summoned, and Gregory
+and Sylvester III actually appeared. Sylvester was deposed from his
+pontificate and condemned to penance in a monastery. Gregory VI,
+however, gave the council cause to doubt its competence to judge him.
+Gregory, who was an upright man, or one at least conscious of good
+intentions, consented publicly to describe the circumstances of his
+elevation, and was thereby forced to condemn himself as guilty of simony
+and unworthy of the papal office. He quietly laid down the insignia of
+the papacy, and his renunciation did him honor. Henry, with the bishops
+and the margrave Boniface, immediately started for the city, which did
+not shut its gates against him; for Benedict II had hid himself in
+Tusculum, and his brothers did not venture on any resistance. Rome,
+weary of the Tusculum horrors, joyfully accepted the German King as her
+deliverer. Never afterward was a king of Germany received with such glad
+acclamations by the Roman people; never again did any other effect such
+great results or achieve the like changes. With the Roman expedition of
+Henry III begins a new epoch in the history of the city, and more
+especially of the Church. It seemed as if the waters of the deluge had
+subsided, and as if men from the ark had landed on the rock of Peter to
+give new races and new laws to a new world. What law, that stern and
+terrible power which kills, binds, and holds together, signifies in
+human affairs, has indeed been experienced by few periods so fully as by
+that with which we have now to deal.
+
+A synod, assembled in St. Peter's on December 23d, again pronounced all
+three popes deposed, and a canonical pope had consequently to be
+elected. Like Otto III before his coronation, Henry had also at his side
+a man who was to wear the tiara and to confer the crown upon himself.
+
+Adalbert of Hamburg and Bremen having refused the papacy, the King chose
+Suidger of Bamberg. The royal command was all that was required to place
+the candidate on the sacred chair. Henry, however, would not violate any
+of the canonical forms. As King of Germany he possessed no right either
+over that city or yet over the papal election. The right must first be
+conferred upon him, and this was done by a treaty which he had already
+concluded with the Romans at Sutri. "Roman Signors," said Henry at the
+second sitting of the synod on December 24th, "however thoughtless your
+conduct may hitherto have been, I still accord you liberty to elect a
+pope according to ancient custom; choose from among this assembly whom
+you will."
+
+The Romans replied: "When the royal majesty is present, the assent to
+the election does not belong to us, and, when it is lacking, you are
+represented by your _patricius_. For in the affairs of the republic the
+patricius is not patricius of the pope, but of the emperor. We admit
+that we have been so thoughtless as to appoint idiots as popes. It now
+behooves your imperial power to give the Roman republic the benefit of
+law, the ornament of manners, and to lend the arm of protection to the
+Church."
+
+The senators of the year 1046, who so meekly surrendered the valuable
+right to the German King, heeded not the shades of Alberic and the three
+Crescentii; since these--their patricians--would have accused them of
+treason.
+
+The Romans of these days were, however, ready for any sacrifice so that
+they obtained freedom from the Tusculum tyranny. Nothing more clearly
+shows the utter depth of their exhaustion and the extent of their
+sufferings than the light surrender of a right which it had formerly
+cost Otto the Great such repeated efforts to extort from the city. Rome
+made the humiliating confession that she possessed no priest worthy of
+the papacy, that the clergy in the city were rude and utter simonists.
+All other circumstances, moreover, forbade the election of a Roman or
+even of an Italian to the papacy.
+
+The Romans besought Henry to give them a good pope; he presented the
+Bishop of Bamberg to the assenting clergy, and led the reluctant
+candidate to the apostolic chair. Clement II, consecrated on Christmas
+Day, 1046, immediately placed the imperial crown on Henry's head and on
+that of his wife Agnes. There were still many Romans who had been
+eye-witnesses of like transactions--that is to say, of papal election
+and imperial coronation following one the other in immediate
+succession--in the case of Otto III and Henry V; who, as they now saw
+the second German pope mount the chair of Peter, may have recalled the
+fact that the first had only lived a few sad years in Rome and had died
+in misery.
+
+The coronation of Henry III was performed under such significant
+conditions and in such perfect tranquillity that it offers the most
+fitting opportunity for describing in a few sentences the ceremonial of
+the imperial coronation.
+
+Since Charles the Great, these repeated ceremonies, with the more
+frequent coronations or Lateran processions of the popes, formed the
+most brilliant spectacle in Rome.
+
+When the Emperor-elect approached with his wife and retinue, he first
+took an oath to the Romans, at the little bridge on the Neronian Field,
+faithfully to observe the rights and usages of the city. On the day of
+the coronation he made his entrance through the Porta Castella close to
+St. Angelo and here repeated the oath. The clergy and the corporations
+of Rome greeted him at the Church of Santa Maria Traspontina, on a
+legendary site called the Terebinthus of Nero. The solemn procession
+then advanced to the steps of the cathedral. Senators walked by the side
+of the King, the prefect of the city carried the naked sword before him,
+and his chamberlains scattered money.
+
+Arrived at the steps he dismounted from his horse and, accompanied by
+his retinue, ascended to the platform where the Pope, surrounded by the
+higher clergy, awaited him sitting. The King stooped to kiss the Pope's
+foot, tendered the oath to be an upright protector of the Church,
+received from the Pope the kiss of peace, and was adopted by him as the
+son of the Church. With solemn song both King and Pope entered the
+Church of Santa Maria in Turri, beside the steps of St. Peter's, and
+here the King was formally made canon of the cathedral. He then
+advanced, conducted by the Lateran count of the palace and by the
+_primicerius_ of the judges, to the silver door of the cathedral, where
+he prayed, and the Bishop of Albano delivered the first oration.
+
+Innumerable mystic ceremonies awaited the King in St. Peter's itself.
+Here, a short way from the entrance, was the _rota porphyretica_, a
+round porphyry stone inserted in the pavement, on which the King and
+Pope knelt. The imperial candidate here made his profession of faith,
+the Cardinal-bishop of Portus placed himself in the middle of the rota
+and pronounced the second oration. The King was then draped in new
+vestments, was made a cleric in the sacristy by the Pope, was clad with
+tunic, dalmatica, pluviale, mitre and sandals, and was then led to the
+altar of St. Maurice, whither his wife, after similar but less fatiguing
+ceremonies, accompanied him. The Bishop of Ostia here anointed the King
+on the right arm and neck and delivered the third oration.
+
+If the Emperor-elect were fitted by the dignity of his calling, then the
+solemnity of the function, the mystic and tedious pomp, the magnificent
+monotone of prayer and song in the ancient cathedral, hallowed by so
+many exalted memories, must have stirred his inmost soul. The pinnacle
+of all human ambition, the crown of Charles the Great, lay glittering
+before his longing eyes on the altar of the Prince of the Apostles. The
+Pope, however, first placed a ring on the finger of the Anointed, as
+symbol of the faith, the permanence and strength of his Catholic rule;
+with similar formulae girt him with the sword, and finally placed the
+crown upon his head. "Take," he said, "the symbol of fame, the diadem of
+royalty, the crown, the empire, in the name of the Father, of the Son,
+and of the Holy Ghost; renounce the archfiend and all sins, be upright
+and merciful, and live in such pious love that thou mayest hereafter
+receive the everlasting crown in company with the saints, from our Lord
+Jesus Christ."
+
+The church resounded with the Gloria and the Laudes: "Life and victory
+to the Emperor, to the Roman and the German army," and with the endless
+acclamations of the rude soldiers who hailed their King in German, Slav,
+and Romance tongues.
+
+The Emperor divested himself of the symbols of the empire, and now
+ministered to the Pope as subdeacon at mass. The Count Palatine
+afterward removed the sandals, and put the red imperial boots with the
+spurs of St. Maurice upon him. Whereupon the entire procession,
+accompanied by the Pope, left the church and advanced along the
+so-called "Triumphal Way," through the flower-bedecked city, amid the
+ringing of all the bells, to the Lateran. At special stations were
+posted clergy singing praises, and the _scholae_ or guilds placed to
+salute the Emperor as he passed. Chamberlains scattered money before and
+behind the procession, and all the scholae and the officials of the
+palace received the _presbyterium_ or customary present of money. A
+banquet closed the solemnities in the papal palace.
+
+Such are merely the barest outlines of an imperial coronation of this
+period. The ceremonies, borrowed from Byzantine pomp, had been
+established since Charles the Great, and had remained essentially the
+same, although, in the course of time, many details had been altered and
+others had been introduced. The magnificence of these spectacles is no
+longer rivalled by the pageantry of our days. The multitudes of dukes
+and counts, of bishops and abbots, knights and nobles with their
+retinues, the splendor of their attire, the strangeness of their faces
+and their tongues, the martial array of warriors, the mystic
+magnificence of the papacy with all its orders in such picturesque
+costume, the aspect of secular Rome, of judges and senators, of consuls
+and _duces_, of the militia with their banners, in curious, motley,
+fantastic attire; lastly, as the sublime scene of the drama, the stern,
+gloomy, ruinous city, through which the procession solemnly
+advanced--all combined to produce a picture of such mighty and universal
+historic interest that even a Roman accustomed to the pomp of Trajan's
+period could not have beheld it without feelings of astonishment.
+
+These coronation processions restored to the city its character of
+metropolis. The Romans of the time might flatter themselves that the
+emperors whom they elected still ruled the universe. The strangers who
+flocked to the city freely distributed their gold, and the hungry
+populace could live for weeks on the proceeds of the coronation.
+
+
+J.E. DARRAS
+
+The accession of Gregory VI was the harbinger of an epoch of moral
+renaissance. The wise Pontiff, whose glory it had been to free the
+Church from a disgraceful yoke, proved himself worthy of the sovereign
+power, as much by the zeal with which he wielded as by the noble
+disinterestedness with which he resigned it. He found the temporal
+domains of the Church so far diminished that they hardly furnished the
+Pope with the means of an honorable maintenance. As guardian of the
+rights of the Church, he hurled an excommunication against the usurpers.
+The infuriated plunderers marched upon Rome with an armed force. The
+Pope also raised troops, took possession of St. Peter's church, drove
+out the wretches who stole the offerings laid upon the tombs of the
+Apostles, took back several estates belonging to the domain of the
+Church, and secured the safety of the roads, upon which pilgrims no
+longer ventured to travel except in caravans. This policy displeased the
+Romans, who had now become habituated to plunder. Their complaints
+induced Henry III, King of Germany, to hurry to Italy, and to summon a
+council at Sutri, during the Christmas festival, to inquire whether the
+election of Gregory should be regarded as simoniacal. The Pope and the
+clergy entertained the sincere conviction that they were justified in
+bringing about, even by means of money, the abdication of the unworthy
+Benedict, thus to end the scandal which so foully disgraced the Holy
+See. As opinions were divided on this point, Gregory VI, to set all
+doubts at rest, stripped himself, with his own hands, of the Pontifical
+vestments, and gave up to the bishops his pastoral staff. Having given
+to the world this noble example of self-denial, Gregory withdrew to the
+monastery of Cluny, bearing with him the consciousness of a great duty
+done. He died in that holy solitude in the odor of sanctity.
+
+The see left vacant by the magnanimous humility of Gregory VI was
+bestowed, by general consent, upon Suidger, bishop of Bamberg, whom King
+Henry had brought with him to Rome. The new Pope, whose elevation was
+due only to universally known and acknowledged virtues, took the name of
+Clement II, and was crowned on Christmas-Day (A.D. 1046); in the same
+solemnity he bestowed the imperial title and crown upon Henry III, and
+his queen, Agnes, daughter of William, duke of Aquitaine.
+
+The Emperor Henry, during his sojourn in Rome, sent for St. Peter Damian
+to assist the Pope by his counsels. The illustrious religious thus wrote
+to the Pontiff, in excuse for not complying: "Notwithstanding the
+Emperor's request, so expressive of his benevolence in my regard, I
+cannot devote to journeys the time which I have promised to consecrate
+to God in solitude. I send the imperial letter in order that your
+Holiness may decide, if it become necessary. My soul is weighed down
+with grief when I see the churches of our provinces plunged into
+shameful confusion through the fault of bad bishops and abbots. What
+does it profit us to learn that the Holy See has been brought out from
+darkness into the light, if we still remain buried in the same gloom of
+ignominy? But we hope that you are destined to be the savior of Israel.
+Labor then, Most Holy Father, once more to raise up the kingdom of
+justice, and use the vigor of discipline to humble the wicked and to
+raise the courage of the good."
+
+On his return to Germany, Henry took the Pope with him. The city of
+Beneventum refused to open its gates to the Sovereign Pontiff, who, at
+the Emperor's request, pronounced against it a sentence of
+excommunication. Clement made but a short visit to his native land, and
+hastened back to Rome. His apostolic zeal led him to visit, in person,
+the churches of Umbria, the deplorable condition of which he had learned
+from the letter of St. Peter Damian. On reaching the monastery of St.
+Thomas of Aposello, he was seized with a mortal disease, before having
+accomplished the object of his journey. His last thought was for his
+beloved church of Bamberg, to which he sent, from his dying couch, a
+confirmation of all its former privileges, assuring it, in the most
+touching terms, of his unchanging affection.
+
+
+
+
+DISSENSION AND SEPARATION OF THE GREEK AND ROMAN CHURCHES
+
+A.D. 1054
+
+HENRY FANSHAWE TOZER
+
+JOSEPH DEHARBE
+
+
+(In the division of the Greek Catholic Church from that at Rome,
+Protestant writers see a very natural and legitimate separation of two
+equal powers. Roman Catholics, regarding the Papal supremacy as
+established from the beginning, treat the division as a plot by evil and
+malignant men. Both viewpoints are here given.
+
+The Eastern--or Greek Christian--Church, now known as the Holy Orthodox,
+Catholic, Apostolic, Oriental Church, first assumed individuality at
+Ephesus, and in the catechetical school of Alexandria, which flourished
+after A.D. 180. It early came into conflict with the Western or Roman
+Church: "the Eastern Church enacting creeds, and the Western Church
+discipline."
+
+In the third century, Dionysius, Bishop of Rome, accused the Patriarch
+of Alexandria of error in points of faith, but the Patriarch vindicated
+his orthodoxy. Eastern monachism arose about 300; the Church of Armenia
+was founded about the same year; and the Church of Georgia or Iberia in
+340.
+
+Constantine the Great caused Christianity to be recognized throughout
+the Roman Empire, and in 325 convened the first ecumenical or general
+Council at Nicaea [Nice], when Arius, excommunicated for heresy by a
+provincial synod at Alexandria in 321, defended his views, but was
+condemned. Arianism long maintained a theological and political
+importance in the East and among the Goths and other nations converted
+by Arian missionaries. In A.D. 330, Constantine removed the capital of
+the Roman Empire to Constantinople, and thence dates the definite
+establishment of the Greek Church and the serious rivalry with the Roman
+Church over claims of preeminence, differences of doctrine and ritual,
+charges of heresy and inter-excommunications, which ended in the final
+separation of the churches in 1054.
+
+In A.D. 461, the churches of Egypt, Syria, and Armenia separated from
+the Church of Constantinople, over the Monophysite controversy on the
+single divine or single compound nature of the Son; in 634 the struggle
+with Mahometanism began; in 676 the Maronites of Lebanon formed a strong
+sect, which, in 1182, joined the Roman Church. In 988, Vladimir the
+Great of Russia founded the Graeco-Russian Church, in which the Greek
+Church found a refuge, when Mahometanism was established at
+Constantinople, after its capture by the Turks in 1453.)
+
+
+HENRY FANSHAWE TOZER
+
+The separation of the Eastern and Western churches, which finally took
+place in the year 1054, was due to the operation of influences which had
+been at work for several centuries before. From very early times a
+tendency to divergence existed, arising from the tone of thought of the
+dominant races in the two, the more speculative Greeks being chiefly
+occupied with purely theological questions, while the more practical
+Roman mind devoted itself rather to subjects connected with the nature
+and destiny of man. In differences such as these there was nothing
+irreconcilable: the members of both communions professed the same forms
+of belief, rested their faith on the same divine persons, were guided by
+the same standard of morals, and were animated by the same hopes and
+fears; and they were bound by the first principles of their religion to
+maintain unity with one another. But in societies, as in individuals,
+inherent diversity of character is liable to be intensified by time, and
+thus counteracts the natural bonds of sympathy, and prevents the two
+sides from seeing one another's point of view. In this way it cooeperates
+with and aggravates the force of other causes of disunion, which adverse
+circumstances may generate. Such causes there were in the present
+instance, political, ecclesiastical, and theological; and the nature of
+these it may be well for us to consider, before proceeding to narrate
+the history of the disruption.
+
+The office of bishop of Rome assumed to some extent a political
+character as early as the time of the first Christian emperors. By them
+this prelate was constituted a sort of secretary of state for Christian
+affairs, and was employed as a central authority for communicating with
+the bishops in the provinces; so that after a while he acted as minister
+of religion and public instruction. As the civil and military power of
+the Western Empire declined, the extent of this authority increased; and
+by the time when Italy was annexed to the Empire of the East, in the
+reign of Justinian, the popes had become the political chiefs of Roman
+society. Nominally, indeed, they were subject to the exarch of Ravenna,
+as vicegerent of the Emperor at Constantinople, but in reality the
+inhabitants of Western Europe were more disposed to look to the
+spiritual potentate in the Imperial city as representing the traditions
+of ancient Rome.
+
+The political rivalry that was thus engendered was sharpened by the
+traditional jealousy of Rome and Constantinople, which had existed ever
+since the new capital had been erected on the shores of the Bosporus.
+Then followed struggles for administrative superiority between the popes
+and the exarchs, culminating in the shameful maltreatment and banishment
+of Martin I by the emperor Constans--an event which the See of Rome
+could never forget.
+
+The attempt to enforce iconoclasm in Central Italy was influential in
+causing the loss of that province to the Empire; and even after the
+Byzantine rule had ceased there, the controversy about images tended to
+keep alive the antagonism, because, although that question was once and
+again settled in favor of the maintenance of images, yet many of the
+emperors, in whose persons the power of the East was embodied, were
+foremost in advocating their destruction. Indeed, from first to last,
+owing to the close connection of church and state in the Byzantine
+empire, the unpopularity of the latter in Western Europe was shared by
+the former. To this must be added the contempt for one another's
+character which had arisen among the adherents of the two churches, for
+the Easterns had learned to regard the people of the West as ignorant
+and barbarous, and were esteemed by them in turn as mendacious and
+unmanly.
+
+In ecclesiastical matters also the differences were of long standing.
+These related to questions of jurisdiction between the two
+patriarchates. Up to the eighth century, the patriarchate of the West
+included a number of provinces on the eastern side of the
+Adriatic--Illyricum, Dacia, Macedonia, and Greece. But Leo the Isaurian,
+who probably foresaw that Italy would ere long cease to form part of his
+dominions, and was unwilling that these important territories should own
+spiritual allegiance to one who was not his subject, altered this
+arrangement, and transferred the jurisdiction over them to the Patriarch
+of Constantinople. Against this measure the bishops of Rome did not fail
+to protest, and demands for their restoration were made up to the time
+of the final schism. A further ecclesiastical question, which in part
+depended on this, was that of the Church of the Bulgarians. The prince
+Bogoris had swayed to and fro in his inclinations between the two
+churches, and had ultimately given his allegiance to that of the East;
+but the controversy did not end there. According to the ancient
+territorial arrangement the Danubian provinces were made subject to the
+archbishopric of Thessalonica, and that city was included within the
+Western patriarchate; and on this ground Bulgaria was claimed by the
+Roman see as falling within that area. The matter was several times
+pressed on the attention of the Greek Church, especially on the occasion
+of the council held at Constantinople in 879, but in vain. The Eastern
+prelates replied evasively, saying that to determine the boundaries of
+dioceses was a matter which belonged to the sovereign. The Emperor, for
+his part, had good reason for not yielding, for by so doing he would not
+only have admitted into a neighboring country an agency which would soon
+have been employed for political purposes to his disadvantage, but would
+have justified the assumption on which the demand rested, viz., that the
+pope had a right to claim the provinces which his predecessors had lost.
+Thus this point of difference also remained open, as a source of
+irritation between the two churches.
+
+But behind these questions another of far greater magnitude was coming
+into view, that of the papal supremacy. From being in the first instance
+the head of the Christian church in the old Imperial city, and afterward
+Patriarch of the West, and _primus inter pares_ in relation to the other
+spiritual heads of Christendom, the bishop of Rome had gradually
+claimed, on the strength of his occupying the _cathedra Petri_, a
+position which approximated more and more to that of supremacy over the
+whole Church. This claim had never been admitted in the East, but the
+appeals which were made from Constantinople to his judgment and
+authority, both at the time of the iconoclastic controversy and
+subsequently, lent some countenance to its validity.
+
+But the great advance was made in the pontificate of Nicholas I
+(858-867), who promulgated, or at least recognized, the _False
+Decretals_. This famous compilation, which is now universally
+acknowledged to be spurious, and can be shown to be the work of that
+period, contains, among other documents, letters and decrees of the
+early bishops of Rome, in which the organization and discipline of the
+Church from the earliest time are set forth, and the whole system is
+shown to have depended on the supremacy of the popes. The newly
+discovered collection was recognized as genuine by Nicholas, and was
+accepted by the Western Church. The effect of this was at once to
+formulate all the claims which had before been vaguely asserted, and to
+give them the authority of unbroken tradition. The result to Christendom
+at large was in the highest degree momentous. It was impossible for
+future popes to recede from them, and equally impossible for other
+churches which valued their independence to acknowledge them. The last
+attempt on the part of the Eastern Church to arrange a compromise in
+this matter was made by the emperor Basil II, a potentate who both by
+his conquests and the vigor of his administration might rightly claim to
+negotiate with others on equal terms. By him it was proposed (A.D. 1024)
+that the Eastern Church should recognize the honorary primacy of the
+Western patriarch, and that he in turn should acknowledge the internal
+independence of the Eastern Church. These terms were rejected, and from
+that moment it was clear that the separation of the two branches of
+Christendom was only a question of time.
+
+Already in the papacy of Nicholas I a rupture had occurred in connection
+with the dispute between the rival patriarchs of Constantinople,
+Ignatius and Photius. The former of these prelates, who was son of the
+emperor Michael I, and a man of high character and a devout opponent of
+iconoclasm, was appointed, through the influence of Theodora, the
+restorer of images, in the reign of her son, Michael the Drunkard. But
+the uncle of the Emperor, the Caesar Bardas, who was a man of flagrantly
+immoral life, had divorced his own wife, and was living publicly with
+his son's widow. For this incestuous connection Ignatius repelled him
+from the communion. Fired with indignation at this insult, the Caesar
+determined to ruin both the Patriarch and his patroness, the
+Empress-mother, and with this view persuaded the Emperor to free himself
+from the trammels of his mother's influence by forcing her to take
+monastic vows. To this step Ignatius would not consent, because it was
+forbidden by the laws of the Church that any should enter on the
+monastic life except of their own free will. In consequence of his
+resistance a charge of treasonable correspondence was invented against
+him, and when he refused to resign his office he was deposed (857).
+Photius, who was chosen to succeed him, was the most learned man of his
+age, and like his rival, unblemished in character and a supporter of
+images, but boundless in ambition. He was a layman at the time of his
+appointment, but in six days he passed through the inferior orders which
+led up to the patriarchate. Still, the party that remained faithful to
+Ignatius numbered many adherents, and therefore Photius thought it well
+to enlist the support of the Bishop of Rome on his side. An embassy was
+therefore sent to inform Pope Nicholas that the late Patriarch had
+voluntarily retired, and that Photius had been lawfully chosen, and had
+undertaken the office with great reluctance. In answer to this appeal
+the Pope despatched two legates to Constantinople, and Ignatius was
+summoned to appear before a council at which they were present. He was
+condemned, but appealed to the Pope in person.
+
+On the return of the legates to Rome it was discovered that they had
+received bribes, and thereupon Nicholas, whose judgment, however
+imperious, was ever on the side of the oppressed, called together a
+synod of the Roman Church, and refused his consent to the deposition of
+Ignatius. To this effect he wrote to the authorities of the Eastern
+Church, calling upon them at the same time to concur in the decrees of
+the apostolic see; but subsequently, having obtained full information as
+to the harsh treatment to which the deposed Patriarch had been
+subjected, he excommunicated Photius, and commanded the restoration of
+Ignatius "by the power committed to him by Christ through St. Peter."
+
+These denunciations produced no effect on the Emperor and the new
+Patriarch, and a correspondence between Michael and Nicholas, couched in
+violent language, continued at intervals for several years. At last, in
+consequence of a renewed demand on the part of the Pope that Ignatius
+and Photius should be sent to Rome for judgment, the latter prelate,
+whose ability and eloquence had obtained great influence for him,
+summoned a council at Constantinople in the year 867, to decree the
+counter-excommunication of the Western Patriarch. Of the eight articles
+which were drawn up on this occasion for the incrimination of the Church
+of Rome, all but two relate to trivial matters, such as the observance
+of Saturday as a fast, and the shaving of their beards by the clergy.
+The two important ones deal with the doctrine of the Procession of the
+Holy Spirit, and the enforced celibacy of the clergy.
+
+The condemnation of the Western Church on these grounds was voted, and a
+messenger was despatched to bear the defiance to Rome; but ere he
+reached his destination he was recalled, in consequence of a revolution
+in the palace at Constantinople. The author of this, Basil the
+Macedonian, the founder of the most important dynasty that ever occupied
+the throne of the Eastern Empire, had for some time been associated in
+the government with the emperor Michael; but at length, being fearful
+for his own safety, he resolved to put his colleague out of the way, and
+assassinated him during one of his fits of drunkenness.
+
+It is said that in consequence of this crime Photius refused to admit
+him to the communion; anyhow, one of the first acts of Basil was to
+depose Photius. A council, hostile to him, was now assembled, and was
+attended by the legates of the new pope, Hadrian II (869). By this
+Ignatius was restored to his former dignity, while Photius was degraded
+and his ordinations were declared void. So violent was the animosity
+displayed against him that he was dragged before the assembly by the
+Emperor's guard, and his condemnation was written in the sacramental
+wine. During the ten years which elapsed between his restoration and his
+death Ignatius continued to enjoy his high position in peace, but for
+Photius other vicissitudes were in store.
+
+On the removal of his rival, so strangely did opinion sway to and fro at
+this time in the empire, the current of feeling set strongly in favor of
+the learned exile. He was recalled, and his reinstatement was ratified
+by a council (879). But with the death of Basil the Macedonian (886), he
+again fell from power, for the successor of that Emperor, Leo the
+Philosopher, ignominiously removed him, in order to confer the dignity
+on his brother Stephen. He passed the remainder of his life in honorable
+retirement, and by his death the chief obstacle in the way of
+reconcilement with the Roman Church was removed. It is consoling to
+learn, when reading of the unhappy rivalry of the two men so superior to
+the ordinary run of Byzantine prelates, that they never shared the
+passions of their respective partisans, but retained a mutual regard for
+one another.
+
+We have now to consider the doctrinal questions which were in dispute
+between the two churches. Far the most important of these was that
+relating to the addition of the _Filioque_ clause to the Nicene Creed.
+In the first draft of the Creed, as promulgated by the council of
+Nicaea, the article relating to the Holy Spirit ran simply thus: "I
+believe in the Holy Ghost." But in the Second General Council, that of
+Constantinople, which condemned the heresy of Macedonius, it was thought
+advisable to state more explicitly the doctrine of the Church on this
+subject, and among other affirmations the clause was added, "who
+proceedeth from the Father." Again, at the next general council, at
+Ephesus, it was ordered that it should not be lawful to make any
+addition to the Creed, as ratified by the Council of Constantinople. The
+followers of the Western Church, however, generally taught that the
+Spirit proceeds from the Son as well as from the Father, while those of
+the East preferred to use the expression, "the Spirit of Christ,
+proceeding from the Father, and receiving of the Son," or, "proceeding
+from the Father through the Son." It was in the churches of Spain and
+France that the _Filioque_ clause was first introduced into the Creed
+and thus recited in the services, but the addition was not at once
+approved at Rome. Pope Leo III, early in the ninth century, not only
+expressed his disapproval of this departure from the original form, but,
+in order to show his sense of the importance of adhering to the
+traditional practice, caused the Creed of Constantinople to be engraved
+on silver plates, both in Greek and Latin, and thus to be publicly set
+forth in the Church. The first pontiff who authorized the addition was
+Nicholas I, and against this Photius protested, both during the lifetime
+of that Pope and also in the time of John VIII, when it was condemned by
+the council held at Constantinople in 879, which is called by the Greeks
+the Eighth General Council. It is clear from what we have already seen
+that Photius was prepared to seize on _any_ point of disagreement in
+order to throw it in the teeth of his opponents, but in this matter the
+Eastern Church had a real grievance to complain of. The Nicene Creed was
+to them what it was not to the Western Church, their only creed, and the
+authority of the councils, by which its form and wording were
+determined, stood far higher in their estimation. To add to the one and
+to disregard the other were, at least in their judgment, the violation
+of a sacred compact.
+
+The other question, which, if not actually one of doctrine, had come to
+be regarded as such, was that of the _azyma_, that is, the use of
+unfermented bread in the celebration of the eucharist. As far as one can
+judge from the doubtful evidence on the subject, it seems probable that
+ordinary, that is, leavened bread, was generally used in the church for
+this purpose until the seventh or eighth century, when unleavened bread
+began to be employed in the West, on the ground that it was used in the
+original institution of the sacrament, which took place during the Feast
+of the Passover. In the Eastern Church this change was never admitted.
+It seems strange that so insignificant a matter of observance should
+have been erected into a question of the first importance between the
+two communions, but the reason of this is not far to seek. The fact is
+that, whereas the weighty matters of dispute--the doctrine of the
+Procession of the Holy Spirit, and the papal claims to supremacy--
+required some knowledge and reflection in order rightly to understand
+their bearings, the use of leavened or unleavened bread was a matter
+within the range of all, and those who were on the lookout for a ground
+of antagonism found it here ready to hand.
+
+In the story of the conversion of the Russian Vladimir we are told that
+the Greek missionary who expounded to him the religious views of the
+Eastern Church, when combating the claims of the emissaries of the Roman
+communion, remarked: "They celebrate the mass with unleavened bread;
+therefore they have not the true religion." Still, even Photius, when
+raking together the most minute points of difference between him and his
+adversaries, did not introduce this one. It was reserved for a
+hot-headed partisan at a later period to bring forward as a subject of
+public discussion.
+
+This was Michael Cerularius, Patriarch of Constantinople, with whose
+name the Great Schism will forever be associated.
+
+The circumstances which led up to that event are as follows: For a
+century and a half from the death of Photius the controversy slumbered,
+though no advance was made toward an understanding with respect to the
+points at issue. In Italy, and even at Rome, churches and monasteries
+were tolerated in which the Greek rite was maintained, and similar
+freedom was allowed to the Latins resident in the Greek empire. But this
+tacit compact was broken in 1053 by the patriarch Michael, who, in his
+passionate antagonism to everything Western, gave orders that all the
+churches in Constantinople in which worship was celebrated according to
+the Roman rite should be closed. At the same time--aroused, perhaps, in
+some measure by the progress of the Normans in conquering Apulia, which
+tended to interfere with the jurisdiction still exercised by the Eastern
+Church in that province--he joined with Leo, the archbishop of Achrida
+and metropolitan of Bulgaria, in addressing a letter to the Bishop of
+Trani in Southern Italy, containing a violent attack on the Latin
+Church, in which the question of the azyma was put prominently forward.
+
+Directions were further given for circulating this missive among the
+Western clergy. It happened that at the time when the letter arrived at
+Trani, Cardinal Humbert, a vigorous champion of ecclesiastical rights,
+was residing in that city, and he translated it into Latin and
+communicated it to Pope Leo IX. In answer, the Pope addressed a
+remonstrance to the Patriarch, in which, without entering into the
+specific charges that he had brought forward, he contrasted the security
+of the Roman See in matters of doctrine, arising from the guidance which
+was guaranteed to it through St. Peter, with the liability of the
+Eastern Church to fall into error, and pointedly referred to the more
+Christian spirit manifested by his own communion in tolerating those
+from whose opinions they differed. Afterward, at the commencement of
+1054, in compliance with a request from the emperor Constantine
+Monomachus, who was anxious on political grounds to avoid a rupture, he
+sent three legates to Constantinople to arrange the terms of an
+agreement. These were Frederick of Lorraine, Chancellor of the Roman
+Church; Peter, Archbishop of Amalfi, and Cardinal Humbert.
+
+The legates were welcomed by the Emperor, but they unwisely adopted a
+lofty tone toward the haughty Patriarch, who thenceforward avoided all
+communication with them, declaring that on a matter which so seriously
+affected the whole Eastern Church he could take no steps without
+consulting the other patriarchs. Humbert now published an argumentative
+reply to Michael's letter to the Pope, in the form of a dialogue between
+two members of the Greek and Latin churches, in which the charges
+brought against his own communion were discussed _seriatim_, and
+especially those relating to fasting on Saturday and the use of
+unleavened bread in the eucharist. A rejoinder to this appeared from the
+pen of a monk of the monastery of Studium, Nicetas Pectoratus, in which
+the enforced celibacy of the Western clergy, on which Photius had before
+animadverted, was severely criticised. The Cardinal retorted in
+intemperate language, and so entirely had the legates secured the
+support of Constantine that Nicetas' work was committed to the flames,
+and he was forced to recant what he had said against the Roman Church.
+But the Patriarch was immovable, and for the moment he occupied a
+stronger position than the Emperor, who desired to conciliate him. At
+last the patience of the legates was exhausted, and on July 16, 1054,
+they proceeded to the Church of St. Sophia, and deposited on the altar,
+which was prepared for the celebration of the eucharist, a document
+containing a fierce anathema, by which Michael Cerularius and his
+adherents were condemned. After their departure they were for a moment
+recalled, because the Patriarch expressed a desire to confer with them;
+but this Constantine would not permit, fearing some act of violence on
+the part of the people. They then finally left Constantinople, and from
+that time to the present all communion has been broken off between the
+two great branches of Christendom.
+
+The breach thus made was greatly widened at the period of the crusades.
+However serious may have been the alienation between the East and West
+at the time of their separation, it is clear that the Greeks were not
+regarded by the Latins as a mere heretical sect, for one of the primary
+objects with which the First Crusade was undertaken was the deliverance
+of the Eastern Empire from the attacks of the Mahometans. But the
+familiarity which arose from the presence of the crusaders on Greek soil
+ripened the seeds of mutual dislike and distrust. As long as
+negotiations between the two parties took place at a distance, the
+differences, however irreconcilable they might be in principle, did not
+necessarily bring them into open antagonism, whereas their more intimate
+acquaintance with one another produced personal and national ill-will.
+The people of the West now appeared more than ever barbarous and
+overbearing, and the Court of Constantinople more than ever senile and
+designing. The crafty policy of Alexius Comnenus in transferring his
+allies with all speed into Asia, and declining to take the lead in the
+expedition, was almost justified by the necessity of delivering his
+subjects from these unwelcome visitors and avoiding further
+embarrassments. But the iniquitous Fourth Crusade (1204) produced an
+ineradicable feeling of animosity in the minds of the Byzantine people.
+The memory of the barbarities of that time, when many Greeks died as
+martyrs at the stake for their religious convictions, survives at the
+present day in various places bordering on the Aegean, in legends which
+relate that they were formerly destroyed by the Pope of Rome.
+
+Still, the anxiety of the Eastern emperors to maintain their position by
+means of political support from Western Europe brought it to pass that
+proposals for reunion were made on several occasions. The final attempt
+at reconciliation was made when the Greek empire was reduced to the
+direst straits, and its rulers were prepared to purchase the aid of
+Western Europe against the Ottomans by almost any sacrifice.
+Accordingly, application was made to Pope Eugenius IV, and by him the
+representatives of the Eastern Church were invited to attend the council
+which was summoned to meet at Ferrara in 1438. The Emperor, John
+Palaeologus and the Greek patriarch Joseph proceeded thither.
+
+The Emperor, however, on his return home, soon discovered that his
+pilgrimage to the West had been lost labor. Pope Eugenius, indeed,
+provided him with two galleys and a guard of three hundred men, equipped
+at his own expense, but the hoped-for succors from Western Europe did
+not arrive. His own subjects were completely alienated by the betrayal
+of their cherished faith; the clergy who favored the union were regarded
+as traitors. John Palaeologus himself did not survive to see the final
+catastrophe; but Constantinople was captured by the Turks, and the
+Empire of the East ceased to exist.
+
+
+JOSEPH DEHARBE
+
+The bonds so often and so painfully knit between the Eastern and Western
+churches were destined at last to be completely torn asunder, and the
+truth of our Lord's words, "Who is not for Me, is against Me," was again
+to be proved. The Greek schism places strikingly before our eyes the
+fate of such churches as supinely yield their rights and independence,
+and submit willingly to State tyranny. In the year 857 the wicked
+Bardas, uncle to the reigning Emperor, who wielded an almost absolute
+power and disregarded all laws, human and divine, unjustly banished from
+his See, Ignatius, the rightful patriarch of Constantinople, and placed
+in his stead the learned, but worthless, Photius. Such bishops as
+refused to recognize the intruder (who had received all the orders in
+six days from an excommunicated bishop) were deposed, imprisoned and
+exiled.
+
+Photius tried, by cruel ill-treatment, to force the aged Ignatius to
+abdicate, and by a well-contrived fabrication endeavored to obtain the
+support of Pope Nicholas I. When, however, this great Pope learned the
+true facts of the case from the imprisoned Ignatius, he assembled a
+synod in Rome in 864, by which Photius and all the bishops whom he had
+consecrated were deposed. Fired by ambition, Photius now threw off all
+concealments. He summoned the bishops of his own party, laid various
+charges against the Roman Church, and in his inconsiderate rage ended by
+anathematising the holy Father. Pope Nicholas, in a most powerful
+letter, exhorted the Emperor Michael III to set bounds to the disorders
+of Photius, warning him that a fearful judgment would await him if the
+faithful were misled and so many believers caused to swerve from the
+right path. It was not, however, till the reign of his successor that
+Photius was banished and the much-tried St. Ignatius restored to his
+rights.
+
+To remedy the evil brought about by Photius, the eighth general council
+was held in Constantinople, at the desire of St. Ignatius and the
+Emperor, and presided over by the legates of Pope Adrian. Photius, when
+called upon to answer for himself, having nothing to say in his own
+defence, excused his silence by the example of our Lord, who also was
+silent when accused. The fathers were filled with indignation at this
+blasphemous speech, and his guilt having been fully proved, they cried
+unanimously: "Anathema on Photius, promoted through court favor!
+Anathema to the tyrant Photius, to the inventor of lies, to the new
+Judas! Anathema on all his followers and protectors! Everlasting glory
+to the most holy Roman Pope Nicholas! Long life to Adrian, the holy
+Father in Rome!" At the next sitting of the council, a collection of
+spurious and falsified writings, together with the acts of the synod
+which Photius had held against Pope Nicholas, and which were filled with
+lies and invective and had forged signatures appended to them, were
+publicly burned in the church. But hardly had Ignatius died in the year
+879, when the crafty Photius, who knew well how to ingratiate himself
+with the Emperor, reascended the ill-fated chair and began afresh his
+old courses. His rule did not last long. He was again deposed and
+banished to a monastery, where he died about the year 891. His death,
+however, in nowise healed the wounds which he had inflicted on the
+Eastern Church. His party survived him. He had filled most of the Greek
+sees with men of his own cast, and had illegally bestowed benefices on
+great numbers of priests. These all harbored a deep-seated dislike
+towards Rome, and only awaited a favorable opportunity to renew the
+breach with her. Thus that sectarian spirit which Photius had kindled
+continued to smoulder on like a spark beneath the ashes, and spread
+itself wider and wider, as well among the worst sort of the clergy as
+among the fickle and discontented population.
+
+It was after all this that the patriarchs of Constantinople attempted to
+make themselves fully independent of the West. The splendor of the
+imperial city of Byzantium was a constant incitement to their desire for
+freedom, and they were certain for the most part of being supported in
+their endeavors by the emperors. As early as the time of Pope Gregory
+the Great, the patriarch John the Faster had taken on himself the title
+of "Oecumenical," or universal bishop, whilst Gregory, in apostolic
+humility, chose that of "Servant of the servants of God." It was in the
+middle of the eleventh century that a complete separation was
+accomplished. The universally recognized precedence of the See of Peter
+was intolerable to the ambitious spirit of the patriarch Michael
+Cerularius. To aid him in casting off the hated yoke, he circulated,
+like Photius, a document in which the Western Church was loaded with
+invective and all manner of accusations laid to her charge. The celibacy
+of the secular clergy, the use of unleavened bread for the sacrifice,
+fasting on Saturdays, the shaving of beards, the omission of the
+Alleluia in Lent, were all brought forward as causes of offence. These
+complaints were at once answered by Pope St. Leo IX, who tried, in a
+most eloquent letter, to bring the deluded patriarch to reason. He
+reminded him of the sanctity and inviolability of the unity of Christ's
+Church, the folly and presumption of his attempting to direct the
+successor of Peter, whom Christ had Himself confirmed in the faith, and
+pointed out to him with what ingratitude and contempt he was treating
+the Roman Church, the mother and guardian of all the churches. Lastly,
+he urged upon the patriarch to set aside all discord and pride, and to
+allow divine mercy and peace to prevail instead of strife. But the
+paternal words were spoken in vain, and the legates also who were sent
+by the Pope to Constantinople were powerless to move the obduracy of the
+patriarch. He persistently refused all communication with them by speech
+or writing. Having therefore formally laid their complaints in the most
+distinct terms before the Emperor and Senate, they proceeded to
+extremities. On the 16th of July, 1054, they appeared in the church of
+St. Sophia at the beginning of divine service, and declared solemnly
+that all their endeavors to re-establish peace and union had been
+defeated by Cerularius. They then laid the bull of excommunication on
+the high altar and left the church, shaking, as they did so, the dust
+from off their feet, and exclaiming in the deepest grief, "God sees it;
+He will judge." Thus was the unhappy schism between the East and the
+West accomplished.
+
+
+
+
+NORMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND
+
+BATTLE OF HASTINGS
+
+A.D. 1066
+
+SIR EDWARD SHEPHERD CREASY
+
+
+(Toward the end of the reign of Edward the Confessor the claims of three
+rival competitors for the English crown were persistently urged. These
+claimants were Harald Hardrada, King of Norway, whose claim was based
+upon an alleged compact of King Hardicanute with King Magnus, Harald's
+predecessor; Duke William of Normandy, and the Saxon Harold, son of
+Godwin, Earl of Wessex. This Harold, born about 1022, became Earl of
+East Anglia about 1045; was banished with his father by Edward the
+Confessor in 1051, and restored with his father in 1052; succeeded his
+father as Earl of Wessex in 1053--relinquishing the earldom of East
+Anglia--and from 1053 to 1066 was chief minister of Edward.
+
+Harold--probably in 1064--being shipwrecked on the coast of Normandy,
+became a guest and virtual prisoner of William, Duke of Normandy, by
+whom the Saxon was forced to take an oath that he would marry William's
+daughter and assist him in obtaining the crown of England; William then
+allowed Harold to return to his country. Upon the death of Edward the
+Confessor--January 5, 1066--an assembly of thanes and prelates and
+leading citizens of London declared that Harold should be their king.
+His accession as Harold II dates from the day after Edward's death.
+Harold justified himself on the ground that his oath to William of
+Normandy was taken under constraint.
+
+William published his protest against what he called the bad faith of
+Harold, and proclaimed his purpose to assert his rights by the sword. He
+also obtained the countenance of the Pope, whose authority Harold
+refused to recognize. A banner, blessed by the Pope for the invasion of
+England, was sent to William from the Holy See, and the clergy of the
+Continent upheld his enterprise as being the Cause of God. Thus
+supported by the spiritual power, then wielding vast influence, William
+proceeded to gather "the most remarkable and formidable armament which
+the western nations had witnessed." With this following he entered upon
+an undertaking the speedy and complete success of which, in the single
+and decisive battle of Hastings, was fruitful in historic results such
+as are seldom so traceable to definite causes and events. "No one who
+appreciates the influence of England and her empire upon the destinies
+of the world will ever rank that victory as one of secondary
+importance.")
+
+
+All the adventurous spirits of Christendom flocked to the holy banner,
+under which Duke William, the most renowned knight and sagest general of
+the age, promised to lead them to glory and wealth in the fair domains
+of England. His army was filled with the chivalry of Continental Europe,
+all eager to save their souls by fighting at the Pope's bidding, eager
+to signalize their valor in so great an enterprise, and eager also for
+the pay and the plunder which William liberally promised. But the
+Normans themselves were the pith and the flower of the army, and William
+himself was the strongest, the sagest, and the fiercest spirit of them
+all.
+
+Throughout the spring and summer of 1066 all the seaports of Normandy,
+Picardy, and Brittany rang with the busy sound of preparation. On the
+opposite side of the Channel King Harold collected the army and the
+fleet with which he hoped to crush the southern invaders. But the
+unexpected attack of King Harald Hardrada of Norway upon another part of
+England disconcerted the skilful measures which the Saxon had taken
+against the menacing armada of Duke William.
+
+Harold's renegade brother, Earl Tostig, had excited the Norse King to
+this enterprise, the importance of which has naturally been eclipsed by
+the superior interest attached to the victorious expedition of Duke
+William, but which was on a scale of grandeur which the Scandinavian
+ports had rarely, if ever, before witnessed. Hardrada's fleet consisted
+of two hundred warships and three hundred other vessels, and all the
+best warriors of Norway were in his host. He sailed first to the
+Orkneys, where many of the islanders joined him, and then to Yorkshire.
+After a severe conflict near York he completely routed Earls Edwin and
+Morcar, the governors of Northumbria. The city of York opened its gates,
+and all the country, from the Tyne to the Humber, submitted to him.
+
+The tidings of the defeat of Edwin and Morcar compelled Harold to leave
+his position on the southern coast and move instantly against the
+Norwegians. By a remarkably rapid march he reached Yorkshire in four
+days, and took the Norse King and his confederates by surprise.
+Nevertheless, the battle which ensued, and which was fought near
+Stamford Bridge, was desperate, and was long doubtful. Unable to break
+the ranks of the Norwegian phalanx by force, Harold at length tempted
+them to quit their close order by a pretended flight. Then the English
+columns burst in among them, and a carnage ensued the extent of which
+may be judged of by the exhaustion and inactivity of Norway for a
+quarter of a century afterward. King Harald Hardrada and all the flower
+of his nobility perished on the 25th of September, 1066, at Stamford
+Bridge, a battle which was a Flodden to Norway.
+
+Harold's victory was splendid; but he had bought it dearly by the fall
+of many of his best officers and men, and still more dearly by the
+opportunity which Duke William had gained of effecting an unopposed
+landing on the Sussex coast. The whole of William's shipping had
+assembled at the mouth of the Dive, a little river between the Seine and
+the Orne, as early as the middle of August. The army which he had
+collected amounted to fifty thousand knights and ten thousand soldiers
+of inferior degree. Many of the knights were mounted, but many must have
+served on foot, as it is hardly possible to believe that William could
+have found transports for the conveyance of fifty thousand war-horses
+across the Channel.
+
+For a long time the winds were adverse, and the Duke employed the
+interval that passed before he could set sail in completing the
+organization in and improving the discipline of his army, which he seems
+to have brought into the same state of perfection as was seven centuries
+and a half afterward the boast of another army assembled on the same
+coast, and which Napoleon designed for a similar descent upon England.
+
+It was not till the approach of the equinox that the wind veered from
+the northeast to the west, and gave the Normans an opportunity of
+quitting the weary shores of the Dive. They eagerly embarked and set
+sail, but the wind soon freshened to a gale, and drove them along the
+French coast to St. Valery, where the greater part of them found
+shelter; but many of their vessels were wrecked, and the whole coast of
+Normandy was strewn with the bodies of the drowned.
+
+William's army began to grow discouraged and averse to the enterprise,
+which the very elements thus seemed to fight against; though, in
+reality, the northeast wind, which had cooped them so long at the mouth
+of the Dive, and the western gale, which had forced them into St.
+Valery, were the best possible friends to the invaders. They prevented
+the Normans from crossing the Channel until the Saxon King and his army
+of defence had been called away from the Sussex coast to encounter
+Harald Hardrada in Yorkshire; and also until a formidable English fleet,
+which by King Harold's orders had been cruising in the Channel to
+intercept the Normans, had been obliged to disperse temporarily for the
+purpose of refitting and taking in fresh stores of provisions.
+
+Duke William used every expedient to reanimate the drooping spirits of
+his men at St. Valery; and at last he caused the body of the patron
+saint of the place to be exhumed and carried in solemn procession, while
+the whole assemblage of soldiers, mariners, and appurtenant priests
+implored the saint's intercession for a change of wind. That very night
+the wind veered, and enabled the mediaeval Agamemnon to quit his Aulis.
