Eleanor of Aquitaine was
one of the most powerful people in feudal Europe.
At age 15 she married Louis VII, King of France, bringing into the union
her vast possessions in from the River Loire in France to the Pyrenees
(near the border of modern Germany).
A few
years later, at age 19, Eleanor visited the celebrated Abbé Bernard of Clairvaux
at the cathedral of Vézelay to offer him thousands of her
vassals for the Second Crusade. Rumour has it that Queen Eleanor
was so in favour of the crusades that she appeared
at the cathedral dressed like an Amazon and galloped through the crowds on a
white horse, urging them to join the crusades. We don't know if this is
true, but it is an indication of the way her passion for the crusades is
remembered.
While the church may have been
pleased to receive her thousands of fighting vassals, they were less happy
when they learned that Eleanor, attended by 300 of her ladies, also
intended to go with the crusaders. She planned to help ' tend the
wounded'.' The presence of Eleanor, her
ladies and wagons of female servants, was criticized by commentators
throughout her adventure. The women dressed in armour and carried lances,
but they never fought.
When they reached the city of Antioch, Eleanor
renewed a renewed friendship with her uncle, Raymond, who
had been appointed prince of the city. Raymond was only a few years older
than Eleanor, and was far more interesting, and by all reports more handsome, than Eleanor's
husband, Louis. When Raymond decided that the best strategic objective
of the Crusade would be to recapture Edessa, to protect the Western
presence in the Holy Land, Eleanor sided with his view. Her husband Louis, however,
was determined to reach Jerusalem. Louis demanded
that Eleanor follow him to Jerusalem. Eleanor, furious, announced that their marriage was not valid in the eyes of God, for they
were related through some family connections to an extent prohibited by
the Church. Offended and hurt by her claim, Louis nonetheless forced Eleanor to
honour her marriage vows and ride with him. The expedition failed, and
a defeated Eleanor and Louis returned to France in separate ships.
On her way home, while resting in
Sicily, Eleanor was brought the news that her fair haired uncle Raymond had been
killed in battle, and his head delivered to the Caliph of
Baghdad.
Although her marriage to Louis continued for a time, and she bore him
two daughters, the relationship was over. In 1152 the marriage was
annulled and her vast estates reverted to Eleanor's control. Within a
year, at age thirty, she married twenty year old Henry who became king of
England two years
later.
Following this, in a papal bull for the next
Crusade, the Church forbade women of all sorts to join the expedition.
All the Christian monarchs, including King Louis, Eleanor's ex-husband agreed to this.
However by this time Eleanor had problems of her own in her marriage to King Henry
II of England.
If you want to you can read about what happened to Eleanor
after she returned from the Crusades.

To read more
about the Caliph of Baghdad, link to the
story of Shagrat
(or Shajarat) al-Durr: Queen of the Egyptian Army Back
Papal
bull:
A
public statement issued by the pope
Back

Bibliography
Desmond Seward, Eleanor
of Aquitaine: The Mother Queen, Dorsett Press, 1978.
Andrea Hopkins, Most
Wise & Valliant Ladies, Collins & Brown, 1997.
Marion Mead, Eleanor
of Aquitaine: A Biography, Penguin, 1992.
Tim Newark, Women
Warlords, Blandford
Press, UK, 1989.
Dominion
& Domination
Women
in World History
Adapted with kind permission from
Lynn
Reese