Read An Empire of Memory Online
Authors: Matthew Gabriele
Tags: #History, #Medieval, #Social History, #Religion
11th cent., the Charroux legend eliminated the middle man and had Charlemagne acquire the
christological relics in Jerusalem himself. See Ch. 2 above.
43 Callahan, ‘The Cross, the Jews’, 17–19.
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worthy piety to the fruit of penance’.44 Yet, all this devotion to new Jerusalems in
the West simultaneously (and perhaps paradoxically) reinforced the necessity of the
real Jerusalem. No matter how sacred the loci sancti in the West, no matter how
vivid an image of Jerusalem that shrine or cloister became, it could never be
anything more than an image. And an image requires something tangible and
real from which it can reflect––the true Jerusalems, heavenly and terrestrial. While
the heavenly Jerusalem was not attainable in this life, Christ’s own city was.
The roots of Christian pilgrimage lay deep in late antiquity.45 Despite the fact that
virtually every monastery or church throughout Europe was a pilgrimage destina-
tion during the Middle Ages, the perceived efficacy of their relics distinguished
certain cult centers from the rest. In other words, the difference was mostly a matter
of scale, with Jerusalem sitting at the apex.46 Bede’s De locis sanctis, an early eighth-
century reworking of Adomnan of Iona’s (and the Pseudo-Eucherius’) description
of the holy places, may best represent how the West thought about the Holy Land
in the early Middle Ages. This extremely popular text, which served as a model for
later writers and was particularly important during the Carolingian centuries,
continued to be the dominant descriptive source of the Holy Land until well into
the twelfth century.47 Bede’s account begins with a short biblical history of the city
and its geographical situation, then briefly narrates Jerusalem’s destruction by Titus
in 70 CE and explains why the Holy Sepulcher is now located within the city walls.
44 ‘Tribuas gestimus quatinus nostrates, qui ad urbem Iherosolimam causa abholendi sua peccata
venire nequeunt, quiddam in partibus nostris visibile habeant, quod ad passionis dominice mentionem
corda eorum fideliter molliat et ad fructum penitencie digna revocet pietate.’ Descriptio qualiter Karolus Magnus clavum et coronam Domini a Constantinopoli Aquisgrani detulerit qualiterque Karolus Calvus hec
ad Sanctum Dyonisium retulerit, in Die Legende, 112.
45 See the fundamental Peter Brown, The Cult of the Saints: Its Rise and Function in Latin
Christianity (Chicago, 1981). On the transformation of Jerusalem into a Christian space and its
appeal as a pilgrimage destination, see Wilken, Land Called Holy, 82–125; and Annabel Wharton,
Refiguring the Post-Classical City: Dura Europe, Jerash, Jerusalem and Ravenna (Cambridge, 1995),
64–104. We should here too note that the word ‘pilgrimage’ reflects our modern understanding of this
particular phenomenon. Into at least the early 12th cent., peregrinus seems to have commonly meant
‘traveler’ or ‘wanderer’ and is used in just this manner e.g. in the Vulgate. ‘peregrino molestus non eris scitis enim advenarum animas quia et ipsi peregrini fuistis in terra Aegypti’, Exod. 23: 9. See also Janus Mller Jensen, ‘War, Penance and the First Crusade: Dealing with a “Tyrannical Construct”’, in
Tuomas M. S. Lehtonen, Kurt Villads Jensen, Janne Malkki, and Katja Ritari (eds.), Medieval History
Writing and Crusading Ideology (Helsinki, 2005), 55–6.
46 Bernhard Töpfer, ‘The Cult of Relics and Pilgrimage in Burgundy and Aquitaine at the Time of
the Monastic Reform’, in Thomas Head and Richard Landes (eds.), The Peace of God: Social Violence
and Religious Response in France around the Year 1000 (Ithaca, NY, 1992), 46–50.
47 For instance, Bernard the Monk’s late 9th-cent. account does not describe the Holy Sepulcher in
his pilgrimage account, simply referring the reader back to Bede. Bernard the Monk, A Journey to the
Holy Places and Babylon, in Jerusalem Pilgrims Before the Crusades, tr. John Wilkinson (Warminster,
2002), 266. On the afterlife of Bede’s account, see Graboïs, Le Pèlerin occidental, 79, 184, 192. On
Bede and the Carolingians generally, see Joyce Hill, ‘Carolingian Perspectives on the Authority of
Bede’, in Scott DeGregorio (ed.), Innovation and Tradition in the Writings of the Venerable Bede
(Morgantown, WV, 2006), 227–49; and Mark Stansbury, ‘Early-Medieval Biblical Commentaries and
their Readers’, Frühmittelalterliche Studien, 33 (1999), 75–6. Bede’s was a very conscious reworking of Adomnan’s text. See Arthur G. Holder, ‘Allegory and History in Bede’s Interpretation of Sacred
Architecture’, American Benedictine Review, 40 (1989), 127, for examples of some of the choices Bede
made.
