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The Crusaders:
To Arab historians, the
Crusaders were a minor irritant, their invasion one more barbarian
incursion, not nearly as serious a threat as the Mongols were to
prove in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries.
The First Crusade
began in 1095 after the Byzantines - threatened by Seljuk power-
appealed to Pope Urban II for military aid. Pope Urban, hoping to
divert the Christian kings and princes from their struggles with
each other, and perhaps also seeing an opportunity to reunite the
Eastern and Western churches, called for a "Truce of God" among the
rulers of Europe and urged them to take the Holy Land from the
Muslims.
The most
impossing of the many fortresses
built by the
crusaders, the elegant krak des Chevailers
in Syria held
out against the Muslims for over a century and a half.
Considered
dispassionately, the venture was impossible. The volunteers - a
mixed assemblage of kings, nobles, mercenaries, and adventurers -
had to cross thousands of miles of unfamiliar and hostile country
and conquer lands of whose strength they had no conception. Yet so
great was their fervor that in 1099 they took Jerusalem,
establishing along the way principalities in Antioch, Edessa, and
Tripoli. Although unable to fend off the Crusaders at first - even
offering the Crusaders access to Jerusalem if they would come as
pilgrims rather than invaders - the Muslims eventually began to
mount effective counterattacks. They recaptured Aleppo and besieged
Edessa, thus bringing on the unsuccessful Second Crusade.
In the meantime the
Crusaders - or Franks, the Arabs called them - had extended their
reach to the borders of Egypt, where the Fatimids had fallen after
two hundred years. There they faced a young man called Salah al-Din
(Saladin) who had founded still another new dynasty, the Ayyubids,
and who was destined to blunt the thrust of the Crusaders' attack.
In 1187 Saladin counterattacked, eventually recapturing Jerusalem.
The Europeans mounted a series of further crusading expeditions
against the Muslims over the next hundred years or so, but the
Crusaders never again recovered the initiative. Confined to the
coast, they ruled small areas until their final defeat at the hands
of the Egyptian Mamluks at the end of the thirteenth century.
The Crusader
castle at Sidon in Lebanon
was abandoned
after the final defeat of
the Crusader
Kingdom of Jerusalem.
Although the
Crusades achieved no lasting results in terms of military conquest,
they were important in the development of trade, and their
long-range effects on Western society - on everything from feudalism
to fashion - are inestimable. Ironically, they also put an end to
the centuries-old rivalry between the Arabs and Byzantines. By
occupying Constantinople, the capital of their Christian allies, in
the Fourth Crusade, the Crusaders achieved what the Arabs had been
trying to do from the early days of Islam. Although the Byzantine
Empire continued until 1453, when Constantinople fell to the Ottoman
Turks, it never recovered its former power after the Fourth Crusade,
and subsisted only in the half-light of history during its remaining
years.
For the West,
however, the Crusaders' greatest achievement was the opening of the
eastern Mediterranean to European shipping. The Venetians and
Genoese established trading colonies in Egypt, and luxury goods of
the East found their way to European markets. In the history of the
Middle Ages, this was far more important than ephemeral conquests.
Control of the Eastern trade became a constantly recurring theme in
later relations between the European countries and the East, and in
the nineteenth century was to lead to widespread Western
intervention.

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