But the crusades were not simply an expression of the
simple faith of the Middle Ages. Something more than religious enthusiasm sent
an unending procession of crusaders along the highways of Europe and over the
trackless wastes of Asia Minor to Jerusalem. The crusades, in fact, appealed
strongly to the warlike instincts of the feudal nobles. They saw in an expedition
against the East an unequaled opportunity for acquiring fame, riches, lands,
and power. The Normans were especially stirred by the prospect of adventure and
plunder which the crusading movement opened up. By the end of the eleventh
century they had established themselves in southern Italy and Sicily, from
which they now looked across the Mediterranean for further lands to conquer.
Norman knights formed a very large element in several of the crusaders'
armies.
THE LOWER CLASSES AND THE CRUSADES
The crusades also attracted the lower classes. So great
was the misery of the common people in medieval Europe that for them it seemed
not a hardship, but rather a relief, to leave their homes in order to better
themselves abroad. Famine and pestilence, poverty and oppression, drove them to
emigrate hopefully to the golden East.
PRIVILEGES OF CRUSADERS
The Church, in order to foster the crusades, promised both
religious and secular benefits to those who took part in them. A warrior of the
Cross was to enjoy forgiveness of all his past sins. If he died fighting for
the faith, he was assured of an immediate entrance to the joys of Paradise. The
Church also freed him from paying interest on his debts and threatened with
excommunication anyone who molested his wife, his children, or his property.