Collective title for medieval poems about the Crusades. It is usually subdivided into the First and Second Cycles. The First Cycle comprises a sequence of epic poems preserved in several cyclical manuscripts; it purportedly describes the events of the First Crusade (1096-9) and the establishment of the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem, and was composed between the end of the 11th c. and the late 13th c. In practice, only the earliest poems of the First Cycle (Chanson d'Antioche, dealing with the siege of Antioch; Chanson de Jérusalem, describing the capture of Jerusalem) have any claim to historical accuracy; subsequent accretions are increasingly fictional in nature and increasingly concerned with the implausible adventures (amorous and military) of a range of thoroughly romanticized Christian and Saracen heroes. In this respect, the First Crusade Cycle is typical of the later chansons de geste.
The composition of the First Cycle also conforms to the practice found in, for instance, the Guillaume Cycle: the poems or ‘branches’ composed first (the most historical) constitute the central sections of the corpus, with both the prehistory of these episodes and their subsequent development being added later. Thus, the ancestry of one of the heroes of the First Crusade, Godefroy de Bouillon, is provided by the branches preceding the historical nucleus: the poems known as the Enfances Godefroi and Le Chevalier au Cygne (legendary material accommodated to the framework of the Crusade Cycle by means of a spurious genealogy), then a branch devoted to the enfances of the Swan Knight himself, are added in the 13th c. Promotion and glorification of Godefroy, both by exaggerating his role in the First Crusade and by endowing him with famous ancestors, seems to be one of the aims of the First Cycle. A transitional branch between the Chanson d'Antioche and the Chanson de Jérusalem, a semi-fictional account of the adventures of a number of Christian Knights captured en route to Jerusalem (Les Chétifs), had been added earlier.
The Continuations, describing events after the capture of Jerusalem in 1099, constitute the last branch to be appended to the First Cycle. In form and style the First Crusade Cycle is a chanson de geste cycle; retrospective modification of historical events abounds. Where it differs from the other epic texts is in its subject-matter, nearer to current events than is the norm. It must not be forgotten that none of the cyclical manuscripts is contemporary with the First Crusade: all date from at least a century later, and the more developed manuscripts (those with most branches) are later still. It may be that the dates at which the manuscripts were copied (the time of the Third Crusade, the period of Louis IX's expeditions) correspond to moments when interest in the (by then) legendary First Crusade had grown. Divergences between different manuscripts point to an important part being played in the composition of the First Cycle by the scribes-cum-remanieurs. A collective edition is in progress under the aegis of the University of Alabama.
The Second Cycle consists of three 14th-c. poems, the Chevalier au Cygne et Godefroid de Bouillon (a reworking of the Swan Knight theme), Baudouin de Sebourc, and the Bâtard de Bouillon. To these may be added Saladin, a mise en prose of a lost epic concerning this archetypical Saracen hero. The Cycle endeavours to update and continue the First Cycle, by adding accounts of later expeditions; and it continues the process of romanticization of the crusades begun in the First Cycle, thus moving further still from historical reality. The introduction of romance themes and motifs is very evident throughout the works of the Second Cycle.
The Crusade Cycle provides evidence of the vitality of epic form, used in this case to celebrate relatively recent historical events which (perhaps partly because of the chosen form) are none the less imbued with legendary and mythological qualities. It also illustrates the interplay between history and fiction (and the extent to which no such distinction was made in the Middle Ages) which is characteristic of medieval writing.
[David A. Trotter]
Bibliography
- R. F. Cook and L. S. Crist, Le Deuxième Cycle de la Croisade (1972)
- K.-H. Bender (ed.), Les Épopées de la croisade. Colloque de Trèves, 1984 (1987)
- D. A. Trotter, Medieval French Literature and the Crusades (1988)