+
+With full sails, and a following southern breeze, the Norman armada left
+the French shores and steered for England. The invaders crossed an
+undefended sea, and found an undefended coast. It was in Pevensey Bay,
+in Sussex, at Bulverhithe, between the castle of Pevensey and Hastings,
+that the last conquerors of this island landed on the 29th of September,
+1066.
+
+Harold was at York, rejoicing over his recent victory, which had
+delivered England from her ancient Scandinavian foes, and resettling the
+government of the counties which Harald Hardrada had overrun, when the
+tidings reached him that Duke William of Normandy and his host had
+landed on the Sussex shore. Harold instantly hurried southward to meet
+this long-expected enemy. The severe loss which his army had sustained
+in the battle with the Norwegians must have made it impossible for many
+of his veteran troops to accompany him in his forced march to London,
+and thence to Sussex. He halted at the capital only six days, and during
+that time gave orders for collecting forces from the southern and
+midland counties, and also directed his fleet to reassemble off the
+Sussex coast. Harold was well received in London, and his summons to
+arms was promptly obeyed by citizen, by thane, by socman, and by ceorl,
+for he had shown himself, during his brief reign, a just and wise king,
+affable to all men, active for the good of his country, and, in the
+words of the old historian, sparing himself from no fatigue by land or
+by sea. He might have gathered a much more numerous army than that of
+William; but his recent victory had made him overconfident, and he was
+irritated by the reports of the country being ravaged by the invaders.
+As soon, therefore, as he had collected a small army in London he
+marched off toward the coast, pressing forward as rapidly as his men
+could traverse Surrey and Sussex, in the hope of taking the Normans
+unawares, as he had recently, by a similar forced march, succeeded in
+surprising the Norwegians. But he had now to deal with a foe equally
+brave with Harald Hardrada and far more skilful and wary.
+
+The old Norman chroniclers describe the preparations of William on his
+landing with a graphic vigor, which would be wholly lost by transfusing
+their racy Norman couplets and terse Latin prose into the current style
+of modern history. It is best to follow them closely, though at the
+expense of much quaintness and occasional uncouthness of expression.
+They tell us how Duke William's own ship was the first of the Norman
+fleet. It was called the _Mora_, and was the gift of his duchess
+Matilda. On the head of the ship, in the front, which mariners call the
+prow, there was a brazen child bearing an arrow with a bended bow. His
+face was turned toward England, and thither he looked, as though he was
+about to shoot. The breeze became soft and sweet, and the sea was smooth
+for their landing. The ships ran on dry land, and each ranged by the
+other's side. There you might see the good sailors, the sergeants, and
+squires sally forth and unload the ships; cast the anchors, haul the
+ropes, bear out shields and saddles, and land the war-horses and the
+palfreys. The archers came forth and touched land the first, each with
+his bow strung, and with his quiver full of arrows slung at his side.
+All were shaven and shorn; and all clad in short garments, ready to
+attack, to shoot, to wheel about and skirmish. All stood well equipped
+and of good courage for the fight; and they scoured the whole shore, but
+found not an armed man there. After the archers had thus gone forth, the
+knights landed all armed, with their hauberks on, their shields slung at
+their necks, and their helmets laced. They formed together on the shore,
+each armed and mounted on his war-horse; all had their swords girded on,
+and rode forward into the country with their lances raised. Then the
+carpenters landed, who had great axes in their hands, and planes and
+adzes hung at their sides. They took counsel together, and sought for a
+good spot to place a castle on. They had brought with them in the fleet
+three wooden castles from Normandy in pieces, all ready for framing
+together, and they took the materials of one of these out of the ships,
+all shaped and pierced to receive the pins which they had brought cut
+and ready in large barrels; and before evening had set in they had
+finished a good fort on the English ground, and there they placed their
+stores. All then ate and drank enough, and were right glad that they
+were ashore.
+
+When Duke William himself landed, as he stepped on the shore he slipped
+and fell forward upon his two hands. Forthwith all raised a loud cry of
+distress. "An evil sign," said they, "is here." But he cried out
+lustily: "See, my lords, by the splendor of God,[26] I have taken
+possession of England with both my hands. It is now mine, and what is
+mine is yours."
+
+[Footnote 26: William's customary oath.]
+
+The next day they marched along the sea-shore to Hastings. Near that
+place the Duke fortified a camp, and set up the two other wooden
+castles. The foragers, and those who looked out for booty, seized all
+the clothing and provisions they could find, lest what had been brought
+by the ships should fail them. And the English were to be seen fleeing
+before them, driving off their cattle, and quitting their houses. Many
+took shelter in burying-places, and even there they were in grievous
+alarm.
+
+Besides the marauders from the Norman camp, strong bodies of cavalry
+were detached by William into the country, and these, when Harold and
+his army made their rapid march from London southward, fell back in good
+order upon the main body of the Normans, and reported that the Saxon
+King was rushing on like a madman. But Harold, when he found that his
+hopes of surprising his adversary were vain, changed his tactics, and
+halted about seven miles from the Norman lines. He sent some spies, who
+spoke the French language, to examine the number and preparations of the
+enemy, who, on their return, related with astonishment that there were
+more priests in William's camp than there were fighting men in the
+English army. They had mistaken for priests all the Norman soldiers who
+had short hair and shaven chins, for the English laymen were then
+accustomed to wear long hair and mustaches. Harold, who knew the Norman
+usages, smiled at their words, and said, "Those whom you have seen in
+such numbers are not priests, but stout soldiers, as they will soon make
+us feel."
+
+Harold's army was far inferior in number to that of the Normans, and
+some of his captains advised him to retreat upon London and lay waste
+the country, so as to starve down the strength of the invaders. The
+policy thus recommended was unquestionably the wisest, for the Saxon
+fleet had now reassembled, and intercepted all William's communications
+with Normandy; and as soon as his stores of provisions were exhausted,
+he must have moved forward upon London, where Harold, at the head of the
+full military strength of the kingdom, could have defied his assault,
+and probably might have witnessed his rival's destruction by famine and
+disease, without having to strike a single blow. But Harold's bold blood
+was up, and his kindly heart could not endure to inflict on the South
+Saxon subjects even the temporary misery of wasting the country. "He
+would not burn houses and villages, neither would he take away the
+substance, of his people."
+
+Harold's brothers, Gurth and Leofwine, were with him in the camp, and
+Gurth endeavored to persuade him to absent himself from the battle. The
+incident shows how well devised had been William's scheme of binding
+Harold by the oath on the holy relics.
+
+"My brother," said the young Saxon prince, "thou canst not deny that
+either by force or free will thou hast made Duke William an oath on the
+bodies of saints. Why then risk thyself in the battle with a perjury
+upon thee? To us, who have sworn nothing, this is a holy and a just war,
+for we are fighting for our country. Leave us then alone to fight this
+battle, and he who has the right will win."
+
+Harold replied that he would not look on while others risked their lives
+for him. Men would hold him a coward, and blame him for sending his best
+friends where he dared not go himself. He resolved, therefore, to fight,
+and to fight in person; but he was still too good a general to be the
+assailant in the action; and he posted his army with great skill along a
+ridge of rising ground which opened southward, and was covered on the
+back by an extensive wood. He strengthened his position by a palisade of
+stakes and osier hurdles, and there he said he would defend himself
+against whoever should seek him.
+
+The ruins of Battle Abbey at this hour attest the place where Harold's
+army was posted; and the high altar of the abbey stood on the very spot
+where Harold's own standard was planted during the fight, and where the
+carnage was the thickest. Immediately after his victory William vowed to
+build an abbey on the site; and a fair and stately pile soon rose there,
+where for many ages the monks prayed and said masses for the souls of
+those who were slain in the battle, whence the abbey took its name.
+Before that time the place was called Senlac. Little of the ancient
+edifice now remains; but it is easy to trace in the park and the
+neighborhood the scenes of the chief incidents in the action; and it is
+impossible to deny the generalship shown by Harold in stationing his
+men, especially when we bear in mind that he was deficient in cavalry,
+the arm in which his adversary's main strength consisted.
+
+William's only chance of safety lay in bringing on a general engagement;
+and he joyfully advanced his army from their camp on the hill over
+Hastings, nearer to the Saxon position. But he neglected no means of
+weakening his opponent, and renewed his summonses and demands on Harold
+with an ostentatious air of sanctity and moderation.
+
+"A monk, named Hugues Maigrot, came in William's name to call upon the
+Saxon King to do one of three things--either to resign his royalty in
+favor of William, or to refer it to the arbitration of the pope to
+decide which of the two ought to be king, or let it be determined by the
+issue of a single combat. Harold abruptly replied, 'I will not resign my
+title, I will not refer it to the pope, nor will I accept the single
+combat.' He was far from being deficient in bravery; but he was no more
+at liberty to stake the crown which he had received from a whole people
+in the chance of a duel than to deposit it in the hands of an Italian
+priest. William, not at all ruffled by the Saxon's refusal, but steadily
+pursuing the course of his calculated measures, sent the Norman monk
+again, after giving him these instructions: 'Go and tell Harold that if
+he will keep his former compact with me, I will leave to him all the
+country which is beyond the Humber, and will give his brother Gurth all
+the lands which Godwin held. If he still persist in refusing my offers,
+then thou shalt tell him, before all his people, that he is a perjurer
+and a liar; that he and all who shall support him are excommunicated by
+the mouth of the Pope, and that the bull to that effect is in my hands.'
+
+"Hugues Maigrot delivered this message in a solemn tone; and the Norman
+chronicle says that at the word _excommunication_ the English chiefs
+looked at one another as if some great danger were impending. One of
+them then spoke as follows: 'We must fight, whatever may be the danger
+to us; for what we have to consider is not whether we shall accept and
+receive a new lord, as if our king were dead; the case is quite
+otherwise. The Norman has given our lands to his captains, to his
+knights, to all his people, the greater part of whom have already done
+homage to him for them: they will all look for their gift if their duke
+become our king; and he himself is bound to deliver up to them our
+goods, our wives, and our daughters: all is promised to them beforehand.
+They come, not only to ruin us, but to ruin our descendants also, and to
+take from us the country of our ancestors. And what shall we do--whither
+shall we go, when we have no longer a country?' The English promised, by
+a unanimous oath, to make neither peace nor truce nor treaty with the
+invader, but to die or drive away the Normans."
+
+The 13th of October was occupied in these negotiations, and at night the
+Duke announced to his men that the next day would be the day of battle.
+That night is said to have been passed by the two armies in very
+different manners. The Saxon soldiers spent it in joviality, singing
+their national songs, and draining huge horns of ale and wine round
+their campfires. The Normans, when they had looked to their arms and
+horses, confessed themselves to the priests, with whom their camp was
+thronged, and received the sacrament by thousands at a time.
+
+On Saturday, the 14th of October, was fought the great battle.
+
+It is not difficult to compose a narrative of its principal incidents
+from the historical information which we possess, especially if aided by
+an examination of the ground. But it is far better to adopt the
+spirit-stirring words of the old chroniclers, who wrote while the
+recollections of the battle were yet fresh, and while the feelings and
+prejudices of the combatants yet glowed in the bosoms of living men.
+
+Robert Wace, the Norman poet, who presented his _Roman de Rou_ to Henry
+II, is the most picturesque and animated of the old writers, and from
+him we can obtain a more vivid and full description of the conflict than
+even the most brilliant romance-writer of the present time can supply.
+We have also an antique memorial of the battle more to be relied on than
+either chronicler or poet (and which confirms Wace's narrative
+remarkably) in the celebrated Bayeux tapestry, which represents the
+principal scenes of Duke William's expedition and of the circumstances
+connected with it, in minute though occasionally grotesque details, and
+which was undoubtedly the production of the same age in which the battle
+took place, whether we admit or reject the legend that Queen Matilda and
+the ladies of her court wrought it with their own hands in honor of the
+royal Conqueror.
+
+Let us therefore suffer the old Norman chronicler to transport our
+imaginations to the fair Sussex scenery northwest of Hastings, as it
+appeared on that October morning. The Norman host is pouring forth from
+its tents, and each troop and each company is forming fast under the
+banner of its leader. The masses have been sung, which were finished
+betimes in the morning; the barons have all assembled round Duke
+William; and the Duke has ordered that the army shall be formed in three
+divisions, so as to make the attack upon the Saxon position in three
+places.
+
+The Duke stood on a hill where he could best see his men; the barons
+surrounded him, and he spake to them proudly. He told them how he
+trusted them, and how all that he gained should be theirs, and how sure
+he felt of conquest, for in all the world there was not so brave an army
+or such good men and true as were then forming around him. Then they
+cheered him in turn, and cried out: "'You will not see one coward; none
+here will fear to die for love of you, if need be.' And he answered
+them: 'I thank you well. For God's sake, spare not; strike hard at the
+beginning; stay not to take spoil; all the booty shall be in common, and
+there will be plenty for everyone. There will be no safety in asking
+quarter or in flight; the English will never love or spare a Norman.
+Felons they were, and felons they are; false they were, and false they
+will be. Show no weakness toward them, for they will have no pity on
+you; neither the coward for running well, nor the bold man for smiting
+well, will be the better liked by the English, nor will any be the more
+spared on either account. You may fly to the sea, but you can fly no
+farther; you will find neither ships nor bridge there; there will be no
+sailors to receive you, and the English will overtake you there and slay
+you in your shame. More of you will die in flight than in battle. Then,
+as flight will not secure you, fight and you will conquer. I have no
+doubt of the victory; we are come for glory; the victory is in our
+hands, and we may make sure of obtaining it if we so please.'
+
+"As the Duke was speaking thus and would yet have spoken more, William
+Fitzosbern rode up with his horse all coated with iron. 'Sire,' said he,
+'we tarry here too long; let us all arm ourselves. _Allons! allons!_'
+
+"Then all went to their tents and armed themselves as they best might;
+and the Duke was very busy, giving everyone his orders; and he was
+courteous to all the vassals, giving away many arms and horses to them.
+When he prepared to arm himself, he called first for his hauberk, and a
+man brought it on his arm and placed it before him, but in putting his
+head in, to get it on, he unawares turned it the wrong way, with the
+back part in front. He soon changed it; but when he saw that those who
+stood by were sorely alarmed, he said: 'I have seen many a man who if
+such a thing had happened to him would not have borne arms or entered
+the field the same day; but I never believed in omens, and I never will.
+I trust in God, for he does in all things his pleasure, and ordains what
+is to come to pass according to his will. I have never liked
+fortune-tellers, nor believed in diviners, but I commend myself to Our
+Lady. Let not this mischance give you trouble. The hauberk which was
+turned wrong, and then set right by me, signifies that a change will
+arise out of the matter which we are now stirring. You shall see the
+name of duke changed into king. Yea, a king shall I be, who hitherto
+have been but duke.'
+
+"Then he crossed himself, and straightway took his hauberk, stooped his
+head and put it on aright, and laced his helmet, and girt on his sword,
+which a varlet brought him. Then the Duke called for his good horse--a
+better could not be found. It had been sent him by a king of Spain, out
+of very great friendship. Neither arms nor the press of fighting men did
+it fear if its lord spurred it on. Walter Giffard brought it. The Duke
+stretched out his hand, took the reins, put foot in stirrup, and
+mounted, and the good horse pawed, pranced, reared himself up, and
+curvetted.
+
+"The Viscount of Toarz saw how the Duke bore himself in arms and said to
+his people that were around him: 'Never have I seen a man so fairly
+armed, nor one who rode so gallantly, or bore his arms or became his
+hauberk so well; neither any one who bore his lance so gracefully or sat
+his horse and managed him so nobly. There is no such knight under
+heaven! a fair count he is, and fair king he will be. Let him fight and
+he shall overcome; shame be to the man who shall fail him!'
+
+"Then the Duke called for the standard which the Pope had sent him, and,
+he who bore it having unfolded it, the Duke took it and called to Raoul
+de Conches. 'Bear my standard,' said he, 'for I would not but do you
+right; by right and by ancestry your line are standard-bearers of
+Normandy, and very good knights have they all been.' But Raoul said that
+he would serve the Duke that day in other guise, and would fight the
+English with his hand as long as life should last.
+
+"Then the Duke bade Walter Giffard bear the standard. But he was old and
+white-headed, and bade the Duke give the standard to some younger and
+stronger man to carry. Then the Duke said fiercely, 'By the splendor of
+God, my lords, I think you mean to betray and fail me in this great
+need.' 'Sire,' said Giffart, 'not so! we have done no treason, nor do I
+refuse from any felony toward you; but I have to lead a great chivalry,
+both hired men and the men of my fief. Never had I such good means of
+serving you as I now have; and, if God please, I will serve you; if need
+be I will die for you, and will give my own heart for yours.'
+
+"'By my faith,' quoth the Duke, 'I always loved thee, and now I love
+thee more; if I survive this day, thou shalt be the better for it all
+thy days.' Then he called out a knight, whom he had heard much praised,
+Tosteins Fitz-Rou le Blanc by name, whose abode was at Bec-en-Caux. To
+him he delivered the standard; and Tosteins took it right cheerfully,
+and bowed low to him in thanks, and bore it gallantly and with good
+heart. His kindred still have quittance of all service for their
+inheritance on this account, and their heirs are entitled so to hold
+their inheritance forever.
+
+"William sat on his war-horse, and called out Rogier, whom they call De
+Montgomeri. 'I rely much on you,' said he; 'lead your men thitherward
+and attack them from that side. William, the son of Osbern the
+seneschal, a right good vassal, shall go with you and help in the
+attack, and you shall have the men of Boilogne and Poix and all my
+soldiers. Alain Fergert and Ameri shall attack on the other side; they
+shall lead the Poitevins and the Bretons and all the barons of Maine;
+and I, with my own great men, my friends and kindred, will fight in the
+middle throng, where the battle shall be the hottest.'
+
+"The barons and knights and men-at-arms were all now armed; the
+foot-soldiers were well equipped, each bearing bow and sword; on their
+heads were caps, and to their feet were bound buskins. Some had good
+hides which they had bound round their bodies; and many were clad in
+frocks, and had quivers and bows hung to their girdles. The knights had
+hauberks and swords, boots of steel, and shining helmets; shields at
+their necks, and in their hands lances. And all had their cognizances,
+so that each might know his fellow, and Norman might not strike Norman,
+nor Frenchman kill his countryman by mistake. Those on foot led the way,
+with serried ranks, bearing their bows. The knights rode next,
+supporting the archers from behind. Thus both horse and foot kept their
+course and order of march as they began, in close ranks at a gentle
+pace, that the one might not pass or separate from the other. All went
+firmly and compactly, bearing themselves gallantly.
+
+"Harold had summoned his men, earls, barons, and vavasors, from the
+castles and the cities, from the ports, the villages and boroughs. The
+peasants were also called together from the villages, bearing such arms
+as they found; clubs and great picks, iron forks and stakes. The English
+had enclosed the place where Harold was with his friends and the barons
+of the country whom he had summoned and called together.
+
+"Those of London had come at once, and those of Kent, of Hertfort, and
+of Essesse; those of Suree and Susesse, of St. Edmund and Sufoc; of
+Norwis and Norfoc; of Cantorbierre and Stanfort, Bedefort and Hundetone.
+The men of Northanton also came; and those of Eurowic and Bokinkeham, of
+Bed and Notinkeham, Lindesie and Nichole. There came also from the west
+all who heard the summons; and very many were to be seen coming from
+Salebiere and Dorset, from Bat and from Sumerset. Many came, too, from
+about Glocestre, and many from Wirecestre, from Wincestre, Hontesire and
+Brichesire; and many more from other counties that we have not named,
+and cannot, indeed, recount. All who could bear arms, and had learned
+the news of the Duke's arrival, came to defend the land. But none came
+from beyond Humbre, for they had other business upon their hands, the
+Danes and Tosti having much damaged and weakened them.
+
+"Harold knew that the Normans would come and attack him hand to hand, so
+he had early enclosed the field in which he had placed his men. He made
+them arm early and range themselves for the battle, he himself having
+put on arms and equipments that became such a lord. The Duke, he said,
+ought to seek him, as he wanted to conquer England; and it became him to
+abide the attack who had to defend the land. He commanded the people,
+and counselled his barons to keep themselves all together and defend
+themselves in a body, for if they once separated, they would with
+difficulty recover themselves. 'The Normans,' said he, 'are good
+vassals, valiant on foot and on horseback; good knights are they on
+horseback and well used to battle; all is lost if they once penetrate
+our ranks. They have brought long lances and swords, but you have
+pointed lances and keen-edged bills; and I do not expect that their arms
+can stand against yours. Cleave whenever you can; it will be ill done if
+you spare aught.'
+
+"The English had built up a fence before them with their shields and
+with ash and other wood, and had well joined and wattled in the whole
+work, so as not to leave even a crevice; and thus they had a barricade
+in their front through which any Norman who would attack them must first
+pass. Being covered in this way by their shields and barricades, their
+aim was to defend themselves; and if they had remained steady for that
+purpose, they would not have been conquered that day; for every Norman
+who made his way in lost his life in dishonor, either by hatchet or
+bill, by club or other weapon.
+
+"They wore short and close hauberks, and helmets that hung over their
+garments. King Harold issued orders, and made proclamation round, that
+all should be ranged with their faces toward the enemy, and that no one
+should move from where he was, so that whoever came might find them
+ready; and that whatever anyone, be he Norman or other, should do, each
+should do his best to defend his own place. Then he ordered the men of
+Kent to go where the Normans were likely to make the attack; for they
+say that the men of Kent are entitled to strike first; and that whenever
+the king goes to battle, the first blow belongs to them. The right of
+the men of London is to guard the king's body, to place themselves
+around him, and to guard his standard; and they were accordingly placed
+by the standard to watch and defend it.
+
+"When Harold had made all ready, and given his orders, he came into the
+midst of the English and dismounted by the side of the standard;
+Leofwine and Gurth, his brothers, were with him; and around him he had
+barons enough, as he stood by his standard, which was, in truth, a noble
+one, sparkling with gold and precious stones. After the victory William
+sent it to the Pope, to prove and commemorate his great conquest and
+glory. The English stood in close ranks, ready and eager for the fight;
+and they, moreover, made a fosse, which went across the field, guarding
+one side of their army.
+
+"Meanwhile the Normans appeared advancing over the ridge of a rising
+ground, and the first division of their troops moved onward along the
+hill and across a valley. And presently another division, still larger,
+came in sight, close following upon the first, and they were led toward
+another part of the field, forming together as the first body had done.
+And while Harold saw and examined them, and was pointing them out to
+Gurth, a fresh company came in sight, covering all the plain; and in the
+midst of them was raised the standard that came from Rome.
+
+"Near it was the Duke, and the best men and greatest strength of the
+army were there. The good knights, the good vassals, and brave warriors
+were there; and there were gathered together the gentle barons, the good
+archers, and the men-at-arms, whose duty it was to guard the Duke, and
+range themselves around him. The youths and common herd of the camp,
+whose business was not to join in the battle, but to take care of the
+harness and stores, moved off toward a rising ground. The priests and
+the clerks also ascended a hill, there to offer up prayers to God, and
+watch the event of the battle.
+
+"The English stood firm on foot in close ranks, and carried themselves
+right boldly. Each man had his hauberk on, with his sword girt, and his
+shield at his neck. Great hatchets were also slung at their necks, with
+which they expected to strike heavy blows.
+
+"The Normans brought on the three divisions of their army to attack at
+different places. They set out in three companies, and in three
+companies did they fight. The first and second had come up, and then
+advanced the third, which was the greatest; with that came the Duke with
+his own men, and all moved boldly forward.
+
+"As soon as the two armies were in full view of each other, great noise
+and tumult arose. You might hear the sound of many trumpets, of bugles,
+and of horns; and then you might see men ranging themselves in line,
+lifting their shields, raising their lances, bending their bows,
+handling their arrows, ready for assault and defence.
+
+"The English stood steady to their post, the Normans still moved on; and
+when they drew near, the English were to be seen stirring to and fro;
+were going and coming; troops ranging themselves in order; some with
+their color rising, others turning pale; some making ready their arms,
+others raising their shields; the brave man rousing himself to fight,
+the coward trembling at the approach of danger.
+
+"Then Taillefer, who sang right well, rode, mounted on a swift horse,
+before the Duke, singing of Charlemagne and of Roland, of Oliver, and
+the peers who died in Roncesvalles. And when they drew nigh to the
+English,
+
+"'A boon, sire!' cried Taillefer; 'I have long served you, and you owe
+me for all such service. To-day, so please you, you shall repay it. I
+ask as my guerdon, and beseech you for it earnestly, that you will allow
+me to strike the first blow in the battle!' And the Duke answered, 'I
+grant it.'
+
+"Then Taillefer put his horse to a gallop, charging before all the rest,
+and struck an Englishman dead, driving his lance below the breast into
+his body, and stretching him upon the ground. Then he drew his sword,
+and struck another, crying out, 'Come on, come on! What do ye, sirs? lay
+on, lay on!' At the second blow he struck the English pushed forward,
+and surrounded, and slew him. Forthwith arose the noise and cry of war,
+and on either side the people put themselves in motion.
+
+"The Normans moved on to the assault, and the English defended
+themselves well. Some were striking, others urging onward; all were bold
+and cast aside fear. And now, behold, that battle was gathered whereof
+the fame is yet mighty.
+
+"Loud and far resounded the bray of the horns and the shocks of the
+lances, the mighty strokes of maces and the quick clashing of swords.
+One while the Englishmen rushed on, another while they fell back; one
+while the men from over sea charged onward, and again at other times
+retreated. The Normans shouted, '_Dex Aie_,' the English people, 'Out.'
+Then came the cunning manoeuvres, the rude shocks and strokes of the
+lance and blows of the swords, among the sergeants and soldiers, both
+English and Norman.
+
+"When the English fall, the Normans shout. Each side taunts and defies
+the other, yet neither knoweth what the other saith; and the Normans say
+the English bark, because they understand not their speech.
+
+"Some wax strong, others weak: the brave exult, but the cowards tremble,
+as men who are sore dismayed. The Normans press on the assault, and the
+English defend their post well; they pierce the hauberks and cleave the
+shields, receive and return mighty blows. Again, some press forward,
+others yield; and thus, in various ways, the struggle proceeds. In the
+plain was a fosse, which the Normans had now behind them, having passed
+it in the fight without regarding it. But the English charged and drove
+the Normans before them till they made them fall back upon this fosse,
+overthrowing into it horses and men. Many were to be seen falling
+therein, rolling one over the others, with their faces to the earth, and
+unable to rise. Many of the English also, whom the Normans drew down
+along with them, died there. At no time during the day's battle did so
+many Normans die as perished in that fosse. So those said who saw the
+dead.
+
+"The varlets who were set to guard the harness began to abandon it as
+they saw the loss of the Frenchmen when thrown back upon the fosse
+without power to recover themselves. Being greatly alarmed at seeing the
+difficulty in restoring order, they began to quit the harness, and
+sought around, not knowing where to find shelter. Then Duke William's
+brother, Odo, the good priest, the Bishop of Bayeux, galloped up and
+said to them: 'Stand fast! stand fast! be quiet and move not! fear
+nothing; for, if God please, we shall conquer yet.' So they took courage
+and rested where they were; and Odo returned galloping back to where the
+battle was most fierce, and was of great service on that day. He had put
+a hauberk on over a white aube, wide in the body, with the sleeve tight,
+and sat on a white horse, so that all might recognize him. In his hand
+he held a mace, and wherever he saw most need he held up and stationed
+the knights, and often urged them on to assault and strike the enemy.
+
+"From nine o'clock in the morning, when the combat began, till three
+o'clock came, the battle was up and down, this way and that, and no one
+knew who would conquer and win the land. Both sides stood so firm and
+fought so well that no one could guess which would prevail. The Norman
+archers with their bows shot thickly upon the English; but they covered
+themselves with their shields, so that the arrows could not reach their
+bodies nor do any mischief, how true so ever was their aim or however
+well they shot. Then the Normans determined to shoot their arrows upward
+into the air, so that they might fall on their enemies' heads and strike
+their faces. The archers adopted this scheme and shot up into the air
+toward the English; and the arrows, in falling, struck their heads and
+faces and put out the eyes of many; and all feared to open their eyes or
+leave their faces unguarded.
+
+"The arrows now flew thicker than rain before the wind; fast sped the
+shafts that the English call 'wibetes.' Then it was that an arrow, that
+had been thus shot upward, struck Harold above his right eye, and put it
+out. In his agony he drew the arrow and threw it away, breaking it with
+his hands; and the pain to his head was so great that he leaned upon his
+shield. So the English were wont to say, and still say to the French,
+that the arrow was well shot which was so sent up against their King,
+and that the archer won them great glory who thus put out Harold's eye.
+
+"The Normans saw that the English defended themselves well, and were so
+strong in their position that they could do little against them. So they
+consulted together privily, and arranged to draw off, and pretend to
+flee, till the English should pursue and scatter themselves over the
+field; for they saw that if they could once get their enemies to break
+their ranks, they might be attacked and discomfited much more easily. As
+they had said, so they did. The Normans by little and little fled, the
+English following them. As the one fell back, the other pressed after;
+and when the Frenchmen retreated, the English thought and cried out that
+the men of France fled and would never return.
+
+"Thus they were deceived by the pretended flight, and great mischief
+thereby befell them; for if they had not moved from their position, it
+is not likely that they would have been conquered at all; but, like
+fools, they broke their lines and pursued.
+
+"The Normans were to be seen following up their stratagem, retreating
+slowly so as to draw the English farther on. As they still flee, the
+English pursue; they push out their lances and stretch forth their
+hatchets, following the Normans as they go, rejoicing in the success of
+their scheme, and scattering themselves over the plain. And the English
+meantime jeered and insulted their foes with words. 'Cowards,' they
+cried, 'you came hither in an evil hour, wanting our lands and seeking
+to seize our property; fools that ye were to come! Normandy is too far
+off, and you will not easily reach it. It is of little use to run back;
+unless you can cross the sea at a leap or can drink it dry, your sons
+and daughters are lost to you.'
+
+"The Normans bore it all; but, in fact, they knew not what the English
+said: their language seemed like the baying of dogs, which they could
+not understand. At length they stopped and turned round, determined to
+recover their ranks; and the barons might be heard crying, '_Dex Aie_!'
+for a halt. Then the Normans resumed their former position, turning
+their faces toward the enemy; and their men were to be seen facing round
+and rushing onward to a fresh _melee_, the one party assaulting the
+other; this man striking, another pressing onward. One hits, another
+misses; one flies, another pursues; one is aiming a stroke, while
+another discharges his blow. Norman strives with Englishman again, and
+aims his blows afresh. One flies, another pursues swiftly: the
+combatants are many, the plain wide, the battle and the _melee_ fierce.
+On every hand they fight hard, the blows are heavy, and the struggle
+becomes fierce.
+
+"The Normans were playing their part well, when an English knight came
+rushing up, having in his company a hundred men furnished with various
+arms. He wielded a northern hatchet with the blade a full foot long, and
+was well armed after his manner, being tall, bold, and of noble
+carriage. In the front of the battle, where the Normans thronged most,
+he came bounding on swifter than the stag, many Normans falling before
+him and his company.
+
+"He rushed straight upon a Norman who was armed and riding on a
+war-horse, and tried with his hatchet of steel to cleave his helmet; but
+the blow miscarried, and the sharp blade glanced down before the
+saddle-bow, driving through the horse's neck down to the ground, so that
+both horse and master fell together to the earth. I know not whether the
+Englishman struck another blow; but the Normans who saw the stroke were
+astonished and about to abandon the assault, when Roger de Montgomeri
+came galloping up, with his lance set, and, heeding not the long-handled
+axe which the Englishman wielded aloft, struck him down and left him
+stretched on the ground. Then Roger cried out, 'Frenchmen, strike! the
+day is ours!' And again a fierce _melee_ was to be seen, with many a
+blow of lance and sword; the English still defending themselves, killing
+the horses and cleaving the shields.
+
+"There was a French soldier of noble mien who sat his horse gallantly.
+He spied two Englishmen who were also carrying themselves boldly. They
+were both men of great worth and had become companions in arms and
+fought together, the one protecting the other. They bore two long and
+broad bills and did great mischief to the Normans, killing both horses
+and men.
+
+"The French soldier looked at them and their bills and was sore alarmed,
+for he was afraid of losing his good horse, the best that he had, and
+would willingly have turned to some other quarter if it would not have
+looked like cowardice. He soon, however, recovered his courage, and,
+spurring his horse, gave him the bridle and galloped swiftly forward.
+Fearing the two bills, he raised his shield, and struck one of the
+Englishmen with his lance on the breast, so that the iron passed out at
+his back. At the moment that he fell the lance broke, and the Frenchman
+seized the mace that hung at his right side, and struck the other
+Englishman a blow that completely fractured his skull.
+
+"On the other side was an Englishman who much annoyed the French,
+continually assaulting them with a keen-edged hatchet. He had a helmet
+made of wood, which he had fastened down to his coat and laced round his
+neck, so that no blows could reach his head. The ravage he was making
+was seen by a gallant Norman knight, who rode a horse that neither fire
+nor water could stop in its career when its master urged it on. The
+knight spurred, and his horse carried him on well till he charged the
+Englishman, striking him over the helmet so that it fell down over his
+eyes; and as he stretched out his hand to raise it and uncover his face,
+the Norman cut off his right hand, so that his hatchet fell to the
+ground. Another Norman sprang forward and eagerly seized the prize with
+both his hands, but he kept it little space and paid dearly for it, for
+as he stooped to pick up the hatchet an Englishman with his long-handled
+axe struck him over the back, breaking all his bones, so that his
+entrails and lungs gushed forth. The knight of the good horse meantime
+returned without injury; but on his way he met another Englishman and
+bore him down under his horse, wounding him grievously and trampling him
+altogether under foot.
+
+"And now might be heard the loud clang and cry of battle and the
+clashing of lances. The English stood firm in their barricades, and
+shivered the lances, beating them into pieces with their bills and
+maces. The Normans drew their swords and hewed down the barricades, and
+the English, in great trouble, fell back upon their standard, where were
+collected the maimed and wounded.
+
+"There were many knights of Chauz who jousted and made attacks. The
+English knew not how to joust, or bear arms on horseback, but fought
+with hatchets and bills. A man, when he wanted to strike with one of
+their hatchets, was obliged to hold it with both his hands, and could
+not at the same time, as it seems to me, both cover himself and strike
+with any freedom.
+
+"The English fell back toward the standard, which was upon a rising
+ground, and the Normans followed them across the valley, attacking them
+on foot and horseback. Then Hue de Mortemer, with the Sires D'Auviler,
+D'Onebac, and St. Cler, rode up and charged, overthrowing many.
+
+"Robert Fitz Erneis fixed his lance, took his shield, and, galloping
+toward the standard, with his keen-edged sword struck an Englishman who
+was in front, killed him, and then drawing back his sword, attacked many
+others, and pushed straight for the standard, trying to beat it down;
+but the English surrounded it and killed him with their bills. He was
+found on the spot, when they afterward sought for him, dead and lying at
+the standard's foot.
+
+"Duke William pressed close upon the English with his lance, striving
+hard to reach the standard with the great troop he led, and seeking
+earnestly for Harold, on whose account the whole war was. The Normans
+follow their lord, and press around him; they ply their blows upon the
+English, and these defend themselves stoutly, striving hard with their
+enemies, returning blow for blow.
+
+"One of them was a man of great strength, a wrestler, who did great
+mischief to the Normans with his hatchet; all feared him, for he struck
+down a great many Normans. The Duke spurred on his horse, and aimed a
+blow at him, but he stooped, and so escaped the stroke; then jumping on
+one side, he lifted his hatchet aloft, and as the Duke bent to avoid the
+blow, the Englishman boldly struck him on the head and beat in his
+helmet, though without doing much injury. He was very near falling,
+however; but, bearing on his stirrups, he recovered himself immediately;
+and when he thought to have revenged himself upon the churl by killing
+him, he had escaped, dreading the Duke's blow. He ran back in among the
+English, but he was not safe even there; for the Normans, seeing him,
+pursued and caught him, and having pierced him through and through with
+their lances, left him dead on the ground.
+
+"Where the throng of the battle was greatest, the men of Kent and Essex
+fought wondrously well, and made the Normans again retreat, but without
+doing them much injury. And when the Duke saw his men fall back and the
+English triumphing over them, his spirit rose high, and he seized his
+shield and his lance, which a vassal handed to him, and took his post by
+his standard.
+
+"Then those who kept close guard by him and rode where he rode, being
+about a thousand armed men, came and rushed with closed ranks upon the
+English, and, with the weight of their good horses, and the blows the
+knights gave, broke the press of the enemy, and scattered the crowd
+before them, the good Duke leading them on in front. Many pursued and
+many fled; many were the Englishmen who fell around, and were trampled
+under the horses, crawling upon the earth, and not able to rise. Many of
+the richest and noblest men fell in the rout, but still the English
+rallied in places, smote down those whom they reached, and maintained
+the combat the best they could, beating down the men and killing the
+horses. One Englishman watched the Duke, and plotted to kill him; he
+would have struck him with his lance, but he could not, for the Duke
+struck him first, and felled him to the earth.
+
+"Loud was now the clamor and great the slaughter; many a soul then
+quitted the body it inhabited. The living marched over the heaps of
+dead, and each side was weary of striking. He charged on who could, and
+he who could no longer strike still pushed forward. The strong struggled
+with the strong; some failed, others triumphed; the cowards fell back,
+the brave pressed on; and sad was his fate who fell in the midst, for he
+had little chance of rising again; and many in truth fell who never rose
+at all, being crushed under the throng.
+
+"And now the Normans had pressed on so far that at last they had reached
+the standard. There Harold had remained, defending himself to the
+utmost; but he was sorely wounded in his eye by the arrow, and suffered
+grievous pain from the blow. An armed man came in the throng of the
+battle, and struck him on the ventail of his helmet, and beat him to the
+ground; and as he sought to recover himself a knight beat him down
+again, striking him on the thick of his thigh, down to the bone.
+
+"Gurth saw the English falling around, and that there was no remedy. He
+saw his race hastening to ruin, and despaired of any aid; he would have
+fled, but could not, for the throng continually increased. And the Duke
+pushed on till he reached him, and struck him with great force. Whether
+he died of that blow I know not, but it was said that he fell under it
+and rose no more.
+
+"The standard was beaten down, the golden standard was taken, and Harold
+and the rest of his friends were slain; but there was so much eagerness,
+and throng of so many around, seeking to kill him, that I know not who
+it was that slew him.
+
+"The English were in great trouble at having lost their King and at the
+Duke's having conquered and beat down the standard; but they still
+fought on, and defended themselves long, and in fact till the day drew
+to a close. Then it clearly appeared to all that the standard was lost,
+and the news had spread throughout the army that Harold, for certain,
+was dead; and all saw that there was no longer any hope, so they left
+the field, and those fled who could.
+
+"William fought well; many an assault did he lead, many a blow did he
+give, and many receive, and many fell dead under his hand. Two horses
+were killed under him, and he took a third when necessary, so that he
+fell not to the ground and lost not a drop of blood. But whatever anyone
+did, and whoever lived or died, this is certain that William conquered
+and that many of the English fled from the field, and many died on the
+spot. Then he returned thanks to God, and in his pride ordered his
+standard to be brought and set up on high, where the English standard
+had stood; and that was the signal of his having conquered, and beaten
+down the standard. And he ordered his tent to be raised on the spot
+among the dead, and had his meat brought thither, and his supper
+prepared there.
+
+"Then he took off his armor; and the barons and knights, pages and
+squires came, when he had unstrung his shield; and they took the helmet
+from his head and the hauberk from his back, and saw the heavy blows
+upon his shield and how his helmet was dinted in. And all greatly
+wondered and said: 'Such a baron (_ber_) never bestrode war-horse nor
+dealt such blows nor did such feats of arms; neither has there been on
+earth such a knight since Rollant and Oliver.'
+
+"Thus they lauded and extolled him greatly and rejoiced in what they
+saw, but grieving also for their friends who were slain in the battle.
+And the Duke stood meanwhile among them, of noble stature and mien, and
+rendered thanks to the King of Glory, through whom he had the victory,
+and thanked the knights around him, mourning also frequently for the
+dead. And he ate and drank among the dead, and made his bed that night
+upon the field.
+
+"The morrow was Sunday; and those who had slept upon the field of
+battle, keeping watch around and suffering great fatigue, bestirred
+themselves at break of day and sought out and buried such of the bodies
+of their dead friends as they might find. The noble ladies of the land
+also came, some to seek their husbands, and others their fathers, sons,
+or brothers. They bore the bodies to their villages and interred them at
+the churches; and the clerks and priests of the country were ready, and
+at the request of their friends took the bodies that were found, and
+prepared graves and lay them therein.
+
+"King Harold was carried and buried at Varham; but I know not who it was
+that bore him thither, neither do I know who buried him. Many remained
+on the field, and many had fled in the night."
+
+Such is a Norman account of the battle of Hastings, which does full
+justice to the valor of the Saxons as well as to the skill and bravery
+of the victors. It is indeed evident that the loss of the battle by the
+English was owing to the wound which Harold received in the afternoon,
+and which must have incapacitated him from effective command. When we
+remember that he had himself just won the battle of Stamford Bridge over
+Harald Hardrada by the manoeuvre of a feigned flight, it is impossible
+to suppose that he could be deceived by the same stratagem on the part
+of the Normans at Hastings. But his men, when deprived of his control,
+would very naturally be led by their inconsiderate ardor into the
+pursuit that proved so fatal to them. All the narratives of the battle,
+however much they vary as to the precise time and manner of Harold's
+fall, eulogize the generalship and the personal prowess which he
+displayed until the fatal arrow struck him. The skill with which he had
+posted his army was proved both by the slaughter which it cost the
+Normans to force the position, and also by the desperate rally which
+some of the Saxons made after the battle in the forest in the rear, in
+which they cut off a large number of the pursuing Normans. This
+circumstance is particularly mentioned by William of Poictiers, the
+Conqueror's own chaplain. Indeed, if Harold or either of his brothers
+had survived, the remains of the English army might have formed again in
+the wood, and could at least have effected an orderly retreat and
+prolonged the war. But both Gurth and Leofwine, and all the bravest
+thanes of Southern England, lay dead on Senlac, around their fallen King
+and the fallen standard of their country. The exact number that perished
+on the Saxons' side is unknown; but we read that, on the side of the
+victors, out of sixty thousand men who had been engaged, no less than a
+fourth perished; so well had the English billmen "plyed the ghastly
+blow," and so sternly had the Saxon battle-axe cloven Norman's casque
+and mail. The old historian Daniel justly as well as forcibly remarks:
+"Thus was tried, by the great assize of God's judgment in battle, the
+right of power between the English and Norman nations; a battle the most
+memorable of all others, and, however miserably lost, yet most nobly
+fought on the part of England."
+
+Many a pathetic legend was told in after years respecting the discovery
+and the burial of the corpse of our last Saxon King. The main
+circumstances, though they seem to vary, are perhaps reconcilable. Two
+of the monks of Waltham Abbey, which Harold had founded a little time
+before his election to the throne, had accompanied him to the battle. On
+the morning after the slaughter they begged and gained permission of the
+Conqueror to search for the body of their benefactor. The Norman
+soldiery and camp followers had stripped and gashed the slain, and the
+two monks vainly strove to recognize from among the mutilated and gory
+heaps around them the features of their former King. They sent for
+Harold's mistress, Edith, surnamed "the Fair," and "the Swan-necked," to
+aid them. The eye of love proved keener than the eye of gratitude, and
+the Saxon lady even in that Aceldama knew her Harold.
+
+The King's mother now sought the victorious Norman, and begged the dead
+body of her son. But William at first answered, in his wrath and the
+hardness of his heart, that a man who had been false to his word and his
+religion should have no other sepulchre than the sand of the shore. He
+added, with a sneer: "Harold mounted guard on the coast while he was
+alive; he may continue his guard now he is dead." The taunt was an
+unintentional eulogy; and a grave washed by the spray of the Sussex
+waves would have been the noblest burial-place for the martyr of Saxon
+freedom. But Harold's mother was urgent in her lamentations and her
+prayers; the Conqueror relented: like Achilles, he gave up the dead body
+of his fallen foe to a parent's supplications, and the remains of King
+Harold were deposited with regal honors in Waltham Abbey.
+
+On Christmas Day in the same year William the Conqueror was crowned, at
+London, King of England.
+
+
+
+
+TRIUMPHS OF HILDEBRAND
+
+"THE TURNING-POINT OF THE MIDDLE AGES:"
+
+HENRY IV BEGS FOR MERCY AT CANOSSA
+
+A.D. 1073-1085
+
+ARTHUR R. PENNINGTON
+
+ARTAUD DE MONTOR
+
+
+(If during the pontificate of Innocent III [1198-1216] the papal power
+attained its greatest height, yet under one of his predecessors the
+chair of St. Peter became a throne of almost absolute supremacy. This
+mighty pontiff, Gregory VII, whose real name, Hildebrand, indicates his
+German descent, was born--the son of a carpenter--in Tuscany, about
+1020. He became a monk of the Benedictine order, and was educated at the
+abbey of Cluny in France. In 1044 he went to Rome, called by a papal
+election, and there saw abuses which from that moment he fixed his mind
+upon striving to abolish. In 1048 he was again in Rome and soon rose to
+the rank of cardinal.
+
+For many years Hildebrand was the real director of papal policy, and
+long before his election as pope, in 1073, he worked to accomplish the
+reforms that distinguish his pontificate, which continued till his
+death, in 1085.
+
+As a part of the Holy Roman Empire, Italy held a dual relation to the
+emperor and the pope. Between the Roman pontiffs and the secular heads
+of the Empire the struggle for supremacy had been long and often bitter.
+At the time of Hildebrand's active appearance the papacy was in a state
+of degradation which demoralized the Church itself.
+
+Long before his elevation to the papal chair Hildebrand's efforts had
+met with much success, and the power of the holy see was gradually
+increased. Independently of the Emperor, whose will had hitherto
+governed the papal elections, in 1058--chiefly through the influence of
+Hildebrand--Pope Nicholas II was chosen by a new method, and from that
+time the choice of popes has been made by the sacred college of
+cardinals.
+
+Hildebrand reluctantly accepted the office of pope; but having entered
+upon the task which he knew to be so formidable, he pursued it with such
+energy, courage, and success as to make his pontificate one of the most
+memorable in the annals of the Church. Of his greatest contests within
+the ecclesiastical jurisdiction--over the celibacy of the clergy and
+simony--as well as of those with the Imperial power represented by Henry
+IV--the "War of Investitures"--the following account will be found to
+present the essential features with a clearness and comprehensiveness
+which are seldom seen in the relation of matter so complex and in a
+narrative so concise. The differing viewpoints are also instructive, as
+presented by Pennington of the Church of England, and Artaud, the
+standard Roman Catholic authority.)
+
+
+ARTHUR R. PENNINGTON
+
+The time had come when Hildebrand was to receive the reward of the
+important services which he had rendered to the holy see. He had been
+the ruling spirit under five popes--Leo, Victor, Stephen, Nicholas, and
+Alexander--four of whom were indebted to him for their election. But now
+he must himself be raised to the papal throne.
+
+The clergy were assembled in the Lateran Church to celebrate the
+obsequies of Alexander. Hildebrand, as archdeacon, was performing the
+service. Suddenly, in the midst of the requiem for the departed, a shout
+was heard which seemed to come as if by inspiration from the assembled
+multitude: "Hildebrand is Pope! St. Peter chooses the archdeacon
+Hildebrand!"
+
+From the funeral procession Hildebrand flew to the pulpit, and with
+impassioned gestures seemed to be imploring silence. The storm, however,
+did not cease till one of the cardinals, in the name of the sacred
+college, declared that they had unanimously elected him whom the people
+had chosen. Arrayed in scarlet robes, crowned with the papal tiara,
+Gregory VII ascended the chair of St. Peter.
+
+The Pope very soon made known the course which he should pursue. He
+issued a prohibition against the marriage of the clergy, and in a
+council at Rome abolished the right of investiture.[27] He was
+determined to redress the wrongs of society. He had seen oppression
+laying waste the fairest provinces of Europe, he had seen many princes,
+goaded on by the revengeful passions of their nature, flinging wide
+their standard to the winds, and dipping their hands in the blood of
+those who, if Christianity be not a fable, were their very brothers. A
+magnificent vision rose up before him. He would rule the world by
+religion; he would be the caesar of the spiritual monarchy. He and a
+council of prelates, annually assembled at Rome, would constitute a
+tribunal from whose judgment there should be no appeal, empowered to
+hold the supreme mediation in matters relating to the interests of the
+body politic, to settle contested successions to kingdoms; and to compel
+men to cease from their dissensions.
