Tag: knight

  • Knights in the Middle Ages

    Knights in the Middle Ages

    In the Middle Ages, the knight was a horseback warrior, most often in the service of a king or a great feudal lord. The term “chivalry” evokes in our minds a whole dreamlike and fantastic universe that speaks to us of self-transcendence, honor, loyalty, generosity, and courtesy, which literature and then cinema have widely echoed. Mounted on a powerful steed, wearing a helm, and clad in steel armor, the knight, wielding the sword “of thrust and cut,” proudly displays his colors. Beautiful, loyal, valiant, and courageous, chivalry still testifies today to what the Middle Ages truly were.

    Germanic Origins of Chivalry

    A 14th-century depiction of the 13th-century German knight Hartmann von Aue, from the Codex Manesse
    A 14th-century depiction of the 13th-century German knight Hartmann von Aue, from the Codex Manesse

    The cult of weapons asserted itself within Germanic societies, which provided numerous recruits to the declining Roman Empire. For the Germanic peoples, to be free is to be armed, and the transition from youth to manhood is marked by a ritual described in a famous text by the Latin writer Tacitus:

    Custom dictates that no one should take up arms until the city has recognized him as capable. Then, one of the leaders, his father, or his close relatives adorn the young man with a shield and a ‘framea‘: this is their toga; these are the first honors of their youth.

    Marc Bloch identifies the roots of medieval chivalry (initiatory warrior brotherhood) in the practices of Germanic societies of the early Middle Ages.

    Dungeons and the Castral Revolution

    The terms “castrum” and “castellum” initially denoted structures of modest size until the close of the 10th century. Basic wooden keeps were erected on rocky elevations, river bends, marshland nuclei, or plains atop mounds of earth. With the adoption of stone circa 1050, the keep gained resilience, adorned with square towers featuring arrow slits. Typically comprising three levels, these houses housed a cellar for provisions on the ground floor, a spacious chamber for the lord’s valuables above, and a roofed platform where sentinels kept vigil.

    While the keep offered sanctuary during perilous times, the lord and his household resided in adjacent edifices, encircled by a defensive palisade and a moat. Adjoining the master’s abode were stables, workshops, kitchens, and quarters for servants. The term “donjon” stems from “dungio,” derived from “dominus,” signifying the lord.

    The governance of the medieval castle rested with a lord castellan endowed with the right of ban (military, policing, and judicial authority), which he exercised through a retinue of warriors stationed in the garrison. These “milites” constituted a corps of permanent professional combatants, marking an innovation in 11th-century chivalry.

    A labyrinthine array of castles punctuated the landscape. Maine, boasting eleven castles in 1050, burgeoned to sixty-two by 1100; Poitou escalated from three to thirty-nine within the 11th century; meanwhile, Catalonia harbored eight hundred identifiable fortifications by 1050, a phenomenon historians term the “castellary revolution.” The tally of motte castles in France approximates ten thousand.

    Despite attempts by Charles the Bald to proscribe these constructions in 864, citing detriments to neighboring inhabitants, such communities, beleaguered by insecurity, opted to endure the impositions of lordly authority in exchange for the protection afforded by fortified strongholds and their armed defenders.

    The Knights of the Middle Ages: A Warrior Aristocracy

    In medieval society, the knight is the bearer of the sword, the one who has the right and duty to be armed. He is the protector of the men and women of his community so that they may go about their occupations in peace. In Europe, the bearing of arms has been perceived since ancient times as the mark of those who claim their dignity by shedding their blood and risking their lives. The prestige of the weapon makes the one who carries it a separate being with specific rights and duties.

    Among the knights, there are princes, dukes, and counts, but also men of modest origins: serfs and peasant commoners who have distinguished themselves because of their courage and loyalty to a noble in danger. Many epic poems recount these deeds. The lord looks after and feeds these “milites castri”; they are a part of his household.

    Others are “chased”; they receive lands intended to provide for their maintenance. Ministerial, identifiable serf knights can achieve social ascent (for example, through advantageous marriages). The younger sons of minor nobility must seek their fortune at the point of the sword, as they cannot claim their father’s inheritance.

