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{{Short description|Religious wars of the High Middle Ages}}
{{About|the medieval religious military campaigns|other uses|Crusade (disambiguation)|and|Crusader (disambiguation)}}
{{Campaignbox Crusades}} {{Other uses}}
{{Pp|small=yes}}
The '''Crusades''' were military campaigns sanctioned by the Latin ] during the ] and ]. In 1095 ] proclaimed the ] with the stated goal of restoring Christian access to ] in and near ]. Many historians and some of those involved at the time, like Saint ], give equal precedence to other papal-sanctioned military campaigns undertaken for a variety of religious, economic, and political reasons, such as the ], the ], the ], and the ].<ref name="Davies 1997 362–364">{{Harvnb|Davies|1997|pp=362–364}}</ref> Following the first crusade there was an intermittent 200-year struggle for control of the ], with six more major crusades and numerous minor ones. In 1291, the conflict ended in failure with the fall of the last Christian stronghold in the Holy Land at ], after which Roman Catholic Europe mounted no further coherent response in the east.
{{Good article}}
{{Use British English|date=October 2015}}
], a ] battle, from the '']''|alt=Medieval illustration of a battle during the Second Crusade]]
{{Campaignbox Crusades|state=expanded}}
The '''Crusades''' were a series of ] initiated, supported, and sometimes directed by the Christian ] in the ]. The best known of these military expeditions are those to the ] between 1095 and 1291 that had the objective of reconquering ] and ] from Muslim rule after the region had been ] by the ] centuries earlier. Beginning with the ], which resulted in the ], dozens of military campaigns were organised, providing a focal point of European history for centuries. Crusading declined rapidly after the 15th century with the ] to the ].


In 1095, after a ] request for aid,<ref name="Nicholson6">Helen J. Nicholson, ''The Crusades'', (Greenwood Publishing, 2004), 6.</ref> ] proclaimed the first expedition at the ]. He encouraged military support for ] ] and called for an armed pilgrimage to Jerusalem. Across all social strata in Western Europe, there was an enthusiastic response. Participants came from all over Europe and had a variety of motivations. These included religious salvation, satisfying feudal obligations, opportunities for renown, and economic or political advantage. Later expeditions were conducted by generally more organised armies, sometimes led by a king. All were granted papal ]. Initial successes established four ]: the ]; the ]; the ]; and the ]. A European presence remained in the region in some form until the ] in 1291. After this, no further large military campaigns were organised.
Some historians see the Crusades as part of a purely defensive war against the expansion of ] in the near east; some see them as part of long-running conflict at the frontiers of Europe; and others see them as confident, aggressive, papal-led expansion attempts by Western Christendom. Crusading attracted men and women of all classes. The masses involved were mainly attributed as being caused by disorder, an epidemic of ergotism and economic distress.<ref>{{cite book|last=Riley-Smith|first=Johnathan|title=The Oxford Illustrated history of the Crusades|date=1995|publisher=Oxford Press|location=Oxford|pages=66}}</ref> The ] was unable to recover territory lost during the initial ] under the expansionist ] and ] ]s in the ] and the ]; these conquests culminated in the loss of fertile farmlands<ref name="JLTeall1959">{{cite book |last=Teall |first=J.L. |authorlink=J.L. Teall |year=1959 |publisher=Dumbarton Oaks Papers |title=The Grain Supply of the Byzantine Empire, 330-1025 |pages=85–94 |volume=Volume 13}}</ref> and vast grazing areas of ]<ref name="HansenWickham2000">{{cite book|author1=Inge Lyse Hansen|author2=Chris Wickham|title=The Long Eighth Century|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=F6FbuKU3ZAYC&pg=PA244|year=2000|publisher=BRILL|isbn=90-04-11723-7|pages=244-}}</ref> in 1071, after a sound victory by the occupying armies of ]s at the ]. Urban II sought to reunite the Christian church under his leadership by providing Emperor ] with military support.


Other church-sanctioned campaigns include crusades against Christians not obeying papal rulings and ], those against the ], and ones for political reasons. The struggle against the ] in the Iberian Peninsula–the '']–''ended in 1492 with the ]. From 1147, the ] were fought against ] tribes in Northern Europe. ] began with the ] in the 13th century and continued through the ] in the early 15th century. ] began in the late 14th century and include the ]. ], including the ] of 1212, were generated by the masses and were unsanctioned by the Church.
Several hundred thousand Roman Catholic Christians became crusaders by taking a public vow and receiving ] from the Vatican.<ref name=Nelson40>Nelson ''Byzantine Perspective of the First Crusade'' p. 40</ref><ref name=Asbridge1>Asbridge ''Crusades'' p. 1</ref> The Crusaders came from various ] kingdoms of Western Europe, whose very customs turned every attempt to form a unified central command to lead the crusaders into failure. With hundreds of aristocrats and noblemen among the crusaders, each vying for personal fame, wealth, and glory, the very idea of a feudal lord giving up personal command over loyal men-at-arms to a single commander, a nobleman and competitor for position at court, was an unthinkable and insulting proposition to even consider. This lack of a central command resulted in frequent quarrels between feudal noblemen, church leaders, and courtiers, leading to intra-faith political factions and shifting alliances as hundreds of capricious feudal lords jostled for political advantage and influence within the Crusade, which at times led to rather bizarre situations, including an instance when the crusaders joined forces with the army of the Islamic ] during the ].


==Terminology==
The impact of the crusades was profound, and judgment of the conduct of crusaders has varied widely from laudatory to highly critical. ] identifies the independent states established, such as the ] and the ], as the first experiments in "Europe Overseas". These ventures reopened the ] to trade and travel, enabling ] and ] to flourish. Crusading armies would engage in commerce with the local populations while on the march, with ] Byzantine emperors often organizing markets for Crusader forces moving through their territory. The crusading movement consolidated the collective identity of the ] under the Pope’s leadership and was the source of heroism, ], and medieval piety. This in turn spawned medieval romance, philosophy, and literature.<ref>{{Harvnb|Davies|1997|p=359}}</ref> However, the crusades reinforced the connection between Western Christendom, ], and ] that ran counter to the ] that Urban had promoted.
] as depicted in the '']'', {{circa|1490}}]]
The term "crusade" first referred to military expeditions undertaken by European Christians in the 11th, 12th, and 13th{{nbsp}}centuries to the ]. The conflicts to which the term is applied have been extended to include other campaigns initiated, supported and sometimes directed by the Latin Church with varying objectives, mostly religious, sometimes political. These differed from previous Christian religious wars in that they were considered a penitential exercise, and so earned participants remittance from penalties for all confessed sins.{{sfn|Tyerman|2019|p=1}} What constituted a crusade has been understood in diverse ways, particularly regarding the early Crusades, and the precise definition remains a matter of debate among contemporary historians.{{sfn|Asbridge|2012|p=40}}{{sfn|Tyerman|2011|pp=225–226}}


At the time of the ], {{lang|la|iter}}, "journey", and {{lang|la|peregrinatio}}, "pilgrimage" were used for the campaign. Crusader terminology remained largely indistinguishable from that of Christian pilgrimage during the 12th{{nbsp}}century. A specific term for a crusader in the form of {{lang|la|crucesignatus}}{{mdash}}"one signed by the cross"{{mdash}}emerged in the early 12th century. This led to the French term {{lang|fr|croisade}}{{mdash}}the way of the cross.{{sfn|Asbridge|2012|p=40}} By the mid 13th{{nbsp}}century the cross became the major descriptor of the crusades with {{lang|la|crux transmarina}}{{mdash}}"the cross overseas"{{mdash}}used for crusades in the eastern Mediterranean, and {{lang|la|crux cismarina}}{{mdash}}"the cross this side of the sea"{{mdash}}for those in Europe.{{sfn|Tyerman|2019|p=5}} The use of {{lang|enm|croiserie}}, "crusade" in Middle English can be dated to {{circa|1300}}, but the modern English "crusade" dates to the early 1700s.{{sfn|Tyerman|2011|p=77}} The ] of Syria and Palestine were known as the "]" from the French ''outre-mer'', or "the land beyond the sea".{{sfn|Tyerman|2019|p=105}}
The crusaders often pillaged the countries through which they travelled in the typical medieval manner. Nobles often retained much of the territory gained rather than returning it to the Byzantines as they had sworn to do.<ref name="Davies 1997 358">{{Harvnb|Davies|1997|p=358}}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Hillenbrand|1999|pp=64–66}}</ref> Encouraged by the Church, the Peoples' Crusade prompted Rhineland massacres and the murder of thousands of Jews. In the late 19th century this episode was used by Jewish historians to support ].<ref name="Cambridge UP">{{cite book|last1=Althoff|first1=Gerd|last2=Fried|first2=Johannes|last3=Geary|first3=Patrick J.|title=Medieval Concepts of the Past: Ritual, Memory, Historiography|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=MxS6-pQZzGsC&pg=PA307|year=2002|publisher=Cambridge UP|pages=305–8}}</ref> The Fourth Crusade resulted in the ] by the Roman Catholics, effectively ending the chance of reuniting the Christian church by reconciling the ] and leading to the weakening and eventual fall of the Byzantine Empire to the ]. Nevertheless, some crusaders were merely poor people trying to escape the hardships of medieval life in an armed pilgrimage leading to ] at Jerusalem.<ref name="Cohn 1970 61,64">{{Harvnb|Cohn|1970|p=61,64}}</ref>


==Crusades and the Holy Land, 1095–1291==
==Terminology==
{{see also|Timeline of the Kingdom of Jerusalem}}
{{Campaignbox Crusades Battles|state=collapsed}}
] in Jerusalem. In 1071, Jerusalem was conquered by the Seljuk Turks.]]


=== Crusade === ===Background===
By the end of the 11th{{nbsp}}century, the period of ] had been over for centuries. The Holy Land's remoteness from focus of Islamic power struggles enabled relative peace and prosperity in Syria and Palestine. Muslim-Western European contact was only more than minimal in the conflict in the ].{{sfn|Jotischky|2004|p=40}} The Byzantine Empire and the Islamic world were long standing centres of wealth, culture and military power. The Arab-Islamic world tended to view Western Europe as a backwater that presented little organised threat.{{sfn|Asbridge|2012|p=8}} By 1025, the Byzantine Emperor ] had extended territorial recovery to its furthest extent. The frontiers stretched east to Iran. Bulgaria and much of southern Italy were under control, and piracy was suppressed in the Mediterranean Sea. The empire's relationships with its Islamic neighbours were no more quarrelsome than its relationships with the ] or the Western Christians. The ] in Italy; to the north ], ] and ]; and ] in the east all competed with the Empire and the emperors recruited mercenaries{{mdash}}even on occasions from their enemies{{mdash}}to meet this challenge.{{sfn|Jotischky|2004|pp=42–46}}
], medieval miniature]]


The political situation in Western Asia was changed by later waves of ], in particular the arrival of the ] in the 10th{{nbsp}}century. Previously a minor ruling clan from ], they had recently converted to Islam and migrated into Iran. In two decades following their arrival they conquered Iran, Iraq and the Near East. The Seljuks and their followers were from the ] tradition. This brought them into conflict in Palestine and Syria with the ] who were ].{{sfn|Jotischky|2004|pp=39–41}} The Seljuks were nomadic, ] speaking and occasionally shamanistic, very different from their sedentary, Arabic speaking subjects. This difference and the governance of territory based on political preference, and competition between independent princes rather than geography, weakened existing power structures.{{sfn|Tyerman|2019|pp=43–44}} In 1071, Byzantine Emperor ] attempted confrontation to suppress the ], leading to his defeat at the ]. Historians once considered this a pivotal event but now Manzikert is regarded as only one further step in the expansion of the ].{{sfn|Asbridge|2012|p=27}}
"]" is a modern term, from the French ''croisade'' and Spanish ''cruzada.'' The French form of the word first appears in the ''L'Histoire des Croisades'' written by A. de Clermont and published in 1638. By 1750, the various forms of the word "crusade" had established themselves in English, French, and German.<ref name=Lock258>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 258</ref> The '']'' records its first use in English as occurring in 1757 by William Shenstone.<ref name=Hindley2>Hindley ''Crusades'' pp. 2–3</ref>


The evolution of a Christian theology of war developed from the link of ] to Christianity, according to which citizens were required to fight the empire's enemies. This doctrine of ] dated from the 4th-century theologian ]. He maintained that aggressive war was sinful, but acknowledged a "]" could be rationalised if it was proclaimed by a legitimate authority, was defensive or for the recovery of lands, and without an excessive degree of violence.{{sfn|Tyerman|2019|pp=14–15}}{{sfn|Asbridge|2012|pp=14–15}} Violent acts were commonly used for dispute resolution in Western Europe, and the papacy attempted to mitigate this.{{sfn|Jotischky|2004|pp=30–31}} Historians have thought that the ] movements restricted conflict between Christians from the 10th{{nbsp}}century; the influence is apparent in Urban II's speeches. Other historians assert that the effectiveness was limited and it had died out by the time of the crusades.{{sfn|Jotischky|2004|pp=30–38}} ] developed a system of recruitment via oaths for military resourcing that his successor ] extended across Europe.{{sfn|Jotischky|2004|p=31}} In the 11th{{nbsp}}century, Christian conflict with Muslims on the southern peripheries of Christendom was sponsored by the Church, including the ] and the ].{{sfn|Tyerman|2019|pp=18–19, 289}} In 1074, Gregory{{nbsp}}VII planned a display of military power to reinforce the principle of papal sovereignty. His vision of a holy war supporting Byzantium against the Seljuks was the first crusade prototype, but lacked support.{{sfn|Asbridge|2012|p=16}}
The Crusades were never referred to as such by their participants. The original crusaders were known by various terms, including ''fideles Sancti Petri'' (the faithful of ]) or ''{{lang|la|milites Christi}}'' (knights of Christ).


The First Crusade was an unexpected event for contemporary chroniclers, but historical analysis demonstrates it had its roots in earlier developments with both clerics and laity recognising ] as worthy of penitential ]. In 1071, Jerusalem was captured by the Turkish warlord ], who seized most of Syria and Palestine as part of the expansion of the ] throughout the Middle East. The Seljuk hold on the city was weak and returning pilgrims reported difficulties and the oppression of Christians. Byzantine desire for military aid converged with increasing willingness of the western nobility to accept papal military direction.{{sfn|Asbridge|2012|p=28}}{{sfn|Jotischky|2004|p=46}}
Like pilgrims, each crusader swore a vow (a ''votus'') to be fulfilled on successfully reaching Jerusalem, and they were granted a cloth cross (''crux'') to be sewn into their clothes. This "taking of the cross", the ''crux'', eventually became associated with the entire journey.<ref>''American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language'', Fourth Edition, Houghton Mifflin Company, 2009</ref> They saw themselves as undertaking an ''iter'', a journey, or a ''peregrinatio'', an armed ]. The inspiration for this “messianism of the poor" was the expected mass ] at Jerusalem.<ref name="Cohn 1970 61,64">{{Harvnb|Cohn|1970|p=61,64}}</ref>


=== Numbering === ===First Crusade===
{{main|First Crusade}}
Historians consider that between 1096 and 1291 there were seven major Crusades and numerous minor ones.<ref name="Davies 1997 358"/> However, some consider the ] of ] as two distinct crusades. This would make the crusade launched by ] in 1270 the ]. In addition, sometimes even this crusade is considered as two, leading to a ].
] leading the ] ('']'', MS ] 1500, Avignon, 14th{{nbsp}}century)|alt=14th-century miniature of Peter the Hermit leading the People's Crusade]]


In 1095, Byzantine Emperor ] requested military aid from ] at the ]. He was probably expecting a small number of mercenaries he could direct. Alexios had restored the Empire's finances and authority but still faced numerous foreign enemies. Later that year at the ], Urban raised the issue again and preached a crusade.<ref>{{Harvnb|Asbridge|2012|p=34}}</ref> Almost immediately, the French priest ] gathered thousands of mostly poor in the ].<ref>{{Harvnb|Hindley|2004|pp=20–21}}</ref> Traveling through Germany, German bands massacred Jewish communities in the ] during wide-ranging anti-Jewish activities.<ref>{{Harvnb|Chazan|1996|pp=28–34}}</ref> Jews were perceived to be as much an enemy as Muslims. They were held responsible for the ], and were more immediately visible. People wondered why they should travel thousands of miles to fight non-believers when there were many closer to home.<ref>{{Harvnb|Tyerman|2006|pp=99–100}}</ref> Quickly after leaving Byzantine-controlled territory on their journey to ], these crusaders were annihilated in a Turkish ambush at the ].<ref>{{Harvnb|Asbridge|2012|p=41}}</ref>
=== The Crusades ===
A pluralist view of the Crusades has developed in the 20th century inclusive of all papal-led efforts, whether in the Middle East or in Europe.<ref name=Lock270>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 270</ref> This takes into account the view of the Roman Catholic Church and medieval contemporaries such as Saint ] that gave equal precedence to comparable military campaigns against ], ] and many undertaken for political reasons. This wider definition includes the ], the ], the ] and the ].<ref name="Davies 1997 362–364"/> Countering this is the view the crusades were a defensive war in the Middle East against Muslims to free the Holy Land from Muslim rule.<ref name="Thomas F. Madden 2005 xii, 4, 8">{{cite book|author=Thomas F. Madden|title=The New Concise History of the Crusades|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=fKYxKsgVpmMC&pg=PR12|year=2005|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield|pages=xii, 4, 8}}</ref>


Conflict with Urban II meant that King ] and ] declined to participate. Aristocrats from France, western Germany, the ], ] and Italy led independent contingents in loose, fluid arrangements based on bonds of lordship, family, ethnicity and language. The elder statesman ] was foremost, rivaled by the relatively poor but martial ] ] and his nephew ]. ] and his brother ] also joined with forces from ], ], and ]. These five princes were pivotal to the campaign, which was augmented by a northern French army led by ], Count ], and Count ].<ref>{{Harvnb|Asbridge|2012|pp=43–47}}</ref> The total number may have reached as many as 100,000 people including non-combatants. They traveled eastward by land to Constantinople where they were cautiously welcomed by the emperor.<ref>{{Harvnb|Hindley|2004|pp=30–31}}</ref> Alexios persuaded many of the princes to pledge allegiance to him and that their first objective should be Nicaea, the capital of the ]. Sultan ] left the city to resolve a territorial dispute, enabling its capture after the ] and a Byzantine naval assault in the high point of Latin and Greek co-operation.<ref>{{Harvnb|Asbridge|2012|pp=52–56}}</ref>
===Political Crusades===
Popes frequently called crusades for political reasons and crusades were also declared as a means of conflict resolution amongst fellow Roman Catholic Christians. Pope Innocent III declared a crusade against his political opponent ] in Sicily. Only a few people took part, and the need for the crusade ended in 1202 when Markward died. This is generally considered the first "political crusade".<ref name=Lock155>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' pp. 155–156</ref> Between 1232 and 1234 there was a crusade against the ], peasants who refused to pay tithes to the ]. The archbishop excommunicated them, and Pope Gregory IX declared a crusade in 1232. The peasants lost the Battle with Altenesch on 27 May 1234 and were destroyed.<ref name=Lock172>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 172</ref>


]The first experience of Turkish tactics, using lightly armoured mounted archers, occurred when an advanced party led by Bohemond and Robert was ambushed at the ]. The Normans resisted for hours before the arrival of the main army caused a Turkish withdrawal.<ref>{{Harvnb|Asbridge|2012|pp=57–59}}</ref> The army marched for three months to the former Byzantine city ], that had been in Muslim control since 1084. Starvation, thirst and disease reduced numbers, combined with Baldwin's decision to leave with 100 knights and their followers to carve out ].<ref>{{Harvnb|Asbridge|2012|pp=59–61}}</ref> The ] lasted eight months. The crusaders lacked the resources to fully invest the city; the residents lacked the means to repel the invaders. Then Bohemond persuaded a guard in the city to open a gate. The crusaders entered, massacring the Muslim inhabitants and many Christians amongst the Greek Orthodox, Syrian and Armenian communities.<ref>{{Harvnb|Asbridge|2012|pp=72–73}}</ref> A force to recapture the city was raised by ], the effective ruler of ]. The Byzantines did not march to the assistance of the crusaders after the deserting Stephen of Blois told them the cause was lost. Alexius retreated from ], where he received Stephen's report, to Constantinople. The Greeks were never truly forgiven for this perceived betrayal and Stephen was branded a coward.<ref>{{Harvnb|Asbridge|2012|pp=74–75}}</ref> Losing numbers through desertion and starvation in the besieged city, the crusaders attempted to negotiate surrender but were rejected. Bohemond recognised that the only option was open combat and launched a counterattack. Despite superior numbers, Kerbogha's army{{mdash}}which was divided into factions and surprised by the Crusaders' commitment{{mdash}}retreated and abandoned the siege.<ref>{{Harvnb|Asbridge |2012|pp=72–82}}</ref> Raymond ] in February 1099 and sent an embassy to ], the vizier of ], seeking a treaty. The Pope's representative ] died, leaving the crusade without a spiritual leader. Raymond failed to capture Arqa and in May led the remaining army south along the coast. Bohemond retained Antioch and remained, despite his pledge to return it to the Byzantines. Local rulers offered little resistance, opting for peace in return for provisions. The Frankish envoys returned accompanied by Fatimid representatives. This brought the information that the Fatimids had recaptured Jerusalem. The Franks offered to partition conquered territory in return for the city. Refusal of the offer made it imperative that the crusade reach Jerusalem before the Fatimids made it defensible.{{sfn|Asbridge|2012|pp=82–83, 87, 89}}
Emperor Frederick II was the object of several political crusades called by a number of popes. In 1240 Pope Gregory IX deposed and preached a crusade against Frederick for his opposition in Italy.<ref name=Lock173/> In 1248 ]'s<ref name=Lock176>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 176</ref> crusade against him was transferred in 1250 to his son, ] when he died, but to little effect. Crusades were called against Frederick's illegitimate son ], from 1255 through 1266,<ref name=Lock179>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 179</ref> and Conrad's son, ], in 1268 with the urging of ].<ref name=Lock180>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 180</ref>


The first attack on the city, launched on 7 June 1099, failed, and the ] became a stalemate, before the arrival of craftsmen and supplies transported by the ] to ] tilted the balance. Two large siege engines were constructed and the one commanded by Godfrey breached the walls on 15 July. For two days the crusaders massacred the inhabitants and pillaged the city. Historians now believe the accounts of the numbers killed have been exaggerated, but this narrative of massacre did much to cement the crusaders' reputation for barbarism.<ref>{{Harvnb|Asbridge|2012|pp=96–103}}</ref> Godfrey secured the Frankish position by defeating an Egyptian force at the ] on 12 August.<ref>{{Harvnb|Asbridge|2012|pp=104–106}}</ref> Most of the crusaders considered their pilgrimage complete and returned to Europe. When it came to the future governance of the city it was Godfrey who took leadership and the title of ''],'' Defender of the Holy Sepulchre. The presence of troops from Lorraine ended the possibility that Jerusalem would be an ecclesiastical domain and the claims of Raymond.<ref>{{Harvnb|Jotischky|2004|p=62}}</ref> Godfrey was left with a mere 300 knights and 2,000 infantry. Tancred also remained with the ambition to gain a princedom of his own.<ref name="Asbridge 2012 106">{{Harvnb|Asbridge|2012|p=106}}</ref>
Two crusades appear to have been called against opponents of King ]&nbsp;– one from 1215 to 1217 and the other from 1263 to 1265 with the first enjoying the same privileges as those given to crusaders on the Fifth Crusade. The second got as far as having papal legates being dispatched to England with the power to declare a crusade against ], but Montfort's death in 1265 ended this.<ref name=Lock167>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 167</ref> The ] of 1383, also called the ], which was a military expedition that aimed to assist the city of ] in its struggle against the supporters of ], was really an extension of the ] rather than a purely religious enterprise.<ref name=England336>Tyerman ''England and the Crusades'' p. 336</ref>


The Islamic world seems to have barely registered the crusade; certainly, there is limited written evidence before 1130. This may be in part due to a reluctance to relate Muslim failure, but it is more likely to be the result of cultural misunderstanding. Al-Afdal Shahanshah and the Muslim world mistook the crusaders for the latest in a long line of Byzantine mercenaries, not religiously motivated warriors intent on conquest and settlement.<ref>{{Harvnb|Asbridge|2012|pp=111–113}}</ref> The Muslim world was divided between the Sunnis of Syria and Iraq and the Shi'ite Fatimids of Egypt. The Turks had found unity unachievable since the death of Sultan Malik-Shah in 1092, with rival rulers in ] and ].<ref>{{Harvnb|Asbridge|2012|pp=21–22}}</ref> In addition, in Baghdad, Seljuk sultan ] and Abbasid caliph ] were engaged in a power struggle. This gave the Crusaders a crucial opportunity to consolidate without any pan-Islamic counter-attack.<ref>{{Harvnb|Asbridge|2012|p=114}}</ref>
A key difference between the Crusades and other holy wars was that the authorization to carry out these wars came directly from the pope, who claimed to be working on behalf of Christ.<ref>{{cite book|last=Riley-Smith|first=Jonathan|title=What were the Crusades?|publisher=Ignatius Press|page=27|edition=Fourth Edition}}</ref>


=== Saracen === === Early 12th century ===
]
{{Main|Saracen}}
] by ].]]
Before the 16th century the words "Muslim" and "Islam" were very rarely used by Europeans.<ref name="Tolan2002xv">{{Harvnb|Tolan|2002|p=xv}}</ref> During the crusades the term widely used for ] was Saracen. In Greek and Latin this term had a longer evolution from the beginning of the first millennia where it referred to a people who lived in desert areas around the ] who were distinguished from ].<ref name="Daniel197953">{{Harvnb|Daniel|1979|p=53}}</ref><ref name="Retso505">{{Harvnb|Retso|2003|pp=505–506}}</ref> The term developed to include ] and by the 12th century had become an ethnic and religious marker synonymous with "Muslim" in Medieval Latin literature.<ref>. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. 27 April 2012.</ref><ref name="Kahf 81">{{Harvnb|Kahf|1999|p=81}}</ref><ref name="Retso">{{Harvnb|Retso|2003|p=96}}</ref><ref name="Heng 2004 334">{{Harvnb|Heng|2004|p=334}}</ref> In the romance ], Saracens are ] while Christians are ].<ref name="Heng 2004 231">{{Harvnb|Heng|2004|pp=231, 422}}</ref><ref name="tars">. The Crusades Project at the University of Rochester. 28 April 2012.</ref> The ] 11th century heroic poem ] takes the association of black skin with Saracens a step further by making it their only exotic feature.<ref name="Kahf 31">{{Harvnb|Kahf|1999|p=31}}</ref>


Urban II died on 29 July 1099, fourteen days after the capture of Jerusalem by the Crusaders, but before news of the event had reached Rome. He was succeeded by ] who continued the policies of his predecessors in regard to the Holy Land.{{sfn|Asbridge|2012|pp=106-107}} Godfrey died in 1100. ], ] and Tancred looked to Bohemond to come south, but he was captured by the ].<ref>{{Harvnb|Tyerman|2006|pp=178}}</ref> The Lorrainers foiled the attempt to seize power and enabled Godfrey's brother, ], to take the crown.<ref>{{Harvnb|Jotischky|2004|pp=62–63}}</ref>
=== Frank ===


Paschal II promoted the large-scale ] in support of the remaining Franks. This new crusade was a similar size to the First Crusade and joined in Byzantium by ]. Command was fragmented and the force split in three:{{sfn|Asbridge|2012|pp=106-107}}
The term ''Frank'' has been used by many of the Eastern Orthodox and Muslim neighbours of medieval Latin Christendom (and beyond, such as in Asia) as a general synonym for a European from Western and Central Europe, areas that followed the Latin rites of Christianity under the authority of the Pope in Rome. Another term with similar use was "]".
* A largely Lombard force was harried by Kilij Arslan's forces and finally destroyed in three days at the ] in August 1101. Some of the leadership, including Raymond, ] and ], survived to retreat to Constantinople.
* A force led by ] attempted catch up with the Lombards but was caught and routed at ]. The destitute leaders eventually reached Antioch.
* ], ], ] and ] reached Heraclea later and were also defeated. Again the leaders fled the field and survived, although Hugh died of his wounds at ] and Ida disappeared. The remnants of the army helped Raymond capture ].<ref>{{Harvnb|Tyerman|2006|pp=170–175}}</ref>


The defeat of the crusaders proved to the Muslim world that the crusaders were not invincible, as they appeared to be during the First Crusade. Within months of the defeat, the Franks and Fatimid Egypt began fighting in three battles at Ramla, and one at ]:
Modern historians often refer to Christians following the Latin rites in the eastern Mediterranean as "Franks" or "Latins", regardless of their country of origin, whereas they use the words '']'' and '']i'' ('Roman') for Orthodox Christians. On a number of Greek islands, Catholics are still referred to as ''Φράγκοι'' (Frangoi) or 'Franks', for instance on ], where they are called ''Φραγκοσυριανός'' (Frangosyrianos), in Thailand where all people of European ancestry are called ] (ฝรั่ง). Latin Christians living in the Middle East (particularly in the Levant) are known as ].
* In the ] on 7 September 1101, Baldwin I and 300 knights narrowly defeated the Fatimid vizier al-Afdal Shahanshah.{{sfn|Lock|2006|p=27}}
* In the ] on 17 May 1102, al-Afdal's son ] and a superior force inflicted a major defeat on the Franks. Stephen of Blois and Stephen of Burgundy from the Crusade of 1101 were among those killed. Baldwin I fled to Arsuf.{{sfn|Lock|2006|p=27}}
* Victory at the ] on 27 May 1102 saved the kingdom from virtual collapse.{{sfn|Lock|2006|p=27}}
* In the ] at Ramla on 28 August 1102, a coalition of Fatimid and Damescene forces were defeated again by Baldwin I and 500 knights.{{sfn|Lock|2006|p=28}}


], later king of Jerusalem as Baldwin II, and Patriarch ] ransomed Bohemond for 100,000 gold pieces.{{sfn|Asbridge|2000|p=138}} Baldwin and Bohemond then jointly campaigned to secure Edessa's southern front. On 7 May 1104, the Frankish army was defeated by the Seljuk rulers of ] and ] at the ].{{sfn|Lock|2006|p=28}} Baldwin II and his cousin, ], were captured. Bohemond and Tancred retreated to Edessa where Tancred assumed command. Bohemond returned to Italy, taking with him much of Antioch's wealth and manpower. Tancred revitalised the beleaguered principality with victory at the ] on 20 April 1105 over a larger force, led by the Seljuk ]. He was then able to secure Antioch's borders and push back his Greek and Muslim enemies.{{sfn|Asbridge|2000|pp=138-142}} Under Paschal's sponsorship, Bohemond launched a version of a crusade in 1107 against the Byzantines, crossing the ] and ]. The siege failed; Alexius hit his supply lines, forcing his surrender. The terms laid out in the ] were never enacted because Bohemond remained in Apulia and died in 1111, leaving Tancred as notional regent for his son ].{{sfn|Asbridge|2000|pp=142-145}} In 1007, the people of ] ransomed Joscelin and he negotiated Baldwin's release from ], atabeg of Mosul, in return for money, hostages and military support. Tancred and Baldwin, supported by their respective Muslim allies, entered violent conflict over the return of Edessa leaving 2,000 Franks dead before Bernard of Valence, patriarch of both Antioch and Edessa, adjudicated in Baldwin's favour.{{sfn|Asbridge|2000|pp=146-147}}
During the ] in the 13-14th centuries, the ] used the term 'Franks' to designate Europeans.<ref>Igor de Rachewiltz - Turks in China under the Mongols, in: China Among Equals: The Middle Kingdom and Its Neighbors, 10th-14th Centuries, pp.281</ref> The term '']'' ("Land of the Franks") was used by Muslims to refer to Roman Catholic Christian Europe and was commonly used over several centuries in ] and the ].