+
+[Footnote 27: That is, the right of the civil power to grant church
+offices at will, and to invest ecclesiastics with symbols of their
+offices and receive their oaths of fealty.]
+
+The civil power was to pledge itself to be prompt in the execution of
+their decrees against those who despised their authority. But if the
+decisions of those judges were to carry weight, they must be men of
+unblemished integrity. The purity of their ermine must be altogether
+unsullied. The sale of the highest spiritual offices by the prince, who
+had deprived the clergy and people of their right to elect them, which
+had stained the hands of the Church and undermined its power, must be
+altogether forbidden. Elections must be free. The custom of investiture
+by sovereigns with the ring and crozier, which had rendered the
+hierarchy and clergy the creatures of their will, must be forbidden.
+
+The clergy must possess an absolute exemption from the criminal justice
+of the state. They must recognize but one ruler, the pope, who disposed
+of them indirectly through the bishops or directly in cases of
+exemption, and used them as tools for the execution of his behests. In
+fact, they were to constitute a vast army, exclusively devoted to the
+service of an ecclesiastical monarch.
+
+They must be unconnected by marriage with the world around them, that
+they might be bound more closely to one another and to their head; that
+they might be saved from the temptation of restless projects for the
+advancement of their families, which have caused so much scandal in the
+world; and that they might give an exalted idea of their sanctity,
+inasmuch as, in order that they might give themselves to prayer and the
+ministry of the Word, they would forego that connubial bliss, the
+portion of those,
+
+ "The happiest of their kind,
+ Whom gentler stars unite and in one fate Their hearts, their fortunes,
+ and their beings blend."
+
+The marriage of the clergy was everywhere more or less repugnant to the
+general feeling of Christendom. The rise and progress of asceticism in
+the Church had their source in human nature, and its growth was
+quickened by a reaction from the immorality of paganism. The general
+effect on the position of the clergy was to compel them to keep progress
+with the prevailing movement. Men consecrated to the service of Jehovah
+must rise superior to the common herd of their fellow-creatures.
+
+By a decree of Pope Siricius at the end of the fourth century marriage
+was interdicted to all priests and deacons. This decree was, however,
+very imperfectly observed during the following centuries. The general
+feeling was, however, at this time very strongly against the married
+clergy. But throughout the spiritual realm of Hildebrand in Italy, from
+Calabria to the Alps, the clergy had risen up in rebellion against him
+and the popes his predecessors when they attempted to coerce them into
+celibacy. We believe that this opposition, much more than the strife as
+to investitures, was the cause of the strong feeling, almost
+unprecedented, which existed against Gregory VII.
+
+We must now show that Gregory enforced his views as to investitures.
+This part of our subject is important, because it gave occasion for the
+assertion that the pope could depose the Holy Roman emperor and the king
+of Italy, if he should find him morally or physically disqualified for
+fulfilling the condition on which his appointment depended--that he
+should defend him from his enemies. Henry IV, at the beginning of his
+reign only ten years of age, was at this time Emperor.[28]
+
+[Footnote 28: That is, Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, which included
+the German-speaking people of Europe, and also, in theory at least,
+Italy.]
+
+One day, as he was standing by the Rhine, a galley with silken streamers
+appeared, into which he was invited to enter. After he had been gliding
+for some time down the stream, he found that he was a prisoner. The
+archbishops of Milan and Cologne, with other powerful lords, having
+consigned him to a degrading captivity, administered, in his name, the
+government of the empire. By affording him every means of vicious
+indulgence, they were only too successful in corrupting a noble and
+generous nature. Very soon he was guilty of crimes, and plunged into
+excesses which seemed to cry aloud for vengeance.
+
+The Pope saw that the time had come for the execution of his designs.
+Henry had been guilty of the grossest simony. The spiritual dignities
+had been openly sold to the highest bidder. He saw also that, while the
+clergy took the oath of fealty to the monarch and were invested by him
+with the ring and crozier, he could not establish the superiority of the
+spiritual to the temporal jurisdiction. He therefore summoned a council
+at the Lateran (1075), which issued a decree against lay investitures.
+The Pope, having thus declared war against the Emperor, proceeded to
+fill up certain vacant bishoprics, and to suspend bishops, both in
+Germany and Italy, who had been guilty of simony. He also cited Henry
+before him to answer for his simony, crimes, and excesses.
+
+This citation is alleged to have given occasion for an attempted crime,
+supposed to have been sanctioned by Henry, which may show us that while
+the Pope was asserting a right to rule over the nations, he could not
+rule in his own city. On Christmas Eve, 1075, the city of Rome was
+visited with a violent tempest. Darkness brooded over the land. The
+inhabitants thought that the day of judgment was at hand. In the midst
+of this war of the elements two processions were seen advancing toward
+the Church of Santa Maria Maggiore. At the head of one of them was
+Hildebrand, leading his priests to worship at a shrine. At the head of
+the other was Cencius, a Roman noble. In one of the pauses in the roar
+of the tempest, when the Pope was heard blessing his flock, the arm of
+Cencius grasped his person, and the sword of a ruffian inflicted a wound
+on his forehead. Bound with cords, the Pope was removed to a mansion in
+the city, from which he was the next day to be removed to exile or to
+death. A sword was aimed at the Pontiff's bosom, when the cries of a
+fierce multitude, threatening to burn down the house, arrested the arm
+of the assassin. An arrow, discharged from below, reached and slew the
+latter. Cencius fell at the Pope's feet, a suppliant for pardon and for
+life. The Pontiff immediately pardoned him. Then, amid the acclamations
+of the Roman people, Gregory proceeded to complete the interrupted
+solemnities at Santa Maria Maggiore.
+
+The war between Henry and the Pope continued. Henry summoned a synod at
+Worms in January, 1076, which decreed the deposition of the Pope. The
+envoy charged to convey this sentence appeared in the council chamber of
+the Lateran in February, before an assembly consisting of the mightiest
+in the land, whom the Pope had summoned to sit in judgment on Henry.
+With flashing eyes and in a voice of thunder he directed the Pope to
+descend from the chair of St. Peter. Cries of indignation rang through
+the hall, and a hundred swords were seen leaping from their scabbards to
+inflict vengeance on the daring intruder. The Pope, with difficulty,
+stilled the angry tumult. Then, rising with calm dignity, amid the
+breathless silence of the assembled multitude, he uttered that dread
+anathema which "shuts paradise and opens hell," and absolved the
+subjects of Henry from their allegiance.
+
+The inhabitants of Europe were struck dumb with amazement when they
+witnessed this exercise of papal prerogative. They thought that the
+powerful arm of Henry would have been raised to smite down the audacious
+Hildebrand. The Pope, however, well knew that Henry had by his excesses
+alienated from himself the affections of his subjects. The sentence gave
+a pretext to many of his nobility to withdraw from their allegiance.
+Awed by spiritual terrors, his attendants fell away from him as if he
+had been smitten by a leprosy. An assembly was now summoned at Trebur,
+in obedience to a requisition from the Pope, at which it was decreed
+that, if the Emperor continued excommunicate on the 23d of February,
+1077, his crown should be given to another. The theory of the Holy Roman
+Empire had thus become a practical reality. The vassal of Otho had
+reduced the successor of Otho to vassalage. A great pope had wrung from
+the superstition and reverence of mankind a spiritual empire, which, it
+was hoped, would extend its sway to earth's remotest boundaries.
+
+
+ARTAUD DE MONTOR
+
+Gregory made it an invariable rule to act at the outset with gentleness.
+"No one," says he, "reaches the highest rank at a single spring; great
+edifices rise gradually." Certain of his strength, he chose to employ
+conciliation. He especially sought to convince Henry, but the excesses
+in which that prince wallowed were so abominable that his subjects in
+all parts, and especially the great, revolted against him. In 1076,
+Gregory assembled a council, which pronounced the excommunication of the
+King, with all the terrible consequences attendant upon it.
+
+History shows several emperors of the East excommunicated by preceding
+popes: Arcadius, by Innocent I; Anastasius, by Saint Symmachus; and Leo
+the Isaurian, by Gregory II and Gregory III.
+
+The decree of the same council set forth that the throne vacated by
+Henry was adjudged to Rudolph, duke of Swabia, already created king of
+Germany by the electors of the empire.
+
+Before the election of Rudolph, Gregory had declared that he would
+repair to Germany. King Henry, on his part, promised to come into Italy.
+The Pope left Rome with an escort furnished by the countess of Tuscany,
+daughter of Boniface, marquis of Tuscany. The march of Gregory was a
+triumph. Amidst that escort he reached Vercelli. It was feared by some
+that Henry would make his appearance at the head of an army, but he had
+not that intention. The Pope, nevertheless, deemed it best to retire
+into the fortress of Canossa, belonging to the Countess Matilda, in
+order that he might be secure from all violence.
+
+Henry had spent nearly two months at Spires in a profound and melancholy
+solitude. The weight of the excommunication oppressed him with a
+thousand griefs. Weary of that state of uncertainty, and still, as ever,
+tricky and hypocritical, he conceived the idea of winning over the Pope
+by an apparent piety, and of satisfying his requirements by a brief
+humiliation; moreover, the decree of excommunication declared that it
+should be withdrawn if the King appeared before the Pope within a year
+from the date of the decree. The winter was severe. After running a
+thousand dangers, the King and his queen arrived at Turin, and proceeded
+to Placentia. Thence the prince announced that he would proceed to
+Canossa, by way of Reggio.
+
+The Countess Matilda met him with Hugo, Bishop of Cluny. She wished to
+restore harmony between the Pope and the King. Gregory seemed to desire
+that Henry should return to Augsburg, to be judged by the Diet. The
+envoys of the King at Canossa replied: "Henry does not fear being
+judged; he knows that the Pope will protect innocence and justice; but
+the anniversary of the excommunication is at hand, and if the
+excommunication be not removed, the King, _according to the laws of the
+land_, will lose his right to the crown. The prince humbly requests the
+Holy Father to raise the interdict, and to restore him to the communion
+of the Church. He is ready to give every satisfaction that the Pope
+shall require; to present himself at such place and at such time as the
+Pope shall order; to meet his accusers, and to commit himself entirely
+to the decision of the head of the Church."
+
+Henry, says Voigt, having received permission to advance, was not long
+on the way. The fortress had triple inclosures; Henry was conducted into
+the second; his retinue remained outside the first. He had laid aside
+the insignia of royalty; nothing announced his rank. All day long,
+Henry, bareheaded, clad in penitential garb, and fasting from morning
+till night, awaited the sentence of the sovereign pontiff. He thus
+waited during a second and a third day. During the intervening time he
+had not ceased to negotiate. On the morrow, Matilda interceded with the
+Pope on behalf of Henry, and the conditions of the treaty were settled.
+The prince promised to give satisfaction to the complaints made against
+him by his subjects, and he took an oath, in which his sureties joined.
+When those oaths were taken, the pontiff gave the King the benediction
+and the apostolic peace, and celebrated Mass.
+
+After the consecration of the host, the Pope called Henry and all
+present, and still holding the host in his hand, said to the King: "We
+have received letters from you and those of your party, in which we are
+accused of having usurped the Holy See by simony, and of having, both
+before and since our episcopacy, committed crimes which, according to
+the canons, excluded us from holy orders.
+
+"Although we could justify ourselves by the testimony of those who have
+known our manner of life from our childhood, and who were the authors of
+our promotion to the episcopacy, nevertheless, to do away with all kind
+of scandal, we will appeal to the judgment, not of men, but of God. Let
+the body of our Lord Jesus Christ, that we are about to take, be this
+day a proof of our innocence. We pray the Almighty to dispel all
+suspicion, if we are innocent, and to cause us suddenly to die, if we
+are guilty."
+
+Then turning towards the King, Gregory again spoke: "Dear son, do also
+as you have seen us do. The German princes have daily accused you to us
+of a great number of crimes, for which those nobles maintain that you
+ought to be interdicted, during your whole life, not only from royalty
+and all public function, but also from all ecclesiastical communion, and
+from all commerce of civil life. They urgently demand that you be
+judged, and you know how uncertain are all human judgments. Do, then, as
+we advise, and if you feel that you are innocent, deliver the Church
+from this scandal, and yourself from this embarrassment. Take this other
+portion of the host, that this proof of your innocence may close the
+lips of your enemies, and engage us to be your most ardent defender, to
+reconcile you with the nobles, and forever to terminate the civil war."
+
+This address astonished the King. Going apart with his confidants, he
+tremblingly consulted as to what he could do to avoid so terrible a
+test. At length, having somewhat recovered his calmness, he said to the
+Pope, that as those nobles who remained faithful were, for the most
+part, absent, as well as those who accused him, the latter would give
+little faith to what he might do in his own justification, unless it
+were done in their presence. For that reason, he asked that the test
+should be postponed to the day of the sitting of the general diet, and
+the Pope consented.
+
+When the Pope had finished Mass, he invited the King to dinner, treated
+him with much attention, and dismissed him in peace to his own people,
+who had remained outside the castle. Henry, on his return to his nobles,
+was not well received. Henry, as Voigt shows, soon became alarmed at
+their disapprobation, which originated only in a feeling of wounded
+complicity and ambitious views, which could not hope for success after
+the victory gained by Gregory.
+
+Henry, hearing himself accused of weakness, thought to deliver himself
+from so much annoyance by a bold perjury; and he endeavored to draw
+Gregory and Matilda into a snare. Warned by faithful friends, they did
+not visit the King as had been agreed; and that new wrong determined
+Gregory to suspend his departure for the Diet of Augsburg. No one, not
+even the pious Matilda, now dared to speak of a reconciliation.
+
+Henry held at Brescia, in 1080, a pseudo council of the bishops devoted
+to him; and there he caused Guibert, Archbishop of Ravenna, an avowed
+enemy of Gregory, to be elected as Pope; and he deposed Gregory,
+although he was recognized as the legitimate pope by the whole Catholic
+world, with the exception of the bishops in revolt, under the direction
+of Henry. On learning this, Gregory celebrated at Rome, in the year
+1080, a regular council, in which he again excommunicated Henry, and
+especially the antipope, whom he would never absolve.
+
+
+ARTHUR PENNINGTON
+
+The war continued. Henry's rival for the empire, Rudolph of Swabia, was
+supported by many German partisans, especially by the Saxons. He was
+defeated with great loss at Fladenheim. The skill and courage of the
+Saxon commander, however, turned a defeat into a victory. Emboldened by
+this victory, Gregory excommunicated Henry, and "gave, granted, and
+conceded" that Rudolph might rule the Italian and German empires. With
+the sanction of thirty bishops, an antipope, Guibert, was elected at
+Brixen. The war raged with undiminished violence. The Saxons, the only
+power in alliance with the Romans, gained a victory over Henry in
+Germany at the very same time when Matilda's forces fled before his army
+in the Mantuan territory. Matilda had lately granted all her hereditary
+states to Gregory and his successors forever. Before the summer of the
+year 1080 the citizens of Rome saw the forces of Henry in the Campagna.
+The siege of Rome continued for three years. The capture of the city was
+imminent, when the forces of Robert Guiscard, the Norman, came to the
+rescue of the Pope.
+
+Nicholas II had bestowed on Robert Guiscard the investiture of the
+duchies of Apulia and Calabria; Sicily also, the conquest of which his
+brother Richard was meditating, being prospectively added to Robert's
+dominions. The oath taken by Robert Guiscard on this occasion bound him
+to be the devoted defender of the pontificate. He now became a friend
+indeed. A hasty retreat saved the forces of Henry from the impending
+danger. The Pope returned in triumph to the Lateran. But within a few
+hours he heard from the streets the clash of arms and the loud shouts of
+the combatants. A fierce contest was raging between the soldiers of
+Robert and the citizens who espoused the cause of Henry. A conflagration
+was kindled, which at length destroyed three-fourths of the city.
+Gregory, perhaps conscience-stricken when he thought of the wars he had
+kindled, sought, in the castle of Salerno, from the Normans the security
+which he could no longer expect among his own subjects. He soon found
+that the hand of death was upon him. He summoned round his bed the
+bishops and cardinals who had accompanied him in his flight from Rome.
+He maintained the truth of the principles for which he had always
+contended. He forgave and blessed his enemies, with the exception of the
+antipope and the Emperor. He had received the transubstantiated
+elements. The final unction had been given to him. He then prepared
+himself to die. Anxious to catch the last words from that tongue, to the
+utterances of which they had always listened with intense delight, his
+followers were bending over him, when, collecting his powers for one
+last effort, he said, in an indignant tone, "I have loved righteousness
+and hated iniquity, and, therefore, I die in exile."
+
+
+
+
+COMPLETION OF THE DOMESDAY BOOK
+
+A.D. 1086
+
+CHARLES KNIGHT
+
+
+(When William the Conqueror had been some years established in his
+English realm, he found himself confronted with a feudal baronage
+largely composed of men who had gone with him from Normandy, where many
+of them had reluctantly bowed to his command. They were jealous of the
+royal power and eager for military and judicial independence within
+their own manors. The Conqueror met this situation with the skill of
+political genius. He granted large estates to the nobles, but so widely
+scattered as to render union of the great land-owners and hereditary
+attachment of great areas of population to separate feudal lords
+impossible. He caused under-tenants to be bound to their lords by the
+same conditions of service which bound the lords to the crown, to which
+each sub-tenant swore direct fealty. William also strengthened his
+position as king by means of a new military organization and by his
+control of the judicial and administrative systems of the kingdom. By
+the abolition of the four great earldoms of the realm he struck a final
+blow at the ambition of the greater nobles for independent power. By
+this stroke he made the shire the largest unit of local government. By
+his control of the national revenues he secured a great financial power
+in his own hands.
+
+A large part of the manors were burdened with special dues to the crown,
+and for the purpose of ascertaining and recording these William sent
+into each county commissioners to make a survey, whose inquiries were
+recorded in the _Domesday Book_, so called because its decision was
+regarded as final. This book, in Norman-French, contains the results of
+his survey of England made in 1085-1086, and consists of two volumes in
+vellum, a large folio of three hundred and eighty-two pages, and a
+quarto of four hundred and fifty pages. For a long time it was kept
+under three locks in the exchequer with the King's seal, and is now kept
+in the Public Record Office. In 1783 the British Government issued a
+fac-simile edition of it, in two folio volumes, printed from types
+specially made for the purpose. It is one of the principal sources for
+the political and social history of the time.
+
+The _Domesday Book_ contains a record of the ownership, extent, and
+value of the lands of England at the time of the survey, at the time of
+their bestowal when granted by the King, and at the time of a previous
+survey under Edward the Confessor. Of the detailed registrations of
+tenants, defendants, live stock, etc., as well, as of contemporary
+social features of the English people, the following account presents
+interesting pictures.)
+
+
+The survey contained in the _Domesday Book_ extended to all England,
+with the exception of Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, and
+Durham. All the country between the Tees and the Tyne was held by the
+Bishop of Durham; and he was reputed a count palatine, having a separate
+government. The other three northern counties were probably so
+devastated that they were purposely omitted. Let us first see, from the
+information of _Domesday Book_, by "what men" the land was occupied.
+
+First, we have barons and we have thanes. The barons were the Norman
+nobles; the thanes, the Saxon. These were included under the general
+designation of _liberi homines_, free men; which term included all the
+freeholders of a manor. Many of these were tenants of the King "_in
+capite_"--that is, they held their possessions direct from the Crown.
+Others of these had placed themselves under the protection of some lord,
+as the defender of their persons and estates, they paying some stipend
+or performing some service. In the _Register_ there are also _liberae
+feminae_, free women. Next to the free class were the _sochemanni_ or
+"socmen," a class of inferior land-owners, who held lands under a lord,
+and owed suit and service in the lord's court, but whose tenure was
+permanent. They sometimes performed services in husbandry; but those
+services, as well as their payments, were defined.
+
+Descending in the scale, we come to the _villani_. These were allowed to
+occupy land at the will of the lord, upon the condition of performing
+services, uncertain in their amount and often of the meanest nature. But
+they could acquire no property in lands or goods; and they were subject
+to many exactions and oppressions. There are entries in _Domesday Book_
+which show that the villani were not altogether bondmen, but represented
+the Saxon "churl." The lowest class were _servi_, slaves; the class
+corresponding with the Saxon _theow_. By a degradation in the condition
+of the villani, and the elevation of that of the servi, the two classes
+were brought gradually nearer together; till at last the military
+oppression of the Normans, thrusting down all degrees of tenants and
+servants into one common slavery, or at least into strict dependence,
+one name was adopted for both of them as a generic term, that of
+_villeins regardant_.
+
+Of the subdivisions of these great classes, the _Register_ of 1085
+affords us some particulars. We find that some of the nobles are
+described as _milites_, soldiers; and sometimes the milites are classed
+with the inferior orders of tenantry. Many of the chief tenants are
+distinguished by their offices. We have among these the great regal
+officers, such as they existed in the Saxon times--the _camerarius_ and
+_cubicularius_, from whom we have our lord chamberlain; the _dapifer_,
+or lord steward; the _pincerna_, or chief butler; the constable, and the
+treasurer. We have the hawkkeepers, and the bowkeepers; the providers of
+the king's carriages, and his standard-bearers. We have lawmen, and
+legates, and mediciners. We have foresters and hunters.
+
+Coming to the inferior officers and artificers, we have carpenters,
+smiths, goldsmiths, farriers, potters, ditchers, launders, armorers,
+fishermen, millers, bakers, salters, tailors, and barbers. We have
+mariners, moneyers, minstrels, and watchmen. Of rural occupations we
+have the beekeepers, ploughmen, shepherds, neatherds, goatherds, and
+swineherds. Here is a population in which there is a large division of
+labor. The freemen, tenants, villeins, slaves, are laboring and deriving
+sustenance from arable land, meadow, common pasture, wood, and water.
+The grain-growing land is, of course, carefully registered as to its
+extent and value, and so the meadow and pasture. An equal exactness is
+bestowed upon the woods. It was not that the timber was of great
+commercial value, in a country which possessed such insufficient means
+of transport; but that the acorns and beech-mast, upon which great herds
+of swine subsisted, were of essential importance to keep up the supply
+of food. We constantly find such entries as "a wood for pannage of fifty
+hogs." There are woods described which will feed a hundred, two hundred,
+three hundred hogs; and on the Bishop of London's demesne at Fulham a
+thousand hogs could fatten. The value of a tree was determined by the
+number of hogs that could lie under it, in the Saxon time; and in this
+survey of the Norman period, we find entries of useless woods, and woods
+without pannage, which to some extent were considered identical. In some
+of the woods there were patches of cultivated ground, as the entries
+show, where the tenant had cleared the dense undergrowth and had his
+corn land and his meadows. Even the fen lands were of value, for their
+rents were paid in eels.
+
+There is only mention of five forests in this record, Windsor,
+Gravelings (Wiltshire), Winburn, Whichwood, and the New Forest.
+Undoubtedly there were many more, but being no objects of assessment
+they are passed over. It would be difficult not to associate the memory
+of the Conqueror with the New Forest, and not to believe that his
+unbridled will was here the cause of great misery and devastation.
+Ordericus Vitalis says, speaking of the death of William's second son,
+Richard: "Learn now, my reader, why the forest in which the young prince
+was slain received the name of the New Forest. That part of the country
+was extremely populous from early times, and full of well-inhabited
+hamlets and farms. A numerous population cultivated Hampshire with
+unceasing industry, so that the southern part of the district
+plentifully supplied Winchester with the products of the land. When
+William I ascended the throne of Albion, being a great lover of forests,
+he laid waste more than sixty parishes, compelling the inhabitants to
+emigrate to other places, and substituted beasts of the chase for human
+beings, that he might satisfy his ardor for hunting." There is probably
+some exaggeration in the statement of the country being "extremely
+populous from early times." This was an old woody district, called
+Ytene. No forest was artificially planted, as Voltaire has imagined; but
+the chases were opened through the ancient thickets, and hamlets and
+solitary cottages were demolished.
+
+It is a curious fact that some woodland spots in the New Forest have
+still names with the terminations of _ham_ and _ton_. There are many
+evidences of the former existence of human abodes in places now
+solitary; yet we doubt whether this part of the district plentifully
+supplied Winchester with food, as Ordericus relates; for it is a sterile
+district, in most places, fitted for little else than the growth of
+timber. The lower lands are marsh, and the upper are sand. The
+Conqueror, says the _Saxon Chronicle_, "so much loved the high deer as
+if he had been their father." The first of the Norman kings, and his
+immediate successors, would not be very scrupulous about the
+depopulation of a district if the presence of men interfered with their
+pleasures. But Thierry thinks that the extreme severity of the Forest
+Laws was chiefly enforced to prevent the assemblage of Saxons in those
+vast wooded spaces which were now included in the royal demesnes.
+
+All these extensive tracts were, more or less, retreats for the
+dispossessed and the discontented. The Normans, under pretence of
+preserving the stag and the hare, could tyrannize with a pretended
+legality over the dwellers in these secluded places; and thus William
+might have driven the Saxon people of Ytene to emigrate, and have
+destroyed their cottages, as much from a possible fear of their
+association as from his own love of "the high deer." Whatever was the
+motive, there were devastation and misery. _Domesday_ shows that in the
+district of the New Forest certain manors were afforested after the
+Conquest; cultivated portions, in which the Sabbath bell was heard.
+William of Jumieges, the Conqueror's own chaplain, says, speaking of the
+deaths of Richard and Rufus: "There were many who held that the two sons
+of William the King perished by the judgment of God in these woods,
+since for the _extension_ of the forest he had destroyed many inhabited
+_places (villas) and churches within its circuit_." It appears that in
+the time of Edward the Confessor about seventeen thousand acres of this
+district had been afforested; but that the cultivated parts remaining
+had then an estimated value of three hundred and sixty-three pounds.
+After the afforestation by the Conqueror, the cultivated parts yielded
+only one hundred and twenty-nine pounds.
+
+The grants of land to huntsmen (_venatores_) are common in Hampshire, as
+in other parts of England; and it appears to have been the duty of an
+especial officer to stall the deer--that is, to drive them with his
+troop of followers from all parts to the centre of a circle, gradually
+contracting, where they were to stand for the onslaught of the hunters.
+In the survey many parks are enumerated. The word hay (_haia_), which is
+still found in some of our counties, meant an enclosed part of a wood to
+which the deer were driven.
+
+In the seventeenth century this mode of hunting upon a large scale, by
+stalling the deer--this mimic war--was common in Scotland. Taylor,
+called the "Water Poet," was present at such a gathering, and has
+described the scene with a minuteness which may help us to form a
+picture of the Norman hunters: "Five or six hundred men do rise early in
+the morning, and they do disperse themselves divers ways; and seven,
+eight, or ten miles' compass, they do bring or chase in the deer in many
+herds--two, three, or four hundred in a herd--to such a place as the
+noblemen shall appoint them; then, when the day is come, the lords and
+gentlemen of their companies do ride or go to the said places, sometimes
+wading up to the middle through bourns and rivers; and then they being
+come to the place, do lie down on the ground till those foresaid scouts,
+which are called the 'tinkhelt,' do bring down the deer. Then, after we
+had stayed there three hours or thereabouts, we might perceive the deer
+appear on the hills round about us--their heads making a show like a
+wood--which being followed close by the tinkhelt, are chased down into
+the valley where we lay; then all the valley on each side being waylaid
+with a hundred couple of strong Irish greyhounds, they are let loose as
+occasion serves upon the herd of deer, that with dogs, guns, arrows,
+dirks, and daggers, in the space of two hours fourscore fat deer were
+slain."
+
+_Domesday_ affords indubitable proof of the culture of the vine in
+England. There are thirty-eight entries of vineyards in the southern and
+eastern counties. Many gardens are enumerated. Mills are registered with
+great distinctness; for they were invariably the property of the lords
+of the manors, lay or ecclesiastical; and the tenants could only grind
+at the lord's mill. Wherever we find a mill specified in _Domesday_,
+there we generally find a mill now. At Arundel, for example, we see what
+rent was paid by a mill; and there still stands at Arundel an old mill
+whose foundations might have been laid before the Conquest. Salt works
+are repeatedly mentioned. They were either works upon the coast for
+procuring marine salt by evaporation, or were established in the
+localities of inland salt springs. The salt works of Cheshire were the
+most numerous, and were called "wiches." Hence the names of some places,
+such as Middlewich and Nantwich. The revenue from mines offers some
+curious facts. No mention of tin is to be found in Cornwall. The ravages
+of Saxon and Dane, and the constant state of hostility between races,
+had destroyed much of that mineral industry which existed in the Roman
+times. A century and a half after the Conquest had elapsed before the
+Norman kings had a revenue from the Cornish iron mines. Iron forges were
+registered, and lumps of hammered iron are stated to have been paid as
+rent. Lead works are found only upon the king's demesne in Derbyshire.
+
+Fisheries are important sources of rent. Payments of eels are enumerated
+by hundreds and thousands. Herrings appear to have been consumed in vast
+numbers in the monasteries. Sandwich yielded forty thousand annually to
+Christ Church in Canterbury. Kent, Sussex, and Norfolk appear to have
+been the great seats of this fishery. The Severn and the Wye had their
+salmon fisheries, whose produce king, bishop, and lord were glad to
+receive as rent. There was a weir for Thames fish at Mortlake. The
+religious houses had their _piscinae_ and _vivaria_--their stews and
+fish-pools.
+
+_Domesday_ affords us many curious glimpses of the condition of the
+people in cities and burghs. For the most part they seem to have
+preserved their ancient customs. London, Winchester, and several other
+important places are not mentioned in the record. We shall very briefly
+notice a few indications of the state of society. Dover was an important
+place, for it supplied the king with twenty ships for fifteen days in a
+year, each vessel having twenty-one men on board. Dover could therefore
+command the service of four hundred and twenty mariners. Every burgess
+in Lewes compounded for a payment of twenty shillings when the king
+fitted out a fleet to keep the sea.
+
+At Oxford the king could command the services of twenty burgesses
+whenever he went on an expedition; or they might compound for their
+services by a payment of twenty pounds. Oxford was a considerable place
+at this period. It contained upward of seven hundred houses; but four
+hundred and seventy-eight were so desolated that they could pay no dues.
+Hereford was the king's demesne; and the honor of being his immediate
+tenants appears to have been qualified by considerable exactions. When
+he went to war, and when he went to hunt, men were to be ready for his
+service. If the wife of a burgher brewed his ale, he paid tenpence. The
+smith who kept a forge had to make nails from the king's iron. In
+Hereford, as in other cities, there were moneyers, or coiners. There
+were seven at Hereford, who were bound to coin as much of the king's
+silver into pence as he demanded. At Cambridge the burgesses were
+compelled to lend the sheriff their ploughs. Leicester was bound to find
+the king a hawk or to pay ten pounds; while a sumpter or baggage-horse
+was compounded for at one pound.
+
+At Warwick there were two hundred and twenty-five houses on which the
+king and his barons claimed tax; and nineteen houses belonged to free
+burgesses. The dues were paid in honey and corn. In Shrewsbury there
+were two hundred and fifty-two houses belonging to burgesses; but the
+burgesses complained that they were called upon to pay as much tax as in
+the time of the Confessor, although Earl Roger had taken possession of
+extensive lands for building his castle. Chester was a port in which the
+king had his dues upon every cargo, and where he had fines whenever a
+trader was detected in using a false measure. The fraudulent female
+brewer of adulterated beer was placed in the cucking-stool, a
+degradation afterward reserved for scolds.
+
+This city has a more particular notice as to laws and customs in the
+time of the Confessor than any other place in the survey. Particular
+care seems to have been taken against fire. The owner of a house on fire
+not only paid a fine to the king, but forfeited two shillings to his
+nearest neighbor. Marten skins appear to have been a great article of
+trade in this city. No stranger could cart goods within a particular
+part of the city without being subjected to a forfeiture of four
+shillings or two oxen to the bishop. We find, as might be expected, no
+mention of that peculiar architecture of Chester called the "Rows,"
+which has so puzzled antiquarian writers. The probability is that in a
+place so exposed to the attacks of the Welsh they were intended for
+defence. The low streets in which the Rows are situated have the road
+considerably beneath them, like the cutting of a railway; and from the
+covered way of the Rows an enemy in the road beneath might be assailed
+with great advantage.
+
+In the civil wars of Charles I the possession of the Rows by the
+Royalists, or Parliamentary troops, was fiercely contested. Of their
+antiquity there is no doubt. They probably belong to the same period as
+the Castle. The wall of Chester and the bridge were kept in repair,
+according to the survey, by the service of one laborer for every hide of
+land in the county. It is to be remarked that in all the cities and
+burghs the inhabitants are described as belonging to the king or a
+bishop or a baron. Many, even in the most privileged places, were
+attached to particular manors.
+
+The _Domesday_ survey shows that in some towns there was an admixture of
+Norman and English burgesses; and it is clear that they were so settled
+after the Conquest, for a distinction is made between the old customary
+dues of the place and those the foreigner should pay. The foreigner had
+to bear a small addition to the ancient charge. No doubt the Norman
+clung to many of the habits of his own land; and the Saxon unwillingly
+parted with those of the locality in which his fathers had lived. But
+their manners were gradually assimilated. The Normans grew fond of the
+English beer, and the English adopted the Norman dress.
+
+The survey of 1085 affords the most complete evidence of the extent to
+which the Normans had possessed themselves of the landed property of the
+country. The ancient demesnes of the crown consisted of fourteen hundred
+and twenty-two manors. But the king had confiscated the properties of
+Godwin, Harold, Algar, Edwin, Morcar, and other great Saxon earls; and
+his revenues thus became enormous. Ordericus Vitalis states, with a
+minuteness that seems to imply the possession of official information,
+that "the king himself received daily one-and-sixty pounds thirty
+thousand pence and three farthings sterling money from his regular
+revenues in England alone, independently of presents, fines for
+offences, and many other matters which constantly enrich a royal
+treasury." The numbers of manors held by the favorites of the Conqueror
+would appear incredible, if we did not know that these great nobles were
+grasping and unscrupulous; indulging the grossest sensuality with a
+pretence of refinement; limited in their perpetration of injustice only
+by the extent of their power; and so blinded by their pride as to call
+their plunder their inheritance. Ten Norman chiefs who held under the
+crown are enumerated in the survey as possessing two thousand eight
+hundred and twenty manors.
+
+This enormous transfer of property did not take place without the most
+formidable resistance, but when a period of tranquillity arrived came
+the era of castle-building. The Saxons had their rude fortresses and
+intrenched earthworks. But solid walls of stone, for defence and
+residence, were to become the local seats of regal and baronial
+domination. _Domesday_ contains notices of forty-nine castles; but only
+one is mentioned as having existed in the time of Edward the Confessor.
+Some which the Conqueror is known to have built are not noticed in the
+survey. Among these is the White Tower of London. The site of Rochester
+Castle is mentioned. These two buildings are associated by our old
+antiquaries as being erected by the same architect. Stow says: "I find
+in a fair register-book of the acts of the bishops of Rochester, set
+down by Edmund of Hadenham, that William I, surnamed Conqueror, builded
+the Tower of London, to wit, the great white and square tower there,
+about the year of Christ 1078, appointing Gundulph, then Bishop of
+Rochester, to be principal surveyor and overseer of that work, who was
+for that time lodged in the house of Edmere, a burghess of London." The
+chapel in the White Tower is a remarkable specimen of early Norman
+architecture.
+
+The keep of Rochester Castle, so picturesquely situated on the Medway,
+was not a mere fortress without domestic convenience. Here we still look
+upon the remains of sculptured columns and arches. We see where there
+were spacious fireplaces in the walls, and how each of four floors was
+served with water by a well. The third story contains the most
+ornamental portions of the building. In the _Domesday_ enumeration of
+castles, we have repeated mention of houses destroyed and lands wasted,
+for their erection. At Cambridge twenty-seven houses are recorded to
+have been thus demolished. This was the fortress to overawe the fen
+districts. At Lincoln a hundred and sixty-six mansions were destroyed,
+"on account of the castle."
+
+In the ruins of all these castles we may trace their general plan. There
+were an outer court, an inner court, and a keep. Round the whole area
+was a wall, with parapets and loopholes. The entrance was defended by an
+outwork or barbacan. The prodigious strength of the keep is the most
+remarkable characteristic of these fortresses; and thus many of these
+towers remain, stripped of every interior fitting by time, but as
+untouched in their solid construction as the mounts upon which they
+stand. We ascend the steep steps which lead to the ruined keep of
+Carisbrook, with all our historical associations directed to the
+confinement of Charles I in this castle. But this fortress was
+registered in _Domesday Book_. Five centuries and a half had elapsed
+between William I and James I. The Norman keep was out of harmony with
+the principles of the seventeenth century, as much as the feudal
+prerogatives to which Charles unhappily clung.
+
+We have thus enumerated some of the more prominent statistics of this
+ancient survey, which are truly as much matter of history as the events
+of this beginning of the Norman period. There is one more feature of
+this _Domesday Book_ which we cannot pass over. The number of parish
+churches in England in the eleventh century will, in some degree,
+furnish an indication of the amount of religious instruction. By some
+most extraordinary exaggeration, the number of these churches has been
+stated to be above forty-five thousand. In _Domesday_ the number
+enumerated is a little above seventeen hundred. No doubt this
+enumeration is extremely imperfect. Very nearly half of all the churches
+put down are found in Lincolnshire, Norfolk, and Suffolk. The
+_Register_, in some cases, gives the amount of land with which the
+church was endowed. Bosham, in Sussex, the estate of Harold, had, in the
+time of King Edward, a hundred and twelve hides of land. At the date of
+the survey it had sixty-five hides. This was an enormous endowment. Some
+churches had five acres only; some fifty; some a hundred. Some are
+without land altogether. But, whether the endowment be large or small,
+here is the evidence of a church planted upon the same foundation as the
+monarchy, that of territorial possessions.
+
+The politic ruler of England had, in the completion of _Domesday Book_,
+possessed himself of the most perfect instrument for the profitable
+administration of his government. He was no longer working in the dark,
+whether he called out soldiers or levied taxes. He had carried through a
+great measure, rapidly, and with a minuteness which puts to shame some
+of our clumsy modern statistics. But the Conqueror did not want his
+books for the gratification of official curiosity. He went to work when
+he knew how many tenants-in-chief he could command, and how many men
+they could bring into the field. He instituted the great feudal
+principle of knight-service. His ordinance is in these words: "We
+command that all earls, barons, knights, sergeants, and freemen be
+always provided with horses and arms as they ought, and that they be
+always ready to perform to us their whole service, in manner as they owe
+it to us of right for their fees and tenements, and as we have appointed
+to them by the common council of our whole kingdom, and as we have
+granted to them in fee with right of inheritance."
+
+These words, "in fee, with right of inheritance," leave no doubt that
+the great vassals of the crown were absolute proprietors, and that all
+their subvassals had the same right of holding in perpetuity. The
+estate, however, reverted to the crown if the race of the original
+feoffee became extinct, and in cases, also, of felony and treason. When
+Alain of Bretagne, who commanded the rear of the army at the battle of
+Hastings, and who had received four hundred and forty-two manors, bowed
+before the King at Salisbury, at the great council in 1085, and swore to
+be true to him against all manner of men, he also brought with him his
+principal _land-sittende_ men (land-owners), who also bowed before the
+King and became his men. They had previously taken the oath of fealty to
+Alain of Bretagne, and engaged to perform all the customs and services
+due to him for their lands and tenements. Alain, and his men, were
+proprietors, but with very unequal rights. Alain, by his tenure, was
+bound to provide for the King as many armed horsemen as the vast extent
+of his estates demanded. But all those whom he had enfeoffed, or made
+proprietors, upon his four hundred and forty-two manors, were each bound
+to contribute a proportionate number. When the free service of forty
+days was to be enforced, the great earl had only to send round to his
+vassals, and the men were at his command.
+
+By this organization, which was universal throughout the kingdom, sixty
+thousand cavalry could, with little delay, be called into the field.
+Those who held by this military service had their allotments divided
+into so many knights' fees, and each knight's fee was to furnish one
+mounted and armed soldier. The great vassals retained a portion of their
+land as their demesnes, having tenants who paid rents and performed
+services not military. But, under any circumstances, the vassal of the
+crown was bound to perform his whole free service with men and horses
+and arms. It is perfectly clear that this wonderful organization
+rendered the whole system of government one great confederacy, in which
+the small proprietors, tenants, and villeins had not a chance of
+independence; and that their condition could only be ameliorated by
+those gradual changes which result from a long intercourse between the
+strong and the weak, in which power relaxes its severity and becomes
+protection.
+
+In the ordinance in which the King commanded "free service" he also
+says, "we will that all the freemen of the kingdom possess their lands
+in peace, free from all tallage and unjust exaction." This, unhappily
+for the freemen, was little more than a theory under the Norman kings.
+There were various modes of making legal exaction the source of the
+grossest injustice. When the heir of an estate entered into possession
+he had to pay a "relief," or _heriot_, to the lord. This soon became a
+source of oppression in the crown; and enormous sums were exacted from
+the great vassals. The lord was not more sparing of his men. He had
+another mode of extortion. He demanded "aid" on many occasions, such as
+the marriage of his eldest daughter, or when he made his eldest son a
+knight. The estate of inheritance, which looks so generous and equitable
+an arrangement, was a perpetual grievance; for the possessor could
+neither transmit his property by will nor transfer it by sale. The heir,
+however remote in blood, was the only legitimate successor.
+
+The feudal obligation to the lord was, in many other ways, a fruitful
+source of tyranny, which lasted up to the time of the Stuarts. If the
+heir were a minor, the lord entered into possession of the estate
+without any accountability. If it descended to a female, the lord could
+compel her to marry according to his will, or could prevent her
+marrying. During a long period all these harassing obligations connected
+with property were upheld. The crown and the nobles were equally
+interested in their enforcement; and there can be little doubt that,
+though the great vassals sometimes suffered under these feudal
+obligations to the king, the inferior tenants had a much greater amount
+of oppression to endure at the hands of their immediate lords. But if
+the freemen were oppressed in the tenure of their property, we can
+scarcely expect that the landless man had not much more to suffer. If he
+committed an offence in the Saxon time, he paid a "mulct"; if in the
+Norman, he was subjected to an _amerciament_. His whole personal estate
+was at the mercy of the lord.
+
+Having thus obtained a general notion of the system of society
+established in less than twenty years after the Conquest, we see that
+there was nothing wanting to complete the most entire subjection of the
+great body of the nation. What had been wanting was accomplished in the
+practical working out of the theory that the entire land of the country
+belonged to the King. It was now established that every tenant-in-chief
+should do homage to the king; that every superior tenant should do
+homage to his lord; that every villein should be the bondman of the
+free; and that every slave should, without any property however limited
+and insecure, be the absolute chattel of some master. The whole system
+was connected with military service. This was the feudal system. There
+was some resemblance to it in parts of the Saxon organization; but under
+that organization there was so much of freedom in the allodial or free
+tenure of land that a great deal of other freedom went with it. The
+casting-off of the chains of feudality was the labor of six centuries.
+
+
+
+
+DECLINE OF THE MOORISH POWER IN SPAIN
+
+GROWTH AND DECAY OF THE ALMORAVIDE AND ALMOHADE DYNASTIES
+
+A.D. 1086-1214
+
+S.A. DUNHAM
+
+
+(During the early part of the eleventh century the western caliphate,
+which with its splendid capital of Cordova had flourished for almost
+three hundred years, entered upon a decline that was the beginning of
+its final dissolution. By A.D. 1020 the local governors openly asserted
+their independence of Cordova and assumed the title of kings.
+Conspicuous among them was Mahomet ben Ismail ben Abid, the _wali_ of
+Seville.
+
+While these petty rulers were determined to renounce allegiance to
+Cordova, it was resolved at that capital to elect a sovereign to subdue
+them and restore the ancient splendor of the empire. The choice fell
+upon Gehwar ben Mahomet, who soon established a degree of tranquillity
+and commercial prosperity unknown for many years. But he failed to
+reestablish the supremacy of Cordova, which capital Mahomet of Seville
+was preparing to invade when he died. His son, Mahomet Almoateded,
+having subdued Southern Andalusia, became the ally of Mahomet, son and
+successor of Gehwar on the throne of Cordova; but he betrayed the latter
+under pretence of aiding him against his enemies, and usurped the
+sovereignty.
+
+On the death of Mahomet Almoateded, his son Mahomet succeeded him at
+Cordova. He was already King of Seville, and as he soon occupied many
+other cities he became the most independent and powerful sovereign of
+Mahometan Spain. His chief rival, Yahia Alkadia, King of Toledo, was so
+contemptible to his people that they expelled him. He appealed for aid
+to Alfonso VI, King of Leon [Alfonso of Castile]; but that Christian
+soldier was persuaded by Mahomet to oppose, instead of assisting, Yahia.
+The latter was restored to his throne by the King of Badajoz, but
+Alfonso invested Toledo and, after a three-years' siege, reduced the
+city, in A.D. 1085. In the history of the events directly following the
+capitulation it is shown how costly to himself was the alliance of
+Mahomet with Alfonso, and how it played its part in the coming of his
+coreligionists from Africa to his assistance, and finally, as it proved,
+to his own undoing and the supplanting of the power he represented in
+the Mahometan government of Spain.)
+
+
+The fall of Toledo, however it might have been foreseen by the
+Mahometans, filled them with equal dismay and indignation. As Mahomet
+was too formidable to be openly assailed, they turned their
+vociferations of anger against his _hagib_, whom they accused of
+betraying the faith of Islam. Alarmed at the universal outcry, Mahomet
+was not sorry that he could devolve the heavy load of responsibility on
+the shoulders of his minister. The latter fled; but though he procured a
+temporary asylum from several princes, he was at length seized by the
+emissaries of his offended master; was brought, first to Cordova, next
+to Seville; confined within the walls of a dungeon; and soon beheaded by
+the royal hand of Mahomet. Thus was a servant of the King sacrificed for
+no other reason than that he had served that King too well.
+
+The conquest of Toledo was far from satisfying the ambition of Alfonso:
+he rapidly seized on the fortresses of Madrid, Maqueda, Guadalaxara, and
+established his dominion on both banks of the Tagus. Mahomet now began
+seriously to repent his treaty with the Christian, and to tremble even
+for his own possessions. He vainly endeavored to divert his ally from
+the projects of aggrandizement which that ally had evidently formed. The
+kings of Badajoz and Saragossa became tributaries to the latter; nay, if
+any reliance is to be placed on either Christian or Arabic
+historians,[29] the King of Seville himself was subjected to the same
+humiliation. However this may have been, Mahomet saw that unless he
+leagued himself with those whose subjugation had hitherto been his
+constant object--the princes of his faith--his and their destruction was
+inevitable. The magnitude of the danger compelled him to solicit their
+alliance.
+
+[Footnote 29: Conde gives the translation of two letters--one from
+Alfonso to Mahomet, distinguished for a tone of superiority and even of
+arrogance, which could arise only from the confidence felt by the writer
+in his own strength; the other from Mahomet to Alfonso, containing a
+defiance. The latter begins:
+
+"To the proud enemy of Allah, Alfonso ben Sancho, who calls himself lord
+of both nations and both laws. May God confound his arrogance, and
+prosper those who walk in the right way!"
+
+One passage of the same letter says: "Fatigued with war, we were willing
+to offer thee an annual tribute; but this does not satisfy thee: thou
+wishest us to deliver into thine hands our towns and fortresses; but are
+we thy subjects, that thou makest such demands, or hast thou ever
+subdued us? Thine injustice has roused us from our lethargy," etc.]
+
+As the King of Saragossa was too much in fear of the Christians to enter
+into any league against them, and as the one of Valencia (Yahia) reigned
+only at the pleasure of Alfonso, the sovereigns of Badajoz, Almeria, and
+Granada were the only powers on whose cooeperation he could calculate (he
+had annihilated the authority of several petty kings). He invited those
+princes to send their representatives to Seville, to consult as to the
+measures necessary to protect their threatened independence. The
+invitation was readily accepted. On the day appointed, Mahomet, with his
+son Al Raxid and a considerable number of his _wazirs_ and _cadis_, was
+present at the deliberations. The danger was so imminent--the force of
+the Christians was so augmented, and that of the Moslems so weakened--
+that such resistance as Mahometan Spain alone could offer seemed
+hopeless. With this conviction in their hearts, two of the most
+influential cadis proposed an appeal to the celebrated African
+conqueror, Yussef ben Taxfin, whose arm alone seemed able to preserve
+the faith of Islam in the Peninsula.
