crusaders did not marry because they already devoted there lives to god and the pope thought they would gain a closer relationship with there wife instead of god and the crusaders thought that to and they were scared that they wouldn't go to heaven.
The Seljuks were defeated militarily, primarily by the Khwarezmian Empire (which was based in Persia).
The crusaders who were the Peasant crusaders in 1096 and the Noble crusaders in 1097 wanted to re- capture the Holy Land which was important to them, as they were Christians. The Peasant crusaders failed, so the Nobles had to step up and take back the Holy Land.
the holy land
internal pressures and external pressures
the seljuks were baureaucrats
It had no initial effect. The Fatimids had already lost Jerusalem and its environs to the Seljuks before the Seljuks lost Jerusalem and its environs to the Crusaders. The Crusades, however, strengthened the Muslim forces' loyalty to Saladin and allowed him to form the Ayyubid Sultanate. The Ayyubid Sultanate was able to conquer the Egyptian Fatimids after the fall of the Crusader States.
crusaders did not marry because they already devoted there lives to god and the pope thought they would gain a closer relationship with there wife instead of god and the crusaders thought that to and they were scared that they wouldn't go to heaven.
The Seljuks established their capital in Isfahan, Iran.
The Seljuks were defeated militarily, primarily by the Khwarezmian Empire (which was based in Persia).
The Seljuks converted to Islam, specifically Sunni Islam, during the 11th century. They became strong supporters and defenders of the Islamic faith as they expanded their empire across Persia and Anatolia.
Seljuks need to seek religious guidance from the Persian-Seljuks had arrived in Southwest Asia basically illiterate, having to result to Persian subjects for both cultural & religious guidance.
BagdadWrong it is Nicaea.
Baghdag
The Ottomans.
The decline of the Seljuks created a power vacuum in Anatolia which allowed the Ottoman Empire to make its initial expansions.
No, Baghdad was not burned down by the Seljuks. The Seljuks did capture Baghdad in 1055 and weakened the Abbasid Caliphate, but they did not completely end the Arab empire. The Arab empire continued to exist, albeit in a weakened state, until the Mongol invasion in 1258.