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The Mamluks (AD 1260 - 1516)
History of Palestine
The agreement between
Richard the Lionhearted and Saladin had left the Crusaders
confined to the Palestinian coastline, but they yearned to
regain Jerusalem and Bethlehem.
In the Far East, the
Mongols were moving westwards, leaving behind them a ghastly
trail of death and destruction. The Crusaders struck an
agreement with the Mongols against the Muslims and, in 1258,
Haulage, the grandson of Mongol leader Genhgis Khan, swept
through Iraq and thoroughly destroyed Baghdad. The Mongols burnt
down Baghdad's splendid palaces, and its renowned libraries.
They also deliberately
set out to destroy the irrigation systems, which had kept Iraq
prosperous and populous since its ancient times. These
blood-crazed horsemen then hacked their way through Syria and
Palestine, leaving behind the only work of which they were
capable; decapitated heads stacked in the shape of pyramids.
Delighted with their victories, the Pope in Rome sent these
pagan hordes his blessings.
In response, a large
Mamluki cavalry in Cairo headed for Palestine and, in 1260, at
Ain Jalut, near Nazareth, they routed and defeated the Mongols.
Baybars, the Mamluki leader, then took his revenge on the
Crusaders for their alliance with the Mongols. He mercilessly
destroyed the Crusade strongholds along Palestine's coastline,
leaving them clinging to Acre, Tyre and Tripoli. In 1291, the
Mamluks overran Acre, the last Crusade stronghold, to become the
undisputed leaders of Egypt and Palestine.
Rudolph of Suchem left us
this impression of the Mamluk Sultan al Ashraf khalil besieging
the Crusaders in Acre: 'He pitched his tents, set up sixty
machines, dug many mounds beneath the city walls, and for forty
days and nights, without any respite, assailed the city with
fire, stones, and arrows so that the air seemed to be stiff with
arrows. I have heard a very honorable knight say that a lance
which he was about to hurl from a tower among the Saracens was
all notched with arrows before it left his hand.'
The European inhabitants
of Acre tried to evacuate by sea; many got away, but, because
there were not enough boats, many were left on the quayside. One
chronicler tells the story of 500 ladies of noble birth crowding
around the harbor, promising sailors whatever they asked to get
a place on a boat that would take them to safety.
Palestine
was now sinking into a very long and depressive Dark Age that
was to last some 600 years. The vicious plundering of the
Mongols and the savage wars between the Mamluks and Crusaders
overwhelmed this tiny land. In fear of the return of the
Crusaders, the Mamluks destroyed the harbors, orchards,
farmsteads, and irrigation systems in Palestine, paralyzing and
crippling a shattered land.
The once prosperous
Canaanite seaports now stood idle. Income from pilgrims dried up
as the Mamluks succeeded in isolating Palestine from the West.
Illiteracy became rampant, since the Mamluks were alien to Arab
literature and Baghdad, the Arab cultural and scientific center,
stood destroyed.
Two major discoveries in
the fifteenth century added to Palestine's miseries. The
discovery of a sea route around South Africa to the Far East,
and the discovery of America, drastically shifted sea routes
away from the eastern Mediterranean and the passage of foreign
ships to Palestine almost ceased.
The Mamluks maintained
their own oligarchy as they continuously imported more Turkish
and Circassian slaves to replenish their ranks. Ironically,
these ex-slaves are considered to be great patrons of arts, as
they adorned Cairo to such an extent that it became one of the
most beautiful mediaeval cities in the world. Palestine was
largely ignored, although they continuously beautified the Dome
of the Rock in Jerusalem.
In Asia Minor, one of
Islam's greatest dynasties was in the making. The Ottoman Turks
had become the most powerful forces in Asia Minor after their
cousins, the Seljuki Turks, had been greatly weakened by the
Crusaders. In 1455, the Ottomans gave the long awaited deathblow
to the Roman Byzantine when they overran Constantinople. In
1516, the modern Ottoman Turkish army invaded Palestine after
decrimating the Mamluki cavalry with artillery and powder
muskets, against which the proud Mamluks charged into battle
with swords, lances and spears.
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