用戶:Hinnia/沙盒/History Notes (Leadership
First Crusade Leadership 編輯
Leadership 編輯
- Certainly responsible for success
- No single commander in chief
- No kings
- Henry IV and Philip I excommunicated
- Princes from various parts of Europe
Initial Division 編輯
Attitude towards Pope 編輯
- German and Lotharingians supporters of Henry IV
- Raymond of Toulouse supported Pope
Attitude towards Alexius 編輯
- Raymond of Toulouse was happy to swear Allegiance
- Bohemond did not wish to be subject to Alexius’s power
Attitude towards Power and Land 編輯
- Bohemond and Tancred seeking land
- Robert of Normandy seeking indulgence
First Wave: People’s Crusade 編輯
- Peasants army led by Peter the Hermit and Walter Sansavoir
- Caused a lot of trouble
- Shipped across to Asia Minor within a week
- Slaughtered by Kilij Arslan
- Shows how terrible the crusade could have gone without good leadership even with a divided Muslim enemy
Council of Princes 編輯
- If the crusade was to succeed
- Had to overcome differences
- Set hierarchical chain of command
- Provided a forum in the absence of a single commander for decisions to be reached jointly
- Took Nicea
- With the help of Tacticius
- Two wave strategy
- Worked well
- Suck up pressure from Kilij Arslan
- Dorylaeum
- Bohemond and Robert of Normandy attacked by the Turks
- Two princes took up a defensive position
- With the support of the second wave made the Turks retreat
- Secures Asia Minor
Bohemond Leadership 編輯
Capture of Antioch 編輯
- Foraging Strategy
- Raymond foraged in Ruj Valley
- Tancred in areas surrounding Harim
- Ensured supplies
- Helped them survive
- Financial Support
- Raymond of Toulouse was very wealthy
- Used this money to help the Crusaders
- Built La Mahomerie
- Secret Negotiations
- Negotiations with someone inside the city
- Allowed access to Antioch
Secure of Antioch 編輯
- Bridge Gate
- Arranged for his troops to leavee
- Kerbogha’s troops at other gates would not be able to reach him as the river blocked their path
- 7 divisions
- Each with a clear leader
- Help keep the army in formation
- Thinned out force of Kerbogha
- While convincing Kerbogha that his army was not an all-out offensive
- Kept back extra troops in a separate division
- Rearguard
- Stopped Kerbogha’s first relief force from supporting main force
Siege of Jerusalem 編輯
- 5 weeks, rather than 7.5 months like Antioch
- Tactical genius shown
- Crusade leadership maintain unity to the end
- Range of strategies
- Siege tower to enter Jerusalem
- Eastern wall (vulnerable)
Other factors 編輯
Popular pressure 編輯
- Disagreements after the siege of Antioch
- Crusade faced paralysis
- Stopped for 6 months
- Only because of popular pressure that the First Crusade continued
Muslim World 編輯
- Divided into Shia and Sunni
- Sunni would rather align with Crusaders against Shia and vice versa
- Key Central Leaders died at the same time
- Caused political fragmentation
- By 1097-99 there was a power vacuum in Asia Miinor
- Princes faced small rival lordships
- Muslims failed to recognise the crusade as an army of religious conquest
- Gave the Crusaders an advantage
Second Crusade Leadership 編輯
Leaders 編輯
- Eugenius has tight control of preaching
- No peoples crusade
- Proper Kings
- Louis VII, the king of France
- Conrad III, the king of Germany
- State power and resources
- Unified before heading to Outremer
- Louis deliberately went with Conrad by land
- Avoid antagonising Conrad
- Conrad was in conflict with Scicily
- In return Conrad offered fleet at Regensburg
- Supposed to be successful
- Not the case
- Failure largely due to bad leadership
German Campaign (Octobebr 1147 to June 1148) 編輯
- Departed with 8 days of supplies, estimating a 20-day journey
- Assuming they could acquire supplies along the way
- Plan did not go as expected
- Overconfidence and the lack of control by Manuel I
- The crusaders were ambushed by the Turks near Dorylaeum.
- Retreat to Nicaea with a casualty rate of around 17 percent.
Failure to consult leaders of the crusader states 編輯
- Did not consult with the leaders of Outremer (the Crusader states)
- Initial goal: recapture Edessa
- But was destroyed in 1146
- Still had same goal in 1148 (Conrad letter)
- Spent four months to establish new goal
- Hindered progress into Outremer
- Incurred additional expenses
- Did not adequately respond to the needs of all the Crusader states
- Antioch plan, which reflected northern interests
- Jerusalem plan, which focused on the threat faced by the south
- Decided to head south to Damascus
- Contributed to delays and misalignment of objectives during the Second Crusade.
