William of Tyre (c. 1130 – September 29, 1186),
was a
medieval prelate and
chronicler. As
archbishop of Tyre, he is
sometimes known as
William II to distinguish him
from a predecessor,
William of
Malines.
He grew up in Jerusalem
at the height of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, which had been
established in 1099 after the First
Crusade, and he spent twenty years studying the liberal arts and canon
law in the universities of
Europe.
Following William's return to Jerusalem in 1165, King
Amalric I made him an ambassador to
the
Byzantine Empire. William
became tutor to the king's son, the future King
Baldwin IV, whom William discovered
to be a
leper. After Amalric's death William
became
chancellor and
archbishop of Tyre, two of the highest offices in the kingdom, and
in 1179 William led the eastern delegation to the
Third Council of the Lateran.
As he was involved in the dynastic struggle that developed during
Baldwin IV's reign, his importance waned when a rival faction
gained control of royal affairs. He was passed over for the
prestigious
Patriarchate of
Jerusalem, and died in obscurity, probably in 1186.
William wrote an account of the Lateran Council and a history of
the Islamic states from the time of
Muhammad. Neither work survives. He is famous today
as the author of a history of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. William
composed his
chronicle in excellent Latin
for his time, with numerous quotations from
classical literature. The chronicle is
sometimes given the title
Historia rerum in partibus
transmarinis gestarum ("History of Deeds Done Beyond the Sea")
or
Historia Ierosolimitana ("History of Jerusalem"), or
the
Historia for short. It was translated into French soon
after his death, and thereafter into numerous other languages.
Because it is the only source for the history of twelfth-century
Jerusalem written by a native, historians have often assumed that
William's statements could be taken at face value. However, more
recent historians have shown that William's involvement in the
kingdom's political disputes resulted in obvious biases in his
account. Despite this, he is considered the greatest chronicler of
the crusades, and one of the best authors of the
Middle Ages.
Early life

The Crusader states in 1165
The Kingdom of Jerusalem was founded in 1099 at the end of the
First Crusade. It was the third of four
Christian territories to be established by the
crusaders, following the
County of
Edessa and the
Principality
of Antioch, and followed by the
County of Tripoli.
Jerusalem's first
three rulers, Godfrey of
Bouillon (1099–1100), his brother Baldwin I (1100–1118), and their
cousin Baldwin II
(1118–1131), expanded and secured the kingdom's borders, which
encompassed roughly the same territory as modern-day Israel
, Palestine
, and Lebanon
.
During the kingdom's early decades, the population was swelled by
pilgrims visiting the holiest sites of Christendom.
Merchants from the
Mediterranean city-states of Italy
and France
were eager
to exploit the rich trade markets of the east.
William's family probably originated in either France or Italy,
since he is very familiar with both countries. His parents were
likely merchants who had settled in the kingdom and were
"apparently well-to-do", although it is unknown whether they
participated in the First Crusade or arrived later. William was
born in Jerusalem around 1130. He had at least one brother, Ralph,
who was one of the city's
burgess, a
non-noble leader of the merchant community. Nothing more is known
about his family, except that his mother died before 1165.
As a child
William was educated in Jerusalem, at the cathedral school in the Church of the
Holy Sepulchre
. The
scholaster, or school-master,
John the Pisan, taught William to read and write, and first
introduced him to
Latin. From the
Historia it is clear that he also knew
French and possibly
Italian, but there is not enough evidence
to determine whether he learned
Greek,
Persian, and
Arabic, as is sometimes claimed.
Around
1145 William went to Europe to continue his education in the
schools of France and Italy, especially in those of Paris
and Bologna
, "the two
most important intellectual centers of twelfth-century
Christendom." These schools were not yet the official
universities that they would
become in the 13th century, but by the end of the 11th century both
had numerous schools for the arts and sciences. They were separate
from the cathedral schools, and were established by independent
professors who were masters of their field of study. Students from
all over Europe gathered there to hear lectures from these masters.
William
studied liberal arts and theology in Paris
and Orléans
for about
ten years, with professors who had been students of Thierry of Chartres and Gilbert de la Porrée. He
also spent time studying under
Robert of
Melun and
Adam de Parvo
Ponte, among others. In Orléans, one of the pre-eminent centres
of classical studies, he read ancient Roman literature (known
simply as "the Authors") with
Hilary of
Orléans, and learned
mathematics
("especially
Euclid") with
William of Soissons. For six years, he
studied theology with
Peter Lombard
and
Maurice de Sully.
Afterwards, he studied
civil law and canon law in Bologna
, with the "Four
Doctors", Hugolinus de
Porta Ravennate, Bulgarus, Martinus Gosia, and Jacob de Boraigne. William's list
of professors "gives us almost a who's who of the grammarians,
philosophers, theologians, and law teachers of the so-called
Twelfth-Century
Renaissance", and shows that he was as well-educated as any
European cleric. His contemporary
John
of Salisbury had many of the same teachers.
Religious and political life in Jerusalem
The highest religious and political offices in Jerusalem were
usually held by Europeans who had arrived on pilgrimage or crusade.
William was one of the few natives with a European education, and
he quickly rose through the ranks.
After his return to the Holy Land in 1165,
he became canon of the cathedral at
Acre
.
In 1167 he
was appointed archdeacon of the cathedral
of Tyre
by Frederick de la Roche, archbishop of
Tyre, with the support of King Amalric I.
Amalric had come to power in 1164 and had made it his goal to
conquer Egypt.