    From the 11th century on, knights were expected to integrate into the ranks of the nobility, except for those already belonging to it. The merger between knights and nobility occurs later; it is necessary to wait until the 13th century in Lorraine and the 14th in Alsace to observe it. However, from the 13th century onward, chivalry closes in on itself, as the aristocracy wants to reserve the privilege for its sons. Chivalry then presents itself as the community of noble warriors opposing the “foot soldiers” without faith or law.

    A professionalization of the warrior emerges, with changes in combat techniques requiring specialization. In heavy cavalry, tactics are based on breaking through the enemy’s front. The charge is made at a gallop, with the lance wedged under the arm and lowered horizontally, unlike the lance throw, which can only be used once.

    Knight’s Weapons in the Middle Ages

    Hungarian knights routing Ottoman spahi cavalry during the Battle of Mohács in 1526
    Hungarian knights routing Ottoman spahi cavalry during the Battle of Mohács in 1526

    If javelins and pikes continue to be used by infantry, the knight’s lance is frequently cited in the literature, including epic poems, lays, and novels, extolling chivalric life. This lance, equipped with a wooden shaft, gradually extends to reach four meters and weighs nearly twenty kilograms. A stopper prevents the hand from slipping during impact.

    In the 15th century, a hook was affixed to the armor to secure the lance and cuirass together, easing the burden on the lance bearer (known as a knight-banneret), as the weight could increase due to the pennant, standard, or even the banner, which identifies the fighter and serves as a rallying point in the midst of battle. When the lance breaks, the sword must be drawn!

    The most commonly used offensive weapons are the lance and the sword, followed by axes, war hammers, flails, and daggers. Among the latter, “the mercy stroke” bears an eloquent name: its short and thin blade can penetrate the gaps between the metal pieces of the hauberk and helmet. The crossbow is such a fearsome weapon (its bolt pierces armor through and through) that the Council of 1139 forbade its use among Christians, to no avail. The great Welsh longbow, with an even faster rate of fire, wreaked havoc on French armies during the Hundred Years’ War.

    A close combat weapon (used for face-to-face combat), the sword of the 11th and 12th centuries is massive, measuring a meter long and weighing over a kilogram. It is called a thrusting and cutting sword because it strikes with both the tip and the double-edged blade. The handle, made of wood or horn covered with leather, and the round pommel designed to improve balance vary in elaborateness depending on the wealth of the owner.

    Crafting a good and beautiful sword that is elastic and resistant requires up to 200 hours of work. This sheds light on the blacksmith’s status.

    The brogne, a sturdy leather tunic reinforced with metal scales, served as the most typical form of protection until the middle of the eleventh century. Then the mail coat or hauberk, became highly valued. Made of interlocking iron rings of varying thickness and tightness (depending on cost), it protects the body down to the knees, with limbs covered by mail leggings and sleeves. Under the hauberk, a padded gambeson is worn to cushion blows and friction. A fabric coat of arms is worn over it, displaying the fighter’s heraldry.

    Warriors in Armor

    Page from King René's Tournament Book (BnF Ms Fr 2695)
    Page from King René’s Tournament Book (BnF Ms Fr 2695)

    From the 13th century onwards, the protection of the body was reinforced by applying metal plates to the chest, arms, and back, intended to make it more difficult for weapons to penetrate (a blow from an axe or a crossbow bolt could pierce a hauberk). This assembly became more rigid, leading in the 15th century to the grand white harness, a complete armor made of more effective, heavier, and more expensive articulated pieces!

    The knight’s head is protected by a helmet, the “heaume” (from the Germanic “helm”), a simple hemispherical cap reinforced with a nasal guard from the 11th century onwards, then with a ventail or visor pierced with eye slits. In the 12th century, the helmet became closed and cylindrical, with two narrow horizontal openings for vision and ventilation holes underneath. With the articulated visor, it evolved towards the “bassinet.” On the helmet a crest bears the knight’s heraldic symbol, adding weight to the helmet, which is only put on during combat.

    The shield completes the protective equipment. The Norman model, almond-shaped, is made of wood covered with leather but cumbersome; it is replaced by the variously shaped targe on which the knight’s arms are painted.

