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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Crusades myths (T.F .Madden)
    Posted: 21-Aug-2006 at 06:36
The Crusades are much in the news of late. President Bush made the mistake of referring to the war against terrorism as a "crusade" and was roundly criticized for uttering a word both offensive and hurtful to the worlds Muslims. If it is painful, then it is remarkable indeed how often the Arabs themselves make use of the word. Osama bin Laden and Mullah Omar have repeatedly referred to Americans as "crusaders" and the present war as a "crusade against Islam." For decades now Americans have been routinely referred to as "crusaders" or "cowboys" among Arabs in the Middle East. Clearly the crusades are very much alive in the Muslim world.

They are not forgotten in the West either. Actually, despite the many differences between the East and West, most people in both cultures are in agreement about the Crusades. It is commonly accepted that the Crusades are a black mark on the history of Western civilization generally and the Catholic Church in particular. Anyone eager to bash Catholics will not long tarry before brandishing the Crusades and the Inquisition. The Crusades are often used as a classic example of the evil that organized religion can do. Your average man on the street in both New York and Cairo would agree that the Crusades were an insidious, cynical, and unprovoked attack by religious zealots against a peaceful, prosperous, and sophisticated Muslim world.

It was not always so. During the Middle Ages you could not find a Christian in Europe who did not believe that the Crusades were an act of highest good. Even the Muslims respected the ideals of the Crusades and the piety of the men who fought them. But that all changed with the Protestant Reformation. For Martin Luther, who had already jettisoned the Christian doctrines of papal authority and indulgences, the Crusades were nothing more than a ploy by a power-hungry papacy. Indeed, he argued that to fight the Muslims was to fight Christ himself, for it was he who had sent the Turks to punish Christendom for its faithlessness. When Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent and his armies began to invade Austria, Luther changed his mind about the need to fight, but he stuck to his condemnation of the Crusades. During the next two centuries people tended to view the Crusades through a confessional lens: Protestants demonized them, Catholics extolled them. As for Suleiman and his successors, they were just glad to be rid of them.

It was in the Enlightenment of the eighteenth century that the current view of the Crusades was born. Most of the philosophes, like Voltaire, believed that medieval Christianity was a vile superstition. For them the Crusades were a migration of barbarians led by fanaticism, greed, and lust. Since then, the Enlightenment take on the Crusades has gone in and out of fashion. The Crusades received good press as wars of nobility (although not religion) during the Romantic period and the early twentieth century. After the Second World War, however, opinion again turned decisively against the Crusades. In the wake of Hitler, Mussolini, and Stalin, historians found war of ideologyany ideology distasteful. This sentiment was summed up by Sir Steven Runciman in his three-volume work, A History of the Crusades (1951-54). For Runciman, the Crusades were morally repugnant acts of intolerance in the name of God. The medieval men who took the cross and marched to the Middle East were either cynically evil, rapaciously greedy, or naively gullible. This beautifully written history soon became the standard. Almost single-handedly Runciman managed to define the modern popular view of the Crusades.

Since the 1970s the Crusades have attracted many hundreds of scholars who have meticulously poked, prodded, and examined them. As a result, much more is known about Christianitys holy wars than ever before. Yet the fruits of decades of scholarship have been slow to enter the popular mind. In part this is the fault of professional historians, who tend to publish studies that, by necessity, are technical and therefore not easily accessible outside of the academy. But it is also due to a clear reluctance among modern elites to let go of Runcimans vision of the Crusades. And so modern popular books on the Crusadesdesiring, after all, to be populartend to parrot Runciman. The same is true for other media, like the multi-part television documentary, The Crusades (1995), produced by BBC/A&E and starring Terry Jones of Monty Python fame. To give the latter an air of authority the producers spliced in a number of distinguished Crusade historians who gave their views on events. The problem was that the historians would not go along with Runcimans ideas. No matter. The producers simply edited the taped interviews cleverly enough that the historians seemed to be agreeing with Runciman. As Professor Jonathan Riley-Smith quite vehemently told me, "They made me appear to say things that I do not believe!"

So, what is the real story of the Crusades? As you might imagine, it is a long story. But there are good histories, written in the last twenty years, that lay much of it out. For the moment, given the barrage of coverage that the Crusades are getting nowadays, it might be best to consider just what the Crusades were not. Here, then, are some of the most common myths and why they are wrong.

Myth 1: The Crusades were wars of unprovoked aggression against a peaceful Muslim world.

