Ernoul is the name generally given to the author of a
chronicle of the late 12th century dealing with the fall of the
crusader
Kingdom of Jerusalem.
Biography
Ernoul himself is mentioned only once in history, and only in his own chronicle. He was a
squire of
Balian of Ibelin, an important crusader noble in
Jerusalem, and accompanied his lord on an embassy from King
Guy of Jerusalem to Count
Raymond III of Tripoli in 1187. Balian and his retinue remained behind for a day at
Nablus during the voyage to Tripoli; the rest were ambushed at the
Battle of Cresson on
May 1. It was Ernoul who investigated the almost-empty
Templar castle of
La Fève before news of the battle reached Balian. No other mention is made of Ernoul. However, it is clear that he was at the
Battle of Hattin on
July 4, as his chronicle gives an account from the rearguard, which was commanded by his master Balian.
According to M. R. Morgan, the squire Ernoul was the same man as Arnaix or
Arneis of Gibelet, who was an important noble in the crusader
Kingdom of Cyprus in the first half of the 13th century, and must have been connected to the
Ibelins, who were also important there; the Gibelets had strong ties to the Ibelins throughout the 12th and 13th centuries in both Jerusalem and Cyprus. This identification is rejected by Peter Edbury, who suggests that Arneis lived too late to be Ernoul, and also that their names are too dissimilar.
The chronicle
The so-called Chronicle of Ernoul is actually a number of separate but similar manuscripts, stemming from an original source that does not survive but assumed to have been written by Ernoul himself. The basis of these is a 13th century
Old French translation of the
Latin chronicle of
William of Tyre, who wrote in the Kingdom of Jerusalem in the mid- to late-12th century. This French translation came to be known as the
History of Heraclius or the
Estoire de Eracles, because William of Tyre began his chronicle with the reign of
Byzantine emperor Heraclius.
One of the more important manuscripts is known as the
Lyon Eracles, which is the basis of modern editions. It was edited by Morgan as
La Continuation de Guillaume de Tyr (1183–1197). This manuscript continues until 1248, and the section containing the years 1184–1197 is not found in any other manuscript. The 19th century
Receuil des historiens des croisades, a collection of crusade texts compiled by the
Académie des inscriptions et belles-lettres, used a different version of the
Eracles known as the
Colbert-Fontainebleau Eracles. There is also a shorter manuscript known as the
abrégé, and a
Florentine Eracles from the
Laurentian Library in
Florence which has a unique section from 1191 to 1197 and continues until 1277.
The text known as
The Chronicle of Ernoul and Bernard the Treasurer, edited by L. de Mas Latrie in the 19th century, has a separate manuscript tradition. It is essentially the same as the
abrégé, and appears to have been produced from the French translation of William of Tyre, which was then mostly removed except for a few sections. It carries on until 1227 or 1231, depending on the manuscript.
The surviving texts were written in their final form from the 1230s to the 1250s. Ernoul himself may have written only a small part, covering the years 1186 and 1187, in which Balian and the Ibelin family feature prominently.