Saturday, July 20, 2019
The Three Crusades :: essays research papers
 The Three Crusades    à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  There were three Crusades and they all took different  routes from western Europe to Palestine.     THE FIRST CRUSADE - The first crusade began in A.D. 1095.   Pope Urban II mounted a platform outside the church at  Clermont, France. The crowd shouted ââ¬Å"Deus vult!â⬠ in response to  the popeââ¬â¢s plea. Knights and peasants alike vowed to join the  expedition to the Holy Land. For knights, the Crusade was a  welcome chance to employ their fighting skills. For peasants,  the Crusade meant freedom from feudal bonds while on the  Crusade. All were promised immediate salvation in heaven if  they were killed freeing the Holy Land from non-Christians.   Adventure and the possibility of wealth were other reasons to  join the Crusade. The First Crusade heightened already existing  hatred of non-Christians and marked the onset of a long period of  Christian persecution of the Jews. During the First Crusade,  which began in A.D. 1096, three armies of Crusader knights and  volunteers traveled separately from western Europe to the  eastern Mediterranean. On the way, many of them killed Jews  and sometimes massacred entire Jewish communities. The  three armies finally met in Constantinople in A.D. 1097. From  there the Crusaders made their way to Jerusalem, enduring the  hardships of desert travel as well as quarrels among their  leaders. In June A.D. 1099, the Crusaders finally reached the  city. After the siege of almost two months Jerusalem fell.   Crusaders swarmed into the city and killed most of its Muslim  and Jewish inhabitants. The success of the First Crusade  reinforced the authority of the Church and strengthened the  self-confidence of western Europeans. The religious zeal of the  Crusaders soon cooled, however, and many knights returned  home. Those who stayed set up feudal states in Syria and  Palestine. Contact between the Crusaders and the relatively  more sophisticated civilizations of the Byzantines and the  Muslims would continue for the next 100 years and become major  factor in ending the cultural isolation of western Europe.    THE SECOND CRUSADE - Less than 50 years after the First  Crusade, the Seljuks conquered part of the Crusader states in  Palestine. Pope Eugenius IV called for a Second Crusade to  regain the territory. Eloquent sermons by the monk Bernard of  Clairvaux persuaded King Louis VII of France and Holy Roman  Emperor Conrad III to lead armies to Palestine. The Second  Crusade, which lasted from A.D. 1147 to A.D. 1149, was  unsuccessful. Louis VII and Conrad III quarreled constantly and  were ineffective militarily. They were easily defeated by the  Seljuks.    THE THIRD CRUSADE - A diplomatic and forceful leader named  Saladin united the Muslim forces and then captured Jerusalem in  A.D. 1187.  					    
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