Egypt
had been
invaded by King Baldwin I fifty years earlier, and the weak
Fatimid Caliphate was forced to
pay yearly tribute to Jerusalem. Amalric turned towards
Egypt because Muslim territory to the east of Jerusalem had fallen
under the control of the powerful
Zengid sultan
Nur
ad-Din.
Nur ad-Din had taken control of Damascus
in 1154, six years after the disastrous siege of Damascus by the Second Crusade in 1148. Jerusalem could now
expand only to the southwest, towards Egypt, and in 1153 Ascalon
, the last Fatimid outpost in Palestine, fell to the crusaders. Nur ad-Din,
however, also wished to acquire Egypt, and sent his army to hinder
Amalric's plans. This was the situation in the east when William
returned from Europe. In 1167 Amalric married
Maria Comnena,
grand-niece of
Byzantine emperor
Manuel I Comnenus, and in 1168 the
king sent William to finalize a treaty for a joint
Byzantine-crusader campaign against Egypt. The expedition,
Amalric's fourth, was the first with support from the
Byzantine navy. Amalric, however, did not
wait for the fleet to arrive.
He managed to capture Damietta
, but within a few years he was expelled from Egypt
by one of Nur ad-Din's generals, Saladin,
who would later become Jerusalem's greatest threat.
Meanwhile, William continued his advancement in the kingdom.
In 1169
he visited Rome
, possibly to
answer accusations made against him by Archbishop Frederick,
although if so, the charge is unknown. It is also possible
that while Frederick was away on a diplomatic mission in Europe, a
problem within the diocese forced William to seek the archbishop's
assistance.
On his return from Rome in 1170 he may have been commissioned by
Amalric to write a history of the kingdom. He also became the tutor
of Amalric's son and heir,
Baldwin IV. When Baldwin was
thirteen years old, he was playing with some children, who were
trying to cause each other pain by scratching each others' arms.
"The other boys gave evidence of pain by their outcries," wrote
William, "but Baldwin, although his comrades did not spare him,
endured it altogether too patiently, as if he felt
nothing ... It is impossible to refrain from tears while
speaking of this great misfortune." William inspected Baldwin's
arms and recognized the possible symptoms of
leprosy, which was confirmed as Baldwin grew
older.
Amalric died in 1174, and Baldwin IV succeeded him as king. Nur
ad-Din also died in 1174, and his general Saladin spent the rest of
the decade consolidating his hold on both Egypt and Nur ad-Din's
possessions in Syria, which allowed him to completely encircle
Jerusalem. The subsequent events have often been interpreted as a
struggle between two opposing factions, a "court party" and a
"noble party." The "court party" was led by Baldwin's mother,
Amalric's first wife
Agnes of
Courtenay, and her
immediate
family, as well as recent arrivals from Europe who were
inexperienced in the affairs of the kingdom and were in favour of
war with Saladin. The "noble party" was led by
Raymond III of Tripoli and the native
nobility of the kingdom, who favoured peaceful co-existence with
the Muslims. This is the interpretation offered by William himself
in the
Historia, and it was taken as fact by later
historians. Peter W. Edbury, however, has more recently argued that
William must be considered extremely partisan as he was naturally
allied with Raymond, who was responsible for his later advancement
in political and religious offices. The accounts of the
13th-century authors who continued the
Historia in French
must also be considered suspect, as they were allied to Raymond's
supporters in the
Ibelin family. The general
consensus among recent historians is that although there was a
dynastic struggle, "the division was not between native barons and
newcomers from the West, but between the king's maternal and
paternal kin."
Miles of Plancy briefly held the
regency for the underaged Baldwin IV. Miles was assassinated in
October 1174, and Raymond III was soon appointed to replace him.
Raymond
named William chancellor of
Jerusalem, as well as archdeacon of Nazareth
, and on June 6, 1175, William was elected
archbishop of Tyre to replace Frederick de la Roche, who had died
in October 1174. William's duties as chancellor probably did
not take up too much of his time; the scribes and officials in the
chancery drafted
documents and it may not have even been necessary for him to be
present to sign them. Instead he focused on his duties as
archbishop. In 1177 he performed the funeral services for
William of
Montferrat, husband of Baldwin IV's sister
Sibylla, when the
patriarch of Jerusalem,
Amalric of Nesle, was too sick to
attend.
In 1179,
William was one of the delegates from Jerusalem and the other
crusader states at the Third Lateran Council; among
the others were Heraclius, archbishop of Caesarea, Joscius, bishop of Acre and William's future successor
in Tyre, the bishops of Sebastea
, Bethlehem
, Tripoli
, and Jabala
, and the
abbot of Mount
Sion
. Patriarch Amalric and
Patriarch of Antioch Aimery of Limoges were unable to attend,
and William and the other bishops did not have sufficient weight to
persuade
Pope Alexander III of
the need for a new crusade. William was, however, sent by Alexander
as an ambassador to Emperor Manuel, and Manuel then sent him on a
mission to the
Principality of
Antioch. William does not mention exactly what happened during
these embassies, but he probably discussed the Byzantine alliance
with Jerusalem, and Manuel's protectorate over Antioch, where, due
to pressure from Rome and Jerusalem, the emperor was forced to give
up his attempts to restore a
Greek patriarch. William was
absent from Jerusalem for two years, returning home in 1180.
