Dieric Bouts the Elder,
Meeting of Abraham and Melchizedek
Courtesy: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melchizedek#/media/File:Meeting_of_abraham_and_melchizadek.jpg
This short chapter ushers in the era of Prester John, a priest-king of a gargantuan oriental realm and a potential crusader.
The fact that Otto of Freising included this tale into his account of the world history shows its immediate impact. Whether the writer took it as a fact or fiction, this yarn helped materialize the Crusaders' anxiety and expectations on the eve of the Second Crusade.
Here is a brief extract:
Otto von Freising, a bishop and a prolific writer, didn't intend to amuse his readers with frivolous tales. His twelfth-century chronicle of world history features a battleground where the forces of good are pitted against the swarms of evil. Nevertheless, he is the author who baptized our character and breathed life into his somber shadow.
Otto heard a story when he was at the attendance at the papal court which moved to Viterbo, Italy due to security issues. The curia was hosting a delegation of oriental clerics. One of the guests, Bishop Hugh of Gabala (modern-day Jableh, Syria), reported about the faltering morale of crusaders after the loss of Edessa and an imminent threat overhanging Jerusalem. The disaster highlighted the emergency: the Latin principalities in the Outremer were in dire straits, anticipating even worse calamities. They issued a desperate call for the Pope to supply reinforcements.
The prelate was a well-versed storyteller. To change the tune, he entertained his listeners with an anecdote about a proverbial Oriental sovereign, a cut above any other ruler, who gave a resounding slap in the face of Islam.
Prester John, a monarch and a Christian priest, though of the Nestorian creed, resides in the extreme east, next to the earthly paradise. The emerald scepter that he wields epitomizes his overwhelming wealth and power. The worthy offshoot of his noble ancestors, the Biblical Magi, he has always dreamed of making a pilgrimage to Jerusalem.
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