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The Crusades and the Siege of Damascus

Decent Essays

The Crusades lasted much longer than most people are aware. Common knowledge of the Crusades states that it was one long war between Christians and Muslims, when in fact; there were several Crusades, between Christians, and all non-Christians. The first Crusade was the only successful Crusade, and was widely praised in Christian Europe. After the fall of Edessa in 1144, a second Crusade was waged unsuccessfully. Dawn Hayes, a professor at Montclair State University, defines the Crusades as a “series of armed military campaigns waged between two very different cultures that had developed separately, but along paths that eventually brought them into violent contact”(3). In 1096, Pope Urban II declared war on the Muslims, with the goal of reclaiming the Holy Land from the Muslim invaders. Preparations began in eastern and western Europe; Kings began to hire more knights and begin to gather armies, and knights in smaller states led their own armies of the people, with untrained peasants as their foot soldiers. After three years, the Christians had a clear shot at the Muslim city of Jerusalem, and marched on the city with more than fifteen-thousand soldiers. This Crusade was the only one where the Christians successfully captured Jerusalem from the Muslims. After the defeat of the Muslims, people rejoiced, and praised the crusaders. European economies boomed, and the Christian world was in peace for some time. It wasn’t until 1144, when the governor of Mosul, Zangī,

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