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As-Salih Ayyub

Al-Malik as-Salih Najm al-Din Ayyub (5 November 1205 – 22 November 1249), nickname: Abu al-Futuh (Arabic: أبو الفتوح), also known as al-Malik al-Salih, was the Ayyubid Kurdish ruler of Egypt from 1240 to 1249.

As-Salih Najm Al-Din Ayyub
Sultan of Egypt
Reign1240 – 22 November 1249
PredecessorAl-Adil II
SuccessorAl-Muazzam Turanshah
Emir of Damascus
(first reign)
Reign1239
PredecessorAl-Adil II
SuccessorAs-Salih Ismail
(second reign)
Reign1245 – 22 November 1249
PredecessorAs-Salih Ismail
SuccessorAl-Muazzam Turanshah
Born5 November 1205
Cairo
Died22 November 1249(1249-11-22) (aged 44)
ConsortShajar al-Durr
IssueAl-Muazzam Turanshah
Names
Salih Najm al-Din Ayyub
DynastyAyyubid dynasty
FatherAl-Kamil
ReligionSunni Islam

Early life Edit

As-Salih was born in 1205, the son of Al-Kamil and a Nubian concubine. Her name was Ward Al-Muna and she was also the servant of Al-Kamil's other wife, Sawda bint Al-Faqih, the mother of Adil.[1] In 1221, he became a hostage at the end of the Fifth Crusade, while John of Brienne became a hostage of as-Salih's father Al-Kamil, until Damietta was reconstructed and restored to Egypt.[2] In 1232, he was given Hasankeyf in the Jazirah (now part of Turkey), which his father had captured from the Artuqids. In 1234 his father sent him to rule Damascus, removing him from the succession in Egypt after suspecting him of conspiring against him with the Mamluks.

In 1238, al-Kamil died leaving as-Salih his designated heir in the Jazira, and his other son Al-Adil II as his heir in Egypt.[3] In the dynastic disputes which followed, as-Salih took control of Damascus,[4] in 1239, and set about using it as a base for enlarging his domain.

He received representations from his father's old Emirs in Egypt, who appealed to him to remove his brother, while making ready to invade Egypt, he was informed that his brother had been captured by his soldiers and was being held prisoner. As-Salih was invited to come at once and assume the Sultanate.[5]

In August 1239, Ayyub began pressuring Al-Salih Ismail to join him at Nablus for the campaign to take over Egypt from al-Adil II. Ayyub began to grow suspicious of Ismail's perceived procrastination and sent a noted physician, Sa'd al-Din al-Dimashqi, to find out what his vassal was doing. Ismail's vizier discovered Ayyub's scheme and secretly forged al-Dimashqi's recordings to mislead Ayyub into thinking Ismail was indeed on his way to Nablus. Eventually, Ismail, with the support of the Ayyubids of Kerak, Hama and Homs, captured Damascus from Ayyub in September 1239. Ayyub was abandoned by his troops and taken captive by local Bedouin who transferred him to al-Nasir Dawud's control, in which he was held as a prisoner in Kerak, along with Shajar al-Durr who gave birth to their son Khalil, and his Mamluk Rukn al-Din Baybars al-Salihi.[6]

In April 1240, An-Nasir, quarreling with al-Adil II, released Ayyub and allied with him against the Egyptians, in return for a promise that Ayyub would reinstall him in Damascus. Al-Adil was imprisoned by his own troops, and Ayyub and An-Nasir made a triumphal entry into Cairo in June 1240, hence As-Salih became the paramount ruler of the Ayyubid family.[5]

Rise of the Mamluks Edit

Once installed in Cairo, As-Salih was far from secure. The complex nature of the Ayyubid state meant that the ruling family itself, as well as associated Kurdish clans, had divided loyalties. Within Egypt, a powerful faction of Emirs, the Ashrafiyya, were conspiring to depose him and replace him with his uncle, as-Salih Ismail, who had regained control of Damascus after his departure. As-Salih shut himself in the Cairo citadel, and could no longer trust even the once-loyal Emirs who had brought him to power. The lack of loyal soldiers led him to begin buying large numbers of Kipchak slaves, who were available in unusually large numbers following the Mongol invasions in central Asia. They soon formed the core of his army, and were known as Mamluks.[7] As-Salih was not the first Ayyubid ruler to make use of Mamluks, but he was the first to depend on them so heavily.[8] Rather than just recruiting small numbers of Mamluks, As-Salih established two complete corps of them, numbering up to 1000 men.[9] One unit was known as the 'River Corps' or Baḥrīyah or Bahriyya, because they were garrisoned at Rawḍah island in the River Nile.[8][9] The second, smaller corps was the Jamdārīyah, which appears to have operated as a body guard for As-Salih.[9] As the Mamluks would eventually overthrow the Ayyubid dynasty and take power on their own, their early rise to prominence under As-Salih Ayyub is of considerable historical importance. In English, references to the Bahriyya after As-Salih's death, when they became the dominant power in Egypt, usually describe them as the Bahri Mamluks. The members of the Bahriyya who were recruited by As-Salih himself are also sometimes referred to as the Salihiyya. During his lifetime these terms were synonymous.[citation needed]

