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The list of the Crusades to the Holy Land from 1095 through 1291 is as follows. ... During the battle of Karuse, the Livonian Order was defeated, ...
This category contains historical battles fought as part of the Crusades (1096–1291). Please see the category guidelines for more information. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battles of the crusades .
The Crusades were a series of religious wars initiated, supported, and sometimes directed by the Christian Latin Church in the medieval period.The best known of these military expeditions are those to the Holy Land between 1095 and 1291 that had the objective of reconquering Jerusalem and its surrounding area from Muslim rule after the region had been conquered by the Rashidun Caliphate ...
This is a list of orders of battle, ... Order of battle Date Crusades; Battle of Lepanto: Holy League and Ottoman fleets: October 7, 1571 Thirty Years' War;
The first secularized military order was the Order of Saint George, founded in 1326 by King Charles I of Hungary, through which he made all the Hungarian nobility swear loyalty to him. Shortly thereafter, the Order of the "Knights of the Band" was founded in 1332 by King Alfonso XI of Castile. Both orders existed only for about a century. [4]
(Date unknown). Pope Adrian IV rejects the calls for a crusade in Spain made by Henry II of England and Louis VII of France. [375] The Battle of Putaha on July 15, 1159 [sic], between King Baldwin III of Jerusalem and Emir Nur ad-Din. Original painting by Éloi Firmin Féron. The work is exhibited in the Salles des Croisades at the Palace of ...
This chronology presents the timeline of the Northern Crusades beginning with the 10th century establishment of Christian churches in northern Europe. These were primarily Christianization campaigns undertaken by the Christian kingdoms of Denmark, Norway and Sweden together with the Teutonic Knights, primarily against the pagan Baltic, Finnic and West Slavic peoples around the southern and ...
The Pope urges women to make donations for the crusaders instead of joining a crusade. [422] 1202. Spring. Reginald of Dampierre and 300 crusaders land at Acre. They leave for Antioch after Henry I prohibits them from breaking the truce. [423] [424] 1203. May. The leaders of the Fourth Crusade decide to attack Constantinople. [425] 1204. May.