
Jerusalem
Captured During First Crusade
July 14, 1099

Kalini
Castle
(Built during the first crusade as a staging post
for knights going to the Holy Land)
During
the First Crusade, Christian knights from Europe
capture Jerusalem after seven weeks of siege and
begin massacring the city's Muslim and Jewish
population.
Beginning in the 11th century, Christians in
Jerusalem were increasingly persecuted by the
city's Islamic rulers, especially when control of
the holy city passed from the relatively tolerant
Egyptians to the Seljuk Turks in 1071. Late in
the century, Byzantine Emperor Alexius Comenus,
also threatened by the Seljuk Turks, appealed to
the West for aid. In 1095, Pope Urban II publicly
called for a crusade to aid Eastern Christians
and recover the holy lands. The response by
Western Europeans was immediate.
The first crusaders were actually undisciplined
hordes of French and German peasants who met with
little success. One group, known as the
"People's Crusade," reached as far as
Constantinople before being annihilated by the
Turks. In 1096, the main crusading force,
featuring some 4,000 mounted knights and 25,000
infantry, began to move east. Led by Raymond of
Toulouse, Godfrey of Bouillon, Robert of
Flanders, and Bohemond of Otranto, the army of
Christian knights crossed into Asia Minor in
1097.
In June, the crusaders captured the Turkish-held
city of Nicaea and then defeated a massive army
of Seljuk Turks at Dorylaeum. From there, they
marched on to Antioch, located on the Orontes
River below Mount Silpius, and began a difficult
six-month siege during which they repulsed
several attacks by Turkish relief armies.
Finally, early in the morning of June 3, 1098,
Bohemond persuaded a Turkish traitor to open
Antioch's Bridge Gate, and the knights poured
into the city. In an orgy of killing, the
Christians massacred thousands of enemy soldiers
and citizens, and all but the city's fortified
citadel was taken. Later in the month, a large
Turkish army arrived to attempt to regain the
city, but they too were defeated, and the Antioch
citadel surrendered to the Europeans.
After resting and reorganizing for six months,
the crusaders set off for their ultimate goal,
Jerusalem. Their numbers were now reduced to some
1,200 cavalry and 12,000 foot soldiers. On June
7, 1099, the Christian army reached the holy
city, and finding it heavily fortified, began
building three enormous siege towers. By the
night of July 13, the towers were complete, and
the Christians began fighting their way across
Jerusalem's walls. On July 14, Godfrey's men were
the first to penetrate the defenses, and the Gate
of Saint Stephen was opened. The rest of the
knights and soldiers then poured in, the city was
captured, and tens of thousands of its occupants
were slaughtered.
The crusaders had achieved their aims, and
Jerusalem was in Christian hands, but an Egyptian
army marched on the holy city a few weeks later
to challenge their claim. The Egyptians' defeat
by the outnumbered Christians in August ended
Muslim resistance to the Europeans for the time
being, and five small Christian states were set
up in the region under the rule of the leaders of
the crusade.
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