From the 11th century until the beginning of the
... Silk-Dynasty leads to a route-displancement to the southern Chinese coast. Missing trade- and money cash-flow leads the inhabitans leaving their cities, their buddhism sanctums and abbeys and ends in a turn to the islamic faith.The Venetian ...
... Silk-Dynasty leads to a route-displancement to the southern Chinese coast. Missing trade- and money cash-flow leads the inhabitans leaving their cities, their buddhism sanctums and abbeys and ends in a turn to the islamic faith.The Venetian ...
Section Summary Key Terms and People
... Christians call the region the Holy Land because it was where Jesus had lived, preached, and died. For many years Palestine had been ruled by Muslims. In general, the Muslims did not bother Christians who visited the region. In the late 1000s, however, a new group of Turkish Muslims captured the cit ...
... Christians call the region the Holy Land because it was where Jesus had lived, preached, and died. For many years Palestine had been ruled by Muslims. In general, the Muslims did not bother Christians who visited the region. In the late 1000s, however, a new group of Turkish Muslims captured the cit ...
The Crusades - OnMyCalendar
... nobles and followed them into the Crusades • Merchants helped finance, transport, and profit from their participation • Merchants also hoped for access to the merchandise available in the Middle East ...
... nobles and followed them into the Crusades • Merchants helped finance, transport, and profit from their participation • Merchants also hoped for access to the merchandise available in the Middle East ...
The Crusades
... nobles and followed them into the Crusades • Merchants helped finance, transport, and profit from their participation • Merchants also hoped for access to the merchandise available in the Middle East ...
... nobles and followed them into the Crusades • Merchants helped finance, transport, and profit from their participation • Merchants also hoped for access to the merchandise available in the Middle East ...
The Crusades
... nobles and followed them into the Crusades • Merchants helped finance, transport, and profit from their participation • Merchants also hoped for access to the merchandise available in the Middle East ...
... nobles and followed them into the Crusades • Merchants helped finance, transport, and profit from their participation • Merchants also hoped for access to the merchandise available in the Middle East ...
Crusades
... • French king left. • English king (King Richard I) stayed in the Holy Land to fight the Muslim leader (Saladin). • King Richard and Saladin admired each other and made compromises. Though King Richard conquered some lands, he left with Jerusalem in Muslim hands. ...
... • French king left. • English king (King Richard I) stayed in the Holy Land to fight the Muslim leader (Saladin). • King Richard and Saladin admired each other and made compromises. Though King Richard conquered some lands, he left with Jerusalem in Muslim hands. ...
UNIT 2: The Rise of Islam
... to cope with a radically different environment (largely desert), disease, and fierce fighting by the Muslims, led by Salah al-Din. 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 ...
... to cope with a radically different environment (largely desert), disease, and fierce fighting by the Muslims, led by Salah al-Din. 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 ...
Powerpoint-Arabic/Church reform and the crusades
... left with 700,000 men and 100,000 were knights. They went down the Mediterranean coast. One of the battles on the way to Jerusalem was the siege of Antioch. They lost 75% of their men in Antioch. When they finally reached Jerusalem, the army failed to take Jerusalem on the first attempt but succeede ...
... left with 700,000 men and 100,000 were knights. They went down the Mediterranean coast. One of the battles on the way to Jerusalem was the siege of Antioch. They lost 75% of their men in Antioch. When they finally reached Jerusalem, the army failed to take Jerusalem on the first attempt but succeede ...
content - St George – Kearney
... The people of Andalusia give me money and gifts while we drive them like cattle. We kill their men and we make their women widows. We take the boys and girls as prisoners and we make houses empty. I have told you enough and I have advised you to the end, so now if you make the strongest oath to me a ...
... The people of Andalusia give me money and gifts while we drive them like cattle. We kill their men and we make their women widows. We take the boys and girls as prisoners and we make houses empty. I have told you enough and I have advised you to the end, so now if you make the strongest oath to me a ...
ch14_sec1
... • New leader arose in Muslim world, 1177 • Salah ad-Din, known to Europeans as Saladin • Overthrew Fatimids, took title of sultan • Set out to take back Crusader states, succeeded, drove European Christians out of Jerusalem ...
... • New leader arose in Muslim world, 1177 • Salah ad-Din, known to Europeans as Saladin • Overthrew Fatimids, took title of sultan • Set out to take back Crusader states, succeeded, drove European Christians out of Jerusalem ...
