The impetus for this article was my viewing, and great
enjoyment, of the BBC series “A Discovery of Witches”, and the inclusion
therein of a fraternal society known as the Knights of Lazarus. Having heard the name before, I looked it up
on Wikipedia, and, sure enough, there was a Knights of Saint Lazarus. This reignited my interest in medieval
military religious orders which I acquired reading Katherine Kurtz’s Deryni
novels.
THE CRUSADES
There were actually quite a few of these, a hell of a lot more
than I knew before I started this.
The classic use of the term Crusades refers to the series of
military campaigns conducted by armies of Western Europe in the Levant,
Anatolia, the Eastern Meditarranean, the Balkans, Egypt, and North Africa
during the 11th through 13th centuries.
That was once the sole use of the term Crusade by historians. In the past century, the term has been
greatly expanded.
Under this enlarged
concept, Crusades were fought in three primary theaters of operation: the Levant; the Iberian Peninsula; and the
Baltic Sea region.
The first theater
involved the Eastern Crusades against the Seljuq authorities in the Levant and
Anatolia. The Fourth Crusade, a war of
conquest against the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire, was an aberration that
did not involve any of the military orders listed below.
The second theater
involved the centuries-long series of campaigns commonly known as the
Reconquista of Al-Andalus in the Iberian Peninsula.
The third involved
the conquest and forced conversion of the pagan Baltic, Finnic, and West
Slavice peoples in what were known as the Northern or Baltic Crusades.
There were other
religious military campaigns and wars during the Middle Ages designated as
crusades, of course, but these were directed at groups designated as “heretics”
against the doctrines and dogma of the Church, the “enemy within” to the
soulless minions of orthodoxy at the See of Rome.
While the (Eastern) Crusades
are often portrayed as an unprovoked invasion by the West of the East, in fact
the First Crusade came about because of the appeal in 1095 from Alexios I
Komnenos of the Basilea Rhomain to Pope Urban III for military assistance against
the Seljuqs who were seriously pressing his eastern borders.
The Basilea Rhomain
was the official name (in Greek) of what was known in Latin as the Imperium
Romanum, or the Roman Empire. It is
often mistakenly called the Byzantine Empire, a misnomer invented in the 16th
century. Its officially recognized
western counterpart was the Sacrum Romanum Imperium or Holy Roman Empire, whose
ruler held the title Romanorum Imperator Augustus.
The most powerful
authority in the West, however, was not the ‘Emperor of the Romans’, but the
Pope or Bishop of Rome, who had held the Roman imperial title of Pontifex
Maximus since the year 366. The
authority of the Romanorum Imperator was the limited to the empire itself,
which took in Germany, Bavaria, Switzerland, Burgundy, Bohemia, Austria, and
northern Italy, but that of the pope spread over the whole of Western Europe.
The people of the
Basilea Rhomain and the people of Western Europe (at least the elites) both
identified themselves as Romans as well as Christians, and in some ways and
places the word of the Roman Basileus at Konstantinopolis was held in higher
regard than that of the Emperor of the Romans in the West.
Stepping back
historically, the wars between the Christian Romans (of various nations and
peoples) and the Muslim Arabs, Berbers, Moors, and Turks began in 637 CE, when
forces of the Rashidun Caliphate first invaded the eastern borders of the
Basilea Rhomain. From that year through
719, Muslim armies swept across and conquered Palestine, Syria, Armenia, Egypt,
North Africa, Hispaniae, and Septimania (the later Languedoc region of France).
Reconquista
(722-1492)
In Hispaniae, the Iberian peninsula, the only remaining
independent territories of the former Visigothic kingdom in 719 were Asturias and Pamplona
(later Navarre) in the north. The beginning of the Reconquista of Hispaniae is counted as the significant victory of the forces of
Asturias against those of Al-Andalus in the Battle of Covadonga in 722.
In the beginning, the Reconquista was merely that, a war of
reconquest. It did not acquire the
actual trappings of a crusade until 1064, when Pope Alexander II granted
indulgences to participants in the conflict.
By then, Asturias and Navarre were joined by Galicia, Aragon, Castile,
Leon, and Portugal, carved out of territory taken back from Al Andalus.
In 1230, all that remained of Al-Andalus was the Emirate of
Granada in the southwest, a tributary state of Castile. The final phase of the Reconquista was the
Granada War (1482-1492).
People’s Crusade
(1096)
Also called the Peasants’, Popular, or Paupers’ Crusade.
This was a populist campaign led by the charasmatic Peter
the Hermit who managed to recruit some 40,000 followers on his quest. This crusade is notorious for groups of this
movement carrying out the Rhineland Massacres, mass murders and pogroms against
Jews living in the Rhine Valley. Thousands
died.
Only half the recruits eventually made it to the Basilea
Rhomain, where they were ferried across the Bosporus into Anatolia. The crusade ended with the Battle of Civetot
in which the Seljuq army of 5000 defeated the crusaders numbering 20,000, only
3,000 of whom survived.
Interestingly, Peter the Hermit survived, and was present
for the fall of Jerusalem in 1099.
First Crusade
(1096-1099)
Also called the Princes’ Crusade.
This conflict, on the part of the crusaders, was much more
organized than the one that preceded it.
The Roman/Christian forces included the Papal States, the Holy Roman
Empire, the Kingdom of France, the County of Flanders, the County of Sicily,
the Principality of Taranto, the Duchy of Apulia and Calabria, the Republic of
Genoa, the County of Toulouse, the Margraviate of Provence, the Basilea Rhomain,
and the Principality of Cilicia.
The Turkish-Arab/Muslim forces included the Abbasid
Caliphate, the Fatimid Caliphate, the Sultunate of Rum, the Emirate of
Danishmend, the Emirate of Damascus, and the Emirate of Aleppo.
The Crusaders were grouped into seven major armies. They reconquered Nicaea and western Anatolia,
which they handed over to the Basilea Rhomain, then Antioch, Edessa, Tripoli,
and Palestine, which they kept for themselves.
They helped strengthen the Armenian Principality of Cilicia and later
aided its erection into the Kingdom of Cilicia in 1198.
In the territories they kept for themselves, the western
Crusaders erected the County of Edessa, the Principality of Antioch, the County
of Tripoli, and the Kingdom of Jerusalem.
The Crusader States were collectively referred to as Outremer (French
for ‘Overseas’).
Crusade of the
Faint-hearted (1101)
This was a minor crusade against the Sultanate of Rum, the
Emirate of Danishmend, and the Emirate of Aleppo. Rather than a single movement of different
armies, as was the case with the First Crusade, this one was three armies
operating completely independently.