+
+The proposal was received with general applause by all present: they did
+not make the very obvious reflection that when a nation admits into its
+bosom an ally more powerful than itself, it admits at the same time a
+conqueror. The wali of Malaga alone, Abdallah ben Zagut, had courage to
+oppose the dangerous embassy under consideration: "You mean to call in
+the aid of the Almoravides! Are you ignorant that these fierce
+inhabitants of the desert resemble their own native tigers? Suffer them
+not, I beseech you, to enter the fertile plains of Andulasia and
+Granada! Doubtless they would break the iron sceptre which Alfonso
+intends for us; but you would still be doomed to wear the chains of
+slavery. Do you not know that Yussef has taken all the cities of
+Almagreb; that he has subdued the powerful tribes of the east and west;
+that he has everywhere substituted despotism for liberty and
+independence?" The aged Zagut spoke in vain: he was even accused of
+being a secret partisan of the Christian; and the embassy was decreed.
+
+But Zagut was not the only one who foresaw the catastrophe to which that
+embassy must inevitably lead: Al Raxid shared the same prophetic
+feeling. In reply to his father, who, after the separation of the
+assembly, expatiated on the absolute necessity of soliciting the
+alliance of Aben Taxfin as the only measure capable of saving the rest
+of Mahometan Spain from the yoke of Alfonso, he said: "This Aben Taxfin,
+who has subdued all that he pleased, will serve us as he has already
+served the people of Almagreb and Mauritania--he will expel us from our
+country!"
+
+"Anything," rejoined the father, "rather than Andalusia should become
+the prey of the Christians! Dost thou wish the Mussulmans to curse me? I
+would rather become an humble shepherd, a driver of Yussef's camels,
+than reign dependent on these Christian dogs! But my trust is in Allah."
+
+"May Allah protect both thee and thy people!" replied Al Raxid,
+mournfully, who saw that the die of fate was cast.
+
+The course of this history must be interrupted for a moment, while the
+origin and exploits of this formidable African are recorded.
+
+Beyond the chain of Mount Atlas, in the deserts of ancient Getulia,
+dwelt two tribes of Arabian descent--both, probably, of the greater one
+of Zanhaga, so illustrious in Arabian history. At what time they had
+been expelled, or had voluntarily exiled themselves, from their native
+Yemen, they knew not; but tradition taught them that they had been
+located in the African deserts from ages immemorial. Their life was
+passed under the tent; their only possessions were their camels and
+their freedom. Yahia ben Ibrahim, belonging to one of these tribes--that
+of Gudala--made the pilgrimage of Mecca. On his return through the
+province of Cairwan he became acquainted with Abu-Amram, a famous
+_alfaqui_, originally of Fez. Being questioned by his new friend as to
+the religion and manners of his countrymen, he replied that they were
+sunk in ignorance, both from their isolated situation in the desert and
+from their want of teachers; he added, however, that they were strangers
+to cruelty, and that they would be willing enough to receive instruction
+from any quarter. He even entreated the alfaqui to allow some one of his
+disciples to accompany him into his native country; but none of those
+disciples was willing to undertake so long and perilous a journey, and
+it was not without considerable difficulty that Abdallah ben Yassim, the
+disciple of another alfaqui, was persuaded to accompany the patriotic
+Yahia.
+
+Abdallah was one of those ruling minds which, fortunately for the peace
+of society, nature so seldom produces. Seeing his enthusiastic reception
+by the tribe of Gudala, and the influence he was sure of maintaining
+over it, he formed the design of founding a sovereignty in the heart of
+these vast regions. Under the pretext that to diffuse a holy religion
+and useful knowledge was among the most imperative of duties, he
+prevailed on his obedient disciples to make war on the kindred tribe of
+Lamtuna. That tribe submitted, acknowledging his spiritual authority,
+and zealously assisted him in his great purpose of gaining proselytes by
+the sword. His ambition naturally increased with his success: in a short
+time he had reduced, in a similar manner, the isolated tribes around
+him. To his valiant followers of Lamtuna he now gave the name of
+_Muraditins_, or _Almoravides_,[30] which signifies men consecrated to
+the service of God.
+
+[Footnote 30: This Moslem dynasty, founded about 1050, ruled in Africa,
+and afterward in Spain, until 1147, when it was overthrown and succeeded
+by that of the Almohades.]
+
+The whole country of Darah was gradually subdued by this new apostle,
+and his authority was acknowledged over a region extensive enough to
+form a respectable kingdom. But though he exercised all the rights of
+sovereignty, he prudently abstained from assuming the title: he left to
+the emir of Lamtuna the ostensible exercise of temporal power; and when,
+in A.D. 1058, that emir fell in battle, he nominated Abu-Bekr ben Omar
+to the vacant dignity. His own death, which was that of a warrior, left
+Abu-Bekr in possession of an undivided sovereignty. The power and
+consequently the reputation of the emir, spread far and wide, and
+numbers flocked from distant provinces to share in the advantages of
+religion and plunder. His native plains were now too narrow for the
+ambition of Abu-Bekr, who crossed the chain of Mount Atlas, and fixed
+his residence in the city of Agmat, between those mountains and the sea.
+
+But even this place was soon too confined for his increased subjects,
+and he looked round for a site on which he might lay the foundations of
+a great city, the destined metropolis of a great empire. One was at
+length found; and the city of Morocco began to rear its head from the
+valley of Eylana. Before, however, his great work was half completed, he
+received intelligence that the tribe of Gudala had declared a deadly war
+against that of Lamtuna; and that the ruin of one at least of the
+hostile people was to be apprehended. As he belonged to the latter, he
+naturally trembled for the fate of his kindred; and at the head of his
+cavalry he departed for his native deserts, leaving the superintendence
+of the buildings and the command of the army, during his absence, to his
+cousin, Yussef ben Taxfin.
+
+The person and character of Yussef are drawn in the most favorable
+colors by the Arabian writers. We are told that his stature was tall and
+noble, his countenance prepossessing, his eye dark and piercing, his
+beard long, his tone of voice harmonious, his whole frame, which no
+sickness ever assailed, strong, robust, and familiar with fatigue; that
+his mind corresponded with his outward appearance, his generosity, his
+care of the poor, his sobriety, his justice, his religious zeal, yet
+freedom from intolerance, rendering him the admiration of foreigners and
+the love of his own people. But whatever were his other virtues, it will
+be seen that gratitude, honor, and good faith were not among the number.
+Scarcely had his kinsman left the city, than, in pursuance of the design
+he had formed of usurping the supreme authority, he began to win the
+affection of the troops, partly by his gifts and partly by that winning
+affability of manner which he could easily assume. How well he succeeded
+will soon appear. Nor was his success in war less agreeable to so fierce
+and martial a people as the Almoravides. The Berbers who inhabited the
+defiles of Mount Atlas, and who, animated by the spirit of independence
+so characteristic of mountaineers, endeavored to vindicate their natural
+liberty, were quickly subdued by him.
+
+But his policy was still superior. He had long loved, or at least long
+aspired to the hope of marrying, the beautiful Zainab, sister of
+Abu-Bekr; but the fear of a repulse from the proud chief of his family
+had caused him to smother his inclination. He now disdained to
+supplicate for that chief's consent: he married the lady, and from that
+moment proceeded boldly in his projects of ambition. Having put the
+finishing touch to his magnificent city of Morocco, he transferred
+thither the seat of his empire; and by the encouragement he afforded to
+individuals of all nations who chose to settle there, he soon filled it
+with a prosperous and numerous population. The augmentation of his army
+was his next great object; and so well did he succeed in it that on his
+departure, in a hostile expedition against Fez, he found his troops
+exceeded one hundred thousand. With so formidable a force, he had little
+difficulty in rapidly extending his conquests.
+
+Yussef had just completed the subjugation of Fez when Abu-Bekr returned
+from the desert and encamped in the vicinity of Agmat. He was soon made
+acquainted--probably common report had acquainted him long before--with
+the usurpation of his kinsman. With a force so far inferior to his
+rival's, and still more with the conviction that the hearts of the
+people were weaned from him, he might well hesitate as to the course he
+should adopt. His greatest mortification was to hear his own horsemen,
+whom curiosity drew into Morocco, loud in the praises of Yussef, whose
+liberality to the army was the theme of universal admiration, and whose
+service for that reason many avowed their intention of embracing. He now
+feared that his power was at an end, yet he resolved to have an
+interview with his cousin.
+
+The two chiefs met about half-way between Morocco and Agmat,[31] and
+after a formal salutation took their seats on the same carpet. The
+appearance of Yussef's formidable guard, the alacrity with which he was
+obeyed, and the grandeur which surrounded him convinced Abu-Bekr that
+the throne of the usurper was too firmly established to be shaken. The
+poor emir, so far from demanding the restitution of his rights, durst
+not even utter one word of complaint; on the contrary, he pretended that
+he had long renounced empire, and that his only wish was to pass the
+remainder of his days in the retirement of the desert. With equal
+hypocrisy Yussef humbly thanked him for his abdication; the sheiks and
+walis were summoned to witness the renewed declaration of the emir,
+after which the two princes separated. The following day, however,
+Abu-Bekr received a magnificent present from Yussef,[32] who, indeed,
+continued to send him one every year to the period of his death.
+
+[Footnote 31: The distance is about ten or twelve leagues.]
+
+[Footnote 32: This present is made to consist of twenty-five thousand
+crowns of gold, seventy horses of the best breed, all splendidly
+accoutred, one hundred and fifty mules, one hundred magnificent turbans
+with as many costly habits, four hundred common turbans, two hundred
+white mantles, one thousand pieces of rich stuffs, two hundred pieces of
+fine linen, one hundred and fifty black slaves, twenty beautiful young
+maidens, with a considerable quantity of perfumes, corn, and cattle.
+Such a gift was worthy of royalty. In a similar situation a modern
+English sovereign would probably have sent--one hundred pounds.]
+
+Yussef, who, though he had refused to receive the title of _almumenin_,
+which he considered as properly belonging to the Caliph of the East, had
+just exchanged his humble one of emir for those of _almuzlemin_, or
+prince of the believers, and of _nazaradin_, or defender of the faith,
+when the letters of Mahomet reached him. A similar application from
+Omar, King of Badajoz, he had disregarded, not because he was
+indifferent to the glory of serving his religion, still less to the
+advantage of extending his conquests, but because he had not then
+sufficiently consolidated his power. Now, however, he was in peaceful
+possession of an extended empire, and he assembled his chiefs to hear
+their sentiments on an expedition which he had resolved to undertake.
+All immediately exclaimed that war should be undertaken in defence of
+the tottering throne of Islam. Before, however, he returned a final
+answer to the King of Seville, he insisted that the fortress of
+Algeziras should be placed in his hands, on the pretence that if fortune
+were unpropitious he should have some place to which he might retreat.
+That Mahomet should have been so blind as to not perceive the designs
+involved in the insidious proposal is almost enough to make one agree
+with the Arabic historians that destiny had decreed he should fall by
+his own measures. The place was not only surrendered to the artful Moor,
+but Mahomet himself went to Morocco to hasten the departure of Yussef.
+He was assured of speedy succor and induced to return. He was soon
+followed by the ambitious African, at the head of a mighty armament.
+
+Alfonso was besieging Saragossa, which he had every expectation of
+reducing, when intelligence reached him of Yussef's disembarkation. He
+resolved to meet the approaching storm. At the head of all the forces he
+could muster he advanced toward Andalusia, and encountered Yussef on the
+plains of Zalaca, between Badajoz and Merida. As the latter was a strict
+observer of the outward forms of his religion, he summoned the Christian
+King by letter to embrace the faith of the Prophet or consent to pay an
+annual tribute or prepare for immediate battle. "I am told," added the
+writer, "that thou wishest for vessels to carry the war into my kingdom;
+I spare thee the trouble of the voyage. Allah brings thee into my
+presence that I may punish thy presumption and pride!" The indignant
+Christian trampled the letter under foot, and at the same time said to
+the messenger: "Tell thy master what thou hast seen! Tell him also not
+to hide himself during the action: let him meet me face to face!" The
+two armies engaged the 13th day of the moon Regeb, A.H. 479.[33]
+
+[Footnote 33: October 23, A.D. 1086.]
+
+The onset of Alfonso at the head of the Christian cavalry was so fierce
+that the ranks of the Almoravides were thrown into confusion; not less
+successful was Sancho, King of Navarre, against the Andalusians, who
+retreated toward Badajoz. But the troops of Seville kept the field, and
+fought with desperate valor: they would, however, have given way, had
+not Yussef at this critical moment advanced with his reserve and his own
+guard, consisting of his bravest troops, and assailed the Christians in
+the rear and flanks. This unexpected movement decided the fortune of the
+day. Alfonso was severely wounded and compelled to retreat, but not
+until nightfall, nor until he had displayed a valor worthy of the
+greatest heroes. Though his own loss was severe, amounting, according to
+the Arabians, to twenty-four thousand men, that of the enemy could
+scarcely be inferior, when we consider that this victory had no result;
+Yussef was evidently too much weakened to profit by it.
+
+Not long after the battle, Yussef being called to Africa by the death of
+a son, the command of the Almoravides devolved on Syr ben Abu-Bekr, the
+ablest of his generals. That general advanced northward, and seized some
+insignificant fortresses; but the advantage was but temporary, and was
+more than counterbalanced by the disasters of the following year. The
+King of Saragossa, Abu-Giafar, had hoped that the defeat of Zalaca would
+prevent the Christians from attacking him; but that of his allies, the
+Mahometan princes, in the neighborhood, and the taking of Huesca by the
+King of Navarre, convinced him how fallacious was his fancied security.
+Seeing that no advantage whatever had accrued from his former
+expedition, Yussef now proclaimed the Alhiged, or holy war, and invited
+all the Andalusian princes to join him. In A.D. 1088, he again
+disembarked at Algeziras and joined the confederates. But this present
+demonstration of force proved as useless as the preceding: it ended in
+nothing; owing partly to the dissensions of Mahometans, and partly to
+the activity of the Christians, who not only rendered abortive the
+measures of the enemy, but gained some signal advantages over them.
+Yussef was forced to retreat on Almeida. Whether through the distrust of
+the Mahometan princes, who appear to have penetrated his intention of
+subjecting them to his empire, or through his apprehension of Alfonso,
+he again returned to Africa, to procure new and more considerable
+levies. In A.D. 1091 he landed a third time at Algeziras, not so much
+with the view of humbling the Christian King as of executing the
+perfidious design he had so long harbored. For form's sake, indeed, he
+invested Toledo, but he could have entertained no expectation of
+reducing it; and when he perceived that the Andalusian princes refused
+to join him, he eagerly left that city, and proceeded to secure far
+dearer and easier interests: he openly threw off the mask, and commenced
+his career of spoliation.
+
+The King of Granada, Abdallah ben Balkin, was the first victim to
+African perfidy. In the conviction that he must be overwhelmed if
+resistance were offered, he left his city to welcome Yussef. His
+submission was vain: he was instantly loaded with chains, and with his
+family sent to Agmat. Timur ben Balkin, brother of Abdallah, was in the
+same violent manner despoiled of Malaga. Mahomet now perceived the
+grievous error which he had committed, and the prudent foresight of his
+son Al Raxid. "Did not I tell thee," said the latter, mournfully, "what
+the consequences would be; that we should be driven from our palace and
+country?"
+
+"Thou wert indeed a true prophet," replied the self-accused father; "but
+what power could avert the decrees of fate?"
+
+It seemed as if fate had indeed resolved that this well-meaning but
+misguided prince should fall by his own obstinacy; for though his son
+advised him to seek the alliance of Alfonso, he refused to do so until
+that alliance could no longer avail him. He himself seemed to think that
+the knell of his departing greatness was about to sound; and the most
+melancholy images were present to his fancy, even in sleep. "One night,"
+says an Arabic historian, "he heard in a dream his ruin predicted by one
+of his sons: he awoke, and the same verses were repeated:
+
+"'Once, Fortune carried thee in her car of triumph and thy name was by
+renown spread to the ends of the earth. Now, the same renown conveys
+only thy sighs. Days and nights pass away, and like them the enjoyments
+of the world; thy greatness has vanished like a dream!'"
+
+But if Mahomet was superstitious--if he felt that fate had doomed him,
+and that resistance would be useless--he resolved not to fall ignobly.
+His defence was indeed heroic; but it was vain, even though Alfonso sent
+him an aid of twenty thousand men: his cities fell one by one; Seville
+was constrained to capitulate: he and his family were thrown into prison
+until a ship was prepared to convey them into Africa, whither their
+perfidious ally had retired some weeks before. His conduct in this
+melancholy reverse of fortune is represented as truly great. Not a sigh
+escaped him, except for the innocent companions of his misfortune,
+especially for his son, Al Raxid, whose virtues and talents deserved a
+better destiny. Surrounded by the best beloved of his wives, by his
+daughters, and his four surviving sons, he endeavored to console them as
+they wept on seeing his royal hands oppressed with fetters, and still
+more when the ship conveyed all from the shores of Spain. "My children
+and friends," said the suffering monarch, "let us learn to support our
+lot with resignation! In this state of being our enjoyments are but lent
+us, to be resumed when heaven sees fit. Joy and sorrow, pleasure and
+pain, closely follow each other; but the noble heart is above the
+inconstancy of fortune!"
+
+The royal party disembarked at Ceuta, and were conveyed to Agmat, to be
+confined in a fortress. We are told that on their journey a
+compassionate poet presented the fallen King with a copy of verses
+deploring his misfortunes, and that he rewarded the poet with thirty-six
+pieces of gold--the only money he had left, from his once exhaustless
+riches. He had little apprehension of what was to follow--that Yussef
+would leave him without support; that his future life was to be passed
+in penury; nay, that his daughters would be compelled to earn his
+subsistence and their own by the labor of their hands. Yet even in that
+indigent condition, says Aben Lebuna, and through the sadness which
+covered their countenances, there was something about them which
+revealed their high origin. The unfortunate monarch outlived the loss of
+his crown and liberty about four years.
+
+After the fall of Mahomet, the general of Yussef had little difficulty
+in subduing the princes of Andalusia. Valencia next received the African
+yoke. The King of Saragossa was more fortunate. He sent ambassadors to
+Yussef, bearing rich presents, and proposing an alliance with a common
+league against the Christians. "My dominions," said Abu-Giafar, "are the
+only barrier between thee and the Christian princes. Hitherto my
+predecessors and myself have withstood all their efforts; with thy
+succor I shall fear them still less." Yussef accepted the proposal; a
+treaty of alliance was made; and the army of Abu-Giafar was reinforced
+by a considerable body of Amoravides, A.H. 486, with whom he repelled an
+invasion of Sancho, King of Aragon. A third division of the Africans,
+which marched to destroy the sovereignty of Algarve and Badajoz, was no
+less successful. Badajoz capitulated; but, in violation of the treaty,
+the dethroned Omar, with two of his sons, was surrounded and
+assassinated by a body of cavalry, as he was unsuspiciously journeying
+from the scene of his past prosperity in search of another asylum. A
+third son was placed in close confinement.
+
+Thus ended the petty kingdoms of Andalusia, after a stormy existence of
+about sixty years.
+
+For some years after the usurpation of Yussef, peace appears to have
+existed in Spain between the Mahometans and the Christians. Fearing a
+new irruption of Africans, Alfonso contented himself with fortifying
+Toledo; and Yussef felt little inclination to renew the war with one
+whose prowess he had so fatally experienced. But Christian Spain was, at
+one moment, near the brink of ruin. The passion for the crusades was no
+less ardently felt by the Spaniards than by other nations of Europe;
+thousands of the best warriors were preparing to depart for the Holy
+Land, as if there were more merit in contending with the infidels, in a
+remote region, for a barren sepulchre, than at home for the dearest
+interests of man--for honor, patriotism, and religion. Fortunately for
+Spain, Pope Pascal II, in answer to the representations of Alfonso,
+declared that the proper post of every Spaniard was at home, and there
+were his true enemies. Soon afterward Yussef returned to Morocco, where
+he died on the 3d day of the moon Muharram, A.H. 500, after living one
+hundred Arabian or about ninety-seven Christian years.
+
+In A.H. 514 the empire of the Almoravides was tottering to its fall. It
+had never been agreeable to the Mahometans of Spain, whose manners, from
+their intercourse with a civilized people, were comparatively refined.
+The sheiks of Lamtuna were so many insupportable tyrants; the Jews, the
+universal agents for the collection of the revenues, were here, as in
+Poland, the most pitiless extortioners; every savage from the desert
+looked with contempt on the milder inhabitant of the Peninsula. The
+domination of these strangers was indeed so odious that, except for the
+divisions between Alfonso and his ambitious queen Donna Urraca, who was
+sovereign in her own right, all Andalusia might speedily have been
+subjected to Christian rule. Alfonso, the King of Aragon, fell at the
+siege of Fraga about A.D. 1109, but the Almoravides met an equally
+valiant foe in his son and successor, Alfonso Raymond, King of Leon and
+Castile.
+
+After a period of about forty years, during which the Christians were
+steadily increasing their dominions, Coria and Mora and other Mahometan
+strongholds were acquired by Alfonso, now styled the "Emperor"; and
+almost every contest between the two natural enemies had turned to the
+advantage of the Christians. So long, indeed, as the walis were eager
+only to preserve or to extend their authority, independent of each other
+and of every superior, this success need not surprise us--we may rather
+be surprised that the Mahometans were allowed to retain any footing in
+the Peninsula. Probably they would at this time have been driven from it
+but for the seasonable arrival of the victorious Almohades. Both
+Christians and Africans now contended for the superiority. While the
+troops of Alfonso reduced Baeza, and, with a Mahometan ally, even
+Cordova, Malaga, and Seville acknowledged Abu Amram; Calatrava and
+Almeria next fell to the Christian Emperor, about the same time that
+Lisbon and the neighboring towns received Don Enrique, the new sovereign
+of Portugal. Most of these conquests, however, were subsequently
+recovered by the Almohades. Being reinforced by a new army from Africa,
+the latter pursued their successes with greater vigor. They reduced
+Cordova, which was held by an ally of Alfonso; defeated, and forever
+paralyzed, the expiring efforts of the Almoravides; and proclaimed their
+Emperor Abdelmumen as sovereign of all Mahometan Spain.
+
+Notwithstanding the destructive wars which had prevailed for nearly a
+century, neither Moors nor Christians had acquired much advantage by
+them. From the reduction of Saragossa to the present time, the victory,
+indeed, had generally declared for the Christians; but their conquests,
+with the exception of Lisbon and a few fortresses in Central Spain, were
+lost almost as soon as gained; and the same fate attended the equally
+transient successes of the Mahometans. The reasons why the former did
+not permanently extend their territories, were their internal
+dissensions; while Leon was at war with Castile, or Castile with Leon,
+or either with Aragon, we need not wonder that the united Almoravides,
+or their successors the Almohades, should sometimes triumph; but those
+triumphs were sure to be followed by reverses whenever not all, but any
+one, of the Christian states was at liberty to assail its natural enemy.
+The Christians, when at peace among themselves, were always too many for
+their Mahometan neighbors, even when the latter were aided by the whole
+power of Western Africa.
+
+In A.H. 572 (about A.D. 1179) the King of Castile reduced Caenza, and
+the Moors were defeated before Toledo. The following year the Portuguese
+were no less successful before Abrantes, which the Africans had
+besieged. These disasters roused the wrath of Yussef abu Yagur (son and
+successor of Abdulmumen who died A.H. 558 = A.D. 1165); but as an
+obscure rebellion required his presence at that time in Mauritania, he
+did not land in Spain until A.H. 580. He marched without delay against
+Santarem, which his soldiers had vainly besieged some years before.
+Wishing to divide the Portuguese force, he one night sent an order to
+his son Cid Abu Ishac, who lay encamped near him, to march with the
+Andalusian cavalry on Lisbon. The officer who carried the order instead
+of Lisbon named Seville; the whole Moslem army were sure that some
+disaster was impending, and that the siege was to be raised; before
+morning the camp was deserted, the guard alone of Yussef remaining.
+While he despatched orders to recall the alarmed fugitives, the
+Christians, who were soon aware of the retreat, issued from the walls,
+surrounded and massacred the guard. Yussef defended himself like a hero:
+six of the advancing assailants he laid low, before the same fate was
+inflicted on himself. The merciless carnage of the Christians spared not
+even his female attendants. At this moment two companies of cavalry
+arrived, and, finding their monarch dying, furiously charged the
+Christians, whom they soon put to flight. In a few hours the whole army
+returned, and, inspired with the same hope of vengeance, they stormed
+and took the place, and put every living creature to the sword.
+
+Yacub ben Yussef, from his victories afterward named Almansor, who was
+then in Spain, was immediately declared successor to his father. For
+some years he was not personally opposed to the Christians, though his
+walis carried on a desultory indecisive war; he was long detained in
+Africa, first in quelling some domestic commotions, and afterward by
+severe illness. He was scarcely recovered, when the intelligence that
+the Christians were making insulting irruptions to the very outworks of
+Algeziras made him resolve on punishing their audacity. His preparations
+were of the most formidable description. In A.H. 591 he landed in
+Andalusia, and proceeded toward Valencia, where the Christian army then
+lay. There Alfonso VIII, King of Castile, was awaiting the expected
+reinforcements from his allies, the kings of Leon and Navarre. Both
+armies pitched their tents on the plains of Alarcon. The following day
+the Christians commenced the attack, and with so much impetuosity that
+the centre was soon broken. But an Andalusian chief conducted a strong
+body of his men against Alfonso, who with the reserve occupied the hill
+above the plain. While the struggle was in all its fury, Yacub and his
+division took the Christians in flank. The result was fatal to the
+Castilian army, which, discouraged at what it considered a new enemy,
+gave way in every direction. Alfonso, preferring an honorable death to
+the shame of defeat, prepared to plunge into the heart of the Mahometan
+squadrons, when his nobles surrounded him and forced him from the field.
+His loss must have been immense, amounting probably to twenty thousand
+men. With a generosity very rare in a Mahometan, and still more in an
+African, Yacub restored his prisoners to liberty--an action for which,
+we are informed, he received few thanks from his followers. Alfonso
+retreated to Toledo just as the King of Leon arrived with the promised
+reinforcement.
+
+After this signal victory Yacub rapidly reduced Calatrava, Guadalaxara,
+Madrid and Esalona, Salamanca, etc. Toledo, too, he invested, but in
+vain. He returned to Africa, caused his son Mahomet to be declared _wali
+alhadi_, and died, the 22d day of the moon Regeb, A.H. 595.[34] He left
+behind him the character of an able, a valiant, a liberal, a just, and
+even magnanimous prince--of one who labored more for the real welfare of
+his people than any other potentate of his age. He was, beyond doubt,
+the greatest and best of the Almohades.
+
+[Footnote 34: May 19, 1199.]
+
+The character of Mahomet Abu Abdallah, surnamed Alnassir, was very
+different from that of his great father. Absorbed in effeminate
+pleasures, he paid little attention to the internal administration of
+his empire or to the welfare of his people. Yet he was not insensible to
+martial fame; and he accordingly showed no indisposition to forsake his
+harem for the field. After quelling two inconsiderable rebellions, he
+prepared to punish the audacity of Alfonso of Castile, who made
+destructive inroads into Andalusia. Much as the world had been astounded
+at the preparations of his grandfather Yussef, they were not surpassed
+by his own, if, as we are credibly informed, one alone of the five
+divisions of his army amounted to one hundred and sixty thousand men. It
+is certain that a year was required for the assembling of this vast
+armament, that two months were necessary to convey it across the
+straits, and that all Christian Europe was filled with alarm at its
+disembarkation. Innocent III proclaimed a crusade to Spain; and Rodrigo
+of Toledo, the celebrated historian, accompanied by several prelates,
+went from one court to another, to rouse the Christian princes. While
+the kings of Aragon and Navarre[35] promised to unite their forces with
+their brother of Castile to repel the common danger, great numbers of
+volunteers from Portugal[36] and Southern France hastened to the general
+rendezvous at Toledo, the Pope ordered fasting, prayers, and processions
+to be made, to propitiate the favor of heaven, and to avert from
+Christendom the greatest danger that had threatened it since the days of
+the emir Abderahman.
+
+[Footnote 35: Sancho, King of Navarre, is justly accused of backwardness
+at least in joining the Christian alliance. He even sought that of Yacub
+and Mahomet, on condition that his own states should be spared, or
+perhaps amplified at the expense of his neighbors. If the Arabian
+writers are correct, he privately waited on Mahomet in Seville; but the
+result of the interview is unknown.]
+
+[Footnote 36: The King of Portugal was not present in this campaign,
+confidently as the contrary has been asserted by most historians.--_La
+Clede: Histoire Generale de Portugal_, ii.]
+
+Mahomet opened the campaign of A.H. 608 by the siege of Salvatierra, a
+strong but not important fortress of Estremadura, defended by the
+knights of Calatrava. That he should waste his forces on objects so
+incommensurate with their extent proves how little he was qualified to
+wield them. The place stood out for several months, and did not
+surrender until the Emperor had sustained a heavy loss, nor until the
+season was too far advanced to permit any advantage to be derived from
+this partial success. By suspending the execution of his great design
+until the following season, he allowed Alfonso time to prepare for the
+contest. The following June, the kings of Leon and Castile having
+assembled at Toledo, and been joined by a considerable number of foreign
+volunteers, the Christian army advanced toward the south. That of the
+infidels lay in the neighborhood of Baeza, and extended to the Sierra
+Morena.
+
+On July 12th, A.H. 608, the crusaders reached the mountainous chain
+which divides New Castile from Andalusia. They found not only the
+passes, but the summits of the mountains, occupied by the Almohades. To
+force a passage was impossible; and they even deliberated on retreating,
+so as to draw out, if possible, the enemy from positions so formidable,
+when a shepherd entered the camp of Alfonso and proposed to conduct the
+Christian army, by a path unknown to both armies, to the summit of this
+elevated chain--by a path, too, which would be invisible to the enemy's
+outposts. A few companies having accompanied the man and found him
+equally faithful and well informed, the whole army silently ascended and
+intrenched themselves on the summit, the level of which was extensive
+enough to contain them all. Below appeared the wide-spread tents of the
+Moslems, whose surprise was great on perceiving the heights thus
+occupied by the crusaders. For two days the latter, whose fatigues had
+been harassing, kept their position; but on the third day they descended
+into the plains of Tolosa, which were about to be immortalized by their
+valor. Their right wing was led by the King of Navarre, their left by
+the King of Aragon, while Alfonso took his station in the centre.
+Mahomet had drawn up his army in a similar manner; but, with a strong
+body of reserve, he occupied an elevation well defended besides by vast
+iron chains, which surrounded his impenetrable guard.[37] In one hand he
+held a useless scimitar, in the other the _Koran_. The attack was made
+by the Christian centre against that of the Mahometans; and immediately
+the two wings moved against those of the enemy. The African centre,
+which consisted of the one hundred and sixty thousand volunteers, made a
+determined stand; and though it was broken, it soon rallied, on being
+reinforced from the reserve. At one time, indeed, the superiority of
+numbers was so great on the part of the Moslems that the troops of
+Alfonso appeared about to give way. At this moment that King, addressing
+the archbishop Rodrigo, who was with him, said, "Let us die here,
+prelate!" and he prepared to rush amid the dense ranks of the enemy. The
+prelate, however, and a Castilian general, retained him by the bridle of
+his horse, representing the rashness of his purpose, and advising him to
+reinforce his weak points by new succors. Accordingly those succors,
+among which were the vassals with the pennon of the archbishop, advanced
+to support the sinking Castilians. This manoeuvre decided the fortune of
+the day.[38] The Mahometan centre, after a sharp conflict, was again
+broken, this time irretrievably, and a way opened to the intrenchments
+of the Emperor. Seeing the success of their allies, the two wings
+charged their opponents with double fury and triumphed likewise. But the
+Africans[39] rallied round Mahomet, and presented a mass deep and
+formidable to the conquerors. Rodrigo, with his brother prelate, the
+Archbishop of Narbonne, now incited the Christians to overcome this last
+obstacle: both intrepidly accompanied the van of the centre. The
+struggle was terrific, but short; myriads of the barbarians fell; the
+boundary was first broken down by the King of Navarre; the Castilians
+and Aragonese followed; all opponents were massacred or fled; and the
+victors began to ascend the eminence on which Mahomet still remained.
+Seeing the total destruction or flight of his vast host, the Emperor
+sorrowfully exclaimed, "Allah alone is just and powerful; the devil is
+false and wicked!" Scarcely had he uttered the truism, when an Alarab
+approached, leading by the hand a strong but nimble mule. "Prince of the
+faithful!" said the African, "how long wilt thou remain here? Dost thou
+not perceive that thy Moslems flee? The will of Allah be done! Mount
+this mule, which is fleeter than the bird of heaven, or even the arrow
+which strikes it; never yet did she fail her rider; away! for on thy
+safety depends that of us all!" Mahomet mounted the beast, while the
+Alarab ascended the Emperor's horse, and both soon outstripped not only
+the pursuers but the fugitives. The carnage of the latter was dreadful
+until darkness put an end to it. The victors now occupied the tents of
+the Mahometans, while the two martial prelates sounded the _Te Deum_ for
+the most splendid success which had shone on the banners of the
+Christians since the time of Charles Martel. The loss of the Africans,
+even according to the Arabian writers, who admit that the centre was
+wholly destroyed, could not fall short of one hundred and sixty thousand
+men.[40]
+
+[Footnote 37: These chains are not mentioned by the Arabs; but what can
+be expected from their brevity?]
+
+[Footnote 38: The standard-bearer of Rodrigo, don Domingo Pasquel, canon
+of Toledo, showed that he was well fitted to serve the church militant;
+he twice carried his banner through the heart of the Mahometan forces.]
+
+[Footnote 39: The Arabian account says that the Andalusians were the
+first to flee.]
+
+[Footnote 40: Of this great battle we have an account by four
+eye-witnesses: 1, By King Alfonso, in a letter to the Pope; 2, by the
+historian Rodrigo of Toledo; 3, by Arnaud, Archbishop of Narbonne; 4, by
+the author of the _Annals of Toledo_.
+
+The reduction of several towns, from Tolosa to Baeza, immediately
+followed this glorious victory--a victory in which Don Alfonso nobly
+redeemed his failure in the field of Zalaca--and which, in its immediate
+consequences, involved the ruin of the Mahometan empire in Spain. After
+an unsuccessful attempt on Ubeda, as the hot season was raging, the
+allies returned to Toledo, satisfied that the power of Mahomet was
+forever broken. That Emperor, indeed, did not long survive his disaster.
+Having precipitately fled to Morocco, he abandoned himself to licentious
+pleasures, left the cares of government to his son, or rather his
+ministers, and died on the 10th day of the moon Shaffan, A.H. 610 (A.D.
+1214), not without suspicion of poison.
+
+By recent writers of Spain the number of slain on the part of the
+Africans was two hundred thousand; on that of the Christians,
+twenty-five individuals only. Of course the whole campaign is
+represented as miraculous; and, indeed, actual miracles are
+recorded--which we have neither space nor inclination to notice.]
+
+
+
+
+THE FIRST CRUSADE
+
+A.D. 1096-1099
+
+SIR GEORGE W. COX
+
+
+(Religious feeling in the eleventh century rose to a great pitch of
+enthusiasm, and led men of various nations, with still more various
+motives and aims in worldly affairs, to pursue one common end with their
+whole heart. Between the years 1096 and 1270 these attempts of Christian
+nations to rescue the Holy Land from the "Infidels," as the Mahometans
+were called, added a wholly new character of human enterprise to the
+world's history.
+
+At the time--in the middle of the eleventh century--when the Seljuks, a
+Turkish tribe of Western Asia, had overrun Syria and Asia Minor,
+throwing the East into a state of anarchy, Europe was beginning to adopt
+modes of settled order. Through the Byzantine empire great numbers of
+pilgrims for centuries had passed to visit Palestine. With the improved
+condition of the western nations, which led to an extension of commerce
+in the East, the pilgrimage to that part of the world acquired a new
+importance. As early as 1064 a caravan of seven thousand pilgrims made
+their way to the neighborhood of Jerusalem, where they narrowly escaped
+destruction by the Bedouins, their rescue being effected by a Saracen
+emir.
+
+In 1070 the Seljuks took possession of Jerusalem, inflicting hardships
+on the pilgrims by intolerable exactions, insult, and plunder. Besides
+outraging Christian sentiment, they ruined the commerce of the western
+nations. Throughout Europe arose the cry for vengeance, and men's minds
+were fully prepared for an attempt to conquer Palestine when their
+leaders began to preach the sacred duty of delivering the Holy Sepulchre
+from the hands of the infidels.
+
+At the Council of Clermont, in 1094, Pope Urban II depicted the miseries
+of Christians in Palestine, and, with a power of eloquence unsurpassed
+in his day, called upon those who heard him to wipe off from the face of
+the earth the impurities which caused them, and to lift their oppressed
+fellow-Christians from the depths into which they had been trampled. He
+urged them to take up arms in the service of the Cross, at the same time
+setting before them the temporal, no less than the spiritual, advantages
+that would accrue from the conquest of a land "flowing with milk and
+honey," and which, he said, should be divided among them. He likewise
+offered them full pardon for all their sins.
+
+The enthusiasm of his hearers burst all bounds, and with one voice they
+cried: "God wills it! God wills it!" To all parts of Europe the fervor
+spread. The Pope was powerfully aided by an earnest and eloquent--if
+ignorant--monk, Peter the Hermit, of Amiens, who declared that he would
+rouse the martial spirit of Europe in the cause, and he himself was the
+first--with whatsoever of misguided zeal--to lead the way to the Holy
+Land.
+
+The crusades are so called from the simple circumstance that the badge
+chosen for the movement was the cross, which Pope Urban bade the
+Christian warriors wear on their breasts or on their shoulders, as the
+sign of Him who died for the salvation of their souls, and as the pledge
+of a vow that could never be recalled.)
+
+
+In the enterprise to which Latin Christendom stood committed, the
+several nations or countries of Europe took equal parts; or, rather, no
+_nation_, as such, took any part in it at all; and in this fact we have
+the explanation of that want of coherent action, and even decent or
+average generalship, which is commonly seen in national undertakings.
+For the crusade there was no attempt at a commissariat, no care for a
+base of supplies; and the crusading hosts were a collection of
+individual adventurers who either went without making any provisions for
+their journey or provided for their own needs and those of their
+followers from their own resources. The number of these adventurers was
+naturally determined by the political conditions of the country from
+which they came. In Italy the struggle between the pope and the antipope
+went far toward chilling enthusiasm; and the recruits for the crusading
+army came chiefly from the Normans who had followed Robert Guiscard to
+the sunny southern lands. The Spaniards were busied with a crusade
+nearer home, and were already pushing back to the south the Mahometan
+dominion which had once threatened to pass the barriers of the Pyrenees
+and carry the Crescent to the shores of the Baltic Sea. About ten years
+before the council of Clermont the Moslem dynasty of Toledo had been
+expelled by Alfonso, King of Galicia: the kingdom of Cordova had fallen
+twenty years earlier (1065), and while Peter the Hermit was hurrying
+hither and thither through the countries of Northern Europe, the
+Christians of Spain were winning victories in Murcia, and the land was
+ringing with the exploits of the dauntless Cid, Ruy Diaz de Bivar. By
+the Germans the summons to the rescue of the Holy Sepulchre was received
+with comparative coldness; the partisans of emperors, who had been
+humbled to the dust by the predecessors of Urban, if not by himself,
+were not vehemently eager to obey it. The bishops of Salzburg, Passau,
+and Strasburg, the aged duke Guelph of Bavaria, had undertaken the
+toilsome and perilous journey: not one of them saw their homes again,
+and their death in the distant East was not regarded by their countrymen
+as an encouragement to follow their example. In England the English were
+too much weighed down by the miseries of the Conquest, the Normans too
+much occupied in strengthening their position, and the King, William the
+Red, more ready to take advantage of the needs of his brother Robert
+than to incur any risks of his own. The great movement came from the
+lands extending from the Scheldt to the Pyrenees. Franks and Normans
+alike made ready with impetuous haste for the great adventure; and tens
+of thousands, who could not wait for the formation of something like a
+regular army, hurried away, under leaders as frantic as themselves, to
+their inevitable doom.
+
+Little more than half the time allowed for the gathering of the
+crusaders had passed away, when a crowd of some sixty thousand men and
+women, neither caring nor thinking about the means by which their ends
+could be attained, insisted that the hermit Peter should lead them at
+once to the Holy City. Mere charity may justify the belief that some
+even among these may have been folk of decent lives moved by the earnest
+conviction that their going to Jerusalem would do some good; that the
+vast majority looked upon their vow as a license for the commission of
+any sin, there can be no moral doubt; that they exhibited not a single
+quality needed for the successful prosecution of their enterprise is
+absolutely certain. With a foolhardiness equal to his ignorance Peter
+undertook the task, in which he was aided by Walter the Penniless, a man
+with some pretensions to the soldier-like character. But the utter
+disorder of this motley host made it impossible for them to journey long
+together. At Cologne they parted company; and fifteen thousand under the
+penniless Walter made their way to the frontiers of Hungary, while Peter
+led onward a host which swelled gradually on the march to about forty
+thousand.
+
+Another army or horde of perhaps twenty thousand marched under the
+guidance of Emico, Count of Leiningen, a third under that of the monk
+Gottschalk, a man not notorious for the purity or disinterestedness of
+his motives. Behind these came a rabble, it is said, of two hundred
+thousand men, women, and children, preceded by a goose and a goat, or,
+as some have supposed, by banners on which, as symbols of the mysterious
+faith of Gnostics and Paulicians, the likeness of these animals was
+painted. In this vile horde no pretence was kept up of order or of
+decency. Sinning freely, it would seem, that grace might abound, they
+plundered and harried the lands through which they marched, while three
+thousand horsemen, headed by some counts and gentlemen, were not too
+dignified to act as their attendants and to share their spoil.
+
+But if they had no scruple in robbing Christians, their delight was to
+prove the reality of their mission as soldiers of the cross by
+plundering, torturing, and slaying Jews. The crusade against the Turk
+was interpreted as a crusade directed not less explicitly against the
+descendants of those who had crucified the Redeemer. The streets of
+Verdun and Treves and of the great cities on the Rhine ran red with the
+blood of their victims; and if some saved their lives by pretended
+conversions, many more cheated their persecutors by throwing their
+property and their persons either into the rivers or into the consuming
+fires.
+
+A space of six hundred miles lay between the Austrian frontier and
+Constantinople; and across the dreary waste the followers of Walter the
+Penniless struggled on, destitute of money, and rousing the hostility of
+the inhabitants whom they robbed and ill-used. In Bulgaria their
+misdeeds provoked reprisals which threatened their destruction; and none
+perhaps would have reached Constantinople if the imperial commander at
+Naissos had not rescued them from their enemies, supplied them with
+food, and guarded them through the remainder of their journey. These
+succors involved some costs; and the costs were paid by the sale of
+unarmed men among the pilgrims, and especially of the women and
+children, who were seized to provide the necessary funds. Of those who
+formed the train of the hermit Peter, seven thousand only, it is said,
+reached Constantinople.
+
+Of such a rabble rout the emperor Alexius[41] needed not to be afraid.
+He had already seen and encountered far larger armies of Normans, Turks,
+and Romans; and he now extended to this vanguard of the hosts of Latin
+Christendom a hospitality which was almost immediately abused. They had
+refused to comply with his request that they should quietly await the
+arrival of their fellow-crusaders; and consulting the safety of his
+people not less than his own, he induced them to cross the Bosporus, and
+pitch their camp on Asiatic soil, the land which they had come to wrest
+from the unbelievers.
+
+[Footnote 41: Head of the Byzantine empire.]
+
+Alexius wished simply to be rid of their presence: they had to deal with
+an enemy still more crafty and formidable in the Seljukian sultan David.
+The vagrants whom Peter and Walter had brought thus far on the road to
+Jerusalem were scattered about the land in search of food; and it was no
+hard task for David to cheat the main body with the false tidings that
+their companions had carried the walls of Nice, and were revelling in
+the pleasures and spoils of his capital. The doomed horde rushed into
+the plain which fronts the city; and a vast heap of bones alone remained
+to tell the story of the great catastrophe, when the forces which might
+more legitimately claim the name of an army passed the spot where the
+Seljukian had entrapped and crushed his victims. In this wild expedition
+not less, it is said, than three hundred thousand human beings had
+already paid the penalty of their lives.
+
+Still the First Crusade was destined to accomplish more than any of the
+seven or eight crusades which followed it; and this measure of success
+it achieved probably because none of the great European sovereigns took
+part in it. The task of setting up a Latin kingdom in Palestine was to
+be achieved by princes of the second order.
+
+Of these the foremost and the most deservedly illustrious was Godfrey,
+of Bouillon in the Ardennes, a kinsman of the counts of Boulogne, and
+Duke of Lotharingen (Lorraine). In the service of the emperor Henry IV,
+the enemy or the victim of Hildebrand, he had been the first to mount
+the walls of Rome and cleave his way into the city; he might now hope
+that his crusading vow would be accepted as an atonement for his
+sacrilege. Speaking the Frank and Teutonic dialects with equal ease, he
+exercised by his bravery, his wisdom, and the uprightness of his life an
+influence which brought to his standard, it is said, not less than
+eighty thousand infantry and ten thousand horsemen, together with his
+brothers Baldwin and Eustace, Count of Boulogne.
+
+Among the most conspicuous of Godfrey's colleagues was Hugh, Count of
+Vermandois. With him may be placed the Norman duke Robert, whose
+carelessness had lost him the crown of England, and who had now pawned
+his duchy for a pittance scarcely less paltry than that for which Esau
+bartered away his birthright. The number of the great chiefs who led the
+pilgrims from Northern Europe is completed with the names of Robert,
+Count of Flanders, and of Stephen, Count of Chartres, Troyes, and Blois.
+
+Foremost, by virtue of his title and office, among the leaders of the
+southern bands was the papal legate Adhemar (Aymer) Bishop of Puy--a
+leader rather as guiding the counsels of the army than as gathering
+soldiers under his banner.
+
+A hundred thousand horse and foot attested, we are told, the greatness,
+the wealth, and the zeal of Raymond, Count of Toulouse, lord of Auvergne
+and Languedoc, who had grown old in warfare.
+
+Less tinged with the fanatical enthusiasm of his comrades, and certainly
+more cool and deliberate in his ambition, Bohemond, son of Robert
+Guiscard, looked to the crusade as a means by which he might regain the
+vast regions extending from the Dalmatian coast to the northern shores
+of the Aegean. Nay, if we are to believe William of Malmesbury, he urged
+Urban to set forward the enterprise for the very purpose, partly, of
+thus recovering what he was pleased to regard as his inheritance, and in
+part of enabling the Pontiff to suppress all opposition in Rome.
+Guiscard had left his Apulian domains to a younger son, and Bohemond was
+resolved, it would seem, to add to his principality of Tarentum a
+kingdom which would make him a formidable rival of the Eastern Emperor.
+
+Far above Bohemond rises his cousin Tancred, the son of the marquis Odo,
+surnamed the Good, and of Emma, the sister of Robert Guiscard.
+
+In Tancred was seen the embodiment of those peculiar sentiments and
+modes of thought which gave birth to the crusades, and to which the
+crusades in their turn imparted marvellous strength and splendor.
+
+The miserable remnant of three thousand men who escaped from the field
+of blood before the city of the Seljukian sultan found a refuge in
+Byzantine territory about the time when the better appointed armies of
+the crusaders were setting off on their eastward journey. The most
+disciplined of these troops set out with a vast following from the banks
+of the Meuse and the Moselle under Godfrey of Bouillon, who led them
+safely and without opposition to the Hungarian border. Here the armies
+of Hungary barred the way against the advance of a host at whose hands
+they dreaded a repetition of the havoc wrought by the lawless bands of
+Peter the Hermit and his self-chosen colleagues. Three weeks passed away
+in vain attempts to get over the difficulty. The Hungarian King demanded
+as a hostage Baldwin, the brother of the general: the demand was
+refused, and Godfrey put him to shame by surrendering himself. He asked
+only for a free passage and a free market; but although these were
+granted, it was not in his power to prevent some disorder and some
+depredations as his army or horde passed through the country. The
+mischief might have been much worse, had not the Hungarian cavalry,
+acting professedly as a friendly escort, but really as cautious warders,
+kept close to the crusading hosts.
+
+At length they reached the gates of Philippopolis, and here Godfrey
+learned that Hugh of Vermandois, whose coming had been announced to the
+Greek emperor Alexius by four-and-twenty knights in golden armor, and
+who styled himself the brother of the king of kings and lord of all the
+Frankish hosts, was a prisoner within the walls of Constantinople. With
+Robert of Normandy and Robert of Flanders, with Stephen of Chartres and
+some lesser chiefs, Hugh had chosen to make his way through Italy; and
+the charms of that voluptuous land had a greater effect, it seems, in
+breaking up and corrupting their forces than the delights of Capua had
+in weakening the soldiers of Hannibal.
