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Across the Bosphorus at last, the Crusaders set their sights on nothing less than the Turkish capitol.

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Europe: The First Crusade - IV: Men of Iron - Extra History

Support us on Patreon! http://bit.ly/EHPatreon Watch the First Crusade series! http://bit.ly/1DxBoWh Subscribe for new episodes every Saturday! http://bit.ly/SubToEC Follow us on Facebook! http://bit.ly/ECFBPage Follow us on Twitter! http://bit.ly/ECTweet Follow us on Twitch! http://bit.y/ECTwitch ____________ Having sworn their oaths to Emperor Alexius Comnenus, the Crusaders finally sailed across the Bosphorus River to Turkey. When they disembarked, however, there were no Turkish armies waiting for them. Unopposed, they marched to Nicaea, the capitol of the Sultanate of Rum, and laid siege to it. At last word reached the sultan, Kilij Arslan, who rode back to save his city (and his family) only to realize that this army of crusaders was much larger and better organized than the People's Crusade which had come before. They had not yet realized, however, that the city of Nicaea was being secretly resupplied by ships arriving by night from Lake Askania. Once they did, the Byzantines transported their own ships overland to blockade the lake and launch a coordinated assault with the crusaders to force the city to surrender. The crusaders marched towards Jerusalem, but along the way, the Turks launched a surprise assault on Bohemond's army. He ordered his knights to form a shield wall around the priests and civilians traveling with them, and they held for hours under a burning sun until reinforcements from the other crusading armies arrived. They rallied, defeated the Turks, and resumed their march. ____________ Get the intro music here! http://bit.ly/1EQA5N7 *Music by Demetori: http://bit.ly/1AaJG4H Get the outro music here! http://bit.ly/1NbpIcd __________ Extra History - From Swineherd to Emperor Byzantine Empire: Justinian and Theodora: http://bit.ly/1J4vFWU Extra Credits - Best Detective Game Ever Made The Witcher: Wild Hunt: http://bit.ly/1MYYSXO

Comments

The Cayute

Seven hours. Holy shit. I do that amount of time these days in a concrete block of a machine shop under the baking southern California sun (an hour's drive from the coast) wearing steel toe boots and light clothing. I'm dealing with humidity in the shop made of vaporised water and coolant oil inside an almost literal brick oven with only some air flow. I can only imagine that amount of time under the direct heat of a Middle Eastern Sun, crammed next to my comrades, wearing steel mail and holding up heavy kite shields. AND under constant barrage from iron-headed arrows.

Anonymous

Hardcore! Y'know, if they weren't so prone to looting their friends, you could almost give these guys a kitty-lack-of-thumbs up. =)

Michael Waisfeld

To think all this could have been avoided if the Byzantines didn't botch so badly at manzikert

Anonymous

And next time we will finally see how the crusaders fare against the fire power that will be known throughout the world as the holy hand grenades of Antioch!

Anonymous

You should get Oscars of Nobel Price for this.

Anonymous

And the trend continues - despite being there to help the Byzantines, the crusaders are way less competent than the Byzantines are. "Lets just not worry about that lake - what's the worst they could do?"

Anonymous

To be fair, we are getting the fairly pro-Byzantine version of this story. History is many things, but it is not truly objective, and James' clear fondness for Byzantium is bleeding in to this series a bit. He also read a lot of Steven Runciman who has a fairly noticeable pro-Byzantine bias. That bias isn't necessarily wrong, but other historians working with the same sources and materials have produced very different accounts and explanations for these events. It's worth noting that by and large the Crusaders were superior to their Byzantine counterparts at siege warfare, at least when it came to destroying or scaling city walls. Left to their own devices they likely would have eventually taken Nicaea by force, hence why Alexios felt he needed to negotiate the city's surrender and prevent it from being sacked. Similarly, while the Crusaders seem pretty wild and incompetent at times, remember that they are marching deep into territory that Byzantium hasn't been able to make any headway in despite trying to for ~25 years. There are also a lot of things we view as incompetent or stupid from the perspective of our modern society but were business as usual in medieval society. They lived under very different conditions and rules with different expectations. It's also worth bearing in mind that the lake problem fell pretty squarely into "Thing's Byzantium had to solve" in this campaign. Byzantium needed to support the Crusaders. Alexios asked for help but help came with conditions of support and Byzantium had the ships and equipment to barricade the port. The Crusaders could hardly build a fleet to encircle the city. Their best option was either rely on Byzantium to defend the lake or else take down the walls of the city themselves (which they were doing, although it's a slow going type of warfare).

Jason Youngberg

Wait, what were the Crusaders doing PROTECTING civilians?

Anonymous

"You though you were surrendering to the Crusaders? TOO BAD! It was me, Alexius!" The battle you depicted at the end would be the most boring tactic ever in a video game, but somehow you made it sound so epic.

Anonymous

@Hung Nguyen. That's the most common and effective way of murdering the enemy army. Nothing boring about completely crushing the enemy from two sides.

Anonymous

Moral of the story; dead peasants get things done.

Anonymous

this story about Bohemand's knights holding their ground sounds a little... embellished tbh

Jathby Dredas

I think he's talking about turtling, and it works in some video games too.

De

I want to say how much I appreciate the way the art is full of little cues and details to help us all remember who we're talking about and basic facts about them. Those sunglasses on Hughe may be silly but they make you go "Oh yeah, the We're Cool guy who's father fought for Byzantine and who made it to Constantinople without losing too many guys or looting." The same goes for Raymond's eyepatch and Bohemand's mustache, the old guy and the tricky guy. Without these reminders I'd be totally lost.

De

How about that battle cry though?

ExtraCredits

I'm glad the little cues are helping out! Heather is great at finding ways to add the characters' personality through those little touches.

ExtraCredits

Human fatigue is unfortunately one of those things that few video games represent well (though I've seen a few, like Total War, gesture in that direction). People standing their ground in the face of a seemingly endless assault may not look exciting - and I doubt the people enduring it would call it "exciting" themselves - but damned if it isn't brave!

ExtraCredits

Well, those were THEIR civilians (and unarmed soldiers), you see, so... :\

ExtraCredits

Yikes! Yeah, as much as the crusaders have had... rough moments this story, there was certainly a core element of courage driving them on.