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Backward to A.D. 901 to 1000
In the time of the European Middle Ages urban sites and countryside were intimately connected. A town of 3,000 people required the produce of some 10 villages and 8.5 square kilometers of surrounding land to survive. Long distance trade was available only to a few exceptional cities, such as Mecca, Istanbul, Florence, Venice, Naples, Rome, Bruges, Delhi and Peking. The real leader of the world, beginning in this century and lasting for about 400 years, if the Europeans had but known it, was China, where remarkable achievements in industry and armaments occurred. (Ref. 260 , 279 )
The reforms initiated by the Cluniac monasteries spread quickly and reached Rome when Emperor Henry III started a papal reform at the Synod of Sutri, in 1046. The actual church administration reform began under Pope Leo IX in 1049 and was continued by Gregory VII, called Hildebrand, one of the strongest pontifs in history who, himself, had been a monk of Cluny. His reforms included attacks on simony (the sale of ecclesiastical offices) and lay investiture (the right of kings to appoint bishops, etc.). He tried to give spiritual unity to the western church without interfering in secular rule, but his doctrines led to a life and death struggle with the empire and in the end he too turned to militarism via alliances with the Normans, who had conquered southern Italy and Sicily. The Great Schism (the final splitting of the Greek Orthodox and Latin Catholic churches) occurred in 1054 over a point of theology.
In previous years Christian pilgrims had traveled to the holy places in the Middle East unmolested by the Arabs, but at the beginning of this 11th century the "Mad Caliph" Hakim began to prey upon these travelers and profane the Holy Sepulchre. At the end of the century Emperor Alexius I of Byzantine appealed to the western princes for help when he was again threatened by the Moslems. Thus, in 1095 the 1st Crusade was summoned by Pope Urban. The first ill-organized wave of crusaders sacked Hungary and the Balkans en route to the east and were, in turn, massacred by the Turks when they did arrive in Asia Minor. Antioch did fall to Bohemund of Otranto after a 9 month siege but he lost 5,000 of his 7,000 horses to hunger and disease and so many men died so quickly that it was not possible to bury all of them and the bodies contaminated cisterns and aqueducts, aggravating the epidemic. In 1099 a final wave of crusaders finally did reach Jerusalem where the Moslems remaining in the city were slaughtered, but the particular Turks that they had come to fight had already been run out by the Fatimids of Egypt a year previously. (Ref. 8 , 49 , 42 , 222 ) (See map on page 603)
A conflict between religion and science developed within Islam, with three separate groups of thinkers deviating from the orthodox concepts. These were:
Al-Ghazali, the greatest Moslem theologian, fought against all these concepts and all orthodoxy took comfort from him. Even some Christian theologians were glad to find such an exposition of piety. He was so dominant that after this, with very few exceptions, philosophy was hidden, the pursuit of science waned and the mind of Islam more and more buried itself in the Hadith and the Koran. Al-Ghazali became a Sufi, a mystic, and with a radical distrust of human reason he changed the course of Islam to a more personal religion. (Ref. 49 )
Jewry flowered in Moslem Spain in the first half of the century but persecution returned later. About the same situation occurred in France, with Jews killed and/or confined to ghettos late in the century.
Forward to A.D. 1101 to 1200
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