The patriarchal election of 1180
During William's absence a crisis had developed in Jerusalem. King
Baldwin had reached the
age of
majority in 1176 and Raymond III had been removed from the
regency, but as a leper Baldwin could have no children and could
not be expected to rule much longer. After the death of William of
Montferrat in 1177, King Baldwin's widowed sister Sibylla required
a new husband. At Easter in 1180, the two factions were divided
even further when Raymond and his cousin
Bohemond III of Antioch attempted to
force Sibylla to marry
Baldwin of
Ibelin. Raymond and Bohemond were King Baldwin's nearest male
relatives in the paternal line, and could have claimed the throne
if the king died without an heir or a suitable replacement. Before
Raymond and Bohemond arrived, however, Agnes and King Baldwin
arranged for Sibylla to be married to a
Poitevin newcomer,
Guy of
Lusignan, whose older brother
Amalric of Lusignan was already an
established figure at court.
The dispute affected William, since he had been appointed
chancellor by Raymond and may have fallen out of favour after
Raymond was removed from the regency. When Patriarch Amalric died
on October 6, 1180, the two most obvious choices for his successor
were William and Heraclius of Caesarea. They were fairly evenly
matched in background and education, but politically they were
allied with opposite parties, as Heraclius was one of Agnes of
Courtenay's supporters. It seems that the canons of the Holy
Sepulchre were unable to decide, and asked the king for advice; due
to Agnes' influence, Heraclius was elected. There were rumours that
Agnes and Heraclius were lovers, but this information comes from
the partisan 13th-century continuations of the
Historia,
and there is no other evidence to substantiate such a claim.
William himself says almost nothing about the election and
Heraclius' character or his subsequent patriarchate, probably
reflecting his disappointment at the outcome.
Death

Saladin burning a town, from a
manuscript of the French translation of the
Historia.
William remained archbishop of Tyre and chancellor of the kingdom,
but the details of his life at this time are obscure. The
13th-century
continuators claim that
Heraclius excommunicated William in 1183, but it is unknown why
Heraclius would have done this. They also claim that William went
to Rome to appeal to the Pope, where Heraclius had him poisoned.
According to Peter Edbury and John Rowe, the obscurity of William's
life during these years shows that he did not play a large
political role, but concentrated on ecclesiastical affairs and the
writing of his history. The story of his excommunication, and the
unlikely detail that he was poisoned, were probably an invention of
the Old French continuators. William remained in the kingdom and
continued to write up until 1184, but by then Jerusalem was
internally divided by political factions and externally surrounded
by the forces of Saladin, and "the only subjects that present
themselves are the disasters of a sorrowing country and its
manifold misfortunes, themes which can serve only to draw forth
lamentations and tears."
His importance had dwindled with the victory of Agnes and her
supporters, and with the accession of
Baldwin V, infant son of Sibylla and
William of Montferrat. Baldwin was a sickly child and he died the
next year. In 1186 he was succeeded by his mother Sibylla and her
second husband Guy of Lusignan, ruling jointly. William was
probably in failing health by this point. Rudolf Hiestand
discovered that the date of William's death was September 29, but
the year was not recorded; whatever the year, there was a new
chancellor in May 1185 and a new archbishop of Tyre by October 21,
1186. Hans Mayer concluded that William died in 1186, and this is
the year generally accepted by scholars.
William's foresight about the misfortunes of his country was proven
correct less than a year later.
Saladin defeated King Guy at the Battle of
Hattin
in 1187, and went on to capture Jerusalem and almost every
other city of the kingdom, except the seat of William's
archdiocese, Tyre. News of the fall of Jerusalem shocked
Europe and plans were made to send assistance.
According to Roger of Wendover, William was present at
Gisors
in France in
1188 when Henry II of England
and Philip II of France agreed
to go on crusade: "Thereupon the king
of the English first took the sign of the cross at the hands of the
Archbishop of Rheims and
William of Tyre, the latter of whom had been entrusted by our lord
the pope with the office of legate in the affairs of the crusade in
the western part of Europe." Roger was however mistaken; he
knew that an unnamed archbishop of Tyre was present and assumed it
must have been the William whose chronicle he possessed, although
the archbishop in question was actually William's successor
Joscius.
Works
William reports that he wrote an account of the Third Council of
the Lateran, which does not survive. He also wrote a history of the
Holy Land from the time of
Muhammad up to
1184, for which he used
Eutychius of Alexandria as his main
source. This work seems to have been known in Europe in the 13th
century but it also does not survive.
Latin chronicle
William's great work is a Latin chronicle, written between 1170 and
1184. It contains twenty-three books; the final book, which deals
with the events of 1183 and the beginning of 1184, has only a
prologue and one chapter, so it is either unfinished or the rest of
the pages were lost before the whole chronicle began to be copied.
The first book begins with the
conquest of Syria by
Umar in the seventh century, but otherwise the work
deals with the advent of the
First
Crusade and the subsequent political history of the Kingdom of
Jerusalem. It is arranged, but was not written, chronologically;
the first sections to be written were probably the chapters about
the invasion of Egypt in 1167, which are extremely detailed and
were likely composed before the Fatimid dynasty was overthrown in
1171. Much of the
Historia was finished before William
left to attend the Lateran Council, but new additions and
corrections were made after his return in 1180, perhaps because he
now realized that European readers would also be interested in the
history of the kingdom. In 1184 he wrote the Prologue and the
beginning of the twenty-third book.
