Chronology of The Crusades in the Near East
1095 | November 27: Urban II proclaims the crusade (Council of Clermont) |
1096 | Spring/summer: pogroms against Jews along the Rhine Late summer/fall: annihilation of the “People’s Crusade” in Asia Minor Late fall 1096–May 1097: armies of the second crusading wave meet at Constantinople |
1097 | July 1: Battle of Dorylaeum |
1097-98 | Siege and conquest (June 3) of Antioch |
1098 | Baldwin of Boulogne seizes control of Edessa |
1099 | July 15: conquest of Jerusalem; massacre of the populace August 12: Christian victory over a Fatimid army (Ascalon) |
1101 | Summer: destruction of the third crusading wave in Asia Minor |
1109 | Conquest of Tripoli |
1123–24 | Venetian crusade |
1127–46 | Rule of Imad ad-Din Zengi, emir of Damascus |
1145–48 | Crusade against Damascus (“Second Crusade”) |
1146–74 | Rule of Nur ad-Din, emir of Damascus |
1171 | Saladin ends the Fatimid caliphate of Egypt |
1174 | Saladin assumes power in Damascus |
1187 | July 3/4: Battle of Hattin |
1190–92 | Crusade of Frederick I Barbarossa, Richard I of England, and Philip II of France (“Third Crusade”) |
1197 | Crusade of Henry VI |
1202–04 | Crusade against Constantinople (“Fourth Crusade”) |
1204–61 | Latin Empire of Constantinople |
1212 | Children’s Crusade |
1215 | Fourth Lateran Council. Crusade bull Ad liberandam |
1219–21 | Crusade against Damietta (“Fifth Crusade”) |
1227–29 | Crusade of Emperor Frederick II |
1239–41 | Crusades of Thibald of Champagne and Richard of Cornwall |
1244 | August 23: Khorezmian conquest of Jerusalem October 17: Battle of Forbie (Gaza) |
1248–54 | First Crusade of Louis IX of France |
1260 | September 3: Mamluks under Sultan Baibars defeat the Mongols at the Battle of Ain-Jalut |
1270 | Second Crusade of Louis IX |
1291 | May 18: Mamluk conquest of Acre |
1332–34 | First “Holy League” |
1365 | Crusade of King Peter I of Cyprus |
1396 | September 25: Battle of Nicopolis |
1453 | Ottoman conquest of Constantinople |
Chronology of European Crusades
711 | July 23: defeat of the Visigoths at the river Guadalete |
711–16 | Muslim conquest of the Iberian Peninsula |
1085 | Conquest of Toledo by Alfonso VI of Castile-León |
1086 | Christians defeated by the Almoravids at the Battle of Sagrajas |
1107/08 | Crusade proclaimed against the Wends |
1118 | Conquest of Zaragoza by Alfonso I of Aragón |
1147–49 | Wendish crusade; military campaigns under King Afonso Henriques I of Portugal, King Alfonso VII of Castile-León, and Count Raymond Berengar IV of Barcelona |
1168 | Conquest of Rügen by the Danes |
1195 | July 9: Almohad victory over the Christians at Alarcos |
1199 | Crusades proclaimed against Livonia and Markward of Annweiler |
1209–29 | Albigensian crusades |
1212 | July 16: Christian victory over the Almohads at Las Navas de Tolosa |
1228–48 | Conquest of Mallorca (1228) and Valencia (1238) by King Jaime I of Aragón; conquest of Córdoba (1236) and Seville (1248) by Ferdinand III of Castile-León. Christian expansion to the Algarve coast |
1230–85 | Conquest of Prussia by the Teutonic Knights |
1239 | Crusade proclaimed against Emperor Frederick II (repeated in 1244) |
1242 | April 5: defeat of the Teutonic Knights by Alexander Nevskii at Lake Peipus |
1260 | July: defeat of a Danish-Swedish-German army by the Lithuanians at Durben |
1265-68 | War for the throne of Sicily between Charles I of Anjou and the Hohenstaufen |
1282–1302 | War over Sicily between Charles I of Anjou and Aragón (1285: crusade against Aragón) |
1302 on | Several crusade proclamations against Italian cities |
1307 | Crusade against the Apostolici under Fra Dolcino |
1386 | Polish-Lithuanian union |
1410 | July 15: Poles and Lithuanians defeat Knights at Tannenberg/Grunwald |
1420–34 | Hussite crusades, several defeats of the |
1454–66 | Thirteen-year war between the Teutonic Prussian League; ends 1466 with the Thorn |
1465–67 | Renewed crusade against the Hussites |
1492 | January 2: Granada surrenders to the Christians. Exile or forced baptism of the Spanish Jews and Muslims |
1525 | Secularization of the Teutonic Knights |
'Women on Crusades'
From the first expedition of 1096–99, many female crusaders traveled to the East. Albert of Aachen and other authors report that on the one hand the women supported the army, but on the other hand could be a hindrance on the long marches. The pattern repeated itself on later expeditions. The Itinerarium regis Ricardi tells that before Acre in 1191 the women helped with the earthworks, and the Anglo-Norman poet Ambrose reports in his Estoire de la Guerre Sainte that there were women fighters among the crusaders. Some of these tales became part of the edifying literature of the age as exempla of moral behavior—such as the story of the wounded crusader woman who asked to be thrown into the ditch at Acre so that in death she could help fill it and thus aid in the city’s conquest. But it was not only fighting women who accompanied the expedition. Prostitutes, too, took part, and were sometimes blamed for military failures: God’s army, moralists declared, had sinned and therefore justly suffered defeats. This was an important reason for the prohibitions against women taking part in crusades. But they had little effect, and there is evidence that many nobles and princes took their wives along to the East. Some of them, like the French queen Eleanor of Aquitaine (d. 1204), also had an active influence on political relations in Outremer.