The Civil War between Philipp of Swabia and Otto IV

The kingdom is in turmoil. Two pretenders fight for supremacy. On the one side, Philipp of Swabia, son of the emperor Barbarossa, brother of Emperor Henry VI. and head of the House of Hohenstaufen. In the opposite corner stands Otto IV., son of Henry the Lion, protégé of king Richard the Lionheart and preferred candidate of pope Innocent III. But the main protagonists are the imperial princes who play the two kings against each other for their personal gain, swearing fealty one day and breaking it the next. It only ends with murder most foul.

Transcript

Hello and welcome to the History of the Germans: Episode 74 – A Breaking of Oaths

The kingdom is in turmoil. Two pretenders fight for supremacy. On the one side, Philipp of Swabia, son of the emperor Barbarossa, brother of Emperor Henry VI. and head of the House of Hohenstaufen. In the opposite corner stands Otto IV., son of Henry the Lion, protégé of king Richard the Lionheart and preferred candidate of pope Innocent III. But the main protagonists are the imperial princes who play the two kings against each other for their personal gain, swearing fealty one day and breaking it the next. It only ends with murder most foul.

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Here we are, in the midst of a civil war. Well, as we will see it isn’t the kind of civil war where two determined sides relentlessly go at each other. It is much more a very prolonged negotiation amongst the princes, interspersed with great festivities, papal bulls and the occasional military campaign that usually stalls before the walls of a mighty city,.

Let us recap the starting position of our two contenders.

There is Otto IV., whose main sponsor is his uncle, king Richard the Lionheart. Richard is enormously rich thanks to the tax income from England and his extensive domains in France.

Richard’s main objective was to get back at the Hohenstaufen who had imprisoned and ransomed him on his return from the crusades. He was also very fond of his nephew and there may be a long-term option that Otto would support him in his struggle with the king of France, Philippe Auguste.

Otto’s second supporter is archbishop Adolf of Cologne. Adolf was less of a supporter of Otto than an opponent of the Hohenstaufen. Why he took so strongly against them is a bit lost in the mist of time. He stood as a candidate for the archbishopric of Cologne against a Hohenstaufen candidate, but he did get through and was invested by Henry VI. He had also opposed Henry VI.’th proposal to turn the empire into an inheritable monarchy, but so had many others. He did not want to elect little Frederick II. but relented in the end and had promised to crown the child. So, all in he wasn’t a friend but not a sworn enemy. In fact, there would have been a good reason for Adolf to oppose a candidature of a Welf prince who would want the old Saxon duchy back, which included Westphalia, the bit that Cologne had received after the fall of Henry the Lion. It looks a bit as if Adolf had accidentally become the focal point of anti-Hohenstaufen sentiment thanks to his lukewarm, but consistent opposition.

The third set of supporters of Otto were the merchants of Cologne, who probably pushed their archbishop over to his side. The merchants were most interested in trading privileges in England. These were extremely valuable as English wool was the raw material that Florentine weavers turned into the most desirable cloth in Europe. And Cologne sat on the Rhine the great traffic artery that sat between these two economic centres. This the time when the great cities of Flanders, Ghent, Bruges and Ypres were vying for that same trade.

These are his core supporters, The English, the archbishop of Cologne and the citizens of Cologne.

Otto’s second layer of supporters were first up his brother, Henry, The Count Palatinate. Henry was the older brother and had inherited the majority of his fathers’ possessions in line with the principles of primogeniture. Otto had only received a brace of castles from Henry the Lion’s vast lands and had to make his own way in life, which was already a bit of a sore point in their relationship. We had met this Henry before. He was the son of Henry the Lion who had deserted his emperor’s army before Naples in 1192, had spread rumours Henry VI. had died and had suggested the princes that they elect him instead.

For political reasons the emperor had forgiven him and for completely incomprehensible reasons, the aristocratic society of the 12th century completely overlooked this truly un-chivalric behaviour.

Two more things about Henry. He had become Count Palatinate by seducing and secretly marrying Agnes, sole child of Conrad, half -brother of Barbarossa. Henry VI. had to accept the valid marriage and even enfeoffed the Welf with the Palatinate. And final point, Henry was the initial choice of Richard the Lionheart to be candidate for kingship. The only reason this did not happen was that Henry had been on crusade in the Holy Land when the decision was made. Another sore point in the brotherly relationship.

Another member of this second layer of support was Henry, duke of Brabant. The duchy of Brabant encompassed most of eastern Belgium including Brussels and Antwerp and was in immediate neighbour of the archbishop of Cologne. The duke’s interest lay mainly in the large amount of English money he was offered for his help and a marital alliance whereby Otto was to marry his daughter Maria.

There are some others in this category like Bishop Konrad of Strasbourg who had a long-lasting feud with Philipp’s irascible brother and hence hated all Hohenstaufens and the duke of Limburg and his son, who initially fought for Philipp but were brought into the Otto camp early on in the process.

So, if you look on a map, Otto’s zone of control was in the lower Rhine around Cologne and Brabant, and upriver in the Palatinate as well as the family lands of the House of Welf around Brunswick.

On the other side was Philipp of Swabia.

He too has an inner and an outer circle. But that is where the similarity ends.

Philipps inner circle are the royal Hohenstaufen institutions such as they exist. At its heart sits the duchy of Swabia and the extensive Hohenstaufen possessions that stretch from the border with Bohemia in the east through sways of Franconia, including Nurnberg and Rothenburg to the outskirts of Frankfurt and then southwards through Swabia and Alsace. Part 2 is the royal domain, which comprises a large number of castles dotted across mostly the southern part of Germany, but at this point also include Goslar in Saxony with its great silver mines.

These territories come the imperial and the family Ministeriales. These had already risen to prominence in the last decades of Barbarossa, but now took up key position under Henry VI. and  Philipp. Men like Markward of Annweiler and Heinrich von Kalden who had served in Italy and Sicily. But also Kuno von Munzenberg, a mega ministeriale who owned dozens of castles and even minted his own coins, Eberhard von Tanne, seneschal of the emperors was another one. Ministeriales were at least theoretically, unfree men who had been trained in the use of knightly weapons. By the end of the 12th century, they have become a permanent feature of the medieval German society. Some of them were extremely rich and would even ascend to princely rank, but the vast majority were not much better off than their neighbours in the village. They were much more loyal than the aristocratic vassals, but not absolutely loyal. Even ministeriales are known to betray their lords.

Beyond this fairly compact powerbase, Philipp could count on a few natural allies. There are Bernhard of Anhalt, duke of Saxony, Ludwig, duke of Bavaria and the margrave of Meissen. These men had been the direct beneficiaries of the fall of Henry the Lion and hence could not expect anything good from Henry the Lion’s son. Other southern dukes like the Babenberger in Austria as well as the Zaehringer in Burgundy were linked either by family ties or financial gain.

Beyond that was the wide world of the undecided. Two of those became crucial, Ottokar duke of Bohemia and the landgrave Hermann of Thuringia.

Ottokar’s main interest was the title of king, which Philipp granted him generously at the very start of his reign. Landgrave Hermann was most interested in expanding his territory at the expense of what had remained of the royal domain in Saxony. Basically, these two were available to the highest bidder.

And then we have the foreigners. We already talked about the role the king of England played. But then we have the King of France, Philippe Auguste who was a natural ally of Philipp, because the enemy of my enemy is my friend. And the King of Denmark also gets involved. He wanted the lands of Adolf of Holstein, in the very north of the country. Because Adolf sided with Philip, Denmark sided with Otto.

So that is our chessboard. Otto has English money, Cologne, Brabant and his brother and the Danes. Philipp has French support, his own lands, the royal domain and support from most of Southern Germany.

Next question, what are the weapons.

Sounds like a stupid question but isn’t. Sure, there is military might. Armies are raised and sent against the opponents. But there were no decisive battles or even many battles at all. The two kings will face each other only once and that is very much at the end of the conflict. Mostly what these armies do is go down into their opponents’ territories, burn the fields and make some attempt at besieging the cities but never succeeding. I could take you through the back and forth of the military fortunes, but the detail is excessively dull.

Broadly speaking the fighting breaks down into four main theatres of war.

The surroundings of Strasbourg get devastated by Philipp in an attempt to move bishop Konrad into his camp. That is successful at least temporarily.

The other is Holstein, which is invaded by the Danes. They chuck out count Adolf who had to retire and Holstein remained Danish for 25 years. This one went to Otto.

The third theatre of war was the lower Rhine and specifically the surroundings of Cologne. Philipp would bring up an army, devastate the surrounding lands, but the walls of Cologne usually held firm and Philipp had to go back, either because winter was coming or because he was called into that other key battleground, Saxony, specifically Brunswick, capital of Otto IV. and Goslar, the loyal imperial city. Neither Brunswick nor Goslar could be taken by their respective besiegers.

With Saxony the big undecided piece, the Landgrave of Thuringia whose lands were just south and east of there, became the lynchpin. Both Philipp and Otto courted him, and he exploited the situation to the max. In total Hermann changed sides 5 times throughout the 5 years of the main conflict. He would declare for Otto when Philipp was otherwise engaged, capture a few royal castles and cities and when Philipp shows up, he would swap sides and revert to being a loyal imperial vassal in exchange for keeping these castles and cities. Three rounds of that and the Landgraves were properly rich.

But the military was only one side of the battle. The other was public relations. Philipp went on a massive spending spree, inviting all his followers and the undecideds to splendid royal assemblies. We can name 630 individuals who have come to his court, though in reality it would have been a lot more. He staged 28 of those, often outside his direct zone of influence.  

And for those he put on a great show. He would appear wearing the true imperial crown, by now believed to be the crown of Charlemagne, as well as the Holy Lance and all the imperial regalia. His wife the gorgeous and exotic Irene would parade next to her husband in her byzantine finery. And after the official ceremonies it was party time.

The court of Philipp of Schwaben was one of the first in Germany to sponsor the Minnesaenger, the German version of the Troubadours. Minnesaenger would write mostly songs about courtly love, but also romances like the Parzival of Hartmann von Aue or Tristan and Isolde by Godfrey of Strasburg. Minnesaenger would not only write of love and chivalric quests, they can do politics too. The most famous of them was Walter von der Vogelweide, and that is the one Philipp attracts to his court.

And Walter delivers. He writes several poems to praise Philipp and to diss his enemies. One of those is about the most splendid royal assembly in Magdeburg over Christmas 1199. I will read it to you, though be warned, my skills in Middle high German are non-existant:

Ez gienc eines tages, als unser hêrre wart geborn

von einer maget, die er im ze muoter hât erkorn,

ze Megdeburc der künic Philippes schône.


da gienc eins keisers bruoder und eins keisers kint

in einer wât, swie doch die namen drîge sint,

er truoc des rîches zepter und die krône.

Er trât vil lîse, im was niht gâch,

im sleich ein hôhgeborne küniginne nâch,

rôse âne dorn, ein tûbe sunder gallen.

diu zuht was niener anderswâ,

die Düringe und die Sahsen dienten alsô dâ,

daz ez den wîsen müeste wol gevallen.

Roughly translated it says something like that:

On that day, when our Lord was born of a virgin whom he chose to be his mother, there walked in Magdeburg King Philip, glorious to behold. There walked an emperor’s brother and an emperor’s son in one robe, although they are three persons; he carried the real sceptre and the real crown. He walked along very slowly in complete tranquillity. After him walked a high-born queen, rose without thorn, dove without gall. The decency of the whole world was united there. The Thuringians and the Saxons performed their court duties there in such a manner that even the most discerning could be highly satisfied.

