An opportunity very well exploited! Now you are set to march on Jerusalem as soon as the new provinces recover enough to be able to field sufficient troops.
An opportunity very well exploited! Now you are set to march on Jerusalem as soon as the new provinces recover enough to be able to field sufficient troops.
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Superb! The first step in the recovery of the Holy Land itself.
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Nice gameplay![]()
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Nicely played!
I'm a tad concerned however at the line about the reconquest of Antioch as well as the arrival of the Horde in Aleppo. I dearly hope that the de Lusignan's hold the back door before marching south into the Holy Land or their stay may not last even a generation!![]()
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I've fallen a bit behind on my updates schedule due to an avalanche of work (and a bit of hectic gameplay). Hopefully I'll get a few hours before or during the weekend to hammer out the next few updates.
Freedom in capitalist society always remains about the same as it was in the ancient Greek republics: freedom for the slave-owners
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Looking forward to it!
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Jerusalem and Mesopotamia (1356-1358)
The Tripoli campaign of 1351 served to both bolster Cyprus's standing in the region while simultaneously highlighting the impotency of the Mamluks. Even after relocating his court to Amman, after being ejected by the crusaders from Egypt, Sultan Shihab Bahri cut an increasingly isolated and marginal figure in Outremer politics. Indeed one of his last major contributions to history was the inability to prevent or reverse the independence declared by Emir Bilal of Jerusalem on 10 March 1356. This was an event at least that would reverberate around Christendom.
The Egyptian crusade and Cypriot reconquest of Tripoli had been closely followed in Europe. Contemporary sources record that after decades of defeat and disappointment there was a growing belief that the recovery of the Holy Land could not be far off. Crusade enthusiasm amongst the populace had never particularly waned in Europe but in 1356 it appears to have reached levels unprecedented since 1095 or 1188. In what were possibly the first package tours, nobles from around the region would flock to Egypt where they could spend a number of weeks engaged in light warfare with the "Saracens". Such activities were rarer in the more tightly controlled Cypriot lands but are well documented nonetheless.
Crusade fever may have been most prominent amongst the footloose nobility but it was hardly isolated to it. The Christian monarchs themselves cannot have but been aware of the potential for gains in the East. Guy certainly was not. The independence of Jerusalem presented a golden opportunity to re-establish the Kingdom of Heaven in one fell swoop… a notion that was hardly the preserve of Guy alone. The de Lusignan claim to the crown of Jerusalem was not universally recognised, in particular the d'Anjous of Sicily were recognised as rightful kings by the Pope, and the seizure of the city by another Christian lord would complicate matters no end. Guy was no doubt aware of the wider European scrutiny when he mobilised his Anatolian regiments on 23 March 1356 and directed them to sail for Tripoli where his son Hugues awaited with the Syrian armies. Jerusalem beckoned.
Hugues de Lusignan
Of course Outremer politics were never that straightforward and trouble to the east would prevent the Frankish armies even reaching their ships. For the first time in the past decade the Sultanate of Eretnid had secured peace on its borders. After the embarrassing peace with Cyprus, Kılıç had turned his attentions to the Mongol menace. For over eight years he had valiantly fought the Il-Khanat before finally falling on the fields of Melitene. His son Baturay had taken up the task and finally fought the Mongol horde to a standstill, timely aided by the latter's conflict with the Golden Horde and expansion north. The diversion of the horde through the Caucasus region and beyond removed, temporarily at least, the great eastern threat that had hung so menacingly over the Outremer for decades.
With a secure eastern border Baturay cast his eyes west and cannot have been comforted by the mass mobilisation of Cyprus in spring 1356. Perhaps it was the fear of Christian attack that spurred Baturay. Muslim chroniclers recorded an increasing paranoia creeping into the Sultan's demeanour. On 4 May 1356 he publicly declared his intentions to destroy the infidel armies in Anatolia and issued a call to jihad.
