The Seventh Crusade formally began on 12 August 1248 when Louis IX left from Paris. His entourage included his wife, consort queen of France
Margaret of Provence, two of the king's brother,
Charles I of Anjou with his wife,
Beatrice of Provence, sister of Margaret, and
Robert I of Artois. The youngest brother of Louis
Alphonse of Poitiers with his wife
Joan of Toulouse, departed the next year. The king's retinue included his cousins and vassals,
Hugh IV of Burgundy and
Peter Maulcerc, who were considered veterans due to their participation in the Barons' Crusade; the seigneur and vassal
Hugh XI of Lusignan;
Jean de Joinville with his cousin John,
Count of Saarbrücken; and
Olivier de Termes, who was veteran of the
Albigensian Crusade. Some of them embarked at Aigues-Mortes, others at Marseilles. An English detachment was led by
William Longespée, grandson of
Henry II of England, who took his mistress
Ida de Tosny (not the rumoured
Fair Rosamond) along, followed close behind. The rest of the English lords who had pledged to join the crusade were kept back by Henry III with papal help. The Scottish lords that joined were
Patrick II of Dunbar and
Stewart of Dundonald.
The Crusade begins By the time the preparations for the Crusade were reaching finalisation, Louis was progressing towards the port of Aigues Mortes in a markedly religious royal procession. The king's departure saw a climactic series of ceremonies that culminated in the consecration of the
Sainte Chapelle. This, the palace's chapel, was built as the actual reliquary container housing his newly acquired collection of Holy relics from the Passion that
Baldwin II, the Latin emperor of Constantinople, had sent him. The king of France with his crusade was attempting to fill in the vacated position of the
par excellence leader of Christendom, an eventuality that happened due to the friction between the
emperor Frederick II and
pope Gregory IX, leading the latter to excommunicate the former. Louis was embarking on the Crusade in his royal capacity as leader, not least as a personal commitment that rendered him a penitent. Before leaving Paris, Louis went to the
Abbey of St. Denis where he received the
Oriflamme which was considered to be the insignia of the pilgrim. From there he then marched to Notre Dame dressed as a penitent where he heard the mass. After that he continued barefoot to the
Abbey of St. Antoine. Even after he had left Paris, Louis was still being dressed as a pilgrim in public appearances. At Lyons, he met with
Innocent IV and from there he travelled towards the Mediterranean, dispensing justice as he went. He was the first French king to visit the region since his father in 1226. On 25 August, Louis set sail to his first destination the town of
Limassol in Lusignan Cyprus. representing the departure from
Aigues-Mortes of King Louis IX for the crusade (by
Gustave Doré)
Interlude in Cyprus Louis IX arrived in Cyprus on 17 September 1248 and landed the next day accompanied by his queen, her sister, and his chamberlain Jean Pierre Sarrasin (John the Saracen). Sarrasin wrote an extensive letter, quoted in the
Rothelin, apropos of their voyage at sea, an experience of some good 22 days. After a discourse by ''Rothelin's'' anonymous author on the perils of sea travel and authentic or legendary Roman history, the work returns to Sarrasin's letter for the events occurring through 1250. After arriving in Cyprus, the royal party had a long wait for their forces to assemble. The delay was costly, as many men were lost to diseases, including
John of Montfort, son of a crusader,
Peter of Vendôme,
John I of Dreux, and
Archambaud IX of Bourbon, grandson of a veteran of the Third Crusade.
Robert VII of Béthune was among those who died
en route to Cyprus. Similarly costly were, however, the limited funding some of his vassals had who then required royal support. As the troops for the Crusade gathered in Cyprus, they were well received by
Henry I of Cyprus. The nobles from France were supplemented by those from Acre, among whom were
Jean de Ronay and
Guillaume de Sonnac. The two eldest sons of John of Brienne,
Alsonso of Brienne and
Louis of Brienne, also joined and outlived the Crusade.
