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The Crusades- Islamic Perspectives

Page 6

by Carole Hillenbrand


  sura:

  chapter of the Qur’an.

  tiraz:

  inscribed fabrics made in a state workshop.

  ‘ulama’:

  those who possess knowledge, scholars of Islamic theology and law; the learned class.

  umma:

  the Islamic community.

  vizier:

  minister.

  Glossary of Arabic Military Terms

  amir:

  army commander.

  ‘amud:

  mace, club.

  ‘arrada:

  ballista, that is a type of mangonel used for throwing stones over long distances.

  ‘ayn:

  spy.

  bahriyya:

  navy.

  burj:

  siege tower.

  dabbaba:

  wooden tower used in siege warfare for the protection of soldiers.

  dar al-sina‘a:

  arsenal.

  daraqa:

  wooden shield, covered with leather.

  dir‘:

  coat of mail.

  faris:

  horseman, cavalryman.

  farr:

  withdraw or run.

  ghazw:

  raid.

  hasak:

  caltrop.

  hisar:

  siege.

  hisn:

  fortress.

  jawshan:

  coat of mail, protecting the front part of the warrior’s body only.

  kabsh:

  ram.

  kamin:

  ambush.

  karr:

  attack or hit, return to attack.

  khanjar:

  dagger.

  khayl:

  cavalry.

  liwa‘:

  banner.

  manjaniq:

  mangonel.

  maymana:

  the right flank of the army.

  maysara:

  the left flank of the army.

  mighfar:

  a helmet covering the head and the whole of the face except the eyes.

  mutatawwi‘a:

  volunteers.

  naft:

  Greek fire.

  naqb:

  mine.

  qalb:

  the centre column of the army.

  qaws:

  bow.

  raya:

  flag, standard.

  sabigha:

  a long-sleeved coat of mail.

  sayf:

  sword.

  tabar:

  axe.

  tariqa:

  cuirass.

  turs:

  shield.

  Chronological List of Major Medieval Islamic Authors Mentioned in the Text

  Al-Sulami (d. early 6th/12th century)

  Al-‘Azimi (d. c. 555/1160)

  Ibn al-Qalanisi (d. 555/1160)

  Usama b. Munqidh (d. 584/1188)

  Al-Qadi al-Fadil (d. 596/1200)

  Ibn al-Jawzi (d. 597/1200)

  ‘Imad al-Din al-Isfahani (d. 597/1201)

  Ibn Jubayr(d. 614/1217)

  Ibn Zafir (d. 613/1216 or 623/1226)

  Ibn Abi Tayyi’ (d. 630/1233)

  Ibn al-Athir (d. 630/1233)

  Baha’ al-Din Ibn Shaddad (d. 632/1234)

  Sibt b. al-Jawzi (d. 654/1257)

  Ibn al-‘Adim (d. 660/1262)

  Abu Shama (d. 665/1267)

  Ibn Muyassar (d. 677/1278)

  Ibn Khallikan (d. 681/1282)

  ‘Izz al-Din Ibn Shaddad (d. 684/1285)

  Ibn ‘Abd al-Zahir (d. 692/1292)

  Ibn Wasil (d. 697/1298)

  Al-Yunini (d. 726/1326)

  Ibn Taymiyya (d. 728/1328)

  Al-Nuwayri (d. 732/1332)

  Shafi’ b. ‘Ali (d. 750/1349)

  Ibn al-Furat (d. 807/1405)

  Ibn Khaldun (d. 808/1406)

  Al-Qalqashandi (d. 821/1418)

  Al-Maqrizi (d. 845/1441)

  Ibn Taghribirdi (d. 874/1470)

  Chronological Table of Important Events until the Fall of Acre in 690/1291

  1092

  Deaths of Malikshah, Nizam al-Mulk

  1094

  Death of Fatimid caliph al-Mustansir and ‘Abbasid caliph al-Muqtadi

  1095

  (Mar.) Council of Piacenza

  1096

  (27 Nov.) Proclamation of First Crusade by Pope Urban II at the Council of Clermont

