Originally posted by chegitz guevara
Whatchu talkin' 'bout, Willis?
Whatchu talkin' 'bout, Willis?
The native Christians were more inclined towards Salah al-Din than towards the Latins. For besides their hostile relations with the Latins and their linguistic and ethnic identification with the Arabs of the area, they were also influenced by the Greek Orthodox Church in Byzantium. Byzantium at this time was an ally of Salah al-Din. The Emperor Isaac II Angelus had confirmed an agreement with Salah al-Din in A.D.1185, according to which Salah al-Din offered to convert existing Latin churches in the Holy Land to the Christian rite once they had been recovered.
Once in Jerusalem, Salah al-Din seems to have contacted the leaders of the native Christian community through an Orthodox Christian scholar from Jerusalem, known as Joseph Batit. Batit, as Runciman says, had even secured a promise from the leaders of the community that they would open the gates of the city in the vicinity of Salah al-Din, but this did not take place because the R Latins decided to surrender the city."
The Crusades began at the request of the Eastern shortly after the great schism between the Eastern and Western churches. It was one of the objectives of the pope to help the Eastern emperor but also to see if he could heal the split. By the time, though, of the events of the movie, 1187, that split had not been healed and there was open hostility between Eastern and Western churches, particularly in the holy city where the Church of the Holy Sepulcher was held by the Latins to the exclusion of the Eastern Church. In 1181, for example, all Latins in Constantinople were massacred. The Eastern Empire formed an alliance with Salah al-Din in 1185 as described in the attached article for the purpose of taking Jersalem and restoring Eastern control over the Holy Land's churches.
A short time later after the events in the movie, when the third Crusade attempted to retake Jerusalem, the German armies traveling overland were met with armed resistance by the Eastern Empire. Only after a war did the Eastern emperor grant passage to the Western army.
When the next, fourth, Crusade was being planned, one of the plans being hatched by the Western emperor was to take Constantinople as a first step in retaking Jerusalem so to again open the land passage between Germany and the Middle East. It is not surprising therefore that the Crusaders went after Constantinople as Constantinople had joined with a Salah al-Din against the West.
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