The Fourth Crusade - Jeremy Choat`s Portfolio
... Villehardouin blamed these pilgrims for future “misfortunes that were ahead”11. Even though not everyone arrived at Venice, Villehardouin thought it was so well equipped “ that no Christian man has ever seen another more handsome or better equipped” 12. The problem was that the crusaders needed thre ...
... Villehardouin blamed these pilgrims for future “misfortunes that were ahead”11. Even though not everyone arrived at Venice, Villehardouin thought it was so well equipped “ that no Christian man has ever seen another more handsome or better equipped” 12. The problem was that the crusaders needed thre ...
Current CV - Ursinus College
... Third International Symposium on Crusade Studies, SLU, February 28, 2014 “‘Ira autem per zelum...virtus est’: Righteous anger, vengeance and the crusades” 48th International Medieval Congress, WMU, May 9, 2013 Discussant, “Teaching the Middle Ages to Undergraduates” 48th International Medieval Congr ...
... Third International Symposium on Crusade Studies, SLU, February 28, 2014 “‘Ira autem per zelum...virtus est’: Righteous anger, vengeance and the crusades” 48th International Medieval Congress, WMU, May 9, 2013 Discussant, “Teaching the Middle Ages to Undergraduates” 48th International Medieval Congr ...
Name____________________________________________Block
... al-Din. Richard and his troops conquered Sicily and Cyprus. In June 1191, Richard arrived at the Muslim town of Acre. Fellow crusader King Phillip II of France had begun to surround and attack Acre two months earlier. The Muslims gave up and surrendered to the crusaders. However, when Richard felt t ...
... al-Din. Richard and his troops conquered Sicily and Cyprus. In June 1191, Richard arrived at the Muslim town of Acre. Fellow crusader King Phillip II of France had begun to surround and attack Acre two months earlier. The Muslims gave up and surrendered to the crusaders. However, when Richard felt t ...
GCE Getting Started - Edexcel
... accessible examination of the failure of the Fourth Crusade and the responsibility for failure. For other suitable books and articles, see the list in the separate Route A Topic booklet. ...
... accessible examination of the failure of the Fourth Crusade and the responsibility for failure. For other suitable books and articles, see the list in the separate Route A Topic booklet. ...
A-level History Candidate exemplar Unit 01 (HIS1) - Average
... emirates, between Sunnis and Shias and between Turks and Arabs. At one point General Kerbogha, emir of Mosul, gathered a large force yet still lost because the Arab leaders he led refused to fight for a Turk who they themselves had fought against. Such was the division in Seljuk territories that whe ...
... emirates, between Sunnis and Shias and between Turks and Arabs. At one point General Kerbogha, emir of Mosul, gathered a large force yet still lost because the Arab leaders he led refused to fight for a Turk who they themselves had fought against. Such was the division in Seljuk territories that whe ...
Richard I and Saladin
... Jaffa and battle of Arsuf; 5. Richard’s attempts to recapture Jerusalem. Students can collect ideas on a great crusader/bad crusader grid as they study the Third Crusade. The enquiry ...
... Jaffa and battle of Arsuf; 5. Richard’s attempts to recapture Jerusalem. Students can collect ideas on a great crusader/bad crusader grid as they study the Third Crusade. The enquiry ...
The Crusading Movement
... III. Rise of the Crusading Movement IV. Progress of the Crusades V. Jews in the First Crusade A. Early Medieval Background B. First Crusade: Riots in the Rhineland ...
... III. Rise of the Crusading Movement IV. Progress of the Crusades V. Jews in the First Crusade A. Early Medieval Background B. First Crusade: Riots in the Rhineland ...
Editable - Patrick Minges
... poisoning. As a result, Saladin became the next King of Egypt. Saladin went on to conquer many lands, uniting the Muslims and finally driving the Christians out of Jerusalem, after 88 years of occupation by the Franks. “When God gave me the land of Egypt,” he said, “I was sure that he meant Palestin ...
... poisoning. As a result, Saladin became the next King of Egypt. Saladin went on to conquer many lands, uniting the Muslims and finally driving the Christians out of Jerusalem, after 88 years of occupation by the Franks. “When God gave me the land of Egypt,” he said, “I was sure that he meant Palestin ...
Germanic Poetry Surrounding the Third Crusade
... Germanic Poetry Surrounding the Third Crusade hood was beginning to expand. Twelfth century Germany saw the rise of ministeriales, men emerging from servile rank and marrying into older families to gain social status.26 Ministeriales throughout the twelfth century were able to achieve the status of ...
