Encyclopedia of Islam



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crescent


Islamization policies. These countries include 

s

aUdi



 a

rabia


, i

ran


, p

akistan


, and s

Udan


. Islamist 

groups and movements usually place the enforce-

ment of Islamic laws and punishments at the top 

of their agendas for radical political and social 

change. At the same time, attempts at enforcing 

Islamic penalties have provoked protests from 

both Muslims and non-Muslims because they are 

seen as being either unjustly applied or in viola-

tion of international 

hUman


 

rights


 principles.

See also 

cUstomary

 

laW


;  i

slamism


;  p

alestine


reneWal


 

and


 

reForm


 

movements

sharia


.

Further reading: Muhammad Abdel Haleem, Adel 

Omar Sherif, and Kate Daniels, eds., Criminal Justice in 



Islam: Judicial Procedure in the Sharia (London: I.B. Tau-

rus, 2003); Rudolph Peters, “The Islamization of Crimi-

nal Law: A Comparative Analysis.” Die Welt des Islams

34 (1994): 246–253; Joseph Schacht, An Introduction to 



Islamic Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1964).

Crusades

(1095–1291)



The Crusades were a series of military campaigns 

conducted by European Christians in the lands 

of Asia Minor (Byzantium), s

yria


,  p

alestine


, and 

e

gypt



. They were more a product of events in 

Europe than of those in the Middle East. The 

Catholic Church was undergoing a period of 

reform in the 11th century and wanted to exert 

more authority over secular government. The 

church also wanted to limit the amount of fighting 

within Europe. Thus, in 1095, when Pope Urban II 

(r. 1088–99) called for what would be the first of 

many crusades, he described the crusade as a pil-

grimage (for which the sins of the crusaders would 

be forgiven) and a defensive war to take back the 

Holy Land, especially J

erUsalem

. Considering the 

fact that the Muslims had been controlling the Holy 

Land for 450 years, during which time Christian 

pilgrims had unhindered access to the holy sites, 

it seems clear that the pope wanted to assert his 

authority to forgive sins and wage war rather than 

to respond defensively to any Muslim aggression

The First Crusade achieved its goal of captur-

ing Jerusalem from the Muslims in 1099. The 

crusaders’ indiscriminate slaughtering of men, 

Women


, and 

children


, done in the name of God, 

has made the Crusades live in infamy for Muslims 

and would later become an embarrassment for the 

Catholic Church and Christianity in general.

The level of violence decreased after the First 

Crusade. The crusaders divided up Palestine and 

Syria into city-states ruled by European lords. 

With the establishment of the Crusader States, the 

need to govern the people peacefully and profit-

ably overshadowed the zeal for holy war. Chris-

tian and Muslim princes made various alliances 

with one other, and traders traveled between both 

communities.

Nevertheless, the crusaders continued to try 

to take more territory, while the Muslims tried to 

take back what they had lost. As the crusaders lost 

territory to the Muslims, they called for new cru-

sades. During the Third Crusade, the English king 

Richard the Lion-Hearted (also known as Richard 

I, d. 1199) waged a long campaign against the 

Muslim leader s

aladin


 (r. 1174–93). The mutual 

respect that characterized their rivalry has made 

them the subject of legend.

The Crusades produced numerous geopoliti-

cal consequences. In Europe, they strengthened 

the church and deflected internal political rival-

ries—for a time. In the Middle East, they encour-

aged political unification and religious renewal, 

which ultimately enabled the Muslims to defeat 

the crusaders. The Crusades have come to sym-

bolize confrontation between East and West, 

Islam and Christianity, and as such continue to 

evoke strong feelings and memories, particularly 

among Muslims, for whom European colonialism 

and the foundation of i

srael


 have revived previ-

ously dormant memories of the medieval wars 

between Christians and Muslims.

See also  a

ssassins


colonialism

;  c

hristianity



and

 i

slam



; i

stanbUl


Jihad


.

Heather N. Keaney




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