Chronology
1035 | Pilgrimage to Jerusalem by Duke Robert of Normandy |
1064-65 | German pilgrimage to the Holy Land |
1071 | Seljuk Turks defeat Byzantine army at the Battle of Manzikert |
1095 March | Council of Piacenza: envoys from Alexius Komnenos ask Pope Urban II for military help |
1095 27 November | Council of Clermont – Pope Urban II launches the First Crusade |
1095 December–September 1096 | Pope Urban tours France preaching the crusade |
1095 December—July 1096 | Pogroms against Jewish communities of the Rhineland, Bavaria and Rouen |
1096 March | Departure of the People’s Crusade |
1096 August-October | Armies of northern French, Toulousains, and Normans of southern Italy set out |
1096 September | People’s Crusade is defeated in Asia Minor |
1096 November- | Crusader armies start to arrive at Constantinople (northern French in |
May 1097 | November, Godfrey of Bouillon in December, Normans of southern Italy and Toulousains in April) |
1097 19 June | Capture of Nicaea in Asia Minor |
1097 1 July | Battle of Dorylaeum, Asia Minor |
1097 20 October | Start of the siege of Antioch |
1098 3 June | Capture of the city of Antioch |
1098 28 June | Battle of Antioch |
1098 29 June | Surrender of the citadel of Antioch |
1098 1 August | Death of Adhémar of Le Puy |
1098 November-May 1099 | March down to Jerusalem |
1099 7 June | Crusaders arrive at Jerusalem |
1099 15 July | Capture of Jerusalem |
1099 22 July | Godfrey of Bouillon is chosen to rule Jerusalem as Advocate of the Holy Sepulchre |
1099 12 August | Battle of Ascalon |
1099 August—September | Many First Crusaders return home to the West |
1100 18 July | Death of Godfrey of Bouillon |
1100 25 December | Coronation of King Baldwin I |
1101 17 May | Capture of Caesarea |
1101 August—September | Crusaders are defeated in Asia Minor |
1104 7 May | Battle of Hauran – Franks heavily defeated |
1104 26 May | Capture of Acre |
1106 | Bohemond of Antioch tours France seeking support for a crusade against the Greeks |
1107 October—September 1108 | Bohemond invades the Byzantine Empire, but is defeated. Treaty of Devol |
1109 12 July | Capture of Tripoli |
1110 13 May | Capture of Beirut |
1110 4 December | Capture of Sidon by a force including Norwegian crusaders led by King Sigurd |
1113 | Papal bull Pie postulatio voluntatis recognises Hospital of St John in Jerusalem |
1118 2 April | Death of King Baldwin I on campaign in Egypt |
1118 14 April | Consecration of King Baldwin II as ruler of Jerusalem |
1119 | Foundation of the Knights Templar |
1119 28 June | Battle of the Field of Blood, northern Antioch |
1120January | Council of Nablus |
1122 April—August 1123 | Captivity of King Baldwin II |
1124 7 July | Capture of Tyre |
1127—29 | Mission of Hugh of Payns to the West to recruit men for the Damascus crusade and to secure ecclesiastical authorisation for the order of the Temple |
1129 May | Arrival of Count Fulk V of Anjou to marry Melisende, heiress to Jerusalem |
1129 November | Failed Frankish attack on Damascus |
1130 February | Death of Prince Bohemond II of Antioch – rule taken over by Princess Alice |
1131 21 August | Death of King Baldwin II of Jerusalem. Coronation of Fulk and Melisende |
1134 | Revolt of Count Hugh of Jaffa |
1136 April | Arrival of Raymond of Poitiers and his succession to the principality of Antioch |
1137 | Birth of Saladin |
1137–38 | Emperor John Komnenos of Byzantium threatens Antioch |
1142–43 | Second expedition of John Komnenos to Antioch. Death of John (March 1143) |
1143 10 November | Death of King Fulk |
1144–45 | Byzantine army forces Raymond of Antioch to travel to Constantinople and acknowledge Byzantine overlordship |
1144 24 December | Fall of Edessa to Zengi of Aleppo and Mosul |
1145 1 December | First issue of Quantum praedecessores, crusade appeal of Pope Eugenius III |
1146 31 March | Bernard of Clairvaux preaches the Second Crusade at Vézelay to King Louis VII and the French nobility |
1146 14 September | Death of Zengi, succeeded by Nur ad-Din |
1146 September—January 1147 | Bernard tours Flanders and the Rhineland recruiting men for the crusade |
1146 24 December | King Conrad III of Germany takes the cross |
1147 May | Fleet of Anglo-Norman, Flemish and Rhinelanders sets out for the Holy Land via Lisbon |
1147 June | Armies of Conrad III and Louis VII set out for the Levant |
