The
first of the Crusades began in 1095, when armies of Christians from Western
Europe responded to Pope Urban II’s plea to go to war against Muslim forces in
the Holy Land. After the First Crusade achieved its goal with the capture of
Jerusalem in 1099, the invading Christians set up several Latin Christian
states, even as Muslims in the region vowed to wage holy war (jihad) to regain
control over the region. Deteriorating relations between the Crusaders and
their Christian allies in the Byzantine Empire culminated in the sack of
Constantinople in 1204 during the Third Crusade. Near the end of the 13th
century, the rising Mamluk dynasty in Egypt provided the final reckoning for
the Crusaders, toppling the coastal stronghold of Acre and driving the European
invaders out of Palestine and Syria in 1291.
The Crusades: Background
By the end of the 11th century, Western Europe had emerged as
a significant power in its own right, though it still lagged far other
Mediterranean civilization such as that of the Byzantine
Empire (formerly
the eastern half of the Roman Empire) and the Islamic empire of the Middle East
and North Africa. Meanwhile, Byzantium was losing considerable territory to the
invading Seljuk Turks, who defeated the Byzantine Army at the battle of
Manzikirt in 1071 and went on to gain control over much of Anatolia. After
years of chaos and civil war, the general Alexius Comnenus seized the Byzantine
throne in 1081 and consolidated control over the remaining empire as Emperor
Alexius I.
Did You Know?
In a popular movement known as the Children's
Crusade (1212), a motley crew including children, adolescents, women, the
elderly and the poor marched all the way from the Rhineland to Italy behind a
young man named Nicholas, who said he had received divine instruction to march
toward the Holy Land.
In
1095, Alexius sent envoys to Pope Urban II asking for mercenary troops from the
West to help confront the Turkish threat. Though relations between Christians
in East and West had long been fractious, Alexius’ request came at a time when
the situation was improving. In November 1095, at the Council of Clermont in
southern France, the pope called on Western Christians to take up arms in order
to aid the Byzantines and recapture the Holy Land from Muslim control. Pope
Urban’s plea met with a tremendous response, both among lower levels of the
military elite (who would form a new class of knights) as well as ordinary
citizens; it was determined that those who joined the armed pilgrimage would
wear a cross as a symbol of the Church.
THE
FIRST CRUSADE (1096-1099)
Four
armies of Crusaders were formed from troops of different Western European
regions, led by Raymond of Saint-Gilles, Godfrey of Bouillon, Hugh of
Vermandois and Bohemond of Taranto (with his nephew Tancred); they were set to
depart for Byzantium in August 1096. A less organized band of knights and
commoners known as the “People’s Crusade” set off before the others under the
command of a popular preacher known as Peter the Hermit. Peter’s army traipsed
through the Byzantine Empire, leaving destruction in their wake. Resisting
Alexius’ advice to wait for the rest of the Crusaders, they crossed the
Bosporus in early August. In the first major clash between the Crusaders and
the Muslims, Turkish forces crushed the invading Europeans at Cibotus. Another
group of Crusaders, led by the notorious Count Emicho, carried out a series of
massacres of Jews in various towns in the Rhineland in 1096, drawing widespread
outrage and causing a major crisis in Jewish-Christian relations.
When
the four main armies of Crusaders arrived in Constantinople, Alexius insisted
that their leaders swear an oath of loyalty to him and recognize his authority
over any land regained from the Turks, as well as any other territory they
might conquer; all but Bohemond resisted taking the oath. In May 1097, the
Crusaders and their Byzantine allies attacked Nicea (now Iznik, Turkey), the
Seljuk capital in Anatolia; the city surrendered in late June. Despite
deteriorating relations between the Crusaders and Byzantine leaders, the
combined force continued its march through Anatolia, capturing the great Syrian
city of Antioch in June 1098. After various internal struggles over control of
Antioch, the Crusaders began their march toward Jerusalem, then occupied by
Egyptian Fatimids (who as Shi’ite Muslims were enemies of the Sunni Seljuks).
Encamping before Jerusalem in June 1099, the Christians forced the besieged
city’s governor to surrender by mid-July. Despite Tancred’s promise of
protection, the Crusaders slaughtered hundreds of men, women and children in
their victorious entrance into the city.
THE
CRUSADER STATES AND THE SECOND CRUSADE
(1147-1149)
Having
achieved their goal in an unexpectedly short period of time, many of the
Crusaders departed for home. To govern the conquered territory, those who
remained established four large western settlements, or Crusader states, in
Jerusalem, Edessa, Antioch and Tripoli. Guarded by formidable castles, the
Crusader states retained the upper hand in the region until around 1130, when
Muslim forces began gaining ground in their own holy war (or jihad) against the
Christians, whom they called “Franks.” In 1144, the Seljuk general Zangi, governor
of Mosul, captured Edessa, leading to the loss of the northernmost Crusader
state.