Siege of Damascus 1148 編輯
- Began successfully
- Attack by King Baldwin III's troops supported by Louis VII's soldiers.
- Conrad III made significant gains
- Goal was to attack the city walls and defeat the garrison
- Changed their plan and attacked a weak point in the eastern walls.
- Bad decision
- No water or food
- Exhaustion and retreat after three days.
- Ended unsuccessfully.
Other factors 編輯
Muslim world 編輯
- Far more untied
- Much more powerful enemy when compared with first crusade
- 1105: Al Sulami first preaches jihad
- 1146 Nur ad-Din deployed Jihad
Lack of support from the Byzantines 編輯
- First Crusade received support from the Byzantine Empire
- Taticius sent to provide crucial guidance and support in battle.
- Second Crusade Manuel I did not have good relations with the two kings
- He did not provide the same support
- Also had a treaty with the Turks
- Betrayed the crusader’s location or plans for their enemy
Third Crusade 編輯
Greater Enemy 編輯
- Saladin
- United Syria and Egypt
- 1187: Captured Jerusalem in the Battle of Hattin
- Christian control of Outremer reduced to Tripoli and Antioch.
- 1189: Crusader states were in a desperate situation.
- In the Third crusade
- Saladin was at the peak of Jihadi strength
- Meanwhile in the second crusade
- The crusaders faced a Muslim enemy at the beginning of Jihadi strength
German First Wave 編輯
- Most effective crusading first wave
- Led by Frederick Barbarossa of Germany, aged 70, with 15k soldiers.
- However
- German participation began and ended unsuccessfully before Richard I and Philip II arrived.
- Byzantine had grown closer to the Turks
- Had an agreement with Saladin to delay the German journey.
- Frederick's army faced challenges and was not welcomed in the Byzantine Empire.
- Isaac prevented markets from being set up, cutting off German supplies.
- Troops seized control of Plovdiv
- Achieved a decisive victory against the Byzantines at Dhidimotikon.
- Frederick's troops were allowed to cross the Dardanelles in March.
- Captured Konya
- Frederick drowned while crossing River Goksu
- Frederick's death fractured the army and prevented it from turning the tide of the siege.
Richard I's Leadership 編輯
Sicily 編輯
- Went to Messina to collect his sister's dowry from Count Tancred of Lecce.
- Tancred refused
- Richard attacked Messina and gained control on October 4.
- Richard extorted 40,000 gold ounces from Tancred to finance the crusade.
Cyprus 編輯
- Encountered missing ships that were stranded on Cyprus when leaving Sicily
- Invaded Cyprus
- Sold the island to the Templars for 100,000 bezants.
Acre 編輯
- Philip arrived at Acre providing vital support for the siege.
- Richard joined Philip with his fleet and participated in the siege.
- Together, their forces destroyed the walls of Acre, and the Muslim garrison surrendered.
- A month-long argument over the king of Jerusalem delayed progress after the surrender.
- Guy became king for life, followed by Conrad.
- Philip returned to France on July 31, 1191, leaving Richard as the clear commander of the crusade.
Jaffa 編輯
- Richard initiated a plan to reclaim territory along the coast of Outremer
- Began a 70-mile march towards Jaffa.
- Well organised army
- Knights divided into three divisions and marching in columns.
- Infantry protected the knights from raids and surprise attacks
- Baggage train marched on the right.
- Leadership and careful planning ensured the safe arrival of the crusaders at Jaffa.
- Monitored the march formation closely and made preparations to maintain its integrity.
Consulting Local Leaders 編輯
- Goal of the Third Crusade: Recapture Jerusalem
- Army advanced towards Jerusalem
- Listened to advice from the Templars and Hospitallers
- Believed that the army could not win and that dealing with Saladin was necessary.
- Turned back to refortify the abandoned city of Ascalon.
- Sought a truce with Saladin
- Christians retaining control of the coastal territory
- Christian pilgrims allowed access to Jerusalem's holy shrines.
However 編輯
*Most disunited leadership
Angevian Capetian conflict 編輯
- Long-term rivalry
- Frederick Barbarossa and Richard are both effective leaders
- The rivalries between Richard and Philip hindered the Third Crusade to some extent
Betrothal of Richard and Alice 編輯
- Richard wanted to marry Berengaria of Navarre
- For an alliance against his old enemy Count Raymond of Toulouse.
- but was already betrothed to Alice, Philip's sister
- He hid this plan from Philip.
Rival claims to Jerusalem 編輯
- Two rival claimants:
- Conrad: Philip’s cousin
- Guy: feudatory of Richard
- Increased the strain on the crusade
- When Richard arrived at Tyre on 6 June
- Conrad refused to allow him entry
- Richard forced to sail directly to Acre and begin the siege without any respite
- Caused delay in the attempt to retake Jerusalem