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Transcript
Children’s Crusade
EUROPEAN HISTORY
WRITTEN BY:
Gary Dickson
Children’s Crusade, popular religious movement in Europe during the summer of 1212 in
which thousands of young people took Crusading vows and set out to
recover Jerusalem from the Muslims. Lasting only from May to September, the Children’s
Crusade lacked official sanction and ended in failure; none of the participants reached the
Holy Land. Nevertheless, the religious fervour it excited helped to initiate the Fifth Crusade
(1218). It was arguably the first European youth movement.
Controversies
Although it is mentioned in more than 50 chronicles (lists of historical events in
chronological order) dating from the 13th century, much about the Children’s Crusade
remains obscure. Reports in the chronicles often amount to no more than a line or two,
and other sources are fragmentary and at times unreliably embellished. As a result, crucial
aspects of the Children’s Crusade remain controversial. For example, scholars of the
period have debated whether the movement was really a Crusade and whether the
participants were really young people.
Despite its popular designation, the Children’s Crusade was officially never aCrusade.
Crusades could come into existence only with papal approval, and Pope Innocent
III (1198–1216) never summoned it. These self-proclaimed, unarmed Crusaders voiced
their intention to regain Jerusalem and recover the True Cross (a purported relic of the
cross on which Jesus was crucified)—which had been lost to the Muslims in the Battle of
Ḥaṭṭīn (1187)—but said nothing about how they hoped to achieve their goals.
Nevertheless, thepueri (Latin: “boys” or “children”)—the term used by 13th-century writers
to describe participants in the movement—wore the insignia of the cross (as did all
Crusaders) and took the Crusader’s vow, which was binding on those who were at least
14 years old. Moreover, the church recognized their vow as valid. This is known because
in 1220 Pope Honorius III absolved a “poor student” named Otto from his Crusading vow.
Although Honorius does refer to “a multitude of other pueri” who joined the movement,
only Otto’s papal absolution is recorded. Although a majority of the chronicles that mention
the Children’s Crusade do so in disapproving terms, all of them refer to it as a Crusade.
BRITANNICA STORIES
Were the pueri really young people? Some scholars, such as the German historian Peter
Raedts, have argued that “pueri” in the chronicles and other documents does not signify
an age group but instead describes a social class of impoverished landless peasants and
day labourers of indeterminate age. In fact, many of thepueri and puelle (“girls”) would
indeed have belonged to such a social class. Yet, this by no means rules out their
youthfulness. The chroniclers emphasized the prevalence of young people in relation to
other groups within the Children’s Crusade, including urban labourers, mothers, and the
elderly. In addition, several chroniclers noted that some parents imprisoned their children
in their homes to prevent them from joining. Thus, it seems likely that young people were
the most conspicuous element within the Children’s Crusade as well as its leaders, though
it is also probable that the movement was not composed exclusively of young people.
Origins
Popular movements of religious revivalism like the Children’s Crusade usually appeared
when official Crusades were preached. Preaching arousedcollective enthusiasm,
particularly in areas with a long tradition of Crusading, as in the town of Chartres and its
surrounding region (the Chartrain) in north-central France. Beginning at the time of the
First Crusade in the late 11th century and continuing into the 13th century, successive
waves of Crusading fervour swept over this region. During the winter of 1211 and the
spring of 1212 the Albigensian Crusade was preached against the heretical Cathars of
southern France, resulting in strong military recruitment from the Chartrain. Spain, on
Christendom’s western frontier, was the scene of another Crusading crisis. A Muslim
invasion from North Africa in 1210 led to the fall of the castle of Salvatierra in 1211. A
climactic battle was expected by Pentecost in 1212. Pope Innocent III anxiously attempted
to mobilize the prayers of Christians on behalf of the threatened Spanish church by
holding processions in Rome on May 16, 1212.
CONNECT WITH BRITANNICA
It is likely that similar processions were held at Chartres on May 20. In all probability, a
shepherd boy, Stephen of Cloyes, and some of his fellow workers took part in them. The
enthusiasm generated by these processions gave birth to a popular Crusading movement
whose aims were summed up in acclamations shouted out by the pueri: “Lord God, raise
up Christendom!” and “Lord God, return to us the True Cross!”
The Crusade
Under Stephen’s leadership, the French participants in the Children’s Crusade assembled
at Saint-Denis, probably during an annual fair known as the Lendit fair (June 8–24).
Contemporary estimates of the size of Stephen’s following ranged from 15,000 to nearly
30,000. The anonymous chronicler ofLaon says that Stephen was instructed by a poor
pilgrim—who was actually Jesus—to deliver letters to King Philip II of France. Nothing is
revealed about the contents of these letters, if indeed they existed, nor of any meeting
with the king. The king, however, ordered the pueri to disperse. Although nothing further is
known of Stephen, bands of French pueri may have then headed north and east to the
town of Saint-Quentin. At this point the French pueridisappear from the historical record,
their whereabouts uncertain, but it is possible that some of them arrived in the German
city of Cologne about July 14–18. Contact with the French pueri is the most likely origin of
the Children’s Crusade in Germany, which began about that time.
Attempting to reach the Holy Land, Nicholas of Cologne led the Germanpueri southward
to Mainz and Speyer. There is reason to suppose that there were French pueri, as well
as pueri from the region between France and Germany, among them. Little is known
about Nicholas except that he originated from the countryside near Cologne and carried a
cross shaped like a T (the tau cross), which was his charismatic emblem. Invoking the
biblical Exodus from Egypt and the parting of the Red Sea, they proclaimed that
the Mediterranean Sea would part for them, a motif of divine election that implies some
degree of identification with the Israelites. Nicholas then led the pueri across the Alps to
the Italian cities of Piacenza and Genoa, where, however, they failed to find a ship to take
them to the Holy Land. Their ultimate fate remains uncertain; some of them might have
traveled by ship to Marseille, while others apparently journeyed to Rome to ask papal
officials to nullify or defer their Crusade vows. Of the more than 7,000 pueriwho arrived in
Genoa, many remained—cheap labour was needed there and in other thriving Italian
cities. Thus, what began as a popular Crusade probably ended as a massive labour
migration.
According to the chronicles, the Children’s Crusade was an utter disaster. Few of the
Crusaders returned from their journey; most died of hunger or thirst or were drowned at
sea, while others were sold as slaves. The chroniclers’ story carried a clear message: God
did not will it. Be this as it may, the Children’s Crusade did confirm Innocent III’s belief that
Crusading enthusiasm was far from dead. Less than one year later he summoned the
Fifth Crusade.
Despite the extreme brevity of the movement, interest in the Children’s Crusade continued
through the centuries. It has been depicted in works by authors
as diverse as Voltaire,Bertolt Brecht, Agatha Christie, andKurt Vonnegut, and countless
children’s books have been written about it. Its evocative themes still delight the literary
imagination.
Gary Dickson