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A50866 The history of the holy vvar began anno 1095, by the Christian princes of Europe against the Turks, for the recovery of the Holy Land, and continued to the year 1294. In two books. To which is added, a particular account of the present war, managed by the emperour, King of Poland, and several other princes against the Turks. By Tho. Mills, gent. Illustrated with copper-plates. Mills, Thomas, gent. 1685 (1685) Wing M2073; ESTC R221362 83,846 225

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the Kingdom Philip Earl of Flanders and the chief strength of the Kingdom being then absent in Celosyria wasting the Country about Emissa and Cesarea Baldwin was forced to keep himself close in the City not daring to venture on so strong an Enemy which fear of Baldwins having possessed Saladine with a belief that he needed not so great an Army to lie before the City he sent out several Parties to forrage and spoil the Country which the King observing resolved to take opportunity by the fore-lock and set on him when he least expected it To which end he sallied out with great privacy and silence and with about four hundred Horse a few Footmen suddenly assaulted his secure Enemies with such invincible Courage and Resolution that notwithstanding their number being Twenty six thousand Horse and Foot they were utterly routed and the Christians returned with great Triumph and Joy to Jerusalem But Saladine who was rather inraged than daunted by this overthrow resolved not to be long before he recovered his credit and therefore about two months after he fell with his Mammalukes like a mighty and raging Tempest upon the Christians as they were dividing the spoil of a Party of Turks whom they had vanquished a little before putting most of them to the Sword and the rest to flight and taking Otto Grand Master of the Templars and Hugh Son-in-law to the Count of Tripoli Prisoners the King himself hardly escaping So that both sides having sufficiently smarted consented to refresh themselves with a short Peace under the shelter whereof their troubled States breathed quietly for the space of about two years which Truce was the more willingly embraced by Saladine because a Famine then raged in the Kingdom of Damascus where it had scarcely rained for five years together But this welcom Calm was somewhat troubled with an unexpected Storm raised by Domestick Discords in King Baldwins Court. For the Kings Mother and Uncle two persons of turbulent spirits accused the Count of Tripoli of Treason as if he had when he was Governour of the Kingdom affected the Crown for himself which accusation so stung the King in the head that the Count coming shortly after to Jerusalem was as he was on the way thither commanded to stay which he looked upon as a great disgrace But some of the Nobility fearing the mischiefs which might proceed from this unhappy difference brought them to be reconciled But though the matter was seemingly made up yet the King ever after looked upon the Earl with a jealous Eye And the Earl seeing himself suspected proved afterwards really treacherous and disloyal though he is supposed by most Historians to be innocent of what he was then charged withal The Kingdom of Damascus having now recovered its self from the Famine and Saladine obtained his ends by the Truce would observe it no longer wherefore having gotten together a good Army he marcht out of Egypt through Palestine destroying and spoiling the Country all along as he went to Damascus And having strengthened himself with the addition of what Forces he had in Syria he entred the Holy Land again But the King who had not above seven hundred Men to twenty thousand met him at a small Village called Frobolt and opposing Valour to his multitudes overthrew him in a great and bloody Battel wherein Saladine himself was forced by speedy flight to escape the danger and by long Marches get him again to Damascus Nor had he any better success when shortly after he besieged Berytus being forced by the valour and courage of Baldwin to raise his Siege and depart with disgrace Wherefore Saladine finding such tough resistance in the Holy Land hoped to gain a better purchase by imploying his Arms in Mesopotamia to which end passing the River Euphrates he won Charran and divers other Towns after which returning again into Syria he besieged Aleppo which was the strongest place the Christians had in the whole Country being so fortified both by Nature and Art that it would have been almost impossible for him to have taken it had he not by his Bribes made a far larger Breach in the Governours Loyalty than he was able to do in the Walls of the City But having by this means possessed himself of Aleppo he marched again into the Holy Land being now more formidable than ever he had been before and carrying an Army of Terrour in the very mention of his name so that the poor Christians unanimously fled into their fenced Cities As for King Baldwin the Leprosie had arrested and confined him within the compass of his own Court where his great spirit long strove with his infirmity being loth to part with his Crown and disrobe himself of his Royalty before they were pluckt away by death but was however forced at last to stoop and retire himself to a private life appointing Baldwin his Nephew a Child of five years old to be his Successor and Guy Earl of Joppa and Askelon who was the young Childs Father in-law to be Protector of the Realm in his minority But soon after finding Guy to be a silly soft man he revoked the latter Act and designed Raimund Earl of Tripoli to succeed him Guy who though he was not valiant yet was very sullen stormed extreamly at his disgrace and leaving the Court in discontent returned home and fortified his Cities of Joppa and Askelon which greatly perplexed the Kings thoughts not knowing whom to name for Protector fearing lest Guys cowardliness should lose the Kingdom to the Turks or Raimunds treachery get it for himself so that anguish of mind and weakness of body ended his days when he was about five and twenty years of age happy in dying before the death of his Kingdom CHAP. XVIII The short Reign and woful Death of Baldwin the Fifth Guy succeeds him Tripoli revolts The Christians overthrown Their King taken Prisoner And the City of Jerusalem won by the Turks IT hath ever been accounted one of the greatest happinesses that can befal a Family for the Heirs to be of Age before their Fathers death in regard Minors have not only been the Ruine of Families but the overthrow of Kingdoms too And it being one of Gods threatnings against a wicked and disobedient People to give Children to be their Princes and Babes to Rule over them he scourged the Kingdom of Jerusalem three several times with that Rod within the compass of forty years Baldwin the Third Fourth and Fifth being all under Age and the last but five years old being the Posthumus Son of William Marquets of Montferat by Sybil his Wife Sister to Baldwin the Fourth and Daughter to King Almerick who was after the death of the Marquess married to this Guy Now the Earl of Tripoli demanding to be Protector of this young King according to the designation of his Uncle before his death Sybil who was Mother to this Infant to defeat Raimunds hopes of obtaining the Protectorship first murthered all natural affections
casual and not the effect of Carelesness or Cowardize in the losing party But it was some help to the Christians that a certain concealed Christian within the City by Letters unsubscribed gave them constant and faithful Intelligence of all remarkable passages among the Turks within In the mean while the Plague and Famine raged in the Christian Camp and in the compass of one year had swept away above Fifty Princes and Prelates of note who together with all the rest of the common Souldiers in the opinion of those who wrote the History of that Siege went undoubtedly to Heaven Although it were before Pope Clement the sixth had commanded the Angels who durst not disobey him to convey every Soul into Paradice which should die in their Pilgrimage Among those who survived no Prince shewed more Valour and deserved greater commendation than Leopoldus Arch-Duke of Austria who fought so long in assaulting this City that his Armour was all gore Blood save only that part of it which was covered with his Belt For which reason renouncing the six Golden Larks the Ancient Arms of his Family he had assigned him by the Emperour as a Testimony of his valour a Fess Argentin a Field Gules And King Richard being now at last arrived in the Camp before Ptolemais having taken a Dromand or Saracen Ship which he mett in his way thither wherein were Fifteen Hundred Soldiers and two hundred and fifty Scorpions designed for the poysoning of Christians the Siege was carried on by him and his English Souldiers more fiercely than ever it had been before So that the Turks despairing of relief and their provisions wholly spent offered to yield up the City which the Christians would not accept of unless Saladine would promise to deliver all the Christian Prisoners which were then in his custody and restore them the Cross again which he promising to do the City was delivered and the Turkish Soldiers guarded safely out of it The Houses which were yet left standing in the City together with the Spoil and Prisoners were by the Kings of England and France divided among themselves whereupon divers great Persons who had been sharers in the pains but were hereby excluded from the gains departed in discontent and King Richards Soldiers rudely pulled down the Arch-Duke of Austria's Ensigns which he ha●● advanced in a principal Tower in tha● City and as some write threw them in to the Jakes whereat the Duke wa● highly displeased but yet wisely dissen●bled his anger and seemed to forget th●● Injury till he might remember it to hisadvantage which he afterwards did made King Richard pay severely for this affron● When the City was taken it grieve● the Christians that they could not fin● out their Faithful Intelligencer wh● had all along by his Letters acquainted them with the State of the City b● more that the Cross did no where appear being either carelesly lost or enviou●● concealed by the Turks They demanded 〈◊〉 of Saladine with the delivery of the Christian Prisoners which he refused not but demanded a longer time for the performance in regard the Cross could not be found But King Richard supposing that it was only a pretence to gain time resolved to have all things performed according to their agreement which being not done he in the heat of his Passio● commanded Seven Thousand Turkish Prisoners to be immediately cut to pieces for which rash and cruel act he suffere● much in his reputation and was looke● upon as the Murtherer of the like number of Christians whom Saladine in revenge put to the Sword whereas on the contrary the moderation of the French King was very much commended for sparing his Prisoners and reserving them to ransom so many Christians But that which most obscured the Glory of this Victory was the Christians being tent asunder with Faction and divided among themselves King Philip the Dukes of Burgundy and Austria most of the Dutch and all the Genoans and Templars fiding with King Conrade and King Richard Henry Count of Champaigne with the Hospitallers the Venetians and Pisans taking part with Guy Conrades side was very much weakned by the sudden departure of the French King who eighteen days after the taking of Ptolemais returned home pretending want of necessaries indisposition of body through the distemper of the Climate but the true cause was his not induring to hear King Richards Fame so much transcend his own together with a desire to seize on the Dominions of the Earl of Flanders who was then lately dead His own Souldiers mightily disswaded him from returning and besought him not to stop in so glorious a work wherein he had prospered so well already telling him that Saladine being already on his Knees he might peradventure be brought on his Face if this Victory were well pursued And since one of his pretences was want of necessaries King Richard generously offered him one half of his Provisions but all this would not prevail with him to stay and therefore with great importunity he obtained leave to depart having first taken an Oath not to molest the King of Englands Dominions during his stay in the Holy Land which Oath was forgot as soon as he got home And at his departure he left his instructions together with his Army to the Duke of Burgundy ordering him to move as slowly as possible in advancing that work wherein the King of England would have all the Honour which rendred this great undertaking less advantagious to the Christians in Syria than otherwise it might have been THE HOLY VVAR BOOK II. CHAP. I. Conrade slain Guy exchanges his Kingdom for the Isle of Cyprus Henry of Champaign chosen King King Richard obtains many Victories but at last makes a dishonourable Peace and in his return home is taken Prisoner in Austria SOon after the French Kings departure Conrade King of Jerusalem was cruelly murthered in the Market-place of Tyre the cause of whose Death is variously reported some falsely charging our King Richard with having procured it and others say he was killed by Humphred Prince of Thoron for marrying Isabella who had been before espoused to him But most affirm that he was stabbed by two Assassines by command of their Master the Old man of the Mountains whose only Quarrel with him was his being a Christian and that the two Murtherers being immediately taken and put to a cruel Death Gloried in the Meritoriousness of their suffering He had Reigned about five years and left on t Daughter Maria Jole on whom the Templers bestowed Princely Education But tho' Conrade was Dead his Faction still survived and those of his party affronted King Guy and strove to have him deposed telling him that the Crown was only tyed on his Head with a Womans Fillet which being now broken by the Death of Queen Sibyl who dyed together with all her Children of the Plague at the Siege of Ptolomais he had no longer any Right to the Kingdom especially being a worthless and
