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Work Sheet 8-3
Work Sheet 8-3

... 3. Why was there a clash between Pope Gregory VII and Henry IV? Explain in detail. ...
Name
Name

... to death. When the survivors reached the Mediterranean Sea, they expected the waters to part and let them pass. When this did not happen, those who were left returned dismally home. Over the next 70 years, there were several other crusade attempts, but they were motivated more by personal gain than ...
14.1 Church Reform and the Crusades
14.1 Church Reform and the Crusades

... journey. How sad. Philip Augustus had a falling out with Richard and went home. Quitter. Richard is left to regain Jerusalem from the great Muslim leader, Saladin. This would be no easy task. ...
BalthazarMonastery.com Roman Catholic Crusades The First Crusade
BalthazarMonastery.com Roman Catholic Crusades The First Crusade

... responded favorably, perhaps hoping to heal the Great Schism of forty years earlier, and to reunite the Church under papal primacy by helping the Eastern churches in their time of need. In July 1095, Urban turned to his homeland of France to recruit men for the expedition. His travels there culminat ...
Crusades1
Crusades1

... •Many killed Jews along the way •Met in Constantinople in 1097 – made way to Jerusalem •1099 – Jerusalem fell to Crusaders after 2 months •Many knights returned home, some set up homes •Only Crusade that Christians won ...
The Crusades: A Quest for the Holy Land
The Crusades: A Quest for the Holy Land

...  Alexius of the Byzantine Empire asked his Christian brothers  Pope Urban II gathered as many Christians as he could and called for there help – Speech known as “Council of Clermont” • He wanted them to fight against the Turks and return the Holy Land to the Christians • Promised those who went wo ...
children`s crusade - Renata`s Digital Portfolio!
children`s crusade - Renata`s Digital Portfolio!

... King Phillip was not pleased with this and ordered them to go home. But this didn’t stop Stephan. He went around telling everyone about the vision and what Jesus had told him to do. Stephan told the group that crossing the Mediterranean or any other waterways was no problem as the water would part a ...
Document
Document

... a. 1071 the Holy Land is conquered by the Seljuk Turks b. Byzantine Emperor calls of the Pope for help c. 1095 Pope Urban II calls for the crusades or holy wars d. Pope Urban II hoped to use this to reunite the eastern and western empires e. The main goal of the Crusades was to regain the Holy Land ...
Crusade
Crusade

... text to show evidence proving your answer is true. ...
The Crusades - ESM School District
The Crusades - ESM School District

... • The Seljuk Turks (Muslims) controlled that land and the amount of visitors grew too much that they began not allowing visitors • It was also believed that the increase in Muslim power would threaten the Byzantine Capital of Constantinople ...
The Crusades - Mr. L. Goldsack
The Crusades - Mr. L. Goldsack

... • The Seljuk Turks (Muslims) controlled that land and the amount of visitors grew too much that they began not allowing visitors • It was also believed that the increase in Muslim power would threaten the Byzantine Capital of Constantinople ...
Crusades - Historiasiglo20.org
Crusades - Historiasiglo20.org

... beliefs of the First Crusade were still alive. In 1212, two groups - one from France, the other from Germany - set off on a crusade to the Holy Land. There was nothing unusual about this as many 'armies' had gathered before to fight the Muslims. The major difference about these two groups was that t ...
The Crusades
The Crusades

... Reduced violence against Christians by Christians The crusades initiated the practice of indulgences, which allowed those who could not make the trip to the holy land to sponsor a knight and thereby gain the spiritual advantages of crusading Brought control of the Mediterranean commerce into the han ...
The Crusades Notes
The Crusades Notes

... would be doing His work. There will be absolution and remission of sins for all who die in the service of Christ. Here they are poor and miserable sinners; there they will be rich and happy. Let none hesitate; they must march next summer. God wills it!” ...
Ch. 14 Power Point
Ch. 14 Power Point

... trade.  During the Middle Ages, however, this situation changed.  During the late 1000s, the Seljuq Turks (Muslims) from Central Asia gained control of Palestine. ...
The Crusades: A Jigsaw Activity
The Crusades: A Jigsaw Activity

... If we’re going to understand how the Crusades worked, we are going to have to ditch our modern-day baggage. Imagine that you’re living in Europe at the end of the 1000s. You’ve never left your small town, yet you hear stories that average people like yourself are experiencing unspeakable atrocities ...
14-1-BLANK-Notes
14-1-BLANK-Notes

... One is ______________________________________—king of England The Third Crusade was led by three powerful rulers ______________ of France ___________ Crusade after arguing with Richard The argument was over Richard breaking off an engagement with Phillip’s sister. _____________ of Germany (Holy Roma ...
The Revival of Trade
The Revival of Trade

... – Started by Pope Urban II – 10,000 Europeans joined cause • Wore a cross on shoulder or back • Reasons people went: – To save souls – Money and land – Adventure ...
The Crusades
The Crusades

... Cause for the Crusades Muslims captured Jerusalem from the Byzantine Empire ...
Content Reading and Graphic Organizers
Content Reading and Graphic Organizers

... This document, the MAGNA CARTA (great charter), stated that all men shall be tried by a jury of their peers, therefore taking power away from the monarchs, and returning it to the people, specifically the nobles. This government where landowning nobles hold the power is called an aristocracy. It sta ...
Why did the Third Crusade fail?
Why did the Third Crusade fail?

... to wait until the spring. ...
The Crusades
The Crusades

... ▫ It made all crusaders, irrespective of rank or background appear to be a unified army. ▫ It reminded crusaders that they were fighting a holy cause. ...
History 10A Final Identification terms Economic Expansion, 900
History 10A Final Identification terms Economic Expansion, 900

... The Capetians – Louis VII and Phillip Augustus: 1180 the crown passed from the Capetian King Louis VII to his fourteen-year-old son, Philip Augustus. Philip’s army had many major victories and took control of territory held by John. Philip instituted new administrative practices rub by officials who ...
Origins of the Crusades Following the Byzantine defeat by the Seljuk
Origins of the Crusades Following the Byzantine defeat by the Seljuk

... Alexius I Comnenus asked the pope to gather mercenary soldiers to join the fight. Pope Urban II, too, saw division in the Muslim east as an opportunity. The papacy had been championing a reform movement meant to assert the authority of the church over secular rulers. Urban II expressed this authorit ...
First Crusade (1095-1099) Sixth Crusade
First Crusade (1095-1099) Sixth Crusade

... The First Crusade Bishop Adhemar led the first official crusade in 1096. He was in charge of five different armies, each led by its own noble. In battle, the former barbarian soldiers now were Christian crusaders who were disciplined and steady. They managed to win against incredible odds. At one p ...
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Despenser's Crusade



Despenser's Crusade (or the Bishop of Norwich's Crusade, sometimes just Norwich Crusade) of 1383 was a military expedition led by Henry le Despenser that aimed to assist the city of Ghent in its struggle against the supporters of Antipope Clement VII. It took place during the great Papal schism and the Hundred Years' War between England and France. While France supported Clement, whose court was based in Avignon, the English supported Pope Urban VI in Rome. Popular at the time among the lower and middle classes, Despenser's Crusade ""was only widely criticised in hindsight"", and ""for all its canonical propriety, [it] was the Hundred Years' War thinly disguised"". Among contemporary critics of the crusade were John Wyclif and the French chronicler Jean Froissart, who charged its leaders with hypocrisy.
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