MAPS OF HISTORY

MAPS OF HISTORY · ON THIS DAY · September 7 · 1191

ON THIS DAY · 7 SEPTEMBER 1191

Arsuf

Map: Arsuf
7 SEPTEMBER 1191 · THE CRUSADES, 1095–1291

7 Sep 1191 — marching down the coast in a disciplined box, Richard absorbs Saladin’s harassment and then breaks him in open battle. It proves the crusaders can still win a field fight — but not that they can hold the interior.

THE MOMENT IN CONTEXT

Three kings answer Hattin, and the crusade’s bad luck begins at once. Frederick Barbarossa, the mightiest ruler in Europe, marches a huge German army overland — and drowns crossing the Saleph river in Cilicia in 1190. His army dissolves in grief and disease; the strongest of the three crusaders never arrives. Richard the Lionheart of England sails instead, and on the way seizes Cyprus from its Byzantine ruler. Watch the island flip to Latin blue: it is the crusade’s one durable territorial gain, a kingdom that outlives every state on the mainland by three centuries.

From Chapter 7 — The Third Crusade of The Crusades, 1095–1291 (1191).

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TEACH THIS IN 5 MINUTES

Then ask the room: Richard beat Saladin at Arsuf and Jaffa but never tried to hold Jerusalem. Was that failure or realism? The argued answer is on the chapter page →

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The Crusades, 1095–1291
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