certainly conquered it had they not fallen out among themselves about parting of it before it was theirs to dispose of Conrade and King Lewis designed it for Theodorick Earl of Flanders who was lately arrived in those parts whilst other Princes who had been there a long time and born the brunt of the War could not endure to see a raw Upstart to be preferred before them For which reason together with their being corrupted with Turkish money although it proved but Brass gilt may all Traitors be so paid they persuaded the King of France to remove his Camp to a stronger part of the Wall whereby they rendred the design of taking the Town fruitless and forced them to raise the Siege and return home leaving the City of Damascus and even Honour both behind them Many thousand Christians perished in that adventure whose Souls are said by all the Writers of that Age to be carried up to Heaven upon the Wings of that Holy Cause they died for And the King of France in his return home was taken Prisoner by the Graecian Fleet but rescued again by Gregory who was Admiral to Roger King of Sicilia The King and Emperour being returned Noradine the Turk prevailed in Palestine which was very much occasioned by the unhappy difference which arose between Queen Millesent and her Son Baldwin who was egged on by some of the Nobles that were offended with the Queen for having advanced a certain Nobleman whose name was Manasses to be Constable of the Kingdom who being unable to manage his own happiness grew so insolent that spurning his equals and trampling on his Inferiours he drew upon himself the general hatred and envy of all men quarrelled with his Mother imprisoned first and then banished her Favourite and at last to conclude the difference the Kingdom was divided between them the City of Jerusalem and all the In-land part was allotted to her and what bordered upon the Se● to him But the widest Throne being too narrow for two to sit on together he was not long content with this division but marched with a great deal of fury to besiege his Mother in Jerusalem and dispossess her of all When he first approach the City the Patriarch went out to him and with abundance of freedom reproved him sharply for his rash and unnatural attempt and upbraided him for his ingratitude in going about to take all from so good a Mother who had not only proved a good Steward in his minority but had also consented to accept of one hal● of the Kingdom when the whole of right belonged to her But he was so inchanted with ambltion that no Arguments would prevail which when the Queen perceived she did by the advice of her friends consent to yield up all lest the Christian Cause should suffer by their differences Noradine being incouraged by those Civil Discords came up with a great Army and wasted all the Country of Antioch and Prince Reimund going forth to give him Battel had his Army beaten and himself slain And not long after Joceline Count of Edessa was taken Prisoner In the mean while King Baldwin is not idle but having made great preparations for the besieging of Askelon at last sate down before it and having made a large breach in the Wall the Templars to whom the King promised the spoil if they took it entred through the breach into the City and supposing they were able without any more help to master the Place set a Guard to prevent any more of their fellow Christians from entring in to be sharers with them in the Booty which covetousness of theirs cost them their lives for the Turks contemning the smalness of their number put them all to the Sword notwithstanding which the City was shortly after taken though with abundance of difficulty Divers other considerable Victories King Baldwin obtained over the Turks especially one near the River of Jordan where he vanquished Noradine and twice relieved Caesarea Philippi which the Turk had straitly besieged but death at la●● made a Conquest of him being poisoned by a Jewish Physician as it was believed in regard the remainder of the potion afterwards killed a Dog to whom it was given He was very much lamented by his Subjects and not without reason being so brave and worthy a Prince that even Noradine his mortal Enemy honourably refused to invade his Kingdom during his Funeral Solemnities protesting that in his Opinion the Christians had just cause of sorrow having lost such 〈◊〉 King whose equal for Justice and Valour the whole World could not produce He died without Issue when he had Reigned about one and twenty years CHAP. XVI Almerick Brother to Baldwin succeeds in the Kingdom of Jerusalem The Sultan of Iconium and the Master of the Assassines desire to be baptized Commotions in Aegypt The Turks called thither and set up for themselves The King of Jerusalem 's Aid implored to drive them out He afterwards invades Aegypt His Death ALmerick Brother to King Baldwin and Earl of Joppa and Askelon succeeded to the Kingdom of Jerusalem but was before he could be admitted to his Coronation enjoyned by the Popes Legate and the Patriarch of Jerusalem to put away Anes his Wife Daughter to Joceline Count of Edessa because she was his Cousen in the fourth degree with this reservation that the two Children Baldwin and Sybill which he had by her should be accounted legitimate and capable of their Fathers Possessions In this Kings time the Sultan of Jcenium freely imbraced the Christian Religion and was baptized more of his Courtiers designing to follow him therein had not his Ambassador then at Ro●● taken great offence at the vicious and debauched lives which he there observe● the Christians to lead which thing ma●● many of the Pagans step back when the had one foot in the Church abhorring to see Christians who believe so well and live so ill Not long after the great Master of the Assassines offered to receive the Christian Faith which good intention wa● spoiled by the base and treacherous killing his Ambassador which he sent t●● Jerusalem to treat with the King about it by one of the Templars 〈…〉 The King demanded the Murderer of the Master of the Templars that so Justice might pass upon him But the Master insolently denied to deliver him saying he had already injoyned him Penance and intended to send him to the Pope but would part with him to none else These Assassines were a certain precise Sect of Mahometans who had in them the very spirit and quintessence of that poisonous Superstition they were about forty thousand in number and were possessed of six Cities near Antaradus in Syria having over them a Chief Master whom they called the Old Man of the Mountains at whose command they would refuse no pain or peril but immediately address themselves to assassinate my Prince whom he had appointed out for death and always find hands to accomplish whatsoever he enjoyed There are now none
while ●ccessful and won the City of Belbis or ●erlusium Notwithstanding which Au●ors from that time date the ill Success ●f the Holy War and shew us a whole ●loud of Miseries which immediately fol●wed thereupon and no wonder for God ●ldom lets Perjury go long unpunished First Whilst Almerick was absent in Egypt Noradine won divers considerable ●laces about Antioch Secondly Meller Prince of Armenia ●ho was a Christian entred into a ●eague with Noradine and kept it in●iolable to the great disadvantage of the King of Jerusalem which act of Mellers must be condemned and yet the Justice of God ought to be admired in punish●ng the Christians thereby for their ●reach of Covenant with the Saracens ●n Egypt Thirdly The Saracens finding themselves faithlesly dealt with laid at on all sides began to learn War and grew good Souldiers on a sudden and although they formerly fought with Bows only yet no● they learned of the Christians to use a● offensive and defensive Weapons it bein● usual with rude Nations to better them● selves by fighting with a skilful Enem● And Fourthly Almericks hope of co●quering Egypt was wholly frustrated b●ing after some few Victories drive● out and the whole Kingdom conquere by Saladine Nephew to Syracon wh● beat out the Caliphs brains when he pr●tended to do him reverence and there● changed the Government of Egypt fro● the Saracen Caliph to a Turkifh King A● shortly after upon the death of Noradi● the Kingdom of the Turks in Syria an● the lesser Asia was likewise bestowe● upon him whereby he became the mo●potent Monarch in the World Whilst Jerusalem was left as a po● Weather-beaten Kingdom bleak an● open to the Storms of its Enemies o● every side lying as it were between th● Lions Teeth Damascus on the North● and Egypt on the South two pote● Turkish Kingdoms united under a valian● and successful Prince which made A●merick fend for Succours into Europ● there being now but few Voluntie● flocking to this service and Souldie● were forced to be pressed with import●nity before they would consent to under●ake the Voyage But it being just with God that those who had betrayed the ●aracens whom they undertook to suc●our should want succour themselves ●hen they stood most in need of it his Embassadours were forced to return ●ithout any other supplies than pity and ●ommiseration And Lastly The King himself wea●ied with so many successive miseries ●nded his life of a Bloody Flux when he ●ad reigned about Eleven years leaving ●esides his two Children by his first Wife one Daughter named Isabel by Mary his second Wife Daughter to John Proto-Sebastus a Grecian Prince who was afterward married to Humphred the third Prince of Thorone CHAP. XVII Baldwin the Fourth succeedeth The Viciousness of the Patriarch of Jerusalem His Embassy to Henry the Second King of England The Original and Power of the Mammalukes Saladine conquered by Baldwin yet afterwards conquers Mesopotamia Baldwins death Baldwin his Son the fourth of that name succeeded his Father having had the benefit of an excellent Education under William Arch-Bishop of Tyre a very Pious Learned Man skilled in all the Oriental Tongues besides the Dutch and French his Native Languages Heraclius who was now Patriarch of Jerusalem being preferred to that Dignity for his handsomness by Queen Mary second Wife to King Almerick and Mother to Baldwin was a man of a debauched and vicious life keeping company with a Vintners Wife whom he maintained in great state like an Empress so that she was generally saluted by the name of Patriarches His ill Example infected the inferiour Clergy whose corrupt manners was a sad presage of the approaching Ruine of that Kingdom This Man was sent by King Baldwin as his Embassadour to Henry the Second King of England to crave his personal assistance in the Holy War and as an inducement thereunto to deliver him the Royal Standard of that Kingdom the Keys of our Saviours Sepulchre the Tower of David and the City of Jerusalem Henry was chosen out before any other Prince because the world justly esteemed him valiant wise rich and fortunate and which was the main that so he might thereby expiate his Murther and gather up again the innocent Blood that he had spilt in the death of Thomas Becket And that he might the more easily be drawn to undertake the Voyage the Patriarch intitled him to the Kingdom of Jerusalem because Geoffrey ●●●ntagenet his Father was Son to Fulco the Fourth King of Jerusalem But he was too wise a Prince to be so easily wheedled However he pretended he would go and got together a Mass of Money towards the defraying the Charge of his Voyage making every one as well the Clergy as the Laity pay that year the Tenth of all their Revenues both movables and immovables and when he bad filled his Purse all men expected he should perform his promise but he changed the Voyage into Palestine for a Journey into France The Patriarch while he stayed in England consecrated the Temple Church near St. Dunstans in the West and the House adjoyning belonging then to Knights Templars but since employed to a better use viz. the entertaining those Gentlemen who study and practise the English Laws In the minority of King Baldwin who was but thirteen years old Milo de Planci a Nobleman was Protector of the Kingdom whose Pride and Insolence could not be endured by the great men and therefore they got him to be stabb'd at Ptolemais and chose Raimund Count of Tripoli to suceeed him And Saladine having now seriously resolved upon the Ruine of the Kingdom of Jerusalem endeavoured to furnish himself with such Souldiers as might be most fit for that service in order whereunto he bought a great number of Slaves of the Circassians a People by the Lake of Meotis near Taurica Chersonesus who were brought up to be extream hardy and inured to War by their continual skirmishing with the neighbouring Tartars Those Slaves he trained up in Military Discipline after the Turkish manner They had most of them been Christians and were baptized in their Infancy but being taken from their Parents whilst young they were untaught Christ and instructed in the Mahometan Superstition whereby they became the more implacable Enemies to Christianity for having been once its friends They received from Saladine the name of Mammalukes and were so couragious and expert in War that his and his Successors greatness was not to be so much attributed to their own Conduct as to those Mammalukes Valour till at last perceiving their own strength they wrested the Soveraignty from the Turkish Kings and advanced one of their own number to the Regal Dignity Saladine having thus furnished himself with a new sort of Souldiers resolved to try their Valour upon the Christian and therefore invaded the Holy Land slaying and burning all before him till he came to Askelon where King Baldwin then was before which he sate down and closely besieged it And Count Raimund Protector of
before all the Cities of the Earth to be the place of his own habitation dwelling as were in a most immediate manner in the Temple of Jerusalem which was afterward built by King Solomon and commanding all the Tribes of Israel to repair thither to do him homage and adoration And says of it himself That he loved the gates of Sion more than all the dwelling places of Jacob. Whereby it became a lively Type both of the Gospel Church and the state of the Redeemed in the everlasting injoyment of Heaven which is frequently in Sacred Writ called by the name of the New Jerusalem For which reason as well as its being the place of the Nativity and Death of our Saviour it hath acquired the Name of Holy But altho' Jerusalem and the Land of Judea was thus dignified by the Almighty yet the ungrateful Jews were perpetually multiplying Rebellions against him whereby he was provoked to scurge them with the Rod of the Gentels and give them up to the spoil and cruelty of their Enemies So that it was twice plundered by the Egyptians once in the Reign of Rehoboam and a second time upon the death of Josiah once by the Assyrians in the Reign of Manassch three times by Nebuchadnezzar King of Babylon first in the Reign of Jehoiakim secondly in the Reign of Jehoiachin and thirdly in the Reign of Zedekiah carrying all those three Kings and all the Inhabitants of the Land Captive into Babylon together with all the Treasure and Riches of the Kingdom and spoiling the City of Jerusalem and the Temple of the Lord so that it lay wast for 70 years At the end whereof according to the Prophecy of the Prophet Jeremiah they were freed from their Captivity by Cyrus King of Persia When returning home they rebuilt the City and the Temple and by degrees became as formidable to their Enemies as ever they had been before till by their increasing wickedness they pulled down upon themselves the Vengeance of Heaven to their utter and final ruin The People of Judea and the Inhabitants of Jerusalem having filled up the ●easure of their sins by putting to death ●he Lord of Life and murthering him who came to save them from everlasting ●isery were presently after swallowed up ●y an universal and irrecoverable ●uine and rooted out from being ●ny longer a Nation by the victorious Arms of the conquering Romans who ●ackt the City of Jerusalem destroyed ●he Temple and carried away the Inha●itants captive according to the unerring ●rediction of our blessed Saviour But a●out sixty years after this Destruction by ●itus Adrian the Emperour rebuilt the City ●hanging the situation of it somewhat more Westward and calling it by the name ●f Aelia And to shew his hatred to the ●weet and adorable name of Christ and ●espite against the Professors of Christi●nity he erected a Temple over our Sa●iours Sepulcher wherein he placed the ●mages of Jupiter and Venus And that ●e might inrage the Jews likewise he ●aused Swine to be engraven over the ●ates of the City which they accounting ●o be a great profanation of their Land ●rake out into open Rebellion but were ●asily overcome and subdued by the Em●erour who to prevent the like Attempt or the future caused them all to be transported into Spain and left the who●● Country waste and forlorn which part● with its Inhabitants and fruitfulness t●gether those delicious streams of Mi● and Honey wherewith it was wont 〈◊〉 flow being now wholly exhausted dri● up and the Soil become altogeth●● barren and unfruitful The wretch● Jews being thus transported into Spa● were from thence scattered into all pa●● of the World so that there is scarce a● Nation under Heaven where some of the● are not to be found at this day After this Pagan Worship flourishe● in Jury and the Professors of Christian● were inhumanely and barbarously u● by the Roman Emperours under the f● Ten Persecutions until at last God out compassion to their deplorable mise● raised up Constantine the Great a Br●tain born as most Historians affir● whose healing hand quickly stanch that Issue of Blod wherewith the Chur● of Christ had been so long afflicted a● blessed her Borders with Peace a● Tranquillity Whereupon the devout Helen w● was Mother to Constantine and as mu● fam'd among the Christians for her Pie● as the Ancient Helen was among the P●gans for her Beauty Notwithstanding ●he greatness of her Age being about Eighty years old travelled to Jerusalem ●nd having first purged Mount Calvary ●nd Bethlehem from Idolatry built in ●he places of Christs death and burial ●nd elsewhere in Palestine divers very ●ately and magnificent Churches so that Christianity flourished through all Pa●stine being well provided of able Bi●ops and Preachers and they indued with very liberal Maintenance But Constantine being succeeded by ●ulian who shamefully apostatized from ●he Christian Religion and turned again 〈◊〉 the Pagan Idolatry the Sun of the ●ospel was for a while eclipsed For in ●ope to prove Christs Prediction false ●e gave the Jews leave to rebuild their Temple who thereupon flockt together 〈◊〉 great numbers with Spades and Matocks of Silver to clear the Foundation ●nd were so desirous of accomplishing ●e work that the Women carried way the Rubbish in their Aprons and ontributed all their Jewels to advance ●e great design But a sudden and ama●ng Tempest which carried away their ●ools and Materials for Building and ●ith Balls of Fire scorched the for●ardest and most adventurous of ●he Builders made them desist and give over the Enterprize Yet the Christians afterwards in the place where the Temple stood built a stately Church for the Worship of Christ which remained a long time in the Christians hands and was the Ancient Seat of the Patriarchs of Jerusalem but is now in the possession of the Turks and the very entring into it prohibited to Christians upon pain of forfeiting their Lives or renouncing their Religion CHAP. II. The Holy Land conquered 1. By the Persians 2. By the Saracens And 3. By the Turks THE next remarkable Accident that happened in the Holy Land was under Phocas the Emperour who having murdered Mauritius and usurped the Imperial Dignity abandoned himself wholly to ease and pleasure whereby he betrayed the Empire to Forreig●● Foes and invited Chosrees the Persian to invade his Territories who with a grea● Army subdued Syria and Jerusalem and carried away many Thousand Christians many of whom he sold to their Ancient Enemies the Jews And to grace his Conquest the more he carried the Cross away with him But Heraclius who succeeded Phocas having gotten an Army together passed into Persia and gave him an absolute overthrow and in his return took Jerusalem in his way and restored the Cross which was then accounted as a most precious Jewel to the Temple of the Sepulchre and appointed the fourteenth day of September to be the Feast of the exaltation of the Cross But wickedness and impiety abounding in and among the