+
+With little regard to order, the chiefs determined to cross the sea as
+best they might. Hugh embarked at Bari; and if we may believe Anna
+Comnena, the historian and the worshipper of her father Alexius, his
+fleet was broken by a tempest which shattered his own ship on the coast
+between Palos and Dyrrhachium (Durazzo), of which John Comnenus, the
+nephew of the Emperor, was at this time the governor. The Frank chief
+was here detained until the good pleasure of Alexius should be known.
+That wary and cunning prince saw at once how much might be made of his
+prisoner, who was by his orders conducted with careful respect and
+ceremony to the capital. Kept here really as a hostage, but welcomed to
+outward seeming as a friend, Hugh was so completely won by the charm of
+manner which Alexius well knew how and when to put on, that, paying him
+homage and declaring himself his man, he promised to do what he could to
+induce others to follow his example.
+
+From Philippopolis Godfrey sent ambassadors to Alexius, demanding the
+immediate surrender of Hugh. The request was refused, and Godfrey
+resumed his march, treating the land through which he passed as an
+enemy's country, until by way of Adrianople he at length appeared before
+the walls of the capital at Christmastide, 1096. The fears of Alexius
+were aroused by the sight of a host so vast and so formidable: they
+quickened into terror as he thought of the armies which were still on
+their way under the command of Bohemond and Tancred. Of Godfrey, beyond
+the fact of his mission as a crusader, he knew little or nothing; but in
+Bohemond he saw one who claimed as his inheritance no small portion of
+his empire. This gathering of myriads, whom a false step on his part
+might convert into open enemies, was the result of his own entreaties
+urged through his envoys before Urban II in the Council of Piacenza; and
+his mind was divided between a feverish anxiety to hurry them on to
+their destination and so to rid himself of their hateful presence, and
+the desire to retain a hold not only on the crusading chiefs but on any
+conquests which they might make in Syria.
+
+Hugh was sent back to Godfrey's camp; but the quarrel was patched up,
+rather than ended. It was easier to rouse suspicion and jealousy than to
+restore friendship. But it was of the first importance for Alexius that
+he should secure the homage of the princes already gathered round his
+capital before the arrival of his ancient enemy Bohemond. In this he
+succeeded, and a compact was made by which Alexius pledged them his word
+that he would supply them with food and aid them in their eastward
+march, and would protect all pilgrims passing through his dominions. On
+the other hand the crusading chiefs, as already subjects of other
+sovereigns, gave their fealty to the Emperor as their liege lord only
+for the time during which they might remain within his borders, and
+undertook to restore to him such of their conquests as had been recently
+wrested from the empire.
+
+The policy and the bribes of Alexius had overcome the opposition of
+Bohemond. He was to experience a stouter resistance from Raymond of
+Toulouse, who, though he had been the first to enlist, was the last to
+set out on his crusade.
+
+The Count of Toulouse scarcely regarded himself as the vassal even of
+the French King. He was ready, he said, to be the friend of Alexius on
+equal terms; but he would not declare himself to be his man. On this
+point he was immovable, although Bohemond tried the effect of a threat
+(which was never forgiven), that if the quarrel came to blows, he should
+be found on the side of the Emperor. But Alexius soon saw that in
+Raymond he had to deal with an enthusiast as sincere and persistent as
+Godfrey. He took his measures accordingly, winning the heart of the old
+warrior, although he failed to compel his obedience.
+
+While Alexius was busied in dealing with Godfrey and Raymond, Bohemond
+and Tancred, he was not less anxiously occupied with the task of sending
+across the Bosporus the swarms which might soon become an army of
+devouring locusts round his own capital. It was easier to give them a
+welcome than to get rid of them: and more than two months had passed
+since Christmas, when the followers of Godfrey found themselves on the
+soil of Asia.
+
+Godfrey's men had no sooner been landed on the eastern side of the
+Bosporus than all the vessels which had transported them were brought
+back to the western shore. With great astuteness, and at the cost of
+large gifts, Alexius in like manner freed the neighborhood of his
+capital from the invading multitudes. As fast as they came they were
+hurried across, and the Emperor breathed more freely when, on the Feast
+of Pentecost, not a single Latin pilgrim remained on the European shore.
+
+The danger of conflict had throughout been imminent; and the danger
+arose, not so much from the fact that the crusaders were armed men,
+marching through the country of professed allies, but from the thorough
+antagonism between Greeks and Latins in modes of thought and habits of
+life. Nor must we forget the vast gulf which separated the Eastern from
+the Western clergy. The clergy of the West despised their brethren of
+the East for their cowardly submission to the secular arm. These, in
+their turn, shrunk with horror from the sight of bishops, priests, and
+monks riding with blood-stained weapons over fields of battle, and
+exhibiting at other times an ignorance equal to their ferocity.
+
+The strength and valor of the crusaders were soon to be tested. They
+were now face to face with the Turks, on whose cowardice Urban II had
+enlarged with so much complacency before the Council of Clermont. The
+sultan David, or Kilidje Arslan, placed his family and treasures in his
+capital city of Nice and retreated with fifty thousand horsemen to the
+mountains, whence he swooped down from time to time on the outposts of
+the Christians. By these his city was formally invested; and for seven
+weeks it was assailed to little purpose by the old instruments of Roman
+warfare, while some of the besiegers shot their weapons from the hill on
+which were mouldering the bones of the fanatic followers of Peter. It
+was protected to the west by the Askanian lake, and so long as the Turks
+had command of this lake they felt themselves safe. But Alexius sent
+thither on sledges a large number of boats, and the city, subjected to a
+double blockade, submitted to the Emperor, who was in no way anxious to
+see the crusaders masters of the place. The crusaders were making ready
+for the last assault, when they saw the imperial banner floating on the
+walls. Their disappointment at the escape of the miscreants, or
+unbelievers, for so they delighted to speak of them, was vented in
+threats which seemed to bode a renewal of the old troubles; but Alexius,
+with gifts, which added force to his words, professed that his only
+desire now, as it had been, was to forward them safely on their journey.
+Nor had they to go many stages before they found themselves again
+confronted with their adversary.
+
+The conflict took place near the Phrygian Dorylaion, and seemed at first
+to portend dire defeat to the crusaders. More than once the issue of the
+day seemed to be turned by the indomitable personal bravery of the
+Norman Robert, of Tancred, and of Bohemond; and when even those seemed
+likely to be borne down, they received timely succors from Godfrey, and
+Hugh of Vermandois, from Bishop Adhemar of Puy and from Raymond, Count
+of Toulouse. Still the Turks held out, and it seemed likely that they
+would long hold out, when the appearance of the last division of
+Raymond's army filled them with the fear that a new host was upon them.
+
+The crusaders had won a considerable victory. Three thousand knights
+belonging to the enemy had been slain, and Kilidje Arslan was hurrying
+away to enlist the services of his kinsmen. Meanwhile the Latin hosts
+were sweeping onward. Hundreds died from the heat, and dogs or goats
+took the place of the baggage-horses which had perished. At length
+Tancred with his troop found himself before Tarsus, the birthplace and
+the home of that single-hearted apostle who long ago had preached a
+gospel strangely unlike the creed of the crusaders. Following rapidly
+behind him, Baldwin saw with keen jealousy the banner of the Italian
+chief floating on its towers, and insisted on taking the precedence.
+Tancred pleaded the choice of the people and his own promise to protect
+them; but the intrigues of Baldwin changed their humor, and the
+rejection of Tancred by the men of Tarsus was followed by an attempt at
+private war between Tancred and Baldwin, in which the troops of Tancred
+were overborne. So early was the first harvest of murderous discord
+reaped among the holy warriors of the Cross. It was ruin, however, to
+stay where they were; and the main army again began its march, to
+undergo once more the old monotony of hardship and peril.
+
+A very small force would have sufficed to disorganize and rout them as
+they clambered over the defiles of Mount Taurus; nor could Raymond,
+recovering from a terrible illness, or Godfrey, suffering from wounds
+inflicted by a bear, have done much to help them. But for the present
+their enemies were dismayed; and Baldwin, brother of Godfrey, hastened
+with eagerness to obey a summons which besought him to aid the Greek or
+Armenian tyrant of Edessa. As Alexius had done to his brother, so this
+chief welcomed Baldwin as his son; but Baldwin, having once entered into
+the city, cared nothing for the means which had brought him thither, and
+the death of his adoptive father was followed by the establishment at
+Edessa of a Latin principality which lasted for fifty-four, or, as some
+have thought, forty-seven years. Baldwin had anticipated the
+unconditional surrender of Samosata; but the Turkish governor had some
+of the Edessenes in his power, and he refused to give up the city except
+on the payment of ten thousand gold pieces. The Turk shortly afterward
+fell into Baldwin's hands, and was put to death.
+
+Meanwhile the main army of the crusaders was advancing toward the Syrian
+capital (Antioch), that ancient and luxurious city whose fame had gone
+over the whole Roman world for its magnificence, its unbounded wealth,
+its soft delights, and its unholy pleasures. The days of its greatest
+splendor had passed away. Its walls were partially in ruins; its
+buildings were in some parts crumbling away or had already fallen; but
+against assailants utterly ignorant and awkward in all that relates to
+the blockade of cities it was still a formidable position. Nor could
+they invest it until they had passed the iron bridge--so called from its
+iron-plated gates--of nine stone arches, which spanned the stream of the
+Ifrin at a distance of nine miles from the city. This bridge was carried
+by the impetuous charge of Robert of Normandy, aided by the more steady
+efforts of Godfrey; and in the language of an age which delighted in
+round numbers, a hundred thousand warriors hurried across to seize the
+splendid prize which now seemed almost within their grasp.
+
+But the city was in the hands of men who had been long accustomed to
+despise the Greeks, and who had not yet learned to respect the valor of
+the Latins. Preparing himself for a resolute defence, the Seljukian
+governor Baghasian had sent away as useless, if not mischievous, most of
+the Christians within the town; and the crusading chiefs had begun to
+discuss the prudence of postponing all operations till the spring, when
+Raymond of Toulouse with some other chiefs insisted that delay would
+imply fear, and that the imputation of cowardice would insure the
+paralysis of their enterprise. The city was therefore at once invested,
+so far as the forces of the crusaders could suffice to encircle it; and
+a siege began which in the eyes of the military historian must be
+absolutely without interest, and of which the issue was decided by
+paroxysms of fanatical vehemence on the one side, and by lack, not of
+bravery, but of generalship on the other. Of the eastern and northern
+walls the blockade was complete; of the west it was partial; and the
+failure to invest a portion of the western wall, with two out of the
+five gates of the city, left the movements of the Turks in this
+direction free.
+
+But the besiegers were in no hurry to begin the work of death. The
+wealth of the harvest and the vintage spread before them its
+irresistible temptations, and the herds feeding in the rich pastures
+seemed to promise an endless feast. The cattle, the corn, and the wine
+were alike wasted with besotted folly, while the Turks within the walls
+received tidings, it is said, of all that passed in the crusading camp
+from some Greek and Armenian Christians to whom they allowed free egress
+and ingress. Of this knowledge they availed themselves in planning the
+sallies by which they caused great distress to the besiegers, whose
+clumsy engines and devices seemed to produce no result beyond the waste
+of time, and who felt perhaps that they had done something when they
+blocked up the gate of the bridge with huge stones dug from the
+neighboring quarries.
+
+Three months passed away, and the crusaders found themselves not
+conquerors, but in desperate straits from famine. The winter rains had
+turned the land round their camp into a swamp, and lack of food left
+them more and more unable to resist the pestilential diseases which were
+rapidly thinning their numbers. A foraging expedition under Bohemond and
+Tancred filled the camp with food; it was again recklessly wasted. The
+second famine scared away Tatikios, the lieutenant of the Greek emperor
+Alexius; but the crusading chiefs were perhaps still more disgusted by
+the desertion of William of Melun, called "the Carpenter," from the
+sledgehammer blows which he dealt out in battle. Hunger obtained a
+victory even over the hermit Peter, who was stealing away with William
+of Melun, when he with his companion was caught by Tancred and brought
+back to the tent of Bohemond.
+
+For a moment the look of things was changed by the arrival of
+ambassadors from Egypt. To the Fatimite caliph of that country the
+progress of the crusading arms had thus far brought with it but little
+dissatisfaction. The humiliation of the Seljukian Turks could not fail
+to bring gain to himself, if the flood of Latin conquests could be
+checked and turned back in time. His generals besieged Jerusalem and
+Tyre; and when the Fatimite once more ruled in Palestine, his envoys
+hastened to the crusaders' camp to announce the deliverance of the Holy
+Land from its oppressors, to assure to all unarmed and peaceable
+pilgrims a month's unmolested sojourn in Jerusalem, and to promise them
+his aid during their march, on condition that they should acknowledge
+his supremacy within the limits of his Syrian empire.
+
+The arguments and threats of the Caliph were alike thrown away. The
+Latin chiefs disclaimed all interest in the feuds and quarrels of rival
+sultans and in the fortunes of Mahometan sects. God himself had destined
+Jerusalem for the Christians, and if any held it who were not
+Christians, these were usurpers whose resistance must be punished by
+their expulsion or their death. The envoys departed not encouraged by
+this answer, and still more perplexed by the appearance of plenty and by
+the magnificence of a camp in which they had expected to see a terrible
+spectacle of disorder and misery.
+
+The resolute persistence of the besiegers convinced Baghasian of the
+need of reinforcements. These were hastening to him from Caesarea,
+Aleppo, and other places, when they were cut off by Bohemond and
+Raymond, who sent a multitude of heads to the envoys of the Fatimite
+Caliph, and discharged many hundreds from their engines into the city of
+Antioch. The Turks had their opportunity for reprisals when the arrival
+of some Pisan and Genoese ships at the mouth of the Orontes drew off the
+greater part of the besieging army. The crusaders were returning with
+provisions and arms, when their enemies started upon them from an
+ambuscade. The battle was fierce; but the defeat of Raymond, which
+threatened dire disaster, was changed into victory on the arrival of
+Godfrey and the Norman Robert, whose exploits equalled or surpassed, if
+we are to believe the story, even those of Arthur, Lancelot, or
+Tristram. Hundreds, if not thousands, of Turks fell. Their bodies were
+buried by their comrades in the cemetery without the walls: the
+Christians dug them up, severed the heads from the trunks, and paraded
+the ghastly trophies on their pikes, not forgetting to send a goodly
+number to the Egyptian Caliph, by way of showing how his Seljukian
+friends or enemies had fared. The picture is disgusting; but if we shut
+our eyes to these loathsome details, the truth of the history is gone.
+We are dealing with the wars of savages, and it is right that we should
+know this.
+
+The next scene exhibits Godfrey and Bohemond in fierce quarrel about a
+splendid tent, which, being intended as a gift for the former, had been
+seized by an Armenian chief and sent to the latter. But there was now
+more serious business on hand. Rumor spoke of the near approach of a
+Persian army, and the besieged, under the plea of wishing to arrange
+terms of capitulation, obtained a truce which they sought probably only
+for the sake of gaining time. The days passed by, but no offers were
+made; and their disposition was shown by seizing a crusading knight in
+the groves near the city and tearing his body in pieces. The Latins
+returned with increased fury to the siege: but the defence, although
+more feeble, was still protracted, and Bohemond began to feel not only
+that fraud might succeed where force had failed, but that from fraud he
+might reap, not safety merely, but wealth and greatness. His plans were
+laid with a renegade Christian named Phirouz, high in the favor of the
+governor, with whom he had come into contact either during the truce or
+in some other way. By splendid promises he insured the zealous aid of
+his new ally, and then came forward in the council with the assurance
+that he could place the city in their hands, but that he could do this
+only on condition that he should rule in Antioch as Baldwin ruled in
+Edessa. His claim was angrily opposed by the Provencal Raymond; but this
+opposition was overruled, and it was resolved that the plan should be
+carried out at once.
+
+There was need for so doing. Rumors spread within the city that some
+attempt was to be made to betray the place to the besiegers, and hints
+or open accusations pointed out Phirouz as the traitor. Like other
+traitors, the renegade thought it best to anticipate the charge by
+urging that the guards of the towers should on the very next day be
+changed. His proposal was received as indubitable proof of his innocence
+and his faithfulness; but he had made up his mind that Antioch should
+fall that night, and that night by means of a rope ladder Bohemond with
+about sixty followers (the ropes broke before more could ascend) climbed
+up the wall. Seizing ten towers, of which all the guards were killed,
+they opened a gate, and the Christian host rushed in. The banner of
+Bohemond rose on one of the towers; the trumpets sounded for the onset,
+and a carnage began in which at first the assailants took no heed to
+distinguish between the Christian and the Turk. In the awful confusion
+of the moment some of the besieged made their way to the citadel, and
+there shut themselves in, ready to resist to the death. Of the rest few
+escaped; ten thousand, it is said, were massacred. Baghasian with some
+friends passed out beyond the besiegers' lines, but, fainting from loss
+of blood, he fell from his horse, and his companions hurried on. A
+Syrian Christian heard his groans, and striking off his head carried the
+prize to the camp of the conquerors. Phirouz lived to be a second time a
+renegade, and to close his career as a thief.
+
+The victory was for the crusaders a change from famine to abundance; and
+their feasting was accompanied by the wildest riot and the most filthy
+debauchery. But if heedless waste may have been one of the most venial
+of their sins, it was the greatest of their blunders. The reports which
+spoke of the approach of the Persians were not false. The Turks within
+the citadel suddenly found that they were rather besiegers than
+besieged, and that the Christians' were hemmed in by the myriads of
+Kerboga, Prince of Mosul, and the warriors of Kilidje Arslan. The old
+horrors of famine were now repeated, but in greater intensity; and the
+doom of the Latin host seemed now to be sealed.
+
+Stephen, Count of Chartres, had deserted his companions before the fall
+of the city; others now followed his example, and with him set out on
+their return to Europe. In Phrygia, Stephen encountered the emperor
+Alexius, who was marching to the aid of the crusaders, not only with a
+Greek army, but with a force of well-appointed pilgrims who had reached
+Constantinople after the departure of Godfrey and his fellows. The story
+told by Stephen drove out of his head every thought except that of his
+own safety. The order for retreat was given; and the pilgrim warriors,
+not less than the Greeks, were compelled to turn their faces westward.
+
+In Antioch the crusading soldiers were fast sinking into utter despair.
+Discipline had well-nigh come to an end, and so obstinate was their
+refusal to bear arms any longer that Bohemond resolved to burn them out
+of their quarters. These were consumed by the flames, which spread so
+rapidly as to fill him with fear that he had destroyed, not only their
+dwellings, but his whole principality. His experiment brought the men
+back to their duty; but so despondingly was their work done that but for
+some signal succor the end, it was manifest, must soon come. In a
+credulous age such succor at the darkest hour, if obtained at all, will
+generally be obtained through miracle. A Lombard priest came forward, to
+whom St. Ambrose of Milan had declared in a vision that the third year
+of the crusade should see the conquest of Jerusalem; another had seen
+the Saviour himself, attended by his Virgin Mother and the Prince of the
+Apostles, had heard from his lips a stern rebuke of the crusaders for
+yielding to the seductions of pagan women--as if the profession of
+Christianity altered the color and the guilt of a vice--and lastly had
+received the distinct assurance that in five days they should have the
+help which they needed.
+
+The hopes of the crusaders were roused; with hope came a return of
+vigorous energy; and Peter Barthelemy, chaplain to Raymond of Toulouse,
+seized the opportunity for recounting a vision which was to be something
+more than a dream. To him St. Andrew had revealed the fact that in the
+Church of St. Peter lay hidden the steel head of the spear which had
+pierced the side of the Redeemer as he hung upon the cross; and that
+Holy Lance should win them victory over all their enemies as surely as
+the spear which imparted irresistible power to the Knight of the
+Sangreal. After two days of special devotion they were to search for the
+long-lost weapon; on the third day the workmen began to dig, but until
+the sun had set they toiled in vain. The darkness of night made it
+easier for the chaplain to play the part which Sir Walter Scott, in the
+_Antiquary_, assigns to Herman Dousterswivel in the ruins of St. Ruth.
+Barefooted and with a single garment the priest went down into the pit.
+For a time the strokes of his spade were heard, and then the sacred
+relic was found, carefully wrapped in a veil of silk and gold. The
+priest proclaimed his discovery; the people rushed into the church; and
+from the church throughout the city spread the flame of a fierce
+enthusiasm.
+
+Nine or ten months later Peter Barthelemy paid the penalty of his life
+for his fraud or his superstition. A bribe taken by his master Raymond
+brought that chief into ill odor with his comrades, and let loose
+against his chaplain the tongue of Arnold, the chaplain of Bohemond.
+Raymond had traded on fresh visions of his clerk; and Arnold boldly
+attacked him in his citadel by denying the genuineness of the Holy
+Lance. Peter appealed to the ordeal of fire. He passed through the
+flames, as it seemed, unhurt. The bystanders pressed to feel his flesh,
+and were vehement in their rejoicings at the result which vindicated his
+integrity. He had really received fatal injuries. Twelve days afterward
+he died, and Raymond suffered greatly in his dignity and his influence.
+
+The infidel was doomed; but the crusaders resolved to give him one
+chance of escape. Peter the Hermit was sent as their envoy to Kerboga to
+offer the alternative of departure from a land which St. Peter had
+bestowed on the faithful, or of baptism which should leave him master of
+the city and territory of Antioch. The reply was short and decisive. The
+Turk would not embrace an idolatry which he hated and despised, nor
+would he give up soil which belonged to him by right of conquest. The
+report of the hermit raised the spirit of the crusaders to fever heat;
+and on the feast of St. Peter and St. Paul they marched out in twelve
+divisions, in remembrance of the mission of the Twelve Apostles, while
+Raymond of Toulouse remained to prevent the escape of the Turks shut up
+in the citadel. The Holy Lance was borne by the papal legate, Adhemar,
+Bishop of Puy; and the morning air laden with the perfume of roses was
+now regarded as a sign assuring them of the divine favor. They were
+prepared to see good omens in everything; and they went in full
+confidence that departed saints would, as they had been told, take part
+in the battle and smite down the infidel. The fight--one of brute force
+on the Christian side, of some little skill as well as strength on the
+other--had gone on for some time when such help seemed to become
+needful. Tancred had hurried to the aid of Bohemond, who was grievously
+pressed by Kilidje Arslan; and Kerboga was bearing heavily on Godfrey
+and Hugh of Vermandois, when, clothed in white armor and riding on white
+horses, some human forms were seen on the neighboring heights. "The
+saints are coming to your aid," shouted the Bishop of Puy, and the
+people saw in these radiant strangers the martyrs St. George, St.
+Maurice, and St. Theodore.
+
+Without awaiting their nearer approach the crusaders turned on the enemy
+with a force and fury which were now irresistible. Their cavalry could
+do little. Two hundred horses only remained of the sixty thousand which
+had filled the plain a few months before. But the hedge of spears
+advanced like a wall of iron, and the Turks gave way, broke, and fled.
+It was rout, not retreat; and with the crusaders victory was followed by
+the massacre of men, women, and children. The garrison in the citadel at
+once surrendered. Some declared themselves Christians and were baptized;
+those who refused to abandon Islam were taken to the nearest Mohametan
+territory. The city was the prize of Bohemond; and in his keeping it
+remained, although Raymond of Toulouse had made an effort to seize it by
+hoisting his banner on the walls. The work of pillage being ended, the
+churches were cleansed and repaired, and their altars blazed with golden
+spoils taken from the infidel. The Greek Patriarch was again seated on
+his throne; but he held his office at the good pleasure of the Latins,
+and two years later he was made to give place to Bernard, a chaplain of
+the Bishop of Puy.
+
+Ten months had passed away after the conquest of Antioch when the main
+body of the crusading army set out on its march to Jerusalem. They had
+wished to depart at once, but their chiefs dreaded to encounter
+waterless wastes at the end of a Syrian summer, and for the present they
+were content to send Hugh of Vermandois and Baldwin of Hainault as
+envoys to the Greek Emperor, to reproach him with his remissness or his
+want of faith. But the miseries endured by Christians and Turks were the
+pleasantest tidings in the ears of Alexius, for in the weakening of both
+lay his own strength; and he saw with satisfaction the departure of
+Hugh, not for Antioch, but for Europe, whither Stephen of Chartres had
+preceded him.
+
+Winter came, but the chiefs still lingered at Antioch. Some were
+occupied in expeditions against neighboring cities; but a more pressing
+care was the plague which punished the foulness and disorder of the
+pilgrims. A band of fifteen hundred Germans, recently landed in strong
+health and full equipments, were all, it is said, cut off; and among the
+victims the most lamented perhaps was the papal legate Adhemar. A
+feeling of discouragement was again spreading through the army
+generally. The chiefs vainly entreated the Pope to visit the city where
+the disciples of St. Peter first received the Christian name; the people
+were disheartened by the animosities and the selfish or crooked policy
+of their chiefs. Raymond still hankered after the principality of
+Antioch, and insisted that Bohemond and his people should share in the
+last great enterprise of the crusade. More disgraceful than these feuds
+were the scenes witnessed during the siege and after the conquest of
+Marra. Heedlessness and waste soon brought the assailants to devour the
+flesh of dogs and of human beings. The bodies of Turks were torn from
+their sepulchres, ripped up for the gold which they were supposed to
+have swallowed, and the fragments cooked and eaten. Of the besieged many
+slew themselves to avoid falling into the hands of the Christians; to
+some Bohemond, tempted by a large bribe, gave an assurance of safety.
+When the massacre had begun he ordered these to be brought forward. The
+weak and old he slaughtered; the rest he sent to the slave markets of
+Antioch.
+
+A weak attempt made by Alexius to detain the crusaders only spurred them
+to more vigorous efforts. They had already left Antioch, and Laodicea
+was in their hands, when he desired them to await his coming in June.
+The chiefs, remembering the departure of Tatikios with his Byzantine
+troops for Cyprus, retorted that he had broken his compact, and had
+therefore no further claims on their obedience. Hastening on their way,
+they crossed the plain of Berytos (Beyrout), overlooked by the eternal
+snows of Lebanon, along the narrow strip of land whence the great
+Phoenician cities had sent their seamen and their colonists, with all
+the wealth of the East, to the shores of the Adriatic and the gates of
+the Mediterranean. Having reached Jaffa, they turned inland to Ramlah, a
+town sixteen miles only from Jerusalem.
+
+Two days later the crusaders came in sight of the Holy City, the object
+of their long pilgrimage, the cause of wretchedness and death to
+millions. As their eyes rested on the scene hallowed to them through all
+the associations of their faith, the crusaders passed in an instant from
+fierce enthusiasm to a humiliation which showed itself in sighs and
+tears. All fell on their knees, to kiss the sacred earth and to pour
+forth thanksgivings that they had been suffered to look upon the desire
+of their eyes. Putting aside their armor and their weapons, they
+advanced in pilgrim's garb and with bare feet toward the spot which the
+Saviour had trodden in the hours of his agony and his passion.
+
+But before their feelings of devotion could be indulged, there was other
+work to be done. The chiefs took up their posts on those sides from
+which the nature of the ground gave most hope of a successful assault.
+On the northern side were Godfrey and Tancred, Robert of Flanders, and
+Robert of Normandy; on the west Raymond with his Provencals. On the
+fifth day, without siege instruments, with only one ladder, and trusting
+to mere weight, the crusaders made a desperate assault upon the walls.
+Some succeeded in reaching the summit, and the very rashness of their
+attack struck terror for a moment into their enemies. But the garrison
+soon rallied, and the invaders were all driven back or hurled from the
+ramparts. The task, it was manifest, must be undertaken in a more formal
+manner. Siege engines must be made, and the palm and olive of the
+immediate neighborhood would not supply fit materials for their
+construction.
+
+These were obtained from the woods of Shechem, a distance of thirty
+miles; and the work of preparation was carried on under the guidance of
+Gaston of Beam by the crews of some Genoese vessels which had recently
+anchored at Jaffa. So passed away more than thirty days, days of intense
+suffering to the besiegers. At Antioch they had been distressed chiefly
+by famine: in place of this wretchedness they had here the greater
+miseries of thirst. The enemy had carefully destroyed every place which
+might serve as a receptacle of water; and in seeking for it over miles
+of desolate country they were exposed to the harassing attacks of Moslem
+horsemen. Nor had visions and miracles improved the morals or discipline
+of the camp; and the ghost of Adhemar of Puy appeared to rebuke the
+horrible sins which were drawing down upon them the judgments of the
+Almighty. Better service was done by the generosity of Tancred, who made
+up his quarrel with Raymond: and the enthusiasm of the crusaders was
+again roused by the preaching of Arnold and the hermit Peter. The
+narrative of the siege of Jericho in the book of Joshua suggested
+probably the procession in which the clergy singing hymns preceded the
+laity round the walls of the city.
+
+The Saracens on the ramparts mocked their devotions by throwing dirt
+upon crucifixes; but they paid a terrible price for these insults. On
+the next day the final assault began, and was carried on through the day
+with the same monotony of brute force and carnage which marked all the
+operations of this merciless war. The darkness of night brought no rest.
+The actual combat was suspended, but the besieged were incessantly
+occupied in repairing the breaches made by the assailants, while these
+were busied in making their dispositions for the last mortal conflict.
+In the midst of that deadly struggle, when it seemed that the Cross must
+after all go down before the Crescent, a knight was seen on Mount
+Olivet, waving his glistening shield to rouse the champions of the Holy
+Sepulchre to the supreme effort. "It is St. George the Martyr who has
+come again to help us," cried Godfrey, and at his words the crusaders
+started up without a feeling of fatigue and carried everything before
+them.
+
+The day, we are told, was Friday, the hour was three in the afternoon--
+the moment at which the last cry from the cross announced the
+accomplishment of the Saviour's passion--when Letold of Tournay stood,
+the first victorious champion of the Cross, on the walls of Jerusalem.
+Next to him came, we are told, his brother Engelbert; the third was
+Godfrey. Tancred with the two Roberts stormed the gate of St. Stephen;
+the Provencals climbed the ramparts by ladders, and the conquest of
+Jerusalem was achieved. The insults offered a little while ago to the
+crucifixes were avenged by Godfrey's orders in the massacre of hundreds;
+the carnage in the Mosque of Omar swept away the bodies of thousands in
+a deluge of human blood. The Jews were all burnt alive in their
+synagogues. The horses of the crusaders, who rode up to the porch of the
+Temple, were--so the story goes--up to the knees in the loathsome
+stream; and the forms of Christian knights hacking and hewing the bodies
+of the living and the dead furnished a pleasant commentary on the sermon
+of Urban at Clermont.
+
+From the duties of slaughter these disciples of the Lamb of God passed
+to those of devotion. Bareheaded and barefooted, clad in a robe of pure
+white linen, in an ecstasy of joy and thankfulness mingled with profound
+contrition, Godfrey entered the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and knelt
+at the tomb of his Lord. With groans and tears his followers came, each
+in his turn, to offer his praises for the divine mercy which had
+vouchsafed this triumph to the armies of Christendom. With feverish
+earnestness they poured forth the vows which bound them to sin no more,
+and the excitement of prayer and slaughter, perhaps of both combined,
+led them to see everything which might be needed to give effect to the
+closing scene of this appalling tragedy. As the saints had arisen from
+their graves when the Son of Man gave up the ghost on Calvary, so the
+spirits of the pilgrims who had died on the terrible journey came to
+take part in the great thanksgiving. Foremost among them was Adhemar of
+Puy, rejoicing in the prayers for forgiveness and the resolutions of
+repentance which promised a new era of peace upon earth and of good-will
+toward all men.
+
+With departed saints were mingled living men who deserved all the honor
+which might be paid to them. The backsliding of the hermit Peter was
+blotted out of the memory of those who remembered only the fiery
+eloquence which had first called them to their now triumphant
+pilgrimage, and the zeal which had stirred the heart of Christendom to
+cut short the tyranny of the Unbeliever in the birthland of
+Christianity. The assembled throng fell down at his feet, and gave
+thanks to God, who had vouchsafed to them such a teacher. His task was
+done, and in the annals of the time Peter is heard of no more.
+
+On this dreadful day Tancred had spared three hundred captives to whom
+he had given a standard as a pledge of his protection and a guarantee of
+their safety. Such misplaced mercy was a crime in the eyes of the
+crusaders. The massacre of the first day may have been aggravated by the
+ungovernable excitement of victory; but it was resolved that on the next
+day there should be offered up a more solemn and deliberate sacrifice.
+The men whom Tancred had spared were all murdered; and the wrath of
+Tancred was roused, not by their fate, but by an act which called his
+honor into question. The butchery went on with impartial completeness,
+old and young, decrepit men and women, mothers with their infants, boys
+and girls, young men and maidens in the bloom of their vigor, all were
+mowed down, and their bodies mangled until heads and limbs were tossed
+together in awful chaos. A few were hidden away by Raymond of Toulouse;
+his motive, however, was not mercy, but the prospects of gain in the
+slave market. After this great act of faith and devotion the streets of
+the Holy City were washed by Saracen prisoners; but whether these were
+butchered when their work was ended we are not told.
+
+Four centuries and a half had passed away, when these things were done,
+since Omar had entered Jerusalem as a conqueror and knelt outside the
+Church of Constantine, that his followers might not trespass within it
+on the privileges of the Christians. The contrast is at the least marked
+between the Caliph of the Prophet and the children of the Holy Catholic
+Church.
+
+When, the business of the slaughter being ended, the chiefs met to
+choose a king for the realm which they had won with their swords, one
+man only appeared to whom the crown could fitly be offered. Baldwin was
+lord of Edessa; Bohemond ruled at Antioch; Hugh of Vermandois and
+Stephen of Chartres had returned to Europe; Robert of Flanders cared not
+to stay; the Norman Robert had no mind to forfeit the duchy which he had
+mortgaged; and Raymond was discredited by his avarice, and in part also
+by his traffic in the visions of Peter Barthelemy. But in the city where
+his Lord had worn the thorny crown, the veteran leader who had looked on
+ruthless slaughter without blanching and had borne his share in swelling
+the stream of blood would wear no earthly diadem nor take the title of
+king. He would watch over his Master's grave and the interests of his
+worshippers under the humble guise of Baron and Defender of the Holy
+Sepulchre; and as such, a fortnight after his election, Godfrey departed
+to do battle with the hosts of the Fatimite Caliph of Egypt, who now
+felt that the loss of Jerusalem was too high a price for the humiliation
+of his rivals. The conflict took place at Ascalon, and the Fatimite army
+was miserably routed. Godfrey returned to Jerusalem, to hang the sword
+and standard of the Sultan before the Holy Sepulchre and to bid farewell
+to the pilgrims who were now to set out on their homeward journey. He
+retained, with three hundred knights under Tancred, only two thousand
+foot soldiers for the defence of his kingdom; and so ended the first act
+in the great drama of the crusades.
+
+
+
+
+FOUNDATION OF THE ORDER OF KNIGHTS TEMPLARS
+
+A.D. 1118
+
+CHARLES G. ADDISON
+
+
+(Among the military orders of past ages, that of the Knights Templars,
+founded for the defence of the Latin kingdom of Jerusalem, with its
+lofty motive, its superb organization and discipline, and its history
+extending over nearly two centuries, is justly accounted one of the most
+illustrious. At the period when this extraordinary and romantic order
+came into existence, the contrasting spirits of warlike enterprise and
+monastic retirement were drawing men, some from the field to the
+cloister, others from the life of ascetic piety to the scenes of strife.
+There appeared a strange blending of these two tendencies, which indeed
+was the leading characteristic of the time. This union of the religious
+with the militant spirit had been promoted by the enthusiasm of the
+crusades which had already been undertaken, and among the crusaders
+themselves the blended spiritual and military ideal of the holy war had
+its complete development. Let us recall the reasons and the beginnings
+of the crusades themselves.
+
+Upon the legendary discovery of the Holy Sepulchre by Helena, the mother
+of Constantine, about three hundred years after the death of Christ, and
+the consequent erection, as it is said, by her great son--the first
+Christian emperor of Rome--of the magnificent Church of the Holy
+Sepulchre over the sacred spot, a tide of pilgrimage set in toward
+Jerusalem which increased in strength as Christianity gradually spread
+throughout Europe. When in A.D. 637 the Holy City was surrendered to the
+Saracens, the caliph Omar gave guarantees for the security of the
+Christian population. Under this safeguard the pilgrimages to Jerusalem
+continued to increase, until in 1064 the Holy Sepulchre was visited by
+seven thousand pilgrims, led by an archbishop and three bishops. But in
+1065 Jerusalem was taken by the Turcomans, who massacred three thousand
+citizens, and placed the command of the city in savage hands. Terrible
+oppression of the Christians there followed; the Patriarch of Jerusalem
+was dragged by the hair of his head over the sacred pavement of the
+Church of the Holy Sepulchre and cast into a dungeon for ransom;
+extortion, imprisonment, and massacre were indiscriminately visited upon
+the people.
+
+Such were the conditions that aroused the indignant spirit of
+Christendom and prepared it for the cry of Peter the Hermit, which awoke
+the wild enthusiasm of the crusades. When Jerusalem was captured by the
+crusaders under Godfrey of Bouillon in 1099, the zeal of pilgrimage
+burst forth anew. But although Jerusalem was delivered, Palestine was
+still infested with the infidels, who made it as hazardous as before for
+the pilgrims entering there. Some means for their protection must be
+found, and out of this necessity grew the great military order of which
+the following pages treat.)
+
+
+To alleviate the dangers and distresses to which the pilgrim enthusiasts
+were exposed; to guard the honor of the saintly virgins and matrons, and
+to protect the gray hairs of the venerable palmers, nine noble knights
+formed a holy brotherhood-in-arms, and entered into a solemn compact to
+aid one another in clearing the highways of infidels and robbers, and in
+protecting the pilgrims through the passes and defiles of the mountains
+to the Holy City. Warmed with the religious and military fervor of the
+day, and animated by the sacredness of the cause to which they had
+devoted their swords, they called themselves the "Poor Fellow-soldiers
+of Jesus Christ."
+
+They renounced the world and its pleasures, and in the Holy Church of
+the Resurrection, in the presence of the Patriarch of Jerusalem, they
+embraced vows of perpetual chastity, obedience, and poverty, after the
+manner of monks. Uniting in themselves the two most popular qualities of
+the age, devotion and valor, and exercising them in the most popular of
+all enterprises, the protection of the pilgrims and of the road to the
+Holy Sepulchre, they speedily acquired a vast reputation and a splendid
+renown.
+
+At first, we are told, they had no church and no particular place of
+abode, but in the year of our Lord 1118--nineteen years after the
+conquest of Jerusalem by the crusaders--they had rendered such good and
+acceptable service to the Christians that Baldwin II, King of Jerusalem,
+granted them a place of habitation within the sacred enclosure of the
+Temple on Mount Moriah, amid those holy and magnificent structures,
+partly erected by the Christian emperor Justinian and partly built by
+the caliph Omar, which were then exhibited by the monks and priests of
+Jerusalem, whose restless zeal led them to practise on the credulity of
+the pilgrims, and to multiply relics and all objects likely to be sacred
+in their eyes, as the Temple of Solomon, whence the "Poor
+Fellow-soldiers of Jesus Christ" came thenceforth to be known by the
+name of "the Knighthood of the Temple of Solomon."
+
+A few remarks in elucidation of the name "Templars," or "Knights of the
+Temple," may not be unacceptable.
+
+By the Mussulmans the site of the great Jewish Temple on Mount Moriah
+has always been regarded with peculiar veneration. Mahomet, in the first
+year of the publication of the _Koran_, directed his followers, when at
+prayer, to turn their faces toward it, and pilgrimages have constantly
+been made to the holy spot by devout Moslems. On the conquest of
+Jerusalem by the Arabians, it was the first care of the caliph Omar to
+rebuild "the Temple of the Lord." Assisted by the principal chieftains
+of his army, the Commander of the Faithful undertook the pious office of
+clearing the ground with his own hands, and of tracing out the
+foundations of the magnificent mosque which now crowns with its dark and
+swelling dome the elevated summit of Mount Moriah.
+
+This great house of prayer, the most holy Mussulman temple in the world
+after that of Mecca, is erected over the spot where "Solomon began to
+build the house of the Lord at Jerusalem in Mount Moriah, where the Lord
+appeared unto David his father, in the place that David had prepared in
+the threshing-floor of Oman the Jebusite."
+
+It remains to this day in a state of perfect preservation, and is one of
+the finest specimens of Saracenic architecture in existence. It is
+entered by four spacious doorways, each door facing one of the cardinal
+points: the _Bab el D'Jannat_ (or "Gate of the Garden"), on the north;
+the _Bab el Kebla_, (or "Gate of Prayer"), on the south; the _Bab ibn el
+Daoud_ (or "Gate of the Son of David"), on the east; and the _Bab el
+Garbi_, on the west. By the Arabian geographers it is called _Beit
+Allah_ ("the House of God"), also _Beit Almokaddas_ or _Beit Almacdes_
+("the Holy House"). From it Jerusalem derives its Arabic name, _El Kods_
+("the Holy"), _El Schereef_ ("the Noble"), and _El Mobarek_ ("the
+Blessed"); while the governors of the city, instead of the customary
+high-sounding titles of sovereignty and dominion, take the simple title
+of _Hami_ (or "Protectors").
+
+On the conquest of Jerusalem by the crusaders, the crescent was torn
+down from the summit of this famous Mussulman temple, and was replaced
+by an immense golden cross, and the edifice was then consecrated to the
+services of the Christian religion, but retained its simple appellation
+of "the Temple of the Lord." William, Archbishop of Tyre and Chancellor
+of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, gives an interesting account of this famous
+edifice as it existed in his time, during the Latin dominion. He speaks
+of the splendid mosaic work, of the Arabic characters setting forth the
+name of the founder and the cost of the undertaking, and of the famous
+rock under the centre of the dome, which is to this day shown by the
+Moslems as the spot whereon the destroying angel stood, "with his drawn
+sword in his hand stretched out over Jerusalem." This rock, he informs
+us, was left exposed and uncovered for the space of fifteen years after
+the conquest of the Holy City by the crusaders, but was, after that
+period, cased with a handsome altar of white marble, upon which the
+priests daily said mass.
+
+To the south of this holy Mussulman temple, on the extreme edge of the
+summit of Mount Moriah, and resting against the modern walls of the town
+of Jerusalem, stands the venerable Church of the Virgin, erected by the
+emperor Justinian, whose stupendous foundations, remaining to this day,
+fully justify the astonishing description given of the building by
+Procopius. That writer informs us that in order to get a level surface
+for the erection of the edifice, it was necessary, on the east and south
+sides of the hill, to raise up a wall of masonry from the valley below,
+and to construct a vast foundation, partly composed of solid stone and
+partly of arches and pillars. The stones were of such magnitude that
+each block required to be transported in a truck drawn by forty of the
+Emperor's strongest oxen; and to admit of the passage of these trucks it
+was necessary to widen the roads leading to Jerusalem. The forests of
+Lebanon yielded their choicest cedars for the timbers of the roof; and a
+quarry of variegated marble, seasonably discovered in the adjoining
+mountains, furnished the edifice with superb marble columns.
+
+The interior of this interesting structure, which still remains at
+Jerusalem, after a lapse of more than thirteen centuries, in an
+excellent state of preservation, is adorned with six rows of columns,
+from whence spring arches supporting the cedar beams and timbers of the
+roof; and at the end of the building is a round tower, surmounted by a
+dome. The vast stones, the walls of masonry, and the subterranean
+colonnade raised to support the southeast angle of the platform whereon
+the church is erected are truly wonderful, and may still be seen by
+penetrating through a small door and descending several flights of steps
+at the southeast corner of the enclosure. Adjoining the sacred edifice
+the Emperor erected hospitals, or houses of refuge, for travellers, sick
+people, and mendicants of all nations; the foundations whereof, composed
+of handsome Roman masonry, are still visible on either side of the
+southern end of the building.
+
+On the conquest of Jerusalem by the Moslems this venerable church was
+converted into a mosque, and was called D'Jame al Acsa; it was enclosed,
+together with the great Mussulman "Temple of the Lord" erected by the
+caliph Omar, within a large area by a high stone wall, which runs around
+the edge of the summit of Mount Moriah and guards from the profane tread
+of the unbeliever the whole of that sacred ground whereon once stood the
+gorgeous Temple of the wisest of kings.
+
+When the Holy City was taken by the crusaders, the D'Jame al Acsa, with
+the various buildings constructed around it, became the property of the
+kings of Jerusalem, and is denominated by William of Tyre "the Palace,"
+or "Royal House to the south of the Temple of the Lord, vulgarly called
+the 'Temple of Solomon.'" It was this edifice or temple on Mount Moriah
+which was appropriated to the use of the "Poor Fellow-soldiers of Jesus
+Christ," as they had no church and no particular place of abode, and
+from it they derived their name of "Knights Templars."
+
+James of Vitry, Bishop of Acre, who gives an interesting account of the
+holy places, thus speaks of the temple of the Knights Templars: "There
+is, moreover, at Jerusalem another temple of immense spaciousness and
+extent, from which the brethren of the Knighthood of the Temple derive
+their name of 'Templars,' which is called the 'Temple of Solomon,'
+perhaps to distinguish it from the one above described, which is
+specially called the 'Temple of the Lord.'" He moreover informs us in
+his oriental history that "in the 'Temple of the Lord' there is an abbot
+and canons regular; and be it known that the one is the 'Temple of the
+_Lord_,' and the other the 'Temple of the _Chivalry_.' These are
+_clerks_; the others are _knights_."
+
+The canons of the "Temple of the Lord" conceded to the "Poor
+Fellow-soldiers of Jesus Christ" the large court extending between that
+building and the Temple of Solomon; the King, the Patriarch, and the
+prelates of Jerusalem, and the barons of the Latin kingdom assigned them
+various gifts and revenues for their maintenance and support, and, the
+order being now settled in a regular place of abode, the knights soon
+began to entertain more extended views and to seek a larger theatre for
+the exercise of their holy profession.
+
+Their first aim and object had been, as before mentioned, simply to
+protect the poor pilgrims on their journey backward and forward from the
+sea-coast to Jerusalem; but as the hostile tribes of Mussulmans, which
+everywhere surrounded the Latin kingdom, were gradually recovering from
+the stupefying terror into which they had been plunged by the successful
+and exterminating warfare of the first crusaders, and were assuming an
+aggressive and threatening attitude, it was determined that the holy
+warriors of the temple should, in addition to the protection of
+pilgrims, make the defence of the Christian kingdom of Jerusalem, of the
+Eastern Church, and of all the holy places a part of their particular
+profession.
+
+The two most distinguished members of the fraternity were Hugh de Payens
+and Geoffrey de St. Aldemar, or St. Omer, two valiant soldiers of the
+cross, who had fought with great credit and renown at the siege of
+Jerusalem. Hugh de Payens was chosen by the knights to be superior of
+the new religious and military society, by the title of "the Master of
+the Temple"; and he has, in consequence, been generally called the
+founder of the order.
+
+The name and reputation of the Knights Templars speedily spread
+throughout Europe, and various illustrious pilgrims of the Far West
+aspired to become members of the holy fraternity. Among these was Fulk,
+Count of Anjou, who joined the society as a married brother (1120), and
+annually remitted the order thirty pounds of silver. Baldwin, King of
+Jerusalem, foreseeing that great advantages would accrue to the Latin
+kingdom by the increase of the power and numbers of these holy warriors,
+exerted himself to extend the order throughout all Christendom, so that
+he might, by means of so politic an institution, keep alive the holy
+enthusiasm of the West, and draw a constant succor from the bold and
+warlike races of Europe for the support of his Christian throne and
+kingdom.
+
+St. Bernard, the holy abbot of Clairvaux, had been a great admirer of
+the Templars. He wrote a letter to the Count of Champagne, on his
+entering the order (1123), praising the act as one of eminent merit in
+the sight of God; and it was determined to enlist the all-powerful
+influence of this great ecclesiastic in favor of the fraternity. "By a
+vow of poverty and penance, by closing his eyes against the visible
+world, by the refusal of all ecclesiastical dignities, the abbot of
+Clairvaux became the oracle of Europe and the founder of one hundred and
+sixty convents. Princes and pontiffs trembled at the freedom of his
+apostolical censures; France, England, and Milan consulted and obeyed
+his judgment in a schism of the Church; the debt was repaid by the
+gratitude of Innocent II; and his successor, Eugenius III, was the
+friend and disciple of the holy St. Bernard."
+
+To this learned and devout prelate two Knights Templars were despatched
+with the following letter:
+
+"Baldwin, by the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, King of Jerusalem and
+Prince of Antioch, to the venerable Father Bernard, Abbot of Clairvaux;
+health and regard.