It did not take long for word of the Eretnid mobilisation and declaration of war to reach the Cypriot court where Guy would promptly proceed to prove the old adage that generals always plan to fight the last war. The bulk of the mobilised Frankish regiments were immediately placed under the command of Charles Mondromenos and directed to advance towards Tarsos, presumably in an attempt to force a peace settlement. The flanks of this advance would be covered by Guy's royal Dorylaion regiment which would invest the fortifications in Tyana. To the south Marshal Hugues readied the Syrian regiments to open a second front by advancing through what had once been Armenia Minor. Once more however it would be the blood soaked fields of Tarsos that would determine the victors of the war.
The Eretnid War
For roughly four months the fighting raged in and around Tarsos. The failure of Guy to seize Tyana, his army had withdrawn to await reinforcements following defeat on June 11, and cut off the Muslims forces to the south had dashed any hopes of a quick victory. Despite this the inconclusive fighting across the fields surrounding Tarsos rapidly became the focal point of the war with both sides funnelling resources to support the fierce fighting. The battle's outcome would eventually be decided by the Frankish advance to the east.
The Syrian regiments under Hugues de Lusignan had enjoyed some success in advancing north from Tripoli. Alexandretta had rapidly fallen and Hugues had wasted no time in moving north towards Teluch. He could not have been oblivious to the worrying rumours from Tarsos however and in early July he dispatched his chief lieutenant Orhan of Bukhara, an Arab Christian, westwards with the bulk of his forces. After pausing only to lay claim to Adana the relief force under Orhan arrived in Tarsos in late August. These timely reinforcements would prove to be the decisive factor in the eventual Frankish victory on October 24.
Victory in Tarsos came at a cost
The victory in Tarsos was hard won but of vital importance. Baturay would inflict more defeats on the Cypriot armies as the war progressed but none could reverse the loss he suffered in Tarsos. To the north Guy's campaign had resumed strongly, Ankyra would fall on September 28, until it was checked at Galatia on November 18 while his son Hugues had met little resistance in his march northwards. With the liberation of Tarsos the armies of Charles Mondromenos and Orhan were free to rejoin the fighting further north and the war's outcome could not be said to be in serious doubt. Despite this it still took almost a year of determined campaigning before last vestiges of Eretnid authority had been destroyed. Sinope would finally fall on 8 August 1357.
The war had not been of Guy's making. Despite this it had led to the destruction of the last Turkish power in Outremer and the complete victory of Cyprus over the Sultans of Anatolia. The campaigning had been expensive but not ruinously so and Genoa, in a pleasant seasonal surprise, donated over 1,700 bezants on Christmas Eve in exchange for trading rights along the newly opened Black Sea ports. It is unlikely that either the Papacy or Venice were pleased at this but such was Guy's reputation that no immediate action could be taken. This windfall allowed the King to divest himself of the bulk of the new lands, while retaining the more profitable provinces of course. Both Charles Mondromenos and Orhan were rewarded for their services during the war by being granted the titles of Prince of Chersianon and Armenia Minor respectively. While Guy's son Hugues was not elevated to the rank of Prince he retained his large lands captured during the war. To these nobles were left the weighty tasks of managing the new lands and guarding against the Mongol presence while Guy could return his gaze to his Syrian possessions and the Holy Land beyond.
Cyprus in 1358
Freedom in capitalist society always remains about the same as it was in the ancient Greek republics: freedom for the slave-owners
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So Far From God (Complete)
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A shame about the Eretnid ruining your plans, but well done in finally getting rid of them. But I wonder if Guy will now have the time necessary to capture Jerusalem before things get ugly with the Mongols.
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I do like that map of movements, victories, and defeats. Actually quite a complicated tale, but well presented.
To view is human, to comment is divine.
"Be not afraid" - John Paul II
"The Christian way has not been tried and found wanting, it has been found to be hard and left untried" - GK Chesterton.
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I second Stynlan`s opinion, great idea showing a campaign map.





Thankfully that isn't looking too likely right now. The Il-Khanat has gotten distracted with rampaging through the Caucasus and Ukraine. Seeing as I've absolutely no interest in fighting the Mongols its a real weight off my mind as things start heating up in the Levant.Originally Posted by Shuma
With regards the map, I decided to use one after sitting down and failing miserably to convey the movements of the war through words. Personally I feel it provides a better summary of events than my writing alone ever could.
