Unknown Crusader Castles
By Kristian Molin
Hambledon Press, ISBN: 1 85285 261 5 (2001)

Introduction
In November 1095 Pope Urban II launched the First Crusade at
Clermont in south central France. The popularity of his message turned out to be
enormous, as tens of thousands of people joined the expedition to liberate
Jerusalem from the Muslims in order to cleanse their own souls and, hopefully,
achieve salvation after death. Having suffered enormous hardships as it
travelled from western Europe through the Balkans, across Asia Minor and into
Syria, the First Crusade finally captured Jerusalem in July 1099. During this
gruelling journey its participants passed through several different regions
whose history was to become inexorably linked with that of the future crusader
states. Stretching from the Adriatic to Constantinople and dominating most
eastern Mediterranean islands, including Cyprus, the Byzantine empire viewed the
arrival of this and future Crusades with mixed feelings. On the one hand, the
empire's inhabitants were fellow Christians and therefore grateful for any aid
they might receive against the Turkish threat to the east. On the other hand,
they were of course Orthodox Greeks rather than Catholics, and were consequently
separated from western Europe by profound differences in religion, culture and
outlook, which often caused tension or even open warfare.
After they crossed the Bosphorus the armies of the First Crusade entered an even
more alien world as they gradually began to move into Muslim territories. During
the period covered by this book, these lands can loosely be divided into the
three key regions of Asia Minor, Syria and Egypt. Asia Minor had originally been
Byzantine, but by the logos most of it had been lost for good because of a
series of Turkish advances achieved in the course of the eleventh century.
During the next two hundred years the most dominant people in the region were
normally the Seljuk Turks. However, after the mid fourteenth century the various
Turkish peoples of Asia Minor were eventually unified under the rule of the
Ottomans, who subsequently expanded their power in such a spectacular fashion
that by 1520 they had created an empire stretching from North Africa to the
Balkans via Egypt, Syria, Turkey and northern Greece. But at the time of the
First Crusade and for a long time thereafter no such unity existed. The Muslims
who inhabited the other key regions of Syria and Egypt were sporadically at war
both with the Turks of Asia Minor and with each other. Unlike western Europe,
where urban growth was still extremely limited, these political struggles were
largely centred around the most important cities of the Muslim world. Inland
these included Aleppo, Damascus and Cairo, all of which had grown extremely rich
because of their trade links with Asia or Africa. Through ports such as
Alexandria, Acre and Tyre they also had economic connections with Italy and the
Byzantine empire, which ensured that the eastern Mediterranean was far richer
and far more sophisticated than any of the north European lands inhabited by
most members of the First Crusade.
The region also differed from the west in its cultural diversity. The Muslim
peoples were not just divided geographically or politically, they varied
considerably in terms of their ethnic background and according to whether they
adhered to the Sunnite or to the Shiite faith. The eastern Mediterranean also
had a notable population of Jews, plus several nonCatholic Christian groups,
many of whom lived under Muslim rule. These included various Orthodox
communities, as well as Maronites, Nestorians and Syrian Jacobites. The most
important such group for the purposes of this book was the Armenians. They
inhabited a large part of what is now south-eastern Turkey and northern Syria,
and in particular the region to the north west of Antioch known as Cilicia. They
had consequently lived under Byzantine rule until the Turkish incursions of the
eleventh century. Although the Greek emperors continued to enjoy some sporadic
authority over them during the next hundred years, their distance from
Constantinople ensured that by the late twelfth century the Armenians had
effectively become independent. This move toward independence was greatly aided
by the local terrain, for Cilicia itself was surrounded by mountains to the
north, east and west, and by the Mediterranean to the south. These barriers
helped to protect the Armenians both from the Greeks and from the Seljuk Turks.
Like the Byzantine Greeks, they enjoyed a love-hate relationship with the
crusading newcomers, for they were fellow Christians yet they were non-Catholics
with their own language, history and cultural identity.
This was the world which the members of the First Crusade entered in 1099.