    Role of the Horse

    The warhorse, the destrier (held by the right hand of the squire), must be sturdy and resilient, capable of charging at a gallop and withstanding the press of the melee. It stands above the palfrey, used for traveling, and the roncin, a pack horse carrying the warriors’ gear. A knight must possess several destriers because it is not uncommon for his mount to be killed in battle, despite mail coverings intended to protect it. The complete equipment of the knight costs considerable sums, and many knights cannot afford to meet these expenses, so they seek the aid of a powerful lord by entering his service.

    Hunting in the Middle Ages was seen as training for war, both psychologically and physically, as the wild fauna of medieval forests could severely test even the most determined hunters, providing an opportunity to assess their mastery and endurance. The warrior’s training begins with hunting, as well as with horsemanship and horse care.

    The Knighthood Ceremony

    After a long and rigorous apprenticeship experienced alongside the aspirants of his age, the young squire is welcomed into the community of knights. It is the greatest day of his life: that of “knighthood” (which means in medieval French to equip).

    During this ceremony, the young boy, thanks to the weapons he receives, crosses the threshold that separates the status of a child from that of a man. This ritual is described in epic poems:

    Then they dressed him in very beautiful attire.
    And they laced a green helmet on his head.
    Guillaume girds the sword on his left side.
    He takes a great shield by the handle.
    He had a good horse, one of the best on earth.

    Before receiving the weapons, he will perform a sanctification gesture known as the accolade, which involves striking the recipient with the right palm of the person doing the dubbing. This is a symbolic test to see if the young man can withstand a blow without flinching. Thus inaugurated, the new knight must demonstrate horseback riding skills, then, at a gallop, strike down with a lance in the center the dummy mounted on a pivot meant to represent the enemy.

    Next comes the banquet, where the father, uncle, or lord shows generosity, which is a sign of chivalrous spirit, by entertaining their guests, not forgetting the poor, the jugglers, and the jesters who will extol the virtues of their benefactor.

    The Spirit of Chivalry in the Middle Ages

    The chivalry has its own code of honor, based on loyalty, courage, and often devotion to a lady (referred to as courtly love). Courageous in combat and faithful to his lord (or his king, or his lady), such is the image of the valiant knight.

    However, the knight remains primarily a warrior, and the church (like the people) often bears the brunt of private wars. That is why it tries to make the lives and actions of the knights moral, who soon receive the mission to protect those who pray and those who work. The knights thus transform into soldiers of God.

    Knights’ Tournaments

    Tournament from the Codex Manesse, depicting the mêlée
    Tournament from the Codex Manesse, depicting the mêlée

    The freshly dubbed knight must travel the world to gain experience and demonstrate his valor. He will find in the practice of tournaments the opportunity to distinguish himself and make a name for himself (vital for knights of modest origins) to find a protector to rise within feudal society. These tournaments are highlights of chivalrous life; they serve as grand maneuvers during which one trains for war.

    Two camps form according to affinities, family ties, and provincial origins. At the signal, the two troops launch against each other in combat whose rules resemble those of a real battle; wounded and dead are collected at the end of the confrontation, while prisoners are ransomed.

    In these tournaments, beautiful ladies and noble maidens crowd the stands, adorned in their finest attire, to witness the battles. If one of them entrusts her colors to a fighter, he must win or die. Life is hard for the knight!

    The Christianization of Chivalry

    Originally, the Church unequivocally relied on scripture (Matthew 26:52, “All who take the sword will perish by the sword” and “if a catechumen or a faithful wants to become a soldier, let him be sent away because he has despised God”). This condemnation persisted over the centuries, imposing severe sanctions on any man who killed one of his own.

    However, the church had to take into account the necessities implied by an increasingly intimate coexistence with the state. When the Germanic invasions raised concerns about the future of the Empire, the clergy had to denounce the militant incivility that declared antimilitarism represented. Thus, through the words of Saint Augustine, the theory of “just war” emerged.

    “The soldier who kills the enemy is like the executioner who executes a criminal; it is not a sin to obey the law. He must, to defend his fellow citizens, oppose force with force.”

    Just war (and the mission to conduct it) became justified because the duty of the Christian prince was to impose by terror and discipline what priests were unable to assert through words. In practice, the demands of Christian doctrine became, against the pagan or the infidel, a holy war.