  1096–1102

  The First Crusade

  1096–7

  Arrival of the armies of the Crusade at Constantinople

  1097

  (1 July) Battle of Dorylaeum

  (21 Oct.–3 June 1098) Siege of Antioch

  1098

  (10 Mar.) Baldwin of Boulogne seized Edessa

  (28 June) Battle of Antioch

  1099

  (15 July) Jerusalem fell to the Crusaders

  (22 July) Godfrey of Bouillon elected first Frankish ruler of Jerusalem

  1101

  (Aug.–Sept.) Final wave of armies of the First Crusade defeated by the Turks in Asia Minor

  1109

  (12 July) Tripoli captured by the Franks

  1119

  (27 June) Battle of the Field of Blood

  1124

  (7 July) Tyre captured by the Franks

  1129

  (Nov.) Crusaders attacked Damascus

  1144

  (24 Dec.) Zengi took Edessa

  1146

  Death of Zengi

  1147–9

  The Second Crusade

  1148

  (24–8 July) The Franks withdrew from the siege of Damascus

  1154

  (25 Apr.) Nur al-Din occupied Damascus

  1163–9

  King Amalric of Jerusalem made expeditions to Egypt

  1169

  (23 Mar.) Saladin, acting on behalf of Nur al-Din, took control in Egypt

  1172

  (10 Sept.) Saladin abolished the Fatimid caliphate and restored Egypt to Sunni Islam

  1174

  (15 May) Death of Nur al-Din

  (28 Oct.) Saladin took Damascus

  1183

  (11 June) Saladin took Aleppo

  1186

  (3 Mar.) Saladin took Mosul

  1187

  (4 July) Battle of Hattin

  (2 Oct.) Saladin regained Jerusalem

  (29 Oct.) Pope Gregory VIII proclaimed the Third Crusade

  1189–92

  The Third Crusade

  1190

  (10 June) Drowning of the Emperor Frederick I in Cilicia

  1191

  (12 July) Richard I of England and Philip II of France received capitulation of Acre

  (7 Sept.) Battle of Arsuf

  1192

  (2 Sept.) Treaty of Jaffa

  1193

  Death of Saladin

  1198

  (Aug.) Pope Innocent III proclaimed the Fourth Crusade

  1202–4

  The Fourth Crusade

  1204

  (12–15 Apr.) Constantinople sacked by the Franks

  1213

  (Apr) Pope Innocent III proclaimed the Fifth Crusade

  1217–29

  The Fifth Crusade

  1218

  (27 May-5 Nov. 1219) Siege of Damietta

  1221

  (30 Aug.) Franks in Egypt defeated at al-Mansura

  1228–9

  Crusade of the Emperor Frederick II of Sicily (last part of the Fifth Crusade)

  1229

  (18 Feb.) Jerusalem restored to Franks by treaty with the Ayyubids

  1244

  (11 July-23 Aug.) Khwarazmians sacked Jerusalem

  (17 Oct.) Battle of La Forbie

  1250

  (8 Feb.) Franks in Egypt defeated at al-Mansura

  1250–4

  St Louis in the Holy Land

  1258

  (19 Feb.) Mongols sacked Baghdad and killed the ‘Abbasid caliph

  1260

  (3 Sept.) Battle
of ‘Ayn Jalut – Mamluks defeated depleted Mongol army

  (23 Oct.) Baybars became sultan of Egypt

  1268

  (18 May) Baybars took Jaffa, Belfort and Antioch

  1270

  Death of St Louis

  1271

  Baybars took Krak des Chevaliers and Montfort

  1277

  Death of Baybars

  1289

  (26 Apr.) Qalawun took Tripoli

  1291

  (18 May) Mamluks under al-Ashraf Khalil took Acre

  (July) Sidon and Beirut fell to Mamluks

  Dynastic Tables

  The Fatimids (Egypt and Syria)

  365/975

  Al-‘Aziz

  386/996

  Al-Hakim

  411/1021

  Al-Zahir

  427/1036

  Al-Mustansir

  487/1094

  Al-Musta‘li

  495/1101

  Al-Amir

  525/1131

  Al-Hafiz

  544/1149

  Al-Zafir

  549/1154

  Al-Fa’iz

  555–67/1160–71

  Al-‘Adid

  The Seljuqs

  Great Seljuqs, 431–590/1040–1194 (Iraq and Persia)

