Yes, Arabs were highly involved in the Crusades.
I think you meant who. Who was involved in the crusades were Richard,Edessa,and The 4 nobles
There were multipule crusades, many of witch had 10,000+ people involved. So in total there were probaly about 150,000+ people in total.
rome
Although there were more than 15 crusades Baghdad was never occupied by the European armies.
Plenty of them weren't involved. In fact, any countries other than Britain and Jerusalem were basically out of the question.
Yes, Arabs were highly involved in the Crusades.
I think you meant who. Who was involved in the crusades were Richard,Edessa,and The 4 nobles
from what countries did the fours biggest crusades begin?
There were multipule crusades, many of witch had 10,000+ people involved. So in total there were probaly about 150,000+ people in total.
rome
Although there were more than 15 crusades Baghdad was never occupied by the European armies.
The two rival religions involved in the Crusades were Christianity and Islam. Christians from Europe launched military campaigns (Crusades) to reclaim holy sites in the Middle East from Muslim control.
The Crusades was won by the Muslims. This is because as their were a total of 7 crusades, 6 were "won" by the Muslims. The first crusade involved christians taking over jerusalem, and killing all other civlians. The next involved Salahudin taking back the Holy Land , and then holding it and defending against 7 more crusades
The main religions involved in the Crusades were Christianity and Islam. The Crusades were a series of religious wars initiated by Christian armies to regain control of the Holy Land (Jerusalem) from Muslim rule. The Crusades were motivated by a mix of religious fervor, political interests, and economic factors.
The total amount of crusades there was 8. The whole point in the crusades was pretty much trying to take over the holy land. Kings, nobles, knights, peasants (serfs), and towns people where involved in the crusades.
Germany, France, and Great Brittan all participated in the Crusades. Anyone who followed under the Pope.