Saladin got control of it with his Muslim army.
The chief goal was to rescue the Christian Holy Land or Jerusalem from the Saracens.
Feudalism was a system of government during the Middle Ages. And the Crusades is a medieval military expedition.
Christian military expeditions to take the "holy land" from the Muslims during the middle ages were called crusades becasue they carried the Sign of the Cross before them.
It was, above all, misguided religious zeal during the Crusades that encouraged antisemitism.
A major goal of the christian church during the crusades 1096-1291 was to?
The Christians were trying to reclaim Jerusalem and other holy sites in the Holy Land from Muslim control. They believed that capturing these territories would secure safe passage for Christian pilgrims and demonstrate their faith and power.
Jerusalem
When studying the crusades and the beginning of it, religion was perhaps the greatest factor. Roman Catholic Europe wanted to restore Christian control of the Holy Land, which the Muslims had rule over and used religious beliefs in order to sanction the campaigns.
This question makes no sense. If you intend to ask, "Who controlled Jerusalem during the Crusades?" the answer would be Moslems for the majority of the time with a Christian interlude between the First and Second Crusades.
A major goal of the Christian Church during the Crusades was to reclaim Jerusalem and the Holy Land from Muslim control. The Church sought to protect and expand its influence in the region, as well as unify Christians under a common cause.
To protect soldiers during war and crusades
Well, in the early middle ages, the Eastern Roman Empire still survived and expanded. During the high middle ages which began after 1000, the population of Europe increased greatly as new technological and agricultural innovations allowed trade to flourish and crop yields to increase. The crusades occured during this time period. The crusades were a "Holy Christian war"