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The Near East in 1135, with the Crusader states in green hues.
The 'Crusader states' were a number of mostly 12th- and 13th-century
feudal states created by Western European
crusaders in
Asia Minor,
Greece and the
Holy Land (ancient and modern
Israel and
Palestine). The Middle Eastern
Islamic powers eventually conquered them. The name also refers to other territorial gains (often small and short-lived) made by medieval
Christendom against Muslim and
pagan adversaries.
Mediterranean
While the ''
Reconquista'', the centuries-long fight to reconquer the Iberian peninsula from the Arabo-Barbaresque Moors (who called it
al-Andalus), fills all the criteria for crusades, it is not customary to call the resulting Catholic principalities there Crusader states, except for the
Kingdom of Valencia.
[1]
In the Levant
The first four Crusader states were created in the
Levant immediately after the
First Crusade:
★ The first Crusader state, the
County of Edessa, was founded in
1098 and lasted until
1144.
★ The
Principality of Antioch, founded in
1098, lasted until
1268.
★ The
County of Tripoli (the Lebanese city, not the
Libyan capital), founded in
1104, with Tripoli itself conquered in
1109, lasted until
1288.
★ The
Kingdom of Jerusalem, founded in
1099, lasted until
1291, when the city of
Acre fell. There were also many
vassals of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, the four major lordships (''seigneuries'') being:
★
★ The
Principality of Galilee
★
★ The
County of Jaffa and Ascalon
★
★ The
Lordship of Oultrejordain
★
★ The
Lordship of Sidon
The
Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia had its origins before the Crusades, but was granted the status of a kingdom by
Pope Innocent III, and later became semi-westernized by the (French)
Lusignan dynasty.
Cyprus
During the
Third Crusade, Crusaders founded the
Kingdom of Cyprus.
Richard I of England conquered
Cyprus on the way to
Holy Land. The island was made into a kingdom and given to the displaced King of Jerusalem
Guy of Lusignan in
1192. It lasted until
1489, when its last queen sold it to Venice. It was later awarded to the Knights Hospitaliers, but was never really taken seriously as an outpost and fell into decline before being lost in a revolt.
In the Balkans

The Latin Empire, its vassals and the Greek successor states, ca. 1204
After the
Fourth Crusade, the territories of the
Byzantine Empire were divided into several states, beginning the so-called "Francocracy" () period:
★ The
Latin Empire in
Constantinople (1204-1261)
★ The
Kingdom of Thessalonica (1205-1224)
★ The
Principality of Achaea (1205-1432)
★
★ The Lordship of
Argos and Nauplia (1205-1388)
★ The
Duchy of Athens (1205–1458)
★
★ The
Margraviate of Bodonitsa (1204-1414)
★ The
Duchy of Naxos (1207–1579)
★ The Duchy of
Philippopolis
Several islands, most notably
Crete (1204-1669),
Euboea (
Negroponte, until 1470), and the
Ionian Islands (until 1797) came under the rule of
Venice.
These states faced the attacks of the Byzantine Greek successor states of
Nicaea and
Epirus, as well as
Bulgaria. Thessalonica and the Latin Empire were reconquered by the Byzantine Greeks by
1261. Descendants of the Crusaders continued to rule in Athens and the
Peloponnesus (
Morea) until the
15th century when the area was conquered by the
Ottoman Empire.
★ The military order of the
Knights Hospitaller of Saint John established itself on
Rhodes (and several other Aegean islands; see below) in 1310, with regular influx of new blood, until the Ottomans finally drove them out (to
Malta) in 1522.
★
★ the island of
Kastellorizo (like Rhodes a part of the Aegean
Dodecanese island group) was taken by the
Knights of St. John Hospitaller of Jerusalem in 1309; the Egyptians occupied it from 1440 until 1450; then the Kingdom of Naples ruled; Venetian rule began in 1635 (as ''Castellorosso''); all these states, excluding the Egyptians, were Catholic; Ottoman rule was established in 1686, although Greeks controlled the island during the
Greek War of Independence from 1821-1833.
★
★ other neighbouring territories temporarily under the order were: the cities of
Smyrna (now Izmir; 1344-1402),
Attaleia (now Antalya; 1361-1373 and
Halicarnassos (now Bodrum;1412-14..), all three in Anatolia; the Greek Isthmus city of
Corinth (1397-1404)), the city of
Salona (ancient
Amphissa; 1407-1410) and the islands of
Ikaria (1424-1521) and
Kos (1215-1522), all now in Greece
Northern Crusades
In the
Baltic region, the indigenous tribes in the Middle Ages at first staunchly refused Christianity. In 1193, Pope
Celestine III urged two religious orders of Knights, the
Livonian Order and the
Teutonic Order, to invade and subjugate the heathens which included the
Old Prussians, the
Lithuanians and other tribes inhabiting
Estonia,
Latvia and
East Prussia. This period of warfare is called the
Northern Crusades.
References
1. See for example ''The Crusader Kingdom of Valencia: Reconstruction on a Thirteenth-Century Frontier'', R.I. Burns, SJ, Harvard, 1967 (available online)
See also
★
List of Crusader castles
★
Sources and references
★ Westermann, ''Großer Atlas zur Weltgeschichte'' (in German)