The first was from the County of Blois, the (French) County
of Burgundy, the Palatinate Duchy of Burgundy (Holy Roman Empire), the Basilea
Rhomain, and Pechneg mercenaries of the Basilea Rhomain. This was the only army of the crusade that
accomplished anything, recovering Ankara for the Basilea Rhomain. It was later destroyed at the Battle of
Mersivan.
The second was from the County of Nevers was destroyed at
Heraclea.
The third was from the Duchy of Aquitaine, the County of
Vermandois, the Margraviate of Austria, and the Duchy of Barvaria. It too was destroyed at Heraclea.
Norwegian Crusade
(1107-1111)
This crusade was more of a pilgrimage than a crusade by the
Kingdom of Norway led by its king, Sigurd I.
The Norwegians did, however, participate in the Siege of Sidon which led
to its capture and the subsequent Lordship of Sidon.
Wendish Crusade
(1147)
This was primarily a campaign by the northern Saxons in the
Holy Roman Empire who chose not to go to Southwest Asia like their southern
cousins against the pagan (Slavic) Wends of Central Europe in what became
Mecklenburg, Holstein, Rugen, Lusatia, and Pomerania. The Wends included the Obotrites, the Veleti,
the Lusatians (Sorbs), the Lutici, the Pomeranians, and the Rani (Rujani).
The crusading forces involved were the Duchy of Saxony, the
Kingdom of Denmark, and the Kingdom of Poland.
These were opposed by the Wendish Obotriate Confederacy, the Wendish
Liutizian Confederacy, and the Duchy of Pomerania.
Second Crusade
(1147-1149)
This crusade was called in response to the fall of the County
of Edessa in 1144. The crusading forces
came from the Kingdom of France (led personally by Louis VII), the Knights
Templar, the Knights Hospitaller, the Knights of the Holy Sepulchre, the
Knights of Lazarus, the Holy Roman Empire, the Basilea Rhomain, the Principality
of Cilicia, the Kingdom of England, the Duchy of Normandy, the Kingdom of
Sicily, the Papal States, the remaining three Crusader States (Jerusalem,
Tripoli, Antioch).
Opposing forces were the Sultanate of Rum, the Emirate of
Danishmend, the Emirate of Zengids, the Emirate of Damascus, the Abbasid
Caliphate, the Emirate of Mosul, and the Alamut State (the Hashishim).
The main actions of the crusade were the Siege of Damascus,
abandoned after six days, and an aborted attack against Ascalon. These were in addition to the harassment of
the French forces on their way through Anatolia.
First Swedish Crusade
(c. 1155)
This was a little known crusade by the Kingdom of Sweden into
southwest Finland, led personally by Erick IX and Henry, Bishop of Uppsala.
Massacre of the
Latins (1182)
At the time, there were 60,000 Latins (Western Romans)
living in Konstantinopolous, capital of the Basilea Rhomain. Merchants from the Republics of Venice,
Genoa, and Pisa dominated the empire’s martime trade and financial sector.
After a usurper took power in 1182, the populace of the city
went on a rampage, murdering tens of thousands, burning the Latin section of
the city, and selling four thousand survivors to the Sultanate of Rum as
slaves.
Sack of Thessalonica
(1185)
After a two-week siege of Thessalonica, second city of the
Basilea Rhomain, forces of the Kingdom of Sicily slaughtered some seven
thousand of the city’s inhabitants.
Third Crusade
(1189-1192)
Also known as the Kings’ Crusade due to its being led by
Richard I of England, Philip II of France, and Frederick Barbarossa of the Holy
Roman Empire.
This crusade was called in response to the capture by
Saladin’s forces of the city of Jerusalem and the eponymous kingdom in 1187 and
the subsequent capture of the Lordship of Oultrejordan in 1188.
The crusading forces came from the Angevin Empire*, the
Kingdom of France, the Holy Roman Empire, the Republic of Genoa, the Republic
of Pisa, the Crusader States (Jerusalem, Antioch, Tripoli), the Templars, the
Hospitallers, the Knights of the Holy Sepulchre, the Knights of Saint Lazarus,
the Knights of Saint Thomas, and the Teutonic Knights.
The opposing forces were the Ayyubid Sultanate (Egypt, Damascus,
Mesopotamia, Hamah), the Sultanate of Rum, and the Hashishim.
Notable events included the Battle of Philomelion (a
significant victory for the Holy Roman Empire contingent over their antagonists
from the Sultanate of Rum), the Siege of Acre (ending in its capture), the
Battle of Arsuf, the capture of Jaffa by the crusaders, and the Battle of
Jaffa, in which Saladin failed to retake the city.
In one of the most shameful atrocities of the Crusades
period, the forces under Richard I of England decapitated the 2700 Muslim
inhabitants of Acre after its capture, soldiers, civilians, women, and children,
in front of the armies of Saladin in what is now known now as the Massacre at
Ayyadieh.
En route to Acre, the Angevin forces stopped in and captured
Cyprus, at the time ruled by a pretender to the Basilea Rhomain, Isaac Komnenos. It became a Crusader State as the Kingdom of
Cyprus, as part of the Holy Roman Empire.
*The Angevin Empire at this time took in the Kingdom of
England; the Lordship of Ireland; the Duchies of Normandy, Brittany, Gascony,
and Aquitaine; the Counties of Anjou, Pitou, Maine, Touraine, Saintonge, La
Marche, Perigord, Limousin, Nantes, and Quercy.
German Crusade
(1197-1198)
Also known as the Emperor’s Crusade.
This crusade was launched by Henry VI of the Holy Roman
Empire, whose forces were opposed by those of the Ayyubid Sultanate.
The crusaders retook Byblos, Sidon, and Beirut, restoring
the land link between the remnant Kingdom of Jerusalem and the County of
Tripoli.
Livonian Crusade
(1198-1207)
Pope Celestine III first called for a crusade to convert the
pagan tribes east of the Baltic Sea in 1193, but the crusade was not announced
publicly until 1198.
The crusading forces involved were the Livonian Brothers of
the Sword, the Kingdom of Sweden, and the Kingdom of Denmark. The targeted peoples were the Livonians, the Latvians, the Curonians, the Selonians, the
Semigallians, the Latgalians, the Yotvingians, the Eastern Galindians, and the
Finns.
This crusade ended
with the establishment of Terra Mariana as an ecclesiatical principality of the
Holy Roman Empire in 1207. In 1215, Pope
Innocent III proclaimed Terra Mariana a subject of the See of Rome.