On 13 May 1110, Baldwin II and a Genoese fleet ].{{sfn|Lock|2006|p=31}}{{sfn|Asbridge|2000|p=125}} In the same month, ], sultan of the Seljuk Empire, sent an army to recover Syria, but a Frankish defensive force arrived at Edessa, ending the short siege of the city.{{sfn|Asbridge|2000|p=150}} On 4 December, Baldwin ], aided by a flotilla of ] led by ].{{sfn|Lock|2006|p=31}}{{sfn|Asbridge|2000|p=125}} Next year, Tancred's extortion from Antioch's Muslim neighbours provoked the inconclusive ] between the Franks and an ] army led by the governor of Mosul, ]. Tancred died in 1112 and power passed to his nephew ].{{sfn|Asbridge|2000|p=153}} In May 1113, Mawdud invaded Galilee with ], ]. On 28 June this force surprised Baldwin, chasing the Franks from the field at the ]. Mawdud was killed by ]. ] led the Seljuk army in 1115 against an alliance of the Franks, Toghtekin, his son-in-law ] and the Muslims of Aleppo. Bursuq feigned retreat and the coalition disbanded. Only the forces of Roger and Baldwin of Edessa remained, but, heavily outnumbered, they were victorious on 14 September at the ].{{sfn|Asbridge|2000|pp=155-159}}
The ] (or "Frankish language") was a ] first spoken by 11th-century European Christians and Muslims in ] which remained in use until the 19th century.
] known as the Battle of the Field of Blood, medieval miniature]]
In April 1118, Baldwin I died of illness while raiding in Egypt.{{sfn|Asbridge|2000|p=160}} His cousin, Baldwin of Edessa, was unanimously elected his successor. {{sfn|Lock|2006|p=33}} In June 1119, Ilghazi, now ], attacked Antioch with more than 10,000 men. ]'s army of 700 knights, 3,000 foot soldiers and a corps of ]s was defeated at the ], or "field of blood". Roger was among the many killed.{{sfn|Asbridge|2000|pp=163-165}} Baldwin II's counter-attack forced the offensive's end, after an inconclusive ].{{sfn|Asbridge|2000|pp=163-165}}


In January 1120 the secular and ecclesiastical leaders of the Outremer gathered at the ]. The council laid a foundation of a law code for the kingdom of Jerusalem that replaced common law.{{sfn|Kedar|1999}} The council also heard the first direct appeals for support made to the Papacy and ]. They responded with the ], sending a large fleet that supported the ] in 1124.{{sfn|Asbridge|2000|p=172}} In April 1123, Baldwin II was ambushed and captured by ] while campaigning north of Edessa, along with ]. He was released in August 1024 in return for 80,000 gold pieces and the city of ].{{sfn|Lock|2006|pp=36-37}} In 1129, the ] approved the rule of the ] for ]. He returned to the East with a major force including ]. This allowed the Franks to capture the town of ] during the ]. Defeat at ] and ] ended the campaign and Frankish influence on Damascus for years.{{sfn|Lock|2006|p=40}}
Examples of derived words include:
*''Frangos'' in ]
*''Frenk'' in ]
*''al-Faranj'', ''Afranj'' and ''Firinjīyah'' in ]<ref>Rashid al-din Fazl Allâh, quoted in Karl Jahn (ed.) Histoire Universelle de Rasid al-Din Fadl Allah Abul=Khair: I. Histoire des Francs (Texte Persan avec traduction et annotations), Leiden, E. J. Brill, 1951. (Source: M. Ashtiany)</ref>
*''Farang'', ''Farangī'' in ]
*''Pfirangi'' in ]


The Levantine Franks sought alliances with the Latin West through the marriage of heiresses to wealthy martial aristocrats. ] was married to ], son of ]. Baldwin II's eldest daughter ] was married to Fulk of Anjou in 1129. When Baldwin II died on 21 August 1131, Fulk and Melisende were consecrated joint rulers of Jerusalem. Despite conflict caused by the new king appointing his own supporters and the Jerusalemite nobles attempting to curb his rule, the couple were reconciled and Melisende exercised significant influence. When Fulk died in 1143, she became joint ruler with their son, ].{{sfn|Asbridge|2000|pp=172-174}} At the same time, the advent of ] saw the Crusaders threatened by a Muslim ruler who would introduce '']'' to the conflict, joining the powerful Syrian emirates in a combined effort against the Franks.<ref>Christie, Naill (2006). "Zengi (d. 1146)". In ''The Crusades: An Encyclopedia''. pp. 1293–1295.</ref> He became ] in September 1127 and used this to expand his control to ] in June 1128.{{sfn|El-Azhari|2016|pp=10–23|loc=The Early Career of Zengi, 1084–1127: the Turkmen influence}} In 1135, Zengi moved against Antioch and, when the Crusaders failed to put an army into the field to oppose him, he captured several important Syrian towns. He defeated Fulk at the ] of 1137, seizing ].{{sfn|Maalouf|2006|pp=123–142|loc=An Emir among Barbarians}}
==Historiography==
{{Quote box
| quote =...&nbsp; The lives and labours of millions who were buried in the East, would have been more profitably employed in the improvement of their native country
| source =] in '']'' <ref name="Davies 1997 358">{{Harvnb|Davies|1997|p=358}}</ref>
| width =20%
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In 1137, Zengi invaded ], killing the count ].{{sfn|Maalouf|2006|pp=109–122|loc=The Damascus Conspiracies}} Fulk intervened, but Zengi's troops captured Pons' successor ], and besieged Fulk in the border castle of ]. Fulk surrendered the castle and paid Zengi a ransom for his and Raymond's freedom. ], emperor since 1118, reasserted Byzantine claims to ], compelling ] to give homage. In April 1138, the Byzantines and Franks jointly besieged ] and, with no success, began the ], abandoning it a month later.{{sfn|Runciman|1952|pp=214–216|loc=The Christians lay siege to Shaizar (1138)}}
During the ] and ] of the 16th century, historians saw the Crusades through the prism of their own religious beliefs. ] saw them as a manifestation of the evils of the ], while ] viewed the movement as a force for good.<ref name=Lock257>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 257</ref> During the ], historians tended to view both the Crusades and the entire ] as the efforts of barbarian cultures driven by fanaticism.<ref name=Lock259>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 259</ref> By the 19th century, with the dawning of ], this harsh view of the crusades and its time period was mitigated somewhat,<ref name=Lock261>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 261</ref> with later 19th-century crusade scholarship focusing on increasing specialization of study and more detailed works on subjects.<ref name=Lock266>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 266</ref>


On 13 November 1143, while the royal couple were in Acre, Fulk was killed in a hunting accident. On Christmas Day 1143, their son ] was crowned co-ruler with his mother.<ref>Barker, Ernest (1911). "]". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). ''Encyclopædia Britannica''. '''3.''' (11th ed.), Cambridge University Press. p. 246–247.</ref> That same year, having prepared his army for a renewed attack on Antioch, John II Komnenos cut himself with a poisoned arrow while hunting wild boar. He died on 8 April 1143 and was succeeded as emperor by his son ].<ref name="images.library.wisc.edu">Baldwin, Marshall W. (1969). "{{Dead link|date=August 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}". In Setton, Kenneth M.; Baldwin, Marshall W. (eds.). ''A History of the Crusades: Volume One. The First Hundred Years''. Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 528–563.</ref>
Enlightenment scholars in the 18th century and modern historians in the West have expressed moral outrage at the conduct of the crusaders. In the 1950s, Sir ] wrote that "High ideals were besmirched by cruelty and greed&nbsp;... the Holy War was nothing more than a long act of intolerance in the name of God".<ref name=Runicman480>Runciman ''History of the Crusades: The Kingdom of Acre'' p. 480</ref>


Following John's death, the Byzantine army withdrew, leaving Zengi unopposed. Fulk's death later in the year left ] with no powerful allies to help defend Edessa. Zengi came north to begin the first ], arriving on 28 November 1144.<ref>] (1969). "". In Setton, K. ''A History of the Crusades: Volume I''. pp. 449–462.</ref> The city had been warned of his arrival and was prepared for a siege, but there was little they could do. Zengi realised there was no defending force and surrounded the city. The walls collapsed on 24 December 1144. Zengi's troops rushed into the city, killing all those who were unable to flee. All the Frankish prisoners were executed, but the native Christians were allowed to live. The Crusaders were dealt their first major defeat.{{sfn|Runciman|1952|pp=225–246|loc=The Fall of Edessa}}
In the 20th century, three important works covering the entire history of the crusades have been published, those of ], ], and the multi-author work edited by K. M. Stetton.<ref name=Lock269>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 269</ref> A pluralist view of the crusades has developed in the 20th century inclusive of all papal-led efforts, whether in the Middle East or in Europe.<ref name=Lock270>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 270</ref> Historian ] has made the contrary argument that "he crusade, first and foremost, was a war against Muslims for the defense of the Christian faith.... They began as a result of a Muslim conquest of Christian territories." Madden says the goal of Pope Urban was that "he Christians of the East must be free from the brutal and humiliating conditions of Muslim rule."<ref name="Thomas F. Madden 2005 xii, 4, 8"/>


Zengi was assassinated by a slave on 14 September 1146 and was succeeded in the ] by his son ]. The Franks recaptured the city during the ] of 1146 by stealth but could not take or even properly besiege the citadel.<ref>MacEvitt, Christopher (2006). "Edessa, City of". In ''The Crusades: An Encyclopedia''. pp. 378–379.</ref> After a brief counter-siege, Nūr-ad-Din took the city. The men were massacred, with the women and children enslaved, and the walls razed.{{sfn|Asbridge|2012|pp=225–232|loc=Zangi – Champion of Islam, The Advent of Nūr-ad-Din}}
==Background==


===Byzantium & The Near East=== ===Second Crusade===
{{Main|Second Crusade}}
{{main|Muslim conquests|Great Seljuq Empire|Byzantine–Seljuq wars|Arab–Byzantine wars}}
]
The fall of Edessa caused great consternation in Jerusalem and Western Europe, tempering the enthusiastic success of the First Crusade. Calls for a new crusade{{snd}}the ]{{snd}}were immediate, and was the first to be led by European kings. Concurrent campaigns as part of the '']'' and ] are also sometimes associated with this Crusade.<ref name=":1">Berry, Virginia G. (1969). " {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210709182119/http://images.library.wisc.edu/History/EFacs/HistCrus/0001/0001/reference/history.crusone.i0030.pdf |date=2021-07-09 }}". In Setton, Kenneth M.; Baldwin, Marshall W. (eds.). ''A History of the Crusades: Volume One. The First Hundred Years''. Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 463–512.</ref> The aftermath of the Crusade saw the Muslim world united around ], leading to the ].<ref name=":02">] (1969). "". In Setton, Kenneth M.; Baldwin, Marshall W. (eds.). ''A History of the Crusades: Volume One. The First Hundred Years''. Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 563–589.</ref>


], recently elected pope, issued the bull '']'' in December 1145 calling for a new crusade, one that would be more organized and centrally controlled than the First. The armies would be led by the strongest kings of Europe and a route that would be pre-planned. The pope called on ] to preach the Second Crusade, granting the same indulgences which had been accorded to the First Crusaders. Among those answering the call were two European kings, ] and ]. Louis, his wife, ], and many princes and lords prostrated themselves at the feet of Bernard in order to take the cross. Conrad and his nephew ] also received the cross from the hand of Bernard.<ref>Beverly Mayne Kienzle and James Calder Walton (2006). Second Crusade (1147–1149). In ''The Crusades: An Encyclopedia''. pp. 1083–1090.</ref>
After 636, when Muslim forces defeated the Eastern Roman/Byzantines at the ], the control of Palestine passed through the ],<ref name=Wickham280>Wickham ''Inheritance of Rome'' p. 280</ref> the ],<ref name=Lock4>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 4</ref> and the ].<ref name=Hindley14>Hindley ''Crusades'' p. 14</ref> Toleration, trade, and political relationships between the Arabs and the Christian states of Europe ebbed and flowed until 1072 when the Fatimids lost control of Palestine to the rapidly expanding ].<ref name=Hindley15>Hindley ''Crusades'' p. 15</ref> For example, the ] Caliph ] ordered the destruction of the ], only to have his successor allow the Byzantine Empire to rebuild it.<ref name=Pringle157>Pringle "Architecture in Latin East" ''Oxford History of the Crusades'' p. 157</ref> The Muslim rulers allowed pilgrimages by Christians to the holy sites. Resident Christians were considered ] and so were tolerated as ], and inter-marriage was not uncommon.<ref name = Findley2005p73>{{harvnb|Findley|2005|p=73}}</ref> Cultures and creeds coexisted as much as competed, but the frontier conditions were not conducive to Latin Christian pilgrims and merchants.<ref name=Hindley16>Hindley ''Crusades'' pp.&nbsp;15–16</ref> The disruption of ]s by conquering ] prompted support for the Crusades in Western Europe.<ref name = TolanVeinsteinHenry>{{harvnb| TolanVeinsteinHenry |2013|p=37}}</ref>


Conrad III and the German contingent planned to leave for the Holy Land at Easter, but did not depart until May 1147. When the German army began to cross Byzantine territory, emperor Manuel I had his troops posted to ensure against trouble. A brief ] in September ensued, and their defeat at the emperor's hand convinced the Germans to move quickly to Asia Minor. Without waiting for the French contingent, Conrad III engaged the ] under sultan ], son and successor of ], the nemesis of the First Crusade. Mesud and his forces almost totally destroyed Conrad's contingent at the ] on 25 October 1147.{{sfn|Tyerman|2006|pp=268–303|loc=God's Bargain: Summoning the Second Crusade}}
] at its greatest extent, in 1092.]]


The French contingent departed in June 1147. In the meantime, ], an enemy of Conrad's, had invaded Byzantine territory. Manuel I needed all his army to counter this force, and, unlike the armies of the First Crusade, the Germans and French entered Asia with no Byzantine assistance. The French met the remnants of Conrad's army in northern Turkey, and Conrad joined Louis's force. They fended off a Seljuk attack at the ] on 24 December 1147. A few days later, they were again victorious at the ]. Louis was not as lucky at the ] on 6 January 1148 when the army of Mesud inflicted heavy losses on the Crusaders. Shortly thereafter, they sailed for Antioch, almost totally destroyed by battle and sickness.{{sfn|Runciman|1952|pp=268–274|loc=The French in Asia Minor, 1147–1148}}
The ] was resurgent from the end of the 10th century, with ] spending most of his 50-year reign on campaign, conquering a great amount of territory. He left a growing treasury, at the expense of neglecting domestic affairs and also ignoring the cost of incorporating his conquests into the Byzantine ]. None of Basil’s successors had any particular military or political talent, and governing the Empire increasingly fell into the hands of the civil service. Their efforts to spend the Byzantine economy back into prosperity only resulted in burgeoning inflation. To balance the increasingly unstable budget, Basil’s large standing army was dismissed as unnecessary, and native ] troops were cashiered and replaced by ]. Following the defeat of the Byzantine army at the ] in 1071, the Seljuq Turks had taken over almost all of ], and the Empire descended into frequent civil wars.<ref name=Asbridge97>Asbridge, ''First Crusade'' p. 97</ref>


The Crusader army arrived at Antioch on 19 March 1148 with the intent on moving to retake Edessa, but Baldwin III of Jerusalem and the Knights Templar had other ideas. The ] was held on 24 June 1148, changing the objective of the Second Crusade to Damascus, a former ally of the kingdom that had shifted its allegiance to that of the Zengids. The Crusaders fought the ] with the Damascenes in the summer of 1147, with no clear winner.<ref>] (1969). "". In Setton, Kenneth M.; Baldwin, Marshall W. (eds.). ''A History of the Crusades: Volume One. The First Hundred Years''. Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 513–528.</ref> Bad luck and poor tactics of the Crusaders led to the disastrous five-day ] from 24 to 28 July 1148.{{sfn|Maalouf|2006|pp=143–158|loc=Nūr-ad-Din, the Saint King}} The barons of Jerusalem withdrew support and the Crusaders retreated before the arrival of a relief army led by Nūr-ad-Din. Morale fell, hostility to the Byzantines grew and distrust developed between the newly arrived Crusaders and those that had made the region their home after the earlier crusades. The French and German forces felt betrayed by the other, lingering for a generation due to the defeat, to the ruin of the Christian kingdoms in the Holy Land.{{sfn|Runciman|1952|pp=278–288|loc=Fiasco}}
===The Roman Catholic Church===
In the West an aggressive and reformist ] came into conflict with both the Eastern Empire and Western secular monarchs, leading to the ] in 1054<ref name=Mayer2>Mayer ''Crusades'' pp.&nbsp;2–3</ref> and the ], which had started around 1075 and was still on-going during the First Crusade. The papacy began to assert its independence from secular rulers, marshaling arguments for the proper use of armed force by Christians. The result was intense Christian piety, interest in religious affairs, and religious propaganda advocating "]" in order to retake Palestine from the Muslims. The majority view was that non-Christians could not be forced to accept Christian baptism or should be physically assaulted for having a different faith as opposed to a less common opinion that vengeance was a response to injuries such as the denial of Christian faith, government or the opportunity for justified forcible conversion.<ref>{{cite book|last=Riley-Smith|first=Johnathan|title=What were the Crusades|year=2009|publisher=Ignatius Press|pages=10–11|edition=Fourth Edition}}</ref> Taking part in such a war was seen as a form of ], which could remit sins.<ref name=Smith8>Riley-Smith ''Crusades'' pp.&nbsp;8–10</ref> Meanwhile in Europe, the Germans were expanding at the expense of the ],<ref name=Contest31>Housley ''Contesting the Crusades'' p. 31</ref> while ] was conquered by the ] adventurer ] in 1072.<ref name=Mayer17>Mayer ''Crusades'' pp.&nbsp;17–18</ref>


In the spring of 1147, Eugene III authorised the expansion of his mission into the Iberian Peninsula, equating these campaigns against the ] with the rest of the Second Crusade. The successful ], from 1 July to 25 October 1147, was followed by the six-month ], ending on 30 December 1148 with a defeat for the Moors.<ref>Jaspert, Nikolas (2006). Tortosa (Spain). In ''The Crusades: An Encyclopedia''. p. 1186.</ref> In the north, some Germans were reluctant to fight in the Holy Land while the pagan ] were a more immediate problem. The resulting ] of 1147 was partially successful but failed to convert the pagans to Christianity.<ref>Lind, John H. (2006). Wendish Crusade (1147). In ''The Crusades: An Encyclopedia''. pp. 1265–1268.</ref>
===Council of Clermont===
{{Main|Council of Clermont}}
In 1074 the Byzantine Emperor ] sent a request for military aid to ], but although Gregory appears to have considered leading an expedition to aid Michael, nothing reached the planning stage.<ref name=Lock306>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' pp.&nbsp;306–308</ref> The Eastern Empire faced difficulties in the Danube river area, as the ] had allied with the ] and threatened the Empire until 1091, when they were defeated by ] ].


The disastrous performance of this campaign in the Holy Land damaged the standing of the papacy, soured relations between the Christians of the kingdom and the West for many years, and encouraged the Muslims of Syria to even greater efforts to defeat the Franks. The dismal failures of this Crusade then set the stage for the fall of Jerusalem, leading to the Third Crusade.{{sfn|Runciman|1952|pp=278–288|loc=Fiasco}}
In 1095 Alexios sent envoys to the west requesting military assistance against the Seljuqs. Alexios needed to reinforce his tagmata, so the embassy probably sought to recruit mercenaries and may have exaggerated the dangers facing the Eastern Empire in order to secure the needed troops.<ref name=Mayer6>Mayer ''Crusades'' pp.&nbsp;6–7</ref> The message was received by ] at the ]. In November Urban called the ] to discuss the matter, further urging the ]s and ]s whom he addressed directly to bring with them the prominent lords in their provinces. The Council lasted from 19 to 28 November, attended by nearly 300 clerics from throughout ]. Urban discussed the ] of the Church and extended the ] of ]. Urban spoke for the first time about the problems in the east on 27 November, promoting the struggle of western Christians against the ] who had occupied the ] and were attacking the ]. There are six main sources of information on the Council: the anonymous '']'' ("The Deeds of the Franks" dated c. 1100/1101),<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/urban2-5vers.html#gesta |title=Medieval Sourcebook: Urban II: Speech at Council of Clermont, 1095, according to Fulcherof Chartres |publisher=Fordham.edu |date= |accessdate=2013-06-12}}</ref> which influenced all versions of the speech, except that by ] who was present at the council; ], who may have been present; as well as ], and ], who were not present at the council. All the accounts were written much later following different literary traditions and differ greatly.<ref>Georg Strack, The sermon of Urban II in Clermont 1095 and the Tradition of Papal Oratory, in: Medieval Sermon Studies 56 (2012), S. 30-45.<http://www.mag.geschichte.uni-muenchen.de/downloads/strack_urban.pdf>.</ref>
] setting in this illumination from the ''Livre des Passages d'Outre-mer'', c. 1490 (])]]


==== Nūr-ad-Din and the rise of Saladin ====
Robert the Monk, in ''Historia Iherosolimitana'', written in 1106/7, reports that Urban called for ], reform, and submission to the Church. Robert records that the pope asked western Christians, poor and rich, to come to the aid of the Byzantine Empire because "'']''," ("God wills it"). Robert records that Urban promised ] for those who went to the east, although the 'Liber Lamberti', a source based on the notes of Bishop Lambert of Arras, who attended the Council, indicates that Urban offered the remission of all penance due from sins, later called an ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://falcon.arts.cornell.edu/prh3/259/texts/clermont.html |title=Decrees of Pope Urban II at the Council of Clermont, 1095 |publisher=Falcon.arts.cornell.edu |date= |accessdate=2013-06-12}}</ref> Robert's account has Urban delivering a classical battle speech: he emphasizes reconquering the ] more than aiding the Greeks; the intervening decades and the events of the ] had certainly shifted the emphasis. According to Robert, Urban listed various gruesome offenses of the Muslims,<ref name="ford">{{cite web|url=http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/urban2-5vers.html |title=Medieval Sourcebook: Urban II: Speech at Council of Clermont, 1095, according to Fulcherof Chartres |publisher=Fordham.edu |date= |accessdate=2013-06-12}}</ref> and more alleged atrocities were expressed in inflammatory images derived from ]. Perhaps with the wisdom of hindsight, Robert has Urban advise that none but ]s should go, not the old and feeble, nor ]s without the permission of their bishops, "for such are more of a hindrance than aid, more of a burden than advantage&nbsp;... nor ought women to set out at all, without their husbands or brothers or legal guardians". A later version by Baldric, archbishop of Dol, reported the sermon as focusing on the offenses of the Muslims and the reconquest of the ], and that Urban deplored the violence of the Christian knights of ]. He wanted the violence of knights to be ennobled in the service of Christ, defending the churches of the East as if defending a mother. Guibert, abbot of Nogent, also has Urban emphasize the reconquest of the Holy Land more than providing aid to the Greeks or other Christians there. This may, as in the case of Robert and Baldric, be due to the influence of the Gesta Francorum's account of the reconquest of Jerusalem.
In the first major encounter after the Second Crusade, Nūr-ad-Din's forces then destroyed the Crusader army at the ] on 29 June 1149. ], as prince of Antioch, came to the aid of the besieged city. Raymond was killed and his head was presented to Nūr-ad-Din, who forwarded it to the caliph ] in Baghdad.<ref>Barker, Ernest (1911). "]". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). ''Encyclopædia Britannica''. '''22.''' (11th ed.), Cambridge University Press. p. 934.</ref> In 1150, Nūr-ad-Din defeated ] for a final time, resulting in Joscelin being publicly blinded, dying in prison in Aleppo in 1159. Later that year, at the ], he tried but failed to prevent Baldwin III's evacuation of the residents of ].{{sfn|Runciman|1952|pp=329–330|loc=Turbessel ceded to Byzantium (1150)}} The unconquered portions of the County of Edessa would nevertheless fall to the Zengids within a few years. In 1152, ] became the first Frankish victim of the ].{{sfn|Lewis|2017|p=167|loc=Military Decline and Matrimonial Discord: Count Raymond II (1137–1152)}} Later that year, Nūr-ad-Din captured and burned ], briefly occupying the town before it was taken by the Knights Templar as a military headquarters.{{sfn|Runciman|1952|p=333|loc=Murder of Raymond II (1152)}}


] victory at the ], 1149. Illustration from the '']'', {{circa|1490}}.]]
A general call was sent out to the knights and nobles of France. Urban apparently knew in advance of the day that ] was prepared to take up arms. Urban himself spent a few months preaching the Crusade in France, while ]s spread the word in the south of Italy, during which time the focus presumably turned from helping Alexios to taking Jerusalem. Urban's letter to the faithful "waiting in ]" laments that Turks, in addition to ravaging the "churches of God in the eastern regions," have seized "the Holy City of Christ, embellished by his passion and resurrection—and blasphemy to say it—have sold her and her churches into abominable slavery." Yet he does not explicitly call for the reconquest of Jerusulem. Rather he explicitly calls for the military "liberation" of the ] and appoints ] to lead the Crusade, to set out on the day of the ], 15 August.<ref>Quotes from Urban's letter in {{Cite book |title=The Crusades: Idea and Reality, 1095–1274 |editor1-first=Louise |editor1-last=Riley-Smith |editor2-first=Johnathan |editor2-last=Riley-Smith |series=Documents of Medieval History |volume=4 |location=London |publisher=E. Arnold |year=1981 |page=38 |isbn=0-7131-6348-8 }}</ref> Pope Urban's speech ranks as one of the most influential speeches ever, launching holy wars that occupied the minds and forces of western Europe for 200 years before their ultimate failure.<ref name=Munro>Munro "Speech of Pope Urban II" ''American Historical Review''</ref>


After the ] ended on 22 August 1153 with a Crusader victory, Damascus was taken by Nūr-ad-Din the next year, uniting all of Syria under Zengid rule. In 1156, Baldwin III was forced into a treaty with Nūr-ad-Din, and later entered into an alliance with the ]. On 18 May 1157, Nūr-ad-Din began a siege on the Knights Hospitaller contingent at ], with the Grand Master ] captured. Baldwin III was able to break the siege, only to be ambushed at ] in June. Reinforcements from Antioch and Tripoli were able to relieve the besieged Crusaders, but they were defeated again that month at the ]. In July 1158, the Crusaders were victorious at the ]. Bertrand's captivity lasted until 1159, when emperor Manuel I negotiated an alliance with Nūr-ad-Din against the Seljuks.{{sfn|Runciman|1952|pp=338–342|loc=The Rise of Nur ed-Din: The Capture of Ascalon, 1153}}
==Role of women, children, and class==
{{Main|Children's Crusade|Shepherds' Crusade}}
Women were intricately connected with the Crusades, aiding the recruitment of crusading men, taking on responsibility in their absence, and providing financial and moral support.<ref name=Hodgson39>Hodgson ''Women, Crusading and the Holy Land'' pp. 39–44</ref><ref>C.T. Maier, "The roles of women in the crusade movement: a survey" ''Journal of medieval history'' (2004). 30#1 pp&nbsp;61–82</ref> Historians argue that the most significant role played by women in the West was maintaining the status quo.<ref>Susan B. Edgington and Sarah Lambert, eds., ''Gendering the Crusades'' (2002)</ref> Landholders left for the Holy Land, leaving control of their estates with regents, often wives or mothers.<ref name=First99>Riley-Smith ''First Crusaders'' p. 99</ref> The Church recognized that risk to families and estates might discourage crusaders, so special papal protection formed part of the crusading privilege.<ref name=Hodgson110>Hodgson ''Women, Crusading and the Holy Land'' pp. 110–112</ref> A few women took up the cross themselves to go on the crusade.<ref name=Owen22>Owen ''Eleanor of Aquitaine'' p. 22</ref> For example, ] joined her husband, ],<ref name="Owen22" /> and some non-aristocratic women were involved in tasks considered feminine like washerwoman.<ref name=Gendering98>Edington and Lambert ''Gendering the Crusades'' p. 98</ref> More controversial was women taking an active part, which threatened their femininity, with accounts of women fighting coming mostly from Muslim historians with the aim of portraying Christian women as barbaric and ungodly due to their acts of killing.<ref name=nicholson337>Nicholson "Women on the Third Crusade" ''Journal of Medieval History'' p. 337</ref> Christian accounts portray women fighting only in rare situations for the preservation of their camps and lives.<ref name="nicholson337" />


Baldwin III died on 10 February 1163, and ] was crowned as king of Jerusalem eight days later.<ref>Barker, Ernest (1911). "]". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). ''Encyclopædia Britannica''. '''1.''' (11th ed.), Cambridge University Press. pp. 778–779.</ref> Later that year, he defeated the Zengids at the ]. Amalric then undertook a series of four ] from 1163 to 1169, taking advantage of weaknesses of the Fatimids.<ref name="images.library.wisc.edu"/> Nūr-ad-Din's intervention in the first invasion allowed his general ], accompanied by his nephew ], to enter Egypt.<ref>Winifred Frances Peck (1911). "]". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). ''Encyclopædia Britannica''. '''24.''' (11th ed.), Cambridge University Press.</ref> ], the deposed vizier to the Fatimid caliph ], allied with Amalric I, attacking Shirkuh at the second ] beginning in August 1164, following Amalric's unsuccessful first siege in September 1163.{{sfn|Runciman|1952|pp=380–382|loc=Amalric advances on Cairo}} This action left the Holy Land lacking in defenses, and Nūr-ad-Din defeated a Crusader force at the ] in August 1164, capturing most of the Franks' leaders.{{sfn|Barber|2012|p=240|loc=The Zengid Threat}}
Less historically certain was a ] movement in France and Germany in 1212 that attracted large numbers of peasant teenagers and young people, with some under the age of 15. They were convinced that they could succeed where older and more sinful crusaders had failed: the miraculous power of their faith would triumph where the force of arms had not. Many parish priests and parents encouraged such religious fervor and urged them on. The pope and bishops opposed the attempt but failed to stop it entirely. A band of several thousand youth and young men, led by a German named Nicholas, set out for ]. About a third survived the march over the Alps and got as far as Genoa; another group went to ]. The luckier ones eventually managed to return home, but many others were sold as lifetime slaves on the auction blocks of Marseilles slave dealers.<ref name=Zacour330>Zacour "Children's Crusade" ''Later Crusades'' pp. 330–337</ref>


After the sacking of Bilbeis, the Crusader-Fatimid force was to meet Shirkuh's army in the indecisive ] on 18 March 1167. In 1169, both Shawar and Shirkuh died, and al-Adid appointed Saladin as vizier. Saladin, with reinforcements from Nūr-ad-Din, defeated a massive Crusader-Byzantine force at the ] in late October.<ref>Bird, Jessalynn (2006). Damietta. In ''The Crusades: An Encyclopedia''. pp. 343–344.</ref> This gained Saladin the attention of the Assassins, with attempts on his life in January 1175 and again on 22 May 1176.{{sfn|Lewis|2003|pp=113–117|loc=The Old Man of the Mountain}}
Three crusading efforts among the peasants occurred in the middle 1250s and again in the early 1300s. The first, the ], was preached in northern France. After meeting with ], however, it became disorganized and had to be disbanded by the government.<ref name=Lock179/> The second, in 1309, occurred in ], northeastern France, and Germany, and had as many as 30,000 peasants arriving at ] before being disbanded.<ref name=Lock187>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' pp. 187–188</ref> The last one, in ], had similar origins as the first shepherds' crusade but quickly turned into a series of attacks on clergy and Jews, and was forcibly dispersed.<ref name=Lock190>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 190</ref>


]<ref>Barker, Ernest (1911). "]". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). ''Encyclopædia Britannica''. '''3.''' (11th ed.), Cambridge University Press. p. 247.</ref> became king on 5 July 1174 at the age of 13.<ref name=":22"/> As a leper he was not expected to live long, and served with a number of regents, and served as co-ruler with his nephew ] beginning in 1183. Baldwin IV, ] and the Knights Templar defeated Saladin at the celebrated ] on 25 November 1177. In June 1179, the Crusaders were defeated at the ], and in August the unfinished castle at ] fell to Saladin, with the slaughter of half its Templar garrison. However, the kingdom repelled his attacks at the ] in 1182 and later in the ] of 1183.<ref>Barker, Ernest (1911). "]". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). ''Encyclopædia Britannica''. '''22.''' (11th ed.), Cambridge University Press. p. 936.</ref>
==Outremer==
{{main|Outremer}}
{{see also| Crusader states|Latin Empire| Frankokratia }}
]
The First Crusade established the first four crusader states in the Eastern Mediterranean: the ] (1098 until 1149), the ] (1098 until 1268), ] (1099 until 1291) and the ] (1104, although Tripoli itself was not conquered until 1109, to 1289). The ] had its origins before the Crusades, but was granted the status of a kingdom by ], and later became fully westernized by the (French) ] dynasty. These states were recognised by ] as the first experiments in "Europe Overseas". The general name given to them is Outremer ({{lang-fr|outre-mer}}) for "overseas" and was often used as a synonym for the ] of Renaissance.


