The Siege and Capture of Lisbon (1147):…
October 1147 CE
The Siege and Capture of Lisbon (1147): A Victory of the Second Crusade
While the Second Crusade largely failed in the eastern Mediterranean, it achieved a notable success in Iberia. In October 1147, a fleet of Flemish, Frisian, Norman, English, Scottish, and German crusaders, en route to the Holy Land, fortuitously stopped in Portugal and joined Afonso I of Portugal in his campaign against the Almoravids.
Together, they laid siege to Lisbon, then known as Lixbuna under Moorish rule. After a prolonged assault, the city fell to the combined Portuguese-Crusader forces, marking one of the only significant victories of the Second Crusade and a pivotal moment in the Christian reconquest of Iberia.
Locations
Groups
Moors
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Frisians
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Muslims, Sunni
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Scottish people
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Flemish people
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Normans
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Christians, Roman Catholic
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Almoravid dynasty
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England, (Norman) Kingdom of
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English people
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Almohad Caliphate
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Portugal, Burgundian (Alfonsine) Kingdom of
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