Jerusalem 1099

On 15 July 1099, after more than four and a half centuries of Muslim rule, Jerusalem fell to the army of the First Crusade and for the next 88 years it became once again a Christian city. At that time, the city’s population may have numbered hundreds rather than the thousands of earlier periods, but...

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Main Author: Denys Pringle
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Instituto de Estudos Medievais 2022-07-01
Series:Medievalista
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/medievalista/5625
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author Denys Pringle
author_facet Denys Pringle
author_sort Denys Pringle
collection DOAJ
description On 15 July 1099, after more than four and a half centuries of Muslim rule, Jerusalem fell to the army of the First Crusade and for the next 88 years it became once again a Christian city. At that time, the city’s population may have numbered hundreds rather than the thousands of earlier periods, but it seems to have grown afterwards. The size of the late 12th century population may therefore have been closer to that of the mid-11th century, perhaps around 20,000–30,000, that is to say roughly the same size as Acre, Tyre, Florence or London in the same period. Along with these demographic fluctuations and the reduction of the area defended by city-walls, this paper analyses the impact of Christian rule on the town structures. From the conversion of the former Aqṣā Mosque as a royal palace, and then as the Temple’s headquarters, to the renovation of the Citadel as a small triangular-shaped fortress, and mostly to the important changes made in the Holy Sepulchre, with the enlargement of the church and the addition of an adjoining monastic cloister.
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spelling doaj-art-69193c2c547a4aacb26ec215547b26282025-01-30T10:52:56ZdeuInstituto de Estudos MedievaisMedievalista1646-740X2022-07-013210.4000/medievalista.5625Jerusalem 1099Denys PringleOn 15 July 1099, after more than four and a half centuries of Muslim rule, Jerusalem fell to the army of the First Crusade and for the next 88 years it became once again a Christian city. At that time, the city’s population may have numbered hundreds rather than the thousands of earlier periods, but it seems to have grown afterwards. The size of the late 12th century population may therefore have been closer to that of the mid-11th century, perhaps around 20,000–30,000, that is to say roughly the same size as Acre, Tyre, Florence or London in the same period. Along with these demographic fluctuations and the reduction of the area defended by city-walls, this paper analyses the impact of Christian rule on the town structures. From the conversion of the former Aqṣā Mosque as a royal palace, and then as the Temple’s headquarters, to the renovation of the Citadel as a small triangular-shaped fortress, and mostly to the important changes made in the Holy Sepulchre, with the enlargement of the church and the addition of an adjoining monastic cloister.https://journals.openedition.org/medievalista/5625Crusadedemographytown wallspalaceschurches
spellingShingle Denys Pringle
Jerusalem 1099
Medievalista
Crusade
demography
town walls
palaces
churches
title Jerusalem 1099
title_full Jerusalem 1099
title_fullStr Jerusalem 1099
title_full_unstemmed Jerusalem 1099
title_short Jerusalem 1099
title_sort jerusalem 1099
topic Crusade
demography
town walls
palaces
churches
url https://journals.openedition.org/medievalista/5625
work_keys_str_mv AT denyspringle jerusalem1099