1190
The plan of embarking the troops. The
English fleet. The French forces. Richard’s
rules. The origin of tarring and feathering. Command
of the fleet. The fleet dispersed by a
storm. A delay in Lisbon. The
rendezvous at Vezelai. Devastation by the
armies. Richard goes to the East in advance
of his fleet. The rendezvous at Messina. Joanna. Richard’s
visit. King Richard’s excursions. Ostia. A
quarrel. Why Richard quarreled with the
bishop. Naples and Vesuvius. The
crypt. Salerno. Richard’s
visit there. The fleet. Richard
pursuing his journey along the coast of the Mediterranean. Richard’s
tyrannical disposition. Stealing the falcon. Richard
flees to a priory to escape the peasants.
The plan which Richard had formed
for conveying his expedition to the Holy Land was
to embark it on board a fleet of ships which he was
sending round to Marseilles for this purpose, with
orders to await him there. Marseilles is in the
south of France, not far from the Mediterranean Sea.
Richard might have embarked his troops in the English
Channel; but that, as the reader will see from looking
on the map of Europe, would require them to take a
long sea voyage around the coasts of France and Spain,
and through the Straits of Gibraltar. Richard
thought it best to avoid this long circuit for his
troops, and so he sent the ships round, with no more
men on board than necessary to manoeuvre them, while
he marched his army across France by land.
As for Philip, he had no ships of
his own. England was a maritime country, and
had long possessed a fleet. This fleet had been
very much increased by the exertions of Henry the
Second, Richard’s father, who had built several
new ships, some of them of very large size, expressly
for the purpose of transporting troops to Palestine.
Henry himself did not live to execute his plans, and
so he left his ships for Richard.
France, on the other hand, was not
then a maritime country. Most of the harbors
on the northern coast belonged to Normandy, and even
at the south the ports did not belong to the King
of France. Philip, therefore, had no fleet of
his own, but he had made arrangements with the republic
of Genoa to furnish him with ships, and so his plan
was to march over the mountains to that city and embark
there, while Richard should go south to Marseilles.
Richard drew up a curious set of rules
and regulations for the government of this fleet while
it was making the passage. Some of the rules
were the following:
1. That if any man killed another,
the murderer was to be lashed to the dead body
and buried alive with it, if the murder was committed
in port or on the land. If the crime was
committed at sea, then the two bodies, bound together
as before, were to be launched overboard.
2. If any man, with a knife or
with any other weapon, struck another so as to
draw blood, then he was to be punished by being
ducked three times over head and ears by being let
down from the yard-arm of the ship into the sea.
3. For all sorts
of profane and abusive language, the
punishment was a fine
of an ounce of silver for each
offense.
4. Any man convicted of theft,
or “pickerie” as it was called, was
to have his head shaved and hot pitch poured over
it, and upon that the feathers of some pillow or cushion
were to be shaken. The offender was then to be
turned ashore on the first land that the ship
might reach, and there be abandoned to his fate.
The penalty named in this last article
is the first instance in which any account of the
punishment of tarring and feathering is mentioned,
and this is supposed to be the origin of that extraordinary
and very cruel mode of punishment.
The king put the fleet under the command
of three grand officers of his court, and he commanded
all his seamen and marines to obey them strictly in
all things, as they would obey the king himself if
he had been on board.
The fleet met with a great variety
of adventures on its way to Marseilles. It had
not proceeded far before a great tempest arose, and
scattered the ships in every direction. At last,
a considerable number of them succeeded in making
their way, in a disabled condition, into the Tagus,
in order to seek succor in Lisbon. The King of
Portugal was at this time at war with the Moors, who
had come over from Africa and invaded his dominions.
He proposed to the Crusaders on board the ships to
wait a little while, and assist him in fighting the
Moors. “They are as great infidels,”
said he, “as any that you will find in the Holy
Land.” The commanders of the fleet acceded
to this proposal, but the crews, when they were landed,
soon made so many riots in Lisbon, and involved themselves
in such frequent and bloody affrays with the people
of the city, that the King of Portugal was soon eager
to send them away; so, in due time, they embarked again,
in order to continue their voyage.
In the mean time, while the fleet
was thus going round by sea, Richard and Philip were
engaged in assembling their forces and making preparation
to march by land. The two armies, when finally
organized, came together at a place of rendezvous
called Vezelai, where there were great plains suitable
for the camping-ground of a great military force.
Vezelai was on the road to Lyons, and the armies, after
they had met, marched in company to the latter city.
The number of troops assembled was very great.
The united army amounted, it is said, to one hundred
thousand men. This was a very large force for
those days. The great difficulty was to find
provision for them from day to day during the march.
