The Crusades: A Successful Failure

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Founder of Constantinople, Constantine claimed the great Byzantine Empire and in turn inherited the new Holy Roman Empire. With the Edict of Milan in 313, Constantine proclaimed religious tolerance of Christians throughout the empire and soon the religion spread. Constantine then transformed the city of Byzantium into the new capital of the Roman Empire, which then was known and proclaimed as Constantinople. The new capital would profit from its location being closer to the east frontier, having then the advantage of better trading, and a militarily sound location being protected on three sides by water.

The location of the new capital would without a doubt later be a cause of concern for the Papal states. Consequently in 1054 a great blow was received by the Christian Church. The Pope argued that Rome had religious primacy over Constantinople. The Bishop of Constantine had a different opinion. The argument was based on the creation of a Council in the Papacy, an idea not to the Pope's liking. The struggle caused the Great Schism in 1054 where then the Greek Orthodox and Roman Catholic Church split. The split then would become an important cause of the Crusades.

The late eleventh century brought the Byzantine Empire new increasing threats from various sides. The most prominent of all were the Seljuk Turks who had begun to advance towards the very heartland of the Byzantine Empire. Soon the Turks stood at the wake of controlling Anatolia, the most prosperous of cities in the Byzantine Empire. Not too far along Jerusalem returned to Sunni control as the Turks succeeded in capturing the Holy City. The Seljuk Turks continued to advance.

Concerned of the Seljuk approach, Alexius Comnenus appealed to the western European knight...

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...could even be argued that it also provoked such Atlantic powers as Spain and Portugal to seek trade routes to India and China. Efforts that helped open most of the world to European trade dominance and colonization and to shift the center of commercial activity from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic. Nonetheless the Crusades failed in ending the split between the Church, but ultimately succeeded in strengthening the Roman Catholic Church and accelerating trade which brought new economic and cultural wealth.

Works Cited

Bokenkotter, Thomas. A concise history of the Catholic Church. Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1977. Print.

Eberhard, Hans. The Crusades. 2nd. Oxford University Press, USA, 1988. Print.

Coffin, Judith, and Robert Stacey. Western Civilizations: From Prehistory to the Present. 2nd. New York, NY: W W Norton & Co Inc, 2008. Print.

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