Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- Notes on the Text
- Maps
- Introduction: Low Cunning in the High Middle Ages
- 1 Trickery in Medieval Culture: Source and Problems
- 2 Military Intelligence: Misdirection, Misinformation and Espionage
- 3 The Element of Surprise: Ambushes and Night Raids
- 4 The Feigned Flight
- 5 Disguises
- 6 Bribes and Inducements
- 7 Oaths and Truces
- 8 The Language of Deception
- 9 The Morality of Deception
- Conclusion
- Appendix: Taxonomy of Deceptions in Medieval Chronicles c. 1000–1320
- Bibliography
- Index
- Warfare in History
6 - Bribes and Inducements
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2022
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- Notes on the Text
- Maps
- Introduction: Low Cunning in the High Middle Ages
- 1 Trickery in Medieval Culture: Source and Problems
- 2 Military Intelligence: Misdirection, Misinformation and Espionage
- 3 The Element of Surprise: Ambushes and Night Raids
- 4 The Feigned Flight
- 5 Disguises
- 6 Bribes and Inducements
- 7 Oaths and Truces
- 8 The Language of Deception
- 9 The Morality of Deception
- Conclusion
- Appendix: Taxonomy of Deceptions in Medieval Chronicles c. 1000–1320
- Bibliography
- Index
- Warfare in History
Summary
In 1122, William VI, count of Auvergne, seized the town of Clermont, along with its cathedral. The contemporary French chronicler Suger of St. Denis offers this cryptic statement on how it was accomplished: ‘[Aimeri, bishop of Clermont], appealing to the lord king, laid before him a tearful complaint on behalf of the Church, that the count of Auvergne had occupied the city and had fortified the Church of the Blessed Mary through the deception of his dean, together with many tyrannical acts’. No other information is provided. Who was this dean? Why did he help William? What was the nature of the fraus he committed and how did it help William fortify the cathedral? It is not always possible to tell how and why a stronghold fell, especially when chroniclers use vague terms such as ‘fraud’ or ‘treachery’. Some cases, however, are more explicit and commanders are depicted actively soliciting traitors in the enemy garrison. This was a sound strategy, as it allowed the attackers to take a stronghold quickly, without risking a full-frontal assault. Frontinus dedicated a section of his Strategemata to various examples of how to entice members of a garrison to commit treachery (‘De eliciendis ad proditionem’):
Marcus Marcellus, when he had solicited a certain Sosistratus of Syracuse to commit treachery, learned from him that the guards would be more slack on a feast day, when Epicydes was going to provide much wine and food. So, lying in wait for the merry-making (and what followed it), he scaled the walls and, when the sentries had been cut down, he opened the city, famous for noble victories, to the Roman army.
When discussing siege warfare, medieval chroniclers would sometimes present bribery as the logical alternative to violent assault. This is a variation of the common topos of presenting force and trickery as two potential methods of achieving victory (see Chapter 8). For example, Roger of Wendover described Louis VIII of France's advance to La Rochelle (ruled at that time by Henry III of England) in 1224 as follows: ‘In that same year Louis, king of the French, led a grand army to La Rochelle, to conquer the town either by arms or by money’.
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- Deception in Medieval WarfareTrickery and Cunning in the Central Middle Ages, pp. 123 - 133Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2022