New Jerusalems and Pilgrimage to the East before 1100
85
After mentioning Constantine and Helena’s impact on the city, the account moves
on to descriptions of the holy sites, beginning with the Holy Sepulcher and ending
with the resting place of the True Cross in Constantinople.48 But these discussions
of the holy sites do not note contemporary architectural or geographical markers.
Instead they are couched exclusively in terms of Old or New Testament events.
Jerusalem continued to be ‘read’ and the terrestrial Jerusalem’s only importance
sat squarely in the past. The land around Jerusalem was the dwelling place of the
(long-dead) saints. Monasteries and churches were empty vessels, devoid of current
inhabitants and contemporary significance, serving only as memorializations of
decisive moments of sacred history. Mount Zion commemorated the descent of the
Holy Spirit to the apostles and the death of the Virgin. Raab’s house in Jericho was
all that was left of the city of Joshua and its tumbling walls. According to Bede, all
there was in the city now called Neapolis was ‘a church split into four parts, that is
in the way of a cross, in the middle of which is Jacob’s well, forty cubits deep . . . , at
which Christ thought a Samaritan woman worthy to ask water from her’.49 Bede
narrates a place where time seems to have stopped, allowing the pilgrim (or reader)
to walk through the pages of the Old and New Testaments.
In Palestine, the pilgrim followed his or her own mental map, created by their
particular understanding of scriptures. Sacred history led the early medieval pilgrim
through the Holy Land, even if that history seemed to have stopped just after the
crucifixion. The Holy Land became, in a way, ‘atemporal’. It existed almost outside
of time, a museum where one could look directly at the past, which lived on into
the present. The pilgrim ‘relived’ both Testaments as he or she visited each site,
contemplating the crucifixion on Golgotha, the entry into Jerusalem via the Mount
of Olives, etc. If one so chose, the pilgrim could quite literally walk in Jesus’
footsteps, especially along the route of the crucifixion. As Blake Leyerle has written,
‘Unlike other historical events which unscroll in time, the sights of the biblical land
are repeatable.’50 One could experience them anew by visiting their place. The
stational liturgy that the pilgrim would encounter at Jerusalem would only heighten
this association, with specially chosen readings recreating the past for their
48 Bede, De locis sanctis, ed. I. Fraipont, CCSL (Turnhout, 1965), 175: 251–80.
49 ‘Ecclesia quadrifida est, hoc est in crucis modum facta, in cuius medio fons Iacob XL cubitis
altus . . . , de quo Dominus aquas a Samaritana muliere petere dignatus est.’ Bede, De locis sanctis, ed.
Fraipont, 258–9, 267, and quotation at 275.
50 Leyerle, ‘Landscape as Cartography’, 128–31, quotation at 131; Graboïs, Le Pèlerin occidental,
33, 109–16; Ora Limor, ‘“Holy Journey”: Pilgrimage and Christian Sacred Landscape’, in Ora Limor
and Guy G. Strousma (eds.), Christians and Christianity in the Holy Land: From the Origins to the Latin Kingdoms (Turnhout, 2006), 347–51; and Mary B. Campbell, ‘“The Object of One’s Gaze”:
Landscape, Writing, and Early Medieval Pilgrimage’, in Scott D. Westrem (ed.), Discovering New
Worlds: Essays on Medieval Exploration and Imagination (New York, 1991), 6, 11–12. On the imitatio
Christi, see Graboïs, Le Pèlerin occidental, 84–5; Sumption, Pilgrimage, 92–3; and now Purkis,
Crusading Spirituality, who argues convincingly for the prevalence of the idea (if not the explicit use of the phrase) in the 11th cent. It is interesting to note, however, that pilgrim narratives almost never dwell on Jerusalem’s place in the events of the Last Days. For example, of all the pre-1100 narratives translated in John Wilkinson’s Jerusalem Pilgrims Before the Crusades, Bernard the Monk is the only
writer to mention the site of the Last Judgment. See Bernard the Monk, Journey to the Holy Places, tr.
Wilkinson, 267.
