There are a lot of misconceptions about the Crusades, and the belief that they were unprovoked attacks against innocent Muslims who were minding their own business in the faraway Middle East is one of them.
Steve Weidenkopf had an article at Crisis Magazine a few years back titled Crash Course on the Crusades in which he lamented the historical distortions and fabrications about the Crusades in the popular culture. He began his essay with this lede:
The Crusades are one of the most misunderstood events in Western and Church history. The very word “crusades” conjures negative images in our modern world of bloodthirsty and greedy European nobles embarked on a conquest of peaceful Muslims.Weidenkopf then sought to set the record straight by debunking the following five myths:
The Crusades are considered by many to be one of the “sins” the Christian Faith has committed against humanity, and together with the Inquisition the two comprise the go-to cudgels for bashing the Church.
While the mocking and generally nasty portrayal of the Crusades and Crusaders on the big screen ranges from Monty Python farce to the cringe-worthy big budget spectacles like Kingdom of Heaven (2005), it is the biased and bad scholarship such as Steven Runciman’s History of the Crusades, or the BBC/A&E documentary, The Crusades, hosted by Terry Jones (of Monty Python acclaim) that does real damage.
From academia to pop-culture, the message is reinforced and driven home with resounding force: the Crusades were bad and obviously so. The real story is of course far more complicated and far more interesting.
It is worth our time to be versed in the facts and especially to recall the tremendous faith, sacrifice, and courage that inspired the vast majority of the Crusaders to act in defense of Christendom.
- The Crusades were wars of unprovoked aggression.
- The Crusades were about European greed for booty, plunder and the establishment of colonies.
- When Jerusalem was captured in 1099 the crusaders killed all the inhabitants – so many were killed that the blood flowed ankle deep through the city.
- The Crusades were also wars against the Jews and should be considered the first Holocaust.
- The Crusades are the source of the modern tension between Islam and the West.
For those looking for an excellent and very readable book on this topic I highly recommend God's Battalions by Rodney Stark and Sword and Scimitar by Raymond Ibrahim.