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johnnyt3000
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After the Muslims started their campaign, why did it take long for the Crusades to start?
It’s a fair question. There were 463 years between Mohammed’s death in 632 AD and the calling of the first Crusade in 1095. Does Weidenkopf address this time period?Which campaign: there were seven major ones, and a multitude of minor ones?
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You’re assuming the First Crusade was a straightforward and obvious response to Muslim conquest of the Holy Land, whereas in reality it was an event that relied on a multitude of contingencies for it to occur.After the Muslims started their campaign, why did it take long for the Crusades to start?
Honestly, I can’t say. The book is in my TBR (to be read) pile.It’s a fair question. There were 463 years between Mohammed’s death in 632 AD and the calling of the first Crusade in 1095. Does Weidenkopf address this time period?
Not only that, it would have taken a while for all the news to get to Europe. It’s not like you got Saladin on his twitter feed going “i can haz palestine? kthxbye #minenow” and then all the Christian kings doing a flashmob in Jerusalem.Which campaign: there were seven major ones, and a multitude of minor ones?
It was a monumental undertaking, financially and spiritually. The Holy Land was not a jet ride away. It took months to get there, one out two men didn’t make it: starvation, sickness, or perils of the journey. Some nobles impoverished their families financing their campaign with their own money.
Do you mean to ask why there wasn’t Any Catholic military response, or do you mean specifically a military campaign with the characteristics of the Crusades? I ask because there were hundreds of pre-Crusade military reactions to Islamic campaigns. Many of them are very famous historically.After the Muslims started their campaign, why did it take long for the Crusades to start?
My understanding is that the early Arab conquerers merely took over existing societies as rulers. They didn’t change much of anything except the party to whom taxes were to be paid. In many instances, the taxes were less under them than it had been under the Byzantines. Byzantium was, by the time of the Arab conquest, a long way from being “Roman”, let alone martial. It relied heavily on diplomacy and mercenaries for survival, and did both well. But it was not a martial state itself.It’s good to hear an interesting question I have not heard before.
When the Moslems conquered the Near East and north Africa, the armies of the Byzantine Empire which ruled over the area were inefffectual (because of low morale?) and the Emperor was apathetic as the Moslims conquered these large areas. (This, actually, could be better understood by realizing that this parallels the listless response of the the political leaders of the West to the rise and expansion of ISIS.) And too the rest of Europe had undergone a period of growing political disorganization after the fall of the Roman Empire. The Byzantine Empire never got it together, the Muslim Turks finally destroying it, and only after Europe in the west recovered from its political dissolution centuries later could the Christians try to take back the Holy Land after its conquest.