The
Emperor's deputy in Outremer had now decisively defeated the
Ibelin/Cypriot army at the Battle of Casal Imbert and occupied Cyprus without a fight. Henry I may have come of age, but he was a king without a kingdom. He appeared on the brink of becoming an obscure footnote in history. Instead, he recovered his kingdom in less than two months and ruled for another two decades. Indeed, he delivered such a resounding blow to the forces of the Holy Roman Emperor that he was able to shake off the Imperial yoke altogether.
In
the surprise attack at Casal Imbert, the Cypriot/Ibelin army had lost
roughly 30 knights and the bulk of their horses and equipment. More
important, the Genoese had lost their ships. Thus, while Filangieri
struck in Cyprus, King Henry had no means of responding. Filangieri had brilliantly taken advantage of his
enemy’s concentration of forces in one place, to attack in another.
Yet
Filangieri had underestimated the Cypriot King. Henry had come of age
on the same day that he had to flee from Casal Imbert in his nightshirt.
He now proved that he
had been no puppet of the Ibelins. Had he been merely their prisoner up
to now,
he would have abandoned their cause and turned to Filangieri to help him
crush
his former jailers. Instead, he used his increased stature as king to
make significant concessions to the Genoese, securing their continued
support, and in order to obtain revenue and fighting men through
the bestowal of fiefs in Cyprus upon Syrian knights. In just one month,
the
Cypriot/Ibelin army was sufficiently reequipped to return to Cyprus — in
Imperial ships.
The
latter had been tied up in Acre idle. Henry and the Lord of Beirut
appealed to the anti-Imperial Patriarch of Jerusalem, arguing that
Filangieri in occupying Cyprus had committed a grave sin that threatened the safety of the Holy Land. The point was that Filangieri had attacked a Christian monarch without justification. While the Patriarch sympathized, he demurred, saying he could not interfere in secular affairs. However, he also noted that he would not stop anyone from seizing the ships. At once, the pro-Ibelin mob rushed down to the harbour,
where they managed to seize 13 of the large Imperial "salanders"
(apparently warships), while the remaining Imperial ships managed to escape by slipping anchor and sailing away.
In
these "confiscated" ships, the Cypriot/Ibelin knights, turcopoles and
sergeants sailed for Cyprus at the very end of May or the first days of
June. Expecting the ports to be heavily defended, Beirut took the
radical decision to beach (i.e. wreck) their confiscated Imperial
galleys on the
shore of an island near Famagusta. This island was connected to the
mainland
only at low tide. From here, some of the men took small boats into
Famagusta
harbor to make noise and create a diversion, while the bulk of the army
crossed
via the ford to the mainland at dawn without encountering serious
opposition.
Indeed, by daybreak, it was clear that the Imperial forces,
possibly overestimating the strength of the Cypriot/Ibelin
force in the darkness, had opted for a strategic withdrawal. King Henry and his troops spent
three days in Famagusta receiving the surrender of the key castle of Kantara and
collecting further support before advancing cautiously toward Nicosia. Although
they encountered no resistance, they found that the retreating Imperial troops
had burned the granges and also vandalized the water and windmills.
On arrival in Nicosia, the Cypriot/Ibelin army found that,
again, the enemy had retreated before them. With a sense of relief, they sought
food and lodging — only to be called to arms at vespers. The men rushed out,
mustered and marched north to face an Imperial attack. When they were beyond
the walls, however, they discovered that the alarm had been rung by Beirut
himself. Recognizing that they still faced an intact and formidable enemy army that might strike at any time, Beirut wanted no repeat of Casal Imbert. He ordered the collected and alerted army to camp in a defensible position near water and gardens and a watch
was established.
The next morning, the army set out along the main road from
Nicosia to Kyrenia. Between these two cities a dramatic mountain range with jagged
peaks and deep pine forests rises up. From Nicosia, the road runs almost due
north, weaving with the terrain, until it turns sharply to the right to enter a
pass that runs west-east. Then having crested the pass, the road turns north
again to descend toward the coastal plain and the port of Kyrenia. Just before
the end of the pass, the main road to the royal castle of St. Hilarion branches
off.
St. Hilarion still held for King Henry and was filled with many
women and children of Ibelin supporters as well as King Henry’s two sisters. King
Henry had received word that the castle was dangerously short of supplies and
would soon have to capitulate if it did not receive aid. Anticipating an
attempt to relieve St. Hilarion, Filangieri positioned the main body of his
army inside the pass, where it was invisible from the lower part of the road,
but he had deployed two advance divisions across the Nicosia-Kyrenia road just
below the entrance to the pass.
The mountains separating Kyrenia from Nicosia, seen from the north looking west. |
The Imperial forces on Cyprus consisted of the Cypriot
traitors and the bulk of the Sicilian knights and Imperial mercenaries. Altogether,
Filangieri could deploy over 2,000 horsemen and an unknown number of archers
and infantry. The Cypriot/Ibelin army, on the other hand, had been decimated by
the desertions, the reinforcement of Beirut, and the losses of Casal Imbert.
