This page summarizes the history of the castle called Krak
des Chevaliers based on the little information that can be recovered visiting
the place directly, reading history books on the XI-XII century period or
surfing the web. The information you read below have been cross checked using
several sources, but mainly the Steven Runciman’s book on history of crusades.
That basic info has been then complemented with other sources to give an overall
picture of this castle story.
Krak des Chevaliers (Hosn el Akrad in Arab) is one of the
main attractions of a travel in Syria. The Castle is located half road
approximately between Aleppo and Damascus and its position was strategic since
located in the only passage that the mountain chains Syrian (the Oronts) and
Lebanese (Ante Lebanon) allow to who, at those times, wanted to reach the
Mediterranean coasts. This passage is called the passage of Homs and was as said
one of the few passages to reach the city of Tartus (today).
At that time the roads to travel from place to place were
almost obliged and by controlling the passage of Homs meant controlling great
part of the Lebanese coast between Antioch and Beirut and great part of the
Syrian hinterland.
The hill, on which Krak des Chevaliers it has been
constructed, was originally the place on which a small fortress called the
"Castle on the slope" or “Kurdish castle” rose. It was created/occupied in 1031
approximately from the Homs Emir that left, as garrison, curds soldiers in order
to protect the inner territories of Syria from the threat of potential intruders
coming from the Mediterranean coast
The First conquest of the Krak
The dates of the events, related to the
first conquest from the crusaders of Krak des Chevaliers, are those of the First
Crusade with the participation of characters like “Geoffrey de Bullion” (from
Northern France), “Raymond de Saint Gilles” count of Tolouse (from Southern
France), Bohemond from Tarant (Southern Italy Norman), Tancred (grandson of
Bohemond), “Baldwin de Boulogne”. They left Europe in August 1096 and reached
Constantinople (via earth) to the end of the same year. In the 1097 crusaders
conquered Edessa (Baldwin of Flanders) Antioch (Bohemond) and gradually they
conquered the various coastal cities, Tripoli (Raymond of Toulouse), and then
Jerusalem that they “liberated” on July, 1099 (Geoffrey de Bullion).
(Microsoft Encarta)
In 1099, during the passage of the first crusade soldiers
heading towards Jerusalem, Raymond of Toulouse occupied the castle shortly (3
weeks) as the historian Steven Runciman tells us. According to the story,
Raymond and Geoffrey de Bullion, leaders of the crusaders troops, left Antioch
(Bohemond remained as a king of that city) and continued towards Jerusalem.
During the trip, in search of food supplies (always insufficient) for the
troops, they found the castle, garrisoned from curds soldiers and for the
greater part peasants. Curds, in order to avoid a direct clash with crusaders,
let sheep flocks get out from the castle so to satisfy the francs. These, in a
limited number, were dispersed to recover the cattle. In that moment the curds,
seeing crusaders troops separate and vulnerable, tried a sortie and nearly they
succeeded to capture Raymond that was helped in time from its personal guard.
During the night the castle was abandoned from the occupants and Raymond
established there for three weeks before returning to the road to Jerusalem.
Runciman does not explain if in this date they left a crusader garrison, but it
is possible that this actually didn’t happen and that later the castle was taken
back from curds.
The first incursion to Krak des Chevaliers (January 1099)
came before the conquest of Jerusalem (15 July 1099). After that event the
destiny of Krak des Chevaliers is bound to the events of the county of Tripoli
where it belonged. Raymond of Toulouse, in the attempt to take and own land as
they made before him Baldwin, Bohemond, Tancred and Geoffrey, tried to conquer
Tripoli. First he took Tartus around 1100 and then tried to conquer the Krak and
the city of Homs in Syria without succeeding. It was then concentrated on taking
Tripoli where it constructed its fortress on the Mont-Pelerin, close to the port
of the city. It died in the February of 1105. In the 1109 county of Tripoli was
in hands of the cousin of Raymond, Wilhelm-Jordan, count of Cerdagne, but in the
spring of the same year it arrived from France the son of Raymond, Bertrand of
Saint Gilles, than demanded the inheritance. After an initial division in which
the zone to north of Tripoli was assigned to Wilhelm- Jordan (vassal of Tancred)
and the south zone to Bertrand, this last one took the total area after the dead
of Wilhelm-Jordan and became count of Tripoli with the name of Raymond II from
1109 to 1189. Various sources bring back the conquest date of the Krak around to
1110 and therefore it is reasonable that it has been Raymond II to take it.
