Transcript Document

The Crusades
Key Concepts
The Crusades- another manifestation of the
religious enthusiasm that seized Europe in
the High Middle ages mounted against the
Muslins.
The first widespread attacks on the Jews
occurred during the Crusades.
Chronology The Crusades
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Pope Urban II call for a crusade at Clermont
First Crusade
Fall of Edessa
Second Crusade
Saladin’s conquest of Jerusalem
Third Crusade
Fourth Crusade-sack of Constantinople
Children’s Crusade
Fifth Crusade
Sixth Crusade
Seventh Crusade
Eighth Crusade
Surrender of Acre-end of Christian presence
1095
1096-1099
1144
1147-1149
1187
1189-1192
1204
1212
1219-1221
1228
1248-1254
1270
1291
Children’s Crusade
• During the year of 1212
• Stephen of Cloyes
• French peasant lad who became
persuaded that Jesus Christ had
commanded him to lead a crusade of
children and come to the rescue of the
Holy Sepulchre.
• Conquer Holy Land by force.
Children’s Crusade
• During the year of 1212
• Nicholas of Cologne
• German lad who preached the same
message as Stephen and declared
children could do better than grown men.
• Unlike the French, the Germans were to
achieve their aim by peaceful conversion
of the Muslims.
German route
French route
?????
Results
French Crusade: (30,000)Led by Stephen himself, it started in Vendôme to
Marseilles. It was a painful journey. The summer was unusually hot. They depended
on charity for their food, and the drought left little to spare in the country, and water
was scarce. Many of the children died. The remaining children embarked on the ships
provided by the merchants sailing to Palestine. A few days out they had run into bad
weather, and two of the ships were wrecked on the island of San Pietro, off the southwest corner of Sardinia, and all the passengers were drowned. The five ships that
survived the storm found themselves soon afterwards surrounded by a Saracen
squadron from Africa and were sold into captivity. Many were never heard from again.
German Crusade: (50,000)Led by Nicholas himself, set out up the Rhine to Basle and
through western Switzerland, past Geneva, to cross the Alps by Mont Cenis pass. It
was an arduous journey for the children, and their losses were heavy. Less than a
third of the company that left Cologne appeared before the walls of Genoa. There two
ships bound for Palestine agreed to take several of the children, who embarked and
who perhaps reached Palestine; but nothing is known of their fate. Nicholas, however,
still awaited a miracle, and trudged on with his faithful followers in Rome. At Rome
Pope Innocent III received them. The Pope told them they must go home.
Significance
The children's expedition marked at
once the culmination and the
decline of the crusading
movement. "These children," said
the Pope, referring to the young
crusaders, "reproach us with
having fallen asleep, whilst they
were flying to the assistance of the
Holy Land."
Fact or Fiction
• A study published in 1977 cast doubt on the
existence of these events and many historians
now believe that they were not (or not primarily)
children but multiple bands of "wandering poor"
in Germany and France, some of whom tried to
reach the Holy Land and others who never
intended to do so. Early versions of events, of
which there are many variations told over the
centuries, are largely fictional.
Works Cited
• http://www.sbceo.k12.ca.us/%7Evms/carlton/Me
dieval/childrenscrusade.html
• http://www.historyguide.org/ancient/children.html
• http://www.middle-ages.org.uk/the-childrenscrusade.html
• www.crusades.encyclopedia.com/bibchildren.ht
ml Raedts, Peter. "The Children's Crusade of
1212." Journal of Medieval History, 3 (1977)
Remember
1212