it is about Lewis boland
The Crusades for starters. The Crusades were a religious was between the Christians and the Muslims...with the Jews caught in the middle.
This is a hard question to answer. Spain had Christians, Muslims, and Jews during the Middle Ages, but Christians and Muslims were in greater numbers than Jews. It is hard to know whether Muslims outnumbered Christians at some times, particularly around the year 800 or so. Earlier in the Middle Ages and later, in the Late Middle Age, Christians were in greater numbers.
No. Crusades were only by early European Christians.
Christians lied about Muslims destroying sacred shrines, providing an excuse for the Christians to attack the Muslims. The Muslims won. As a result, Christians were shut off from trade, and the Muslims grew together even closer. It didn't affect Islam much, but it destroyed the Byzantine Empire.
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.
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
Infidels Correction: Muslims called Christians Infidels. Christians called Muslims Saracens.
The Crusades were holy wars fought between Christians in Europe and Muslims in the Middle East between 1095 and 1291.
Christians were referred to as Musta'rabs which in turn was a sub-classification of the broader classification Ahl Al Zimma
The Crusades were primarily fought between Christians from Western Europe and Muslims in 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.
Jerusalem.
This is a hard question to answer. Spain had Christians, Muslims, and Jews during the Middle Ages, but Christians and Muslims were in greater numbers than Jews. It is hard to know whether Muslims outnumbered Christians at some times, particularly around the year 800 or so. Earlier in the Middle Ages and later, in the Late Middle Age, Christians were in greater numbers.
Christians and Muslims !
No. Crusades were only by early European Christians.
No. There are substantial (but declining) populations of Christians and Jews in the middle east. Not entirely, but close. The overwhelming majority (>90%) of Middle Easterners are Muslims. Jews, Christians, Druze, and Baha'i make up around 7-8% of the Middle East cumulatively.