The Crusades Essay

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Before diving into different theological justifications of the Crusades, understanding what a crusade is, what preceded the Crusades, and the history of the Crusades are vitally important. First, what is a crusade? According to Paul Robinson in his writing Three Myths about the Crusades: What They Mean for Christian Witness “only the official military expeditions launched from Europe to the Holy Land and sanctioned by the pope count as Crusades” (28). Compounding off of that, it’s accepted that a crusade is one of a series of medieval military expeditions set forth to regain land lost to Muslim control. Accepting this definition, one lays the foundation for discovering thought-provoking information about the Crusades and all that they were …show more content…

This is quite significant for a wide variety of reasons but for this topic it plays a large part in how the Crusades began and continued. Finally, the history of the Crusades can be and have been debated by historians and theologians alike, however, for the purpose of this paper the very brief history discussed merely provides an insight, background information, as to why the Crusades were called, who was involved, and lastly the outcome of the Crusades. It all started with large efforts from Islamic people after the death of Mohammed, to gain land and spread the Islamic faith. Muslims gained control of Palestine, Syria, and Egypt (one of the most heavily Christian areas in the world). By the eighth century, Islam had control over all of Christian North Africa and Spain. Again in the eleventh century, by the Seljuk Turks, land known as Asia Minor was taken under Islamic control, a region which had been Christian dating back to St. Paul. What was known as the Byzantine Empire had been minimized to about the size of Greece. Obviously desperate, the Emperor of Constantinople (Byzantine Empire and Eastern Church) requested help from Christians of the Western church to fight off advancing Muslims

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