This is as wrong as wrong can be. From the time of Mohammed, Muslims had sought to conquer the Christian world. They did a pretty good job of it, too. After a few centuries of steady conquests, Muslim armies had taken all of North Africa, the Middle East, Asia Minor, and most of Spain. In other words, by the end of the eleventh century the forces of Islam had captured two-thirds of the Christian world. Palestine, the home of Jesus Christ; Egypt, the birthplace of Christian monasticism; Asia Minor, where St. Paul planted the seeds of the first Christian communities: These were not the periphery of Christianity but its very core. And the Muslim empires were not finished yet. They continued to press westward toward Constantinople, ultimately passing it and entering Europe itself. As far as unprovoked aggression goes, it was all on the Muslim side. At some point what was left of the Christian world would have to defend itself or simply succumb to Islamic conquest. The First Crusade was called by Pope Urban II in 1095 in response to an urgent plea for help from the Byzantine emperor in Constantinople. Urban called the knights of Christendom to come to the aid of their eastern brethren. It was to be an errand of mercy, liberating the Christians of the East from their Muslim conquerors. In other words, the Crusades were from the beginning a defensive war. The entire history of the eastern Crusades is one of response to Muslim aggression.

Myth 2: The Crusaders wore crosses, but they were really only interested in capturing booty and land. Their pious platitudes were just a cover for rapacious greed.

Historians used to believe that a rise in Europes population led to a crisis of too many noble "second sons," those who were trained in chivalric warfare but who had no feudal lands to inherit. The Crusades, therefore, were seen as a safety valve, sending these belligerent men far from Europe where they could carve out lands for themselves at someone elses expense. Modern scholarship, assisted by the advent of computer databases, has exploded this myth. We now know that it was the "first sons" of Europe that answered the popes call in 1095, as well as in subsequent Crusades. Crusading was an enormously expensive operation. Lords were forced to sell off or mortgage their lands to gather the necessary funds. They were also not interested in an overseas kingdom. Much like a soldier today, the medieval Crusader was proud to do his duty but longed to return home. After the spectacular successes of the First Crusade, with Jerusalem and much of Palestine in Crusader hands, virtually all of the Crusaders went home. Only a tiny handful remained behind to consolidate and govern the newly won territories. Booty was also scarce. In fact, although Crusaders no doubt dreamed of vast wealth in opulent Eastern cities, virtually none of them ever even recouped their expenses. But money and land were not the reasons that they went on Crusade in the first place. They went to atone for their sins and to win salvation by doing good works in a faraway land.

Myth 3: When the Crusaders captured Jerusalem in 1099 they massacred every man, woman, and child in the city until the streets ran ankle deep with the blood.

This is a favorite used to demonstrate the evil nature of the Crusades. Most recently, Bill Clinton in a speech at Georgetown cited this as one reason the United States is a victim of Muslim terrorism. (Although Mr. Clinton brought the blood up to knee level for effect.) It is certainly true that many people in Jerusalem were killed after the Crusaders captured the city. But this must be understood in historical context. The accepted moral standard in all pre-modern European and Asian civilizations was that a city that resisted capture and was taken by force belonged to the victorious forces. That included not just the buildings and goods, but the people as well. That is why every city or fortress had to weigh carefully whether it could hold out against besiegers. If not, it was wise to negotiate terms of surrender. In the case of Jerusalem, the defenders had resisted right up to the end. They calculated that the formidable walls of the city would keep the Crusaders at bay until a relief force in Egypt could arrive. They were wrong. When the city fell, therefore, it was put to the sack. Many were killed, yet many others were ransomed or allowed to go free. By modern standards this may seem brutal. Yet a medieval knight would point out that many more innocent men, women, and children are killed in modern bombing warfare than could possibly be put to the sword in one or two days. It is worth noting that in those Muslim cities that surrendered to the Crusaders the people were left unmolested, retained their property, and allowed to worship freely. As for those streets of blood, no historian accepts them as anything other than a literary convention. Jerusalem is a big town. The amount of blood necessary to fill the streets to a continuous and running three-inch depth would require many more people than lived in the region, let alone the city.

Myth 4: The Crusades were just medieval colonialism dressed up in religious finery.