+
+"The Brothers of the Temple, whom the Lord hath deigned to raise up, and
+whom by an especial providence he preserves for the defence of this
+kingdom, desiring to obtain from the Holy See the confirmation of their
+institution and a rule for their particular guidance, we have determined
+to send to you the two knights, Andrew and Gondemar, men as much
+distinguished by their military exploits as by the splendor of their
+birth, to obtain from the Pope the approbation of their order, and to
+dispose his holiness to send succor and subsidies against the enemies of
+the faith, reunited in their design to destroy us and to invade our
+Christian territories.
+
+"Well knowing the weight of your mediation with God and his vicar upon
+earth, as well as with the princes and powers of Europe, we have thought
+fit to confide to you these two important matters, whose successful
+issue cannot be otherwise than most agreeable to ourselves. The statutes
+we ask of you should be so ordered and arranged as to be reconcilable
+with the tumult of the camp and the profession of arms; they must, in
+fact, be of such a nature as to obtain favor and popularity with the
+Christian princes.
+
+"Do you then so manage that we may, through you, have the happiness of
+seeing this important affair brought to a successful issue, and address
+for us to Heaven the incense of your prayers."
+
+Soon after the above letter had been despatched to St. Bernard, Hugh de
+Payens himself proceeded to Rome, accompanied by Geoffrey de St. Aldemar
+and four other brothers of the order: namely, Brother Payen de
+Montdidier, Brother Gorall, Brother Geoffrey Bisol, and Brother
+Archambauld de St. Armand. They were received with great honor and
+distinction by Pope Honorius, who warmly approved of the objects and
+designs of the holy fraternity. St. Bernard had, in the mean time, taken
+the affair greatly to heart; he negotiated with the pope, the legate,
+and the bishops of France, and obtained the convocation of a great
+ecclesiastical council at Troyes (1128), which Hugh de Payens and his
+brethren were invited to attend. This council consisted of several
+archbishops, bishops, and abbots, among which last was St. Bernard
+himself. The rules to which the Templars had subjected themselves were
+there described by the master, and to the holy abbot of Clairvaux was
+confided the task of revising and correcting these rules, and of framing
+a code of statutes fit and proper for the governance of the great
+religious and military fraternity of the temple.
+
+_The Rule of the Poor Fellow-soldiers of Jesus Christ and of the Temple
+of Solomon_, arranged by St. Bernard, and sanctioned by the holy Fathers
+of the Council of Troyes, for the government and regulation of the
+monastic and military society of the Temple, is principally of a
+religious character and of an austere and gloomy cast. It is divided
+into seventy-two heads or chapters, and is preceded by a short prologue
+addressed "to all who disdain to follow after their own wills, and
+desire with purity of mind to fight for the most high and true King,"
+exhorting them to put on the armor of obedience, and to associate
+themselves together with piety and humility for the defence of the Holy
+Catholic Church; and to employ a pure diligence, and a steady
+perseverance in the exercise of their sacred profession, so that they
+might share in the happy destiny reserved for the holy warriors who had
+given up their lives for Christ.
+
+The rule enjoins severe devotional exercises, self-mortification,
+fasting, and prayer, and a constant attendance at matins, vespers, and
+on all the services of the Church, "that, being refreshed and satisfied
+with heavenly food, instructed and stablished with heavenly precepts,
+after the consummation of the divine mysteries," none might be afraid of
+the _Fight_, but be prepared for the _Crown_.
+
+If unable to attend the regular service of God, the absent brother is
+for matins to say over thirteen _pater-nosters_, for every hour seven,
+and for vespers nine. When any Templar draweth nigh unto death, the
+chaplains and clerk are to assemble and offer up a solemn mass for his
+soul; the surrounding brethren are to spend the night in prayer, and a
+hundred pater-nosters are to be repeated for the dead brother.
+"Moreover," say the holy Fathers, "we do strictly enjoin you, that with
+divine and most tender charity ye do daily bestow as much meat and drink
+as was given to that brother when alive, unto some poor man for forty
+days."
+
+The brethren are, on all occasions, to speak sparingly and to wear a
+grave and serious deportment. They are to be constant in the exercise of
+charity and almsgiving, to have a watchful care over all sick brethren,
+and to support and sustain all old men. They are not to receive letters
+from their parents, relations, or friends without the license of the
+master, and all gifts are immediately to be taken to the latter or to
+the treasurer, to be disposed of as he may direct. They are, moreover,
+to receive no service or attendance from a woman, and are commanded,
+above all things, to shun feminine kisses.
+
+"This same year (1128) Hugh of the Temple came from Jerusalem to the
+King in Normandy, and the King received him with much honor and gave him
+much treasure in gold and silver, and afterward he sent him into
+England, and there he was well received by all good men, and all gave
+him treasure, and in Scotland also, and they sent in all a great sum in
+gold and silver by him to Jerusalem, and there went with him and after
+him so great a number as never before since the days of Pope Urban."
+Grants of land, as well as of money, were at the same time made to Hugh
+de Payens and his brethren, some of which were shortly afterward
+confirmed by King Stephen on his accession to the throne (1135). Among
+these is a grant of the manor of Bistelesham made to the Templars by
+Count Robert de Ferrara, and a grant of the Church of Langeforde in
+Bedfordshire made by Simon de Wahull and Sibylla his wife and Walter
+their son.
+
+Hugh de Payens, before his departure, placed a Knight Templar at the
+head of the order in England, who was called the prior of the temple and
+was the procurator and viceregent of the master. It was his duty to
+manage the estates granted to the fraternity, and to transmit the
+revenues to Jerusalem. He was also delegated with the power of admitting
+members into the order, subject to the control and direction of the
+master, and was to provide means of transport for such newly-admitted
+brethren to the Far East, to enable them to fulfil the duties of their
+profession. As the houses of the Temple increased in number in England,
+subpriors came to be appointed, and the superior of the order in this
+country was then called the "grand prior," and afterward master, of the
+temple.
+
+Many illustrious knights of the best families in Europe aspired to the
+habit and vows, but, however exalted their rank, they were not received
+within the bosom of the fraternity until they had proved themselves by
+their conduct worthy of such a fellowship. Thus, when Hugh d'Amboise,
+who had harassed and oppressed the people of Marmontier by unjust
+exactions, and had refused to submit to the judicial decision of the
+Count of Anjou, desired to enter the order, Hugh de Payens refused to
+admit him to the vows until he had humbled himself, renounced his
+pretensions, and given perfect satisfaction to those whom he had
+injured. The candidates, moreover, previous to their admission, were
+required to make reparation and satisfaction for all damage done by them
+at any time to churches and to public or private property.
+
+An astonishing enthusiasm was excited throughout Christendom in behalf
+of the Templars; princes and nobles, sovereigns and their subjects, vied
+with each other in heaping gifts and benefits upon them, and scarce a
+will of importance was made without an article in it in their favor.
+Many illustrious persons on their death-beds took the vows, that they
+might be buried in the habit of the order; and sovereigns, quitting the
+government of their kingdoms, enrolled themselves among the holy
+fraternity, and bequeathed even their dominions to the master and the
+brethren of the temple.
+
+Thus, Raymond Berenger, Count of Barcelona and Provence, at a very
+advanced age, abdicating his throne and shaking off the ensigns of royal
+authority, retired to the house of the Templars at Barcelona, and
+pronounced his vows (1130) before Brother Hugh de Rigauld, the prior.
+His infirmities not allowing him to proceed in person to the chief house
+of the order at Jerusalem, he sent vast sums of money thither, and
+immuring himself in a small cell in the temple at Barcelona, he there
+remained in the constant exercise of the religious duties of his
+profession until the day of his death.
+
+At the same period, the emperor Lothair bestowed on the order a large
+portion of his patrimony of Supplinburg; and the year following (1131),
+Alphonso I, King of Navarre and Aragon, also styled Emperor of Spain,
+one of the greatest warriors of the age, by his will declared the
+Knights of the Temple his heirs and successors in the crowns of Navarre
+and Aragon, and a few hours before his death he caused this will to be
+ratified and signed by most of the barons of both kingdoms. The validity
+of this document, however, was disputed, and the claims of the Templars
+were successfully resisted by the nobles of Navarre; but in Aragon they
+obtained, by way of compromise, lands and castles and considerable
+dependencies, a portion of the customs and duties levied throughout the
+kingdom, and the contributions raised from the Moors.
+
+To increase the enthusiasm in favor of the Templars, and still further
+to swell their ranks with the best and bravest of the European chivalry,
+St. Bernard, at the request of Hugh de Payens, took up his powerful pen
+in their behalf. In a famous discourse, _In Praise of the New Chivalry_,
+the holy abbot sets forth, in eloquent and enthusiastic terms, the
+spiritual advantages and blessings enjoyed by the military friars of the
+temple over all other warriors. He draws a curious picture of the
+relative situations and circumstances of the _secular_ soldiery and the
+soldiery of _Christ_, and shows how different in the sight of God are
+the bloodshed and slaughter of the one from that committed by the other.
+
+This extraordinary discourse is written with great spirit; it is
+addressed "To Hugh, Knight of Christ, and Master of the Knighthood of
+Christ," is divided into fourteen parts or chapters, and commences with
+a short prologue. It is curiously illustrative of the spirit of the
+times, and some of its most striking passages will be read with
+interest.
+
+The holy abbot thus pursues his comparison between the soldier of the
+world and the soldier of Christ--the _secular_ and the _religious_
+warrior: "As often as thou who wagest a secular warfare marchest forth
+to battle, it is greatly to be feared lest when thou slayest thine enemy
+in the body, he should destroy thee in the spirit, or lest peradventure
+thou shouldst be at once slain by him both in body and soul. From the
+disposition of the heart, indeed, not by the event of the fight, is to
+be estimated either the jeopardy or the victory of the Christian. If,
+fighting with the desire of killing another, thou shouldst chance to get
+killed thyself, thou diest a manslayer; if, on the other hand, thou
+prevailest, and through a desire of conquest or revenge killest a man,
+thou livest a manslayer.... O unfortunate victory! when in overcoming
+thine adversary thou fallest into sin, and, anger or pride having the
+mastery over thee, in vain thou gloriest over the vanquished....
+
+"What, therefore, is the fruit of this secular, I will not say
+_militia_, but _malitia_, if the slayer committeth a deadly sin, and the
+slain perisheth eternally? Verily, to use the words of the apostle, he
+that plougheth should plough in hope, and he that thresheth should be
+partaker of his hope. Whence, therefore, O soldiers, cometh this so
+stupendous error? What insufferable madness is this--to wage war with so
+great cost and labor, but with no pay except either death or crime? Ye
+cover your horses with silken trappings, and I know not how much fine
+cloth hangs pendent from your coats of mail. Ye paint your spears,
+shields, and saddles; your bridles and spurs are adorned on all sides
+with gold and silver and gems, and with all this pomp, with a shameful
+fury and a reckless insensibility, ye rush on to death. Are these
+military ensigns, or are they not rather the garnishments of women? Can
+it happen that the sharp-pointed sword of the enemy will respect gold,
+will it spare gems, will it be unable to penetrate the silken garment?
+
+"As ye yourselves have often experienced, three things are indispensably
+necessary to the success of the soldier: he must, for example, be bold,
+active, and circumspect; quick in running, prompt in striking; ye,
+however, to the disgust of the eye, nourish your hair after the manner
+of women, ye gather around your footsteps long and flowing vestures, ye
+bury up your delicate and tender hands in ample and wide-spreading
+sleeves. Among you indeed naught provoketh war or awakeneth strife, but
+either an irrational impulse of anger or an insane lust of glory or the
+covetous desire of possessing another man's lands and possessions. In
+such cases it is neither safe to slay nor to be slain.... But the
+soldiers of Christ indeed securely fight the battles of their Lord, in
+no wise fearing sin, either from the slaughter of the enemy or danger
+from their own death. When indeed death is to be given or received for
+Christ, it has naught of crime in it, but much of glory....
+
+"And now for an example, or to the confusion of our soldiers fighting
+not manifestly for God, but for the devil, we will briefly display the
+mode of life of the Knights of Christ, such as it is in the field and in
+the convent, by which means it will be made plainly manifest to what
+extent the soldiery of God and the soldiery of the World differ from one
+another.... The soldiers of Christ live together in common in an
+agreeable but frugal manner, without wives and without children; and
+that nothing may be wanting to evangelical perfection, they dwell
+together without property of any kind, in one house, under one rule,
+careful to preserve the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace. You
+may say that to the whole multitude there is but one heart and one soul,
+as each one in no respect followeth after his own will or desire, but is
+diligent to do the will of the Master. They are never idle nor rambling
+abroad, but, when they are not in the field, that they may not eat their
+bread in idleness, they are fitting and repairing their armor and their
+clothing, or employing themselves in such occupations as the will of the
+Master requireth or their common necessities render expedient. Among
+them there is no distinction of persons; respect is paid to the best and
+most virtuous, not the most noble. They participate in each other's
+honor, they bear one anothers' burdens, that they may fulfil the law of
+Christ.
+
+"An insolent expression, a useless undertaking, immoderate laughter, the
+least murmur or whispering, if found out, passeth not without severe
+rebuke. They detest cards and dice, they shun the sports of the field,
+and take no delight in the ludicrous catching of birds (hawking), which
+men are wont to indulge in. Jesters and soothsayers and story-tellers,
+scurrilous songs, shows, and games, they contemptuously despise and
+abominate as vanities and mad follies. They cut their hair, knowing
+that, according to the apostle, it is not seemly in a man to have long
+hair. They are never combed, seldom washed, but appear rather with rough
+neglected hair, foul with dust, and with skins browned by the sun and
+their coats of mail.
+
+"Moreover, on the approach of battle they fortify themselves with faith
+within and with steel without, and not with gold, so that, armed and not
+adorned, they may strike terror into the enemy, rather than awaken his
+lust of plunder. They strive earnestly to possess strong and swift
+horses, but not garnished with ornaments or decked with trappings,
+thinking of battle and of victory, and not of pomp and show, studying to
+inspire fear rather than admiration....
+
+"Such hath God chosen for his own, and hath collected together as his
+ministers from the ends of the earth, from among the bravest of Israel,
+who indeed vigilantly and faithfully guard the Holy Sepulchre, all armed
+with the sword, and most learned in the art of war....
+
+"There is indeed a temple at Jerusalem in which they dwell together,
+unequal, it is true, as a building, to that ancient and most famous one
+of Solomon, but not inferior in glory. For truly the entire magnificence
+of that consisted in corrupt things, in gold and silver, in carved
+stone, and in a variety of woods; but the whole beauty of this resteth
+in the adornment of an agreeable conversation, in the godly devotion of
+its inmates, and their beautifully ordered mode of life. That was
+admired for its various external beauties, this is venerated for its
+different virtues and sacred actions, as becomes the sanctity of the
+house of God, who delighteth not so much in polished marbles as in
+well-ordered behavior, and regardeth pure minds more than gilded walls.
+The face likewise of this temple is adorned with arms, not with gems,
+and the wall, instead of the ancient golden chapiters, is covered around
+with pendent shields.
+
+"Instead of the ancient candelabra, censers, and lavers, the house is on
+all sides furnished with bridles, saddles, and lances, all which plainly
+demonstrate that the soldiers burn with the same zeal for the house of
+God as that which formerly animated their great Leader, when, vehemently
+enraged, he entered into the Temple, and with that most sacred hand,
+armed not with steel, but with a scourge which he had made of small
+thongs, drove out the merchants, poured out the changers' money, and
+overthrew the tables of them that sold doves; most indignantly
+condemning the pollution of the house of prayer by the making of it a
+place of merchandise.
+
+"The devout army of Christ, therefore, earnestly incited by the example
+of its king, thinking indeed that the holy places are much more
+impiously and insufferably polluted by the infidels than when defiled by
+merchants, abide in the holy house with horses and with arms, so that
+from that, as well as all the other sacred places, all filthy and
+diabolical madness of infidelity being driven out, they may occupy
+themselves by day and by night in honorable and useful offices. They
+emulously honor the temple of God with sedulous and sincere oblations,
+offering sacrifices therein with constant devotion, not indeed of the
+flesh of cattle after the manner of the ancients, but peaceful
+sacrifices, brotherly love, devout obedience, voluntary poverty.
+
+"These things are done perpetually at Jerusalem, and the world is
+aroused, the islands hear, and the nations take heed from afar...."
+
+St. Bernard then congratulates Jerusalem on the advent of the soldiers
+of Christ, and declares that the Holy City will rejoice with a double
+joy in being rid of all her oppressors, the ungodly, the robbers, the
+blasphemers, murderers, perjurers, and adulterers; and in receiving her
+faithful defenders and sweet consolers, under the shadow of whose
+protection "Mount Zion shall rejoice, and the daughters of Judah sing
+for joy."
+
+
+
+
+STEPHEN USURPS THE ENGLISH CROWN
+
+HIS CONFLICTS WITH MATILDA: DECISIVE INFLUENCE OF THE CHURCH
+
+A.D. 1135-1154
+
+CHARLES KNIGHT
+
+
+(William the Conqueror, King of England, was succeeded by his sons
+William Rufus and Henry--on account of his scholarship known as
+Beauclerc. Prince William, Henry's only son, was drowned when starting
+from Normandy for England in 1120. In the absence of male issue Henry
+settled the English and Norman crowns upon his daughter Matilda, and
+demanded an oath of fidelity to her from the barons.
+
+Matilda had been married first to Emperor Henry V of Germany, who died
+in 1125, and secondly to Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou.
+
+Stephen was the son of Adela, daughter of William the Conqueror, who had
+married Stephen, Count of Blois. Stephen, with his brother Henry, had
+been invited to the court of England by their uncle, and had received
+honors, preferments, and riches. Henry becoming an ecclesiast was
+created abbot of Glastonbury and bishop of Winchester. Stephen, among
+other possessions, received the great estate forfeited by Robert Mallet
+in England, and that forfeited by the Earl of Mortaigne in Normandy. By
+his marriage with Matilda, daughter of the Earl of Boulogne, he had
+succeeded also to the territories of his father-in-law. Stephen by
+studied arts and personal qualities became a great favorite with the
+English barons and the people.
+
+The empress Matilda and her husband Geoffrey, unfortunately, were
+unpopular both in England and Normandy, the English barons especially
+viewing with disfavor the prospect of a woman occupying the throne.
+
+Henry Beauclerc died in 1135 at his favorite hunting-seat, the Castle of
+Lions, near Rouen, in Normandy. Stephen, ignoring the oath of fealty to
+the daughter of his benefactor, hastened to England, and,
+notwithstanding some opposition, with the help of his clerical brother
+and other functionaries had himself proclaimed and crowned king. This
+act involved England in years of civil war, anarchy, and wretchedness,
+which ended only with the accession as Henry II of Empress Matilda's
+son, Henry Plantagenet of Anjou.)
+
+
+Of the reign of Stephen, Sir James Mackintosh has said, "It perhaps
+contains the most perfect condensation of all the ills of feudality to
+be found in history." He adds, "The whole narrative would have been
+rejected, as devoid of all likeness to truth, if it had been hazarded in
+fiction." As a picture of "all the ills of feudality," this narrative is
+a picture of the entire social state--the monarchy, the Church, the
+aristocracy, the people--and appears to us, therefore, to demand a more
+careful examination than if the historical interest were chiefly centred
+in the battles and adventures belonging to a disputed succession, and in
+the personal characters of a courageous princess and her knightly rival.
+
+Stephen, Earl of Boulogne, the nephew of King Henry I, was no stranger
+to the country which he aspired to rule. He had lived much in England
+and was a universal favorite. "From his complacency of manners, and his
+readiness to joke, and sit and regale even with low people, he had
+gained so much on their affections as is hardly to be conceived." This
+popular man was at the death-bed of his uncle; but before the royal body
+was borne on the shoulders of nobles from the Castle of Lions to Rouen,
+Stephen was on his road to England. He embarked at Whitsand, undeterred
+by boisterous weather, and landed during a winter storm of thunder and
+lightning. It was a more evil omen when Dover and Canterbury shut their
+gates against him. But he went boldly on to London. There can be no
+doubt that his proceedings were not the result of a sudden impulse, and
+that his usurpation of the crown was successful through a very powerful
+organization. His brother Henry was Bishop of Winchester; and his
+influence with the other dignitaries of the Church was mainly
+instrumental in the election of Stephen to be king, in open disregard of
+the oaths taken a few years before to recognize the succession of
+Matilda and of her son. Between the death of a king and the coronation
+of his successor there was usually a short interval, in which the form
+of election was gone through. But it is held that during that suspension
+of the royal functions there was usually a proclamation of "the king's
+peace," under which all violations of law were punished as if the head
+of the law were in the full exercise of his functions and dignities.
+King Henry I died on the 1st of December, 1135. Stephen was crowned on
+the 26th of December. The death of Henry would probably have been
+generally known in England in a week after the event. There is a
+sufficient proof that this succession was considered doubtful, and,
+consequently, that there was an unusual delay in the proclamation of
+"the king's peace." The Forest Laws were the great grievance of Henry's
+reign. His death was the signal for their violation by the whole body of
+the people. "It was wonderful how so many myriads of wild animals, which
+in large herds before plentifully stocked the country, suddenly
+disappeared, so that out of the vast number scarcely two now could be
+found together. They seemed to be entirely extirpated." According to the
+same authority, "the people also turned to plundering each other without
+mercy"; and "whatever the evil passions suggested in peaceable times,
+now that the opportunity of vengeance presented itself, was quickly
+executed." This is a remarkable condition of a country which, having
+been governed by terror, suddenly passed out of the evils of despotism
+into the greater evils of anarchy. This temporary confusion must have
+contributed to urge on the election of Stephen. By the Londoners he was
+received with acclamations; and the _witan_ chose him for king without
+hesitation, as one who could best fulfil the duties of the office and
+put an end to the dangers of the kingdom.
+
+Stephen succeeded to a vast amount of treasure. All the rents of Henry I
+had been paid in money, instead of in necessaries; and he was rigid in
+enforcing the payment in coin of the best quality. With this possession
+of means, Stephen surrounded himself with troops from Flanders and
+Brittany. The objections to his want of hereditary right appear to have
+been altogether laid aside for a time, in the popularity which he
+derived from his personal qualities and his command of wealth. Strict
+hereditary claims to the choice of the nation had been disregarded since
+the time of the Confessor. The oath to Matilda, it was maintained, had
+been unwillingly given, and even extorted by force. It is easy to
+conceive that, both to Saxon and Norman, the notion of a female
+sovereign would be out of harmony with their ancient traditions and
+their warlike habits. The king was the great military chief, as well as
+the supreme dispenser of justice and guardian of property. The time was
+far distant when the sovereign rule might be held to be most
+beneficially exercised by a wise choice of administrators, civil and
+military; and the power of the crown, being cooerdinate with other
+powers, strengthening as well as controlling its final authority, might
+be safely and happily exercised by a discreet, energetic, and just
+female. King Stephen vindicated the choice of the nation at the very
+outset of his reign. He went in person against the robbers who were
+ravaging the country. The daughter of "the Lion of Justice" would
+probably have done the same. But more than three hundred years had
+passed since the Lady of Mercia, the sister of Alfred, had asserted the
+courage of her race. Norman and Saxon wanted a king; for though ladies
+defended castles, and showed that firmness and bravery were not the
+exclusive possession of one sex, no thane or baron had yet knelt before
+a queen, and sworn to be her "liege man of life and limb."
+
+The unanimity which appeared to hail the accession of Stephen was soon
+interrupted. David, King of Scotland, had advanced to Carlisle and
+Newcastle, to assert the claim of Matilda which he had sworn to uphold.
+But Stephen came against him with a great army, and for a time there was
+peace. Robert, Earl of Gloucester, the illegitimate son of Henry I, had
+done homage to Stephen; but his allegiance was very doubtful; and the
+general belief that he would renounce his fealty engendered secret
+hostility or open resistance among other powerful barons. Robert of
+Gloucester very soon defied the King's power. Within two years of his
+accession the throne of Stephen was evidently becoming an insecure seat.
+To counteract the power of the great nobles, he made a lavish
+distribution of crown lands to a large number of tenants-in-chief. Some
+of them were called earls; but they had no official charge, as the
+greater barons had, but were mere titular lords, made by the royal
+bounty. All those who held direct from the Crown were called barons; and
+these new barons, who were scattered over the country, had permission
+from the King to build castles. Such permission was extended to many
+other lay barons. The accustomed manor-house of the land proprietor, in
+which he dwelt amid the churls and serfs of his demesne, was now
+replaced by a stone tower, surrounded by a moat and a wall. The wooden
+one-storied homestead, with its thatched roof, shaded by the "toft" of
+ash and elm and maple, was pulled down, and a square fortress with
+loopholes and battlement stood in solitary nakedness upon some bleak
+hill, ugly and defiant. There with a band of armed men--sometimes with a
+wife and children, and not unfrequently with an unhappy victim of his
+licentiousness--the baron lived in gloom and gluttony, till the love of
+excitement, the approach of want, or the call to battle drove him forth.
+His passion for hunting was not always free to be exercised. Venison was
+not everywhere to be obtained without danger even to the powerful and
+lawless. But within a ride of a few miles there was generally corn in
+the barns and herds were in the pastures. The petty baron was almost
+invariably a robber--sometimes on his own account, often in some
+combined adventure of plunder. The spirit of rapine, always too
+prevalent under the strongest government of those times, was now
+universal when the government was fighting for its own existence. Bands
+of marauders sallied forth from the great towns, especially from
+Bristol; and of their proceedings the author of the _Gesta Stephani_
+speaks with the precision of an eye-witness. The Bristolians, under the
+instigation of the Earl of Gloucester, were partisans of the ex-empress
+Matilda; and wherever the King or his adherents had estates they came to
+seize their oxen and sheep, and carried men of substance into Bristol as
+captives, with bandaged eyes and bits in their mouths. From other towns
+as well as Bristol came forth plunderers, with humble gait and courteous
+discourse; who, when they met with a lonely man having the appearance of
+being wealthy, would bear him off to starvation and torture, till they
+had mulcted him to the last farthing. These and other indications of an
+unsettled government took place before the landing of Matilda to assert
+her claims. An invasion of England, by the Scottish King, without regard
+to the previous pacification, was made in 1138. But this attempt,
+although grounded upon the oath which David had sworn to Henry, was
+regarded by the Northumbrians as a national hostility which demanded a
+national resistance. The course of this invasion has been minutely
+described by contemporary chroniclers.
+
+The author of the _Gesta Stephani_ says: "Scotland, also called Albany,
+is a country overspread by extensive moors, but containing flourishing
+woods and pastures, which feed large herds of cows and oxen." Of the
+mountainous regions he says nothing. Describing the natives as savage,
+swift of foot, and lightly armed, he adds, "A confused multitude of this
+people being assembled from the lowlands of Scotland, they were formed
+into an irregular army and marched for England." From the period of the
+Conquest, a large number of Anglo-Saxons had been settled in the
+lowlands; and the border countries of Westmoreland and Cumberland were
+also occupied, to a considerable extent, by the same race. The people of
+Galloway were chiefly of the original British stock. The historians
+describe "the confused multitude" as exercising great cruelties in their
+advance through the country that lies between the Tweed and the Tees;
+and Matthew Paris uses a significant phrase which marks how completely
+they spread over the land. He calls them the "Scottish Ants." The
+Archbishop of York, Thurstan, an aged but vigorous man, collected a
+large army to resist the invaders; and he made a politic appeal to the
+old English nationality, by calling out the population under the banners
+of their Saxon saints. The Bishop of Durham was the leader of this army,
+composed of the Norman chivalry and the English archers. The opposing
+forces met at Northallerton, on the 22d of August, 1138. The
+Anglo-Norman army was gathered round a tall cross, raised on a car, and
+surrounded by the banners of St. Cuthbert and St. Wilfred and St. John
+of Beverley. From this incident the bloody day of Northallerton was
+called "the Battle of the Standard." Hoveden has given an oration made
+by Ralph, Bishop of Durham, in which he addresses the captains as "Brave
+nobles of England, Normans by birth"; and pointing to the enemy, who
+knew not the use of armor, exclaims, "Your head is covered with the
+helmet, your breast with a coat of mail, your legs with greaves, and
+your whole body with the shield." Of the Saxon yeomanry he says nothing.
+Whether the oration be genuine or not, it exhibits the mode in which the
+mass of the people were regarded at that time. Thierry appears to
+consider that the bold attempt of David of Scotland was made in reliance
+upon the support of the Anglo-Saxon race. But it is perfectly clear that
+they bore the brunt of the English battle; and whatever might be their
+wrongs, were not disposed to yield their fields and houses to a fierce
+multitude who came for spoil and for possession. The Scotch fought with
+darts and long spears, and attacked the solid mass of Normans and
+English gathered round the standard. Prince Henry, the son of the King
+of Scotland, made a vigorous onslaught with a body of horse, composed of
+English and Normans attached to his father's household. These were,
+without doubt, especial partisans of the claim to the English crown of
+the ex-empress Matilda; and, as the King of Scotland himself is
+described, were "inflamed with zeal for a just cause."[42] The issue of
+the battle was the signal defeat of the Scottish army, with the loss of
+eleven thousand men upon the field. A peace was concluded with King
+Stephen in the following year.
+
+[Footnote 42: Scott has given a picturesque account of the battle in his
+_Tales of a Grandfather_. Writing, as he often did, from general
+impressions, in describing the gallant charge of Prince Henry, he states
+that he broke the English line "as if it had been a spider's web."
+Hoveden, the historian to whom Scott alludes, applies this strong image
+to the scattering of the men of Lothian: "For the Almighty was offended
+at them, and their strength was rent like a cobweb."]
+
+The issue of the battle of the Standard might have given rest to England
+if Stephen had understood the spirit of his age. In 1139 he engaged in a
+contest more full of peril than the assaults of Scotland or the
+disturbances of Wales. He had been successful against some of the
+disaffected barons. He had besieged and taken Hereford Castle and
+Shrewsbury Castle. Dover Castle had surrendered to his Queen. Robert,
+Earl of Gloucester, kept possession of the castles of Bristol and Leeds;
+and other nobles held out against him in various strong places. London
+and some of the larger towns appear to have steadily clung to his
+government. The influence of the Church, by which he had been chiefly
+raised to sovereignty, had supported him during his four years of
+struggle. But that influence was now to be shaken.
+
+The rapid and steady growth of the ecclesiastical power in England, from
+the period of the Conquest, is one of the most remarkable
+characteristics of that age. This progress we must steadily keep in view
+if we would rightly understand the general condition of society. All the
+great offices of the Church, with scarcely an exception, were filled by
+Normans. The Conqueror sternly resisted any attempts of bishops or
+abbots to control his civil government. The "Red King" misappropriated
+their revenues in many cases. Henry I quarrelled with Anselm about the
+right of investiture, which the Pope declared should not be in the hands
+of any layman, but Henry compromised a difficult question with his usual
+prudence. Whatever difficulties the Church encountered, during seventy
+years, and especially during the whole course of Henry's reign, wealth
+flowed in upon the ecclesiastics, from king and noble, from burgess and
+socman; and every improvement of the country increased the value of
+church possessions. It was not only from the lands of the Crown and the
+manors of earls that bishoprics and monasteries derived their large
+endowments. Henry I founded the Abbey of Reading, but the _mimus_ of
+Henry I built the priory and hospital of St. Bartholomew. This
+"pleasant-witted gentleman," as Stow calls the royal mimus (which Percy
+interprets "minstrel"), having, according to the legend, "diverted the
+palaces of princes with courtly mockeries and triflings" for many years,
+bethought himself at last of more serious matters, and went to do
+penance at Rome. He returned to London; and obtaining a grant of land in
+a part of the King's market of Smithfield, which was a filthy marsh
+where the common gallows stood, there erected the priory, whose Norman
+arches as satisfactorily attest its date as Henry's charter. The piety
+of a court jester in the twelfth century, when the science of medicine
+was wholly empirical, founded one of the most valuable medical schools
+of the nineteenth century. The desire to raise up splendid churches in
+the place of the dilapidated Saxon buildings was a passion with Normans,
+whether clerics or laymen. Ralph Flambard, the bold and unscrupulous
+minister of William II, erected the great priory of Christchurch, in his
+capacity of bishop. But he raised the necessary funds with his usual
+financial vigor. He took the revenues of the canons into his hands, and
+put the canons upon a short allowance till the work was completed. The
+Cistercian order of monks was established in England late in the reign
+of Henry I. Their rule was one of the most severe mortification and of
+the strictest discipline. Their lives were spent in labor and in prayer,
+and their one frugal daily meal was eaten in silence. While other
+religious orders had their splendid abbeys amid large communities, the
+Cistercians humbly asked grants of land in the most solitary places,
+where the recluse could meditate without interruption by his fellow-men,
+amid desolate moors and in the uncultivated gorges of inaccessible
+mountains. In such a barren district Walter l'Espee, who had fought at
+Northallerton, founded Rievaulx Abbey. It was "a solitary place in
+Blakemore," in the midst of hills. The Norman knight had lost his son,
+and here he derived a holy comfort in seeing the monastic buildings rise
+under his munificent care, and the waste lands become fertile under the
+incessant labors of the devoted monks. The ruins of Tintern Abbey and
+Melrose Abbey, whose solemn influences have inspired the poets of our
+own age with thoughts akin to the contemplations of their Cistercian
+founders, belong to a later period of ecclesiastical architecture; for
+the dwellings of the original monks have perished, and the "broken
+arches," and "shafted oriel," the "imagery," and "the scrolls that teach
+thee to live and die," speak of another century, when the Norman
+architecture, like the Norman character, was losing its distinctive
+features and becoming "Early English." We dwell a little upon these
+Norman foundations, to show how completely the Church was spreading
+itself over the land, and asserting its influence in places where man
+had seldom trod, as well as in populous towns, where the great cathedral
+was crowded with earnest votaries, and the lessons of peace were
+proclaimed amid the distractions of unsettled government and the
+oppressions of lordly despotism. Whatever was the misery of the country,
+the ordinary family ties still bound the people to the universal
+Christian church, whether the priest were Norman or English. The
+new-born infant was dipped in the great Norman font, as the children of
+the Confessor's time had been dipped in the ruder Saxon. The same Latin
+office, unintelligible in words, but significant in its import, was said
+and sung when the bride stood at the altar and the father was laid in
+his grave. The vernacular tongue gradually melted into one dialect; and
+the penitent and the confessor were the first to lay aside the great
+distinction of race and country--that of language.
+
+The Norman prelates were men of learning and ability, of taste and
+magnificence; and, whatever might have been the luxury and even vices of
+some among them, the vast revenues of the great sees were not wholly
+devoted to worldly pomp, but were applied to noble uses. After the lapse
+of seven centuries we still tread with reverence those portions of our
+cathedrals in which the early Norman architecture is manifest. There is
+no English cathedral in which we are so completely impressed with the
+massive grandeur of the round-arched style as by Durham. Durham
+Cathedral was commenced in the middle of the reign of Rufus, and the
+building went on through the reign of Henry I. Canterbury was commenced
+by Archbishop Lanfranc, soon after the Conquest, and was enlarged and
+altered in various details, till it was burned in 1174. Some portions of
+the original building remain. Rochester was commenced eleven years after
+the Conquest; and its present nave is an unaltered part of the original
+building. Chichester has nearly the same date of its commencement; and
+the building of this church was continued till its dedication in 1148.
+Norwich was founded in 1094, and its erection was carried forward so
+rapidly that in seven years there were sixty monks here located.
+Winchester is one of the earliest of these noble cathedrals; but its
+Norman feature of the round arch is not the general characteristic of
+the edifice, the original piers having been recased in the pointed
+style, in the reign of Edward III. The dates of these buildings, so
+grand in their conception, so solid in their execution, would be
+sufficient of themselves to show the wealth and activity of the Church
+during the reigns of the Conqueror and his sons. But, during this period
+of seventy years, and in part of the reign of Stephen, the erection of
+monastic buildings was universal in England, as in Continental Europe.
+The crusades gave a most powerful impulse to the religious fervor. In
+the enthusiasm of chivalry, which covered many of its enormities with
+outward acts of piety, vows were frequently made by wealthy nobles that
+they would depart for the Holy Wars. But sometimes the vow was
+inconvenient. The lady of the castle wept at the almost certain perils
+of her lord, and his projects of ambition often kept the lord at home to
+look after his own especial interests. Then the vow to wear the cross
+might be commuted by the foundation of a religious house. Death-bed
+repentance for crimes of violence and a licentious life increased the
+number of these endowments. It has been computed that three hundred
+monastic establishments were founded in England during the reigns of
+Henry I, Stephen, and Henry II.
+
+We have briefly stated these few general facts regarding the outward
+manifestation of the power and the wealth of the Church at this period,
+to show how important an influence it must have exercised upon all
+questions of government. But its organization was of far greater
+importance than the aggregate wealth of the sees and abbeys. The English
+Church, during the troubled reign of Stephen, had become more completely
+under the papal dominion than at any previous period of its history. The
+King attempted, rashly perhaps, but honestly, to interpose some check to
+the ecclesiastical desire for supremacy; but from the hour when he
+entered into a contest with bishops and synods, his reign became one of
+kingly trouble and national misery.
+
+The Norman bishops not only combined in their own persons the functions
+of the priest and of the lawyer, but were often military leaders. As
+barons they had knight-service to perform; and this condition of their
+tenures naturally surrounded them with armed retainers. That this
+anomalous position should have corrupted the ambitious churchman into a
+proud and luxurious lord was almost inevitable. The authority of the
+Crown might have been strong enough to repress the individual
+discontent, or to punish the individual treason, of these great
+prelates; but every one of them was doubly formidable as a member of a
+confederacy over which a foreign head claimed to preside. There were
+three bishops whose intrigues King Stephen had especially to dread at
+the time when an open war for the succession of Matilda was on the point
+of bursting forth. Roger, the Bishop of Salisbury, had been promoted
+from the condition of a parish priest at Caen, to be chaplain,
+secretary, chancellor, and chief justiciary of Henry I. He was
+instrumental in the election of Stephen to the throne; and he was
+rewarded with extravagant gifts, as he had been previously rewarded by
+Henry. Stephen appears to have fostered his rapacity, in the conviction
+that his pride would have a speedier fall; the King often saying, "I
+would give him half England, if he asked for it: till the time be ripe
+he shall tire of asking ere I tire of giving." The time was ripe in
+1139. The Bishop had erected castles at Devizes, at Sherborne, and at
+Malmesbury. King Henry had given him the castle of Salisbury. This lord
+of four castles had powerful auxiliaries in his nephews, the Bishop of
+Lincoln and the Bishop of Ely. Alexander of Lincoln had built the
+castles of Newark and Sleaford, and was almost as powerful as his uncle.
+In July, 1139, a great council was held at Oxford; and thither came
+these three bishops with military and secular pomp, and with an escort
+that became "the wonder of all beholders." A quarrel ensued between the
+retainers of the bishops and those of Alain, Earl of Brittany, about a
+right to quarters; and the quarrel went on to a battle, in which men
+were slain on both sides. The bishops of Salisbury and Lincoln were
+arrested, as breakers of the king's peace. The Bishop of Ely fled to his
+uncle's castle of Devizes. The King, under the advice of the sagacious
+Earl Millent, resolved to dispossess these dangerous prelates of their
+fortresses, which were all finally surrendered. "The bishops, humbled
+and mortified, and stripped of all pomp and vainglory, were reduced to a
+simple ecclesiastical life, and to the possessions belonging to them as
+churchmen." The contemporary who writes this--the author of the _Gesta
+Stephani_--although a decided partisan of Stephen, speaks of this event
+as the result of mad counsels, and a grievous sin that resembled the
+wickedness of the sons of Korah and of Saul. The great body of the
+ecclesiastics were indignant at what they considered an offence to their
+order. The Bishop of Winchester, the brother of Stephen, had become the
+Pope's legate in England, and he summoned the King to attend a synod at
+Winchester. He there produced his authority as legate from Pope
+Innocent, and denounced the arrest of the bishops as a dreadful crime.
+The King had refused to attend the council, but he sent Alberic de Vere,
+"a man deeply versed in legal affairs," to represent him. This advocate
+urged that the Bishop of Lincoln was the author of the tumult at Oxford;
+that whenever Bishop Roger came to court, his people, presuming on his
+power, excited tumults; that the Bishop secretly favored the King's
+enemies, and was ready to join the party of the Empress. The council was
+adjourned, but on a subsequent day came the Archbishop of Rouen, as the
+champion of the King, and contended that it was against the canons that
+the bishops should possess castles; and that even if they had the right,
+they were bound to deliver them up to the will of the King, as the times
+were eventful, and the King was bound to make war for the common
+security. The Archbishop of Rouen reasoned as a statesman; the Bishop of
+Winchester as the Pope's legate. Some of the bishops threatened to
+proceed to Rome; and the King's advocate intimated that if they did so,
+their return might not be so easy. Swords were at last unsheathed. The
+King and the earls were now in open hostility with the legate and the
+bishops. Excommunication of the King was hinted at; but persuasion was
+resorted to. Stephen, according to one authority, made humble
+submission, and thus "abated the rigor of ecclesiastical discipline." If
+he did submit, his submission was too late. Within a month Earl Robert
+and the empress Matilda were in England.
+
+Matilda and the Earl of Gloucester landed at Arundel, where the widow of
+Henry I was dwelling. They had a very small force to support their
+pretensions. The Earl crossed the country to Bristol. "All England was
+struck with alarm, and men's minds were agitated in various ways. Those
+who secretly or openly favored the invaders were roused to more than
+usual activity against the King, while his own partisans were terrified
+as if a thunderbolt had fallen." Stephen invested the castle of Arundel.
+But in the most romantic spirit of chivalry he permitted the Empress to
+pass out, and to set forward to join her brother at Bristol, under a
+safe-conduct. In 1140 the whole kingdom appears to have been subjected
+to the horrors of a partisan warfare. The barons in their castles were
+making a show of "defending their neighborhoods, but, more properly to
+speak, were laying them waste." The legate and the bishops were
+excommunicating the plunderers of churches, but the plunderers laughed
+at their anathemas. Freebooters came over from Flanders, not to practise
+the industrial arts as in the time of Henry I, but to take their part in
+the general pillage. There was frightful scarcity in the country, and
+the ordinary interchange of man with man was unsettled by the debasement
+of the coin. "All things," says Malmesbury, "became venial in England;
+and churches and abbeys were no longer secretly but even publicly
+exposed to sale." All things become venial, under a government too weak
+to repress plunder or to punish corruption. The strong aim to be rich by
+rapine, and the cunning by fraud, when the confusion of a kingdom is
+grown so great that, as is recorded of this period, "the neighbor could
+put no faith in his nearest neighbor, nor the friend in his friend, nor
+the brother in his own brother." The demoralization of anarchy is even
+more terrible than its bloodshed.
+
+The marches and sieges, the revolts and treacheries, of this evil time
+are occasionally varied by incidents which illustrate the state of
+society. Robert Fitz-Herbert, with a detachment of the Earl of
+Gloucester's soldiers, surprised the castle of Devizes, which the King
+had taken from the Bishop of Salisbury. Robert Fitz-Herbert varies the
+atrocities of his fellow-barons, by rubbing his prisoners with honey,
+and exposing them naked to the sun. But Robert, having obtained Devizes,
+refused to admit the Earl of Gloucester to any advantage of its
+possession, and commenced the subjection of the neighborhood on his own
+account. Another crafty baron, John Fitz-Gilbert, held the castle of
+Marlborough; and Robert Fitz-Herbert, having an anxious desire to be
+lord of that castle also, endeavoring to cajole Fitz-Gilbert into the
+admission of his followers, went there as a guest, but was detained as a
+prisoner. Upon this the Earl of Gloucester came in force for revenge
+against his treacherous ally, Fitz-Herbert, and, conducting him to
+Devizes, there hanged him. The surprise of Lincoln Castle, upon which
+the events of 1141 mainly turned, is equally characteristic of the age.
+Ranulf, Earl of Chester, and William de Roumare, his half-brother, were
+avowed friends of King Stephen. But their ambition took a new direction
+for the support of Matilda. The garrison of Lincoln had no apprehension
+of a surprise, and were busy in those sports which hardy men enjoy even
+amid the rougher sport of war. The Countess of Chester and her
+sister-in-law, with a politeness that the ladies of the court of Louis
+le Grand could not excel, paid a visit to the wife of the knight who had
+the defence of the castle. While there, at this pleasant morning call,
+"talking and joking" with the unsuspecting matron, as Ordericus relates,
+the Earl of Chester came in, "without his armor or even his mantle,"
+attended only by three soldiers. His courtesy was as flattering as that
+of his countess and her friend. But his men-at-arms suddenly mastered
+the unprepared guards, and the gates were thrown open to Earl William
+and his numerous followers. The earls, after this stratagem, held the
+castle against the King, who speedily marched to Lincoln. But the Earl
+of Chester contrived to leave the castle, and soon raised a powerful
+army of his own vassals. The Earl of Gloucester joined him with a
+considerable force, and they together advanced to the relief of the
+besieged city. The battle of Lincoln was preceded by a trifling incident
+to which the chroniclers have attached importance. It was the Feast of
+the Purification; and at the mass which was celebrated at the dawn of
+day, when the King was holding a lighted taper in his hand it was
+suddenly extinguished. "This was an omen of sorrow to the King," says
+Hoveden. But another chronicler, the author of the _Gesta Stephain_,
+tells us, in addition, that the wax candle was suddenly relighted; and
+he accordingly argues that this incident was "a token that for his sins
+he should be deprived of his crown, but on his repentance, through God's
+mercy, he should wonderfully and gloriously recover it." The King had
+been more than a month laying siege to the castle, and his army was
+encamped around the city of Lincoln. When it was ascertained that his
+enemies were at hand he was advised to raise the siege and march out to
+strengthen his power by a general levy. He decided upon instant battle.
+He was then exhorted not to fight on the solemn festival of the
+Purification. But his courage was greater than his prudence or his
+piety. He set forth to meet the insurgent earls. The best knights were
+in his army; but the infantry of his rivals was far more numerous.
+Stephen detached a strong body of horse and foot to dispute the passage
+of a ford of the Trent. But Gloucester by an impetuous charge obtained
+possession of the ford, and the battle became general. The King's
+horsemen fled. The desperate bravery of Stephen, and the issue of the
+battle, have been described by Henry of Huntingdon with singular
+animation: "King Stephen, therefore, with his infantry, stood alone in
+the midst of the enemy. These surrounded the royal troops, attacking the
+columns on all sides, as if they were assaulting a castle. Then the
+battle raged terribly round this circle; helmets and swords gleamed as
+they clashed, and the fearful cries and shouts reechoed from the
+neighboring hills and city walls. The cavalry, furiously charging the
+royal column, slew some and trampled down others; some were made
+prisoners. No respite, no breathing time, was allowed; except in the
+quarter in which the King himself had taken his stand, where the
+assailants recoiled from the unmatched force of his terrible arm. The
+Earl of Chester seeing this, and envious of the glory the King was
+gaining, threw himself upon him with the whole weight of his
+men-at-arms. Even then the King's courage did not fail, but his heavy
+battle-axe gleamed like lightning, striking down some, bearing back
+others. At length it was shattered by repeated blows. Then he drew his
+well-tried sword, with which he wrought wonders, until that too was
+broken. Perceiving which, William de Kaims, a brave soldier, rushed on
+him, and seizing him by his helmet, shouted, 'Here, here, I have taken
+the King!' Others came to his aid, and the King was made prisoner."
+
+After the capture of King Stephen, at this brief but decisive battle, he
+was kept a close prisoner at Bristol Castle. Then commenced what might
+be called the reign of Queen Matilda, which lasted about eight months.
+The defeat of Stephen was the triumph of the greater ecclesiastics. On
+the third Sunday in Lent, 1141, there was a conference on the plain in
+the neighborhood of Winchester--a day dark and rainy, which portended
+disasters. The Bishop of Winchester came forth from his city with all
+the pomp of the pope's legate; and there Matilda swore that in all
+matters of importance, and especially in the bestowal of bishoprics and
+abbeys, she would submit to the Church; and the Bishop and his
+supporters pledged their faith to the Empress on these conditions. After
+Easter, a great council was held at Winchester, which the Bishop called
+as the Pope's vicegerent. The unscrupulous churchman boldly came
+forward, and denounced his brother, inviting the assembly to elect a
+sovereign; and, with an amount of arrogance totally unprecedented, thus
+asserted the notorious untruth that the right of electing a king of
+England principally belonged to the clergy: "The case was yesterday
+agitated before a part of the higher clergy of England, to whose right
+it principally pertains to elect the sovereign, and also to crown him.
+First, then, as is fitting, invoking God's assistance, we elect the
+daughter of that peaceful, that glorious, that rich, that good, and in
+our times incomparable king, as sovereign of England and Normandy, and
+promise her fidelity and support." The Bishop then said to the
+applauding assembly: "We have despatched messengers for the Londoners,
+who, from the importance of their city in England, are almost nobles, as
+it were, to meet us on this business." The next day the Londoners came.
