Record Details

Rhetoric and Reality: Latin Christian Unity during the First Crusade

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title Rhetoric and Reality: Latin Christian Unity during the First Crusade
Names Chamberlain, Hannah M. (creator)
Lauer, Rena (advisor)
Date Issued 2015-05-22 (iso8601)
Note Honors Bachelor of Science (HBS)
Abstract This thesis focuses on Latin Crusader unity, or the lack thereof, during the First Crusade.
Letters written during the First Crusade show that crusaders used rhetoric of unity to
affirm superiority over their enemy, to dissolve differences between one another, and to
justify the warfare. The reality of the First Crusade, however, consisted of disunity
between crusaders and amongst the leadership. This division developed after a drawn out
battle over the city of Antioch and the death of the religious leader and papal legate,
Bishop Adhémar of Le Puy. The emotional trauma in 1098, along with supply shortages
and survival mentality, altered crusader attitudes and motives during the last year of war.
Crusaders reclaimed Jerusalem in 1099 and used new territory to project political,
military, and cultural influence in the eastern Mediterranean region. This thesis argues
that the rhetoric of unity outlasted the disunity crusaders experienced and formed a new
identity by which Latin Christians would use to justify future Crusades. Over the course
of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, the Church would engage in over a dozen more
Crusades against cultural and political enemies.
Genre Thesis
Access Condition http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/3.0/us/
Topic First Crusade
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/55958

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