NOTE BY PATRÍCIA  LANÇA

    Contrary to the 'politically correct' version of History, it was not the Crusades that
    provoked Islamic militarism, but the other way round.  The extraordinary expansion
    of Islam through the Christian lands of the Middle East to Iberia, Italy and southern
    France took place LONG BEFORE the Crusades and was not carried through by peaceful means.  The purveyors
    of post-colonial guilt turn History on its head.  The following
    article is published by kind permission of its author, the Reverend Paul Stenhouse, who
    sets the  record straight and gives an account of the true sequence of events. The
    author  of the article that follows is a  specialist in Middle Eastern  History and the Editor of Annals
    Australasia.  
    http://jloughnan.tripod.com/annals.htm


                                   

                                   THE CRUSADES IN CONTEXT

                      By Paul Stenhouse PhD


    CURRENT WISDOM would have it that ‘five centuries of peaceful  co-existence’ between Muslims and
    Christians were brought to an end by ‘political  events and an imperial-papal power play,' that was to lead to a  
    ‘centuries-long series of so-called “holy-wars” that pitted Christendom against Islam, and left an  enduring
    legacy of misunderstanding and mistrust’.1

    A school textbook, Humanities Alive,2 for Year 8 students in the Australian State of Victoria, carries the anti-
    Christian/anti Western argument further: 'Those  who destroyed the World Trade Centre are regarded as
    terrorists... Might it be fair to say that the Crusaders who attacked the Muslim inhabitants of Jerusalem were
    also terrorists?'

    Muhammad died in Medina on June 8, 632 AD. The first of the eight Crusades to free the Holy Places in
    Palestine from Muslim control, and offer safe passage to the Holy Land for Christian pilgrims, was called only in
    1095. At the risk of sounding pedantic, the period in question is not ‘five centuries,’ but four hundred and sixty-
    three years; and those years were not characterized by ‘peaceful coexistence’. For the Christian states
    bordering the Mediterranean, it was a four-hundred and sixty-three year period of regular, disorganized and
    occasionally  organized] bloody incursions by Muslim--–mainly Arab and Berber-land and sea forces. These came
    intent on booty-gold, silver, precious stones and slaves,on destroying churches, convents and shrines of the
    ‘infidels,’ and on the spread of politico-religious Islam throughout Europe from their bases in the Mediterranean
    and the Adriatic.

    At the time of Muhammad’s death there were flourishing Christian and Jewish communities in Arabia, and
    throughout the major centres of the Persian Empire. The whole of the Mediterranean world on its European,
    Asian and African sides, was predominantly Christian.  It had taken only a few years for Muslim tribesmen from
    Arabia, inspired by Muhammad’s revelations and example, to invade the Eastern Roman or Byzantine Empire
    whose emperors devoted more time to religious disputation than to defending their empire.

    In 633 Mesopotamia fell. After a few years the entire Persian Empire fell to the marauding Arab tribesmen
    who drove the young Persian emperor Yazdagird into the farthest reaches of his empire, to Sogdiana
    [Uzbekistan], where he was eventually murdered by his Tartar bodyguard in a miller’s hut.

    One Thousand Years of Hellenic Civilization Ends
    Damascus fell in 635, and Jerusalem capitulated five years after Muhammad died, in
    February 638. The fall of Alexandria in 643 sounded the death knell of more than  a thousand years of
    Hellenic civilization that once enriched the whole of the Near East with its scholarship and culture. Henri Daniel-
    Rops claims that from the point of view of the history of civilization, Alexandria’s fall was as significant as the
    fall of Constantinople to the Turks eight-hundred years later3. Cyprus fell in 648-9 and Rhodes in 653. By 698
    the whole of North Africa was lost. Less than eighty years after Muhammad’s death, in 711, Muslims from
    Tangiers poured across the 13 km-wide strait of Gibraltar into Spain. By 721 this motley Arab-Berber horde
    had overthrown the ruling Catholic Visigoths and, with the fall of Saragossa, set their sights on southern France.













