РефератыИностранный языкThThe Crusades Essay Research Paper The crusades

The Crusades Essay Research Paper The crusades

The Crusades Essay, Research Paper


The crusades were military expeditions launched against the


Muslims by the Christians in an attempt to regain the Holy Land. They


took place between 1095 A.D. and 1270 A.D. It was one of the most


violent periods in the history of mankind.


The starting point of the crusades was on November 18, 1095


A.D. when Pope Urban II opened the Council of Clermont. On November


27, outside the French city of Clermont-Ferrand, the Pope made an


important speech . He called upon everyone to help the Christians in


the east to restore peace. The crowd’s response was very positive.


Garments were cut into crosses which were attached to people’s


shoulders in an imitation of Christ (Matthew 10:38).(1) The original


object of the First Crusade was to help Christian churches in the


east. The new goal became to free the Holy Land from Muslim control,


especially Jerusalem.


Pope Urban II stayed in France until September 1096 to provide


leadership and guidance for the members of the First Crusade. He


urged churchmen to preach the cross in France. Urban wanted the


crusading army to be mostly made up of knights and other military


personnel. Since the news of his speech at Clermont spread through


the west, people from all social classes and occupations joined the


Crusade. As a result of Urban losing control of personnel, violence


was launched against the Jews of northern France. This violence was


mostly instigated by bands of the urban and rural poor led by men like


Peter the Hermit and Walter Sans-Avoir.


These groups lacked supplies and discipline. They attempted


to reach Constantinople but most of them never got that far. The


leaders in lands which they passed through were frightened and killed


many of the crusading bands. Some did get to Constantinople and


traveled across the Bosphorus in August 1096. There they split into


two groups. One tried to overtake Nicaea and was unsuccessful. The


other was ambushed and slaughtered near Civetot in October. The


remaining crusaders retreated to Constantinople and joined the second


wave of the Crusade.


The crusaders were eager to start the journey to Jerusalem but


they needed to capture the Anatolian Turkish capital of Nicaea first


because it blocked the road that would be their main supply route. It


was held by Seljuk Turks. In May 1097, the crusaders attacked Nicaea.


The Turks realized that they were defeated and agreed to give the city


to the Byzantines in exchange for the lives of their men. The


Byzantines agreed to this and on June 18, Nicaea was under Byzantine


control. The leaders of the crusade disagreed and wanted to slaughter


the Turks because they were enemies of Christ.(2) On June 30, 1097,


the crusaders were ambushed at the city of Dorylaeum by Seljuk Turks


led by Kilij Arslam the Seljuk Sultan. The fight continued until July


1. The crusaders won a big victory and nearly wiped out the Turkish


force. This victory opened up the way to Anatolia.


The crusaders attacked Anitoch in northern Syria on October


21, 1097. “This was the main obstacle on the road to Jerusalem.”(3)


In a long and gruesome battle, the city finally fell on June 2, 1098.


The crusaders were quickly attacked by a new Turkish army from Al


Mawsil. They arrived too late to revive Anitoch’s Turkish defenders


and they were forced to retreat on June 28.


The starting date for the march to Jerusalem was set for


November 1, 1098 but was delayed by an epidemic as well as fighting to


the south of Anitoch. On January 13, 1099 the commander-in-chief,


Count Raymond IV of Toulouse, led the crusaders’ march to Jerusalem.


They avoided attacks on cities to conserve forces. In May 1099 they


reached the northern border of Palestine. On June 7 they camped on


the summit of a hill where they could see Jerusalem. Many soldiers


had tears of joy on that day. The hill was named Montjoie.


Jerusalem was well fortified and only vulnerable from the


north and the southwest. On June 13 they tried to storm Jerusalem but


were driven back because of insufficient supplies. Extreme heat and a


water shortage lowered morale. A priest called Peter Desiderius told


them that if they fasted and held a procession around the walls of


Jerusalem with sufficient piety, the city would be theirs within nine


days. The crusaders did this and, when they completed building


three mini castles, they assaulted Jerusalem on July 13. “There was a


frenzy of killing as everyone was hacked down.”(4) The governor and


his staff were the only Muslims to escape alive. The Jewish library


containing 8 Torah rolls and 330 manuscripts survived.


