the kings crusade was the 3rd Crusade.
During the second crusades Muslims managed to defeat the Christians and retake Jerusalem. I'd like to add that a "crusader" is a warrior taking part in a crusade, while the "wholly wars" started by the Mediaeval Christians were called "crusades".
Jerusalem was one of the cities gained during the First Crusade but that is all I know.
jeruslam ) jeruslam )
Key leaders in the Crusades included Richard the Lionheart of England, who played a pivotal role during the Third Crusade, and Saladin, the Muslim military leader who opposed him and ultimately recaptured Jerusalem. Other notable figures include Godfrey of Bouillon, a leader during the First Crusade, and Frederick Barbarossa, the Holy Roman Emperor, who led forces in the Third Crusade. These leaders were significant in shaping the course and outcomes of the Crusades.
the kings crusade was the 3rd Crusade.
Cities such as Venice flourished as a result of the Crusaders because,people fled to Venice and it developed into a powerful,city-state that came to dominate much of the Mediterranean during the Crusades.
Cyprus.
It was during the Second Crusade in 1144.
During the second crusades Muslims managed to defeat the Christians and retake Jerusalem. I'd like to add that a "crusader" is a warrior taking part in a crusade, while the "wholly wars" started by the Mediaeval Christians were called "crusades".
Jerusalem
No..the crusades were intended to capture Jerusalem for Christianity and to oust the Moslems from there. The Jews suffered terribly during the crusades.
Jerusalem was one of the cities gained during the First Crusade but that is all I know.
jeruslam ) jeruslam )
Well not really, the children's crusade occured during the fifth crusade, but they are two different things. There were also two different children's crusades, the French and Germans. They both failed.
To answer in one word : poor Many more died of disease during the Crusade of illness than fighting.
There were several crusades over a long period of time. You need to be more specific.