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, from a medieval miniature painting, during the First Crusade.
The
Crusades were a series of military conflicts of a religious war waged by much of Christian Europe during
1095–
1291, most of which were sanctioned by the Pope in the name of
Christendom. This term refers to a particular polity of the medieval world. The Crusades originally had the goal of recapturing Jerusalem and the sacred "
Holy Land" from
Muslim rule and were originally launched in response to a call from the Eastern Orthodox Byzantine Empire for help against the expansion of the Muslim Seljuk Turks into
Anatolia.
The term is also used to describe contemporaneous and subsequent campaigns conducted through to the 16th century in territories outside the Levantsuch as Muslim territories in
Al Andalus, Ifriqiya, and Egypt, as well as in
Eastern Europe, usually against pagans, those considered by the
Catholic Church to be
Heresy, and peoples under the ban of
excommunication for a mixture of religious, economic, and political reasons.
e.g. the Albigensian Crusade, the
Aragonese Crusade, the
Reconquista and the
Northern Crusades. Rivalries among both Christian and Muslim powers led also to alliances between religious factions against their opponents, such as the Christian alliance with the
Sultanate of Rum during the
Fifth Crusade.
The traditional numbering scheme for the Crusades includes the nine major expeditions to the Holy Land during the 11th to 13th centuries. Other unnumbered "crusades" continued into the 16th century, lasting until the political and religious climate of Europe was significantly changed during the
Renaissance and
Reformation (as well as the subsequent Counter-reformation).
The Crusades had far-reaching political, economic, and social impacts, some of which have lasted into contemporary times. Because of internal conflicts among Christian kingdoms and political powers, some of the crusade expeditions (such as the
Fourth Crusade) were diverted from their original aim and resulted in the sack of a Christian city,
Constantinople, and the partition of the Byzantine Empire between Republic of Venice and the Crusaders. The Sixth Crusade was the first crusade to set sail without the official blessing of the Church, establishing the precedent that rulers other than the Pope could initiate a crusade.
Historical context
{{Quote box|align=right|width=35%|quote=It is necessary to look for the origin of a crusading ideal in the struggle between Christians and Muslims in Spain and consider how the idea of a holy war emerged from this background.|source=
Norman F. Cantor|-->
Jerusalem falls to the Sassanids
The Byzantines lost control of Jerusalem and the True Cross in 614 to Khosrau II, ruler of the Zoroastrianism Sassanid Empire. The Byzantine emperor
Heraclius imbued the subsequent struggle between the Empires with religious overtones, aiming to recapture both Jerusalem and the True Cross (he was successful on both counts). The Byzantines called themselves "soldiers of the cross".
Middle Eastern situation
The Muslim presence in the Holy Land began with the initial
Arab conquest of Palestine in the 7th century. This did not interfere much with pilgrimage to Christian holy sites or the security of monasteries and Christian communities in the Holy Land, and western Europeans were less concerned with the loss of far-away Jerusalem than, in the ensuing decades and centuries, the invasions by Muslims and other hostile non-Christians, such as the Vikings, Slavs and Magyars. However, the Muslim armies' successes put increasing pressure on the Eastern Orthodox Byzantine Empire.
Another factor that contributed to the change in Western attitudes towards the East came in the year 1009, when the
Fatimids Caliph
al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah ordered the Church of the Holy Sepulchre destroyed. In 1039 his successor permitted the Byzantine Empire to rebuild it. Denys Pringle "Architecture in Latin East" in
The Oxford History of the Crusades ed. Jonathan Riley-Smith (New York:Oxford University Press,1999) 157 Pilgrimages were allowed to the Holy Lands before and after the Sepulchre was rebuilt, but for a time pilgrims were captured and some of the clergy were killed. The Muslim conquerors eventually realized that the wealth of Jerusalem came from the pilgrims; with this realization the persecution of pilgrims stopped.Thomas F Madden
A Concise History of the Crusades (Lanham:Rowman & Littlefield Publishers Inc, 1999) 5 However, the damage was already done, and the violence of the Seljuk Turks became part of the concern that spread the passion for the Crusades. Thomas F Madden
A Concise History of the Crusades (Lanham:Rowman & Littlefield Publishers Inc, 1999) 8
Western European situation
The origins of the Crusades lie in developments in
Western Europe earlier in the Middle Ages, as well as the deteriorating situation of the
Byzantine Empire in the east caused by a new wave of Turkish Muslim attacks. The breakdown of the Carolingian Empire in the late 9th century, combined with the relative stabilisation of local European borders after the Christianization of the Vikings, Slavs, and Magyars, had produced a large class of armed warriors whose energies were misplaced fighting one another and terrorizing the local populace. The Church tried to stem this violence with the Peace and Truce of God movements, which was somewhat successful, but trained warriors always sought an outlet for their skills, and opportunities for territorial expansion were becoming less attractive for large segments of the nobility. One exception was the
Reconquista in Spain and
Portugal, which at times occupied Iberian
knights and some
mercenaries from elsewhere in Europe in the fight against the Islamic
Moors, who had successfully overrun most of the Iberian Peninsula over the preceding two centuries.
In 1063, Pope Alexander II had given his blessing to Iberian Christians in their wars against the Muslims, granting both a papal standard (the
vexillum sancti Petri) and an indulgence to those who were killed in battle. Pleas from the Byzantine Emperors, now threatened by the
Seljuks, thus fell on ready ears. These occurred in 1074, from Emperor
Michael VII to
Pope Gregory VII and in 1095, from Emperor Alexius I Comnenus to Pope Urban II.
The Crusades were, in part, an outlet for an intense religious piety which rose up in the late 11th century among the lay public. A crusader would, after pronouncing a solemn vow, receive a cross from the hands of the pope or his papal legates, and was thenceforth considered a "soldier of the Church". This was partly because of the Investiture Controversy, which had started around 1075 and was still on-going during the First Crusade. As both sides of the Investiture Controversy tried to marshal public opinion in their favor, people became personally engaged in a dramatic religious controversy. The result was an awakening of intense Christian piety and public interest in religious affairs. This was further strengthened by religious propaganda, advocating
Just War in order to retake the Holy Land—which included Jerusalem (where the
Death of Jesus,
Resurrection of Jesus and
ascension into heaven of
Jesus took place according to Christian theology) and Antioch (the first Christian city)—from the Muslims. Further, the remission of sin was a driving factor. This provided any God-fearing men who had committed sins with an irresistible way out of eternal damnation in hell. It was a hotly debated issue throughout the Crusades as what exactly "remission of sin" meant. Most believed that by retaking Jerusalem they would go straight to heaven after death. However, much controversy surrounds exactly what was promised by the popes of the time. One theory was that one had to die fighting for Jerusalem for the remission to apply, which would hew more closely to what Pope Urban II said in his speeches. This meant that if the crusaders were successful, and retook Jerusalem, the survivors would not be given remission. Another theory was that if one reached Jerusalem, one would be relieved of the sins one had committed before the Crusade. Therefore one could still be sentenced to hell for sins committed afterwards.
All of these factors were manifested in the overwhelming popular support for the First Crusade and the religious vitality of the 12th century.
Immediate cause
at the
Council of Clermont, where he preached an impassioned sermon to take back the Holy Land.The immediate cause of the First Crusade was
Alexios I Komnenos's appeal to
Pope Urban II for mercenaries to help him resist Muslim advances into territory of the Byzantine Empire. In 1071, at the Battle of Manzikert, the Byzantine Empire was defeated, which led to the loss of all of Asia Minor (modern Turkey) save the coastlands. Although attempts at reconciliation after the East-West Schism between the Catholic Western Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church had failed, Alexius I hoped for a positive response from Urban II and got it, although it turned out to be more expansive and less helpful than he had expected.
When the First Crusade was preached in 1095, the Christian princes of northern Iberia had been fighting their way out of the mountains of Galicia (Spain) and
Asturias, the Basque Country (historical territory) and
Navarre, with increasing success, for about a hundred years. The fall of Moorish
Toledo, Spain to the Kingdom of León in 1085 was a major victory, but the turning points of the
Reconquista still lay in the future. The disunity of Muslim emirs was an essential factor.
While the
Reconquista was the most prominent example of Christian reaction against Muslim conquests, it is not the only such example. The Normans adventurer
Robert Guiscard had conquered the "toe of Italy," Calabria, in 1057 and was holding what had traditionally been Byzantine territory against the Muslims of Sicily. The maritime states of Pisa, Genoa and
Catalonia were all actively fighting Islamic strongholds in Majorca and
Sardinia, freeing the coasts of Italy and Catalonia from Muslim raids. Much earlier, the Christian homelands of
Syria,
Lebanon, Palestine, Egypt, and so on had been conquered by Muslim armies. This long history of losing territories to a religious enemy created a powerful motive to respond to Byzantine Emperor Alexius I's call for holy war to defend Christendom, and to recapture the lost lands starting with Jerusalem.
The papacy of
Pope Gregory VII had struggled with reservations about the doctrinal validity of a holy war and the shedding of blood for the Lord and had, with difficulty, resolved the question in favour of justified violence. More importantly to the Pope, the Christians who made pilgrimages to the Holy Land were being persecuted. Actions against Arianism and other heretics offered historical precedents in a society where violence against nonbelievers—and indeed against other Christians—was acceptable and common. Saint
Augustine of Hippo, Gregory's intellectual model, had justified the use of force in the service of Christ in
The City of God, and a Christian "just war" might enhance the wider standing of an aggressively ambitious leader of Europe, as Gregory saw himself. The northerners would be cemented to
Rome, and their troublesome knights could see the only kind of action that suited them. Previous attempts by the church to stem such violence, such as the concept of the "Peace of God", were not as successful as hoped. To the south of Rome, Normans were showing how such energies might be unleashed against both Arabs (in Sicily) and Byzantines (on the mainland). A Latin hegemony in the Levant would provide leverage in resolving the Papacy's claims of supremacy over the Patriarch of Constantinople, which had resulted in the
Great Schism of 1054, a rift that might yet be resolved through the force of Frankish arms.