    By 720 Narbonne had fallen. Bordeaux was stormed and its churches burnt down by  ‘Abd al-Rahman ibn
    ‘Abdullah al-Ghafiqi in early spring 732. A basilica outside the walls of Poitiers was razed, and ‘Abd al-Rahman
    headed for Tours which held the body of St Martin [who died in 397] apostle and patron saint of the Franks.
    He was to be defeated and killed by Charles Martel and his Frankish army on a Saturday in October, 732, one
    hundred years after Muhammad’s death, on the road from Poitiers to Tours--– a defeat that was hailed by
    Gibbon and others as decisive in turning back the Muslim tide from Europe.

    Attacks on France, however, continued, and in 734 Avignon was captured by an Arab force. Lyons was sacked in
    743. It wasn’t until 759 that the Arabs were driven out  of Narbonne. Marseilles was plundered by them in
    838. Muslim incursions into Italy had   been a feature of life from the early 800s. The islands of Ponza [off
    Gaeta] and Ischia [off Naples] had been plundered, and then, in 813 Civitavecchia, the port of Rome, whose
    harbour had been constructed by Trajan, was sacked by the Arabs.
        
    In 826 the island of Crete fell to Muslim forces which retained it as their base  until 961. From around 827
    they then began nibbling at Sicily. They  captured Messina  and controlled the Strait of Messina by 842, and
    finally took the whole island in 859, after Enna fell to them.

     In 836 the Neapolitans self-interestedly invited the Muslim forces to help them against the Lombards and set
    the stage for more than a century of Muslims raids along the Adriatic, involving the destruction of Ancona, and
    Muslim progress as far as the mouth of the Po. ‘Saracen Towers’ south of Naples, built in the ninth century to
    warn locals of the approach of Arab fleets from Sicily and Africa still charm visitors to the Neapolitan coast.

    Bari, now home to the relics of St Nicholas of Myra, the original ‘Father Christmas,’ fell to Khalfun, a Berber
    chieftan, by another act of treachery in 840. From 853-871 the notorious Muslim brigand al-Mufarraj bin
    Sallam, and his successor, another Berber named Sawdan,  controlled all the coast from Bari down to Reggio
    Calabria, and terrorized Southern Italy. They even plundered the Abbey of St Michael on Mt Gargano. They  
    claimed the title of Emir, and independence of the Emir in Palermo.

    Naples herself had to beat off a Muslim attack in 837. But in 846 Rome was not to be so fortunate. On
    August 23rd 846, Arab squadrons from Africa arrived at Ostia, at the iber’s mouth. There were 73 ships. The
    Saracen force numbered 11,000 warriors,  with  500 horses.4

    The most revered Christian shrines outside the Holy Land, the tombs of Sts Peter and Paul,  were desecrated
    and their respective Basilicas were sacked, as was the Lateran Basilica along with numerous other churches and
    public buildings. The very altar over the body of St Peter was smashed to pieces, and the great door of St
    Peter’s Basilica was stripped of  its  silver plates. Romans were desolated and Christendom was shocked at the
    barbarism of the Muslim forces.

    Three years later Pope Leo IV [847-855] formed an alliance with Naples, Amalfi and  Gaeta, and when a
    Saracen fleet again appeared at the mouth of the Tiber in 849, the Papal fleet joined forces with its allies and
    they repelled the Muslim fleet which turned, and ran into a violent wind-storm that destroyed it, like Pharaoh’s
    army long before.

    Survivors were brought to Rome and put to work helping to build the Leonine Wall around the Vatican. Twelve
    feet thick, nearly forty feet in height and defended by forty-four towers, most of this wall, and two of the
    round towers, can be seen still by visitors.            
        
     These defensive walls were finished and blessed by Pope Leo IV in 852.

    Taranto in Apulia was conquered by Arab forces in 846. They held it until 880. In 870  Malta was captured by
    the Muslims. In 871 Bari, the Saracens’ capital on mainland Italy, was recaptured from the Muslims by Emperor
    Louis II, who in 872 was to defeat a Saracen fleet off Capua.