Turks seeing the Christians enter the City in such numbers retired to Solomons Temple so called because it was built in or near the same place with a resolution there to take the last farewel of their lives The Christians followed them thither and in a fierce and desperate conflict the foremost of them were miserably slain being thrust upon their Enemies weapons by their own fellows who followed them so that the pavement swom with humane gore and none could go either in or out but he must wade through a River of Blood or pass over a Bridge of dead Bodies In this fight valour was n● wanting in the Turks but it was supe● latively abundant in the Christians wh● still pressed forward upon their Enemie● till the want of light compelled them t● give over Thus was Jerusalem won 〈◊〉 the Christians and Twenty Thousa● Turks slain therein on the Fifteenth 〈◊〉 July Then many Christians who had till no● lived in Jerusalem in a most deplorab● slavery being forced to lurk in secre came forth rejoycing and heartily we comed and imbraced those Pilgrin who were the happy procurers of the liberty And the next Morning mer● being proclaimed to all those who wou● lay down their Arms the Turks yield● upon promise of saving their lives no withstanding which they were three day after all put to the Sword witho● respect to Age or Sex upon the idle prtence of fear of Treason in them if t● Persian Emperour should come and besie● them But the Noble Tancred decla● himself highly displeased with that ●vage and barbarous action CHAP. VI. Robert Duke of Normandy refuseth the Kingdom of Jerusalem whereupon Duke Godfrey is advanced to the new erected Throne EIght days after the taking of Jerusalem they proceeded to the Election of a King but having so many Princes whose shining Vertues made them equally deserving they knew not which of them to pitch upon however at last they unanimously resolve on Robert Duke of Normandy as a person of the highest Descent notwithstanding which the Duke contrary to all mens expectation refused this honorable offer either because he had an Eye to the English Diadem which was now fallen to him by the death of William Rufus who was his Elder Brother or else because he imagined and that truly enough that the Kingdom of Jerusalem would in all probability be incumbred with a continual War But he who would not accept of the Crown with the Cross was afterwards forced to take the Cross without the Crown for from that day forward he never thrived in any thing he undertook bu● lived to see abundance of misery and fe● more being shut up in Prison and de● prived of his sight by King Henry h● Brother Robert having declared his refusal the● proceed to a second Choice and th● they might acquaint themselves the be●ter with the temper and disposition ●those Princes out of which the Choi● was to be made they examined the● Servants upon Oath concerning the● Masters faults and when they came● examine the Servants of Godfrey Du● of Bovillon they all protested that the o●ly fault they knew their Master guil● of was that when he went to Church ●sing Mattens he would stay so long aft● they were done to learn of the Pri● the meaning of every Image and Pictur● that Dinner at home was utterly spoil● by his long tarrying This relation b● gat him the admiration of all men w● admiring that the Dukes worst Vi● should prove so great a Vertue ma● choice of him to be their King T● Duke accepted of the Title but not 〈◊〉 the solemnity of it refusing to wear● Crown of Gold there where the Savi●● of Mankind had been tortured with Crown of Thorns Godfrey D k of Bovelion The First Christian King of Jerusalem CHAP. VII Of the Establishing of Ecclesiastical Affairs and settling Patriarchs in Antioch and Jerusalem the numerosity of Palestine Bishops Godfrey being now possessed of the Crown took care to settle the ●itre and provide for the well-ordering ●f the Ecclesiastical Affairs Well con●dering that the Commonwealth never ●rives so well as when the Church and ●tate are equally interested in the Princes ●are So soon as Antioch was taken one Bernard a Reverent Prelate was with a ●eneral consent advanced to the Patri●rchal Seat But more difficulty there ●as to settle that Dignity in Jerusalem ●or first Arnulphus a vicious and worthless man was by popular Faction lifted ●p into the Patriarchs Chair but being ●ith much difficulty put by Robert Arch●ishop of Pisa was substituted in his place 〈◊〉 person wise politick and learned but ●nfected with the general humour of the Clergy of that Age a delight to justle with Princes for more Elbow-room Arnulphus never ceased to molest him and all those who succeeded him till by many changes he found means to struggle himself into the Chair again Under these Two Patriarchs were divers Archbishops and Bishops who were placed as near as could be where they were before the Saracens had over-run the Country and liberal Maintenance allotted to most of them But they were too numerous for all to grow great and Palestine fed too many Cathedral Churches to have them generally fat for there was Lydda Jomnia and Joppa three Episcopal Towns within four Miles of each other Nay Tyrius tells us of Fourteen Bishops under the Archbishop of Tyre 20 under the Archbishop of Caesarea Nine under the Archbishop of Scythopolis Twelve under the Archbishop of Rabbah besides Twenty five Suffragan Churches which were immediately depending on the Patriarch without subordination to any Archbishop From whence we may observe that in those days Bishops kept their Sees at mean and contemptible Villages as here in Engl. before the Conquest Sunning in Bark shire and Dorchester near Oxford had Cathedral Churches in them though now they have removed them to the great and most Principal Towns CHAP. VIII The Saracens overthrown at Askelon MAhomets Tomb was not so firmly fixed to the attractive Load-stone but that now it began to shake and was in all probability like to have tumbled down the Christians victories giving daily wounds to that silly and foppish Religion which made the Saracens enter into a Combination with the Turks to assist them in stopping if possible the further progress of their Victorious Arms wherefore coming out of Egypt under the command of Ammitavissius their General near Askelon they gave the Christians Battel but God sent such a qualm upon these Infidels hearts that 100000 of them were presently slain and their Rich Tents which seemed as if they were the Exchequer of the East Country possessed by the Pilgrims who now so much abounded with wealth that they knew not how to value it Which made many of the Pilgrims who were Merchants for honour and had now made so gainful an Adventure think of returning home and those who remained were advanced to honourable Titles and Places in the Land But by this return of the Pilgrims the heat of the
Christians Victories was some● what staid for Boemund Prince of Antioch● marching into Mesopotamia was take● Prisoner and the Heroick Godfrey wh● had till now been ever accustomed to Conquer was forced to depart with disgrace from the Siege of Antipatris CHAP. IX The Original of the Hospitallers The scuffling between the King and Patriarch of Jerusalem about the division of the City The Issue of the quarrel and th● Death of Godfrey the first King ABout this time under Serard thei● first Master began the Order o● Knights Hospitallers There was indee● an Order called by that name more anciently in Jerusalem but they were n● Knights but poor Alms-men whose House was founded and themselve● maintained by the Merchants of Amu● phia a City in Italy But they had now more stately Buildings assigned them and their House dedicated to St. John o● Jerusalem the conditions upon which they were to be admitted to the Highest Order of this Knighthood were these they must be Eighteen years old at least of an able body not descended of Jewish or Turkish Parents no Bastards except to a Prince there being honour in that dishonour but born of honest and worshipful Parents they always wore a Red Belt with a White Cross and a Black Cloak whereon was the White Cross of Jerusalem which was a Cross crossed or five Crosses together in memory of our Saviours five Wounds Their Profession was to fight against Infidels and secure Pilgrims in their coming to the Sepulchre they vowed Poverty Chastity and Obedience to which was added by Reimundus de Podio their second Master that they must receive the Sacrament thrice a year hear Mass once a day be no Merchants or Usurers fight no private Duels and always stand neuters and take part with neither side if the Princes of Europe should fall out At their Inauguration they received a Sword to intimate that they must be valiant which Sword had a Cross Hilt to remember them that they must therewith defend Religion 2ly With this Sword they were struck three times over the shoulders to teach them patiently to suffer for Christ Thirdly They must wipe the Sword to intimate that their lives must be clean and undefiled Fourthly They had gilt Spurs put upon them to intimate that they must scorn Wealth and spurn it at their heels Fifthly They were to take a Taper in their hands to intimate that they were to enlighten others by their exemplary lives About the same time also were ordained the Knights of the Sepulchre who were for their Original and Profession much like the former and their Order continueth to this day they being made by the Padre Guardian of Jerusalem of such as have seen the Sepulchre and should be all Gentlemen but the Padre frequently dispenses with the severity of that Law and admits of those who bring fat enough though no blood Now also there arose a great Controversie between the King and the Patriarch the latter claiming the Cities of Jerusalem and Joppa with all their dependances as belonging of right to him and the other denying to deliver them The Patriarch affirmed they had always belonged to his Predecessors and that it did not become Princes who ought to be Nursing Fathers to the Church sacrilegiously to suck from and devour it On the other side the King alledged that the Christian Princes had now purchased Jerusalem with their Blood and bestowed it on him so that the Patriarchs over-grown Title was lost in that Conquest from which as upon a new Foundation all must now build their claims who challenge a right to any part in that City Besides which it would be unreasonable for the King of Jerusalem to enjoy nothing in Jerusalem but live there more like a Sojourner than a Prince in his Royal Palace and be confined only to an airy Title whilst the Patriarch should enjoy all the Command To this the Patriarch answered That the Christians new Conquest could not cancel his Ancient Right which he said was enjoyed even under the Saracens especially since that Voyage was purposely undertaken for the advancing of the Church and not the bare restoring her to her Liberty only which Argument he pressed so home that Godfrey notwithstanding he was unwilling at first yet afterwards not only granted him on Candlemas day a fourth part of the City but on the Easter following the King lying then on his Death-bed gave him all Jerusalem Joppa and whatsoever else he desired upon condition that he should hold it of the Patriarch till he should Conquer Babylon or some other Royal City to keep his Court in And that i● in the mean time he should have died without Issue it should immediately b●delivered into the Patriarchs Possession Not long after Godfrey had made this liberal Grant wherein he frankly gave away his whole Kingdom at once he died having Reigned one year wanting five days and was buried in the Temple of the Sepulchre where his Tomb remains inviolated to this day CHAP. X. Baldwin chosen King he keepeth Jerusalem in despite of the Patriarch GOdfrey being dead the Christians with an unanimous consent made choice of Bald●in who was ●●ount of Edessa a City in Arabia and Brother to Godfrey to succeed him a Prince who was tall and of a comely Personage being like Saul higher by the head than any of his Subjects and being thus chosen to the Kingdom without troubling his head about his Brothers Religious scruple of wearing a Crown of Gold where Christ wore one of Thorns he accepted the Ceremony as well as the Title and was Crowned on the Christmas day following But before his Coronation there was a desperate Quarrel between him and the Patriarch who upon the death of Godfrey devoured Jerusalem and the Tower of David in his hope but coming to take possession found that a more difficult task than it was to obtain the grant from the dying King For Garnier Earl of Gretz refused to surrender it telling him that he would according to his duty keep it on the behalf of King Baldwin who was not yet arrived from Edessa This unexpected refusal made the Patriarch storm exceedingly but however Baldwin having the stronger Sword and actual possession of the City kept it perforce which made the Patriarch complain to Boemund Prince of Antioch and stir him up to take Arms against King Baldwin for the recovery of the Churches Right as he was pleased to term it But not succeeding therein the difference was made up for the present by the mediation of friends although it was not long before it brake out again to that degree that the Patriarch was glad to flee to Antioch and from thence to Rome to complain to the Pope from whom h● obtained a command to King Baldwin fo● the re establishing him in the Patriarcha● Seat with which as he was returning home he died at Messena in Cicilia● whereupon Bremarus an holy and devou● man was against his own will advance● by King Baldwin to the Chair
