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Background to the holy wars and the
First Crusade's conquest of Jerusalem, a holy city for Jews, Christians and
Muslims.
The Crusades: An Arab Perspective is a four-part
documentary series telling the dramatic story of the Crusades seen through Arab
eyes, from the seizing of Jerusalem under Pope Urban II in 1099, to its
recapture by Salah ad-Din (also known as Saladin), Richard the Lionheart's
efforts to regain the city, and the end of the holy wars in 1291. In part one,
we explore the history of the First Crusade and the conquest of Jerusalem.
The Crusades are the epitome of "holy war". Yet the roots of
this 200-year conflict lay not just in religion, but also in the economic
condition of medieval Europe.
"Around the time of the Crusades,
Europe experienced several droughts which made people lose faith in
everything," says Antoine Domit, history
professor at the Lebanese University.
A struggle between church and state was taking place in Europe: Who
would rule over the people of Europe, the pope or the king?
After centuries of European domination, largely through the armies of
imperial Rome, the Mediterranean basin had fallen firmly under Muslim control.
So the Muslims surrounded Europe, from Spain in the west to the eastern
Mediterranean in the east.
"For Europeans, the east is 'A Thousand and One Nights'. It
represents wealth, beautiful clothing, young concubines, thriving public life,
songs and culture," says Elias al-Kattar, history professor at the
Lebanese University.
While the Muslim east lived in prosperity, Europe had slipped into
relative poverty and conflict.
"Medieval western society was a feudal society, which meant that
you had the aristocracy in charge of a large amount of people that had no land
possessions," says Jan Vendeburie, of the School of History, University of
Kent.
Ishaaq Abaid, history professor at Ain
Shams University, explains that "only one percent of people who had the titles of 'count', 'duke' or
'baron', owned all the agricultural lands. Ninety-nine percent of the European
population were called serfs and worked on these lands."
Most Europeans in the 11th century lived in poverty and were struggling
to survive, while war and conflict among knights were part of everyday life.