- Siege of Mahdia
The Siege of Mahdia was the main event of the
Tunisia ncrusade of 1390. "Froissart's Chronicles " is a chief document describing what was one of the last crusades.Background
During the lulls of the
Hundred Years War knight s looked for opportunities for glory and honor.cite web |url=http://www.dissertationen.unizh.ch/2006/lanz/diss.pdf |author=Rainer Lanz |title=Ritterideal und Kriegsrealität im Spätmittelalter. Das Herzogtum Burgund und Frankreich |publisher=Dissertation, University Zurich pp. 171-187| Language=Germanaccessed 07-10-08] As Genoese ambassadors approached the French king Charles VI to subscribe to a crusade, they eagerly supported the plan to fight Moslempirate s from North Africa. These pirates had their main base atMahdia on theBarbary coast .Genoa was ready to supply ships, supplies, 12,000 archers and 8,000 foot soldiers, if France would provide the knights. The proposal by the dogeAntoniotto I Adorno was presented as acrusade . As such it would give prestige to its participants, a moratorium on their debts, immunity from law suits, and papalindulgence .cite book | author=Barbara Tuchman | title=A Distant Mirror | publisher=Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1978 pp. 462-77] The French force included also some English participants and consisted of 1,500 knights under the leadership ofLouis II, Duke of Bourbon .The siege
It has been estimated that the total force numbered about 5,000 knights and soldiers plus 1,000 sailors. Two priests representing both popes blessed the departing. An armada of about 60 ships left Genoa on
July 1 ,1390 and landed at the end of July near the town of Mahdi where the soldiers disembarked unchallenged. The crusaders put up their camp and invested the fortified city for the next two months. They had failed to bring sufficient siege engines to breach the walls. A relief army reportedly 40,000 men strong was brought up byHafsid SultanAbu'l-Abbas supported by the kings of Bugia andTlemesan , camped nearby, avoided pitched battle, but started to harass the crusaders. The crusaders had to built a wall around their camp and fortify it. The Berbers send out a negotiating party asking why the French would attack them, they had only troubled the Genoese, a natural affair among neighbors. In answer the they were told that they were unbelievers who had "crucified and put to death the son of God called Jesus Christ." The Berbers laughed saying it was the Jews not they who had done that. Negotiations broke off.In a subsequent encounter with the large relief army the crusaders killed many but eventually had to retreat exhausted and tired. The duration of the siege not only frustrated them, but their logistical systems started to weaken. When a final assault on the city was repelled they were ready to settle for a treaty. On the opposing side the Berbers realized that they could not overcome the heavier armed invaders. Both sides looked for a way to end the hostilities.
Lifting the siege
The siege was lifted with the conclusion of a treaty negotiated through the Genoese party. The treaty stipulated a ten year armistice, an agreement by Mahdia of payment of taxes to Genoa for 15 years, and to Louis II for his expenses. Thus piracy from the Barbary coast was reduced, and the crusaders withdrew. By mid-October the crusaders had returned to Genoa. Losses due to fighting and disease amounted to 274 knights and squires, about 20 %.
Comments
Both sides celebrated victory afterwards. The Berbers had repelled the invaders, and the Genoese could conduct trade with less interference. The French knights had no tangible goals but had participated for action and glory. They failed to learn any lessons from a "chivalric adventure with religious overlay" Their mistakes of unfamiliarity with the environment, lack of heavy siege equipment, underestimation of the enemy, and internal quarrels were repeated six years later on a grander scale in their fatal last crusade at Nicopolis
Notable participants
*
Louis II, Duke of Bourbon
*Philip of Artois, Count of Eu
*AdmiralJean de Vienne
*Enguerrand VII, Lord of Coucy
*John of Nevers
*John Beaufort, 1st Earl of Somerset
*Philippe de Bar
*Geoffrey Boucicaut
*Jean d'Harcourt VII References
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