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THE CRUSADES 1096-1291

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The First Crusade (1096-1099) Peasant army Ill prepared Lacked military equipment Many killed by Muslim Turks Knights Succeeded in capturing Jerusalem, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: THE CRUSADES 1096-1291


1
THE CRUSADES1096-1291
  • A Quest for the Holy Land

2
Crusades
  • A long series or Wars between Christians and
    Muslims
  • They fought over control of Jerusalem which was
    called the Holy Land because it was the region
    where Jesus had lived, preached and died

3
Causes of the Crusades
4
The Call to Arms
  • Byzantine emperor Alexius Comnenus asked for help
    from West.
  • Pope Urban II called for the defeat of the Turks,
    returning the Holy Land to the Christians. If
    you die assured place in heaven.

5
Pope Urban II
6
Goals of the Crusades (from Western Perspective)
  • Economic, social and political goals as well as
    Religious
  • Stop Muslim Turks from conquering additional land
    from Christian Byzantine Empire.
  • Reclaim Palestine / Holy Land from Muslims and
    reunite Christendom, which had split in 1054.
  • Opportunity to unite Europe.
  • Eventually goals change and include Economic.

7
Who Answered the Call?
  • Feudal Lords
  • Knights
  • Peasants
  • Fueled by
  • religious fervor,
  • adventure, land.

8
Based on this map, which holy city was the
destination of the first three? How about 4th
crusade?
9
The First Crusade (1096-1099)
  • Peasant army
  • Ill prepared
  • Lacked military equipment
  • Many killed by Muslim Turks
  • Knights
  • Succeeded in capturing Jerusalem, July 15, 1099

10
Second Crusade (1147-1149)
  • After victory many Christians went back home.
  • The Turks eventually took back much of the
    territory and re-captured Jerusalem.
  • 2nd Crusade was unsuccessful in taking back
    Jerusalem.

11
Second Crusade (1147-1149)
  • Saladin leads the Muslim Turks to victory,
    defeating the Christians
  • He was considered a very wise ruler. He was
    known for his sometimes kind treatment of fallen
    enemies. Many Christians saw him as a model of
    knightly chivalry.

12
Third Crusade (1189-1192)
  • King Richard of England and Saladin fight several
    battles, eventually convinces Turks to allow
    Christians to visit the Holy Land
  • Well known in Literature, due to Robin Hood

13
Fourth Crusade (1199-1204)
  • Do not reach Holy Land
  • Western East Christian relations strained
  • Crusaders sack Constantinople in 1204!
  • In 1453, when Constantinople is under siege by
    Turks, Byzantine Empire does not bother to ask
    Rome / West for help.

14
Crusades Continue Through 1200s
  • Several more crusades attempted with no victories
    for the Christians
  • Childrens crusade of 1212, - 30,000 soldiers -
    many of them under 12 years old Never made it
    to the Holy Land
  • Most died from cold,
  • Hunger or sold into slavery
  • The last crusader cities
  • fell in 1291.

15
Crusades Die Out
  • Lack of interest
  • Rising European prosperity
  • Repeated military defeats
  • Pope influence lessened, tired of religious call
    to crusade

16
Results of the Crusades
  • Fatal weakening of Byzantine Empire after
    Constantinople sacked
  • Vast increase in cultural horizons for many
    Europeans.
  • Stimulated Mediterranean trade.
  • Need to transfer large sums of money for troops
    and supplies led to development of banking
    techniques.
  • Romantic and imaginative literature.

17
Results of the Crusades
  • Knowledge introduced to Europe
  • Heavy stone masonry, construction of castles and
    stone churches.
  • Siege technology, tunneling, sapping.
  • Moslem minarets adopted as church spires
  • Weakening of nobility, rise of merchant classes
  • Enrichment was primarily from East to
    West--Europe had little to give in return
  • Distrust (mild term) between religions
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