These events and the sponsorship of poets in the midst of war had previously been seen as wasteful spending, but it was probably worth a lot more than a battalion of knights. If you were one of the undecided princes in the civil war that could not be won militarily, where would you tend to go, to the one who keeps his purse closed tight and seems to have no friends, or the one where everybody goes and who wines and dines you?

Apart from great festivities, the other element of soft power were marriage alliances. Otto had the advantage of being himself available, a trump card he used to tie the duke of Barbant to his cause. Philipp was already married but four daughters to offer. These were put in play at various points to different German magnates, and at some point even to a papal nephew.

As for money Philipp can match the English funds thanks to the treasures his brother had sent up from Sicily, the 150 mules worn down by the weight of gold and precious stones. But Otto is no slouch either. We know a little less about the splendour of his court since he did not pay the right poets, but when English money was still flowing, he sure must have put on great performances.

And that gets us to the other theatre of this conflict, the one that did not involve any Germans. And that is the first hundred years war between England and France. That is ongoing and will be ongoing for most of the Middle Ages. And it is also where some military events do have a decisive impact on German affairs.

The first happened in March 1199 below the walls of the small and barely defended castle of Chalus-Chabrol near Limoges, central France. Richard had attacked the castle as part of a pointless feud with the viscount of Limoges. In the fighting a bolt from a cross bow hit the king’s shoulder. The wound turned gangrene and a month later, Richard, Coeur de Lion was dead, not before forgiving the crossbowman who had shot him – chivalric knight to the last.

Richard’s brother and successor, John lackland had much less interest in German affairs or fondness for his nephew. The great supply of cash from England dwindled and when John made peace with Philippe Auguste in 1204 it ceased altogether.

In the absence of English money, Otto became more and more dependent upon support from pope Innocent III. As I mentioned last week, Innocent took his sweet time with taking a decision. When he did, in 1201, he came down very much on Otto’s side. He had negotiated with Philipp as well and as guardian of young Frederick had at some point contemplated pushing his wards claim.

Innocent’s main interest in the conflict was to protect and expand the papal territories. In the aftermath of the death of Henry VI. almost all of Italy had risen up against the imperial administrators.

I did say last week that Philipp had stood at the empty crib in the castle of Folignano where little Frederick was supposed to have been. That I admit was a bit of artistic license. Philipp never made it to Folignano. His journey ended in Montefiascone, north of Rome as local lords encouraged by the news of Henry VI.’s death besieged him. Philipp had to hack his way home through Northern Italy, barely making it. In this context I just want to say that I indeed used a bit of I feel not very foul language and some of you found it unnecessary. I personally saw it as a good way to express the distress I think Philipp may have felt at that moment. But I understand that some of you prefer it if I refrain from such terms and I will do my best to stick to it. Though note that German is a language of prolific and inventive swearwords and where the use of them is evidenced or used in literature, I will use it.

Going back to Italy. In the chaos after the death of the emperor, pope Innocent managed to get hold of key positions, including the duchy of Spoleto, the mark of Ancona, the pentapolis around Ravenna, parts of Emilia Romagna and again, the lands of Matilda. Protecting those from imperial power became one of his key political objectives. Hence Innocent support for Otto was made conditional upon recognition of the papal gains and a solemn promise never to seek the Sicilian crown. Philipp had not been prepared to make such concessions.

On the face of it papal support did not produce much. In particular the German bishops remained loyal to Philipp. They write to the pope stating that it is their prerogative to elect the emperor and that his holiness should stay out of the discussion.

Only one bishop was affected by papal support for Otto IV. and the subsequent excommunication of Philipp, and that was his own chancellor, Konrad von Querfurth. Konrad had been a Hohenstaufen loyalist, former chancellor of Henry VI. and had played a major role in the conquest of Sicily and the crusade. His change of allegiance from Philipp to Otto was less for reasons of the afterlife but was bought with the bishopric of Wuerzburg, something the chancellor very much desired.

The defection of Konrad was a major blow both militarily and politically. It potentially opened a new theatre of war, now much closer to the Hohenstaufen homelands. But Philipp got lucky. Konrad had got himself in trouble in his new post. He had levied a tax on his Ministeriales and they weren’t happy about it. One of them, Bodo of Ravensburg killed the episcopal administrator who was collecting the tax. Konrad then pursued Bodo for murder to which Bodo responded by killing the bishop himself. That solved this problem.

But the papal support had one great advantage. Ever since Gregory VII. the papacy had declared its right to release people from their solemn oaths. The concept that oaths are inviolate are at the heart of the political system of the Middle Ages. Vassalage is the exchange of vows, one to support the lord and the other to protect the vassal.

You may remember the speech that Otto von Northeim made in 1073 gathering support for an uprising against emperor Henry IV. There he had to go to extreme lengths to justify why he was no longer bound by his oath. Here is what he said after having first listed Henry’s innumerable crimes against the freedom of the Saxons:

Quote: “Perhaps you, as Christians, are afraid to violate the oath with which you have paid homage to the king. Indeed, to the king you have sworn. As long as he was a king to me and acted royally, I also kept the oath I swore to him freely and faithfully; but after he ceased to be a king, the one to whom I had to keep loyalty was no longer there. So not against the king, but against the unjust robber of my freedom; not against the fatherland, but for the fatherland, and for freedom, which no good man surrenders other than with his life at the same time, I take up arms, and I demand of you that you also take them up. “ end quote

130 years later the Landgrave of Thuringia and King Ottokar of Bohemia will swear individual detailed oaths to Philipp to support him. The oaths are made over important relics and the princes pre-agree to the most severe temporal and spiritual punishments in case of a breach of this oath. Hostages are exchanged to ensure compliance and in the case of Ottokar, he marries a daughter of Philipp. But the ink is barely dry on the document and both of these change side, not for the greater good of the realm or to escape unbearable servitude, but for short term territorial gains. And they are not afraid of any punishment since the pope immediately releases them from their oath.

This devaluation of solemn oaths is another element in the shift in political and social culture, away from the ideals of the Middle Ages. Just as the troubadours and Minnesaenger celebrate the ideals of chivalry, the reality becomes more and more Machiavellian.

This change of sides by Thuringia and Bohemia in 1203 coincides with Danish conquest of Holstein and puts Philipp under enormous pressure. His campaign against Thuringia fails and he finds himself besieged inside the city of Erfurt. At the end of 1203, Philipp flees from Erfurt and Otto IV. writes triumphantly to pope Innocent III that he expects to have Philipp defeated by the end of next year.

In 1204 Philipp makes a last desperate attempt and goes straight for Otto’s headquarters, the city of Brunswick. And that is where Otto makes his fatal mistake. Brunswick was initially owned by Otto’s older brother, Henry, the Count Palatinate. Otto had taken it over since in it lay the great palace of Dankwarderode, the magnificent construction of their father, Henry the Lion that rivalled any imperial palace. The loss of Brunswick was the last straw for Henry. He had already seen his own principality, the Palatinate, being occupied by Philipp’s troops. And now after all the pain he had experienced in the service of his younger brother, he, the eldest son, was now to give up his family inheritance. Henry snapped and switched sides, joining Philipp.

And then archbishop Adolf of Cologne, the one guy who had kicked off the conflict also switched to Philipp. He may have worried about the overbearing nature of the young Welf who might still hanker after Westphalia or it was a more prosaic donation of 5000 mark of silver that changed his mind.

This is also the time English money stops coming.

Only the city of Cologne is still with Otto.

In 1205 Philipp can eventually heal the defects in his initial coronation. He is crowned again, this time in the right place, the palatine chapel in Aachen, by the correct Archbishop, Adolf of Cologne.

From there it should have only been a question of time before Otto finally gives up. There are two more battles between Otto and the citizens of Cologne on one side and Philipp and his superior troops on the other. Otto loses both of them and is even gets injured in one of them.

Heinrich von Kalden, the great leader of Philipp’s armies finally arranges for the two kings to meet to resolve their differences. Philipp offers Otto great terms. Otto was to marry Philipp’s daughter, become duke of Swabia and King of Burgundy if he gives up the claim on the imperial crown. But Otto refuses. Even when pope Innocent III urges him to accept, he still refuses.

All the parties can agree to is a truce. But the route ahead is now clear. Otto’s claim is defunct. His support is gone. Cologne had opened its doors to Philipp. Philipp is gathering a large army to dislodge him from his last remaining positions around Brunswick. His future is bleak, he will either have to go into exile or end his days on one of his father’s castles, alone and friendless.

On June 21st, 1208, Philipp is celebrating the marriage of his niece, the daughter of his brother Otto of Burgundy to the duke of Andechs-Meran in Bamberg. It is again, a splendid occasion. Many of the imperial princes have come, and the groom’s brother, the bishop of Bamberg had celebrated a great wedding in the marvellous cathedral the current bishop was constructing over the ruins of Henry II’s House of God.

At the end of the church service Philipp retires to the cooler rooms inside the episcopal palace. There he had asked his physician to bleed him. He was alone with just his chancellor and his Lord High Stewart, Henry of Waldburg. At the ninth hour, Otto von Wittelsbach, the count palatinate of Bavaria enters the royal chambre alone. Philipp welcomes him and even as Otto unsheathes his sword, the king still believes that all Otto wants to do is display his skills with the blade as he had often done before.

But not today. “This will not be a game for you today” the count screams and cuts straight through the royal jugular. The High Stewart tries to intervene but is struck down. Otto and his men can flee. 

Philipp of Swabia is dead. The first royal assassination since Merovingian times and one of only two in the Holy Roman empire.

And in this power vacuum steps, his opponent, Otto IV. as the anointed king. Almost immediately all imperial princes recognise Otto IV. as the rightful king and heir.

Philipp’s wife, the majestic and tragic Queen Irene flees to Swabia, to a monastery close to the family seat of the Hohenstaufen.  There she dies 2 months later in childbirth.

The civil war is over. One question remains, why did Otto von Wittelsbach kill his king?

The contemporaries ascribed the murder to injured honour. Otto von Wittelsbach had been promised a daughter of King Philipp in marriage. This offer was made shortly after the king had to flee from Erfurt when his chips were down, and he needed Otto’s support. But when things had improved, Philipp cancels the marriage agreement and offers the girl to someone else.

Is that indeed what happened? A recent essay claimed that the act was part of a wider conspiracy that included the groom, the duke of Andechs, his brother, the bishop of Bamberg and the duke of Bavaria. All these men were loosely related as members of the wider house of Wittelsbach and had their power base in what we now see as Bavaria. It was suspicious that both the duke of Andechs and his brother, the bishop fled immediately after the murder.

But this theory is widely dismissed, in part because the evidence it was based on was badly put together. And further it is very unclear what benefit these protagonists would have drawn from killing Philipp. As things stood the conflict between Welf and Waiblingen was a honeypot for the magnates. As long as it continued, they could demand money, titles, marriages and privileges in exchange for their continued loyalty. Killing one of them would bring back tighter, more centralised royal power.

But if Otto acted alone, what does that mean. Was he simply a particularly prickly man who could not control himself. Or was he acting within the context of the honour code of the times.

German historians of the period have recently focused more and more on honour as a broader social concept. They conclude that the concept of honour, i.e., the loss or gain of reputation within the aristocratic class is crucial to maintaining political and economic positions. A lord who cannot defend his honour risks losing his vassals and subsequently his military and financial resources.

