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World at War

The Crusades

1096–1291 Middle East / Europe Status: ended Casualties: ~3 million total

Nine major Crusading expeditions over two centuries. The First Crusade (1096–99) captured Jerusalem. Saladin retook it in 1187. The Crusader states finally fell with the loss of Acre in 1291. Permanently reshaped relations between Christianity and Islam.

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Belligerents

  • Western Crusaders
  • Fatimids
  • Seljuks
  • Ayyubids
  • Mamluks

Casualties

~3 million total

Key events

  • 1097 — Siege of Antioch
  • 1099 — Sack of Jerusalem
  • Establishment of the Crusader States

Aftermath

Founded the Crusader States (lasted ~200 years). Hardened Muslim–Christian antagonism that resonates today. The 4th Crusade (1204) sacked Christian Constantinople, fatally weakening Byzantium and accelerating its eventual fall to the Ottomans. Italian maritime republics (Venice, Genoa) became economic superpowers from crusade logistics.

Weapons & matériel

  • Crusader: knight's lance, longsword, mail hauberk
  • Saracen: composite bow, scimitar, light cavalry
  • Trebuchets, mangonels at sieges

Cost

Many crusaders mortgaged or sold their estates to fund the journey — long-term wealth transfer to the Church

Sources

  • Gesta Francorum
  • Anna Komnene, Alexiad
  • Ibn al-Athir
From World at War, an interactive atlas by Jairus Pereira. Figures are approximate, drawn from Wikipedia, UCDP, ACLED and academic sources — a design artefact, not an authoritative register. Contact.