In the Byzantine homelands, the Eastern Emperor's weakness was revealed by the disastrous defeat at the Battle of Manzikert in 1071, which reduced the Empire's Asian territory to a region in western Anatolia and around Constantinople. A sure sign of Byzantine desperation was the appeal of Alexius I Comnenus to his enemy, the Pope, for aid. But Gregory was occupied with the
Investiture Controversy and could not call on the German emperor, so a crusade never took shape.
For Gregory's more moderate successor, Pope Urban II, a crusade would serve to reunite Christendom, bolster the Papacy, and perhaps bring the East under his control. The disaffected Germans and the Normans were not to be counted on, but the heart and backbone of a crusade could be found in Urban's own homeland among the northern French.
After the First Crusade
On a popular level, the first crusades unleashed a wave of impassioned, personally felt pious Christian fury that was expressed in the massacres of Jews that accompanied the movement of the Crusader mobs through Europe, as well as the violent treatment of "
schismatic" Orthodox Christians of the east. During many of the attacks on Jews, local Bishops and Christians made attempts to protect Jews from the mobs that were passing through. Jews were often offered sanctuary in churches and other Christian buildings, but the mobs broke in and killed them anyway.
In the 13th century, Crusades never expressed such a popular fever, and after Acre, Israel#Arab rule and the Crusades fell for the last time in 1291 and the
Occitania Cathars were exterminated during the
Albigensian Crusade, the crusading ideal became devalued by Papal justifications of political and territorial aggressions within Catholic Europe.
The last crusading order of knights to hold territory were the
Knights Hospitaller. After the final fall of Acre, they took control of the island of Rhodes, and in the sixteenth century, were driven to
Malta, before being finally unseated by Napoleon I of France in 1798.
List of crusades
A traditional numbering scheme for the Crusades totals nine during the 11th to 13th centuries, as well as other smaller sorties that were mostly contemporaneous and are unnumbered. There were frequent "minor" Crusades throughout this period, not only in Palestine but also in the Iberian Peninsula and central Europe, against Muslims and also Christian heretics and personal enemies of the Papacy or other powerful monarchs. Such "crusades" continued into the 16th century until the Renaissance and Reformation, when the political and religious climate of Europe was significantly different from that of the Middle Ages.
First Crusade 1096–1099
In March 1095 at the Council of Piacenza, ambassadors sent by List of Byzantine Emperors Alexios I Komnenos called for help with defending his empire against the
Seljuk Turks. Later that year, at the
Council of Clermont,
Pope Urban II called upon all Christians to join a war against the Turks, promising those who died in the endeavor would receive immediate remission of their sins Fulcher of Chartres, Medieval Sourcebook.. Crusader armies managed to defeat two substantial Turkish forces at Battle of Dorylaeum and at
Siege of Antioch, finally marching to Jerusalem with only a fraction of their original forces. In 1099, during the
Siege of Jerusalem (1099), the Crusader army took Jerusalem by assault and massacred the population. As a result of the First Crusade, several small
Crusader states were created, notably the Kingdom of Jerusalem.
Crusade of 1101
Following this crusade there was a second, less successful wave of crusaders. This is known as the Crusade of 1101 and may be considered an adjunct of the First Crusade.
Second Crusade 1147–1148
After a period of relative peace in which Christians and Muslims co-existed in the Holy Land, Muslims conquered the town of County of Edessa. A new crusade was called for by various preachers, most notably by Bernard of Clairvaux. French and South German armies, under the Kings
Louis VII of France and Conrad III of Germany respectively, marched to Jerusalem in 1147 but failed to win any major victories, launching a failed pre-emptive siege of Damascus, an independent city that would soon fall into the hands of Nur al Din, the main enemy of the Crusaders.{{Lewis, Archibald. "Nomads and Crusaders: AD 1000-1368." January 1988. Indiana University Press. ISBN-13 9780253206527 On the other side of the Mediterranean, however, the Second Crusade met with great success as a group of Northern European Crusaders stopped in Portugal, allied with the Portuguese, and retook Lisbon from the Musilms in 1147. In the Holy Land by 1150, both the kings of France and Germany had returned to their countries without any result. St. Bernard of Clairvaux, who in his preachings had encouraged the Second Crusade, was upset with the amount of misdirected violence and slaughter of the Jewish population of the Rhineland.
Crusades in
The New Catholic Encyclopedia, New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1966, Vol. IV, p. 508. North Germans and Danes attacked the Wends during the 1147
Wendish Crusade, which was unsuccessful as well.
Third Crusade 1189–1192
In 1187, Saladin, Sultan of Egypt, recaptured Jerusalem, following the Battle of Hattin. Pope Pope Gregory VIII called for a crusade, which was led by several of Europe's most important leaders:
Philip II of France, Richard I of England (aka Richard the Lion Heart), and Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor. Frederick drowned in Cilicia in 1190, leaving an unstable alliance between the English and the French. Before his arrival in the Holy Land Richard captured the island of Cyprus from the Byzantines in 1191. Cyprus would serve as a Crusader base for centuries to come, and would remain in Western European hands until the Ottoman Empire conquered the island from Venice in 1571. Philip left, in 1191, after the Crusaders had recaptured Acre from the Muslims. The Crusader army headed south along the coast of the Mediterranean Sea. They defeated the Muslims near Arsuf, recaptured the port city of Jaffa, and were in sight of Jerusalem. However, Richard did not believe he would be able to hold Jerusalem once it was captured, as the majority of Crusaders would then return to Europe, and the crusade ended without the taking of Jerusalem. Richard left the following year after establishing a truce with Saladin.
On Richard's way home, his ship was wrecked and he ended up in
Austria, where his enemy,
Leopold V, Duke of Austria, captured him. The Duke delivered Richard to the Emperor
Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor, who held the King for ransom. By 1197, Henry felt ready for a crusade, but he died in the same year of
malaria. Richard I died during fighting in Europe and never returned to the Holy Land. The Third Crusade is sometimes referred to as the Kings' Crusade.
Fourth Crusade 1200–1204
The Fourth Crusade was initiated in 1202 by Pope Innocent III, with the intention of invading the Holy Land through Egypt. Because the Crusaders lacked the funds to pay for the fleet and provisions that they had contracted from the Venice,
Doge of Venice Enrico Dandolo, enlisted the crusaders to restore the Christian city of Zara (
Zadar) to obedience. Because they subsequently lacked provisions and time on their vessel lease the leaders decided to go to
Constantinople, where they attempted to place a Byzantine exile on the throne. After a series of misunderstandings and outbreaks of violence, the crusaders sacked the city in 1204.
Albigensian Crusade
The Albigensian Crusade was launched in 1209 to eliminate the heresy Cathars of Occitania (the south of modern-day
France). It was a decades-long struggle that had much more to do with the concerns of northern France to extend its control southwards than it did with heresy. In the end, both the Cathars and the independence of southern France were exterminated.
Children's Crusade
The Children's Crusade is a series of possibly fictitious or misinterpreted events of 1212. The story is that an outburst of the old popular enthusiasm led a gathering of children in France and Germany, which Pope Innocent III interpreted as a reproof from heaven to their unworthy elders. The leader of the French army, Stephen, led 30,000 children. The leader of the German army, Nicholas, led 7,000 children. None of the children actually reached the Holy Land; they were either sold into slavery, died in shipwrecks crossing the Mediterranean Sea, returned home, settled along the route to Jerusalem, or died of hunger during the journey.
Fifth Crusade 1217–1221
By processions, prayers, and preaching, the Church attempted to set another crusade afoot, and the Fourth Council of the Lateran (1215) formulated a plan for the recovery of the Holy Land. In the first phase, a crusading force from
Hungary and Austria joined the forces of the king of Jerusalem and the Principality of Antioch to take back Jerusalem. In the second phase, crusader forces achieved a remarkable feat in the capture of
Damietta in Egypt in 1219, but under the urgent insistence of the papal legate, Pelagio Galvani, they then launched a foolhardy attack on Cairo in July of 1221. The crusaders were turned back after their dwindling supplies led to a forced retreat. A nighttime attack by the ruler of Egypt, the powerful Sultan Al-Kamil, resulted in a great number of crusader losses and eventually in the surrender of the army. Al-Kamil agreed to an eight-year peace agreement with Europe.
Sixth Crusade 1228–1229
Emperor Frederick II had repeatedly vowed a crusade but failed to live up to his words, for which he was excommunication by Pope Gregory IX in 1228. He nonetheless set sail from
Brindisi, landed in Palestine, and through diplomacy he achieved unexpected success: Jerusalem,
Nazareth, and Bethlehem were delivered to the crusaders for a period of ten years. attacks
Damietta
Seventh Crusade 1248–1254
The papal interests represented by the
Knights Templar brought on a conflict with Egypt in 1243, and in the following year a
Khwarezmian Empire force summoned by the latter stormed Jerusalem. The crusaders were drawn into battle at
Battle of La Forbie in
Gaza. The crusader army and its Bedouin mercenaries were outnumbered by Baibars' force of
Khwarezmian Empire tribesmen and were completely defeated within forty-eight hours. This battle is considered by many historians to have been the death knell to the
Outremer Although this provoked no widespread outrage in Europe as the fall of Jerusalem in 1187 had done, Louis IX of France organized a crusade against Egypt from 1248 to 1254, leaving from the newly constructed port of
Aigues-Mortes in southern France. It was a failure, and Louis spent much of the crusade living at the court of the crusader kingdom in Acre. In the midst of this crusade was the first
Shepherds' Crusade in 1251.
Eighth Crusade 1270
The eighth Crusade was organized by Louis IX of France in 1270, again sailing from Aigues-Mortes, initially to come to the aid of the remnants of the crusader states in Syria. However, the crusade was diverted to
Tunis, where Louis spent only two months before dying. For his efforts, Louis was later canonised (the city of St. Louis, Missouri, USA is named for him). The Eighth Crusade is sometimes counted as the Seventh, if the Fifth and Sixth Crusades are counted as a single crusade. The Ninth Crusade is sometimes also counted as part of the Eighth.