was to pay a Ransom 〈◊〉 an hundred thousand Michaelets for t●● security whereof he left his Daughter 〈◊〉 Hostage But he paid the Turks with t●● Saracens money whom he beat first 〈◊〉 Antioch and then at Damascus whi●● place he unfortunately besieged a●● thereby damped the Joy of his two fo●mer Victories And the more to qu● their swelling pride the young Prince● Antioch was overthrown in Battel a●● slain Which ill success so afflicted Ki●● Baldwins mind that for some time b● fore his death he renounced the wor●● and took upon him a Religious Habit● thing not very unusual in those days a● sometimes though not often practi●● still as by the Late Queen of Sweden W● is yet living CHAP. XIII Of Fulco the Fourth King of Jerusalem The remarkable Ruine of Rodolphus Patriarch of Antioch The Graecian Emperour demands Anti och The Prince thereof pays him Homage for it The●amentable Death of Fulco FVlco Earl of Tours Mam and Anjou came about three years before on Pilgrimage to Jerusalem where he ob●ained in Marriage Mellesent the Kings Daughter and thereupon had assigned ●he City of Tyre and some other Prince●y Accommodations for his present main●enance and the Kingdom after his Father-in-laws decease which he received ●ccordingly He had one Son by a for●er Wife which was Jeffry Plantagenet Earl of Anjou to whom he left all his Lands in France and from whom our Kings of England are descended This Fulco was a very valiant man indued with many perfections both of body and mind In his Reign there was ●o Alterations worth remark in the Church of Jerusalem but in that of Antioch there was much stir who should succeed Bernard that peaceable and long liv'd Prelate who sate Thirty six year● in the Chair and survived Eight Patriarchs of Jerusalem For the Clerg● being long in their choice before the● could come to a result the Laity wa● too nimble for them and clapped o● Rodolphus of honourable descent into th● Chair who cast off his Obedience to th● Pope and refused to acknowledge a●● Superiour but St. Peter He was th● Darling of the Gentry but bated of th● Clergy because advanced without the● suffrage wherefore being conscious 〈◊〉 himself that he needed strong Arms sin● he was to swim against the stream 〈◊〉 screwed himself into the favour of t●● Princess of Antioch Widdow to you● Boemund so that with her strength 〈◊〉 beat down all his Enemies promising h● in requital to make a Marriage betw●● her and Reimund Earl of Poictou who w● then coming into those parts But 〈◊〉 deceived her and procured the Earl 〈◊〉 marry with the Lady Constantia h● Daughter who was but a Child wi●● whom he had the Principality of Antio● The Patriarch that he might ma●● sure work and oblige him for ever to 〈◊〉 his friend bound him to it by an Oat● But as it is usual in those cases frien● unjustly gotten are seldom long injoyed of a sworn Friend he became his sworn Enemy and forced him to go to Rome there to answer many Accusations laid to his charge The chief whereof was that he made odious comparisons between Antioch and Rome and accounted himself equal to his Holiness When he arrived at Rome he found the Popes Doors shut against him but he quickly opened them with a Golden Key and upon his repentance for having refused to acknowledge Obedience to the Church of Rome he was dismissed only it was ordered by his Holiness that the Bishop of Ostia should be sent into Byria to examine matters relating to his other Crimes and proceed accordingly Whereat his Adversaries stormed extreamly expecting that he should have been immediately deposed But having mist their mark they resolved to have a second blow at him wherefore they prevailed with Albericus the Legate to favour their design which was not unknown to Rodolphus who coming to Antioch cited the Patriarch to appear but being called three several times came not which was variously commented upon by those who were present according as they affected or disaffected him Whereupon the Legate directed himself to the Arch-Bishop of Apamea who had formerly been one of the most vehemen● Accusers of Rodolphus but had lately bee● reconciled to him and demanded why he did not accuse the Patriarch now o● those Crimes which he had formerly laid to his charge To which the Arch-Bishop answered That what he the● did was done out of heat and prejudice and he thought it was his great sin so unadvisedly to discover the nakedness o● his Father like cursed Cham from which God had so far reclaimed him that he would rather die for his safety than accuse him Upon which Speech the Legate such was the Martial-Law in a Prelate in those days immediately deposed him and shortly after thrust out the Patriarch with great violence and shut him up in Prison where he remained a long time in Chains till at last he made his escape and went to Rome with an intent to have traversed his Cause again had not death cut him off About this time Calo Johannes the Graecian Emperour came with a great Army of Horse and Foot and demanded of Reimund Prince of Antioch to resign to him that whole Signiory according to the Composition which the Christian Princes made with Alexius his Father which insolent demand fretted Reimund and all the Latines to the heart in regard they had purchased an Inheritance with their own Blood and yet were required to turn Tenants at will to another They told him it was offered his Father when first taken and he refused it That Alexius kept not his Covenants nor assisted them according to the Agreement He called them his Sons indeed but disinherited them of their hopes and all the Portion that he gave them lay in promises never paid But all these Arguments signified little the Emperours Sword being far stronger than theirs for coming with so great a force he conquered in a few days all Cilicia and then besieged the City of Antioch it self whereupon the King of Jerusalem fearing it would give too great advantage to the Infidels to have the Christians fall together by the Ears among themselves made composition between them wherein Reimund obliged himself to do homage to the Emperour and hold his Principality of him Notwithstanding which about four years after he returned again but did not much harm only pillaged the Country And some few years after that he died being accidentally poisoned by one of his own Arrows which he had prepared for the Wild Bore having always carried it much fairer to the Latines than his Father had done in regard an honourable Foe is much more desirable than a Treacherous Friend Falco having Reigned in Jerusalem about Eleven years with abundance o● care and industry being almost continually imbroiled in Civil Discords which hindered him from much inlarging of hi● Dominion was slain as he was following his sport in Hunting to the great grie● of his Subjects He was buried with his Predecessors
in the Temple of the Sepulchre leaving two Sons behind him Balder and Almerick the former being about Thirteen and the latter Eleve● years old CHAP. XIV The Reign of Baldwin the Third Of Fulche● Patriarch of Jerusalem and the insole● carriage of the Hospitallers toward him The Institution of Carmelites BAldwin the Eldest Son of Falco succeeded his Father and quickly gre● up as well in Age as in Royal Qualifications and became a most compleat and well accomplished Prince During his minority his Mother who governed all made up his want of Age with her abundant care she being a Woman in sex but of a masculine Spirit William who was last possessed of the Patriarchs Chair in Jerusalem was no great Clerk being better at Building of Castles than at Edifying the Church He built one at Askelon one at Ramula a third called Blankguard for the securing of Prisoners But having enjoyed the Dignity Fifteen years he was translated to Heaven and Fulcher Arch-Bishop of Tyre succeeded him whose old Age was much molested with the Pride and Rebellion of the Hospitallers who had then obtained from the Pope a plenary Exemption from the Jurisdiction of the Patriarch which he did the more easily grant because he hoped thereby to make himself absolute Master of all Orders and link them intirely to himself by an immediate dependence whereby he made every Covent a Castle of Rebels and armed them with Priviledges to fight their lawful Diocesan Those Hospitallers were by this means become so rude that they would without all shame Ring their Bells when the Patriarch Preached that so his Voice might not be heard and shoot Arrows into the Church to disturb him and the People in Divine Service A bundle whereof was hung up in the Church as a Monument of their monstrous Impiety Fulcher crawled to Rome when an hundred years old to complain of those outrages but the Hospitallers prevented him and bribed off the business beforehand so that the good old man was forced to return without redress whereupon they grew more insolent than ever Nor was Haymericus who succeeded Rodolphus at Antioch much quieter He instituted about the year 1160. the Order of Carmelites who pretended to an imitation of the Prophet Elias Some indeed had formerly lived dispersed about the Mount of Carmel but he gathered them into one House But although Palestine brought them forth yet England proved the most officious in nursing of them up For being first brought into it by Ralph Freshburgh in the year 1240. they were first seated at Newenden in Kent and in a little time scattered themselves all over England and lived in great pomp till dispersed by King Henry the Eighth when he demolished the Abbeys CHAP. XV. Edessa lost The Voyage of the French King and the Emperour of Germany blasted by the perfidiousness of the Graecian Emperour The Turks beaten at Meander Damascus besieged in vain ALL Empires like the swelling Sea have bounds set to them whither being once come they can rise no higher And the Kingdom of Jerusalem being now arrived at its full growth began to decline apace till at last all revolved again into the Infidels hands And the first considerable step which it made in its declension was the loss of Edessa one of the four Tetrarchies of that Kingdom and a place wherein the Christian Religion had always flourished from the time of the Apostles Which loss moved Conrade Emperour of the West and Lewis the Seventh surnamed the Young King of France by the persuasion of St. Bernard to undertake a Voyage to the Holy Land The Emperour for this design had gotten together an Army of 200000 Foot and 50000 Horse and the King near as many more For in France they sent a Dista●● and a Spindle to those that would not go● with them as upbraiding their Effeminacy and no wonder for Women themselves went in Armour to this War and had a brave Heroick Lass like another Penthesilea for their Leader who was so richly clad and befringed with Gold that she was generally known by the name of Golden Foot Conrade with his Army took his way through Graecia where Emmanuel the Emperour possessed with an hereditary fear of the Latines fortified his Cities concluding that there needed strong Banks where such a stream of people were to pass using them most treacherously and giving them a very bad welcom in hope thereby to get rid of them the sooner And to increase their misery as they lay incamped by the River Melas if it be proper to call that a River which is all Mud in Summer and all Sea in Winter it drowned many of them by its sudden and unexpected overflowing as if it had learn'd Treachery of the Graecians and conspired with them to spoil the Emperours generous Design And those of them that survived this unhappy accident were reserved for a more lingering misery the Emperour endeavouring by all imaginable ways to accomplish their Ruine as by mixing Lime with their Meal killing those who strayed from the Army holding intelligence with the Turks corrupting his Coin and giving them false Conductors who designedly led them into danger and made the way less doubtful than the Guides And no sooner had the Emperour got through all those dangers and escaped the Treachery of the Greeks but he was immediately encountred by the Hostility of the Turks who waited for them on the Banks of the River Meander which being not fordable and the Christians having neither Boat nor Bridge to convey them over the undaunted Emperour after an Exhortation to his Souldiers to follow his brave Example plunged himself into the Water and quickly reached the other Shoar where in despite of the Enemy he Landed with all his Army Whereat the affrighted Turks did as it were offer their Throats to the Christians Swords and were slain in such numbers that whole piles of dead Bones remain there for a monument of their Victory flushed with this success he marched forward to Iconium now called Cogni which he besieged in vain to the wasting and lo● of his Army The French King followed after wit● a numerous Army and drank of the sam● Cup at the Graecians hands though no● so deeply as the Emperour had done before him But at last finding that tho● who marched to Palestine by Land me with an Ocean of misery though the came not to Sea he thought it muc● safer to trust the Winds and the Wave● than the perfidious Graecians and therefore shipping himself and his Army h● arrived safe in Palestine where he wa● highly welcomed by the Prince of A●tioch Some weeks were spent in Princely Entertainments and visiting of holy Places before they entred upon action But having sufficiently recreated themselves and rested their Souldiers the Emperour and the King of France both resolve upon the Siege of Damascus accounting a smaller Town too mean a trifle for them to employ their Arms in its Conquests wherefore they immediately sate down before it and had
of them left they being rooted out and destroyed by Selemus the Turkish Emperour when he conquered Syria and Aegypt or as others say by the Tartarians Anno 1257. unless we may suppose them to be revived again in the Jesuits gracious Loyola having fetched his Platform of blind obedience from them Whilst the Turks Lorded it over Syria and the lesser Asia the Saracen Caliph commanded in Aegypt which was the Stage whereon most of the remarkable passages of King Almericks life were acted For Dargan and Sanar two great Saracen Lords belonging to the Caliph of Aegypt falling out about the Sultany or Viceroyship of the Land made way for the calling of him thither Sanar finding that he was too weak to contend with his Rival craved Aid of Noradine King of the Turks that then Reigned at Damascus who sent him an Army of Turks under the Command of Syracon an experienced Captain Notwithstanding which Dargan obtained the Victory but enjoyed it not long being shortly after slain by Treachery whereby Sanar got the Sultans place It the mean while the voluptuous Calip● carelesly pursued his private pleasures without concerning himself about their difference or regarding their introducing forreign Force to decide their Quarrel as though the tottering of his Kingdom had rocked him into a Lethargy out of which nothing would awake him Sanar having now obtained his desire by the death of Dargan liberally rewarded the Turks and desired them to return home but Syracon refused to be gone and having seized on the City of Belbis fortified it and there waited for the coming of more Turks for the Conquest of Aegypt which made Sanar implore the help of Almerick King of Jerusalem to drive them out of Aegypt which he effectually performed But whilst he was Victorious in Aegypt an unfortunate Battel was fought between Boemund the Third Prince of Antioch Reimund Prince of Tripoli Calamar● Governour of Cilicia and Joceline Coun● of Edessa on one side and Noradine the Turkish King on the other wherein the Turk obtained the Victory and took those four Christian Princes Prisoners As for Syracon the Turk though he was forced to retire for the present out of Egypt by the Victorious Arms of Almerick yet he resolved not to part with it so wherefore he presently went to the Caliph of Babylon who was opposite to him of Egypt and accounted him an Usurper each of them claiming as sole Heir to Mahomet their false Prophet the Soveraignty over all the Saracens in the World and offered him that if he would furnish him with a good number of Souldiers he would extirpate this Schismatical Caliph and reduce all Egypt to the Obedience of the Babylonian which motion being joyfully embraced by the greedy and aspiring Fop Syracon once again invadeth Egypt with a great and powerful Army Whereupon Sanar who was greatly affrighted thereat made new and larger offers to King Almericus to come and stop this deluge of his Enemies promising him a Pension of Forty thousand Ducats yearly if he