The establishment of
Terra Mariana did not signal an end to fighting, nor were the establishment and
declaration of 1207 and 1215 the final word on Terra Mariana.
Fourth Crusade
(1202-1204)
Called for the recapture of Jerusalem, the western Crusaders
turned their attentions to the Basilea Rhomain after getting involved in a
dynastic struggle. After the Siege of
Constantinopolis, ending in its capture by the Crusaders, the empire was
divided between the “Latin” states of the Crusaders and the “Greek” rump states
of the former empire.
The Sack of Konstantinopoulis is one of the most notable
markers in medieval history.
Known collectively as the Francocracy, the Latin states were
the Empire of Romania (aka Latin Empire), the Kingdom of Thessalonica, the
Principality of Achaea, the Duchy of Athens, the Duchy of Naxos, the Duchy of
Philippopolis, the Triarchy of Negroponte, the County of Salona, the Marquisate
of Bodonista, the County Palatine of
Cephalonia and Zakynthos, the Hospitaller State of Rhodes, the possessions of
the Republic of Genoa, and the possessions of the Republic of Venice.
The Greek rump
states were the Empire of Nicaea, the Empire of Trebizond, and the
Despotate of Epirus.
Albigensian Crusade
(1209-1229)
Also known as the Cathar Crusade.
This crusade involved France asserting its control over an
independent region of the County of Toulouse and suppression by the Church of
the Cathari movement.
The crusaders came from the Papal States, the Kingdom of
France, and the Militia of Jesus Christ founded by Saint Dominic. The opposing forces included the Cathars, the
County of Toulouse, the County of Foix, the County of Comminges, the Viscounty
of Bearn, the Viscounty of Beziers and Carcassonne, and the Kingdom of Aragon.
Besides the creation of the Militia of Jesus Christ, the
crusade was the foundation of both the Order of Preachers (Dominicans) and the
Holy Office of Inquisition, the latter occurring at the end of the crusdae in
1229.
Children’s Crusade
(1212)
Despite medieval myth and legend, this “crusade” was
comprised of two separate populist movements to reach the “Holy Land”. The first was that of Nicolas of Cologne,
which ended in the Papal States, though most had stayed in Genoa. The second was that of Stephen of Cloyes,
which ended in Marseilles.
Prussian Crusade (1217–1274)
This crusade began with failed attempts by the Kingdom of Poland
to subdue and convert the Old Prussians beginning in 1217, with the Teutonic
Knights brought on in 1230.
The crusading forces came from the Teutonic Knights, the Knights
of Calatrava, the Knights of Dobrin, the Kingdom of Poland, the Holy Roman
Empire, the Duchy of Masovia, and the Kingdom of Galicia-Volhynia.
The opposing forces were the Old Prussians, the Western
Galindians, the Sudovians, the Skalvians, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, and the
Duchy of Pomerania.
The State of the Teutonic Order was established in 1230, the same
year the Teutonic Knights joined the crusade.
Fifth Crusade
(1217-1221)
This crusade was an attempt to conquer and destroy the
Ayyubi Sultanate based in Egypt.
The Western forces came from the Holy Roman Empire
(especially the Duchy of Austria), the Kingdom of Sicily, the Kingdom of
Hungary, the Kingdom of Croatia, the Principality of Halych, the Kingdom of
France, the County of Flanders, the Papal States, the Latin Empire of Romania,
the Kingdom of Cyprus, the Kingdom of Jerusalem, the Principality of Antioch, the
Knights Templar, the Knights Hospitaller, the Teutonic Knights, and the
Sultanate of Rum.
The sole opposing power was the Ayyubid Sultanate.
The fighting took place in both the Levant and Egypt. It turned out to be a disastrous failure.
Sixth Crusade (1228-1229)
The crusade was yet another attempt to regain the city of
Jerusalem.
The crusading forces came from the Holy Roman Empire, the
Kingdom of Sicily, and the Teutonic Knights.
The Knights Templar and the Knights Hospitaller refused to join the army
but supported the crusade indirectly after it launched.
The opposing force was the Ayyupid Sultanate.
Give his small force, Emperor Frederick II opted for
diplomacy the Ayyubid Sultan, Al-Kamil (known to the Crusaders as
Meledin). As a result he received the
city of Jerusalem along with a corridor connecting it with the possessions of
the Kingdom of Jerusalem on the coast, with the Ayyubids retaining the Temple
Mount, as well as Nazareth, Sidon, Jaffa, and Bethlehem. In later years, Ascalon and Safed were
recovered as well.
Bosnian Crusade
(1235-1241)
In 1234, Pope Gregory III called for a crusade against
Bosnia to root out an unspecified heresy, which probably amounted to the Church
of Bosnia exercising the same autonomy from Rome as the state did from Hungary.
The crusading forces were from the Kingdom of Hungary and
the opposing forces from the Banate of Bosnia.
Due to the hazardous terrrain and resistance of the
population, Hungary took three years to even get to Bosnia proper. In the end, the crusade was cut short by the
Tatar invasion of Hungary.
Barons’ Crusade
(1239-1241)
This crusade was to secure the territories of the Kingdom of
Jerusalem won by negotiation in the Sixth Crusade in the treaty set to expire
in 1230. At the same time, another call
was issued to aid the Latin Empire of Romania in its war with the Greek Empire
of Nicaea.
The crusading forces came from the Kingdom of Navarre, the
Kingdom of France, the Duchy of Brittany, and the Kingdom of Jerusalem.
The opposing forces were the Ayyubid Sultanate and the
Emirate of Damascus.
Once again, though there was fighting, the main action was
negotiation between Theobald I of Navarre and As-Salih Ismail, Emir of
Damascus. In addition to resecuring the
lands gained in the Sixth Crusade, Theobald gained Ascalon, Safed, and a number
of Crusader castles.
The force marching to the aide of the Empire of Romania
crossed into Anatolia and captured the stronghold of Tzouroulos. However, the ruler of the Empire of Nicaea
captured those of Darivya and Nikitiaton, essentially cancelling out the gain.
Siege of Jerusalem
(1244)
As a result of the civil war between the Ayyubid Sultanate
in Egypt and its rebellious emirates in Syria, the sultan engaged mercenaries
from the former Khwarezmian Empire, which had been destroyed by the
Mongols in 1220. After their loss, the
Khwarezmians had set up a state in northern Mesopotamia and Syria, hiring
themselves out as mercenaries. The
Ayyubid sultan engaged them as such for his war with the Emirate of Damascus.