Crusades
... • New leader arose in Muslim world, 1177 • Salah ad-Din, known to Europeans as Saladin • Overthrew Fatimids, took title of sultan • Set out to take back Crusader states, succeeded, drove European Christians out of Jerusalem ...
... • New leader arose in Muslim world, 1177 • Salah ad-Din, known to Europeans as Saladin • Overthrew Fatimids, took title of sultan • Set out to take back Crusader states, succeeded, drove European Christians out of Jerusalem ...
Document
... • New leader arose in Muslim world, 1177 • Salah ad-Din, known to Europeans as Saladin • Overthrew Fatimids, took title of sultan • Set out to take back Crusader states, succeeded, drove European Christians out of Jerusalem ...
... • New leader arose in Muslim world, 1177 • Salah ad-Din, known to Europeans as Saladin • Overthrew Fatimids, took title of sultan • Set out to take back Crusader states, succeeded, drove European Christians out of Jerusalem ...
Socratic Seminar: The Crusades Background: Beginning in 1096
... the second, headed by Louis VII, 1145-47; Christians lost horribly but Jews were spared due to the abbot St. Bernard of Clairvaux, Jerusalem was lost to Muslim commander Saladin the third, conducted by Philip Augustus and Richard the Lionhearted, 1188-92; won back a lot of land but not Jerusalem, Ri ...
... the second, headed by Louis VII, 1145-47; Christians lost horribly but Jews were spared due to the abbot St. Bernard of Clairvaux, Jerusalem was lost to Muslim commander Saladin the third, conducted by Philip Augustus and Richard the Lionhearted, 1188-92; won back a lot of land but not Jerusalem, Ri ...
Crusades - Nutley Schools
... • After victory many Christians went back home • The Turks eventually took back much of the territory • King of France and Emperor of Germany sent troops to stop the Turks ...
... • After victory many Christians went back home • The Turks eventually took back much of the territory • King of France and Emperor of Germany sent troops to stop the Turks ...
File
... the second, headed by Louis VII, 1145-47; Christians lost horribly but Jews were spared due to the abbot St. Bernard of Clairvaux, Jerusalem was lost to Muslim commander Saladin the third, conducted by Philip Augustus and Richard the Lionhearted, 1188-92; won back a lot of land but not Jerusalem, Ri ...
... the second, headed by Louis VII, 1145-47; Christians lost horribly but Jews were spared due to the abbot St. Bernard of Clairvaux, Jerusalem was lost to Muslim commander Saladin the third, conducted by Philip Augustus and Richard the Lionhearted, 1188-92; won back a lot of land but not Jerusalem, Ri ...
King Johns problems
... control over the English church. Becket disappointed the King, by taking his new job very seriously and suddenly becoming very holy. Becket refused to help Henry II, and made him so angry that, eventually Henry’s knights murdered Becket in the Cathedral at Canterbury in 1170. The Pope forced Henry t ...
... control over the English church. Becket disappointed the King, by taking his new job very seriously and suddenly becoming very holy. Becket refused to help Henry II, and made him so angry that, eventually Henry’s knights murdered Becket in the Cathedral at Canterbury in 1170. The Pope forced Henry t ...
The Crusades - Nutley Public Schools
... • Two Groups went to fight the 1st Crusade: – People’s Crusade: 1096 • Made up of untrained and illiterate mostly peasants with some knights. • Lacked military discipline and knowledge and were massacred in Asia Minor by the Turks. ...
... • Two Groups went to fight the 1st Crusade: – People’s Crusade: 1096 • Made up of untrained and illiterate mostly peasants with some knights. • Lacked military discipline and knowledge and were massacred in Asia Minor by the Turks. ...
THE CRUSADES
... • After victory many Christians went back home. • The Turks eventually took back much of the territory. • King of France and Emperor of Germany sent troops to stop the Turks. ...
... • After victory many Christians went back home. • The Turks eventually took back much of the territory. • King of France and Emperor of Germany sent troops to stop the Turks. ...
Crusades Article - Mrs. Blair`s World History Class
... After two years of travel, hunger, and disease, the Crusaders reached Palestine. Jews and Muslims both fought to keep the Christians out of Jerusalem. After some very hard fighting and a three month siege of the city, the Crusaders won and recaptured Jerusalem. The crusaders killed almost all of the ...
