The Crusades
... The Second Crusade and the Third Crusade were unsuccessful. The Fourth Crusade lasted from 1202-1204. Instead of attacking Jerusalem, the crusaders attacked Constantinople. They stole statues, money, paintings and jewelry. They burned libraries. They destroyed churches. Their excuse was that they ne ...
... The Second Crusade and the Third Crusade were unsuccessful. The Fourth Crusade lasted from 1202-1204. Instead of attacking Jerusalem, the crusaders attacked Constantinople. They stole statues, money, paintings and jewelry. They burned libraries. They destroyed churches. Their excuse was that they ne ...
Chapter 14 Topics
... “The Franj arrived at dawn. It was carnage. For three days they put people to the sword, killing more than a hundred thousand people and taking many prisoners.” “In Ma’arra our troops (the Crusaders) boiled pagan adults in cooking pots; they impaled children on spits and devoured them grilled” ...
... “The Franj arrived at dawn. It was carnage. For three days they put people to the sword, killing more than a hundred thousand people and taking many prisoners.” “In Ma’arra our troops (the Crusaders) boiled pagan adults in cooking pots; they impaled children on spits and devoured them grilled” ...
Crusades
... III. The Amazing First Crusade A. Led by assemblage of feudal lords 1. Godfrey of Bouillion 2. Baldwin 3. Robert of Normandy 4. Bohemund of Taranto B. Conflicts with Emperor Alexius in Constantinople 1. Feudal oaths and victory at Nicea ...
... III. The Amazing First Crusade A. Led by assemblage of feudal lords 1. Godfrey of Bouillion 2. Baldwin 3. Robert of Normandy 4. Bohemund of Taranto B. Conflicts with Emperor Alexius in Constantinople 1. Feudal oaths and victory at Nicea ...
File - HALDANE MUN 2016
... departed for home. To govern the conquered territory, those who remained established four large western settlements, or Crusader states, in Jerusalem, Edessa, Antioch and Tripoli. Guarded by formidable castles, the Crusader states retained the upper hand in the region until around 1130, when Muslim ...
... departed for home. To govern the conquered territory, those who remained established four large western settlements, or Crusader states, in Jerusalem, Edessa, Antioch and Tripoli. Guarded by formidable castles, the Crusader states retained the upper hand in the region until around 1130, when Muslim ...
crusades
... Rather than fight, King Richard the Lion-Hearted and Saladin agreed to a peace treaty. Under the treaty, European pilgrims would be allowed to safely visit the Holy Land, which would remain under the control of the Muslims. ...
... Rather than fight, King Richard the Lion-Hearted and Saladin agreed to a peace treaty. Under the treaty, European pilgrims would be allowed to safely visit the Holy Land, which would remain under the control of the Muslims. ...
the crusades
... After about two years of harsh traveling, hunger, disease, freezing weather, and quarrels amongst themselves, the crusaders finally arrived in Jerusalem. After a two-month siege of the city, the city fell. The crusaders had won back Jerusalem. Some men stayed. Some headed home. Those who returned t ...
... After about two years of harsh traveling, hunger, disease, freezing weather, and quarrels amongst themselves, the crusaders finally arrived in Jerusalem. After a two-month siege of the city, the city fell. The crusaders had won back Jerusalem. Some men stayed. Some headed home. Those who returned t ...
The Crusades
... Christians, Jews, and Muslims Crusaders brought advanced knowledge back to Europe ...
... Christians, Jews, and Muslims Crusaders brought advanced knowledge back to Europe ...
The Crusading Spirit Dwindles
... miles from Edessa in the north to Jerusalem in the south. Four feudal Crusader states were carved out of this territory, each ruled by a European noble. The Crusaders’ states were extremely vulnerable to Muslim counterattack. In 1144, Edessa was reconquered by the Turks. The Second Crusade was organ ...
... miles from Edessa in the north to Jerusalem in the south. Four feudal Crusader states were carved out of this territory, each ruled by a European noble. The Crusaders’ states were extremely vulnerable to Muslim counterattack. In 1144, Edessa was reconquered by the Turks. The Second Crusade was organ ...
The Crusades! - Mrs. Blair`s World History Class
... In 1093, Byzantine Emperor named Alexius Comnenus ask for help against invaders THE ...
... In 1093, Byzantine Emperor named Alexius Comnenus ask for help against invaders THE ...
The First Crusade
... Crusaders • Ten of thousands of peasants, nobles, and clergy responded to Urban II’s call. • In the spring and summer of 1096, armies of Crusaders departed from Western Europe for Constantinople. Peter the Hermit Leading an army of crusaders ...
... Crusaders • Ten of thousands of peasants, nobles, and clergy responded to Urban II’s call. • In the spring and summer of 1096, armies of Crusaders departed from Western Europe for Constantinople. Peter the Hermit Leading an army of crusaders ...