I am not qualified to really give an opinion on that. But I notice that broken marriage agreements are quite common as alliances are shifting back and forth. We have already talked about the devaluation of oaths and the machiavellisation of society. Hold that against the one isolated case of royal assassination and my money is on Otto being exceptionally prickly or has indeed suffered a massive humiliation by Philipp.

Otto never got to explain his actions. Heinrich von Kalden, most feared of the Hohenstaufen Ministeriales, hunted him down, and in a barn somewhere in Bavaria cut off his head and threw it into a river.

Next week we will see how Otto IV. the only Welf on the imperial throne will fare. Let is find out what is left of the royal infrastructure and income after 10 years of handouts to imperial princes? And most crucially, will his alliance with Innocent III hold against the political train tracks of the empire?

Before I go, let me thank all of you who are supporting the show, in particular the Patrons who have kindly signed up on patreon.com/historyofthegermans. It is thanks to you this show does not have to do advertising for matrasses or as I recently heard energy supplements and pension plans. If Patreon isn’t for you, another way to help the show is sharing the podcast directly or boosting its recognition on social media. If you share, comment or retweet a post from the History of the Germans it is more likely to be seen by others, hence bringing in more listeners. My most active places are Twitter @germanshistory and my Facebook page History of the Germans Podcast. As always, all the links are in the show notes.   

Emperor Henry VI is dead and his son just 3 years old

This week we will see the reverse of 1046 when there was one emperor choosing between three popes. Today, we have one Pope, given the choice between three emperors. How could that happen? Last time we looked we had Henry VI. at the peak of his reign, being king of Sicily, having pushed through the inheritability of the imperial title and de-facto encircled the pope militarily. But now, just 2 years later the picture is reversed. There is a reason the wheel of fortune is one of the favourite subjects of high medieval painting..

Transcript

Hello and welcome to the history of the Germans: Episode 73 – One Pope, three Emperors

This week we will see the reverse of 1046 when there was one emperor choosing between three popes. Today, we have one Pope, given the choice between three emperors. How could that happen? Last time we looked we had Henry VI. at the peak of his reign, being king of Sicily, having pushed through the inheritability of the imperial title and de-facto encircled the pope militarily. But now, just 2 years later the picture is reversed. There is a reason the wheel of fortune is one of the favourite subjects of high medieval painting..

Before we start just a reminder. The History of the Germans Podcast is advertising free thanks to the generous support from patrons. And you can become a patron too and enjoy exclusive bonus episodes and other privileges from the price of a latte per month. All you have to do is sign up at patreon.com/historyofthegermans or on my website historyofthegermans.com. You find all the links in the show notes. And thanks a lot to Tim, Brannen, and Christopher who have already signed up.

Last week’s episode closed with the end of the negotiations between emperor Henry VI. and Pope Celestin III. Subject of the intended agreement  was nothing less than the resolution of all existing conflicts between the papacy and the empire. Henry VI. had put everything and the kitchen sink on the table. He had offered financial freedom for the papacy, a settlement for the lands of Matilda, a crusade, vassalage for the kingdom of Sicily and most bewildering of all, vassalage of the whole empire. But the ancient pope Celestin III, now in his 90s refused. He refused because an empire that held both Northern Italy including Tuscany and the Southern Italian kingdom of Sicily would have been the end of papal independence.

There was no possible compromise to be had. The pope is not going to accept Henry VI. as King of Sicily. Full stop.

Henry left Rome, frustrated but determined not to give up.  He had to perform a full 180-degree shift in policy.

The crusade that he had worked on for so long, that he had sacrificed the inheritable monarchy for and that he thought would be the lever to force the papacy into recognition of his kingship was now irrelevant. The Pope would not make him king of Sicily even if he brings Jerusalem back into Christian hands. That does not mean he would stop the crusade, but he would not join it.

His top priority is now to protect his reign in Sicily. As soon as the papal refusal of Henry’s offer was public, it would encourage more opposition and rebellion. And that he needed to nip in the bud.

To get on the front foot he called an assembly of the Southern Italian barons to Capua. There the nobles the cities were to show their charters and documents for inspection. All rights and privileges were put under scrutiny. Given how thin on the ground written documentation was at the time, any confirmation of their possessions was made dependent on their display of loyalty. To drive his point home, he also staged a show trial of Richard of Acerra, the defender of Naples in 1192. Richard had not only defied the emperor through his skilful defence of Naples, but he was accused of having committed atrocities. When the ancient city of Capua had fallen into his hands after Henry’s withdrawal in 1192, Richard had its German garrison massacred.

As soon as Henry had taken control of the kingdom, he had issued a search warrant for Richard of Acerra. Richard had fled but was betrayed by a monk who handed him over to one of Henry VI. Knights.

In an elaborate show trial, Richard of Acerra was condemned to death for high treason. The emperor had him dawn behind a horse through the streets of Capua, then hanged from the gallows by his feet where he remained alive for two days before the court jester put an end to his suffering.

The lack of legitimacy caused by the papal refusal to recognise Henry as king had to be made up for by terror.

Henry, satisfied with his handiwork, proceeded to Puglia to inspect progress of the crusade. The most senior of the imperial princes, Konrad, archbishop of Mainz was leading the first contingent of 30 ships that left Bari in March 1197. Contingents from Bavaria and Austria were on their way through Italy, looking to take ship from Messina or Bari. The same goes for the large number of mercenaries the emperor had hired. One detachment, led by duke Henry of Brabant had taken ship in the low countries and were sailing along the Atlantic coast towards Sicily, making brief stopovers to help the Portuguese in their expansion southwards. It was all a bit uncoordinated and undisciplined, leaving the population of his new kingdoms fearing rather than cheering the crusaders.

In this atmosphere of unrest and disapproval, Henry scheduled a re-run of the assembly in Capua for the Sicilian nobles. They too were asked to present their charters for inspection, leading to a redistribution of land and possessions from unreliable candidates to imperial loyalists. We should not forget that Henry VI. had brought a not insignificant number of his own Ministeriales and aristocratic followers to his new lands and these men were expecting to be rewarded with their own territories. Men like Markward of Annweiler, Konrad von Querfurt and Heinrich von Kalden took all the leading roles in the kingdom.

The Sicilian/Norman aristocrats realised that their days as the elite in the land was numbered unless they acted now. They arranged a conspiracy that involved not just the nobles but also many cities and the leaders of the large Muslim and Greek communities. It seems they had even involved the pope into their plans. At least we are told that old Celestin warned some German crusaders from travelling south.

The plan was to kill Henry during a hunting trip and simultaneously take out all his key advisors. The rebels had assembled a small army of armoured knights for that purpose and they may even have already elected a new king, the lord of Castrogiovanni who was variously known as Jordan le pin or as William the Monk. This new king was to marry Constance and thereby become the legitimate ruler of Sicily.

The plot failed literally at the very last minute. Henry VI. had already set out for his hunting expedition which was where the conspirators planned to strike. Outside town one of his spies rode up to him and told him not just about the extensive preparations of the conspirators but also about the armed men following him into woods. Henry just about managed to get back behind the walls of Messina. Markward of Annweiler and the Marshall Heinrich von Kalden mustered some of the mercenaries and crusaders who had gathered in Messina and rode out to meet the insurgents. At a bloody battle below Mount Etna the last of the Sicilian Normans were utterly routed. The survivors fled to their castle at Castrogiovanni. The imperial troops surrounded the castle and when Henry arrived with even more troops from Palermo the garrison surrendered. The leaders of the rebellion were caught alive, including their potential king.

Henry’s justice was even more cruel than at Capua. They were all condemned to death, some were hanged, others burned, drowned or sawn in half. The pretender was given the most brutal death. He had a crown fixed to his head with iron nails and Henry said to him: “Now you have this crown you so badly craved. I do not envy you for it, enjoy this you so desired.”

The irony of it. If there is one man in this narrative who craved the crown of Sicily above and beyond any other thing, it is Henry VI.  

These events are often cited as proof that Henry was a cruel and vicious ruler. And they are no doubt brutal punishments. But they were driven not by excessive brutality beyond the standards of his time, but out of a position of weakness.

Thanks to the papal refusal to legitimise Henry and Constance as the rulers of Sicily had changed his approach. When he still hoped for Papal recognition, Henry was magnanimous and did not condemn his opponents to death, let alone a humiliating and painful death. But now his only chance of staying on the throne was by taking away his opponents’ resources and establishing an atmosphere of fear and suppression. Like many a usurper before him, he resorted to a display of exaggerated brutality to cow the opposition.

All this took place in May. Over the next few months, more and more crusaders gathered in the harbours of Sicily, until on September 1, 1197 order was given for the 250 ships to set sail for the Holy Land.

Meanwhile Henry’s brother Philipp had prematurely ended his honeymoon and was on his way to Folignano to pick up little Frederick, by now elected King of the Romans, to take him to Aachen for his coronation.

Henry’s position was now fairly stable, not quite as stable as he wanted it, but stable. Sicily was cowering in fear before its ruthless new ruler and the imperial princes north of the Alps had finally elected his son to be king and his coronation was not that far away.

But then he suddenly felt weak. A fever that troubled him since the siege of Naples in 1192 had come back with a vengeance but was now accompanied by terrible bouts of diarrhoea. He was brought to Messina and the empress was called to expect the worse. But on September 25th he seemed to recover and ordered his imminent departure for Palermo. Most of the imperial train was already packed up and en route to the capital, when the emperor suddenly relapsed. On September 28th after confession and the last rites, emperor Henry VI. died in the presence of just his wife and few close advisors.

How is this possible. Henry VI. was just 32 years old, much younger at his death than even Henry V., whose unexpected and early death ended the Salian dynasty.  Only Otto III had died younger, at just 22 years of age, but then Otto III had been fasting himself to death since his teenage years.

Talk of poison spread. Suspicion fell on his wife, Constance. The couple had spent most of the last few years apart as Constance was first confined with her precious only child and then managed Sicily when Henry was up in Germany and Rome. As is common with medieval rulers, we know very little about the emotional side of their relationship.

Those who argue that Constance may have wanted Henry out of the way point to the fact that Henry had systematically replaced Sicilian Normans with German knights. And many of these Sicilian Normans were Constance’s cousins, respected courtiers, admirals and generals at the court of her father and her nephew. It may be that Constance shared their resentment at the takeover by the Annweilers and Kaldens from the North.

Politically it is harder to see how Constance would benefit from Henry VI. death. The death of the emperor threw Sicily into turmoil. The official legitimate heir was little Frederick. But Frederick was not even in Sicily. He was in Folignano and for all Constance knew could already be on his way to his coronation as King of the Romans in Aachen. And one thing is clear. Once Frederick was crowned as future emperor, the pope would not allow him to become king of Sicily. And without papal permission, a three-year-old and an ageing empress would not hang on to the crown for long. Hence for Constance to seek her husbands death would only make sense if (i) she knew that Frederick was still in Folignano and Philipp would not get to him in time, (ii) she had an agreement with the papacy that Frederick could become king of Sicily in exchange for renouncing the rights to the empire, and most crucially (iii) Constance believed that her husbands policy to hold on to Sicily and the Empire was doomed. And that is where the theory falls down. Yes, Henry was not popular in Sicily, but his regime was not doomed by any stetch of the imagination.

That being said, Constance next steps are exactly what I lined out above. Upon the emperor’s death she sends envoys to bring Frederick down to Sicily as fast as humanly possible. At the same time she opens negotiations with Pope Celestin III. She promises effectively Frederick’s renunciation of the imperial crown, makes the pope the little boys’ guardian, throws out all the German courtiers and replaces them with Sicilians. And with that she can have little Frederick crowned King of Sicily in 1198. This is where we will leave the two of them for the next couple of episodes. No worries we will get back to the beautiful south soon.