... Germanic Poetry Surrounding the Third Crusade hood was beginning to expand. Twelfth century Germany saw the rise of ministeriales, men emerging from servile rank and marrying into older families to gain social status.26 Ministeriales throughout the twelfth century were able to achieve the status of ...
Using In-Text Citation
... According to Packard, crusaders joined the fight to secure themselves a place in heaven (64). Note: even though this idea has been summarized in your own words, it still needs to be cited. Since the author’s name is mentioned in the text, it is not needed in the parentheses. ...
... According to Packard, crusaders joined the fight to secure themselves a place in heaven (64). Note: even though this idea has been summarized in your own words, it still needs to be cited. Since the author’s name is mentioned in the text, it is not needed in the parentheses. ...
The Templars as Papal`s Bankers
... crusader warfare, the Templars were able to leverage on their expertise to help the Popes to organize the tremendous financial effort that supporting the Holy Land represented. In the following lines, we shall see how the Popes leveraged on Templars’ expertise to organize the complexities of their f ...
... crusader warfare, the Templars were able to leverage on their expertise to help the Popes to organize the tremendous financial effort that supporting the Holy Land represented. In the following lines, we shall see how the Popes leveraged on Templars’ expertise to organize the complexities of their f ...
SIEGE WARFARE DURING THE CRUSADES by BETSY TREVOR
... the wooden tower, constructed from huge beams, collapsed because it could not bear the weight of the men. Nearly one hundred Franks fell and were seriously injured.15 By the time of the siege of Jerusalem during the First Crusade, the crusaders had overcome the problem of weight and support but had ...
... the wooden tower, constructed from huge beams, collapsed because it could not bear the weight of the men. Nearly one hundred Franks fell and were seriously injured.15 By the time of the siege of Jerusalem during the First Crusade, the crusaders had overcome the problem of weight and support but had ...
THE 20-th CENTURY
... marched 300 miles to Marseilles, France . The group was shipped out in 7 ships loaded with 5,000 children, monks, and nuns. 2 ships were wrecked, 5 ships made it to North Africa where all were sold into slavery. Nicholas also a 12 year old shepherd and another child leader from Germany led 20,000 ch ...
... marched 300 miles to Marseilles, France . The group was shipped out in 7 ships loaded with 5,000 children, monks, and nuns. 2 ships were wrecked, 5 ships made it to North Africa where all were sold into slavery. Nicholas also a 12 year old shepherd and another child leader from Germany led 20,000 ch ...
The Second Crusade - Ms-Ball-NEHS
... The months which followed the Council of Clermont were marked by an epidemic of religious excitement in western Europe. Popular preachers everywhere took up the cry "God wills it!" and urged their hearers to start for Jerusalem. A monk named Peter the Hermit aroused large parts of France with his pa ...
... The months which followed the Council of Clermont were marked by an epidemic of religious excitement in western Europe. Popular preachers everywhere took up the cry "God wills it!" and urged their hearers to start for Jerusalem. A monk named Peter the Hermit aroused large parts of France with his pa ...
The Disaster of the Popular Crusade
... something divine”8. This humble hermit preached throughout northern France and went city-to-city recruiting followers. By Easter, Peter had gathered more than 15,000 people, including knights, foot soldiers, peasants, women and the elderly 9 and also found fellow leader Walter the Penniless10. These ...
... something divine”8. This humble hermit preached throughout northern France and went city-to-city recruiting followers. By Easter, Peter had gathered more than 15,000 people, including knights, foot soldiers, peasants, women and the elderly 9 and also found fellow leader Walter the Penniless10. These ...
Sample Chapter 2 from Conquest, control and resistance in the
... The first priority: getting to the Byzantine Empire Naturally, the four contingents chose different routes across Europe to reach their rendezvous point in Constantinople. However, the fact they chose departure times that would not result in a common arrival time illustrates how disconnected they we ...
... The first priority: getting to the Byzantine Empire Naturally, the four contingents chose different routes across Europe to reach their rendezvous point in Constantinople. However, the fact they chose departure times that would not result in a common arrival time illustrates how disconnected they we ...
1A Crusades 1095-1204 Chapter 2_XML.indd
... The first priority: getting to the Byzantine Empire Naturally, the four contingents chose different routes across Europe to reach their rendezvous point in Constantinople. However, the fact they chose departure times that would not result in a common arrival time illustrates how disconnected they we ...
... The first priority: getting to the Byzantine Empire Naturally, the four contingents chose different routes across Europe to reach their rendezvous point in Constantinople. However, the fact they chose departure times that would not result in a common arrival time illustrates how disconnected they we ...