    At this point in our examination of the ‘peaceful coexistence,’ which is made much of by Muslim apologists, we
    are still two-hundred and twenty-three years away from the calling  of the first Crusade. Perhaps readers
    may better understand, now, why Emperor Louis II,  grandson of Charlemagne was absolutely convinced, in the
    ninth century, of the need for a Crusade. ‘He was quite sure that Islam must be driven right out of Europe.’5
    But still there was no call for a Crusade.

       I haven’t spoken of Muslim attacks against the Byzantine Empire even though these, too,
     played a part in setting the stage for the Crusades. The much vaunted military might and
     political power of the Eastern Roman Empire carried with it responsibility for protecting the
     West from Muslim invaders. This it generally failed to do.

     Constantinople had been attacked in 673, and then for the next five years Arab armies and
     fleets attempted unsuccessfully to break through the Byzantine defences. ‘Greek Fire,’ that
     mysterious substance that burned on water, destroyed the Muslim fleets and won the day
     for the defenders.

     Then, in 717, the Muslims returned to the attack, emboldened by their successes in Spain.
     Fate intervened, and like Charles Martel and his Franks at Poitiers in 732, emperor Leo the
     Isaurian [717-740] turned back the Muslim tide. Constantinople was saved--- for a time.
     Leo, for all his military skills, was a usurper, and an iconoclast. Despite defeating the
     Muslims, his policies ultimately further weakened both the Western and Eastern Roman Empires.

    In 870, when Bernard the Wise from Brittany wanted to visit Palestine he had to obtain a
    laissez-passer from Muslim authorities in Bari, on the Adriatic Coast.6 In 873 the Muslim
    forces devastated Calabria in southern Italy to the point that it was reduced to the  state in which it had    
    been left by the 'Great Flood’ and the Saracens expressed their intention of destroying Rome, the  city  of the
    ‘Petrulus senex,’ ‘the ineffective old man, Peter’.7

     In 874 Pope John VIII did all he could to dissuade Amalfi, Naples, Benevento, Capua,
     Salerno, and Spoleto from forming a pragmatic alliance with the Saracens. Amalfi, Capua
     and Salerno alone heeded his pleas for Christian solidarity.

     From the close of 876 Pope John VIII had been sending letters in all directions to obtain
     help against the Arab forces which were devastating southern Italy and even threatening
     Rome itself. He sought the aid of Duke Bosone of Milan whom Emperor Charles the Bald
     had appointed his legate in Northern Italy--- to no avail. He wrote for cavalry horses to
     Alfonso III, king of Galicia in Spain; and for war-ships to the Byzantines, and from 876
     until May 877 he sent numerous letters to the Frankish Emperor begging him to aid the
     Catholics in Italy. The Emperor proved to be a frail reed, and in 879, upon his death, the
     Duke of Spoleto turned on the Pope. John VIII, unable to cope with both Saracens and
     Spoleto, at once, had to pay tribute of 25,000 mancuses annually to the Arabs. A silver
        mancus was worth roughly AUD$25. This situation lasted for two years.

     In 881 the Muslim allies of the Neapolitans captured the fortress on the Garigliano [the
     ancent Liris] 14 km east of Gaeta close to Anzio, just north of Naples, and plundered the
     surrounding countryside with impunity for forty years. Returning from a synod at Ravenna
     [February 882] Pope John VIII found, as he put it, that ‘the Saracens are as much at
     home in Fundi [close to Rome, in Latium] and Terracina’ [80 km SE of Rome] as in Africa.
     ‘Though we were seriously unwell,’ wrote the Pope, ‘we went forth to battle with our
     forces, captured eighteen of the enemy’s ships, and slew a great many of their men’.8 Six
     hundred captives of the Saracens were liberated.

