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Rhineland Massacre First Crusade Term Paper

¶ … Rhineland Massacre: Holy War or Papal Politics? The Rhineland Massacre of 1096 was one of the first large-scale slaughters of the Jews in the Middle Ages, and was followed by a series of mass genocides in Europe, in which Jews were targeted. Although often discussed within the context of the First Crusade, the Rhineland Massacre was actually part of the Popular Crusade, a prelude to the First Crusade. These crusades, or Holy Wars, were a response by the Christian people of Europe to an appeal for help, given by Pope Urban II on behalf of the Byzantine Emperor, Alexius I Comnenus.

The original appeal was for soldiers to go East to the Holy Land in an effort to take the land from the Arabs and Turks that were claiming it as their own, and claim the land on behalf of the Latin Christendom. However, this appeal for help involved...

In reality, the papal motives were not as "holy" as the reclaiming of land.
In my research paper, I will assess the circumstances leading up to the Rhineland Massacre, and attempt to show that those circumstances led to the attempts by the papacy to drive the Arabs, Turks, and Jews from the lands. In order to fully understand the reasons behind the Rhineland Massacre, I will examine the social, economic, and political environment of Europe during the time immediately prior to the crusades. The examination of these aspects will reveal the true motives of the papacy in relation to the crusade.

This topic fascinates me, in part, because of the nature of the subject itself. The Church, usually referred to as an institution of faith and as "God's Church," should by all rights be…

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Primary Sources

Kray, August C. The First Crusade: The Accounts of Eyewitnesses and Participants. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton, 1921.

Riley-Smith, Louise and Jonathan. The Crusades, Ideas and Reality, 1095-1274. Documents of Medieval History 4. Edited by G.W.S.
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The shifting perceptions of 1096, particularly when seen against the backdrop of the historical "reality, have much to teach us." The development of the Rhineland Massacres, often looked at in history as a linear first example of official Jewish mass persecution by the Christians, wavers in importance to the modern scholar, as well as the modern Jew and Christian. Was it a warm up for mass persecution, or a warm up

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