  431/1040

  Tughril

  455/1063

  Alp Arslan

  465/1072

  Malikshah

  485/1092

  Mahmud

  487/1094

  Barkyaruq

  498/1105

  Muhammad

  511–22/1118–57

  Sanjar (ruler in eastern Persia)

  after 511/1118

  supreme Sultan of the Seljuq family

  The Seljuqs in Iraq and western Persia only

  511/1118

  Mahmud

  525/1131

  Da’ud

  526/1132

  Tughril II

  529/1134

  Mas’ud

  547/1152

  Malik-Shah III

  548/1153

  Muhammad II

  555/1160

  Sulayman Shah

  556/1161

  Arslan

  571–90/1176–94

  Tughril III

  The Seljuqs in Syria

  471/1078

  Tutush

  488–507/1095–1113

  Ridwan (in Aleppo)

  488–97/1095–1104

  Duqaq (in Damascus)

  The Zengids (Jazira and Syria)

  521/1127

  Zengi

  541/1146

  Nur al-Din

  (Some branches of the dynasty lasted until the middle of the thirteenth century)

  The Ayyubids (Egypt, Syria, Diyarbakr, Yemen)

  The Ayyubids in Egypt

  564/1169

  al-Malik al-Nasir I Salah al-Din (Saladin)

  589/1193

  al-Malik al-‘Aziz ‘Imad al-Din

  595/1198

  al-Malik al-Mansur Nasir al-Din

  596/1200

  al-Malik al-‘Adil I Sayf al-Din

  615/1218

  al-Malik al-Kamil I Nasir al-Din

  635/1238

  al-Malik al-‘Adil II Sayf al-Din

  637/1240

  al-Malik al-Salih Najm al-Din Ayyub

  647/1249

  al-Malik al-Mu’azzam Turan-Shah

  648–50/1250–2

  al-Malik al-Ashraf II Muzaffar al-Din

  The Ayyubids in Damascus

  582/1186

  al-Malik al-Afdal Nur al-Din ‘Ali

  592/1196

  al-Malik al-‘Adil I Sayf al-Din

  615/1218

  al-Malik al-Mu’azzam Sharaf al-Din

  624/1227

  al-Malik al-Nasir Salah al-Din Da‘ud

  626/1229

  al-Malik al-Ashraf I Muzaffar al-Din

  634/1237

  al-Malik al-Salih ‘Imad al-Din (first reign)

  635/1238

  al-Malik al-Kamil I Nasir al-Din

  636/1239

  al-Malik al-Salih Najm al-Din Ayyub (first reign)

  637/1239

  al-Malik al-Salih ‘Imad al-Din (second reign)

  643/1245

  al-Malik al-Salih Najm al-Din Ayyub (second reign)

  647/1249

  al-Malik al-Mu‘azzam Turan-Shah (with Egypt)

  648–58/1250–60

  al-Malik al-Nasir II Salah al-Din

  The Mamluks, 648–922/1250–1517 (Egypt and Syria) – up to the fall of Acre

  648/1250

  Shajarat al-Durr

  648/1250

  al-Mu’izz ‘Izz al-Din Aybak

  655/1257

  al-Mansur Nur al-Din ‘Ali

  657/1259

  al-Muzaffar Sayf al-Din Qutuz

  658/1260

  al-Zahir Rukn al-Din Baybars I al-Bunduqdari

  676/1277

  al-Sa‘id Nasir al-Din Baraka (or Berke) Khan

  678/1279

  al-‘Adil Badr al-Din Salamish

  678/1279

  al-Mansur Sayf al-Din Qalawun al-Alfi

  689/1290

  al-Ashraf Salah al-Din Khalil

  693/1294

  al-Nasir Nasir al-Din Muhammad (first reign)

  Note: These tables have been simplified. They do not include all the short-lived rulers in the period covered by this book. For full details, cf. C. E. Bosworth, The new Islamic dynasties, Edinburgh, 1996.

  Key to Abbreviations Used in the Text

  Abu Shama = Abu Shama, Kitab al-rawdatayn, ed. M. H. M. Ahmad, Cairo, 1954.

  Abu Shama, RHC = Abu Shama, Kitab al-rawdatayn, RHC, IV.

  Al-Ansari, trans. Scanlon = Al-Ansari, Tafrij al-kurub fi tadbir al-hurub, trans. G. T. Scanlon as A Muslim Manual of War, Cairo, 1961.