William had access to the chronicles of the First Crusade,
including
Fulcher of Chartres,
Albert of Aix,
Raymond of Aguilers,
Baldric of Dol, and the
Gesta Francorum, as well as other
documents located in the kingdom's archives. He used
Walter the Chancellor and other
now-lost works for the history of the
Principality of Antioch. From the
end of Fulcher's chronicle in 1127, William is the only source of
information from an author living in Jerusalem. For events that
happened in William's own lifetime, he interviewed older people who
had witnessed the events about which he was writing, and drew on
his own memory.
William's classical education allowed him to compose Latin superior
to that of many medieval writers. He used numerous ancient Roman
and early Christian authors, either for quotations or as
inspiration for the framework and organization of the
Historia. His vocabulary is almost entirely classical,
with only a few medieval constructions such as "loricator" (someone
who makes armour, a
calque of the Arabic
"zarra") and "assellare" (to empty one's bowels). He was capable of
clever word-play and advanced
rhetorical
devices, but he was prone to repetition of a number of words and
phrases. His writing also shows phrasing and spelling which is
unusual or unknown in purely classical Latin but not uncommon in
medieval Latin, such as:
- confusion between reflexive
and possessive pronouns;
- confusion over the use of the accusative and ablative cases, especially after the preposition in;
- collapsed diphthongs (i.e. the Latin
dipthongs ae and oe are spelled simply
e);
- the dative "mihi" ("to me") is
spelled "michi";
- a single "s" is often doubled, for example in the adjectival
place-name ending which he often spells "-enssis"; this spelling is
also used to represent the Arabic "sh", a sound which Latin lacks, for example in
the name Shawar which he spells
"Ssauar".
Literary themes and biases
Despite his quotations from Christian authors and from the
Bible, William did not place much emphasis on the
intervention of God in human affairs, resulting in a somewhat
"secular" history. Nevertheless, he included much information that
is clearly legendary, especially when referring to the First
Crusade, which even in his own day was already considered an age of
great Christian heroes. Expanding on the accounts of Albert of Aix,
Peter the Hermit is given
prominence in the preaching of the First Crusade, to the point that
it was he, not
Pope Urban II, who
originally conceived the crusade. Godfrey of Bouillon, the first
ruler of crusader Jerusalem, was also depicted as the leader of the
crusade from the beginning, and William attributed to him legendary
strength and virtue. This reflected the almost mythological status
that Godfrey and the other first crusaders held for the inhabitants
of Jerusalem in the late twelfth century.
William gave a more nuanced picture of the kings of his own day. He
claimed to have been commissioned to write by King Amalric himself,
but William did not allow himself to praise the king excessively;
for example, Amalric did not respect the rights of the church, and
although he was a good military commander, he could not stop the
increasing threat from the neighbouring Muslim states. On a
personal level, William admired the king's education and his
interest in history and law, but also noted that Amalric had
"breasts like those of a woman hanging down to his waist" and was
shocked when the king questioned the
resurrection of the dead.
About Amalric's son Baldwin IV, however, "there was no ambiguity".
Baldwin was nothing but heroic in the face of his debilitating
leprosy, and he led military campaigns against Saladin even while
still underaged; William tends to gloss over campaigns where
Baldwin was not actually in charge, preferring to direct his praise
towards the afflicted king rather than subordinate commanders.
William's history can be seen as an
apologia, a literary defense, for the kingdom,
and more specifically for Baldwin's rule. By the 1170s and 1180s,
western Europeans were reluctant to support the kingdom, partly
because it was far away and there were more pressing concerns in
Europe, but also because leprosy was usually considered divine
punishment.
William was famously biased against the
Knights Templar, whom he believed to be
arrogant and disrespectful of both secular and ecclesiastical
hierarchies, as they were not required to pay tithes and were
legally accountable only to the Pope. Although he was writing
decades later, he is the earliest author to describe the actual
foundation of the Templar order. He was generally favourable
towards them when talking about their early days, but resented the
power and influence they held in his own time. William accused them
of hindering the
Siege of Ascalon
in 1153; of poorly defending a cave-fortress in 1165, for which
twelve Templars were hanged by King Amalric; of sabotaging the
invasion of Egypt in
1168; and of murdering
Hashshashin
ambassadors in 1173.
Compared to other Latin authors of the twelfth century, William is
surprisingly favourable to the Byzantine Empire. He had visited the
Byzantine court as an official ambassador and probably knew more
about Byzantine affairs than any other Latin chronicler. He shared
the poor opinion of
Alexius I
Comnenus that had developed during the First Crusade, although
he was also critical of the some of the crusaders' dealings with
Alexius. He was more impressed by Alexius' son
John II Comnenus; he did not approve of
John's attempts to bring the crusader Principality of Antioch under
Byzantine control, but John's military expeditions against the
Muslim states, the common enemy of both Greeks and Latins, were
considered admirable. Emperor Manuel, whom William met during his
visits to Constantinople, was portrayed more ambivalently, much
like King Amalric. William admired him personally, but recognized
that the Empire was powerless to help Jerusalem against the Muslim
forces of Nur ad-Din and Saladin. William was especially
disappointed in the failure of the joint campaign against Egypt in
1169. The end of the
Historia coincides with the
massacre of the Latins in
Constantinople and the chaos that followed the coup of
Andronicus I Comnenus, and in his
description of those events, William was certainly not immune to
the extreme anti-Greek rhetoric that was often found in Western
European sources.
