Itinerary
6
and his soul fled triumphant, bearing the palm of martyrdom, to the
heavenly kingdom. His death indeed was rendered glorious, since by his
single sword so large a circle of dead bodies had been heaped around him.
It was
sweet for a man to die thus, himself in the centre, surrounded by the
unbelievers whom his brave arm had slaughtered. [And inasmuch as he
rode on a white horse and fought that day in white armour, the idolaters
who know St. Gregory to have fought in such costume, boasted that they
had slain the knight of the white armour, who was the bulwark of the
Christians.
3
] There was,
in the place of this conflict, some stubble which the
reaper had left after the ears had been cut off a short time before, but the
Turks had rushed over it in such multitudes, and this single champion had
held out so long against them, that the field in which they stood was
wholly trampled to dust, and showed no signs of a crop of corn ever
having grown there. It is said, there were some who sprinkled the limbs of
the
dead man with dust, which they afterwards placed on their own heads,
believing that they derived force from the contact; and one man, as is said,
more ardent than the rest, cut off certain members of the man, and kept
them for his own use, that even though dead they might perchance
produce a successor to such distinguished valour.
Chapter III. Ñ
Of the origin of Saladin.
At this victory Saladin rejoiced greatly; and
fired with the ambition of
gaining the kingdom turned his thoughts to still greater deeds. But that
future ages may know more of this persecutor of the Christian name, I will
premise a few particulars of his origin, as far as the brevity at which I aim
will allow. He was of the race of the Mirmur¾ni, the son of parents who
were not noble, though not a plebeian of obscure birth. His father was
called Job, and his own name was Joseph. For according to the tradition of
Mahomet, it is customary among many of the heathens, when they
3This passage is omitted in some and is very likely to be spurious. May we not read St.
George instead of St. Gregory?