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Page "Crusade (disambiguation)" ¶ 14
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Crusaders and film
* The Crusaders ( film ), a 2001 Italian television mini-series
He secured a supporting role in a Hollywood film, Knights of the Round Table ( 1953 ), which led to being cast with Rex Harrison and George Sanders in King Richard and the Crusaders ( 1954 ).
King, Miriam Makeba, The Spinners, Bill Withers, The Crusaders, and Manu Dibango as documented in the 2008 film Soul Power.
The 1954 film King Richard and the Crusaders, loosely based on The Talisman, similarly depicts him as a villain, played by Michael Pate.
In the 2001 film The Crusaders, Peter Bartholomew was portrayed by Flavio Insinna.
Games included: The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers based on the Peter Jackson film for Electronic Arts and Kingdom Under Fire: The Crusaders.
The film opens in 1099 at the end of the First Crusade, depicting Christian Crusaders sacking Jerusalem and slaughtering the local population.
The movie King Richard and the Crusaders ( 1954 ) was based on The Talisman ( Rex Harrison, who portrayed Saladin in the film, calls it a " rotten " picture in his autobiography ).

Crusaders and ),
In 1187, the Ayyubid Sultan, Saladin, defeated the Crusaders in the Battle of Hattin ( above Tiberias ), taking Jerusalem and most of Palestine.
The medieval historian Ibn Athir relates a passage from another commander: "... both you and Saladin are Kurds and you will not let power pass into the hands of the Turks ": Minorsky ( 1953 ), p. 138 .</ ref > He led Muslim opposition to the Franks and other European Crusaders in the Levant.
* 1205 — The Battle of Adrianople occurred on April 14, 1205 between Bulgarians under Tsar Kaloyan of Bulgaria, and Crusaders under Baldwin I, ( July 1172 – 1205 ), the first emperor of the Latin Empire of Constantinople.
Kingdoms of the Crusaders: From Jerusalem to Cyprus ( Aldershot: Ashgate, Variorum Collected Series Studies, 1999 ), pp. 1 – 25.
in Kingdoms of the Crusaders: From Jerusalem to Cyprus ( Aldershot: Ashgate, Variorum Collected Series Studies, 1999 ), pp. 173 – 189.
( High Wycombe ) Civil Service, Crusaders, Forest of Leytonstone ( later to become Wanderers ), N. N.
* Crusaders ( DC Comics ), a name used by a team of DC Comics superheroes
* Crusaders ( Marvel Comics ), a name by a similar team from Marvel Comics
* The Crusaders ( 1960s garage band ), a 1960s garage band who released first Gospel rock record
* Crusaders ( rugby ) ( formerly the Canterbury Crusaders ), a rugby union team from New Zealand
* The Crusaders ( repeal of alcohol prohibition ), a group that promoted repeal of national alcohol prohibition in the U. S.
Initially published by JC Comics in JCP Features # 1, ( December 1981 ), in March 1983, the first issue of Mighty Crusaders appeared, leading to a procession of new titles under the Red Circle Comics banner, soon to be re-branded ( in February 1984 ) the Archie Adventure Series, before cancellation in September 1985.
For many decades, heraldic authors have believed that the term may have arisen from the Persian word gol " rose " ( coming to Europe via Muslim Spain or brought back by returning Crusaders ), but according to Brault there is no evidence to support this derivation.
Thus, having recovered his stature, in the middle of the year he was sent by the princes to invite Kerbogha to settle all differences by a duel which the Emir subsequently declined ; and in 1099 he appears as treasurer of the alms at the siege of Arqa ( March ), and as leader of the supplicatory processions around the walls of Jerusalem before it fell and later within Jerusalem which preceded the Crusaders ' miraculous victory at the Battle of Ascalon ( August ).
When the Crusaders took Constantinople ( 1204 ), they found some Paulicians, whom the historian Geoffrey of Villehardouin calls Popelicans.
The province is named after Saladin ( written Salah ad-Din in modern Arabic Latin transcription ), a Kurdish Muslim leader who defeated the Crusaders at Hattin, who hailed from the province.
* Larry Carlton ( born 1948 ), studio guitarist most known for working with Steely Dan, the Crusaders and Joni Mitchell in the 1970s
Although Peter most likely planted it there himself ( even the papal legate Adhemar of Le Puy believed this to be the case ), it helped raise the spirits of the Crusaders.
Among the new denominations formed by those seceding or being expelled from the Church of the Nazarene are: the People's Mission Church ( 1912 ), which had become part of the Church of the Nazarene in 1911, but subsequently became part of the Pilgrim Holiness Church in 1925 ; the Pentecost Pilgrim Church ( 1917 ), which merged with the International Holiness Union to form the Pilgrim Holiness Church in 1922 ; the Bible Missionary Church ( 1955 ), which subsequently split to create the Wesleyan Holiness Association of Churches ( 1959 ), and the Nazarene Baptist Church ( 1960 ) ( later Nazarene Bible Church in 1967 ); the Holiness Church of the Nazarene ( 1961 ) in the Philippines ; the Church of the Bible Covenant ( 1967 ); the Crusaders Churches of the United States of America ( 1972 ); and the Fellowship of Charismatic Nazarenes ( 1977 ).