As a medieval Christian author William could hardly avoid hostility
towards the kingdom's Muslim neighbours, but as an educated man who
lived among Muslims in the east, he was rarely polemical or
completely dismissive of Islam. He did not think Muslims were
pagans, but rather infidels, people who believed in God, but not in
the correct Christian way, and who followed the teachings of a
false prophet. He often praised the Muslim leaders of his own day,
even if he lamented their power over the Christian kingdom; thus
Muslim rulers such as
Mu'in ad-Din
Unur, Nur ad-Din,
Shirkuh, and even
Jerusalem's ultimate conqueror Saladin are presented as honourable
and pious men, characteristics that William did not bestow on many
of his own Christian contemporaries.
Circulation of the chronicle
After William's death the
Historia was copied and
circulated in the
crusader states and
was eventually brought to Europe. In the 13th century,
James of Vitry had access to a copy while he
was bishop of Acre, and it was used by
Guy of Bazoches,
Matthew Paris, and
Roger of Wendover in their own chronicles.
However, there are only ten known manuscripts that contain the
Latin chronicle, all of which come from France and England, so
William's work may not have been very widely read in its original
form. In England, however, the
Historia was expanded in
Latin, with additional information from the
Itinerarium Regis Ricardi,
and the chronicle of
Roger Hoveden;
this version was written around 1220.
It is unknown what title William himself gave his chronicle,
although one group of manuscripts uses
Historia rerum in
partibus transmarinis gestarum and another uses
Historia
Ierosolimitana. The Latin text was printed for the first time
in Basel in 1549 by
Nicholas
Brylinger; it was also published in the
Gesta Dei per
Francos by
Jacques Bongars in
1611 and the
Recueil des historiens des
croisades (RHC) by
Auguste-Arthur Beugnot and
Auguste Le Prévost in 1844, and
Bongars' text was reprinted in the
Patrologia Latina by
Jacques Paul Migne in 1855. The
now-standard Latin critical edition, based on six of the surviving
manuscripts, was published as
Willelmi Tyrensis Archiepiscopi
Chronicon in the
Corpus
Christianorum in 1986, by R. B. C. Huygens, with notes by
Hans E. Mayer and
Gerhard Rösch. The RHC edition was
translated into English by Emily A. Babcock and August C. Krey in
1943 as "A History of Deeds Done Beyond the Sea," although the
translation is sometimes incomplete or inexact.
Old French translation
A translation of the
Historia into
Old French, made around 1223, was
particularly well-circulated and had many anonymous additions made
to it in the 13th century. In contrast to the surviving Latin
manuscripts, there are "at least fifty-nine manuscripts or
fragments of manuscripts" containing the Old French translation.
There are also independent French continuations attributed to
Ernoul and Bernard le Trésorier. The
translation was sometimes called the
Livre dou conqueste;
it was known by this name throughout Europe as well as in the
crusader
Kingdom of Cyprus and in
Cilician Armenia, and 14th-century
Venetian geographer
Marino
Sanuto the Elder had a copy of it. The French was further
translated into Spanish, as the
Gran Conquista de
Ultramar, during the reign of
Alfonso the Wise of Castile in the late
13th century. The French version was so widespread that the
Renaissance author
Francesco Pipino translated it back into
Latin, unaware that a Latin original already existed. A
Middle English translation of the French was
made by
William Caxton in the 15th
century.
Modern assessment
William's neutrality as an historian was often taken for granted
until the late twentieth century. August C. Krey, for example,
believed that "his impartiality ... is scarcely less
impressive than his critical skill." Despite this excellent
reputation, D. W. T. C. Vessey has shown that William was certainly
not an impartial observer, especially when dealing with the events
of the 1170s and 1180s. Vessey believes that William's claim to
have been commissioned by Amalric is a typical ancient and medieval
topos, or literary theme, in which a
wise ruler, a lover of history and literature, wishes to preserve
for posterity the grand deeds of his reign. William's claims of
impartiality are also a typical
topos in ancient and
medieval historical writing.
His depiction of Baldwin IV as a hero is an attempt "to vindicate
the politics of his own party and to blacken those of its
opponents." As mentioned above, William was opposed to Baldwin's
mother Agnes of Courtenay, Patriarch Heraclius, and their
supporters; his interpretation of events during Baldwin's reign was
previously taken as fact almost without question. In the mid
twentieth century,
Marshall W.
Baldwin,
Steven Runciman, and
Hans E. Mayer
were influential in perpetuating this point of view, although the
more recent re-evaluations of this period by Vessey, Peter Edbury
and Bernard Hamilton have undone much of William's influence.
An often-noted flaw in the
Historia is William's poor
memory for dates. "Chronology is sometimes confused, and dates are
given wrongly", even for basic information such as the regnal dates
of the kings of Jerusalem. For example, William gives the date of
Amalric's death as July 11, 1173, when it actually occurred in
1174.
Despite his biases and errors, William "has always been considered
one of the greatest medieval writers."
Steven Runciman wrote that "he had a broad
vision; he understood the significance of the great events of his
time and the sequence of cause and effect in history." Christopher
Tyerman calls him "the historian's historian", and "the greatest
crusade historian of all." and Bernard Hamilton says he "is justly
considered one of the finest historians of the Middle Ages". As the
Dictionary of the Middle
Ages says, "William's achievements in assembling and evaluating
sources, and in writing in excellent and original Latin a critical
and judicious (if chronologically faulty) narrative, make him an
outstanding historian, superior by medieval, and not inferior by
modern, standards of scholarship."
