Alvor massacre

Last updated

The Alvor massacre took place in June 1189 during the Third Crusade, when a fleet of crusaders from the Holy Roman Empire, Denmark and the County of Flanders stormed the castle of Alvor in the Algarve, then part of the Almohad Caliphate, and massacred 5,600 people. [1] The place of the conquest and massacre of Alvor in the Portuguese Reconquista is unclear, but there are grounds for thinking that it was part of the strategy of King Sancho I, who launched a siege of Silves a month later. [2]

Contents

Sources

The event is briefly mentioned in several sources, the most important being the anonymous Account of the Seaborne Journey by a crusader from northern Germany on a later expedition, whose mention takes up seven lines in the manuscript. [3] The only other contemporary source to directly mention the Alvor massacre is the Royal Chronicle of Cologne . [4] Another contemporary source, the Annals of Lambertus Parvus, is probably referring to the Alvor expedition when it recounts how a fleet of northerner crusaders gathered in England and "many battles … joined with the pagans" in the Iberian Peninsula on their way to the East. [5] The only Arabic source that refers to the loss of Alvor is the Bayān al-mughrib of Ibn ʿIdhārī, based on contemporary sources. It refers to Alvor as "the port", a reference to its classical name, Portus Hannibalis. It records that the crusaders "dealt death to all that were in it, great and small, men and women." [6]

There is confusion in some later sources, such as the Itinerary of the Pilgrims and Deeds of King Richard and the Chronicle of Robert of Auxerre, between the sack of Alvor and the capture of Silves. [7] Robert's account found its way into the chronicle of William of Nangis and the Chronicle of Tours . [8] The memory of the Alvor massacre was erroneously transferred to the conquest of Silves in Robert's account, where "no age was spared, and both sexes equally were slaughtered." He has 50 ships from Frisia and Denmark joining with the 37 crusader ships that actually attacked Silves. [9] Ibn ʿIdhārī mentions the massacre after the fall of Silves in his narrative. [6]

Expedition

In February 1189, fifty or more ships carrying perhaps 12,000 men sailed from Frisia. [10] At the mouth of the Rhine, they joined with another fleet consisting of crusaders from the Rhineland, Holland and Flanders. From there, they sailed to Dartmouth, joining further squadrons of English and Flemish ships. [11] According to Lambertus, the fleet had 55 ships and contained Danes, Flemings, Frisians and men from Cologne and Liège. [5]

The Royal Chronicle records that the fleet set sail during Lent. Ten days after setting out, it stopped in Galicia. At that time it contained 60 ships of various origins with "10,000 fighting men and more." The crusaders attempted to visit the shrine of Saint James at Compostela. A rumour spread that they intended to steal James's relics and there was fighting between the pilgrims and the townspeople resulting in fatalities on both sides before, "through wise men intervening," the crusaders agreed to return to their ships. [12] The fleet then stopped in Lisbon before attacking Alvor, as recorded in the Seaborne Journey:

The ships from our empire and from Flanders had arrived some four or five weeks before us [around 29 May – 6 June], and on their voyage beyond Lisbon they had stormed a fortified town named Alvor, subject to the lordship of Silves, and we were reliably informed that, sparing neither age nor sex, they slew some 5,600 people. Galleys from Lisbon accompanied them until they reached the Straits [of Gibraltar] and then they returned. They informed us that they were making a good voyage, and they brought back some captive Saracens… On the afternoon of the third day [July 17] we saw the town of Alvor, which our men had captured and destroyed, overlooking the sea, as well as other abandoned places whose inhabitants had been killed at Alvor. [13]

View inside the walls of the citadel of Alvor today Alvor Castle, 28 September 2015 (2).JPG
View inside the walls of the citadel of Alvor today

To this account of the massacre, the Royal Chronicle adds the detail that they "captured endless amounts of silver and gold." [12] After the sack, the men of Cologne chose to remain in Portugal while the rest of the expedition continued eastward. [11] Lambertus confirms that the fleet eventually joined the siege of Acre. It is the fleet that arrives on 1 September in the account of Arnold of Lübeck and is also mentioned by Ralph of Coggeshall. [4] The Itinerary of the Pilgrims records its arrival, but conflates it with the fleet that captured Silves and mistakenly transplants the massacre to that city. [14]

The leaders of the fleet that sacked Alvor are unnamed in any source. The crusaders seem mainly to have been commoners. [1] The event cannot be dated more precisely than to the month of June. [15] Neither is it clear how long it took to reduce Alvor. It was probably stormed, since the chronology leaves no room for a lengthy siege. [16] Following the capture of Silves, Sancho I granted Alvor to the monastery of Santa Cruz. [17]