     Syracuse fell to the Muslims in 878 after a nine-month siege from which few escaped alive.
     The Byzantine city was pillaged and destroyed. Its collapse freed-up more numerous
     bands of marauding Muslims to harry the Italian towns and cities. 880 saw victory over
     Saracen forces at Naples by Byzantine Commanders and also the arrival in waters off Rome
     of warships sent by the emperor Basil to give the Pope the means of defending ‘the
     territory of St Peter’.9

     Meanwhile, the Saracens had turned their attention again to southern France and northern
     Italy. They had taken Avignon in 734 and Marseilles in 838 and they were ravaging
     Provence and North Italy from their bases in the Alps. The most important of these bases
     was Fraxineto or Fréjus, not far from Toulon, which they captured in 889. They were
     displaced temporarily from their base in 942 by Hugh of Arles who had a Byzantine fleet
     harry them from the sea, while he attacked from land. Horace Mann comments10 that it is
     symptomatic of the kind of pragmatic leaders who controlled the destiny of Europe at that
     time, that instead of wiping out this bloodthirsty band of Muslim invaders, Hugh allowed
     them to stay where they were on condition that they did all they could to prevent his rival
     as ‘king of Italy, Berengerius Marquis of Ivrea, from returning to Italy.

     The latter managed to return from Germany to Italy in 945, and the Muslims were not to
     be expelled completely from their lair until 972 – almost one-hundred years after capturing
     Fraxineto – by a league of Italian and Provençal princes.

     In the meantime they infested the passes of the Alps, robbing and murdering pilgrims on
     their way to Rome. In 921 a large band of Englishmen, on pilgrimage to the tombs of the
     Apostles in Rome, were crushed to death under rocks rolled down on them by Saracens in
     the passes of the Alps.11

     At this point in the alleged peaceful co-existence between Muslims and Christians, we are
     still one-hundred and seventy-four years away from the calling of the first Crusade to free
     the Holy Places.

     Meanwhile, Muslim fleets sacked and destroyed Demetrias in Thessaly, Central Greece, in
     902, and Thessalonica the second city of the Byzantine Empire fell to them in 904. Muslim
     armies took Hysela in Carsiana in 887, and Amasia, the metropolitan city of Pontus in Asia
     Minor. The bishop of Amasia named Malecenus wanted to ransom those of his people who
     had been captured but knew that the Byzantine Emperor Leo VI would not help; so he
     appealed to Pope Benedict IV in Rome.

     The Pope received him kindly, and gave him an encyclical letter addressed to all bishops,
     abbots, counts and judges and to all orthodox professors of the Christian faith asking
     them to show Malacenus every consideration, and to see him safely from one city to the
     next.

     In 905 Pope Sergius III helped Bishop Hildebrand of Silva Candida restore some of the
     damage done to his See by the ravaging Saracens who had devastated the Church of Silva
     Candida in the neighbourhood of Rome.

     In 915 Pope John X successfully created a Christian League with the help of Byzantine
     Admiral Picingli and his fleet. Even the bickering princes of southern Italy joined forces
     against the Saracens, along with King Berengarius and his armies from North Italy. The
     enemy were holed-up in their fortresses on the Garigliano near Gaeta, north of Naples.

     After three months of blockade, they tried to fight their way out only to be repelled by a
     victorious Christian force.

    In 934 the Fatimid imam al-Ka’im planned an audacious invasion of Liguria led by Ya‘kub
    bin Ishaq. The latter attacked Genoa that year, and took it in 935. It wasn’t until 972 that Duke William  of
    Provence succeeded in driving the Saracens finally from the fastnesses of Faxineto. In 976 the Fatimid Caliphs
    of Egypt had sent fresh Muslim expeditions into southern Italy. Initially the German emperor Otho II, who had
    set up his headquarters in Rome, successfully defeated these Saracen forces, but in July 982 he was ambushed
    and his army was almost cut to pieces.

     In 977 Sergius, Archbishop of Damascus, was expelled from his See by the Muslims. Pope   Benedict VII gave
    him the ancient church of St Alexius on Rome’s Aventine hill, and he
    founded a monastery there and placed it under Benedictine rule, with himself its first abbot.