John of Ibelin, nephew to the Old Lord of Beirut, joined later in 1249. When the plan of the campaign was discussed, it was agreed that Egypt was the objective. It was the richest and most vulnerable province of the Ayyubids and many remembered how the sultan's father, al-Kamil had been willing to exchange Jerusalem itself for Damietta in the Fifth Crusade. Louis wanted to start operations at once but was deterred from the grand masters and Syrian barons. The winter storms would soon begin and the coast of the delta of Nile would be too dangerous to reach. In addition, they hoped to persuade the king to intervene in the Ayyubid affairs. The Franks also missed an opportunity as the sultan
as-Salih Ayyub had taken his army to fight
an-Nasir Yusuf, emir of Aleppo, at
Homs. The Templars had already entered into negotiations with the sultan suggesting that territorial concessions would be met with Frankish intervention. Louis wanted to have nothing to do with scheming or excelling at diplomacy, he had come to fight the Muslims. He ordered Guillaume de Sonnac to break the negotiations off and sent a list of demands to the sultan. The sultan's response was equally diplomatic. While the king would not negotiate with Muslims, he did so with the Mongols following the precedent of the pope. In December 1248, two
Nestorians, called
Mark and David, arrived at
Nicosia. They were sent by the Mongol general
Eljigidei Noyan, the commissioner of the
Great Khan at
Mosul, bringing a letter expressing the Mongols’ sympathy for Christianity. Louis responded by sending the Arabic-speaking
André de Longjumeau to meet with the general. He carried with him a chapel, relics for its altar and other presents. From Eljigidei's camp, de Longjumeau sent on to Mongolia. On his arrival at Karakorum, he found that
Güyük, with whom the pope had negotiated, had died, with his widow
Oghul Qaimish now as regent. She regarded the king's gifts as the tribute due to her and declined sending a large expedition to the West. De Longjumeau returned in 1252 with a patronizing letter thanking her vassal Louis for his attentions, requesting that similar gifts each year. Apparently shocked by this response, Louis still hoped to achieve an eventual Mongol alliance. Before coming to Cyprus, Louis had collected food and weapons for the army on the island, but his commissariat had not expected to have to feed so many. By spring, it was practical to sail against Egypt and Louis called on local Italian merchants for their ships. The Venetians disapproved of the endeavour and were unwilling to help due to their open war against the Genoese and their allies the Pisans in Acre, let alone to Louis' alliance with the Genoese.
John of Ibelin, son of the Old Lord and now ruler of
Arsuf, managed to secure a truce for three years, and by the end of May the ships were provided. In the meantime, Louis received many callers while at Nicosia.
Hethoum of Armenia sent him gifts.
Bohemond V of Antioch requested several hundred archers to protect his principality from brigands, which were provided.
Maria of Brienne came to beg for help for the
Latin empire being threatened by
John III Ducas Vatatzes, the
emperor of Nicaea. Her pleas were refused as the Crusade against the infidel took precedence. Loyalist
Hugh IV of Burgundy had spent the winter in
Achaea and convinced their ruler
William of Villehardouin to join the Crusade. He arrived with ships and Frankish soldiers from the
Morea, to remain for the duration.
The Crusaders at Damietta The sultan
as-Salih Ayyub had spent the winter at Damascus, trying to finish the conquest of Homs before the Franks invaded. He had expected them to land in Syria, and realizing that the objective was instead Egypt, the siege was lifted and he ordered his armies to follow him to Cairo. He was stricken with tuberculosis and could no longer lead his men in person and turned to his aged vizier
Fakhr ad-Din ibn as-Shaikh, who had negotiated with Frederick II during the Sixth Crusade, to command the army. He sent stores of munitions to
Damietta and garrisoned it with the Bedouin tribesmen of the
Banū Kinana, known for their courage. He monitored the coming conflict from his camp at the village of
Ashmun al-Rumman, to the east of the main branch of the Nile. Fakhr ad-Din was supported by
Qutuz, later to become the sultan. (See a map of the area here.) On 13 May 1249, a fleet of one hundred and twenty large transport vessels was assembled and the army began its embarkation. A storm scattered the ships a few days later and the king finally set sail on 30 May, arriving off Damietta on 4 June 1249. Only a quarter of his contingent sailed with him, the rest made their way independently to the Egyptian coast. Aboard his flagship the
Montjoie, Louis' advisers urged delay of disembarking till the rest of the fleet units' arrival, but he refused. At dawn of 5 June, the landing and subsequent
Siege of Damietta began. There was a fierce battle at the edge of the sea led by the king. Under
John of Ibelin of the knights of France and Outremer prevailed against their Muslims adversaries. At nightfall, Fakhr ad-Din withdrew over a bridge of boats to Damietta, only to find the population in panic and the garrison wavering, leading him to evacuate the city. All the Muslim civilians fled with him, with the Kinana following, but not before setting the bazaars to fire. His orders to destroy the bridge of boats were not observed, allowing for the Crusaders entrance to the city. The latter had received news from its Christian population that Damietta was then undefended.