would lend him his Assistance But Almerick perceiving that the Sultan notwithstanding he took so much upon him was subject to a high Lord refused to make any Bargain with him but with the Caliph himself in order whereunto he sent Hugh Earl of ●sarea and a Knight Templar as his E●bassadours to Caliph Elhadach who th● kept his Court at Cairo Who being a●rived at his Palace were conducted 〈◊〉 the Sultan through several dark passag● well guarded with armed Ethiopians a● then into divers spacious open Courts such beauty and riches that the Embasadours were amazed and even astonis●ed at the rarities they beheld And s●● the farther they went the greater t● state appeared till at last they we● brought to the Caliphs own Loding● where as soon as they entred the Pr●sence-Chamber the Sultan prostra● himself three several times to t● ground before the Curtain behind whi● the magnificent Caliph was sitting a● thereupon the Traverse which was 〈◊〉 rich Silk wrought all over with Pea● of inestimable value was immediate drawn and the Caliph himself discover● sitting with great Majesty on a Thro● of massy Gold having only some few● his most confiding Eunuchs about him The Caliph having discovered himsel● and the Sultan humbly kissed his feet ● briefly related the cause of their comin● the eminent danger which then threa●ned them and the offers which he h● made to King Almerick which he intreated him now to ratifie and in demonstration thereof to give his hand to ●he Kings Embassadour The Calip'● having heard what he had to say demur●ed a while upon the Ceremony of gi●ing them his hand accounting such a ge●ure beneath the greatness of his state ●nd would by no means consent to give ●em his bare hand but offered it them with his Glove on to which the reso●te Earl of Caesarea replied Sir truth ●eks no holes to hide it self in and Prin●es who intend to keep Covenant ought ● deal openly and nakedly give us there●re your hand or we will make no bar●in with your Glove He was loth to ●o it but necessity which was at that ●me a more imperious Caliph than him●lf commanding it he at last consented ●nd dismissed the Christian Embassadours ●ith such liberal Gifts as testified his ●reatness Almerick according to this Agree●ent faithfully used his utmost endea●our to expel Syracon with his Turks out ●f Egypt and in order thereunto he met ●hem in the Field and gave them Battel ●herein he got the day but lost all his ●aggage so that the Conquest was as it ●ere divided the Turks gaining the Wealth and the Christians the Hono● of the Victory But Almerick followi● his success pursued them to Alexandr● and pent them up and straitly besieg● them in that City and thereby for●● them to accept of conditions of Pea● wherein they were obliged to depart 〈◊〉 of Egypt without performing what th● had promised and the Caliph of Baby expected and then returned himself w●● honour to Askelon But when a Crown is the Prize play● for it is vain to expect fair play in 〈◊〉 Gamesters For King Almerick hav● once beheld the Beauty and Riches● Egypt was so enamoured therewith t● he longed to obtain that Kingdom 〈◊〉 himself And the next year contr● to his Solemn League with the Cal● invaded it with a great Army pretend● though falsly that the Caliph wo● make a private Peace with Nora● King of the Turks Guilbert Master the Hospitallers was the chief Instrum● in stirring up the King to this treac●rous and unjust War hoping that 〈◊〉 Country of Perlusium if conquered sho● be given to their order But the Te●plars very much opposed the design 〈◊〉 of their Order being Embassador at 〈◊〉 ratifying the Agreement between 〈◊〉 King and Caliph and with much Zeal ●otested against it as undertaken against ●ath and Fidelity However the King would not be di●erted from his design but having made ●reat preparations for this War descend●d into Egypt where he was for a
habitations save only the L●tines knowing full well that if the Christians could not buy their lives chea● they would not fail to sell them dear a● fight it out to the last man Saladine flushed with this great succe● summon'd Askelon but the Governo● refusing to surrender it he concluded would not be convenient to hazard th● checking of his fortune in so long a Sieg● and therefore left it and went to Jerus●lem which he looked upon to be a pla● of less difficulty and more honour 〈◊〉 conquer and so indeed he found it f●● though they within the City valiantly defended it for about fourteen days yet a last considering that it was but playing out a desperate game which must certainly be lost in the end in regard the● Enemies were near and their Friends f●● off and unable to send them any othe● relief than vain and helpless pity they resolved to lavish out no more valour b● yield up the City upon condition th● all their lives might be redeemed 〈◊〉 man for Ten a woman for five and child for one Besent But 14000 w●● were not able to discharge their Ransom were kept as perpetual Slaves Those of the Greek Church were permitted to stay in the City but all the Latines were commanded to depart except two Frenchmen to whom Saladine gave leave to stay and allowed them maintenance to live on in Reverence to their great Age one of them having been a Soldier under Godfrey when he first took the City and the other the first Child that was born in it after it was conquered by the Christians Thus Jerusalem after it had been enjoyed by the Christians for the space of eighty eight years was by the just Judgment of God wrested from them again by the Turks and all their stately Churches turned into Stables except those of the Sepulcher and the Temple The former whereof Saladine spared for a great Sum of Money to the Chiristians which is enjoyed by them to this day by licence from the Grand Signior and innumerable Pilgrimages continually made to it by all sorts of Christians either out of Zeal or Curiosity And the other he Converted to a Mosque for the Worship of Mahomet sprinkling it all over with Rose-water as if he intended thereby to cleanse it from its Profanation by the Christians whilst he really defiled it by his unholy washing It was generally observed that the Sun as sympathizing with the Christians in their approaching Miseries suffered an Eclipse which was afterward looked upon as a sad presage of the loss of tha● City But that which was much more deplorable and threatning than the Suns Eclipse was the total Eclipse of Piety Wickedness abounding in every corner and scarce one honest Woman to be found in the whole City of Jerusalem For Heraclius the Patriarch and the whole Clergy being exceedingly debaucht the Laity imitated their bad Example When this doleful News of Jerusalem'● loss arrived in Europe it filled every Eye with Tears and swelled all Hearts with Sorrow and Anguish CHAP. XIX Conrade Valiantly defending Tyre is chosen King The Voyage of Frederick Emperor of Germany to the Holy Land The Siege of Ptolemais The Voyage of Richard King of England and Philip King of France to the Holy Land IN this sad deplorable State stood the affairs in Palestine when Conrade arrived there whose Worth and Excellence commands my Pen to attend him from his own Country thither He was Son to Boniface Marquess of Montferrat who was taken Prisoner in that Fatal Battle wherein King Guy lost himself and his Kingdom His Youth was for the most part spent in the Service of Isaaccius Angelus the Grecian Emperour who being bred in a Monastery the confining of his Body seemed to have brought him to a pent and narrow Soul and indued him with Accomplishments more becoming a Priest than a Prince For when his Rebellious Subjects affronted him to the face instead of sending an Army against them to reduce them to their obedience he only committed his cause to a company of Bald-pated Friers whom he kept in his Court to pray for his Prosperity Hoping that by their supposed Pious Tears he should be able to quench the Combustions of his Empire But this Conrade told him plainly that if ever he intended to sit upon the Imperial Throne in Peace he must make use of the Weapons of the left Hand as well as those of the right and Fight as well as Pray Which advice being taken by the Emperour he did by the help of this General quickly subdue all his Enemies But our brave Conrade found but a small reward for so great a service being only graced in consideration thereof to wear his Shoes of the Imperial Fashion And it being usual with Princes not to love the sight of those to whom they know themselves obliged and yet care not to reward Isaaccius by the perswasion of some about him who envied his Courage and Bravery spurred on Conrade who was free enough of himself to any Noble Enterprize to go into Palestine and endeavour to support the ruinous affairs of the afflicted Christians And although he was sensible of their Plot yet being weary of the Grecians baseness he suffered himself to be prevailed upon to undertake that Honourable Imployment and therefore set forward with all convenient speed for the Holy Land with a gallant Band of Gentlemen who fitted out themselves at their own charge wherewith he marched to the City of Tyre where we will leave him for the present to return again to Saladine Who having won the City and possessed himself of the greatest part of the Kingdom of Jerusalem laid close Siege to the City of Askelon which had refused to surrender when Ptolemais and the rest yielded to his victorious Arms but was now after a short Siege delivered to him upon condition that King Guy Gerard Masters of the Templars should be sett at Liberty And shortly after the Castle of Antioch was betrayed to him by the Patriarch And Antioch it self which cost the Christians 11 Months Siege was by that means lost in an instant besides several Provinces thereunto belonging Five Twenty strong Towns more which followed the like Fate with Antioch and fell into the Possession of the Turks After which he sat down likewise before Tripoli but that City being after the death of Earl Reimond delivered to the Christians by his Wife they Bravely defended it against all Saladines Force so that having once tasted of their Valour in Tripoli he had no great Stomach to make a second trial but raised his Siege and marched away to Tyre where he hoped to speed better But he found himself greatly mistaken for Conrade being a little before got thither with his Army gave him so hot a Welcome that he was glad to fly and leave all his Tents behind him which were sufficiently lined with Treasure whereby the Christians had the happiness to inrich themselves with their own Spoil Those
in the City over-joyed at their great deliverance chose Conrade to be King of Jerusalem swearing Fealty to him and promising to be for ever his Subjects whose Valour had preserved them from being Saladines Slaves And the better to strengthen his Title he married Elisa or as others call her Isabella Sister to Baldwin the fourth and Daughter to King Almerick So that King Guy who was about this time delivered out of Prison having when he was released sworn never more to bear Arms against Saladine which Oath the Clergy judged void because forced from him when detained in Prison contrary to promise obtained his Liberty but could not get his Kingdom For coming to Tyre he found the Gates shut against him and his Subjects refusing to acknowledge any other King then Conrade Whereupon Guy packing up a Cloth of Remnants with his broken Army went and besieged Ptolemais the Pisans Venetians and Florentines with their Sea-Forces assisting him therein But it went on notwithstanding so slowly that it could hardly be perceived to have made any advance in a Twelve Months time Things going thus wofully to wrack in Palestine the Christians sighs there alarmed their Brethren in Europe to repair thither to their Succour and among the rest Frederick Barbarossa Emperour of Germany moved by the strength of his Devotion undertook a Voyage thither when he was Seventy Years old having one foot in the Grave and yet adventureing with the other to go on Pilgrimage He had been long chained to the Stake as it were and baited by several successive Popes till at length wearied with their continual worrying of him he gave up himself wholly to their direction and was sent by Pope Clement the third on this Errand into the Holy Land And having made great Preparations for this Adventure he marched through Hungary with a gallant Army of an Hundred and Fifty Thousand Valiant Men being kindly received and Welcomed by King Bela. But changing his Host he changed his Entertainment to being basely used as he passed through the Grecian Empire Insomuch that Frederick contrary to his expectation finding such perfidious dealing from the Greeks drew his Sword and resolving to fight his way through took Philippople Adrianople and divers other Citys not so much to get their Spoil as to secure his passage toward Palestine But when Isaaccius saw that those Pilgrims would either find or force their passage he left off all terms of Enmity and presently accommodated them with all things necessary for their Transportation over the Bosphorus pretending to hasten them away because the Christians Exigencies in Palestine admitted of no delay although it was really the effect of his fear the Greeks ever loving the Latin best when they were furthest off Old Frederick having now left the treacherous Grecian Shore and entred into the Turkish Territories found great resistance from the Sultan of Iconium whom he vanquished and overcame in four several Battles And then besieging the City of Iconium he took it by force and gave the Spoil of it to his Souldiers to revenge the injury done by that Sultan to his Uncle Conrade the Emperour And removing from thence to Philomela he took that likewise razing it to the ground and executing the Inhabitants therein as Rebels against the Law of Nations for killing his Ambassadors after which he passed with much difficulty but more honour into Syria Saladine shook for fear at the rumor of his coming and thought it best to follow the advice of Charatux his chief Counsellor who was at that time accounted one of the wisest men in the world tho his Person was mean and contemptible and dismantled all his Citys in the Holy Land except his Frontire Towns that so they might not be tenable with an Army fearing lest if the Germans won those places it would be no easy matter to drive them out again but being naked from shelter he thought he should soon weary them with set Battles in regard he had Soldiers without number and those near at hand But Frederick soon after he was entered into the Holy Land was suddenly taken away being to the great grief of all Christians unhappily drowned in the River of Saleph the occasion whereof is variously reported by Historians but they all agree that there he lost his Life and some of them pretending to acquaint the World with the reason why the Almighty permitted this Fatal Accident tell us that it was because he had in his Younger Years fought against the Popes and Church of Rome But seeing so great an Emperour drowned in a shallow River it was a great piece of audacious boldness in them to adventure into the fathomless depths of Gods secret Council Let it suffice therefore for us to know that he who disposes of all humane affairs according to his own Arbitrary Pleasure sometimes blasts the fairest hopes and makes the Feet of Monarchs to slip just when they are stepping into their Enemies Throne After his death Frederick Duke of Su● via his second Son undertook the conduct of the Army when the Turks supposing that grief for the loss of the Emperor had steeped and moistened those Pilgrims Hearts and taken off the edg of their Valour gave them a sudden charge in hope to have overthrown them before they had recovered themselves But the Valiant Dutch-men though they had scarce wiped their Eyes had however sufficiently scowred their Swords and gave them so warm a welcom that they quickly forced them to retire Then Frederick summoning the City of Antioch had it presently delivered to him where his hungry Souldiers being well refreshed by the Citizens who were yet for the most part Christians he marched forth in Battle Array and meeting with Dodequin General of Saladines forces he gave him a mighty overthrow wherein he slew four thousand upon the place and took a thousand Turks Prisoners with little or no loss to himself After which he went to the City of Tyre in the Cathedral Church whereof he buried the Corps of his worthy and warlike Father near the Tomb of the Learned Origen His Funeral Sermon being preached by the worthy Arch-bishop Gulielmus of Tyre So soon as the Emperors Funeral Rites were solemnly performed they were conveyed by Sea to the Christian Army before Ptolemais where young Frederick died of the Plague and all his huge Army which at their setting out of Germany consisted of an hundred and fifty thousand men were now reduced to eighteen hundred onely And thus by following this numerous Army to their graves we have once again overtaken the tedious and slow-paced siege of Ptolemais before which place lay an Army that was as it were the abridgment of the Christian World there being scarce a petty state or populous City in Europe that had not some representatitives there So that there were many bloody Blowes lent on both sides repayed again with interest in innumerable Sallys fierce Assaults and bloody Encounters The Christians lying between Saladine and the
