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The First Crusade

The First Crusade.png The Turkish Treaty, 1920ThumbnailsGermany after the Peace Treaty, 1919The Turkish Treaty, 1920ThumbnailsGermany after the Peace Treaty, 1919The Turkish Treaty, 1920ThumbnailsGermany after the Peace Treaty, 1919The Turkish Treaty, 1920ThumbnailsGermany after the Peace Treaty, 1919The Turkish Treaty, 1920ThumbnailsGermany after the Peace Treaty, 1919The Turkish Treaty, 1920ThumbnailsGermany after the Peace Treaty, 1919The Turkish Treaty, 1920ThumbnailsGermany after the Peace Treaty, 1919
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They came by diverse routes from France, Normandy, Flanders, England, Southern Italy, and Sicily, and the will and power of them were the Normans. They crossed the Bosphorus and captured Nicæa, which Alexius snatched away from them before they could loot it. They then went on by much the same route as Alexander the Great, through the Cilician Gates, leaving the Turks in Konia unconquered, past the battle-fields of the Issus, and so to Antioch, which they took after nearly a year’s siege. Then they defeated a great relieving army from Mosul. A large part of the Crusaders remained in Antioch, a smaller force under Godfrey of Bouillon (in Belgium) went on to Jerusalem. “After a little more than a month’s siege, the city was finally captured (July 15). The slaughter was terrible; the blood of the conquered ran down the streets, until men splashed in blood as they rode. At nightfall, ‘sobbing for excess of joy,’ the crusaders came to the Sepulchre from their treading of the wine-press, and put their blood-stained hands together in prayer. So, on that day of July, the First Crusade came to an end.”

Author
The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Outline of History - Being a Plain History of Life and Mankind, by H. G. Wells published 1920
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