Taking Frederick to Sicily and dropping opposition to the papacy helps Constance and Frederick clinging to the Kingdom of Sicily, but it creates a huge problem for Henry’s younger brother Philipp, by now duke of Swabia,  for the Hohenstaufen position in Germany and for the empire as a whole.

I mentioned earlier that Philipp was on his way down to Folignano to pick up young Frederick and take him to his coronation in Aachen. But when he got there, he is told that his mother had already taken him down to Palermo. I guess medieval people did not say Oh shit, but whatever the equivalent of Oh Shit is in early high German, that is what Philipp must have said when he is shown the empty crip at the home of the Duke of Spoleto.  

The empire needs an emperor, and the elected future emperor is little Frederick. Philipp had spent the last years making exactly that happen. Having a child emperor is already a bit of an anomaly in an elective monarchy, but a child emperor that isn’t even here that is complexity cubed.

Philipp is wrecking his brain on his way back to Germany how to solve the issue. Constance, he is sure, will not hand over Frederick, because that would cause the same problem in Sicily, the new king is a child and a child that isn’t even here. So no, there is little chance that Frederick will come to Germany before he has reached adulthood.

But what shall we do in the meantime? A regency council headed by himself, Philipp and some of the loyal imperial princes? Or shall a new king be elected, either as a permanent ruler or to rule until Frederick comes back?

How and who should decide that? In the 12th century the answer to that question is increasingly to let the pope decide. Ever since the Investiture Controversy had broken the supremacy of the emperors over the other rulers in Europe, disputes over difficult questions like the succession to the throne were brought to the courts of the church. And thanks to the expanding network of papal legates, the church could provide dispute resolution quickly and locally.

Questions as fundamental as the one brought about by the death of Henry VI. should hence be decided by the church and most specifically by the pope. But the papacy was unable to act. Pope Celestin III had died at the start of the year 1198 at the ripe old age of 92. His successor, Innocent III who will become the most important pope of the Middle Ages. But it takes him a few weeks to get into gear, weeks during which no decision can be expected.

Into that vacuum steps Adolf, archbishop of Cologne. He is at this point the most senior bishop present in Germany and hence in charge of imperial elections. Konrad, archbishop of Mainz is down in the Holy Land and so are many other imperial princes.

Adolf had only reluctantly accepted the election of young Frederick, but now as circumstances had changed, acts as that had never happened.

He writes to the newest of the imperial vassals, Richard the Lionheart and invites him to come down for the election. Richard politely declines. But the former prisoner on the Trifels and imperial ATM realises that this is a great opportunity to get back at his now dead tormentor.  As a vassal and prince, he can make a suggestion for the election. And that suggestion was to elect Otto, count of Poitou, Duke of Aquitaine.

Otto who?

Otto was born around 1177, so is pretty much the same age as Philipp of Swabia. His father was Henry the Lion, known to you all and friend of the podcast. His mother was Matilda, daughter of King Henry II of England and hence the sister of Richard the Lionheart. The reason we have not heard anything about Otto is, because he grew up at the English court.  His father was exiled to England in 1181 when Otto was maybe six and he stayed there after his father had returned to Germany.

King Richard was exceedingly fond of his nephew, who had little prospects in Germany being the younger son of a family that insisted on Salian law inheritance. Richard first tried to make him the Earl of York though the locals rejected him. But he was successful in appointing him count of Poitou in France, a title Richard used himself= before he became king of England. As Count of Poitou he was also the acting as duke of Aquitaine, that great territory in South West France that had come into the Angevin family through the marriage of Eleanor and Henry II. Otto was now in one of the top positions of the Angevin empire.

If Henry VI. had not died in 1197, Otto would have likely played a significant role in English politics. He was not just one of Richards favourite nephews, but he was also a potential heir to his throne. Richard was 36 at the time and given the state of his personal inclinations and relationship with his wife was likely to remain childless. As we have been told by Erroll Flynn, John Derek, Russell Crowe, Cary Elwes, Kevin Costner, Sean Connery and four more, his brother John later to be called Lackland was not the right man to become king. Or at least that is what Richard thought after John had offered vast amounts of money to Henry VI. to prolong Richard’s stay in Germany.

The other potential heir was Arthur of Brittany, the son of Godfrey, another brother of Richard’s and John’s. Arthur had technically a better claim than John Lackland, since Godfrey had been older than John. But Arthur was living at the court of Phillippe Auguste of France, Richard’s arch enemy, which disqualified him.

That made Otto the technical# 3 to succeed and as far as Richard was concerned, the #1. But Richard also knew that if he were to appoint Otto as his successor, a civil war was unavoidable. Henry VI. death and the disappearance of little Frederick down south was an absolute godsend for Richard the Lionheart.

He wrote back to Adolf of Cologne that Otto was on his way, and he should get everything ready for the election and coronation.

Adolf may have been in opposition to the Hohenstaufen for a while, so a non-Hohenstaufen candidate was something he liked. But a Welf? The prospect of a Welf King and emperor was not exactly what an archbishop of Cologne could get excited about. Cologne had been one of the great beneficiaries of the fall of Henry the Lion. When henry the Lion lost his duchies of Saxony and Bavaria, Saxony was split in two, one, Westphalia had gone to Cologne and the other still called Saxony had gone to Bernhard of Anhalt and Bavaria had gone to the Wittelsbachs. It could not be their interest to get a son of Henry the Lion on to the throne.

But money talks and Richard of England had money, lots of money. We are entering the high Middle Ages and taxation is becoming a thing. England always had a coherent enough structure to force through taxation and the King of France was establishing the same in his territories. The Empire had fallen behind. The territorial lords and the independent cities of Northern Italy and increasingly Germany were building taxation infrastructure, but the empire as a whole had no such capabilities. Henry VI. had tax income from Sicily but nothing from the empire.

Richard was willing to use his money to buy his beloved nephew a crown, the crown of the empire no less.

And another force pushed for the candidature of Otto, one that appears for the first time on the imperial stage. The merchants, more specifically the merchants of Cologne. Cologne was the centre of trade between England and Germany and down the Rhine into Italy. The Cologne merchants were very keen on a close alliance between the empire and England and that meant they supported Otto.

With Adolf on board one crucial element of the process to become the anointed king was in place – Otto had the correct archbishop for the coronation. And, since the archbishop of Mainz was down in the Holy Land, Adolf was also in charge of the imperial duties of his colleague upriver, i.e, he was the correct archbishop for organising the election. The only thing that was missing were the imperial regalia, those were in the castle of Trifels, firmly in the hand of the Hohenstaufen.

Talking about the Hohenstaufen where is Philipp, duke of Swabia and currently leader of the clan? Well, he had rushed back to Germany after his failure to bring young Frederick to Germany and listened to all the chatter about an English-welfish candidate for the imperial crown.

What is he to do now? Should he try to be elected himself and be king in his own right, stepping over the rights of his nephew? Or shall he claim to act as his nephew’s guardian and representative? But how would that work?  Would the imperial vassals recognise the representative of a four-year old who wasn’t even baptised, let alone crowned as their liege lord?

We do not know what Philipps actual motives were, but he declared his willingness to accept an election as king and so, on March 8th, 1198 Philipp was elected King of the Romans and future emperor by an impressive number of imperial princes led by the dukes Bernhard of Saxony and Ludwig of Bavaria, the archbishop of Magdeburg and the bishops of Bamberg, Eichstaett, Merseburg and Worms. But he did not have any of the most senior archbishops, those of Cologne, Mainz and Trier on his roster. The election also took place in Muehlhausen in Thuringia, not exactly on Frankish soil, as was the custom.

As soon as Philipp was elected, a call went out to Otto to come down to Germany where he arrived in June. Otto’s allies besieged and entered Aachen on 12h of July 1198 where he was crowned by the correct archbishop, in the correct place, but with replicas of the actual imperial regalia.

Philipp had hesitated to proceed to his own coronation, in part because he hoped he may still be able to sway the archbishop of Cologne to join his side and also, because he wanted to have his nephew’s prior permission for this irrevocable step.

The permission from Frederick was also important because the German crusaders were now returning from the Holy Land. It is all a bit chaotic, even more chaotic than a normal succession. Henry’s crusade had simply ended with his death. As soon as the crusaders had heard of the demise of the emperor, they knew that their home would be in turmoil. Long gone were the days when the lands and possessions of a crusader were sacrosanct whilst he was down freeing Jerusalem. Everybody rushed home as fast as they could to protect or even expand their territory in the now inevitable rejigging of the cards. And these crusaders had sworn an oath on the succession rights of little Frederick. So, in order to transfer their loyalty to him, Philipp needed the little boy’s consent.

That came through in July and another obstacle was also cleared. In 1198 Philipp had still been under excommunication. Excommunication is by now so common, I barelyh mention them any more.. He had picked up the papal wrath when his brother had made him duke of Tuscany. In this role Philipp had pushed the imperial prerogatives against papal resistance. That was enough to have him excommunicated. As I said, the actual Middle Ages are gradually coming to an end and being replaced by a more cynical, everyone for himself attitude, where the papacy will use its moral superiority in the pursuit of purely temporal political objectives. This political excommunication was lifted by the papal legate so that a coronation could take place in Mainz on September 8th, 1198.

Mainz was not Aachen but had at least historically been a place of coronation. Philipp also had the correct imperial regalia, which we know are important to confer legitimacy. But he did not have the correct archbishop. In fact no German or any other archbishop was willing to perform this coronation in the see of the absent archbishop of Mainz. Philipp’s party had to resort to the rather obscure bishop of Tarantaise in Burgundy who apparently owed Philipp’s brother, the count of Burgundy big time.

There we are at the end of 1198. We have three elected Kings of the Romans.

There is the child Frederick, four years old and elected by most of the princes but far away and not yet crowned.

Then there is Otto counted as Otto IV, who could rely on English money and the Bishop and city of Cologne.

And finally, Philipp, usually not given a numeral though he sometime called himself Philipp II counting the emperor Philipp the Arab in the 3rd century as his predecessor. He had the strongest position amongst the territorial lords, counting the dukes of Saxony and Bavaria in his camp plus his own domain as duke of Swabia.

And then we have the throng of undecided princes many just on their way back from the crusades, Henry, the Count Palatinate, Bernhard von Zaehringen, the archbishop of Mainz and Trier just to name a few.

For the good of Christendom, the pope should decide this election and bring peace to the empire. That is what he is for. And the new pope, Innocent III, will decide it along of what is fair and best for the empire. Sorry, just kidding. He will certainly not do that. He will make his decision on the basis what is best for the political objectives of the papacy and only two years after the civil war had gone into full swing.

His reasoning in 1200/1201 boils down to the following:

Frederick should not have been elected when he was just 2 years old since Christendom requires a capable and proactive emperor, something a small child could not be, in particular not one that hasn’t even been baptised.

Philipp of Swabia, he argues is also unsuitable because at the time of the election he had still been excommunicated. The lifting of the ban by the papal legate was invalid because Philipp was descendant of a race of persecutors of the church who, like his father and brother had shown scant regard for the rights of the church.

Otto, he argues may not have had a lot of votes on his side, but that does not matter since he was descendent from the Kings of England and the House of Welf, both of which are renowned for their fealty to the mother church, something he had so aptly displayed himself.