==== Fall of Jerusalem ====
] conquered ] during the Third Crusade; he eventually sold it to the displaced King of Jerusalem ] in 1192. Guy went on to found a dynasty that lasted until 1489 when control passed to the Republic of Venice.<ref name="Edbury P.W. 1374">Edbury P.W., The Kingdom of Cyprus and the Crusades 1191 - 1374, Cambridge University Press (1991)</ref> Cyprus became a prosperous medieval kingdom, a commercial and trading hub of Western Christendom in the Middle East.<ref name="Edbury P.W. 1374"/>
Baldwin V became sole king upon the death of his uncle in 1185 under the regency of ]. Raymond negotiated a truce with Saladin which went awry when the king died in the summer of 1186.<ref>Barker, Ernest (1911). "]". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). ''Encyclopædia Britannica''. '''22.''' (11th ed.), Cambridge University Press. p. 935.</ref> His mother ] and her husband ] were crowned as queen and king of Jerusalem in the summer of 1186, shortly thereafter. They immediately had to deal with the threat posed by Saladin.<ref>Gerish, Deborah (2006). Guy of Lusignan (d. 1194). In ''The Crusades: An Encyclopedia''. pp. 549–551.</ref>


Despite his defeat at the ] in the fall of 1183, Saladin increased his attacks against the Franks, leading to their defeat at the ] on 1 May 1187. Guy of Lusignan responded by raising the largest army that Jerusalem had ever put into the field. Saladin lured this force into inhospitable terrain without water supplies and routed them at the ] on 4 July 1187. One of the major commanders was ] who saw his force slaughtered, with some knights deserting to the enemy, and narrowly escaping, only to be regarded as a traitor and coward.{{sfn|Lewis|2017|pp=233–284|loc=The Regent Thwarted: Count Raymond III (1174–1187)}} Guy of Lusignan was one of the few captives of Saladin's after the battle, along with Raynald of Châtillon and ]. Raynald was beheaded, settling an old score. Guy and Humphrey were imprisoned in Damascus and later released in 1188.<ref>Hoch, Martin (2006). Hattin, Battle of (1187). In ''The Crusades: An Encyclopedia''. pp. 559–561.</ref>
]. (c. 1204)]]
After the fourth crusade the treaty called {{lang|la|]}} for "partition of the lands of the empire of ''Romània''<ref>On the meaning of ''Romània'', an ambiguous term, see R.L. Wolff, "Romània: The Latin Empire of Constantinople". In: ''Speculum'', 23 (1948), pp. 1-34.</ref> established the Latin Empire and arranged the partition of the Byzantine territory among the participants of the Crusade, with the ] being the greatest beneficiary. In October October 1204 a 24-man committee consisting of 12 Venetians and 12 representatives of the other crusader leaders agreed to give the Latin Emperor direct control of one fourth of the Byzantine territory, Venice three eighths , including three eighths of the city of Constantinople, and divide the remaining three eighths among the other crusader leaders. Thus began the period of the ] known as ''Frankokratia'' or ''Latinokratia'' ("Frankish/Latin rule"), where ] West European nobles, mostly from France and Italy, established states on former Byzantine territory and ruled over the mostly ] native ]. The Partitio Romànie is a valuable document for the administrative divisions ('']'') and estates of the various Byzantine magnate families ca. 1203, as well as the areas still controlled by the Byzantine central government at the time.


As a result of his victory, much of Palestine quickly fell to Saladin. The ] began on 20 September 1187 and the Holy City was surrendered to Saladin by ] on 2 October. According to some, on 19{{nbsp}}October 1187, ] died upon of hearing of the defeat.{{sfn|Asbridge|2012|p=367|loc=Called to Crusade}} Jerusalem was once again in Muslim hands. Many in the kingdom fled to Tyre, and Saladin's subsequent attack at the ] beginning in November 1187 was unsuccessful. The ] began the next month and the Hospitaller stronghold finally fell a year later. The ] and ] in July 1188 and the ] and ] in August 1188 further solidified Saladin's gains. The ] in late 1188 then completed Saladin's conquest of the Holy Land.<ref name=":22">Baldwin, Marshall W. (1969). " {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230601084304/http://images.library.wisc.edu/History/EFacs/HistCrus/0001/0001/reference/history.crusone.i0034.pdf |date=2023-06-01 }}". In Setton, Kenneth M.; Baldwin, Marshall W. (eds.). ''A History of the Crusades: Volume One. The First Hundred Years''. Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 590–621.</ref>
==Finance==
Crusades were expensive and as the wars increased, the costs also escalated. Pope Urban II called upon the rich to help those who were "less well-off" and lords on the First Crusade such as Duke Robert of Normandy and Count Raymond of St. Gilles, who had subsidized knights in their own contingents. The total cost of the crusades of 1284-1254 to King Louis IX of France was at about 1,537,570 ''livres'', which was six times his annual income. This may be an underestimate because there are records that show he spent 1,000,000 ''livres'' in Palestine after his campaign in Egypt was over. Furthermore, rulers had demanded subsidies from their subjects.<ref>{{cite book|last=Riley-Smith|first=Jonathan|title=What were the Crusades?|year=2009|publisher=Ignatius Press|pages=43–44|edition=Fourth Edition}}</ref> Eventually, alms and legacies from the outburst of enthusiasm in the conquest of Palestine were another source of finance. The popes had ordered chests to be placed in churches for their collection and from the middle of the twelfth century, they granted indulgences, to those who contributed to the movement this way, while also encouraging the faithful to make bequests to the Holy Land in their own wills.<ref>{{cite book|last=Riley-Smith|first=Jonathan|title=What were the Crusades?|year=2009|publisher=Ignatius Press|page=44|edition=Fourth Edition}}</ref>


]
==Crusading decline==


===Third Crusade===
{{see also| War of Saint Sabas|Sicilian Vespers|Aragonese Crusade}}
{{main|Third Crusade}}


The years following the founding of the Kingdom of Jerusalem were met with multiple disasters. The ] did not achieve its goals, and left the Muslim East in a stronger position with the rise of ]. A united Egypt–Syria led to the loss of Jerusalem itself, and Western Europe had no choice but to launch the ], this time led by the kings of Europe.<ref>Nicholson, Helen (2006). "Third Crusade (1189–1192)". In ''The Crusades: An Encyclopedia''. pp. 1174–1181.</ref>
One factor in the eventual decline and fall was the disunity and conflict that were endemic between the various Latin Christian interests of the Eastern Mediterranean. ] hopelessly compromised the Papacy supporting Charles of Anjou; and the botched secular "crusades" against Sicily and Aragon greatly tarnished its spiritual power. The collapse of its ] and the rise of nationalism rang the death knell for crusading, and would ultimately lead to the ] and the ].


The news of the disastrous defeat at the ] and subsequent fall of Jerusalem gradually reached Western Europe. ] died shortly after hearing the news, and his successor ] issued the bull '']'' on 29 October 1187 describing the events in the East and urging all Christians to take up arms and go to the aid of those in the Kingdom of Jerusalem, calling for a new crusade to the Holy Land{{snd}}the ]{{snd}}to be led by ] and ].{{sfn|Tyerman|2006|pp=375–401|loc=The Call of the Cross}}
In 1256 the Venetians were evicted from Tyre, prompting the War of Saint Sabas over territory in Acre claimed by both Genoa and Venice.<ref name=SS39>{{harvnb|Marshall|1994|pp=39}}</ref> Venice conquered the disputed property, destroying Saint Sabas' fortifications, but was unable to expel the Genoese. During a blockade of 14 months Genoa allied with ], ] and the ] while Venice was supported by the ] and the ],<ref name=SS10>{{harvnb|Marshall|1994|pp=10}}</ref> By 1261, the Genoese were expelled, but ], concerned about the impact of the war on the defences against the ], organised a peace council.<ref>refname=”Riley37”> {{Harvnb|Riley-Smith|1973|p=37}}</ref> The conflict resumed in 1264 when the Genoese received aid from ], ] and Venice failed in an attempt to conquer Tyre. Both sides employed Muslim soldiers, mostly ], against their Christian foes and the Genoese had made an alliance with ].<ref name=SS59>{{harvnb|Marshall|1994|pp=59}}</ref> The warfare between Genoa and Venice had a significant negative impact on the Kingdom's ability to withstand external threats to its existence. Except for the religious buildings, most of the fortified buildings in Acre had been destroyed at one point and it looked like it had been ravaged by a Muslim army. According to Rothelin, the continuator of ] ''History'', 20,000 men had lost their lives in the conflict at a time when the crusader states were chronically short on soldiery. The war ended in 1270 and in 1288 Genoa finally received its quarter in Acre back.<ref name=SS41>{{harvnb|Marshall|1994|pp=41}}</ref>


]
In 1268 ] executed ] {{mdash}} a great-grandson of ], principal pretender to the throne of Jerusalem {{mdash}} when seizing Sicily from the Holy Roman Empire. Charles went on to purchase the rights to Jerusalem from ] {{mdash}} the only remaining grandchild of Queen Isabella{{mdash}} creating a rival claim to that of ], who was a great grandson of Queen Isabella.<ref>Setton, Kenneth M. (ed.) (1985). ''A History of the Crusades: The Impact of the Crusades on the Near East'', p. 201. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 0-299-09144-9</ref> Charles spent his life striving to assemble a Mediterranean empire. He and Louis regarded themselves as God's instruments to uphold the Papacy. ] In 1266 Charles had seized, with Sicily, parts of the eastern ] it had previously controlled as well as ], ]o, ] and ]. The ] was agreed with the exiled ] and ] that the heirs of both Latin princes were to marry children of Charles, and Charles was to have the reversion of the Empire and principality should the couples have no heirs. He also turned his brother's crusade to his own advantage, persuading Louis to direct the ] against his rebel vassals in Tunis. Louis’s death, illness among the crusaders and a storm that devastated his fleet forced Charles to postpone his designs against Constantinople. ] was alarmed by Charles’s planned crusade to restore the Latin Empire that had fallen in 1261 and Charles' expansion in the Mediterranean. Palaeologus delayed Charles by beginning negotiations with ] for a union between the ] and the ] churches. At the Council of Lyon, a Union of Churches was declared; Charles and ] were compelled to extend a truce with Byzantium. The union would later prove to be unacceptable to the Greeks. Palaeogus also provided Genoa and with funds to encourage the revolts in Charles’s northern Italian territories.


Frederick took the cross in March 1188.<ref name=":4">Johnson, Edgar N. (1977). ".". In Setton, K., ''A History of the Crusades: Volume II.'' pp. 87–122.</ref> Frederick sent an ultimatum to Saladin, demanding the return of Palestine and challenging him to battle and in May 1189, Frederick's host departed for Byzantium. In March 1190, Frederick embarked to Asia Minor. The armies coming from western Europe pushed on through Anatolia, defeating the Turks and reaching as far as ]. On 10 June 1190, Frederick drowned near ]. His death caused several thousand German soldiers to leave the force and return home. The remaining German army moved under the command of the English and French forces that arrived shortly thereafter.{{sfn|Asbridge|2012|pp=420–422|loc=The Fate of the German Crusade}}
The accession of a French pope, Martin IV, in 1281 brought the full power of the Papacy into line behind Charles' plans. He campaigned unsuccessfully in Albania and Achaea before preparing to launch the body of his Crusade (400 ships carrying 27,000 mounted knights) against Constantinople. However, Palaeogus allied with ] to encourage an uprising known as the ] in which the crusader fleet was abandoned and burnt. The Sicilians appealed to King Peter, who was proclaimed king with the ] house exiled forever from Sicily. Pope Martin excommunicated Peter and called a crusade against Aragon before, in 1287, Charles died, allowing ] to reclaim the ].


] had already taken the cross as the ] in 1187. His father ] and ] had done so on 21 January 1188 after receiving news of the fall of Jerusalem to Saladin.<ref>Painter, Sidney (1977). " {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304000907/http://images.library.wisc.edu/History/EFacs/HistCrus/0001/0002/reference/history.crustwo.i0016.pdf |date=2016-03-04 }}.". In Setton, K. ''A History of the Crusades: Volume II.'' pp. 45–86.</ref>{{sfn|Murray|2009}} Richard I and ] agreed to go on the Crusade in January 1188. Arriving in the Holy Land, Richard led his support to the stalemated ]. The Muslim defenders surrendered on 12 July 1191. Richard remained in sole command of the Crusader force after the departure of Philip II on 31 July 1191. On 20 August 1191, Richard had more than 2000 prisoners beheaded at the ]. Saladin subsequently ordered the execution of his Christian prisoners in retaliation.{{sfn|Norgate|1924|pp=152–175|loc=The Fall of Acre, 1191}}
The mainland Crusading states of the middle eastern Outremer were extinguished with the fall of ] in 1289,<ref name=Lock122>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 122</ref> and ] in 1291. The remaining Latin Christians largely left for various destinations in the Frankokratia, were killed or enslaved.<ref name=GodsWar820>Tyerman ''God's War'' pp. 820–822</ref> Minor crusading efforts lingered into the 14th century. ] captured and sacked ] in 1365 in what became known as the ] though his motivation was as much commercial as it was religious.<ref name=Lock195>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' pp. 195–196</ref> ] led a French-Genoese campaign in 1390 against Muslim ]s in North Africa and based in ] called the ]. After a ten week siege, the crusaders lifted their siege with the signing of a ten-year truce.<ref name=Lock199>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 199</ref>


Richard moved south, defeating Saladin's forces at the ] on 7 September 1191. Three days later, Richard took ], held by Saladin since 1187, and advanced inland towards Jerusalem.{{sfn|Oman|1924|pp=306–319|loc=Tactics of the Crusades: Battles of Arsouf and Jaffa (Volume I)}} On 12 December 1191 Saladin disbanded the greater part of his army. Learning this, Richard pushed his army forward, to within 12 miles from Jerusalem before retreating back to the coast. The Crusaders made another advance on Jerusalem, coming within sight of the city in June before being forced to retreat again. ], leader of the Franks, was adamant that a direct attack on Jerusalem should be made. This split the Crusader army into two factions, and neither was strong enough to achieve its objective. Without a united command the army had little choice but to retreat back to the coast.
==Military Orders==
{{Main|Military Order|Knights Hospitaller|Knights Templar|Teutonic Knights}}
Central to the debate on crusading ethics are the military orders, particularly the Hospitallers and the Templars. To a modern sensibility it is strange that the church could reconcile monasticism with soldiering. Both the Hospitallers and the Templars became international organisations with depots located across the countries of Western Europe as well as in the East. In contrast the Teutonic knights successfully moved their attentions to the Baltic and the Spanish military orders of ], ] and ] concentrated on the Iberian Peninsula. The Knights of the Order of the Hospital of St John of Jerusalem were founded in 1099 in the aftermath of the first crusade. The order included military, medical and pastoral brothers. Following the fall of Acre they escaped to Cyprus and successively conquered and ruled both Rhodes (1309-1522) and Malta (1530-1801). The Poor Knights of Christ and the Temple of Solomon were founded in 1118 to protect pilgrims en route to Jerusalem. However, they quickly became immensely rich and powerful through banking and real estate with property throughout Christendom. In 1322 the King of France suppressed the order on spurious charges of sodomy, magic and heresy but more probably for financial and political reasons.<ref name="Davies 1997 359">{{Harvnb|Davies|1997|pp=359}}</ref>


On 27 July 1192, Saladin's army began the ], capturing the city. Richard's forces stormed Jaffa from the sea and the Muslims were driven from the city. Attempts to retake Jaffa failed and Saladin was forced to retreat.{{sfn|Runciman|1954|pp=70–72|loc=Richard's Last Victory (1192)}} On 2 September 1192 Richard and Saladin entered into the ], providing that Jerusalem would remain under Muslim control, while allowing unarmed Christian pilgrims and traders to freely visit the city. This treaty ended the Third Crusade.{{sfn|von Sybel|1861|pp=89–91|loc=Treaty with Saladin}}
==Legacy==


===Ethnic=== ===Crusade of 1197===
{{main|Crusade of 1197}}


Three years later, ] launched the ]. While his forces were en route to the Holy Land, Henry VI died in Messina on 28 September 1197. The nobles that remained captured the Levant coast between Tyre and Tripoli before returning to Germany. The Crusade ended on 1 July 1198 after capturing ] and ].{{sfn|Runciman|1954|pp=97–98|loc=The German Crusade of 1197}}
{{main|Levantines (Latin Christians)|Italian Levantine}}


===Fourth Crusade===
A people and culture descended from remaining European inhabitants of the ] {{mdash}} especially French Levantines in ], ] and ] {{mdash}} and of traders from the ] of the ]{{mdash}} ], ] and ], continued to live in ]/], ]/] and other parts of ] and the eastern ] coast throughout the middle ] and ] eras. These people are known as Levantines or Franco-Levantines (pr:"Frankolevantini"){{mdash}}]: Levantins, ]: Levantini, ]: Φραγκολεβαντίνοι, ]: Levantenler or Tatlısu ]leri{{mdash}}and are ]. They are now mainly concentrated in ] {{mdash}} in the districts of ], ] and ], İzmir {{mdash}} in the districts of ], ] and ], and ], where they had been influential for creating and reviving a tradition of ].<ref>, ], 26 May 2007</ref> Since the ] occupied parts of ] in the aftermath of the ] the term "Levantine" has been used pejoratively for inhabitants of mixed ] and European descent and for Europeans {{mdash}} usually French, Italian or Greek {{mdash}} who adopted local dress and customs.
{{main|Fourth Crusade|Sack of Constantinople}}
] of the ] city of ] by the Crusaders in 1204 (BNF ] 5090, 15th century)|alt=Image of siege of Constantinople]]
] and ]s|] and Byzantine states in 1205. Green marks Venetian acquisitions; pink the Byzantine states; purple the Latin Empire and its vassals]]
In 1198, the recently elected Pope Innocent III announced a new crusade, organised by three Frenchmen: ]; ]; and ]. After Theobald's premature death, the Italian ] replaced him as the new commander of the campaign. They contracted with the ] for the transportation of 30,000 crusaders at a cost of 85,000 marks. However, many chose other embarkation ports and only around 15,000 arrived in Venice. The ] ] proposed that Venice would be compensated with the profits of future conquests beginning with the ] of the Christian city of ]. Pope Innocent III's role was ambivalent. He only condemned the attack when the siege started. He withdrew his legate to disassociate from the attack but seemed to have accepted it as inevitable. Historians question whether for him, the papal desire to salvage the crusade may have outweighed the moral consideration of shedding Christian blood.<ref>{{Harvnb|Jotischky|2004|p=168}}</ref> The crusade was joined by King ], who intended to use the Crusade to install his exiled brother-in-law, ], as Emperor. This required the overthrow of ], the uncle of Alexios{{nbsp}}IV. Alexios IV offered the crusade 10,000 troops, 200,000 marks and the reunion of the Greek Church with Rome if they toppled his uncle ].{{sfn|Tyerman|2019|pp=240–242}} When the crusade entered ], Alexios{{nbsp}}III fled and was replaced by his nephew. The Greek resistance prompted Alexios{{nbsp}}IV to seek continued support from the crusade until he could fulfil his commitments. This ended with his murder in a violent anti-Latin revolt. The crusaders were without seaworthy ships, supplies or food. Their only escape route was through the city, taking by force what Alexios had promised and the new anti-westerner Byzantine ruler{{snd}}]{{snd}}denied them. The ] involved three days of pillaging churches and killing much of the Greek Orthodox Christian populace. This sack was not unusual considering the violent military standards of the time, but contemporaries such as Innocent III and ] saw it as an atrocity against centuries of classical and Christian civilisation.{{sfn|Tyerman|2019|pp=249–250}}


===Politics and culture=== ===Fifth Crusade===
{{main|Fifth Crusade}}
]]]
The ] (1217–1221) was a campaign by Western Europeans to reacquire Jerusalem and the rest of the Holy Land by first conquering Egypt, ruled by the sultan ], brother of ]. In 1213, ] called for another Crusade at the ], and in the papal bull '']''.<ref>{{Cite encyclopedia|title=Summons to a Crusade, 1215|encyclopedia=Internet Medieval Sourcebook|publisher=Fordham University|url=https://sourcebooks.fordham.edu/source/inn3-cdesummons.asp|access-date=|first=|pages=337–344}}</ref> Innocent died in 1216 and was succeeded by ] who immediately called on ] and ] to lead a Crusade.<ref>Michael Ott (1910). "]". In ''Catholic Encyclopedia''. '''7.''' New York.</ref> Frederick had taken the cross in 1215, but hung back, with his crown still in contention, and Honorius delayed the expedition.<ref name=":23">Van Cleve, Thomas C. (1977). " {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230326032639/http://images.library.wisc.edu/History/EFacs/HistCrus/0001/0002/reference/history.crustwo.i0025.pdf |date=2023-03-26 }}". In Setton, K., ''A History of the Crusades: Volume II''. pp. 343–376.</ref>


] in a painting by ].]]
The crusades influenced the attitude of the western Church and people towards warfare. The frequent calling of crusades habituated the clergy to the use of violence. The crusades also sparked debate about the legitimacy of taking lands and possessions from pagans on purely religious grounds that would arise again in the 15th and 16th centuries with the ].<ref name=Contest146>Housley ''Contesting the Crusades'' pp. 146–147</ref> The needs of crusading warfare also stimulated secular governmental developments, although these were not necessarily positive. The resources collected for crusading could have been used by the developing states for local and regional needs instead of in far away lands.<ref name=Contest149>Housley ''Contesting the Crusades'' p. 149</ref>


Andrew II left for Acre in August 1217, joining ], king of Jerusalem. The initial plan of a two-prong attack in Syria and in Egypt was abandoned and instead the objective became limited operations in Syria. After accomplishing little, the ailing Andrew returned to Hungary early in 1218. As it became clear that Frederick II was not coming to the east, the remaining commanders began the planning to attack the Egyptian port of ].<ref>Powell, James M. (2006). "The Fifth Crusade". In ''The Crusades: An Encyclopedia''. pp. 427–432.</ref>
With its power and prestige raised by the crusades, the papal had greater control over the entire western Church and extended the system of papal taxation throughout the whole ecclesiastical structure of the west. The ] system grew significantly in late medieval Europe, later to spark the ] in the early 1500s.<ref name=Contest147>Housley ''Contesting the Crusades'' pp. 147–149</ref>


The fortifications of Damietta included the ''Burj al-Silsilah''{{snd}}the chain tower{{snd}}with massive chains that could stretch across the Nile. The ] began in June 1218 with a successful assault on the tower. The loss of the tower was a great shock to the ], and the sultan al-Adil died soon thereafter.{{sfn|Gibb|pp=697–700|loc=The Ayyubids through 1221|1969}} He was succeeded as sultan by his son ]. Further offensive action by the Crusaders would have to wait until the arrival of additional forces, including legate ] with a contingent of Romans.{{sfn|Tyerman|2006|pp=626–649|loc=The Fifth Crusade, 1213–1221}} A group from England arrived shortly thereafter.{{sfn|Tyerman|1996|p=97|loc=The Fifth Crusade}}
Military experience influenced European castle design {{mdash}} ] directly reflects the style of fortresses Edward I had observed while fighting in the Crusades.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://uktv.co.uk/blighty/listing/aid/582330 |title=Caernarfon Castle |publisher=Uktv.co.uk |date=2007-03-12 |accessdate=2010-04-18}}</ref>


By February 1219, the Crusaders now had Damietta surrounded, and al-Kamil opened negotiations with the Crusaders, asking for envoys to come to his camp. He offered to surrender the kingdom of Jerusalem, less the fortresses of ] and ], guarding the road to Egypt, in exchange for the evacuation of Egypt. John of Brienne and the other secular leaders were in favor of the offer, as the original objective of the Crusade was the recovery of Jerusalem. But Pelagius and the leaders of the Templars and Hospitallers refused.{{sfn|Runciman|1954|pp=132–179|loc=The Fifth Crusade}} Later, ] arrived to negotiate unsuccessfully with the sultan.<ref>Paschal Robinson (1909). "]". In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). ''Catholic Encyclopedia''. '''6'''. New York: Robert Appleton Company.</ref>
] ignited a long tradition of organized violence against ] in European culture.<ref name=Contest>Housley ''Contesting the Crusades'' pp. 161–163</ref> The Albigensian Crusade was initiated by the Catholic Church to eliminate the ] in Languedoc. The violence led to France's acquisition of lands with closer cultural and linguistic ties to ]. The Albigensian Crusade also had a role in the creation and institutionalization of both the ] and the ].<ref name=AlbCrusades143>Strayer ''Albigensian Crusades'' p. 143</ref>


In November 1219, the Crusaders entered Damietta and found it abandoned, al-Kamil having moved his army south. In the captured city, Pelagius was unable to prod the Crusaders from their inactivity, and many returned home, their vow fulfilled. Al-Kamil took advantage of this lull to reinforce his new camp at ], renewing his peace offering to the Crusaders, which was again refused. Frederick II sent troops and word that he would soon follow, but they were under orders not to begin offensive operations until he had arrived.{{sfn|Maalouf|2006|pp=218–226|loc=The Perfect and the Just}}
===Criticism===


In July 1221, Pelagius began to advance to the south. John of Brienne argued against the move, but was powerless to stop it. Already deemed a traitor for opposing the plans and threatened with excommunication, John joined the force under the command of the legate. In the ensuing ] in late August, al-Kamil had the sluices along the right bank of the Nile opened, flooding the area and rendering battle impossible.{{sfn|Christie|2014|loc=Document 16: Al-Kamil Muhammad and the Fifth Crusade}} Pelagius had no choice but to surrender.{{sfn|Perry|2013|loc=The Fifth Crusade|pp=89–121}}
Crusading remained supported in Europe after the fall of Acre in 1291 despite contemporary criticism by contemporaries such as ] who felt the Crusades were ineffective as "those who survive, together with their children, are more and more embittered against the Christian faith."<ref name=Rose72>Rose "Order of the Knights Templar'' p. 72</ref><ref name=BaconQuote>Quoted in Rose ''Order of the Knights Templar'' p. 72</ref> The historian Norman Davies summarised the case against the crusades as that they ran counter to the ] that Urban had promoted; instead they reinforced the connection between Western Christendom, ], and ]. The formation of military religious orders scandalised the Orthodox Christian Byzantine Greeks. Crusaders pillaged the countries they transited through on their journey east and retained land gained rather than restoring territory previously held by Byzantium to the Byzantines as they had sworn to do.<ref name="Davies 1997 358">{{Harvnb|Davies|1997|p=358}}</ref><ref name=Kolbaba49>Kolbaba ''Byzantine Lists'' p. 49</ref><ref name=Vasil408>Vasilʹev ''History of the Byzantine Empire'' p. 408</ref> The Peoples' Crusade instigated the Rhineland massacres and the massacre of thousands of Jews. In the late 19th century this episode was used by Jewish historians to support ].<ref name="Cambridge UP"/> The Fourth Crusade resulted in the ], effectively ending the chance of reuniting the Christian church by reconciling the ] and leading to the weakening and eventual fall of the ] to the Ottomans.


The Crusaders still had some leverage as Damietta was well-garrisoned. They offered the sultan a withdrawal from Damietta and an eight-year truce in exchange for allowing the Crusader army to pass, the release of all prisoners, and the return of the relic of the ]. Prior to the formal surrender of Damietta, the two sides would maintain hostages, among them John of Brienne and ] for the Franks side and a son of al-Kamil for Egypt.{{sfn|Richard|1999|pp=299–307|loc=The Egyptian Campaign of the Legate Pelagius}} The masters of the military orders were dispatched to Damietta, where the forces were resistant to giving up, with the news of the surrender, which happened on 8 September 1221. The Fifth Crusade was over, a dismal failure, unable to even gain the return of the piece of the True Cross.{{sfn|Asbridge|2012|pp=551–562|loc=The Fifth Crusade}}
Historians of the Enlightenment criticised the misdirection of the crusading movement. In particular they pointed to the Fourth Crusade which instead of attacking Islam attacked another Christian power{{mdash}}the (Eastern) Roman Empire. David Nicolle says the Fourth Crusade has always been controversial in terms of the "betrayal" of Byzantium.<ref name=Fourth5>Nicolle ''Fourth Crusade'' p. 5</ref>


===Sixth Crusade===
Eight hundred years after the Fourth Crusade, ] twice expressed sorrow for the events of the Fourth Crusade. In 2001, he wrote to ], ], saying, "''It is tragic that the assailants, who set out to secure free access for Christians to the Holy Land, turned against their brothers in the faith. The fact that they were Latin Christians fills Catholics with deep regret.''"<ref>. EWTN.</ref> In 2004, while ], ], was visiting the ], John Paul II asked, "How can we not share, at a distance of eight centuries, the pain and disgust."<ref>"". ]. June 29, 2004.</ref> This has been regarded as an apology to the Greek Orthodox Church for the terrible slaughter perpetrated by the warriors of the Fourth Crusade.<ref>Phillips. ''The Fourth Crusade'', p. xiii.</ref>
{{main|Sixth Crusade}}
] (left) meets ] (right), illumination from ]'s '']'' (] ms. Chigiano L VIII 296, 14th{{nbsp}}century).]]