Place in the Reconquista

No source states explicitly that the crusaders who attacked Alvor were acting in agreement with Portugal, but it is likely that they were. The fleet was in Lisbon prior to the sack and was accompanied as far as the Straits of Gibraltar by some Portuguese galleys. Moreover, the sack of Alvor was of strategic value for King Sancho I's impending attack on Silves. [2]

The massacre at Alvor was exceptional in the Portuguese Reconquista. The normal policy was to encourage Muslim populations to remain to keep the land under cultivation and to pay taxes to the king. [18] The indiscriminate massacre shocked contemporaries. [19] The sack of Alvor is unrecorded in medieval Portuguese historiography, possibly it was even suppressed. In the account of Sancho I's reign in the Chronicle of 1419 , the capture of Silves is recounted in detail, but Alvor is not mentioned. [20]

Alvor was retaken by the Almohads during their campaign of 1191. [21]

Notes

  1. 1 2 Wilson 2020, pp. 1–2.
  2. 1 2 Wilson 2020, pp. 4–5.
  3. Wilson 2020, pp. 2–3.
  4. 1 2 David 1939, p. 664.
  5. 1 2 Wilson 2020, pp. 7–8.
  6. 1 2 David 1939 , pp. 663–664; Wilson 2020 , p. 7.
  7. David 1939, pp. 608–609.
  8. David 1939 , p. 665; Wilson 2020 , p. 8
  9. Wilson 2020, p. 8.
  10. Mol 2002 , p. 94, has 12,000 men leaving Frisia, but Slaughter 1968 , p. 28, puts the size of the force that sacked Alvor at 12,000 men. The Itinerary of the Pilgrims puts the number of armed men who arrived in Acre on 50 cogs at 12,000. See Nicholson 2019 , p. 73.
  11. 1 2 Mol 2002 , p. 94; Mol 2006.
  12. 1 2 Wilson 2020, p. 7.
  13. Translation is from Loud 2010, p. 196. The dates in brackets are from David 1939, pp. 615, 617. According to David 1939, p. 616 n93, earlier editors emended "ships … some four or five weeks" to "fifty-five ships … four weeks".
  14. David 1939 , pp. 664–666, argues that it could not have been the Silves fleet in the Itinerary, but Nicholson 2019 , p. 73, thinks it is.
  15. David 1939 , p. 663, although Mol 2002 , p. 94, gives the month as May and Mol 2006 dates the conquest to 16 June.
  16. David 1939, p. 666.
  17. Lay 2009, p. 294.
  18. Wilson 2020, p. 5.
  19. Lay 2009, p. 155.
  20. Wilson 2020, p. 9.
  21. Barroca 2006.

Bibliography

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1189</span> Calendar year

Year 1189 (MCLXXXIX) was a common year starting on Sunday of the Julian calendar. In English law, 1189 - specifically the beginning of the reign of Richard I - is considered the end of time immemorial.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1242</span> Calendar year

Year 1242 (MCCXLII) was a common year starting on Wednesday of the Julian calendar.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Third Crusade</span> 1189–1192 attempted re-conquest of the Holy Land

The Third Crusade (1189–1192) was an attempt led by three European monarchs of Western Christianity to reconquer the Holy Land following the capture of Jerusalem by the Ayyubid sultan Saladin in 1187. For this reason, the Third Crusade is also known as the Kings' Crusade.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sancho I of Portugal</span> King of Portugal

Sancho I of Portugal, nicknamed "the Populator", King of Portugal was the second but only surviving legitimate son and fifth child of Afonso I of Portugal by his wife, Maud of Savoy. Sancho succeeded his father and was crowned in Coimbra when he was 31 years old on 9 December 1185. He used the title King of Silves from 1189 until he lost the territory to Almohad control in 1191.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Silves, Portugal</span> Municipality in Algarve, Portugal

Silves is a city and municipality in the Portuguese region of Algarve, in southern Portugal. The population of the entire municipality of Silves in 2011 was 37,126, in an area of 680.06 km2. The urbanized area of the city proper has approximately 11,000 inhabitants. Silves is the former capital of the Kingdom of the Algarve (1249–1910), a nominal kingdom within the Kingdom of Portugal (1139-1910), and is of great historical importance.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Siege of Lisbon</span> Sieges involving Portugal

The siege of Lisbon, from 1 July to 25 October 1147, was the military action against the Muslim-ruled Taifa of Badajoz that brought the city of Lisbon under the definitive control of the new Christian power, the Kingdom of Portugal.

This is a historical timeline of Portugal.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Frisian involvement in the Crusades</span> Involvement of Frisians in the Crusades

Frisian involvement in the Crusades is attested from the very beginning of the First Crusade, but their presence is only felt substantially during the Fifth Crusade. They participated in almost all the major Crusades and the Reconquista. The Frisians are almost always referred to collectively by contemporary chroniclers of the Crusades and few names of individual Frisian crusaders can be found in the historical record. They generally composed a naval force in conjunction with other larger bodies of crusaders.