This historical period sees the important born of knight’s
orders as the Templars (1119) and the Hospitalers. Mission of these last ones
was to protect the coastal roads and to cure the sicks. Both were military
orders and had an important role in the wars in middle east. Krak des
Chevaliers, with other castles, was donated to the Hospitalers order from
Raymond II of Tripoli in 1144 (cfr. M.Barber "the History of the Templars") and
since then they continued to garrison it in order to defend itself from the
Muslim incursions.
The Krak could accommodate until 2000 between soldiers and
knights, even if some speak about 4000, and the garrison constructed
fortifications in adding to those original ones along all the period of their
permanence and every time the circumstances demanded it. Difficult to think that
the Krak has ever accommodated so many knights. the historians are conservative
on the number of knights present in this period in all the middle east area and
is thought they could be in all around a thousand.
The presence of crusaders in the zone in the following
years was never calm and was always subject to the incursions of the muslin
populations of border. Krak des Chevaliers, respect to other fortifications, was
in a favorable geographic position because in that period the main zones on
which it was concentrated the defensive efforts or attack efforts was Jerusalem
(Israel), Damietta (Egypt), Edessa (Armenia), Constantinople (Turkey), Aleppo
and Damascus (Syria) all enough far from the Krak. Perhaps this is the reason
because the Krak it has not suffered in the time destructions and it has been
maintained in this state until today.
The Krak during the other crusades
In the 1144 Sultan of Damascus, Nureddin, conquered Edessa
defeating Baldwin. This marked a hard blow to crusaders and had remarkable
repercussions also in the West. It came launch a second crusade (1148-1149)
that, in spite of the presence of the king of France (Luigi with Queen Eleanor
of Aquitaine) and Germany (Conrad III), he turned out to be a failure. The
journey followed the path of the first crusade, from Constantinople to Antioch
to Jerusalem. They tried to conquer Damascus, but unsuccessfully.
The Krak was attacked in 1163 always from Nureddin whose
troops met with those of crusaders in Buquai' ah in the vicinities of the
castle. Crusaders in that occasion won and they maintained the garrison of the
zone and the castle.
In 1170 Nureddin died and Saladin took his place. During
his reign it surrounded all the Christian reins from Armenia until Egypt.
Saladin, even if seems that it did not place under direct
besiege the Krak castle, around 1180 he made various incursions in the zone of
the county of Tripoli, but gave up conquest plans. This would have to confirm
that the Krak had an important role of defense of the coastal positions of the
zone, but that in the more general within the clash “Crusaders –Muslims” it was
not among the priorities of conquest from Muslims. Interesting is what one of
the famous historian of the age Wilhelm from Tiro in this period writes about
one of the raids of Saladin within the triangle of castles crusades Chastel
Blanc, Krak des Chevaliers, al-Arimah: "the count of Tripoli grouped his men in
the city of Arqa (near Tripoli), waiting the opportunity to fight the enemy
without to incur in serious danger. The warrior monks of the Temple (Templars),
in the same region, barricaded themselves within their castles (Chastel Blanc
and al-Arimah were castles possessed from the Templars) waiting for besiege,
without taking risk of thoughtless attacks; the monks of the Hospital (the
Hospitalers) induced from analogous fears, grouped themselves in their castle,
called Krak, judging sufficient in case of crisis to protect the castle from the
damages provoked from the enemy. The enemy troops were between the templars, the
hospitalers castles and the forces of count of Tripoli (in Arqa) so to prevent
that they could ask for help to each other or send messengers in order to inform
on the respective situations. Saladin troops were moving freely on the territory
and destroyed farms and land without opposition, Saladin set afire the harvest,
took the cattle and depopulated the entire region". From this we evince as
crusaders in these lands they were shrewd and conscious of the own forces and
more focused to defend than to the attack.