On a slightly related topic, he's the map of the Levant in 1358. Just so people know where everything is for the next few updates![]()
Freedom in capitalist society always remains about the same as it was in the ancient Greek republics: freedom for the slave-owners
VI Lenin
Collected Works
The de Lusignan Dream (Complete) | Les Journals d'Artois (Complete) | Sins of the Fathers (Complete)
So Far From God (Complete)
The Life and Times of a Good Mexican





Its actually surprising quiet, albeit still very fluid, at this time. The crusader conquest of Egypt is just about complete. El-Arish has taken Antioch from Mallorca and those two are still at war. Bilal of Jerusalem is still fighting the Mamluks for independence and is holding his own. He also happens to be at war with half of Christendom but the crusaders have yet to make their way to Palestine.Originally Posted by Vincent Julien
Which reminds me that I really should get a move on with this…
Freedom in capitalist society always remains about the same as it was in the ancient Greek republics: freedom for the slave-owners
VI Lenin
Collected Works
The de Lusignan Dream (Complete) | Les Journals d'Artois (Complete) | Sins of the Fathers (Complete)
So Far From God (Complete)
The Life and Times of a Good Mexican





The Polish Crusade (1358)
The war waged against Baturay of Eretnid had been both hard won and draining. Despite this the eyes of Christendom remained firmly focused on the Holy Sepulchre with the campaigning to the north of the Holy Land firmly relegated to that of a sideshow. Insofar as the campaign had registered on Europe it was in acknowledging that the land route taken by the knights of 1095 was once again open. Above all this suited the purposes of King Borzyslaw Piast of Poland who led what would come to be called the Polish Crusade.
![]()
King Borzyslaw Piast of Poland
Like much of the European nobility, King Piast had been dazzled by the lure of Jerusalem following the events of the previous few years. The collapse of Sultanates in both Anatolia and Egypt had sparked a sense that the recovery of the Holy Land was not just inevitable but immanent. Unlike most royalty however Borzyslaw Piast was not satisfied with recording such divine planning; he intended to play a role in it. Preparations for crusade were begun following the harvest in 1356 when the King convened a congress of leading Polish nobles to discuss the events in the Levant. There the King and his brother, Jerzy Piast Duke of Mazovia, publicly received the cross from Archbishop Maciej Borkowic and pledged to recover the Holy Land from the "infidels, heathens and Saracens". While the armies of Cyprus battled across eastern Anatolia, the combined royal and ducal armies of the Polish royal family, perhaps some ten thousand strong, slowly made their way south.
The crusading host finally reached the Cypriot court at Dorylaion in the first weeks of February 1358. There the realities and ideals of Outremer once again clashed. Guy de Lusignan was, ironically not unlike past Byzantine Emperors, perturbed at the arrival of outside armies that could disrupt his own timetable for war. Following the campaign in Mesopotamia the armies of Cyprus were hardly in ideal shape to resume the offensive. At the same time Guy is unlikely to have been keen on the burden of hosting the Polish armies for the summer months. This disagreement would be simply one of many points of contention between the two kings.
![]()
The Polish Crusaders arrive at Dorylaion
During his time at Dorylaion Borzyslaw flatly rejected refused, more than once, to acknowledge Guy's lordship of Jerusalem and its lands. Such an oath would have placed lands conquered by the Poles under nominal Cypriot lordship as feudal lords. In this regard the Polish King's refusal both undermined Guy's authority and contributed to the extremely ill feelings that would result from the meeting. Today it remains a matter of debate as to whether this clash was due to Borzyslaw's own ambitions in the Levant or his acquaintance with the other claimant of Jerusalem, Mathieu d'Anjou.
After an inconclusive week the Polish armies left Dorylaion with little to show for their stay. Guy had eventually promised to provide the vital logistical support and markets for the venture as well as guides through his lands. Crucially however Borzyslaw had failed to garner the support of the Cypriot armies on which his crusade had relied upon to supplement his slim numbers. Instead Guy had decided to launch his own, separate and distinct, campaign in the Holy Land. This division of operations that resulted from an inability to reach political settlement in February would lead to military disaster in June.