On their way south, the Khwarezmians besieged and captured
Jerusalem, expelled its Christian poplulation, then utterly destroyed the
city.
Battle of La Forbie
(1244)
The Khwarezmian force proceeded south to Egypt. Joining forces with the Ayyubid army there,
they met the Christian forces at the place the Crusaders called La Forbie
(Hirbiya) north of Gaza.
The Crusader forces came from the Kingdom of Jerusalem, the
Knights Templar, the Knights Hospitaller, the Teutonic Knights, the Knights of
Saint Lazarus, the Emirate of Damascus, the Emirate of Homs, the Emirate of
Kerak, and Bedouin from Transjordan. The
opposing forces were the armies of the Ayyubid Sultanate and its force of Khwarezmian mercenaries.
The Crusader army lost five thousand of its nine thousand
troops, with only 33 Templar, 27 Hospitallers, and 3 Teutonic Knights
surviving. Of the 2000 mounted Bedouin,
only 280 survived to ride off.
Seventh Crusade
(1248–1250)
This crusade was called in response to the loss of Jerusalem
and the disaster of La Forbie.
The crusading forces came from the Kingdom of France, the
Principality of Achaea, the Knights Templar, and included a small force from
England.
The opposing force was the army of the Ayyupid Sultanate in
Egypt, primarily made up of Mamluks, slave soldiers who included the former
Khwarezmians.
The invasion proved a failure, though not as bad as the disaster
at La Forbie.
Louis IX eventually made it back to Acre, the capital of the
Kingdom of Jerusalem, after being held captive in Egypt, and remained there
shoring up the kingdom and its defenses until 1254.
The Mamluks overthrew the Ayyubids and established the
Mamluk Sultanate in 1250, and the same year the Emir of Damascus declared
himself Sultan. Louis allied with the former
against the latter.
Second Swedish
Crusade (1249)
This was a little known crusade led by Birger Magnusson,
Jarl of Sweden, against the Tavastians in southern Finland.
War of Saint Sabas
(1256–1270)
This was a civil war among the Crusaders fought over control
of Acre, the capital of the Kingdom of Jerusalem.
On one side were the Republic of Venice and its allies the
County of Jaffa and Ascalon (a division of the Kingdom of Jerusalem) and the
Knights Templar.
On the other side were the Republic of Genoa and its allies
the Lordship of Tyre, the Lordship of Arsuf, and the Knights Hospitaller, with
support from the Empire of Nicaea (Basilea Rhomain again after its reconquest
of the Latin Empire of Romania in 1261).
Both sides employed Muslim mercenaries known as
“turcopoles”. The military orders had,
in fact, had long included turcopoles in their ranks, though not in their
membership.
Much of the fighting took place at sea. Most of the physical defenses of the kingdom,
especially those of Acre, were destroyed, and twenty thousand soldiers died.
Eighth Crusade (1270)
After its victory over the Mongols at the Battle of Ain
Jalut in 1260, the Mamluk Sultanate turned its attention to the Outremer
states, capturing Arsuf, Haifa, Safed, Jaffa, and Caesarea, and completely
destroying the city of Ascalon.
Originally planned to reinforce the Outremer states
beginning at Acre, this crusade changed its direction to attack Tunis in North
Africa.
The crusading forces, led again by Louis IX, came from the
Kingdom of France, the Kingdom of Navarre, and the Kingdom of Sicily.
The opposing forces belonged to the Caliphate of Ifriqiya
under the Berber Hafsids, with the Mamluk Sultanate in Egypt almost intervening
on the side of Tunis as the siege was lifted.
The campaign involved solely the siege of Tunis, which
lasted four months, the beginning of July through the end of October. The Crusaders gave up the siege, but gained
free trade with Tunis and and permission for priests and monks to reside in the
city.
Ninth Crusade
(1271-1272)
The surviving besiegers of Tunis retreated to Sicily to
recoup, the next year deploying to the original destination of the Eighth
Crusade, Acre.
The crusading forces came from the Kingdom of England, the
Kingdom of France, the Kingdom of Naples, the Kingdom of Cilicia, the Kingdom
of Cyprus, the Kingdom of Jerusalem, the County of Tripoli, and their allies,
the Mongol Ilkhanate. On the other side
were the Mamluk Sultanate and its Turkmen mercenaries.
The crusaders relieved the sieges of Acre and Tripoli, and
the Mamluk fleet was destroyed off the coast of Cyprus. At the end, a cessation of hostilities
agreement was signed to last ten years, ten months, and ten days.
Lithuanian Crusade
(1283-1410)
Also known as the Reisin.
Lithuania was the last outpost of paganism in Europe.
The crusading forces were the Teutonic Knights, the Livonian
Order, and their “guests”, facing off against the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
Though there had been occasional raids as far back as 1208,
the Reisin did not begin in earnest until 1283.
In 1386, Grand Duke Wladyslaw II Jagiello was baptized
before marrying Jadwiga, Queen of Poland, and being crowned King thereof. After his return in 1387, his court
converted, followed by most of the nobles and many peasants. The Teutonic Knights challenged the
conversions at the See of Rome, and continued fighting.
The Lithuanian Crusade culminated in the
Polish-Lithuanian-Teutonic War (1409-1411), in which the Teutonic Knights and
the Livonian Order were supported by the Duchy of Pomerania, the Kingdom of
Denmark, the Duchy of Oels, and the Holy Roman Empire. The climax of the war was the Battle of
Grunwald in 1410, a significant defeat for the Teutonic Knights. The war ended with the Treaty of Melno in
February 1411.
The State of the Teutonic Order withdrew to Prussia, leaving
Terra Mariana to govern itself as the Livonian Confederation.
Aragonese Crusade
(1284-1285)
This crusade was declared by Pope Martin IV against the
Kingdom of Aragon and its king, Peter III, whose forces had recently conquered
the Kingdom of Sicily. The crusading
forces came from the Kingdom of France, the Kingdom of Majorca, the Kingdom of
Navarre, and the Republic of Genoa. The
Crusaders had early successes but in the end lost badly.
Siege and Fall of
Tripoli (1289)
This ended the County of Tripoli.
The Crusader forces included the County of Tripoli, the
Knights Templar, the Knights Hospitaller, and the Republic of Genoa. The victorious besieging force, of course,
came from the Mamluk Sultanate.
Siege and Fall of
Acre (1291)
This ended the Kingdom of Jerusalem in the Levant, though
the rulers of the Kingdom of Cyprus carried the title King of Jerusalem.