The ] (1228–1229) was a military expedition to recapture the city of Jerusalem. It began seven years after the failure of the Fifth Crusade and involved very little actual fighting. The diplomatic maneuvering of ]<ref name=":25">Franz Kampers (1909). "]". In ''Catholic Encyclopedia''. '''6'''. New York: Robert Appleton Company.</ref> resulted in the Kingdom of Jerusalem regaining some control over Jerusalem for much of the ensuing fifteen years. The Sixth Crusade is also known as the Crusade of Frederick II.<ref name=":232">Van Cleve, Thomas C. (1977). " {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240113040112/http://images.library.wisc.edu/History/EFacs/HistCrus/0001/0002/reference/history.crustwo.i0026.pdf |date=2024-01-13 }}". In Setton, K. ''A History of the Crusades: Volume II''. pp. 377–448.</ref>
In April 2004, in a speech on the 800th anniversary of the city's capture, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I formally accepted the apology. "The spirit of reconciliation is stronger than hatred," he said during a liturgy attended by Roman Catholic Archbishop ] of Lyon, France. "We receive with gratitude and respect your cordial gesture for the tragic events of the Fourth Crusade. It is a fact that a crime was committed here in the city 800 years ago." Bartholomew said his acceptance came in the spirit of ]. "The spirit of reconciliation of the resurrection... incites us toward reconciliation of our churches."<ref></ref>


Of all the European sovereigns, only Frederick II, the Holy Roman Emperor, was in a position to regain Jerusalem. Frederick was, like many of the 13th-century rulers, a serial ''crucesignatus'',<ref>Markowski, Michael. "". ''Journal of Medieval History'' (1984), pp. 157–165.</ref> having taken the cross multiple times since 1215.<ref>Weiler, Björn K. (2006). "Crusade of Emperor Frederick II (1227–1229)". In ''The Crusades: An Encyclopedia''. pp. 313–315.</ref> After much wrangling, an onerous agreement between the emperor and Pope ] was signed on 25 July 1225 at San Germano. Frederick promised to depart on the Crusade by August 1227 and remain for two years. During this period, he was to maintain and support forces in Syria and deposit escrow funds at Rome in gold. These funds would be returned to the emperor once he arrived at Acre. If he did not arrive, the money would be employed for the needs of the Holy Land.{{sfn|Runciman|1954|pp=171–205|loc=The Emperor Frederick}} Frederick II would go on the Crusade as king of Jerusalem. He married John of Brienne's daughter ] by proxy in August 1225 and they were formally married on 9 November 1227. Frederick claimed the kingship of Jerusalem despite John having been given assurances that he would remain as king. Frederick took the crown in December 1225. Frederick's first royal decree was to grant new privileges on the Teutonic Knights, placing them on equal footing as the Templars and Hospitallers.{{sfn|Tyerman|2006|pp=739–780|loc=The Crusade of Frederick II, 1227–1229}}
===Trade===
The need to raise, transport and supply large armies led to a flourishing of ] between Europe and the Outremer. ] and ] flourished through profitable trading colonies in the crusader states, both in the ] and later in captured ] territory.<ref name=Contest152>Housley ''Contesting the Crusades'' pp. 152–154</ref>


After the Fifth Crusade, the Ayyubid sultan ] became involved in civil war in Syria and, having unsuccessfully tried negotiations with the West beginning in 1219, again tried this approach,{{sfn|Gibb|1969|pp=700–702|loc=The Ayyubids from 1221–1229}} offering return of much of the Holy Land in exchange for military support.{{sfn|Maalouf|2006|pp=226–227|loc=Fakhr ad-Din}} Becoming pope in 1227, ] was determined to proceed with the Crusade.<ref>Michael Ott (1909). "]". In ''Catholic Encyclopedia''. '''6'''. New York: Robert Appleton Company.</ref> The first contingents of Crusaders then sailed in August 1227, joining with forces of the kingdom and fortifying the coastal towns. The emperor was delayed while his ships were refitted. He sailed on 8 September 1227, but before they reached their first stop, Frederick was struck with the plague and disembarked to secure medical attention. Resolved to keep his oath, he sent his fleet on to Acre. He sent his emissaries to inform Gregory IX of the situation, but the pope did not care about Frederick's illness, just that he had not lived up to his agreement. Frederick was excommunicated on 29 September 1227, branded a wanton violator of his sacred oath taken many times.<ref name=":232" />
==Age of Crusade==


Frederick made his last effort to be reconciled with Gregory. It had no effect and Frederick sailed from ] in June 1228. After a stop at Cyprus, Frederick II arrived in Acre on 7 September 1228 and was received warmly by the military orders, despite his excommunication. Frederick's army was not large, mostly German, Sicilian and English.{{sfn|Tyerman|1996|pp=99–101|loc=The Crusade of 1227–1229}} Of the troops he had sent in 1227 had mostly returned home. He could neither afford nor mount a lengthening campaign in the Holy Land given the ongoing ] with Rome. The Sixth Crusade would be one of negotiation.{{sfn|Runciman|1954|pp=183–184|loc=Frederick at Acre (1228)}}
===Reconquista (718–1492)===
{{main|Reconquista}}
]


After resolving the internecine struggles in Syria, al-Kamil's position was stronger than it was a year before when he made his original offer to Frederick. For unknown reasons, the two sides came to an agreement. The resultant ] was concluded on 18 February 1229, with al-Kamil surrendering Jerusalem, with the exception of some Muslim holy sites, and agreeing to a ten-year truce.{{sfn|Richard|1999|pp=312–318|loc=The Sixth Crusade and the Treaty of Jaffa}} Frederick entered Jerusalem on 17 March 1229 and received the formal surrender of the city by al-Kamil's agent and the next day, crowned himself.{{sfn|Runciman|1954|pp=189–190|loc=Frederick at Jerusalem (1229)}} On 1 May 1229, Frederick departed from Acre and arrived in Sicily a month before the pope knew that he had left the Holy Land. Frederick obtained from the pope relief from his excommunication on 28 August 1230 at the ].{{sfn|Asbridge|2012|pp=562–571|loc=Frederick II's Crusade}}
Although the reconquest of the Iberian Peninsula from Muslims began in the 8th century and reached its turning point with the recapture of Toledo in 1085<ref name=Bull18>Bull "Origins" ''Oxford History of the Crusades'' pp.&nbsp;18–19</ref> and the subsequent ] in 1095<ref name=Barber341>Barber ''Two Cities'' pp.&nbsp;341–345</ref> when Urban II tied the ongoing wars in Iberia to his preaching of the First Crusade and the crusading effort, it wasn't until the papal encyclical in 1123 by ] that these wars attained the status of crusades.<ref name=Lock205>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' pp. 205–209</ref> After this, the papacy declared Iberian crusades in 1147, 1193, 1197, 1210, 1212, 1221 and 1229. Crusading privileges were also given to those people who were helping the military orders&nbsp;– both the traditional Templars and Hospitallers as well as the specifically Iberian orders that were founded and eventually merged into two main orders&nbsp;– that of the ] and the ]. From 1212 to 1265, the Christian kingdoms of Iberia drove Muslim rule into the far south of the Iberian Peninsula, confined to the small ]. In 1492, this remnant was conquered and Muslims and Jews were expelled from the peninsula.<ref name=Lock211>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' pp. 211–212</ref>


The results of the Sixth Crusade were not universally acclaimed. Two letters from the Christian side tell differing stories,{{sfn|Munro|1902|pp=24–30|loc=Letters of the Sixth Crusade}} with Frederick touting the great success of the endeavor and the Latin patriarch painting a darker picture of the emperor and his accomplishments. On the Muslim side, al-Kamil himself was pleased with the accord, but others regarded the treaty as a disastrous event.{{sfn|Christie|2014|loc=Document 17: Two sources on the Handover of Jerusalem to Frederick II}} In the end, the Sixth Crusade successfully returned Jerusalem to Christian rule and had set a precedent, in having achieved success on crusade without papal involvement.
===People's Crusade (1096)===
{{Main|People's Crusade}}
Urban inspired the preaching of ] who eventually led perhaps as many as 20,000 people, mostly peasants, towards the Holy Land just after Easter 1096.<ref name=Hindley20>Hindley ''Crusades'' pp.&nbsp;20–21</ref> When they reached the Byzantine Empire, Alexios urged them to wait for the western nobles, but the "army" insisted on proceeding and was ambushed outside Nicaea by the Turks, with only about 3,000 people escaping the ambush.<ref name=Hindley23>Hindley ''Crusades'' p. 23</ref> This crusade is considered a part of the First Crusade.


===The Crusades of 1239–1241===
===First Crusade (1095–1099) and immediate aftermath===
{{main|Barons' Crusade}}
{{Main|First Crusade| Siege of Jerusalem (1099)|Crusade of 1101|Norwegian Crusade|Bohemond I of Antioch#Wars between Antioch and the Byzantine Empire}} {{see also| Persecution of Jews in the First Crusade}}


The Crusades of 1239–1241, also known as the ], were a series of crusades to the Holy Land that, in territorial terms, were the most successful since the First Crusade.<ref>Burgturf, Jochen. "Crusade of 1239–1241". ''The Crusades: An Encyclopedia''. pp. 309–311.</ref> The major expeditions were led separately by ] and ].<ref>] (1977). " {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230601083652/http://images.library.wisc.edu/History/EFacs/HistCrus/0001/0002/reference/history.crustwo.i0027.pdf |date=2023-06-01 }}.". In Setton, K., ''A History of the Crusades: Volume II''. pp. 463–486.</ref> These crusades are sometimes discussed along with that of ] to Constantinople.<ref>Hendrickx, Benjamin. "Baldwin II of Constantinople". ''The Crusades: An Encyclopedia''. pp. 133–135.</ref>
]


], 13th century]]
The official crusader armies set off from France and Italy at different times in August and September 1096, with Hugh of Vermandois departing first, and the bulk of the army dividing into four parts travelling separately to Constantinople.<ref name=Hindley27>Hindley ''Crusades'' pp.&nbsp;27–30</ref><ref name=Lock20>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' pp. 20–21</ref> In all, the western forces may have totaled as many as 100,000 persons, counting both combatants and non-combatants.<ref name=Hindley31>Hindley ''Crusades'' pp.&nbsp;30–31</ref> The armies journeyed eastward by land toward Constantinople, where they received a wary welcome from the Byzantine Emperor.<ref name=GodsWar106>Tyerman ''God's War'' pp. 106–110</ref> Pledging to restore lost territories to the empire,<ref name=Ashbridge50>Ashbridge ''Crusades'' pp. 50–52</ref> the main army, mostly French and Norman knights under baronial leadership, marched south through Anatolia.<ref name=Ashbridge46>Ashbridge ''Crusades'' p. 46</ref><ref name=RileySmith32>Riley-Smith ''Crusades'' pp. 32–36</ref> The leaders of the First Crusade included ], ], ], ], ], Raymond of Toulouse, ], and ], and ]. The King of France and ], were both in conflict with the Papacy and did not take part.<ref name=Hindley25>Hindley ''Crusades'' pp.&nbsp;25–26</ref> When the French crusaders crossed into Germany in spring 1096, units of crusaders ] in the cities of Speyer, Worms, Mainz and Cologne, despite the efforts by Catholic bishops to protect the Jews. Major leaders included ] and ].<ref>Robert Chazan, ''In the Year 1096: The First Crusade and the Jews'' (1996) </ref> Chazan says "the range of anti-Jewish activity was broad, extending from limited, spontaneous violence to full-scale military attacks on the Jewish communities of Mainz and Cologne."<ref>{{cite book|author=Robert Chazan|title=European Jewry and the First Crusade|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=sndVK_foqI4C&pg=PA60|year=1996|publisher=U. of California Press|page=60}}</ref> This was the first major outbreak of ] in Christian Europe and was cited by Zionists in the 19th century as indicating the need for a state of Israel.<ref>{{cite book|author=Corliss K. Slack|title=Historical Dictionary of the Crusades|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=uX8e2zU_TG0C&pg=PA108|year=2013|publisher=Scarecrow Press|pages=108–9}}</ref>


In 1229, ] and the Ayyubid sultan ], had agreed to a ten-year truce. Nevertheless, ], who had condemned this truce from the beginning, issued the papal bull '']'' in 1234 calling for a new crusade once the truce expired. A number of English and French nobles took the cross, but the crusade's departure was delayed because Frederick, whose lands the crusaders had planned to cross, opposed any crusading activity before the expiration of this truce. Frederick was again excommunicated in 1239, causing most crusaders to avoid his territories on their way to the Holy Land.{{sfn|Runciman|1954|pp=205–220|loc=Legalized Anarchy}}
The crusader armies initially fought the Turks at the lengthy ] that began in October 1097 and lasted until June 1098. Once inside the city the crusaders massacred the Muslim inhabitants and pillaged the city.<ref name=Nicholle56>Nicholle ''First Crusade'' p. 56</ref> However, a large Muslim relief army under ] immediately besieged the victorious crusaders within Antioch. Bohemond of Taranto led a successful rally of the crusader army and defeated Kerbogha's army on 28 June.<ref name=Tyerman143>Tyerman ''God's War'' pp.&nbsp;143–146</ref> Bohemond and his men retained control of Antioch,<ref name=Tyerman146/> in spite of his pledge to the Byzantine emperor.<ref name=Mayer60>Mayer ''Crusades'' pp.&nbsp;60–61</ref> Most of the surviving crusader army marched south, moving from town to town along the coast, finally reaching the walls of Jerusalem on 7 June 1099 with only a fraction of their original forces.<ref name=Tyerman146>Tyerman ''God's War'' pp. 146–153</ref>


The French expedition was led by ] and ], joined by ] and ].<ref name=":252">]. "". ''Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies'', Vol. 50, No. 1 (1987). pp. 32–60.</ref> On 1 September 1239, Theobald arrived in Acre, and was soon drawn into the ], which had been raging since the death of al-Kamil in 1238.{{sfn|Gibb|1969|pp=703–709|loc=The Ayyubids from 1229–1244}} At the end of September, al-Kamil's brother ] seized Damascus from his nephew, ], and recognised ] as sultan of Egypt. Theobald decided to fortify ] to protect the southern border of the kingdom and to move against Damascus later. While the Crusaders were marching from Acre to Jaffa, Egyptian troops moved to secure the border in what became the ].<ref name=":233">Burgturf, Jochen. "Gaza, Battle of (1239)". ''The Crusades: An Encyclopedia''. pp. 498–499.</ref> Contrary to Theobald's instructions and the advice of the military orders, a group decided to move against the enemy without further delay, but they were surprised by the Muslims who inflicted a devastating defeat on the Franks. The masters of the military orders then convinced Theobald to retreat to Acre rather than pursue the Egyptians and their Frankish prisoners. A month after the battle at Gaza, ], emir of ], seized Jerusalem, virtually unguarded. The internal strife among the Ayyubids allowed Theobald to negotiate the return of Jerusalem. In September 1240, Theobald departed for Europe, while Hugh of Burgundy remained to help fortify Ascalon.{{sfn|Tyerman|2006|pp=755–780|loc=The Crusades of 1239–1241}}
Jews and Muslims fought together to defend Jerusalem against the invading Franks. On 15 July 1099 the crusaders entered the city. They proceeded to massacre the remaining Jewish and Muslim civilians and pillaged or destroyed mosques and the city itself.<ref name=GodsWar156>Tyerman ''God's War'' pp. 156–158</ref> As a result of the First Crusade, four main ] were created: the ], the ], the ], and the ].<ref name=RileySmith50>Riley-Smith ''Crusades'' pp. 50–51</ref>


On 8 October 1240, the English expedition arrived, led by Richard of Cornwall.{{sfn|Tyerman|1996|pp=101–107|loc=The Crusade of Richard of Cornwall}} The force marched to Jaffa, where they completed the negotiations for a truce with Ayyubid leaders begun by Theobald just a few months prior. Richard consented, the new agreement was ratified by Ayyub by 8 February 1241, and prisoners from both sides were released on 13 April. Meanwhile, Richard's forces helped to work on Ascalon's fortifications, which were completed by mid-March 1241. Richard entrusted the new fortress to an imperial representative, and departed for England on 3 May 1241.{{sfn|Richard|1999|pp=319–324|loc=The Barons' Crusade}}
{{Quote box
| quote =...&nbsp; Wonderful sights were to be seen. Some of our men (and this was more merciful) cut off the heads of their enemies; others shot them with arrows, so that they fell from the towers; others tortured them longer by casting them into the flames. Piles of heads, hands and feet were to be seen in the streets of the city. It was necessary to pick one's way over the bodies of men and horses. But these were small matters compared to what happened at the Temple of Solomon, a place where religious services are normally chanted ... in the temple and the porch of Solomon, men rode in blood up to their knees and bridle reins. Indeed it was a just and splendid judgement of God that this place should be filled with the blood of unbelievers since it had suffered so long from their blasphemies
| source =] in Historia Francorum qui ceperunt Iherusalem <ref name="Sinclair">{{Harvnb|Sinclair|1995|pp=55–56}}</ref>
| width =20%
| align =right}}


In July 1239, Baldwin of Courtenay, the young heir to the Latin Empire, travelled to Constantinople with a small army. In the winter of 1239, Baldwin finally returned to Constantinople, where he was crowned emperor around Easter of 1240, after which he launched his crusade. Baldwin then besieged and captured ], a Nicaean stronghold seventy-five miles west of Constantinople.<ref>] (1911). "]" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). ''Encyclopædia Britannica''. '''3.''' (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 867.</ref>
On a popular level, the preaching of the First Crusade unleashed a wave of impassioned, personally felt pious Christian fury that was expressed in the ] that accompanied and preceded the movement of the crusaders through Europe,<ref name=Smith23>Riley-Smith ''Crusades'' pp.&nbsp;23–24</ref> as well as the violent treatment of the "]" Orthodox Christians of the east.<ref name=GodsWar192>Tyerman ''God's War'' pp. 192–194</ref>


Although the Barons' Crusade returned the kingdom to its largest size since 1187, the gains would be dramatically reversed a few years later. On 15 July 1244, the city was reduced to ruins during the ] and its Christians massacred by the ]. A few months later, the ] permanently crippled Christian military power in the Holy Land. The sack of the city and the massacre which accompanied it encouraged ] to organise the ].{{sfn|Asbridge|2012|pp=574–576|loc=The Bane of Palestine}}
Following this crusade was a second, less successful wave of crusaders, known as the ], in which Turks led by ] defeated the crusaders in three separate battles in a response to the First Crusade.<ref name=Housley42>Housley ''Contesting the Crusades'' p. 42</ref> ] was the first European king to visit the crusading states, as well as the first European king to take part in a crusading campaign, although his expedition was as much pilgrimage as crusade. His fleet helped at the ]. Also in 1107, Bohemond I of Antioch attacked the Byzantines at Avlona and Dyrrachium, in what is occasionally called ], which ended in September 1108 with a defeat for Bohemond and his retiring to Italy.


===The Seventh Crusade===
Further efforts in the 1120s included a crusade preached by ] around 1120, which became the ] of 1122–1124;<ref name=Lock144>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' pp. 144–145</ref> a pilgrimage of Count ] in 1120; an effort by ] in 1124, of which few details are known; and the ] of 1129 by Fulk V, which resulted in the recognition of the ] by ] in January 1129. Some historians have seen ]'s grant in 1135 of the same crusading indulgences to those who opposed papal enemies as the first of the politically motivated crusades against papal opponents, but other historians do not agree.<ref name=Lock146>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' pp. 146–147</ref>
{{Main|Seventh Crusade}}
]


The ] (1248–1254) was the first of the two Crusades led by ]. Also known as the Crusade of Louis IX to the Holy Land, its objective was to reclaim the Holy Land by attacking Egypt, the main seat of Muslim power in the Middle East, then under ], son of al-Kamil. The Crusade was conducted in response to setbacks in the Kingdom of Jerusalem, beginning with the loss of the Holy City in 1244, and was preached by ] in conjunction with a crusade against emperor ], the ] and Mongol incursions.<ref name=":0">Strayer, Joseph R. (1977). " {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211207190824/https://images.library.wisc.edu/History/EFacs/HistCrus/0001/0002/reference/history.crustwo.i0028.pdf |date=2021-12-07 }}". In Wolff, Robert L. and Hazard, H. W. (eds.). ''A History of the Crusades: Volume II, The Later Crusades 1187–1311''. Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 487–521.</ref>
The crusader states were initially secure, but ], who was appointed governor of ] in 1127, captured Aleppo in 1128 and Edessa in 1144.<ref name=RileySmith104>Riley-Smith ''Crusades'' pp. 104–105</ref> These defeats led ] to call for another crusade on 1 March 1145.<ref name=Lock144/>


At the end of 1244, Louis was stricken with a severe malarial infection and he vowed that if he recovered he would set out for a Crusade. His life was spared, and as soon as his health permitted him, he took the cross and immediately began preparations.<ref name=":7">James Thomson Shotwell (1911). "]". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). ''Encyclopædia Britannica''. '''17.''' (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 37–38.</ref> The next year, the pope presided over ], directing a new Crusade under the command of Louis. With Rome under siege by Frederick, the pope also issued his '']'', formally renewing the sentence of excommunication on the emperor, and declared him deposed from the imperial throne and that of Naples.<ref name=":42">Michael Ott (1910). "]". In ''Catholic Encyclopedia''. '''8.''' New York.</ref>
===Second Crusade (1147–1149)===
{{Main|Second Crusade}}


The recruiting effort under cardinal ] was difficult, and the Crusade finally began on 12 August 1248 when Louis IX left Paris under the insignia of a pilgrim, the '']''.<ref name=":6">Goldsmith, Linda (2006). ''Crusade of Louis IX to the East (1248–1254)''. In The Crusades – An Encyclopedia. pp. 321–324.</ref> With him were queen ] and two of Louis' brothers, ] and ]. Their youngest brother ] departed the next year. They were followed by ], ], ], royal companion and chronicler ], and an English detachment under ], grandson of ].{{sfn|Runciman|1954|pp=256–257|loc=King Louis sails from Agues-Mortes (1248}}
The new crusade was called for by various preachers, most notably by ].<ref name=Hindley71>Hindley ''Crusades'' pp. 71–74</ref> French and South German armies, under the Kings ] and ] respectively, marched to Jerusalem in 1147 but failed to win any major victories, launching a failed pre-emptive siege of Damascus.<ref name=Hindley77>Hindley ''Crusades'' pp. 77–85</ref> 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 ], ], and ] from the Muslims in 1147.<ref name=Hindley75>Hindley ''Crusades'' pp. 75–77</ref> A detachment from this group of crusaders helped Count ] conquer the city of ] the following year.<ref name=Villegas>Villegas-Aristizábal "Anglo-Norman involvement" ''Crusades''</ref>{{page needed|date=April 2013}} In the Holy Land by 1150, both the kings of France and Germany had returned to their countries without any result. 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.<ref name=Hindley77/> A followup to this crusade was the pilgrimage of ], ], in 1172 that is sometimes labeled a crusade.<ref name=Lock151>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 151</ref>


The first stop was Cyprus, arriving in September 1248 where they experienced a long wait for the forces to assemble. Many of the men were lost ''en route'' or to disease.{{sfn|Asbridge|2012|pp=580–584|loc=The preparation for war}} The Franks were soon met by those from Acre including the masters of the Orders ] and ]. The two eldest sons of John of Brienne, ] and ], would also join as would ], nephew to the ].{{sfn|Riley-Smith|1973|pp=21–39|loc=Lords, Lordships and Vavasours}} ] also arrived with ships and Frankish soldiers from the ]. It was agreed that Egypt was the objective and many remembered how the sultan's father had been willing to exchange Jerusalem itself for Damietta in the Fifth Crusade. Louis was not willing to negotiate with the infidel Muslims, but he did unsuccessfully seek a ], reflecting what the pope had sought in 1245.{{sfn|Runciman|1954|p=259–260|loc=Negotiations with the Mongols}}
===Wendish (1147–1162)===
{{Main|Wendish Crusade}}
Contemporaneous with the Second Crusade, ] and ] fought against ] in the ] or ]. The Wends defeated the Danes and the Saxons did not contribute much to the crusade.<ref name=Lock48>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 48</ref> The Wends did acknowledge the overlordship of the Saxon ruler, ]. Further crusading actions continued although no papal bulls were issued calling new crusades.<ref name=Lock213>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' pp. 213–214</ref> Efforts to conquer the Wends began again in 1160 under Henry the Lion,<ref name=Lock55>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 55</ref> continuing until 1162, when the Wends were defeated at the ].<ref name=Lock56>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 56</ref>


As-Salih Ayyub was conducting a campaign in Damascus when the Franks invaded as he had expected the Crusaders to land in Syria. Hurrying his forces back to Cairo, he turned to his vizier ] to command the army that fortified ] in anticipation of the invasion. On 5 June 1249 the Crusader fleet began the landing and subsequent ]. After a short battle, the Egyptian commander decided to evacuate the city.{{sfn|Runciman|1954|pp=262–263|loc=Louis at Damietta (1249)}} Remarkably, Damietta had been seized with only one Crusader casualty.{{sfn|Barber|1994|pp=148–151|loc=The last years of the Templars in Palestine and Syria}} The city became a Frankish city and Louis waited until the Nile floods abated before advancing, remembering the lessons of the Fifth Crusade. The loss of Damietta was a shock to the Muslim world, and as-Salih Ayyub offered to trade Damietta for Jerusalem as his father had thirty years before. The offer was rejected. By the end of October 1249 the Nile had receded and reinforcements had arrived. It was time to advance, and the Frankish army set out towards ].{{sfn|Runciman|1954|pp=264–265|loc=The Crusaders Advance towards Mansourah}}
===Third Crusade (1187–1192)===
{{Main|Third Crusade}}
] arriving in the Holy Land]]


The sultan died in November 1249, his widow ] concealing the news of her husband's death. She forged a document which appointed his son ], then in Syria, as heir and Fakhr ad-Din as viceroy.{{sfn|Gibb|1969|p=712|loc=as-Salih Ayyub}} But the Crusade continued, and by December 1249, Louis was encamped on the river banks opposite to Mansurah.{{sfn|Barber|1994|pp=148–151|loc=The last years of the Templars in Palestine and Syria}} For six weeks, the armies of the West and Egypt faced each other on opposite sides of the canal, leading to the ] that would end on 11 February 1250 with an Egyptian defeat. Louis had his victory, but a cost of the loss of much of his force and their commanders. Among the survivors were the Templar master Guillaume de Sonnac, losing an eye, ], constable of France, ], and the duke of Brittany, Peter Maulcerc. Counted with the dead were the king's brother ], ] and most of his English followers, ], and ]. But the victory would be short-lived.<ref>Nicolle, David (2006). ''Mansurah''. In The Crusades – An Encyclopedia. pp. 794–795.</ref> On 11 February 1250, the Egyptians attacked again. Templar master Guillaume de Sonnac and acting Hospitaller master Jean de Ronay were killed. ], guarding the camp, was encircled and was rescued by the camp followers. At nightfall, the Muslims gave up the assault.{{sfn|Tyerman|2006|pp=793_802|loc=Defeat, February–March 1250}}
The Muslims had long fought among themselves, but they were finally united by ], who created a single powerful state.<ref name=Holt235>Holt "Saladin and His Admirers" ''Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies'' pp.&nbsp;235–239</ref> Following his victory at the ] he easily overwhelmed the disunited crusaders in 1187 and retook Jerusalem on 29 September 1187. Terms were arranged and the city surrendered, with Saladin entering the city on 2 October 1187.<ref name=Ashbridge343>Ashbridge ''Crusades'' pp. 343–357</ref>
])]]


On 28 February 1250, Turanshah arrived from Damascus and began an Egyptian offensive, intercepting the boats that brought food from Damietta. The Franks were quickly beset by famine and disease.{{sfn|Runciman|1954|pp=268–269|loc=Turanshah takes Command of the Moslems (1250)}} The ] fought on 6 April 1250 would be the decisive defeat of Louis' army. Louis knew that the army must be extricated to Damietta and they departed on the morning of 5 April, with the king in the rear and the Egyptians in pursuit. The next day, the Muslims surrounded the army and attacked in full force. On 6 April, Louis' surrender was negotiated directly with the sultan by ]. The king and his entourage were taken in chains to Mansurah and the whole of the army was rounded up and led into captivity.{{sfn|Tyerman|2006|pp=793_802|loc=Defeat, February–March 1250}}
Saladin's victories shocked Europe. On hearing news of the ], ] died of a heart attack on 19 October 1187.<ref name=Ashbridge367>Ashbridge ''Crusades'' p. 367</ref> On 29 October ] issued a ], '']'', proposing the ]. To reverse the loss of Jerusalem, Emperor ] (r. 1152–1190) of Germany, King ] (r. 1180–1223), and King ] (r. 1189–1199) of England all organized forces. Frederick died en route, and few of his men reached the Holy Land. The other two armies arrived but were beset by political quarrels. Philip returned to France, leaving most of his forces behind. Richard captured the island of Cyprus from the Byzantines in 1191. He then recaptured the city of ] after ]. The crusader army headed south along the Mediterranean coast, defeated the Muslims near ], recaptured the port city of ], and was in sight of Jerusalem, but supply problems forced them to end the crusade without taking Jerusalem.<ref name=Lock151>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' pp. 151–154</ref> Richard left the following year after negotiating a treaty with Saladin. The terms allowed trade for merchants and unarmed Christian pilgrims to make pilgrimages to Jerusalem, while it remained under Muslim control.<ref name=Ashbridge512>Ashbridge ''Crusades'' pp. 512–513</ref>


The Egyptians were unprepared for the large number of prisoners taken, comprising most of Louis' force. The infirm were executed immediately and several hundred were decapitated daily. Louis and his commanders were moved to Mansurah, and negotiations for their release commenced. The terms agreed to were harsh. Louis was to ransom himself by the surrender of Damietta and his army by the payment of a million ]s (later reduced to 800,000).{{sfn|Runciman|1954|pp=270–271|loc=Louis in Prison (1250)}} Latin patriarch ] went under safe-conduct to complete the arrangements for the ransom. Arriving in Cairo, he found Turanshah dead, murdered in a coup instigated by his stepmother Shajar al-Durr. On 6 May, ] handed Damietta over to the Moslem vanguard. Many wounded soldiers had been left behind at Damietta, and contrary to their promise, the Muslims massacred them all. In 1251, the ], a popular crusade formed with the objective to free Louis, engulfed France.<ref>{{Cite CE1913|wstitle=Crusade of the Pastoureaux}}</ref> After his release, Louis went to Acre where he remained until 1254. This is regarded as the end of the Seventh Crusade.<ref name=":0" />
===Northern crusades (1193–1290)===
{{Main|Northern Crusades|Livonian Crusade|Prussian Crusade}}
]]]


===The final crusades===
] called for a crusade against ] in ] in 1193. Bishop ] arrived with a large contingent of crusaders in 1198, but he was killed in battle and his forces were defeated. To avenge Berthold, ] issued a bull declaring a ] against the ], who were mostly still pagan.<ref name=Lock82>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 82</ref> ], consecrated as bishop in 1199, arrived the following year with a large force and established Riga as the seat of his ] in 1201. In 1202 he formed the ] to aid in the conversion of the pagans to Christianity and, more importantly, to protect German trade and secure German control over commerce.<ref name=Lock84>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 84</ref> The Livonians were conquered and converted between 1202 and 1209.<ref name=Lock84/>
{{main|Eighth Crusade|Lord Edward's Crusade}}
After the defeat of the Crusaders in Egypt, Louis remained in Syria until 1254 to consolidate the crusader states.<ref>{{harvnb|Asbridge|2012|pp=606–608}}</ref> A brutal power struggle developed in Egypt between various ] leaders and the remaining weak Ayyubid rulers. The threat presented by an invasion by the Mongols led to one of the competing Mamluk leaders, ], seizing the sultanate in 1259 and uniting with another faction led by ] to defeat the Mongols at ]. The Mamluks then quickly gained control of Damascus and Aleppo before Qutuz was assassinated and Baibers assumed control.<ref>{{harvnb|Asbridge|2012|pp=616–621}}</ref>


Between 1265 and 1271, Baibars drove the Franks to a few small coastal outposts.<ref>{{Harvnb|Tyerman|2006|pp=816–817}}</ref> Baibars had three key objectives: to prevent an alliance between the Latins and the Mongols, to cause dissension among the Mongols (particularly between the ] and the Persian ]), and to maintain access to a supply of slave recruits from the Russian steppes. He supported ] failed resistance to the attack of Charles and the papacy. Dissension in the crusader states led to conflicts such as the ]. Venice drove the Genoese from Acre to Tyre where they continued to trade with Egypt. Indeed, Baibars negotiated free passage for the Genoese with ], ], the newly restored ruler of Constantinople.<ref>{{harvnb|Asbridge|2012|pp=628–630}}</ref> In 1270 Charles turned his brother King Louis{{nbsp}}IX's crusade, known as the ], to his own advantage by persuading him to attack ]. The crusader army was devastated by disease, and Louis himself died at Tunis on 25{{nbsp}}August. The fleet returned to France. ], the future king of England, and a small retinue arrived too late for the conflict but continued to the Holy Land in what is known as ].<ref>{{Harvnb|Summerson|2005|}}</ref> Edward survived an assassination attempt, negotiated a ten-year truce, and then returned to manage his affairs in England. This ended the last significant crusading effort in the eastern Mediterranean.<ref>{{Harvnb|Asbridge|2012|pp=643–644}}</ref>
] called a crusade against the Prussians in 1217.<ref name=Lock92>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 92</ref> ] gave ] to the Teutonic Knights in 1226 to serve as a base for the Prussian crusade.<ref name=Lock96>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 96</ref> In 1236 the Livonian Sword Brothers were defeated by the Lithuanians at Saule, and in 1237 ] merged the remaining Sword Brothers into the Teutonic Knights.<ref name=Lock103>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 103</ref> By 1249, the Teutonic Knights had completed their conquest of the Prussians, which they ruled as a fief of the German emperor. The Knights then moved on to conquer and convert the pagan Lithuanians, a process that lasted into the 1380s.<ref name=Lock221>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' pp. 221–222</ref>


===Decline and fall of the Crusader States===
The Teutonic Order attempted but failed to conquer ] Russia (particularly the Republics of ] and ]), an enterprise endorsed by Pope Gregory IX, as part of the Northern Crusades. In 1240 the Novgorod army defeated the Swedes in the ],<ref name=Lock104>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 104</ref> and in 1242 they defeated the Livonian knights in the ].<ref name=Lock221/>
] depicted in ''] défend ] en 1291'', by ] at ] in ]]]
{{main|Fall of Outremer}}
The years 1272–1302 include numerous conflicts throughout the Levant as well as the Mediterranean and Western European regions, and many crusades were proposed to free the Holy Land from ] control. These include ones of ], ] and ], none of which came to fruition. The major players fighting the Muslims included the kings of England and France, the kingdoms of ] and ], the three ] and ]. The end of Western European presence in the Holy Land was sealed with the ] and their subsequent defeat at the ] in 1291. The Christian forces managed to survive until the final ] in 1302.{{sfn|Runciman|1954|pp=387–426|loc=The Fall of Acre}}


The Holy Land would no longer be the focus of the West even though various crusades were proposed in the early years of the fourteenth century. The Knights Hospitaller would ] from Byzantium, making it the center of their activity for a hundred years. The Knights Templar, the elite fighting force in the kingdom, was disbanded. The Mongols converted to Islam, but ] as a fighting force. The Mamluk sultanate would continue for another century. The Crusades to liberate Jerusalem and the Holy Land were over.{{sfn|Asbridge|2012|pp=638–656|loc=The Holy Land Reclaimed}}
===German Crusade (1195–1198)===
{{Main|German Crusade}}


==Other crusades==
Emperor ] began preparations to launch a ] in 1195. His health did not allow him to lead the forces in person, so leadership devolved to ], the ]. The forces landed at Acre in September 1197 and captured the cities of ] and ]. Henry died soon thereafter, and most of the crusaders returned to Germany in 1198.<ref name=Lock155/>
{{see also|Chronologies of the Crusades}}
] in Europe {{circa|1300}}. Shaded area is sovereign territory.]]