     The pontificate of Pope John XVIII [1003-1009] was marred by famine and plague and by
     marauding bands of Saracens who plundered the Italian coast from Pisa to Rome from
     bases on Sardinia.

     By 1010 they had seized Cosenza in southern Italy. Then Sardinia fell to the Arabs in   1015, led by a
    certain Abu Hosein Mogehid [thus the Latin Chronicles]. I take this person   to be Mujahid bin ‘Abd Allah whom
    Arab sources credit with the invasion. The Saracen   force based on Sardinia, over the next few years, torched
    Pisa, seized Luna in northern Tuscany, and ravaged the land. Pope Benedict VIII managed to assemble a fleet
    and challenged the Saracen chief who turned tail and fled to Sardinia, leaving his fleet at the mercy of the
    papal force which was victorious.

     Mujahid bin ‘Abd Allah then sent the Pope a bag of chestnuts and a message that he would   arrive in the
    following summer with as many soldiers as there were nuts in the bag. Benedict accepted the chestnuts and sent
    back a bag of rice: ‘If your master,’ he said to the astonished messenger, ‘ísn’t satisfied with the damage he
    has done to the dowry of the Apostle, let him come again and he will find an armed warrior for every grain of
    rice’.

     The Pope did not wait for an answer but carried the war into the enemy’s territory. He coopted the combined
    fleets of Pisa and Genoa and they sailed for Sardinia in 1017 only to find Mujahid in the act of crucifying
    Christians on Sardinia. The Muslim leader fled to Africa, and Sardinia was occupied by the Pisans. Mujahid kept
    trying to re-take Sardinia  until 1050 when he was captured by the Pisans and the island was made over to
    them by the Pope.

     Muslims from Spain sacked Antibes in 1003. They sacked Pisa in 1005 and 1016, and Narbonne in 1020.
    Sometime around 1025 Pope John XIX granted the pallium [sign of Ecclesiastical jurisdiction] to Archbishop
    Peter of Gerona in northeast Spain, on condition  that he redeemed Christian captives of the Saracens as he
    had promised the Pope when he had come on his 'ad limina' visit.

     The four-hundred and sixty-three years that elapsed between Muhammad’s death in 632  and the calling of a
    Crusade to free the Holy Places in 1095 was not a time of ‘peaceful co-existence’ between Muslims and
    European or Byzantine Christians. Nor was it for Christians living in Muslim-occupied territories. They enjoyed
    ‘peace’ only by keeping the lowest possible profile, paying the jizya, or head-tax, and accepting non-person
    status in lands that had been Christian before the Muslim invaders arrived.

     The new millennium saw the situation go from bad to worse. In 1009 the Fatimid Caliph of  Egypt, abu-‘Ali
    Mansur al-Hakim, ordered the destruction of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. The edict of destruction was
    signed by his Christian secretary ibn-‘Abdun. The  Muslims destroyed the Tomb of Jesus, the Dome and the
    upper parts of the Church until their demolition was halted by the great mound of debris at their feet. For
    eleven years Christians were forbidden even to visit the rubble or to pray in the ruins. Shocked by the
     destruction of Christendom’s holiest Shrine, Pope Sergius IV appealed for help to go to Palestine to rebuild it.
    His appeal fell on deaf ears.

     At the beginning of the fifth century, two hundred years before Muhammad appeared,
     there were seven-hundred Catholic bishops in Africa12. Two-hundred of them attended
     the Council of Carthage in 535 AD. By the middle of the 900s there were forty left. By
     1050, as a result of ‘peaceful coexistence,’ there were only five left.

     In 1076 there were two.

     We learn this from a letter that Pope Gregory VII, ‘Hildebrand,’ wrote to Cyriacus,   Archbishop of Carthage
    in June 1076. As three bishops are needed for the valid  consecration of another bishop Gregory asked him to
    send a suitable priest to Rome who  could be consecrated assistant bishop, so that he [Cyriacus] and Servandus,
    bishop of  Buzea in Mauritania, and the new bishop could consecrate other bishops for the African  Catholics.13

     Gregory VII, on his deathbed in 1085, dreamt of forming a Christian League against Islam  and said, ‘I would
    rather risk my life to deliver the Holy Places, than govern the Universe’. 14

     It seems to have been the Seljuk Turkish capture of Jerusalem in 1076 that finally swung  the balance,
    exhausted the patience of the European Christians, and fulfilled Gregory’s  wish. Pilgrimage to the Holy Places
    had became more difficult; a poll-tax was imposed on  visitors. Those who dared journey there were harassed,
    robbed and some even enslaved.