The Crusades
... Muslim scholarship, and the Greek learning it was based on, flowed back into Europe, largely through Spain, Italy, and Sicily. European military technology took a giant leap forward because of advanced techniques in fortification and castle building learned from both the Muslims and the Greeks. And ...
... Muslim scholarship, and the Greek learning it was based on, flowed back into Europe, largely through Spain, Italy, and Sicily. European military technology took a giant leap forward because of advanced techniques in fortification and castle building learned from both the Muslims and the Greeks. And ...
Salah al-Din - neshaminy.org
... Salah al-Din (Saladin) was born in 1138 to a powerful Kurdish Muslim family in Syria. He was a schoolboy in Damascus when the Christians attacked the city during the Second Crusade. He observed firsthand how important it was for Muslims to defend their religion and themselves from the Christian crus ...
... Salah al-Din (Saladin) was born in 1138 to a powerful Kurdish Muslim family in Syria. He was a schoolboy in Damascus when the Christians attacked the city during the Second Crusade. He observed firsthand how important it was for Muslims to defend their religion and themselves from the Christian crus ...
Richard the Lionheart
... with Phillip Augustus, perhaps in a homosexual relationship and then made him a lifelong enemy, before they made an uneasy alliance of convenience to go on crusade. These problems were all evident even before the Crusaders sailed. Even before reaching Outremer he became embroiled in feuds with other ...
... with Phillip Augustus, perhaps in a homosexual relationship and then made him a lifelong enemy, before they made an uneasy alliance of convenience to go on crusade. These problems were all evident even before the Crusaders sailed. Even before reaching Outremer he became embroiled in feuds with other ...
Lionheart: The True Story of England`s Crusader
... with Phillip Augustus, perhaps in a homosexual relationship and then made him a lifelong enemy, before they made an uneasy alliance of convenience to go on crusade. These problems were all evident even before the Crusaders sailed. Even before reaching Outremer he became embroiled in feuds with other ...
... with Phillip Augustus, perhaps in a homosexual relationship and then made him a lifelong enemy, before they made an uneasy alliance of convenience to go on crusade. These problems were all evident even before the Crusaders sailed. Even before reaching Outremer he became embroiled in feuds with other ...
Why did people go on Crusade?
... They were often quite wealthy because they were allowed to lend money to people (like a human credit card!) whereas Christians at that time were banned from lending money for profit. If you wanted to borrow money and you couldn’t borrow it from family, you had to borrow from a Jewish lender. ...
... They were often quite wealthy because they were allowed to lend money to people (like a human credit card!) whereas Christians at that time were banned from lending money for profit. If you wanted to borrow money and you couldn’t borrow it from family, you had to borrow from a Jewish lender. ...
The Second Crusade - Institute of Historical Research
... calculations seems gratuitous, but a figure of c.17% is suggested. The defeat of Louis’ army is not subjected to a similar calculation, though the narrative sources are superior. Finally, the remnants of the two armies arrived in the crusader states. Phillips maintains plausibly that to this point t ...
... calculations seems gratuitous, but a figure of c.17% is suggested. The defeat of Louis’ army is not subjected to a similar calculation, though the narrative sources are superior. Finally, the remnants of the two armies arrived in the crusader states. Phillips maintains plausibly that to this point t ...
The Age of Crusades - First Covenant Church
... gates and posted his own soldiers against them, since he was afraid that the Crusaders might attack him So the Germans went on toward Antioch alone and were soundly defeated by the Turks By the time the French arrived, Manuel had made a treaty with the Turks When they arrived at Antioch, they were w ...
... gates and posted his own soldiers against them, since he was afraid that the Crusaders might attack him So the Germans went on toward Antioch alone and were soundly defeated by the Turks By the time the French arrived, Manuel had made a treaty with the Turks When they arrived at Antioch, they were w ...
Siege of Acre (1291)
The Siege of Acre (also called the Fall of Acre) took place in 1291 and resulted in the loss of the Crusader-controlled city of Acre to the Muslims. It is considered one of the most important battles of the period. Although the crusading movement continued for several more centuries, the capture of the city marked the end of further crusades to the Levant. When Acre fell, the Crusaders lost their last major stronghold of the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem. They still maintained a fortress at the northern city of Tartus (today in north-western Syria), engaged in some coastal raids, and attempted an incursion from the tiny island of Ruad, but when they lost that as well in 1302–3 in the Siege of Ruad, the Crusaders no longer controlled any of the Holy Land.