Ninth Crusade 1271–1272
The future Edward I of England undertook another expedition in 1271, after having accompanied Louis on the Eighth Crusade. He accomplished very little in Syria and retired the following year after a truce.
In their later years, faced with the threat of the Egyptian
Mamluks, the Crusaders' hopes rested with a Franco-Mongol alliance. The
Mongols were thought to be sympathetic to Christianity, and the Frankish princes were most effective in gathering their help, engineering their invasions of the Middle East on several occasions. Although the Mongols successfully attacked as far south as Damascus on these campaigns, the ability to effectively coordinate with Crusades from the west was repeatedly frustrated most notably at the Battle of Ain Jalut in 1260. The Mamluks eventually made good their pledge to cleanse the entire Middle East of the infidel Franks. With the fall of
Principality of Antioch (1268), County of Tripoli (1289), and Siege of Acre (1291) (1291), the last traces of the Christian rule in Syria disappeared.
Northern Crusades (Baltic and Germany)
in Pskov in 1240 as depicted in Sergei Eisenstein's
Alexander Nevsky (film) (1938).
The Crusades in the Baltic Sea area and in Central Europe were efforts by (mostly German) Christians to subjugate and convert the peoples of these areas to Christianity. These Crusades ranged from the 12th century, contemporaneous with the Second Crusade, to the 16th century.
Contemporaneous with the Second Crusade,
Saxons and
Danes fought against
Polabian Slavs in the 1147
Wendish Crusade. In the 13th century, the Teutonic Knights led Germans,
Poles, and Pomeranians against the
Old Prussians during the Prussian Crusade.
Between 1232 and 1234, there was a crusade against the
Stedingen. This crusade was special, because the Stedingers were not heathens or heretics, but fellow Roman Catholics. They were free
Frisians farmers who resented attempts of the count of Oldenburg (state) and the archbishop
Archbishopric of Bremen to make an end to their freedoms. The archbishop excommunicated them, and
Pope Gregory IX declared a crusade in 1232. The Stedingers were defeated in 1234.
Other crusades
Crusade against the Tatars
In 1259 Mongols ravaged the principality of Halych-Volynia, Lithuania and
Poland, led by
Burundai and Nogai Khan. After that Pope Alexander IV tried without success to create a crusade against the
Blue Horde.
In the 14th century, Khan Tokhtamysh combined the Blue and White Hordes forming the Golden Horde. It seemed that the power of the Golden Horde had begun to rise, but in 1389, Tokhtamysh made the disastrous decision of waging war on his former master, the great Tamerlane. Tamerlane's hordes rampaged through southern Russia, crippling the Golden Horde's economy and practically wiping out its defenses in those lands.
After losing the war, Tokhtamysh was then dethroned by the party of Khan Temur Kutlugh and Emir Edigu, supported by Tamerlane. When Tokhtamysh asked Vytautas the Great for assistance in retaking the Horde, the latter readily gathered a huge army which included Lithuanians, Ruthenians, Russians,
Mongols,
Moldavians, Poles, Romanians and Teutonic knights.
In 1398, the huge army moved from Moldavia and conquered the southern steppe all the way to the
Dnieper River and northern Crimea. Inspired by their great successes, Vytautas declared a 'Crusade against the Tatars' with
Pope Boniface IX backing. Thus, in 1399, the army of Vytautas once again moved on the Horde. His army met the Horde's at the Vorskla River, slightly inside Lithuanian territory.
Although the Lithuanian army was well equipped with
cannon, it could not resist a rear attack from Edigu's reserve units. Vytautas hardly escaped alive. Many princes of his kin—possibly as many as 20—were killed (for example,
Stefan Musat, Prince of Principality of Moldavia and two of his brothers, while a fourth was badly injured ), and the victorious Tatars besieged Kiev. "And the Christian blood flowed like water, up to the Kievan walls," as one chronicler put it. Meanwhile, Temur Kutlugh died from the wounds received in the battle, and Tokhtamysh was killed by one of his own men.
Crusades in the Balkans
To counter the expanding
Ottoman Empire, several crusades were launched in the 15th century.The most notable are:
- the Crusade of Nicopolis (1396) organized by Sigismund of Luxemburg king of Hungary culminated in the Battle of Nicopolis. It is often called the last of the crusades.
- the Crusade of Varna (1444) led by the Polish-Hungarian king Władysław III of Poland ended in the Battle of Varna
- and the Crusade of 1456 organized to lift the Siege of Belgrade led by John Hunyadi and Giovanni da Capistrano
Aragonese Crusade
The
Aragonese Crusade, or Crusade of Aragón, was declared by
Pope Martin IV against the
Peter III of Aragon, in 1284 and 1285.
Alexandrian Crusade
The
Alexandrian Crusade of October 1365 was a minor seaborne crusade against Muslim
Alexandria led by Peter I of Cyprus. His motivation was at least as commercial as religious. It had limited success.
Hussite Crusade
The Hussite Crusade(s), also known as the "
Hussite Wars," or the "Bohemian Wars," involved the military actions against and amongst the followers of Jan Hus in Bohemia#Hussite Bohemia in the period 1420 to circa 1434. The Hussite Wars were arguably the first European war in which hand-held gunpowder weapons such as muskets made a decisive contribution. The Taborite faction of the Hussite warriors were basically infantry, and their many defeats of larger armies with heavily armoured knights helped affect the infantry revolution. In the end, it was an inconclusive war.
Swedish Crusades
The Sweden conquest of
Finland in the
Middle Ages has traditionally been divided into three "crusades": the
First Swedish Crusade around 1155 AD, the Second Swedish Crusade about 1249 AD and the
Third Swedish Crusade in 1293 AD.
The First Swedish Crusade is purely legendary, and according to most historians today, never took place as described in the legend and did not result in any ties between Finland and Sweden. For the most part, it was made up in the late 13th century to date the Swedish rule in Finland further back in time. No historical record has also survived describing the second one, but it probably did take place and ended up in the concrete conquest of southwestern Finland. The third one was against
Novgorod, and is properly documented by both parties of the conflict.
According to archaeological finds, Finland was largely Christian already before the said crusades. Thus the "crusades" can rather be seen as ordinary expeditions of conquest whose main target was territorial gain. The expeditions were dubbed as actual crusades only in the 19th century by the national-romanticist Swedish and Finnish historians.
Historical perspective
Western and other interpretations
Western and Eastern
historiography present variously different views on the crusades, in large part because "crusade" invokes dramatically opposed sets of associations—"crusade" as a valiant struggle for a supreme cause, and "crusade" as a byword for barbarism and aggression. This contrasting view is not recent since Christians have in the past struggled with the tension of military activity and teachings of Christ to "love one's enemies" and to "turn the other cheek". For these reasons, the crusades have been controversial even among contemporaries.
Western sources speak of both heroism, faith and honour (emphasized in Romance (genre)), but also of acts of brutality. Islamic and Orthodox Christian chroniclers tell stories of barbarian savagery and brutalityMaalouf, Amin. Crusades Through Arab Eyes..
Likewise, some modern historians in the west express moral outrage—for example Steven Runciman, the leading western historian of the crusades for much of the 20th century, ended his history with a resounding condemnation:
"High ideals were besmirched by cruelty and greed.. the Holy War was nothing more than a long act of intolerance in the name of God".
Eastern Orthodoxy
Like Muslims, Eastern Orthodox Christians also see the Crusades as attacks by "the barbarian West", but centered on the sack of Constantinople in 1204. Many relics and artifacts taken from Constantinople are still in the West, in the Vatican City and elsewhere. Disagreement currently exists between modern Turks and Greeks over the claimant rights to the Horses of Saint Mark on the façade of San Marco di Venezia in Venice. The Greeks argue that the frieze is inherently part of Greek culture and identity, similar to the Elgin Marbles; the Turks counter that the freize originated from what is now modern-day Istanbul. A picture of Turkish popular history of the Crusades can be assembled by compiling text of official Turkish brochures on Crusader fortifications in the Aegean coast and coastal islands.
Countries of Central Europe, despite the fact that they also belonged to Western Christianity, were the most skeptical about the idea of Crusades. Many cities in Hungary were sacked by passing bands of Crusaders;
Poland Prince
Leszek I the White refused to join a Crusade, allegedly because of the lack of
mead in Palestine.
Popular reputation in Western Europe
In Western Europe, the Crusades have traditionally been regarded by laypeople as heroic adventures, though the mass enthusiasm of common people was largely expended in the First Crusade, from which so few of their class returned. Today, the "
Saracen" adversary is crystallized in the lone figure of Saladin; his adversary Richard the Lionheart is, in the
English language-speaking world, the archetypical crusader king, while Frederick Barbarossa and Louis IX fill the same symbolic niche in German and French culture. Even in contemporary areas, the crusades and their leaders were romanticized in popular literature; the
Chanson d'Antioche was a
chanson de geste dealing with the First Crusade, and the Song of Roland, dealing with the era of the similarly romanticized
Charlemagne, was directly influenced by the experience of the crusades, going so far as to replace Charlemagne's historic
Basque people opponents with Muslims. A popular theme for
troubadours was the knight winning the love of his lady by going on crusade in the east.
, in his mountain cave: a late 19th century German woodcutIn the 14th century, Godfrey of Bouillon was united with the
Trojan War and the adventures of
Alexander the Great against a backdrop for military and courtly heroics of the Nine Worthies who stood as popular secular
culture heroes into the 16th century, when more critical literary tastes ran instead to
Torquato Tasso and Rinaldo and Armida, Roger and Angelica. Later, the rise of a more authentic sense of history among literate people brought the Crusades into a new focus for the Romantic generation in the romances of Sir
Walter Scott in the early 19th century. Crusading imagery could be found even in the Crimean War, in which the United Kingdom and France were allied with the Muslim Ottoman Empire, and in World War I, especially Edmund Henry Hynman Allenby, 1st Viscount Allenby capture of Jerusalem in 1917.
