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Why did the crusaders want to seize Antioch prior to moving on toward Jerusalem?

Cause hes stupid


why did the crusades want to seize Antioch prior to moving on towards Jerusalem?

Cause hes stupid


What were the 3 ships that sailed to Jerusalem?

The question as posed describes an impossibility. Jerusalem is an inland city with no access to any rivers or moving bodies of water. (Jerusalem's water comes primarily from underground aquifers and pipes.) As a result, no ships can sail into or out of Jerusalem.


Are lights in the sky planes or what?

If the lights are moving, it is most likely they are planes. If the lights are not moving, it is most likely they are stars.


What are the pros and cons of moving the embassy to Jerusalem?

Pros of moving the embassy to Jerusalem include recognizing it as the capital of Israel, fulfilling a campaign promise, and strengthening ties with Israel. Cons include sparking tensions in the region, alienating Palestinians, and potentially hindering peace efforts.


What were some initial success despite the Crusades late failure?

The Crusaders enjoyed a resounding series of early successes in the later years of the 11th century and the early decades of of the 12th. The First Crusade, lauched by Pope Urban II at Clermont in 1096, achieved the most of any of the Crusades. This initial movement is the one that you are probably thinking of. Crusaders from the Occitan, Normandy, Sicily, Lorraine, Blois, and Flanders succeeded in defeating the Turks in Asia Minor and capturing Niceae and Iconium. Moving south, two of the crusading nobels recovered Taursus in Cilicia. Then some knights from Lorraine detached with Baldwin of Boulonge and captrued the city of Edessa to the east. The rest of the army headed south into Turkic Syria and beseiged Antioch, which then was occupied under Bohemond of Taranto, a Norman crusader lord from Sicily. Under Raymond of Toulouse, the rest of the crusaders marched south and recovered Jerusalem and Galilee.After the first crusade, Godfrey de Boullion was proclaimed soverign of Jerusalem in 1099. The next year, he fell ill and died. His brother Baldwin, the count of Edessa, became king. Under Baldwin, the crusaders captured the cities of Acre, Beruit, Tyre, and Caeserea. Later, the southern coastal metropolis of Ascalon was recovered after a lengthy siege by kingBaldwin III. Following these successes, the crusader states in the eastern Mediterranean were established to their fullest extent. In the decades after 1150, the Moslems of Aleppo, Damascus, and Cairo became stronger and more capable of combating the Europeans. In 1187, the royal army of Jerusalem, along with the Templars and Hospitallers, rode to destruction at the Battle of Hattin. That same year Jerusalem was lost, along with most of the other cities. Soon, only Tyre remained in crusader hands. Richard the Lion Heart's Third Crusade regained the coastal cities from the Muslims, but the kingdom of Jerusalem was never as strong again as it had been following those early successes.


When an object on the constellation is moving what is the most likely explanation for the moving object?

If you mean visibly moving, it's most likely a satellite. Or an airplane. If you mean moving appreciably over the course of several days or weeks or months, it's probably a planet.


Why did crusades attack Muslims?

There are a wide variety of reasons as to why Crusaders attacked Moslems. 1) Impeding Control of Jerusalem: The stated mission of the Crusades was to take back control of Jerusalem for Christendom. If they were trying to take it back, it follows logically that somebody else was in possession of it. As Moslems were in possession of Jerusalem and they did not wish to just give the city up, Crusaders attacked them. 2) Protecting Byzantium: The real reason for the Crusades was to prevent the Byzantine Empire from being completely overrun. The Seljuks, Ottomans, and Abbassids were all moving into Eastern Anatolia and threatening the survival of the Byzantine Empire. These states were all Moslem, so necessarily any policy to contain them militarily would require Moslem deaths. 3) Religious Discrimination: Many Christians saw Moslems as infidels who had knowingly rejected Christ and were thus fit to die. (This view has changed with time.) For a more detailed analysis, see the link below.


Where will Jesus be coming back to?

Jesus is coming back to Jerusalem. Zecheriah 14:4 On that day his feet will stand on the Mount of Olives, east of Jerusalem, and the Mount of Olives will be split in two from east to west, forming a great valley, with half of the mountain moving north and half moving south.


Why is an AED likely to shock in a moving ambulance?

Motion


What is the mostly likely outcome of the moon moving away from earth?

most likely there will be no moon in the nights.


What way will you roll if you jump out of a moving car?

most likely if you are moving fast you will role the opposite direction that the car is moving. but the best bet is to never jump out of a moving car.