This assessment will come back to bite his holiness in his unholiness, but before that we have to go through 10 years of civil war, political manoeuvring and hollowing out of royal rights, ending in murder most foul. I hope you will join us again.

Before I go, let me thank all of you who are supporting the show, in particular the Patrons who have kindly signed up on patron.com/historyofthegermans. It is thanks to you this show does not have to do advertising. I was absolutely shocked to hear the host of another show I admire and which is much more successful than this one pretending he supports some energy supplement.. If Patreon isn’t for you, another way to help the show is sharing the podcast directly or boosting its recognition on social media. If you share, comment or retweet a post from the History of the Germans it is more likely to be seen by others, hence bringing in more listeners. My most active places are Twitter @germanshistory and my Facebook page History of the Germans Podcast. As always, all the links are in the show notes.   

Pope and emperor Henry VI clash over Sicily

This week we will watch Henry VI’s attempts to make the papacy comfortable with the fact that their neighbour to the south is now the same as their neighbour to the North. Pope Celestin may see it as encirclement by a family whose track record as sons of mother church had been to say it politely, a bit patchy. But Henry VI thinks there is a way to make this work. Let’s see…

Transcript

Hello and welcome to the History of the Germans, Episode 72 – Clouds on the Horizon

This week we will watch Henry VI’s attempts to make the papacy comfortable with the fact that their neighbour to the south is now the same as their neighbour to the North. Pope Celestin may see it as encirclement by a family whose track record as sons of mother church had been to say it politely, a bit patchy. But Henry VI thinks there is a way to make this work. Let’s see…

Before we start just a reminder. The History of the Germans Podcast is advertising free thanks to the generous support from patrons. And you can become a patron too and enjoy exclusive bonus episodes and other privileges from the price of a latte per month. All you have to do is sign up at patreon.com/historyofthegermans or on my website historyofthegermans.com. You find all the links in the show notes. And thanks a lot to Francisco, Peter and Per who have already signed up.

Last time we left emperor Henry VI. enjoying a string of successes that made the year 1194 by far his best. Not only did he take possession of the Kingdom of Sicily, his by right of inheritance through his wife. What put the icing on the cake in 1194 was the birth of his son and heir in the city of Jesi on Christmas day.

He was only 32 but his wife had just turned 40 and hope of continuing his line must have been thin on the ground. Henry VI. Had probably resigned himself to the idea of not having a legitimate heir. For him to die without a direct heir was not particularly worrisome for the dynasty since Henry’s father, Barbarossa had 8 sons, of which 4, including Henry were still alive by 1194.  

But now even that possible wrinkle in his imperial career was resolved. Henry VI. was at the top of the world.

But the wheel of fortune that had catapulted him up keeps turning. Barely a month after his solemn coronation in Palermo, a monk appears in the imperial chamber and tells of a conspiracy. The Sicilian nobles were planning to murder their new ruler. Behind it he says are Tancred’s widow who just recently had been so magnanimously allowed to retain the ancestral lands of her former husband. Other key conspirators were the bishop of Salerno who had so vehemently insisted on putting Constance in chains and the admirals Margarito and Eugenius who had frustrated Henry’s siege of Naples in 1192.

Initially Henry VI. did not believe the story, but when he was shown documents that implicated the main conspirators, he had to strike. He invited them to court, confronted them with the proof he had gathered and had them all arrested. Within days the whole conspiracy collapsed and it’s leaders were in jail. Their crime was high treason and the sanction for that was death. Again, still magnanimous, Henry Vi. did not have them killed or blinded. They were exiled and kept under guard in Germany. The ex-queen Sybil and her daughters were confined to the monastery of St. Odile in Alsace where they were held until Pope Innocence III effected their release in 1198. The former boy king William III was brought to Hohenems, one of the largest Hohenstaufen castles near lake Constance. He would never see daylight again. The admirals and the bishop ended up on the Trifels, in the suite of rooms so recently vacated by Richard the Lionheart..

For many of his contemporaries this felt a little bit too convenient though. The conspiracy allows Henry to remove the potential leaders of the opposition to his rule, just when he is planning to go home. There is also the question why the conspiracy happened so soon after Henry had taken power. A few months earlier the conspirators were in charge of the kingdom, and they did surrender without much resistance. If they had thought imperial rule had to be opposed at all cost they could have struck after Henry had released his army in October when he had only taken Messina so far. Some questions are hanging in the air, and remember, this is a man some accused of having killed the elected bishop of Liege and who had a returning crusader apprehended and released only after a huge ransom was paid.

The conspiracy, disconcerting as it was, was also the background to one of the great love stories of the age.

Amongst those taken prisoner was Irene, the daughter of the Byzantine emperor Isaac Angelos. She had been sent to Palermo to marry the son of Tancred as part of an alliance to keep Henry VI. out of the Mediterranean. But this son, a man called Roger, had died before the marriage could actually take place. Irene had stayed in Palermo after Roger’s death, probably because the political situation in Constantinople was fragile. Her father would be deposed and blinded by his brother in 1195. As a member of the family of Tancred she was implicated in the conspiracy and her fate was to be buried alive in some monastery in Germany. But she did not.

Henry VI. youngest brother, Phillip had fallen deeply in love with the Greek beauty. The 18-year old prince had fallen head over heels for the beautiful and ill-fated princess from the East. Young Phillip was begging, beseeching, entreating and imploring his brother to release this wonderful creature, the love of his life. Henry VI. still magnanimous let her go. He even allowed Phillip to marry her even though she had zero political value now that her father was blinded and imprisoned. Henry VI. She travelled back to Germany with the Imperial party, not as a prisoner, but as the bride of Phillip, the emperor’s brother.

Phillip had initially been designated for the church and had even been elected as bishop of Wurzburg but in 1193 he had left the church and returned to being a laymen. That was probably in the wake of the death of his older brother Frederick who had died in the Holy Land and the realisation that his other brothers were falling short of their great father. Otto, the second youngest had inherited his mother’s county of Burgundy. There he managed to create absolute chaos. He began feuding with most of his neighbours. One he killed with his own bare hands, another was assassinated under implicating circumstances. He had the brother of the bishop of Strasburg executed and basically fought all the time with everybody, until he was mercifully himself murdered in 1200.

The next oldest surviving brother, Conrad had been made duke of Swabia upon his older brother’s death in 1191. Conrad was also fond of the occasional quarrel with his neighbours, but his true passion was sex, both with willing and with unwilling participants. His end came about thanks to such a case of rape. One theory is that he was killed by an enraged husband, but my preferred version is that the victim bit off his right nipple. The wound became infected, and this awful duke of Swabia succumbed in 1196. Phillip became his brother’s successor as Duke of Swabia and de facto the number 2 in the House of Hohenstaufen after his brother, the emperor Henry VI.

Ok so much for the family history. Trust me that will become relevant pretty soon, but before we get there, we should go back to Henry VI. and the fundamental problem he needs to address.

He might have found some compliant bishop who was prepared to crown him king of Sicily, but that is not the same as having the papal blessing for his ascension. Thing is that by 1194 the Kingdom of Sicily has become a fief of the papacy and only of the papacy. Yes, there used to be imperial overlordship over Southern Italy and emperor Lothar and Pope Innocent II had a bit of ding dong about who was to take the oath of vassalage of Apulian nobles. But 50 years later this imperial right had gone from theoretical to non-existent. The kings of Sicily beginning with Roger II had signed multiple agreements with the papacy that confirmed the pope’s feudal superiority. Usually, these agreements came about when the pope had – again – lost a battle against the Normans and was put in a cell. From there he was made to graciously accept the Norman upstarts as his vassals whilst signing an agreement  that limited his effective control of the kingdom to close to nothing. The last such agreement dated from 1156 and restricted papal over lordship to a mere formality. The pope did not even have any influence on the selection of bishops in the kingdom of Sicily.

Henry VI had taken Sicily not on the back of some long forgotten imperial rights, but as the inheritance of his wife whose rights have the same source as that of her ancestors, the investiture of the kingdom by the papacy.

Hence in order to be fully established as king of Sicily, Henry VI. needed the pope to formally invest him as King of Sicily. Without that the pope could at any point invest another third cousin twice removed of King Roger II as King of Sicily and Henry VI. would have another war to deal with.

But it is more than just this formality. The pope is now sandwiched between two territories the emperor controls. In the south the Kingdom of Sicily and in the North, the Kingdom of the Lombards as well as the Lands of Matilda that at this point are under imperial administration. This, Henry realises is an uncomfortable position for his holiness. It is important both for his reign, but also for his dynasty that a sustainable settlement is found.

Negotiations did not start slow. They did not start – full stop. Henry VI. and Pope Celestin III had not communicated at all for three years. Relations had been strained ever since the freshly crowned emperor rode out of Rome telling the Holy father that he did not care one bit about his opposition to him becoming king of Sicily.

To mend fences, Henry thought he could give the pope the one thing he should cherish more than him not being king of Sicily. And that would be the return of Jerusalem into Christian hands. So, Henry sends a letter to Celestin offering to take the cross. He asks to be sent a papal legate to discuss the details and formulate a plan. At the end of March the papal response arrives at the imperial court in Bari. It is delivered by a simple bishop who says – nothing. Celestin does not see why the promise of a crusade would any reason to speak to the emperor again.

Henry now changes the angle of attack. He sends a formal offer to the cardinals of the curia, promising to leave with 1,500 well-equipped and well-funded knights and the same number of infantry for the Holy Land. And he simultaneously calls all his vassals to join him on crusade.

Now the pope cannot ignore Henry any longer. He may have his differences with the emperor but at this point the church is not yet prepared to outright dismiss a sincere offer of crusade for purely political reasons. That they will do later. Celestin III has to  and does send some cardinals to help plan the upcoming crusade. Two high ranking Cardinals who have a good reputation at the imperial court arrive and the crusade is under way. They even bring a letter from pope Celestin where he addresses Henry as Emperor of the Romans and says nice things about working together and the like. But when Henry probes the cardinals to find out about Celestin’s willingness to accept him as King of Sicily, he gets the response he should have expected: what do these two things have to do with each other? We love the crusade idea, but that will not make you the legitimate King of Sicily.

And with that communication between pope and emperor goes silent again.

This failure to strengthen the legitimacy of his reign in Sicily forced Henry to go all in on the crusade plan. If he were to return to Europe as the prince who had returned Jerusalem to Christendom, the logic goes, there won’t be anything the pope could refuse him anymore. Equally, if he fails, the game is up, papal allies will revolt in Sicily and even the civil war in Germany may resume.

With failure not an option, he needed to massively increase the military commitment. When the crusade finally leaves in 1197 the knights and foot soldiers count up to 18,000, 6 times what he had promised the cardinals in 1195.

And he needs to go it alone. No other monarch should be allowed to share in the glory if he wants to return as the saviour of Outre Mer. And that is where the recent vow of allegiance of Richard the Lionheart comes in handy. Richard might have been interested to go back to the Middle East and relive his glory days. He went so far as to negotiate a peace with his foe, king Philippe Auguste to allow him to join the crusade. But Henry, as his now overlord, rejected the agreement so that the two kings had to keep fighting in France.

Henry now needs the support of the imperial princes, nobles and Ministeriales. To gain that he needs money, glamour and he will have to make major concessions.