King Henry could field only 236 knights, supported by sergeants and turcopoles
of unrecorded number. The advancing Cypriot/Ibelin army was not only
much smaller, it was below the Imperial army and would have to fight uphill to breakthrough.
However, King Henry knew of a steep and narrow path that
ascended the mountain from a village called Agridi just less than a mile west
of the main road, i.e., before the enemy positions. Beirut proposed
advancing to Agridi, and under cover of darkness the next night, sending relief
to St. Hilarion over the narrow path. Beirut divided his army into four
divisions, commanded as follows: 1) Sir Hugh d’Ibelin (Beirut’s third son) and
Sir Anseau de Brie, 2) Sir Baldwin d’Ibelin (Beirut’s second son, 3) the Lord
of Caesarea (Beirut’s nephew) and 4) Beirut with King Henry.
Beirut’s eldest
son Balian, who already had a reputation for prowess from earlier engagements,
was publicly denied the place of honor in command of the vanguard, because he
had been excommunicated for failing to set aside his wife — and cousin —
Eschiva de Montbéliard. (That same lady who had provisioned and was
holding the only other castle that had remained loyal to the king as described last week) Saying he
trusted God more than Sir Balian’s knighthood, Beirut ordered his firstborn
and heir to the rear.
Daylight, however, revealed the pathetic size of the
Cypriot/Ibelin army. Immediately, the Sicilians took heart and with cheers, the
first division started to descend the slope to attack. Led by Count Walter of
Manupello, this division only glancingly engaged with Beirut’s rearguard before
continuing toward Nicosia. Christopher Marshall in Warfare in the Latin East
suggests this was a matter of incompetence; that the charge was carried out so badly
that momentum swept it past the enemy doing no damage. It is equally possible,
however, that the intention was to either divert some of Beirut’s troops and
divide his forces or to reestablish Imperial control of Nicosia and cut Beirut
and King Henry off from retreat. We know some of Beirut’s knights wanted to
pursue and Beirut had to prevent them. Certainly, it was only after the
Cypriot/Ibelin force carried the day that Count of Manupello retreated to
Gastria to seek refuge with the Templars.
Meanwhile, however, the second Imperial division had fallen
on the first division of the Cypriot/Ibelin army and pressed it so hard that it
had to be reinforced by the second division. The fighting became fierce and
hand-to-hand. Sir Anseau de Brie unhorsed the commander, the Count de Menope,
and the Cypriot infantry closed in to kill. According to the account of Philip
de Novare, no less than seventeen Sicilian knights dismounted to protect him
and help him remount — only to be slaughtered by the Cypriot sergeants shouting
“Kill! Kill!” Not exactly the picture of chivalry.
The image is from the Hundred Years War -- another in which infantry would often prove decisive. |
Yet the battle was far from won. Filangieri’s main force was
still safe within the pass. Had they reinforced at this point, the Cypriot army
would probably have been overwhelmed. Instead, Sir Balian, with only five
knights, attacked from a point high up the slope along a rugged and steep path leading
to the head of the pass, cutting off reinforcements at this choke point. He was
so hard-pressed that the men around Beirut urged him to go to his son’s
assistance, but Beirut insisted that his division — with the King — must continue
to advance, presumably toward St. Hilarion. Without further assistance, Sir
Balian’s small troops held the foot of the pass and prevented Filangieri from
reinforcing his advance divisions.
Below the pass, the Cypriot/Ibelin army decimated the
Imperial troops that had engaged them. No less than sixty knights — a huge
number by 13th century standards — had been killed and forty more
had been taken prisoner. Filangieri decided to cut his losses and disengaged,
retreating up the pass and down again to Kyrenia. King Henry and the Ibelins proceeded
to the successful relief of St. Hilarion.
Castle of St. Hilarion |
Although the Imperial army had sustained shockingly high
losses by the standards of the day, it was by no means annihilated. Yet, apparently
the fight had gone out it. The Count of Manupello’s division, denied refuge by
the Templars, surrendered, while Filangieri and the Cypriot traitors retreated
to the fortress of Kyrenia. From here they sent appeals for help to Armenia,
Antioch, and the Emperor himself, but when these yielded nothing, Filangieri
and the traitors sailed away. The garrison they left behind eventually capitulated
after a year-long siege. In short, Agridi had proved decisive. Frederick II
never again attempted to send “orders” to King Henry, and the Pope later
absolved King Henry of all oaths to the Holy Roman Emperor.
(Note: much of the text of this essay first appeared in Medieval Warfare magazine. For the full
article see: https://www.karwansaraypublishers.com/medieval-warfare)
These events are depicted in detail in my latest release:
Dr. Helena P. Schrader holds a PhD in History.
She is the Chief Editor of the Real Crusades History Blog.
She is an award-winning novelist and author of numerous books both fiction and non-fiction. Her three-part biography of Balian d'Ibelin won a total of 14 literary accolades. Her current series describes the civil war in Outremer between Emperor Frederick andthe barons led by John d'Ibelin the Lord of Beirut. Dr. Schrader is also working on a non-fiction book describing the crusader kingdoms. You can find out more at: http://crusaderkingdoms.com
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