an unfortunate man Tho' the truth is the measuring a Princes worth by his Success is a Rule often false and always uncertain and the common Consent of all Nations will plead this in his Favour that having been once a King he ought ever to remain so But to put a sinal end to this unhappy Controversie King Richard made a pleasing Motion which rellished well to the Palate of that hungry Prince offering him the Island of Cyprus in exchange for his Kingdom of Jerusalem Which motion was willingly imbraced and the exchange actually made to the Content of both parties and the Kings of England bore the Title of King of Jerusalem in their style for many years after But in this exchange Guy had really the better Bargain in regard he bought a real Possession for an Airy Title However he lived not long to injoy it for he dyed soon after his Arrival there but his Family injoyed it for some hundred years after which it fell by some Transaction to the state of Venice and was at last wrested from them by the Turks who injoy it at this day Conrade being killed and Guy having renounced his Kingdom Henry Earl of Champaign was advanced to the Kingdom of Jerusalem by the procurement of King Richard his Uncle who to corroborate his Election by some Right of Succession married Isabella the Widow of Conrade and Daughter of Almerick King of Jerusalem he was a Prince valiant enough but in regard his Reign was short and most of it spent in a Truce he had not an opportunity to express it He took more delight in the style of Prince of Tyre then he did in that of being King of Jerusalem as accounting it more honourable to be Prince of what he had then to be called King of what he injoyed not And now the Christians promising themselves abundance of Peace and Tranquility began every where to build and to beautifie their Habitations The Templers fortified Gaza and King Richard repaired and walled Ptolemais Pomphyria Joppa and Askelon But alass this short liv'd Prosperity like an Autumn Spring came too late and was gone too soon to bring forth any mature Fruit However it was now agreed on by all parties that they should march immediately towards the City of Jerusalem which Holy and Sacred place was the mark at which they all principally Aimed And having prepared all things for the putting this resolution into Practice King Richard lead the Vant Guard of English the Duke of Burgundy Commanded in the main Body over his French and James of Avergn with his Flemings and Brabanters brought up the Rear Saladine who understood by his Spies the manner of their march Serpent like bit them by the Heels for not far from Bethlehem he violently assaulted the Rear of their Army but the English and French suddenly Wheeling about charged the Turks most furiously and Emulation formerly Poyson here proved a Cordial every Christian unanimously striving not only to Conquer their Enemies but to overcome their Friends to in the Honour of the Victory And our Royal Pilgrim in this Battel was so adventrous and fought with such invincible Courage and Resolution against those Enemies of Christianity that his Valour brought his Judgment into question in regard he was more careless of himself and exposed his Person to greater danger then beseemed the prudence of a General for having received a Wound as tho' by losing his Blood he had received a new Addition to his Strength he laid about him like a Mad-man killing divers of the Infidels with his own hands The Turks withstood the Christians force for a long time and strove hard to carry away the Honour of the Day but were at last forced to give Ground and leave the Christians in the Possession of the Victory which they obtained with little or no loss to themselves save James of Avergn who dyed here in the Bed of Honour But there were more Turks slain in this Battel then there had been in any other for forty years before And had the Christian improved this Victory and marched immediately to Jerusalem they might in all Probability have surprized it whilst the Turks were Blind-folded and in a kind of a maze at this Prodigious overthrow But the opportunity was wholly lost by the backwardness of King Richard and his English Soldiers say the French Writers whilst others impute it altogether to the Envy and Emulation of the French who rather chose to have so Glorious an Action left undone then to see it performed by the English together with the Treachery of Odo Duke of Burgundy who being more grieved for the loss of his Credit than careful to preserve a good Conscience was choaked with the shame of the sin which he had swallowed and dyed for Grief that his holding Correspondence with the Turks came to be discovered But most are of the Opinion that Richard attempted not the taking of Jerusalem because like a wise Architect he intended to build his Victories so as they might stand unshaken by securing the Country all along as he went It being Sensless and Imprudent to besiege Jerusalem an In-land City whilst the Turks were still in Possession of all the Sea-Ports and other places of Strength thereabouts Sometime after this Victory he intercepted divers Camels laden with very rich Commodities those Eastern Wars containing a great deal of Treasure in a little Room And yet of all this and of all that abundance of Wealth of England Sicily and Cyprus which he brought hither he carried nothing home save only one Gold-Ring all the rest being melted away and consumed in this hot Service He spent the Winter at Askelon and intended the following Spring to have gone to Jerusalem had not bad News out of Europe altered his resolution and put him in mind of returning home William Bishop of Ely whom he had left his Vice-Roy in England used many unsufferable Insolencies towards his Subjects So hard and difficult a thing it is for one of a mean and Contemptible Birth to personate a King without going beyond his Limits and over Acting his part And that which was yet worse his Brother John Earl of Morton had conspired with the French King to invade his Dominions Which reports and the concluding of this War a Subject not likely to answer the expence and Charge of of it especially now the Venetians Genoans Pisans and Florentines were gone away with their Fleet wisely shrinking themselves out of the Collar when they found their Necks too much Galled with their hard imployment made him desire a Peace of Saladine who thereby finding that he had all the Cords in his own hands knew well enough how to play his Game and make his best of those Exigencies wherein he knew King Richard to be plunged for he had those about him who had cunning and skill enough to read in King Richards Face what grieved and perplexed his mind and knew by his Spies every thing that was worth Observation
and the new Legate The miserable Effects thereof John resigns his Kingdom to Frederick Emperor of Germany NOt long after the Arrival of this new Legate there arose a great diference between him and the King of Jerusalem in regard he Challenged Damiatia for his Holiness which had at the taking of it by publick Agreement been assigned to the King Whereupon Bren in anger returned to Ptolomais as well to puff out his discontent in private as to teach the Christians his worth by their want of him who presently after his departure found themselves at so great a loss that they were neither able to stand still without disgrace nor proceed in the War without danger The Legate commanded them to march but he found they had too great a Spirit to be ruled by a Church-man for they swore they would not stir one step unless the King were with them So that the Legate was fain to send Messengers to intreat his return to the Army which at last he Consented to by the perswasion of the Messengers and a promise of having Damatia according to the first Agreement But no sooner was the King and the Legate met again after eight Months absence but new Divisions were started between them The Legate perswaded the Army to march up and besiege Grand Cairo assuring them that they might thereby quickly command all Egypt God having as he pretended opened them such a door of victory that they might easily enter into Possession of their Enemies Country if they did not bar it up by their own Idleness But the King opposed it and advised them to return again into Syria in regard that City was difficult to take and impossible to keep the Ground whereon they were to march was altogether as Treacherous as the People against whom they were to fight so that it was better for them now to retire with Honour then hereafter to fly with shame But the Legate persisting in his resolution thundred out Excommunications against all those who refused to go forwards therefore they must needs go when the Devil drove them Whereupon the crafty Egyptians whose flight was more to be feared then their fight seeing the Christians advance pretended to fly before them the better to draw them into the Snare But the Legate fancying that the pretended flight was the Effect of their Cowardize and Fear hugged himself in his own Imaginary Happiness and highly applauded his Sagacity in giving that Successful advice tho' he quickly found his Joy turned into Sorrow For Egypt being a low level Ground through the midst whereof runs the River Nilus whose stream the Egyptians had by their Industry so bridled with Banks and Sluces that they could easily Command it to be their own Servant and their Enemies Master And therefore when the Christians had Confidently marched on without the least Suspicion till it was impossible for them either to retire or be relieved the Turks pierced their Banks and let the River run open mouthed upon them yet so as they only drowned them up to the middle reserving their Lives for the Ransome of Damatia So that there you might have the Land of Egypt in an instant turned into a Sea and an Army of sixty thousand as the Neck of one Man streached on the Block and expecting the fatal blow every one Cursed the Legate and blamed their own folly in complying with the Advice of a Clergy-man and neglecting that of a King But it was now too late to complain and they must bear with Patience the Misery which they had brought upon themselves by their own Rashness Meladine King of Egypt seeing the deplorable Misery of those drowned Christians and the Constancy and Patience wherewith they indured their Calamity was moved with Compassion towards them being himself as was thought somewhat inclined to ibrace the Christian Religion and offered them their Lives upon condition that they would quit the Country and restore Damiata They glady accepted the conditions and presently dispatched Messengers to the City to prepare them for the Surrendering of it but they within the City being themselves safe on the shore knew not how to simpathise with their Poor Brethren in Shipwrack and therefore told the Messengers that those drowned Pilgrims deserved no pity in regard they had invited this misery upon themselves by their own rashness and that if they yielded up this City for nothing which cost so many Lives they should thereby expose themselves to the derision of the whole World that if those Pilgrims perished more might be had but no more Damata's it being a place of such Importance that it would always be a curb to the excursions of the Egyptian King but however those poor distressed wretches had some friends in the City who confessed that the Voyage was indeed undertaken unadvisedly and was justly to be blamed but yet pleaded that worse and more inconsiderate projects had some times been undertaken by others and when they have been Crowned with Success have passed unquestioned and so they supposed would this have done had it Succeeded and that therefore it was most unreasonable to add misery to the miserable beseeching them to pity their Brethren and not leave them in that forlorn state But finding their arguments to avail little they betook themselves to their Arms resolving to force the adverse party to resign the City and King John who of all others had the least reason to pity them in regard their project was wholly against his advice was notwithstanding so touched with a sence of their calamity that he generously threatned in case they refused to surrender it to give Meladine Ptolemais in Syria in the stead of it whereupon they consented and Damiata was restored to the Turks and the Legate and his Army let out of the trap wherein they were taken Meladine out of his Princely goodness furnishing them with Victuals and Horses to carry their feeble persons upon and thus the Christians received an overthrow without a wound and the Turks obtained an absolute Victory without Blood And there being at this time besides the agreement for the Exchange of Damiata a Peace made with the Turks for eight years whereby things were setled in Syria King John took a Journey to Rome where he was Honourably entertained by the Pope And shortly after tho' for what reason I cannot find he resigned the Kingdom of Jerusalem to Froderick the second Emperour of Germany upon condition that he should marry Jole the only Daughter of King John by his first Wife altho' by a second Wife he had another named Martha Marryed to Robert Emperour of Greece so that by Marriage he was now become Father to both the Emperours of the East and West Fred the 2d. Empr. of Germa ni and K. of Jerusalem F. H. Van. Houe Sculp Some condemn his resignation as an unadvised Act and conclude that if he had not first parted with his wits he would never have parted so freely with his Kingdom But others on