+They were sent, they said, by their fraternity to entreat that their
+lord, the King, might be liberated from captivity. The legate refused
+them, and repeated his oration against his brother. It was a work of
+great difficulty to soothe the minds of the Londoners; and St. John's
+Day had arrived before they would consent to acknowledge Matilda. Many
+parts of the kingdom had then submitted to her government, and she
+entered London with great state. Her nature seems to have been rash and
+imperious. Her first act was to demand subsidies of the citizens; and
+when they said that their wealth was greatly diminished by the troubled
+state of the kingdom, she broke forth into insufferable rage. The
+vigilant queen of Stephen, who kept possession of Kent, now approached
+the city with a numerous force, and by her envoys demanded her husband's
+freedom. Of course her demand was made in vain. She then put forth a
+front of battle. Instead of being crowned at Westminster, the daughter
+of Henry I fled in terror; for "the whole city flew to arms at the
+ringing of the bells, which was the signal for war, and all with one
+accord rose upon the Countess [of Anjou] and her adherents, as swarms of
+wasps issue from their hives."
+
+William Fitzstephen, the biographer of Thomas a Becket, in his
+_Description of London_, supposed to be written about the middle of the
+reign of Henry II, says of this city, "ennobled by her men, graced by
+her arms, and peopled by a multitude of inhabitants," that "in the wars
+under King Stephen there went out to a muster of armed horsemen,
+esteemed fit for war, twenty thousand, and of infantry, sixty thousand."
+In general, the _Description of London_ appears trustworthy, and in some
+instances is supported by other authorities. But this vast number of
+fighting men must, unquestionably, be exaggerated: unless, as Lyttelton
+conjectures, such a muster included the militia of Middlesex, Kent, and
+other counties adjacent to London. Peter of Blois, in the reign of Henry
+II, reckons the inhabitants of the city at forty thousand. That the
+citizens were trained to warlike exercises, and that their manly sports
+nurtured them in the hardihood of military habits, we may well conclude
+from Fitzstephen's account of this community at a little later period
+than that of which we are writing. To the north of the city were pasture
+lands, with streams on whose banks the clack of many mills was pleasing
+to the ear; and beyond was an immense forest, with densely wooded
+thickets, where stags, fallow-deer, boars, and wild bulls had their
+coverts. We have seen that in the charter of Henry I the citizens had
+liberty to hunt through a very extensive district, and hawking was also
+among their free recreations. Football was the favorite game; and the
+boys of the schools, and the various guilds of craftsmen, had each their
+ball. The elder citizens came on horseback to see these contests of the
+young men. Every Sunday in Lent a company with lances and shields went
+out to joust. In the Easter holidays they had river tournaments. During
+the summer the youths exercised themselves in leaping, archery,
+wrestling, stone-throwing, slinging javelins, and fighting with
+bucklers. When the great marsh which washed the walls of the city on the
+north was frozen over, sliding, sledging, and skating were the sports of
+crowds. They had sham fights on the ice, and legs and arms were
+sometimes broken. "But," says Fitzstephen, "youth is an age eager for
+glory and desirous of victory, and so young men engage in counterfeit
+battles, that they may conduct themselves more valiantly in real ones."
+That universal love of hardy sports, which is one of the greatest
+characteristics of England, and from which we derive no little of that
+spirit which keeps our island safe, is not of modern growth. It was one
+of the most important portions of the education of the people seven
+centuries ago.
+
+It was this community, then, so brave, so energetic, so enriched by
+commerce above all the other cities of England, that resolutely abided
+by the fortunes of King Stephen. They had little to dread from any
+hostile assaults of the rival faction; for the city was strongly
+fortified on all sides except to the river; but on that side it was
+secure, after the Tower was built. The palace of Westminster had also a
+breastwork and bastions. After Matilda had taken her hasty departure,
+the indignant Londoners marched out, and they sustained a principal part
+in what has been called "the rout of Winchester," in which Robert, Earl
+of Gloucester, was taken prisoner. The ex-Empress escaped to Devizes.
+The capture of the Earl of Gloucester led to important results. A
+convention was agreed to between the adherents of each party that the
+King should be exchanged for the Earl. Stephen was once more "every inch
+a king." But still there was no peace in the land.
+
+The Bishop of Winchester had again changed his side. In the hour of
+success the empress Matilda had refused the reasonable request that
+Prince Eustace, the son of Stephen, should be put in possession of his
+father's earldom of Boulogne. Malmesbury says, "A misunderstanding arose
+between the legate and the Empress which may be justly considered as the
+melancholy cause of every subsequent evil in England." The chief actors
+in this extraordinary drama present a curious study of human character.
+Matilda, resting her claim to the throne upon her legitimate descent
+from Henry I, who had himself usurped the throne--possessing her
+father's courage and daring, with some of his cruelty--haughty,
+vindictive--furnishes one of the most striking portraits of the proud
+lady of the feudal period, who shrank from no danger by reason of her
+sex, but made the homage of chivalry to woman a powerful instrument for
+enforcing her absolute will. The Earl of Gloucester, the illegitimate
+brother of Matilda, brave, steadfast, of a free and generous nature, a
+sagacious counsellor, a lover of literature, appears to have had few of
+the vices of that age, and most of its elevating qualities. Of Stephen
+it has been said, "He deserves no other reproach than that of having
+embraced the occupation of a captain of banditti." This appears rather a
+harsh judgment from a philosophical writer. Bearing in mind that the
+principle of election prevailed in the choice of a king, whatever was
+the hereditary claim, and seeing how welcome was the advent of Stephen
+when he came, in 1135, to avert the dangers of the kingdom, he merits
+the title of "a captain of banditti" no more than Harold or William the
+Conqueror. After the contests of six years--the victories, the defeats,
+the hostility of the Church, his capture and imprisonment--the
+attachment of the people of the great towns to his person and government
+appears to have been unshaken. When he was defeated at Lincoln, and led
+captive through the city, "the surrounding multitude were moved with
+pity, shedding tears and uttering cries of grief." Ordericus says: "The
+King's disaster filled with grief the clergy and monks and the common
+people; because he was condescending and courteous to those who were
+good and quiet, and if his treacherous nobles had allowed it, he would
+have put an end to their rapacious enterprises, and been a generous
+protector and benevolent friend of the country." The fourth and not
+least remarkable personage of this history is Henry, the Bishop of
+Winchester, and the Pope's legate. At that period, when the functions of
+churchman and statesman were united, we find this man the chief
+instrument for securing the crown for his brother. He subsequently
+becomes the vicegerent of the papal see. Stephen, with more justice than
+discretion, is of opinion that bishops are not doing their duty when
+they build castles, ride about in armor, with crowds of retainers, and
+are not at all scrupulous in appropriating some of the booty of a
+lawless time. From the day when he exhibited his hostility to fighting
+bishops, the Pope's legate was his brother's deadly enemy. But he found
+that the rival whom he had set up was by no means a pliant tool in his
+hands, and he then turned against Matilda. When Stephen had shaken off
+the chains with which he was loaded in Bristol Castle, the Bishop
+summoned a council at Westminster, on his legatine authority; and there
+"by great powers of eloquence, endeavored to extenuate the odium of his
+own conduct"; affirming that he had supported the Empress, "not from
+inclination, but necessity." He then "commanded on the part of God and
+of the Pope, that they should strenuously assist the King, appointed by
+the will of the people, and by the approbation of the Holy See."
+Malmesbury, who records these doings, adds that a layman sent from the
+Empress affirmed that "her coming to England had been effected by the
+legate's frequent letters"; and that "her taking the King, and holding
+him in captivity, had been done principally by his connivance." The
+reign of Stephen is not only "the most perfect condensation of all the
+ills of feudality," but affords a striking picture of the ills which
+befall a people when an ambitious hierarchy, swayed to and fro at the
+will of a foreign power, regards the supremacy of the Church as the one
+great object to be attained, at whatever expense of treachery and
+falsehood, of national degradation and general suffering.
+
+In 1142 the civil war is raging more fiercely than ever. Matilda is at
+Oxford, a fortified city, protected by the Thames, by a wall, and by an
+impregnable castle. Stephen, with a body of veterans, wades across the
+river and enters the city. Matilda and her followers take refuge in the
+keep. For three months the King presses the siege, surrounding the
+fortress on all sides. Famine is approaching to the helpless garrison.
+It is the Christmas season. The country is covered with a deep snow. The
+Thames and the tributary rivers are frozen over. With a small escort
+Matilda contrives to escape, and passes undiscovered through the royal
+posts, on a dark and silent night, when no sound is heard but the clang
+of a trumpet or the challenge of a sentinel. In the course of the night
+she went to Abingdon on foot, and afterwards reached Wallingford on
+horseback. The author of the _Gesta Stephani_ expresses his wonder at
+the marvellous escapes of this courageous woman. The changes of her
+fortune are equally remarkable. After the flight from Oxford the arms of
+the Earl of Gloucester are again successful. Stephen is beaten at
+Wilton, and retreats precipitately with his military brother, the Bishop
+of Winchester. There are now in the autumn of 1142 universal turmoil and
+desolation. Many people emigrate. Others crowd round the sanctuary of
+the churches, and dwell there in mean hovels. Famine is general. Fields
+are white with ripened corn, but the cultivators have fled, and there is
+none to gather the harvest. Cities are deserted and depopulated. Fierce
+foreign mercenaries, for whom the barons have no pay, pillage the farms
+and the monasteries. The bishops, for the most part, rest supine amid
+all this storm of tyranny. When they rouse themselves they increase
+rather than mitigate the miseries of the people. Milo, Earl of Hereford,
+has demanded money of the Bishop of Hereford to pay his troops. The
+Bishop refuses, and Milo seizes his lands and goods. The Bishop then
+pronounces sentence of excommunication against Milo and his adherents,
+and lays an interdict upon the country subject to the Earl's authority.
+We might hastily think that the solemn curse pronounced against a
+nation, or a district, was an unmeaning ceremony, with its "bell, book,
+and candle," to terrify only the weakminded. It was one of the most
+outrageous of the numerous ecclesiastical tyrannies. The consolations of
+religion were eagerly sought for and justly prized by the great body of
+the people, who earnestly believed that a happy future would be a reward
+for the patient endurance of a miserable present. As they were admitted
+to the holy communion, they recognized an acknowledgment of the equality
+of men before the great Father of all. Their marriages were blessed and
+their funerals were hallowed. Under an interdict all the churches were
+shut. No knell was tolled for the dead, for the dead remained unburied.
+No merry peals welcomed the bridal procession, for no couple could be
+joined in wedlock. The awe-stricken mother might have her infant
+baptized, and the dying might receive extreme unction. But all public
+offices of the Church were suspended. If we imagine such a condition of
+society in a village devastated by fire and sword, we may wonder how a
+free government and a Christian church have ever grown up among us.
+
+If Stephen had quietly possessed the throne, and his heir had succeeded
+him, the crowns of England and Normandy would have been disconnected
+before the thirteenth century. Geoffrey of Anjou, while his duchess was
+in England, had become master of Normandy, and its nobles had
+acknowledged his son Henry as their rightful duke. The boy was in
+England, under the protection of the Earl of Gloucester, who attended to
+his education. The great Earl died in 1147. For a few years there had
+been no decided contest between the forces of the King and the Empress.
+After eight years of terrible hostility, and of desperate adventure,
+Matilda left the country. Stephen made many efforts to control the
+license of the barons, but with little effect. He was now engaged in
+another quarrel with the Church. His brother had been superseded as
+legate by Theobald, Archbishop of Canterbury, in consequence of the
+death of the Pope who had supported the Bishop of Winchester. Theobald
+was Stephen's enemy, and his hostility was rendered formidable by his
+alliance with Bigod, the Earl of Norfolk. The Archbishop excommunicated
+Stephen and his adherents, and the King was enforced to submission. In
+1150 Stephen, having been again reconciled to the Church, sought the
+recognition of his son Eustace as the heir to the kingdom. This
+recognition was absolutely refused by the Archbishop, who said that
+Stephen was regarded by the papal see as an usurper. But time was
+preparing a solution of the difficulties of the kingdom. Henry of Anjou
+was grown into manhood. Born in 1133, he had been knighted by his uncle,
+David of Scotland, in 1149. His father died in 1151, and he became not
+only Duke of Normandy, but Earl of Anjou, Touraine, and Maine. In 1152
+he contracted a marriage of ambition with Eleanor, the divorced wife of
+Louis of France, and thus became Lord of Aquitaine and Poitou, which
+Eleanor possessed in her own right. Master of all the western coast of
+France, from the Somme to the Pyrenees, with the exception of Brittany,
+his ambition, thus strengthened by his power, prepared to dispute the
+sovereignty of England with better hopes than ever waited on his
+mother's career. He landed with a well-appointed band of followers in
+1153, and besieged various castles. But no general encounter took place.
+The King and the Duke had a conference, without witnesses, across a
+rivulet, and this meeting prepared the way for a final pacification. The
+negotiators were Henry, the Bishop, on the one part, and Theobald, the
+Archbishop, on the other. Finally Stephen led the Prince in solemn
+procession through the streets of Winchester, "and all the great men of
+the realm, by the King's command, did homage, and pronounced the fealty
+due to their liege lord, to the Duke of Normandy, saving only their
+allegiance to King Stephen during his life." Stephen's son Eustace had
+died during the negotiations. The troublesome reign of Stephen was soon
+after brought to a close. He died on the 25th of October, 1154. His
+constant and heroic queen had died three years before him.
+
+
+
+
+ANTIPAPAL DEMOCRATIC MOVEMENT: ARNOLD OF BRESCIA
+
+ST. BERNARD AND THE SECOND CRUSADE
+
+A.D. 1145-1155
+
+JOHANN A.W. NEANDER
+
+
+(During the first half of the twelfth century--a period marked by
+conflicting spiritual tendencies--in Italy began a work of political and
+religious reform, which has ever since been associated with the name of
+its chief originator and apostle, Arnold of Brescia, so called from his
+native city in Lombardy. He was born about the year 1100, became a
+disciple of Abelard--whose teachings fired him with enthusiasm--and
+entered the priesthood.
+
+Although quite orthodox in doctrine, he rebelled against the
+secularization of the Church--which had given to the pope almost supreme
+power in temporal affairs--and against the worldly disposition and life
+then prevalent among ecclesiastics and monks. His own life was sternly
+simple and ascetic, and this habit had been strongly confirmed by the
+ethical passion which burned in the religious and philosophical
+instructions of Abelard. With the popular religion Arnold had earnest
+sympathy, but he would reduce the clergy to their primitive and
+apostolic poverty, depriving them of individual wealth and of all
+temporal power.
+
+The inspiring idea of Arnold's movement was that of a holy and pure
+church, a renovation of the spiritual order after the pattern of the
+apostolic church. He conformed in dress as well as in his mode of life
+to the principles he taught. The worldly and often corrupt clergy, he
+maintained, were unfit to discharge the priestly functions--they were no
+longer priests, and the secularized Church was no longer the house of
+God.
+
+Arnold dreamed of a great Christian republic and labored to establish
+it, insomuch that his ideal, never realized in concrete form, either in
+church or state, took, and in history has kept, the name of republic.
+His eloquence and sincerity brought him powerful popular support, and
+even a large part of the nobility were won to his side. But of course,
+among those whom his aims condemned or antagonized, there were many who
+spared no pains to place him in an unfavorable light and to bring his
+labors to naught. In the simple story of his career, as here told by the
+great church historian, his figure appears in an attitude of heroism,
+which the pathos of his end can only make the reader more deeply
+appreciate. Through all this agitation is heard the voice of St. Bernard
+urging the religious conscience and better aspiration of the time,
+preaching the Second Crusade, and speeding its eastward march with
+earnest expectation--his high hope doomed to perish with its inglorious
+result.)
+
+
+Arnold's discourses were directly calculated by their tendency to find
+ready entrance into the minds of the laity, before whose eyes the
+worldly lives of the ecclesiastics and monks were constantly present,
+and to create a faction in deadly hostility to the clergy. Superadded to
+this was the inflammable matter already prepared by the collision of the
+spirit of political freedom with the power of the higher clergy. Thus
+Arnold's addresses produced in the minds of the Italian people, quite
+susceptible to such excitements, a prodigious effect, which threatened
+to spread more widely, and Pope Innocent felt himself called upon to
+take preventive measures against it. At the Lateran Council, in the year
+1139, he declared against Arnold's proceedings, and commanded him to
+quit Italy--the scene of the disturbances thus far--and not to return
+again without express permission from the Pope. Arnold, moreover, is
+said to have bound himself by an oath to obey this injunction, which
+probably was expressed in such terms as to leave him free to interpret
+it as referring exclusively to the person of Pope Innocent. If the oath
+was not so expressed, he might afterward have been accused of violating
+that oath. It is to be regretted that the form in which the sentence was
+pronounced against Arnold has not come down to us; but from its very
+character it is evident that he could not have been convicted of any
+false doctrine, since otherwise the Pope would certainly not have
+treated him so mildly--would not have been contented with merely
+banishing him from Italy, since teachers of false doctrine would be
+dangerous to the Church everywhere.
+
+Bernard, moreover, in his letter directed against Arnold, states that he
+was accused before the Pope of being the author of a very bad schism.
+Arnold now betook himself to France, and here he became entangled in the
+quarrels with his old teacher Abelard, to whom he was indebted for the
+first impulse of his mind toward this more serious and free bent of the
+religious spirit. Expelled from France, he directed his steps to
+Switzerland, and sojourned in Zurich. The abbot Bernard thought it
+necessary to caution the Bishop of Constance against him; but the man
+who had been condemned by the Pope found protection there from the papal
+legate, Cardinal Guido, who, indeed, made him a member of his household
+and companion of his table. The abbot Bernard severely censured the
+prelate, on the ground that Arnold's connection with him would
+contribute, without fail, to give importance and influence to that
+dangerous man. This deserves to be noticed on two accounts, for it makes
+it evident what power he could exercise over men's minds, and that no
+false doctrines could be charged to his account.
+
+But independent of Arnold's personal presence, the impulse which he had
+given continued to operate in Italy, and the effects of it extended even
+to Rome. By the papal condemnation, public attention was only more
+strongly drawn to the subject.
+
+The Romans certainly felt no great sympathy for the religious element in
+that serious spirit of reform which animated Arnold; but the political
+movements, which had sprung out of his reforming tendency, found a point
+of attachment in their love of liberty, and their dreams of the ancient
+dominion of Rome over the world. The idea of emancipating themselves
+from the yoke of the Pope, and of reestablishing the old Republic,
+flattered their Roman pride. Espousing the principles of Arnold, they
+required that the Pope, as spiritual head of the Church, should confine
+himself to the administration of spiritual affairs; and they committed
+to a senate the supreme direction of civil affairs.
+
+Innocent could do nothing to stem such a violent current; and he died in
+the midst of these disturbances, in the year 1143. The mild Cardinal
+Guido, the friend of Abelard and Arnold, became his successor, and
+called himself, when pope, Celestine II. By his gentleness, quiet was
+restored for a short time. Perhaps it was the news of the elevation of
+this friendly man to the papal throne that encouraged Arnold himself to
+come to Rome. But Celestine died after six months, and Lucius II was his
+successor. Under his reign the Romans renewed the former agitations with
+more violence; they utterly renounced obedience to the Pope, whom they
+recognized only in his priestly character, and the restored Roman
+Republic sought to strike a league in opposition to the Pope and to
+papacy with the new Emperor, Conrad III.
+
+In the name of the "senate and Roman people," a pompous letter was
+addressed to Conrad. The Emperor was invited to come to Rome, that from
+thence, like Justinian and Constantine, in former days, he might give
+laws to the world.
+
+Caesar should have the things that are Caesar's; the priest the things
+that are the priest's, as Christ ordained when Peter paid the tribute
+money. Long did the tendency awakened by Arnold's principles continue to
+agitate Rome. In the letters written amidst these commotions, by
+individual noblemen of Rome to the Emperor, we perceive a singular
+mixing together of the Arnoldian spirit with the dreams of Roman vanity;
+a radical tendency to the separation of secular from spiritual things
+which if it had been capable enough in itself, and if it could have
+found more points of attachment in the age, would have brought
+destruction on the old theocratical system of the Church. They said that
+the Pope could claim no political sovereignty in Rome; he could not even
+be consecrated without the consent of the Emperor--a rule which had in
+fact been observed till the time of Gregory VII. Men complained of the
+worldliness of the clergy, of their bad lives, of the contradiction
+between their conduct and the teachings of Scripture.
+
+The popes were accused as the instigators of the wars. "The popes," it
+was said, "should no longer unite the cup of the eucharist with the
+sword; it was their vocation to preach, and to confirm what they
+preached by good works. How could those who eagerly grasped at all the
+wealth of this world, and corrupted the true riches of the Church, the
+doctrine of salvation obtained by Christ, by their false doctrines and
+their luxurious living, receive that word of our Lord, 'Blessed are the
+poor in spirit,' when they were poor themselves neither in fact nor in
+disposition?" Even the donative of Constantine to the Roman bishop
+Silvester was declared to be a pitiable fiction. This lie had been so
+clearly exposed that it was obvious to the very day-laborers and to
+women, and that these could put to silence the most learned men if they
+ventured to defend the genuineness of this donative; so that the Pope,
+with his cardinals, no longer dared to appear in public. But Arnold was
+perhaps the only individual in whose case such a tendency was deeply
+rooted in religious conviction; with many it was but a transitory
+intoxication, in which their political interests had become merged for
+the moment.
+
+The pope Lucius II was killed as early as 1145, in the attack on the
+Capitol. A scholar of the great abbot Bernard, the abbot Peter Bernard
+of Pisa, now mounted the papal chair under the name of Eugene III. As
+Eugene honored and loved the abbot Bernard as his spiritual father and
+old preceptor, so the latter took advantage of his relation to the Pope
+to speak the truth to him with a plainness which no other man would
+easily have ventured to use. In congratulating him upon his elevation to
+the papal dignity, he took occasion to exhort him to do away with the
+many abuses which had become so widely spread in the Church by worldly
+influences. "Who will give me the satisfaction," said he in his letter,
+"of beholding the Church of God, before I die, in a condition like that
+in which it was in ancient days, when the apostles threw out their nets,
+not for silver and gold, but for souls? How fervently I wish thou
+mightest inherit the word of that apostle whose episcopal seat thou hast
+acquired, of him who said, 'Thy gold perish with thee.' Oh that all the
+enemies of Zion might tremble before this dreadful word, and shrink back
+abashed! This, thy mother indeed expects and requires of thee, for this
+long and sigh the sons of thy mother, small and great, that every plant
+which our Father in heaven has not planted may be rooted up by thy
+hands." He then alluded to the sudden deaths of the last predecessors of
+the Pope, exhorting him to humility, and reminding him of his
+responsibility. "In all thy works," he wrote, "remember that thou art a
+man; and let the fear of Him who taketh away the breath of rulers be
+ever before thine eyes."
+
+Eugene was soon forced to yield, it is true, to the superior force of
+the insurrectionary spirit in Rome, and in 1146 to take refuge in
+France; but, like Urban and Innocent, he too, from this country,
+attained to the highest triumph of the papal power. Like Innocent, he
+found there, in the abbot Bernard of Clairvaux, a mightier instrument
+for operating on the minds of the age than he could have found in any
+other country; and like Urban, when banished from the ancient seat of
+the papacy, he was enabled to place himself at the head of a crusade
+proclaimed in his name, and undertaken with great enthusiasm; an
+enterprise from which a new impression of sacredness would be reflected
+back upon his own person.
+
+The news of the success which had attended the arms of the Saracens in
+Syria, the defeat of the Christians, the conquest of the ancient
+Christian territory of Edessa, the danger which threatened the new
+Christian kingdom of Jerusalem and the Holy City, had spread alarm among
+the Western nations, and the Pope considered himself bound to summon the
+Christians of the West to the assistance of their hard-pressed brethren
+in the faith and to the recovery of the holy places. By a letter
+directed to the abbot Bernard he commissioned him to exhort the Western
+Christians in his name, that, for penance and forgiveness of sins, they
+should march to the East, to deliver their brethren, or to give up their
+lives for them. Enthusiastic for the cause himself Bernard communicated,
+through the power of the living word and by letters, his enthusiasm to
+the nations. He represented the new crusade as a means furnished by God
+to the multitudes sunk in sin, of calling them to repentance, and of
+paving the way, by devout participation in a pious work, for the
+forgiveness of their sins. Thus, in his letter to the clergy and people
+in East Frankland (Germany), he exhorts them eagerly to lay hold on this
+opportunity; he declares that the Almighty condescended to invite
+murderers, robbers, adulterers, perjurers, and those sunk in other
+crimes, into his service, as well as the righteous. He calls upon them
+to make an end of waging war with one another, and to seek an object for
+their warlike prowess in this holy contest. "Here, brave warrior," he
+exclaims, "thou hast a field where thou mayest fight without danger,
+where victory is glory and death is gain. Take the sign of the cross,
+and thou shalt obtain the forgiveness of all the sins which thou hast
+never confessed with a contrite heart." By Bernard's fiery discourses
+men of all ranks were carried away. In France and in Germany he
+travelled about, conquering by an effort his great bodily infirmities,
+and the living word from his lips produced even mightier effects than
+his letters.
+
+A peculiar charm, and a peculiar power of moving men's minds, must have
+existed in the tones of his voice; to this must be added the
+awe-inspiring effect of his whole appearance, the way in which his whole
+being and the motions of his bodily frame joined in testifying of that
+which seized and inspired him. Thus it admits of being explained how, in
+Germany, even those who understood but little, or in fact nothing, of
+what he said, could be so moved as to shed tears and smite their
+breasts; could, by his own speeches in a foreign language, be more
+strongly affected and agitated than by the immediate interpretation of
+his words by another. From all quarters sick persons were conveyed to
+him by the friends who sought from him a cure; and the power of his
+faith, the confidence he inspired in the minds of men, might sometimes
+produce remarkable effects. With this enthusiasm, however, Bernard
+united a degree of prudence and a discernment of character such as few
+of that age possessed, and such qualities were required to counteract
+the multiform excitements of the wild spirit of fanaticism which mixed
+in with this great ferment of minds.
+
+Thus, he warned the Germans not to suffer themselves to be misled so far
+as to follow certain independent enthusiasts, ignorant of war, who were
+bent on moving forward the bodies of the crusaders prematurely. He held
+up as a warning the example of Peter the Hermit, and declared himself
+very decidedly opposed to the proposition of an abbot who was disposed
+to march with a number of monks to Jerusalem; "for," said he, "fighting
+warriors are more needed there than singing monks." At an assembly held
+at Chartres it was proposed that he himself should take the lead of the
+expedition; but he rejected the proposition at once, declaring that it
+was beyond his power and contrary to his calling. Having, perhaps,
+reason to fear that the Pope might be hurried on, by the shouts of the
+many, to lay upon him some charge to which he did not feel himself
+called, he besought the Pope that he would not make him a victim to
+men's arbitrary will, but that he would inquire, as it was his duty to
+do, how God had determined to dispose of him.
+
+With the preaching of this Second Crusade, as with the invitation to the
+First, was connected an extraordinary awakening. Many who had hitherto
+given themselves up to their unrestrained passions and desires, and
+become strangers to all higher feelings, were seized with compunction.
+Bernard's call to repentance penetrated many a heart; people who had
+lived in all manner of crime were seen following this voice and flocking
+together in troops to receive the badge of the cross. Bishop Otto of
+Freisingen, the historian, who himself took the cross at that time,
+expresses it as his opinion "that every man of sound understanding would
+be forced to acknowledge so sudden and uncommon a change could have been
+produced in no other way than by the right hand of the Lord." The
+provost Gerhoh of Reichersberg, who wrote in the midst of these
+movements, was persuaded that he saw here a work of the Holy Spirit,
+designed to counteract the vices and corruptions which had got the upper
+hand in the Church.
+
+Many who had been awakened to repentance confessed what they had taken
+from others by robbery or fraud, and hastened, before they went to the
+holy war, to seek reconciliation with their enemies. The Christian
+enthusiasm of the German people found utterance in songs in the German
+tongue; and even now the peculiar adaptation of this language to sacred
+poetry began to be remarked. Indecent songs could no longer venture to
+appear abroad.
+
+While some were awakened by Bernard's preaching from a life of crime to
+repentance, and by taking part in the holy war strove to obtain the
+remission of their sins, others again, who though hitherto borne along
+in the current of ordinary worldly pursuits, yet had not given
+themselves up to vice, were filled by Bernard's words with loathing of
+the worldly life, inflamed with a vehement longing after a higher stage
+of Christian perfection, after a life of entire consecration to God.
+They longed rather to enter upon the pilgrimage to the heavenly than to
+an earthly Jerusalem; they resolved to become monks, and would fain have
+the man of God himself, whose words had made so deep an impression on
+their hearts, as their guide in the spiritual life, and commit
+themselves to his directions, in the monastery of Clairvaux. But here
+Bernard showed his prudence and knowledge of mankind; he did not allow
+all to become monks who wished to do so. Many he rejected because he
+perceived they were not fitted for the quiet of the contemplative life,
+but needed to be disciplined by the conflicts and cares of a life of
+action.
+
+As contemporaries themselves acknowledge, these first impressions, in
+the case of many who went to the crusades, were of no permanent
+duration, and their old nature broke forth again the more strongly under
+the manifold temptations to which they were exposed, in proportion to
+the facility with which, through the confidence they reposed in a
+plenary indulgence, without really laying to heart the condition upon
+which it was bestowed, they could flatter themselves with security in
+their sins.
+
+Gerhoh of Reichersberg, in describing the blessed effects of that
+awakening which accompanied the preaching of the crusader, yet says: "We
+doubt not that among so vast a multitude some became in the true sense
+and in all sincerity soldiers of Christ. Some, however, were led to
+embark in the enterprise by various other occasions, concerning whom it
+does not belong to us to judge, but only to Him who alone knows the
+hearts of those who marched to the contest either in the right or not in
+the right spirit. Yet this we do confidently affirm, that to this
+crusade many were called, but few were chosen." And it was said that
+many returned from this expedition, not better, but worse than they
+went. Therefore the monk Cesarius of Heisterbach, who states this, adds:
+"All depends on bearing the yoke of Christ not _one_ year or _two_
+years, but daily, if a man is really intent on doing it in truth, and in
+that sense in which our Lord requires it to be done, in order to follow
+him."
+
+When it turned out, however, that the event did not answer the
+expectations excited by Bernard's enthusiastic confidence, but the
+crusade came to that unfortunate issue which was brought about
+especially by the treachery of the princes and nobles of the Christian
+kingdom in Syria, this was a source of great chagrin to Bernard, who had
+been so active in setting it in motion, and who had inspired such
+confident hopes by his promises. He appeared now in the light of a bad
+prophet, and he was reproached by many with having incited men to engage
+in an enterprise which had cost so much blood to no purpose; but
+Bernard's friends alleged, in his defence, that he had not excited such
+a popular movement single-handed, but as the organ of the Pope, in whose
+name he acted; and they appealed to the facts by which his preaching of
+the cross was proved to be a work of God--to the wonders which attended
+it. Or they ascribed the failure of the undertaking to the bad conduct
+of the crusaders themselves, to the unchristian mode of life which many
+of them led, as one of these friends maintained, in a consoling letter
+to Bernard himself, adding, "God, however, has turned it to good.
+Numbers who, if they had returned home, would have continued to live a
+life of crime, disciplined and purified by many sufferings, have passed
+into the life eternal."
+
+But Bernard himself could not be staggered in his faith by this event.
+In writing to Pope Eugene on this subject, he refers to the
+incomprehensibleness of the divine ways and judgments; to the example of
+Moses, who, although his work carried on its face incontestable evidence
+of being a work of God, yet was not permitted himself to conduct the
+Jews into the Promised Land. As this was owing to the fault of the Jews
+themselves, so too the crusaders had none to blame but themselves for
+the failure of the divine work. "But," says he, "it will be said,
+perhaps, how do we know that this work came from the Lord? What miracle
+dost thou work that we should believe thee? To this question I need not
+give an answer; it is a point on which my modesty asks to be excused
+from speaking. Do you answer," says he to the Pope, "for me and for
+yourself, according to that which you have seen and heard." So firmly
+was Bernard convinced that God had sustained his labors by miracles.
+
+Eugene was at length enabled, in the year 1149, after having for a long
+time excited against himself the indignation of the cardinals by his
+dependence on the French abbot, with the assistance of Roger, King of
+the Sicilies, to return to Rome; where, however, he still had to
+maintain a struggle with the party of Arnold.
+
+The provost Gerhoh finds something to complain of in the fact that the
+Church of St. Peter wore so warlike an aspect that men beheld the tomb
+of the apostle surrounded with bastions and the implements of war.
+
+As Bernard was no longer sufficiently near the Pope to exert on him the
+same immediate personal influence as in times past, he addressed to him
+a voice of admonition and warning, such as the mighty of the earth
+seldom enjoy the privilege of hearing. With the frankness of a love
+which, as he himself expresses it, knew not the master, but recognized
+the son, even under the pontifical robes, he set before him, in his four
+books _On Meditation_, which he sent to him singly at different times,
+the duties of his office, and the faults against which, in order to
+fulfil these duties, he needed especially to guard.
+
+Bernard was penetrated with a conviction that to the Pope, as St.
+Peter's successor, was committed by God a sovereign power of church
+government over all, and responsible to no other tribunal; that to this
+church theocracy, guided by the Pope, the administration even of the
+secular power, though independent within its own peculiar sphere, should
+be subjected, for the service of the kingdom of God; but he also
+perceived, with the deepest pain, how very far the papacy was from
+corresponding to this its idea and destination; what prodigious
+corruption had sprung and continued to spring from the abuse of papal
+authority; he perceived already, with prophetic eye, that this very
+abuse of arbitrary will must eventually bring about the destruction of
+this power. He desired that the Pope should disentangle himself from the
+secular part of his office, and reduce that office within the purely
+spiritual domain; and that, above all, he should learn to govern and
+restrict himself.
+
+But to the close of his life, in the year 1153, Pope Eugene had to
+contend with the turbulent spirit of the Romans and the influences of
+the principles disseminated by Arnold; and this contest was prolonged
+into the reign of his second successor, Adrian IV. Among the people and
+among the nobles, a considerable party had arisen who would concede to
+the Pope no kind of secular dominion. And there seems to have been a
+shade of difference among the members of this party. A mob of the people
+is said to have gone to such an extreme of arrogance as to propose the
+choosing of a new emperor from among the Romans themselves, the
+restoration of a Roman empire independent of the Pope. The other party,
+to which belonged the nobles, were for placing the emperor Frederick I
+at the head of the Roman Republic, and uniting themselves with him in a
+common interest against the Pope. They invited him to receive the
+imperial crown, in the ancient manner, from the "senate and Roman
+people," and not from the heretical and recreant clergy and false monks,
+who acted in contradiction to their calling, exercising lordship despite
+of the evangelical and apostolical doctrine; and in contempt of all
+laws, divine and human, brought the Church of God and the kingdom of the
+world into confusion. Those who pretend that they are the
+representatives of Peter, it was said, in a letter addressed in the
+spirit of this party to the emperor Frederick I, "act in contradiction
+to the doctrines which that apostle teaches in his epistles. How can
+they say with the apostle Peter, 'Lo, we have left all and followed
+thee,' and, 'Silver and gold have I none'? How can our Lord say to such,
+'Ye are the light of the world,' 'the salt of the earth'? Much rather is
+to be applied to them what our Lord says of the salt that has lost its
+savor. 'Eager after earthly riches, they spoil the true riches, from
+which the salvation of the world has proceeded.' How can the saying be
+applied to them, 'Blessed are the poor in spirit'? for they are neither
+poor in spirit nor in fact."
+
+Pope Adrian IV was first enabled, under more favorable circumstances,
+and assisted by the Emperor Frederick I, to deprive the Arnold party of
+its leader, and then to suppress it entirely. It so happened that, in
+the first year of Adrian's reign, 1155, a cardinal, on his way to visit
+the Pope, was attacked and wounded by followers of Arnold. This induced
+the Pope to put all Rome under the interdict, with a view to force the
+expulsion of Arnold and his party. This means did not fail of its
+effect. The people who could not bear the suspension of divine worship,
+now themselves compelled the nobles to bring about the ejection of
+Arnold and his friends. Arnold, on leaving Rome, found protection from
+Italian nobles. By the order, however, of the emperor Frederick, who had
+come into Italy, he was torn from his protectors and surrendered up to
+the papal authority. The Prefect of Rome then took possession of his
+person and caused him to be hanged. His body was burned, and its ashes
+thrown into the Tiber, lest his bones might be preserved as the relics
+of a martyr by the Romans, who were enthusiastically devoted to him.
+Worthy men, who were in other respects zealous defenders of the church
+orthodoxy and of the hierarchy--as, for example, Gerhoh of
+Reichersberg--expressed their disapprobation, first, that Arnold should
+be punished with death on account of the errors which he disseminated;
+secondly, that the sentence of death should proceed from a spiritual
+tribunal, or that such a tribunal should at least have subjected itself
+to that bad appearance.
+
+But on the part of the Roman court it was alleged, in defence of this
+proceeding, that "it was done without the knowledge and contrary to the
+will of the Roman curia." "The Prefect of Rome had forcibly removed
+Arnold from the prison where he was kept, and his servants had put him
+to death in revenge for injuries they had suffered from Arnold's party.
+Arnold, therefore, was executed, not on account of his doctrines, but in
+consequence of tumults excited by himself." It may be a question whether
+this was said with sincerity, or whether, according to the proverb, a
+confession of guilt is not implied in the excuse. But Gerhoh was of the
+opinion that in this case they should at least have done as David did,
+in the case of Abner's death, and, by allowing Arnold to be buried, and
+his death to be mourned over, instead of causing his body to be burned,
+and the remains thrown into the Tiber, washed their hands of the whole
+transaction.
+
+But the idea for which Arnold had contended, and for which he died,
+continued to work in various forms, even after his death--the idea of a
+purification of the Church from the foreign worldly elements with which
+it had become vitiated, of its restoration to its original spiritual
+character.
+
+
+
+
+DECLINE OF THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE: RAVAGES OF ROGER OF SICILY
+
+A.D. 1146
+
+GEORGE FINLAY
+
+
+(From the enthronement of the Commenian dynasty in A.D. 1081, which was
+accomplished through a successful rebellion, attended by shameful
+treachery and rapine, the Byzantine empire, and especially
+Constantinople, its capital, passed through many vicissitudes; but the
+sack of the city by Alexius Commenus, the founder of the line, was
+remembered by the populace to the disadvantage of all his successors;
+the last of whom, Andronicus I, ended his reign in 1185. John, the son
+of Alexius [1118-1143], ruled with discretion and ability, and recovered
+some territory from the Turks.
+
+Manuel I, the son of John [1143-1181], ruled during a period of almost
+constant war, and for a time he held the enemies of the empire in check.
+But he appears to have been more endowed with courage and the spirit of
+enterprise than with good judgment, and his conduct of the empire
+coincided with events that, as seen in history, contributed to its
+decline, which after his death followed rapidly. As this decline is to
+be dated especially from the passing but not ineffectual invasion of
+Roger II, King of Sicily, in 1146, some account of that, together with a
+view of conditions immediately preceding, becomes important in a work
+like this.
+
+The century and a half before Roger's invasion had been a period of
+tranquillity for the distinctively Greek people of the empire, who had
+increased rapidly in numbers and wealth, and were in possession of an
+extensive commerce and many manufactures. Therefore they were perhaps
+the greatest sufferers from the adverse events which befell the State.)
+
+
+The emperor Alexius I had concluded a commercial treaty with Pisa toward
+the end of his reign. Manuel renewed this alliance, and he appears to
+have been the first of the Byzantine emperors who concluded a public
+treaty with Genoa. The pride of the emperors of the Romans--as the
+sovereigns of Constantinople were styled--induced them to treat the
+Italian republics as municipalities still dependent on the Empire of the
+Caesars, of which they had once formed a part; and the rulers both of
+Pisa and Genoa yielded to this assumption of supremacy, and consented to
+appear as vassals and liegemen of the Byzantine emperors, in order to
+participate in the profits which they saw the Venetians gained by
+trading in their dominions.
+
+Several commercial treaties with Pisa and Genoa, as well as with Venice,
+have been preserved. The obligations of the republics are embodied in
+the charter enumerating the concessions granted by the Emperor, and the
+document is called a _chrysobulum_, or golden bull, from the golden seal
+of the Emperor attached to it as the certificate of its authenticity.
+
+In Manuel's treaties with the Genoese and Pisans, the republics bind
+themselves never to engage in hostilities against the empire; but, on
+the contrary, all the subjects of the republics residing in the
+Emperor's dominions become bound to assist him against all assailants;
+they engage to act with their own ships, or to serve on board the
+imperial fleet, for the usual pay granted to Latin mercenaries. They
+promise to offer no impediment to the extension of the empire in Syria,
+reserving to themselves the factories and privileges they already
+possess in any place that may be conquered. They submit their civil and
+criminal affairs to the jurisdiction of the Byzantine courts of justice,
+as was then the case with the Venetians and other foreigners in the
+empire. Acts of piracy and armed violence, unless the criminals were
+taken in the act, were to be reported to the rulers of the republic
+whose subjects had committed the crime, and the Byzantine authorities
+were not to render the innocent traders in the empire responsible for
+the injuries inflicted by these brigands. The republicans engaged to
+observe all the stipulations in their treaties, in defiance of
+ecclesiastical excommunication or the prohibition of any individual,
+crowned or not crowned.
+
+Manuel, in return, granted to the republicans the right of forming a
+factory, erecting a quay for landing their goods, and building a church;
+and the Genoese received their grant in an agreeable position on the
+side of the port opposite Constantinople, where in after-times their
+great colony of Galata was formed. The Emperor promised to send an
+annual of from four hundred to five hundred gold bezants, with two
+pieces of a rich brocade then manufactured only in the Byzantine empire,
+to the republican governments, and sixty bezants, with one piece of
+brocade, to their archbishops. These treaties fixed the duty levied on
+the goods imported or exported from Constantinople by the Italians at 4
+per cent.; but in the other cities of the empire, the Pisans and Genoese
+were to pay the same duties as other Latin traders, excepting, of
+course, the privileged Venetians. These duties generally amounted to 10
+per cent. The republics were expressly excluded, by the Genoese treaty,
+from the Black Sea trade, except when they received a special license
+from the Emperor. In case of shipwreck, the property of the foreigners
+was to be protected by the imperial authorities and respected by the
+people, and every assistance was to be granted to the unfortunate
+sufferers. This humane clause was not new in Byzantine commercial
+treaties, for it is contained in the earliest treaty concluded by
+Alexius I with the Pisans. On the whole, the arrangements for the
+administration of justice in these treaties prove that the Byzantine
+empire still enjoyed a greater degree of order than the rest of Europe.
+
+The state of civilization in the Eastern Empire rendered the public
+finances the moving power of the government, as in the nations of modern
+Europe. This must always tend to the centralization of political
+authority, for the highest branch of the executive will always endeavor
+to dispose of the revenues of the State according to its views of
+necessity. This centralizing policy led Manuel to order all the money
+which the Greek commercial communities had hitherto devoted to
+maintaining local squadrons of galleys for the defence of the islands
+and coasts of the Aegean to be remitted to the treasury at
+Constantinople. The ships were compelled to visit the imperial dockyard
+in the capital to undergo repairs and to receive provisions and pay.
+
+A navy is a most expensive establishment; kings, ministers, and people
+are all very apt to think that when it is not wanted at any particular
+time, the cost of its maintenance may be more profitably applied to
+other objects. Manuel, after he had secured the funds of the Greeks for
+his own treasury, soon left their ships to rot, and the commerce of
+Greece became exposed to the attacks of small squadrons of Italian
+pirates who previously would not have dared to plunder in the
+Archipelago. It may be thought by some that Manuel acted wisely in
+centralizing the naval administration of his empire; but the great
+number, the small size, and the relative position of many of the Greek
+islands with regard to the prevailing winds render the permanent
+establishment of naval stations at several points necessary to prevent
+piracy.
+
+Manuel and Otho ruined the navy of Greece by their unwise measures of
+centralization; Pericles, by prudently centralizing the maritime forces
+of the various states, increased the naval power of Athens, and gave
+additional security to every Greek ship that navigated the sea.
+
+The same fiscal views which induced Manuel to centralize the naval
+administration when it was injurious to the interests of the empire,
+prompted him to act diametrically opposite with regard to the army. The
+emperor John had added greatly to the efficiency of the Byzantine
+military force by improving and centralizing its administration, and he
+left Manuel an excellent army, which rendered the Eastern Empire the
+most powerful state in Europe. But Manuel, from motives of economy,
+abandoned his father's system. Instead of assembling all the military
+forces of the empire annually in camps, where they received pay and were
+subjected to strict discipline, toward the end of his reign he
+distributed even the regular army in cities and provinces, where they
+were quartered far apart, in order that each district, by maintaining a
+certain number of men, might relieve the treasury from the burden of
+their pay and subsistence while they were not on actual service. The
+money thus retained in the central treasury was spent in idle festivals
+at Constantinople, and the troops, dispersed and neglected, became
+careless of their military exercises, and lived in a state of relaxed
+discipline. Other abuses were quickly introduced; resident yeomen,
+shopkeepers, and artisans were enrolled in the legions, with the
+connivance of the officers. The burden of maintaining the troops was in
+this way diminished, but the army was deteriorated.
+
+In other districts, where the divisions were exposed to be called into
+action, or were more directly under central inspection, the effective
+force was kept up at its full complement, but the people were compelled
+to submit to every kind of extortion and tyranny. The tendency of
+absolute power being always to weaken the power of the law, and to
+increase the authority of the executive agents of the sovereign, soon
+manifested its effects in the rapid progress of administrative
+corruption. The Byzantine garrisons in a few years became prototypes of
+the shopkeeping janizaries of the Ottoman empire, and bore no
+resemblance to the feudal militia of Western Europe, which Manuel had
+proposed as the model of his reform. This change produced a rapid
+decline in the military strength of the Byzantine army and accelerated
+the fall of the empire.
+
+For a considerable period the Byzantine emperors had been gradually
+increasing the proportion of foreign mercenaries in their service; this
+practice Manuel carried further than any of his predecessors. Besides
+the usual Varangian, Italian, and German guards, we find large corps of
+Patzinaks, Franks, and Turks enrolled in his armies, and officers of
+these nations occupying situations of the highest rank. A change had
+taken place in the military tactics, caused by the heavy armor and
+powerful horses which the crusaders brought into the field, and by the
+greater personal strength and skill in warlike exercises of the Western
+troops, who had no occupation from infancy but gymnastic exercises and
+athletic amusements. The nobility of the feudal nations expended more
+money on arms and armor than on other luxuries; and this becoming the
+general fashion, the Western troops were much better armed than the
+Byzantine soldiers. War became the profession of the higher ranks, and
+the expense of military undertakings was greatly increased by the
+military classes being completely separated from the rest of society.
+The warlike disposition of Manuel led him to favor the military nobles
+of the West who took service at his court; while his confidence in his
+own power, and in the political superiority of his empire, deluded him
+with the hope of being able to quell the turbulence of the Franks, and
+set bounds to the ambition and power of the popes.
+
+The wars of Manuel were sometimes forced on him by foreign powers, and
+sometimes commenced for temporary objects; but he appears never to have
+formed any fixed idea of the permanent policy which ought to have
+determined the constant employment of all the military resources at his
+command, for the purpose of advancing the interest of his empire and
+giving security to his subjects. His military exploits may be considered
+under three heads: His wars with the Franks, whether in Asia or Europe;
+his wars with the Hungarians and Servians; and his wars with the Turks.
+
+His first operations were against the principality of Antioch. The death
+of John II caused the dispersion of the fine army he had assembled for
+the conquest of Syria; but Manuel sent a portion of that army, and a
+strong fleet, to attack the principality. One of the generals of the
+land forces was Prosuch, a Turkish officer in high favor with his
+father. Raymond of Antioch was no longer the idle gambler he had shown
+himself in the camp of the emperor John; but though he was now
+distinguished by his courage and skill in arms, he was completely
+defeated, and the imperial army carried its ravages up to the very walls
+of Antioch, while the fleet laid waste the coast. Though the Byzantine
+troops retired, the losses of the campaign convinced Raymond that it
+would be impossible to defend Antioch should Manuel take the field in
+person. He therefore hastened to Constantinople, as a suppliant, to sue
+for peace; but Manuel, before admitting him to an audience, required
+that he should repair to the tomb of the emperor John and ask pardon for
+having violated his former promises. When the Hercules of the Franks, as
+Raymond was called, had submitted to this humiliation, he was admitted
+to the imperial presence, swore fealty to the Byzantine empire as Prince
+of Antioch, and became the vassal of the emperor Manuel. The conquest of
+Edessa by the Mahometans, which took place in the month of December,
+1144, rendered the defence of Antioch by the Latins a doubtful
+enterprise, unless they could secure the assistance of the Greeks.