CH 6 SECT 2 - Miami Beach Senior High School
... Request from Byzantine emperor: A Byzantine emperor asked Pope Urban II for help against Muslim Seljuk Turks, who had beaten them at the battle of Manzikert and then overrun Byzantine territory in Asia Minor. In 1095, Urban responded by calling on European Christians to join in a war to free the Hol ...
... Request from Byzantine emperor: A Byzantine emperor asked Pope Urban II for help against Muslim Seljuk Turks, who had beaten them at the battle of Manzikert and then overrun Byzantine territory in Asia Minor. In 1095, Urban responded by calling on European Christians to join in a war to free the Hol ...
Station 2 Resources
... empire. With the support of the Byzantine emperor, the knights, guided by Armenian Christians, tenuously marched through Seljuq-controlled territories in modern Turkey and Syria to Jerusalem. In June 1099, the Crusaders began a five-week siege of Jerusalem, which fell in July 1099. The Crusaders the ...
... empire. With the support of the Byzantine emperor, the knights, guided by Armenian Christians, tenuously marched through Seljuq-controlled territories in modern Turkey and Syria to Jerusalem. In June 1099, the Crusaders began a five-week siege of Jerusalem, which fell in July 1099. The Crusaders the ...
First Crusade
... Feudal princes used success in warfare to gain power. Merchants financed the Crusades hoping to gain access to trade routes. Seljuk attacked the Byzantine Empire and the emperor asked the pope for help. The pope agreed and this became the first Crusade. ...
... Feudal princes used success in warfare to gain power. Merchants financed the Crusades hoping to gain access to trade routes. Seljuk attacked the Byzantine Empire and the emperor asked the pope for help. The pope agreed and this became the first Crusade. ...
Document
... 1. What terms does Pope Urban II use in reference to the Islamic faith and its followers? 2. What does the Pope promise to those who fight this battle for Christianity? Document 3 – People’s Crusade Massacre by the Seljuk Turks (Start of the First Crusade) The People’s Crusade was a band of peasants ...
... 1. What terms does Pope Urban II use in reference to the Islamic faith and its followers? 2. What does the Pope promise to those who fight this battle for Christianity? Document 3 – People’s Crusade Massacre by the Seljuk Turks (Start of the First Crusade) The People’s Crusade was a band of peasants ...
The Crusades Notes (295-302)
... King Richard of England took the Muslim city of Acre and ordered the execution of 2700 Muslims. ...
... King Richard of England took the Muslim city of Acre and ordered the execution of 2700 Muslims. ...
The Crusades
... all this treasure shall not fall into the hands of the Turks…Therefore act while there is still time lest the kingdom of the Christians shall vanish from your sight and, what is more important, the Holy Sepulchre shall vanish. And in your coming you will find your reward in heaven, and if you do not ...
... all this treasure shall not fall into the hands of the Turks…Therefore act while there is still time lest the kingdom of the Christians shall vanish from your sight and, what is more important, the Holy Sepulchre shall vanish. And in your coming you will find your reward in heaven, and if you do not ...
The Crusades: Military expeditions from Christian Europe to
... • It is sacred to Christians, Jews, and Muslims, who ALL make pilgrimages there • The Seljuk Turks (Muslims) had captured Palestine making Christian pilgrimages to the ...
... • It is sacred to Christians, Jews, and Muslims, who ALL make pilgrimages there • The Seljuk Turks (Muslims) had captured Palestine making Christian pilgrimages to the ...
The Crusades
... Jerusalem. Supplies, reinforcement, and retreat could all be managed from this city. The walls that surround the city were constructed by Byzantine engineers and provided a formidable defense against those attacking. 1099 – Siege of Jerusalem Jerusalem was considered to be the major prize of the ...
... Jerusalem. Supplies, reinforcement, and retreat could all be managed from this city. The walls that surround the city were constructed by Byzantine engineers and provided a formidable defense against those attacking. 1099 – Siege of Jerusalem Jerusalem was considered to be the major prize of the ...
The Crusades PP
... departed from Western Europe for Constantinople. Peter the Hermit Leading an army of crusaders ...
... departed from Western Europe for Constantinople. Peter the Hermit Leading an army of crusaders ...
The First Crusade
... departed from Western Europe for Constantinople. Peter the Hermit Leading an army of crusaders ...
... departed from Western Europe for Constantinople. Peter the Hermit Leading an army of crusaders ...
Kingdom of Jerusalem
The Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem was a crusader state established in the Southern Levant in 1099 after the First Crusade. The kingdom lasted nearly two hundred years, from 1099 until 1291 when the last remaining possession, Acre, was destroyed by the Mamluks, but its history is divided into two distinct periods. The sometimes so-called First Kingdom of Jerusalem lasted from 1099 to 1187, when it was almost entirely overrun by Saladin. After the subsequent Third Crusade, the kingdom was re-established in Acre in 1192, and lasted until that city's destruction in 1291. This second kingdom is sometimes called the Second Kingdom of Jerusalem or the Kingdom of Acre, after its new capital.