Causes of the 2nd and 3rd crusades
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- Created by: mrevv
- Created on: 01-11-19 10:51
The Papacy (2)
- Religious motivations were mostly the same as in the 1st crusade.
- The spark- Edessa was taken on Christmas Day 1144 by Zengi leaving 15k dead.
- This threatened Jerusalem and shocked Christendom.
- QP bull set out indulgences and protected their property.
- While indulgences in the first crusade came from penance, in the second they came as thanks from God for fighting for him.
- The papacy wanted to maintain the strength and vitality of the Latin states.
- The loss of territory would be a blow to the Pope's authority.
- The Pope's action was reactionary, instead of preactionary like in the 1st crusade.
- Moreover, the Pope's political ambitions were not in Europe.
- The third crusade was caused by Saladin's 1187 campaign which captured King Guy and the True cross- Pope Urban III died of shock and Jerusalem fell.
- Gregory VIII released AT bull in 1187. It was reissued by Pope Celestine III.
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Motivations (2)
- QP bull set out indulgences and protected their property.
- While indulgences in the first crusade came from penance, in the second they came as thanks from God for fighting for him.
- Family tradition meant that knights had to uphold the family name.
- They had to maintain their prestige and their ancestors' achievements.
- Edessa's fall caused the West to realise the threats which were already present in the East.
- Chivalry started to emerge- virtuous warfare developed for fighting infidels.
- Louis VII was praised for his acts against the Turks in Asia Minor.
- Being chivalric was more important than being a good general.
- However, these ideas were not fully realised yet.
- 1120, the Templars were founded as Christian knights, building the idea of holy war.
- Land was no longer a motivation, since they owed service to their kings and it was already conquered. They also no longer cared about the Byzantine Empire- this shows thier motivations were not helping thier Christian brothers any more, it was serving thier own leaders.
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Bernard of Clairvaux (2)
- Eugenius III's Papal bull, Quantum praedecessores, did not initially have much impact.
- It was re-issued and Bernard of Clairvaux went on a preaching tour.
- Bernard was the most influential man in Christendom, and he persuaded Kings Louis VII and Conrad III to crusade. Without this, Urban wouldn't have got a response.
- Involvement of king led to greater recruitment from their subjects.
- Bernard was a Cistercian monk who wanted a return to St Benedict's rules.
- Bernard went on a preaching tour of France and Germany.
- Riley Smith says Bernard was 'the most powerful crusade propaganda of all time.'
- Bernard wanted to link the crusades by protecting Holy Jerusalem.
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Recruitment (2)
- The later crusades clarified which sins would be forgiven- all the sins on the journey were included, and you received indulgences for attempting, not succeeding in reaching Jerusalem.
- Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate first crusaders who abandoned the cause.
- Archbishops such as Baldwin of Canterbury set off in Wales in 1188 and recruited 3k.
- St Bernard restored 235 cripples to health in a preaching tour.
- Later Popes regulated preachers to stop ones like Peter the hermit recruiting the wrong sort of crusader by sending designated legates.
- Kings could pay for mercenaries during the second crusade and use feudal ties.
- In 1146, Maurice of Glons gave up his rights to a fief to crusade.
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Chivalry (2)
- The old rules applied to horsed soldiers, who wanted to be courageous and win.
- The new rules applied to aristocrats who wanted to be polite, courteous, loyal and skilled.
- Chivalry included fighting for Jesus and faith was part of knightly culture.
- Knights often trained in holy orders to protect pilgrims and Christian sites.
- Chivalry's potential was realised in the 3rd crusade with King Richard's developments.
- Most wanted booty, some wanted to settle but this stopped in later crusades.
- Only up to a quarter of knights settled in the holy land (300/1200)
- They lost most of thier booty reaching the West so they did not make profits.
- Wealth was a deterrent, not inspiring factor.
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Political (3)
- From 1170 Saladin had started to invade Outremer
- 1187, Jerusalem was taken after the Franks were defeated at Hattin.
- King Guy and the True Cross were captured- Urban III died from shock
- The Christians were forced to leave the city after paying 30k bezants.
- Pope Gregory VIII issued Audati Tremenda in 1187 calling for a truce between the English and French for a crusade. Celestine III reissued it three months later.
- Many small attempts to crusade had been made, such as Alexander III's attempt to launch a crusade in 1165 to help Bohemond III from Nur Al-Din.
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