1147 28 June | Start of the siege of Lisbon |
1147 July—September | Wendish Crusade |
1147 17 October | Genoese and Catalan fleet capture Almeria in southern Spain |
1147 21 October | Capture of Lisbon |
1147 September—October | Armies of the Second Crusade at Constantinople |
1147 25 October | German army defeated in Asia Minor |
1148 7January | Defeat of the French army at Mount Cadmus in Asia Minor |
1148 March—May | Louis VII at Antioch |
1148 24 June | Council of Palmarea decides to attack Damascus |
1148 23—28 July | Siege of Damascus fails |
1148 July–30 December | Siege and capture of Tortosa in northern Spain by crusaders from Genoa, Barcelona and southern France |
1149 29 June | Death of Prince Raymond of Antioch at the Battle of Inab |
1149 15 July | Inauguration of the new Church of the Holy Sepulchre |
1150 March—May | Failed attempts to launch a new crusade in France |
1151–52 | Struggle between Baldwin III and Melisende for control over Jerusalem |
1153 22 August | Capture of Ascalon |
1154 April | Nur ad-Din takes control of Damascus |
1157–58 | Crusade of Count Thierry of Flanders and the attack on Shaizar (December 1157) |
1158–59 | Manuel Komnenos in northern Syria |
1158 September | Marriage of Baldwin III and Theodora, a niece of Manuel Komnenos |
1163 10 February | Death of King Baldwin III |
1163 18 February | Coronation of King Amalric |
1163 September | Amalric’s first expedition to Egypt |
1164 August–October | Amalric’s second expedition to Egypt |
1167 January–August | Amalric attacks Egypt with a Pisan fleet; he captures but then concedes Alexandria |
1167 29 August | Marriage of Amalric and Maria, grand-niece of Manuel Komnenos |
1168 | Construction of the concentric castle at Belvoir by the Hospitallers |
1168 October–January 1169 | Amalric’s fourth expedition to Egypt; Nur ad-Din takes control of Egypt |
1169 October–December | Amalric’s fifth expedition to Egypt |
1169–71 | Mission of Archbishop Frederick of Tyre to the West; he visits King Louis VII and King Henry II of England |
1169 29 July | Papal appeal Inter omnia of Pope Alexander III |
1170—c. 1184 | Composition of Historia of William of Tyre |
1171 | Amalric visits Constantinople and swears homage to Manuel Komnenos |
1174 15 May | Death of Nur ad-Din |
1174 11 July | Death of Amalric; succession of Baldwin IV |
1174 November | Saladin takes control of Damascus |
1176 17 September | Manuel Komnenos is defeated by Seljuk Turks at the Battle of Myriocephalum |
1177 25 November | Battle of Mont Gisard – Saladin is defeated |
1177–78 | Crusade of Count Philip of Flanders |
1178–79 | Construction of the castle of Jacob’s Ford; it is taken by Saladin in August 1179 |
1180 April | Marriage of Guy of Lusignan and Sibylla |
1180 24 September | Death of Manuel Komnenos |
1181 January | Papal appeal of Cum orientalis terrae of Pope Alexander III |
1182 December–February 1183 | Reynald of Chatillon’s expedition to the Red Sea and attack on Medina |
1183 February | General tax enacted in the kingdom of Jerusalem |
1183 12 June | Saladin takes control of Aleppo |
1183 September–October | Saladin invades – the Franks shadow him and the Muslims retreat |
1183 October | Removal of Guy of Lusignan from the regency |
1184-85 | Mission of Patriarch Heraclius and the masters of the Templars and Hospitallers to the West |
1185 May | Death of King Baldwin IV; regency of Count Raymond III of Tripoli |
1186 May–September | Death of King Baldwin V (precise date unknown) |
1186 September | Coronation of Guy and Sibylla |
1187 January | Reynald of Chatillon attacks a Muslim caravan in Transjordan |
1187 1 May | Battle of Cresson |
1187 1 July | Saladin invades the kingdom of Jerusalem |
1187 2 July | Saladin lays siege to Tiberias; King Guy decides to march to Tiberias |
1187 4 July | Battle of Hattin |
1187 August | Arrival of Conrad of Montferrat at Tyre |
1187 July–November | Saladin moves through the kingdom of Jerusalem taking towns and castles |
1187 October | Fall of Jerusalem |
1187 October–November | Audita tremendi issued by Pope Gregory VIII – a call for the Third Crusade |
1188–90 | Crusade preparations in western Europe |
1189 | King Guy lays siege to Acre |
1189 May | Emperor Frederick Barbarossa sets out on crusade |
1189 July–May | Frederick moves successfully through the Byzantine Empire and also |
1190 | defeats Seljuk Turks of Iconium (May 1190) |