The military expeditions undertaken by European Christians in the 11th, 12th, and 13th{{nbsp}}centuries to recover the Holy Land from Muslims provided a template for warfare in other areas that also interested the Latin Church. These included the 12th and 13th{{nbsp}}century ] Muslim ] by Spanish Christian kingdoms; 12th to 15th{{nbsp}}century German ] expansion into the pagan ]; the suppression of non-conformity, particularly in ] during what has become called the ] and for the Papacy's temporal advantage in Italy and Germany that are now known as political crusades. In the 13th and 14th centuries there were also unsanctioned, but related popular uprisings to recover Jerusalem known variously as Shepherds' or Children's crusades.{{sfn|Housley|1992}}
===Fourth Crusade (1202–1204)===
{{Main|Fourth Crusade|Latin Empire|Frankokratia|Siege of Constantinople (1203)|Siege of Constantinople (1204)| Battle of Adrianople (1205)|Siege of Zara }}


Urban II equated the crusades for Jerusalem with the ongoing Catholic invasion of the ] and crusades were preached in 1114 and 1118, but it was ] who proposed dual fronts in Spain and the ] in 1122. In the spring of 1147, Eugene authorised the expansion of his mission into the Iberian peninsula, equating these campaigns against the ] with the rest of the Second Crusade. The successful ], from 1 July to 25 October 1147, was followed by the six-month ], ending on 30 December 1148 with a defeat for the Moors.<ref>Jaspert, Nikolas (2006). "Tortosa (Spain)". In ''The Crusades: An Encyclopedia''. p. 1186.</ref> In the north, some Germans were reluctant to fight in the Holy Land while the pagan ] were a more immediate problem. The resulting ] of 1147 was partially successful but failed to convert the pagans to Christianity.<ref>Lind, John H. (2006). " Wendish Crusade (1147)". In ''The Crusades: An Encyclopedia''. pp. 1265–1268.</ref> By the time of the Second Crusade the three Spanish kingdoms were powerful enough to conquer Islamic territory{{snd}}], ], and ].{{sfn|Jotischky|2004|p=188}} In 1212 the Spanish were victorious at the ] with the support of foreign fighters responding to the preaching of Innocent III. Many of these deserted because of the Spanish tolerance of the defeated Muslims, for whom the Reconquista was a war of domination rather than extermination.{{sfn|Jotischky|2004|p=191}} In contrast the Christians formerly living under Muslim rule called ] had the ] relentlessly imposed on them and were absorbed into mainstream Catholicism.<ref name="Jotischky 2004 131">{{Harvnb|Jotischky|2004|p=131}}</ref> Al-Andalus, Islamic Spain, was completely suppressed in 1492 when the ] surrendered.{{sfn|Lock|2006|pp=212–213}}
The Fourth Crusade never reached the Holy Land. Instead, it became a vehicle for the political ambitions of Doge ] and the German King ] who was married to Irene of Byzantium. Dandolo saw an opportunity to expand Venice's possessions in the near east, while Philip saw the crusade as a chance to restore his exiled nephew, ], to the throne of Byzantium.<ref name="Davies1997359">{{Harvnb|Davies|1997|pp=359–360}}</ref> ] initiated recruitment for the crusade in 1200 with preaching taking place in France, England, and Germany, although the bulk of the efforts were in France.<ref name=GodsWar502>Tyerman ''God's War'' pp. 502–508</ref>


In 1147, ] extended Calixtus's idea by authorising a crusade on the German north-eastern frontier against the pagan ] from what was primarily economic conflict.{{sfn|Riley-Smith|2001|p=2}}{{sfn|Jotischky|2004|pp=199–205}} From the early 13th{{nbsp}}century, there was significant involvement of military orders, such as the ] and the ]. The Teutonic Knights diverted efforts from the Holy Land, absorbed these orders and established the ].{{sfn|Jotischky|2004|pp=202–203}}{{sfn|Tyerman|2019|pp=315–327}} This evolved the ] and ] in 1525 and 1562, respectively.{{sfn|Tyerman|2019|pp=328–333}}
The crusaders contracted with the ] for a fleet and provisions to transport them to the Holy Land, but they lacked the funds to pay when too few knights arrived in Venice. They agreed to divert the crusade to Constantinople and share what could be looted as payment. As collateral the crusaders seized the Christian city of ] on 24 November 1202. Innocent was appalled and excommunicated the crusaders.<ref name=Lock158>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' pp. 158–159</ref> The crusaders met with limited resistance in their initial siege of Constantinople, sailing down the Dardanelles and breaching the sea walls. However, Alexios was strangled after a palace coup, robbing them of their success, and they had to repeat the siege in April 1204. This time the city was sacked, churches pillaged, and large numbers of the citizens butchered. The crusaders took their rewards, dividing the Empire into Latin fiefs and Venetian colonies. In the Venetian period, there was particular attention to improving defences of La Cava and Nicosia.<ref>{{cite book|last=Riley-Smith|first=Johnathan|title=The Oxford Illustrated History of the Crusades|date=1995|publisher=Oxford Press|location=Oxford|page=181}}</ref>


] excommunicating, and the crusaders massacring, Cathars (BL Royal 16 G VI, fol. 374v, 14th{{nbsp}}century)]]
In April 1205, the crusaders were largely annihilated by Bulgars and remaining Greeks at ], where ] captured and imprisoned the new Latin emperor ].<ref name=Lock159>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' pp. 159–161</ref><ref name=GodsWar554>Tyerman ''God's War'' pp. 554–561</ref><ref>Dennis P. Hupchick, ''The Balkans:From Constantinople to Communism'', (Macmillan, 2002), 71.</ref> While deploring the means, the papacy initially supported this apparent forced reunion between the Eastern and Western churches.<ref name=Ashbridge531>Ashbridge ''Crusades'' pp. 531–532</ref> The Fourth Crusade effectively left two Roman Empires in the East: a Latin "Empire of the Straits", existing until 1261, and a Byzantine rump ruled from Nicea, which later regained control in the absence of the Venetian fleet. Venice was the sole beneficiary in the long run.<ref name="Davies1997360">{{Harvnb|Davies|1997|p=360}}</ref>
By the beginning of the 13th{{nbsp}}century papal reticence in applying crusades against the papacy's political opponents and those considered heretics had abated. Innocent III proclaimed ] against Catharism that failed to suppress the heresy itself but ruined the culture of the ].{{sfn|Riley-Smith|2001|pp=42–43}} This set a precedent that was followed in 1212 with pressure exerted on the city of ] for tolerating Catharism,{{sfn|Jotischky|2004|p=193}} in 1234 ] the ] peasants of north-western Germany, in 1234 and 1241 Hungarian crusades against ].{{sfn|Riley-Smith|2001|pp=42–43}} The historian ] notes the connection between ] and anti-papalism in Italy.{{sfn|Housley|1982}} ] was offered to anti-heretical groups such as the ] and the ].{{sfn|Jotischky|2004|pp=193–196}} Innocent III declared the first political crusade against Frederick II's regent, ], and when Frederick later threatened Rome in 1240, Gregory IX used crusading terminology to raise support against him. On Frederick II's death the focus moved to Sicily. In 1263, ] offered crusading indulgences to Charles of Anjou in return for Sicily's conquest. However, these wars had no clear objectives or limitations, making them unsuitable for crusading.{{sfn|Jotischky|2004|pp=195–198}} The ] of a French pope, ], brought the power of the papacy behind Charles. Charles's preparations for a crusade against Constantinople were foiled by the Byzantine Emperor ], who instigated an uprising called the ]. Instead, ] was proclaimed king of Sicily, despite his excommunication and an unsuccessful ].{{sfn|Jotischky|2004|p=198}} Political crusading continued against Venice over ]; ] when he ] for his imperial coronation; and the ] of mercenaries.{{sfn|Tyerman|2019|pp=353–354}}


The Latin states established were a fragile patchwork of petty realms threatened by Byzantine successor states{{snd}}the ], the ] and the ]. ] fell to Epirus in 1224, and Constantinople to Nicaea in 1261. Achaea and Athens survived under the ] after the ].{{sfn|Lock|2006|pp=125, 133, 337, 436–437}} The Venetians endured a long-standing conflict with the Ottoman Empire until the final possessions were lost in the ] in the 18th{{nbsp}}century. This period of ] is known as the '']'' or ''Latinokratia'' ("Frankish or Latin rule") and designates a period when western European Catholics ruled ] ].<ref>Hendrickx, Benjamin (2006). "Constantinople, Latin Empire of". In ''The Crusades: An Encyclopedia''. pp. 279–286.</ref>
===Albigensian Crusade (1208–1241)===
{{Main|Albigensian Crusade}}
] excommunicating the Albigensians (left), Massacre against the Albigensians by the crusaders (right)]]


The major ] include: the ]; the ]; the ]; the ]; the ]; the ]; the ]; the ]; the ]; the ], ], and ]; and the ].
The ] was launched in 1208 to eliminate the ] ] of ] (modern-day southern France). It was a decades-long struggle that had as much to do with the desire of northern France to extend its control southwards as it did with battling heresy. In the end, the Cathars were driven underground, and the independence of southern France was eliminated.<ref name=Lock163>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' pp. 163–165</ref>


The threat of the expanding ] prompted further ]. In 1389, the Ottomans defeated the Serbs at the ], won ] from the ] to the ], in 1396 defeated French crusaders and ] at the ], in 1444 destroyed a crusading Polish and Hungarian force at ], four years later again defeated the Hungarians at ] and in 1453 captured Constantinople. The 16th{{nbsp}}century saw growing rapprochement. The ], French, Spanish and Venetians and Ottomans all signed treaties. ] allied with all quarters, including from German Protestant princes and Sultan ].{{sfn|Tyerman |2019|pp=406–408}}
] called a crusade against supposed Cathar heretics in Bosnia. There were rumors that there was an ] of the Cathars named Nicetas, although whether such a figure ever existed is unclear. Hungarian forces responded to the papal calls in two efforts in 1234 and 1241, with the second one ending because of the Mongol invasion of Hungary in 1241. The ] was Catholic in theology, but continued to be in schism with the Roman Catholic Church well past the end of the Middle Ages.<ref name=Lock172a>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' pp. 172–173</ref>


Anti-Christian crusading declined in the 15th{{nbsp}}century, the exceptions were the ] against the religiously radical ] in ] and attacks on the ] in Savoy.{{sfn|Tyerman |2019|pp=358–359}} Crusading became a financial exercise; precedence was given to the commercial and political objectives. The military threat presented by the Ottoman Turks diminished, making anti-Ottoman crusading obsolete in 1699 with the final ].{{sfn|Jotischky|2004|p=257}}{{sfn|Tyerman |2019|pp=9, 257, 420–421}}
===Fifth Crusade (1217–1221)===
==Crusading movement==
{{Main|Fifth Crusade}}
{{Main|Crusading movement}}
Prior to the 11th{{nbsp}}century, the ] had developed a system for the remission and absolution of sin in return for contrition, confession, and penitential acts. Reparation through abstinence from martial activity still presented a difficulty to the noble warrior class. It was revolutionary when Gregory VII offered absolution of sin earned through the Church-sponsored violence in support of his causes, if selflessly given at the end of the century.{{sfn|Tyerman|2011|p=61}}{{sfn|Latham|2012|p=123}} This was developed by subsequent Popes into the granting of plenary indulgences that reduced all God-imposed temporal penalties.{{sfn|Maier|2006a|pp=627–629}} The papacy developed "Political ]" into attempts to remove the Church from secular control by asserting ecclesiastical supremacy over temporal polities and the Orthodox Church. This was associated with the idea that the Church should actively intervene in the world to impose "justice".{{sfn|Latham|2012|p=118}}


A distinct ideology promoting and regulating crusading is evidenced in surviving texts. The Church defined this in legal and theological terms based on the theory of holy war and the concept of pilgrimage. Theology merged the Old Testament Israelite wars instigated and assisted by God with New Testament Christocentric views. Holy war was based on ancient ideas of just war. The fourth-century theologian ] had Christianised this, and it eventually became the ] of Christian holy war. Theologians widely accepted the justification that holy war against pagans was good, because of their opposition to Christianity.{{sfn|Maier|2006a|pp=627–629}} The Holy Land was the patrimony of Christ; its recovery was on behalf of God. The Albigensian Crusade was a defence of the French Church, the Northern Crusades were campaigns conquering lands beloved of Christ's mother ] for Christianity.{{sfn|Maier|2006a|pp=629–630}}
] struck by Christians between 1216 and 1241 with Arabic inscriptions.]] Pope Innocent III declared a new crusade to commence in 1217, along with his summoning of the ] in 1215. The majority of the crusaders came from Germany, ], and ], along with a large army from Hungary led by King ] and other forces led by Duke ]. The forces of Andrew and Leopold arrived in Acre in October 1217 but little was accomplished and Andrew returned to Hungary in January 1218. After the arrival of more crusaders, Leopold and the king of Jerusalem, ], laid siege to ], Egypt,<ref name=Lock168>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' pp. 168–169</ref> which they captured finally in November 1219. Further efforts by the ], ], to invade further into Egypt led to no gains.<ref name=RileySmith179>Riley-Smith ''Crusades'' pp. 179–180</ref> Blocked by forces of the ] ] ], the crusaders were forced to surrender. Al-Kamil forced the return of Damietta and agreed to an eight-year truce and the crusaders left Egypt.<ref name=Hindley561>Hindley ''Crusades'' pp. 561–562</ref>


Inspired by the First Crusade, the crusading movement went on to define late medieval western culture and impacted the history of the western Islamic world.{{sfn|Riley-Smith|1995|pp=4–5, 36}} Christendom was geopolitical, and this underpinned the practice of the medieval Church. Reformists of the 11th{{nbsp}}century urged these ideas which declined following the Reformation. The ideology continued after the 16th{{nbsp}}century with the military orders but dwindled in competition with other forms of religious war and new ideologies.{{sfn|Maier|2006a|pp=630–631}}
===Sixth Crusade (1228–1229)===
{{Main|Sixth Crusade}}
] (left) meets ] (right), from a manuscript of the '']'' by ]]]


==Military orders==
Emperor ] had repeatedly vowed a crusade but failed to live up to his words,<ref name=Lock169>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 169</ref> for which he was excommunicated by Gregory IX in 1228. He nonetheless set sail from ] in June 1228 and landed at ] in September 1228, after a stopover in Cyprus.<ref name=Ashbridge566>Ashbridge ''Crusades'' pp. 566–568</ref> There were no battles as Frederick made a peace treaty with ], the ruler of Egypt. This treaty allowed Christians to rule over most of Jerusalem and a strip of territory from Acre to Jerusalem, while the Muslims were given control of their sacred areas in Jerusalem. In return, Frederick pledged to protect Al-Kamil against all his enemies, even if they were Christian.<ref name=Ashbridge569>Ashbridge ''Crusades'' p. 569</ref>
{{Main|Military order (religious society)|l1=Military orders}}] granting the captured ] to ]|alt=13th-century miniature of King Baldwin II granting the Al Aqsa Mosque to Hugues de Payens]] The military orders were forms of a religious order first established early in the twelfth century with the function of defending Christians, as well as observing monastic vows. The ] had a medical mission in Jerusalem since before the ], later becoming a formidable military force supporting the crusades in the Holy Land and Mediterranean. The ] were founded in 1119 by a band of knights who dedicated themselves to protecting pilgrims en{{nbsp}}route to Jerusalem.<ref>{{harvnb| Asbridge|2012| p= 168}}</ref> The ] were formed in 1190 to protect pilgrims in both the Holy Land and Baltic region.''<ref>Barker, Ernest (1911). "]". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). ''Encyclopædia Britannica'' '''26''' (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 676–679.</ref>''


The Hospitallers and the Templars became supranational organisations as papal support led to rich donations of land and revenue across Europe. This, in turn, led to a steady flow of new recruits and the wealth to maintain multiple fortifications in the crusader states. In time, they developed into autonomous powers in the region.<ref>{{harvnb| Asbridge|2012|pp=169–170}}</ref> After the fall of Acre the Hospitallers relocated to Cyprus, then ruled ] until the island was taken by the Ottomans in 1522. While there was talk of merging the Templars and Hospitallers in 1305 by ], ultimately the Templars were charged with heresy and disbanded. The Teutonic Knights supported the later Prussian campaigns into the fifteenth century.
A followup to this crusade was the effort by King ] in 1239 and 1240 that had originally been called in 1234 by ] to assemble in July 1239 at the end of a truce. Besides Theobald, ] and ] and other French nobles took part. They arrived in Acre in September 1239 and after a defeat in November, Theobald arranged a treaty with the Muslims that returned territory to the crusading states, but caused much disaffection within the crusaders. Theobald returned to Europe in September 1240. Also in 1240, ], younger brother of King ], took the cross and arrived in Acre in October. He then secured the ratification of Theobald's treaty and left the Holy Land in May 1241 for Europe.<ref name=Lock173>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' pp. 173–174</ref>


==Art and architecture==
===Seventh Crusade (1248–1254)===
{{Main|Seventh Crusade}} {{Main|Art of the Crusades}}


] castle of ] in Syria, one of the first castles to use concentric fortification, i.e. concentric rings of defence that could all operate at the same time. It has two curtain walls and sits on a promontory.|alt=Photograph of 12th-century Hospitaller castle of Krak des Chevaliers in Syria showing concentric rings of defence, curtain walls and location sitting on a promontory.]]According to the historian Joshua Prawer no major European poet, theologian, scholar or historian settled in the crusader states. Some went on pilgrimage, and this is seen in new imagery and ideas in western poetry. Although they did not migrate east themselves, their output often encouraged others to journey there on pilgrimage.{{sfn|Prawer|1972|p=468}}
In the summer of 1244 a ] force summoned by the son of al-Kamil, ], stormed and took Jerusalem. The Franks allied with Ayyub's uncle ] and the ] and their combined forces were drawn into battle at ] in ]. The crusader army and its allies were completely defeated within forty-eight hours by the Khwarezmian tribesmen.<ref name=Ashbridge574>Ashbridge ''Crusades'' pp. 574–576</ref> In showing utter agony, a Templar knight lamented :
{{cquote|Rage and sorrow are seated in my heart...so firmly that I scarce dare to stay alive. It seems that God wishes to support the Turks to our loss...ah, lord God...alas, the realm of the East has lost so much that it will never be able to rise up again. They will make a ] of Holy Mary's convent, and since the theft pleases her Son, who should weep at this, we are forced to comply as well...Anyone who wishes to fight the Turks is mad, for ] does not fight them any more. They have conquered, they will conquer. For every day they drive us down, knowing that God, who was awake, sleeps now, and ] waxes powerful.<ref>Howarth,p.223</ref>}}


Historians consider the crusader military architecture of the Middle East to demonstrate a synthesis of the European, Byzantine and Muslim traditions and to be the most original and impressive artistic achievement of the crusades. Castles were a tangible symbol of the dominance of a Latin Christian minority over a largely hostile majority population. They also acted as centres of administration.{{sfn|Prawer|1972|pp=280–281}} Modern historiography rejects the 19th-century consensus that Westerners learnt the basis of military architecture from the Near East, as Europe had already experienced rapid development in defensive technology before the First Crusade. Direct contact with Arab fortifications originally constructed by the Byzantines did influence developments in the east, but the lack of documentary evidence means that it remains difficult to differentiate between the importance of this design culture and the constraints of situation. The latter led to the inclusion of oriental design features such as large water reservoirs and the exclusion of occidental features such as moats.{{sfn|Prawer|1972|pp=295–296}}
King ] organized a crusade after taking the cross in December 1244, preaching and recruiting from 1245 through 1248.<ref name=GodsWar770>Tyerman ''God's War'' pp. 770–775</ref> Louis' forces set sail from France in May 1249 and landed near Damietta in Egypt on 5 June 1249. Waiting until the end of the Nile flood, the army marched into the interior in November and by February were near El Manusra. They were defeated near there, however, and King Louis was captured while retreating towards Damietta.<ref name=Hindley194>Hindley ''Crusades'' pp. 194–195</ref> Louis was ransomed for 800,000 ]s and a ten-year truce was agreed. Louis then went to Syria, where he remained until 1254 working to solidify the kingdom of Jerusalem and constructing fortifications.<ref name=Lock178>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 178</ref>
] of the ]]]


Typically, crusader church design was in the ] style. This can be seen in the 12th-century rebuilding of the Holy Sepulchre. It retained some of the Byzantine details, but new arches and chapels were built to northern French, Aquitanian, and Provençal patterns. There is little trace of any surviving indigenous influence in sculpture, although in the Holy Sepulchre the ] of the south facade follow classical Syrian patterns.{{sfn|Jotischky|2004|p=146}}
===Eighth and Ninth Crusade (1270–1272)===
{{Main|Eighth Crusade|Ninth Crusade}}


In contrast to architecture and sculpture, it is in the area of visual culture that the assimilated nature of the society was demonstrated. Throughout the 12th{{nbsp}}and 13th{{nbsp}}centuries the influence of indigenous artists was demonstrated in the decoration of shrines, paintings and the production of illuminated manuscripts. Frankish practitioners borrowed methods from the Byzantines and indigenous artists and iconographical practice leading to a cultural synthesis, illustrated by the ]. Wall mosaics were unknown in the west but in widespread use in the crusader states. Whether this was by indigenous craftsmen or learnt by Frankish ones is unknown, but a distinctive original artistic style evolved.{{sfn|Jotischky|2004|pp=145–146}}
]]]


Manuscripts were produced and illustrated in workshops housing Italian, French, English and local craftsmen leading to a cross-fertilisation of ideas and techniques. An example of this is the ], created by several hands in a workshop attached to the Holy Sepulchre. This style could have both reflected and influenced the taste of patrons of the arts. But what is seen is an increase in stylised, Byzantine-influenced content. This extended to the production of ], unknown at the time to the Franks, sometimes in a Frankish style and even of western saints. This is seen as the origin of Italian panel painting.{{sfn|Jotischky|2004|pp=147–149}} While it is difficult to track illumination of manuscripts and castle design back to their origins, textual sources are simpler. The translations made in Antioch are notable, but they are considered of secondary importance to the works emanating from Muslim Spain and from the hybrid culture of Sicily.{{sfn|Asbridge|2012|pp=667–668}}
Ignoring his advisers, in 1270 Louis IX again attacked the Arabs in Tunis in North Africa. He picked the hottest season of the year for campaigning and his army was devastated by disease. The king himself died, ending the last major attempt to take the Holy Land.<ref name=Strayer487>Strayer "Crusades of Louis IX" ''Later Crusades'' p. 487</ref> The Mamluks, led by ], eventually drove the Franks from the Holy Land. From 1265 through 1271, Baibars drove the Franks to a few small coastal outposts.<ref name=GodsWar816>Tyerman ''God's War'' pp. 816–817</ref> His armies slaughtered or enslaved every Christian in the city of ].<ref>Michaud, ''The History of the Crusades'', Vol. 3, p. 18 ; available . Note that in a footnote Michaud claims reliance on "the chronicle of Ibn Ferat" (Michaud, Vol.3, p.22) for much of the information he has concerning the ''Mussulmans''.</ref> The future ] undertook to crusade with Louis IX, but he was delayed and did not arrive in North Africa until November 1270. After the death of Louis, Edward went to Sicily and then on to Acre in May 1271. His forces were too small to make much difference, though, and he was upset at the conclusion of a truce between Baibars and the king of Jerusalem, ]. Although Edward learned of his father's death and his succession to the throne in December 1272, he did not return to England until 1274, although he accomplished little in the Holy Land.<ref name=Lock164>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 164</ref>


==Financing==
===Aragonese Crusade (1284-1285)===
{{main|Aragonese Crusade}} {{main|Papal income tax}}
Crusade finance and taxation left a legacy of social, financial, and legal institutions. Property became available while coinage and precious materials circulated more readily within Europe. Crusading expeditions created immense demands for food supplies, weapons, and shipping that benefited merchants and artisans. Levies for crusades contributed to the development of centralised financial administrations and the growth of papal and royal taxation. This aided development of representative bodies whose consent was required for many forms of taxation.<ref name=":3">Bird, Jessalynn (2006). "Finance of Crusades". In ''The Crusades: An Encyclopedia''. pp. 432–436.</ref>
The Crusade of Aragón was declared by ] against King ] in 1284 and 1285. Peter was supporting the anti-Angevin forces in Sicily following the ], and the papacy supported Charles of Anjou. ] proclaimed a crusade against ], the younger brother of Peter, in 1298, but was unable to prevent Frederick's crowning and recognition as King of Sicily.<ref name=Lock186>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 186</ref>


The Crusades strengthened exchanges between ]al and ]al economic spheres. The transport of pilgrims and crusaders notably benefitted Italian maritime cities, such as the trio of Venice, Pisa, and Genoa. Having obtained commercial privileges in the fortified places of Syria, they became the favoured intermediaries for trade in goods such as silk, spices, as well as other raw alimentary goods and mineral products. Trade with the Muslim world was thus extended beyond existing limits. Merchants were further advantaged by technological improvements, and long-distance trade as a whole expanded.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Cartwright |first1=Mark |title=Trade in Medieval Europe |url=https://www.worldhistory.org/article/1301/trade-in-medieval-europe/ |website=World History Encyclopedia |access-date=30 April 2021 |language=en |date=8 January 2019}}</ref> The increased volume of goods being traded through ports of the Latin Levant and the Muslim world made this the cornerstone of a wider Middle Eastern economy, as manifested in important cities along the trade routes, such as Aleppo, Damascus, and Acre. It became increasingly common for European merchants to venture farther east, and business was conducted fairly despite religious differences, and continued even in times of political and military tensions.<ref name=":3" />
===Crusades of the 14th and 15th centuries===
{{main|Ottoman Wars in Europe}}
{{further|Crusade of Nicopolis}}
]


==Legacy==
Various crusades were launched in the 14th and 15th centuries to counter the expanding ] starting in 1396 with ], king of Hungary. Many French nobles joined Sigismund's forces, including ], son of the Duke of Burgundy, who was appointed military leader of the crusade. Although Sigismund advised the crusaders to adopt a defensive posture once they reached the Danube, the crusaders instead besieged the city of ]. The Ottomans met the crusaders in the ] on 25 September 1396, defeating the Christian forces and capturing 3,000 prisoners.<ref name=Lock200>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 200</ref>
{{See also|Crusading movement#Legacy}}
]
The Crusades created national mythologies, tales of heroism, and a few place names.{{sfn|Tyerman|2019|p=468}} Historical parallelism and the tradition of drawing inspiration from the Middle Ages have become keystones of ] encouraging ideas of a modern jihad and a centuries-long struggle against Christian states, while secular ] highlights the role of western imperialism.{{sfn|Asbridge|2012|pp=675–680}} Modern Muslim thinkers, politicians and historians have drawn parallels between the crusades and political developments such as the ] in 1948.{{sfn|Asbridge|2012|pp=674–675}}


Right-wing circles in the ] have drawn opposing parallels, considering Christianity to be under an Islamic religious and demographic threat that is analogous to the situation at the time of the crusades. Crusader symbols and ] rhetoric are presented as an appropriate response. These symbols and rhetoric are used to provide a religious justification and inspiration for a struggle against a religious enemy.<ref>{{Harvnb|Koch|2017|p=1}}</ref>
{{further|Hussite Wars}}
] warriors and the Crusaders, Jena Codex, 15th century]]
The Hussite Crusade(s), also known as the "]," or the "Bohemian Wars," involved the military actions against the followers of ] in ] in the period 1420 to around 1431. Crusades were declared five times in that period&nbsp;– in 1420, 1421, 1422, 1427 and in 1431. The net effect of these expeditions was to force the Hussite forces, which disagreed on many doctrinal points, to unite to drive out the invaders. The wars were brought to a conclusion in 1436 with the ratification of the ] by the Church.<ref name=Lock201>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' pp. 201–202</ref> In April 1487, ] called a crusade against the ] heretics of ], the ], and the ] in southern France and northern Italy. The only efforts actually undertaken were against heretics in the Dauphiné, and resulted in little change.<ref name=Lock204>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' p. 204</ref>


==Historiography==
{{further|Crusade of Varna}}
{{main|Historiography of the Crusades}}The ] is concerned with their "history of the histories" during the Crusader period. The subject is a complex one, with overviews provided in ''Select Bibliography of the Crusades,<ref>Zacour, N. P.; Hazard, H. W., Editor. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200620044204/http://images.library.wisc.edu/History/EFacs/HistCrus/0001/0006/reference/history.crussix.i0029.pdf |date=2020-06-20 }}. (A History of the Crusades, volume, VI) Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press, 1989, pp. 511–664.</ref> Modern Historiography'',<ref name=":65">Tyerman, Christopher (2006). "Historiography, Modern". ''The Crusades: An Encyclopedia''. pp. 582–588.</ref> and ''Crusades (Bibliography and Sources'').<ref name=":332">Bréhier, Louis René (1908). "]". In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). ''Catholic Encyclopedia''. '''4'''. New York: Robert Appleton Company.</ref> The histories describing the Crusades are broadly of three types: (1) The ]s of the Crusades,{{sfn|Slack|2013|p=111|loc=Historians}} which include works written in the medieval period, generally by participants in the Crusade or written contemporaneously with the event, letters and documents in archives, and archaeological studies; (2) ]s, beginning with early consolidated works in the 16th century and continuing to modern times; and (3) ]s, primarily encyclopedias, bibliographies and genealogies.
The Polish-Hungarian king, ] invaded the recently conquered Ottoman territory and reached Belgrade in January 1444. Negotiations over a truce eventually led to an agreement, that was repudiated by Sultan ] within days of its ratification. Further efforts by the crusaders ended in the ] on 10 November 1444 which, although resulting in a draw between the two forces, led to the crusaders withdrawing. This withdrawal led to the fall of Constantinople in 1453, as it was the last Western attempt to help the Byzantine Empire.