Guillaume de Sonnac wrote of how on the morning after the battle, Damietta had been seized with only one Crusader casualty. The rapid capture of Damietta was unexpected, but the Nile floods would soon pin down the Crusaders. Louis, knowing the experience of the first
Battle of Mansurah in 1221 during the Fifth Crusade, would not advance before the river flowed. He was also waiting for the arrival of the reinforcements under his brother Alphonse. In the meantime, Damietta once again transformed into a Frankish city. The
Amr Ibn al-A'as Mosque became the cathedral, where Louis' son would later be baptized, and
Gilles of Saumur was made archbishop. The Genoese and Pisans were rewarded for their services, and so were the Venetians repenting their hostility. The native Coptic
Miaphysites were given justice by the king, welcoming his rule. Queen
Margaret and the rest of the ladies of the Crusade were summoned from Acre. Louis also welcomed his ally the Latin emperor,
Baldwin II of Constantinople, who being in dire need of monies had sold him the Passion relics. Throughout the summer months Damietta became briefly the capital of Outremer. The inaction brought to the soldiers along with the humid heat of the Delta demoralization. Food shortage followed disease outbreak in the camp. The loss of Damietta again shocked the Muslim world, and, like his father thirty years ago, as-Salih Ayyub offered to trade Damietta for Jerusalem. The offer was rejected as Louis refused to negotiate with an infidel. Meanwhile, those responsible for the loss of the city were punished, with the Kinana emirs executed and Fakhr ad-Din and his Mamluk commanders disgraced. There was talk of a coup, but Fakhr ad-Din having stopped them saved him face for his loyalty to the dynasty. Troops were rushed up to
Mansurah, built by al-Kamil on the site of his victory over the Crusaders of 1221. The dying as-Salih Ayyub was carried there in a litter to organize the army. Bedouins conducted guerrilla operations around the walls of Damietta, killing any Frank that strayed outside. The Franks erected dykes and dug ditches to protect the city.
Advancement towards Mansurah The Nile waters receded at the end of October 1249, and Alphonse arrived with the reinforcements from France. It was time to advance on Cairo.