References
- The most up-to-date works about the First Crusade are
Thomas
Asbridge, The First Crusade: A New
History (Oxford: 2004) and Christopher Tyerman, God's
War: A New History of the Crusades (Penguin: 2006).
- Emily Atwater Babcock and August C. Krey, trans., introduction
to William of Tyre, A History of Deeds Done Beyond the Sea
(Columbia University Press, 1943), vol. 1, p. 7.
- R. B. C. Huygens, "Editing William of Tyre", Sacris
Erudiri 27 (1984), p. 462.
- Peter W. Edbury and John G. Rowe, William of Tyre:
Historian of the Latin East (Cambridge University Press,
1988), p. 14.
- Hans E. Mayer, "Guillaume de Tyr à l’école" (Mémoires de
l’Académie des sciences, arts et belles-lettres de Dijon 117,
1985–86), p. 264; repr. Kings and Lords in the Latin Kingdom of
Jerusalem (Aldershot: Ashgate, Variorum Collected Series
Studies, 1994). John later became cardinal
priest of SS. Silvestri e Martino, and supported
Antipope Victor IV
over Pope Alexander III.
- R. B. C. Huygens, ed., introduction to Willemi Tyrensis
Archiepiscopi Chronicon, Corpus Christianorum, Continuatio
Medievalis, vol. 38 (Turnhout: Brepols, 1986), p. 2.
- G. A. Loud and J. W. Cox, "The 'Lost' Autobiographical Chapter
of William of Tyre's Chronicle (Book XIX.12)", The Crusades: An
Encyclopedia, ed. Alan V. Murray (ABC-Clio, 2006), vol. 4,
Appendix: Texts and Documents #4, p. 1306.
- Jacques Verger, "The birth of the universities". A History
of the University in Europe, vol. 1: Universities in the
Middle Ages, ed. Hilde de Ridder-Symoens (Cambridge University
Press, 1992), pp. 47–50.
- Charles Homer Haskins, The
Renaissance of the Twelfth Century (Harvard University Press,
1927; repr. Meridian Books, 1966), p. 103.
- The chapter of the Historia detailing his education in
Europe was lost until Robert Huygens discovered it 1961, in a
manuscript in the Vatican Library (ms. Vaticanus
latinus 2002); Huygens, "Guillaume de Tyr étudiant: un
chapître (XIX, 12) de son Histoire retrouvé" (Latomus 21,
1962), p. 813. It is unknown why no other manuscript has this
chapter, but Huygens suggests an early copyist considered it out of
place within the rest of book nineteen and excised it, and thus all
subsequent copies also lacked it (ibid., p. 820). It was included
in Huygen's critical edition of the Historia (book 19,
chapter 12, pp. 879–881.) As the chapter had not yet been
discovered, it is not included in the 1943 English translation by
Babcock and Krey.
- Loud and Cox, p. 1306. Loud and Cox also give an English
translation of the chapter. It has also been translated online by
Paul R. Hyams, " William of Tyre's Education, 1145/65".
- Alan V. Murray, "William of Tyre". The Crusades: An
Encyclopedia, vol. 4, p. 1281.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, pp. 15–16.
- Hans E. Mayer, The Crusades, 2nd ed., trans. John
Gillingham (Oxford: 1988), pp. 119–120.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, pp. 16–17.
- William of Tyre, trans. Babcock and Krey, vol. 2, book 21,
chapter 1, p. 398.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, p. 17; Bernard Hamilton, The Leper
King and His Heirs: Baldwin IV and the Latin Kingdom of
Jerusalem (Cambridge University Press, 2000), pp. 27–28.
- Peter W. Edbury, "Propaganda and faction in the Kingdom of
Jerusalem: the background to Hattin", Crusaders and Moslems in
Twelfth-Century Syria (ed. Maya Shatzmiller, Leiden: Brill,
1993), p. 174.
- Hamilton p. 158.
- Hamilton, p. 93.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, pp. 18–19.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, pp. 19–20.
- Hamilton, p. 144.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, pp. 54–55, 146–47; Hamilton, pp.
147–149.
- Hamilton, pp. 150–158.
- Hamilton, pp. 162–163; Edbury and Rowe, "William of Tyre and
the Patriarchal election of 1180", The English Historical
Review 93 (1978), repr. Kingdoms of the Crusaders:
From Jerusalem to Cyprus (Aldershot: Ashgate, Variorum
Collected Series Studies, 1999), pp. 23–25.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, pp. 20–22.
- William of Tyre, trans. Babcock and Krey, vol. 2, book 23,
preface, p. 505.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, p. 22.
- Hans Mayer, "Zum Tod Wilhelms von Tyrus" (Archiv für
Diplomatik 5/6, 1959–1960; repr. Kreuzzüge und
lateinischer Osten (Aldershot: Ashgate, Variorum Collected
Studies Series, 1983)), p. 201. Huygens (Chronicon,
introduction, p. 1), Susan M. Babbitt ("William of Tyre",
Dictionary of the Middle
Ages (ed. Joseph Strayer, (New York: Charles Scribner's
Sons, 1989), vol. 12, p. 643), Helen J. Nicholson ("William of
Tyre", Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing,
ed. Kelly Boyd (Taylor & Francis, 1999), vol. 2, p. 1301), and
Alan V. Murray ("William of Tyre", The Crusades: An
Encyclopedia, vol. 4, p. 1281), among others, accept Mayer's
date.
- Hamilton, pp. 229–232.