The crusading forces came from the Kingdom of Jerusalem, the
Knights Templar, the Knights Hospitaller, the Teutonic Knights, and the Knights
of Saint Thomas.
The Knights Templar relocated to Cyprus, the Knights
Hospitaller to Rhodes, the Teutonic Knights to the State of the Teutonic Order,
and the Knights of St. Thomas to England.
Third Swedish Crusade
(1293)
This was the second crusade into southern Finland led by
Birger Magnusson, now King of Sweden, and this time the target was the
Karelians.
First Smyrniote
Crusade (1343)
The aim of this crusade was to deprive the Beylik of Aydin
of the port of Smyrna, its main launching point for attacks in the Aegean
Sea. Involved were the Papal States, the
Republic of Venice, the Kingdom of Cyprus, the Dauphine, and the Knights
Hospitaller.
The crusaders won a naval victory and took the harbor and
citadel of Smyrna, but not the acropolis.
Novgorod Crusade
(1347-1349)
This crusade was an attempt by Magnus II, King of Sweden and
Norway, to forcibly convert the people of the Novgorod Republic from Eastern
Orthodox to Roman Catholic.
Second Smyrniote
Crusade (1351)
Involving the same forces as the prior Smyrna crusade, this
one accomplished little other than a small victory at Mytilene and shoring up
some defenses in the Christian section of the city.
The Crusaders did manage to hold the city until 1402, when
it fell to the Turco-Mongol forces of Timur (or Tamerlane).
Alexandrian Crusade
(1365)
This can only be called a crusade in the broadest definition
of the term. Peter I led the forces of
the Kingdom of Cyprus, the Republic of Venice, and the Knights Hospitaller in
what he intended as the capture of Alexandria to provide a beachhead for
further crusades into the Mamluk Sultanate.
What happened instead was a three-day sack of the city in which mosques,
churches, temples, and the library were the primary targets. Five thousand were enslaves and twenty
thousand, mostly civilians, were killed.
Savoyard Crusade
(1366-1367)
Carried out by the County of Savoy, the Kingdom of France,
the Kingdom of Cyprus, the Republic of Venice, the Republic of Genoa, and the
Basilea Rhomain, this crusade targeted the Bulgarian Empire.
The crusaders took Gallipoli, which they handed over to the
Basilea, and some territory from the Bulgarian Empire, which they likewise
handed over to Constantinopolis.
Barbary Crusade
(1390)
This crusade was called by the Doge of Genoa, Antoniotto
Adorno, and supported by the Pope with a view toward crushing the pirates
operating out of North Africa. The only
crusading forces came from the Kingdom of France and the Republic of
Genoa. These faced forces from the
Caliphate of Ifriqiya, the Emirate
of Bejaia, and the Sultanate of Tlemcen, all in North Africa and all allies of
the pirates.
The whole crusade was pretty much limited to the Siege of
Mahdia, which lasted three months, and related skirmishes. The end result was the city of Mahdia
agreeing to pay tax to Genoa for fifteen years.
Crusade of Nicopolis
(1396)
The crusade was called by Pope Boniface IX to recover the
city of Nicopolis for the Bulgarian Empire from the Ottoman Sultanate.
The crusading forces came from the Holy Roman Empire, the
Kingdom of France, the Kingdom of Hungary, the Kingdom of Croatia, the
Principality of Wallachia, the Republic of Venice, the Republic of Genoa, the
Kingdom of England, the Kingdom of Scotland, the Kingdom of Poland, the Grand
Duchy of Lithuania, the Kingdom of Aragon, the Kingdom of Castile, the Kingdom
of Portugal, the Kingdom of Navarre, the Basilea Rhomain, the Knights
Hospitaller, and the Teutonic Knights.
Opposed were the Ottoman Sultanate and Moravian Serbia.
The Crusader force laid siege to Nicopolis, for which they
were woefully unprepared. Two weeks into
the siege, the commanders launched a battle for which they were also woefully
unprepared. The result was a complete
disaster and the loss of all but a small contingent of the army of 16,000, as
well as the end of the Second Bulgarian Empire.
Hussite Crusades
(1419-1434); overview
Also called the Hussite Wars, the Bohemian Wars, and the
Hussite Revolution.
These were called against the followers of the early
reformer John Hus, murdered by the Church and the Holy Roman Empire in 1415.
The crusading forces came from the Papal States, the Holy
Roman Empire, the Kingdom of Hungary, the Kingdom of England, the Knights
Hospitaller, the Teutonic Knights, the Serbian Despotate, Polish volunteers,
and the Moderate Hussites after 1423.
The opposing forces were the Hussite Coalition (before
1423), the Radical Hussites (after 1423), and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, all
of which were supported by the Kingdom of Poland.
In the end, the wars ended with the defeat of the Radical Hussites
by the Moderate Hussites at the Battle of Lipany in 1434.
First Hussite Crusade
(1420)
Called by Pope Martin V against “Wycliffites, Hussites, and
all other heretics in Bohemia”, this one was led by Sigismund, King of Hungary,
also a pretender to the crown of Bohemia.
It ended with the Battle of Viktov Hill, a victory for the Hussites.
Second Hussite
Crusade (1421-1422)
Ultimately led by Sigismund, this crusade ended at the
Battle of Deutschbrod.
Third Hussite Crusade
(1422-1424)
This crusade was largely abortive. Its most significant features were the
invasion of Moravia by the Hussites and the split in the Hussite Confederation
between Moderates (Ultraquists) and Radicals (Taborites).
Sigismund, King of Hungary, did invade with a large army in
1424, but his main action was to negotiate a peace between the two Hussite
factions.
Fourth Hussite
Crusade (1426)
The divided but allied Hussite army defeated the crusaders
led by Boso of Vitzthum at the Battle of Aussing.
Fifth Hussite Crusade
(1427)
Led by Henry Cardinal Beaufort, Bishop of Winchester, and
Otto von Ziegenhain, Archbishop of Trier, this crusade ended at the Battle of
Tachov.
Sixth Hussite Crusade
(1431)
Led by Frederick I, Elector of Brandenburg, this crusade met
its end at the Battle of Domazlice.
Crusade of Varna
(1443)
Also called the Long Campaign.
Called by Pope Eugene IV to drive the Turks out of Europe,
these crusaders led by Hungarian general John Hunyadi, Voivode of Transylvania
and Regent of Hungary, came from the Kingdom of Hungary, the Kingdom of Poland,
the Papal States, the Serbian Despotate, the Kingdom of Croatia, the Kingdom of
Bohemia-Moravia, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, the Principality of Wallachia, the
Principality of Moldavia, the Holy Roman Empire, the Papal States, the Teutonic
Knights, and Bulgarian rebels.