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Jerusalem
listeners.51 In this way the pilgrim could feel the continuation of the covenant
between God and his people––the ‘new’ Israel––without being troubled by the
city’s ‘profane’ present (Jerusalem being controlled by Muslims continuously
between 638 and 1099).
None of these ideas, however, could overcome inherent difficulties in travel from
the West and pilgrimage to Palestine remained sporadic before the eleventh
century. In the ninth century, the Franks tried to re-establish contacts with
Jerusalem by exchanging emissaries with the Islamic Caliph, the patriarch of
Jerusalem, and religious houses around the city (especially the Benedictine monas-
tery on the Mount of Olives and the church of St Mary Latin in Jerusalem itself ).52
This all seems to have had an effect, for while the eighth century was dominated by
diplomatic envoys to Constantinople, the ninth century witnessed an upsurge in
the number of pilgrims setting off for the Holy Land.53 But the waxing of
pilgrimage to the East in the ninth century was followed by its waning in the
tenth, which in turn was followed by renewed interest in pilgrimage to the Holy
Land before the turn of the first millennium. At that time, the Holy Sepulcher
became a ‘magnetic pole’, likely attracting many more pilgrims than are even
attested in the surviving sources. By c.1030, pilgrimage to the Holy Land had
become more popular than it ever had been before, more popular even than the
route to Rome.54 One of the factors contributing to this resurgence in pilgrimage to
the Holy Land in the eleventh century was the reopening of the land route to
Constantinople.
In the ninth century, the Western traveler could sail the short distance across the
Adriatic Sea from Bari or Brindisi to Durazzo and follow the old Roman Via
Egnatia through the Byzantine-held Balkans to Constantinople. The Bulgars,
however, took control of at least part of the route by the middle of the century
and this change, coupled with the poor physical condition of the road at the time,
led to the collapse of the route by the beginning of the tenth century. But the route
reopened as the Byzantines expanded once again into the Balkans and northern
Syria, with their navy simultaneously starting to reassert itself in the eastern
51 e.g. see the late 4th-cent. description by Egeria. Egeria’s Travels, tr. John Wilkinson, 3rd edn.
(Warminster, 1999), 142–64.
52 See the fuller discussion in Ch. 1, above.
53 Michael McCormick, Origins of the European Economy: Communication and Commerce, A.D.
300–900 (Cambridge, 2001), 435, 171, respectively; also Yitzhak Hen, ‘Holy Land Pilgrims from
Frankish Gaul’, Revue Belge de Philologie et d’Histoire, 76 (1998), 295.
54 The characterization of the Holy Sepulcher is from Françoise Micheau, ‘Les Itinéraires maritimes
et continentaux des pèlerinages vers Jérusalem’, in Occident et Orient au Xe siècle: Actes du IXe congrès de la Société des historiens médiévistes de l’enseignement supérieur public (Dijon, 2–4 Juin 1978) (Paris, 1979), 75. On the number of pilgrims, see Colin Morris, ‘Memories of the Holy Places and Blessings
from the East: Devotion to Jerusalem before the Crusades’, in R. N. Swanson (ed.), The Holy Land,
Holy Lands and Christian History (Woodbridge, 2000), 90–1; Phyllis G. Jestice, ‘A New Fashion in
Imitating Christ: Changing Spiritual Perspectives around the Year 1000’, in Year 1000, 178; and
France, ‘Le Rôle de Jérusalem’, 154–5. See also the lists of travelers compiled in Runciman,
‘Pilgrimages to Palestine’, 68–78; Micheau, ‘Itinéraires’, 79–104; and Jean Ebersolt, Orient et
Occident: Recherches sur les influences byzantines et orientales en France pendant les Croisades, 2 vols.
(Paris, 1929), i. 72–81.
New Jerusalems and Pilgrimage to the East before 1100
87
Mediterranean.55 Thus, the oft-cited conversion of the Hungarians to Latin
Christianity, coupled with this re-emergence of Byzantium as a power in the
Balkans, allowed a Western pilgrim to travel virtually the whole overland route to
the Holy Land through Christian lands by the early eleventh century. The ‘new’
land route to the East was immediately popular. As late as the First Crusade, every
army followed the land route in one form or another. The armies of the northern
Franks and Southern Italian Normans did journey part of the way to Constanti-
nople by ship, but they both followed ninth-century precedent, traveling only the
short distance from Southern Italy to the Albanian coast by sea and continuing
overland to Constantinople from there. The northern Franks picked up the Via
Egnatia at Durazzo and followed it through the Balkans to Constantinople, while