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where are the crusaders from

Crusaders were primarily Latin Christian warriors from Western Europe, not from just one country.

Quick Scoop: Where the Crusaders Came From

When people talk about “the Crusaders,” they usually mean the knights and soldiers who went to fight in the Crusades in the Holy Land between the 11th and 13th centuries.

They mostly came from:

  • What is now France (especially the Franks and Normans).
  • The Holy Roman Empire area (parts of modern Germany, Austria, Belgium, Netherlands).
  • The Italian city-states like Venice and Genoa.
  • England and Norman -controlled regions.
  • Some contingents from other parts of Western and Central Europe (e.g., Spain, Hungary, etc.).

In short, they were Western European Roman Catholics—mainly Franks—who traveled east to fight in the Levant (the Eastern Mediterranean: modern Israel, Palestine, Lebanon, Syria, etc.).

Over time, people in the Middle East called these Western Europeans “Franks,” and that word (Farang/Feringi) stuck in many Asian languages for “Westerners.”

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.