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4 - Eugenius III and the Crusades to the East

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 December 2020

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Summary

Abstract

While some historians have generally assigned to Bernard of Clairvaux an overwhelmingly dominant role in the Second Crusade, others have accused Eugenius III of ‘remarkable passivity’. This chapter suggests that the pope's suitability and competence to organize the crusade has been seriously underestimated and offers further investigation to lead towards his rehabilitation. In particular, an examination of the background to Eugenius III's crusade encyclical Quantum praedecessores of 1 December 1145 and the process which resulted in the reissuing of this letter on 1 March 1146 reveals that the pope's circle of advisors played a more influential role in determining the form of the encyclical than has hitherto been thought. Quantum praedecessores represented a real landmark in the development of crusading.

Keywords: Quantum praedecessores; Edessa; Alberic; cardinal bishop of Ostia; Divini dispensatione I; Zangī; ruler of Aleppo and Mosul; Bernard of Clairvaux

Bernard's unanimous election as Pope Eugenius III provoked a scathing reaction from his fellow-Cistercian, Abbot Bernard of Clairvaux:

God have mercy on you [the papal Curia]; what have you done? … What reason, what counsel, made you … suddenly rush upon this rustic, lay hands upon him when hiding from the world, and, knocking away his axe, mattock or hoe, drag him to the palatine, place him upon a throne, clothe him in purple and fine linen, and gird him with a sword…? Had you no other wise and experienced man amongst you who would have been better suited to these things? …Ridiculous or miraculous? Either one or the other… I fear that he may not exercise his apostolate with sufficient firmness.

Other contemporaries described the pope as a man of eloquence and wisdom, but the pervasive words of Abbot Bernard – buttressed by his hagiographers’ reports of countless miracles during his preaching tour – have tended to colour historians’ views of Eugenius and his suitability to steer a crusade. This, in turn, has caused them to assign Bernard an overwhelmingly dominant role in the campaign and thereby to seriously underestimate Eugenius's contribution to the history of the crusades. Barber wrote that the abbot ‘almost single-handedly put together a crusade which neither pope nor king [Louis VII, 1137–80] had been able to launch on their own, and consequently the Second Crusade bears Bernard's stamp’

Type
Chapter
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Pope Eugenius III (1145–1153)
The First Cistercian Pope
, pp. 125 - 146
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2018

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