Peter Maulcerc and the Syrian barons proposed an alternate attack on
Alexandria, surprise the Egyptians and control the Mediterranean littoral of Egypt. But Louis’ other brother
Robert I of Artois opposed the operation along with the king and, on 20 November 1249, the Frankish army set out from Damietta to Mansurah. A garrison was left to guard the city where the queen and the patriarch
Robert of Nantes remained. Louis' timing of the move was fortuitous. As-Salih Ayyub died on 23 November 1249 after having his leg amputated in an attempt to save his life from a serious abscess. As-Salih did not trust his son
al-Muazzam Turanshah and had kept him at a safe distance from Egypt in
Hasankeyf. As-Salih's widow,
Shajar al-Durr managed to conceal the news of her husband's death, confiding only in the chief eunuch Jamal ad-Din Mohsen and the commander Fakhr ad-Din. She forged a document under his signature which appointed Turanshah as heir and Fakhr ad-Din as viceroy. Mamluk commander
Faris ad-Din Aktai was sent to return Turanshah home. (Turanshah's rule would be brief. His mother married
al-Malik al-Muizz Aybak, who served as
Mamluk ruler of Egypt, as regent to
al-Ashraf Musa and later as sultan.) When as-Salih's death was finally revealed, the sultana and viceroy were firmly in charge. But the Franks were encouraged by the news and believed that this government would soon collapse. The route taken by the Crusaders from Damietta was crossed by numerous canals and branches of the Nile. The largest was the al-Bahr as-Saghit (Ushmum canal), which left the main river just below Mansurah and ran past
Ashmun al-Rumman to
Lake Manzala, isolating the island of Damietta. Fakhr ad-Din kept the bulk of his forces behind the al-Bahr as-Saghir, and sent his cavalry to harass the Franks as they crossed the canals. There was a battle near
Fariskur on 7 December 1249, where the Egyptian cavalry was stopped, and the Templars, against all orders, pursued those retreating. On 14 December, Louis reached the village of Barāmūn, just ten miles to the north of their objective, and the next week encamped on the river banks opposite to Mansurah. On 29 December, Bishop
Hugh of Clermont died.
Battle of Mansurah For six weeks, the armies of the West and Egypt faced each other on opposite sides of the canal, leading to second
Battle of Mansurah that would end on 11 February 1250 with an Ayyubid victory. The Egyptians attempted to attack the Franks in the rear was stopped by Charles I of Anjou. Louis had ordered construction to bridge the waterway, but the resultant enemy bombardment, including the use of
Greek fire, caused the work to be abandoned. At one point, an
Egyptian Copt came to the camp and offered to reveal the location of a ford across the canal. At the dawn of 8 February, the Crusaders set out across the ford. The king led the advancing army while Hugh IV of Burgundy and
Renaud de Vichiers remained to guard the camp. The vanguard was led by Robert I of Artois and supported by the Templars and the English contingent. He was under orders not to attack until directed by the king. Once Robert and his force had crossed the river, he feared that the element of surprise would be lost unless he took the offensive. Despite opposition, Robert attacked the Egyptian camp. The Egyptians were unprepared, still beginning their day, when the Frankish cavalry arrived. The Muslims were slaughtered looking for their weapons, the survivors fleeing to Mansurah. Fakhr ad-Din had just left his bath when he heard the attack, leaping on his horse to ride into the battle. He was cut down by Templar knights. Having taken the Egyptian camp, Robert's commanders Guillaume de Chateauneuf and William Longespée again cautioned him to wait for the main army to arrive. Determined to finish off the Egyptian army, Robert denounced the Templars and the English as cowards and charged toward the fleeing Egyptians. Although Fakhr ad-Din was dead, his commanders,
Qutuz and
Rukn ad-Din Baibars, both whom later became
Mamluk sultans, restored order to the Egyptians. Strategically placing soldiers in the town, he allowed the Frankish cavalry through the open gate and the Egyptians attacked them from the sidestreets. The horses could not turn in the narrow spaces and were thrown into confusion. The few knights that escaped on foot to the river drowned in its waters. The Templars fell fighting, with only five out of 290 surviving. Among the survivors were the Templar master Guillaume de Sonnac, losing an eye,
Humbert V de Beaujeu, constable of France,
John II of Soissons, and the duke of Brittany, Peter Maulcerc. Counted with the dead were the king's brother Robert I of Artois, William Longespée and most of his English followers,
Peter of Courtenay, and
Raoul II of Coucy. The survivors hurried to warn the king. Upon hearing of the battle at the Egyptian camp, Louis drew up his front line to meet an attack, and sent the engineers to make a bridge over the stream. The crossbowmen had been left on the far side to cover the crossing, and now needed to be brought over on a pontoon nearing completion. The Mamluks soon charged out of the town towards his lines. Keeping his force in reserve while the enemy poured arrows into their ranks, Louis ordered a counterattack as soon as their ammunition ran short. The cavalries of the two sides fought back and forth while trying tried to hinder the building of the pontoon. The pontoon was soon finished and the bowmen crossed over, and the Egyptians retired back into the city. Louis had his victory, but a cost of the loss of much of his force and their commanders, including his younger brother. But the victory would be short-lived.