In Spain, the popular reputation of the Crusades is outshone by the particularly Spanish history of the
Reconquista.
El Cid is the central figure.
Role of women
While traditional historiography conceptualizes the crusades as a masculine movement symbolic of honour and male courage, women were also involved.
Women at home were intricately connected whether aware of it or not in the recruitment of crusading men. Their encouragement and familial ties would present men friendly connections which made the prospect of taking the cross more appealing for those risking their lives. Arguably the most significant role that women played in the West during the crusades was their preservation of the home. While many men were gone to the East, women were needed to take care of the home. The best known example is of Adela of Normandy, wife of Stephen II, Count of Blois whose correspondence with her husband while he was on Crusade and she was at home managing his fief has survived in part. It appears she was rather more keen on his crusading than he was. Men could journey to The Holy Land without having to worry about their home because their wives were in charge of their estates and families. Jonathan Riley-Smith. The First Crusaders 1096–1131, New York, NY: Cambridge University Press 1997, 99.
Even though most women showed their support for the crusades at home, some women took the cross themselves to go on the crusade. Aristocratic women who joined the movement often found that they had new positions of authority they did not have in the West. Eleanor of Aquitaine the wealthy queen of France and the wife of king Louis VII took the cross from St. Bernard of Clairvaux on Easter Sunday 1145 to join her husband. Roy Douglas Davis Owen. Eleanor of Aquitaine : queen and legend, Oxford, UK; Cambridge, Mass: Blackwell Publishing 1993, 22. Another woman who had ultimate political power in the East was
Melisende of Jerusalem, who under law gained hereditary rights to the crown upon her husband’s death. Like Eleanor, Melisende never led troops into battle, but she did participate in acts of political diplomacy. Less successful was her grand-daughter
Sibylla of Jerusalem, whose choice of husband had been a crucial political issue since her childhood. Her second marriage to Guy of Lusignan made him the king-consort on the death of Baldwin IV, with disastrous results. While most women were there to help and care for the crusading men by bringing them water or raising their spirits by offering emotional support, there were women who had specific tasks which defined their feminine characteristics like the washerwoman. Susan B. Edington and Sarah Lambert ed. Gendering the Crusades, New York: Columbia University Press 2002, 98.
The permanent residents of the Crusader kingdoms, if born in Europe, had usually come unmarried. Very many married women from Apulia in Southern Italy, where living conditions were often harsh, encouraged young women to take ship for Palestine in the knowledge that many men there were looking for wives.
The most controversial role that women had in the crusades was of course the role which threatened their femininity, actual militancy. When analyzing the primary documentation of female militancy, one must be cautious. The accounts of women fighting come mostly from Muslim historians whose aim was to portray Christian women as barbaric and ungodly because of their acts of killing. The contrasting view from Christian accounts portray women fighting only in emergency situations for the preservation of the camps and their own lives. In these cases women are seen as more feminine while behaving like ‘proper women’. Helen Nicholson. “Women on the Third Crusade.
Journal of Medieval History (23) no.4 (1997) pp. 337.” It is essential to note that all writings of crusades came from men, and women no matter what role they played would have been interpreted subjectively either way.
Legacy
Europe
The crusades have been remembered relatively favourably in western Europe (countries which were, at the time of the Crusades, Roman Catholic countries). Nonetheless, there have certainly been many vocal critics of the Crusades in Western Europe since the Renaissance.
Politics and culture
The Crusades had an enormous influence on the European Middle Ages. At times, much of the continent was united under a powerful
Papacy, but by the 14th century, the development of centralized bureaucracies (the foundation of the modern
nation-state) was well on its way in France, England,
Burgundy,
Portugal, Crown of Castile, and Aragon partly because of the dominance of the church at the beginning of the crusading era.
Although Europe had been exposed to Islamic culture for centuries through contacts in Iberian Peninsula and
Sicily, much knowledge in areas such as science, medicine, and architecture was transferred from the Islamic to the western world during the crusade era.
The military experiences of the crusades also had their effects in Europe; for example, European castles became massive stone structures as they were in the east, rather than smaller wooden buildings as they had typically been in the past.
In addition, the Crusades are seen as having opened up European culture to the world, especially Asia:
{{cquote], optics, and refinement of engineering) made their way west and sped the course of advancement in European universities that led to the Renaissance in later centuries
The invasions of German crusaders prevented formation of the large Lithuanian state incorporating all Baltic nations and tribes. Lithuania was destined to become a small country and forced to expand to the East looking for resources for wars with crusaders. Tomas Baranauskas.
Prūsų sukilimas—prarasta galimybė sukurti kitokią Lietuvą (Prussian rebellion—the lost chance of creating different Lithuania). 20 September, 2006
Trade
The need to raise, transport and supply large armies led to a flourishing of trade throughout Europe. Roads largely unused since the days of Roman Empire saw significant increases in traffic as local merchants began to expand their horizons. This was not only because the Crusades
prepared Europe for travel, but also because many
wanted to travel after being reacquainted with the products of the Middle East. This also aided in the beginning of the Renaissance in Italy, as various Italian
city-states from the very beginning had important and profitable trading colonies in the crusader states, both in the Holy Land and later in captured Byzantine territory.
Increased trade brought many things to Europeans that were once unknown or extremely rare and costly. These goods included a variety of spices, ivory, jade, diamonds, improved glass-manufacturing techniques, early forms of gun powder, oranges, apples, and other Asian crops, and many other products.
The achievement of preserving Christian Europe must not, however, ignore the eventual fall of the Christian Byzantine Empire, which was mostly caused by Fourth Crusade's extreme aggression against Eastern Orthodox Christianity, largely at the instigation of the infamous Enrico Dandolo, the
Doge of Venice and financial backer of the Fourth Crusade. The Byzantine lands had been a stable Christian state since the 4th century, though had been in a crisis immediately before the Fourth Crusade of 1202-1204. After the Crusaders took Constantinople in 1204, the Byzantines never again had as large or strong a state and finally fell in 1453.
Taking into account the fall of the Byzantines, the Crusades could be portrayed as the defence of Roman Catholicism against the violent expansion of Islam, rather than the defence of Christianity as a whole against Islamic expansion. On the other hand, the Fourth Crusade could be presented as an anomaly. It is also possible to find a compromise between these two points of view, specifically that the Crusades were Roman Catholic campaigns which primarily sought to fight Islam to preserve Catholicism, and secondarily sought to thereby protect the rest of Christianity; in this context, the Fourth Crusade's crusaders could have felt compelled to abandon the secondary aim in order to retain Dandolo's logistical support in achieving the primary aim. Even so, the Fourth Crusade was condemned by the Pope of the time (Pope Innocent III) and is now generally remembered throughout Europe as a disgraceful failure.
From a larger perspective, and certainly from that of noted naval/maritime historian Archibald Lewis, the Crusades must be viewed as part of a massive macrohistorical event during which Western Europe, primarily by its ability in naval warfare, amphibious siege, and maritime trade, was able to advance in all spheres of civilization. Recovering from the Dark Ages of AD 700-1000, throughout the 11th century Western Europe began to push the boudaries of its civilization. Prior to the First Crusade the Italian city-state of Venice, along with the Byzantine Empire, had cleared the Adriatic Sea of Islamic pirates, and loosened the Islamic hold on the Mediterranean Sea (Byzantine-Muslim War of 1030-1035). The Normans, with the assistance of the Italian city-states of Genoa and Pisa, had retaken Sicily from the Muslims from 1061-1091. These conflicts prior to the First Crusade had both retaken Western European territory and weakend the Islamic hold on the Mediterranean, allowing for the rise of Western European Mediterranean trading and naval powers such as the Sicilian Normans and the Italian city-states of Venice, Genoa, and Pisa. One must keep in mind when studying the Crusades that the key trading region of the Earth in the Middle Ages was the Black Sea-Mediterranean Sea-Red Sea. It was the aforementioned pre-First Crusade actions, then the Crusades themselves, which allowed Western Europe to control the trade of the Mediterranean Sea and Black Sea, a control which began in the 1000s and would only be threatened by the Turkish Ottoman Empire beginning in the mid-to-late 1400s. This Western European control of vital sea lanes allowed the economy of Western Europe to advance to previously unknown degrees, most obviously as regards the Maritime Republics of Venice, Genoa, and Pisa. Indeed, it is no coincidence that the Renaissance began in Italy, as the Maritime Republics, through their control of the Eastern Mediterranean and Black Seas, were able to return to Italy the Ancient knowledge of the Greeks and Romans, as well as the products of distant East Asia. Combined with the Mongol Empire, Western Europe traded extensively with East Asia, the security of the Mongol Empire allowing the products of Asia to be brought to such Western European controlled ports as Acre, Antioch, Kaffa (on the Black Sea) and even, for a time, Constantinople itself. The Fifth Crusade of 1217-1221 and the Seventh Crusade of 1248-1254 were largely attempts to secure Western European control of the Red Sea trade region, as both Crusades were directed against Egypt, the power base of the Ayyubid, and then Mameluke, Sultanates. It was only in the 1300s, as the stability of trade with Asia collapsed with the Mongol Empire, the Mamelukes destroyed the Middle Eastern Crusader States, and the rising Ottoman Empire impeded further Western European trade with Asia, that Western Europeans sought alternate trade routes to Asia, ultimately leading to Columbus's voyage of 1492.
Islamic world
The crusades had profound but localized effects upon the Islamic world, where the equivalents of "Franks" and "Crusaders" remained expressions of disdain. Muslims traditionally celebrate Saladin as a hero against the Crusaders. In the 21st century, some in the Arab world, such as the Arab independence movement and
Pan-Islamism movement, continue to call Western involvement in the Middle East a "crusade". The Crusades were regarded by the Islamic world as cruel and savage onslaughts by European Christians.
The most devastating long term consequence of the crusades, according to historian
Peter Mansfield (historian), was the creation of an Islamic mentality that sought a retreat into isolation. He says "Assaulted from all quarters, the Muslim w
, from a medieval miniature painting, during the First Crusade.