    At the end of the 11th century, a formula was established, leading to the adherence of men of war: the Crusade. Its ideology was already present in Spain and Italy in the 9th and 10th centuries in the struggle between Islam and Christianity, but it reached its full extent when the Holy See announced a new objective: Jerusalem and the liberation of Christ’s tomb. The Christianization of chivalry is a phenomenon that has affected all of Christianity from the East to Northern Europe.

    Bayard: A Model Knight

    Entered into the service of King Charles VIII, the knight Bayard distinguished himself as early as 1495 at the Battle of Fornovo, during the Italian Wars. In 1503, his heroic defense of the Garigliano Bridge alone against 200 Spaniards to secure the French retreat earned him universal renown. His name also remains associated with the victory at Agnadello in 1509. He besieged Brescia with Gaston de Foix after deciding to take Bologna, but a pike blow during the assault seriously injured him.

    He managed to stop the enemy army in Pavia for two hours with 36 men despite being under threat from the Venetians’ and Swiss’ superior forces. He also sustained a serious shoulder wound. He was in Artois in 1513 when the English invaded, and at Guinegate (the Battle of the Spurs), the English captured him. Released shortly after, he was appointed lieutenant-general of Dauphiné. After the battle at Marignano in 1515, King Francis I wanted to receive a knighthood from his hands.

    In 1522, despite prodigies of valor, he could not prevent the defeat of La Bicocca in Lombardy. He was successful in getting the French army across the Sesia after defeating Romagnano, but on April 30, 1524, an arquebus shot fatally wounded him. Incarnated with courage and chivalrous spirit, he passed into posterity as “the knight without fear and beyond reproach.”.

    The Decline of the Knights

    The fortress linked to the history of chivalry is going to disappear, powerless to resist for long against repeated battery fire, and all military architecture is evolving. Proud walls must be abandoned in favor of low defenses “à la Vauban.”

    The setbacks of French chivalry during the major defeats of the Hundred Years’ War (Crécy, Poitiers, and Agincourt) demonstrate the increasing power of artillery and infantry.

    Time and history have done their work; chivalry has disappeared as an institution, but its ideals and models are still present. If chivalry is absent from society, is it also absent from the hearts of men?

  • Jousting and Knightly Tournaments in the Middle Ages

    Jousting and Knightly Tournaments in the Middle Ages

    Gradually organized into tournaments, jousting was a medieval combat of men on horseback who fought using a lance. Tournaments, a preferred pastime of nobles in the Middle Ages, experienced an extraordinary boom in France in the 12th century before spreading to Germany and England. Originally war games and sometimes deadly, they evolved into spectacles. They were ritualized simulations of violent combat between two teams in open fields and later jousts pitting knights against each other in pairs during chivalrous festivities, given in the 14th century “in honor of the ladies” during ceremonies, princely weddings, and other receptions…

    Jousting and Knightly Weaponry

    The nobles enjoy distinguishing themselves with weapons in hand, engaging in daily training from a young age. As a formative exercise for jousting, ring tilting sees skillful knights aiming for a ring fixed to a post. Lords also endorse games like shooting at the papegaut or wrestling, which serve as interludes in martial festivities. For “the safety and defense of the kingdom,” a decree by King Charles V in 1369 prohibited dice and other games in favor of archery and crossbow exercises, more suitable due to their military nature.

    Learning warfare while having fun is what young boys of the aristocracy do as they practice behourd (mounted combat) and the handling of wooden swords. Castle courtyards serve as schools where young athletes are trained to acquire flexibility, agility, and strength. They engage in running, stone or javelin throwing, high jumps, either armed or unarmed, and fencing (stick or sword fighting), robust pastimes preparing them for military art.

    The Quintain, a challenging trial, is a wooden articulated dummy placed atop a pole called an “estache.” Galloping towards it, the jouster must deliver a forceful lance blow against the target equipped with a hauberk and a shield to knock it down, aiming squarely in the middle. If the jouster fails to strike squarely or break his lance, he risks being unseated, thereby ridiculing himself in front of the assembly.

    While nobles handle swords, lances, and maces, bourgeois and peasants practice with sticks or fists and shoot with bows or crossbows. Skill in archery is paramount in the case of a siege. The papegaut (parrot) is a bird painted green placed atop a pole or on a rampart to serve as a target. Papegaut brotherhoods gather the best shooters and distribute prizes. A formidable weapon in the hands of the Bretons, the ferruled stick, or “estoc,” already features in a poem by the troubadour Marcabrun in the 12th century.