the contrary commend it as a Wise and Considerate Action and give us those reasons to prove it First his Wife was dead by whose Right he held his Kingdom Secondly he knew the Turks power to Invade it and his own weakness to defend it Thirdly before his resignation he had little left but the bare Title and after it he had nothing less it being so customary for all men to salute him by the name of King of Jerusalem that he was called so to his dying day Fourthly he thereby provided better for his Daughter then otherwise he could in all probability have done And Lastly because he got more after the surrender then he did before for in England he received many great presents from Henry the Third In France besides rich gifts left to himself he had the managing of 60000 Crowns left by Phillip Augustus the French King to the Templars for the carrying on the Holy War In Spain he got a rich Wife Beringaria the Daughter of the King of Castile and in Italy he tasted largely of the Popes liberality lived there in great plenty but at last Perfidiously raising Rebellion against the Emperour of Germany his Son in Law at the Instigation of the Pope he lost the General Esteem of most men and went off the stage without Applause Fredericks Nuptials with the Lady Jole was solemnized at Rome in the presence of the Pope with all the Ceremonies of Majesty imaginable and he ingaged himself by promise that he would within two years prosecute his Title in Palestine but by Discords and Jealousies between the Pope and him he was much longer before he got things in readiness to march and when he was on his way to Palestine the Plague seized on his Army at Brindisi in Italy where he likewise was shortly after Visited with a desperate fit of sickness which stayed his Journey for many Months It went against the grain with the Pope to have the Emperor so near him and therefore he Excommunicated him afresh having done it divers times before pretending his sickness was only the Cramp of Laziness and charging him with the unjust seizing on the goods of Lewis Lantgrave of Thuringia who died a little before in the Camp The Emperour protested his innocency and accused the Pope of injustice offering for the proof of it to put himself on the tryal of all Christian Princes However at last health came and Frederick departed with his Fleet for the Holy Land wherea● the Pope who was neither well full nor fasting stormed exceedingly and be libel'd him more then ever because he had forsooth departed without his Fathers Blessing or being Absolved and Reconciled to his Mother the Church But we may observe that Gods Blessing often times goes along with the Popes curses for the Fame of Fredericks Valour and his Virgin Fortune never yet stained with ill Success hastning like an Harbinger before perpared Victory to entertain him at his arrval there This Emperor Swifter then Caesar himself overcame before he came to Palestine so that Coradine being dead and his Children in their Minority the Sultan of Babylon who was then of greatest Authority among the Turks and Governed Syria offered him what he could never have expected viz. To restore him Jerusalem and all Palestine in as full and ample a manner as it was enjoyed by Baldwine the Fourth before it was Conquered by S●ladine and to release all Christian Prisoners upon condition that the Turks might be permitted in small numbers to have access to the Sepulcher they likewise having some Knowledg off and some kind of Veneration for Christ Before Frederick would ratifie any thing by Oath he sent to have the Popes approbation but hearing that he had Imprisoned his Messengers and in a most contemptuous manner torn his Letters he concluded a Truce with the Sultan for Ten years without the Popes consent and entering on Easter-day Triumphantly into Jerusalem he Crowned himself King with his own hands for the Patriarch the Master of the Templars and all the Clergy absented themselves neither was there any Mass Sung in the City so long as the Emperor staid there because he was Excommunicated And thus by the Valour and Policy of Frederick was the Holy Land recovered without blood which had been for many years before attempted without success and the affairs of Palestine brought into a good condition rendered capable of improving had not the Pope ruined all by forcing the Emperor to return sooner then he intended to supress the Rebellion which the Pope had caused John Bren to raise against him at home At his departure he appointed Reinoldus Duke of Bavaria to be his Lieutenant in Syria who wisely discharged his Office and preserved the Peace intire which was concluded with the Sultan of Babylon although the Temp●ars endeavoured to bring that Ten years Truce to an untimely end it being an insufferable thing with them to fast from Fighting which was Meat and Drink to their Turbulent Spirits Condemning him for his want of Zeal in the Holy War and giving him many a lift to heave him from his place but still he sate sure nor was he much troubled at the envy of Henry King of Cyprus who challenged the principality of Antioch as next of kin the last deceased Prince for the Duke met him and defeated him in battle and gave that Principality to Frederick base Son to the Emperor But that which kept both Turks and Christians in awe and made them the more carefull to observe the Truce was their mutual fear of the Tartars a fierce People which at this time took their first flight out of their own nest into the Neighbouring Countries they were anciently called Scythians and Inhabited the Northern parts of Asia a country never Conquered by any of the Monarchs being priviledged from their Victorious Arms by its own barrenness which was the reason why after they had made several incursions into Europe and the lesser Asia they found it so sweet that they cared not to return home They were by their multitudes and ferceness become so formidable that the Pope himself began to fear them in Italy to prevent which he sent Askelin a Frier much famed in those days and three others to Convert them to the Christian Religion who instead of instructing them the Rudiments of Christianity acquainted them with the greatness and power of the Pope who was as he told them exalted above all the Princes of Europe but Baiothnoi Chief Captain of the Tartarian Army for they were not admitted to the Great Cham himself crying quits with this Frier outvyed him in discribing his Cham whose greatness and Divinity he affirmed to exceed that of the Popes and sent him back with a blunt Letter which he concluded thus If thou wilt set upon our Land and Inheritance it behoveth that Thou Pope in thy proper Person come unto us and that Thou come to him who containeth the Face of the Whole Earth meaning their Great Cham.
the Miseries of the last Siege and fearing the same Tragedy would be acted over again set fire to the Houses and in the Night saved themselves by flight whereupon the French issued in and quenching the fire saved abundance of Treasure from the fury of the flames Which Loss so discouraged Meladine that to purchase Peace with the Christians he offered to restore them the whole Kingdom of Jerusalem in as ample a manner as ever it had been enjoyed by any of their Predecessors to release all Prisoners and disburse a great Sum of Money to defray the Charge of the War But such was their Pride and Folly that they refused to accept of it unless Alexandria the best Port in all Egypt were given them as an Over-plus the Pope's Legate and Robert Earl of Artois persuading them to grant Peace upon no other terms Wherefore the Turk seeing themselves in so desperate a condition their Extremity rendered their Sword the keener and made them provide with the greater resolution to defend their Country to the utmost About this time there arose a difference between the French and the English to the great prejudice of their Proceedings And Meladine King of Egypt died likewise the same Year and left his imbroiled Kingdom to Melcchsala his Son From Damiata the French marched up towards Cairo the Governor whereof being offended with the new King promised to deliver it into their hands And having passed an arm of the River Nilus Earl Robert marched forward with a third part of the Army and suddenly assaulted the Turks in their Tents whilst the King was absent and put them to flight which Victory so lifted him up with conceit that he adventured contrary to the advice of the Master of the Templers to set on the whole Turkish Power which lay incamped not far off without staying for the rest of the Army whereby he was utterly overthrown and as he was crossing the River in his flight found Water enough to drown him tho' not to wash away the stain of rashness and cowardize from his memory and our English Earl refusing to fly died fighting in the midst of his Enemies there escaping no more but four persons to carry News of this fatal overthrow to the rest of the Army It is easier for the Reader to conceive than for my Pen to express the general grief wherewith these doleful Tydings were received by the French among whom the Plague raged so furiously that it daily swept away Thousands And to increase their sorrow several sick persons whom the King had sent down the River to Damiata were set upon by the Egyptian King and having neither Hands to fight nor Legs to run were every one either burned or drowned except Alexander Gifford an English-man whose Name and Family still remains at Chellingworth in Stafford-shire who acquainted the French with what had happened They would now have been glad of those Terms which a little before they slighted but it was too late for the Turks now scorned to treat with them The French would have had the King provided for his own safety by flying back to Damiata But he refused and resolving to live or die overcome or perish with them marched forward to the fatal place where the last Battel was fought And whilst they were astonished at the sight of their mangled fellows the Egyptian King set upon them with an infinite number of men and put them all being but few in number and those very weak to the sword except Lewis and his two Brothers whom he took Prisoners The Turks having thus slain all the French Pilgrims instantly marched up with their Ensigns to Damiata hoping thereby to surprize it which if they had done King Lewis had been for ever lost But God disappointed them for they were easily discovered notwithstanding their disguise and forced to go away without their desire The News of this sorrowful Accident coming to Europe filled every one with grief and made Henry King of England who had made great preparation to undertake the Voyage to alter his mind and imploy his Money to a better use But to return to Egypt Melechsala did not long survive this Victory being slain soon after by Tanquemine a sturdy Mammaluke who succeeded him in the Egyptian Kingdom by whom King Lewis was released in exchange for Damiata being obliged besides the surrender of the City to pay many Thousand Pounds for the releasing of Christian Captives and to make satisfaction for the Damage done in Egypt for the securing whereof he was forced to pawn to the Turks the Pyx and Host whence it is that a Wafer-Cake and a Box is always wrote in the Borders of that Tapestry which we have brought us out of Egypt as a perpetual Memorial of that Victory But tho' Lewis was set at liberty yet he got not home till four years after CHAP. VIII The Mammalukes described The Death of Frederick The Conversion of the Tartars And the extinguishing the Caliphs of Babylon Charles made King of Sicily and Jerusalem King Lewis makes a second Voyage THose Mammalukes which had now seized on the Kingdom of Egypt were the Children of Christian-Parents which were by Saladine and his Successors taught the Mahometan Superstition and instructed in all Military Discipline at several Nurseries and being found by their Valour and Courage to be the chief support of the Turkish Kings were by them advanced to the chief places of profit and trust and thereby the better enabled to pull down their raisers Which was performed during the captivity of King Lewis by Tarquemine who slew Melechsala and thinking it unfit so great a Prince should go to the grave alone sent all his Children after him And was afterwards chosen by the rest of the Mammalukes King of Egypt whereupon he by their advice and consent made several Laws which were ever afterward observed by them as irrevokable The first whereof was That the Sultan or chief of the servile Empire should not succeed by Inheritance but be chosen out of the Mammalukes The second That none should be admitted into the Order of the Mammalukes that were born either of Turkish or Jewish Parents but only such as were born Christians The third was That tho' the Sons of Mammalukes should injoy their Fathers Lands and Wealth yet they should not take upon them the Name and Honour of a Mammaluke The fourth was That the Native Egyptians should be permitted the use of no other Weapons but such wherewith they were to fight against Weeds and Till and Manure their Land There were in this Government several things worthy admiration First That of Slaves they should act the King without playing the Tyrant Secondly That they should neglect their own Children when it is common for other men to idolize them and sacrifice all that they have to their welfare Thirdly That they should not fall out in the Election of their Kings in regard they were all equal among themselves Lastly That it should indure so
long for it lasted Two hundred sixty and seven Years till overcome by Selimus the great Turkish Emperour in the Year 1517. by the help of the Janizaries an Order of Men for Birth and Breeding not unlike themselves In that Year likewise it being a Year of great Revolutions died Frederick Emperour of Germany and King of Jerusalem whereupon followed an Interegnum in that Kingdom for fourteen Years together the right indeed lay in Conrade Frederick's Son by Jole King John's Daughter but he was so imployed in defending himself in Sicily against Maufred his Bastard Brother who quickly after dispatched him out of the way that he had no leisure to look after the fragments of the Kingdom of Jerusalem Near about this time a certain Hungarian Peasant said to have been an Apostate to Mahomet and well learned gathered together several Thousand people who took on them the Name and Habit of Pastorelli in imitation of those in the Gospel who were warned by Angels to go to Bethlehem they had the Holy Lamb for their Ensign and pretended to have intelligence from Heaven to march into the Holy Land but mistaking West for the East they shaped their course into France and committing several outrages that no way suited either with their Habit or Banner they were incountred near Burdeaux and threescore Thousand of them slain and the rest dispersed Things being now brought into a sad and deplorable condition in Syria without any hope of amendment behold a strange and unexpected accident revived them again For Haito King of Armenia taking the pains to travel himself to Margo the Great Cham of Tartaria to acquaint him with the danger he was in from the Turks as well as others telling him Tho' he lay something out of their way yet the only favour he must expect from them was to be last devoured whereupon he not only promised to assist the Christians in suppressing them but himself and by his example a great part of the Country imbraced the Christian Faith and thereupon sent Haalon his Brother with a great Army to suppress the Turks and assist the Christians in recovering what they had lost in the performing whereof his Army seemed to ride post conquering Persia in as little time as one can well travel it within six Months The City of Samarchanda was the only place that resisted him and therefore being unwilling to tempt his Fortune with a long siege he left it to one of his Captains who besieged it seven and twenty year and at last did not take it but had it surrendred to him Haalon having Conquered Persia marched to Babylon the Caliph whereof called Musteazem Idolized his wealth so much that he would not provide necessaries for the defence of the City so that it became an easie Conquest to this Tartarian Prince who having famished the Covetous Caliph to death filled his mouth with melted Gold and now Mosques every where went down and Churches went up from thence he went into Mesopotamia where having Conquered the City of Aleppo and Edessa he restored them to the Christians and many other places which he wan from the Turks whereby he so awed Melechem the Mammaluke who Succeeded Tarminus in Egypt that he durst not budg But of this Tartarian help they were altogether unworthy in regard they would not be at leasure to make use of it but busied themselves in private dissentions the Genoans and Ventians two states in Italy who had thrown of the Imperial Command and had erected themselves into commonwealths being not content to quarrel at home would needs go into Syria to fight it out there that so the Turks might look on and laugh at them the pretence of the quarrel was about superiority in the Church of St. Sabbas which was apointed by the Pope for them and the Pisans who likewise ingaged themselves in the quarrel somtimes siding with one side and some times with the other The Venetians being at length compelled by the Genoans to forsake the City were so incensed thereat that they came with thirteen Galleys and having forced asunder the chain which-crossed the Haven burned five twenty of the Genoans Ships that lay there to revenge which loss the state of Genoa sent a great Navy into Syria which meeting with the Duke of Venice at Tyre with the united power of the Venetians and Pisans being