  Al-‘Azimi = Al-‘Azimi, ‘La chronique abrégée d’al-‘Azimi’, ed. C. Cahen, JA, 230 (1938), 353–448.

  Al-Harawi, ed. Sourdel-Thomine = Al-Harawi, Al-tadhkira al-harawiyya fi‘l-hiyal al-harbiyya, trans. J. Sourdel-Thomine, BEO, 17 (1962), 105–268.

  Al-Harawi, trans. Sourdel-Thomine, Guide = Al-Harawi, Kitab al-ziyarat, trans. J. Sourdel-Thomine as Guide des lieux de pèlerinage, Damascus, 1957.

  Al-Maqrizi, Itti’az = Al-Maqrizi, Itti‘az al-hunafa’, II, ed. M. H. M. Ahmad, Cairo, 1971.

  Al-Maqrizi, trans. Broadhurst = Al-Maqrizi, Kitab al-suluk, trans. R. J. C. Broadhurst as History of Ayyubids and Mamluks, Boston, 1980.

  Al-Nuwayri = Al-Nuwayri, Nihayat al-arab fi funun al-adab, XXVIII, ed. S. A. al-Nuri, Cairo, 1992.

  Al-’Umari, Lundquist = Al-’Umari, Masalik al-absar, partial trans. E. R. Lundquist as Saladin and Richard the Lionhearted, Lund, 1996.

  Al-Yunini = Al-Yunini, Dhayl mir’at al-zaman, 4 vols, Hyderabad, 1954–61.

  Atabegs = Ibn al-Athir, Al-tarikh al-bahir fi ’I-dawlat al-atabakiyya, ed. A. A. Tulaymat, Cairo, 1963.

  BEO = Bulletin des Études Orientales

  BIFAO = Bulletin de l’lnstitut Français d’Archéologie Orientale du Caire

  BSOAS = Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies

  Bughya = Ibn al-‘Adim, Bughyat al-talab, partial ed. A. Sevim, Ankara, 1976.

  Bughya, Zakkar = Ibn al-‘Adim, Bughyat al-talab, ed. S. Zakkar, Damascus, 1988.

  EI1 = Encyclopaedia of Islam, first edition.

  EI2 = Encyclopaedia of Islam, second edition.

  Gabrieli = F. Gabrieli, Arab Historians of the Crusades, London, 1969.

  Ibn ‘Abd al-Zahir, Rawd = Ibn ‘Abd al-Zahir, Al-rawd al-zahir, ed. A. A. al-Khuwaytir, Riyadh, 1976.

  Ibn ‘Abd al-Zahir, Tashrif = Ibn ‘Abd al-Zahir, Tashrif al-ayyam wa‘l-’usur, ed. M. Kamil and M. A. al-Najjar, Cairo, 1961.

  Ibn al-‘ Adim, Zubda = Ibn al-‘Adim, Zubdat al-halab min tarikh Halab, ed. S. Zakkar, Damascus, 1997.

  Ibn al-‘Adim, Zubda, Dahan = Ibn al-‘Adim, Zubdat al-halab, ed. S. Dahan, Damascus, 1954.

  Ibn al-‘Adim, Zubda, RHC, III = Ibn al-‘A
dim, Zubdat al-halab min tarikh Halab, RHC, III.

  Ibn al-Athir, Atabegs, RHC = Ibn al-Athir, Al-tarikh al-bahir fi ‘l-dawlat al-atabakiyya, RHC, III.

  Ibn al-Athir, Kamil = Ibn al-Athir, Al-Kamil fi’l-tarikh, ed. C. J. Tornberg, Leiden and Uppsala, 1851–76.

  Ibn al-Athir, RHC, Kamil = Ibn al-Athir, Kamil in Recueil des historiens des Croisades, I.

  Ibn al-Dawadari = Ibn al-Dawadari, Kanz al-durar, VI, ed. S. al-Munajjid, Cairo, 1961.

  Ibn al-Furat, Lyons = Ibn al-Furat, Tarikh al-duwal wa’l-muluk, ed. and trans. U. and M. C. Lyons as Ayyubids, Mamlukes and Crusaders, Cambridge, 1971.

 

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