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  1. The Children's Crusade was a failed popular crusade by European Christians to establish a second Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem in the Holy Land, said to have taken place in 1212. Although it is called the Children's Crusade, it never received the papal approval from Pope Innocent III to be an actual Crusade.

  2. Children’s Crusade, popular religious movement in Europe during the summer of 1212 in which thousands of young people took Crusading vows and set out to recover Jerusalem from the Muslims. Lasting only from May to September, the Children’s Crusade lacked official sanction and ended in failure; none.

  3. Sep 4, 2018 · The so-called Children's Crusade of 1212 CE, was a popular, double religious movement led by a French youth, Stephen of Cloyes, and a German boy, Nicholas of Cologne, who gathered two armies of perhaps 20,000 children, adolescents, and adults with the hopelessly optimistic objective of bettering the failures of the professional Crusader armies ...

    • Mark Cartwright
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  5. Oct 18, 2017 · Unarmed and unprepared, these kids were determined to strike out on a crusade of their own. But the Children’s Crusade of 1212, as it is now known, has gone down in history as a misguided...

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  6. May 28, 2020 · The Children's Crusade set out for the Holy Land in 1212. It never arrived. Two bands of young European Christians had their eyes on Jerusalem but failed to reach it. Historians are still...

  7. Crusades - Children, Europe, Faith: The Children's Crusade in 1212 was a popular movement that swept through the Rhineland. The movement included Nicholas from Cologne and thousands of children, adolescents, women, the elderly, the poor, and parish clergy.

  8. The Children's Crusade took place in the year 1212, and its participants were primarily young people between the ages of 6 and 18. What caused it? The Children's Crusade was not a single event, but rather two separate movements that occurred throughout Europe at roughly the same time.

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