     At the Council of Piacenza summoned by Pope Urban II and held in March 1095, Byzantine delegates
    emphasized the danger facing Christendom from Muslim expansion, and the  hardship facing Eastern Christians
    until the infidel be driven back.15 They repeated an appeal made by Emperor Alexius to Robert of Flanders
    asking him to return to the East with some knights to assist the Byzantines in their struggle with the Muslims.

     Towards the end of that same year, Urban II, at another Council held at Claremont in France, took up the
    suggestion, and urged Europe’s Christians to ‘Take the road to the Holy Sepulchre… let each one deny himself
    and take up the Cross’. The Assembly rose to its feet and shouted ‘God wills it’.

     Muhammad died on June 8, 632 AD.

     It had taken four hundred and sixty-three years for Europe’s Christians to combine their forces and rise up in
    defence of themselves and of their Faith.

     *Reproduced by kind permission of the Reverend Paul Stenhouse

         NOTES

         1 John Esposito, Islam: the Straight Path, 3rd ed. OUP, 1998, p.58.
    2 See ‘Civilizing influence of previous wars fought between East and West,’ The Weekend Australian,
    March 18-19, 2006.
         3 The Church in the Dark Ages, J.M.Dent and Sons, London, 1959, p.336.
    4 Letter from Adelbert, Marquis of Tuscany and protector of the Papal territory of  Corsica,  to Pope
    Sergius II in Liber Pontificalis, n.xliv, ed. Farnesiana.
    5 Henri Daniel-Rops, The Church in the Dark Ages, J.M.Dent and Sons, London,  1959, p. 472.
    6 Quoted Runciman, A History of the Crusades, Cambridge University Press, 1951,   vol.i, p. 43.
    7 See Horace Mann, The Lives of the Popes in the Early Middle Ages, 12 vols Kegan Paul, London, 1906,   
    vol. iii, p.321.
         8 Epistle 334 – fragment of a letter to the Emperor.
         9 Epistle 296 to the Byzantine Emperor Basil, August 12, 880 AD.
         10 Op.cit. vol.4, p.10
         11 Flodoard [894-966] Chronique de France 919-966, entry for 921.
         12 ‘H. Daniel-Rops, The Church in the Dark Ages, J,M,Dent and Sons, 1959,
         pp. 340, 344.
         13 Register of Gregory VII, III, 19.
         14 H. Daniel-Rops, Cathedral and Crusade, J.M.Dent and Sons, London, 1957, p.434.
            15 Steven Runciman, A History of the Crusades, Cambridge University Press, 1951
Press,
                        p. 105


       **Also by Paul Stenhouse: The Three Faces of Islam: http://jloughnan.tripod.com/3f_islam.htm
                                                                                              
      

         
  Portolani for Our Times
        Patricia Lança's Web Site                                                          THE CRUSADES IN CONTEXT
            HISTORY                                    

    The scene depicted by Froissart, shown right, is
    of an Ottoman massacre,long after
  the Crusades.  The Ottoman Turks
were, however, following a long
tradition that dates back to the
founding of Islam.
NENEXT XT
HOHOME
ME
Less than eighty years after Muhammad’s death, in
711, Muslims from Tangiers poured across the 13 km-
wide strait of Gibraltar into Spain. By 721 this motley
Arab-Berber horde had overthrown the ruling Catholic
Visigoths and, with the fall of Saragossa, set their
sights on southern France.

(Right: Muslim ocupation of Spain and Portugal, at its
height
in 910.  From Encyclopedia Britannica 2004)