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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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78 Chivalry<br />

<strong>The</strong>re were eight crusades between 1096 and 1270. Except for the<br />

rowdy mobs of ravaging peasants who were later massacred by the Turks,<br />

the First Crusade began in high spirits, with a righteous purpose and banners<br />

flying. <strong>The</strong> response to the call came mostly from the knighthood of<br />

France, which left an enduring French stamp on the movement. <strong>The</strong> crusading<br />

army fought its way through Asia Minor and Syria, taking<br />

Jerusalem from Muslim control in 1099 and setting up a Latin Kingdom of<br />

Jerusalem.<br />

Turkish attacks on the new Frankish protectorate, followed by the fall<br />

of Edessa in 1144, inspired a new crusade. <strong>The</strong> second effort achieved little<br />

against a revival of Muslim military aggression, but the capture of<br />

Jerusalem by the famed Saladin in 1187 quickened a new papal call. <strong>The</strong><br />

Third Crusade attracted the support of the Holy Roman Emperor, Frederick<br />

I, Philip II of France, and Richard I, called the Lion-Hearted, of England.<br />

Known as the King’s Crusade, it did little more than capture a few<br />

cities along the Mediterranean coast. In the chronicles of chivalry, the romanticized<br />

King Richard must remain unhonored: Saladin released his<br />

Christian captives; Richard massacred 2,700 of his own prisoners of war.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Fourth Crusade of 1204 debased the chivalric ideal of crusading<br />

knighthood. Its forces overwhelmed the Christian world of Byzantium, partitioned<br />

much of its territory, and impressed upon the land a Frankish imprisonment<br />

that, fortunately for the Greeks, did not last longer than 1261.<br />

In 1212, the response to the religious call was answered by bands of<br />

adolescents from France and Germany. Called the Children’s Crusade, it<br />

was not a crusade at all but a calamitous outpouring of innocent faith that<br />

displaced countless numbers of children from their homes and led many<br />

into the slave markets of the Levant. <strong>The</strong> Fifth Crusade accomplished nothing,<br />

and its successor, under Frederick II, managed to negotiate some<br />

treaties favorable to the Christian side.<br />

<strong>The</strong> earlier high purpose of the crusading movement was regained<br />

during the last two fated crusades led by the sainted Louis IX of France.<br />

His first expedition was an assault on Damietta in Egypt, where he surpassed<br />

his knights in valor by leaping into the surf on landing and wading<br />

ashore with shield and lance. It was an act of daring that might have earned<br />

him an honored place in the heroic lines of the chansons de geste (French;<br />

songs of heroic deeds), but his effort was of no avail in Egypt. He tried to<br />

redeem himself in 1270, an enfeebled old warrior, but he failed again, giving<br />

up his life on an alien Tunisian shore.<br />

In the fourteenth century, the crusading movement was briefly revived,<br />

and French chivalry was again represented at Nicopolis in 1396,<br />

when the king of Hungary led a campaign against the advancing Turks.<br />

Early battle successes were reversed when the French knights, spurning

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