Crusades
III
First Crusade
It
was against this background that Pope Urban II,
in a speech at Clermont in France in November 1095,
called for a great Christian expedition to free
Jerusalem from the Seljuk Turks, a new Muslim power
that had recently begun actively harassing peaceful
Christian pilgrims traveling to Jerusalem.
The
pope was spurred by his position as the spiritual
head of Western Europe, by the temporary absence
of strong rulers in Germany (the Holy Roman Empire)
or France who could either oppose or take over the
effort, and by a call for help from the Byzantine
emperor, Alexius I. These various factors were genuine
causes, and at the same time, useful justifications
for the pope's call for a Crusade. In any case,
Urban's speech—well reported in several chronicles—appealed
to thousands of people of all classes. It was the
right message at the right time.
The
First Crusade was successful in its explicit aim
of freeing Jerusalem. It also established a Western
Christian military presence in the Near East that
lasted for almost 200 years. The Crusaders called
this area Outremer, French for "beyond the seas."
The
First Crusade was the wonder of its day. It attracted
no European kings and few major nobles, drawing
mainly lesser barons and their followers. They came
primarily from the lands of French culture and language,
which is why Westerners in Outremer were referred
to as Franks.
The
Crusaders faced many obstacles. They had no obvious
or widely accepted leader, no consensus about relations
with the churchmen who went with them, no definition
of the pope's role, and no agreement with the Byzantine
emperor on whether they were his allies, servants,
rivals, or perhaps enemies. These uncertainties
divided the Crusaders into factions that did not
always get along well with one another.
Different
leaders followed different routes to Constantinople,
where they were all to meet.
The
contingents of Robert of Flanders and Bohemond of
Taranto went by sea via Italy, while the other major
groups, those of Godfrey of Bouillon and Raymond
of Toulouse, took the land route around the Adriatic
Sea.
As
the Crusaders marched east, they were joined by
thousands of men and even women, ranging from petty
knights and their families, to peasants seeking
freedom from their ties to the manor. A vast miscellany
of people with all sorts of motives and contributions
joined the march. They followed local lords or well-known
nobles or drifted eastward on their own, walking
to a port town and then sailing to Constantinople.
Few knew what to expect. They knew little about
the Byzantine Empire or its religion, Eastern Orthodox
Christianity. Few Crusaders understood or had much
sympathy for the Eastern Orthodox religion, which
did not recognize the pope, used the Greek language
rather than Latin, and had very different forms
of art and architecture. They knew even less about
Islam or Muslim life. For some the First Crusade
became an excuse to unleash savage attacks in the
name of Christianity on Jewish communities along
the Rhine.
The
leaders met at Constantinople and chose to cross
on foot the inhospitable and dangerous landscape
of what is now Turkey, rather than going by sea.
Somehow, despite this questionable decision, the
original forces of perhaps 25,000 to 30,000 still
survived in sufficient numbers to overcome the Muslim
states and principalities of what are now Syria,
Lebanon, and Israel.
Like
Western Christendom, Islam was disunited. Its rulers
failed to anticipate the effectiveness of the enemy.
In addition, the Franks, as the attacking force,
had at least a temporary advantage. They exploited
this, taking the key city of Antioch in June 1098,
under the lead of Bohemond of Taranto. Then, despite
their divisions and factionalism, they moved on
to Jerusalem. The siege of Jerusalem culminated
in a bloody and destructive Christian victory in
July 1099, in which many of the inhabitants were
massacred.
With
victory came new problems. Many Crusaders saw the
taking of Jerusalem as the goal; they were ready
to go home. Others, especially minor nobles and
younger sons of powerful noble families, saw the
next step as the creation of a permanent Christian
presence in the Holy Land. They looked to build
feudal states like those of the West. They hoped
to transplant their military culture and to carve
out fortunes on the new frontier.
Though
the Crusaders were more intolerant than understanding
of Eastern life, they recognized its riches. They
also saw such states as the way to protect the routes
to the Holy Land and its Christian sites. The result
was the establishment of the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem,
first under Godfrey of Bouillon, who took the title
of Defender of the Holy Sepulchre, and then under
his brother Baldwin, who ruled as king. In addition
to the Latin Kingdom, which was centered on Jerusalem,
three other Crusader states were founded: the County
of Tripoli, in modern Lebanon; the Principality
of Antioch, in modern Syria; and the County of Edessa,
in modern northern Syria and southern Turkey.
The
Crusader States
In
the aftermath of the First Crusade (1095-1099),
Europeans carved out four states in Palestine, on
the eastern coast of the Mediterranean Sea. Many
castles and fortresses were built to protect the
states from Muslim forces. However, the Muslims
gradually recaptured the territory, and European
presence in Palestine ended with the fall of the
city of Acre in 1291.
|
Return
to page 1, page
2 - Go to page 4
Contributed
By: Joel T. Rosenthal, B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Professor
of History, State University of New York at Stony
Brook. Editor of Medieval Women and the Sources
of Medieval History. Author of Patriarchy and Families
of Privilege in 15th-Century England and other books.
"Crusades,"
Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2001 http://encarta.msn.com
© 1997-2001 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.