+
+Manuel involved himself in a war with Roger, King of Sicily, which
+perhaps he might have avoided by more prudent conduct. An envoy he had
+sent to the Sicilian court concluded a treaty, which Manuel thought fit
+to disavow with unsuitable violence. This gave the Sicilian King a
+pretext for commencing war, but the real cause of hostilities must be
+sought in the ambition of Roger and the hostile feelings of Manuel.
+Roger was one of the wealthiest princes of his time; he had united under
+his sceptre both Sicily and all the Norman possessions in Southern
+Italy; his ambition was equal to his wealth and power, and he aspired at
+eclipsing the glory of Robert Guiscard and Bohemund by some permanent
+conquests in the Byzantine empire. On the other hand, the renown of
+Roger excited the envy of Manuel, who, proud of his army and confident
+of his own valor and military skill, hoped to reconquer Sicily. His
+passion made him forget that he was surrounded by numerous enemies, who
+would combine to prevent his employing all his forces against one
+adversary. Manuel consequently acted imprudently in revealing his
+hostile intentions; while Roger could direct all his forces against one
+point, and avail himself of Manuel's embarrassments. He commenced
+hostilities by inflicting a blow on the wealth and prosperity of Greece,
+from which it never recovered.
+
+At the commencement of the Second Crusade, when the attention of Manuel
+was anxiously directed to the movements of Louis VII of France, and
+Conrad, Emperor of Germany, Roger, who had collected a powerful fleet at
+Brindisi, for the purpose either of attacking the Byzantine empire or
+transporting the crusaders to Palestine, availed himself of an
+insurrection in Corfu to conclude a convention with the inhabitants, who
+admitted a garrison of one thousand Norman troops into their citadel.
+The Corfutes complained with great reason of the intolerable weight of
+taxation to which they were subjected; of the utter neglect of their
+interests by the central government, which consumed their wealth, and of
+the great abuses which prevailed in the administration of justice; but
+the remedy they adopted, by placing themselves under the rule of foreign
+masters, was not likely to alleviate these evils.
+
+The Sicilian admiral, after landing the Norman garrison at Corfu, sailed
+to Monembasia, then one of the principal commercial cities in the East,
+hoping to gain possession of it without difficulty; but the maritime
+population of this impregnable fortress gave him a warm reception and
+easily repulsed his attack. After plundering the coasts of Euboea and
+Attica, the Sicilian fleet returned to the West, and laid waste
+Acarnania and Etolia; it then entered the Gulf of Corinth, and debarked
+a body of troops at Crissa. This force marched through the country to
+Thebes, plundering every town and village on the way. Thebes offered no
+resistance and was plundered in the most deliberate and barbarous
+manner. The inhabitants were numerous and wealthy. The soil of Boeotia
+is extremely productive, and numerous manufactures established in the
+city of Thebes gave additional value to the abundant produce of
+agricultural industry.
+
+A century had elapsed since the citizens of Thebes had gone out
+valiantly to fight the army of Slavonian rebels in the reign of Michael
+IV (the Paphlagonian), and that defeat had long been forgotten. But all
+military spirit was now dead, and the Thebans had so long lived without
+any fear of invasion that they had forgotten the use of arms. The
+Sicilians found them not only unprepared to offer any resistance, but so
+surprised that they had not even adopted any effectual measures to
+secure or conceal their movable property. The conquerors, secure against
+all danger of interruption, plundered Thebes at their leisure. Not only
+gold, silver, jewels, and church plate were carried off, but even the
+goods found in the warehouses, and the rarest articles of furniture in
+private houses, were transported to the ships. Bales of silk and dyed
+leather were sent off to the fleet as deliberately as if they had been
+legally purchased in time of peace. When all ordinary means of
+collecting booty were exhausted, the citizens were compelled to take an
+oath on the Holy Scriptures that they had not concealed any portion of
+their property; yet many of the wealthiest were dragged away captive, in
+order to profit by their ransom; and many of the most skilful workmen in
+the silk manufactories, for which Thebes had long been famous, were
+pressed on board the fleet to labor at the oar.
+
+From Boeotia the army passed to Corinth. Nicephorus Caluphes, the
+governor, retired into the Acro-Corinth, but the garrison appeared to
+his cowardly heart not strong enough to defend this impregnable
+fortress, and he surrendered it to George Antiochenus, the Sicilian
+admiral, on the first summons. On examining the fortress of which he had
+thus unexpectedly gained possession, the admiral could not help
+exclaiming that he fought under the protection of heaven, for if
+Caluphes had not been more timid than a virgin, Corinth should have
+repulsed every attack.
+
+Corinth was sacked as cruelly as Thebes; men of rank, beautiful women,
+and skilful artisans, with their wives and families, were carried away
+into captivity. Even the relics of St. Theodore were taken from the
+church in which they were preserved; and it was not until the whole
+Sicilian fleet was laden with as much of the wealth of Greece as it was
+capable of transporting that the admiral ordered it to sail. The
+Sicilians did not venture to retain possession of the impregnable
+citadel of Corinth, as it would have been extremely difficult for them
+to keep up their communications with the garrison. This invasion of
+Greece was conducted entirely as a plundering expedition, having for its
+object to inflict the greatest possible injury on the Byzantine empire,
+while it collected the largest possible quantity of booty for the
+Sicilian troops. Corfu was the only conquest of which Roger retained
+possession.
+
+The ruin of the Greek commerce and manufactures has been ascribed to the
+transference of the silk trade from Thebes and Corinth to Palermo, under
+the judicious protection it received from Roger; but it would be more
+correct to say that the injudicious and oppressive financial
+administration of the Byzantine emperors destroyed the commercial
+prosperity and manufacturing industry of the Greeks; while the wise
+liberality and intelligent protection of the Norman kings extended the
+commerce and increased the industry of the Sicilians.
+
+When the Sicilian fleet returned to Palermo, Roger determined to employ
+all the silk manufacturers in their original occupations. He
+consequently collected all their families together, and settled them at
+Palermo, supplying them with the means of exercising their industry with
+profit to themselves, and inducing them to teach his own subjects to
+manufacture the richest brocades and to rival the rarest productions of
+the East.
+
+Roger, unlike most of the monarchs of his age, paid particular attention
+to improving the wealth of his dominions by increasing the prosperity of
+his subjects. During his reign the cultivation of the sugar-cane was
+introduced into Sicily. The conduct of Manuel was very different; when
+he concluded peace with William, the son and successor of Roger, in
+1158, he paid no attention to the commercial interests of his Greek
+subjects; the silk manufactures of Thebes and Corinth were not reclaimed
+and reinstated in their native seats; they were left to exercise their
+industry for the profit of their new prince, while their old sovereign
+would have abandoned them to perish from want. Under such circumstances
+it is not remarkable that the commerce and the manufactures of Greece
+were transferred in the course of another century to Sicily and Italy.
+
+
+
+
+CHRONOLOGY OF UNIVERSAL HISTORY
+
+EMBRACING THE PERIOD COVERED IN THIS VOLUME
+
+A.D. 843-1161
+
+JOHN RUDD, LL.D.
+
+
+Events treated at length are here indicated in large type; the numerals
+following give volume and page.
+
+Separate chronologies of the various nations, and of the careers of
+famous persons, will be found in the INDEX VOLUME, with volume and page
+references showing where the several events are fully treated.
+
+A.D.
+
+843. Messina in Sicily captured by the Saracens.
+
+Feudalism may be said to become an actuality from about this time. See
+"FEUDALISM: ITS FRANKISH BIRTH AND ENGLISH DEVELOPMENT," v, 1.
+
+The Danes--called by Arabian writers "_Magioges_," people of Gog and
+Magog--land at Lisbon from fifty-four ships and carry off a rich booty.
+
+The treaty of Verdun, between the three sons of Louis _le Debonnaire_.
+See "DECAY OF THE FRANKISH EMPIRE," v, 22.
+
+844. Lothair gives the title king of Italy to his son Louis, who is
+crowned at Rome.
+
+Abderrahman fits out a fleet to resist the Danes who have infested the
+neighborhood of Cadiz and Seville.
+
+845. Paris is pillaged for the first time by the Danes or Northmen. See
+"DECAY OF THE FRANKISH EMPIRE," v, 22.
+
+Hamburg is looted and destroyed by the Danes.
+
+846. Rome is attacked by the Saracens, who, after plundering the
+country, lay siege to Gaeta.
+
+Spain afflicted by a great drought and swarms of locusts.
+
+847. A violent storm drives the Saracens from the siege of Gaeta. The
+distress in Spain is relieved by Abderrahman, who remits the taxes and
+constructs aqueducts and fountains.
+
+848. Louis, King of Italy, drives the Saracens out of Beneventum.
+
+Bordeaux is assailed by the Northmen, but they are vigorously repulsed.
+See "DECAY OF THE FRANKISH EMPIRE," v, 22.
+
+Pope Leo IV adds a new quarter to the city of Rome by surrounding the
+Vatican with walls.
+
+849. Birth of Alfred the Great. See "CAREER OF ALFRED THE GREAT," v, 49.
+
+Gottschalk, a German bishop who preached the doctrine of twofold
+predestination, sentenced by the Council of Quincy to be flogged and
+suffer perpetual imprisonment.
+
+The Saracens range at will through the Mediterranean; they are defeated
+at the mouth of the Tiber by the combined fleets of Naples, Gaeta, and
+Amalphi.
+
+On Gallic soil the _benificium_ and practice of commendation is
+specially fostered. See "FEUDALISM: ITS FRANKISH BIRTH AND ENGLISH
+DEVELOPMENT," v, 1.
+
+850. Roric, a nephew of Harold, collects a piratical armament in
+Friesland and attacks adjacent coasts; Lothair grants Durstadt to him to
+secure his own lands.
+
+Pepin strengthens himself in Aquitaine by leagues with the Northmen. See
+"DECAY OF THE FRANKISH EMPIRE," v, 22.
+
+851. Danes ascend the Rhine with 252 ships and plunder Ghent, Cologne,
+Treves, and Aix-la-Chapelle.
+
+Roric, with 350 sail, proceeds up the Thames and pillages Canterbury and
+London, after defeating the King of Mercia; he is at last defeated by
+Ethelwulf, with great slaughter, at Ockley.
+
+852. A revolt against the Moslems in Armenia.
+
+853. Hastings' (the Danish chief) ruse at Tuscany. See "DECAY OF THE
+FRANKISH EMPIRE," v, 22.
+
+855. Death of Lothair, Emperor of the Franks; civil war between his
+sons.
+
+A band of Danes keep the Isle of Sheppey through the winter; their first
+foothold in England.
+
+860. Iceland discovered by the Northmen.
+
+862. Rurik, the Varangian chief, conquers Novgorod and Kiov and lays the
+foundation of the Russian empire.
+
+863. Cyril and Methodius, the "apostles of the Slavs," undertake the
+conversion of the Moravians.
+
+Pope Nicholas deposes Photius and declares Ignatius to be the patriarch
+of Constantinople; Photius in turn excommunicates the Pope.
+
+Charles the Bald founds the County of Flanders.
+
+864. Pope Nicholas asserts his exclusive right to appoint and depose
+bishops; the sovereigns and prelates of France and Germany resist his
+claim.
+
+Christianity first introduced into Russia; it makes little progress.
+
+865. First naval expedition of the Varangians or Russians against
+Constantinople; their fleet is dispersed by a storm.
+
+866. East Anglia invaded by a numerous body of Danes.
+
+Accession of Alfonso the Great of Asturias.
+
+868. Nottingham captured by the Danes; they are besieged by Burhred,
+Alfred, and his brother, who allow them to return to York with their
+booty. See "CAREER OF ALFRED THE GREAT," v, 49.
+
+869. Eighth general council held at Constantinople; the deposition of
+Photius confirmed and all iconoclasts anathematized.
+
+870. Malta captured by the Saracens.
+
+East Anglia captured by the Danes; Edmund, titular king of the country,
+is treacherously slain by them; is afterward canonized.
+
+871. Hincmar, a French prelate, encourages Charles the Bald to resist the
+authority assumed by the Pope over the church of France.
+
+Bari, a Saracen fortress in Southern Italy, is surrendered to the Franks
+and Greeks.
+
+Alfred ascends the throne of Wessex. See "CAREER OF ALFRED THE GREAT,"
+v, 49.
+
+872. Louis of Germany relinquishes to Emperor Louis his portion of
+Lorraine.
+
+873. On the approach of Emperor Louis with an army the Saracens, who
+were besieging Salerno, retire; they land in Calabria and commit great
+depredations.
+
+Locusts lay waste Italy, France, and Germany.
+
+Organs introduced into the churches of Germany.
+
+874. Mercia is conquered by the Danes, who set up Ceolwulf as their
+king.
+
+Iceland is settled by the Danes.
+
+875. Death of Emperor Louis; Charles the Bald and Louis of Germany
+contend for the succession. The former, by granting new privileges to
+the Church of Rome, obtains the support of the Pope, and is acknowledged
+as the king of Italy and emperor of the West.
+
+Alfred, King of Wessex, fits out a fleet and conquers the Danes in a
+great sea battle. See "CAREER OF ALFRED THE GREAT," v, 49.
+
+876. Death of Louis of Germany; division of his kingdom among his three
+sons: Bavaria to Carloman; Saxony to Louis the Stammerer; and East
+France (Franconia and Swabia) to Charles the Fat. Their uncle, Charles
+the Bald, attempts to dispossess them, but is defeated by Louis at
+Andernach.
+
+Rollo, at the head of the Northmen, enters the Seine and makes his first
+settlement in Normandy. See "DECAY OF THE FRANKISH EMPIRE," v, 22.
+
+877. No emperor of the West for three years.
+
+Carloman acquires the crown of Italy; the Pope, who opposes him, is
+driven from Rome by Lambert, Duke of Spoleto, and takes refuge in
+France.
+
+A large traffic in slaves carried on by the Venetians.
+
+Count Boso founds the kingdom of Florence.
+
+878. Alfred defeats a great host of the Danes at Eddington. See "CAREER
+OF ALFRED THE GREAT," v, 49.
+
+Syracuse captured by the Saracens, who become the masters of Sicily.
+
+879. Methodius forbidden by the Pope to perform the services of the
+Church for the Slavonians in their own language.
+
+The kingdom of Cisjurane, Burgundy, founded; it included Provence,
+Dauphine, and the southern part of Savoy.
+
+880. Germany is ravaged by the Northmen.
+
+Alfred, the English King, defeats the Danes at the battle of Ethandun;
+by treaty he gives them equal rights, and they acknowledge his
+supremacy. See "CAREER OF ALFRED THE GREAT," v, 49.
+
+881. Methodius gets leave to use the Slavonic tongue in the churches.
+Charles the Fat ascends the throne of Italy and Germany; is emperor of
+the West.
+
+882. Albategni, the Arabian astronomer, observes the autumnal equinox,
+September 19th.
+
+883. Alfred sends Singhelm and Athelstan on missions to Rome and the
+Christian church in India.
+
+884. Charles the Fat reunites the Frankish empire of Charlemagne.
+
+885. Siege of Paris by the Northmen. See "DECAY OF THE FRANKISH EMPIRE,"
+v, 22.
+
+886. Alfred the Great said to have founded the University of Oxford.
+
+887. Deposition of Charles the Fat; Arnulf, natural son of Carloman of
+Bavaria, elected by the nobles.
+
+888. Death of Charles the Fat; final disruption of the Frankish empire;
+the crown of France in dispute between the Count of Paris, Eudes, and
+Charles the Simple. See "DECAY OF THE FRANKISH EMPIRE," v, 22.
+
+Founding of the kingdom of Transjurane, Burgundy, which includes the
+northern part of Savoy and all Switzerland between the Reuss and the
+Jura.
+
+Alfred the Great begins his translations from Latin into Anglo-Saxon.
+See "AUGUSTINE'S MISSIONARY WORK IN ENGLAND," iv, 182.
+
+890. Southern Italy constituted a province of the Greek empire and
+called Lombardia.
+
+891. King Arnulf, of Germany, defeats the Northmen or Danes at Louvain.
+
+894. Arnulf becomes emperor of Germany.
+
+Hungarians (Magyars) cross the Carpathians and occupy the plains of the
+Theiss.
+
+895. Rome is captured by Emperor Arnulf of Germany; he is crowned
+emperor of the West.
+
+896. Pope Stephen VII declares the election of his predecessor,
+Formosus, invalid; disinters his body and has it thrown in the Tiber.
+
+897. Pope Stephen imprisoned and strangled.
+
+Alfred constructs a powerful navy and defeats Hastings the Dane. See
+"CAREER OF ALFRED THE GREAT," v, 49.
+
+899. Accession of Louis the Child, on the death of Arnulf, to the German
+throne.
+
+900. Hungarians ravage Northern Italy.
+
+901. Death of Alfred the Great, King of England; his son, Edward the
+Elder, succeeds.
+
+904. Russians, with a large naval force, attack Constantinople, and the
+Saracens Thessalonica.
+
+907. Bavaria desolated by the Hungarians.
+
+909. Founding of the Fatimite caliphate in Africa. See "CONQUEST OF
+EGYPT BY THE FATIMITES," v, 94.
+
+911. End of the Carlovingian line in Germany. See "HENRY THE FOWLER
+FOUNDS THE SAXON LINE OF GERMAN KINGS," v, 82.
+
+912. Rollo, converted to Christianity, takes the name of Robert and
+receives from Peter the Simple the province afterward called Normandy,
+of which he is the first duke. See "DECAY OF THE FRANKISH EMPIRE," v,
+22.
+
+913. Igor, son of Rurik, by the death of his guardian, Oleg, is invested
+with the government of Russia.
+
+Bodies of Hungarians and Slavs make inroads on German territory. See
+"HENRY THE FOWLER FOUNDS THE SAXON LINE OF GERMAN KINGS," v, 82.
+
+914. John X elected pope through the intrigues of Theodora.
+
+916. Berengar is crowned emperor of the West, in Italy.
+
+918. Death of Conrad, the King of Germany. See "HENRY THE FOWLER FOUNDS
+THE SAXON LINE OF GERMAN KINGS," v, 82.
+
+919. Founding of the Danish kingdom of Dublin, Ireland. "HENRY THE
+FOWLER FOUNDS THE SAXON LINE OF GERMAN KINGS." See v, 82.
+
+923. Rudolph of Burgundy disputes with Charles the Simple for the crown
+of France.
+
+924. Germany is overrun and devastated by the Hungarians. Death of
+Berengar, upon which the imperial title lapses.
+
+925. Edward the Elder is succeeded by his son Athelstan, in England.
+
+926. Henry the Fowler conquers the Slavonians; he establishes the
+margravate of Brandenburg.
+
+928. Guido and Marozia usurp supreme temporal power in Rome and confine
+Pope John X in prison, where he dies. (Date uncertain.)
+
+929. Charles the Simple dies in captivity at Peronne.
+
+Abu Taher, the Carmathian leader, plunders Mecca and massacres the
+pilgrims.
+
+930. Prague is besieged by Henry the Fowler, who becomes superior lord
+of Bohemia; his son, Otho, marries Eadgith, sister of Athelstan, King of
+England.
+
+931. Marozia still rules in Rome; she makes her son pope John XI.
+
+932. Hugh marries Marozia and is expelled from Rome by her son Alberic,
+who confines his mother, and his brother, Pope John, in St. Angelo and
+governs the city.
+
+933. Henry the Fowler is victorious over the Hungarians at Merseburg.
+See "HENRY THE FOWLER FOUNDS THE SAXON LINE OF GERMAN KINGS," v, 82.
+
+Union of Cis- and Transjurane Burgundy into one realm, the kingdom of
+Arles.
+
+Saracens invade Castile and are defeated at Uxama.
+
+936. Death of Henry the Fowler; accession of Otho the Great in Germany
+and of Louis _d'Outre-Mer_ in France. Louis was given the surname for
+having been in exile in England, whence he was recalled to the crown.
+
+From this time chivalry may be said to arise. See "GROWTH AND DECADENCE
+OF CHIVALRY," v, 109.
+
+937. Confederation of Scots and Irish with the Danes of Northumberland,
+totally defeated by Athelstan, at Brunanburh.
+
+France is invaded by the Hungarians.
+
+939. The Marquis of Istria levies imposts on Venetian merchants, the
+repeal of which is enforced by the Doge suspending all intercourse
+between the two states.
+
+940. Death of King Athelstan; his brother Edmund succeeds to the English
+throne.
+
+941. Constantinople attacked by the Russians under Igor; they are
+repelled by Romanus.
+
+945. Death of Igor; his widow, Olga, governs the Russians during the
+minority of their son Swatoslaus.
+
+Cumberland and Westmoreland, England, granted as a fief to Malcolm, King
+of Scotland.
+
+946. Edmund, who had conquered Mercia and the "Five Boroughs" of the
+Danish confederacy, England, slain by an outlaw; his brother Edred
+succeeds.
+
+951. Otho the Great marches an army in to Italy; he dethrones Berengar
+for cruelly ill-treating Adelaide.
+
+952. Otho restores Italy to Berengar and his son; they do homage to him
+at the Diet of Augsburg.
+
+955. Otho vanquishes the Hungarians on the Lech; he afterward conquers
+the Slavonians.
+
+Olga, the Russian Princess, baptized at Constantinople; she carries back
+into her own country some beginnings of civilization.
+
+956. Many provinces, including Armenia, recovered from the Saracens by
+the Eastern Empire.
+
+959. St. Dunstan made archbishop of Canterbury on the accession of
+Edgar.
+
+961. Berengar finally dethroned by Otho the Great; the sovereignty of
+Italy passes from Charlemagne's descendants to German rulers.
+
+962. Otho the Great, master of Italy; his coronation as emperor of the
+Romans by Pope John XII; establishment of the Holy Roman Empire of the
+German nation.
+
+963. Nicephorus Phocas defeats the Saracens and recovers the former
+provinces of the empire as far as the Euphrates.
+
+Al Hakem, Caliph of Cordova, famous as a patron of literature and
+learning, and who is said to have collected a library of 600,000
+volumes, employs agents in Africa and Arabia to purchase or copy
+manuscripts.
+
+King Edgar, England, defeats the Welsh and exacts an annual tribute of
+three hundred wolves' heads.
+
+964. Pope Leo VIII is expelled; John XII reinstated, he dies soon after;
+Rome is besieged and captured by the Emperor, after a revolt encouraged
+by Berengar.
+
+966. After 328 years' subjection Antioch is recovered from the Saracens.
+
+Bulgaria invaded by the Russians, who also extend their dominion to the
+Black Sea.
+
+Miecislas, ruler of Poland, embraces Christianity.
+
+969. Kahira (now Cairo) built by the Fatimites, who establish a
+caliphate in Egypt. See "CONQUEST OF EGYPT BY THE FATIMITES," v, 94.
+
+Nicephorus Phocas, Emperor of the East, murdered by John Zimisces, who
+succeeds.
+
+971. All munitions of war and arms are by the Venetians forbidden to be
+sold by their merchants to the Saracens.
+
+973. On the death of his father, Otho the Great, Otho II ascends the
+throne of the German empire. His Empress, Theophania, introduces Greek
+customs and manners into Germany.
+
+976. Henry, Duke of Bavaria, defeated by Otho II and deposed, takes
+refuge in Bohemia.
+
+Death of Al Hakem; his reign the most glorious of the Saracenic dominion
+in Spain.
+
+Commotion in Venice; the Doge attempts to introduce mercenary troops and
+is slain; his palace, St. Mark's, and other churches burned.
+
+978. Otho II makes a victorious movement into France.
+
+979. King Edward the Martyr assassinated by command of his
+mother-in-law, Elfrida; Ethelred the Unready succeeds. (Date uncertain.)
+
+980. Theophania urges her husband, Otho II, to claim the Greek provinces
+in Italy; he advances with his army to Ravenna.
+
+Vladimir obtains the assistance of the sea-kings, defeats his brother,
+Jaropolk, puts him to death, and becomes sole ruler of Russia.
+
+982. Saracens of Africa are invited by the Greek emperors to join them
+in opposing Otho; battle of Basientello, total defeat of Otho; he is
+taken prisoner, but escapes by swimming.
+
+983. Eric the Red, a Norseman, first visits Greenland, which he thus
+names, and afterward settles. See "LEIF ERICSON DISCOVERS AMERICA," v,
+141.
+
+Death of Otho II; Otho III succeeds to the throne of Germany under the
+regency of his mother, Theophania.
+
+987. Death of Louis V, the last of the Carlovingian line; Hugh Capet is
+elected king of France; this inaugurates the Capetian dynasty.
+
+988. Vladimir the Great of Russia embraces Christianity. See "CONVERSION
+OF VLADIMIR THE GREAT," v, 128.
+
+989. Sedition in Rome; Empress Theophania arrives there and suppresses
+it.
+
+In Germany rural counts and barons commence their depredations on the
+properties of their neighbors.
+
+Learned men from all parts of the East flock to Cordova, Almansor, the
+Saracen regent, having set apart a fund to promote literature.
+
+991. Archbishop Gerbert, of Rheims, introduces the use of Arabic
+numerals, which he had learned at Cordova.
+
+Ipswich and Maldon, England, ravaged by the Danes; a tribute raised for
+them by means of the "Danegild" tax.
+
+994. Hugh Capet maintains Gerbert in the see of Rheims, against the
+opposition of the Pope.
+
+With a fleet of ninety-four ships the kings of Norway and Denmark attack
+London; they are beaten off by the citizens.
+
+996. Death of Hugh Capet; his son Robert succeeds.
+
+997. Venetians conquer the coast and islands of the Adriatic as far as
+Ragusa; their Doge styles himself duke of Dalmatia.
+
+Death of Gejza, first Christian prince of Hungary.
+
+Insurrection of peasants in Normandy.
+
+998. Crescentius, having usurped power in Rome and expelled the Pope, is
+defeated, captured, and put to death by Otho III.
+
+1000. Leif Ericson and Biorn discover America. See "LEIF ERICSON
+DISCOVERS AMERICA," v, 141.
+
+Otho III and Boleslas the Valiant, King of Poland, meet at Gnesen.
+
+Expectation of the end of the world causes the sowing of seed and other
+agricultural work to be neglected; famine ensues therefrom.
+
+Duke Stephen of Hungary receives the royal title from Pope Sylvester II.
+
+First invasion of India by Mahmud. See "MAHOMETANS IN INDIA," v, 151.
+
+1002. Massacre of Danes in England; the Day of St. Brice.
+
+Henry, Duke of Bavaria, elected king of Germany on the death of Otho
+III.
+
+1003. Sweyn of Denmark invades England to avenge the massacre of his
+people.
+
+1013. After various repulses and successes Sweyn takes nearly the whole
+of England; King Ethelred and his Queen flee to her brother Richard,
+Duke of Normandy.
+
+Imperial coronation of Henry II.
+
+1014. Death of Sweyn. Ethelred returns to England; he battles with the
+Danes, under Sweyn's son, Canute, who is driven from the country.
+
+King Brian, the Brian Boroimhe or Boru, the most famous of Irish kings,
+defeats the Danes at the battle of Clontarf, but perishes in the
+conflict.
+
+1016. Pope Benedict VIII repulses the Saracens at Luni, Tuscany; they
+besiege Salerno and are defeated by the aid of a band of Norman pilgrims
+returning from Jerusalem.
+
+Edmund "Ironsides," the English King, assassinated. See "CANUTE BECOMES
+KING OF ENGLAND," v, 164.
+
+1017. Swatopolk, Grand Duke of Russia, defeated by his brother,
+Jaroslav, Prince of Novgorod, seeks an asylum in Poland.
+
+All England acknowledges Canute as king. See "CANUTE BECOMES KING OF
+ENGLAND," v, 164.
+
+1018. Complete destruction of the Bulgarian realm by the Eastern emperor
+Basil II.
+
+Swatopolk finally expelled from Russia by Jaroslav, who becomes ruler.
+
+1020. Death of Firdusi, a famous Persian poet.
+
+1022. Guido Aretinus invents the staff, and is the first to adopt as
+names for the notes of the musical scale the initial syllables of the
+hemistichs of a hymn in honor of St. John the Baptist.
+
+1024. Death of the emperor Henry II of Germany; the Franconian dynasty
+inaugurated by Conrad II.
+
+1027. Conrad II crowned emperor at Rome; Canute of England and Rudolph
+of Burgundy attend the ceremony.
+
+Schleswig is formally ceded to Denmark by Conrad II.
+
+1028. Canute invades Norway; he conquers King Olaf and annexes his
+dominions. See "CANUTE BECOMES KING OF ENGLAND," v, 164.
+
+1031. End of the Ommiad caliphate of Cordova; Spain divided by the
+Moorish chiefs into many states.
+
+1033. Institution of the "Truce of God." A suspension of private feuds
+observed in England, France, Italy, and elsewhere. Such a truce provided
+that these feuds should cease on all the more important church festivals
+and fasts, from Thursday evening to Monday morning, during Lent, or
+similar occasions.
+
+Castile created an independent kingdom by Sancho the Great, King of
+Navarre.
+
+Conrad II extends his dominion over the Arletan territories.
+
+1035. Death of King Canute; his sons, Hardicanute in Denmark, Harold in
+England, and Sweyn in Norway, succeed him. See "CANUTE BECOMES KING OF
+ENGLAND," v, 164.
+
+Aragon created an independent kingdom.
+
+1037. Avicenna, Arabian physician and scholar, dies. (Date uncertain.)
+
+Harold becomes king of all England.
+
+1039. Murder of King Duncan, of Scotland, by Macbeth, who succeeds.
+
+1042. End of the Danish rule in England; Hardicanute succeeded by Edward
+the Confessor.
+
+1045. Ferdinand of Castile exacts tribute from his Moorish neighbors.
+
+1046. Henry III holds a council at Sutri on the question of the papacy.
+See "HENRY III DEPOSES THE SIMONIACAL POPES," v, 177.
+
+1047. Count Guelf given the duchy Carinthia by Emperor Henry III.
+
+1048. On the death of Clement II, the deposed Pope again intrudes
+himself. See "HENRY III DEPOSES THE SIMONIACAL POPES," v, 177.
+
+1049. Hildebrand, the monk, assumes charge of the patrimony of St.
+Peter, at Rome.
+
+1050. Berenger of Tours condemned and imprisoned for denying the
+doctrine of transubstantiation.
+
+1051. William of Normandy visits England; he confers with Edward the
+Confessor.
+
+1052. Archbishop Robert, with the Norman bishops and nobles, driven out
+of England.
+
+1053. In Italy the Norman conquests of that country are conferred on
+them as a fief of the Church.
+
+1054. Separation of the Greek and Latin churches. See "DISSENSION AND
+SEPARATION OF THE GREEK AND ROMAN CHURCHES," v, 189.
+
+1055. Togrul Beg drives the Buyides from Bagdad and establishes his
+authority there.
+
+1056. Death of Emperor Henry III; his son, Henry IV, is elected king
+under the regency of his mother, Agnes.
+
+Malcolm defeats Macbeth, King of Scotland, at Dunsinane.
+
+1057. Harold, son of Earl Godwin, is designated heir to the throne of
+England. See "NORMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND," v, 204.
+
+1059. Nicholas II and the Council of Rome decree that future popes shall
+be elected by the college of cardinals, but confirmed by the people and
+clergy of Rome and the emperor.
+
+1060. King Andrew slain in battle by his brother, Bela, who ascends the
+throne of Hungary.
+
+1061. Robert Guiscard and his brother Roger, at the head of the Normans,
+engage in the conquest of Sicily from the Saracens.
+
+1062. The Archbishop of Cologne, Anno, assumes the reins of government
+after seizing the young emperor Henry IV.
+
+1066. Death of Edward the Confessor, who is succeeded by Harold II. The
+Norwegians invade England; they are defeated by Harold. William, Duke of
+Normandy, invades and conquers England. See "NORMAN CONQUEST OF
+ENGLAND," v, 204.
+
+1067. Council of Mantua; Hildebrand denies the imperial right to
+interfere in the election of a pope.
+
+1068. Carrier pigeons are employed by the Saracens to convey
+intelligence to the besieged in Palermo.
+
+1069. Morocco founded by Abu-Bekr, Ameer of Lantuna.
+
+1071. Alp Arslan, the Seljuk Sultan, defeats and captures the Eastern
+Emperor, Romanus Diogenes.
+
+1072. Palermo is taken by the Normans, who reduce the whole of Sicily.
+
+1073. Lissa, taken by the Normans, is recovered by the Venetians.
+
+Hildebrand elected pope; he takes the name of Gregory VII; the sale of
+church benefices in Germany forbidden by him. See "TRIUMPHS OF
+HILDEBRAND," v, 231.
+
+1074. Gregory VII suggests the first idea of a general crusade against
+the Turks.
+
+1075. Lay investiture prohibited by a council called by Gregory VII. See
+"TRIUMPHS OF HILDEBRAND," v, 231.
+
+1076. Atziz, Malek Shah's lieutenant, conquers Syria from the Fatimites
+of Egypt, and takes Jerusalem.
+
+Christian pilgrims are persecuted by the Seljukian Turks.
+
+Henry IV, Emperor of Germany, holds a council at Rome which deposes
+Gregory VII. In union with the German princes the Pope deposes the
+Emperor.
+
+1077. Pope Gregory exacts an annual tribute from Alfonso, King of
+Castile.
+
+At Canossa Henry IV humbles himself before the Pope and is absolved. See
+"TRIUMPHS OF HILDEBRAND," v, 231.
+
+1079. Boleslas of Poland excommunicated by Gregory and expelled by his
+subjects.
+
+1080. Henry IV convenes a council which deposes Gregory VII; it elects
+Guibert, Antipope Clement III, in his stead.
+
+End of the war between Henry and Rudolph of Saxony caused by the death
+of the latter.
+
+1081. Constantinople captured by Alexis Comnenus, who is placed by his
+soldiers on the Byzantine throne.
+
+1084. Gregory VII is besieged in the castle of St. Angelo; Robert
+Guiscard delivers the Pope. See "TRIUMPHS OF HILDEBRAND," v, 231.
+
+1085. Death of Gregory VII, in exile at Salerno; the papacy vacant till
+the following year.
+
+Conquest of Toledo from the Moors by Alfonso of Castile.
+
+1086. "COMPLETION OF THE DOMESDAY BOOK." See v, 242.
+
+The Mahometans of Spain invite the chief of the Almoravides to assist
+them. See "DECLINE OF THE MOORISH POWER IN SPAIN," v, 256.
+
+1087. King William of England invades France; he dies at Rouen. His
+eldest son, Robert, inherits Normandy; his second son, William Rufus,
+secures the throne of England.
+
+1088. Yussef is called into Spain by the Moorish princes; their
+jealousies and discords render his assistance unavailing. See "DECLINE
+OF THE MOORISH POWER IN SPAIN," v, 256.
+
+1089. Henry IV excommunicated by Pope Urban II. A violent earthquake in
+England.
+
+The disease known as St. Anthony's fire breaks out in Lorraine.
+
+1090. Hasan, Subah of Nishapur, collects a band of Carmathians who are
+named after him, "Assassins."
+
+William Rufus, King of England, invades Normandy and captures St.
+Valery.
+
+1091. Yussef conquers Seville and Almeria, sends Almoatamad to Africa,
+and becomes supreme ruler in Mahometan Spain. See "DECLINE OF THE
+MOORISH POWER IN SPAIN," v, 256.
+
+1092. Guibert's party hold the castle of St. Angelo; Guibert's title to
+the papacy is still asserted by Henry IV.
+
+Complete disruption of the empire of the Seljuks follows the death of
+Shah Malek.
+
+1093. King Malcolm of Scotland invades England; he is killed near
+Alnwick, by Roger de Mowbray.
+
+1094. Sancho, King of Aragon and Navarre, falls in battle; he is
+succeeded by his son Pedro.
+
+Peter the Hermit goes on his pilgrimage to Jerusalem. See "THE FIRST
+CRUSADE," v, 276.
+
+1095. Philip and Henry again excommunicated by Pope Urban II.
+
+Henry of Besangon marries Theresa, daughter of Alfonso the Valiant, who
+erects Portugal into a county for his son-in-law.
+
+1096. Aphdal, the Fatimite, expels the sons of Ortok from Jerusalem.
+
+Movement of the first crusading armies; massacre of Jews in Europe. See
+"THE FIRST CRUSADE," v, 276.
+
+1097. William Rufus expels Archbishop Anselm, from England in defiance
+of the papal legate.
+
+Emperor Henry IV protects the German Jews.
+
+Death of Albert Azzo, Marquis of Lombardy, more than 100 years old; he
+was father of Guelf IV, the progenitor of the Brunswick family,
+afterward one of the English royal lines.
+
+The crusaders take Nicaea; the Eastern emperor Alexius, suspicious of
+the crusaders, obtains the city of Nicasa for himself. See "THE FIRST
+CRUSADE," v, 276.
+
+1098. Edgar, son of Malcolm, seated on the throne of Scotland by Edgar
+Atheling with an English army.
+
+Pope Urban II holds a council at Bari to condemn the doctrines of the
+Greek Church.
+
+1099. Jerusalem captured by the crusaders. See "THE FIRST CRUSADE," v,
+276.
+
+Founding of the order of the Knights Hospitallers; Gerard of Jerusalem
+the first provost or grand master.
+
+Coronation of Henry V, second son of the Emperor, as king of the Romans.
+
+1100. New antipopes arise on the death of Guibert (Clement III), one of
+whom assumes the name of Sylvester IV.
+
+William Rufus accidentally slain; Henry I becomes king of England; he
+renews the laws of Edward the Confessor and unites the Saxon and Norman
+races by his marriage with Matilda, granddaughter of Edmund "Ironside."
+
+1101. Robert, Duke of Normandy, invades England and makes war on his
+brother, Henry I.
+
+Guelf, Duke of Bavaria, and William, Duke of Aquitaine, conduct a large
+body of crusaders to the East. United with those who set out in the
+preceding year, they are met by Kilidsch Arslan, on entering Asia Minor,
+and are cut to pieces or dispersed.
+
+1102. Pope Paschal II obtains from Matilda a deed of gift of all her
+states to the Church.
+
+Coloman, King of Hungary, conquers Croatia and Dalmatia.
+
+1103. Yussef's son Ali recognized as heir to the thrones of Spain and
+Africa.
+
+1104. Baldwin, King of Jerusalem, defeats the Turks and captures Acre.
+
+Emperor Henry IV faces a rebellion of his son, incited by the papal
+party.
+
+1105. Interview between Emperor Henry and his son at Elbingen; a diet is
+called to be held at Mainz for the settlement of their dispute.
+
+The English, under King Henry, take Caen and Bayeux in Normandy.
+
+Defeat of the Turks in an attempt to retake Jerusalem; Bohemond, Prince
+of Tarentum, who had taken Antioch from the Turks, made prisoner.
+
+1106. King Henry I overthrows Duke Robert, who is captured, and secures
+Normandy.
+
+Death of Henry IV and accession of his son Henry V to the German throne;
+the new Emperor asserts his right to appoint bishops.
+
+1108. Death of Philip, King of France; Louis VI, the Fat, succeeds.
+
+1109. Baldwin, King of Jerusalem, assisted by a Venetian fleet, captures
+Tripoli.
+
+Portugal declared independent and the hereditary succession established
+in Count Henry's family.
+
+1111. Emperor Henry V enters Rome; bloody contests between his soldiers
+and the people. Pope Paschal II, a prisoner, resigns the right of
+investiture and crowns the Emperor.
+
+1113. Death of Swatopolk, Duke of Russia; his brother Vladimir succeeds.
+
+1114. War in Wales; King Henry I erects castles there to secure his
+conquests.
+
+1117. The Doge of Venice falls at Zara in defending Dalmatia against the
+Hungarians.
+
+1118. "FOUNDATION OF THE ORDER OF KNIGHTS TEMPLAR." See v, 301.
+
+On the death of Paschal II the cardinals elect Gelasius II; the Emperor
+appoints the Archbishop of Braga to assume the papal dignity under the
+name of Gregory VIII. The factions afterward known as the Guelfs and
+Ghibellines arose from this event.
+
+1119. Battle of Noyon, by which Henry I reestablishes his ascendency in
+Normandy.
+
+Defeat of the Turks at Antioch by King Baldwin II and the Knights
+Hospitallers.
+
+Henry I resists the papal claim to investiture in England; banishment of
+Thurstan, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+
+1120. Sinking of the White Ship (_La Blanche Nef_), in which Prince
+William, son of Henry I, was lost. The King is said to have "never
+smiled again" after the receipt of the news.
+
+1121. Siege of Sutri by the army of Pope Calixtus II, and surrender of
+Antipope Gregory.
+
+1122. Henry V and Calixtus II compromise, at the Diet of Worms, the
+dispute respecting the right of investiture.
+
+Baldwin, King of Jerusalem, and Jocelyn de Courtenay made prisoners by
+the Turks.
+
+Abelard, a noted French theologian, accused of heresy at the Council of
+Soissons, is condemned to burn his writings.
+
+1123. Ninth general council; First Lateran Council.
+
+War renewed in Normandy by the rebellion of certain powerful barons;
+Henry I, King of England, takes their castles.
+
+1124. A rich Pisan convoy, on its voyage from Sardinia, captured by the
+Genoese.
+
+1125. Death of the emperor Henry V of Germany, which ends the Franconian
+dynasty; the Duke of Saxony, Lothair II, elected his successor; he
+declares war against the Hohenstaufens.
+
+Punishment of the mintmen in England for issuing base coin.
+
+1126. King Henry leaves Normandy and takes his prisoners to England.
+
+1127. Marriage of Henry's daughter, Matilda, to Geoffrey Plantagenet;
+she is acknowledged by the English barons as heiress to her father's
+throne. See "STEPHEN USURPS THE ENGLISH CROWN," v, 317.
+
+Death of William, Duke of Apulia; Roger II, Great Count of Sicily,
+succeeds. This unites the Norman conquests in Italy with Sicily; the
+Pope excommunicates him.
+
+1128. Conrad, Duke of Franconia, of the Hohenstaufen house, crowned king
+of Italy at Milan, in opposition to Lothair II; he is excommunicated by
+the Pope.
+
+Roger II overcomes the papal resistance and is formally acknowledged
+duke of Apulia and Calabria.
+
+1129. King Henry of England releases his Norman prisoners and restores
+their lands to them.
+
+1130. On the death of Pope Honorius II the cardinals divide into two
+factions, one of which elects Innocent II, and the other the antipope
+Anacletus II. The latter gains possession of the Lateran and is there
+consecrated; Innocent takes refuge in France.
+
+1131. Birth of Maimonides, who, next to Moses, is believed to have had
+the greatest influence on Jewish thought. (Date uncertain.)
+
+1132. Lothair II goes to Rome in support of Pope Innocent II against
+Antipope Anacletus II; he expels Conrad.
+
+Wool-spinning is introduced into England by the Flemings at Worstead;
+hence the name "worsted."
+
+1133. Lothair conducts Innocent to Rome and is there crowned emperor by
+him.
+
+1134. Aragon and Navarre choose separate sovereigns, who are protected
+by Alfonso the Noble, King of Castile.
+
+1135. Death of Henry I of England; Stephen usurps the throne. See
+"STEPHEN USURPS THE ENGLISH CROWN," v, 317.
+
+A copy of Justinian's _Pandects_ said to have been discovered at Amalfi.
+
+The house of Hohenstaufen forced into submission by Lothair.
+
+1136. Lothair marches into Italy with a large army; the cities make
+submission.
+
+Matilda resists Stephen's usurpation of the English crown, and invades
+Normandy.
+
+1137. Death of Louis VI; his son, Louis VII, succeeds to the French
+crown.
+
+1138. David I of Scotland defeated at the Battle of the Standard. See
+"STEPHEN USURPS THE ENGLISH CROWN," v, 317.
+
+Conrad, Duke of Franconia, elected emperor of Germany; he founds the
+Hohenstaufen dynasty. From his castle of Wiblingen his party takes the
+name of Ghibellines; his opponent, Henry Guelf, is put under the ban of
+the empire, hence the papal party were called Guelfs.
+
+1139. Pope Innocent II taken prisoner by Roger; a treaty of peace
+confirms Roger's title. Arnold of Brescia is banished Italy. See
+"ANTI-PAPAL DEMOCRATIC MOVEMENT," v, 340.
+
+Robert, Earl of Gloucester, a natural son of Henry I, promises
+assistance to Matilda in her war against King Stephen of England. See
+"STEPHEN USURPS THE ENGLISH CROWN," v, 317.
+
+1140. Conrad III defeats the forces of Guelf VI, uncle of Henry the
+Lion, while attempting to gain possession of Bavaria.
+
+1141. Battle of Lincoln; King Stephen defeated and carried prisoner to
+Bristol. See "STEPHEN USURPS THE ENGLISH CROWN," v, 317.
+
+1142. Henry the Lion is invested with the duchy of Saxony by Conrad III.
+His rival, Albert the Bear, created margrave of Brandenburg.
+
+1143. Geisa, King of Hungary, invites German emigrants to join the
+colony of that people in Transylvania.
+
+1144. Edessa, Turkey, stormed and captured by Zenghi, Sultan of Aleppo.
+
+1145. Arnold of Brescia initiates the antipapal democratic movement. See
+"ANTIPAPAL DEMOCRATIC MOVEMENT," v, 340.
+
+Disruption of the Almoravide kingdom in Spain.
+
+1146. Prince Henry inherits Anjou and Maine; Normandy submits to him.
+
+St. Bernard, at the instance of Pope Eugenius, preaches a crusade for
+the protection of the Holy Land against Noureddin, Sultan of Aleppo.
+
+Byzantium is ravaged by Roger, King of Sicily. See "DECLINE OF THE
+BYZANTINE EMPIRE," v, 353.
+
+Crusaders and mobs massacre Jews in Germany.
+
+1147. Louis VII of France and Emperor Conrad III lead the Second
+Crusade.
+
+Lisbon, after being taken from the Moors, is made the capital of
+Portugal.
+
+Moscow, Russia, is founded by the Prince of Suzdal, Dolgoucki.
+
+1148. Unsuccessful sieges of Damascus and Ascalon by the crusaders.
+
+1149. Louis, returning by sea from his crusade, is captured by the
+Greeks, and rescued by the Sicilian fleet.
+
+1150. Victory of Manuel, the Byzantine Emperor, over the Servians, who
+become vassals of that empire.
+
+1151. Manuel invades Hungary, crosses the Danube, grants a truce to
+Geisa, and carries a large booty to Constantinople.
+
+1152. Death of Conrad III; Frederick I, Barbarossa, elected emperor.
+
+1153. Treaty by King Stephen and Henry Plantagenet concerning the
+succession of the English crown. See "STEPHEN USURPS THE ENGLISH CROWN,"
+v, 317.
+
+1154. A large portion of France united with the crown of England on the
+accession of Henry II, who founds the Plantagenet line, following
+Stephen's death.
+
+The first Italian expedition of Frederick Barbarossa.
+
+Pope Adrian IV, by a bull, grants Ireland to the English crown.
+
+1155. Frederick reestablishes the papal rule in Rome. Pope Adrian IV
+orders the execution of Arnold. See "ANTIPAPAL DEMOCRATIC MOVEMENT," v,
+340.
+
+1156. Henry the Lion, of the Guelf line, has Bavaria restored to him.
+Austria erected into a duchy.
+
+1157. Pope Adrian, in a letter to the German Emperor, asserts Germany to
+be a papal benefice; Frederick resists the claim.
+
+Poland is compelled by Emperor Frederick I to pay him homage.
+
+1158. Eric IX of Sweden conquers the coast of Finland and builds Abo.
+
+Frederick I, Barbarossa, a second time invades Italy; he captures Milan.
+
+1159. Election of Pope Alexander III; Frederick I creates an anti-pope,
+Victor IV.
+
+War ensues between Henry II of England and Louis VII of France; the
+former claiming the county of Toulouse, Southern France.
+
+1160. Emperor Frederick I calls the Council of Pavia; it declares Victor
+to be pope; Alexander excommunicates them all.
+
+1161. Peace concluded between Henry II and Louis VII; they acknowledge
+Alexander as pope. The kings of Denmark, Norway, Bohemia, and Hungary
+declare in favor of Victor.
+
+Henry II limits the papal authority in England.
+
+END OF VOLUME V
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GREAT EVENTS BY FAMOUS
+HISTORIANS, VOLUME 5***
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