It is important to remember that in the Middle Ages the West was not a powerful, dominant culture venturing into a primitive or backward region. It was the Muslim East that was powerful, wealthy, and opulent. Europe was the third world. The Crusader States, founded in the wake of the First Crusade, were not new plantations of Catholics in a Muslim world akin to the British colonization of America. Catholic presence in the Crusader States was always tiny, easily less than ten percent of the population. These were the rulers and magistrates, as well as Italian merchants and members of the military orders. The overwhelming majority of the population in the Crusader States was Muslim. They were not colonies, therefore, in the sense of plantations or even factories, as in the case of India. They were outposts. The ultimate purpose of the Crusader States was to defend the Holy Places in Palestine, especially Jerusalem, and to provide a safe environment for Christian pilgrims to visit those places. There was no mother country with which the Crusader States had an economic relationship, nor did Europeans economically benefit from them. Quite the contrary, the expense of Crusades to maintain the Latin East was a serious drain on European resources. As an outpost, the Crusader States kept a military focus. While the Muslims warred against each other the Crusader States were safe, but once united the Muslims were able to dismantle the strongholds, capture the cities, and in 1291 expel the Christians completely.

Myth 5: The Crusades were also waged against the Jews.


No pope ever called a Crusade against Jews. During the First Crusade a large band of riffraff, not associated with the main army, descended on the towns of the Rhineland and decided to rob and kill the Jews they found there. In part this was pure greed. In part it also stemmed from the incorrect belief that the Jews, as the crucifiers of Christ, were legitimate targets of the war. Pope Urban II and subsequent popes strongly condemned these attacks on Jews. Local bishops and other clergy and laity attempted to defend the Jews, although with limited success. Similarly, during the opening phase of the Second Crusade a group of renegades killed many Jews in Germany before St. Bernard was able to catch up to them and put a stop to it. These misfires of the movement were an unfortunate byproduct of Crusade enthusiasm. But they were not the purpose of the Crusades. To use a modern analogy, during the Second World War some American soldiers committed crimes while overseas. They were arrested and punished for those crimes. But the purpose of the Second World War was not to commit crimes.

Myth 6: The Crusades were so corrupt and vile that they even had a Childrens Crusade.

The so-called "Childrens Crusade" of 1212 was neither a Crusade nor an army of children. It was a particularly large eruption of popular religious enthusiasm in Germany that led some young people, mostly adolescents, to proclaim themselves Crusaders and begin marching to the sea. Along the way they gathered plenty of popular support and not a few brigands, robbers, and beggars as well. The movement splintered in Italy and finally ended when the Mediterranean failed to dry up for them to cross. Pope Innocent III did not call this "Crusade." Indeed, he repeatedly urged non-combatants to stay at home, helping the war effort through fasting, prayer, and alms. In this case, he praised the zeal of the young who had marched so far, and then told them to go home.

Myth 7: Pope John Paul II apologized for the Crusades.

This is an odd myth, given that the pope was so roundly criticized for failing to apologize directly for the Crusades when he asked forgiveness from all those that Christians had unjustly harmed. It is true that John Paul recently apologized to the Greeks for the Fourth Crusades sack of Constantinople in 1204. But the pope at the time, Innocent III, expressed similar regret. That, too, was a tragic misfire that Innocent had done everything he could to avoid.

Myth 8: Muslims, who remember the Crusades vividly, have good reason to hate the West.

Actually, the Muslim world remembers the Crusades about as well as the Westin other words, incorrectly. That should not be surprising. Muslims get their information about the Crusades from the same rotten histories that the West relies on. The Muslim world used to celebrate the Crusades as a great victory for them. They did, after all, win. But western authors, fretting about the legacy of modern imperialism, have recast the Crusades as wars of aggression and the Muslims as placid sufferers. In so doing they have rescinded centuries of Muslim triumphs, offering in their stead only the consolation of victimhood.

[This article originally appeared in the January/February 2002 issue of Catholic Dossier.]

Thomas F. Madden is Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of History at Saint Louis University. He is author of A Concise History of the Crusades and co-author of The Fourth Crusade.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21-Aug-2006 at 06:40
One common mistake when peolpe talk about crusades it's that always they only speak about the crusades in Holy Land againts Muslims but ther were other, also againts other Christians (Catars and Albigenses) and also in Spain.
I'm sorry but my English is not very good. I'm from Vila-real (Valencia, Spain)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21-Aug-2006 at 06:50
You are right. Indeed they were not called "crusades" (in their times) ...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21-Aug-2006 at 06:55
Emmm, i think yes but i'm not sure 100%.
I'm sorry but my English is not very good. I'm from Vila-real (Valencia, Spain)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21-Aug-2006 at 06:59
I refer to the "Crusades" in Holy Land ...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21-Aug-2006 at 09:27
One common mistake is that whenever you publishe an article that has been published before, then you should add something of your own to it too. Your other post as well.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21-Aug-2006 at 13:11
I can add to the myths as well. Some of the ones that Leo obviously missed.
 
