This is because they didn't have enough crusaders.
It is a monument of a particular shape. It's difficult to describe, but if you can find a picture of the Washington Monument in Washington DC, you will see a beautiful example.
Slavery originated in stone age times, in those days there were no machines so all work had to be done by hand labour. Since it was sometimes difficult to find enough volunteers to do labour work; people would take captives and force them to do the labour for them.
Pagans follow any number of paths, it is very difficult to pin down a single god (or goddess) of love without some idea of the path you are inquiring about. Give a pantheon and we will happily find you a god(dess).
A denarius was a Roman silver coin containing about 3 grams or 3.9 grams of pure silver. It's difficult to give its present day worth because its value would depend on the price of silver today. To find an exact answer, you would have to check the precious metal prices in the financial pages of your daily newspaper.
The pyramids represent the determination of a society to build something that is both meaningful and difficult. The pyramids were burial tombs, so their leaders were powerful enough to garner the men and materials necessary to produce these monuments. The difficulty came in having the engineering skills to design these pyramids, find the material (limestone blocks) and move it into place. :D
he went to Jerusalem to find his friend but in the way there they got killed
SOME of the wars called the "Crusades" involved the taking and retaking of Jerusalem. The Crusades were different wars with different characters. One, the Fourth, have nothing to do with the Muslims at all, but concerned the capture of Constantinople by the Latins from the Greeks. Another was an invasion of Egypt (Muslim, but definitely not where one would find Jerusalem). Of eight, sometimes nine, designated Crusades, only the First (where the Crusaders took Jerusalem)and Third (where the Muslims held on to it) were significant on that basis. Other so-called "Crusades" (e.g., the Albigensian Crusade) were actually purges of heretical sects from within Catholic territory. One also occasionally hears the word "crusade" used to mean a non-military collective struggle for some desirable social change, for example: "Crusade for Literacy" or "Crusade for Childhood Vaccination." The Muslim version of Crusade is "Jihad." Both terms have a) a military meaning and b) a nonmilitary one, which the professing group insists is the "real" meaning and which the opposing group prefers to ignore.
you find pictures of Christians' crusades in google images.
What do you mean were Jerusalem? If you google 'Jerusalem map' you should get a site.
Find them anywhere! They're all around you just try to find a cup to capture them or capture them with your bare hands.
Jerusalem
yes
I'm afraid, that no matter where I check, I cannot find any reference to anyone named Eleazar during the Crusades.
Capture Arena
apple sauce
cinnamon!
buy a globe!