The
Crusades were a series of military conflicts of a
religious war waged by much of Christian Europe during 1095–
1291, most of which were sanctioned by the Pope in the name of
Christendom. This term refers to a particular polity of the medieval world. The Crusades originally had the goal of recapturing Jerusalem and the sacred "
Holy Land" from Muslim rule and were originally launched in response to a call from the
Eastern Orthodox Byzantine Empire for help against the expansion of the Muslim Seljuk Turks into
Anatolia.
The term is also used to describe contemporaneous and subsequent campaigns conducted through to the 16th century in territories outside
the Levantsuch as Muslim territories in
Al Andalus,
Ifriqiya, and
Egypt, as well as in
Eastern Europe, usually against
pagans, those considered by the
Catholic Church to be Heresy, and peoples under the ban of excommunication for a mixture of religious, economic, and political reasons.
e.g. the
Albigensian Crusade, the
Aragonese Crusade, the
Reconquista and the
Northern Crusades. Rivalries among both Christian and Muslim powers led also to alliances between religious factions against their opponents, such as the Christian alliance with the
Sultanate of Rum during the Fifth Crusade.
The traditional numbering scheme for the Crusades includes the nine major expeditions to the Holy Land during the 11th to 13th centuries. Other unnumbered "crusades" continued into the 16th century, lasting until the political and religious climate of Europe was significantly changed during the Renaissance and
Reformation (as well as the subsequent
Counter-reformation).
The Crusades had far-reaching political, economic, and social impacts, some of which have lasted into contemporary times. Because of internal conflicts among Christian kingdoms and political powers, some of the crusade expeditions (such as the
Fourth Crusade) were diverted from their original aim and resulted in the sack of a Christian city, Constantinople, and the partition of the Byzantine Empire between Republic of Venice and the Crusaders. The Sixth Crusade was the first crusade to set sail without the official blessing of the Church, establishing the precedent that rulers other than the Pope could initiate a crusade.
Historical context
{{Quote box|align=right|width=35%|quote=It is necessary to look for the origin of a crusading ideal in the struggle between Christians and Muslims in Spain and consider how the idea of a holy war emerged from this background.|source=
Norman F. Cantor|-->
Jerusalem falls to the Sassanids
The Byzantines lost control of Jerusalem and the True Cross in
614 to
Khosrau II, ruler of the
Zoroastrianism Sassanid Empire. The Byzantine emperor
Heraclius imbued the subsequent struggle between the Empires with religious overtones, aiming to recapture both Jerusalem and the True Cross (he was successful on both counts). The Byzantines called themselves "soldiers of the cross".
Middle Eastern situation
The Muslim presence in the Holy Land began with the initial Arab conquest of Palestine in the 7th century. This did not interfere much with
pilgrimage to Christian holy sites or the security of monasteries and Christian communities in the Holy Land, and western Europeans were less concerned with the loss of far-away Jerusalem than, in the ensuing decades and centuries, the invasions by Muslims and other hostile non-Christians, such as the Vikings,
Slavs and Magyars. However, the Muslim armies' successes put increasing pressure on the
Eastern Orthodox Byzantine Empire.
Another factor that contributed to the change in Western attitudes towards the East came in the year 1009, when the
Fatimids Caliph
al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah ordered the Church of the Holy Sepulchre destroyed. In 1039 his successor permitted the Byzantine Empire to rebuild it. Denys Pringle "Architecture in Latin East" in
The Oxford History of the Crusades ed. Jonathan Riley-Smith (New York:Oxford University Press,1999) 157 Pilgrimages were allowed to the Holy Lands before and after the Sepulchre was rebuilt, but for a time pilgrims were captured and some of the clergy were killed. The Muslim conquerors eventually realized that the wealth of Jerusalem came from the pilgrims; with this realization the persecution of pilgrims stopped.Thomas F Madden
A Concise History of the Crusades (Lanham:Rowman & Littlefield Publishers Inc, 1999) 5 However, the damage was already done, and the violence of the Seljuk Turks became part of the concern that spread the passion for the Crusades. Thomas F Madden
A Concise History of the Crusades (Lanham:Rowman & Littlefield Publishers Inc, 1999) 8
Western European situation
The origins of the Crusades lie in developments in Western Europe earlier in the
Middle Ages, as well as the deteriorating situation of the
Byzantine Empire in the east caused by a new wave of Turkish Muslim attacks. The breakdown of the Carolingian Empire in the late 9th century, combined with the relative stabilisation of local European borders after the Christianization of the Vikings,
Slavs, and Magyars, had produced a large class of armed warriors whose energies were misplaced fighting one another and terrorizing the local populace. The Church tried to stem this violence with the Peace and Truce of God movements, which was somewhat successful, but trained warriors always sought an outlet for their skills, and opportunities for territorial expansion were becoming less attractive for large segments of the nobility. One exception was the
Reconquista in
Spain and Portugal, which at times occupied Iberian
knights and some mercenaries from elsewhere in Europe in the fight against the Islamic Moors, who had successfully overrun most of the
Iberian Peninsula over the preceding two centuries.
In 1063,
Pope Alexander II had given his blessing to Iberian Christians in their wars against the Muslims, granting both a papal standard (the
vexillum sancti Petri) and an
indulgence to those who were killed in battle. Pleas from the Byzantine Emperors, now threatened by the
Seljuks, thus fell on ready ears. These occurred in 1074, from Emperor Michael VII to Pope Gregory VII and in 1095, from Emperor Alexius I Comnenus to
Pope Urban II.
The Crusades were, in part, an outlet for an intense religious piety which rose up in the late 11th century among the lay public. A crusader would, after pronouncing a solemn vow, receive a cross from the hands of the pope or his papal legates, and was thenceforth considered a "soldier of the Church". This was partly because of the Investiture Controversy, which had started around 1075 and was still on-going during the First Crusade. As both sides of the Investiture Controversy tried to marshal public opinion in their favor, people became personally engaged in a dramatic religious controversy. The result was an awakening of intense Christian piety and public interest in religious affairs. This was further strengthened by religious propaganda, advocating
Just War in order to retake the Holy Land—which included Jerusalem (where the Death of Jesus,
Resurrection of Jesus and
ascension into heaven of
Jesus took place according to Christian theology) and
Antioch (the first Christian city)—from the Muslims. Further, the remission of sin was a driving factor. This provided any God-fearing men who had committed sins with an irresistible way out of eternal damnation in hell. It was a hotly debated issue throughout the Crusades as what exactly "remission of sin" meant. Most believed that by retaking Jerusalem they would go straight to heaven after death. However, much controversy surrounds exactly what was promised by the popes of the time. One theory was that one had to die fighting for Jerusalem for the remission to apply, which would hew more closely to what Pope Urban II said in his speeches. This meant that if the crusaders were successful, and retook Jerusalem, the survivors would not be given remission. Another theory was that if one reached Jerusalem, one would be relieved of the sins one had committed before the Crusade. Therefore one could still be sentenced to hell for sins committed afterwards.
All of these factors were manifested in the overwhelming popular support for the First Crusade and the religious vitality of the 12th century.
Immediate cause
at the
Council of Clermont, where he preached an impassioned sermon to take back the Holy Land.The immediate cause of the First Crusade was Alexios I Komnenos's appeal to
Pope Urban II for mercenaries to help him resist Muslim advances into territory of the Byzantine Empire. In
1071, at the
Battle of Manzikert, the Byzantine Empire was defeated, which led to the loss of all of Asia Minor (modern Turkey) save the coastlands. Although attempts at reconciliation after the
East-West Schism between the Catholic Western Church and the
Eastern Orthodox Church had failed, Alexius I hoped for a positive response from Urban II and got it, although it turned out to be more expansive and less helpful than he had expected.
When the First Crusade was preached in 1095, the Christian princes of northern Iberia had been fighting their way out of the mountains of
Galicia (Spain) and
Asturias, the Basque Country (historical territory) and
Navarre, with increasing success, for about a hundred years. The fall of Moorish
Toledo, Spain to the Kingdom of León in 1085 was a major victory, but the turning points of the
Reconquista still lay in the future. The disunity of Muslim emirs was an essential factor.
While the
Reconquista was the most prominent example of Christian reaction against Muslim conquests, it is not the only such example. The Normans adventurer
Robert Guiscard had conquered the "toe of Italy," Calabria, in 1057 and was holding what had traditionally been Byzantine territory against the Muslims of
Sicily. The maritime states of
Pisa, Genoa and Catalonia were all actively fighting Islamic strongholds in
Majorca and
Sardinia, freeing the coasts of Italy and Catalonia from Muslim raids. Much earlier, the Christian homelands of
Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, Egypt, and so on had been conquered by Muslim armies. This long history of losing territories to a religious enemy created a powerful motive to respond to Byzantine Emperor Alexius I's call for holy war to defend Christendom, and to recapture the lost lands starting with Jerusalem.
The papacy of Pope Gregory VII had struggled with reservations about the doctrinal validity of a holy war and the shedding of blood for the Lord and had, with difficulty, resolved the question in favour of justified violence. More importantly to the Pope, the Christians who made pilgrimages to the Holy Land were being persecuted. Actions against Arianism and other heretics offered historical precedents in a society where violence against nonbelievers—and indeed against other Christians—was acceptable and common. Saint Augustine of Hippo, Gregory's intellectual model, had justified the use of force in the service of Christ in
The City of God, and a Christian "
just war" might enhance the wider standing of an aggressively ambitious leader of Europe, as Gregory saw himself. The northerners would be cemented to Rome, and their troublesome knights could see the only kind of action that suited them. Previous attempts by the church to stem such violence, such as the concept of the "Peace of God", were not as successful as hoped. To the south of Rome, Normans were showing how such energies might be unleashed against both Arabs (in Sicily) and Byzantines (on the mainland). A Latin hegemony in the Levant would provide leverage in resolving the Papacy's claims of supremacy over the Patriarch of Constantinople, which had resulted in the
Great Schism of 1054, a rift that might yet be resolved through the force of Frankish arms.
