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Urban II is chiefly remembered as the pope who launched the First Crusade in 1095. He was born to a noble family in the Champagne region of France, and his original name was Odo. After completing his studies, he was an archdeacon at Reims from about 1055 until 1067. He then became a monk at Cluny, the leading reform monastery in Europe. Sent to Rome on a mission in 1079, he was made a cardinal by Pope Gregory VII. He was elected pope in 1088. Urban II helped strengthen the papacy as a political power. He also preached the powerful sermon at Clermont, France, that ignited enthusiasm for the Crusades. He died on July 29, 1099, in Rome (Born 1035?, pope 1088–99). (Encyclopedia Britannica)