Crusader States
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The Crusader states were a number of mostly 12th- and 13th-century feudal states created by Western European crusaders in Asia Minor and the Holy Land (the historical Palestine). They were eventually reconquered by Middle Eastern Islamic powers. The name has also been applied to other territorial gains (often small and short-lived) made by medieval Christendom against Muslim and pagan adversaries.
Facing Islam
While the Reconquista, the centuries long fight to reconquer the Iberian peninsula from the Arabo-Barbaresque Moors (who called it al-Andalus), fills all the criteria for crusades, it is not customary to call the resulting Catholic principalities there Crusader states.The term is usually reserved for the more aggressive (and ultimatley unsuccessful) crusades:
In the Levant
The first four Crusader states were created in the Levant immediately after the First Crusade:
- The first Crusader state, the County of Edessa, was founded in 1098.
- The Principality of Antioch, historically in Syria, but Turkish since 1939, seat of an old patriarchate
- The County of Tripoli (the Lebanese city, not the Libyan capital)
- The Kingdom of Jerusalem lasted until 1291, when the city of Acre fell. There were also many vassals of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, the four major lordships (seigneuries) being:
- * The Principality of Galilee
- * The County of Jaffa and Ascalon
- * The Lordship of Oultrejordain
- * The Lordship of Sidon
Cyprus
During the Third Crusade, Crusaders founded the Kingdom of Cyprus. Richard I of England conquered Cyprus on the way to Holy Land, and the island came to be ruled by descendants of the displaced kings of Jerusalem until 1489.In Greece
During the Fourth Crusade, the Byzantine Empire was conquered and divided into four states:
- The Latin Empire, in Constantinople (never plundered so badly), forcing the 'Greek' Byzantine emperor to reside in Nicaea
- The Kingdom of Thessalonica
- The Duchy of Athens (Catalans)
- The Principality of Achaea
- The Venetians also created the Duchy of the Archipelago (also known as the Duchy of Naxos) in the Aegean Sea in the aftermath of the Fourth Crusade. Thessalonica and the Latin Empire were reconquered by the Byzantines by 1261. Descendants of the Crusaders continued to rule in Athens and the Peloponnesus or Morea until the 15th century when the area was conquered by the Ottoman Empire.
- The military order of the Knights Hospitaller of Saint John established itself on Rhodes (and several other Aegean islands; see below) in 1310, with regular influx of new blood, until the Ottomans finally drove them out (to Malta) in 1522.
- *the island of Kastellorizo (like Rhodes part of the Aegean Dodecannesos) was in 1309 taken by the Knights of St. John Hospitaller of Jerusalem, but fell under Egyptian (Ottoman) occupation 1440 until 1450, was then ruled by the Kingdom of Naples, and since 1635 under Venetian rule (as Castellorosso; still only Catholic states, not counting the Muslims), since 1686 again part of the Ottoman Empire, finally since 1821 - 1833 under Greek (i.e. orthodox) control during the Greek war of independence.
- *other neighbouring territories temporarily under the order were: the cities of Smyrna (now Izmir; 1344-1402), Attaleia (now Antalya; 1361-1373 and Bodrum (1412-14..), all three in Anatolia, the Turkish homeland; the Greek Isthmus city of Corinth (1397-1404)), the city of Salona (ancient Amphissa; 1407-1410) and the islands of Ikaria (1424-1521) and Kos (1215-1522), all now in Greece
Minor Mediterranean fiefs
Even though these are so small that they usually get forgotten there have been various other feudal entities (statehood is a rather blurred concept in European Feudalism) resulting from minor crusading against Islam in the Mediterranean, such as:Sources and references
- Westermann, Großer Atlas zur Weltgeschichte (in German)
- [WorldStatesmen- see each present country]
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