On the heels of the Crusades, a new attitude towards women began to manifest itself in Europe. |
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Yet in spite of the fanatical beliefs of both sides, there were examples of restraint and even of chivalry in the Crusades. |
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The Crusades were a series of military campaigns during the time of Medieval England against the Muslims of the Middle East. |
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St. Jacques, a heroic fighter involved in the Crusades, was the exact double of Ogoun Ferraille, a powerful warrior spirit. |
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These tales were set in different eras ranging from Arthurian times to the Crusades, in Carthage, the Boer War and in Australia. |
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To be sure, the Carthusian order, founded by Saint Bruno in 1084, was home to accomplished steel workers who provided armament for the Crusades. |
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The Crusades did manage to reduce the number of quarrelsome and contentious knights in Europe. |
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The Crusades and their failures made western military men attentive to the multitudes of the Saracens. |
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Saladin and Richard the Lionheart are two names that tend to dominate the Crusades. |
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It may surprise some to learn that the Crusades were almost never profitable, since booty was so scarce. |
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And the surreal and brutal slaughter, violence and bloodletting equals the Crusades. |
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The fret itself is an interwoven cross with a mascle, and both are indicative of service in the Crusades. |
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We have lived through Crusades, Spanish inquisitions, blood libels, pogroms, persecutions, mass murders, and gassings. |
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Are exposed there wooden sculptures and a thorn of Christ's crown, which was brought back from Crusades by a member of Tournemire family. |
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Introdused in France at the time of the Crusades, the sugar improved appreciably candying methods by cooking and soaking fruit in sugar syrup. |
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The first of early Crusades were part of a religious revivalism. |
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Some claim that a French dog descended from stock brought home from the Middle East by Louis IX during the Crusades also figured prominently in the mix. |
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Naker, small kettledrum that reached Europe from the Middle East in the 13th century, during the Crusades. |
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In the time of the Crusades, the adventures of Sir Thibaud, a young knight smitten with justice and liberty. |
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In Europe, evidence for the use of drums is hazy before the 13th century, when small kettledrums and tabors of Arab or Saracen origin were brought back from the Crusades. |
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For Muslims on the other hand, The Crusades are not at all a taken-for-granted, dead or emotionless issue. |
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Small paired kettledrums called naqqāra reached Europe by the 13th century via the Crusades and became known as nakers. |
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Medieval England was to gain a great deal from the Crusades. |
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When soldiers returning from the Crusades introduced wind technology to Europe in the eleventh century, the windmill helped usher in the Industrial Revolution. |
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Relive the historic Crusades in four campaigns as Richard the Lionheart and Saladin, the Sultan of Syria. |
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In times of danger, during the Crusades, smoke signals were relayed between Saladin's Castle, Marqab, Safita and Crac des Chevaliers, our next stop. |
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He has fought with beasts in the Neanderthal era, with infidels in the Crusades, with demons in his mind, and finally, with men in the twentieth century. |
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The Albigensians, a name given traditionally after the Crusades, are thus a branch of Mani and the Paraclete's Church. |
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The coat of arms of Cherbourg dates from the late 12th century, at the time of the Crusades. |
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During the Reconquista and the Crusades, the cross served the symbolic function of possession that a flag would occupy today. |
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Genoa began to gain autonomy from the Holy Roman Empire around 1096, becoming a medieval commune and participating in the First Crusades. |
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The Venetian navy was used in the Crusades, most notably in the Fourth Crusade. |
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Among these were the Crusades and the Franciscan and flagellant movements. |
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As a result of the Northern Crusades in the Middle Ages, Estonia's upper class had been mostly of German origin until well into the 20th century. |
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The West responded with the Crusades, eventually resulting in the Sack of Constantinople by participants in the Fourth Crusade. |
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The result was a series of western European military campaigns into the eastern Mediterranean, known as the Crusades. |
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In the aftermath of Northern Crusades William of Modena as Papal legate solved the disputes between the crusaders in Livonia and Prussia. |
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Even France, once a fervent participant of the Crusades, became an ally of the Ottomans. |
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Preached by a monk, and better than pilgrimages, the Crusades wanted to outdo Christ in hastening the accomplishment of the Reign, returning to the ideal of witness by blood, at the heart of the mystic search. |
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After the Music Room and the Whirling Dervishes of Damascus, he calls upon the timeless art of the qasida to evoke the Levant of the Crusades through the emblematic figure of Prince Usama. |
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He then brings them to the arrival of the Crusades or to the capture of Constantinople by the Turks and the entry of Mahomet II into the Hagia Sophia. |