The crusade ended with the Battle of Varna in 1444, a
significant victory for Ottoman forces.
Crusade of 1448
This year, Hunyadi led another army of Crusaders, this one
from the Kingdom of Hungary, the Kingdom of Poland, the Principality of
Wallachia, and the Principality of Moldavia against the Ottoman Sultanate. The crusade ended with the three-day Battle of Kosovo which proved yet another disastrous loss for the Crusaders.
Fall of Konstantinopoulis
(1453)
The forces of the Ottoman Sultanate laid siege to
Konstantinopoulia in April of this year.
By this time, the city, which had at one time hosted over a million
people, had but 50,000 living within its walls, less than the number of
westerners in the city at the Massacre of the Latins centuries before. Only 7000 of these were soldiers. The Ottoman army numbered 80,000.
After fifty-three days, the city fell, followed by three
days of plunder in which thousands were raped or murdered and some 30,000
expelled or sent into slavery.
All that remained of the Basilea Rhomain were the Empire of
Trebizond (until 1461), the Principality of Gothia (1475), and the Despotate of
Epirus (1479), as well as the surviving Crusader States: Duchy of Athens
(1458), Aegean possessions of Genoa (1462), Kingdom of Negroponte (1470), County Palatine of Cephalonia and Zakynthos (1479),
Kingdom of Cyprus (1489), Hospitaller
State of Rhodes (1522), Lordship of Chios (1566), Duchy of Naxos (1579),
and Kingdom of Candia (aka Crete;
1669).
Council of Mantua (1459-1460)
Pope Pius II issued a call for a three-year crusade at this
council, to which various leaders pledged a total of 80,000 men. The army never materialized. The only leader truly enthusiastic for the
endeavor was Vlad III Dracula, Prince of Wallachia, but he hand his hands full
defending his own realm.
Capitulation of
Granada (1491)
In February 1482, the Castile-Aragon Union began its final
drive against the Emirate of Granada, the last remaining part of Al-Andalus on
the Iberian Peninsula. The
“Capitulation” refers to the Treaty of Granada at the end of 1491 surrendering
the emirate to the Spanish.
Holy Leagues (1538-1717)
Although the Battle of Kosovo was the last official crusading action, it did not end the See of Rome engaging in military actions against the Ottoman Sultanate. Beginning in 1538, it organized a number of alliances referred to as Holy Leagues, the primary action of which were naval over control of the Mediterranean Sea, though there was some accompanying land action as well.
The Holy League of 1538 (1538) included the Papal States, the Republic of Venice, the Kingdom of Spain, the Kingdom of Naples, and the Kingdom of Sicily. Given the players, it should not be surprising that military action was all naval.
The Holy League of 1571 (1571-1573) included the Papal States, the Republic of Venice, the Republic of Genoa, the Grand Duchy of Tuscany, the Duchy of Savoy, the Duchy of Parma, the Knights Hospitaller, and the Knights of Saint Stephen.
The Holy League of 1594 (1592-1606) included the Papal States, the Holy Roman Empire, the Kingdom of Spain, the Principality of Transylvania, the Principality of Wallachia, the Principality of Moldavia, the Cossacks of the Zaporozhian Sich, Serbian hadjuks, the Grand Duchy of Tuscany, the Duchy of Ferrara, the Duchy of Mantua, the Republic of Ragusa, the Duchy of Savoy, and the Knights of Saint Stephen. This league's goal was to push the Ottoman Sultanate out of Europe during the Long Turkish or Thirteen Years War.
The Holy League of 1684 (1684-1699) included the Papal States, the Holy Roman Empire, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, the Republic of Venice, and the Tsardom of Russia.
The Holy League of 1717 (1717-1718) included the Papal States, the Republic of Venice, the Kingdom of Portugal, and the Knights Hospitaller of Malta.
CRUSADER STATES
Outremer
There are the states founded in the wake of the First
Crusade, with the dates of their founding and of their final dissolution.
County of Edessa (1098-1150)
Principality of Antioch (1098-1268)
Kingdom of Jerusalem (1099-1291)
Major direct
vassals
Principality of Galilee
Lordship of Beirut
Lordship of Banias
Lordship of Toron
Lordship of Nazareth
Lordship of Cayphas (Haifa)
County of Jaffa and Ascalon
Lordship of Ramla
Lordship of Ibelin
Lordship of Mirabel
Lordship of Sagette (Sidon)
Lordship of Caesarea
Lordship of the Schulf
Lordship of Oultrejordan
Minor
direct vassals
Lordship of Adelon
Lordship of Arsulf
Lordship of Bethlehem
Lordship of Blanchegard
Lordship of Caymont
Lordship of Darum
Lordship of Dera
Lordship of Hebron
Lordship of Montgisard
Lordship of Naples (Nablus)
Lordship of St. Abraham
Lordship of St. George de la Beyne
Lordship of St. Jorge de Lidde (Lydda)
Lordship of Scandalion
Lordship of Suhete
Lordship of Tyre
County of Tripoli (1104-1289)
Kingdom of Cyprus (1191-1489)
Kingdom of Cilicia (1198-1375)
Principality
of Cilicia (1080-1198)
Note: Cilicia was not a Crusader State and therefore not
really part of the Outremer, but as a Christian Armenian state, it was closely
allied with the Crusaders States and it was raised to a kingdom by the pope.
Francocracy
The Francocracy is the collective term for the “Latin”
states carved out of the Basilea Rhomain after the Fourth Crusade, with the
dates of their founding and of their final dissolution. All the states fell under the suzerainty of
the Empire of Romania as long as that lasted, at least on theory, but in
practice most had a great degree of autonomy.
Empire of Romania, or Latin Empire (1204-1261)
Kingdom of Thessalonica (1205–1224)
Principality of Achaea (1205–1432)
Duchy of Athens (1205-1458)
Duchy of Naxos (1207–1579)
Duchy of Philippopolis (1204–1230)
Triarchy of Negroponte (1204-1390)
Kingdom of
Negroponte (1390-1470)
County of Salona (1205-1410)
Marquisate of Bodonista (1204-1414)
County Palatine of
Cephalonia and Zakynthos (1185–1479)
Hospitaller State of
Rhodes (1310-1522)
Hospitaller State of Malta
(1530-1798)
Lordship of Chios
(1304-1329; 1346-1556)
Kingdom of Candia (1211–1669)
Possessions of the
Republic of Genoa (1304-1462)
Island of Lesbos (1355–1462)
Island of Lemnos (1414–1462)
Island of Thasos (1414–1462)
Island of Samothrace (1355–1457)
City of Ainos (1376–1456)
Possessions of the
Republic of Venice
Corfu (1207–1214, 1386–1797)
Lefkas (1684–1797)
Zaknythos (1479–1797)
Caphalonia and Ithaca (1500–1797)
Tinos (1390-1715)
Mykonos (1390-1715)
Various others
The County Palatine
of Cephalonia and Zakynthos, founded decades before the Fourth Crusade, became
part of the interconnected Latin states.
