北非的十字军东征

Matt A. King
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管耶路撒冷是中世纪时期许多大规模十字军远征的最终目标,但北非在这场运动中仍发挥了至关重要的作用。随着11世纪末十字军国家的建立,拉丁基督徒与埃及的法蒂玛王朝发生冲突,争夺黎凡特和尼罗河三角洲的地区控制权。这场冲突在13世纪让位于“埃及战略”,十字军认为通过这种战略夺回耶路撒冷最有可能的方法是攻击尼罗河富饶的土地。路易九世(King Louis IX)对埃及和突尼斯发起的十字军东征,在一定程度上是出于这样一种想法:占领北非的这些土地,最终将导致对圣地的重新征服。在地中海的其他地方,十字军的狂热通过收复运动传到了北非海岸。从13世纪开始,一直延续到近代早期,伊比利亚的基督教领袖们将非洲西北部的运动视为他们早先对半岛上穆斯林的排斥的延伸。这些十字军东征,理论上被认为是王朝的事业,既传播基督教,又扩大帝国的边界,一直持续到16世纪,因为教皇组织了欧洲基督教力量的援助,反对奥斯曼帝国。北非的穆斯林王朝对这些远征的反应从来都不一致,因为一些人更喜欢与入侵的法兰克人进行外交,而另一些人则发生冲突。然而,伊斯兰世界逐渐形成了一种观念,即对地中海范围内的法兰克侵略进行持久的圣战是一种适当的反应。在法国,中世纪十字军东征的记忆尤其强烈,19世纪法国征服阿尔及利亚期间,路易九世的远征被唤起。
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The Crusades in North Africa
Although Jerusalem was the ultimate target of many of the largest crusading expeditions during the medieval period, North Africa nonetheless played a crucial role in this movement. Following the establishment of the Crusader states at the end of the 11th century, Latin Christians clashed with the Fatimids of Egypt for regional control of the Levant and Nile River delta. This conflict gave way in the 13th century to the “Egyptian strategy,” through which crusaders thought the most likely way to retake Jerusalem was by attacking the rich and fertile lands of the Nile. The crusades of King Louis IX, which were directed at Egypt and Tunis, were motivated in part by the idea that seizing these lands in North Africa would ultimately lead to the reconquest of the Holy Land. Elsewhere in the Mediterranean, crusading fervor reached the shores of North Africa via the Reconquista. Beginning in the 13th century and extending through the early modern period, Christian leaders in Iberia viewed campaigns in northwest Africa as an extension of their earlier repulsion of Muslims from the peninsula. These crusades, which were theorized as dynastic enterprises that served to both spread Christianity and expand the borders of empires, persisted into the 16th century as the papacy marshaled the assistance of European Christian powers against the Ottomans. The response of Muslim dynasties in North Africa to these expeditions was never uniform, as some preferred diplomacy with the aggressing Franks and others conflict. However, there gradually developed in the Islamic world the idea that a persistent jihad against Mediterranean-wide Frankish aggression was an appropriate response. The memory of medieval crusades was a particularly potent one in France, where Louis IX’s expeditions were evoked during France’s conquest of Algeria in the 19th century.
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