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Rodney Stark - God’s Battalions: The Case for the Crusades

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Rodney Stark God’s Battalions: The Case for the Crusades
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InGods Battalions, distinguished scholar Rodney Stark puts forth a controversial argument that the Crusades were a justified war waged against Muslim terror and aggression. Stark, the author ofThe Rise of Christianity,reviews the history of the seven major crusades from 1095-1291 in this fascinating work of religious revisionist history.

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Gods Battalions The Case for the Crusades Rodney Stark Contents - photo 1

Gods Battalions The Case for the Crusades Rodney Stark Contents - photo 2

Gods Battalions

The Case for the Crusades

Rodney Stark

Contents Introduction Greedy Barbarians in Armor One Muslim Invaders Two - photo 3

Contents

Introduction Greedy Barbarians in Armor?

One Muslim Invaders

Two Christendom Strikes Back

Three Western Ignorance Versus Eastern Culture

Four Pilgrimage and Persecution

Five Enlisting Crusaders

Six Going East

Seven Bloody Victories

Eight The Crusader Kingdoms

Nine The Struggle to Defend the Kingdoms Ten Crusades Against Egypt

Conclusion Mission Abandoned

Bibliography

Notes

About the Author

Credits

Copyright

About the Publisher

Introduction GREEDY BARBARIANS IN ARMOR Pope Urban II asks a gathering of - photo 4

Introduction

GREEDY BARBARIANS IN ARMOR?

Pope Urban II asks a gathering of bishops and clergy during the Council at Clermont to help him preach the First Crusade.

The next day he preached the Crusade to a huge crowd in a meadow.

Bridgeman-Giraudon / Art Resource, NY

O N NOVEMBER 27, 1095, Pope Urban I mounted a platform set up in a meadow outside the French city of Clermont, surrounded in al directions by an immense crowd. A vigorous man of fifty-three, Urban was blessed with an unusual y powerful and expressive voice that made it possible for him to be heard at a great distance. On this memorable occasion, addressing a multitude that included poor peasants as wel as nobility and clergy, the pope gave a speech that changed history.

Urban had arranged the gathering in response to a letter from Alexius Comnenus, emperor of Byzantium, who had written from his embattled capital of Constantinople to the Count of Flanders requesting that he and his fel ow Christians send forces to help the Byzantines repel the Seljuk Turks, recent converts to Islam who had invaded the Middle East, captured Jerusalem, and driven to within one hundred miles of Constantinople. In his letter, the emperor detailed gruesome tortures of Christian pilgrims to the Holy Land and vile desecrations of churches, altars, and baptismal fonts.

Should Constantinople fal to the Turks, not only would thousands more Christians be murdered, tortured, and raped, but also the most holy relics of the Saviour, gathered over the centuries, would be lost. Therefore in the name of Godwe implore you to bring this city al the faithful soldiers of Christ[I]n your coming you wil find your reward in heaven, and if you do not come, God wil condemn you.1

There were many reasons that Europeans might have ignored any plea for help from Byzantium. For one thing, their cultural heritage as wel as their Christianity was Roman, while the Byzantines were Greeks, whose lifestyle seemed decadent to Europeans and whose Orthodox Christianity held Latin Catholicism in contemptoften persecuting its priests and practitioners.

Nevertheless, when Pope Urban I read this letter he was determined that it be answered by worthy deeds, and he arranged for a church council at Clermont, which he fol owed with his famous speech.2

Speaking in French, the pope began by graphical y detailing the torture, rape, and murder of Christian pilgrims and the defilement of churches and holy places committed by the Turks (he cal ed them Persians) : They destroy the altars, after having defiled them with their uncleanness. They circumcise the Christians, and the blood of the circumcision they either pour on the altars or pour into the vases of the baptismal font. When they wish to torture people by a base death, they perforate their navels, and dragging forth the extremity of the intestines, bind it to a stake; then with flogging they lead the victim around until the viscera having gushed forth the victim fal s prostrate on the groundWhat shal I say about the abominable rape of women? To speak of it is worse than to be silent. On whom therefore is the labor of avenging these wrongs and recovering this territory incumbent, if not upon you?3

At this point Pope Urban raised a second issue to which he and his il ustrious predecessor Gregory VI had devoted years of effort

the chronic warfare of medieval times. The popes had been attempting to achieve a truce of God among the feudal nobility, many of whom seemed inclined to make war, even on their friends, just for the sake of a good fight. After al , it was what they had trained to do every day since early childhood. Here was their chance!

Christian warriors, who continual y and vainly seek pretexts for war, rejoice, for you have today found a true pretextIf you are conquered, you wil have the glory of dying in the very same place as Jesus Christ, and God wil never forget that he found you in the holy battalionsSoldiers of Hel , become soldiers of the living God!4

Now, shouts of Dieu li volt! (God wil s it!) began to spread through the crowd, and men began to cut up cloaks and other pieces of cloth to make crosses and sew them against their chests.

Everyone agreed that the next year they would set out for the Holy Land. And they did.

That is the traditional explanation of how and why the First Crusade began. But in recent times a far more cynical and sinister explanation of the Crusades has gained popularity. Thus, in the immediate aftermath of the destruction of the World Trade Center by Muslim terrorists, frequent mention was made of the Crusades as a basis for Islamic fury. It was argued that Muslim bitterness over their mistreatment by the Christian West can be dated back to the First Crusade. Far from being motivated by piety or by concern for the safety of pilgrims and the holy places in Jerusalem, the Crusades were but the first extremely bloody chapter in a long history of brutal European colonialism.5

More specifical y, it is charged that the crusaders marched east not out of idealism, but in pursuit of lands and loot; that the Crusades were promoted by power-mad popes seeking to greatly expand Christianity through conversion of the Muslim masses; 6 and that the knights of Europe were barbarians who brutalized everyone in their path, leaving the enlightened Muslim culturein ruins.7 As Akbar Ahmed, chair of Islamic studies at American University in Washington, D.C., has suggested, the Crusades created a historical memory which is with us todaythe memory of a long European onslaught.8

Two months after the attack of September 11, 2001, on New York City, former president Bil Clinton informed an audience at Georgetown University that [t]hose of us who come from various European lineages are not blameless vis--vis the Crusades as a crime against Islam, and then summarized a medieval account about al the blood that was shed when Godfrey of Bouil on and his forces conquered Jerusalem in 1099.

That the Crusades were a terrible crime in great need of atonement was a popular theme even before the Islamic terrorists crashed their hijacked airliners. In 1999, the New York Times had solemnly proposed that the Crusades were comparable to Hitlers atrocities or to the ethnic cleansing in Kosovo.9 That same year, to mark the nine hundredth anniversary of the crusader conquest of Jerusalem, hundreds of devout Protestants took part in a

reconciliation walk that began in Germany and ended in the Holy Land. Along the way the walkers wore T-shirts bearing the message

I apologize in Arabic. Their official statement explained the need for a Christian apology:

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