] translation, ], Paris, MS 2631, f.1r]]
{{further|Siege of Belgrade (1456)}}
In 1456 ] and ] organized a crusade to lift the Ottomon siege of Belgrade.<ref name=Lock202>Lock ''Routledge Companion'' pp. 202–203</ref>


==See also== ===Primary sources===
The primary sources for the Crusades are generally presented in the individual articles on each Crusade and summarised in the ].<ref>Halsall, Paul (ed.). "". '']''. Fordham University.</ref> For the First Crusade, this includes the ], including the '']'', works by ] and ], the '']'' by Byzantine princess ], the ] by Muslim historian ], and the ''Chronicle'' of Armenian historian ]. Many of these and related texts are found in the collections ] and ]. The work of ], ''Historia Rerum in Partibus Transmarinis Gestarum,'' and its continuations by later historians complete the foundational work of the traditional Crusade.<ref>Primary Bibliography. In Phillips, J., Holy Warriors (2009).</ref> Some of these works also provide insight into the later Crusades and Crusader states. Other works include:
{{Misplaced Pages books|The Crusades}}
* Eyewitness accounts of the Second Crusade by ] and ]. The Arab view from Damascus is provided by ].
* ]
* Works on the Third Crusade such as ], the ''],'' and the works of Crusaders ] and ], and the narratives of ], ], ] and ]. The Arabic works by ] and ] as well as the biography of Saladin by ] are also of interest.
* ]
* The Fourth Crusade is described in the '']'' and works of ], in his chronicle ''],'' ] and ]. The view of Byzantium is provided by ] and the Arab perspective is given by ] and ].
* ]
* The history of the Fifth and Sixth Crusades is well represented in the works of ], ] and ], and the Arabic works of ].
* ]
* Key sources for the later Crusades include '']'', ]'s ''Life of Saint Louis,'' as well as works by ], ], ] and ].
* ]


After the fall of Acre, the crusades continued through the 16th century. Principal references on this subject are the ]<ref name=":142">Setton, K. M. (Kenneth Meyer). (1969). . Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.</ref> and ]'s ''The Later Crusades, 1274–1580: From Lyons to Alcazar.''<ref>Housley, Norman (1992). ''The Later Crusades, 1274–1580: From Lyons to Alcazar.'' Oxford University Press.</ref> Complete bibliographies are also given in these works.
==References==
{{Reflist|colwidth=30em}}


===Secondary sources===
==Bibliography==
The secondary sources of the Crusades began in the 16th century, with one of the first uses of the term ''crusades'' by 17th century French historian ] in his ''Histoire des Croisades pour la délivrance de la Terre Sainte.''<ref>Maimbourg, L. (1677). . 2d ed. Paris.</ref>{{sfn|Lock|2006|p=258|loc=Historiography}} Other works of the 18th century include ]'s ''Histoire des Croisades'',<ref>Voltaire (1751). . Berlin.</ref> and Edward Gibbon's ], excerpted as ''The Crusades, A.D. 1095–1261''.<ref name=":12">Gibbon, E., Kaye, J., Scott, W., Caoursin, G. (1870). . London.</ref> This edition also includes an essay on ] by ], whose works helped popularize the Crusades. Early in the 19th century, the monumental ''Histoire des Croisades'' was published by the French historian ], a major new narrative based on original sources.<ref name=":82">Michaud, J. Fr. (Joseph Fr.). (1841). . 6. éd. Paris.</ref><ref name=":311">Michaud, J. Fr., Robson, W. (1881). . New ed. London.</ref>
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* {{cite encyclopedia |author=Strayer, Joseph R. |editor=Wolff, R. L. and Hazard, H. W. |encyclopedia=The Later Crusades, 1189–1311 |year=1969 |url =http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/History/History-idx?type=article&did=HISTORY.CRUSTWO.I0023&isize=M |title=The Crusades of Louis IX |pages=487–521}}
* {{cite book |title= Saracens: Islam in the Medieval European Imagination|last= Tolan | first = John Victor| year=2002 |publisher = ]|isbn=978-0-231-12333-4|ref=harv}}
* {{cite book|last1= Tolan|first1=John|last2=Veinstein|first2= Gilles|last3=Henry|first3=Laurens |year=2013 |title=Europe and the Islamic World: A History.|publisher=Princeton University Press|isbn=978-0-691-14705-5|ref=harv}}
* {{cite book |author=Tyerman, Christopher |title=England and the Crusades, 1095–1588 |publisher=University of Chicago Press |location=Chicago, IL |year=1988 |isbn=0-226-82013-0 }}
* {{cite book |author=Tyerman, Christopher |title=God's War: A New History of the Crusades |publisher=Belknap Press |location=Cambridge, MA |year=2006 |isbn=978-0-674-02387-1 }}
* {{cite book|author= Vasilʹev, Aleksandr Aleksandrovich|title=History of the Byzantine Empire: 324–1453 |year=1952|publisher=University of Wisconsin Press }}
* {{cite journal |author=Villegas-Aristizábal, L. |year=2009 |title=Anglo-Norman involvement in the conquest of Tortosa and Settlement of Tortosa, 1148–1180 |journal=Crusades |issue=8 |pages=63–129}}
* {{cite book |author=Wickham, Chris |authorlink= Christopher Wickham |title=The Inheritance of Rome: Illuminating the Dark Ages 400–1000 |publisher=Penguin Books |location=New York |year=2009 |isbn=978-0-14-311742-1}}
* {{cite encyclopedia |author= Zacour, Norman P. |title=The Children's Crusade |editor=Wolff, R. L. and Hazard, H. W. |encyclopedia=The Later Crusades, 1189–1311 |year=1969 |pages=325–342|url =http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/History/History-idx?type=article&did=HISTORY.CRUSTWO.I0023&isize=M }}
{{refend}}


These histories have provided evolving views of the Crusades as discussed in detail in the ] writeup in ]. Modern works that serve as secondary source material are listed in the Bibliography section below and need no further discussion here.<ref>Secondary Bibliography. In Phillips, J. Holy Warriors (2009).</ref>
'''Further reading'''
::'''Introductions'''
* {{cite encyclopedia |author= Andrea, Alfred J. |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia of the Crusades |year= 2003||isbn= 0-313-31659-7|oclc= 52030565}}
* {{cite book |author=Asbridge, Thomas |title=The First Crusade: A New History: The Roots of Conflict between Christianity and Islam |year=2005|isbn= 0-195-18905-1|oclc=60964496}}
* {{cite book |author= France, John |title=Western Warfare in the Age of the Crusades, 1000–1300 |year=1999 |isbn=0-801-48607-6 |OCLC=40179990}}
* Hillenbrand, Carole. ''The Crusades, Islamic Perspectives''. (2000)
* Holt, P.M. ''The Age of the Crusades: The Near East from the Eleventh Century to 1517''. (1986)
* Phillips, Jonathan. ''Holy Warriors: A Modern History of the Crusades'' (2010)
* Riley-Smith, Jonathan, ed. ''The Atlas of the Crusades'' (1991)
* Riley-Smith, Jonathan. ''The Crusades, Christianity, and Islam'' (2011)


===Tertiary sources===
::'''Specialized studies'''
Three such works are: ] multiple works on the Crusades<ref>'']'' (1913). In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). ''Catholic Encyclopedia''. '''4'''. New York: Robert Appleton Company.</ref> in the ]; the works of ]<ref>] (1911). In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). ''Encyclopædia Britannica''. Index (11th ed.), Cambridge University Press.</ref> in the ] (11th edition), later expanded into a separate publication;{{sfn|Barker|1923|pp=1–122|loc=The Crusades}} and ''The Crusades: An Encyclopedia'' (2006), edited by historian Alan V. Murray.{{sfn|Murray|2006}}
* Boas, Adrian J. ''Jerusalem in the Time of the Crusades: Society, Landscape, and Art in the Holy City under Frankish Rule'' (2001)
* Bull, Marcus, and Norman Housley, eds. ''The Experience of Crusading Volume 1, Western Approaches.'' (2003)
* Edbury, Peter, and Jonathan Phillips, eds. ''The Experience of Crusading Volume 2, Defining the Crusader Kingdom.'' (2003)
* Florean, Dana. "East Meets West: Cultural Confrontation and Exchange after the First Crusade." ''Language & Intercultural Communication,'' 2007, Vol. 7 Issue 2, pp.&nbsp;144–151
* Folda, Jaroslav. ''Crusader Art in the Holy Land, From the Third Crusade to the Fall of Acre'' (2005)
* France, John. ''Victory in the East: A Military History of the First Crusade'' (1996)
* Harris, Jonathan, ''Byzantium and the Crusades'', Bloomsbury, 2nd ed. (2014) ISBN 978-1-78093-767-0
* Hillenbrand, Car. ''The Crusades: Islamic Perspectives'' (1999)
* Housley, Norman. ''The Later Crusades, 1274–1580: From Lyons to Alcazar'' (1992)
* James, Douglas. "Christians and the First Crusade." ''History Review'' (Dec 2005), Issue 53
* Kagay, Donald J., and L. J. Andrew Villalon, eds. ''Crusaders, Condottieri, and Cannon: Medieval Warfare in Societies around the Mediterranean.'' (2003)
* Maalouf, Amin. ''Crusades Through Arab Eyes'' (1989)
* Madden, Thomas F. ''et al.'', eds. ''Crusades Medieval Worlds in Conflict'' (2010)
* Peters, Edward. ''Christian Society and the Crusades, 1198–1229'' (1971)
* Powell, James M. ''Anatomy of a Crusade, 1213–1221,'' (1986)
* Queller, Donald E., and Thomas F. Madden. ''The Fourth Crusade: The Conquest of Constantinople'' (2nd ed. 1999)
* Riley-Smith, Jonathan.''The First Crusade and the Idea of Crusading''. (1986)
* Runciman, Steven. ''A History of the Crusades: Volume 2, The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Frankish East'' (1952) ; ''A History of the Crusades: Volume 3, The Kingdom of Acre and the Later Crusades'' (1954); the classic 20th century history
* Setton, Kenneth ed., ''A History of the Crusades''. (1969–1989), the standard scholarly history in six volumes, published by the University of Wisconsin Press
: Includes: (2nd ed. 1969); (1969); (1975); (1977); (1985); (1989)
* Smail, R. C. "Crusaders' Castles of the Twelfth Century" ''Cambridge Historical Journal'' Vol. 10, No. 2. (1951), pp.&nbsp;133–149.
* Stark, Rodney. ''God's Battalions: The Case for the Crusades'' (2010)
* Tyerman, Christopher. ''England and the Crusades, 1095–1588.'' (1988)


==See also==
::'''Historiography'''
* ]
* Constable, Giles. "The Historiography of the Crusades" in Angeliki E. Laiou, ed. ''The Crusades from the Perspective of Byzantium and the Muslim World'' (2001)
* ]
* {{cite book |author=Housley, Norman |authorlink= Norman Housley |title=Contesting the Crusades |publisher=Blackwell Publishing |location=Malden, MA |year=2006 |isbn=1-4051-1189-5|url=http://www.amazon.com/Contesting-Crusades-Norman-Housley/dp/1405111895/ }}
* ]
* Illston, James Michael. '''An Entirely Masculine Activity'? Women and War in the High and Late Middle Ages Reconsidered'' (MA thesis, University of Canterbury, 2009)
* ]
* Madden, Thomas F. ed. ''The Crusades: The Essential Readings'' (2002)
* ]
* Maier, C.T. "The roles of women in the crusade movement: a survey" ''Journal of medieval history'' 2004.
* ]
* Powell, James M. "The Crusades in Recent Research," '' The Catholic Historical Review'' (2009) 95#2 pp 313-19
* ]
* Rubenstein, Jay. "In Search of a New Crusade: A Review Essay," ''Historically Speaking'' (2011) 12#2 pp 25-27
* ]
::'''Primary sources'''
* ]
* ], Bate, Keith (2010). ''Letters from the East: Crusaders, Pilgrims and Settlers in the 12th–13th Centuries'' (Crusade Texts in Translation Volume 18, Ashgate Publishing Ltd)
* Bird, Jessalynn, et al. eds. ''Crusade and Christendom: Annotated Documents in Translation from Innocent III to the Fall of Acre, 1187-1291'' (2013)
* Housley, Norman, ed. ''Documents on the Later Crusades, 1274–1580'' (1996)
* Krey, August C. ''The First Crusade: The Accounts of Eye-Witnesses and Participants'' (1958)
* Shaw, M. R. B. ed.''Chronicles of the Crusades'' (1963)
* Villehardouin, Geoffrey, and Jean de Joinville. ''Chronicles of the Crusades'' ed. by Sir Frank Marzials (2007)


==External links== ==References==
{{Wiktionary|Crusade}} {{Reflist|20em}}

{{Commons category|Crusades}}
==Bibliography==
{{Wikisource1911Enc}}
{{refbegin|30em}}
* , a virtual college course through ] ed. by E. L. Knox.
* {{Cite book|last=Asbridge|first=Thomas|author-link=Thomas Asbridge|title=The Creation of the Principality of Antioch, 1098–1130|publisher=Boydell & Brewer|year=2000|isbn=978-0-85115-661-3}}
* , Paul Crawford, 1999.
* {{cite book|last=Asbridge|first=Thomas|title=The Crusades: The War for the Holy Land|year=2012|publisher=Simon & Schuster|isbn=978-1-84983-688-3|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rK8nA9U0OE4C}}
* —an international organization of professional Crusade scholars
* {{cite book|last=Barber|first=Malcolm|author-link=Malcolm Barber|title=The New Knighthood. A History of the Order of the Temple|year=1994|publisher=Cambridge University Press|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=B0h6zgEACAAJ|isbn=978-1-107-60473-5}}
* —contains articles and primary sources related to the Crusades
* {{cite book|last=Barber|first=Malcolm|title=The Crusader States|year=2012|publisher=Yale University Press|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Bz_O7-Lb_CsC|isbn=978-0-300-18931-5}}
* {{cite book|last=Barker|first=Ernest|author-link=Ernest Barker|title=The Crusades|series=World's manuals|year=1923|publisher=Oxford University Press, London|url=https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/000630938/Home}}
* {{cite book|first=Robert|last=Chazan|author-link=Robert Chazan|title=In The Year 1096... European Jewry and the First Crusade|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sndVK_foqI4C|year=1996|publisher=]|isbn=978-0-520-91776-7}}
* {{cite book|last=Christie|first=Niall|title=Muslims and Crusaders: Christianity's Wars in the Middle East, 1095–1382, from the Islamic Sources|year=2014|publisher=Routledge|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0d_pAwAAQBAJ|isbn=978-1-138-54310-2}}
* {{cite book|last=El-Azhari|first=Taef|title=Zengi and the Muslim response to the Crusades: The politics of Jihad|year=2016|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-0-367-87073-7|url=https://www.routledge.com/Zengi-and-the-Muslim-Response-to-the-Crusades-The-politics-of-Jihad/El-Azhari/p/book/9780367870737}}
* {{cite book|last=Gibb|first=H. A. R.|author-link=H. A. R. Gibb|title=The Aiyūbids|year=1969|publisher=A History of the Crusades (Setton), Volume II|url=http://images.library.wisc.edu/History/EFacs/HistCrus/0001/0002/reference/history.crustwo.i0034.pdf|access-date=2021-10-10|archive-date=2023-03-26|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230326025110/http://images.library.wisc.edu/History/EFacs/HistCrus/0001/0002/reference/history.crustwo.i0034.pdf|url-status=dead}}
* {{cite book|last=Hindley|first=Geoffrey|year=2004|title=The Crusades: Islam and Christianity in the Struggle for World Supremacy |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-7867-1344-8}}
* {{cite book|last=Housley|first=Norman|author-link=Norman Housley|title=The Italian Crusades: The Papal-Angevin Alliance and the Crusades Against Christian Lay Powers, 1254–1343|year=1982|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-821925-5|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QRhWU5YJyMcC}}
* {{cite book|last=Housley|first=Norman|title=The Later Crusades, 1274–1580: From Lyons to Alcazar|year=1992|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-822136-4|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UrhmAAAAMAAJ}}
* {{cite book|last=Jotischky|first=Andrew|title=Crusading and the Crusader States|publisher=Pearson Longman|year=2004|isbn=978-1-351-98392-1|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rTUlDwAAQBAJ}}
* {{cite journal|last=Kedar|first=Benjamin Z.|author-link=Benjamin Z. Kedar|title=On the Origins of the Earliest Laws of Frankish Jerusalem: The Canons of the Council of Nablus|journal=Speculum|volume=74|issue=2|date=1999|pages=310–35|doi=10.2307/2887049|jstor=2887049|url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/2887049|issn=0038-7134}}
* {{cite journal |last=Koch |first=Ariel |title=The New Crusaders: Contemporary Extreme Right Symbolism and Rhetoric |journal=] |volume=11 |issue=5 |date=2017 |pages=13–24 |jstor=26297928 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/26297928 }}
* {{cite book|last=Latham|first=Andrew A.|title=Theorizing Medieval Geopolitics – War and World Order in the Age of the Crusades|year=2012|publisher=Routledge|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=o9h7PgAACAAJ|isbn=978-0-415-87184-6}}
* {{cite book|last=Lewis|first=Bernard|author-link=Bernard Lewis|title=The Assassins: A Radical Sect in Islam|publisher=Phoenix|year=2003|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rRZAPgAACAAJ|isbn=978-1-84212-451-2}}
* {{cite book|last=Lewis|first=Kevin James|year=2017|title=The Counts of Tripoli and Lebanon in the Twelfth Century: Sons of Saint-Gilles|publisher=Routledge|url=https://www.routledge.com/The-Counts-of-Tripoli-and-Lebanon-in-the-Twelfth-Century-Sons-of-Saint-Gilles/Lewis/p/book/9780367880552|isbn=978-1-4724-5890-2}}
* {{cite book|last=Lock|first=Peter|title=The Routledge Companion to the Crusades|publisher=Routledge|year=2006|doi=10.4324/9780203389638|isbn=978-0-415-39312-6|url=https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/mono/10.4324/9780203389638/routledge-companion-crusades-peter-lock}}
* {{cite book|last=Maalouf|first=Amin|title=The Crusades through Arab Eyes|publisher=Saqi Books|year=2006|isbn=978-0-86356-023-1|url=https://saqibooks.com/books/saqi/the-crusades-through-arab-eyes/}}
* {{cite book|last=Maier|first=Christoph T.|chapter=Ideology|pages=627–631|editor-last=Murray|editor-first=Alan V.|volume=II: D–J|title=The Crusades: An Encyclopedia|url=https://archive.org/details/crusadesencyclop0002unse/page/n5/mode/2up|url-access=registration|year=2006a|publisher=ABC-CLIO|isbn=978-1-57607-862-4}}
* {{cite book|last=Munro|first=Dana Carleton|author-link=Dana Carleton Munro|title=Letters of the Crusaders|series=Translations and reprints from the original sources of European history|year=1902|publisher=University of Pennsylvania|url=https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/007135585/Home}}
* {{cite book|last=Murray|first=Alan V.|title=The Crusades: An Encyclopedia|year=2006|url=https://www.pdfdrive.com/the-crusades-an-encyclopedia-e38126580.html|publisher=ABC-CLIO|isbn=978-1-57607-862-4}}
* {{cite ODNB|last= Murray|first=Alan V.|year=2009|title= Participants in the Third Crusade|doi=10.1093/ref:odnb/98218 |url=https://www.oxforddnb.com/display/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-98218}}
* {{cite book|last=Norgate|first=Kate|author-link=Kate Norgate|title=Richard the Lion Heart|publisher=Macmillan and Co.|year=1924|url=https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/000311544?type%5B%5D=author&lookfor%5B%5D=kate%20norgate&ft=ft}}
* {{Cite book|last=Oman|first=Charles|author-link=Charles Oman|title=A History of the Art of War in the Middle Ages|publisher=Metheun|year=1924|url=https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/102022749/Home}}
* {{cite book|last=Perry|first=Guy|year=2013|title=John of Brienne: King of Jerusalem, Emperor of Constantinople, c. 1175–1237|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-1-107-04310-7|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4XhaAQAAQBAJ}}
* {{cite book|last=Prawer|first=Joshua|author-link=Joshua Prawer|title=The Crusaders' Kingdom|publisher=]|year=1972|isbn=978-1-84212-224-2|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AMxmAAAAMAAJ}}
* {{cite book|last=Richard|first=Jean C.|author-link=Jean Richard (historian)|title=The Crusades, c. 1071 – c. 1291|year=1999|publisher=Cambridge University Press|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=a0LO9u6xKvcC|isbn=978-0-521-62566-1}}
* {{cite book|last=Riley-Smith|first=Jonathan|author-link=Jonathan Riley-Smith|title=The Feudal Nobility and the Kingdom of Jerusalem, 1174–1277|year=1973|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YKLxAAAAMAAJ|publisher=Macmillan|isbn=978-0-333-06379-8}}
* {{cite book|last=Riley-Smith|first=Jonathan|chapter=The Crusading Movement and Historians|pages=1–12|editor-last=Riley-Smith|editor-first=Jonathan|title=The Oxford Illustrated History of The Crusades|url=https://archive.org/details/oxfordillustrate0000unse_q0x8/page/n5/mode/2up|url-access=registration|year=1995|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-285428-5}}
* {{cite book|last=Riley-Smith|first=Jonathan|title=The Oxford Illustrated History of The Crusades|year=2001|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-285428-5|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CuepyJIHXuEC}}
* {{Cite book|last=Runciman|first=Steven|title=A History of the Crusades, Volume Two: The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Frankish East, 1100–1187|year=1952|publisher=Cambridge University Press|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QL88AAAAIAAJ|isbn=978-0-521-34771-6}}
* {{Cite book|last=Runciman|first=Steven|title=A History of the Crusades, Volume Three: The Kingdom of Acre and the Later Crusades|year=1954|publisher=Cambridge University Press|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mrw8AAAAIAAJ|isbn=978-0-521-34772-3}}
* {{cite book|last=Slack|first=Corliss K.|title=Historical Dictionary of the Crusades|year=2013|publisher=Scarecrow Press|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uX8e2zU_TG0C|isbn=978-0-8108-7830-3}}
* {{cite ODNB|last=Summerson|first=Henry|date=2005|title=Lord Edward's crusade|doi=10.1093/ref:odnb/94804 |url=https://www.oxforddnb.com/display/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-94804}}
* {{cite book|last=Tyerman|first=Christopher|author-link=Christopher Tyerman|title=England and the Crusades, 1095–1588|publisher=University of Chicago Press|year=1996|isbn=978-0-226-82012-5|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=215JWFCeSOsC}}
* {{cite book|last=Tyerman|first=Christopher|title=God's War: A New History of the Crusades|publisher=Belknap Press|year=2006|isbn=978-0-674-02387-1|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ULDUopVCVPoC}}
* {{cite book|last=Tyerman|first=Christopher|title=The Debate on the Crusades, 1099–2010|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=t_DEyAEACAAJ|year=2011|publisher=Manchester University Press|isbn=978-0-7190-7320-5}}
* {{cite book|last=Tyerman|first=Christopher|title=The World of the Crusades|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GIOVDwAAQBAJ|year=2019|publisher=Yale University Press|isbn=978-0-300-21739-1}}
* {{cite book|last=von Sybel|first=Heinrich|author-link=Heinrich von Sybel|title=The History and Literature of the Crusades|publisher=G. Routledge & Son, Limited|year=1861|url=https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/012476975/Home}}
{{refend}}


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Latest revision as of 00:41, 12 January 2025

Religious wars of the High Middle Ages For other uses, see Crusades (disambiguation).

Medieval illustration of a battle during the Second Crusade
14th-century miniature of the Battle of Dorylaeum (1147), a Second Crusade battle, from the Estoire d'Eracles
Crusades
Ideology and institutions

In the Holy Land (1095–1291)

Later Crusades (1291–1717)

Northern (1147–1410)

Against Christians (1204–1588)

Popular (1096–1320)

Reconquista (722–1492)

The Crusades were a series of religious wars initiated, supported, and sometimes directed by the Christian Latin Church in the medieval period. The best known of these military expeditions are those to the Holy Land between 1095 and 1291 that had the objective of reconquering Jerusalem and its surrounding area from Muslim rule after the region had been conquered by the Rashidun Caliphate centuries earlier. Beginning with the First Crusade, which resulted in the conquest of Jerusalem in 1099, dozens of military campaigns were organised, providing a focal point of European history for centuries. Crusading declined rapidly after the 15th century with the fall of Constantinople to the Ottomans.

In 1095, after a Byzantine request for aid, Pope Urban II proclaimed the first expedition at the Council of Clermont. He encouraged military support for Byzantine emperor Alexios I Komnenos and called for an armed pilgrimage to Jerusalem. Across all social strata in Western Europe, there was an enthusiastic response. Participants came from all over Europe and had a variety of motivations. These included religious salvation, satisfying feudal obligations, opportunities for renown, and economic or political advantage. Later expeditions were conducted by generally more organised armies, sometimes led by a king. All were granted papal indulgences. Initial successes established four Crusader states: the County of Edessa; the Principality of Antioch; the Kingdom of Jerusalem; and the County of Tripoli. A European presence remained in the region in some form until the fall of Acre in 1291. After this, no further large military campaigns were organised.

Other church-sanctioned campaigns include crusades against Christians not obeying papal rulings and heretics, those against the Ottoman Empire, and ones for political reasons. The struggle against the Moors in the Iberian Peninsula–the Reconquistaended in 1492 with the Fall of Granada. From 1147, the Northern Crusades were fought against pagan tribes in Northern Europe. Crusades against Christians began with the Albigensian Crusade in the 13th century and continued through the Hussite Wars in the early 15th century. Crusades against the Ottomans began in the late 14th century and include the Crusade of Varna. Popular crusades, including the Children's Crusade of 1212, were generated by the masses and were unsanctioned by the Church.

Terminology

The Siege of Damascus (1148) as depicted in the Passages d'outremer, c. 1490

The term "crusade" first referred to military expeditions undertaken by European Christians in the 11th, 12th, and 13th centuries to the Holy Land. The conflicts to which the term is applied have been extended to include other campaigns initiated, supported and sometimes directed by the Latin Church with varying objectives, mostly religious, sometimes political. These differed from previous Christian religious wars in that they were considered a penitential exercise, and so earned participants remittance from penalties for all confessed sins. What constituted a crusade has been understood in diverse ways, particularly regarding the early Crusades, and the precise definition remains a matter of debate among contemporary historians.

At the time of the First Crusade, iter, "journey", and peregrinatio, "pilgrimage" were used for the campaign. Crusader terminology remained largely indistinguishable from that of Christian pilgrimage during the 12th century. A specific term for a crusader in the form of crucesignatus—"one signed by the cross"—emerged in the early 12th century. This led to the French term croisade—the way of the cross. By the mid 13th century the cross became the major descriptor of the crusades with crux transmarina—"the cross overseas"—used for crusades in the eastern Mediterranean, and crux cismarina—"the cross this side of the sea"—for those in Europe. The use of croiserie, "crusade" in Middle English can be dated to c. 1300, but the modern English "crusade" dates to the early 1700s. The Crusader states of Syria and Palestine were known as the "Outremer" from the French outre-mer, or "the land beyond the sea".

Crusades and the Holy Land, 1095–1291

See also: Timeline of the Kingdom of Jerusalem
Crusades: battles in the Levant (1096–1303)
First Crusade
Period post-First Crusade

Second Crusade

Period post-Second Crusade

Third Crusade

Period post-Third Crusade

Fourth Crusade

Fifth Crusade

Sixth Crusade and aftermath

Seventh Crusade

End of the Crusader states in the Levant

The Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. In 1071, Jerusalem was conquered by the Seljuk Turks.

Background

By the end of the 11th century, the period of Islamic Arab territorial expansion had been over for centuries. The Holy Land's remoteness from focus of Islamic power struggles enabled relative peace and prosperity in Syria and Palestine. Muslim-Western European contact was only more than minimal in the conflict in the Iberian Peninsula. The Byzantine Empire and the Islamic world were long standing centres of wealth, culture and military power. The Arab-Islamic world tended to view Western Europe as a backwater that presented little organised threat. By 1025, the Byzantine Emperor Basil II had extended territorial recovery to its furthest extent. The frontiers stretched east to Iran. Bulgaria and much of southern Italy were under control, and piracy was suppressed in the Mediterranean Sea. The empire's relationships with its Islamic neighbours were no more quarrelsome than its relationships with the Slavs or the Western Christians. The Normans in Italy; to the north Pechenegs, Serbs and Cumans; and Seljuk Turks in the east all competed with the Empire and the emperors recruited mercenaries—even on occasions from their enemies—to meet this challenge.

The political situation in Western Asia was changed by later waves of Turkic migration, in particular the arrival of the Seljuk Turks in the 10th century. Previously a minor ruling clan from Transoxania, they had recently converted to Islam and migrated into Iran. In two decades following their arrival they conquered Iran, Iraq and the Near East. The Seljuks and their followers were from the Sunni tradition. This brought them into conflict in Palestine and Syria with the Fatimids who were Shi'ite. The Seljuks were nomadic, Turkic speaking and occasionally shamanistic, very different from their sedentary, Arabic speaking subjects. This difference and the governance of territory based on political preference, and competition between independent princes rather than geography, weakened existing power structures. In 1071, Byzantine Emperor Romanos IV Diogenes attempted confrontation to suppress the Seljuks' sporadic raiding, leading to his defeat at the battle of Manzikert. Historians once considered this a pivotal event but now Manzikert is regarded as only one further step in the expansion of the Great Seljuk Empire.

The evolution of a Christian theology of war developed from the link of Roman citizenship to Christianity, according to which citizens were required to fight the empire's enemies. This doctrine of holy war dated from the 4th-century theologian Saint Augustine. He maintained that aggressive war was sinful, but acknowledged a "just war" could be rationalised if it was proclaimed by a legitimate authority, was defensive or for the recovery of lands, and without an excessive degree of violence. Violent acts were commonly used for dispute resolution in Western Europe, and the papacy attempted to mitigate this. Historians have thought that the Peace and Truce of God movements restricted conflict between Christians from the 10th century; the influence is apparent in Urban II's speeches. Other historians assert that the effectiveness was limited and it had died out by the time of the crusades. Pope Alexander II developed a system of recruitment via oaths for military resourcing that his successor Pope Gregory VII extended across Europe. In the 11th century, Christian conflict with Muslims on the southern peripheries of Christendom was sponsored by the Church, including the siege of Barbastro and the Norman conquest of Sicily. In 1074, Gregory VII planned a display of military power to reinforce the principle of papal sovereignty. His vision of a holy war supporting Byzantium against the Seljuks was the first crusade prototype, but lacked support.

The First Crusade was an unexpected event for contemporary chroniclers, but historical analysis demonstrates it had its roots in earlier developments with both clerics and laity recognising Jerusalem's role in Christianity as worthy of penitential pilgrimage. In 1071, Jerusalem was captured by the Turkish warlord Atsiz, who seized most of Syria and Palestine as part of the expansion of the Seljuks throughout the Middle East. The Seljuk hold on the city was weak and returning pilgrims reported difficulties and the oppression of Christians. Byzantine desire for military aid converged with increasing willingness of the western nobility to accept papal military direction.

First Crusade

Main article: First Crusade
14th-century miniature of Peter the Hermit leading the People's Crusade
Miniature of Peter the Hermit leading the People's Crusade (Abreujamen de las estorias, MS Egerton 1500, Avignon, 14th century)

In 1095, Byzantine Emperor Alexios I Komnenos requested military aid from Pope Urban II at the Council of Piacenza. He was probably expecting a small number of mercenaries he could direct. Alexios had restored the Empire's finances and authority but still faced numerous foreign enemies. Later that year at the Council of Clermont, Urban raised the issue again and preached a crusade. Almost immediately, the French priest Peter the Hermit gathered thousands of mostly poor in the People's Crusade. Traveling through Germany, German bands massacred Jewish communities in the Rhineland massacres during wide-ranging anti-Jewish activities. Jews were perceived to be as much an enemy as Muslims. They were held responsible for the Crucifixion, and were more immediately visible. People wondered why they should travel thousands of miles to fight non-believers when there were many closer to home. Quickly after leaving Byzantine-controlled territory on their journey to Nicaea, these crusaders were annihilated in a Turkish ambush at the Battle of Civetot.

Conflict with Urban II meant that King Philip I of France and Holy Roman Emperor Henry IV declined to participate. Aristocrats from France, western Germany, the Low Countries, Languedoc and Italy led independent contingents in loose, fluid arrangements based on bonds of lordship, family, ethnicity and language. The elder statesman Raymond IV, Count of Toulouse was foremost, rivaled by the relatively poor but martial Italo-Norman Bohemond of Taranto and his nephew Tancred. Godfrey of Bouillon and his brother Baldwin also joined with forces from Lorraine, Lotharingia, and Germany. These five princes were pivotal to the campaign, which was augmented by a northern French army led by Robert Curthose, Count Stephen II of Blois, and Count Robert II of Flanders. The total number may have reached as many as 100,000 people including non-combatants. They traveled eastward by land to Constantinople where they were cautiously welcomed by the emperor. Alexios persuaded many of the princes to pledge allegiance to him and that their first objective should be Nicaea, the capital of the Sultanate of Rum. Sultan Kilij Arslan left the city to resolve a territorial dispute, enabling its capture after the siege of Nicaea and a Byzantine naval assault in the high point of Latin and Greek co-operation.

Southeastern Europe, Asia Minor and Syria before the First Crusade

The first experience of Turkish tactics, using lightly armoured mounted archers, occurred when an advanced party led by Bohemond and Robert was ambushed at the battle of Dorylaeum. The Normans resisted for hours before the arrival of the main army caused a Turkish withdrawal. The army marched for three months to the former Byzantine city Antioch, that had been in Muslim control since 1084. Starvation, thirst and disease reduced numbers, combined with Baldwin's decision to leave with 100 knights and their followers to carve out his own territory in Edessa. The siege of Antioch lasted eight months. The crusaders lacked the resources to fully invest the city; the residents lacked the means to repel the invaders. Then Bohemond persuaded a guard in the city to open a gate. The crusaders entered, massacring the Muslim inhabitants and many Christians amongst the Greek Orthodox, Syrian and Armenian communities. A force to recapture the city was raised by Kerbogha, the effective ruler of Mosul. The Byzantines did not march to the assistance of the crusaders after the deserting Stephen of Blois told them the cause was lost. Alexius retreated from Philomelium, where he received Stephen's report, to Constantinople. The Greeks were never truly forgiven for this perceived betrayal and Stephen was branded a coward. Losing numbers through desertion and starvation in the besieged city, the crusaders attempted to negotiate surrender but were rejected. Bohemond recognised that the only option was open combat and launched a counterattack. Despite superior numbers, Kerbogha's army—which was divided into factions and surprised by the Crusaders' commitment—retreated and abandoned the siege. Raymond besieged Arqa in February 1099 and sent an embassy to al-Afdal Shahanshah, the vizier of Fatimid Egypt, seeking a treaty. The Pope's representative Adhemar died, leaving the crusade without a spiritual leader. Raymond failed to capture Arqa and in May led the remaining army south along the coast. Bohemond retained Antioch and remained, despite his pledge to return it to the Byzantines. Local rulers offered little resistance, opting for peace in return for provisions. The Frankish envoys returned accompanied by Fatimid representatives. This brought the information that the Fatimids had recaptured Jerusalem. The Franks offered to partition conquered territory in return for the city. Refusal of the offer made it imperative that the crusade reach Jerusalem before the Fatimids made it defensible.