The Kingdom of
Candia was the Venetian-held island of Crete.
The Empire of
Romania fell to the Empire of Nicaea in 1261, after which the two were rejoined
as the Basilea Rhomain once again.
All the Latin states of Greece accepted the suzerainty of
the Kingdom of Sicily after 1267.
In 1390, the Republic of Venice, which owned all three
baronies of the Triarchy of Negroponte, turned them into the Kingdom of
Negroponte, but also maintaining the three separate territories intact, but
under a Venetian podesta at Chalkis.
Byzantine Successor
States
These were the rump-states of the Greek Basilea Rhomain
after the Fourth Crusade.
Empire of Nicaea (1204-1261)
Despotate of Epirus (1205-1479)
Empire of
Thessalonica (1224-1242)
Despotate
of Thessalonica (1242-1246)
Empire of Trebizond (1204-1461)
Perateia
(1204-1238)
Principality of Gothia (1238-1475)
Also known as the Lordship of
Theodoro
The Depotate of Epirus conquered the Latin Kingdom of
Thessalonica in 1224, and the Despot moved his seat to the city, renaming his
expanded realm the Empire of Thessalonica.
The Empire of Nicaea forced Thessalonica to submit in 1242, reducing its
ruler to a Despot. Four years later,
Nicaea assimilated the territory, forcing the Despot to retreat to Epirus.
The Empire of Nicaea
lasted until it conquered the Latin Empie of Romania in 1261, after which it
became the revived Basilea Rhomain.
Under the Empire of Trezibond, its exclave of Perateia took
in all of the Crimean Peninsula, along with the Kerch Peninsula and the Taman
Peninsula on either side of the Strait of Kerch into the Sea of Azov. After the Mongol invasion of 1238, this
entity was reduced to the Heracles Peninsula of Crimea and cut off from Trebizond,
becoming the Principality of Gothia.
(Historical note: The territories of the Empire of Trezibond approximated roughly those of the Kingdom of Pontus, 281-63 BCE, including its exclave territory in Crimea. After the Roman conquest in 63 BCE, the southern Anatolian regions became the province of Bithynia et Pontus while the Crimean region thrived as the autonomous but client Kingdom of the Cimmerian Bosphorus, the name referring to the Strait of Ketch, surviving until the Huns overran it in the last quarter of the 4th century.)
Terra Mariana
(1207-1561)
Terra Mariana was erected in Old Livonia, more or less
coterminous with modern Latvia and Estonia by the Knights of the Sword in 1207,
early in the Livonian Crusade. In 1228,
the lands were divided into the following jurisdictions, with the Knights of
the Sword being first among equals and possessors of all the lands outside the
ecclesiatical districts.
Archbishopric of Riga (1186-1561)
Knights of the Sword/Livonian Order (1207-1561)
Duchy of Estonia (1219-1346)
Bishopric of Dorpat (1224-1558)
Bishopric of Osel-Wiek (1228-1560)
Bishopric of Courland (1234-1562)
After a disastrous defeat at the Battle of Schaulen against
the Samogitians in 1236, the surviving Knights of the Sword were incorporated
into the Teutonic Knights, and Terra Mariana became part of the State of the
Teutonic Order. They remained
autonomous, however, as the Livonian Order within the Teutonic Knights.
The Duchy of Estonia, occupying Northern Estonia, was a
nominal Danish possession purchased by the State of the Teutonic Order in 1346,
which then became part of the possessions of the Livonian Order.
After 1422, Terra Mariana became disconnected from the State
of the Teutonic Order and was thereafter governed by the Livionian
Confederation. This state of affairs
lasted until 1561, when the Livonian Order was dissolved during the Livonia War
(1558-1583).
State of the
Teutonic Order (1230-1525)
This was the ecclesiastical state of the Teutonic Knights
founded during the Prussian Crusade. It
took in Old Prussia, Terra Mariana (1237-1422), and at times Gotland, Neumark,
Pomeralia, and Samogitia. The Teutonic
Knights suffered a disastrous defeat against the Sarmogitians in 1410, and by
1422, the Livonian Confederation, comprising Terra Mariana, had broken away.
In 1466, western Prussia was taken from the State of the
Teutonic Order and given to the Kingdom of Poland as Royal Prussia. Royal Prussia’s autonomy ended in 1569 and it
was absorbed into the Crown lands.
In 1525, the Grand Master of the Order secularized its lands
and became Albert, Duke of Prussia, establishing Lutheranism as the state
religion, the first state to do so.
In 1701, the Duchy of Prussia was elevated into the Kingdom
of Prussia. It absorbed the lands of the
former Royal Prussia in 1722 as part of the First Partition of Poland.
Iberia
The surviving Christian territories after the Umayyad
conquest of Hispaniae were the Kingdom of Asturias and the Kingdom of Pamplona/Navarre. During the Reconquista, they added the
Kingdoms of Portugal, Galicia, Castile, Leon, Aragon, Valencia, and Majorca,
the Principality of Catalonia, and the Lordship of Biscay. While not strictly crusader states, they were
states established during a crusade. By
1492, these had consolidated into the Kingdoms of Castile & Leon, Aragon,
Navarre, and Portugal.
CRUSADER ORDERS
There were other
military orders founded during this time, but these operated entirely outside
the theaters of war. The orders listed
here either fought in the Crusades or were formed specifically to do so.
Order of the Knights
of the Hospital of Saint John of Jerusalem
Aka: Knights Hospitaller, Knights of Cyprus, Knights of
Rhodes, Knights of Malta
Founded: 1099,
Jerusalem
Operated in: Levant, Cyprus, Rhodes, Malta, and virtually
every country in Western Europe
Crusade theater: Eastern Crusades, Balkans
Dissolved: Extant
Successors: Sovereign Military Hospitaller Order of Saint
John of Jerusalem, of Rhodes, and of Malta (Rome); Bailiwick of Brandenburg of
the Chivalric Order of Saint John of the Hospital of Jerusalem; Order of St.