Supplies of provisions for such a host can not be carried
far, so that armies are obliged to live on the produce
of the country that they march through, which is collected
for this purpose by foragers from day to day.
The allied armies, as they moved slowly on, impoverished
and distressed the whole country through which they
passed, by devouring every thing that the people had
in store. At length, after marching together
for some time, they came to the place where the roads
separated, and King Philip turned off to the left in
order to proceed through the passes of the Alps toward
Genoa, while Richard and his hosts proceeded southward
toward Marseilles.
When he reached Marseilles, Richard
found that his fleet had not arrived. The delay
was occasioned by the storm, and the subsequent detention
of the crews at Lisbon. And yet this was very
long after the time originally appointed for the sailing
of the expedition. The time first appointed was
the last of March; but Philip could not go at that
time, on account of the death of his queen, which took
place just before the appointed period. Nor was
Richard himself ready. It was not until the thirtieth
of August that the fleet arrived at Marseilles.
When Richard found that the fleet
had not come he was greatly disappointed. He
had no means of knowing when to expect it, for there
were no postal or other communications across the country
in those days, as now, by which tidings could be conveyed
to him. He waited eight days very impatiently,
and then concluded to go on himself toward the East,
and leave orders for the fleet to follow him.
So he hired ten large vessels and twenty galleys of
the merchants of Marseilles, and in these he embarked
a portion of his forces, leaving the rest to come
in the great fleet when it should arrive. They
were to proceed to Messina in Sicily, where Richard
was to join them. With the vessels that he had
hired he proceeded along the coast to Genoa, where
he found Philip, the French king, who had arrived there
safely before him by land.
From Marseilles to Genoa the course
lies toward the northeast along the coast of France.
Thence, in going toward Messina, it turns toward the
southeast, and follows the coast of Italy. The
route may be traced very easily on any map of modern
Europe. The reason why Messina had been appointed
as the great intermediate rendezvous of the fleet was
two-fold. In the first place, it was a convenient
port for this purpose, being a good harbor, and being
favorably situated about midway of the voyage.
Then, besides, Richard had a sister residing there.
Her name was Joanna. She had married the king
of the country. Her husband had died, it is true,
and she was, at that time in some sense retired from
public life. She was, indeed, in some distress,
for the throne had been seized by a certain Tancred,
who was her enemy, and, as she maintained, not the
rightful successor of her husband. So Richard
resolved, in stopping at Messina, to inquire into and
redress his sister’s wrongs; or, rather, he
thought the occasion offered him a favorable opportunity
to interfere in the affairs of Sicily, and to lord
it over the government and people there in his usual
arrogant and domineering manner.
After waiting a short time at Genoa,
Richard set sail again in one of his small vessels,
and proceeded to the southward along the coast of
Italy. He touched at several places on the coast,
in order to visit celebrated cities or other places
of interest. He sailed up the River Arno, which
you will find, on the map, flowing into the Gulf of
Genoa a little to the northward of Leghorn. There
are two renowned cities on this river, which are very
much visited by tourists and travelers of the present
day, Florence and Pisa. Pisa is near the mouth
of the river. Florence is much farther inland.
Richard sailed up as far as Pisa. After visiting
that city, he returned again to the mouth of the river,
and then proceeded on his way down the coast until
he came to the Tiber, and entered that river.
He landed at Ostia, a small port near the mouth of
it the port, in fact, of Rome. One
reason why he landed at Ostia was that the galley
in which he was making the voyage required some repairs,
and this was a convenient place for making them.
Perhaps, too, it was his intention
to visit Rome; but while at Ostia he became involved
in a quarrel with the bishop that resided there, which
led him at length to leave Ostia abruptly, and to refuse
to go to Rome. The cause of the quarrel was the
bishop’s asking him to pay some money that he
owed the Pope. In all the Catholic countries of
Europe, in those days, there were certain taxes and
fees that were collected for the Pope, the income
from which was of great importance in making up the
papal revenues. Now Richard, in his eagerness
to secure all the money he could obtain in England
to supply his wants for the crusade, had appropriated
to his own use certain of these church funds, and
the bishop now called upon him to reimburse them.
This application, as might have been expected, made
Richard extremely angry. He assailed the bishop
with the most violent and abusive language, and charged
all sorts of corruption and wickedness against the
papal government itself. These charges may have
been true, but the occasion of being called upon to
pay a debt was not the proper time for making them.
To make the faults or misconduct of others, whether
real or pretended, an excuse for not rendering them
their just dues, is a very base proceeding.
