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by A R Azzam


  9 Ehrenkreutz, Saladin, 237.

  10 Tyerman, Fi^htin^for Christendom, 195.

  11 C. Hillenbrand, op. cit., 2.

  12 Gibb, 'The achievement of Saladin', 44-60.

  • 258 •

  A Note on the Arabic Sources

  One has to agree with Gibb that historians who have studied the life of

  Saladin have given the first place to two Arabic sources; the biography of

  Saladin by Ibn Shaddad and the Universal History of Ibn al-Athir. Ibn

  Shaddad offers us the most personal insight into Saladin's life, even though

  he did not join his service, as judge of the army, undl 1188 when Saladin

  was already at the height of his power. Nevertheless from that moment on,

  apart from a brief period, Ibn Shaddad did not leave Saladin's side. There

  can be no doubt that he was a great admirer of Saladin and one keeps that

  in mind as one reads Ibn Shaddad's writings. Clearly the fact that Ibn

  Shaddad did not - apart from two occasions - come into contact with

  Saladin prior to 1188 effectively meant that for the period up till then he

  relied on second hand reports.

  The sympathetic portrayal of Saladin that one finds in Ibn Shaddad is in

  sharp contrast to the bias that one reads in Ibn al-Athir. Although there is

  no evidence that the two men met, there is a clear explanation for Ibn al-

  Athir's hostility and that is he was firmly in the Zengid camp and opposed

  to the Ayyubid Saladin whom the Zengids viewed as a usurper. Ibn al-

  Athir's admiration for Saladin is grudging and he is quick to find fault. One

  can give many examples, but one will suffice; when Saladin refused to return

  to Egypt from Syria as part of Nur al-Din's third campaign, Ibn al-Athir is

  quick to conclude it was because he was holding out for financial induce-

  ments. Certainly in every case where Saladin and Nur al-Din are contrasted,

  Ibn al-Athir takes the opportunity to darken Saladin's name.

  Another invaluable contemporary source which is known to have existed

  was the writing of Saladin's secretary Imad al-Din al-Isfahani. Imad al-Din

  had been Saladin's personal secretary since 1175 and certainly his proximity

  • 259 •

  A N O T E O N T H E ARABIC S O U R C E

  to and admiration for Saladin was on the same level as that of Ibn Shaddad.

  What is of particular interest is that Imad al-Din also served Nur al-Din and

  therefore one is offered an insight into the lives of the two great men of

  the age.

  Imad al-Din's work, al-Barq al-Shami was a seven volume chronicle,

  appears to have been utilized by practically all other contemporary chroni-

  clers,^ but although it has been lost, it was abridged by Abu Shama in his

  work Kitab al-Rawdatain. Al-Barq al-Shami was not the only work which

  Imad al-Din devoted to Saladin, for he was also the author of al-Fath al-

  Qussi. Imad al-Din al-Isfahani's appointment as Saladin's personal secretary

  was largely due to al-Qadi al-Fadil who was Saladin's closest advisor and a

  man who exerted tremendous influence over him and we are indebted to

  Lyons and Jackson for the work they did in making available some of the

  letters - both personal and those drafted in Saladin's name - which demon-

  strate clearly the considerable influence that he had over Saladin.

  ' H. Gibb, 'al-Barq al-Shami': The History of Saladin by the Katib Imad al-Din al-Isfahani, Wiener Zeitschrift fiir die Kunde des Morgenlandes LII, 93.

  • 260 •

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  • 265 •

  Index

  c / l x T V )

  Abbas Ibn Abd al-Muttalib 9

  fortifications at 140-1

  Abbasid caliphate 9-21, 34, 40, 42-3, 52-4,

  siege of 66-8, 99, 117, 145

  59, 63-5, 90-2, 114, 146, 180, 197-8

  Alexius Comnenus 150

  weakening of caliph 9-19

  Ali (the Prophet's son-in-law) 10-13, 92

  see also Sunni Revival

  alim I I 1

  al-Abidin, Zayn 10

  'Allahu Akbar' 140, 176-7, 214

  Ibn Abi Asrun 119, 181

  Almohades 205

  Ibn Abi-1 Ashath 38

  Amalfi 13

  A
bul Huija die Gross 84, 220, 224

  Amalric 40, 51-71, 75, 82, 85-90, 100-7,

  Abyssinia 53

  137, 146, 149-50, 189, 240

  Achilles' heel 197

  death of 100-6

  Acre 23, 76, 78, 118, 144, 151, 165,

  ambiguity 32

  184-5, 196, 200-11, 231

  Amid 170

  fall of 206-11

  Amir al-Juyush market 121

  siege of 76, 2 0 0 - 4 , 208

  Amr Ibn al-As mosque 16, 95, 120-1, 129,

  al-Adhrawiyya 131

  193

  al-Adid 70-2, 75, 80, 85-6, 88-91, 124,

  anarchy 107

  202

  Anatolia 163, 219

  al-Adil 48-50, 89, 93, 131, 154, 158-60,

  al-Andalusi, Hasan 97

  163-5, 185-6, 191, 197-8, 208, 213,

  Andronicus Contostephanus 88, 150

  217-23, 233, 240

  Angevin knights 227

  Ibn al-Adim 25

  anti-semitism 56 ^

  'afada al-nas' 134

  Antioch 23, 29, 37, 39, 51, 54, 57, 63,

  al-Afdal 80, 90, 164, 168, 179, 185, 194,

  106, 143, 167, 198

  198, 221, 230, 2 3 3 - 4 , 236, 240

  appointment of Saladin as vizier 73-7

  Agnes of Courtenay 137

  Ibn Aqil 17

  ahl al-bayt 57

  al-Aqmar mosque 129

  Ahmed 141

  al-Aqsa mosque 39, 44, 140, 186, 192

  al-Barq al-Shumi 117

  Arab secular ways 9

  Alchemy of Happiness 117

  Arab socialism 2

  Aleppo 2 1 - 4 , 29, 33-7, 40-3, 46, 6 3 - 4 ,

  Arabia 154

  68, 75, 101-19,138

  Arabic language 4 5 - 6 , 67, 106, 117, 140,

  challenge of 109-19

  166

  siege of 155

  Ibn Arabi 96

  Alexandria 13, 31, 52, 55-9, 64-8, 71, 75,

  Araxes 25

  8 1 , 8 4

  Archbishop Frederick of Tyre 66

  • 266 •

  I N D E X

  Archbishop of Pisa 204

  Baldwin 111 40, 106-7, 138, 150

  Armenians 21, 25, 56-7, 84, 87, 99, 122,

  Baldwin IV 105-6, 114, 137-43, 145-53,

  130, 206

  157-62, 165,200, 207, 240

  army 170-2, 2 0 4 - 6

  death of 160-2

  fragmentation of 2 0 4 - 6

  Baldwin V 159-61, 165-6

  gatliering of 170-2

  Balian of Ibelin 168-9, 174, 177, 189-91

  arrival of the Crusades in Syria 22-5

 

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