Myth: 9 Muslims are human beings like us.
Actually recent research suggests that muslims are not human in the stricty sence of the word, but infact might well be accuratly labled as 'sub-human". We feel that politicians who remind us that muslims are human have no scientific basis to do so, and are encumbered by the present cliamate of political corretness.
 
Myth 10: But all the muslims I know are good.
Its an insidious plot. The only good muslims are either the grave yard, in the Dutch parliament, writing blashpehmous novels, or the webmasters of faith freedom.
 
Myth 11: But how can we kill all of them? It would be like Hitler.
Well Hitler was not all bad.


Edited by Sparten - 21-Aug-2006 at 13:12
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21-Aug-2006 at 13:45
Originally posted by Sparten

I can add to the myths as well. Some of the ones that Leo obviously missed.
 
Myth: 9 Muslims are human beings like us.
Actually recent research suggests that muslims are not human in the stricty sence of the word, but infact might well be accuratly labled as 'sub-human". We feel that politicians who remind us that muslims are human have no scientific basis to do so, and are encumbered by the present cliamate of political corretness.
 
Myth 10: But all the muslims I know are good.
Its an insidious plot. The only good muslims are either the grave yard, in the Dutch parliament, writing blashpehmous novels, or the webmasters of faith freedom.
 
Myth 11: But how can we kill all of them? It would be like Hitler.
Well Hitler was not all bad.
 
Sparten, your post is nationalistic. I would suggest removing it.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21-Aug-2006 at 15:43
Originally posted by rider

 
Sparten, your post is nationalistic. I would suggest removing it.


rider, i think Sparten want to be ironic Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21-Aug-2006 at 16:13
There are people that might see it otherwise, so it would be wiser to remove it.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21-Aug-2006 at 16:17
Originally posted by Leonardo

Thomas F. Madden is Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of History at Saint Louis University. He is author of A Concise History of the Crusades and co-author of The Fourth Crusade.


 
A bit of a incomplete introduction of the good professor. It's the Jesuit University of St' Louis, he's doing his teaching and research at.
Small, but important point.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21-Aug-2006 at 17:02
Originally posted by Leonardo


Myth 1: The Crusades were wars of unprovoked aggression against a peaceful Muslim world.

This is as wrong as wrong can be. From the time of Mohammed, Muslims had sought to conquer the Christian world. They did a pretty good job of it, too. After a few centuries of steady conquests, Muslim armies had taken all of North Africa, the Middle East, Asia Minor, and most of Spain. In other words, by the end of the eleventh century the forces of Islam had captured two-thirds of the Christian world. Palestine, the home of Jesus Christ; Egypt, the birthplace of Christian monasticism; Asia Minor, where St. Paul planted the seeds of the first Christian communities: These were not the periphery of Christianity but its very core. And the Muslim empires were not finished yet. They continued to press westward toward Constantinople, ultimately passing it and entering Europe itself. As far as unprovoked aggression goes, it was all on the Muslim side. At some point what was left of the Christian world would have to defend itself or simply succumb to Islamic conquest. The First Crusade was called by Pope Urban II in 1095 in response to an urgent plea for help from the Byzantine emperor in Constantinople. Urban called the knights of Christendom to come to the aid of their eastern brethren. It was to be an errand of mercy, liberating the Christians of the East from their Muslim conquerors. In other words, the Crusades were from the beginning a defensive war. The entire history of the eastern Crusades is one of response to Muslim aggression.
 
 
What the good professor forgot to mention here, was that the Islamic conquest of Palestine, Northern Africa, Spain etc. had occured four hundred years or more before the first notion of a liberation of the Holy Land appeared in the West. By the end of the 11th century, other than the Seljuk in Asia Minor, there was no immediate Islamic thread to Europe, on the contrary, Muslim Spain had already began to crumble, Sicily had been recovered, and the relations between the Christian and the Islam states were factual, not perfect but not openly hostile either. Trade between the two cultural spheres existed, Christian pilgrims were allowed into Palestine, and so on.
The age of the great Islamic agressive expansion was long gone, and one could even argue that the Seljuk thread against the Eastern-Roman Empire was somewhat exaggerated by the Byzantines who still suffered from a psychological aftershock, after Manzikert in 1071.
 
