Matthew of Clermont (died May 18, 1291, in Acre) was a knight of the Order of the Hospitallers, then he last served as Marshal.
Biography
editMatthew led the Knights Hospitallers in defending Tripoli against the Mamluks in 1289. The city had to be abandoned on April 26, forty monks were killed in the battle, he himself was one of the few who managed to escape by sea.[2]
He was one of the outstanding protagonists in the defense of Acre, the last crusader stronghold in the Holy Land, which had been besieged by the Mamluks under Sultan Al-Ashraf Khalil since April 1291. When the Mamluks entered the city on May 16, Matthew stopped the defenders fleeing to the port, then counter-attacked, pushing the Mamluks back out of the city from the Saint Anthony's Gate.[3] When the city was stormed again on May 18, he fought again in the front line and was killed in the Genoese quarter.[4][5]
Tribute
editThe badly injured Grand Master Jean de Villiers paid tribute to his Marshal shortly after the fall of Acre:
”He was noble, courageous, and well-versed with arms. May God have mercy on him!”
References
edit- ^ Daunou; Émeric-David; Lajard, Félix; Paris, Paulin; Le Clerc, Victor; Fauriel (1842). Didot frères, Firmin; Treuttel; Wurtz (eds.). Histoire littéraire de la France (in French). Vol. 20. Paris: Imprimerie nationale. p. 83.
- ^ Templar of Tyre. Deeds of the Cypriots. §477.
- ^ Thaddeus of Napoli 2004, pp. 71–74.
- ^ Thaddeus of Napoli 2004, p. 118.
- ^ Templar of Tyre. Deeds of the Cypriots. §505.
- ^ Victor Le Clerc (1842). Relation anonyme de le prise d'Acre en 1291 (Histoire littéraire de la France, 20 ed.).
Bibliography
edit- Thaddeus of Napoli (2004). Robert B. C. Huygens (ed.). Excidii Aconis gestorum collectio; Ystoria de desolatione et concvlcatione civitatis Acconensis et tocivs terre sancta. Turnholti.