In the Byzantine homelands, the Eastern Emperor's weakness was revealed by the disastrous defeat at the Battle of Manzikert in 1071, which reduced the Empire's Asian territory to a region in western Anatolia and around Constantinople. A sure sign of Byzantine desperation was the appeal of Alexius I Comnenus to his enemy, the Pope, for aid. But Gregory was occupied with the Investiture Controversy and could not call on the German emperor, so a crusade never took shape.
For Gregory's more moderate successor, Pope Urban II, a crusade would serve to reunite Christendom, bolster the Papacy, and perhaps bring the East under his control. The disaffected Germans and the Normans were not to be counted on, but the heart and backbone of a crusade could be found in Urban's own homeland among the northern French.
After the First Crusade
On a popular level, the first crusades unleashed a wave of impassioned, personally felt pious Christian fury that was expressed in the massacres of
Jews that accompanied the movement of the Crusader mobs through Europe, as well as the violent treatment of "
schismatic" Orthodox Christians of the east. During many of the attacks on Jews, local Bishops and Christians made attempts to protect Jews from the mobs that were passing through. Jews were often offered sanctuary in churches and other Christian buildings, but the mobs broke in and killed them anyway.
In the 13th century, Crusades never expressed such a popular fever, and after
Acre, Israel#Arab rule and the Crusades fell for the last time in 1291 and the
Occitania Cathars were exterminated during the Albigensian Crusade, the crusading ideal became devalued by Papal justifications of political and territorial aggressions within Catholic Europe.
The last crusading order of knights to hold territory were the Knights Hospitaller. After the final fall of Acre, they took control of the island of
Rhodes, and in the sixteenth century, were driven to Malta, before being finally unseated by
Napoleon I of France in 1798.
List of crusades
A traditional numbering scheme for the Crusades totals nine during the 11th to 13th centuries, as well as other smaller sorties that were mostly contemporaneous and are unnumbered. There were frequent "minor" Crusades throughout this period, not only in Palestine but also in the Iberian Peninsula and central Europe, against Muslims and also Christian heretics and personal enemies of the Papacy or other powerful monarchs. Such "crusades" continued into the 16th century until the Renaissance and Reformation, when the political and religious climate of Europe was significantly different from that of the Middle Ages.
First Crusade 1096–1099
In March 1095 at the
Council of Piacenza, ambassadors sent by
List of Byzantine Emperors Alexios I Komnenos called for help with defending his empire against the
Seljuk Turks. Later that year, at the
Council of Clermont, Pope Urban II called upon all Christians to join a war against the Turks, promising those who died in the endeavor would receive immediate remission of their sins Fulcher of Chartres, Medieval Sourcebook.. Crusader armies managed to defeat two substantial Turkish forces at Battle of Dorylaeum and at
Siege of Antioch, finally marching to Jerusalem with only a fraction of their original forces. In 1099, during the Siege of Jerusalem (1099), the Crusader army took Jerusalem by assault and massacred the population. As a result of the First Crusade, several small
Crusader states were created, notably the
Kingdom of Jerusalem.
Crusade of 1101
Following this crusade there was a second, less successful wave of crusaders. This is known as the Crusade of 1101 and may be considered an adjunct of the First Crusade.
Second Crusade 1147–1148
After a period of relative peace in which Christians and Muslims co-existed in the Holy Land, Muslims conquered the town of
County of Edessa. A new crusade was called for by various preachers, most notably by
Bernard of Clairvaux. French and South German armies, under the Kings
Louis VII of France and
Conrad III of Germany respectively, marched to Jerusalem in 1147 but failed to win any major victories, launching a failed pre-emptive siege of Damascus, an independent city that would soon fall into the hands of Nur al Din, the main enemy of the Crusaders.{{Lewis, Archibald. "Nomads and Crusaders: AD 1000-1368." January 1988. Indiana University Press. ISBN-13 9780253206527 On the other side of the Mediterranean, however, the Second Crusade met with great success as a group of Northern European Crusaders stopped in Portugal, allied with the Portuguese, and retook Lisbon from the Musilms in 1147. In the Holy Land by 1150, both the kings of France and Germany had returned to their countries without any result. St. Bernard of Clairvaux, who in his preachings had encouraged the Second Crusade, was upset with the amount of misdirected violence and slaughter of the Jewish population of the Rhineland.
Crusades in
The New Catholic Encyclopedia, New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1966, Vol. IV, p. 508. North Germans and Danes attacked the Wends during the 1147
Wendish Crusade, which was unsuccessful as well.
Third Crusade 1189–1192
In 1187, Saladin, Sultan of Egypt, recaptured Jerusalem, following the Battle of Hattin.
Pope Pope Gregory VIII called for a crusade, which was led by several of Europe's most important leaders: Philip II of France,
Richard I of England (aka Richard the Lion Heart), and
Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor. Frederick drowned in
Cilicia in 1190, leaving an unstable alliance between the English and the French. Before his arrival in the Holy Land Richard captured the island of Cyprus from the Byzantines in 1191. Cyprus would serve as a Crusader base for centuries to come, and would remain in Western European hands until the Ottoman Empire conquered the island from Venice in 1571. Philip left, in 1191, after the Crusaders had recaptured Acre from the Muslims. The Crusader army headed south along the coast of the
Mediterranean Sea. They defeated the Muslims near Arsuf, recaptured the port city of Jaffa, and were in sight of Jerusalem. However, Richard did not believe he would be able to hold Jerusalem once it was captured, as the majority of Crusaders would then return to Europe, and the crusade ended without the taking of Jerusalem. Richard left the following year after establishing a truce with Saladin.
On Richard's way home, his ship was wrecked and he ended up in Austria, where his enemy,
Leopold V, Duke of Austria, captured him. The Duke delivered Richard to the Emperor Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor, who held the King for ransom. By 1197, Henry felt ready for a crusade, but he died in the same year of malaria. Richard I died during fighting in Europe and never returned to the Holy Land. The Third Crusade is sometimes referred to as the Kings' Crusade.
Fourth Crusade 1200–1204
The Fourth Crusade was initiated in 1202 by
Pope Innocent III, with the intention of invading the Holy Land through Egypt. Because the Crusaders lacked the funds to pay for the fleet and provisions that they had contracted from the
Venice, Doge of Venice
Enrico Dandolo, enlisted the crusaders to restore the Christian city of Zara (Zadar) to obedience. Because they subsequently lacked provisions and time on their vessel lease the leaders decided to go to Constantinople, where they attempted to place a Byzantine exile on the throne. After a series of misunderstandings and outbreaks of violence, the crusaders sacked the city in 1204.
Albigensian Crusade
The Albigensian Crusade was launched in 1209 to eliminate the
heresy Cathars of
Occitania (the south of modern-day
France). It was a decades-long struggle that had much more to do with the concerns of northern France to extend its control southwards than it did with heresy. In the end, both the Cathars and the independence of southern France were exterminated.
Children's Crusade
The Children's Crusade is a series of possibly fictitious or misinterpreted events of
1212. The story is that an outburst of the old popular enthusiasm led a gathering of children in France and Germany, which
Pope Innocent III interpreted as a reproof from heaven to their unworthy elders. The leader of the French army, Stephen, led 30,000 children. The leader of the German army, Nicholas, led 7,000 children. None of the children actually reached the Holy Land; they were either sold into slavery, died in shipwrecks crossing the Mediterranean Sea, returned home, settled along the route to Jerusalem, or died of hunger during the journey.
Fifth Crusade 1217–1221
By processions, prayers, and preaching, the Church attempted to set another crusade afoot, and the
Fourth Council of the Lateran (1215) formulated a plan for the recovery of the Holy Land. In the first phase, a crusading force from Hungary and Austria joined the forces of the king of Jerusalem and the
Principality of Antioch to take back Jerusalem. In the second phase, crusader forces achieved a remarkable feat in the capture of
Damietta in Egypt in 1219, but under the urgent insistence of the papal legate,
Pelagio Galvani, they then launched a foolhardy attack on Cairo in July of 1221. The crusaders were turned back after their dwindling supplies led to a forced retreat. A nighttime attack by the ruler of Egypt, the powerful Sultan Al-Kamil, resulted in a great number of crusader losses and eventually in the surrender of the army. Al-Kamil agreed to an eight-year peace agreement with Europe.
Sixth Crusade 1228–1229
Emperor Frederick II had repeatedly vowed a crusade but failed to live up to his words, for which he was excommunication by Pope Gregory IX in 1228. He nonetheless set sail from
Brindisi, landed in Palestine, and through diplomacy he achieved unexpected success: Jerusalem, Nazareth, and Bethlehem were delivered to the crusaders for a period of ten years. attacks
Damietta
Seventh Crusade 1248–1254
The papal interests represented by the Knights Templar brought on a conflict with Egypt in 1243, and in the following year a
Khwarezmian Empire force summoned by the latter stormed Jerusalem. The crusaders were drawn into battle at Battle of La Forbie in Gaza. The crusader army and its Bedouin mercenaries were outnumbered by
Baibars' force of Khwarezmian Empire tribesmen and were completely defeated within forty-eight hours. This battle is considered by many historians to have been the death knell to the
Outremer Although this provoked no widespread outrage in Europe as the fall of Jerusalem in 1187 had done, Louis IX of France organized a crusade against Egypt from 1248 to 1254, leaving from the newly constructed port of
Aigues-Mortes in southern France. It was a failure, and Louis spent much of the crusade living at the court of the crusader kingdom in Acre. In the midst of this crusade was the first
Shepherds' Crusade in 1251.
Eighth Crusade 1270
The eighth Crusade was organized by Louis IX of France in 1270, again sailing from Aigues-Mortes, initially to come to the aid of the remnants of the crusader states in Syria. However, the crusade was diverted to Tunis, where Louis spent only two months before dying. For his efforts, Louis was later canonised (the city of
St. Louis, Missouri, USA is named for him). The Eighth Crusade is sometimes counted as the Seventh, if the Fifth and Sixth Crusades are counted as a single crusade. The Ninth Crusade is sometimes also counted as part of the Eighth.
