(October 1181 – Jerusalem)
The night air in Jerusalem was heavy with incense and silence. Baldwin IV, King of Jerusalem and Syria, Duke of Palestine, Defender of the Holy Sepulchre and the Holy City, lay restless within his chamber at the royal palace. Despite the strength that God had granted his body since the miracle of his healing, Baldwin still wrestled with the ceaseless weight of kingship.
Yet this night was not like others.
As he drifted into uneasy sleep, Baldwin found himself no longer in his chamber but standing in a vast hall of fire and light. It was neither earthly nor wholly of Heaven. Around him great anvils rang with blows that echoed like thunder; sparks leapt into the air like stars. Smiths of flame and spirit toiled, not with hammers of iron but with swords wreathed in holy fire.
At the center stood an angel — vast, terrible, and radiant — clad in burnished bronze armor, a flaming sword in one hand and a blacksmith's hammer in the other. His wings blazed like molten gold, his eyes shone like lightning. Baldwin knew without words that this was Michael, the Prince of Angels, Guardian of Israel, and Captain of the Lord's Hosts.
The angel's voice was like the roar of many waters.
"Baldwin, son of Jerusalem, chosen king and defender of the Holy City. You have been raised up not for yourself but for the armies of God. The enemies of Christ build in number and strength, yet the Lord does not abandon His people. Just as He once gave David the sling, so now shall He give you a new weapon — fire harnessed in iron."
The angel gestured, and before Baldwin rose a colossal structure: a tower of stone and brick, round and tall as a keep, belching smoke and fire into the air. Beside it waterwheels turned ceaselessly, driving great bellows that poured breath into its heart. Inside, he saw ore and charcoal stacked in layers, glowing with a brilliance that melted iron into liquid rivers.
"This is what's called a blast furnace. With it you shall smelt iron not in fragments but in abundance, rivers of metal for the Lord's work. From it shall be cast the thunder of God — great cannon to shatter the walls of His enemies, muskets to strike fear into the hearts of the unbelievers, and armor that no Saracen blade shall pierce."
Baldwin watched as molten iron poured into molds. He saw massive bombards taking shape, their barrels thick and short, able to hurl stone and iron balls with the sound of Heaven's thunder. He saw smaller tubes — primitive muskets — bound to wooden staves, carried by soldiers who unleashed smoke and fire upon their foes.
Then he saw plows and hoes, nails and hinges, all drawn from the furnace's bounty — not only weapons of war but tools of peace, to till the fields of Syria, to build houses in Damascus, to strengthen his kingdom's prosperity.
The angel's voice resounded once more:
"With this furnace, you shall forge both sword and plow. For the Lord blesses not only war but the order and fruitfulness of His people. This gift is terrible, but it is holy. Guard it, use it for the glory of God, and remember always: you are but steward of His mysteries."
Then the angel raised his flaming sword in benediction. Baldwin felt searing fire pour into his chest, not of pain but of unshakable conviction.
The vision dissolved into blinding light.
Baldwin woke with a start. Sweat drenched him, though the chamber was cool. His heart thundered like a drum. On the table beside him lay parchment, quill, and ink, as if set there in anticipation. With trembling yet eager hands, he seized them and began to draw what he had seen: the towering shaft of stone, the chamber for iron ore and charcoal, the waterwheel-driven bellows, the channels for molten metal.
His sketches were rough, but guided by memory sharper than steel. He wrote beside them:
Height: 6–8 meters tall.
Structure: Cylindrical, lined with firebrick, sealed with clay.
Power: Continuous blast from bellows, driven by waterwheels of the Jordan and Orontes.
Fuel: Charcoal, drawn from Lebanon's forests and the mountains of Anatolia.
Operation: Iron ore layered with charcoal and limestone flux. Heat up to 1,500 degrees.
Output: 2–3 tons of iron per day.
At the bottom he scrawled a name with a steady hand:
"The Furnace of St. Michael."
At first light, Baldwin ordered that Balian of Ibelin, his faithful marshal Amalric de Lusignan, his wife Queen Constance, several members of the High Council, and the master blacksmiths of Jerusalem be summoned to the palace hall.
When they were gathered, Baldwin stood before them with the parchments in his hand, his face lit with strange fervor. His voice rang with a conviction none had heard from him before.
"My lords, my queen, and masters of the forge — this night the Lord saw fit to send me a vision. An angel of God appeared, the Archangel Michael himself, and revealed to me a gift for our kingdom. Not only a weapon, but a power to shape the age to come."
He spread the parchments upon the table. The men leaned forward, brows furrowed, while Constance clasped her hands at the sight of her husband's burning intensity.
Balian, ever cautious, studied the drawings. "It seems… a furnace, my lord. But larger than any forge I have seen. What purpose has it?"
Baldwin's eyes gleamed. "With this furnace, we may smelt iron not by fragments as in the bloomeries of old, but in rivers. Two, even three tons in a single day. Enough to cast cannon that will thunder with the wrath of God, muskets to arm our levies, armor to clothe our knights in steel thicker than Saracen blades may pierce. And more — tools, plows, nails, hinges — to raise up the prosperity of Syria and Jerusalem alike."
A murmur spread among the council.
One blacksmith, Master Gerard, shook his head in awe. "If this works, my king, it will be as though Hephaestus himself labored in our forges. We could make iron in abundance such as no realm in Christendom possesses."
Amalric de Lusignan frowned. "Yet my king, the cost. Such a structure will require stone, clay, brick, and most of all fuel. The forests of Lebanon may provide, but will not such demand strip them bare? And how will we guard this secret from spies? If Saladin learns of this…"
Baldwin raised his hand. "It shall be guarded as the Holy Sepulchre itself. This is not the craft of men but the gift of God. We will build it near rivers, where waterwheels may drive the bellows ceaselessly. Its name shall be the Furnace of St. Michael, for it was by him revealed."
Constance, eyes shining, touched her husband's arm. "If God has granted you such a vision, then surely He blesses its making. The Kingdom grows in might and in holiness. Let us build this furnace, that all Christendom may know the Lord has chosen Jerusalem."
The council sat in silence, struck by the weight of her words.
At last, Balian spoke. "Then it shall be done. If this be of God, who are we to withhold His gift? We shall begin at once, my king, and see this Furnace of St. Michael rise."
Baldwin nodded, fire still burning in his eyes. "So let it be written. So let it be forged."