Crusades – a sub-optimal use case for countering recent violence in India and Bangladesh
Richard The Lionheart And His Knights Leave For The First Crusade Painting by Michael Godfrey

Crusades – a sub-optimal use case for countering recent violence in India and Bangladesh

A large section of population is worried about the recent religiously motivated violence in Bangladesh. The battle is as much ideological as it is physical. Hindu groups tout violence back against Muslims as the answer. However, the tales of Crusaders suggest otherwise.

“The Crusades were a series of military campaigns organised by Christian powers in order to retake Jerusalem and the Holy Land back from Muslim control. There would be eight officially sanctioned crusades between 1095 CE and 1270 CE and many more unofficial ones. Each campaign met with varying successes and failures but, ultimately, the wider objective of keeping Jerusalem and the Holy Land in Christian hands failed.” [1]

Goals of following key leaders and social groups:

  • "The Byzantine Emperor – to regain lost territory and defeat a threatening rival state.
  • The Pope – to strengthen the papacy in Italy and achieve ascendancy as head of the Christian church.
  • Merchants – to monopolise important trading centres currently under Muslim control and earn money shipping crusaders to the Middle East.
  • Knights – to defend Christianity (its believers and holy places), follow the principles of chivalry and gain material wealth in this life and special favour in the next one."

“As the historian C. Tyerman points out in his God’s War, in many ways 1095 CE was the 1914 CE of the Middle Ages – a perfect storm of moral outrage, personal gain, institutionalised political and religious propaganda, peer pressure, societal expectations, and a thirst for adventure, which all combined to inspire people to leave their homes and embark on a perilous journey to a destination they knew nothing about and where they might meet glory and death or just death.” [1]

Responding to violence with Violence was the mistake the crusaders did and all it did was change the boundary lines of territories.?What did not happen was a change of heart in the Muslims to give up Jerusalem – a challenge that continues to this day with frequent violent clashes at the Temple of Jerusalem which is partially controlled by Waqf board.

Islamic Waqf runs the Temple Mount or Haram esh-Sharif since the Muslims under Saladin conquered it from the Latin (Christian) Kingdom of Jerusalem (Crusader State) in 1187. The Wakf objects to Israel having any authority on Temple Mount.

“It is estimated that waqf boards in India hold nearly 500,000 registered properties and tracts of land, making them among the top landowners in the country.” India will have the world’s largest Muslim population by 2050, according to a recent forecast by the Pew Research Center. [2]

The Muslim community which makes up around 13% of the population lags in employment and education since it primarily consists of converts from lower end of the society.?

Typically when the Muslim population reaches 50% the Shariah laws will be imposed with greater force and remaining population will be forced to follow the Shariah law.

Yet, the crusades remain a poor model to emulate as violence will engender more violence.?Better to cause a change of heart as give by Sri Caitanya Mahaprabu 540 years ago.

The timeline of the Great Crusades (1095-1291) follows [3]

Appendix:

The following is a list of events that occurred during the Great Crusades and covers the years 1095-1291.[1]

March 1095

Byzantium delegation asks for Urban's help against the Turks

November 27, 1095

Pope Urban II?preaches the First Crusade

1096

Fatimids retake Jerusalem from Seldjuks

spring,summer 1096

massacres of Jews

spring 1096

first wave (People's Crusade) leaves; 3 armies don't make it past Hungary

August 1, 1096

Peter the Hermit and Walter Sansavoir reach Constantinople

August 15, 1096

official start of First Crusade as set by?Pope Urban II

October 6, 1096

armies under Peter and Walter destroyed at Nicaea by Kilij Arslan

Fall 1096

leaders (and armies) of the second wave (official First Crusade) arrive at staggered times at Constantinople. Alexius I Comnenus asks for and receives oaths of fealty and promises to return lands formerly under Byzantine control

April 1097

crusaders cross the Bosporus

early June 1097

crusaders arrive at Nicaea, Kilij Arslan is absent, fighting Danishmend

June 19, 1097

Nicaea surrenders to Byzantium (not the crusaders)

June 26-28, 1097

crusaders head into Asia Minor

July 1, 1097

Turks under Kilij Arslan unsuccessfully attack the crusaders at Dorlyaeum

October 21, 1097

crusaders reach Antioch, which is ruled by Yaghi-Suyan

early February 1098

Muslim relief force under Kerbogha (Karbuqa) of Mosul heading to Antioch

February 6, 1098

Baldwin reaches Edessa (al-Ruha to Arabs) whose prince is Thoros

March 9, 1098

Thoros killed in riot

March 10, 1098

Baldwin takes control of Edessa. Start of the first Latin settlement in the East

June 2-3, 1098

Firuz, a garrison captain of Edessa, lets crusaders into city; Yaghi-Suyan flees; crusaders take city

