Natasha R Hodgson (2013)
Lions, tigers and bears: encounters with wild animals and bestial imagery in the context of crusading the Latin East
Viator, 44(1):65-93.
Animals
were an essential component of medieval life and pervaded contemporary
art and literature, but specific reasons for their presence in
historical narratives are not often investigated. Livestock and beasts
of burden had an important logistical role in the crusades, but animals
also appeared in a symbolic context, especially those deemed to be
“wild.” Preachers of the crusade and authors of historical narratives
used these creatures to communicate with their audiences, to enshrine
crusading as part of God’s divine plan and to differentiate crusaders
from their enemies. Encounters with wild animals also featured as part
of the penitential aspects of crusading. Case studies involving Wicher
the Swabian and Godfrey of Bouillon demonstrate how crusade authors
blended fact and fiction, and adjusted elements of certain
micro-narratives in order to elevate the reputations of individual
crusaders. Animals and the natural world provided a symbolic code which
enabled authors to demonstrate their learning and to communicate
crusading ideas and events. (source: http://www.brepolsonline.net/doi/10.1484/J.VIATOR.1.103142 )