Rather than feeling overawed by the rich and complex society they had
encountered, those crusaders who chose to remain after the fall of Jerusalem
wasted no time in consolidating the military gains they had made. Former Muslim
territories in western Syria and Palestine were gradually conquered and turned
into four new crusader states: the kingdom of Jerusalem, the principality of
Antioch, and the counties of Tripoli and Edessa. The westerners who undertook
these campaigns were mostly French, but others came from Italy, Germany and
Spain. Former Muslim ports such as Acre
After these states had been established, their twelfth-century history was
largely determined by the attitude taken towards them by the Muslim rulers of
Aleppo, Damascus and Cairo. These three key cities were frequently at war, and
at such times their rulers were prepared to negotiate peace treaties with the
Latins, or even seek Christian aid against each other. Although its field army
was relatively small, this enabled the kingdom of Jerusalem to prosper for most
of the early twelfth century. However, in the north the rulers of Aleppo
gradually proved to be more pugnacious toward Antioch and Edessa; and eventually
in 1144 the latter city was recaptured by the Muslims. By the early 1150s the
entire county of Edessa had disappeared, the failed Second Crusade (1148-49)
doing nothing to prevent this. During this period Nur al-Din, the ruler of
Aleppo, also managed to extend his rule to Damascus, threatening the security of
Jerusalem itself. Worse was to come after Nur al-Din's death in 1174, for
eventually his Syrian lands were annexed by Saladin, the ruler of Egypt. This
meant that the Christians could no longer rely on the divisions amongst the
Muslims to keep them safe, for Cairo, Damascus and Aleppo were now all
controlled by one man. Saladin's empire eventually gave him such an overwhelming
military superiority over the Latins that he was able to annihilate the crusader
field army at the battle of Hattin in July 1187. Thereafter the entire kingdom
of Jerusalem, including the holy city itself, was recaptured by the Muslims
except for the heavily fortified port of Tyre. Although the county of Tripoli
and the principality of Antioch did not suffer quite as badly, they too lost
considerable amounts of land, including the corridor of coastal land which
actually connected them, when Saladin launched another devastating campaign
against them in 1188.
Meanwhile, new crusader states had been set up in Greece after the Fourth
Crusade (1202-4), a joint expedition involving Venetian naval forces and
contingents of French and Italian knights. Its original purpose had been to
build on the achievements of the Third Crusade and attack the Muslims of Egypt,
but instead it ended up capturing Constantinople from the Greeks. This diversion
was caused by numerous political and economic factors, such as the request for
western aid by a Greek claimant to the imperial throne and the Venetian desire
to augment its share of the lucrative trade passing through the Aegean. It also
reflected the growing tension between the Greeks and the Latins, as there was
often mutual distrust between these two peoples because of their differences in
language, culture and religion. Both this expedition and Richard I's earlier
conquest of Cyprus reflected a growing willingness in the west to direct
crusades against people who were not necessarily Muslim but were nevertheless
considered schismatic opponents of Catholicism.
After the fall of Constantinople in 1204 some parts of the former Byzantine
empire were carved up into a number of new western states, whilst others
remained under Greek control. The period until 1380 witnessed a protracted
struggle between Latin newcomers and Greeks trying to recreate the Byzantine
empire. On the mainland this struggle generally favoured the Greeks, but by the
late fourteenth century both sides found themselves being confronted by an even
stronger opponent, the Ottoman Turks, who gradually swallowed up all Christian
territories around the Aegean regardless of whether they were Greek or Latin.
Meanwhile, the Muslim armies which had already driven the Franks out of the Holy
Land in 1291 also conquered Cilician Armenia in 1375. This was also a period of
crisis for the kingdom of Cyprus, for in 1374 it was invaded by Genoese forces
hoping to use the island as a base from which to dominate local trade and to
undermine the influence of their great rivals, the Venetians. This highly
destructive episode marked the beginning of the end for Cyprus as a fully
independent Frankish crusader state, for it resulted in the Genoese occupation
of Famagusta until 1464, after which the entire island fell under Venetian
control from 1489 onwards. Finally, in 1571, Cyprus was conquered by the Ottoman
Turks, thereby destroying the last Christian domain in the eastern Mediterranean
whose Frankish settlers could trace their ancestry back to the earliest crusader
states created by the members of the First Crusade.
This book is a study of the various military and non-military functions of
fortifications occupied by Latin or Armenian Christians who settled in the Holy
Land, Cyprus, Cilician Armenia and Greece between 1187 and c. 1380. The
political and military upheavals of the period ensured that fortifications
played a prominent role in its history. Yet the study of such structures still
has a number of important gaps which this book aims to fill. There has been a
tendency in the past for scholars to concentrate their efforts on castles in the
Holy Land, and in particular famous and wellpreserved structures such as Crac
des Chevaliers in Syria. Although this imbalance is being addressed by the work
of scholars such as Denys Pringle, Ronnie Ellenblum and Adrian Boas, who in
recent years have excavated, studied or recorded very many smaller crusader
fortifications and domestic structures, their studies are still focused on the
Holy Land itself, and especially on the kingdom of Jerusalem. A primary aim of
this book is to shed more light on fortifications built or occupied by Latins
and Armenians in the more obscure areas of Cyprus, Greece and Cilician Armenia.