1190 10 June | Death of Frederick at Silifke in Asia Minor |
1190 July | Richard the Lionheart and Philip II Augustus of France set out for the East |
1190 September–April 1191 | Richard and Philip winter in Sicily |
1191 May | Richard captures Cyprus |
1191 12 July | Capture of Acre by crusaders and settlers |
1191 3 August | Philip returns to France |
1191 7 September | Battle of Arsuf |
1191 October–January 1192 | March to Jerusalem – crusaders turn back |
1192 April | King Guy steps down from throne of Jerusalem, but is given Cyprus by King Richard |
1192 28 April | Murder of Conrad of Montferrat |
1192 May | Henry of Champagne is crowned king of Jerusalem |
1192 June | Second march on Jerusalem fails |
1192 5 August | Battle of Jaffa – Richard defeats Saladin |
1192 2 September | Truce is arranged between Richard and Saladin |
1192 9 October | Richard leaves for home |
1193 4 March | Death of Saladin |
1194 December | Death of Guy of Lusignan, ruler of Cyprus |
1195–98 | German crusade; recaptures Beirut (24 October 1197) |
1197 10 September | Death of King Henry of Jerusalem |
1197 October | Aimery of Lusignan, ruler of Cyprus, secures a crown from the German Empire for the island. He also marries Isabella, heiress to Jerusalem, and becomes king of Jerusalem |
1198 8 January | Election of Pope Innocent III |
1198 August | Issue of Post miserabile, the papal appeal for the Fourth Crusade |
1199 November | A crusade preached against Markward of Anweiler in southern Italy |
1199 November | Fourth Crusade preached at a tournament at Ecry-sur-Aisne, Champagne |
1201 March–April | Northern French envoys reach Venice and agree terms for the transportation of the crusade by sea; ‘The Treaty of Venice’ |
1202 Spring to August | Crusaders start to gather in Venice |
1202 October | Fourth Crusade sets out from Venice, destination: Zara |
1202 13 November | Start of the siege of Zara; city surrenders 24 November |
1203 January | Negotiations between representatives of Prince Alexios of Byzantium and the crusaders at Zara |
1203 April | Simon de Montfort leaves main crusade and goes to the Holy Land |
1203 June | Fourth Crusade and Prince Alexios arrive at Constantinople |
1203 5 July | Crusaders cross the Bosphorus and land on Galata shore; first siege of Constantinople begins |
1203 17 July | Confrontation outside northern walls of the city; Emperor Alexios III retreats and overnight flees |
1203 18 July | Crusaders enter the city and their ally, Prince Alexios is crowned Emperor Alexios IV |
1203 Autumn | Crusaders help Emperor Alexios IV consolidate his lands around Constantinople |
1203 Winter | Tensions grow between the crusaders and Emperor Alexios IV |
1204 1 January | Byzantines try to destroy the Venetian fleet using fire ships |
1204 27 January | Coronation of Emperor Nicholas Kannavos |
1204 27 January | Coronation of Emperor Alexios V Mourtzouphlos |
1204 8 February | Murder of Emperor Alexios IV |
1204 March | ‘The March Pact’: Agreement between the Venetians and the crusaders for the division of spoils should they take Constantinople |
1204 9 April | First assault on Constantinople – fails |
1204 12/13 April | Second assault on Constantinople succeeds |
1204 13–17 April | The Sack of Constantinople |
1204 9 May | Election of Count Baldwin of Flanders as the first Latin Emperor of Constantinople |
1205 14 April | Disappearance of Baldwin at the Battle of Adrianople Death of Doge Enrico |
1205 May | Dandolo in Constantinople |
'Why Study the Crusades'
The study of the history of the crusades is flourishing in schools and universities, in academic research (in Europe, the Middle East and North America); it is also a subject that attracts considerable interest from the general public. In part this is a consequence of the enduring fascination fostered by such a dramatic and important aspect of the histories of western Europe and the Middle east, of christianity and Islam and, to a lesser extent, christianity and Judaism. the sense of adventure in trying to conquer and hold a distant and unknown land still exerts a powerful pull on the imagination of the modern West; the perceived glamour of men such as Richard the Lionheart and saladin has great allure too. alongside this, there is, to some modern western eyes at least, curiosity and confusion as to how and why people could fight and kill in the name of God.
