FranceHistories

1095-1099: The First Crusade and the France of Princes

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Philip I: Enduring in Feudal France (1060-1108) · HIGH MIDDLE AGES

In 1095, at the council of Clermont, Pope Urban II calls for crusade. The mobilization is unprecedented. The “France” of Philip I’s time is not a unified state: it is a collection of principalities. The crusade therefore reveals where real power lies: above all, it is the princes who leave, more than the king.


🛡️ The Departure of the Great Lords

The departure of lords and knights produces internal effects:

  • sales of rights and lands to finance the expedition;
  • redistribution of castles, tolls, and loyalties;
  • recomposition of alliance networks.

The king must deal with these movements: some departures may reduce local pressure, but they can also strengthen families when they return, loaded with prestige.


👑 The King and the Crusade

Philip I does not lead the expedition: his crisis with the Church marginalizes him at the very moment the event is launched. Meanwhile, “French” lords play a leading role, such as Raymond of Toulouse or Godfrey of Bouillon.

Royal power, limited as it is, focuses on one objective: maintaining order in the domain and preventing a prince from exploiting the vacuum created by departures to seize a key point. The paradox is striking: a major event, initiated on his own territory, unfolds without the king being able to lead it.


🧠 Key Takeaways

  • The crusade underscores the power of the princes and the relative weakness of the center.
  • The kingdom is reshaped by sales, absences, and returns more than by royal decisions.