News
of Edessa’s fall stunned Europe, and led Christian authorities in the West to
call for another Crusade. Led by two great rulers, King Louis VII of France and
King Conrad III of Germany, the Second Crusade began in 1147. That October, the
Turks crushed Conrad’s forces at Dorylaeum, site of a great victory during the
First Crusade. After Louis and Conrad managed to assemble their armies at
Jerusalem, they decided to attack the Syrian stronghold of Damascus with an
army of some 50,000 (the largest Crusader force yet). Previously well disposed
towards the Franks, Damascus’ ruler was forced to call on Nur al-Din, Zangi’s
successor in Mosul, for aid. The combined Muslim forces dealt a humiliating
defeat to the Crusaders, decisively ending the Second Crusade; Nur al-Din would
add Damascus to his expanding empire in 1154.
THE
THIRD CRUSADE (1189-1192)
After
numerous attempts by the Crusaders of Jerusalem to capture Egypt, Nur al-Din’s
forces (led by the general Shirkuh and his nephew, Saladin) seized Cairo
in 1169 and forced the Crusader army to evacuate. Upon Shirkuh’s subsequent
death, Saladin assumed control and began a campaign of conquests that
accelerated after Nur al-Din’s death in 1174. In 1187, Saladin began a major
campaign against the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem. His troops virtually
destroyed the Christian army at the battle of Hattin, taking the city along
with a large amount of territory.
Outrage
over these defeats inspired the Third Crusade, led by rulers such as the aging
Emperor Frederick Barbarossa (who was drowned at Anatolia before his entire
army reached Syria), King Philip II of France and King Richard I of England
(known as Richard the Lionheart). In September 1191, Richard’s forces defeated
those of Saladin in the battle of Arsuf; it would be the only true battle of
the Third Crusade. From the recaptured city of Jaffa, Richard reestablished
Christian control over some of the region and approached Jerusalem, though he
refused to lay siege to the city. In September 1192, Richard and Saladin signed
a peace treaty that reestablished the Kingdom of Jerusalem (though without the
city of Jerusalem) and ended the Third Crusade.
FROM
THE FOURTH TO THE SIXTH CRUSADE (1198-1229)
Though
the powerful Pope Innocent III called for a new Crusade in 1198, power
struggles in and between Europe and Byzantium drove the Crusaders to divert
their mission in order to topple the reigning Byzantine emperor, Alexius III,
in favor of his nephew, who became Alexius IV in mid-1203. The new emperor’s
attempts to submit the Byzantine church to Rome met with stiff resistance, and
Alexius IV was strangled after a palace coup in early 1204. In response, the
Crusaders declared war on Constantinople, and the Fourth Crusade ended with the
conquest and looting of the magnificent Byzantine capital later that year.
The
remainder of the 13th century saw a variety of Crusades aimed not so much at
toppling Muslim forces in the Holy Land as at combating any and all of those
seen as enemies of the Christian faith. The Albigensian Crusade (1208-29) aimed
to root out the heretical Cathari or Albigensian sect of Christianity in
France, while the Baltic Crusades (1211-25) sought to subdue pagans in
Transylvania. In the Fifth Crusade, put in motion by Pope Innocent III before
his death in 1216, the Crusaders attacked Egypt from both land and sea, but
were forced to surrender to Muslim defenders led by Saladin’s nephew, Al-Malik
al-Kamil, in 1221. In 1229, in what became known as the Sixth Crusade, Emperor Frederick II achieved the peaceful transfer of Jerusalem to
Crusader control through negotiation with al-Kamil. The peace treaty expired a
decade later, and Muslims easily regained control of Jerusalem.
END
OF THE CRUSADES
Through
the end of the 13th century, groups of Crusaders sought to gain ground in the
Holy Land through short-lived raids that proved little more than an annoyance
to Muslim rulers in the region. The Seventh Crusade (1239-41), led by Thibault
IV of Champagne, briefly recaptured Jerusalem, though it was lost again in 1244
to Khwarazmian forces enlisted by the sultan of Egypt. In 1249, King Louis IX
of France led the Eighth Crusade against Egypt, which ended in defeat at
Mansura (site of a similar defeat in the Fifth Crusade) the following year. As
the Crusaders struggled, a new dynasty known as the Mamluks–descended from
former slaves of the sultan–took power in Egypt. In 1260, Mamluk forces in
Palestine managed to halt the advance of the Mongols, an invading force led by Genghis Khan and his descendants that had emerged as a potential
ally for the Christians in the region. Under the ruthless Sultan Baybars, the
Mamluks demolished Antioch in 1268, prompting Louis IX to set out on another
Crusade, which ended in his death in North Africa (he was later canonized).
A
new Mamluk sultan, Qalawan, had defeated the Mongols by the end of 1281 and
turned his attention back to the Crusaders, capturing Tripoli in 1289. In what
was considered the last Crusade,
a
fleet of warships from Venice and Aragon arrived to defend what remained of the
Crusader states in 1290. The following year, Qalawan’s son and successor,
al-Ashraf Khalil, marched with a huge army against the coastal port of Acre,
the effective capital of the Crusaders in the region since the end of the Third
Crusade. After only seven weeks under siege, Acre fell, effectively ending the
Crusades in the Holy Land after nearly two centuries. Though the Church
organized minor Crusades with limited goals after 1291–mainly military
campaigns aimed at pushing Muslims from conquered territory or conquering pagan
regions–support for such efforts disappeared in the 16th century, with the rise
of the Reformation and the corresponding decline of papal authority.
source:
*history.com
*wikipedia
*history.com
*wikipedia
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