There is also the historical legacy of the crusades – a legacy of brutality and fanaticism that has cast a deep shadow across relations between christianity and Islam, christianity and Judaism, and amongst christians themselves. From the sixteenth century onwards, first the Protestant Church and then an increasingly secular European society began to relegate the crusades to a distant and exotic escapade carried out by barbaric and foolhardy knights. During the nineteenth century, however, the crusades found new resonance. The colonial empires of Europe spread into North Africa and the Near East, reviving memories of times gone by while the emergence of nationalism as a powerful force during this period meant that people looked back positively to past successes and times of unity (such as the First Crusade). In the world of literature the phenomenal international success of historical writers such as Sir Walter Scott, author of Ivanhoe (1819) and The Talisman (1825) did much to spawn artistic and musical material that glorified the age of chivalry, including the crusades. World War I proved a fertile ground for combatants on all sides to depict their struggle as a righteous fight against the devil and to use crusading language and imagery. During the 1930s bishops who supported General Franco’s Nationalist forces invoked divine help and Franco described himself as a crusader. The unprecedented horrors of World War II and the nuclear age largely expunged any sense of romanticism in warfare and in the West the ideas and imagery of the crusade have largely faded from an explicitly military context. One grim exception to this was the appalling massacre perpetrated by the Norwegian extremist, Anders Brevnik, in 2011 whose manifesto invoked a crusading message in his hatred of Muslims.
Recent academic scholarship has formulated a more sophisticated picture of the crusades as a complex and central element in the history of medieval Europe. In discovering how this legacy has endured though the centuries, it is evident that the origins and meaning of the word have become obscured. From the nineteenth century the term ʿcrusadeʾ has also been used in a non-military context in western society such as by the Women’s Temperance Movement of 1873 in Ohio, or participants in the Jarrow March who bore the banner ʿJarrow Crusadeʾ in 1936. Today it has become casualised and secularised. It is used readily in everyday life: a crusade to cut hospital waiting lists, a crusade for fair play in sport. Given the fact that, ultimately, the crusades to the Holy Land collapsed, the continued deployment of the word in such ways shows how far removed it has become from historical reality. Why do people want to identify with something that failed? In its contemporary, generic meaning, therefore, people are embracing a sense of moral right, and/or a quest for justice. Such sentiments have their roots in the medieval usage and this broadly positive meaning explains why the word still has such currency.
In the world of contemporary Islam, however, the crusades have retained a much sharper and more vivid presence, in large part because the outline of events in the medieval period have a number of pertinent parallels to the present. In 1099 the armies of the First Crusade (representing the Catholic Church of western Europe) captured Jerusalem and were popularly reported as wading ankle-deep in the blood of their slain Muslim foes; in the wake of this conquest the Crusader States were formed and Christian rule was established in the Levant. By 1187 Saladin had drawn together the Muslims of the Eastern Mediterranean region under the banner of the jihad, or holy war. The forces of Islam retook the city of Jerusalem and relegated the Christians to a strip of land on the Mediterranean coast until their eventual expulsion in 1291. For the Muslim world of modern times the ingredients seem familiar: violent western incursions, slaughter and oppression of the faithful and the loss of the holy city of Jerusalem. These are among the reasons why the crusade still has such a high profile in the Muslim Middle East. Emerging scholarship shows that, contrary to previous claims by historians, the memory of the crusades and the standing of Saladin as a man of admirable virtues, had not (as previously thought) disappeared from view but remained clearly perceptible down the centuries and grew stronger once the western Europeans began to invade the region with Napoleonʾs attempted conquest of Egypt in 1798.
At the start of the twentieth century, as the Arab Near East began to shake off the shackles of western imperialism, their predecessorsʾ struggles against the crusaders seemed especially relevant and this is a perception that has continued. Even more significantly, Saladin provided a redily available role model: a devout Muslim who had succeeded in driving out the invaders. Such a figure has obvious attractions in the modern age and contemporary political leaders have often sought to appropriate his legacy. In the late 1950s President Nasser of Egypt clashed with the British and French over the Suez Canal. He also created the United Arab Republic (1959–61) which joined Syria and Egypt together – just as Saladin had done in the twelfth century. Nasser frequently invoked the sultan in his struggles against the West and drew parallels between the defeats of the crusaders and his actions in Suez and his hopes for the recovery of Jerusalem. President Saddam Hussein of Iraq also compared himself to Saladin, not least because they were both born in Takrit in northern Iraq. A mural depicting Saddam leading his Iraqi tanks into battle against the West alongside Saladin who rode at the head of his mounted warriors conveyed the appropriate message. Similar representations appeared on more prosaic and mass-produced items, such as bathmats, showing the wide circulation of such an image. Saddam, therefore, identified himself as someone who, like Saladin, would defeat the westerners and drive them from the Middle East. In 1992, the late President Hafiz Asad of Syria commissioned a large equestrian statue of Saladin in Damascus. The emir is shown riding to victory, guarded by Muslim holy men as defeated crusaders slump behind his horse. Placed just outside the old citadel of Damascus, Saladin is, of course, symbolically protecting the city, while the West bows to him.