John in the Netherlands; Order of St. John in Sweden; Most Venerable Order of the Hospital of Saint John of Jerusalem (UK)
The first of the
successors is the official Catholic continuation of the original order. The second represents the branch in the Holy
Roman Empire which became Protestant; the Dutch and Swedish orders branched off
from that. The British order descends
from members of a French branch of the Dutch order which moved to UK in the
1830s.
Sacred and Military
Order of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem
Aka: Knights of the Holy Sepulchre
Founded: 1099, Jerusalem
Operated in: Levant
Crusade theater: Eastern Crusades
Dissolved: Extant
Successors: Redesignated as the Sacred and Military Order of
the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem in 1496; known as the Equestrian Order of the
Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem since 1931
Poor Fellow-Soldiers
of Christ and the Temple of Solomon
Aka: Knights Templar
Founded: 1119,
Jerusalem
Operated in: Levant and virtually every country in Western
Europe
Crusade theater: Eastern Crusades, Reconquista
Dissolved: 1312
Successors: Knights
of St. John and the Temple; Military Order of Christ (Portugal, formerly Order of the Knights of Our Lord Jesus Christ); Order of
Montesa (Aragon and Valencia); Supreme Order of Christ (Rome); Imperial Order of Our Lord Jesus Christ
(Brasil)
The Templars in
Scotland, the whole country of which was excommunicated at the time of the
dissolution and therefore not under the aegis of Rome, merged with the Scottish
Hospitallers under the above name and remained until the Scottish Reformation
in 1564. The Military Order of Christ
(1317) and the Order of Montesa (1317) were formed from the former Templars in
their respective kingdoms. The Supreme
Order of Christ was formed by the Pope from surviving Templars in 1319. The Brasil order branched off from the
Portugese order.
Order of Saint
Lazarus of Jerusalem
Aka: Knights of Saint Lazarus
Founded: 1119, Jerusalem
Operated in: Levant, southern Italy, Hungary, Switzerland,
France, England
Crusade theater: Eastern Crusades
Dissolved: 1572
Successors: Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus
(1572-present); Royal Military and
Hospitaller Order of Our Lady of Mount Carmel and Saint Lazarus of Jerusalem
united (France, 1608- 1830/1910); Military and Hospitaller Order of Saint
Lazarus of Jerusalem (1910-present)
The Order of Saint
Maurice was founded in Savoy in 1434.
The second of the successors was established by the French crown from
elements of the Order of Saint Lazarus in France.
Knights of the Order of Saint Benedict of Aviz
Aka: Knights of
Saint Benedict, Knights of Aviz
Founded: 1146,
Portugal
Operated in: Iberia
Crusade theater:
Reconquista
Dissolved: 1789
Successors: Became
the Royal Military Order of Aviz in 1789; Military Order of Aviz in 1910
Royal Equestrian and Military Order of Saint Michael of
the Wing
Aka: Knights of
Saint Michael
Founded: 1147,
Santarem (Portugal)
Operated in: Iberia
Crusade theater:
Reconquista
Dissolved: 1732
Successors: Revived
in 1828, and again in 1981
Order of Calatrava
Aka: Knights of
Calatrava
Founded: 1158,
Calatrava la Vieja (Castile)
Operated in: Iberia
Crusade theater:
Reconquista, Baltic Crusades
Dissolved: 1838
Order of Alcantara
Aka: Knights of
Saint Julian
Founded: 1166,
Alcantara (Leon)
Operated in: Iberia
Crusade theater: Reconquista
Dissolved: Extant
Order of St. James of the Sword
Aka: Order of
Santiago, Knights of St. James
Founded: 1170,
Caceres (Leon)
Operated in: Iberia
Crusader theater: Reconquista
Dissolved: Extant
Military Order of
Saint James of the Sword
Aka: Order of
Santiago, Knights of St. James
Founded: 1172, Portugal
Operated in: Iberia
Crusade theater: Reconquista
Dissolved: Extant
Order of Mountjoy
Aka: Knights of Mountjoy
Founded: 1176, Alfambra (Aragon)
Operated in: Iberia, Levant
Crusade theater: Eastern Crusades, Reconquista
Dissolved: 1196
Successors: Remnants who didn’t merge with the Templars in
1196 became the Order of Montfrague (Castile) until 1221, when that merged with
the Order of Calatrava
Hospitallers of Saint
Thomas of Canterbury at Acre
Aka: Knights of Saint Thomas
Founded: 1191, Acre
Operated in: Levant, England
Crusade theater: Eastern Crusades
Dissolved: 1538 in the English Reformation
Order of the Brothers
of German House of Saint Mary in Jerusalem
Aka: Teutonic Knights
Founded: 1192, Acre
Operated in: Levant, Holy Roman Empire, Balkans, Prussia
Crusade theater: Eastern Crusades, Baltic Crusades, Balkans
Dissolved: Extant
Livonian Brothers of
the Sword
Aka: Knights of the Sword, Christ Knights, Sword Brethren, Militia
of Christ of Livonia
Founded: 1202, Riga
Operated in: Livonia
Crusade theater: Baltic Crusades
Dissolved: 1236
Successors: Absorbed into the Teutonic Knights as the
autonomous Livonian Order until 1561, when that was dissolved after a disastrous
defeat.
Order of the Holy
Faith of Jesus Christ
Aka: Militia of Jesus Christ
Founded: 1209, Languedoc
Operated in: Languedoc, adjacent regions
Crusade theater: Albigensian Crusade
Dissolved: c. 1301
Successors: Merged with the Order of Penance of Saint
Dominic to become the Third Order of Saint Dominic about the year 1301.
Military Brothers of
Christ in Prussia
Aka: Prussian Cavaliers of Jesus Christ, Order of Dobrin,
Knights of Dobrin
Founded: c. 1217, Prussia
Operated in: Prussia
Crusade theater: Baltic Crusades
Dissolved: 1240
Successors: The majority joined the Teutonic Knights in
1237; the remainder were captured by the forces of Kiev in 1240.
What joy at finding your blog and the extensive research you have shared. MY 22nd Great Grandfather, David de Lindsay, Regent of Scotland, and High Chamberlain died in the 9th Crusade. So many people died all in the name of Christ, yet I do not think that Christ would have wanted men to die in battle in his name. SO sad...
ReplyDeleteI agree; I don't think he would have either, and he certainly would not have wanted them to kill for him.
ReplyDelete