As soon as Richard’s galley
was repaired, he embarked on board of it in a rage,
and sailed away. The next point at which he landed
was Naples.
Richard was greatly delighted with
the city of Naples, which, rising as it does from
the shores of an enchanting bay, and near the base
of the volcano Vesuvius, has long been celebrated
for the romantic beauty of its situation. Richard
remained at Naples several days. There is an
account of his going, while there, to perform his devotions
in the crypt of a church. The crypt is a subterranean
apartment beneath the church, the floors above it,
as well as the pillars and walls of the church, being
supported by immense piers and arches, which give the
crypt the appearance of a dungeon. The place is
commonly used for tombs and places of sepulture for
the dead. In the crypt where Richard worshiped
at Naples, the dead bodies were arranged in niches
all around the walls. They were dressed as they
had been when alive, and their countenances, dry and
shriveled, were exposed to view, presenting a ghastly
and horrid spectacle. It was such means as these
that were resorted to, in the Middle Ages, for making
religious impressions on the minds of men.
After spending some days in Naples,
Richard concluded that he would continue his route;
but, instead of embarking at once on board his galley,
he determined to go across the mountains by land to
Salerno, which town lies on the sea-coast at some
distance south of Naples. By looking at any map
of Italy, you will observe that a great promontory
puts out into the sea just below Naples, forming the
Gulf of Salerno on the south side of it. The
pass through the mountains which Richard followed
led across the neck of this promontory. His galley,
together with the other galleys that accompanied him,
he sent round by water. There was a great deal
to interest him at Salerno, for it was a place where
many parties of crusaders, Normans among the rest,
had landed before, and they had built churches and
monasteries, and founded institutions of learning
there, all of which Richard was much interested in
visiting.
He accordingly remained in Salerno
several days, until at length his fleet of galleys,
which had come round from Naples by sea, arrived.
Richard, however, in the mean time, had found traveling
by land so agreeable, that he concluded to continue
his journey in that way, leaving his fleet to sail
down the coast, keeping all the time as near as possible
to the shore. The king himself rode on upon the
land, accompanied by a very small troop of attendants.
His way led him sometimes among the mountains of the
interior, and sometimes near the margin of the shore.
At some points, where the road approached so near
to the cliffs as to afford a good view of the sea,
the fleet of galleys were to be seen in the offing
prosperously pursuing their voyage.
The king went on in this way till
he reached Calabria, which is the country situated
in the southern portion of Italy. The roads here
were very bad, and as the autumn was now coming on,
many of the streams became so swollen with rains that
it was difficult sometimes for him to proceed on his
way. At one time, while he was thus journeying,
he became involved in a difficulty with a party of
peasants which was extremely discreditable to him,
and exhibits his character in a very unfavorable light.
It seems that he was traveling by an obscure country
road, in company with only a single attendant, when
he happened to pass by a village, where he was told
a peasant lived who had a very fine hunting hawk or
falcon. Hunting by means of these hawks was a
common amusement of the knights and nobles of those
days; and Richard, when he heard about this hawk,
said that a plain countryman had no business with
such a bird. He declared that he would go to
his house and take it away from him. This act,
so characteristic of the despotic arrogance which
marked Richard’s character, shows that the reckless
ferocity for which he was so renowned was not softened
or alleviated by any true and genuine nobleness or
generosity. For a rich and powerful king thus
to rob a poor, helpless peasant, and on such a pretext
too, was as base a deed as we can well conceive a
royal personage to perform.
Richard at once proceeded to carry
his design into execution. He went into the peasant’s
house, and having, under some pretext or other, got
possession of the falcon, he began to ride away with
the bird on his wrist. The peasant called out
to him to give him back his bird. Richard paid
no attention to him, but rode on. The peasant
then called for help, and other villagers joining
him, they followed the king, each one having seized
in the mean time such weapons as came most readily
to hand. They surrounded the king in order to
take the falcon away, while he attempted to beat them
off with his sword. Pretty soon he broke his
sword by a blow which he struck at one of the peasants,
and then he was in a great measure defenseless.
His only safety now was in flight. He contrived
to force his way through the circle that surrounded
him, and began to gallop away, followed by his attendant.
At length he succeeded in reaching a priory, where
he was received and protected from farther danger,
having, in the mean time, given up the falcon.
When the excitement had subsided he resumed his journey,
and at length, without any farther adventures, reached
the coast at the point nearest to Sicily. Here
he passed the night in a tent, which he pitched upon
the rocks on the shore, waiting for arrangements to
be made on the next day for his public entrance into
the harbor of Messina, which lay just opposite to
him, across the narrow strait that here separates
the island of Sicily from the main land.