A further, important parallel with the age of the crusades exists for Muslim militants in the form of the state of Israel. Although the First (and subsequent) crusades were responsible for numerous atrocities against the Jews of Jerusalem (in 1099) and in western Europe (1096, 1147, 1190), the close identification of Israel with the USA, and, in the eyes of some, as an enemy of Palestine and occupier of the holy city, means a perception that the crusader kingdom of Jerusalem was a forerunner of the modern Israeli state. Some Muslim polemicists argue that the creation of Israel was the Westʾs revenge for the failure of the crusades and they point out that the Christians were eventually expelled from the Levant: inevitably, therefore, they argue that the Jews will suffer the same fate. The militant Islamic groups in the Middle East, Hamas and Hizbollah, both invoke the struggle between the crusaders and jihad in their efforts to liberate Palestine.
Undoubtedly the most high-profile use of the word ʿcrusadeʾ in recent times was when, after the terrible attacks of 11 September 2001, President George W. Bush stated that ʿthis crusade . . . this war on terror is going to take a whileʾ. Once the implications of the word were revealed to him, Bush tried to distance himself from the comment but it was too late. In calling the fight against bin Laden a crusade he had created the historical parallel the Islamist leader had long claimed existed and offered an opportunity to tap into the emotional tinderbox of centuries of conflict: ʿSo, Bush has declared in his own words: “crusader attack.” The odd thing about this is that he has taken the words right out of our mouth . . . So the world today is split into two parts, as Bush said: either you are with us or you are with terrorism. Either you are with the crusade or you are with Islam. Bush’s image of him today is of him being in the front of the line, yelling and carrying his big cross.ʾ Just to complete the circle, the head of the CIA unit charged with hunting bin Laden described him as: ʿan Islamic hero, as the faithʾs ideal type, and almost as a modern-day Saladinʾ (Phillips, 2009: 348).
'The Impact of Crusading in the West'
The crusades to the holy Land and the settlement of the Latin east are a central part of medieval history. Through the crusading movement the power and influence of Catholic Christendom grew and the physical, cultural and intellectual horizons of the people of the West changed. With the call to the first Crusade in 1095 all of western europe found a common cause that crossed geographical and political boundaries and brought out one of the few characteristics shared across the region, namely the Catholic faith. The crusade also reflected contemporary hopes, fears and aspirations regarding spiritual salvation and, as well as the desire for honour, financial advancement and, for some, the wish to conquer land. four years later and the map of Christendom had changed dramatically, with Jerusalem, the heart of the Christian faith, under Catholic rule. hitherto unthought of opportunities opened up: the papacy had created a new way of attaining salvation and had a means of exerting authority over the people of the West; many thousands of western europeans went to settle in the Levant; large numbers of pilgrims could visit the holy sites; and the prospects for trade and the acquisition of knowledge expanded dramatically.
Along with these new opportunities came new responsibilities. There was the need to consolidate and defend these lands and there were times when crusading activity exerted a profound impact in the West. The second and Third Crusades saw western european rulers absent from their lands for years at a time, and in the case of emperor Frederick Barbarossa, the death of one of these men. The decision to crusade must have galvanised and absorbed a country like nothing else: households and governments had to organise themselves, to arrange regencies, to raise large sums of cash – by taxes, by voluntary contributions, loans, or mortgages – transactions which affected ecclesiastical and secular society alike. The Venetian commitment to transport the army of the Fourth Crusade was the most dramatic example of all. The practicalities of transport and supply must have commanded peoplesʾ attention too. Smaller crusades, such as those seen in the 1160s and 1170s, would have mirrored the same effects on a lesser scale. Alongside these sudden surges of activity, other, more permanent, reminders of the fight for the Holy Land appeared in the East. Relics arrived from the Holy Land (see pp. 34, 142–3 above) to be venerated in churches across the Latin West. More prominent still were the substantial holdings of the military orders, and their presence as powerful landlords, bankers, and as ecclesiastical and medical institutions, became a factor in many peoples' lives.