After the First Crusade, four Levant states were established:


Jerusalem, Tripoli, Anitoch, and Edessa. The success of this


crusade was largely due to the isolation and weakness of the Muslim


powers.(5)


The Muslim reunification started in the Middle East under Imad


ad-Din Zangi, the ruler of Al Mawsil and Halab. The Muslims got their


first great victory versus the crusaders when they captured Edessa in


1144 and destroyed the crusader state in that region. This led to the


Second Crusade, which was proclaimed late in 1145. Many people joined


the crusade, including the King Louis VII of France and the holy Roman


emperor, Conrad III.


Conrad’s army left Nuremberg, Germany for Jerusalem in May


1147. A few weeks later the French army set out for Metz. The


Germans tried to cross central Anatolia in October, but the Seljuks


defeated them near Dorylaeum. The survivors fled to Nicaea. The


other German contingent, led by Otto of Freising, was defeated by


Turks at Ladoicea. The remaining crusaders fled to the coast of


Pamphylia and were slaughtered in February 1148. Few survivors


finished the trip to Syria by ship.


The French army had reached Constantinople on October 4,


1147. The French then journeyed through Byzantine territory in west


Asia Minor. The Turks destroyed most of them, but the French king,


the German Emperor, and some knights survived and traveled by ship to


Outremer from Antalya on the southern coast of Asia Minor. Zengi had


died before the crusaders arrived so his sons took control, Saif


al-Din in Mosul and Nur al-Din in Aleppo. Joescelin II, the Frankish


count of Edessa, took advantage of Zengi’s death and tried to regain


his capital, but Nur al-Din massacred the Edessan population and


retook it.


On June 24, 1148 the High Court of Jerusalem met at Palmarea


near Acre. The decision was made to attack Damascus, since Edessa was


no longer the war objective. On July 24, they camped along the west


side of Damascus. The Palestinian barons convinced the two kings that


the orchards on the west were making the siege more difficult, so they


moved to the southeast. They couldn’t stay very long in the


southeast because it was a hot waterless plain. On that same day they


withdrew their army. The Second Crusade had failed miserably. There


was only one success from the whole crusade: a group of Dutch and


English crusaders had captured the cities of Libson and Tort

osa.(6)


The Muslims had time to regroup after the Second Crusade, and in 1169,


Nur al-Din’s forces took Egypt. Saladin took control of the Muslims


when Nur al-Din died on May 15, 1174 in Damascus. In 1180 he joined


forces with the Anatolian Seljuk sultan, Kilij Arslan II. Saladin


stopped the unification of Aleppo and Mosul in 1182, brought Aleppo


under his control in 1183, and made a four year truce with the Franks


in 1185 after invading Palestine in 1183. Reynald of Ch?tillon,


leader of the Franks, broke the truce when he heard of a rich caravan


of unarmed merchants traveling on the east bank of Jordan. In


retaliation, Saladin invaded Palestine in 1187. The Franks got their


forces together to withstand Saladin at Zippori.


On July 4 Saladin defeated the Latin army at Hattin in


Galilee. Jerusalem surrendered on October 2. On October 29, 1187,


Pope Gregory VIII, who succeeded Pope Urban II after he died


from shock of the defeat at Hattin, declared the Third Crusade. Three


major European monarches joined: the holy Roman Emperor, Frederick I;


the French King, Philip II; and the English King, Richard I. It was


the largest force of crusaders since 1095. Frederick died in


Anitoch along with many others as a result of an epidemic. Most of his


army returned to Germany. Philip and Richard reached Palestine but


couldn’t regain Jerusalem. Many cities along the Mediterranean coast


were freed from Saladin’s control. On July 12, 1191 Acre


surrendered to the Christians. Richard left the Holy Land on October


9, 1192. The Latin Kingdom had been restored.


In 1198 Pope Innocent III proclaimed a Fourth Crusade. In


April 1202 the crusaders asked the Venetians for transport because


they overestimated the number of people who would sail. The Venetians


agreed to postpone the payment due to them if the crusaders helped


them recapture Zara which had been taken from them by Hungary. The


leaders of the crusade had no other choice. Some protested, saying


that an attack on a Christian city is a sin. On November 24, Zara was


captured. The entire army was excommunicated but the Pope lifted it


when he heard of the situation. On June 24, 1203, the fleet anchored


at Chalcedon, and on July 17, Constantinople was attacked from sea and


land. Emperor Alexius III fled in fear. Isaac II Angelus and his son


Alexius IV became co-emperors. In a revolt in January 1204, both were


murdered. Alexius V Ducas Murzuphlus became emperor. On April 12,


1204, they stormed the city and took control of the walls. On April


14 Constantinople was captured. The Crusaders and Venetians murdered


and looted for three days. Afterwards the crusaders started their own


empire in the Byzantine ruins with a Catholic religion, French speech,


and Italian commercial


policies.