Ninth Crusade 1271–1272
The future
Edward I of England undertook another expedition in 1271, after having accompanied Louis on the Eighth Crusade. He accomplished very little in Syria and retired the following year after a truce.
In their later years, faced with the threat of the Egyptian Mamluks, the Crusaders' hopes rested with a
Franco-Mongol alliance. The Mongols were thought to be sympathetic to Christianity, and the Frankish princes were most effective in gathering their help, engineering their invasions of the Middle East on several occasions. Although the Mongols successfully attacked as far south as Damascus on these campaigns, the ability to effectively coordinate with Crusades from the west was repeatedly frustrated most notably at the
Battle of Ain Jalut in 1260. The Mamluks eventually made good their pledge to cleanse the entire Middle East of the infidel Franks. With the fall of
Principality of Antioch (1268), County of Tripoli (1289), and
Siege of Acre (1291) (1291), the last traces of the Christian rule in Syria disappeared.
Northern Crusades (Baltic and Germany)
in
Pskov in 1240 as depicted in
Sergei Eisenstein's
Alexander Nevsky (film) (1938).
The Crusades in the
Baltic Sea area and in
Central Europe were efforts by (mostly German) Christians to subjugate and convert the peoples of these areas to Christianity. These Crusades ranged from the 12th century, contemporaneous with the Second Crusade, to the 16th century.
Contemporaneous with the Second Crusade,
Saxons and Danes fought against
Polabian Slavs in the 1147
Wendish Crusade. In the 13th century, the
Teutonic Knights led Germans, Poles, and
Pomeranians against the Old Prussians during the Prussian Crusade.
Between 1232 and 1234, there was a crusade against the Stedingen. This crusade was special, because the Stedingers were not heathens or heretics, but fellow Roman Catholics. They were free Frisians farmers who resented attempts of the count of
Oldenburg (state) and the archbishop
Archbishopric of Bremen to make an end to their freedoms. The archbishop excommunicated them, and Pope Gregory IX declared a crusade in 1232. The Stedingers were defeated in 1234.
Other crusades
Crusade against the Tatars
In 1259 Mongols ravaged the principality of
Halych-Volynia,
Lithuania and Poland, led by
Burundai and
Nogai Khan. After that Pope Alexander IV tried without success to create a crusade against the
Blue Horde.
In the 14th century, Khan Tokhtamysh combined the Blue and White Hordes forming the
Golden Horde. It seemed that the power of the Golden Horde had begun to rise, but in 1389, Tokhtamysh made the disastrous decision of waging war on his former master, the great Tamerlane. Tamerlane's hordes rampaged through southern Russia, crippling the Golden Horde's economy and practically wiping out its defenses in those lands.
After losing the war, Tokhtamysh was then dethroned by the party of Khan Temur Kutlugh and Emir Edigu, supported by Tamerlane. When Tokhtamysh asked Vytautas the Great for assistance in retaking the Horde, the latter readily gathered a huge army which included Lithuanians, Ruthenians, Russians,
Mongols,
Moldavians, Poles, Romanians and Teutonic knights.
In 1398, the huge army moved from Moldavia and conquered the southern steppe all the way to the Dnieper River and northern Crimea. Inspired by their great successes, Vytautas declared a 'Crusade against the Tatars' with Pope Boniface IX backing. Thus, in 1399, the army of Vytautas once again moved on the Horde. His army met the Horde's at the
Vorskla River, slightly inside Lithuanian territory.
Although the Lithuanian army was well equipped with
cannon, it could not resist a rear attack from Edigu's reserve units. Vytautas hardly escaped alive. Many princes of his kin—possibly as many as 20—were killed (for example, Stefan Musat, Prince of Principality of Moldavia and two of his brothers, while a fourth was badly injured ), and the victorious Tatars besieged
Kiev. "And the Christian blood flowed like water, up to the Kievan walls," as one chronicler put it. Meanwhile, Temur Kutlugh died from the wounds received in the battle, and Tokhtamysh was killed by one of his own men.
Crusades in the Balkans
To counter the expanding Ottoman Empire, several crusades were launched in the 15th century.The most notable are:
- the Crusade of Nicopolis (1396) organized by Sigismund of Luxemburg king of Hungary culminated in the Battle of Nicopolis. It is often called the last of the crusades.
- the Crusade of Varna (1444) led by the Polish-Hungarian king Władysław III of Poland ended in the Battle of Varna
- and the Crusade of 1456 organized to lift the Siege of Belgrade led by John Hunyadi and Giovanni da Capistrano
Aragonese Crusade
The
Aragonese Crusade, or Crusade of Aragón, was declared by
Pope Martin IV against the
Peter III of Aragon, in 1284 and 1285.
Alexandrian Crusade
The
Alexandrian Crusade of October 1365 was a minor seaborne crusade against Muslim
Alexandria led by Peter I of Cyprus. His motivation was at least as commercial as religious. It had limited success.
Hussite Crusade
The Hussite Crusade(s), also known as the "
Hussite Wars," or the "Bohemian Wars," involved the military actions against and amongst the followers of Jan Hus in Bohemia#Hussite Bohemia in the period 1420 to circa 1434. The Hussite Wars were arguably the first European war in which hand-held gunpowder weapons such as
muskets made a decisive contribution. The Taborite faction of the Hussite warriors were basically infantry, and their many defeats of larger armies with heavily armoured knights helped affect the infantry revolution. In the end, it was an inconclusive war.
Swedish Crusades
The Sweden conquest of
Finland in the
Middle Ages has traditionally been divided into three "crusades": the First Swedish Crusade around 1155 AD, the Second Swedish Crusade about 1249 AD and the
Third Swedish Crusade in 1293 AD.
The First Swedish Crusade is purely legendary, and according to most historians today, never took place as described in the legend and did not result in any ties between Finland and Sweden. For the most part, it was made up in the late 13th century to date the Swedish rule in Finland further back in time. No historical record has also survived describing the second one, but it probably did take place and ended up in the concrete conquest of southwestern Finland. The third one was against
Novgorod, and is properly documented by both parties of the conflict.
According to archaeological finds, Finland was largely Christian already before the said crusades. Thus the "crusades" can rather be seen as ordinary expeditions of conquest whose main target was territorial gain. The expeditions were dubbed as actual crusades only in the 19th century by the national-romanticist Swedish and Finnish historians.
Historical perspective
Western and other interpretations
Western and Eastern
historiography present variously different views on the crusades, in large part because "crusade" invokes dramatically opposed sets of associations—"crusade" as a valiant struggle for a supreme cause, and "crusade" as a byword for barbarism and aggression. This contrasting view is not recent since Christians have in the past struggled with the tension of military activity and teachings of Christ to "love one's enemies" and to "turn the other cheek". For these reasons, the crusades have been controversial even among contemporaries.
Western sources speak of both heroism, faith and honour (emphasized in Romance (genre)), but also of acts of brutality. Islamic and Orthodox Christian chroniclers tell stories of barbarian savagery and brutalityMaalouf, Amin. Crusades Through Arab Eyes..
Likewise, some modern historians in the west express moral outrage—for example Steven Runciman, the leading western historian of the crusades for much of the 20th century, ended his history with a resounding condemnation:
"High ideals were besmirched by cruelty and greed.. the Holy War was nothing more than a long act of intolerance in the name of God".
Eastern Orthodoxy
Like Muslims, Eastern Orthodox Christians also see the Crusades as attacks by "the barbarian West", but centered on the sack of Constantinople in 1204. Many relics and artifacts taken from Constantinople are still in the West, in the Vatican City and elsewhere. Disagreement currently exists between modern Turks and Greeks over the claimant rights to the Horses of Saint Mark on the façade of San Marco di Venezia in Venice. The Greeks argue that the frieze is inherently part of Greek culture and identity, similar to the
Elgin Marbles; the Turks counter that the freize originated from what is now modern-day Istanbul. A picture of Turkish popular history of the Crusades can be assembled by compiling text of official Turkish brochures on Crusader fortifications in the Aegean coast and coastal islands.
Countries of Central Europe, despite the fact that they also belonged to
Western Christianity, were the most skeptical about the idea of Crusades. Many cities in Hungary were sacked by passing bands of Crusaders; Poland Prince Leszek I the White refused to join a Crusade, allegedly because of the lack of
mead in Palestine.
Popular reputation in Western Europe
In Western Europe, the Crusades have traditionally been regarded by laypeople as heroic adventures, though the mass enthusiasm of common people was largely expended in the First Crusade, from which so few of their class returned. Today, the "Saracen" adversary is crystallized in the lone figure of Saladin; his adversary Richard the Lionheart is, in the English language-speaking world, the archetypical crusader king, while Frederick Barbarossa and Louis IX fill the same symbolic niche in German and French culture. Even in contemporary areas, the crusades and their leaders were romanticized in popular literature; the
Chanson d'Antioche was a
chanson de geste dealing with the First Crusade, and the Song of Roland, dealing with the era of the similarly romanticized
Charlemagne, was directly influenced by the experience of the crusades, going so far as to replace Charlemagne's historic Basque people opponents with Muslims. A popular theme for troubadours was the knight winning the love of his lady by going on crusade in the east.
, in his mountain cave: a late 19th century German woodcutIn the 14th century, Godfrey of Bouillon was united with the Trojan War and the adventures of
Alexander the Great against a backdrop for military and courtly heroics of the
Nine Worthies who stood as popular secular culture heroes into the 16th century, when more critical literary tastes ran instead to
Torquato Tasso and Rinaldo and Armida, Roger and Angelica. Later, the rise of a more authentic sense of history among literate people brought the Crusades into a new focus for the Romantic generation in the romances of Sir Walter Scott in the early 19th century. Crusading imagery could be found even in the Crimean War, in which the United Kingdom and France were allied with the Muslim Ottoman Empire, and in World War I, especially Edmund Henry Hynman Allenby, 1st Viscount Allenby capture of Jerusalem in 1917.