- Roger of Wendover's Flowers of History, trans. J. A.
Giles (London, 1849), vol. II, p. 63.
- Babcock and Krey, introduction, p. 25, n. 24.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, pp. 23–24.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, p. 26.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, pp. 28–31.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, pp. 44–46.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, pp. 32–33.
- Huygens, Chronicon, introduction, pp. 41–42. William
himself translates the Arabic "zarra"; William of Tyre, trans.
Babcock and Krey, vol. 1, book 5, chapter 11, p. 241.
- Huygens, Chronicon, introduction, pp. 40–47. Huygens
continues with a lengthy discussion of William's style and
language.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, pp. 42–43.
- Frederic Duncalf, "The First Crusade: Clermont to
Constantinople", A History of the Crusades (gen. ed.
Kenneth M. Setton), vol. 1: The First Hundred Years (ed. Marshall
W. Baldwin, University of Wisconsin Press, 1969), p. 258.
- John Carl Andressohn, The Ancestry and Life of Godfrey of
Bouillon (Indiana University Publications, Social Science
Series 5, 1947), p. 5.
- William of Tyre, trans. Babcock and Krey, vol. 2, book 19,
chapter 3, p. 300.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, pp. 75–76.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, p. 76.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, p. 78.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, p. 65.
- Malcolm Barber, The Trial of the Templars (Cambridge
University Press, 1993), p. 11.
- Barber, p. 12.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, pp. 132–34.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, pp. 137–141.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, pp. 141–150.
- R. C. Schwinges, "William of Tyre, the Muslim enemy, and the
problem of tolerance." Tolerance and Intolerance: Social
Conflict in the Age of the Crusades, ed. Michael Gervers and
James M. Powell (Syracuse University Press, 2001), pp. 126–27.
- Schwinges, p. 128.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, pp. 3–4.
- Helen J. Nicholson, ed., The Chronicle of the Third
Crusade: The Itinerarium Peregrinorum and the Gesta Regis
Ricardi (Aldershot: Ashgate, 1997), introduction, pp.
3–4.
- Huygens, Chronicon, introduction, pp. 32–34.
- Huygens, Chronicon, introduction, pp. 87–91. The
manuscripts used by Huygens are from two related traditions;
Bibliothèque nationale lat.
17801 ("N"), Bibliothèque de la faculté de médecine de Montpellier
91 ("M"), and Bibliothèque nationale lat. 6066 ("P") have a French
provenance, and Corpus Christi
College 95 ("C"), British Library Royal 14 C.X ("B"), and
Magdalene College F.4.22 ("W") have an
English provenance. The aforementioned Vatican lat. 2002 ("V") and
a related fragment ("Fr") were also used. Two manuscripts,
Bibliothèque nationale lat. 17153 ("L") and Vatican Reginensis lat.
690 ("R") were not used in Huygens' edition. Huygens,
Chronicon, introduction, pp. 3–31.
- Babcock and Krey, introduction, p. 44.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, p. 4.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, pp. 4–5.
- Babcock and Krey, introduction, p. 32.
- D. W. T. C. Vessey, "William of Tyre and the art of
historiography." Mediaeval Studies 35 (1973), pp.
437–38.
- Vessey, p. 446.
- Vessey, p. 446.
- Marshall W. Baldwin, "The Decline and Fall of Jerusalem,
1174–1189", A History of the Crusades, vol. 1, p.
592ff.
- Steven Runciman, A History of the Crusades, vol. 2:
The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Frankish East (Cambridge
University Press, 1952), p. 404.
- Mayer, The Crusades, pp. 127–128.
- Edbury and Rowe, 1988, p. 26.
- William of Tyre, trans. Babcock and Krey, vol. 2, book 20, ch.
31, p. 395.
- "Depuis toujours, Guillaume de Tyr a été considéré comme l'un
des meilleurs écrivains du moyen âge." Huygens, Chronicon,
introduction, p. 39.
- Runciman, A History of the Crusades, vol. 2, p.
477.
- Tyerman, God's War, p. 361.
- Christopher Tyerman, The Invention of the Crusades
(University of Toronto Press, 1998), p. 126.
- Hamilton, p. 6.
- Babbitt, p. 643.
Sources and further reading
Primary sources
- William of Tyre, A History of Deeds Done Beyond the
Sea, trans. E.A. Babcock and A.C. Krey. Columbia University
Press, 1943.
- Willemi Tyrensis Archiepiscopi Chronicon, ed. R. B. C.
Huygens. Corpus Christianorum Continuatio Medievalis, vol.
38. Turnholt: Brepols, 1986.
- L'Estoire d'Eracles empereur et la conqueste de la terre
d'Outremer, in Recueil des historiens des
croisades, Historiens occidentaux, vols. I-II (1844,
1859).
- J. A. Giles, trans. Roger of
Wendover's Flowers of History. London, 1849.
- La Chronique d'Ernoul et de Bernard le Trésorier, ed.
Louis de Mas-Latrie. Paris,
1871.
- Guillaume de Tyr et ses continuateurs, ed. Alexis Paulin Paris. Paris,
1879–1880.
- Margaret Ruth Morgan, La continuation de Guillaume de Tyr
(1184–1197). Paris, 1982.
- Helen J. Nicholson, ed. The Chronicle of the Third Crusade:
The Itinerarium Peregrinorum and the Gesta Regis Ricardi.
Aldershot: Ashgate, 1997.