... After two years of travel, hunger, and disease, the Crusaders reached Palestine. Jews and Muslims both fought to keep the Christians out of Jerusalem. After some very hard fighting and a three month siege of the city, the Crusaders won and recaptured Jerusalem. The crusaders killed almost all of the ...
Daily Quiz 14.1
... decreed the clergy should pay taxes. It refers to the years when France controlled the popes in Avignon. The Great Schism is the years when France and Rome supported different ...
... decreed the clergy should pay taxes. It refers to the years when France controlled the popes in Avignon. The Great Schism is the years when France and Rome supported different ...
Chapter_14_Powerpoint
... launched a series of religious wars called the Crusades. • The goal of each war was to take the Holy Land. ...
... launched a series of religious wars called the Crusades. • The goal of each war was to take the Holy Land. ...
Day 13 documents for research
... sides to exchange prisoners. When Richard lost patience waiting for Salah al-Din to complete the exchange, Richard ordered the deaths of all 2,700 of his Muslim prisoners. Richard then fought his way toward Jerusalem, but his army was not strong enough to attack the city. Salah al-Din’s forces had a ...
... sides to exchange prisoners. When Richard lost patience waiting for Salah al-Din to complete the exchange, Richard ordered the deaths of all 2,700 of his Muslim prisoners. Richard then fought his way toward Jerusalem, but his army was not strong enough to attack the city. Salah al-Din’s forces had a ...
6-3 Kings and Crusades Notes
... 1098 ACE - 1st Crusade conquered Antioch in Syria 1099 - Crusaders conquered Jerusalem after a bloody fight killing Jews, Muslims, and Christians alike Crusaders created four crusader states: Kingdom of Jerusalem, county of Edessa, principality of Antioch, and the county of Tripoli The states were s ...
... 1098 ACE - 1st Crusade conquered Antioch in Syria 1099 - Crusaders conquered Jerusalem after a bloody fight killing Jews, Muslims, and Christians alike Crusaders created four crusader states: Kingdom of Jerusalem, county of Edessa, principality of Antioch, and the county of Tripoli The states were s ...
File
... as a chance to travel and see the world - Serfs hoped to escape feudal oppression by fighting The Crusades - There were 8 different Crusades in total - These 8 Crusades took place over a course of 200 years - 1100 AD - 1300 AD - The Christians won the 1st Crusade easily; they retook Jerusalem and se ...
... as a chance to travel and see the world - Serfs hoped to escape feudal oppression by fighting The Crusades - There were 8 different Crusades in total - These 8 Crusades took place over a course of 200 years - 1100 AD - 1300 AD - The Christians won the 1st Crusade easily; they retook Jerusalem and se ...
Third Crusade
The Third Crusade (1189–1192), also known as The Kings' Crusade, was an attempt by European leaders to reconquer the Holy Land from Saladin (Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn Yūsuf ibn Ayyūb). The campaign was largely successful, capturing the important cities of Acre and Jaffa, and reversing most of Saladin's conquests, but it failed to capture Jerusalem, the emotional and spiritual motivation of the Crusade.After the failure of the Second Crusade, the Zengid dynasty controlled a unified Syria and engaged in a conflict with the Fatimid rulers of Egypt. The Egyptian and Syrian forces were ultimately unified under Saladin, who employed them to reduce the Christian states and recapture Jerusalem in 1187. Spurred by religious zeal, King Henry II of England and King Philip II of France (known as Philip Augustus) ended their conflict with each other to lead a new crusade. The death of Henry in 1189, however, meant the English contingent came under the command of his successor, King Richard I of England (known as Richard the Lionheart, in French Cœur de Lion). The elderly Holy Roman Emperor Frederick Barbarossa also responded to the call to arms, leading a massive army across Anatolia, but he drowned in a river in Asia Minor on 10 June 1190 before reaching the Holy Land. His death caused tremendous grief among the German Crusaders, and most of his troops returned home.After the Crusaders drove the Muslims from Acre, Philip and Frederick's successor, Leopold V, Duke of Austria (known as Leopold the Virtuous), left the Holy Land in August 1191. On 2 September 1192, Richard and Saladin finalized a treaty granting Muslim control over Jerusalem but allowing unarmed Christian pilgrims and merchants to visit the city. Richard departed the Holy Land on 2 October. The successes of the Third Crusade allowed the Crusaders to maintain considerable states in Cyprus and on the Syrian coast. However, the failure to recapture Jerusalem would lead to the Fourth Crusade.