June 5, 1098

Muslim army under Kerbogha arrives and besieges the crusaders in Antioch

June 14, 1098

crusaders believe they have found the Holy Lance

June 28, 1098

crusaders attack besiegers and win; they then decide to wait out the summer before continuing

August 1, 1098

Adhémar of Le Puy dies, exacerbating crusaders' leadership problems

mid-November 1098

armies of Raymond of St. Gilles and Robert of Flanders arrive at Ma'arat en Nu'man (rank-and-file force the march)

December 11-2, 1098

Ma'arat en Nu'man falls to the crusaders

1098 (sometime)

crusaders practice cannibalism at Ma'arra

January 13, 1099

rank-and-file force Raymond to continue to?Jerusalem

February/March 1099

rank-and-file at Antioch force continuance to Jerusalem

February 14, 1099

crusaders start to besiege 'Arqah

May 13, 1099

crusaders give up on siege of 'Arqah and continue to Jerusalem

June 6, 1099

Tancred seizes Bethelham

June 7, 1099

most of the crusaders arrive at Jerusalem

July 8, 1099

penitential procession of crusaders around Jerusalem

July 15, 1099

crusaders seize and sack Jerusalem

July 22, 1099

Godfrey elected ruler of settlement at Jerusalem

July 19, 1099

Pope Urban II dies, never hearing news of capture of Jerusalem

August 11-12, 1099

crusaders defeat Egyptian army at Ashdod

1099

al-Harawi of Damascus leads group of refugees to Baghdad to protest lack of action by leaders

1100

Baldwin becomes the first king of Jerusalem

summer 1100

Danishmend captures Bohemund

November 15, 1100

Pope Paschal II preaches crusade; threatens deserters and those with unfulfilled crusade vows with excommunication

1101

next wave of crusaders defeated in Asia Minor

1104

Baldwin takes Acre

1104

Muslims defeat Franks at Harran, stopping (momentarily at least) their eastward drive

1108

two coalitions, both of Franks and Muslims, fight near Tel Bashir

1109

Tripoli falls to the crusaders after 2000 days of siege

1110

Beirut and Saida seized by crusaders

1111

riot in Baghdad organized by Ibn al-Khashab (Aleppo's qadi) to try to get help against the Franks

1112

Muslims prevent Franks from seizing Tyre

1113

Order of St. John (the Hospitallers) starts

spring 1115

Muslims and Franks in Syria together fight Muhammad Ibn Malikshah, Seldjuk sultan

1119

Franks defeated at Sarmada by Ilghazi of Aleppo

1120

Order of the Knights Templar begins

July 1124

Franks seize Tyre and so occupy the coast to Ascalon

1125

in Beirut, peasants revolt

1125

Ibn al-Khashab killed by member(s) of the Assassins

1127

Zangi becomes ruler of Mosul

1128

Frankish attempt to seize Damascus fails

1128

Zangi gets control of Aleppo

1131

nobles revolt in the Latin kingdom of Jerusalem (the first such revolt)

1135

Zangi unsuccessful in attempt to take Damascus

1137

King Fulk of Jerusalem captured by Zangi and released

1139

Zangi besieges Damascus

1140

Damascus and Jerusalem ally against Zangi

1144

Zangi seizes Edessa, ending the first (of four) crusader states in the mideast

1146

Zangi murdered (reportedly by a slave), his son Nur al-Din inherits Aleppo

1147-1149

the Second Crusade, includes crusades in Spain, the eastern border of Germany as well as the middle east

1147

crusaders in Spain take Lisbon

1148

crusaders under Conrad of Germany and Louis VII of France besiege Damascus, giving up after Nur al-Din arrives at the request of Damascus

1154

Nur al-Din gets Damascus, unifying the parts of Syria that are Muslim

1163-1169

Nur al-Din's general Shirkuh fights for control of Egypt for Nur al-Din

1169

Shirkuh gets control of Egypt, becomes vizier, then dies within two months; he is succeeded by Saladin, his nephew

1170

Nur al-Din gets control of Mosul upon brother's death

1171

Saladin declares Fatimid control of Egypt is over and becomes sole ruler; start of Ayyubid dynasty; increasing tension between Nur al-Din and Saladin

1174

Nur al-Din dies, power struggle ensues for control of his son

1174

Saladin seizes Damascus

1183

Saladin seizes Aleppo, reuniting Egypt and Syria

1185

Saladin officially controls Egypt and Damascus, Aleppo and Mosul

July 4, 1187

Saladin defeats armies of the Frankish states at the Battle of Hattin

October 2, 1187

Saladin retakes Jerusalem and (about the same time) most of the land the Franks had controlled, leaving the Franks only Tyre, Tripoli, and Antioch