in all seventy four Vessels well provided would have set upon them in the Haven had not the Governour forbid it telling them that they should not fight under his nose but if they loved quarreling so well let them out and try their Fortunes in the open Sea which they did accordingly the manner of Sea-fights in those days before the thundering Ordnance was found out being only for one Vessel to run against another so that the the Ships were both Guns and Bullets themselves In which fight the Venetians prevailed destroying near thirty of the Genoans Ships and forcing the rest to save themselves in the Haven of Tyre Whereupon entering Ptolemais they expelled all the Genoans out of the City pulled down their Buildings and plundered all their Shops and Warehouses but after a ten years War they were at last reconciled in Palestine by the Authority of Pope Clement the fourth tho' their War lasted longer in Italy Charles Duke of Anjou and Brother to King Lewis was now made King of Sicily and Jerusalem by the Pope upon condition that he should conquer Maufred who then Reigned in Sicily and Molested His Holiness and root out all the remaining Race of Frederick and as an acknowledgment that he held those Kingdoms from the Pope pay him an annual pension of four some say forty thousand Pounds But having Conquered Maufred and possessed himself of Sicily he so little minded the regaining of Jerusalem that he never looked after it or came there at all which neglect gave an opportunity to Hugh King of Cyprus to furbish up his old Title to that Kingdom as Linealy descended from Almerick the second who coming to Ptolemais was there Crowned King of Jerusalem However the Christians affairs in Syria began now to hasten to their fatal Catastrophe and the Kingdom of Jerusalem was in a little time between two Kings wholly lost for Haalon the Tartarian Prince being sent for home to Succeed his Brother Mango who died without Issue left Abaga his Son with sufficient forces in the City of Damascus which he had likewise wan from the Turks who following his Father soon after substituted Guirboca his Lieutenant in Damascus who having his Nephew rashly slain by the Christians in an unhapy Broil about parting a great Booty taken from the Turks wholly renounced the Christian Religion together with all the Tartarians under his Command so that the Kingdom of Jerusalem having lost its best support soon after tumbled down Bondocdar who Succeeded Melechem in Egypt taking advantage of their being thus deserted by the Tartars took the City of Joppa all the inhabitants whereof he either
Damascus destroying all before him with fire and sword and carying away many rich booties till at last he was circumvented and taken prisoner by the Mammalukes who kept him in Captivity twenty six years till at length the Sultan of Egypt a Runegado German who had formerly been Enginneer to this Dukes Father set him at Liberty together with Martin his Servant thinking it but reasonable that he who had been his Partner in Misery should likewise pertake of his Happiness but they were no sooner at Liberty but they were both took again by Pirats as they were sailing into Syria which the Sultan hearing of pittied the misfortune of that distressed Prince and scorning that any should frustrate his designed courtesie set him free once more and then returning home he was welcomed with as much wonder as joy by his Subjects who supposed him to have been dead long before When he came home he found two Counterfeits who both pretended to be the Duke and challenged lodging with his Lady but upon his arrival to confute their false pretences they were both condemned to lose their lives by two contrary deaths the one being Burn'd and the other Drowned Charles King of Sicily and Jerusalem having at length made great preparations for the Holy War and strengthned his claim to the Kingdom of Jerusalem by purchasing the Title of Maria Domicella Princess of Antioch who likewise pretended to a Right he sent Roger Count of Severine as his Vice-Roy to Ptolemais where he was received with a great deal of Honour in despite of King Hugh but when his Navy and all things were said to be ready for his own departure and that he had by the way a design upon Michael Paleologus the Grecian Emperour a sudden and unexpected accident blasted all For on Easter-day as the Bell tolled to Even-Song all the Frenchmen in Sicily had their Throats Cut in a moment by the Natives the contriver of this Massacre was one Jacobus Prochyta a Doctor of Physick who thereby killed more in an hour then he cured in his Whole Life but the secresie of its contrivance vvas litle less then a Miracle that so many should knovv of it and yet none either through accident or design discover it from vvhence came the Proverb the Sicilian Vispers Charles himself was at Rome when this Tragedy was acted to see the Pope make Cardinals and when he received the news it struck him so to the Heart that he never injoyed himself after But living as without Life for about two years he died and left his Son Charles to Succeed him in the Kingdom of Naples and the Title of Jerusalem who had little remarkable in his Life but only that being offended with the Templars in Palestine for taking part with the King of Cyprus against him he siesed all the Lands and Goods they had in Naples or any other part of his dominions CHAP. X. Ptolemais Besieged and taken by the Sultan of Egypt and thereby the Holy War ended MElechsaites or as others call him Melechmessor about this time wan the strong Castle of Mergarh from the Hospitallers who kept it and banished the Carmalites out of Syria because they had changed their Habits at the appointment of Pope Honorious the Turks being generally haters of innovations And Alphir who was his next Successor understanding that the Christian Princes of Europe were at variance among themselves resolved to lay hold of that opportunity as the fitest time finally to expel the Christians out of Palestine and therefore coming out of Egypt with a great Army he besieged and won the Cities of Tripoli Sidon and Berytus and being incouraged with this Success he adventured to Besiege Tyre it self and notwithstanding its invincible strength took it in a very short time and beat it down to the ground as he did the other three Cities So that now there remained nothing of all that the Christians had won in Palestine but Ptolemais which he might easily have taken if he would have sate down before with his Army but he was unwilling to venture for fear least if he should attempt the taking all from them at once he might thereby alarum the Christian Princes to repair thither for their Relief and therefore concluded a Peace with the Venetians for five years thinking that the bitter potion would be the more easily swallowed by them if it were devided into two doses But tho' the City Ptolemais did at this time escape the Turks Victorious Arms ' yet it was notwithstanding in a most Wofull and Dismal condition for there were in it some of all Countrys and every Nation had their several Courts to deside causes in so that the great plenty of Judges occasiond a scarcity of Justice and Malefactors when they were impeached for any Crime would by appealing to a Tryal in the Court of their own Country escape the deserved Punishment it being a sufficient proof of the Criminals innocency in the Venetians or Genoans Court to say that he was a Subject of the State to which the Court belonged wherefore Personal Crimes were made National and particular faults by being espoused rendered publick offences so that outrages were every where practised and no where punished as if they had been resolved to spare Divine Vengance the pains of overtaking them by going forth to meet it Besides which there was at this time a great number of Pretenders eagerly pro secuting their several Titles to that City being no fewer then the Venetians Genoans Pisans Florentins the King of Cyprus and Sicily the Agents of the King of England and France the Princes of Tripoli and Antioch the Patriarch of Jerusalem the Master of the Templars and Hospitallers and the Popes Legate who would if he were now living think himself highly abused in not being first named All which Pretenders did at once with much Heat and Violence urge there Right to the Airy Title of the Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Command of that City like Bees making the greatest noise and Bwzzing when they were just ready to forsake the Hive There was within the City at this time many new Pilgrims who were lately come thither out of Europe five hundred whereof were of the Popes sending altho' he afterwards took no care for their Pay for tho' he loved to see the Golden Tide flow into his Coffers yet he could not indure to see it ebb again But the soldiers being not paid resolved according to their blunt but usual custom to pay themselves and therefore Marching out of the City Pillaged the Enemies Country contrary to the Peace made with Alphir The Turks demand satisfaction which was not only denied by those of Ptolomais but their Embassadors likewise abused Which so inraged Sultan Serapha Alphir being now dead that he gathered together all his Forces and sat down before the City with an Army of six hundred thousand men say some Historians tho' others make them not half the number and concluding that that City was so
of this threatned Voyage to Jerusalem which is thought to be propounded only to amuse Henry till Charles should have performed some projects he had then on foot in the Dukedom of Britain which design being scented by our King he used him accordingly More Cordial was the design of James the Fourth of Scotland Who being touched in conscience for his Fathers death which tho' he did not procure yet he seemed to countenance by his presence to expiate his Crime intended a voyage to the Holy Land In order whereunto he had prepared his Souldiers and imparted his design to Forrein Princes and had certainly gon had not other wars breaking out unexpectedly and his own sudden death prevented him Among those Overtures we find one said to be really performed by William Lantgrave of Hesse who with only Ninety eight Noble-men and Earls in his Company made a Holy Voyage into Palestine which he performed in Seven Months time And upon his return brought away with him Forty six Ensigns of Horse which he had taken from the Turks with the loss of one Man only and he not slain neither but died at Cyprus in their return home A Victory so absolute and bloodless to the Conquerour that were it true it would admit no parallel but the Voyage and Victory were both fictitious being found only in Calvisious who quotes one Fab an Historian no where to be met withal for his Author and the Chronology wherein it is recorded being Printed after the Author's death it is most probable that those to whom the care of Printing it was committed found this story in some Paper he had put in his Chronicle and for the improbability of it marked it to be Fabulous which word in regard he had written it defectively with the three first Letters only they thought to have been some Historian whose Name was Fab and so inserted it in the Chronicle it self Ever since the huffing Embassy of Charles the French King the Holy War hath for any thing I can find to the contrary been wholly laid asleep till revived again by the present Emperour of Germany and John Sobieski King of Poland in the Year 1683. The occasion whereof was briefly thus The Grand Seignior having by the persuasions of Count Teckeley sent an huge Army under the leading of the Grand Vizier to invade the Imperial Territories in Hugaria against which the Duke of Lorain who then commanded the Emperours Forces there being not able to make head they destroyed all before them with Fire and Sword and passing forward sat down before Vienna the Imperial City of Germany not doubting but that they should with their vast Army have quickly devoured that Important Place and notwithstanding its having been ever accounted the Bulwork of Christendom have added it to the rest of the Ottoman Conquest The Emperour of Germany and the King of Poland seeing the sad Estate to which things were now like to be reduced entered into a League offensive and defensive and resolved with their united Forces to chastise the Turk for that proud Attempt The Vizier's Army wherewith he had now begirt Vienna consisted of an Hundred and Fifty Thousand Men which were the very Flower of the Turkish Soldiery wherewith he made several fierce Attacks upon the City which were carried on with all the Courage and Skill imaginable and sprang several Mines whereby he did more mischief than by his Batteries Notwithstanding which the City by the resolution and encouragement of Count Starembergh their undaunted Governor bravely defended it self from the fourteenth of July till the twelfth of the following September when the Turks were Forced to raise the Siege and retire with great disorder into Hungaria whither they were so closely persued by the Victorious Christians that very few of that numerous Army escaped to carry the tidings of their Overthrow to Constantinople Vast quantities of Provision and Amunition above an hundred pieces of Cannon two Horse Tayls which the Turks allways use to hang out as a Denounciation of War when ever they undertake any great expedition all their Tents which were above thirty thousand in number all the Enemies Baggage together with the Viziers own Horse and the Grand Seignors STANDARD which was extraordinary Rich and Sumptuous being curiously Embroidered with charactars of Gold and Silver upon Green and Red Silk were here taken by the Christians as Trophies of their Victory the form and shape of the Standard you have here described in this figure The Infidels receiving likwise at the same time several great overthrows by the Sieur Kiniski General of the Cossacks who having slain about thirty thousand Turks and Taratrs entred the Country of Budziak destroying all before him slaying an hundred thousand of them and taking the Cities of Bialogrod and Ketin The Christians incouraged by these Victories resolved to persue them and drive the Turks quite out of Europe in order whereunto after they had taken the City of Tytchin and several other places which the Turks held in Upper Hungaria the Duke of Lorraein invested Buda it self with the greatest part of the Imperial Army Commanding Count Leslie to Encamp with the rest about Virovitzie on the Drave to cover the Siege This City is the strongest place the Turks injoy in Hungary it being formerly the Metropolis of that Kingdom where the Kings of Hungary kept their Courts but being taken from the Christians in the Year 1591. By Solyman the Magnificent Emperor of the Turks they have ever since made it the seat and constant residence of their Chief Bassa or Vice-Roy of that part of Hungary which is ssposseed by them so that it is very populous and rich And being exceedingly well fortified with a strong built Wall and an Invincible Castle and having between 18 or 19 Thousand Men in Garison they have made a stout resistance and declared a resolution to defend it to the last Man Notwithstanding which it is verily believed that it cannot hold out much longer but the Turks must be forced to surrender that City to the Emperor after having injoyed it near an hundred years And that the Turk might be imployed on all sides the Venetians were invited likewise into this League against them which they accepted of and sent out a brave fleet under the Command of their Generall Morosini to attack them at home to whch Fleet the Pope and the Knights of Malta also joyned several of their Galleys and so did the Duke of Tuscany making in all forty six Galleys six Galliesses thirty three Men of War twenty four Petaches four Fire Ships sixteen Brigantines armed and eighty two Galliots on Board whereof they had an Army of twenty five thousand Men or upwards Sancta Maria a strong Fortress of great consequence to the Turks was the first place that felt the force of their victorious Arms which being quickly compelled to a surrender they took their course towardsd Lepanto And General Moraseni concluding it necessary for the maintaining the Conquest of