It is actually pretty good, since Israel is surrounded by Muslim nations and Christians are also a minority in the region, so Jews and Christians cooperate. An example was the South Lebanese Army. It is also notable that the only place in the Middle East where the Christian population is increasing and is becoming more affluent is in Israel.
Christians were referred to as Musta'rabs which in turn was a sub-classification of the broader classification Ahl Al Zimma
One way in which the relationship between Muslims and Christians worsened was during the Crusades in the medieval period, where there was conflict over control of holy sites in the Middle East. This period of intense religious warfare and cultural clashes led to animosity and deepened religious divides between the two communities.
it is about Lewis boland
You are either friends or in a committed relationship.
The Crusades for starters. The Crusades were a religious was between the Christians and the Muslims...with the Jews caught in the middle.
Increase tension between Muslims and Christians
The answer is: They were all major tools.
Muslims over control of the Holy Land in the medieval period. They spanned from the 11th to the 13th century and had significant political, economic, and social consequences in both Europe and the Middle East.
The Crusades were a series of religious wars primarily between Christians from Western Europe and Muslims in the Middle East, starting in the 11th century. There were multiple Crusades, with various objectives and participants, but the main conflict was between Christians and Muslims over control of Holy Land sites like Jerusalem.
The Crusades were primarily fought between Christians from Western Europe and Muslims in the Middle East.
Certainly. Arab Muslims launched their conquest of the Christian Byzantine Empire in the Middle East (Levant, Anatolia, and Egypt) in the 630s and 640s CE. War between the Seljuk Turks against the Byzantines continued until the 1000s CE. Then Christians from Europe began to invade the Levant from Turkish and Arab Muslim control in the 1100s in several successive Crusades. Christians finally gave up true political control of the Middle East after World War II, when Britain and France withdrew their mandatory (colonial) authorities.
Jean