    Tournaments and Simulated Battles

    Jousting and Knightly Tournaments in the Middle Ages
    Image: Malevus.com

    Practiced regularly on St. John’s Day, at Pentecost, or on major occasions (royal weddings, plenary courts), the games of arms took place in the 12th and 13th centuries on a vast exercise field involving two armed groups with their leaders and soldiers. During these pitched battles, they clashed with real weapons, such as swords, lances, and maces, in teams from province to province. Horses and riders lined up in two lines for the maneuver to be executed.

    The troops charged with a great noise of weapons and swords at the signal from trumpets or the tournament bell. Sometimes the jousters put so much zeal into the confrontation that they forgot about the sporting dimension, and fighters lost their lives. The Duke of Brittany, Geoffroy Plantagenet, died at the age of twenty-eight from a wound received at a tournament held in his honor in 1186!

    This expression summarizes mixed tournaments where the stake is not only sporting: prisoners are taken (whose ransom is dearly paid), and the richly adorned horses, as well as the weapons of the vanquished, belong to the victor, representing a highly profitable trade that gives rise to controversies on the field. Some unscrupulous knights take advantage of the confusion to enrich themselves. Many barons and lords have been ruined to parade at these martial feasts! That is why the Council of Clermont condemned these detestable and mercantile games in 1130.

    Tournament Shows in the 14th and 15th Centuries

    The troubadour Jacques Bretel evokes in his writings, “The Tournaments of Chauvency,” the evolution of chivalrous society. The battles fought with bridles pulled tight in open fields transformed into an “elegant” sport practiced in enclosed spaces under the stands of spectators, the “hourds.

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    ” These stands, magnificently decorated with tapestries, coats of arms, banners, and pennants, welcomed princes, ladies, and maidens adorned in their finest attire.

    The fighters, heralds, and squires made a solemn entrance with their emblems and extravagant helmets of exaggerated dimensions. The crest, a kind of plume topping the helmet, was adorned with various motifs: heraldic animals, horns, branches, peacock or ostrich feathers, and embellished with a banner, the “lambrequin,” fluttering in the wind. The knights displayed vivid colors—red, green, or blue—on their shields, banners, or horse covers. They didn’t joust to enrich themselves but to showcase their skill and status with all the necessary panache. The staging resembled that of courtly romances cherished by the nostalgic nobility.

    The day before the tournament, the swords, banners, and helmets were reviewed, recalling the chivalrous laws (see Chivalry in the Middle Ages). On the scheduled day, the knights appeared, their squires following them and their minstrels playing trumpets in front of them. The heraldic banners of the challengers were brought and planted on the lists. Up until the trumpets signaled the retreat, the two teams fought. The queen of the competition, her ladies-in-waiting, the herald, and the judges presented the winners with their prizes.

    Jousting for the Ladies’ Love

    The desire to please ladies is not foreign to the staging of tournaments. Already in the time of the troubadours, knights engaged in the games of courtly love. The champions would whirl around in the hope of seducing a beautiful heiress. The sporting encounter becomes a place of seduction. According to the chronicler Jean d’Authon, the ladies were so adorned at a tournament held in 1507 in Milan in the presence of King Louis XII that “it was like a fairy tale.”

    The erotic element is evident in the custom of ladies offering their favors to their preferred knight. This could be a scarf, a veil, a sleeve (some dresses were equipped with sleeves sewn in a way to detach for this purpose), or another adornment that the chosen one adorns the top of his helmet, shield, or coat of arms with. In the frenzy of combat, the ladies offer so many adornments to the knights that in the end they find themselves bare-headed with their sleeveless coat, without a shirt or surcoat, and laugh at their adventure, “not having noticed their undressing!

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    Knights’ Weapons and Armor

    Very regulated, tournaments require specific equipment quite different from that of war, necessitating the wearing of a light breastplate under which lies a padded corset of canvas and tow to cushion the blows of mace and sword. The tournament helm is gridded with large lozenges on the front for breathing and visibility.

