Crusaders' Success Related to Papal Monarchy

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The Crusades

The success and failures of the crusades “was closely related to the fortunes of the high-medieval papal monarchy” (454). The first crusade started when Pope Urban II called a plea of military aide to “free Jerusalem from Islamic control”. The first crusade was a “great early victory for the papal monarchy” (454-455). However, the crusades were not all victories for the papacy, the failures of the crusades ignited the decline of the papacy control. The crusades began when the Pope appealed to the people “to rescue the Holy Land from the infidels.”

Furthermore, the first crusade began when Byzantine Emperor, Alexius Comnenus summoned military help from Pope Urban II. The Pope turned Alexius Comnenus plea for help into a crusade. “Without question, Urban called the First Crusade to help further the policies of the Gregorian papacy” (455). There were four reasons why the Pope wanted to start the crusades, instead of lending only aide. First, “was to bring the Greek Orthodox Church back into the fold” (455). Second, the Pope wanted to embarrass the German Emperor, which ...

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