The Crusade of 1197, also known as the Crusade of Henry VI or the German Crusade, was a crusade launched by the Hohenstaufen emperor Henry VI in response to the aborted attempt of his father, Emperor Frederick I, during the Third Crusade in 1189–90. Thus the military campaign is also known as the "Emperor's Crusade".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Silves Cathedral</span>

The Silves Cathedral is a former cathedral in the city of Silves, in the Algarve region of southern Portugal. A mosque, built during the Moorish rule of the Iberian Peninsula, was originally located in its current place, and was later mostly restructured and converted into a Catholic cathedral after the Reconquista. Although having some Baroque characteristics, it is mostly Gothic in nature and it is considered to be the main Gothic monument in the Algarve and one of the most important landmarks in southern Portugal. It was classified as a national monument on June 29, 1922.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Castle of Alvor</span> Medieval castle in Alvor, Faro, Portugal

The Castle of Alvor is a medieval castle in the civil parish of Alvor, in the Portuguese district of Faro: considered to be a significant military monument associated with the nearby Castle of Silves.

De itinere Frisonum is an eyewitness account written in Latin of the Frisian crusaders' journey from Friesland to Acre during the Fifth Crusade (1217–1218). The narrative was composed by an anonymous participant of the venture who most likely was a member of the clergy. Abbot Emo of Friesland of the Premonstratensian monastery of Bloemhof copied it without alterations into his chronicle. Emo's version is the only surviving copy of the lost original and it is kept in the Library of the University of Groningen in the Netherlands. The narrative is noteworthy for its detailed description of the geography of the lands encountered by the Frisian Crusaders on their journey and the author's perspective on the motivations of his compatriots during the venture. The narrative runs parallel up to the Frisian fleet's arrival to Lisbon with the Rhenish text known as Gesta crucigerorum Rhenanorum.

<i>De itinere navali</i>

De itinere navali is an anonymous Latin account of the siege and capture of Silves in 1189, one of the expeditions of the Third Crusade. It was written by an eyewitness shortly after the events it records. It is known from a single copy made a few decades later. It has been translated into English three times.

The Almohad Caliphate launched a major offensive against the Kingdom of Portugal in the spring of 1190 that lasted into the summer of 1191. The Caliph Yaʿqūb al-Manṣūr crossed over from Africa to take personal command of his forces. The campaign of 1190 was underwhelming because of assistance Portugal received from passing armies of the Third Crusade. The sieges of Tomar, Santarém and Silves had to be abandoned, but the caliph overwintered in Seville. The campaign of 1191 reversed Portugal's recent reconquests, captured Silves after a second siege and pushed the frontier north to the Tagus.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Siege of Silves (1189)</span>

The siege of Silves was an action of the Third Crusade and the Portuguese Reconquista in 1189. The city of Silves in the Almohad Caliphate was besieged from 21 July until 3 September by the forces of Portugal and a group of crusaders from northern Europe on their way to the siege of Acre. The defenders capitulated on terms, the city was handed over to Portugal and the crusaders took a portion of the spoils.

Nicholas was the bishop of Silves (1189–1191) and bishop of Viseu (1192–1213) during the Portuguese Reconquista.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Siege of Alcácer do Sal</span> Part of the Fifth Crusade and the Reconquista (1217)

The siege of Alcácer do Sal lasted from 30 July to 18 October 1217. The well fortified city of Alcácer do Sal was a frontier outpost of the Almohad Caliphate facing Portugal. It was besieged by forces from Portugal, León, the military orders and the Fifth Crusade. The latter were led by Count William I of Holland. The expedition was the brainchild of Bishop Soeiro II of Lisbon, whose diocese was threatened by regular raids from Alcácer. King Afonso II of Portugal did not take part in person, but the city was incorporated into his kingdom after its capitulation. The crusaders who took part in the siege, mainly from the Rhineland and the Low Countries, did so without papal authorization and were afterwards ordered to continue on to the Holy Land.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Siege of Tomar</span> 1190 siege of a Portuguese town

The siege of Tomar was a military engagement that took place in 1190 between the Almohad caliphate who attacked the town of Tomar in Portugal, and the Templar Order, who owned the settlement and successfully defended it from the Muslim attack.

The Portuguese conquest of the Algarve, the southern-most region in modern-day Portugal, occurred between 1238, when the castle of Estômbar was captured by the Order of Santiago, and 1249, when king Afonso III of Portugal captured Faro, Loulé, Aljezur, Porches and Albufeira.

Portugal in the <i>Reconquista</i>

Portuguese participation in the Reconquista occurred from when the County of Portugal was founded in 868 and continued for 381 years until the last cities still in Muslim control in the Algarve were captured in 1249. Portugal was created during this prolonged process and largely owes its geographic form to it.