    For jousting and single combat, armorers reinforce the helm by eliminating the wide openings and replacing them with a narrow slit at eye level. This helm, named “toad’s head” because of its shape (weighing up to 9 kg), is attached to a steel corselet by huge hinges. The jouster’s armor is of considerable weight to give more power to the lance blow and stability to the rider. The breastplate is reinforced on the left side by a gauntlet on the forearm and a steel plate protecting the shoulder. Attached by a strap to the armor, the shield or targe is a wooden shield covered with leather or a deer horn with a relief grid that allows you to dodge lance blows.

    The so-called courteous lance, equipped with a rochet (a point with three rounded ends to distribute the impact and avoid piercing the armor), is light and fragile enough to break easily on the opponent’s helm or shield. The rider must brace himself on his mount to not “wobble in the saddle.” It takes a lot of dexterity to direct the blow. Following this combat, there is a foot joust “at the barrier” and a clash with an axe or war mace.

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    Henry II’s Fatal Joust

    In June 1559, splendid chivalrous festivities were held on the occasion of the marriages of Marguerite, the king’s sister, to the Duke of Savoy and Elisabeth of France to Philip II of Spain. The jousts were set up in the Saint-Antoine district, in front of the royal residence of the Tournelles.

    On the 30th, after participating in several jousts, the king, wearing the colors of his mistress Diane de Poitiers, decides (despite the queen’s astrologer’s predictions) to engage in one last rematch joust against the Count of Montgomery, who had “unseated” him. Unfortunately, the opponent’s lance breaks and pierces the king’s visor, passing through his eye from one side to the other. The king will agonize for ten days in great suffering.

    The tragic death of Henry II will hasten the decline of these highly prized games of the nobility.

  • El Cid: The Legendary Spanish Knight

    El Cid: The Legendary Spanish Knight

    In medieval Spain, Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar was a Castilian knight and warlord. He fought with both Christian and Muslim forces, earning him the Arabic accolade “El Cid” and the Spanish name “El Campeador”. In 1040, he entered the world in the town of Vivar, not far from the city of Burgos. According to the saying, on June 10, 1099, El Cid was atop the battlements protecting Valencia when he was shot by a stray arrow, and his death was recounted in this way by the Latin Chronicon Malleacense (although it is most likely that he died due to natural causes): “In Spain, at Valentia, Count Rodericus died, for which there was great mourning for the Christians and joy for the pagan enemies.

    Despite his later reputation as a champion for the Reconquest of the Iberian Peninsula and a national hero, El Cid submitted to the authority of both Christian and Muslim rulers at various points in his life. Instead of fighting for a higher cause, he fought for himself, making him what some writers call a “mercenary,” or a professional soldier who does so in return for payment.

    For his personal gain, Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar served as an armed mercenary for many warlords.

    El Cid was a courageous knight

    el cid 2
    El Cid (1040-1099) ordered the execution of an enemy. 19th-century drawing. Image credit: Granger, Fine Art America.

    By defeating the Navarrese knight Jimeno of Pamplona in a single encounter to resolve the dominance of several border castles that the kings of Castile and Navarre were battling over, Rodrigo gained even more status as a royal lieutenant in the court of King Sancho II.

    In spite of his animosity towards Rodrigo Díaz following the Battles of Llantada (1068) and Golpejera (1072), which resulted in the new monarch being forced to seek refuge in the Muslim court, Alfonso VI, who succeeded Sancho II after his death in the Siege of Zamora, honored him by giving him the hand of Lady Jimena Díaz, apparently the daughter of Count Diego Fernández and a relative of the monarch himself.

    Alfonso VI showed Rodrigo respect in spite of his animosity by giving him his cousin Jimena as a bride.

    The ways of El Cid

    After a Muslim invasion of the Castle of Gormaz, “El Cid” had one of his most memorable occurrences (Soria). As soon as Rodrigo Diaz heard the news, he assembled his troops and marched into the Kingdom of Toledo to look for the perpetrators. But King Alfonso’s intentions were derailed by Rodrigo’s sudden move, and so he exiled him.

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    When King Alfonso VI of León was fighting for territory in Toledo without Rodrigo’s assistance in 1081, the Muslims invaded Gormaz (Soria) unexpectedly and won a decisive victory, taking a considerable amount of loot with them. When Rodrigo Diaz heard the news, he went straight to work looking for the perpetrators rather than waiting for instructions from the monarch. Rodrigo’s activities in Toledo, the city from which he returned with as many as 7,000 prisoners (including men and women), thwarted King Alfonso’s efforts to peacefully annex this land. The monarch’s sentence of exile did not include the confiscation of the knight’s possessions.