As for items 1 and 2, his newly acquired kingdom provides plenty. He travels to Germany accompanied by 150 mules carrying selected treasures from the glittering court of Palermo. Amongst them is the coronation mantle of King Roger II. As the name indicates this mantle was used in the coronation ceremonies of the Kings of Sicily and until 1806 in the coronation of the Holy Roman Emperor. It was made of silk and is covered in 100,000 pearls and pieces of enamel. On each side it shows a lion striking a camel. It also bears an inscription in Arabic that was only translated in the 18th century. It states that this coronation mantle was made in the royal workshops of Palermo in the year 528 of the Islamic calendar. It is today in Vienna, together with the other imperial regalia.

On his way home Henry VI. stopped in Folignano the seat of the Konrad, duke of Spoleto. This is where his son, little Frederick had been living for the last year. His mother, Constance had returned to Sicily shortly after giving birth to take over the regency of the kingdom whilst her husband was travelling back to Germany. It seems that in light of the recent conspiracy against the life of Henry, Sicily was still considered too dangerous for the precious heir to the throne. Little Frederick was left in the care of duke Konrad and his wife, who were German nobles, administering the duchy on behalf of the empire. Though Frederick was less than a year old, Henry puts him at the centre of his political schemes.

To gain the support of the imperial princes he offers a package deal.

The princes are to receive two important concessions they have been demanding for a while now.

Number 1 was to make fiefs fully inheritable. That means the duke or count has the right to pass on his fiefs not only to their eldest son, but to their daughters, nephews and even remote cadet branches. In other words, a fief never returns to the king but stays within the family.  This is a privilege some princes enjoyed, others did not. For instance, the duke of Austria enjoyed them under the Privilegium Minus granted by Barbarossa in 1156. And as we have seen in the aftermath of the fall of Henry the Lion, the emperor is already struggling to call back  fiefs that have become vacant.

Number 2 was to end the right of the Spolia. The Spolia allowed the emperor to confiscate the personal belongings of a bishop or abbot upon his death. And further it allowed the emperor to draw the income of the bishopric during the period a bishopric was vacant. That had been both a significant source of imperial income and a thorn in the side of the bishoprics.

In exchange for these concessions, the princes were to grant the following:

  • Election of the baby Frederick as Frederick II
  • Participation in the crusade

And – drumroll

Making the empire a hereditary monarchy.

Yes, that was his deal. No more elections. In the same way the princes can now pass on their fiefs to essentially whoever they want, the emperor should also be able to pass his crown to whoever he chooses. Fair dues, right. It is just an alignment of imperial practice to what has been the case in most other European monarchies, in England, in France, in Aragon and in Sicily.

Henry pushed his package hard. He first proposed it at a royal assembly in Mainz in early March 1196. As only few princes had shown up for that, a new assembly was set for Wuerzburg 2 weeks later. There he managed to coerce the princes into accepting the new concept of monarchy. They squirmed and wiggled, they moaned and groaned, but in the end, they took the deal. They cared more about their right to pass on their fiefs as they liked than the right to elect an emperor.

The princes signed a document that set out the new constitution of the empire, they swore an oath to elect the 2-year-old Frederick and many took the cross. It was agreed that the crusaders should come down to Sicily in the spring of 1197 and would take ship from there to the Holy Land. This again shows how significant the control of Sicily is for the empire. Previous German crusades had taken the land route via Hungary, the Byzantine empire and Turkish controlled Anatolia. And all previous efforts had perished along this route. Sicily with its splendid navy finally opened up the sea route for the skint German knights who could not afford the extortionate fares the Venetians, Pisans and Genoese were charging.

So far the wheel of fortune is still pushing our emperor Henry VI up. He has his Kingdom of Sicily, he has made the empire an inherited monarchy and his crusade is well under way and looks a lot more promising than his father’s. But just you wait.

And when things go well for the empire, the popes tend get very agitated. In fact, pope Celestine III is more than agitated. Henry VI. last move confirmed his worst suspicions. This emperor was out to get him and the papacy. Not only had he encircled Rome militarily, he also removed one of the papacy’s most significant political levers, the imperial coronation.

As we have seen time and again, the popes had used their right to crown the emperor to extract concessions. They made Lothar III wage war against the Normans, they made Barbarossa wrest Rome from the Senate and so on and so on. If the empire becomes an inheritable monarchy, the coronation will become nothing but a formality, similar to the coronation of the kings of England or France. The archbishops of Reims and Canterbury could not demand any concessions from their rulers for performing the coronation, and Celestine feared, quite rightly, that this would be the same for the popes once Henry VI. got his way. The papacy was facing its worst crisis since Henry Iii had deposed three popes in one go in 1046.

He needed to do something to derail Henry’s plans. But what?:

He did stop the marriage of the only daughter and heir of the King of Aragon to one of Henry’s brothers. This would have been an even further expansion of Hohenstaufen power that he could prevent. But it didn’t do much to improve the current situation.

There was however something else. His legates had noticed that many of the princes were uncomfortable with the deal they had just made. They became worried that an inheritable imperial crown could over time challenge their position. They could see how the Capetians across the Rhine were rolling up their once overbearing magnates. The landgrave of Thuringen and some other Saxon nobles publicly refuted the agreement they literally had just signed. They threatened to slow down or even abandon their commitment to go on crusade, thinking that pope Celestine would release them from their crusader oath.

Henry VI. was by now down in Italy as part of the preparations for the crusade. That made it difficult for him to confront the princes directly. He called them to an assembly at Erfurt where his representatives pointed to documents and letters where they had committed to the crusade and the recognition of an inherited monarchy. But to no avail. The princes simply refused to fulfil their obligations.

It is now October 1196 and with all the preparations for the crusade in full swing, ships being prepared, depots set up, mercenaries being hired, there was no time left for Henry VI. to go back to Germany, sort out the rebels and still set sail in spring 1197. And the worst case scenario could materialise, that the pope and the rebels join forces, excommunicate and depose him, establish an antiking and cause decades of civil war.

The only way to solve this was by going to Rome and bringing this conflict with the papacy to a solution, one way or another.

Henry travels south and sends his envoys ahead with a first offer to the pope. He offered the papacy financial independence and a settlement over the lands of Matilda. Oh yes, the lands of Matilda are still in dispute, 85 years after the death of the great countess. He offers the pope some of the most lucrative church benefices in the realm to be paid to him directly in exchange for a formal recognition of the imperial ownership of the lands of Matilda. That is at least financially a great deal since the Lands of Matilda have been under imperial administration for most of the last fifty years and yield close to nothing to the papacy.

Money talks and Celestine III agrees to talk. Henry, who had already travelled south en route to see his son at Folignano, turns west and moves towards Rome. In Montefiascone, 100km north of Rome did Henry VI. receive the cardinals Celestine III had sent to negotiate.

There he revealed an even larger and more comprehensive proposal, a proposal that would address more of existing conflicts between the papacy and the empire not just the Lands of Matilda.

We do not know what exactly Henry VI. proposed, but it was likely that on top of an enhanced financial compensation scheme for the Lands of Matilda, he would accept the pope as his liege lord for Sicily and would let the pope baptise little Frederick and consecrate him as king of Sicily.

That offer was rejected but not in such a way as to end negotiations.

Henry moves now closer to Rome to facilitate negotiations. He modified his offer sacrificing positions that so far no emperor had offered.

Again, Celestine III and his cardinals reject the offer.

In December Henry VI. makes his last and final offer. We do not know exactly what it was,  but Hartmut Jericke believes that Henry VI. offered to become a papal vassal not just for Sicily but for the empire too. That would be an absolute bombshell. The last time a papal envoy suggested the emperor was a papal vassal, he was almost run through with a sword by Otto von Wittelsbach. But here his son is offering the unimaginable, all that to stabilise his rule in Sicily.

Pope Celestine should be ecstatic. Imperial vassalage was the great objective of Gregory VII and Alexander III but neither of these greats popes achieved it. And now here it is offered on a silver platter. But he rejects this last and final offer. He rejected it because Sicily was more important, more important than anything Henry can offer, including himself and his empire.

Are they both mad or is Souther Italy really that important? Hard to believe from today’s perspective, but Short answer, yes it was.

 The rise of the papacy from plaything of Roman aristocrats and emperors to its formidable position under Gregory VII and Alexander III went hand in hand with the rise of the Normans in Sicily. The Normans were the counterweight the papacy needed to resist the emperor and they used the emperor as a counterweight against the Normans. Without the military counterweight in the south, the papacy was doomed to fall back into dependency on the emperors. Sicily was rich, rich enough to fund mercenary armies for years, something no emperor had been able to do before. And Sicily had a fleet, something no emperor commanded before.

And that is why Hohenstaufen control of the kingdom of Sicily was unacceptable. There is literally nothing Henry VI. can offer to make them accept it. Not money, not Jerusalem, not vassalage of the emperor, nothing whatsoever could cut a deal.

This is not the end of the Middle Ages, but a key pillar of it is falling in these December days outside Rome. The pope and emperor, the two swords of Christendom are no longer joined in the pursuit of a common objective. Military and political considerations take precedence over the spread of Christianity. Less than 10 years later crusaders will plunder Constantinople, the capital of a Cristian empire, others will be chasing heretics in southern France in the service of Phillippe Auguste’s aim to consolidate royal power in France.

The encirclement of Rome and the Ppatrimonium Petri pits Papacy and empire into a fight to the death for the next 60 years, at the end of which the Hohenstaufen will be gone and the popes will be locked in the golden cage that is the Palais de Papes in Avignon, courtesy of the heirs of king Philippe Auguste.

This epic struggle will feature two of the greatest popes and emperors in our story, Innocent III and Frederick II. It is going to be great and I hope you will join us. I should also revert to the normal Thursday morning schedule with the next episode and audio should also return to normal.

Before I go, let me thank all of you who are supporting the show, in particular the Patrons who have kindly signed up on patron.com/historyofthegermans. It is thanks to you this show does not have to do advertising. I was absolutely shocked to hear the host of another show I admire and which is much more successful than this one pretending he supports some energy supplement.. If Patreon isn’t for you, another way to help the show is sharing the podcast directly or boosting its recognition on social media. If you share, comment or retweet a post from the History of the Germans it is more likely to be seen by others, hence bringing in more listeners. My most active places are Twitter @germanshistory and my Facebook page History of the Germans Podcast. As always, all the links are in the show notes.   

The Death of Emperor Frederick I Barbarossa

This week, after 15 episodes we will finally leave the emperor Barbarossa behind, though it is almost impossible to ever get away from him. No other medieval ruler is still so present in the national psyche, not as the man he was but as the myth he was turned into. So today we say goodbye to the man and next time we will take a look at the myth. 

Transcript

Hello and welcome to the History of the Germans: Episode 65 – The Third Crusade 

This week, after 15 episodes we will finally leave the emperor Barbarossa behind, though it is almost impossible to ever get away from him. No other medieval ruler is still so present in the national psyche, not as the man he was but as the myth he was turned into. So today we say goodbye to the man and next time we will take a look at the myth. 

Quick apology, I was supposed to put up a page for the last episode with transcripts, maps and images. This has unfortunately not yet happened. The same goes for many other things I wanted to do but have not. This page as well as the one accompanying this episode should be up shortly after it is released, as usual under histioryofthegermans/65-2.  

But before we start as always, a reminder. The History of the Germans Podcast is advertising free thanks to the generous support from patrons. And you can become a patron too and enjoy exclusive bonus episodes and other privileges from the price of a latte per month. All you have to do is sign up at patreon.com/historyofthegermans or on my website historyofthegermans.com. You find all the links in the show notes. Thanks a lot, to James and the extraordinarily generous Michael who have already signed up. 

