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The impact of the crusades

By Dr. Susanna Throop
Wall plaque, Ascalon, mid-twelfth to mid-thirteenth century. The Arabic inscription commemorates the wall built as defense against crusaders. The arms of Sir Hugh Wake (Lincoln, England) were later carved over that, confirming the 1241 crusader reconquest of the city (Israel Museum, Jerusalem; photo: Google Arts & Culture)
Wall plaque, Ascalon, mid-twelfth to mid-thirteenth century. The Arabic inscription commemorates the wall built as defense against crusaders. The arms of Sir Hugh Wake (Lincoln, England) were later carved over that, confirming the 1241 crusader reconquest of the city (Israel Museum, Jerusalem; photo: Google Arts & Culture)
It is hard to summarize the impact of a movement that spanned centuries and continents, crossed social lines, and affected all levels of culture. However, there are a few central effects that can be highlighted.

Military orders

First, the earliest military orders originated in Jerusalem in the wake of the First Crusade. A miltary order is a religious order in which members take traditional monastic vows—communal poverty, chastity, and obedience—but also commit to violence on behalf of the Christian faith. Well-known examples include the Knights Templar (officially endorsed in 1129), the Knights Hospitaller (confirmed by papal bull in 1113), and the Teutonic Knights (originated in the late twelfth century).
The military orders represented a major theological and military development, and went on to play central roles in the formation of key political units that still exist today as nation-states.
Fall of Jerusalem, from William of Tyre, History of Outremer, c. 1350, MS. French 352, fol. 62r, Paris (Bibliothèque Nationale de France, Paris)
Fall of Jerusalem, from William of Tyre, History of Outremer, c. 1350, MS. French 352, fol. 62r, Paris (Bibliothèque Nationale de France, Paris)

Territorial expansion

Second, crusading played a major role in European territorial expansion. The First Crusade resulted in the formation of the crusader states in the Levant (the eastern Mediterranean), which were initially governed, and in small part populated, by settlers from Europe.
Crusading in northern and eastern Europe led to the expansion of kingdoms like Denmark and Sweden, as well as the creation of brand-new political units, for example in Prussia. As areas around the Baltic Sea were taken by the crusaders, traders and settlers—mostly German—moved in and profited economically.
In the Mediterranean Sea, crusading led to the conquest and colonization of many islands, which arguably helped ensure Christian control of Mediterranean trade routes (at least for as long as the islands were held). Crusading also played a role in the conquest of the Iberian peninsula (now Spain and Portugal). This was finally completed in 1492, when the Spanish monarchs Ferdinand II and Isabella I conquered the last Muslim community on the peninsula—the city of Granada. They expelled Jews from the country in the same year. And of course, they also authorized and supported the expeditions of Christopher Columbus, who—like many European explorers of his day—believed that the expansion of the Christian faith was one of his duties.
Tympanum above the south door of St. George's Church, Fordington, Dorset, early 12th century (photo: Michael Day, CC BY-NC 2.0)
Tympanum above the south door of St. George's Church, Fordington, Dorset, early 12th century (photo: Michael Day, CC BY-NC 2.0)

Impact in Europe (religious and secular)

Third, the crusading movement impacted internal European development in a few important ways. The movement helped both to militarize the medieval western Church and to sustain criticism of that militarization. It arguably helped solidify the pope’s control over the Church and made certain financial innovations central to Church operations. And it both reflected and influenced devotional trends. For example, while there was some dedication to St. George from the early Middle Ages, the intensity of that devotion soared in Europe after he reportedly intervened miraculously at the Battle of Antioch in 1098, during the First Crusade.
Secular political theories were influenced by crusading, especially in France and the Iberian peninsula, and government institutions evolved in part to meet the logistical needs of crusading. Credit infrastructures within Europe rose to meet similar needs, and some locales—Venice, in particular—benefitted significantly in economic terms.
It goes without saying that the crusades also had a highly negative effect on interfaith relations.

Impact world-wide

Fourth, the crusading movement has left an imprint on the world as a whole. For example, many of the national flags of Europe incorporate a cross. In addition, many images of crusaders in our popular culture are indebted to the nineteenth century. Some in that century, like the novelist Sir Walter Scott, portrayed crusaders as brave and glamorous yet backward and unenlightened; simultaneously, they depicted Muslims as heroic, intelligent, and liberal. Others more wholeheartedly romanticized crusading.
George Inness, Classical Landscape (March of the Crusaders), 1850, oil on canvas (Fruitlands Museum, Harvard, Massachusetts)
George Inness, Classical Landscape (March of the Crusaders), 1850, oil on canvas (Fruitlands Museum, Harvard, Massachusetts)
These trends in nineteenth-century European culture impacted the Islamic world. Sometimes this influence was quite direct. In 1898 German Emperor Wilhelm II visited the grave of Saladin (Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn Yūsuf ibn Ayyūb, a Muslim leader who led the recapture of Jerusalem in 1187) and was appalled at its state of disrepair. He paid to have it rebuilt, thus helping encourage modern Islamic appreciation of Saladin.
Kaiser Wilhelm II, visit to Jerusalem, 1898 (Library of Congress)
Kaiser Wilhelm II, visit to Jerusalem, 1898 (Library of Congress)
Sometimes the European influence was more diffuse. Modern crusading histories in the Islamic world began to be written in the 1890s, when the
was in crisis. After the Ottomans, some Arab Nationalists interpreted nineteenth-century imperialism as crusading, and thus linked their efforts to end imperial rule with the efforts of Muslims to resist crusading in previous centuries.
It would be reassuring to believe that nobody in the West has provided grounds for such beliefs, but it would not be true. Sadly, the effects of the crusading movement—at least, as it is now remembered and reimagined—seem to be still unfolding.

Want to join the conversation?

  • aqualine ultimate style avatar for user rdeyke
    Aren't you forgetting the most important impact of the crusades? Before the crusades, the Middle East was an enlightened, tolerant, multi-religious society ruled by Arabs. The crusaders destroyed that forever. After the crusades, the Middle East was a lot less enlightened, less tolerant, more homogeneously Muslim, and ruled by the Turks who finally drove out the crusaders.
    (5 votes)
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    • aqualine tree style avatar for user David Alexander
      Yes, the fact that there were many sides in the war known as the crusades is often ignored when one only looks at a single facet. There were the European crusaders (whose side is emphasized from Europe); the Muslim defenders (whose side in the whole thing doesn't get told in the West); and the Orthodox in between (whom both sides squeezed). We also mainly hear about the military, political and religious leaders, and not much about the peasants, serfs and individual believers (and non believers) among each group.
      (4 votes)
  • stelly orange style avatar for user lily!!1!
    my history techer make me study crysades im gonna cry i just wanna study about acient greese i loved ancien greece
    (2 votes)
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  • stelly orange style avatar for user 🌟Z⭐
    why did the Crusades happen
    (1 vote)
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    • aqualine tree style avatar for user David Alexander
      No historical event has happened for a single reason.
      The crusades can be seen as the product of a political process that wanted to control more area around the sea.
      The crusades can be seen as the product of power politics in Western Europe that needed a vent for rebellious and adventurous forces so they wouldn't make trouble at home.
      The crusades can be seen as a commercial enterprise aimed to bring profit to the companies that sold armor, horses, weapons and supplies to soldiers.
      The crusades can be seen as a misguided and misapplied sense of religion.

      This kind of a list could go on and on. Is this enough?
      (1 vote)