Saladin

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by A R Azzam


  • ing to be drawn. Turkish mounted archers assailed the Franks and on occa-

  sion the Latin knights fought back. The intense heat of the day also took its

  toll and William of Tyre noted that many died that day from heatstroke,

  including the Canon of the Sepulchre, who was carrying the Holy Cross.

  Denied tactical success, Saladin withdrew. Credit must go to Baldwin who,

  despite his illness, demonstrated considerable willpower, tenacity, discipline

  and courage, for it was clear he understood the terms of engagement and

  refiised to take the Muslim bait. Saladin then turned his attention to the city

  of Beirut, which he knew was the weakest point in the Frankish control of

  the Syrian coast. While he was in Egypt he had built up a fleet of between

  30 and 40 war galleys,^® and he now launched a sea and land attack on

  the city. At the same time he ordered his brother, al-Adil, to launch raids

  around Darum and Gaza. This appeared to be a serious and well-co-

  ordinated attack^' and when Baldwin heard of these developments he had

  to make a difficult choice: either to divide his army to confront the two

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  9: SALADIN A N D T H E L E P E R K I N G

  challenges or to remain united and defend Beirut. Calculating that the loss

  of Beirut would be a far greater blow to Franldsh moral, he chose the latter

  option. For three days Saladin launched an intense bombardment on Beirut,

  with the arrows - in the words of William of Tyre - filling the air like hail.

  In the meantime Baldwin ordered ships from Acre and Tyre to sail to relieve

  Beirut. Although the capture of the city would have been a spectacular suc-

  cess for Saladin, his withdrawal after only three days of siege was a sign that

  he recognised that even had it fallen, he would not have been able to hold

  it. In any case at this stage the Franks were not his main or immediate con-

  cern.^" Although he now moved north, the Franks were unsettled because,

  contrary to normal practice, he deliberately chose not to make a truce.

  Having called off the attack on Beirut, Saladin marched to Baalbek,

  which he reached around the middle of August 1182. The pace of the

  march was deliberately slow and it took him 40 days to reach the Euphrates.

  The aim was to gather support along the way and thereby to gain momen-

  tum, and he wrote that the amirs of the land were sending him envoys and

  support. Near Aleppo he was joined by Muzaffar al-Din Keukburi, who held

  the town and citadel of Harran, and who had fought against Saladin at the

  battie of Tell al-Sultan. Now he informed Saladin that he was prepared to

  change sides and urged him to cross the Euphrates and claim the lands

  that lay east of the river. 'These lands are yours', he assured him. Keukburi's

  change of sides was cemented by his marriage to Saladin's sister: a for-

  midable ally had been gained. Keukburi's words tempted Saladin, for he

  knew that Aleppo would put up a strong resistance and any siege would

  have to endure the harsh winter months. By contrast, a campaign east of the

  Euphrates held opportunities. Although he would leave his rear exposed to

  an Aleppan attack, he remained confident that any attacks would not cause

  him too many problems. In late September 1182 he reached al-Bira, which

  was one of the crossing points on the Euphrates, where he was welcomed

  by Shihab al-Din Mahmud. He handed Saladin the keys of his citadel, which

  Saladin returned to him. Saladin wrote to al-Adil asking him to send him

  money, which he urgentiy needed to win over the cities which lay ahead, for

  liberality was the key to success. Having crossed the Euphrates, Saladin

  marched to al-Ruha, which was held by none other than Fakhr al-Din al-

  Zafarani, who had once entered Saladin's service but had left in anger when

  Homs had not been given to him. Although Izz al-Din sent some troops

  from Mosul to come to al-Ruha's aid, they arrived too late and al-Ruha fell

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  SALAD I N

  peacefully to Saladin. In the meantime in Aleppo Imad al-Din Zengi took

  advantage of Saladin's crossing of the Euphrates and attacked Manbij. He

  even crossed the Euphrates and raided Saruj, but Saladin did not turn back

  since the Aleppans were not strong enough to trap him. In fact he was not

  in a hurry, and did not press towards Mosul. It appears - as previously in his

  march on Damascus - that his motives were psychological, that is to turn a

  military expedition into a triumphal progress.^^ And so as he moved east-

  wards, he received the submission of Harran and al-Raqqa - which was held

  by Qutb al-Din Inal, who had once threatened Saladin with his sword but

  who was now won over by his purse. By 10 November Saladin was camped

  outside Mosul: Imad al-Din al-Isfahani commented that within one year he

  had watered his horse in the Nile, the Euphrates and the Tigris.

  Saladin had also written to Farruldi-Shah requesting money but he did

  not receive a reply, for Farruldi-Shah had fallen ill and died. An accom-

  plished poet with a great fondness for the poetiy of al-Mutanabbi, Farrukh-

  Shah left behind a reputation for valour and bravery on the battlefield.

