Introduction
Overview
The Crusades were a series of religious wars and armed expeditions launched by western Christians from the late eleventh century, especially toward and the eastern Mediterranean. They combined faith, violence, papal authority, land hunger, and political ambition. The Crusades reshaped relations between Christians, Muslims, and Jews, created crusader states, encouraged cultural exchange, and left a long and contested legacy.
Key forces
- The Crusades combined pilgrimage, warfare, papal authority, aristocratic ambition, and eastern Mediterranean politics.
- The First Crusade captured and created fragile crusader states.
- Muslim counterattack grew stronger under leaders such as Nur al-Din and Saladin.
- Later crusades often became entangled in politics, commerce, and conflicts beyond the Holy Land.

















