Itinerary
36
and professing his own innocence; promising, moreover, as much gold as
he should demand, and whatsoever persons he should name as hostages
for his observance of the treaty. The emperor, alas! too easy, accepted what
was offered and gave what was asked:
in this less worthy of praise,
because he let go that man of blood and treachery whom he had almost in
his possession, when it would have been more honourable to slay him than
to keep alive so great an enemy to the Christian name. The hostages were
given and the treaty confirmed; but the wickedness of that malignant
traitor did not rest there; for, whilst the Christians were continuing their
march far beyond Iconium, he attacked them, sometimes by ambuscade,
sometimes openly in the field. The hostages
were asked what this meant,
and they told a falsehood which suited their own purpose: they said that
the Turks were a wild race whom no one could govern; that they wandered
about with no fixed habitation, having no property of their own, and
always trying to obtain that of others either by robbery or theft. They
attacked us however less boldly, knowing that many of their men had
fallen, for, by a moderate computation, 22,000 of the Turks had been slain
in former conflicts.
Chapter XXIV. Ñ
How the Emperor Frederic, arriving in Armenia, is drowned in
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