The first attack on the city, launched on 7 June 1099, failed, and the siege of Jerusalem became a stalemate, before the arrival of craftsmen and supplies transported by the Genoese to Jaffa tilted the balance. Two large siege engines were constructed and the one commanded by Godfrey breached the walls on 15 July. For two days the crusaders massacred the inhabitants and pillaged the city. Historians now believe the accounts of the numbers killed have been exaggerated, but this narrative of massacre did much to cement the crusaders' reputation for barbarism. Godfrey secured the Frankish position by defeating an Egyptian force at the Battle of Ascalon on 12 August. Most of the crusaders considered their pilgrimage complete and returned to Europe. When it came to the future governance of the city it was Godfrey who took leadership and the title of Advocatus Sancti Sepulchri, Defender of the Holy Sepulchre. The presence of troops from Lorraine ended the possibility that Jerusalem would be an ecclesiastical domain and the claims of Raymond. Godfrey was left with a mere 300 knights and 2,000 infantry. Tancred also remained with the ambition to gain a princedom of his own.

The Islamic world seems to have barely registered the crusade; certainly, there is limited written evidence before 1130. This may be in part due to a reluctance to relate Muslim failure, but it is more likely to be the result of cultural misunderstanding. Al-Afdal Shahanshah and the Muslim world mistook the crusaders for the latest in a long line of Byzantine mercenaries, not religiously motivated warriors intent on conquest and settlement. The Muslim world was divided between the Sunnis of Syria and Iraq and the Shi'ite Fatimids of Egypt. The Turks had found unity unachievable since the death of Sultan Malik-Shah in 1092, with rival rulers in Damascus and Aleppo. In addition, in Baghdad, Seljuk sultan Barkiyaruq and Abbasid caliph al-Mustazhir were engaged in a power struggle. This gave the Crusaders a crucial opportunity to consolidate without any pan-Islamic counter-attack.

Early 12th century

map of the Crusader States (1135)
The Crusader states in 1135

Urban II died on 29 July 1099, fourteen days after the capture of Jerusalem by the Crusaders, but before news of the event had reached Rome. He was succeeded by Pope Paschal II who continued the policies of his predecessors in regard to the Holy Land. Godfrey died in 1100. Dagobert of Pisa, Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem and Tancred looked to Bohemond to come south, but he was captured by the Danishmends. The Lorrainers foiled the attempt to seize power and enabled Godfrey's brother, Baldwin I, to take the crown.

Paschal II promoted the large-scale Crusade of 1101 in support of the remaining Franks. This new crusade was a similar size to the First Crusade and joined in Byzantium by Raymond of Saint-Gilles. Command was fragmented and the force split in three:

The defeat of the crusaders proved to the Muslim world that the crusaders were not invincible, as they appeared to be during the First Crusade. Within months of the defeat, the Franks and Fatimid Egypt began fighting in three battles at Ramla, and one at Jaffa:

  • In the first on 7 September 1101, Baldwin I and 300 knights narrowly defeated the Fatimid vizier al-Afdal Shahanshah.
  • In the second on 17 May 1102, al-Afdal's son Sharaf al-Ma'ali and a superior force inflicted a major defeat on the Franks. Stephen of Blois and Stephen of Burgundy from the Crusade of 1101 were among those killed. Baldwin I fled to Arsuf.
  • Victory at the battle of Jaffa on 27 May 1102 saved the kingdom from virtual collapse.
  • In the third at Ramla on 28 August 1102, a coalition of Fatimid and Damescene forces were defeated again by Baldwin I and 500 knights.

Baldwin of Edessa, later king of Jerusalem as Baldwin II, and Patriarch Bernard of Valence ransomed Bohemond for 100,000 gold pieces. Baldwin and Bohemond then jointly campaigned to secure Edessa's southern front. On 7 May 1104, the Frankish army was defeated by the Seljuk rulers of Mosul and Mardin at the battle of Harran. Baldwin II and his cousin, Joscelin of Courtenay, were captured. Bohemond and Tancred retreated to Edessa where Tancred assumed command. Bohemond returned to Italy, taking with him much of Antioch's wealth and manpower. Tancred revitalised the beleaguered principality with victory at the battle of Artah on 20 April 1105 over a larger force, led by the Seljuk Ridwan of Aleppo. He was then able to secure Antioch's borders and push back his Greek and Muslim enemies. Under Paschal's sponsorship, Bohemond launched a version of a crusade in 1107 against the Byzantines, crossing the Adriatic and besieging Durrës. The siege failed; Alexius hit his supply lines, forcing his surrender. The terms laid out in the Treaty of Devol were never enacted because Bohemond remained in Apulia and died in 1111, leaving Tancred as notional regent for his son Bohemond II. In 1007, the people of Tell Bashir ransomed Joscelin and he negotiated Baldwin's release from Jawali Saqawa, atabeg of Mosul, in return for money, hostages and military support. Tancred and Baldwin, supported by their respective Muslim allies, entered violent conflict over the return of Edessa leaving 2,000 Franks dead before Bernard of Valence, patriarch of both Antioch and Edessa, adjudicated in Baldwin's favour.

On 13 May 1110, Baldwin II and a Genoese fleet captured Beirut. In the same month, Muhammad I Tapar, sultan of the Seljuk Empire, sent an army to recover Syria, but a Frankish defensive force arrived at Edessa, ending the short siege of the city. On 4 December, Baldwin captured Sidon, aided by a flotilla of Norwegian pilgrims led by Sigurd the Crusader. Next year, Tancred's extortion from Antioch's Muslim neighbours provoked the inconclusive battle of Shaizar between the Franks and an Abbasid army led by the governor of Mosul, Mawdud. Tancred died in 1112 and power passed to his nephew Roger of Salerno. In May 1113, Mawdud invaded Galilee with Toghtekin, atabeg of Damascus. On 28 June this force surprised Baldwin, chasing the Franks from the field at the battle of al-Sannabra. Mawdud was killed by Assassins. Bursuq ibn Bursuq led the Seljuk army in 1115 against an alliance of the Franks, Toghtekin, his son-in-law Ilghazi and the Muslims of Aleppo. Bursuq feigned retreat and the coalition disbanded. Only the forces of Roger and Baldwin of Edessa remained, but, heavily outnumbered, they were victorious on 14 September at the first battle of Tell Danith.

The Battle of Ager Sanguinis known as the Battle of the Field of Blood, medieval miniature

In April 1118, Baldwin I died of illness while raiding in Egypt. His cousin, Baldwin of Edessa, was unanimously elected his successor. In June 1119, Ilghazi, now emir of Aleppo, attacked Antioch with more than 10,000 men. Roger of Salerno's army of 700 knights, 3,000 foot soldiers and a corps of Turcopoles was defeated at the battle of Ager Sanguinis, or "field of blood". Roger was among the many killed. Baldwin II's counter-attack forced the offensive's end, after an inconclusive second battle of Tell Danith.

In January 1120 the secular and ecclesiastical leaders of the Outremer gathered at the Council of Nablus. The council laid a foundation of a law code for the kingdom of Jerusalem that replaced common law. The council also heard the first direct appeals for support made to the Papacy and Republic of Venice. They responded with the Venetian Crusade, sending a large fleet that supported the capture of Tyre in 1124. In April 1123, Baldwin II was ambushed and captured by Belek Ghazi while campaigning north of Edessa, along with Joscelin I, Count of Edessa. He was released in August 1024 in return for 80,000 gold pieces and the city of Azaz. In 1129, the Council of Troyes approved the rule of the Knights Templar for Hugues de Payens. He returned to the East with a major force including Fulk V of Anjou. This allowed the Franks to capture the town of Banias during the Crusade of 1129. Defeat at Damascus and Marj al-Saffar ended the campaign and Frankish influence on Damascus for years.

The Levantine Franks sought alliances with the Latin West through the marriage of heiresses to wealthy martial aristocrats. Constance of Antioch was married to Raymond of Poitiers, son of William IX, Duke of Aquitaine. Baldwin II's eldest daughter Melisende of Jerusalem was married to Fulk of Anjou in 1129. When Baldwin II died on 21 August 1131, Fulk and Melisende were consecrated joint rulers of Jerusalem. Despite conflict caused by the new king appointing his own supporters and the Jerusalemite nobles attempting to curb his rule, the couple were reconciled and Melisende exercised significant influence. When Fulk died in 1143, she became joint ruler with their son, Baldwin III of Jerusalem. At the same time, the advent of Imad ad-Din Zengi saw the Crusaders threatened by a Muslim ruler who would introduce jihad to the conflict, joining the powerful Syrian emirates in a combined effort against the Franks. He became atabeg of Mosul in September 1127 and used this to expand his control to Aleppo in June 1128. In 1135, Zengi moved against Antioch and, when the Crusaders failed to put an army into the field to oppose him, he captured several important Syrian towns. He defeated Fulk at the battle of Ba'rin of 1137, seizing Ba'rin Castle.

In 1137, Zengi invaded Tripoli, killing the count Pons of Tripoli. Fulk intervened, but Zengi's troops captured Pons' successor Raymond II of Tripoli, and besieged Fulk in the border castle of Montferrand. Fulk surrendered the castle and paid Zengi a ransom for his and Raymond's freedom. John II Komnenos, emperor since 1118, reasserted Byzantine claims to Cilicia and Antioch, compelling Raymond of Poitiers to give homage. In April 1138, the Byzantines and Franks jointly besieged Aleppo and, with no success, began the Siege of Shaizar, abandoning it a month later.

On 13 November 1143, while the royal couple were in Acre, Fulk was killed in a hunting accident. On Christmas Day 1143, their son Baldwin III of Jerusalem was crowned co-ruler with his mother. That same year, having prepared his army for a renewed attack on Antioch, John II Komnenos cut himself with a poisoned arrow while hunting wild boar. He died on 8 April 1143 and was succeeded as emperor by his son Manuel I Komnenos.

Following John's death, the Byzantine army withdrew, leaving Zengi unopposed. Fulk's death later in the year left Joscelin II of Edessa with no powerful allies to help defend Edessa. Zengi came north to begin the first siege of Edessa, arriving on 28 November 1144. The city had been warned of his arrival and was prepared for a siege, but there was little they could do. Zengi realised there was no defending force and surrounded the city. The walls collapsed on 24 December 1144. Zengi's troops rushed into the city, killing all those who were unable to flee. All the Frankish prisoners were executed, but the native Christians were allowed to live. The Crusaders were dealt their first major defeat.

Zengi was assassinated by a slave on 14 September 1146 and was succeeded in the Zengid dynasty by his son Nūr-ad-Din. The Franks recaptured the city during the Second Siege of Edessa of 1146 by stealth but could not take or even properly besiege the citadel. After a brief counter-siege, Nūr-ad-Din took the city. The men were massacred, with the women and children enslaved, and the walls razed.

Second Crusade

Main article: Second Crusade
Routes of the Second Crusade

The fall of Edessa caused great consternation in Jerusalem and Western Europe, tempering the enthusiastic success of the First Crusade. Calls for a new crusade – the Second Crusade – were immediate, and was the first to be led by European kings. Concurrent campaigns as part of the Reconquista and Northern Crusades are also sometimes associated with this Crusade. The aftermath of the Crusade saw the Muslim world united around Saladin, leading to the fall of Jerusalem.

Eugene III, recently elected pope, issued the bull Quantum praedecessores in December 1145 calling for a new crusade, one that would be more organized and centrally controlled than the First. The armies would be led by the strongest kings of Europe and a route that would be pre-planned. The pope called on Bernard of Clairvaux to preach the Second Crusade, granting the same indulgences which had been accorded to the First Crusaders. Among those answering the call were two European kings, Louis VII of France and Conrad III of Germany. Louis, his wife, Eleanor of Aquitaine, and many princes and lords prostrated themselves at the feet of Bernard in order to take the cross. Conrad and his nephew Frederick Barbarossa also received the cross from the hand of Bernard.

Conrad III and the German contingent planned to leave for the Holy Land at Easter, but did not depart until May 1147. When the German army began to cross Byzantine territory, emperor Manuel I had his troops posted to ensure against trouble. A brief Battle of Constantinople in September ensued, and their defeat at the emperor's hand convinced the Germans to move quickly to Asia Minor. Without waiting for the French contingent, Conrad III engaged the Seljuks of Rûm under sultan Mesud I, son and successor of Kilij Arslan, the nemesis of the First Crusade. Mesud and his forces almost totally destroyed Conrad's contingent at the Second Battle of Dorylaeum on 25 October 1147.

The French contingent departed in June 1147. In the meantime, Roger II of Sicily, an enemy of Conrad's, had invaded Byzantine territory. Manuel I needed all his army to counter this force, and, unlike the armies of the First Crusade, the Germans and French entered Asia with no Byzantine assistance. The French met the remnants of Conrad's army in northern Turkey, and Conrad joined Louis's force. They fended off a Seljuk attack at the Battle of Ephesus on 24 December 1147. A few days later, they were again victorious at the Battle of the Meander. Louis was not as lucky at the Battle of Mount Cadmus on 6 January 1148 when the army of Mesud inflicted heavy losses on the Crusaders. Shortly thereafter, they sailed for Antioch, almost totally destroyed by battle and sickness.

The Crusader army arrived at Antioch on 19 March 1148 with the intent on moving to retake Edessa, but Baldwin III of Jerusalem and the Knights Templar had other ideas. The Council of Acre was held on 24 June 1148, changing the objective of the Second Crusade to Damascus, a former ally of the kingdom that had shifted its allegiance to that of the Zengids. The Crusaders fought the Battle of Bosra with the Damascenes in the summer of 1147, with no clear winner. Bad luck and poor tactics of the Crusaders led to the disastrous five-day siege of Damascus from 24 to 28 July 1148. The barons of Jerusalem withdrew support and the Crusaders retreated before the arrival of a relief army led by Nūr-ad-Din. Morale fell, hostility to the Byzantines grew and distrust developed between the newly arrived Crusaders and those that had made the region their home after the earlier crusades. The French and German forces felt betrayed by the other, lingering for a generation due to the defeat, to the ruin of the Christian kingdoms in the Holy Land.

In the spring of 1147, Eugene III authorised the expansion of his mission into the Iberian Peninsula, equating these campaigns against the Moors with the rest of the Second Crusade. The successful Siege of Lisbon, from 1 July to 25 October 1147, was followed by the six-month siege of Tortosa, ending on 30 December 1148 with a defeat for the Moors. In the north, some Germans were reluctant to fight in the Holy Land while the pagan Wends were a more immediate problem. The resulting Wendish Crusade of 1147 was partially successful but failed to convert the pagans to Christianity.

The disastrous performance of this campaign in the Holy Land damaged the standing of the papacy, soured relations between the Christians of the kingdom and the West for many years, and encouraged the Muslims of Syria to even greater efforts to defeat the Franks. The dismal failures of this Crusade then set the stage for the fall of Jerusalem, leading to the Third Crusade.

Nūr-ad-Din and the rise of Saladin

In the first major encounter after the Second Crusade, Nūr-ad-Din's forces then destroyed the Crusader army at the Battle of Inab on 29 June 1149. Raymond of Poitiers, as prince of Antioch, came to the aid of the besieged city. Raymond was killed and his head was presented to Nūr-ad-Din, who forwarded it to the caliph al-Muqtafi in Baghdad. In 1150, Nūr-ad-Din defeated Joscelin II of Edessa for a final time, resulting in Joscelin being publicly blinded, dying in prison in Aleppo in 1159. Later that year, at the Battle of Aintab, he tried but failed to prevent Baldwin III's evacuation of the residents of Turbessel. The unconquered portions of the County of Edessa would nevertheless fall to the Zengids within a few years. In 1152, Raymond II of Tripoli became the first Frankish victim of the Assassins. Later that year, Nūr-ad-Din captured and burned Tortosa, briefly occupying the town before it was taken by the Knights Templar as a military headquarters.

Nūr-ad-Din's victory at the Battle of Inab, 1149. Illustration from the Passages d'outremer, c. 1490.

After the Siege of Ascalon ended on 22 August 1153 with a Crusader victory, Damascus was taken by Nūr-ad-Din the next year, uniting all of Syria under Zengid rule. In 1156, Baldwin III was forced into a treaty with Nūr-ad-Din, and later entered into an alliance with the Byzantine Empire. On 18 May 1157, Nūr-ad-Din began a siege on the Knights Hospitaller contingent at Banias, with the Grand Master Bertrand de Blanquefort captured. Baldwin III was able to break the siege, only to be ambushed at Jacob's Ford in June. Reinforcements from Antioch and Tripoli were able to relieve the besieged Crusaders, but they were defeated again that month at the Battle of Lake Huleh. In July 1158, the Crusaders were victorious at the Battle of Butaiha. Bertrand's captivity lasted until 1159, when emperor Manuel I negotiated an alliance with Nūr-ad-Din against the Seljuks.

Baldwin III died on 10 February 1163, and Amalric of Jerusalem was crowned as king of Jerusalem eight days later. Later that year, he defeated the Zengids at the Battle of al-Buqaia. Amalric then undertook a series of four invasions of Egypt from 1163 to 1169, taking advantage of weaknesses of the Fatimids. Nūr-ad-Din's intervention in the first invasion allowed his general Shirkuh, accompanied by his nephew Saladin, to enter Egypt. Shawar, the deposed vizier to the Fatimid caliph al-Adid, allied with Amalric I, attacking Shirkuh at the second Siege of Bilbeis beginning in August 1164, following Amalric's unsuccessful first siege in September 1163. This action left the Holy Land lacking in defenses, and Nūr-ad-Din defeated a Crusader force at the Battle of Harim in August 1164, capturing most of the Franks' leaders.

After the sacking of Bilbeis, the Crusader-Fatimid force was to meet Shirkuh's army in the indecisive Battle of al-Babein on 18 March 1167. In 1169, both Shawar and Shirkuh died, and al-Adid appointed Saladin as vizier. Saladin, with reinforcements from Nūr-ad-Din, defeated a massive Crusader-Byzantine force at the Siege of Damietta in late October. This gained Saladin the attention of the Assassins, with attempts on his life in January 1175 and again on 22 May 1176.

Baldwin IV of Jerusalem became king on 5 July 1174 at the age of 13. As a leper he was not expected to live long, and served with a number of regents, and served as co-ruler with his nephew Baldwin V of Jerusalem beginning in 1183. Baldwin IV, Raynald of Châtillon and the Knights Templar defeated Saladin at the celebrated Battle of Montgisard on 25 November 1177. In June 1179, the Crusaders were defeated at the Battle of Marj Ayyub, and in August the unfinished castle at Jacob's Ford fell to Saladin, with the slaughter of half its Templar garrison. However, the kingdom repelled his attacks at the Battle of Belvoir Castle in 1182 and later in the Siege of Kerak of 1183.

Fall of Jerusalem

Baldwin V became sole king upon the death of his uncle in 1185 under the regency of Raymond III of Tripoli. Raymond negotiated a truce with Saladin which went awry when the king died in the summer of 1186. His mother Sibylla of Jerusalem and her husband Guy of Lusignan were crowned as queen and king of Jerusalem in the summer of 1186, shortly thereafter. They immediately had to deal with the threat posed by Saladin.

Despite his defeat at the Battle of al-Fule in the fall of 1183, Saladin increased his attacks against the Franks, leading to their defeat at the Battle of Cresson on 1 May 1187. Guy of Lusignan responded by raising the largest army that Jerusalem had ever put into the field. Saladin lured this force into inhospitable terrain without water supplies and routed them at the Battle of Hattin on 4 July 1187. One of the major commanders was Raymond III of Tripoli who saw his force slaughtered, with some knights deserting to the enemy, and narrowly escaping, only to be regarded as a traitor and coward. Guy of Lusignan was one of the few captives of Saladin's after the battle, along with Raynald of Châtillon and Humphrey IV of Toron. Raynald was beheaded, settling an old score. Guy and Humphrey were imprisoned in Damascus and later released in 1188.

As a result of his victory, much of Palestine quickly fell to Saladin. The siege of Jerusalem began on 20 September 1187 and the Holy City was surrendered to Saladin by Balian of Ibelin on 2 October. According to some, on 19 October 1187, Urban III died upon of hearing of the defeat. Jerusalem was once again in Muslim hands. Many in the kingdom fled to Tyre, and Saladin's subsequent attack at the siege of Tyre beginning in November 1187 was unsuccessful. The siege of Belvoir Castle began the next month and the Hospitaller stronghold finally fell a year later. The sieges of Laodicea and Sahyun Castle in July 1188 and the sieges of al-Shughur and Bourzey Castle in August 1188 further solidified Saladin's gains. The siege of Safed in late 1188 then completed Saladin's conquest of the Holy Land.

The Near East, c. 1190, at the inception of the Third Crusade

Third Crusade

Main article: Third Crusade

The years following the founding of the Kingdom of Jerusalem were met with multiple disasters. The Second Crusade did not achieve its goals, and left the Muslim East in a stronger position with the rise of Saladin. A united Egypt–Syria led to the loss of Jerusalem itself, and Western Europe had no choice but to launch the Third Crusade, this time led by the kings of Europe.

The news of the disastrous defeat at the battle of Hattin and subsequent fall of Jerusalem gradually reached Western Europe. Urban III died shortly after hearing the news, and his successor Gregory VIII issued the bull Audita tremendi on 29 October 1187 describing the events in the East and urging all Christians to take up arms and go to the aid of those in the Kingdom of Jerusalem, calling for a new crusade to the Holy Land – the Third Crusade – to be led by Frederick Barbarossa and Richard I of England.

Richard the Lionheart on his way to Jerusalem, James William Glass (1850)

Frederick took the cross in March 1188. Frederick sent an ultimatum to Saladin, demanding the return of Palestine and challenging him to battle and in May 1189, Frederick's host departed for Byzantium. In March 1190, Frederick embarked to Asia Minor. The armies coming from western Europe pushed on through Anatolia, defeating the Turks and reaching as far as Cilician Armenia. On 10 June 1190, Frederick drowned near Silifke Castle. His death caused several thousand German soldiers to leave the force and return home. The remaining German army moved under the command of the English and French forces that arrived shortly thereafter.

Richard the Lionheart had already taken the cross as the Count of Poitou in 1187. His father Henry II of England and Philip II of France had done so on 21 January 1188 after receiving news of the fall of Jerusalem to Saladin. Richard I and Philip II of France agreed to go on the Crusade in January 1188. Arriving in the Holy Land, Richard led his support to the stalemated siege of Acre. The Muslim defenders surrendered on 12 July 1191. Richard remained in sole command of the Crusader force after the departure of Philip II on 31 July 1191. On 20 August 1191, Richard had more than 2000 prisoners beheaded at the massacre of Ayyadieh. Saladin subsequently ordered the execution of his Christian prisoners in retaliation.

Richard moved south, defeating Saladin's forces at the battle of Arsuf on 7 September 1191. Three days later, Richard took Jaffa, held by Saladin since 1187, and advanced inland towards Jerusalem. On 12 December 1191 Saladin disbanded the greater part of his army. Learning this, Richard pushed his army forward, to within 12 miles from Jerusalem before retreating back to the coast. The Crusaders made another advance on Jerusalem, coming within sight of the city in June before being forced to retreat again. Hugh III of Burgundy, leader of the Franks, was adamant that a direct attack on Jerusalem should be made. This split the Crusader army into two factions, and neither was strong enough to achieve its objective. Without a united command the army had little choice but to retreat back to the coast.

On 27 July 1192, Saladin's army began the battle of Jaffa, capturing the city. Richard's forces stormed Jaffa from the sea and the Muslims were driven from the city. Attempts to retake Jaffa failed and Saladin was forced to retreat. On 2 September 1192 Richard and Saladin entered into the Treaty of Jaffa, providing that Jerusalem would remain under Muslim control, while allowing unarmed Christian pilgrims and traders to freely visit the city. This treaty ended the Third Crusade.

Crusade of 1197

Main article: Crusade of 1197

Three years later, Henry VI launched the Crusade of 1197. While his forces were en route to the Holy Land, Henry VI died in Messina on 28 September 1197. The nobles that remained captured the Levant coast between Tyre and Tripoli before returning to Germany. The Crusade ended on 1 July 1198 after capturing Sidon and Beirut.

Fourth Crusade

Main articles: Fourth Crusade and Sack of Constantinople
Image of siege of Constantinople
Conquest of the Orthodox city of Constantinople by the Crusaders in 1204 (BNF Arsenal MS 5090, 15th century)
Multi-coloured map of Latin and Byzantine Empires
Latin Empire and Byzantine states in 1205. Green marks Venetian acquisitions; pink the Byzantine states; purple the Latin Empire and its vassals

In 1198, the recently elected Pope Innocent III announced a new crusade, organised by three Frenchmen: Theobald of Champagne; Louis of Blois; and Baldwin of Flanders. After Theobald's premature death, the Italian Boniface of Montferrat replaced him as the new commander of the campaign. They contracted with the Republic of Venice for the transportation of 30,000 crusaders at a cost of 85,000 marks. However, many chose other embarkation ports and only around 15,000 arrived in Venice. The Doge of Venice Enrico Dandolo proposed that Venice would be compensated with the profits of future conquests beginning with the seizure of the Christian city of Zara. Pope Innocent III's role was ambivalent. He only condemned the attack when the siege started. He withdrew his legate to disassociate from the attack but seemed to have accepted it as inevitable. Historians question whether for him, the papal desire to salvage the crusade may have outweighed the moral consideration of shedding Christian blood. The crusade was joined by King Philip of Swabia, who intended to use the Crusade to install his exiled brother-in-law, Alexios IV Angelos, as Emperor. This required the overthrow of Alexios III Angelos, the uncle of Alexios IV. Alexios IV offered the crusade 10,000 troops, 200,000 marks and the reunion of the Greek Church with Rome if they toppled his uncle Emperor Alexios III. When the crusade entered Constantinople, Alexios III fled and was replaced by his nephew. The Greek resistance prompted Alexios IV to seek continued support from the crusade until he could fulfil his commitments. This ended with his murder in a violent anti-Latin revolt. The crusaders were without seaworthy ships, supplies or food. Their only escape route was through the city, taking by force what Alexios had promised and the new anti-westerner Byzantine ruler – Alexios V Doukas – denied them. The Sack of Constantinople involved three days of pillaging churches and killing much of the Greek Orthodox Christian populace. This sack was not unusual considering the violent military standards of the time, but contemporaries such as Innocent III and Ali ibn al-Athir saw it as an atrocity against centuries of classical and Christian civilisation.

Fifth Crusade

Main article: Fifth Crusade

The Fifth Crusade (1217–1221) was a campaign by Western Europeans to reacquire Jerusalem and the rest of the Holy Land by first conquering Egypt, ruled by the sultan al-Adil, brother of Saladin. In 1213, Innocent III called for another Crusade at the Fourth Lateran Council, and in the papal bull Quia maior. Innocent died in 1216 and was succeeded by Honorius III who immediately called on Andrew II of Hungary and Frederick II of Germany to lead a Crusade. Frederick had taken the cross in 1215, but hung back, with his crown still in contention, and Honorius delayed the expedition.

Crusaders attack the tower of Damietta during the siege of Damietta in a painting by Cornelis Claesz van Wieringen.

Andrew II left for Acre in August 1217, joining John of Brienne, king of Jerusalem. The initial plan of a two-prong attack in Syria and in Egypt was abandoned and instead the objective became limited operations in Syria. After accomplishing little, the ailing Andrew returned to Hungary early in 1218. As it became clear that Frederick II was not coming to the east, the remaining commanders began the planning to attack the Egyptian port of Damietta.

The fortifications of Damietta included the Burj al-Silsilah – the chain tower – with massive chains that could stretch across the Nile. The siege of Damietta began in June 1218 with a successful assault on the tower. The loss of the tower was a great shock to the Ayyubids, and the sultan al-Adil died soon thereafter. He was succeeded as sultan by his son al-Kamil. Further offensive action by the Crusaders would have to wait until the arrival of additional forces, including legate Pelagius with a contingent of Romans. A group from England arrived shortly thereafter.

By February 1219, the Crusaders now had Damietta surrounded, and al-Kamil opened negotiations with the Crusaders, asking for envoys to come to his camp. He offered to surrender the kingdom of Jerusalem, less the fortresses of al-Karak and Krak de Montréal, guarding the road to Egypt, in exchange for the evacuation of Egypt. John of Brienne and the other secular leaders were in favor of the offer, as the original objective of the Crusade was the recovery of Jerusalem. But Pelagius and the leaders of the Templars and Hospitallers refused. Later, Francis of Assisi arrived to negotiate unsuccessfully with the sultan.

In November 1219, the Crusaders entered Damietta and found it abandoned, al-Kamil having moved his army south. In the captured city, Pelagius was unable to prod the Crusaders from their inactivity, and many returned home, their vow fulfilled. Al-Kamil took advantage of this lull to reinforce his new camp at Mansurah, renewing his peace offering to the Crusaders, which was again refused. Frederick II sent troops and word that he would soon follow, but they were under orders not to begin offensive operations until he had arrived.

In July 1221, Pelagius began to advance to the south. John of Brienne argued against the move, but was powerless to stop it. Already deemed a traitor for opposing the plans and threatened with excommunication, John joined the force under the command of the legate. In the ensuing Battle of Mansurah in late August, al-Kamil had the sluices along the right bank of the Nile opened, flooding the area and rendering battle impossible. Pelagius had no choice but to surrender.

The Crusaders still had some leverage as Damietta was well-garrisoned. They offered the sultan a withdrawal from Damietta and an eight-year truce in exchange for allowing the Crusader army to pass, the release of all prisoners, and the return of the relic of the True Cross. Prior to the formal surrender of Damietta, the two sides would maintain hostages, among them John of Brienne and Hermann of Salza for the Franks side and a son of al-Kamil for Egypt. The masters of the military orders were dispatched to Damietta, where the forces were resistant to giving up, with the news of the surrender, which happened on 8 September 1221. The Fifth Crusade was over, a dismal failure, unable to even gain the return of the piece of the True Cross.

Sixth Crusade

Main article: Sixth Crusade
Manuscript illumination of five men outside a fortress
Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II (left) meets al-Kamil (right), illumination from Giovanni Villani's Nuova Cronica (Vatican Library ms. Chigiano L VIII 296, 14th century).

The Sixth Crusade (1228–1229) was a military expedition to recapture the city of Jerusalem. It began seven years after the failure of the Fifth Crusade and involved very little actual fighting. The diplomatic maneuvering of Frederick II resulted in the Kingdom of Jerusalem regaining some control over Jerusalem for much of the ensuing fifteen years. The Sixth Crusade is also known as the Crusade of Frederick II.

Of all the European sovereigns, only Frederick II, the Holy Roman Emperor, was in a position to regain Jerusalem. Frederick was, like many of the 13th-century rulers, a serial crucesignatus, having taken the cross multiple times since 1215. After much wrangling, an onerous agreement between the emperor and Pope Honorius III was signed on 25 July 1225 at San Germano. Frederick promised to depart on the Crusade by August 1227 and remain for two years. During this period, he was to maintain and support forces in Syria and deposit escrow funds at Rome in gold. These funds would be returned to the emperor once he arrived at Acre. If he did not arrive, the money would be employed for the needs of the Holy Land. Frederick II would go on the Crusade as king of Jerusalem. He married John of Brienne's daughter Isabella II by proxy in August 1225 and they were formally married on 9 November 1227. Frederick claimed the kingship of Jerusalem despite John having been given assurances that he would remain as king. Frederick took the crown in December 1225. Frederick's first royal decree was to grant new privileges on the Teutonic Knights, placing them on equal footing as the Templars and Hospitallers.