- Janet Shirley, Crusader Syria in the Thirteenth Century:
The Rothelin Continuation of the History of William of Tyre with
part of the Eracles or Acre text. Aldershot: Ashgate,
1999.
Secondary sources
- John Carl Andressohn, The Ancestry and Life of Godfrey of
Bouillon. Indiana University Publications, Social Science
Series 5, 1947.
- Thomas Asbridge, The First Crusade: A New
History. Oxford University Press, 2004.
- Susan M. Babbitt, "William of Tyre." Dictionary of the Middle
Ages, ed. Joseph Strayer.
New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1989, vol. 12.
- Marshall W. Baldwin, "The Decline and Fall of Jerusalem,
1174–1189." A History of the Crusades (gen. ed. Kenneth M.
Setton), vol. 1: The First Hundred Years (ed. Marshall W. Baldwin).
University of Wisconsin Press, 1969.
- Malcolm Barber, The Trial of the Templars. Cambridge
University Press, 1993)
- Frederic Duncalf, "The First Crusade: Clermont to
Constantinople." A History of the Crusades (gen. ed.
Kenneth M. Setton), vol. 1: The First Hundred Years (ed. Marshall
W. Baldwin). University of Wisconsin Press, 1969.
- Peter W. Edbury and John G. Rowe, "William of Tyre and the
Patriarchal election of 1180." The English Historical
Review 93 (1978), repr. Kingdoms of the Crusaders: From
Jerusalem to Cyprus (Aldershot: Ashgate, Variorum Collected
Series Studies, 1999), pp. 1–25.
- Peter W. Edbury and John G. Rowe, William of Tyre:
Historian of the Latin East. Cambridge University Press,
1988.
- Peter W. Edbury, "Propaganda and faction in the Kingdom of
Jerusalem: the background to Hattin." Crusaders and Muslims in
Twelfth-Century Syria, ed. Maya Shatzmiller (Leiden: Brill,
1993), repr. in Kingdoms of the Crusaders: From Jerusalem to Cyprus
(Aldershot: Ashgate, Variorum Collected Series Studies, 1999), pp.
173–189.
- Bernard Hamilton, The Leper King and his Heirs.
Cambridge University
Press, 2000.
- Charles Homer Haskins,
The Renaissance of the Twelfth Century. Harvard University
Press, 1927; repr. Meridian Books, 1966.
- Rudolf Hiestand, "Zum Leben und Laufbahn Wilhelms von Tyrus."
Deutsches Archiv 34 (1978), pp. 345–380.
- R. B. C. Huygens, "Guillaume de Tyr étudiant: un chapître (XIX,
12) de son Histoire retrouvé." Latomus 21 (1962), pp.
811–829.
- R. B. C. Huygens, "Editing William of Tyre." Sacris
Erudiri 27 (1984), pp. 461–473.
- G. A. Loud and J. W. Cox, "The 'Lost' Autobiographical Chapter
of William of Tyre's Chronicle (Book XIX.12)." The Crusades: An
Encyclopedia, ed. Alan V. Murray (ABC-Clio, 2006), vol. 4,
Appendix: Texts and Documents #4, pp. 1305–1308.
- Hans E. Mayer, "Guillaume de Tyr à l’école." Mémoires de
l'Académie des sciences, arts et belles-lettres de Dijon 117
(1985–86), repr. Kings and Lords in the Latin Kingdom of
Jerusalem (Aldershot: Ashgate, Variorum Collected Studies
Series, 1994), pp. 257–265.
- Hans E. Mayer, "Zum Tode Wilhelms von Tyrus." Archiv für
Diplomatik 5–6 (1959–1960), pp. 182–201.
- Hans E. Mayer, The Crusades, 2nd ed., trans. John
Gillingham. Oxford University Press, 1988.
- Margaret Ruth Morgan, The Chronicle of Ernoul and the
Continuations of William of Tyre. Oxford University Press,
1973.
- Alan V. Murray, "William of Tyre." The Crusades: An
Encyclopedia, ed. Alan V. Murray (ABC-Clio, 2006), vol.
4.
- Helen J. Nicholson, "William of Tyre." Encyclopedia of
Historians and Historical Writing, ed. Kelly Boyd. Taylor
& Francis, 1999, vol. 2.
- Hans Prutz, "Studien über Wilhelm von
Tyrus." Neues Archiv der Gesellschaft für ältere deutsche
Geschichtskunde 8 (1883), pp. 91–132.
- Steven Runciman, A History
of the Crusades, volume 1: The First Crusade and the
Foundation of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. Cambridge University Press,
1951.
- Steven Runciman, A History of the Crusades, volume 2:
The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Frankish East. Cambridge
University Press, 1952.
- R. C. Schwinges, "William of Tyre, the Muslim enemy, and the
problem of tolerance." Tolerance and Intolerance.
Social Conflict in the Age of the Crusades, ed. Michael
Gervers and James M. Powell, Syracuse University Press, 2001.
- Christopher Tyerman, The Invention of the Crusades.
University of Toronto Press, 1998.
- Christopher Tyerman, God's War: A New History of the
Crusades. Penguin, 2006.
- Jacques Verger, "The birth of the universities". A History
of the University in Europe, vol. 1: Universities in the
Middle Ages, ed. Hilde de Ridder-Symoens. Cambridge University
Press, 1992, pp. 47–55.
- D. W. T. C. Vessey, "William of Tyre and the art of
historiography." Mediaeval Studies 35 (1973), pp.
433–455.
External links