Deus Vult Crusades

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Deus Vult, or God wills it, was the catchphrase that Pope Urban II used to initiate 196 years of fighting between Islam and Christianity in the Middle Ages. The crusades were a conflict between Islam and Christianity that had many causes and outcomes. A crusade is by definition: any vigorous, aggressive movement for the defence or advancement of an idea, cause, etc. The crusades took place in medieval Europe from 1095 to 1291 A.D. by the Christian Europeans to reclaim the Holy Land from the Seljuk Turks under Pope Urban II’s instruction. The crusades helped bring about the end of feudalism in Medieval Europe. Pope Urban II received a letter from the Byzantine Emperor Alexios I Komnenos about the increasing threat from the Seljuk Turks in 1095 A.D. Because of this invasion of allied land and the persecution of pilgrims journeying to Jerusalem, he believed that he should send warriors to repel the Seljuk Turks from Byzantine and the Holy Lands. He called for the crusades at the council of Clermont, telling them, “All who die by the way, whether by land or by sea, or in battle against the pagans, shall have immediate remission of sins.” With this and the slogan “Deus Vult”, (God wills it) he convinced the armies of Europe to march upon the Seljuk Turks, thinking …show more content…

The negative results the death of 1.7 million human lives and the destruction of the relationships between the Christians and the Muslims, and the relationship between the Byzantines and the Roman Catholics. The positive results included making the Roman Catholic Church rich and powerful, and reinforcing the power of the Pope, but the main positive result of the crusades would be bringing about the conditions that helped end feudalism and start the Renaissance. When the barons and lords went off to fight the Muslims and died, the serfs and commoners of the village were able to become independent without the lord and form self-reliant

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