So the question is, why after 400 years, Christianity suddenly decided to take a recovery action, without having suffered a serious and acute provocation? Why wasn't done anything before?
To presume, it was purely done to assist their Christian brothers in Constantinople, is surely naive. By then the conflict between the two most important centres of Christianity had began to escalate, and the Byzantine were regarded with the suspicion of being slightly heretical by their Western neighbours.
Was it that the collective memory of the Christian people of Europe suddenly and miraculously remembered the Islamic conquest of four centuries before? Certainly, at the ime of the Islamic expansion in the 7th and 8th century, Europe had not been in a position to respond, apart from the Byzantine Empire there simply had been no European power with the logistics to send a task force to Palestine. And to think that by the 11th century, and after the formation of formidable European states, the good Christians suddenly thought, we're ready now to strike back, can surely be disregarded.
So, the reason for the sudden appearance idea of the 'armed pilgrimes" to the Holy Land must be sought inside the European societies, not outside.
 
The change of the Christian attitude against the Islamic world, that would lead to the Crusades, is not that result of an immediate response, but that of a shift of religious ideas, that of a shift in feudal power structures, and other reasons that are internal to European society.
The mindset of Central Europe had changed,  the idea of the possibilty of a "holy war" first appeared in Europe in the 11th century, that allowed for military action against non-Christian states on religious grounds.


Edited by Komnenos - 21-Aug-2006 at 17:02
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 22-Aug-2006 at 03:36
Perhaps you have not read with due attention the articles of Madden.
 
Western Europe was the Third World of that time, Islam World was the Big Empire. For centuries Western Europe was on the defensive. They were simple too week to take the offensive. Things began to change only about XI century ...
 
P.S. I don't see the relevance about the Jesuit University of St' Louis. Are you biased against it? I'm an atheists and I'm not.
 
 


Edited by Leonardo - 22-Aug-2006 at 04:01
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 22-Aug-2006 at 03:41
I think its a case of the Jesuits being biased. Not Komnenos.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 22-Aug-2006 at 03:52
Originally posted by Sparten

I think its a case of the Jesuits being biased. Not Komnenos.
 
 
Of course, the Jesuits are biased, the muslims are biased, you are biased, I am biased, only Komnenos is not biased LOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 22-Aug-2006 at 06:23
Of course the crusades can be interpreted in this way, but Madden seems to forget one thing. Muslim states continuously attacked christian states, but why in that moment was a crusade launched? Why not earlier or later. I think this is the key point of the question.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 22-Aug-2006 at 06:34
Komnenos actually made a good point here.
 
 Well, when the Byzantine ask for help from Europe they didn't want to see the horde of fanatics (like peter the hermit) in their doors. The Byzantines actually tried to copy the tactics of muslim jihand.
 
 But how a jihand was made? Simply when a muslim sultanat called for jihand against the Byzantines a lot of people run to be recruited by the army of that muslim state.
 So when the Byzantine asked from help they actually wanted some Europeans to come SERVE IN THEIR ARMY. Not just some hordes of untrain undisciple villagers that would destroy their state. The Byzantines fought the Muslims for more than 400 years alone and knew how to counter them. The Crusaders were just an other enemy for them.
 
 Also consider some of them.
1) Why the first crusaders (the hordes of Peter the Hermit) when came to the Byzantine lands the first think they do was to attack, pillage and kill people. Why they didn't come in peace ( wasn't they come to aid them?) and force the topical Byzantine leader to engage them in battle and dedeat them?
2) The so called four crusade, why it become a tool in the hands of Venice ? It wasn't a Byzantine faul for the 4 crusade. It was the venice that used them to destroy the Byzantine empire in order to gain more power. Foolishly because Venice was a weak state and later it was fast become a pupil in Ottoman hands.
3) If they fought only the muslims, then why in the 14 and 15 century the Popes demanded from the orthodox to decome Catholics in order to help them against the Turks?
4) Why crusades launched against the Baltic statements (they wasn't muslims)


Edited by BlindOne - 22-Aug-2006 at 06:35
That I am stricken and can't let you go
When the heart is cold, there's no hope, and we know
That I am crippled by all that you've done
Into the abyss, will I run


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 22-Aug-2006 at 06:42
Originally posted by Raider

Of course the crusades can be interpreted in this way, but Madden seems to forget one thing. Muslim states continuously attacked christian states, but why in that moment was a crusade launched? Why not earlier or later. I think this is the key point of the question.
 