    El Cid was exiled twice

    The count of Vivar agreed to aid Al-Muqtadir, King of Zaragoza, in his conflict with his brother Al-Mundir, King of Lérida, Tortosa, and Denia, despite the fact that the counts of Barcelona and Ramón Berenguer II had all refused Rodrigo Díaz’s assistance. In 1082, Rodrigo Díaz won a decisive victory against Berenguer Ramon II at Almenar. Two years later, in 1084, he beat the Aragonese ruler and an Islamic force Al-Mundir, near Morella. During this time, Rodrigo Díaz earned the name “El Cid,” which came from the Arabic term sid, meaning “lord.”

    Rodrigo earned the moniker “El Cid” when he defeated Berenguer Ramon II and Al-Mundir during his first exile.

    The year 1086 was a turning point in the narrative of the Iberian Peninsula. It is believed that a sizable Almoravid army crossed the Strait of Gibraltar from the Sahara. They claimed to adhere to a strict version of Islam and were prepared to use violence to establish it. When the Almoravids besieged the Murcian citadel of Aledo in November 1088, King Alfonso VI enlisted El Cid’s assistance in breaking the siege. The Alicante region of Villena was scheduled to be the meeting site for the armies of Alfonso and El Cid, but for whatever reason, the two armies never really met.

    The epitome of the mercenary

    Because of his pivotal role in the so-called Reconquest of the Iberian Peninsula, El Cid is celebrated as a national hero. A real mercenary, however, he battled for his own interests throughout his life, sometimes on the Christian side and sometimes on the Muslim side.

    El Cid camped out at Elche, where he was informed that King Alfonso, angry that he had not gotten the desired assistance, had labeled him a traitor. This was the lowest point of a knight’s life, and the punishment was death or exile.

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    From that point on, the Cid led Levante based on his own self-interest as an autonomous leader. He assumed the dominion of the whole Levant in 1090.

    After Alfonso VI’s death, the Taifa monarch of Toledo and Valencia, Al-Qadir, began making tax payments to El Cid. El Cid expelled the Catalan count from the Levantine territory after defeating a coalition led by Al-Mundir and Berenguer Ramón II in 1090 at the Battle of Tevar.

    Conquest of Valencia

    Meanwhile, in the summer of 1092, Alfonso VI advanced on Tortosa (then a tributary of El Cid) and Valencia itself, forming an alliance with the King of Aragon, the Count of Barcelona, and the towns of Pisa and Genoa, whose respective men and ships participated in the operation. However, the grand scheme ultimately failed, and Alfonso VI was soon forced to return to Castile from Valencia. At the same time, El Cid, who was in Zaragoza seeking an alliance with the King of the Taifa, launched a severe expedition into La Rioja as revenge.

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    In the years that followed, Ibn Jahhaf, the man who would later kill Al-Qadir, led relentless operations to seize Valencia. Cid encircled the city in 1093, and conditions there quickly deteriorated. After a year-long siege in which El Cid’s army utilized war machines to severely damage the city walls, Valencia ultimately surrendered on June 17, 1094, when El Cid declared himself “Prince Rodrigo el Campeador.”

    But the Almoravids didn’t give up, and in September of that year, a force led by Muhammad ibn Tashfin reached Quart de Poblet, only five kilometers from the capital, and besieged it, only to be soundly destroyed by the Cid.

    During his reign as Prince Rodrigo el Campeador, the El Cid took control of Valencia in 1094.

    el cid Charlton Heston
    El Cid in the movies: This 1961 Italian-American co-production “El Cid” movie stars Sofia Loren and Charlton Heston as Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar. It was directed by Anthony Mann. There were three Oscar nominations for the movie.

    Jimena, El Cid’s spirited widow, kept the local resistance going for two more years after her husband’s death, until they finally capitulated to the Muslim onslaught. She took El Cid’s body with her when she fled Valencia, and buried him at the monastery of Cardea. After many trials and tribulations, El Cid’s bones were reinterred in the Cathedral of Burgos, where his grave can still be seen today.