Thlayli
Le Pétit Prince
But if the successes of the First and Second Crusades were coupled with Byzantine victory at Manzikert...
Certainly relations between Constantinople and the Crusaders was never good, but when the Byzantines retake Antioch and eastern Turkey/Armenia things could get quite strained. However, Byzantium would still be strong and in control of Turkey, and the Seljuks of Rum would be pushed south, into Iraq, which is controlled by the Abbasids, and devastate it. The Imperial Frontier remains at Lake Van.
The First Crusade will have an easier time of it, not having to march though a hostile Turkey, and the Second Crusade will take Damascus. Saladin will not live past childhood.
This *might* set the scenario for a Templar/Hospitaller/Byzantine march on Cairo or Baghdad, if a reconciliation can (and probably will) be made with a resurgent Byzantium. This will be the "Third Crusade," probably in the late 13th century after the Crusaders have consolidated their gains in the Holy Land. Byzantines, Crusaders, Arabs, and now Mongols, will soon become locked in a devastating 4-way battle for the control of the Middle East. Possibly this could culminate in a huge Battle of Baghdad.
You could do a really awesome timeline with this, das.
Okay, here we go:
1071: A newly reformed Byzantine Army (this is the PoD, I suppose) smashes the Seljuk Turks at Manzikert. The Emperor taking heed to the prudent warnings of his top General to fortify his position and scout the area proves to be an excellent decision. The Seljuks are instead pushed south, and besiege Baghdad in 1073 before being defeated by the Abbasids. Norman armies are pushed back from the boot of Italy at the Battle of Brundisium.
1081: A massive Slavic revolt is subdued, and the Bulgarian frontier is pushed back. The revitalized Byzantine Army retakes Antioch.
1091: The First Crusades (beginning 5 years earlier due to the Pope seeing the Byzantine successes in Turkey) begin. Despite the rowdiness of the Crusading forces, they are well provisioned at Antioch (which they had to besiege in OTL) by the Byzantines (who are all too happy to get rid of them,) and capture Edessa and Jerusalem by 1099. Tyre, Ascalon, and Tiberias become bustling administrative centers.
1095: Venetian raids on Northern Egypt meet with some success. Deprived of a weak Byzantium, the Venetians raid Arab territories in Sicily, Africa and Egypt. Byzantium resecures Syracuse. Raymond of Toulouse crowned King of Jerusalem.
1120: After spending several years consolidating gains, the Second Crusade assembles a force of about 50,000 men. Despite Franks, Germans and English disagreeing on whether to recapture Edessa or attack Egypt, a compromise is made, and the Crusaders march on Damascus. An initial attack meets with much success, and the inhabitants are slaughtered by the Crusaders after surrendering.
1130: Reuniting of the Catholic and Orthodox Churches. (I have no way to explain this one, simply base it on the continuing Byzantine presence in Italy, and warmer relations because of it) The Pope visits Constantinople. The Patriarch meets an unpleasant end. A combined Crusade is planned to defeat the Arabs once and for all.
Hmm, I'm not really sure where to take it from here.
Certainly relations between Constantinople and the Crusaders was never good, but when the Byzantines retake Antioch and eastern Turkey/Armenia things could get quite strained. However, Byzantium would still be strong and in control of Turkey, and the Seljuks of Rum would be pushed south, into Iraq, which is controlled by the Abbasids, and devastate it. The Imperial Frontier remains at Lake Van.
The First Crusade will have an easier time of it, not having to march though a hostile Turkey, and the Second Crusade will take Damascus. Saladin will not live past childhood.
This *might* set the scenario for a Templar/Hospitaller/Byzantine march on Cairo or Baghdad, if a reconciliation can (and probably will) be made with a resurgent Byzantium. This will be the "Third Crusade," probably in the late 13th century after the Crusaders have consolidated their gains in the Holy Land. Byzantines, Crusaders, Arabs, and now Mongols, will soon become locked in a devastating 4-way battle for the control of the Middle East. Possibly this could culminate in a huge Battle of Baghdad.
You could do a really awesome timeline with this, das.
Okay, here we go:
1071: A newly reformed Byzantine Army (this is the PoD, I suppose) smashes the Seljuk Turks at Manzikert. The Emperor taking heed to the prudent warnings of his top General to fortify his position and scout the area proves to be an excellent decision. The Seljuks are instead pushed south, and besiege Baghdad in 1073 before being defeated by the Abbasids. Norman armies are pushed back from the boot of Italy at the Battle of Brundisium.
1081: A massive Slavic revolt is subdued, and the Bulgarian frontier is pushed back. The revitalized Byzantine Army retakes Antioch.
1091: The First Crusades (beginning 5 years earlier due to the Pope seeing the Byzantine successes in Turkey) begin. Despite the rowdiness of the Crusading forces, they are well provisioned at Antioch (which they had to besiege in OTL) by the Byzantines (who are all too happy to get rid of them,) and capture Edessa and Jerusalem by 1099. Tyre, Ascalon, and Tiberias become bustling administrative centers.
1095: Venetian raids on Northern Egypt meet with some success. Deprived of a weak Byzantium, the Venetians raid Arab territories in Sicily, Africa and Egypt. Byzantium resecures Syracuse. Raymond of Toulouse crowned King of Jerusalem.
1120: After spending several years consolidating gains, the Second Crusade assembles a force of about 50,000 men. Despite Franks, Germans and English disagreeing on whether to recapture Edessa or attack Egypt, a compromise is made, and the Crusaders march on Damascus. An initial attack meets with much success, and the inhabitants are slaughtered by the Crusaders after surrendering.
1130: Reuniting of the Catholic and Orthodox Churches. (I have no way to explain this one, simply base it on the continuing Byzantine presence in Italy, and warmer relations because of it) The Pope visits Constantinople. The Patriarch meets an unpleasant end. A combined Crusade is planned to defeat the Arabs once and for all.
Hmm, I'm not really sure where to take it from here.