Crusaders and 2001
* The Crusaders ( 2001 )
The Crusaders are 16-time state champions ( 1963, 1965, 1966, 1979, 1980, 1982, 1986, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2001 and 2004 ), while holding an all-time record of 365-130-12.

Crusaders and Italian
The French-speaking Crusaders either could not, or did not care to, pronounce the name Lefkosia, and tended to say " Nicosie " translated into Italian and then internationally known as " Nicosia ".
The French-speaking Crusaders either could not, or did not care to, pronounce the name Lefkosia, and tended to say " Nicosie " translated into Italian and then internationally known as " Nicosia ".

Crusaders and directed
Decrees were also passed directed against simony, concubinage among the clergy, church robbers, and forgers of Church documents ; the council also reaffirmed indulgences for Crusaders.

Crusaders and by
Statues and other monuments that stood there were stolen, mostly by the waves of Crusaders.
It had been rebuilt by Harun al-Rashid in 796, refortified at great expense by the Hamdanid Sayf al-Dawla ( mid-10th century ) but was then sacked by the Crusaders and returned to the Armenians.
The word ambar was brought to Europe by the Crusaders.
* 1099 – First Crusade: Battle of Ascalon Crusaders under the command of Godfrey of Bouillon defeat Fatimid forces led by Al-Afdal Shahanshah.
Alexios dealt with the first disorganized group of Crusaders, led by the preacher Peter the Hermit, by sending them on to Asia Minor, where they were massacred by the Turks in 1096.
Unfortunately for Constantinople, Alexios III's misgovernment had left the Byzantine navy with only 20 worm-eaten hulks by the time the Crusaders arrived.
After the capture of the city in June, 1098, and the subsequent siege led by Kerbogha, Adhemar organized a procession through the streets, and had the gates locked so that the Crusaders, many of whom had begun to panic, would be unable to desert the city.
This was done, and Jerusalem was taken by the Crusaders in 1099.
In 1099, Bethlehem was captured by the Crusaders, who fortified it and built a new monastery and cloister on the north side of the Church of the Nativity.
Bethlehem — along with Jerusalem, Nazareth, and Sidon — was briefly ceded to the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem by a treaty between Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II and Ayyubid Sultan al-Kamil in 1229, in return for a ten-year truce between the Ayyubids and the Crusaders.
Nevertheless, the destruction wrought by the 1197 fire paled in comparison with that brought by the Crusaders.
An attack by the Crusaders on 6 April failed, but a second from the Golden Horn on 12 April succeeded, and the invaders poured in.
The Emperor achieved this by summoning former residents having fled the city when the Crusaders captured it, and by relocating Greeks from the recently reconquered Peloponnese to the capital.
However, in 1168 the Fatimids under the leadership of Vizier Shawar set fire to Fustat to prevent Cairo's capture by the Crusaders.
The capture of Jerusalem by the Crusaders on 15 July 10991.
They were invested with feudal authority by Sultan Nur ad-Din Zangi and furnished respectable contingents to the Muslim ranks in their struggle against the Crusaders.
It is quite probable that Egypt ( and Asia-Minor generally ) still produced cotton well after the 7th and 8th centuries and knowledge ( and samples ) of this cloth was brought to Europe by the returning Crusaders.
Thus, there was a short-lived eleventh century attempt to re-establish an independent Galatia by native Galatians whose aristocracy and people appealed to Anglo-Saxon and Russo-Norman mercenaries of the Byzantine Varangian Guard and Frankish Crusaders alike in establishing a new kingdom.
The impression made by Greek fire on the west European Crusaders was such that the name was applied to any sort of incendiary weapon, including those used by Arabs, the Chinese, and the Mongols.

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