Answer:
Seized Jerusalem, slaughtering many Muslim, Christian, and Jewish residents of the city.
Explanation:
The First Crusade had begun after the call of Pope Urban II during the Clermont Council to conquer the Holy Land from the Muslims. The siege of Jerusalem was a siege that took place between June 7 and July 15, 1099, during the First Crusade. The Crusaders managed to penetrate and conquer the holy city of Jerusalem that was in the hands of the Fatimid caliphate of Egypt. Once the Crusaders got into the city they began to carry out a <u>massacre in which almost all the inhabitants of Jerusalem died.</u> The massacre lasted during the afternoon, night and morning of the next day. Muslims, Jews, and even some Christians were massacred in an outbreak of indiscriminate violence. Many Muslims sought refuge in the mosque of Al-Aqsa where, according to a famous story by Gesta Francorum, "<em>the carnage was so great that our men walked with blood at the height of their ankles</em>..."
Edmund Burke was one of the first to suggest that the philosophers of the French Enlightenment were somehow responsible for the French Revolution, and his argument was taken up, and elaborated on, by many historians, including Tocqueville and Lord Acton. The philosophes undoubtedly provided the ideas.
Answer:
Things are rarely as exciting or dramatic as we make them out to be in the press. ... But success, that goes back to what in somebody's eyes success means.
Explanation: