Guillaume Caoursin Explained

Guillaume Caoursin, also called Gulielmus Caoursin (1430, Douai – 1501, Rhodes), was vice-chancellor of the Order of Saint John of Jerusalem, or Knights Hospitaller. He was an eye-witness to the siege of Rhodes in 1480, an unsuccessful attack on the Hospitaller garrison led by Pierre d'Aubusson by an Ottoman fleet of 160 ships and an army of 70,000 men under the command of admiral Mesih Pasha.

Biography

For 40 years, Caoursin was in the service of the Order of Saint John, both as vice-chancellor and in the exercise of other important functions, but did not wear the habit of the Order. In 1462, he assisted as vice-chancellor at the first general chapter, convened in Rhodes. In 1466, he accompanied the Grand Master Piero Raimondo Zacosta to Rome for the holding of a general chapter.[1] This assembly took place in the presence of pope Paul II, and at the closing, it was ordered that those who did not wear the habit of the Order leave, but Caoursin was excepted from this measure. Zacosta died in Rome and Caoursin returned to Rhodes with the new grand master Giovanni Battista Orsini. In 1470, he was sent on an embassy to the pope to ask him for help against the Turks who threatened the island. Caoursin came into the service of his successor Pierre d'Aubusson in 1476.

He then successively fulfilled various missions, and distinguished himself during the siege of Rhodes in 1480. Shortly after this siege, he married and d'Aubusson, recognizing the services he had rendered to the Order in the new compilation of legal statutes, presented him with a thousand gold florins. In 1484, he was ambassador to pope Innocent VIII. The latter charmed by his eloquence and skill, appointed him as Count Palatine, making him apostolic secretary.

On July 5, 1816, a relic of Caoursin was discovered in the chapel of the house of Notre-Dame de Douai, which, since the destruction of the Templars, belonged to the Hospitallers. It was a stone tumulaire two meters long by one meter wide on which is incised the image of a Hospitaller commander with this inscription

This epitaph is dedicated to either Caoursin, his uncle, who is possibly his real father. The stone found in the Temple was found in the gardens of the Lodge of the Freemasons of Douai.

A history of the siege was also provided by Pierre d'Aubusson in his Account of the Siege of Rhodes which was included in The History of the Holy, Military, Sovereign Order of St. John of Jerusalem (1852) by John Taaffe, an English historian and Knight Commander of the Sovereign Order of St. John of Jerusalem.[2] D'Aubusson's biography Histoire de Pierre d'Aubusson (1667) by French Jesuit Dominique Bouhours (1628–1702) is also of interest.[3]

Works

The works of Gulielmus Caoursin include the following.[4]

Johann Snell printed Obsidionis Rhodiae Urbis Descriptio in Denmark in 1482, and this printing is one of the first two book printings in Denmark.[7]

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "St John of Jerusalem, Knights of the Order of the Hospital of". Encyclopædia Britannica. 20. (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 12–19.
  2. Taaffe, J. (1852). The history of the holy, military, sovereign Order of St. John of Jerusalem. London.
  3. Bouhours, D. (1679). The life of the renowned Peter d'Aubusson, grandmaster of Rhodes. London.
  4. http://worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n88603570/ Caoursin, Gulielmus (died 1501)
  5. Gibbon, E., Kaye, J., Scott, W., Caoursin, G. (1870). The crusades. London.
  6. Web site: Vann, Theresa M. and Kagay, Donald J. (2015). Hospitaller Piety and Crusader Propaganda.
  7. Caoursin, G., Johan Snels udg. of 1492 (1910). Guillaume Caoursins Beretning om belejringen af Rhodos. Kjøbenhavn: Petersen.