The Albigensian Crusade was from 1202-1229. During the 12th


Century Albigensians made many converts in western Languedoc.


Innocent III preached a crusade against Raymond VI of Toulouse,


protector of the Albigensians. The crusade turned into a fight for


control of the Pyrenean kingdom of Catalonia and southern France.


There was a lot of blood shed. In the Peace of Paris in 1229, the


Capetian monarchy began shaping Languedoc into a French kingdom.


The church of Rome got a firm hold on southern France. The Christians


failed to bring Albigenses under their control.


The Children’s Crusade of 1212 began in Rhineland and Lower


Lorraine. In the spring large crowds of children gathered there. The


leader was a boy named Nicholas from Cologne. The goal of this


crusade was to capture the Holy Land. The French King persuaded a


large group of French children to return home. The group led by


Nicholas reached Genoa on August 25. They expected God to allow them


to walk across the sea but that didn’t happen. What happened


after that is a mystery. The story most believe says that two


Marseilles merchants provided seven ships for the children. Two


wrecked off Sardinia and the children on the other five ships were


sold into slavery in North Africa and Egypt.


In 1213 Innocent III opened a new crusade. He had no doubt


about the Fifth Crusade because the Book of Revelations said that


Islam would last less than 666 years. It started in 622 A.D. so they


thought it would end by 1288 A.D. Innocent III died on July 16, 1216


and Honorlus III became his successor. “He was dedicated to the


crusade but lacked the political strength and energy of Innocent


III.”(7) In return for the capture of Zara during the Fourth Crusade


, the Venetians agreed to transport the Hungarian army. The crusaders


arrived at Acre in May 1218. Egypt was now the target. If they could


get it, all of southern Palestine could be easily attained. On May


29, 1218, the fleet anchored off shore and the army was placed on the


west bank of the Nile. The crusaders overtook a tower protecting


Damietta. Instead of attacking Damietta, the crusaders waited for


reinforcements. Saladin’s nephew, Sultan al-Kamil, attacked the


crusader camp but was defeated . In September al-Kamil offered


Jerusalem, Palestine, Galilee, and the return of the true cross if the


Christians evacuated Egypt. Cardinal Pelagius, leader of the


Christian army, rejected the offer. He didn’t want to come to terms


with the Muslims. On November 5, 1219, Damietta was captured. In


August 1221 the Crusaders attacked the Egyptians but were forced to


surrender Damitetta.


Emperor Frederick II took up the Sixth Crusade in 1215.


Political problems in the west kept him from joining. He wanted to


boost his appearance by regaining the Holy Land. Pope Gregory IX


excommunicated him in 1227 when his journey was delayed more because


of an illness. He finally left for the Holy Land in June 1228. In


February 1229, Sultan al-Kamil surrendered Jerusalem because he was


afraid of Frederick’s expedition. A ten year truce was agreed upon.


No blood was shed during this peaceful, political crusade.


King Louis IX of France organized the Seventh Crusade after


the Muslims recaptured Jerusalem in 1244. Louis spent four years


planning and at the end of August 1248, Louis and his army sailed to


Cyprus. The army spent the winter in Cyprus while waiting for


reinforcements. The fleet left at the end of May and stopped off at


Damietta on June 5, 1249. On June 6 the citizens of Damietta


evacuated in a panic. The crusaders spent the summer in Damietta


waiting for reinforcements. On November 20, 1249, the army started to


march to Cairo. In the spring of 1250, they attacked Cairo. Louis


surrendered to the Egyptians in April 1250. Damietta was given up and


a ransom was paid.


The Europeans’ calls for more crusades were stupid and didn’t


accomplish much.(8) Italian cities had better commerce and there was


a greater interest in exploring the orient thanks to the crusades.


New trade markets were established. The direct general taxation


system was developed during the crusades.


As you can see, the crusades were one of the most violent


periods of time in the history


of mankind.

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