  His loss was a considerable blow to Saladin, who now appointed Ibn

  al-Muqaddam - proof that the dispute over Baalbek had been truly healed

  - to the governership of Damascus. In the meantime, as they anxiously

  watched Saladin's peaceful promenade across the cities of the Euphrates, Izz

  al-Din of Mosul and his brother Imad al-Din of Aleppo approached the

  Franks and made peace with Bohemond III of Antioch and Rupen III of

  •Cilicia. A few months later, while Saladin was crossing the Euphrates, Izz al-

  Din of Mosul sent envoys to Baldwin in Jerusalem and agreed an 11-year

  truce, in return for which Mosul agreed to pay an annual subsidy of 10,000

  dinars. In addition, Mosul agreed to release all Prankish prisoners. The

  Mosuli-Frankish alliance seemed as firm as ever. The agreement setded,

  Baldwin immediately launched into action with the aim of cutting Saladin's

  lines of communication. He first raided Damascene territoiy. Ibn al-

  Muqaddam, with too few men to risk combat, was unable to challenge him,

  and Baldwin was free to burn the harvest. The leper king then threatened

  to destroy the mosque at Darayya, but was told by a deputation of

  Christians that if he did so he would needlessly antagonise the Muslim popu-

  lation and that in return Ibn al-Muqaddam would inevitably wreak great

  damage on the Christian churches in the province, and he desisted. Then he

  led his forces to Bosra, which lay 145 kilometres (90 miles) to the south and

  which was the first settiement on the desert road from Damascus to Egypt.

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  9: SALADIN A N D T H E L E P E R K I N G

  If the Franks could capture it then Saladin would have had no choice but to

  turn back, but its inhabitants blocked all the wells outside the walls, maldng

  it impossible to besiege. Knowing that Saladin was too far north and that

  Ibn al-Muqaddam was unable to offer much resistance, Baldwin then

  turned to the fortress of al-Habis Jaldak, which Farrukh-Shah had captured

  a few months earlier. After a brief siege the for
tress fell to him. Prankish

  control over eastern Galilee was thus restored.^^ Saladin was kept in touch

  with what was happening, but was unconcerned and appeared dismissive:

  'While they knock down villages we are taking cities'. There was reason for

  his relaxed manner. He Icnew that lacking support from Byzantium, the

  Franks could not attack Egypt, and that the raids launched by Baldwin were

  insufficient in themselves to force him to turn back. He interpreted them as

  being little more than diversionary tactics and he regarded them as symp-

  toms of the impotent anger felt by the Franks because he had left Syria with-

  out troubling to negotiate a truce.

  One question still disturbed many - including al-Qadi al-Fadil - what

  was Saladin doing.^ It was clear that the fall of Mosul would mean the fall of

  Aleppo, but what was less clear was what Saladin was doing besieging

  Mosul, or indeed how he could justify it. As far as Aleppo was concerned, a

  case could be made, since with Nur al-Din's son al-Salih dead, Saladin had

  the best claim. But no such claim could possibly apply to Mosul. This was

  a point which the Mosulis were quick to make to the caliph, and Saladin

  could not have been optimistic when he saw how well Izz al-Din had

  fortified the city. When Taqi ul-Din suggested the use of mangonels,

  Saladin replied, 'One does not set up mangonels against a city like this . . .

  Even if we destroyed a tower . . . who could take the city when there are so

  many people there?' The situation was a stalemate: the Mosulis could not

  drive Saladin away and he could not take the city by assault. In addition, the

  longer he besieged Mosul the weaker his position became in Syria. His solu-

  tion was to turn from Mosul to Sinjar, which surrendered peacefully after a

  15-day siege and which was given to Taqi ul-Din. The leading citizens came

  out and were treated with the courtesy that had now become customary

  with Saladin. He repaired the damage done during the siege and extracted

  no advantage for himself from the capture, so boosting his reputation for

  generosity even among those who previously had been sceptical. Although

  he had been unable to capture Mosul - nor did he realistically expect to -

  he had succeeded in cutting off the Zengids of Aleppo from those of Mosul.

  • 153 •

  SALADIN

  At the beginning of 1183, ai-Adil, and al-Qadi al-Fadil wrote to Saladin

  with some alarming news: the Franks had made an audacious assault on the

  heart of Islam. They were referring to the raid made by Reynald of Chatillon

  on Ai-abia and the city of Medina, where the Prophet was buried. It was

  truly an extraordinary adventure: Reynald had spent two years having ships

  built in sections, which were then transported by camels - which had been

  hired from the Bedouins - and brought down to the Gulf of Aqaba where

  the ships were reconstructed. Reynald had then set sail down the Red Sea

  and landed north of Jeddah. Whether Reynald was trying to establish a

  Franldsh presence in the vicinity or was - as Muslims were convinced -

  attempting to remove the Prophet's body and transport it to Franldsh

  territory is unclear, but the flamboyant raid caused a seismic shock among

  Muslims. It was al-Adil, who had been left in charge of Egypt, who orches-

  trated the Muslim counter-attack. The Muslim fleet destroyed the Franldsh

  ships and Bedouins were employed to track down those who had already

  landed and were heading for Medina. For five days and nights the Muslim

  army tracked down the raiding party, numbering around 170 men, and as

  each day passed and Medina got closer, Muslim anxiety increased. Finally,

  however, they were captured. A couple were sent to Mecca and the rest to

  Medina and Alexandria, where Saladin ordered their execution. To his sur-

  prise, however, al-Adil reftised to execute the prisoners and requested that

  he first consult with the religious scholars. The reason for this was that in the

