The Crusaders Period
1095-1291

For 200 years, Palestine was dominated by the Crusaders, who, following an appeal by
Pope Urban II, came from Europe to recover the Holy Land from the infidels. In July 1099,
after a five-week siege, the knights of the First Crusade and their rabble army captured
Jerusalem, massacring most of the city's non-Christian inhabitants. Barricaded in their
synagogues, the Jews defended their quarter, only to be burnt to death or sold into
slavery. During the next few decades, the Crusaders extended their power over the rest
of the country, through treaties and agreements, but mostly by bloody military victories.
The Latin Kingdom of the Crusaders was that of a conquering minority confined mainly to
fortified cities and castles.

When the Crusaders opened up transportation routes from Europe, pilgrimages to the
Holy Land became popular and, at the same time, increasing numbers of Jews sought to
return to their homeland. Documents of the period indicate that 300 rabbis from France
and England arrived in a group, with some settling in Acro (Akko), others in Jerusalem.

After the overthrow of the Crusaders by a Muslim army under Saladin (1187), the Jews
were again accorded a certain measure of freedom, including the right to live in
Jerusalem. Although the Crusaders regained a foothold in the country after Saladin's
death (1193), their presence was limited to a network of fortified castles. Crusader
authority in the Land ended after a final defeat (1291) by the Mamluks, a Muslim military
class which had come to power in Egypt.