As we heard last week Barbarossa is going on crusade, not just as another ruler, but as the emperor to fulfil the last and final act of his career, free Jerusalem from the yoke of Saladin and possibly the last and final act that brings about 1000 years of bliss by putting down his crown in the Church of the Holy sepulchre, fulfilling an ancient prophecy. 

This all sounds a bit bonkers and probably is. But despite its spiritual objectives, Barbarossa went about organising this crusade with his usual rationality and thoroughness.  

It was not his first rodeo. Barbarossa had been on crusade before, 30 years earlier in the ill-fated crusade of his uncle, king Konrad III. And he remembered the lessons learned. 

The first and most crucial one was that participation of unarmed and poor pilgrims had to be avoided at all costs. These men and women had slowed down the progress through the Balkans in 1147, had consumed much of the scarce water and food and were responsible for the majority of the altercations with the local populace. And, most crucially, they were totally useless on the battlefield. He did get support in his attempt to hold back the pilgrims from the pope himself who ordered that only well-equipped and well-funded soldiers should get the absolution that come with a crusade.   

The second crucial point was discipline. Konrad found himself in all sorts of difficulties with local potentates because order in the army was difficult to enforce. Barbarossa was not willing to allow any distractions of that kind. He instated draconian punishments for stealing and plundering ranging from cutting off hands to execution. And he was not shy in following through. He even executed noblemen who had not stuck by the rules. 

In terms of route, there are now two well established ways to get to the Holy Land. One is via Italy. Crusaders would gather at one of the great maritime republics, Genoa, Pisa or Venice and board huge galleys that could take them and their horses and armour across to the crusader harbours in Acre, Tyre or Tripoli. These journeys were perilous and very, very expensive but much quicker. They could also rely on a fully operational supply chain that offered armour, weapons and horses from their warehouses in Italy, the harbours along the route and in the Holy Land itself. The great republics were able to provide financing, either as credit or by money transfer from back home.  

The cost were initially very high because the galleys returned mostly empty. The few Crusaders who survived long enough to book a return passage would leave their  horses behind and bring souvenirs along. One popular souvenir was earth from Mount Golgatha which is assumed to be where the final judgement would start and hence those buried there would be the first to be sent to paradise. The Camposanto in Pisa was covered with earth of Golgatha brought back on crusader galleys because, in the usual one-upmanship of Italian communes, the Pisans wanted to be the first through the gate. 

This route was however not the one Barbarossa chose. He decided to take the longer and even more dangerous land-route through Hungary, Byzantium and Turkish Anatolia. Why he did that is not recorded. It may be for economic reasons, by now Germany had already fallen behind France and England in terms of wealth. It could be because he wanted to avoid getting into a competition with Richard Lionheart and Phillippe Auguste of France over scarce shipping capacity. Or he may have taken advice from his cousin Henry the Lion who had been to Jerusalem in 1172 and had nearly drowned twice on the way down so that he chose the land route on the way back. 

Barbarossa set the date of departure for May 11, 1189. He left his realm in reasonable order. His son, King Henry VI was 24 which made him an old hand as a medieval ruler. He had run several military campaigns and been involved in all his father’s major decisions over the last decade. As for Henry the Lion, despite the formal reconciliation between him and his adversaries in Saxony, staying in Germany was not an option. Henry was given the choice of joining the crusade or going into exile in England for the duration. He chose England. 

The army that left Regensburg in the early summer of 1189 was one of the largest and best equipped Barbarossa had ever commanded. About 3,000 knights and 12,000 well-armed foot soldiers. His son Frederick VI, duke of Swabia was the second in command. As per normal, a gaggle of bishops came along, though no archbishop. Amongst temporal lords the duke of Bohemia, Duke Berthold of Andechs, the margrave of Baden and another roughly 30 counts and 25 noble knights had joined.  

The other group that will play an important role on the crusade and even more so in later Hohenstaufen history were the Ministeriales. Just to recap, a Ministeriale is a serf-knight. He is not a free man but bound to his master by a servile relationship, unable to own land outright and to shift allegiance. Ministeriales receive the same military training as knights and are given fiefs to sustain them.  Ministeriales have been around for over a 100 years by now and rules have softened. Many Ministeriales are able to pass their position onto their sons. These sons often marry into the aristocracy or daughters of other Ministeriales creating over time dynastic complexes that rival free knights and sometimes counts. And they rise to prominence at court. Two of those, Heinrich von Kalden and Markward von Annweiler serve in imperial court roles and are close advisers. They will later be significant supporters of his son Henry VI.  

The first leg of the journey involved crossing Hungary. This went very smoothly. King Bela of Hungary had offered to support the crusaders with food, drink and transport. The emperor, his entourage and the baggage train travelled by boat along the Danube whilst the army followed along on foot.  

At Belgrade the crusaders entered Byzantine territory. From here the journey had to continue on foot. Though the Danube flows down to the Black Sea, shipping ends beyond Belgrade because of the Iron Gates, a section of fast flowing canyons that weren’t navigable for medieval vessels.  

King Bela took his leave and his boats home. Provisions were loaded onto carts and the host followed the smaller great Morava river. The Byzantine governor of the province greeted the emperor and his magnates with all due honours. Barbarossa had agreed free passage with the Byzantine empire a year earlier and John Dukes, one of the leading figures at court in Constantinople had sworn to provide supplies, guides and safety. When he got to the border Barbarossa had expected to find a letter from the Emperor Issac II Angelos welcoming him to his lands, similar to the letter Konrad III had received at that point in 1147. But there was no letter. There was also no escort and were no guides. The Basileus he was told was in campaign in Asia Minor and hence not yet aware of his coming which explains the lack of letter of welcome. 

What had happened? Before we go into the events of 1189, we have to go back to 1180. The emperor Manuel, the one who had featured so regularly in previous episodes had died aged 61 after 37 years on the throne. His reign was already one of near constant crisis as Byzantium had to fight against Hungarians and Serbs on the Balkans, had fallen out with the maritime republics, in particular Venice and tried to wrestle Anatolia back from the Turks and the Crusaders. The great miracle of his reign was that it held together for so long. It was only in 1176 that he suffered a serious defeat at Myriokephalon against the Turks under Kilij Arslan II.  

Upon his death his wife, Maria of Antioch reigned as regent for her 12-year-old son Alexios II Komnenos.  Maria was not only renowned for her beauty, she was also the daughter of a crusader and supported the Italian merchants in Constantinople. Her opposition was led by her stepdaughter, also Maria and Manuel’s cousin Andronicus Komnenos, who preferred a harsher treatment of the Latins, even though she herself was married to a Latin crusader. The conflict exploded onto the streets and resulted in a massacre of the Pisan and Genoese merchants. The Venetians had already been expelled by Manuel. Maria of Antioch was toppled. The rebels made Alexios II sign his mother’s death warrant before the boy himself was secretly murdered.  

Maria of Antioch

Andronicus’ tried to bring order to the fraying empire, but his regime was considered very harsh. In particular the aristocrats he tried to bring in line opposed him.  His regime grew violent and as chaos set in, King William II of Sicily invaded Greece. William II took Durazza, todays Durres in Albania and sacked Thessaloniki. When he mustered to march his troops towards Constantinople, the population revolted and placed Isaac II, Angelos on the throne. Andronicus was handed to the mob who tortured him for three days before he was hung by his feet in the Hippodrome.    

Emperor Andronikos

Isaac’s regime was initially more stable than Andronicus. He raised an army and sent William II of Sicily packing in 1186. He pacified the borders through marriage alliances. He himself married the daughter of the King of Hungary one of Byzantine’s greatest foes and his niece was given to the leader of the Serbs who had wriggled out of imperial overlordship and expanded. 

Isaac II Angelos

But by 1189 when Barbarossa demanded free passage, things had turned for the worse. The Bulgarians had rebelled against higher taxes and established what is called the Second Bulgarian empire. The general he had sent to put down the revolt had turned his weapons against his master and had marched against Constantinople. The Serbs had also established a pretty much autonomous state. For all intents and purposes, the hold of the Byzantine Empire on the Balkans was fragile.  

Before he had set off, Barbarossa had sent envoys to Isaac II Angelos to confirm the right to free passage and access to supplies through regular markets. He assured him of his peaceful intentions and sole desire to reach Jerusalem. 

However, Isaac II did not get this warm and cosy feeling. Barbarossa was a crusader given previous experiences, a threat. He was also in a close marriage alliance with William of Sicily who had just tried to take Constantinople. The empire was allied with Pisa and Genoa whose citizens had only recently have their limbs torn apart by the mob in his capital. He might even have heard about these age-old diplomatic links to the Seldjuc Turks to his south.  

To say the least, Isaac did not like the idea of a massive Latin army going through his territory. He knew that he did not have the resources to stop Barbarossa and that his other ally, the King of Hungary, would not be willing to prevent a crusade. So, he went out for the full Monty.  

He made an alliance with Saladin, yes, Saladin, the man who had taken Jerusalem from the Christians. Isaac allowed public prayers to be said for the Abasid Caliph in the mosque of Constantinople.  

But where he went completely overboard was when Isaac imprisoned Barbarossa’s envoys, the bishop of Munster and the count of Nassau. The two envoys had their possessions taken and handed over to Saladin’s representatives who taunted the helpless Germans. 

Barbarossa up in Brabitschewo did not know what had happened to his emissaries, but the absence of letters from them made him suspicious. That suspicion grew as he received false intelligence from the governors’ aides.  

After a week of waiting for a more helpful response, the army set off down towards Sofia. What awaited them was the so-called forest of the Bulgars, which is to confuse everyone actually in Serbia. The journey was perilous and the army was constantly attacked by bandits. They finally arrived in Nis, formerly a centre of Byzantine power, but now half destroyed after it had been taken by the Serbs. The Serbs had become a semi-independent polity under their leader Stephan Nemanja. 

The Serbs gave a Barbarossa a splendid reception. They gave the crusaders wine, flour, sheep and cattle as well six extremely useful seals to take along from here. Beyond hard to maintain aquatic animals, they also offered him an alliance that would encompass the recently independent empire of the Bulgars. All they asked was that the emperor would enfeoff them with the lands they already held.  

Tempting as that may have been, Barbarossa refused. Awarding their land to the rebels would have meant war with Constantinople. His objective was however Jerusalem, and he did not want to make the crusade dependent upon being able to overturn the regime of Isaac. 

The other people present in Nis was a delegation from Isaac who saw the emperor drinking and joking with the Serb rulers and – though Barbarossa assured them he would not grant them what they wanted – felt uneasy. They believed that some sort of under the table arrangement had been made to the detriment to Isaac, who quite frankly hadn’t expected anything less.  

The level of mutual suspicion deepened when the Byzantines gathered troops on the passes leading to Sofia whilst the Germans were now given Serbian escorts to protect against the bandits. Sometimes they got through and sometimes the bandits got caught. Bishop Diepold of Passau captured 24 attackers and had them dragged into the camp at the tails of their horses. They admitted to be in the pay of the Byzantine emperor and were hanged by their feet “like wolves” as the chroniclers said. 

When they finally got to Sofia the great reception by senior Byzantine nobles and the promised supplies weren’t there. The city was almost empty, its citizens had fled. There was no food. 

At that point it was clear that emperor Isaac wanted them dead. Reports came that the bodies of crusaders who had died and had been buried in the forest of the Bulgars had been dug up and hung from the trees along the road.  

It nearly came to a battle with regular Byzantine troops a pass called Trajan’s gate. 500 Byzantines had fortified the position and awaited the army. However, as they saw the size of the crusader throng, they fled, leaving the road open to Philippopolis, modern day Plovdiv in Bulgaria. Again, like in Sofia the city is empty of inhabitants but there is some food. 

