Crusades
IV
Crusades of the 12th century
The
Crusades of the 12th century, through the end of
the Third Crusade in 1192, illustrate the tensions
and problems that plagued the enterprise as a whole.
For
the lords of Outremer a compromise with the residents
and Muslim powers made sense; they could not live
in constant warfare. And yet as European transplants
they depended on soldiers and resources from the
West, which were usually only forthcoming in times
of open conflict. Furthermore, rivalries at home
were translated into factional quarrels in Outremer
that limited any common policy among the states.
Nor was the situation helped by the arrival of European
princes and their followers, as happened when the
Second and Third Crusades came East; European tensions
and jealousies proved just as divisive in the East
as they had been at home.
There
is little reason to think that colonization had
been anticipated or encouraged by the pope, let
alone by the Byzantine emperor; however, it seems
a logical consequence of the Crusade's success.
Frankish
nobles maintained links with their families at home,
and they built lives and careers that spanned the
Mediterranean. Moreover, in town and countryside,
daily life in the region did not alter greatly;
one military master was much like another. Christian
lords had no plan for mass conversion of the natives
or for any systematic mistreatment comparable to
modern genocide or enforced migration. They wanted
to maintain their privileged position and to enjoy
the lives of European nobles in a new setting. As
they settled in, they gradually lost interest in
any papal efforts at raising new military expeditions.
Nor did they ever reach any real compromise with
the Byzantine emperor regarding reconquered territory
that had once been his.
Although the two groups of Christians had a common
enemy, this was not a sufficient motive for cooperation
between worlds with so little mutual regard.
To
the rulers of Muslim states a concerted military
effort was imperative. The Franks were an affront
to religious as well as to political and economic
interests.
The
combination of zeal and luck that had enabled the
Crusaders to triumph in 1099 evaporated in the face
of such realities as the need to recruit and maintain
soldiers who were loyal and effective.
Islamic
rulers turned almost at once to the offensive, though
a major blow to Christian power did not come until
1144, when the Muslims recaptured Edessa, on the
Euphrates River. The city of Edessa had guarded
the back door of the Frankish holdings, which were
mostly near the coast. This loss marked the beginning
of the end of a viable Christian military bastion
against Islam.
News
of the fall of Edessa reverberated throughout Europe,
and the Second Crusade was called by Pope Eugenius
III. Though the enthusiasm of 1095 was never again
matched, a number of major figures joined the Second
Crusade, including Holy Roman Emperor Conrad III
and France's King Louis VII. Conrad made the mistake
of choosing the land route from Constantinople to
the Holy Land and his army was decimated at Dorylaeum
in Asia Minor. The French army was more fortunate,
but it also suffered serious casualties during the
journey, and only part of the original force reached
Jerusalem in 1148.
In consultation with King Baldwin III of Jerusalem
and his nobles, the Crusaders decided to attack
Damascus in July. The expedition failed to take
the city, and shortly after the collapse of this
attack, the French king and the remains of his army
returned home. The Second Crusade resulted in many
Western casualties and no gains of value in Outremer.
In fact the only military gains during this period
were made in what is now Portugal, where English
troops, which had turned aside from the Second Crusade,
helped free the city of Lisbon from the Moors.
After
the failure of the Second Crusade, it was not easy
to see where future developments would lead. In
the 1120s and 1130s the Military Religious Orders
had been created to further the Crusading ideal
by combining spirituality with the martial ideas
of knighthood and chivalry. Men who joined the orders
took vows of chastity and obedience patterned after
those of monasticism. At the same time they were
professional soldiers, willing to spend long periods
in the East.
The most famous were the Knights of St. John of
Jerusalem, called Hospitalers, and the Poor Knights
of Christ and of the Temple of Solomon, called Templars.
These groups sent men to Outremer to protect Christian
pilgrims and settlements in the east. This meant
that the rulers in Outremer did not have to depend
only on the huge but wayward armies led by princes.
These orders of Crusading knights tried to mediate
between the Church's concerns and the more worldly
interests of princes who saw the East as an extension
of their own ambitions and dynastic policies.
After
the Second Crusade these orders began steadily to
gain popularity and support. As they attracted men
and wealth, and as the Crusading movement became
part of the extended politics of Western Europe,
the orders themselves became players in European
politics. They established chapters throughout the
West, both as recruiting bases and as a means to
funnel money to the East; they built and fortified
great castles; they sat on the councils of princes;
and they too became rich and entrenched.
In
the years between the failure of the Second Crusade
and 1170, when the Muslim prince Saladin
came to power in Egypt, the Latin States were on
the defensive but were able to maintain themselves.
But in 1187 Saladin inflicted a major defeat on
a combined army at Hattin and subsequently took
Jerusalem.
Saladin
-
Pic -
Saladin
was a Muslim ruler in the 12th century, during the
time Europeans led Crusaders to the Middle East.
Saladin fought the Crusaders several times, and
recaptured Jerusalem for Muslims in 1187. This portrait
of Saladin is in the Uffizi Gallery in Florence,
Italy.
|
The
situation had become dire. In response to the Church's
call for a new, major Crusade, three Western rulers
undertook to lead their forces in person. These
were Richard I, the
Lion-Hearted of England, Philip II of France,
and Frederick I, called Frederick Barbarossa, the
Holy Roman Emperor. Known as the Third Crusade,
it has become perhaps the most famous of all Crusades
other than the First Crusade, though its role in
legend and literature greatly outweighs its success
or value.
The
three rulers were rivals. Richard and Philip had
long been in conflict over the English holdings
in France. Though English kings had inherited great
fiefs in France, their homage to the French king
was a constant source of trouble. Frederick Barbarossa,
old and famous, died in 1189 on the way to the Holy
Land, and most of his armies returned to Germany
following his death.
Philip
II had been spurred into taking up the Crusade by
a need to match his rivals, and he returned home
in 1191 with little concern for Eastern glories.
But Richard, a great soldier, was very much in his
element. He saw an opportunity to campaign in the
field, to establish links with the local nobility,
and to speak as the voice of the Crusader states.
Though
he gained much glory, the Crusaders were unable
to recapture Jerusalem or much of the former territory
of the Latin Kingdom. They did succeed, however,
in wrestling from Saladin control of a chain of
cities along the Mediterranean coast.
By
October 1192, when Richard finally left the Holy
Land, the Latin Kingdom had been reconstituted.
Smaller than the original kingdom and considerably
weaker militarily and economically, the second kingdom
lasted precariously for another century.
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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
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