Krak des Chevaliers
Krak des Chevaliers (also
Crac des Chevaliers, "fortress of the knights" in a mixture of
Arabic and
French) was the headquarters of the
Knights Hospitaller in
Syria during the
Crusades. It was also called in Arabic
Ḥiṣn al-Akrād, i.e., "fortress of the
Kurds."
The
castle is located east of
Tripoli in the
Homs Gap, atop a 650-meter high cliff along the only route from
Antioch to
Beirut and the
Mediterranean Sea. The original
fortress had been built in
1031 for the
emir of
Aleppo. It was captured by
Raymond IV of Toulouse early in
1099, during the
First Crusade, but was abandoned when the Crusaders continued their march to
Jerusalem. It was reoccupied again by
Tancred, Prince of Galilee in
1110.
Raymond II,
count of Tripoli, gave it to the Hospitallers in
1144.
The Hospitallers rebuilt it and expanded it into the largest Crusader fortress in the Holy Land, adding an outer wall 30 meters thick with seven guard
towers 8-10 meters thick, to create a
concentric castle. One of these towers was occupied by the Grand Master of the Hospitallers. In the
12th century there was a moat covered by a
drawbridge leading to
postern gates.
Between the inner and outer gates was a courtyard, leading to the inner buildings, which were rebuilt by the Hospitallers in a
Gothic style. These buildings included a meeting hall, a
chapel, and a 120-meter long storage facility. Other storage facilities were dug into the cliff below the fortress, and it is estimated that the Hospitallers could have withstood a
siege for five years.
|
Gothic cloister by the fortress yard |
By
1170, the Hospitallers' modifications were complete, but parts of the fortress were rebuilt after numerous earthquakes in the late 12th century and early
13th century. It may have held about 50-60 Hospitallers and up to 2000 other foot soldiers. Aside from the control of the road to the Mediterranean, the Hospitallers also exerted some influence over
Lake Homs to the east, where they could control the fishing industry and watch for
Muslim armies gathering in Syria.
In
1163, the fortress was unsuccessfully besieged by
Nur ad-Din. After their victory the Hospitallers became an essentially independent force on the Tripolitanian frontier. It was also besieged, again unsuccessfully, by
Saladin in
1188, during which time the
Castellan was captured. He was taken by
Saladin's men to the castle gates where he was told to order the gates opened. He first told them in Arabic to surrender the castle, then in French told them to hold the castle to the last man.
During the
Fifth Crusade the Hungarian king
Andrew II strengthened the outer walls (1217) and financed the guarding troops. It was recaptured by
Baibars on
April 8,
1271, after they had tricked the Hospitallers into believing the
count of Tripoli had instructed them to surrender. Baibars refortified it and used it as a base against Tripoli. He also converted the Hospitaller chapel to a
mosque. The
Mameluks later used it to attack
Acre in
1291.
The fortress is one of the few sites where Crusader art (in the form of
frescoes) has been preserved.
Edward I of England, while on the
Ninth Crusade in
1272, saw the fortress and used it as an example for his own castles in
England and
Wales.
T.E. Lawrence believed Krak des Chevaliers was the greatest of the Crusader castles and "the most wholly admirable castle in the world." Today, the fortress is owned by the Syrian government, and it is designated as a
World Heritage Site along with
Qal'at Salah El-Din (Fortress of Saladin).
Image:Krak des chavaliers plaine.jpg|Space between the inner and outer walls and plain at the foot of the fortress.Image:Krak westliche Ringmauern.jpg|Space between the inner and outer walls.Image:Krak_des_chevaliers_-_plan.jpg|Plan of Krak des Chevaliers (1871).Image:Plan du Krak des Chevaliers 1170 1200.png|Plan showing construction 1170-1190. Wikimedia Commons has more media related to Krak des Chevaliers