The second, and closely related aim is to make up for the lack of studies which
deal with crusader fortifications from the thirteenth century onwards, even
though this period, as we have seen, represented a massive expansion of
crusading endeavour as Latins settled on Cyprus and in the former Byzantine
territories around the Aegean. Within the Holy Land itself there has often been
a tendency for historians to focus on the period between 1095 and the end of the
Third Crusade in 1192. This is perhaps understandable, bearing in mind that some
of the most famous military encounters of the middle ages, most notably the
First Crusade and Richard Lionheart's struggles with Saladin, took place during
this period. It may also reflect the nature of the sources, and in particular
the fact that William of Tyre's well-known history of the Holy Land, which
contains so many clear and accessible accounts of castles being built, besieged
or destroyed, ended in 1184. Thus for example, R. C. Smail's famous work on
crusader warfare dealt with the period from 1097 to 1193. In recent years
scholars such as C. Marshall, whose book on warfare between 1192 and 1291
represents a continuation of Smail's work, have begun to address this shortfall.
However,
The third aim of this book is to provide an analytical rather than a purely
descriptive study of fortifications in the eastern Mediterranean. Once again,
this is something which is already being done in the Holy Land. Alongside purely
archaeological or architectural works such as D. Pringle's recent survey of
secular structures in the kingdom of Jerusalem, some scholars have also
researched the ways in which castles were actually used by the Latins, and how
they fitted into the wider military and political history of the Latin East. The
earliest and most influential book of this kind was undoubtedly Smail's
Crusading Warfare, but, as we have seen, this has now been complemented by
Marshall's important study of the period after 1192. Other books to appear in
recent years which have viewed castles in the same light include Hugh Kennedy's
Crusader Castles (Cambridge, 1994), plus numerous publications by leading
archaeologists such as Pringle's The Red Tower (London, 1986) and Ellenblum's
Frankish Rural Settlement in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem (Cambridge, 1998).
Beyond the Holy Land itself, the picture is very different. Studies already
exist devoted to the visible remains of fortifications in Cyprus, Greece and
Cilician Armenia, but apart from giving brief historical outlines of the sites
they refer to, these works are largely devoted to listing and describing
surviving structures. What these fortifications were actually used for, rather
than what they looked like, is a topic which has barely been touched upon, and
it is one of the principal aims of this book to make up for this silence. At
times it will become apparent that this can be a difficult task, because some
areas, most notably Frankish Greece and Cilician Armenia, are lacking both in
reliable historical sources and in recent subsurface archaeological excavation.
No studies exist for these areas which can compare with the very detailed
research undertaken in the kingdom of Jerusalem, where a wealth of information
from papal letters, contemporary chroniclers or surviving charters, combined
with the meticulous investigations of leading archaeologists, has sometimes made
it possible to recreate the history of certain crusader castles virtually year
by year.
Despite the limited scope for this type of research outside the Holy Land, a
combination of archaeological and historical sources can shed much new light on
the functions of local fortifications. For example, during the last thirty years
the archaeologists Hansgerd Hellenkemper and Robert Edwards
The vast majority of research already carried out on crusader fortifications, as
is already clear, has concentrated on the Holy Land, and in particular on the
kingdom of Jerusalem (or Acre, as it is often known after 1187). This book
nevertheless contains a chapter on that region, partly because it is the most
famous and important area of crusading endeavour, and partly because it gives
this research as a wide a scope as possible, so that comparisons can be made
between the functions of fortifications in the Holy Land and those situated in
other parts of the eastern Mediterranean. It is hoped that this will show how
the famous castles built by the crusaders in the Holy Land were sometimes very
different from, but sometimes very similar to, the many less well-known
strongpoints constructed in Greece, Cyprus and Cilician Armenia.
This book deals with the period from 1187 to 1380. From what has already been said it will be clear that much work has already been done on the Holy Land, particularly during the twelfth century, yet after 1187 the Latins acquired far more crusader territories around the eastern Mediterranean than they had held before the battle of Hattin. It was also a time when Cilician Armenia gained independence from Byzantine authority, being transformed into another Christian state which had to face the growing pressure applied by powerful Muslim neighbours. Many more Christian strongpoints were built or occupied during this period than the hundred years immediately after the First Crusade. The year 1380 seems a natural ending point for this book for a number of political, military and cultural reasons: Cilician Armenia fell in 1375, bringing its history as an independent state to a close. Cyprus was invaded by Genoa in 1374, and although the Genoese were only able to conquer a small part of the kingdom, this period signalled the end of the island's status as a prosperous crusader state, for its economy was in decline and its political life gradually came to be dominated by Italians rather than by the Frankish families who had originally settled there after 1192. In Greece, meanwhile, the tide had definitely turned in favour of the Ottoman Turks, for by the end of the fourteenth century they had already conquered most of the Byzantine empire and were beginning to penetrate the remaining Latin states in south-western Greece. Technologically speaking, 1380 also seems an appropriate date at which to stop, because by that point gunpowder was already known in Europe. Although it would be a long time before it revolutionised warfare in its entirety, this new discovery heralded the beginning of the end for the kind of medieval fortifications dealt with in this book. Hence both politically and technologically the late fourteenth century marked the end of an old era and the beginning of a new one.

We thank Hambledon Press and
Kristian Molin for allowing us to republish the Introduction of this book.