East Meets West - apwh-bbs-2015
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East Meets West
The Crusades
Causes: Win/Win…why not?
Pope Urban II promises those
who die in the holy war
entrance into heaven.
Also promised citizens who conquer
lands from the Saracens the ability
to keep the land acquired.
Causes: Adventure
After Christianization of the
Vikings, Slavs, and Magyars there
was an entire class of warriors who
now had very little to do but fight
amongst themselves and terrorize
the peasant population.
A plea for help from the Byzantine
Emperor Alexius I in opposing
Muslim attacks thus appealed to
their sense of adventure. It gave
them a reason to fight.
Causes: Papal Politics
Roman-Byzantine Rivalry
Cluniac (Benedictine) reform
A series of reforms that created
monastic communities in Western
Rome. Eastern Orthodox church rejects
monastic reforms like vows of chastity.
Appointment controversy; Pope
Gregory VII excommunicates King
Henry IV because he rejects his appt as
pope; Civil War ensues concerning who
should appt the pope
The Great Schism, 1054, was
a division of Christianity into Eastern
Orthodox and Roman Catholic. The
primary cause was
a dispute over papal authority.
Causes: European Expansionism
In the Battle of Hastings in 1066, William
the Conqueror (from Normandy) defeated
England and brought unity and strength to
that country.
After the recapture of Toledo from the
Moslems in 1087, Toledo became the
residence of the kings of Castile and the
religious center of the whole of Spain
The Normans captured Sicily from the
Moslems in 1091 and paved the way for
the unification of that country.
Causes: Muslim Advances
Events in Moslem World
The Battle of Manzikert,
1071, resulted in the
defeat of the Byzantine
Empire and the capture of
the Emperor by the Seljuk
Turks (muslims).
The Byzantines also lost
Anatolia to the Turks.
The Turks disrupted
pilgrim traffic.
Europe 1000-1100
Adventure
Papal Politics
Battle of
Hastings
1066
Cluniac
Reform
c. 1024
Capture of
Toledo from
Muslims
1087
Religious Piety
Christianization of
the Vikings, Slavs,
and Magyars
c. 1000
Expansionism
Muslim Advances
Papal
Controversy
1075+
Rome
Pilgrimages
Capture of
Sicily from
Muslims
1099
Great Schism
1064
Constantinople
Battle of
Manzikert
1071
Call for a Crusade
Pope Urban II called for
a Crusade in 1095
Objectives
Drive Turks from Anatolia
Obligate the Byzantines
Provide occasion for healing
Great Schism on Rome's terms
Capture Holy Land
Major Events of Crusades
First Crusade 1097-1098
Achieved all major objectives
in Holy Land
Turkish threat blunted, though
not eliminated
Area not strategic to Moslems,
could have been held indefinitely
with a little skill.
Initial gains lost through
diplomatic bungling.
Crusaders attempted to
destabilize neighbors
Major Events of Crusades
Second Crusade, 1147-1148
Military failure, discredits
Crusaders as military threat
Third Crusade, 1189-1191
Well-known in literature (Robin
Hood)
Involved Richard I of England,
Phillip II of France, Frederick I of
Holy Roman Empire
Saladin on Moslem side.
Major Events of Crusades
Fourth Crusade, 1199-1204
Western-Greek relations strained,
mutual contempt.
Crusaders sacked Constantinople,
1204
Chance to heal Great Schism
utterly lost.
In 1453, when attacked by Turks,
Byzantines preferred
surrendering opposed to asking
Rome for aid.
Major Events of Crusades
Fifth Crusade, 1218-1219
Captured Damietta, swapped for Jerusalem
Moslems agreed
Crusaders tried to conquer Egypt,
were routed
Sixth Crusade, 1229
Frederick II of Germany did little
fighting and a lot of negotiation
Treaty gave the Crusaders Jerusalem
and all the other holy cities and a
truce of ten years
He was widely condemned for conducting
the Crusade by negotiating rather than
fighting.
Major Events of Crusades
Seventh Crusade, 1248-1254
Led by Louis IX of France
Nearly an exact repeat of the Fifth Crusade
Eighth Crusade, 1270
Led by Louis IX of France
Louis’ brother, Charles of Anjou, king of
Sicily, had strategic plans of his own and
diverted the expedition to Tunisia, where
Louis died.
The last Crusader cities on the mainland of
Palestine fell in 1291
One small island stronghold lasted until 1303.
Where else in
military history can
we find a war that
was won four times
and still lost?
The Crusades Died Out
Lack of interest, rising
European prosperity
Repeated military defeats
Discredited by "crusades"
against Christians (e.g.,
Albigensians)
Effects of Crusades
Knowledge introduced to Europe
Heavy stone masonry, construction
of castles and stone churches.
Siege technology, tunneling,
sapping.
Moslem minarets adopted as church
spires
Weakening of nobility, rise of merchant
classes & reassertion of kings power
Loss of faith in church
Enrichment was primarily from East to
West--Europe had little to give in
return.
Effects of Crusades
Fatal weakening of Byzantine Empire
Vast increase in cultural horizons for
many Europeans.
Stimulated Mediterranean trade.
Need to transfer large sums of money
for troops and supplies led to
development of banking techniques.
Romantic and imaginative literature.
References
Dutch, Steven I. 13 Dec. 2001. University of Wisconsin-Green Bay. 22 Sept. 2005
<http://www.uwgb.edu/dutchs/WestTechPPT/Crusades.ppt>.
The Crusades." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. 23 Sept. 2005. Wikipedia, the
Free Encyclopedia. 24 Sept. 2005
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crusades#Historical_background>.
The Church and the Crusades." Medieval Crusades. 24 Sept. 2005
http://www.medievalcrusades.com>.