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Ireland and the Crusades. Edited by Edward Coleman, Paul Duffy and Tadhg O'Keeffe. Pp 256. Dublin: Four Courts Press. 2022. €55.

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Ireland and the Crusades. Edited by Edward Coleman, Paul Duffy and Tadhg O'Keeffe. Pp 256. Dublin: Four Courts Press. 2022. €55.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2023

Brendan Smith*
Affiliation:
Department of History, University of Bristol
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Abstract

Type
Reviews and short notices
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Irish Historical Studies Publications Ltd

In an essay published in 1995, John Gillingham remarked that Ireland was ‘perhaps the only corner of Christian Europe to display no interest in the Crusades’. He was referring in particular to the Third Crusade but his use of the plural for the relevant noun suggests that he had more than this single campaign in mind. In fact, there is plenty of evidence of interest on the part of inhabitants of Ireland in the Crusades and their consequences. In 1105 Muirchertach Ua Briain, king of Thomond, received from the king of Scots the gift of a camel, while twenty years later another claimant to the high-kingship of Ireland, Tairdelbach Ua Conchobair, king of Connacht, commissioned the production of the expensive and beautiful processional cross known as the Cross of Cong in order to display a fragment of the true cross that had been transported from the Holy Land to the most westerly part of Christendom. Add to this the numerous references in thirteenth-century annals to the journeys of Irish people to Jerusalem and to the activities of Christian armies there, not to mention the presence in Acre at the end of the thirteenth century of a church dedicated to St Brigid of Kildare, and it is clear that Ireland shared in the wider Western sense of investment in the crusade experience. The country was, as Jean-Michel Picard puts it (p. 51), ‘quite close to the centre of the action’.

It is a surprising feature of the collection of essays under review that none of the evidence cited above appears between its covers. It is certainly the case, as Edward Coleman argues in his introductory essay, that the crusades are an underwritten topic in Irish historiography. They were such an obvious and important manifestation of the church reform movement — which no one could claim has been ignored in medieval Irish scholarship — that their absence from discussions of that phenomenon appears quite peculiar. Perhaps the most positive impact of this volume will be to encourage the filling in of this gap. To identify one potentially fruitful trail worth following, traced in initial detail in the essays by Jean-Michel Picard and Paul Duffy, the Cistercian order, at least from the time when St Bernard of Clairvaux became its leading representative, placed the promotion of crusade at the heart of its identity and mission. How was that manifested at Mellifont and the other Cistercian houses founded by Irish lords before (and after) the English conquest of the 1170s?

Recently published work by Kathryn Hurlock and Denis Casey, and the 2016 edited volume by Browne and Ó Clabaigh on the military orders — details of which can be found in the very welcome bibliography included in this collection — have anticipated much of what is contained in Ireland and the Crusades. The military orders are discussed in worthwhile essays by Paolo Virtuani, Thomas Ivory, David McIlreavy and Tadhg O'Keeffe, while Helen Nicholson makes important points about the involvement of these orders in administering the finances of the Irish lordship from the 1220s onwards. A refreshing reconsideration of the use of crusade rhetoric in sixteenth-century Ireland is provided by Kathryn Hurlock, while in relation to the same topic in the setting of the twelfth century, Maeve Callan succeeds in carving out space for yet another new interpretation of its status in the historiographical congested district that is Laudabiliter studies.

Dave Swift and Emer Purcell aim in their short essays to lay to rest some familiar crusader-related myths — respectively, crossed legs on images of medieval warriors tell us nothing about whether they went on crusade; the unfortunate corpse displayed for the entertainment of the ghoulish in the crypt of St Michan's church is not that of a crusader — but one can be certain that these staples of popular perceptions of the Crusades will persist. A short but intriguing study by Catherine Swift of the appearance of the surname ‘Palmer’ in early thirteenth-century Dublin records could be usefully developed into a more substantial project. Paul Duffy's analysis of the possible existence of a cult of Simon de Montfort in medieval Meath is stimulating, while Ciarán McDonnell traces Geoffrey de Genenville's crusader credentials.

Was the crusade preached in Ireland with the same frequency as it was in England? Can any useful comparisons with respect to Irish attitudes to the Crusades be made from consideration of Archbishop Baldwin's successful crusade precaching tour in Wales in the late 1180s, as detailed by Gerald of Wales? Was the Irish financial system altered by the need to raise cash for Richard I's ransom in the early 1190s as he returned from crusade? What sums were raised for crusading in medieval Ireland? These rather obvious questions are not raised in a volume which advances understanding of its subject incrementally but which eschews setting a new and much needed agenda for research.