Siege of Damascus Essays

  • The Failure of the Second Crusade and the Fall of the Christians

    669 Words  | 2 Pages

    two un-cohesive agendas. This division of power and lack of military organization ultimately led to the massacre of thousands of Christian Crusaders and crushing losses along the way in the Crusaders' attempts to recapture the cities of Edessa and Damascus. The Second Crusade was the beginning of the fall of power of the Christian Crusaders for the first time in decades. At the start of the Second Crusade, it had been four decades since the First Crusade had taken place and the stories from the first

  • Zengi's Response To The Crusades

    1070 Words  | 3 Pages

    In the history of the Muslim response to the Crusades, Zengi's capture of Edessa after a brief siege in the winter of 1144 was a key event. It was one of the first major Muslim victories against the Crusaders and lead to not only the fall of Edessa but also the conquest of all the Frankish territory east of the Euphrates and was viewed seriously enough by the Europeans to necessitate the calling of the Second Crusade. Because of this victory against the Christians Zengi is often portrayed by both

  • Positive And Negative Effects Of The Crusades Essay

    554 Words  | 2 Pages

    of the crusades then established them as rulers of the states of the Holy Land. Second Crusade: In 1144 Islamic power took over the County of Edessa, the church then called for another military siege to take back the Holy Land. Kings Louis VII of France and Conrad III of Germany led the troops into Damascus in 1145. After every army got there, the German king decided he had enough, and left. At the end of the second crusade nothing was accomplished. Third Crusade:

  • Opposing Viewpoints: The Siege of Jerusalem: Christian and Muslim Perspectives

    852 Words  | 2 Pages

    whom he remained, traveling with him to Jerusalem in the winter of 1099. Fulcher, who remained in Jerusalem for the remainder of his life, dying there in approximately 1127, provides, as an eyewitness to the events, the Christian perspective of the Siege of Jerusalem. Ibn al-Athīr, in full Izz al-Dīn Abū al-Ḥasan Alī ibn al-Athīr, born May 12, 1160, in what is now Turkey, was an influential Arab historian whose chief work was a history of the world, al-Kāmil fī al-tārīkh (“The Complete History”)

  • Crusades Dbq

    1250 Words  | 3 Pages

    united army, which increased the success of the First Crusade. For example in March 1098, after Baldwin's success in Edessa, instead of continuing on to Antioch to stop the siege by the crusaders, Kerbogha attempted to recapture Edessa first. This showed that the crusaders weren't a big enough threat to make stopping their siege of Antioch a priority. Another factor responsible for the success of the First Crusade was the desires of wealth by the Princes. Due to many of the princes looking to establish

  • Crusades Dbq

    1263 Words  | 3 Pages

    united army, which increased the success of the First Crusade. For example in March 1098, after Baldwin's success in Edessa, instead of continuing on to Antioch to stop the siege by the crusaders, Kerbogha attempted to recapture Edessa first. This showed that the crusaders weren't a big enough threat to make stopping their siege of Antioch a priority. Another factor responsible for the success of the First Crusade was the desires of wealth by the Princes. Due to many of the princes looking to establish

  • The Byzantine Empire And Islamic Civilization

    1243 Words  | 3 Pages

    Islamic art, especially in Syria and Palestine. There are considerable Byzantine influences which can be detected in the distinctive early Islamic monuments in Syria and Palestine, as on the Dome of the Rock 691 AD in Jerusalem, the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus. While the Dome of the Rock gives clear reference in plan - and partially in decoration - to Byzantine art, the plan of the Umayyad Mosque has also a remarkable similarity with 6th- and 7th-century Christian basilicas, but it has been modified and

  • The Influence Of Pope Urban II

    624 Words  | 2 Pages

    • The Pope has agreed to help defend the Byzantine Empire! After being appealed to by Emperor Alexius I Comnenus, in 1095, Pope Urban II assembled the Council of Clermont. In order to help the Byzantine Empire and ensure his power over the church he has decided to call for a military expedition to get back the Holy Land. • After hearing about Pope Urban II’s pronouncement, huge amounts of people are now moving across Europe! However, most of these first responders seem to be religious people as opposed

  • Alexander The Great Biography

    645 Words  | 2 Pages

    Alexander The Great Biography Alexander the Great was an cunning and brilliant ancient Macedonian ruler who was born in Pella, Macedonia in 356 B.C. his father was King Philip the 2nd and his mother was Queen Olympias. Alexander came to be one of history's greatest military leaders in the history. Even being taught and influenced by the greatest western philosopher Aristotle. Alexander was never once defeated in battle throughout his life. He would come to build one of the greatest and largest empires

  • Rise Of Christianity Essay

    708 Words  | 2 Pages

    He believed Christianity was heresy against his God, and took matters into his own hands. He began persecuting, and even killing Christians. In a wild turn of events Saul had an encounter with Jesus on the Road to Damascus, and ends up converting, and changing his name to Paul. Where things get interesting is Paul was not only a Pharisee, but a Roman citizen. This made him the perfect person to reach not only his fellow Jews, but his fellow Roman Citizens. Paul reached