After the Fifth Crusade, the Ayyubid sultan al-Kamil became involved in civil war in Syria and, having unsuccessfully tried negotiations with the West beginning in 1219, again tried this approach, offering return of much of the Holy Land in exchange for military support. Becoming pope in 1227, Gregory IX was determined to proceed with the Crusade. The first contingents of Crusaders then sailed in August 1227, joining with forces of the kingdom and fortifying the coastal towns. The emperor was delayed while his ships were refitted. He sailed on 8 September 1227, but before they reached their first stop, Frederick was struck with the plague and disembarked to secure medical attention. Resolved to keep his oath, he sent his fleet on to Acre. He sent his emissaries to inform Gregory IX of the situation, but the pope did not care about Frederick's illness, just that he had not lived up to his agreement. Frederick was excommunicated on 29 September 1227, branded a wanton violator of his sacred oath taken many times.

Frederick made his last effort to be reconciled with Gregory. It had no effect and Frederick sailed from Brindisi in June 1228. After a stop at Cyprus, Frederick II arrived in Acre on 7 September 1228 and was received warmly by the military orders, despite his excommunication. Frederick's army was not large, mostly German, Sicilian and English. Of the troops he had sent in 1227 had mostly returned home. He could neither afford nor mount a lengthening campaign in the Holy Land given the ongoing War of the Keys with Rome. The Sixth Crusade would be one of negotiation.

After resolving the internecine struggles in Syria, al-Kamil's position was stronger than it was a year before when he made his original offer to Frederick. For unknown reasons, the two sides came to an agreement. The resultant Treaty of Jaffa was concluded on 18 February 1229, with al-Kamil surrendering Jerusalem, with the exception of some Muslim holy sites, and agreeing to a ten-year truce. Frederick entered Jerusalem on 17 March 1229 and received the formal surrender of the city by al-Kamil's agent and the next day, crowned himself. On 1 May 1229, Frederick departed from Acre and arrived in Sicily a month before the pope knew that he had left the Holy Land. Frederick obtained from the pope relief from his excommunication on 28 August 1230 at the Treaty of Ceprano.

The results of the Sixth Crusade were not universally acclaimed. Two letters from the Christian side tell differing stories, with Frederick touting the great success of the endeavor and the Latin patriarch painting a darker picture of the emperor and his accomplishments. On the Muslim side, al-Kamil himself was pleased with the accord, but others regarded the treaty as a disastrous event. In the end, the Sixth Crusade successfully returned Jerusalem to Christian rule and had set a precedent, in having achieved success on crusade without papal involvement.

The Crusades of 1239–1241

Main article: Barons' Crusade

The Crusades of 1239–1241, also known as the Barons' Crusade, were a series of crusades to the Holy Land that, in territorial terms, were the most successful since the First Crusade. The major expeditions were led separately by Theobald I of Navarre and Richard of Cornwall. These crusades are sometimes discussed along with that of Baldwin of Courtenay to Constantinople.

The defeat of the Crusaders at Gaza, depicted in the Chronica majora of Matthew Paris, 13th century

In 1229, Frederick II and the Ayyubid sultan al-Kamil, had agreed to a ten-year truce. Nevertheless, Gregory IX, who had condemned this truce from the beginning, issued the papal bull Rachel suum videns in 1234 calling for a new crusade once the truce expired. A number of English and French nobles took the cross, but the crusade's departure was delayed because Frederick, whose lands the crusaders had planned to cross, opposed any crusading activity before the expiration of this truce. Frederick was again excommunicated in 1239, causing most crusaders to avoid his territories on their way to the Holy Land.

The French expedition was led by Theobald I of Navarre and Hugh of Burgundy, joined by Amaury de Montfort and Peter of Dreux. On 1 September 1239, Theobald arrived in Acre, and was soon drawn into the Ayyubid civil war, which had been raging since the death of al-Kamil in 1238. At the end of September, al-Kamil's brother as-Salih Ismail seized Damascus from his nephew, as-Salih Ayyub, and recognised al-Adil II as sultan of Egypt. Theobald decided to fortify Ascalon to protect the southern border of the kingdom and to move against Damascus later. While the Crusaders were marching from Acre to Jaffa, Egyptian troops moved to secure the border in what became the Battle at Gaza. Contrary to Theobald's instructions and the advice of the military orders, a group decided to move against the enemy without further delay, but they were surprised by the Muslims who inflicted a devastating defeat on the Franks. The masters of the military orders then convinced Theobald to retreat to Acre rather than pursue the Egyptians and their Frankish prisoners. A month after the battle at Gaza, an-Nasir Dā'ūd, emir of Kerak, seized Jerusalem, virtually unguarded. The internal strife among the Ayyubids allowed Theobald to negotiate the return of Jerusalem. In September 1240, Theobald departed for Europe, while Hugh of Burgundy remained to help fortify Ascalon.

On 8 October 1240, the English expedition arrived, led by Richard of Cornwall. The force marched to Jaffa, where they completed the negotiations for a truce with Ayyubid leaders begun by Theobald just a few months prior. Richard consented, the new agreement was ratified by Ayyub by 8 February 1241, and prisoners from both sides were released on 13 April. Meanwhile, Richard's forces helped to work on Ascalon's fortifications, which were completed by mid-March 1241. Richard entrusted the new fortress to an imperial representative, and departed for England on 3 May 1241.

In July 1239, Baldwin of Courtenay, the young heir to the Latin Empire, travelled to Constantinople with a small army. In the winter of 1239, Baldwin finally returned to Constantinople, where he was crowned emperor around Easter of 1240, after which he launched his crusade. Baldwin then besieged and captured Tzurulum, a Nicaean stronghold seventy-five miles west of Constantinople.

Although the Barons' Crusade returned the kingdom to its largest size since 1187, the gains would be dramatically reversed a few years later. On 15 July 1244, the city was reduced to ruins during the siege of Jerusalem and its Christians massacred by the Khwarazmian army. A few months later, the Battle of La Forbie permanently crippled Christian military power in the Holy Land. The sack of the city and the massacre which accompanied it encouraged Louis IX of France to organise the Seventh Crusade.

The Seventh Crusade

Main article: Seventh Crusade
Louis IX during the Seventh Crusade

The Seventh Crusade (1248–1254) was the first of the two Crusades led by Louis IX of France. Also known as the Crusade of Louis IX to the Holy Land, its objective was to reclaim the Holy Land by attacking Egypt, the main seat of Muslim power in the Middle East, then under as-Salih Ayyub, son of al-Kamil. The Crusade was conducted in response to setbacks in the Kingdom of Jerusalem, beginning with the loss of the Holy City in 1244, and was preached by Innocent IV in conjunction with a crusade against emperor Frederick II, the Prussian crusades and Mongol incursions.

At the end of 1244, Louis was stricken with a severe malarial infection and he vowed that if he recovered he would set out for a Crusade. His life was spared, and as soon as his health permitted him, he took the cross and immediately began preparations. The next year, the pope presided over First Council of Lyon, directing a new Crusade under the command of Louis. With Rome under siege by Frederick, the pope also issued his Ad Apostolicae Dignitatis Apicem, formally renewing the sentence of excommunication on the emperor, and declared him deposed from the imperial throne and that of Naples.

The recruiting effort under cardinal Odo of Châteauroux was difficult, and the Crusade finally began on 12 August 1248 when Louis IX left Paris under the insignia of a pilgrim, the Oriflamme. With him were queen Margaret of Provence and two of Louis' brothers, Charles I of Anjou and Robert I of Artois. Their youngest brother Alphonse of Poitiers departed the next year. They were followed by Hugh IV of Burgundy, Peter Maulcerc, Hugh XI of Lusignan, royal companion and chronicler Jean de Joinville, and an English detachment under William Longespée, grandson of Henry II of England.

The first stop was Cyprus, arriving in September 1248 where they experienced a long wait for the forces to assemble. Many of the men were lost en route or to disease. The Franks were soon met by those from Acre including the masters of the Orders Jean de Ronay and Guillaume de Sonnac. The two eldest sons of John of Brienne, Alsonso of Brienne and Louis of Brienne, would also join as would John of Ibelin, nephew to the Old Lord of Beirut. William of Villehardouin also arrived with ships and Frankish soldiers from the Morea. It was agreed that Egypt was the objective and many remembered how the sultan's father had been willing to exchange Jerusalem itself for Damietta in the Fifth Crusade. Louis was not willing to negotiate with the infidel Muslims, but he did unsuccessfully seek a Franco-Mongol alliance, reflecting what the pope had sought in 1245.

As-Salih Ayyub was conducting a campaign in Damascus when the Franks invaded as he had expected the Crusaders to land in Syria. Hurrying his forces back to Cairo, he turned to his vizier Fakhr ad-Din ibn as-Shaikh to command the army that fortified Damietta in anticipation of the invasion. On 5 June 1249 the Crusader fleet began the landing and subsequent siege of Damietta. After a short battle, the Egyptian commander decided to evacuate the city. Remarkably, Damietta had been seized with only one Crusader casualty. The city became a Frankish city and Louis waited until the Nile floods abated before advancing, remembering the lessons of the Fifth Crusade. The loss of Damietta was a shock to the Muslim world, and as-Salih Ayyub offered to trade Damietta for Jerusalem as his father had thirty years before. The offer was rejected. By the end of October 1249 the Nile had receded and reinforcements had arrived. It was time to advance, and the Frankish army set out towards Mansurah.

The sultan died in November 1249, his widow Shajar al-Durr concealing the news of her husband's death. She forged a document which appointed his son al-Muazzam Turanshah, then in Syria, as heir and Fakhr ad-Din as viceroy. But the Crusade continued, and by December 1249, Louis was encamped on the river banks opposite to Mansurah. For six weeks, the armies of the West and Egypt faced each other on opposite sides of the canal, leading to the Battle of Mansurah that would end on 11 February 1250 with an Egyptian defeat. Louis had his victory, but a cost of the loss of much of his force and their commanders. Among the survivors were the Templar master Guillaume de Sonnac, losing an eye, Humbert V de Beaujeu, constable of France, John II of Soissons, and the duke of Brittany, Peter Maulcerc. Counted with the dead were the king's brother Robert I of Artois, William Longespée and most of his English followers, Peter of Courtenay, and Raoul II of Coucy. But the victory would be short-lived. On 11 February 1250, the Egyptians attacked again. Templar master Guillaume de Sonnac and acting Hospitaller master Jean de Ronay were killed. Alphonse of Poitiers, guarding the camp, was encircled and was rescued by the camp followers. At nightfall, the Muslims gave up the assault.

Louis IX being taken prisoner at the Battle of Fariskur (Gustave Doré)

On 28 February 1250, Turanshah arrived from Damascus and began an Egyptian offensive, intercepting the boats that brought food from Damietta. The Franks were quickly beset by famine and disease. The Battle of Fariskur fought on 6 April 1250 would be the decisive defeat of Louis' army. Louis knew that the army must be extricated to Damietta and they departed on the morning of 5 April, with the king in the rear and the Egyptians in pursuit. The next day, the Muslims surrounded the army and attacked in full force. On 6 April, Louis' surrender was negotiated directly with the sultan by Philip of Montfort. The king and his entourage were taken in chains to Mansurah and the whole of the army was rounded up and led into captivity.

The Egyptians were unprepared for the large number of prisoners taken, comprising most of Louis' force. The infirm were executed immediately and several hundred were decapitated daily. Louis and his commanders were moved to Mansurah, and negotiations for their release commenced. The terms agreed to were harsh. Louis was to ransom himself by the surrender of Damietta and his army by the payment of a million bezants (later reduced to 800,000). Latin patriarch Robert of Nantes went under safe-conduct to complete the arrangements for the ransom. Arriving in Cairo, he found Turanshah dead, murdered in a coup instigated by his stepmother Shajar al-Durr. On 6 May, Geoffrey of Sergines handed Damietta over to the Moslem vanguard. Many wounded soldiers had been left behind at Damietta, and contrary to their promise, the Muslims massacred them all. In 1251, the Shepherds' Crusade, a popular crusade formed with the objective to free Louis, engulfed France. After his release, Louis went to Acre where he remained until 1254. This is regarded as the end of the Seventh Crusade.

The final crusades

Main articles: Eighth Crusade and Lord Edward's Crusade

After the defeat of the Crusaders in Egypt, Louis remained in Syria until 1254 to consolidate the crusader states. A brutal power struggle developed in Egypt between various Mamluk leaders and the remaining weak Ayyubid rulers. The threat presented by an invasion by the Mongols led to one of the competing Mamluk leaders, Qutuz, seizing the sultanate in 1259 and uniting with another faction led by Baibars to defeat the Mongols at Ain Jalut. The Mamluks then quickly gained control of Damascus and Aleppo before Qutuz was assassinated and Baibers assumed control.

Between 1265 and 1271, Baibars drove the Franks to a few small coastal outposts. Baibars had three key objectives: to prevent an alliance between the Latins and the Mongols, to cause dissension among the Mongols (particularly between the Golden Horde and the Persian Ilkhanate), and to maintain access to a supply of slave recruits from the Russian steppes. He supported Manfred of Sicily's failed resistance to the attack of Charles and the papacy. Dissension in the crusader states led to conflicts such as the War of Saint Sabas. Venice drove the Genoese from Acre to Tyre where they continued to trade with Egypt. Indeed, Baibars negotiated free passage for the Genoese with Michael VIII Palaiologos, Emperor of Nicaea, the newly restored ruler of Constantinople. In 1270 Charles turned his brother King Louis IX's crusade, known as the Eighth Crusade, to his own advantage by persuading him to attack Tunis. The crusader army was devastated by disease, and Louis himself died at Tunis on 25 August. The fleet returned to France. Prince Edward, the future king of England, and a small retinue arrived too late for the conflict but continued to the Holy Land in what is known as Lord Edward's Crusade. Edward survived an assassination attempt, negotiated a ten-year truce, and then returned to manage his affairs in England. This ended the last significant crusading effort in the eastern Mediterranean.

Decline and fall of the Crusader States

The Siege of Acre depicted in Matthieu de Clermont défend Ptolémaïs en 1291, by Dominique Papety at Salles des Croisades in Versailles
Main article: Fall of Outremer

The years 1272–1302 include numerous conflicts throughout the Levant as well as the Mediterranean and Western European regions, and many crusades were proposed to free the Holy Land from Mamluk control. These include ones of Gregory X, Charles I of Anjou and Nicholas IV, none of which came to fruition. The major players fighting the Muslims included the kings of England and France, the kingdoms of Cyprus and Sicily, the three Military Orders and Mongol Ilkhanate. The end of Western European presence in the Holy Land was sealed with the fall of Tripoli and their subsequent defeat at the siege of Acre in 1291. The Christian forces managed to survive until the final fall of Ruad in 1302.

The Holy Land would no longer be the focus of the West even though various crusades were proposed in the early years of the fourteenth century. The Knights Hospitaller would conquer Rhodes from Byzantium, making it the center of their activity for a hundred years. The Knights Templar, the elite fighting force in the kingdom, was disbanded. The Mongols converted to Islam, but disintegrated as a fighting force. The Mamluk sultanate would continue for another century. The Crusades to liberate Jerusalem and the Holy Land were over.

Other crusades

See also: Chronologies of the Crusades
Map of the branches of the Teutonic Order in Europe c. 1300. Shaded area is sovereign territory.

The military expeditions undertaken by European Christians in the 11th, 12th, and 13th centuries to recover the Holy Land from Muslims provided a template for warfare in other areas that also interested the Latin Church. These included the 12th and 13th century conquest of Muslim Al-Andalus by Spanish Christian kingdoms; 12th to 15th century German Northern Crusades expansion into the pagan Baltic region; the suppression of non-conformity, particularly in Languedoc during what has become called the Albigensian Crusade and for the Papacy's temporal advantage in Italy and Germany that are now known as political crusades. In the 13th and 14th centuries there were also unsanctioned, but related popular uprisings to recover Jerusalem known variously as Shepherds' or Children's crusades.

Urban II equated the crusades for Jerusalem with the ongoing Catholic invasion of the Iberian Peninsula and crusades were preached in 1114 and 1118, but it was Pope Callixtus II who proposed dual fronts in Spain and the Middle East in 1122. In the spring of 1147, Eugene authorised the expansion of his mission into the Iberian peninsula, equating these campaigns against the Moors with the rest of the Second Crusade. The successful siege of Lisbon, from 1 July to 25 October 1147, was followed by the six-month siege of Tortosa, ending on 30 December 1148 with a defeat for the Moors. In the north, some Germans were reluctant to fight in the Holy Land while the pagan Wends were a more immediate problem. The resulting Wendish Crusade of 1147 was partially successful but failed to convert the pagans to Christianity. By the time of the Second Crusade the three Spanish kingdoms were powerful enough to conquer Islamic territory – Castile, Aragon, and Portugal. In 1212 the Spanish were victorious at the Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa with the support of foreign fighters responding to the preaching of Innocent III. Many of these deserted because of the Spanish tolerance of the defeated Muslims, for whom the Reconquista was a war of domination rather than extermination. In contrast the Christians formerly living under Muslim rule called Mozarabs had the Roman Rite relentlessly imposed on them and were absorbed into mainstream Catholicism. Al-Andalus, Islamic Spain, was completely suppressed in 1492 when the Emirate of Granada surrendered.

In 1147, Pope Eugene III extended Calixtus's idea by authorising a crusade on the German north-eastern frontier against the pagan Wends from what was primarily economic conflict. From the early 13th century, there was significant involvement of military orders, such as the Livonian Brothers of the Sword and the Order of Dobrzyń. The Teutonic Knights diverted efforts from the Holy Land, absorbed these orders and established the State of the Teutonic Order. This evolved the Duchy of Prussia and Duchy of Courland and Semigallia in 1525 and 1562, respectively.

Two illuminations: the pope admonishing a group of people and mounted knights attacking unarmed people with swords
Miniatures showing Pope Innocent III excommunicating, and the crusaders massacring, Cathars (BL Royal 16 G VI, fol. 374v, 14th century)

By the beginning of the 13th century papal reticence in applying crusades against the papacy's political opponents and those considered heretics had abated. Innocent III proclaimed a crusade against Catharism that failed to suppress the heresy itself but ruined the culture of the Languedoc. This set a precedent that was followed in 1212 with pressure exerted on the city of Milan for tolerating Catharism, in 1234 against the Stedinger peasants of north-western Germany, in 1234 and 1241 Hungarian crusades against Bosnian heretics. The historian Norman Housley notes the connection between heterodoxy and anti-papalism in Italy. Indulgence was offered to anti-heretical groups such as the Militia of Jesus Christ and the Order of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Innocent III declared the first political crusade against Frederick II's regent, Markward von Annweiler, and when Frederick later threatened Rome in 1240, Gregory IX used crusading terminology to raise support against him. On Frederick II's death the focus moved to Sicily. In 1263, Pope Urban IV offered crusading indulgences to Charles of Anjou in return for Sicily's conquest. However, these wars had no clear objectives or limitations, making them unsuitable for crusading. The 1281 election of a French pope, Martin IV, brought the power of the papacy behind Charles. Charles's preparations for a crusade against Constantinople were foiled by the Byzantine Emperor Michael VIII Palaiologos, who instigated an uprising called the Sicilian Vespers. Instead, Peter III of Aragon was proclaimed king of Sicily, despite his excommunication and an unsuccessful Aragonese Crusade. Political crusading continued against Venice over Ferrara; Louis IV, King of Germany when he marched to Rome for his imperial coronation; and the free companies of mercenaries.

The Latin states established were a fragile patchwork of petty realms threatened by Byzantine successor states – the Despotate of Epirus, the Empire of Nicaea and the Empire of Trebizond. Thessaloniki fell to Epirus in 1224, and Constantinople to Nicaea in 1261. Achaea and Athens survived under the French after the Treaty of Viterbo. The Venetians endured a long-standing conflict with the Ottoman Empire until the final possessions were lost in the Seventh Ottoman–Venetian War in the 18th century. This period of Greek history is known as the Frankokratia or Latinokratia ("Frankish or Latin rule") and designates a period when western European Catholics ruled Orthodox Byzantine Greeks.

The major crusades of the 14th century include: the Crusade against the Dulcinians; the Crusade of the Poor; the Anti-Catalan Crusade; the Shepherds' Crusade; the Smyrniote Crusades; the Crusade against Novgorod; the Savoyard Crusade; the Alexandrian Crusade; the Despenser's Crusade; the Mahdia, Tedelis, and Bona Crusades; and the Crusade of Nicopolis.

The threat of the expanding Ottoman Empire prompted further crusades of the 15th century. In 1389, the Ottomans defeated the Serbs at the Battle of Kosovo, won control of the Balkans from the Danube to the Gulf of Corinth, in 1396 defeated French crusaders and King Sigismund of Hungary at the Nicopolis, in 1444 destroyed a crusading Polish and Hungarian force at Varna, four years later again defeated the Hungarians at Kosovo and in 1453 captured Constantinople. The 16th century saw growing rapprochement. The Habsburgs, French, Spanish and Venetians and Ottomans all signed treaties. Francis I of France allied with all quarters, including from German Protestant princes and Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent.

Anti-Christian crusading declined in the 15th century, the exceptions were the six failed crusades against the religiously radical Hussites in Bohemia and attacks on the Waldensians in Savoy. Crusading became a financial exercise; precedence was given to the commercial and political objectives. The military threat presented by the Ottoman Turks diminished, making anti-Ottoman crusading obsolete in 1699 with the final Holy League.

Crusading movement

Main article: Crusading movement

Prior to the 11th century, the Latin Church had developed a system for the remission and absolution of sin in return for contrition, confession, and penitential acts. Reparation through abstinence from martial activity still presented a difficulty to the noble warrior class. It was revolutionary when Gregory VII offered absolution of sin earned through the Church-sponsored violence in support of his causes, if selflessly given at the end of the century. This was developed by subsequent Popes into the granting of plenary indulgences that reduced all God-imposed temporal penalties. The papacy developed "Political Augustinianism" into attempts to remove the Church from secular control by asserting ecclesiastical supremacy over temporal polities and the Orthodox Church. This was associated with the idea that the Church should actively intervene in the world to impose "justice".

A distinct ideology promoting and regulating crusading is evidenced in surviving texts. The Church defined this in legal and theological terms based on the theory of holy war and the concept of pilgrimage. Theology merged the Old Testament Israelite wars instigated and assisted by God with New Testament Christocentric views. Holy war was based on ancient ideas of just war. The fourth-century theologian Augustine of Hippo had Christianised this, and it eventually became the paradigm of Christian holy war. Theologians widely accepted the justification that holy war against pagans was good, because of their opposition to Christianity. The Holy Land was the patrimony of Christ; its recovery was on behalf of God. The Albigensian Crusade was a defence of the French Church, the Northern Crusades were campaigns conquering lands beloved of Christ's mother Mary for Christianity.

Inspired by the First Crusade, the crusading movement went on to define late medieval western culture and impacted the history of the western Islamic world. Christendom was geopolitical, and this underpinned the practice of the medieval Church. Reformists of the 11th century urged these ideas which declined following the Reformation. The ideology continued after the 16th century with the military orders but dwindled in competition with other forms of religious war and new ideologies.

Military orders

Main article: Military orders
13th-century miniature of King Baldwin II granting the Al Aqsa Mosque to Hugues de Payens
13th-century miniature of Baldwin II of Jerusalem granting the captured Al Aqsa Mosque to Hugues de Payns

The military orders were forms of a religious order first established early in the twelfth century with the function of defending Christians, as well as observing monastic vows. The Knights Hospitaller had a medical mission in Jerusalem since before the First Crusade, later becoming a formidable military force supporting the crusades in the Holy Land and Mediterranean. The Knights Templar were founded in 1119 by a band of knights who dedicated themselves to protecting pilgrims en route to Jerusalem. The Teutonic Knights were formed in 1190 to protect pilgrims in both the Holy Land and Baltic region.

The Hospitallers and the Templars became supranational organisations as papal support led to rich donations of land and revenue across Europe. This, in turn, led to a steady flow of new recruits and the wealth to maintain multiple fortifications in the crusader states. In time, they developed into autonomous powers in the region. After the fall of Acre the Hospitallers relocated to Cyprus, then ruled Rhodes until the island was taken by the Ottomans in 1522. While there was talk of merging the Templars and Hospitallers in 1305 by Clement V, ultimately the Templars were charged with heresy and disbanded. The Teutonic Knights supported the later Prussian campaigns into the fifteenth century.

Art and architecture

Main article: Art of the Crusades
Photograph of 12th-century Hospitaller castle of Krak des Chevaliers in Syria showing concentric rings of defence, curtain walls and location sitting on a promontory.
12th-century Knights Hospitaller castle of Krak des Chevaliers in Syria, one of the first castles to use concentric fortification, i.e. concentric rings of defence that could all operate at the same time. It has two curtain walls and sits on a promontory.

According to the historian Joshua Prawer no major European poet, theologian, scholar or historian settled in the crusader states. Some went on pilgrimage, and this is seen in new imagery and ideas in western poetry. Although they did not migrate east themselves, their output often encouraged others to journey there on pilgrimage.

Historians consider the crusader military architecture of the Middle East to demonstrate a synthesis of the European, Byzantine and Muslim traditions and to be the most original and impressive artistic achievement of the crusades. Castles were a tangible symbol of the dominance of a Latin Christian minority over a largely hostile majority population. They also acted as centres of administration. Modern historiography rejects the 19th-century consensus that Westerners learnt the basis of military architecture from the Near East, as Europe had already experienced rapid development in defensive technology before the First Crusade. Direct contact with Arab fortifications originally constructed by the Byzantines did influence developments in the east, but the lack of documentary evidence means that it remains difficult to differentiate between the importance of this design culture and the constraints of situation. The latter led to the inclusion of oriental design features such as large water reservoirs and the exclusion of occidental features such as moats.

The ivory front bookcover of the Melisende Psalter

Typically, crusader church design was in the French Romanesque style. This can be seen in the 12th-century rebuilding of the Holy Sepulchre. It retained some of the Byzantine details, but new arches and chapels were built to northern French, Aquitanian, and Provençal patterns. There is little trace of any surviving indigenous influence in sculpture, although in the Holy Sepulchre the column capitals of the south facade follow classical Syrian patterns.

In contrast to architecture and sculpture, it is in the area of visual culture that the assimilated nature of the society was demonstrated. Throughout the 12th and 13th centuries the influence of indigenous artists was demonstrated in the decoration of shrines, paintings and the production of illuminated manuscripts. Frankish practitioners borrowed methods from the Byzantines and indigenous artists and iconographical practice leading to a cultural synthesis, illustrated by the Church of the Nativity. Wall mosaics were unknown in the west but in widespread use in the crusader states. Whether this was by indigenous craftsmen or learnt by Frankish ones is unknown, but a distinctive original artistic style evolved.

Manuscripts were produced and illustrated in workshops housing Italian, French, English and local craftsmen leading to a cross-fertilisation of ideas and techniques. An example of this is the Melisende Psalter, created by several hands in a workshop attached to the Holy Sepulchre. This style could have both reflected and influenced the taste of patrons of the arts. But what is seen is an increase in stylised, Byzantine-influenced content. This extended to the production of icons, unknown at the time to the Franks, sometimes in a Frankish style and even of western saints. This is seen as the origin of Italian panel painting. While it is difficult to track illumination of manuscripts and castle design back to their origins, textual sources are simpler. The translations made in Antioch are notable, but they are considered of secondary importance to the works emanating from Muslim Spain and from the hybrid culture of Sicily.

Financing

Main article: Papal income tax

Crusade finance and taxation left a legacy of social, financial, and legal institutions. Property became available while coinage and precious materials circulated more readily within Europe. Crusading expeditions created immense demands for food supplies, weapons, and shipping that benefited merchants and artisans. Levies for crusades contributed to the development of centralised financial administrations and the growth of papal and royal taxation. This aided development of representative bodies whose consent was required for many forms of taxation.

The Crusades strengthened exchanges between Oriental and Occidental economic spheres. The transport of pilgrims and crusaders notably benefitted Italian maritime cities, such as the trio of Venice, Pisa, and Genoa. Having obtained commercial privileges in the fortified places of Syria, they became the favoured intermediaries for trade in goods such as silk, spices, as well as other raw alimentary goods and mineral products. Trade with the Muslim world was thus extended beyond existing limits. Merchants were further advantaged by technological improvements, and long-distance trade as a whole expanded. The increased volume of goods being traded through ports of the Latin Levant and the Muslim world made this the cornerstone of a wider Middle Eastern economy, as manifested in important cities along the trade routes, such as Aleppo, Damascus, and Acre. It became increasingly common for European merchants to venture farther east, and business was conducted fairly despite religious differences, and continued even in times of political and military tensions.

Legacy

See also: Crusading movement § Legacy
Image of five knights paying homage to Saladin
Saladin and Guy de Lusignan after the Battle of Hattin in 1187, by Said Tahsine (1904–1985)

The Crusades created national mythologies, tales of heroism, and a few place names. Historical parallelism and the tradition of drawing inspiration from the Middle Ages have become keystones of political Islam encouraging ideas of a modern jihad and a centuries-long struggle against Christian states, while secular Arab nationalism highlights the role of western imperialism. Modern Muslim thinkers, politicians and historians have drawn parallels between the crusades and political developments such as the establishment of Israel in 1948.

Right-wing circles in the western world have drawn opposing parallels, considering Christianity to be under an Islamic religious and demographic threat that is analogous to the situation at the time of the crusades. Crusader symbols and anti-Islamic rhetoric are presented as an appropriate response. These symbols and rhetoric are used to provide a religious justification and inspiration for a struggle against a religious enemy.

Historiography

Main article: Historiography of the Crusades

The historiography of the Crusades is concerned with their "history of the histories" during the Crusader period. The subject is a complex one, with overviews provided in Select Bibliography of the Crusades, Modern Historiography, and Crusades (Bibliography and Sources). The histories describing the Crusades are broadly of three types: (1) The primary sources of the Crusades, which include works written in the medieval period, generally by participants in the Crusade or written contemporaneously with the event, letters and documents in archives, and archaeological studies; (2) secondary sources, beginning with early consolidated works in the 16th century and continuing to modern times; and (3) tertiary sources, primarily encyclopedias, bibliographies and genealogies.

A miniature painting from a medieval manuscript, showing a man sitting at a desk writing a book.
William of Tyre writing his history, from a 13th-century Old French translation, Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris, MS 2631, f.1r

Primary sources

The primary sources for the Crusades are generally presented in the individual articles on each Crusade and summarised in the list of sources for the Crusades. For the First Crusade, this includes the original Latin chronicles, including the Gesta Francorum, works by Albert of Aachen and Fulcher of Chartres, the Alexiad by Byzantine princess Anna Komnene, the Complete Work of History by Muslim historian Ali ibn al-Athir, and the Chronicle of Armenian historian Matthew of Edessa. Many of these and related texts are found in the collections Recueil des historiens des croisades (RHC) and Crusade Texts in Translation. The work of William of Tyre, Historia Rerum in Partibus Transmarinis Gestarum, and its continuations by later historians complete the foundational work of the traditional Crusade. Some of these works also provide insight into the later Crusades and Crusader states. Other works include:

After the fall of Acre, the crusades continued through the 16th century. Principal references on this subject are the Wisconsin Collaborative History of the Crusades and Norman Housley's The Later Crusades, 1274–1580: From Lyons to Alcazar. Complete bibliographies are also given in these works.

Secondary sources

The secondary sources of the Crusades began in the 16th century, with one of the first uses of the term crusades by 17th century French historian Louis Maimbourg in his Histoire des Croisades pour la délivrance de la Terre Sainte. Other works of the 18th century include Voltaire's Histoire des Croisades, and Edward Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, excerpted as The Crusades, A.D. 1095–1261. This edition also includes an essay on chivalry by Walter Scott, whose works helped popularize the Crusades. Early in the 19th century, the monumental Histoire des Croisades was published by the French historian Joseph François Michaud, a major new narrative based on original sources.

These histories have provided evolving views of the Crusades as discussed in detail in the Historiography writeup in Crusading movement. Modern works that serve as secondary source material are listed in the Bibliography section below and need no further discussion here.

Tertiary sources

Three such works are: Louis Bréhier's multiple works on the Crusades in the Catholic Encyclopedia; the works of Ernest Barker in the Encyclopædia Britannica (11th edition), later expanded into a separate publication; and The Crusades: An Encyclopedia (2006), edited by historian Alan V. Murray.

See also

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