Geoffrey of Villehardouin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Geoffrey of Villehardouin (in French Geoffroi de Villehardouin) (1160 – c. 1212) was a knight and historian who participated in and chronicled the Fourth Crusade. He is considered one of the most important historians of the time period,[1] best known for writing the eyewitness account De la Conquête de Constantinople (On the Conquest of Constantinople), about the Crusader success on April 13, 1204. The Conquest is the earliest French historical prose narrative that has survived to modern times. After the Crusade, he became Marshal of Champagne, and his full title was: "Geoffrey of Villehardouin, Marshal of Champagne and of Romania".

Contents

[edit] Biography

A layman and a soldier [2], he joined the Crusade in 1199 during a tournament held by Count Thibaud III of Champagne. Thibaud named him one of the ambassadors to Venice to procure ships for the voyage, and he helped to elect Boniface of Montferrat as the new leader of the Crusade when Thibaud died.

Although he does not say so specifically in his own account, he probably supported the diversion of the Crusade first to Zara and then to Constantinople. While at Constantinople he also served as an ambassador to Isaac II Angelus, and was in the embassy that demanded that Isaac appoint Alexius IV co-emperor.

After the conquest of the Byzantine Empire in 1204 he served as a military leader, and led the retreat from the Battle of Adrianople in 1205 after Baldwin I was captured. In recognition of his services, Boniface of Montferrat gave to Geoffrey the city of Messinopolis in Thrace.

In 1207 he began to write his chronicle of the Crusade, On the Conquest of Constantinople. It was in French rather than Latin, making it one of the earliest works of French prose. Villehardouin's account is generally read alongside that of Robert of Clari, a French knight of low station, Nicetas Choniates, a high-ranking Byzantine official and historian who gives an eyewitness account, and Gunther of Pairis, a Cistercian monk who tells the story from the prespective of Abbot Martin who accompanied the Crusaders.

Villehardouin's nephew (also named Geoffrey) Geoffrey I of Villehardouin went on to become Prince of Achaea in Morea (the medieval name for the Peloponnesus) in 1209. Villehardouin himself seems to have died shortly afterwards, perhaps in 1212.

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Smalley, p. 131
  2. ^ Smalley, p. 141

[edit] References

  • Chronicles of the Crusades (Villehardouin and Jean de Joinville), translated by Margaret R. B. Shaw (Penguin). ISBN 0-14-044124-7
  • Colin Morris, "Geoffroy de Villehardouin and the Conquest of Constantinople", History 53 (February 1968): 24-34
  • Beryl Smalley (1974). Historians in the Middle Ages. Thames and Hudson. ISBN 0-684-14121-3. 

[edit] External links