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Rodrigo
De Vivar: El Cid
The Poema de El Cid
recounts the fictionalized adventures of Rodrigo
Diaz de Vivar, an eleventh-century Castilian who conquered much
of Islamic Spain. Many of the events in the poem are historically accurate,
but licenses have been taken by the poet, generally to allow more opportunities
for El Cid to prove his valor and loyalty
to King Alfonso.
In fact, throughout the entire poem, El Cid
is portrayed as an exemplary hero and vassal; he is also an ideal lord
himself. The poet has created an ideal within the historical context
of eleventh - or twelfth - century Spain.
The El Cid’s
Exile
El Cid is exiled because his enemies have turned King Alfonso against
him. This, according to custom, gives Rodrigo De
Vivar the right to earn a living for himself and his followers,
to claim authority over whatever territory he conquers, and even to
wage war against his former lord. Essentially, by exiling him, Alfonso
has relieved him of his obligations as a vassal.
These obligations, much like those of the characters
in La Chanson de Roland, revolve around fidelity, loyalty, and support.
El Cid continues to act as a superbly successful
vassal, sending Alfonso rich spoils from his conquered territories and
humbling himself through his messengers. When restored to the king's
favor, he defers to Alfonso's wishes, even when they conflict with his
own, as in the case of his daughters' marriages.
El Cid and the Vassals
Central to the feudal system is the fact that vassals of a lord often
have vassals themselves. El Cid is presented
as being an ideal lord as well, which seems to balance the humility
he shows to Alfonso. He is generous to his followers, shows them respect,
and accepts their counsel. Perhaps most importantly, he allows his vassals
to serve him honorably.
He often sends Minaya as a messenger, and the latter fulfills his duty
much as Rodrigo De Vivar obliges Alfonso.
At the trial of the heirs of Carrion, who have dishonored and injured El Cid's daughters, and after the family of Carrion has made material restitution to El Cid, he suggests to his vassals that they should denounce the champions of the Carrion family. He then leaves, allowing his vassals the opportunity to distinguish themselves by fighting for their lord's honor.
This of course does not mean that El
Cid is a coward. In fact, his bravery is legendary. However, he
has achieved fame and honor, and allows his vassals to do the same.
Minaya often asks for the distinction of leading a second wing of the
attack in battle and is always allowed to do so.
El Cid's willingness to accept these proposals
does honor to Minaya by allowing him to place himself in a position
to gain glory, and Minaya's eagerness to place himself in the thick
of the battle does honor to El Cid since Minaya has absolutely no doubt
that his lord will come to his aid should he get himself into too much
trouble to handle alone.
El Cid Vassal
El Cid's central function in the poem, however, is as a vassal and champion
of Alfonso. As champion, the Poem never suggests that King Alfonso had
any doubts of El Cid's courage or prowess. It is interesting to note
that when Garcia Ordonez questions El Cid's exploits by suggesting that
he is only interested in enriching himself, Alfonso counters by saying
that Rodrigo De Vivar is doing him more honor
than Garcia, by conquering, however savagely, Moorish lands.
Even before he agrees to El Cid's return, Alfonso admits that El Cid is acquitting himself marvelously. When he does return El Cid to favor, he constantly acknowledges the greatness of his accomplishments. He even allows him to name the time of their meetings, and in many ways treats him as an equal, rather than a relatively low-born vassal.
Of course, the real Alfonso treated the real
Rodrigo De Vivar much less favorably. He was
always ready to accept the slander of El Cid's
enemies and quite ready to believe that El Cid
was greedy to the point of being willing to embezzle moneys due to his
lord and to dishonor the semi-sacred role of acting as his lord's representative.
The changes made by the poet are understandable in an historical context. Although the date of the poem's recording is open to speculation, it is certain that the time was a politically dangerous one. Alfonso VII had been able to reconquer much of Spain because the powerful Islamic Almoravid Empire was faltering.
Later, however, the Islamic threat was renewed, and the Christian princes fought amongst themselves.
The poet, then, saw in El Cid an opportunity to create a hero who would exemplify the heroic virtues that seemed to be lacking in contemporary society. El Cid of the Poema de El Cid is loyal almost to a fault. He never fights as a mercenary for the Moors, as did the historic El Cid, but instead gains territory for his king only at their expense.
He typifies a brutal, vengeful Christianity. By offering an ideal of the kind of behavior the poet wished was more common, El Cid is presented as a hero perfectly suited to medieval Spain.
The Song of El Cid
Like many if not most medieval literary works, the Song of El Cid can be read on various levels and interpreted in several, often complementary ways. The preceding analysis emphasizes the superficial level, on which the focus is on El Cid's loyalty and greatness as a vassal. This is the traditional level of interpretation and was the official one during the dictatorship of Francisco Franco since it was in fact a glorification of "The Leadership Principle."
In the sub-text of the Poem, however, King Alfonso is the protagonist and is portrayed as blind to the concepts of honor and respect. Let us take the trial that ends the poem to illustrate this.
El Cid and Don Alfonso
Having accepted El Cid back into his good graces, Alfonso proposed that El Cid marry his daughters to two youngsters of a rich and old Leonese family of which Alfonso thought highly.
El Cid did not like the match and told the king that he would not marry them so himself, but that he would give them to the king, his lord, to be married honorably. Alfonso then married them to the young Leonese, the princes of Carrion (no jokes, please.) The newly-weds joined El Cid in the rich city of Valencia, which he had conquered from the Muslims.
El Cid heaped his sons-in-law with costly gifts, and they accepted them
eagerly without much thanks. They proved to be mere fops, and cowards
to boot, and El Cid's vassals did all they could to hide the youths'
flaws from El Cid. One afternoon, as El
Cid lay napping, a "pet" lion escaped its cage and entered
the room where El Cid was sleeping.
