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Treat yourself to Medieval Warfare Vol III-2 - Warrior Bishops in the Middle Ages
Medieval warfare vol iii- 2, 2013
Topic: Warrior bishops in the Middle Ages
Introduction: Jonathan Sneddon, 'Historical Introduction: Warrior Bishops in the Middle Ages'.
Warrior bishops were present as early as the 10th century, as can be seen in Otto the Great's commitment of his bishops to the German Empire for military purposes. When speaking of medieval bishops and priests, one imagines saintly individuals in ecclesiastical robes, praying or preaching to their flocks. However, bishops and archbishops could be seen leading their own retinues into battle, sometimes in full armour.
Subject: Sidney E. Dean, 'Odo, Bishop of Bayeux, Earl of Kent - Brothers in Arms'.
Illustrated by Pablo Outeiral.
Rogue and regent, conspirator and crusader, priest and strategic planner – William the Conqueror’s younger half-brother, Odo was all these and more. A driving force during the Norman invasion of England, Odo remained William’s right-hand man on the island. That is, until Odo’s overriding ambition eclipsed even William’s wildest aspirations.
Subject: Gregory J. Liebau, 'War and Politics During the Italian Campaigns - Barbarossa and His Bishops'.
Illustrated by Johnny Shumate.
On 29 May 1167, before the walls of Tusculum, a battle took place between a communal Roman army, thousands strong, and a small German force sent to remind Pope Alexander III of his temporary loyalty to the Holy Roman Emperor, Frederick Barbarossa. The imperial leaders, who were ordered to secure the region around Rome for Frederick's arrival, were bishops: Reinald of Dassel, Archbishop of Cologne and Imperial Chancellor, and Christian I, Count of Buch and newly appointed Archbishop of Mainz. Reinald's men-at-arms, fewer than two hundred, had been inside Tusculum awaiting Christian's reinforcements to lift the Roman siege, and when negotiations failed, imperial soldiers overwhelmed and defeated their adversaries, opening Frederick's path to Rome.
Subject: jean-claude brunner, 'a special kind of warrior: huldrych zwingli'.
Illustrated by mark churms.
Huldrych Zwingli (1484-1531), the Swiss leader of the Reformation, was a man whose life and work marked the transition between the Middle Ages and the early modern period, although his is not an obvious place among the warrior bishops of the middle centuries. He was not a bishop proper, as the city of Zurich did not have its own bishop, being for historical reasons part of the Diocese of Constance. Zwingli's background belonging to neither a noble nor a patrician family would have made his election unlikely for such a remunerative post, had one existed. It is not known whether he personally shed blood in battle, although he did take part in three battles and was killed during the last. The monument to Zwingli, in front of Zurich's Water Church, shows him as a man of the Bible and the sword.
Subject: stephen bennett, 'a man more devoted to battles than to books: philippe de dreux, bishop of beauvais'.
Illustrated by Julia Lillo and Jason Juta.
Philippe de Dreux (or Philippe of Dreux, 1158–1217) was the epitome of the warrior bishop. An ally and cousin of King Philip II of France, the Bishop of Beauvais was an active opponent of Richard the Lionheart in north-west Europe, both before and after his involvement in the Third Crusade. He first campaigned in the Holy Land as part of Henry of Champagne's expedition in 1180, but also joined his brother, Count Robert II of Dreux, on the Albigensian Crusade in 1200. He fought at his brother's side again at the Battle of Bouvines in 1214. Philippe captured William Longespée, Earl of Salisbury.
Source: Filippo Donvito, 'The Bishop of Arezzo and the Battle of Campaldino - Dante at War'.
Illustrated by Jose Antonio Gutierrez Lopez.
One evening in March 1289, Dante Alighieri was walking down a street in Florence with a couple of friends. Suddenly, their attention was caught by a very strong smell of burning. The men ravaging the fields around Florence were soldiers sent by Guglielmino degli Ubertini, Bishop of Arezzo, who was a great warrior (Giovanni Villani, Nuova Cronica VIII. 131). At the time, Florence was ruled by the pro-papal Guelph party, and the only city that threatened its leading position in Tuscany was the Ghibelline city of Arezzo, still loyal to the imperial cause.
Characteristics
Special: Dr. Konstantin Nossov, 'Russian Artillery of the 14th-16th Centuries: The Emergence of a New Weapon of War in the East'.
Firearms revolutionized warfare. We are still reaping the benefits of this today: firearms still hold a dominant position among all types of weapons. The widespread use of firearms marked the transition from medieval warfare to Renaissance battles.
The Battle: Patrick S. Baker, 'Charles Martel's Other Great Victory Over the Moors: The Battle of the River Berre'.
Illustrated by Carlos Garcia.
Conflict between the Muslim Moors of al-Andalus (modern Spain) and the Christian Franks of France (modern northern France and the Benelux countries) over who would rule western Gaul was inevitable. Both were politically and culturally vigorous, resourceful, and motivated by territorial and religious ambitions. Moreover, both sides had sufficient military power to make those ambitions a reality.
The warrior: vassilis pergalias, 'protecting the bishop of saint peter - the pontifical swiss guard'.
Illustrated by Graham Sumner.
By the time of the invasion of italy in 1494 by the articulate army of the french monarch charles viii, and the ensuing wars that ruthlessly engulfed the italian peninsula, swiss mercenaries had earned an infamous reputation for professionalism that would earn them the lucrative business of contracts. on 22 january 1506, 150 swiss infantrymen marched through rome's porta del popolo and into st peter's basilica, where they were jovially greeted by their new paymaster, pope julius ii. with that fateful cold snap began a relationship that would last for more than half a millennium. on that january day, with the pontifical swiss guard protecting the pope ever since.
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