Theatre in Plovdiv

Envoys from Isaac II arrive with a letter from the emperor. I am sure as usual written in gold on purple paper the letter contains a long list of complaints against Barbarossa who he accuses of wanting to conquer Constantinople and make his son Frederick emperor. His dealings with the Serbs are suspicious. Bottom line is that he would allow the “king of the Germans” to cross at the Hellespont only if he receives hostages of his choosing.  

It is here at the latest that Barbarossa hears about the treatment of his ambassadors at the court of Isaac II. This humiliation of the men travelling under the imperial banner was an insult, not just to Barbarossa and the empire but to the crusade in general and thereby to the whole of Latin Christendom.  

In spite of this double insult, Barbarossa retains his cool. He declares that he would not negotiate until his ambassadors are returned to him safe and sound, their losses compensated and the behaviour explained. Without a valid peace, this is now war. 

The ban on plundering and murdering of the local population is lifted. The army will spend the next 11 weeks in Philippopolis devastating Byzantine lands. This is almost as long as it had taken them to get to where they are. By the end they will control most territory north of Constantinople. 

But that wasn’t why they came. They really wanted to go to Jerusalem. To get there you had to cross the Hellespont. And that meant you needed ships. Not only that, you also needed to be sure the army would not be attacked when it was most vulnerable during the crossing. Given how deteriorated the relationship between Isaac and Barbarossa was, there was no way the Germans would go across without some serious assurances, say some very senior hostages.  

The French knights under Lous VII had the same problem in 1147 and they had come to the same conclusion. The only way to force the Vasilev was by threatening to take Constantinople. And that is exactly what Barbarossa did, thereby proving all of Isaac’s suspicions.  

The war of words escalated once Isaac had sent the bishop of Munster and the count of Nassau who he had held in captivity back. Finally, the court hears from their own mouths how they have been treated. The whole army roars in anger when they hear the imperial representatives were kept in confinement with meagre rations and all their possessions taken from them. The diplomatic exchanges are now bordering on rudeness. Barbarossa calls the Basileos a mere King of the Greeks and points out sarcastically that he would not trust any oath he swears. Isaac responds with equally rude letters.  The patriarch in Constantinople offers absolution to any Greek who kills a crusader. Accusations and counteraccusations run around their respective cultural zones. The western world hears theories that Isaac II has formed a permanent alliance with Saladin to expel the crusaders for good, has allowed Friday prayers in his capital and will ultimately convert to Islam. Saladin, they say, have had sent the Byzantines 25 tons of poisoned fruit and 50 tons of poisoned flour to kill crusaders. All this fuels the notion of Byzantium as a duplicitous people in hock with the Muslims and out to destroy Outre-mer. 

Plans are now afoot to take the city of Constantinople itself. Barbarossa writes to his son to hire a fleet of warships from Pisa and Genoa needed to take the great city on the Bosporus. His army is now regularly engaged in fighting with Byzantine troop contingents and one encounter could almost be described as a battle. Barbarosa moves his main forces to Adrianople, closer to the Bosporus.  The zsar of the Bulgars offers him thousands of archers for a siege of Constantinople. 

It is not farfetched to believe that if the Pisan and Genoese fleets had made it to Constantinople, the city would have been taken, not by the Venetians and French in 1204 but by the Pisans, Genoese and Germans in 1189. Can you imagine the Horses of St. Marks standing next to the leaning tower of Pisa or even weirder, on the façade of Speyer cathedral?  

But it did not happen, because Isaac II finally caved. He wrote to Barbarossa in Adrianbople, now calling him the Emperor of Ancient Rome, to say that he would provide ships to cross the Hellespont and offered him a list of hostages. Barbarossa agrees, but when Isaac makes the agreement public, the mob rejects it and so it is not signed. Barbarossa’s troops now move even closer to the city, cutting it off from vital food supplies.  

Another envoy from Isaac arrives, who now senses that the end is nigh if he does not give in. he promises everything, ships to be put under Barbarossa’s command, hostages, a market to buy provisions at fair prices, the Byzantine army moved four days march away from the point of embarkation, restitution of the envoys possessions etc., etc. pp. 500 citizens of Constantionople are made to swear by the agreement before Markward of Annweiler.  

On March 1st, 1190 does the army finally march towards the Hellespont, having lost almost half a year in ultimately unnecessary fighting with Isaac II. Barbarossa’s timing is now way off. In his initial plan he would by now be in Jerusalem campaigning against the infidels. Instead, by April do they reach Philadelphia, the last bit of fully Byzantine controlled territory in Anatolia. From here it is a march through 400km of territory devastated and depopulated by perennial war between Turks and Byzantium.   

The next waypoint is Iconium, modern Konya, the capital of sultan Kilij Arslan II. Barbarossa had made an agreement with him too that allowed for free passage. Kilij Arslan was in principle supportive of the crusaders as they kept Saladin in check who he feared may go after him next. 

So far so good, but what Barbarossa had not realised is that Kilij Arslan II had limited control over what happened on the territory he formally was in charge of. The local turkmen tribes did pretty much what they liked and his sons of which he had many, had wrestled power away from daddy creating their own little fiefdom. The nice piece of parchment from Kilij Arslan II guaranteeing protection from attack was worth precisely nothing. 

The other problem was that they had lost far too much time. The last thing an army of Northern European wants to do is march through the boiling summer heat of Anatolia. And that is exactly what happened. Not only that, because they were almost constantly under attack, they wore their armour all the time. Food was now extremely scarce and knights began eating their horses. 

As they marched, they went from one place Christians had been defeated to the next. Doryleum, where Konrad III’s endeavour had perished, Myriokephalon where Manuel was defeated and so on. The roads were treacherous, and horses and provisions fell into crags and canyons. Whenever they encountered a settlement, the crusaders took revenge by murdering the women and children of their tormentors.  

Finally, the Seldjuc Turks showed their true colours. Near Konya they set themselves up for battle. The crusaders worn down by their ordeal, dirty, their armour rusty and short of food, water and horses looked like easy prey.  

On the eve of battle Count Ludwig of Helfenstain bolstered the morale of the crusaders when he declare he had seen  Saint George in his shimmering coat riding his white horse in the sky before the army in his dreams.  

The German army was lined up in a triangular formation. The top was held by the bishops of Wurzburg and Munster, the left flank by Frederick of Swabia and the right flank by the emperor himself. In the centre were the footsoldiers, defending the unarmed civilians and the baggage train. 

The Turks saw the imperial standard and went straight for it. Frederick sent some of his knights to support his father. Since the terrain was for once favourable to the Latins, the knights could fight in their tight formation and launch their thunderous charges. The Turks in light armour had nothing to put against it. And so, against all odds, the crusaders defeated the Turks. 

A few days later they reached the city of Konya. There they camped in the gardens of the sultan outside the walls where there was water and grazing in abundance.  The Turkish army lay outside the city on a crescent shape around the crusader camp. The next morning the army was divided in two parts. One was to fight the Turkish cavalry outside the walls whilst the other was to break into the city.  

That sounds like utter madness and probably was. Besieging a city whilst being attacked in the rear is a challenge at the best of times, but without siege engines and after 400 km march through heat and constant attacks is pretty much hopeless. 

But then luck came to the rescue. Whilst all this went on, both sides were still negotiating. And at some point the old Sultan came out on of the city gates, seemingly willing to hand back a prisoner they had made before. Frederick of Swabia did not quite realise what was going on, aparty from the gate being opened and only a small contingent coming out. He took his half of the army and ran up against the sultan who had turned tail, leading the crusaders into the city. 

The usual sacking and pillaging followed. The other half of the army never had to engage the Turks who had encircled them. The next day the crusaders took away 100,000 mark of silver, provisions to last them for weeks and 6000 horses and mules to replace those they had lost en route. The sultan signed a peace deal and provided noble hostages that guaranteed free passage for the remaining leg of the journey in their lands. 

This was the last battle Barbarossa would ever fight.  

They left Konya a day later as the smell of decaying flesh made staying impossible. They rested for a week in a camp a few miles away, repairing their equipment and enjoying the abundance of food and drink. 

Four days later they reached the border with Armenia at Laranda. The ruler of Armenia, Leon II had been in correspondence with Barbarossa for a long time. Leon II would like to be elevated to King of Armenia, an honour only an emperor can bestow. Because Leon II was in constant conflict with Byzantium, Barbarossa was his man.    

All was set up for such a coronation. The bishop of Wuerzburg had brought the ordo for a coronation under the Latin rites and Leon II had offered to become an imperial vassal. Veen more surprising, this agreement was indeed serious, unlike the promises of the Byzantines and Turks. The army was now guided by local scouts and there were no more attacks.  

The route led along terraces overlooking the river Saleph. It was extremely hot. As there was no longer any concerns about attacks, the strict marching order dissolved. Everyone just shlepped along in broadly the same direction desperately looking for shade of relief from the heat. 

On June 10th the Armenian guide showed Barbarossa and his entourage a path that led down to the river.  The path was steep, and they had to go on foot. They are now just 8km from the capital of the ruler of Armenia. What exactly happened on the shore of this river we will never know.  

My favourite version is that Barbarossa crossed the river, and now in the shade, sat down for lunch. He would be down in the presence of his new vassal by evening and so decided to have a bath, wash off the dust of the long journey. He was 67 years old, but he had spent his entire life on horseback. He was definitely fitter than I ever was. He was a good swimmer and had enjoyed the occasional swim in the Adriatic with his best friend Otto von Wittelsbach.  

The water of the Saleph is icy cold and it may be that the combination of heat and cold had brought on a sudden heart attack. Or he may have slipped and was dragged along in the water and drowned. When his men realised what had happened, they jumped after him but could only drag him out dead. 

The army is in shock. The emperor who was to go to Jerusalem and bring about 1000 years where Satan would be in chains was dead. The whole endeavour, all the pain and suffering was for nought. More than that 

The fact that the emperor had not had a good death, had not been able to  confess before he died and had not been given the last rites was an indication that the whole enterprise displeased God. 

Almost immediately the great nobles set off for home.  

Barbarossa’s body was brought to Seleucia and embalmed. The crusaders mourned him for four days.  

His intestines were removed and buried in the cathedral of Tarsus, home of the Apostle Paul. Duke Frederick took over as leader of what was left of the crusade. They took the body with them to Antioch. There the flesh was cooked off the bones and buried in the cathedral of St Peter.  

The actual bones remained with the crusaders who journeyed to Tyre, seemingly with the idea of burying them in Jerusalem. As the third crusade never took Jerusalem, the bones never got there. Where they ended up, nobody knows. Many believe he was finally buried in the cathedral of Tyre or maybe Akkon.  

Wild stories began circulating as early as the 13th century that he had not died at all. The mythical prester John who dwelled in the far east had given him a stone that made him invisible and he is still walking amongst us. By the 19th century the tale had turned towards the Kyffhauser mountain, 3,400km from Tyre. And there he still sleeps under that Wilhelmine monstrosity, only to rise when Germany needs him. 

The myth of Barbarossa is for next time. It will unfortunately not be next week. I have been on the trot for 22 episodes, and I need a break. So, the next episode will be on July 7th. Once we covered the myth I was thinking of doing a few episodes about Germany in the year 1200. It has been a while since we have taken a look at how people lived, their customs, laws and behaviours. A lot has changed since the year 1000. I hope you like the idea. 

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