  pursuit the Franks were promised quarter by the Muslims. However, Saladin

  persisted in his demand that the men be put to the sword, arguing that

  sacred territory had been attacked and that the men now loiew the route to

  Medina and so they could not be allowed to live. Finally Saladin's orders

  were carried out, but his insistence and his overriding of his brother's deci-

  sion betrayed the anxiety he undoubtedly felt. How realistic the Prankish

  attempt had been is unclear, but its daring nature caused Saladin great

  embarrassment. It was his absence in northern Syria that had given Reynald

  his opportunity, and his determination to settle the dispute with Aleppo and

  Mosul opened him to charges that he was putting his own dynastic interests

  before those of Islam.^® Saladin had sailed very close to disaster. Reynald's

  raid into the heart of Islam, dramatic as it was, was also not without a stra-

  tegic motive - which was to force Saladin to turn back from Mosul. The

  Franks would thus be aiding their Zengid allies while protecting their own

  interests by restraining the growth of Saladin's power in Syria.

  • 154 •

  9: SALADIN A N D T H E L E P E R K I N G

  By May 1183 Saladin had turned back to lay siege to Aleppo. In the

  city Nur al-Din's nephew, Imad al-Din Zengi, had lost his appetite for a

  long fight. He had once ruled Sinjar and he now sought to return there. So

  he was not opposed to opening secret negotiations with Saladin's camp,

  during which he made it known that he would be prepared to exchange

  Aleppo for Sinjar. And so to the astonishment of its people, on 12 June

  1183, Aleppo opened its gates peacefully to Saladin. The Aleppans sent

  two amirs to negotiate, one of whom was Izz al-Din Jurdik, who had once

  been imprisoned by the Aleppans. An interesting point of the agreement

  was Saladin's decision to replace the Hanafi qadi and Idiatib (preacher) with

  Shafii ones. This was an uncommon act for Saladin, who normally never

  interfered in such matters, and it may have had something to do with the

  previous support given to the Shiites in the city. On the following day,

  13 June, Imad al-Din Zengi finally came face to face with Saladin, who held

  a splendid reception for him. During this reception news reached Saladin

  that his brother Buri had died of a wound he had incurred during a skirmish

  with an Aleppan force, but Saladin showed no expression and the reception

  was not disrupted. He showed Imad al-Din his customary generosity and

  allowed him to take with him all the citadel stores that he could remove.

  One of the conditions, however, was that Imad al-Din would come with

  his troops when Saladin was fighting the Franks. And it was Saladin's

  generosity which won over the people of Aleppo and in particular Nur

  al-Din's mamluks, who now joined his service. To Saladin, Aleppo was the

  eye of Syria and - despite his lack of money, which forced him to make

  urgent appeals to Egypt - he was content, for he had won Aleppo cheaply

  and without any great loss, even though he mourned for the death of his

  brother.

  It had taken Saladin nearly nine years finally to capture Aleppo, a city

  that he had once boasted he would milk. Th
e house of Zengi had resisted

  the advances of that of Ayyub and twice they had dispatched assassins to Idll

  him. But Aleppo could not resist the momentum and pressure that Saladin

  had built up. He had spent money liberally to win over the amirs, and had

  persistently written to the caliph, arguing that without Aleppo and Mosul

  the holy war could not be effectively fought. Whether he truly believed this

  to be the case or not is less important than the fact that he consistently

  advocated it. And Aleppo had fallen peacefully - a testimony of Saladin's

  diplomatic sldlls. This was a crucial point, for Saladin could neither aflford to

  • 155 •

  SALADIN

  be dragged into a long siege nor could he accept a bloody conflict where

  Nur al-Din's lieutenants fell, for he needed these men. He was fortunate

  that Aleppo was ruled by Imad al-Din Zengi, whose career had been one of

  disappointment,^® and whose ambition in crossing west of the Euphrates

  was never matched by his abilities in establishing himself there. The

  Aleppans were outraged by Imad al-Din Zengi's betrayal of their city and a

  popular chant of the day was about a donkey who had sold milk for sour

  milk, but the Aleppans were traders and Saladin quickly soothed their anger

  through the generous distribution of money and conciliatory behaviour,

  though it is noteworthy that strict instructions were issued to the Shiites to

  stop defaming the orthodox caliphs of Islam. Saladin had lost a brother to

  win a city, but he was now in a very strong position, for the armies of

  Aleppo, Damascus and Egypt were united behind him and the encirclement

  of the Franks was nearly complete. The two horns of the Muslim crescent -

  Egypt and North Syria - were firmly in the Saladin's grasp. Muslim unity

  after nearly a century of disunity was now at hand, and the prospects for the

  Franks boded ill.^®

  • 156 •

  Chapter 10

  Sailing Close to Disaster:

  Saladin's Illness at Harran

  Affairs do not run a-ccordin^ to humcin desire, nor do we know how much

  is left of our lives.

  Salcidin

  •
  1 sooner had Saladin returned to Damascus after the successful surrender

 

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