Why not earlier? Because they (western Europeans) were too week to counterattack before XI century, they could only defend themselves.


Edited by Leonardo - 22-Aug-2006 at 06:57
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 22-Aug-2006 at 06:56
Originally posted by BlindOne

Komnenos actually made a good point here.
 
 Well, when the Byzantine ask for help from Europe they didn't want to see the horde of fanatics (like peter the hermit) in their doors. The Byzantines actually tried to copy the tactics of muslim jihand.
 
 But how a jihand was made? Simply when a muslim sultanat called for jihand against the Byzantines a lot of people run to be recruited by the army of that muslim state.
 So when the Byzantine asked from help they actually wanted some Europeans to come SERVE IN THEIR ARMY. Not just some hordes of untrain undisciple villagers that would destroy their state. The Byzantines fought the Muslims for more than 400 years alone and knew how to counter them. The Crusaders were just an other enemy for them.
 
 Also consider some of them.
1) Why the first crusaders (the hordes of Peter the Hermit) when came to the Byzantine lands the first think they do was to attack, pillage and kill people. Why they didn't come in peace ( wasn't they come to aid them?) and force the topical Byzantine leader to engage them in battle and dedeat them?
 
What precisely are you refering to?
 
Originally posted by BlindOne

2) The so called four crusade, why it become a tool in the hands of Venice ? It wasn't a Byzantine faul for the 4 crusade. It was the venice that used them to destroy the Byzantine empire in order to gain more power. Foolishly because Venice was a weak state and later it was fast become a pupil in Ottoman hands.
 
You are partially right, Venice had almost always an ambiguous politics towards the Ottomans and it was also excomunicated sometimes by the Popes, but it was never a pupil in Ottoman hands. Who do you think won the battle of Lepanto?
 
 
Originally posted by BlindOne

3) If they fought only the muslims, then why in the 14 and 15 century the Popes demanded from the orthodox to decome Catholics in order to help them against the Turks?
 
Obviuosly the Papal State had their own ecclesiastical politics towards the orthodox church. They tried to gain advantage ...
 
Originally posted by BlindOne

4) Why crusades launched against the Baltic statements (they wasn't muslims)
 
This is a good question for onother thread. Here we were discussing only the so called "crusades" in Holy Land.
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 22-Aug-2006 at 08:54
Originally posted by Leonardo

 
Why not earlier? Because they (western Europeans) were too week to counterattack before XI century, they could only defend themselves.
 
 
Sure, that's certainly right and I have pointed that out above.
But that still doesn't answer the  question exactly why then, at the end of the 121th century, and exactly where the Crusades set off to.
 
If the main motive was really to reconquer the former Christian lands that had been usurped by the Islamic states, why did the Near-Eastern Crusades concentrate, with very few exceptions, on Palestine. Surely, the loss of Egypt, Northern-Africa, parts of Asia Minor and Spain, had far greater implications for European society and eceonomy, than that of the relatively insignificant territory of Palestine.
The answer to that is obvious, Palestine and especially Jerusalem, had an over-riding symbolic importance for the Christian faith and its adherents. It was the birthplace of the faith, and was now in the hand of infidels, heathens, or whatever you choose to call them.
And that's of course the clue to the whole enterprise, the initial impetus to go East was not that of a political necessity to respond to a threat or to reconquer lands, but a highly symbolic gesture, initiating a "Holy War" to liberate the "Holy Land". That wasn't the only motive, both spiritual and worldly leaders in Christian Europe had their very own and very personal reasons to go East, but this "Holy War" was the umbrella under which everything else could hide.
 
The question "why then", again must be answered by looking at the changing role of the Christian Church and papal authority in the mid 11th century. Urban II was the second Pope, after Gregory VII, who not only succeeded to reform the internal structure of the Church, but also tried, like Gregory had done with some success, to establish the dominance of the Papal authority over that of the worldly rulers of Europe.
And here is another clue, it wasn't that the Kings of Europe suddenly realised in the 1090s that they were now strong enough to counteract any past Islamic conquest or respond to present Islamic provocations.
With Urban II, there came at the end of the 11th century a Pope, who firstly had the universally accepted spiritual and moral authority to call a "Holy War" and econdly, the political authority to unite (well,almost) the European rulers into the pursue of this "Holy War".


Edited by Komnenos - 22-Aug-2006 at 11:13
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