The arrival of the Polish armies had thrown Guy's own leisurely preparations into disarray. By the time Borzyslaw's host had made its way through Anatolia and into Syria Guy had only managed to muster a mere seven thousand men, primarily drawn from the Syrian regiments, and possessed just over a thousand gold bezants in his war treasury. It was a far cry from the King's usual meticulous preparations and had the advantage only in that the army was just a short march from the Jerusalem territory. Finally on 22 April 1358 Guy reached the head of his army and issued the orders to advance towards Muslim Beirut… despite the Borzyslaw's prior departure in the direction of Safed.
![]()
The Galilee Campaign
The Cypriot advance was relatively successful. The Muslim garrison at Beirut was scattered on May 13 and the city would fall a month later. The march south immediately resumed with the army shortly arriving outside the city of Tyre. Despite the brutal heat morale was high with no major opposition being encountered. There was an excellent reason for this. Emir Bilal of Jerusalem had spent an exhausting but generally successful two years in fighting off his former Mamluk masters in Amman. He had been campaigning east of Damascus when word of the Christian advance was first received. Gathering up his armies Bilal turned west to deal with this new threat and it was in the first week of June that the Arab armies caught the Poles besieging Safed by surprise.
As he finished up his own siege at Beirut Guy cannot not have been unaware of the pitched battle occurring so close at Safed. Yet he did nothing to assist the Poles as they found themselves caught between the tall fortress walls and the relief army of Bilal. What followed was a disaster not seen in crusading history since the annihilation of Louis IX's crusade at Mansurah a century earlier. While the Cypriot army maintained their siege at Tyre, the Poles camped outside Safed were annihilated with almost the entire Polish army was killed or captured. King Piast himself was extremely lucky to escape with his life and small retinue.
![]()
Battle at Safed
As the few survivors of the Safed disaster struggled to reach friendly territory, their fellow Christians were busy preparing for battle at Tyre. The city had fallen on July 19 and, rather than abandon his position, Guy had chosen to fortify the town as he awaited the arrival of regiments only now mobilising throughout both Cyprus and Anatolia. First however he would have to contend with the Muslim army seeking capitalise on its numerical advantage and earlier success at Safed. As both sides summoned reinforcements battle finally commenced with the Muslim host arriving at Tyre on July 27.
The battle at Tyre would drag on for two bloody and hard fought days. Eventually however the Frankish forces, aided by the timely arrival of seaborne reinforcements, would triumph. The Arab army was thrown back with heavy casualties and, taking a significant gamble, Guy abandoned his fortifications at Tyre and followed the disorganised army south towards Acre, harrying the Muslims all the way. The Polish campaign had come to an ignominious end on the fields outside Safed but Guy's crusade in the Holy Land had survived and could now begin in earnest.
Freedom in capitalist society always remains about the same as it was in the ancient Greek republics: freedom for the slave-owners
VI Lenin
Collected Works
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So Far From God (Complete)
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Nice update, I liked the interaction between the crusading Polish King and Guy, Jerusalem looks like it may be finally back in the Lusignan's grasp.
Well as I started reading the update I thought: "The race to Jerusalem is on!". But now it seems the Polish king got triped on the way over there. He couldn't really expect for the Cypriots to help after so forcefully refusing to recognize de Lusignan lordship over Jerusalem.
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Why, oh why, do I have a sinking feeling in the pit of my stomach that Guy has just marked himself as tainted following the debacle of the Polish Crusade?
Mayhap he can find someone who can spin the defeat in such a way that all the blame falls on the Poles? Wouldn't that be nice?![]()
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The path to success is open, all he need do now is properly grasp it.
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"Be not afraid" - John Paul II
"The Christian way has not been tried and found wanting, it has been found to be hard and left untried" - GK Chesterton.
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Bah. Spinning anything in the Crusade era is easy. It was God's Will! The De Luisignan family is ruler of Jerusalem by divine right, and he would not allow a usurper to sit on its throne.Originally Posted by Draco Rexus
After all, if God had been on their side the Poles would have triumphed even without Guy...
