The Crusades were a series of religious wars between
Christians and Muslims started primarily to secure control of holy sites
considered sacred by both groups. In all, eight major Crusade expeditions
occurred between 1096 and 1291. The bloody, violent and often ruthless
conflicts propelled the status of European Christians, making them major
players in the fight for land in the Middle East.
Crusades, military expeditions, beginning in the late 11th century, that were organized
by western European Christians in response to centuries of Muslim wars of
expansion. Their objectives were to check the spread of Islam, to retake control of the Holy Land in the eastern Mediterranean, to conquer pagan
areas, and to recapture formerly Christian territories; they were seen by many
of their participants as a means of redemption and expiation for sins. Between 1095, when the First Crusade was
launched, and 1291, when the Latin Christians were finally expelled from their
kingdom in Syria, there were numerous
expeditions to the Holy Land, to Spain, and even to the Baltic; the Crusades continued for several centuries after 1291.
Crusading declined rapidly during the 16th century with the advent of the ProtestantReformation and the decline of papal authority.
The
Crusades constitute a controversial chapter in the
history of Christianity, and their excesses have been the
subject of centuries of historiography. The Crusades also played an integral role in the expansion of medieval Europe.
What Were the Crusades?
By the end of the 11th century, Western Europe had emerged as a
significant power in its own right, though it still lagged behind other
Mediterranean civilizations, such as that of the Byzantine Empire (formerly the
eastern half of the Roman Empire) and the Islamic Empire of the Middle East
and North Africa.
However,
Byzantium had lost considerable territory to the invading Seljuk Turks. After
years of chaos and civil war, the general Alexius Comenius seized the Byzantine
throne in 1081 and consolidated control over the remaining empire as Emperor
Alexius I.
In 1095,
Alexius sent envoys to Pope Urban II asking for mercenary troops from the
West to help confront the Turkish threat. Though relations between Christians
in the East and West had long been fractious, Alexius’s request came at a time
when the situation was improving.
In November 1095, at the Council of Clermont in southern France, the
Pope called on Western Christians to take up arms to aid the Byzantines and
recapture the Holy Land from Muslim control. This marked the beginning of the
Crusades.
Pope
Urban’s plea was met with a tremendous response, both among the military elite
as well as ordinary citizens. Those who joined the armed pilgrimage wore a
cross as a symbol of the Church.
The
Crusades set
the stage for several religious knightly military orders, including the Knights Templar, the Teutonic
Knights, and the Hospitallers. These groups defended the Holy Land and
protected pilgrims traveling to and from the region.