  • Crusades: Effects Of The Crusade

    939 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Effects of the Crusade The Crusades were formed in 1095 through 1291. It was believed that the idea was sparked from the sermon that was preached by Pope Urban II at Clermont-Ferrand in November 1095. When armies of Christians from Western Europe responded to the plea of Pope Urban II to go to war against Muslim forces in the Holy Land. Their main purpose was to recapture the Holy Land. They also wanted to reunite the Christian Church, increase prestige of the Church, and reduce feudal

  • The Crusades

    1612 Words  | 4 Pages

    The crusades were a series of military expeditions undergone by the Christian armies of the eleventh and twelfth centuries directed against Muslim controlled areas of the eastern Mediterranean (Cowper 40). Although there were many reasons for the start of the crusades, the main cause was that the Muslim control of the holy land was a disgrace, and considered a threat to Christianity’s livelihood (Toler 140). With the holy cities of Jerusalem and Palestine being in Muslim control Christianity as a

  • The First Crusades

    1961 Words  | 4 Pages

    The principals of human nature force people to fight for what they believe in; therefore, defending religion is not objective to that principle in the case of the crusades. In the case of the First Crrusade many people did just that, volunteered knowing that many of them would die defending their religious beliefs. In the days of the Byzantine Empire, a person’s faith or religion determined how they would live their life. It is the nature of people to fight for what they believe in; therefore, defending

  • Saladin

    976 Words  | 2 Pages

    certainty that Saladin grew up at Baalbak and various other outposts where his father served as governor. In 1152 he joined his uncle in the service of sultan Nur ad- Din and by 1156 he had become his uncles deputy in the military governorship of Damascus. Saladin became a close companion of Nur ad- Din . He also accompanied his uncle on three separate expeditions to Egypt between 1164 and 1168. In 1169 Saladin's uncle, Shirkuh, took over the Fatimid caliphate in Egypt and became Vizier of Egypt

  • The Crusades

    1382 Words  | 3 Pages

    Spanning from 1095 to 1212 C.E, the Crusades were an effort made by medieval Christians to regain their holy lands back from the Muslims. There were five crusades in total going in order from the First Crusade to the Children's Crusade. A few were effective in their own respects although these Crusades proved costly to the European Kingdoms as a result of large losses of life. This paper will explore these crusades and explain why some succeeded whereas others failed. The year was 1095; Pope Urban

  • The Crusades: The First Crusade

    1227 Words  | 3 Pages

    The crusades were a series of military expeditions from parts of Europe to the Eastern coast of the Mediterranean. They have been romanticized and idealized endlessly and have therefore been featured so prominently throughout history. We have created a story out of the crusades inventing characters to root for and against. For a while, the Muslims, Christians, and Jews were satisfied with living amongst each other. In fact, Muslims were fine with the pilgrimages that Christians took to Jerusalem

  • Abbasid Dynasty

    1188 Words  | 3 Pages

    the Muslims in the region pledged to a holy war in order to defend their religion and regain control of the land. The civil relations that the Crusaders and their Christian allies in the Byzantine Empire had culminated had begun to degenerate in the Siege of Constantinople in 1204 during the Third Crusade. Throughout the rise of the Mamluk dynasty in Egypt near the end of the 13th century, the final retribution for the Crusaders

  • The Pros And Cons Of The Crusades

    2071 Words  | 5 Pages

    How could the Christian church, which bases itself off kindness and peace, allow the Crusades to happen? The religion known to be loving of all was the cause of the most catastrophic occurrence in the late eleventh and late thirteenth centuries because of misconceptions and avarice of the pope. Of all of the religious wars fought, this was the one with the highest level of ridiculousness. Members of the church fought for all of the wrong reasons and the outcome was poor because of it. Even though

  • The Primary Purpose Of The First Crusade

    1428 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Primary Purpose of the First Crusade The history of the Crusades in the early parts of the 11th century is one that was filled with battles fraught with much adversity and hardship, along with their shares of success in accomplishing the church’s goal of reclaiming as much control over the Holy Land as possible. The First Crusade is no exception to this. This campaign had a very specific objective laid out by the church, which was successfully accomplished and equally brought some control back

  • Describe and Explain the Decline of the Abbasid Caliphate

    2158 Words  | 5 Pages

    Baghdad. It seemed likely that Al-Mamun would be defeated, his army numbered around 4,000 men but faced 40,000. However he was fortunate in his commander, called Tahir bin Husain, who won him a spectacular victory at Rayy in 811. Tahir proceeded to siege Baghdad in 812. In that year Al-Amin was captured and forced to hand over the office of Caliph to al-Mamun. Al-Amin was executed after trying to escape Baghdad after it had been captured. This war tore the Caliphate into factions and cost a great