שיחה:מסע הצלב של 1101

תוכן הדף אינו נתמך בשפות אחרות.
מתוך ויקיפדיה, האנציקלופדיה החופשית

דיווח על טעות[עריכת קוד מקור]

פרטי הדיווח[עריכת קוד מקור]

בדומה למסעות הצלב הצפוניים לא שמעתי על מסע הצלב הזה ואין לערך או קישורים לדפים שבהם מוזכר ומשום כך אני מציע לעלות אותו להצבעת מחיקה או לכל הפחות להציב תבנית שלערך אין מקורות. דווח על ידי: מתניה סעיד 31.44.129.248 14:49, 16 בפברואר 2016 (IST)[תגובה]

  • Runciman, Steven (1951) A History of the Crusades, vol. 2: The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Frankish East, 1100-1187, Cambridge University Press. p. 22-24.


1101-1102: the Crusade of the Faint-hearted (coda to the First Crusade). Pope Paschal II, taking up where his predecessor Pope Urban II left off, preached another crusade to aid the fledgling Kingdom of Jerusalem. He called in particular upon those who had taken but failed to fulfill the crusader vow but had not fulfilled it, whom he threatened with excommunication, and those who had left the First Crusade before it reached Jerusalem (the “faint-hearted”). The result was another large, disorganized crusade, even more heterogeneous and far less successful than the First. The largest contingent was townspeople and peasants from Lombardy (northern Italy). Others came from various parts of France and Germany. Among the Crusades’ leaders were Count Stephen of Blois and Count Hugh of Vermandois, both seeking to restore the honor they had lost by leaving the First Crusade prematurely. (Stephen’s ignominious flight from the Crusade during the dark days of the siege of Antioch mortified his wife Countess Adela, the daughter of King William the Conqueror; she nagged him into going back to restore her honor.] The crusade of 1101 was almost annihilated in Asia Minor by the Seljuqs.