1189-1192

Third Crusade, major Franks were Richard I of England, Philip II of France, and Frederick I (the Holy Roman Emperor)

June 1190

Frederick I dies crossing the river Goksu

summer 1191

Richard and Philip arrive in the mideast, besiege Acre

July 1191

Acre falls to Richard and Philip, who then decide who will rule Jerusalem (between Guy and Conrad), Philip then leaves and Richard seizes Arsuf and Jaffa, refortifies Ascalon

September 2, 1192

Richard and Saladin sign a treaty, ending their fighting

October 9, 1192

Richard leaves the mideast

1193

Saladin dies, several years of civil war follow, until his brother al-Adil, takes control

spring 1197

Frederick I's son, Henry VI goes on crusade

September 28, 1197

Henry VI dies

July 1, 1198

Henry VI's nobles reach a treaty with Muslims and leave

1198

Order of Teutonic Knights begins (Acre is their main base)

1202-1204

Fourth Crusade

1202

some of the crusaders seize Zara from the king of Hungary, a fellow crusader, for the Venetians to earn fare

July 17, 1203

crusaders take Constantinople, put Alexius IV on the throne

late January 1204

Murzuphlus seizes throne and tries to expel crusaders

April 12, 1204

crusaders seize and sack Constantinople, found Latin Empire out of Byzantine lands; a government-in-exile formed

1209-1229

Albigensian crusade in southern France against Cathar heretics

1212

Children's Crusade

1213

Pope Innocent III begins planning the Fifth Crusade

1215

imposition of a crusade tax (on Church estates)

July 16, 1216

Innocent III dies, planning continued by successor, Pope Honorius III

1217-1229

Fifth Crusade, consists of various attacks on Egypt

1217-1218

Andrew II of Hungary tries for Acre

1219-1221

crusade in Egypt led by Cardinal Pelagius; he seized Damietta and tried to take Cairo but was defeated by al-Kamil, Egypt's sultan

1227

Genghis Khan dies; ensuing wars for succession lessen Mongol threat for a time

1228-1229

Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II, while under papal interdict, crusades in Egypt; al-Kamil gives him Jerusalem under a treaty; Jerusalem then under interdict

1219

Francis of Assisi fails to convert al-Kamil, sultan of Egypt

1230

Teutonic Knights start attacking Prussia

1235

Byzantines have retaken Asia Minor

1236

Ferdinand III of Castile begins attack on Cordova

1238

army of Aragon takes Valencia

1239-1241

Theobald of Champage and Richard of Cornwall lead a small crusade

1244

Franks lose Jerusalem for the final time

1245

Pope Innocent IV sends missionaries to Mongols; other negotiations follow

1247

Louis IX plans crusade; Frederick keeps al-Kamil's son, Ayyub, informed of plans

1248-1254

Sixth Crusade

1248-1250

Louis IX of France invades Egypt; he seizes Damietta, but is defeated and captured at the Mansurah; released for ransom (and Damietta)

1248-1250

end of Ayyubid dynasty, Mamluks now control Egypt

by 1251

M?ngke, grandson of Genghis Khan, controls Mongols

February 1258

Mongols under Hülegü (Genghis Khan's grandson) take Baghdad, kill the last 'Abbasid caliph; the population is massacred

December 1259

Qutuz becomes leader of Egypt in coup

January 1260

Mongols under Hülegü take Aleppo

March 1, 1260

Mongols under Hülegü take Damascus

1260

M?ngke dies; Hülegü returns to fight for succession

September 3, 1260

battle of 'Ayn Jalut: Mamluks under Qutuz defeat Mongols

September 8, 1260

Mamluks take Damascus

October 23, 1260

Baybars kills Qutuz and becomes sultan; he controls Cairo without a fight but there is some conflict

July 25, 1261

Byzantines recapture Constantinople, end of Latin Empire

1265

Hülegü dies

May 18, 1268

Baybars seizes Antioch (formerly allied to Mongols)

1268

Baybars seizes Jaffa

1270

Seventh Crusade: Louis IX attacks Tunis

August 25, 1270

Louis IX dies near Tunis

1277

Baybars is poisoned and dies; Qalawun becomes sultan

April 26 or 27, 1289

Qalawun, the Mamluk sultan, retakes Tripoli from Franks

November 1290

Qalawun dies; his son Khalil assumes power

June 17, 1291

Khalil retakes Acre, ending what we are defining as the Great Crusades; crusaders fall back to Cyprus

References:

1.??????https://brewminate.com/the-crusades-causes-and-goals/

2.??????https://www.reuters.com/article/us-india-landrights-waqf-idUSKBN16D1TN

3.??????https://websites.umich.edu/~marcons/Crusades/timeline/detailedtimeline.html 4.???

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