Disaster at Fariskur The situation that Louis found himself in was reminiscent of that of the Fifth Crusade when the Crusader army that had captured Damietta was eventually forced to retreat. He would likely suffer the same fate unless the Egyptians would offer him acceptable terms. On 11 February 1250, the Egyptians attacked again, supported by reinforcements from the south, engaging the Franks in battle. Charles I of Anjou and the Syrian and Cypriot barons at the left held their ground, but the remnants of the Templars and the French nobles at the right wavered, to be rescued by the king. Templar master Guillaume de Sonnac, who had lost an eye at Mansurah, lost the other and died from it. Acting Hospitaller master Jean de Ronay was also killed. Alphonse of Poitiers, guarding the camp was encircled and was rescued by the camp followers. At nightfall, the Muslims gave up the assault and returned to town. For eight weeks, Louis waited at the Crusader camp, hoping the leadership problem in Cairo would work to his advantage. Instead, on 28 February 1250,
Turanshah arrived from Damascus where he had been proclaimed sultan following his father's death. His arrival was the impetus for a new Egyptian offensive. A squadron of light boats were made and transported by camel to the lower portion of the Nile. There they began to intercept the boats that brought food from Damietta, capturing more than eighty Frankish ships. On 16 March 1250 alone, a convoy of thirty-two were lost at one fell swoop. The Franks were quickly beset by famine and disease, including dysentery and typhoid. ) The
Battle of Fariskur fought on 6 April 1250 would be the decisive defeat of Louis' army. Louis knew that the army must be extricated to Damietta and began negotiations, offering Turanshah the exchange of Damietta for Jerusalem. The Egyptians realized his disadvantageous position and rejected the offer. In planning their retreat, Louis' officers urged him to go immediately to Damietta. He refused to leave his men. It was decided that the sick should be sent by boat down the Nile and the able-bodied should march along the road by which they had come. They departed on the morning of 5 April, and the painful journey began, with the king in the rear and the Egyptians in pursuit. The Franks managed to get across the al-Bahr as-Saghit, but neglected to destroy the pontoon behind them. The Egyptians crossed over and began attacking the Franks from all sides. Their attacks were repulsed and the Franks moved slowly on, with Louis falling ill that night. The next day, the Muslims surrounded the army at the town of
Fariskur, 10 miles southwest of Damietta, and attacked in full force.
Hugh XI of Lusignan was among the dead. To the sick and weary soldiers, it was clear that the end had come.
Geoffrey of Sergines, commander of the royal bodyguard, sheltered the king at nearby
Sharamsah. On 6 April, Louis' surrender was negotiated directly with the sultan by
Philip of Montfort. The king and his entourage were taken in chains to Mansurah and his whole army was rounded up and led into captivity. The ships conveying the sick to Damietta were surrounded and captured. The Egyptian victory was total. An agonized Templar knight lamented:
Louis' captivity and release The Egyptians were surprised by the large number of prisoners taken, estimated by the sultan himself at 30,000, certainly an exaggeration, but likely most of Louis' force. Unable to guard all of them, the infirm were executed immediately, and every day several hundred were decapitated, by order of the sultan. Louis was moved to a private residence in Mansurah and the Crusader leaders were kept together in a larger prison. While they were threatened with death, their value for ransom allowed them to stay alive. Jean de Joinville, on-board one of the captured ships, saved his life by claiming to be the king's cousin. It was later revealed that he was actually the emperor's cousin, which served him well as the prestige of Frederick II among the Egyptians was a plus. When Louis was ordered by the sultan to cede not only Damietta but all the Frankish lands in Syria, he noted that they were not under his control, but rather that of
Conrad II of Jerusalem, the emperor's son. The demand was quickly dropped. The final terms exacted from Louis were harsh. He was to ransom himself by the surrender of Damietta and his army by the payment of a million
bezants (later reduced to 800,000). After the terms were agreed to, the king and the barons were taken down the river to Fariskur, where the sultan had taken residence. There they would go on to Damietta, the city to be handed over on 30 April 1250. That the bargain could be made at all was due in large part to the queen. When Louis began his march on Mansurah,
Margaret of Provence was in the later stages of pregnancy and their son
John Tristan, the child of sorrow, was born on 8 April, three days after the news came of the surrender of the army. At the same time, she learned that the Pisans and Genoese were planning to evacuate Damietta due to lack of food. She knew that Damietta could not hold without the Italians and she summoned their leaders. If Damietta were to be abandoned there would be nothing to offer towards the release of her husband. She proposed buying all the food in the city and distributing at an enormous cost, and they agreed to stay, boosting the morale of the city. Soon thereafter, she was moved to Acre, while the Latin patriarch
Robert of Nantes went under safe-conduct to complete the arrangements for the ransom with the sultan. Robert arrived there to find
Turanshah dead, murdered on 2 May 1250 in a coup instigated by his stepmother
Shajar al-Durr and led by
Baibars.
