Shepherds' Crusade
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The Shepherds' Crusade refers to separate events from the 13th and 14th century. The first took place in 1251 during the Seventh Crusade; the second occurred in 1320.
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[edit] Shepherds' Crusade, 1251
In 1249, Saint Louis IX of France was away on crusade, and had been defeated and captured at Cairo in Egypt. A peasant movement arose in northern France to support Louis, led by "the Master of Hungary", apparently a very old Hungarian monk, who claimed to have been instructed by the Virgin Mary to lead the shepherds of France to the Holy Land to rescue Louis. He led up to 60,000 mostly young peasants to Paris, where he met with Louis IX's mother, the acting regent.
The group split up after leaving the city where they created disturbances in places such as Rouen, Tours and Orléans. In Amiens, and then Bourges, they also began to attack Jews. The authorities rounded up and excommunicated the crusaders which although a group led by the Master resisted outside Bourges, with the Master himself was killed in the ensuing skirmish.
[edit] Shepherds' Crusade, 1320
A separate movement occurred in May 1320 in Normandy, when a teenage shepherd claimed to have been visited by the Holy Spirit, which instructed him to fight the Moors in Spain. First, they marched to Paris where Philip V refused to meet them. They then marched south attacking castles, royal officials, priests, lepers but most of all Jews. In Avignon John XXII, gave orders to stop them and in Spain James II of Aragon at first prohibited them from entering the kingdom, but when they did enter in July, James warned all his nobles to make sure the Jews were kept safe.
At the fortress of Montclus over 300 Jews were killed and James's son Alfonso was sent out to bring them under control with those responsible for the massacre executed. After this the crusade dispersed. In 1321, King Philip fined those communities in which Jews had been killed. This led to a second revolt, this time among the urban population.
[edit] Sources
[edit] General
"Crusade of the Pastoureaux". Catholic Encyclopedia. (1913). New York: Robert Appleton Company.
[edit] 1251
- Matthew Paris, Chronica Maiora
- Margaret Wade Labarge, Saint Louis: The Life of Louis IX of France. London, 1968.
- Ernest Lavisse, Histoire de France, Tome Troisième, II. Paris, 1901.
- Régine Pernoud, La Reine Blanche. Paris, 1972.
[edit] 1320
- David Nirenberg, Communities of Violence: Persecution of Minorities in the Middle Ages. Princeton, 1996.
- Malcolm Barber, "The Pastoureaux of 1320," in Journal of Ecclesiastical History 20.