Templars Castles (t) and Hospitalers in the zone of Tortoise (North of Tripoli)
Around 1170 the all Syrian area suffered from a earthquake
and also the Krak suffered damages from this event but the most important date
of the period is the 4th of July 1187, when Saladin defeated crusaders in the
battle of Hattin between Jerusalem and Tiberiade’s lake. The defeat was one of
the heaviest for crusaders and in a short time it brought Jerusalem in the
Muslim hands.
Between 1187 and 1271, year in which crusaders lost Krak
des Chevaliers, there happened important events such as (here extremely
summarized):
- The Third Crusade around 1197 with the
participation of Frederic of Germany (died in Asia), Philippe of France (arrived
until to Acres and then abandoned the crusade) and Richard “Lionhearted” that
continued as a real hero to Jerusalem, besieged the city and agreed with the
Saladin a free access to Jerusalem before starting his long trip and adventure
back to England (…)
- The Fourth Crusade around to 1202 carried to the
pillage of Constantinople from crusaders and they placed on the throne Baldwin
of Flanders. As for the other crusades the initial idea was to set Jerusalem
free, however the interests towards Greece and the reign of Constantinople were
so high that still today this episode it is source of division between the
Orthodox Church and Roman. The importance of this crusade was in the breach that
happened between east and the west and carried out to a lack of support from
eastern empire to crusade forces there located.
- Fifth Crusade 1218-1221 saw a change of strategy
and crusaders from the base of Cyprus headed directly for the heart of the reign
of Egypt that in that moment represented the source of every threat for the
Latin possession. They tried to conquer the city of Damietta without succeeding.
- The Sixth Crusade around to the 1229 was carried
out when in Italy was in full action the fight between papacy and empire.
Frederic II passed from Cyprus, Acres and came down towards Jerusalem where
agreed with the Muslims 10 years of free passage and becoming king of Jerusalem.
Being Federico II excommunicated from the Pope, this successful event was not
received with enthusiasm in Italy. At the end of the 10 years (1244) Jerusalem
it was plundered and reconquered from the Muslims of Egypt of the Ayyubide
reign.
- the Seventh and Eighth Crusade from 1250 to 1270
saw the King of France Luigi IX. After some successes in Egypt he lost an
important battle near Damietta in Egypt like the fifth crusade. In the 1270
Luigi tried again embarking from Tunisia, but it died for an epidemic that hit
its army during besieges.
In the last period of XIII century the new force of
Mongols, the force of the Muslims of Egypt, the lack from the western countries
to succeed to find an alliance with the Greeks and the Byzantines, the inner
rivalries to several the participants the crusades reduced the presence of
crusaders in the zone going from Armenia to Egypt drastically and gradually
disappearing in the years to come.
The end of Krak des Chevaliers
Krak des Chevaliers followed therefore these
events. It was in fact during the winter of 1271 that al-Zaher sultan Baybars of
Egypt, in its progressive reconquest of Latin possessions, "besieged the castle
for several days (March), hitting it with bullets of its catapults before that
its troops began the final attack in order to occupy the castle, door to door,
tower to tower" the final conquest of the castle from Baybars called "the
panther". It is not known what it has been the fate of the knights crusaders
that at the moment of the surrender they were not more than 200. Some think that
the defeated soldiers were left free to reach the coast and from there to
continue for their destinies, others (Runciman) that the knights were all killed
after the battle while the others were left free to reach the coast.
An other history tells that the Arabs, avoiding the attack
to the main door of Krak de Chevaliers that would have lead to a series of
narrow passages, attacked the southern wall digging galleries under the great
tower of the south-west angle and in this way they crossed external walls.
Before attacking the last garrison in the main tower they tried a stratagem. A
pigeon traveller was sent to the castle with a message of the Great Master of
the Hospitalers, in which he ordered to the garrison to surrender. In inferior
number and without hope of salvation, the defenders made what they have been
ordered also understanding that the message was false, they surrendered with
honour. Baybars in any case as a result of the conquest restored the damaged
parts and constructed to new towers and the fortress maintained its importance
under the dominion of the Arabs intact.
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