Christen im Jahr 1190

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17 Kommentare

  1. p2rismaalapp on

    Why is Southeastern Estonia under some weird polity? These areas weren’t conquered by Christian forces before the 1220s.

  2. Blackfire853 on

    This seems absolutely impossible to know with this level of confidence given the period, and with weird assumptions like Al-Andalus having a tiny Christian population

  3. Aegeansunset12 on

    The west shouldn’t attack the Byzantine empire, Christendom shrunk in the region partly because of the 4th crusade

  4. I’ve got to say I like these maps you have been making. Some people are quite critical and we obviously can never know the exact numbers but these are decent estimates for the time based on what we know presented in an easy to understand format! Looking forward to seeing more!

  5. in the 11th century Poland had massive pagan revolts and there have been observed many instanced of syncretic beliefs later down the years, i find the figure of 95% to be a bit unrealistic

  6. Organic_Contract_172 on

    Why did Poland stay trad-cath and the Holy Roman Empire didn’t?

  7. Allnamestakkennn on

    Ok but why did you group the principalities of Rus together when they were entirely separate, without a formal seat of power, and some were already parting ways?

  8. At that moment, Orthodox people still lived in the East of the Crimean peninsula, residents of the former old Russian principality of Tmutarakan.

    The principality itself disappeared from history earlier. But the chronicler Ibn al-Asir writes that the rich Russian inhabitants and merchants fled from there after the Mongol victory.

  9. I’m quite certain that the Christian population of Al-Andalus was higher, seeing that –as far as we know– they only stopped being the majority at the tail-end of the caliphate a bit over a century prior.

  10. Kievan Rus did not control these lands in Lithuania. The lands shown here as Kievan Rus are literally the Land of Lithuania, originally

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