Having followed the discussion above on England I started to wonder whether it would not make sense to split the section on Belligerents in three: Crusaders & Byzantium, Seljuk Turks and the Fatimids.
The reasoning is as follows. As the article states in the beginning, one crucial reason was the Seljuk conquests in the Middle East which then led emperor Alexios to ask for military aid in 1095. At this time, Jerusalem had been for around 20 years under Turkmen and then Seljuk turbulent rule (see Atsiz massacre of 1077, street fights in 1093 under Sökmen,...) which created difficulties for the visiting pilgrims. Thus, the Franks set of to liberate the lands fallen into Seljuk hands and then march on Jerusalem and not to make war on all Muslims.
Already at Nicea in March 1097, emperor Alexios suggested the crusaders sent ambassadors to the Fatimid caliph because of the shared interest to maintain the Turkish threat (let's remember that Atsiz had tried to invade Egypt in 1076 and that the Seljuks portrayed themselves as strict Sunnites and fighters against the Shiite Fatimids). The embassy of the Fatimid caliph then met the crusaders at the siege of Antioch in February 1098 and it could be that they even fought in the battle of the lake of Antioch on February 9 (see Albert of Aachen: https://books.google.es/books?id=29ivdUpWBj8C, page 237 (chapter iii, 62)). Though it is not certain and most of the sources are written with hindsight after Jerusalem had fallen, it seems that when they left in March 1097, some kind of arrangement had been made, possibly even an alliance. Stephen of Blois writes that the Fatimids had "established peace and concord with us". Ibn Zafir writes al-Afdal, the Armenian Fatimid vezier said that it was better that the Franks occupy the Syrian ports "so that they could prevent the spread of the influence of the Turks on the lands of Egypt" (note that many coastal places were independent or under Turkish hand such as Antioch or Tripolis and see for the quote the Carolina Hillenbrand pp. 44-47). Hillenbrand and others suggest further that there might have been a plan to divide Seljuk lands and that al-Afdal would have liked to have a buffer state between him and the Seljuks.
With the Crusaders binding the Seljuk attention in northern Syria, the Fatimids were then able to go to war against the southern Seljuk towns and reconquer Jerusalem in August 1098. The Frankish ambassadors celebrated Easter 1099 in the reconquered Jerusalem together with the Fatimids.
The break with the Fatimids came only in April 1099 when the diplomatic discussions before Arqa broke down, likely also influenced by the breakdown of the alliance between (most of) the crusaders and Alexios.
Even then did the crusaders only went straight after Jerusalem, not conquering any further places on their way. Moreover, the Fatimids did not join the Turks in an alliance to expel the crusaders but this joining of arms happened several decades later (under Nur ad-Din? unfortunately I am not well-read on when they actually joined arms).
One option could be to include the Fatimids on both columns and give an entrance date into the conflict (like Russia here in the infobox on the Seven Years' War) but I think this still gives a wrong impression as if the Fatimids and the Crusaders or the Seljuks and Fatimids were united.
Therefore, I think these events could be best reflected by having three columns with the crusading forces (maybe we could use here the Wiki pages on the armies of each crusader lord?) & Byzantium in the first, the Seljuk forces in the second and the Fatimids in the third. This shows better the existing division and complexity in the Middle East and will also give the readers the incentive to see the conflict as more than just Christians vs. Muslims.
What do you think?
PS: Here some sources on the topic:
Asbridge, Thomas S.(2007). Knowing thy Enemy: Latin Relations with Islam at the Time of the First Crusade in Knighthoods of Christ Essays on the History of the Crusades and the Knights Templar, Presented to Malcolm Barber, pp. 17-25 https://www.google.com/books/edition/Knighthoods_of_Christ/mgskDwAAQBAJ
France, John (1994). Victory in the East, pp. 325-327 https://archive.org/details/victoryineast00john/page/324/mode/2up
Hillenbrand, Caroline (2000). The Crusades: Islamic Perspectives, pp. 44-47 https://books.google.com/books?id=UalnoF5MBHMC
Köhler, Markus (2013). Alliances and Treaties between Frankish and Muslim Rulers in the Middle East, especially pp.44-54 https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/14644/1/Kohler%20alliances%2C%20published%20version%20prelim%20and%20ch.%201.pdf PontiffSulivahn (talk) 16:52, 2 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
- I don't object to this per se, but think it might be a little too esoteric for this article. The text doesn't really support this and I think adding this material to the article would just confuse things. I suggest a seperate article discussing the complex relations among all the parties. Dr. Grampinator (talk) 20:57, 2 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
- @PontiffSulivahn makes a good point, that the InfoBox as it currently stands is factually inaccurate. Currently it implies the Seljuks and Fatimids were allied, which is clearly untrue. I would go further, it implies a dualist Muslim v Christian contest. This lacks nuance. The Byzantines were not, by definition, either on crusade or part of the crusade. There may have been some common interest in Anatolia, a desire for restituition of Antioch and logistical support but this was in Byzantine interests; their respective objectives were different and many Crusaders were enimies of the Empire.
- As such the box needs an edit, and I would suggest four columns rather than 3, or it needs deleting. Norfolkbigfish (talk) 08:52, 3 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
- Good point, the dualist view is far to simplified, especially as this article is about the First Crusade and not about Crusader involvement in the Holy Land in general where it could be considered.
- I think with respect to Byzantium the more recent view is to emphasise their role in bringing the crusade to be and the close collaboration they maintained throughout the campaign up to the split at Arqa.
- Any suggestions on how to proceed?
- @Dr. Grampinator, which text specifically do you have in mind?
- Also, if you do not mind I will change as a start the list of belligerent Western Europe to the different crusader armies. Neither was Western Europe involved in this as a whole nor as a "state entity". Happy to discuss it though. PontiffSulivahn (talk) 18:13, 8 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
- I'm thinking that the entire upper part of the Infobox can go. But then the right side should have three bold titles: Seljuks of Rum, Seljuk Empire, Fatimid Dynasty. The same basic information is conveyed. Dr. Grampinator (talk) 19:06, 8 March 2024 (UTC)Reply