In Spain, the popular reputation of the Crusades is outshone by the particularly Spanish history of the
Reconquista. El Cid is the central figure.
Role of women
While traditional historiography conceptualizes the crusades as a masculine movement symbolic of honour and male courage, women were also involved.
Women at home were intricately connected whether aware of it or not in the recruitment of crusading men. Their encouragement and familial ties would present men friendly connections which made the prospect of taking the cross more appealing for those risking their lives. Arguably the most significant role that women played in the West during the crusades was their preservation of the home. While many men were gone to the East, women were needed to take care of the home. The best known example is of
Adela of Normandy, wife of
Stephen II, Count of Blois whose correspondence with her husband while he was on Crusade and she was at home managing his fief has survived in part. It appears she was rather more keen on his crusading than he was. Men could journey to The Holy Land without having to worry about their home because their wives were in charge of their estates and families. Jonathan Riley-Smith. The First Crusaders 1096–1131, New York, NY: Cambridge University Press 1997, 99.
Even though most women showed their support for the crusades at home, some women took the cross themselves to go on the crusade. Aristocratic women who joined the movement often found that they had new positions of authority they did not have in the West. Eleanor of Aquitaine the wealthy queen of France and the wife of king Louis VII took the cross from
St. Bernard of Clairvaux on Easter Sunday 1145 to join her husband. Roy Douglas Davis Owen. Eleanor of Aquitaine : queen and legend, Oxford, UK; Cambridge, Mass: Blackwell Publishing 1993, 22. Another woman who had ultimate political power in the East was
Melisende of Jerusalem, who under law gained hereditary rights to the crown upon her husband’s death. Like Eleanor, Melisende never led troops into battle, but she did participate in acts of political diplomacy. Less successful was her grand-daughter
Sibylla of Jerusalem, whose choice of husband had been a crucial political issue since her childhood. Her second marriage to
Guy of Lusignan made him the king-consort on the death of Baldwin IV, with disastrous results. While most women were there to help and care for the crusading men by bringing them water or raising their spirits by offering emotional support, there were women who had specific tasks which defined their feminine characteristics like the washerwoman. Susan B. Edington and Sarah Lambert ed. Gendering the Crusades, New York: Columbia University Press 2002, 98.
The permanent residents of the Crusader kingdoms, if born in Europe, had usually come unmarried. Very many married women from Apulia in Southern Italy, where living conditions were often harsh, encouraged young women to take ship for Palestine in the knowledge that many men there were looking for wives.
The most controversial role that women had in the crusades was of course the role which threatened their femininity, actual militancy. When analyzing the primary documentation of female militancy, one must be cautious. The accounts of women fighting come mostly from Muslim historians whose aim was to portray Christian women as barbaric and ungodly because of their acts of killing. The contrasting view from Christian accounts portray women fighting only in emergency situations for the preservation of the camps and their own lives. In these cases women are seen as more feminine while behaving like ‘proper women’. Helen Nicholson. “Women on the Third Crusade.
Journal of Medieval History (23) no.4 (1997) pp. 337.” It is essential to note that all writings of crusades came from men, and women no matter what role they played would have been interpreted subjectively either way.
Legacy
Europe
The crusades have been remembered relatively favourably in western Europe (countries which were, at the time of the Crusades, Roman Catholic countries). Nonetheless, there have certainly been many vocal critics of the Crusades in Western Europe since the Renaissance.
Politics and culture
The Crusades had an enormous influence on the European Middle Ages. At times, much of the continent was united under a powerful
Papacy, but by the 14th century, the development of centralized bureaucracies (the foundation of the modern
nation-state) was well on its way in France, England,
Burgundy, Portugal,
Crown of Castile, and
Aragon partly because of the dominance of the church at the beginning of the crusading era.
Although Europe had been exposed to
Islamic culture for centuries through contacts in Iberian Peninsula and
Sicily, much knowledge in areas such as science, medicine, and architecture was transferred from the Islamic to the western world during the crusade era.
The military experiences of the crusades also had their effects in Europe; for example, European castles became massive stone structures as they were in the east, rather than smaller wooden buildings as they had typically been in the past.
In addition, the Crusades are seen as having opened up European culture to the world, especially Asia:
{{cquote], optics, and refinement of engineering) made their way west and sped the course of advancement in European universities that led to the Renaissance in later centuries
The invasions of German crusaders prevented formation of the large Lithuanian state incorporating all Baltic nations and tribes. Lithuania was destined to become a small country and forced to expand to the East looking for resources for wars with crusaders. Tomas Baranauskas.
Prūsų sukilimas—prarasta galimybė sukurti kitokią Lietuvą (Prussian rebellion—the lost chance of creating different Lithuania). 20 September, 2006
Trade
The need to raise, transport and supply large armies led to a flourishing of trade throughout Europe. Roads largely unused since the days of Roman Empire saw significant increases in traffic as local merchants began to expand their horizons. This was not only because the Crusades
prepared Europe for travel, but also because many
wanted to travel after being reacquainted with the products of the Middle East. This also aided in the beginning of the Renaissance in Italy, as various Italian city-states from the very beginning had important and profitable trading colonies in the crusader states, both in the Holy Land and later in captured Byzantine territory.
Increased trade brought many things to Europeans that were once unknown or extremely rare and costly. These goods included a variety of spices, ivory, jade, diamonds, improved glass-manufacturing techniques, early forms of gun powder, oranges, apples, and other Asian crops, and many other products.
The achievement of preserving Christian Europe must not, however, ignore the eventual fall of the Christian Byzantine Empire, which was mostly caused by Fourth Crusade's extreme aggression against Eastern Orthodox Christianity, largely at the instigation of the infamous
Enrico Dandolo, the Doge of Venice and financial backer of the Fourth Crusade. The Byzantine lands had been a stable Christian state since the 4th century, though had been in a crisis immediately before the Fourth Crusade of 1202-1204. After the Crusaders took Constantinople in 1204, the Byzantines never again had as large or strong a state and finally fell in 1453.
Taking into account the fall of the Byzantines, the Crusades could be portrayed as the defence of Roman Catholicism against the violent expansion of Islam, rather than the defence of Christianity as a whole against Islamic expansion. On the other hand, the Fourth Crusade could be presented as an anomaly. It is also possible to find a compromise between these two points of view, specifically that the Crusades were Roman Catholic campaigns which primarily sought to fight Islam to preserve Catholicism, and secondarily sought to thereby protect the rest of Christianity; in this context, the Fourth Crusade's crusaders could have felt compelled to abandon the secondary aim in order to retain Dandolo's logistical support in achieving the primary aim. Even so, the Fourth Crusade was condemned by the Pope of the time (Pope Innocent III) and is now generally remembered throughout Europe as a disgraceful failure.
From a larger perspective, and certainly from that of noted naval/maritime historian Archibald Lewis, the Crusades must be viewed as part of a massive macrohistorical event during which Western Europe, primarily by its ability in naval warfare, amphibious siege, and maritime trade, was able to advance in all spheres of civilization. Recovering from the Dark Ages of AD 700-1000, throughout the 11th century Western Europe began to push the boudaries of its civilization. Prior to the First Crusade the Italian city-state of Venice, along with the Byzantine Empire, had cleared the Adriatic Sea of Islamic pirates, and loosened the Islamic hold on the Mediterranean Sea (Byzantine-Muslim War of 1030-1035). The Normans, with the assistance of the Italian city-states of Genoa and Pisa, had retaken Sicily from the Muslims from 1061-1091. These conflicts prior to the First Crusade had both retaken Western European territory and weakend the Islamic hold on the Mediterranean, allowing for the rise of Western European Mediterranean trading and naval powers such as the Sicilian Normans and the Italian city-states of Venice, Genoa, and Pisa. One must keep in mind when studying the Crusades that the key trading region of the Earth in the Middle Ages was the Black Sea-Mediterranean Sea-Red Sea. It was the aforementioned pre-First Crusade actions, then the Crusades themselves, which allowed Western Europe to control the trade of the Mediterranean Sea and Black Sea, a control which began in the 1000s and would only be threatened by the Turkish Ottoman Empire beginning in the mid-to-late 1400s. This Western European control of vital sea lanes allowed the economy of Western Europe to advance to previously unknown degrees, most obviously as regards the Maritime Republics of Venice, Genoa, and Pisa. Indeed, it is no coincidence that the Renaissance began in Italy, as the Maritime Republics, through their control of the Eastern Mediterranean and Black Seas, were able to return to Italy the Ancient knowledge of the Greeks and Romans, as well as the products of distant East Asia. Combined with the Mongol Empire, Western Europe traded extensively with East Asia, the security of the Mongol Empire allowing the products of Asia to be brought to such Western European controlled ports as Acre, Antioch, Kaffa (on the Black Sea) and even, for a time, Constantinople itself. The Fifth Crusade of 1217-1221 and the Seventh Crusade of 1248-1254 were largely attempts to secure Western European control of the Red Sea trade region, as both Crusades were directed against Egypt, the power base of the Ayyubid, and then Mameluke, Sultanates. It was only in the 1300s, as the stability of trade with Asia collapsed with the Mongol Empire, the Mamelukes destroyed the Middle Eastern Crusader States, and the rising Ottoman Empire impeded further Western European trade with Asia, that Western Europeans sought alternate trade routes to Asia, ultimately leading to Columbus's voyage of 1492.
Islamic world
The crusades had profound but localized effects upon the Islamic world, where the equivalents of "Franks" and "Crusaders" remained expressions of disdain. Muslims traditionally celebrate Saladin as a hero against the Crusaders. In the 21st century, some in the Arab world, such as the
Arab independence movement and
Pan-Islamism movement, continue to call Western involvement in the Middle East a "crusade". The Crusades were regarded by the Islamic world as cruel and savage onslaughts by European Christians.
The most devastating long term consequence of the crusades, according to historian Peter Mansfield (historian), was the creation of an Islamic mentality that sought a retreat into isolation. He says "Assaulted from all quarters, the Muslim w
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