Wednesday, September 18, 2019
The First Crusade Essay -- essays research papers
 The First Crusade           As the year 1000A.D. was approaching the strength of Christianity in  Western Europe was growing along with its population. The newly reformed and  organized Church began to gain great power. A new Europe was being born with  the Catholic Church as a force in every area of life.       In Christian beliefs, the savior, Jesus Christ was to return to earth  and bring judgment on its people. Many clergy members along with lay people  believed this would take place in the year 1000A.D. . Knowing this, the people  of Europe awaited the return of Christ and feared the Wrath of God. Religious  people wanted to make up for their sins and avoid the horrors of eternal  damnation. Clergy members were often consulted to figure out what would be a  suitable penance. " The Church itself still frequently imposed pilgrimages as a  penance" (Campbell p.14). A pilgrimage to the Holy Land was not an easy task to  say the least. The road to Jerusalem was jagged. On the way to Jerusalem,  pilgrims were often murdered by thieves. They were defenseless and often did  not return. Some pilgrims did return from the Holy Land. They came back with  tales that planted the seeds for a Crusade.       "The pilgrims that returned from the Holy City of Jerusalem recounted  tales, often grossly exaggerated, of the horrible pollution of the sacred places  at the hands of the Turks" (Campbell p23). Other stories of the destruction of  the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, the burial place of Jesus, by the Turks  surfaced in the early eleventh century. The news of the destruction of the  Sepulcher was mourned in every Christian country. The nations looked to Rome  for a solution to this most serious of Problems.       The Byzantine emperor asked for the aid of the Pope to help him with his  Turk problem. To the Pope, it would be a strategic move to aid the Byzantine  emperor. The Pope realized that this offered the opportunity to re-establish  the universal Church and establish the supremacy of Rome. In 1095, at the  Council of Clermont in southern France, "Urban II challenged Christians to take  up their weapons against the infidels and participate in a holy war and  recapture the Holy Land" (Spielvogel,p344). Pope Urban II addressed the French  telling them of the horrors im...              ...m the clutches of non-Christian  rulers. They successfully carried out the wishes of the Pope and , more  importantly, what they believed to be the " Will of God ." The crusading  knights gained new powers through the conquest along with salvation.  Economically, the First Crusade was a success for Western Europe. New ports on  the Mediterranean were in the hands of Western lords, opening new gates for  trade.       On the other hand, the First Crusade could be seen to be a failure in  many ways. Relations with the Byzantine Empire grew far more distant. The  Pope's dream of unifying the eastern and western churches could not be achieved.  The gruesome display of barbarism on behalf of the Crusaders could also be seen  as a failure in morals. It seemed that the Crusaders, for the most part, lost  their way. Their goals switched from religious to materialistic.       The First Crusade was the first installment in a series that lose their  " holiness" and become less successful. Militarily, the First Crusade was an  utter success. It started a hatred for the West by the Near and Middle Eastern  peoples that still is strong today.                       
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