El Cid's vassals stepped between El Cid and
the lion, but the sons-in-law were terrified to the point of incontinence
and hid as best they could. Despite their best efforts, El Cid's vassals
could not restrain their amusement, and the princely Heirs of the noble
family of Carrion suffered the humiliation of being laughed at. After
this episode, the princes decided to return to Carrion, smarting under
the poor figure they had cut generally and fearing that El Cid would
discover how shamefully they had reacted at the approach of the lion.
Although they had been careful to take all of the gifts they had received
from El Cid, their self esteem had been badly shaken and, as they rode,
they tried to find some acceptable rationale to restore their sense
of personal dignity.
Once out of range of El Cid, they turned on their wives, saying that they should never have married such low-born sluts. They regained their sense of personal worth by degrading their wives. They tore off the girls' clothes, beat them senseless with their riding crops, and left them to the wild animals of the forest. Luckily, one of El Cid's followers found them and took them home.
El Cid sent word of this shameful act to the King, and Alfonso said that he would arrange a trial where El Cid could seek justice. The Carrion family relied upon a class solidarity with the king in expecting that Alfonso would recognize the validity of the boys' claim that their wives had been too low-born to be accepted into the family of Carrion.
Their consternation was considerable when they discovered that Alfonso was determined that they should stand to answer El Cid's charges. When the date for the trial came, El Cid and his vassals put on their mail and belted their swords and went into the court wearing them under their cloaks.
Stop right here! What is going on? It is illegal to wear weapons or armor in a trial before the king. It is the king's responsibility to keeps order and protect the litigants, and the wearing of weapons or of drawing them is an act of lese-majeste punishable by death since it impugns the honor of the king by suggesting that he was not capable or willing to guarantee a fair trial.
But El Cid does wear armor and carry a weapon. Why? He clearly does not trust Alfonso's ability or inclination to defend him from attack. This is not the attitude of a loyal vassal. Why should El Cid regard Alfonso with such contempt? Well, ask yourself why El Cid is in Alfonso's court in the first place. Because of the dishonoring of his daughters?
That is certainly what Alfonso says, but El Cid's daughters had not been dishonored; Alfonso had accepted them as his wards before the marriage.
Alfonso is completely oblivious of the fact that it was he who had been dishonored. When the princes claim in court that they should never have married so far beneath them, why didn't Alfonso explode, and remind them that it was he who had arranged the marriage and that royal wards stand in honor as the daughters of the king?
This explains why El Cid encourages his vassals to fight the champions of the Carrion's; this is not his battle, it is Alfonso's. But Alfonso has no sense of honor and is quite unlikely to redeem the girls' honor by punishing the Carrion family as they deserve. The final stinger comes with word that El Cid had accepted proposals for the hands of his daughters offered by the kings of Aragon and Navarre.
Alfonso had clearly dishonored El Cid's daughters by marrying them so far beneath their real worth since he had handed them over to the young men of a noble Leonese family when they were actually of a status to be sought by kings equal to himself. He made such a misjudgment because even in this he had no idea of the respect a vassal such as El Cid deserved. True, El Cid did commend all the lands he conquered to Alfonso, but Alfonso could not even hold what El Cid had conquered.
After El Cid's death, historically, his wife Jimena held and ruled Valencia as the kings vassal, Alfonso finally ordered her to return to Castile and to abandon the city on the grounds that he could not protect her. El Cid's vassals lost the rich fiefs they had won under their late lord, and Alfonso did nothing to compensate them for their loss.
One might note that Minaya never had reason to fear that El Cid, his lord, would protect and aid him under any circumstances whatever. I could expand much more on this level. The leitmotif of the poem is "What a worthy vassal if only he had a worthy lord!" Superficially, the poem emphasizes El Cid's worthiness, but the sub-text concentrates on the worthlessness of Alfonso.
El Cid: other interpretation
There is yet another level of interpretation, one that is suggested in the many episodes in which Alfonso treated El Cid like an equal. This is not what El Cid wanted. He wanted Alfonso to behave like a lord and to treat him as a proper vassal, and so we see that, time and again, El Cid breaks the rules and offends against Alfonso, always hoping to goad Alfonso into reprimanding him and establishing the proper relationship between them, but always failing.
A couple of examples will have to suffice to suggest the operation of this level of interpretation. When Alfonso and El Cid approach the Guadalquivir for their reconciliation conference, El Cid is so overcome by the sight of his lord that he throws himself from his horse, and rolls on the ground eating grass like an animal.
The king crosses the river and raises him to his feet. Very pretty. But at such conferences, it is the subordinate who crosses the stream. This is important enough that some conferences between equals were held in midstream scarcely a comfortable arrangement.
After the reconciliation, Alfonso gave his followers leave to join El Cid, if they wished. Almost all did so, whereupon El Cid presented Alfonso with a gift, a large number of finely saddled horses that were paraded in front of Alfonso.
The scene is dramatic. There is El Cid, surrounded by his old vassals and by the warriors who have deserted the king, and there is the king, sitting on a throne looking at his prize horses with empty saddles. But Alfonso doesn't mind; he is more taken with the valuable horses and ornate saddles than with the fighting men who should have been riding them.
There may be more levels, but I cannot see them. At this last level that I can see, the Poem of El Cid is a rich psychological drama, inviting the reader to peer into the motives for every action. It is the tale of El Cid's greatest battle, that of awakening his lord to honor, and it was the only battle in which he was defeated. It was, however, the only battle that really counted.
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