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The Palestine Campaign (1358-1360)
If the destruction of the Polish armies beneath the arid skies of Safed marked the end of one crusade then it had secured the future of another. History is rarely evident to those who act it out however and in the summer of 1358 there was no guarantee that Guy de Lusignan would not follow in the footsteps of Borzyslaw Piast.
Guy had followed up his successful defence of Tyre with a rapid offensive in Acre, on 20 August, that scattered Bilal's personal army. However the Frankish losses had been heavy and reinforcements were painfully slow in mobilising and moving south. It is a sign of Guy's impatience that he left the siege of such an important city as Acre to a lieutenant (Orhan of Bukhara) in order to travel north and personally berate his Princes for their lack of support. The King would return to the battlefield in time to witness the capitulation of Tiberias (30 November) after securing his vassals' commitment to the crusade.
There was good cause for Guy's worry and demand for men. The rapid advance through Galilee had effectively destroyed the capabilities of Bilal's army in the field but the Emir had deep reserves and the campaign had been extremely punishing on the invaders. Eastern politics had further complicated matters, and forestalled an immediate march on the Holy City, with the Mamluks occupying Jerusalem as part of their war against their errant vassal. Further east the Sultan Berkan of Baghdad was watching the unfolding situation with unease. Rather than risk a wider war for which he was woefully unprepared Guy finally turned from the road to Jerusalem in December 1358 and headed west for the coast. For his men the comparison with the Richard I and the Third Crusade must have been unmistakable.
The Palestine Campaign
Spring of 1359 brought mixed fortunes for the Christians in the Levant. Guy's army was met by reinforcements as it marched along the Mediterranean coast and he secured the strategically important ports of Jaffa and Ascalon in rapid succession (17 February and 18 May respectively). To the north however a second army of Jerusalem had emerged and begun besieging the fortifications in Baalbek, part of Christian Syria. A delay in organising a relief army was punished when the town surrendered to the Muslims on 26 March. It would be another month before a Frankish army, led by the Swedish adventurer Sigurd Rova, was able to dispel this new threat and not until June that Baalbek could be retaken.
This campaign in the north could only delay or sap the reinforcements to the south, a state of affairs that clearly worried Guy, but was not crucial. After securing the coast the Frankish army moved inland and encountered little opposition as it passed through the Palestine countryside. By the end of October Hebron, Monreal and Beershab were all flying the de Lusignan standard and Sigurd Rova, now count of Baalbek and Safed, was en route south after eliminating the Arab regiments in Galilee.
The Muslims take Baalbek
During the summer of 1359 there were two distinct events that would shape the future of the crusade. The first was the arrival of over four thousand enthusiastic crusaders in Dorylaion. Fruit of the crusading fever sweeping Europe, these knights were almost uniformly the sons of Western counts and dukes eager to seek adventure and battle against the Saracens in the Holy Land. As a result this band of warriors has traditionally been given the moniker of the Nobles Crusade. Of more immediate importance was the fighting in Jerusalem during late August as Bilal of Jerusalem, with the aid of Berkan of Baghdad, sought to retake the city from the Mamluks. The rivalry between Berkan and Shihab Bahri was infamous; even if only a footnote in the long running competition between the twin centres of Arab power - Baghdad and Egypt (the latter now based in Amman).
For the Christians preparing for winter quarters in Hebron, the latter development was something akin to a miracle and in a stroke opened the road to Jerusalem. On 26 November the Frankish convergence on the city began as Berkan, satisfied with victory over this Mamluk rival, began to withdraw back to Baghdad. While Bilal's army was refreshed and ready, it stood little chance against the numerically superior crusading host. On Christmas Eve 1359 the siege of Jerusalem began. The next day Christmas mass would be celebrated within sight of the Tower of David.
The Siege of Jerusalem begins
Freedom in capitalist society always remains about the same as it was in the ancient Greek republics: freedom for the slave-owners
VI Lenin
Collected Works
The de Lusignan Dream (Complete) | Les Journals d'Artois (Complete) | Sins of the Fathers (Complete)
So Far From God (Complete)
The Life and Times of a Good Mexican
cool, nice expansion but shame about the cost of the eretnid campaign but what does that matter now that jerusalem is soon to fall![]()
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