HISTORY 221: THE MEDIEVAL LEGACY




 READING GUIDE WEEKS 3-4 (Joinville’s Life of Saint Louis)

A. Jean de Joinville, Life of Saint Louis
John de Joinville was a nobleman from the region of Champagne (in fact Joinville’s family held the hereditary office of Seneschal of this county) who joined Louis on the crusade of 1248-1250; during this adventure the two became close, and on their return, Joinville became a royal counselor.  St Louis died in 1272 and was canonized (made a saint) at the end of the thirteenth century.  Joinville wrote up his memoirs of his time with the king at the very end of his life (c. 1315).  You ought to read the dedication, Part I, and Chapters 18-20 of Part II with particular care; the long middle section describing the crusade to Egypt is significant, but we aren’t interested in most of the facts. You ought to be able to skim parts of it. Make sure you know the broad sweep of what happened on Louis’ crusade; look also for information about Louis’ style of kingship: how important to Louis were military skills, honor, chivalry, piety, etc. during the crusade?  Glossary: Saracen is a word for muslim; livre is the French word for ‘pound’ (of silver).

1. In his introduction, Joinville compares St Louis to Christ.  How? Why is this significant?
2. What do the four occasions in which Louis risked his life for his men tell us about him as a man? As a king?
3. St Louis’ words to his son at Fontainebleau (167) are typical of his kingship. What sort of kingship is this? How does it compare to the English kings?
4. What do the personal anecdotes about the king tell us? Why does Joinville bother to tell them to us?
5. What does the incident between Joinville and Maitre Robert de Sorbon [after whom the Sorbonne in Paris is named] tell us about the nobility of France? What do Louis’ actions tell us about his personality? His kingship?
6. How pious was Saint Louis? Give some examples.
7. The chapter “Turbulence of Barons” pertains to the troubled period of Louis’ minority (when his mother, Blanche of Castile, acted as regent). What does the barons’ rebellion against royal authority suggest about the power of the French monarchy? How did these troubles end?
8. Why did Louis choose to go on crusade? What does ‘taking the cross’ mean?
9. Joinville’s personal anecdotes about his preparations for crusading are illustrative: what did lords have to do before they left? What worries might they have about being on crusade?
10. Why is the oath mentioned on the bottom of p. 192 significant? Are you surprised by Joinville’s part in it?
11. Why does Joinville relate the story of the clerk (clergyman) who killed three of the king’s sergeants (p. 193)? What is the moral of this story?
12. How did Joinville come to enter the king’s service?
13. The chapter on preparations reveals the ladder-like process by which an army was raised. The king called out his barons, who each brought a number of knights, knights-banneret or sergeants based on the size of their lands (and their income). This process is called lordship, and we will study it later in the course.
14. Where did the crusaders land? Why did they choose this place? How successful were they initially?
15. Often the interests of new crusaders (like Louis’ army) clashed with the ideas and customs of those Europeans who had settled in the Middle East during the first wave of crusades (1099-1189).  These ‘eastern’ crusaders were often far less bellicose than the new arrivals, and were often far more interested in negotiating a settlement with their Muslim neighbors. One such (minor) argument appears on p. 206-7 after Louis had captured Damietta.
16. Another problem on the crusade was the conflict between cultural attitudes that emphasized chivalry, honor, and noble behavior and the dictates of military discipline. The death of Gautier d’Autreche (p. 208) and Louis’ reaction to it are connected to this clash of values.
17. After Damietta, where did the army go? Why?
18. What was greek fire?
19. The Templars were a military monastic order founded originally in 1119 to guard pilgrims coming to and travelling in the Holy Land. Its members were knights, from aristocratic backgrounds, but they followed a quasi-monastic rule that limited luxury, wealth, sexuality, and personal property. They (and a similar group called the Hospitallers) were the closest thing to a professional army that existed in the Christian lands of the Holy Land.
20. What happened at the battle of Mansourah? How did Louis end up in captivity?
21. What was captivity like for the Franks? How did they gain their freedom?
22. What notions of kingship can we derive from Louis’ sojourn in the Holy Land (ie., in Acre, Caesarea and Jaffa)?
23. What was Louis’ attitude towards justice? Does he take a hands-on approach?
24. Where and how did Louis settle law cases? How does this contrast to English procedure?
25. Louis’ advisors disagreed with his decision to make peace with King Henry III of England [at the Treaty of Paris, 1259] (p. 334).  Why? How did the king respond? What were his motives?
26. What adjectives might we use to describe Louis?
27. How did Louis interact with the church? What was his response to the request to have his officers force excommunicates to amend their ways?
28. What was Louis’ attitude towards war? What about towards private war?
29. What does Louis’ long ordinance (of 1254) tell us about royal administration? About morality? About piety?
30. How did Louis regulate and reform the governance of the city of Paris?
31. Explain Louis’ charitable actions.
32. How did Louis’ second crusade (in 1270) fare? Why?
33. Try to sum up Louis’ strengths and weaknesses. What kind of adminsitrator was he? What kind of bureaucrat? What kind of warrior? What kind of lord? What kind of Christian? What kind of father/husband?
34. Why do you think Joinville thought Louis was great?
 


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