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While trusting Amauri was away on the Crusades, lonely Berthe fell for the chiselled good looks of Amey de Montfaucon, a young knight who oh-so-conveniently arrived at the Chateau to have some trifling wounds tended. |
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By Shakespeare's time, the church was already nearly 500 years old, crammed with crumbling tombs and memorials, some of them dating back to the Crusades. |
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Its history is punctuated by the exalted summits of mysticism, culture and charity, but also by abuses of feudal power, the horror of the Crusades, the Inquisition and wars of religion. |
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Luxuries from the Eastern world, brought home during the Crusades, increased the prosperity of Genoa and Venice. |
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Besides the Crusades and monastic reforms, people sought to participate in new forms of religious life. |
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The English King Richard I agreed to terminate the arrangement in 1189, in return for a large sum of money needed for the Crusades. |
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The West responded with the Crusades, eventually resulting in the Sack of Constantinople by participants of the Fourth Crusade. |
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When seeking to explain this change in the complexity and style of castles, antiquarians found their answer in the Crusades. |
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The Crusades also led to the introduction of machicolations into Western architecture. |
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Beginning with the Crusades, Europeans rediscovered spices, silks, and other commodities rare in Europe. |
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In 2005, he made the modestly successful Kingdom of Heaven, a film about the Crusades. |
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The enthusiastic response to Urban's preaching from all classes across Western Europe established a precedent for subsequent Crusades. |
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The Crusades also reinforced the connection between Western Christendom, feudalism, and militarism. |
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For the first time, reigning monarchs not only swore their support to the Crusades but endeavoured to take part in them. |
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The Crusades also had a role in the creation and institutionalisation of the military and Dominican orders as well as the Medieval Inquisition. |
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Gamal Abdel Nasser likened himself to Saladin and imperialism to the Crusades. |
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An essay collection on the topic was published in 2001, under the title Gendering the Crusades. |
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The cross of Saint Andrew was taken from Greece during the Crusades by the Duke of Burgundy. |
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The naval ability of the Normans would allow them to conquer England and southern Italy, and play a key role in the Crusades. |
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The idea of a trust originated during the Crusades of the 12th century, when noblemen travelled abroad to fight in the Holy Land. |
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Personal trust law developed in England at the time of the Crusades, during the 12th and 13th centuries. |
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Examples include the 13th century Albigensian Crusade and the Northern Crusades. |
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Likewise, the inhabitants of conquered cities were frequently massacred during the Crusades against the Muslims in the 11th and 12th centuries. |
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From 1095 under the pontificate of Urban II, the Crusades were launched. |
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The eagleeyed archer returns from the Crusades only to embark on a battle for justice at home where the corrupt Earl Marshal of England plans treachery. |
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St George rose to high popularity as a warrior saint during the time of the Crusades, but he had no special identity as a patron saint of England during the High Middle Ages. |
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Cistercian monks have lovingly raised him, and as the story begins, Tristam at 15 is invited to accompany Sir Thomas, a Knight Templar, to the Crusades. |
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The Crusades provided an enormous amount of source material, stories of heroism and interest that underpinned growth in medieval literature, romance and philosophy. |
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In northern Europe the Saxons and Danes fought against Wends in the Wendish Crusade, although no official papal bulls were issued authorising new Crusades. |
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The period also saw the innovation of granting indulgences to those who opposed papal enemies, and this marked the beginning of politically motivated Crusades. |
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Through Genoese participation on the Crusades, Genoese colonies were established in the Middle East, in the Aegean, in Sicily and Northern Africa. |
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The Hussite Crusades involved the military actions against and amongst the followers of Jan Hus in Bohemia ending ultimately with the Battle of Grotniki. |
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It features the Knights of the Round Table being summoned into the times of the Crusades, where they swiftly conquer Jerusalem and build a new Camelot over its ruins. |
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On the return of Richard the Lionheart from the Crusades, the Castle was occupied by supporters of Prince John, including the Sheriff of Nottingham. |
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Also a product of the Crusades was the introduction of the concentric castle, and four of the eight castles Edward founded in Wales followed this design. |
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Venice was involved in the Crusades almost from the very beginning. |
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During the Crusades, one of the duties of surgeons was to travel around a battlefield, assessing soldiers' wounds and declaring whether or not the soldier was deceased. |
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The Popes called the knights of Europe to the Crusades in the peninsula. |
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Norman families, such as that of Tancred of Hauteville, Rainulf Drengot and Guimond de Moulins played important parts in the Norman conquest of southern Italy and Crusades. |
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