The crusades

Languageen
First published2025-11-03
RightsPublic domain in the USA.
Gutenberg ID#77173

Description

"The Crusades" by George W. Cox is a historical account written in the late 19th century. It surveys the origins, course, and consequences of the medieval expeditions to the Holy Land, explaining how popular piety, papal leadership, and European politics converged to launch and sustain the crusading movement and reshape society, commerce, and church power. The opening of the work traces how a universal, non-local early Christianity evolved into fervent pilgrimage to the Holy Land, fueled by relic cults and commerce, then buffeted by Persian-Roman wars, Heraclius’s recovery of the True Cross, Omar’s comparatively tolerant conquest of Jerusalem, and later Fatimid and Seljuk disruptions that imperiled pilgrims and trade. It shows how outrage in the West needed papal sanction, recounts Gregory VII’s failed overtures, and then centers on Urban II at Clermont: the Truce of God, his rousing call, the “Deus vult” response, adoption of the cross, and sweeping spiritual, social, and financial incentives that strengthened papal authority and strained feudal structures. It emphasizes that the crusades were not national enterprises, detailing the varied readiness of regions and the church’s growing wealth and reach. At the start of the narrative proper, it depicts the chaotic first waves: unruly mobs led by Peter the Hermit and Walter the Penniless, further bands under Emico and Gotschalk, brutal pogroms against Jews along the Rhine, a brief imperial intervention for their protection, and the early march across Hungary and Bulgaria toward Constantinople. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Subjects

  • Crusades
  • D

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