• Thumbnail for Women's Crusade
    Women's Crusade against Alcohol, 1873-1874". Center for Women's History and Leadership. Retrieved 2024-05-06. Masson, Erin M. (1997). "The Women's Christian...
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  • Thumbnail for Women in the Crusades
    The role of women in the Crusades is frequently viewed as being limited to domestic or illicit activities during the Crusades. While to some extent this...
    35 KB (4,622 words) - 17:43, 26 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for The Women's Peace Crusade
    The Women's Peace Crusade was a grassroots socialist movement that spread across Great Britain between 1916 and 1918. Its central aim was to spread a...
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  • Thumbnail for Portuguese Women's Crusade
    The Portuguese Women's Crusade GCTE (Portuguese: Cruzada das Mulheres Portuguesas [kɾuˈzaðɐ ðɐʒ muˈʎɛɾɨʃ puɾtuˈɣezɐʃ]) was a Portuguese feminist beneficence...
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  • Thumbnail for Crusades
    The Crusades were a series of religious wars initiated, supported, and sometimes directed by the Christian Latin Church in the medieval period. The best...
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  • bootlegging. The Women's Crusade was the precursor to the Women's Christian Temperance Union. It was also known as the Women's Praying Crusade in response...
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  • Thumbnail for First Crusade
    The First Crusade (1096–1099) was the first of a series of religious wars, or Crusades, initiated, supported and at times directed by the Latin Church...
    124 KB (15,394 words) - 04:45, 21 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for People's Crusade
    The People's Crusade was the beginning phase of the First Crusade whose objective was to retake the Holy Land, and Jerusalem in particular, from Islamic...
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  • Thumbnail for Children's Crusade
    The Children's Crusade was a failed popular crusade by European Christians to establish a second Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem in the Holy Land in the early...
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  • Thumbnail for Fourth Crusade
    The Fourth Crusade (1202–1204) was a Latin Christian armed expedition called by Pope Innocent III. The stated intent of the expedition was to recapture...
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  • the traditional numbered crusades and others that prominent historians have identified as crusades. The scope of the term crusade first referred to military...
    146 KB (18,737 words) - 17:09, 27 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Third Crusade
    The Third Crusade (1189–1192) was an attempt led by three European monarchs of Western Christianity (Philip II of France, Richard I of England and Frederick...
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  • Thumbnail for Eighth Crusade
    The Eighth Crusade was the second Crusade launched by Louis IX of France, this one against the Hafsid dynasty in Tunisia in 1270. It is also known as the...
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  • Thumbnail for Albigensian Crusade
    The Albigensian Crusade (French: Croisade des albigeois), also known as the Cathar Crusade (1209–1229), was a military and ideological campaign initiated...
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  • Cru (until 2011 known as Campus Crusade for Christ—informally "Campus Crusade" or simply "Crusade"—or CCC) is an interdenominational Christian parachurch...
    51 KB (5,609 words) - 08:07, 28 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Seventh Crusade
    The Seventh Crusade (1248–1254) was the first of the two Crusades led by Louis IX of France. Also known as the Crusade of Louis IX to the Holy Land, it...
    104 KB (14,317 words) - 05:41, 9 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Esther Lord McNeill
    Washingtonian movement, Women's Crusade, and the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU). She was one of the band of crusaders whose work in Fredonia...
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  • Thumbnail for 2023–24 Holy Cross Crusaders women's basketball team
    2023–24 Holy Cross Crusaders women's basketball team represented the College of the Holy Cross during the 2023–24 NCAA Division I women's basketball season...
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  • Thumbnail for Prohibition in the United States
    sin. Other active organizations included the Women's Church Federation, the Women's Temperance Crusade, and the Department of Scientific Temperance Instruction...
    130 KB (14,220 words) - 12:44, 24 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Crusades after the fall of Acre, 1291–1399
    The Crusades after the fall of Acre, 1291–1399 represent the later Crusades that were called for by papal authorities in the century following the fall...
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  • Thumbnail for Valparaiso Beacons
    evolved into the current NCAA women's golf championship). The women's gymnastics team was discontinued in 1992. The women's soccer team played its inaugural...
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  • Thumbnail for Crusader states
    of feudalism, the foundation for these polities was laid by the First Crusade, which was proclaimed by the Latin Church in 1095 in order to reclaim the...
    138 KB (18,950 words) - 03:39, 27 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Holy Cross Crusaders
    for either sex, the Crusaders are members of two other leagues, with men competing in the Atlantic Hockey Association and women in Hockey East. The men's...
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  • Thumbnail for Crusade of 1101
    The Crusade of 1101 was a minor crusade of three separate movements, organized in 1100 and 1101 in the successful aftermath of the First Crusade. It is...
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  • Thumbnail for Rhineland massacres
    The Rhineland massacres, also known as the German Crusade of 1096 or Gzerot Tatnó (Hebrew: גזרות תתנ"ו, "Edicts of 4856"), were a series of mass murders...
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  • First Crusade, including the armies of the European noblemen of the "Princes' Crusade", the Byzantine army, a number of Independent crusaders as well...
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  • Thumbnail for Prohibition
    Lutherans. The Women's Crusade of 1873 and the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU), founded in 1874, were means through which certain women organized...
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  • the International Women's Convention/Crusade meets annually in May in different cities throughout the nation drawing thousands of women from around the...
    108 KB (14,782 words) - 17:38, 26 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Matilda Gilruth Carpenter
    Matilda Gilruth Carpenter (category American women activists)
    known for leading the crusade against alcohol sales in Ohio in 1874. Carpenter is best remembered as the leader of the Woman's Crusade at Washington Court...
    6 KB (559 words) - 19:38, 22 November 2023
  • 2006. Kristof, Nicholas D.; WuDunn, Sheryl (August 17, 2009). "The Women's Crusade". The New York Times. Archived from the original on October 19, 2019...
    52 KB (5,555 words) - 04:05, 3 September 2024