Lecture 11: 1187 Hattin—Crusader Desert Disaster
1187 Hattin—Crusader Desert Disaster ...........................................
Lecture 11T
hirty years after the Battle of Hastings, Pope Urban II gave one of
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years and involved all the major powers of Europe and the Near East. This
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kingdoms of the Near East by the Christian kingdoms of Europe. Although
the Crusades extended over a 200-year span, the turning point was the Battle
of Hattin in 1187. The opposing forces seem evenly matched, but squabbling
among their leadership and a series of poor decisions ultimately doomed the
European army to a miserable and dusty death.The Crusades up to Hattin
x The enthusiastic response to the Pope’s call for an expedition to
free the Holy Land from the “pagans” was probably much greater
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number of countries volunteered.x Enlisting was called “taking the cross” because strips of cloth in
the shape of a cross were sewn onto enlistees’ clothes or painted on
their shields. It was from this practice that they became known as
Crusaders and the entire movement was called the Crusades.x 7KH RI¿FLDO )LUVW &UXVDGH VHW RII LQ UHDFKLQJ$QWLRFK LQ- After a siege, Antioch fell, and the Crusaders marched
down the coast, winning a string of victories. Eventually, they
reached Jerusalem itself, and after another siege, in July of 1099,
the Crusaders burst into the holy city and massacred many of
the inhabitants.
x A number of small Crusader kingdoms were established along the
eastern coast of the Mediterranean, the most important of which
was the Kingdom of Jerusalem.