Certainty: 3 German & French contingents for the Lombard crusade joined them at Nikomedeia Certainty: 3
Certainty: 3 Crusaders from Aquitaine & Bavaria arrived in Constantinople & stayed five weeks Certainty: 3
Certainty: 3 Crusaders from Aquitaine & Bavaria were also massacred by a river near Herakleia
William, Duke of Aquitaine, Welf of Bavaria, Ida of Cham and (probably) Hugh of Vermandois set off to Ikonion, where they finished their supplies and hunger and thirst set in, for the Turks burned the harvest and blocked the wells. In return for this the crusaders destroyed Philomelion and Salimia. In great thirst they went on to a river at Herakleia, where Gumushtegin Ghazi Danishmend, Kilic Arslan I, Katatyx and Agymith were ready for them. They were butchered on the river banks or hiding in nearby fields. Few males survived; many females were sold into slavery, perhaps including Ida of Cham
Certainty: 3 William of Aquitaine reached Bernard l'Etranger in Cilicia Certainty: 3
1102
Certainty: 3 Remnants of various defeated armies of 1101 set out from Antioch to Jerusalem Certainty: 3
Certainty: 3 Crusaders moved south, & most of them besieged & captured Tortosa Certainty: 3
Certainty: 3 Crusaders celebrated Easter in Jerusalem, then nearly all left Certainty: 3
Certainty: 3 Help from Antioch & Edessa (with Daimbert) arrived in response to Baldwin I's summons Certainty: 3
Certainty: 3 Combined attack on Askalon defeated a strong Egyptian sally Certainty: 3
Certainty: 3 Council held by papal legate condemned Daimbert to deposition & excommunication Certainty: 3