Aybak became commander after Turanshah's assassination, later marrying his widow. His safe-conduct guaranteed by Turanshah was viewed as valueless and treated him as a prisoner. Some Mamluks brandished their swords before the king and the captive barons, still covered with the executed sultan's blood. But, in the end, the Egyptians confirmed the agreed-upon terms. When Louis was asked to swear that he would renounce Christ if he failed in his bargain, he refused. On 6 May, Geoffrey of Sergines handed Damietta over to the Muslim vanguard. The king and the nobles were later brought there and Louis set about finding money for the first installment of the ransom, at first coming up short. Until the remainder could be found, the Egyptians held back releasing the king's brother Alphonse. The Templars, known to have a large supply of money, finally agreed to provide what was required. Louis and the barons set sail for Acre, where they arrived on 12 May 1250 after a stormy voyage. Many wounded soldiers had been left behind at Damietta, and contrary to their promise, the Muslims massacred them all.
Aftermath of the Egyptian campaign The Seventh Crusade would not end for another four years, but there would be no further battles. In Acre, Louis pursued the release of his imprisoned army and attempted to bring order to an increasingly chaotic Outremer. Louis was the last of the Crusader leaders to actually reach the shores of the eastern Mediterranean, and his failure was keenly felt in the West as well as the Holy Land and Muslim world. When the extent of the disaster reached mainland Europe, unrest in Venice and other Italian cities was reported. France plunged into a sort of public mourning. For many, the grief was immediate and personal; for lost those lost in battle or in captivity. In France reactions took a more aggressive turn, which revealed the extent of popular disenchantment. The death of Turanshah essentially ended the
Ayyubid dynasty begun by
Saladin.
Shajar al-Durr was not accepted by the Abbasid caliph
al-Musta'sim in Baghdad. Shajar, who had married her commander
Aybak, then abdicated and passed the throne to her husband. Aybak's formal rule ended after just five days. The
Bahri Mamluks that essentially controlled Egypt at this point installed as sultan the 6-year-old
al-Ashraf Musa. Nevertheless, the actual power in Egypt was still exercised by Aybak, who had returned to his position of atabeg. Egypt would remain a
Mamluk sultanate through 1517.
Henry III of England took the Cross with many of his subjects in the spring of 1250 but convinced the pope to postpone any expedition. Louis’ brothers refused to send help from France where public opinion was indignant but disillusioned. The French nobles contented themselves with bitter comments against the pope who preferred to preach a crusade against the Christian Imperialists rather than to send help to those who were struggling against the infidel. On 13 December 1250,
Frederick II, who remained respected in Muslim circles, died in Italy. His son
Conrad II of Jerusalem lacked the emperor's prestige but inherited the pope's crusade against his father. Blanche of Castile went so far as to confiscate the property of any royal vassal who responded to the appeal of Innocent IV for a crusade against Conrad in 1251. But neither she nor her advisers ventured to send reinforcements to the East. ==The Shepherds' Crusade==