Wars with other Ayyubid realms and the Crusaders Edit

The period 1240–1243 was largely occupied with complex military and diplomatic manoeuvres involving the Crusader states in Palestine and the European armies that arrived during the Barons' Crusade, other Ayyubid family rulers in Syria, and the Khwarezmians of Diyar Mudar who had previously been allied to as-Salih. Just as his Bahri Mamluks were important in enabling him to maintain order in Egypt, the Khwarezmians were useful in dominating the other Ayyubid rulers in neighbouring regions. In 1244, at As-Salih's invitation [10] the Khwarezmians advanced through Syria and Palestine and sacked Jerusalem, which had been handed over to Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor by al-Kamil during the Sixth Crusade. Later that year as-Salih, again allied to the Khwarezmians, defeated as-Salih Ismail in Syria, who had allied with the crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem, at the Battle of La Forbie. In 1245 as-Salih captured Damascus,[11] and was awarded the title of sultan by the caliph al-Musta'sim in Baghdad. As-Salih was not however able to extend his rule far beyond Damascus,[10] although he was able to retain the emirate of Baalbek under Saʿd al-Din al-Humaidi.[12] In 1246 he decided that his Khwarezmian allies were dangerously uncontrollable, so he turned on them and defeated them near Homs, killing their leader and dispersing the remnants throughout Syria and Palestine.[10] As-Salih's capture of Jerusalem after the Khwarezmian sacking led to the call for a new Crusade in Europe, and Louis IX of France took up the cross.[10] The campaign took several years to organise, but in 1249 Louis invaded Egypt on the Seventh Crusade,[13] and occupied Damietta.[citation needed]

Death and legacy Edit

As-Salih was away fighting his uncle in Syria when news of the Crusader invasion came, but he quickly returned to Egypt and encamped at al-Mansourah, where he died on 22 November after having his leg amputated in an attempt to save his life from a serious abscess.[14][15] As-Salih did not trust his heir, al-Muazzam Turanshah, and had kept him at a safe distance from Egypt in Hasankeyf.[16] As-Salih's widow, Shajar al-Durr, managed to hide his death until Turanshah arrived.[17] Turanshah's rule was brief and was followed by a long and complicated interregnum until the Bahri Mamluks eventually took power. As-Salih was thus the last major Ayyubid ruler of Egypt, and the last to combine rule of Egypt with effective rule of parts of Palestine and Syria.[citation needed]

References Edit

  1. ^ Grousset, René. Histoire des croisades, Tome III: L'anarchie franque. p. 444. ISBN 978-2262025694.
  2. ^ Guy Perry, John of Brienne: King of Jerusalem, Emperor of Constantinople, c.1175–1237, Cambridge University Press, 2013 p.119
  3. ^ Humphreys 1977, p. 239.
  4. ^ Humphreys 1977, p. 249.
  5. ^ a b Humphreys 1977, p. 264.
  6. ^ Al-Maqrizi, p.419/vol.1
  7. ^ Humphreys 1977, p. 268.
  8. ^ a b Irwin 1986, p. 18.
  9. ^ a b c Whelan 1988, p. 225.
  10. ^ a b c d Irwin 1986, p. 19.
  11. ^ Humphreys 1977, p. 283.
  12. ^ Encyclopaedia Islamica, "Baalbek".
  13. ^ Riley-Smith 1990, p. 96.
  14. ^ Piers D. Mitchell, Medicine in the Crusades: Warfare, Wounds and the Medieval Surgeon, Cambridge University Press, 2004 p.213
  15. ^   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "From the Earliest Times to the Moslem Conquest". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  16. ^ Irwin 1986, p. 20.
  17. ^ Ann Katherine Swynford Lambton & Bernard Lewis, The Cambridge History of Islam: A. The central islamic lands from pre-islamic times to the First World War, Cambridge University Press, 1977 vol.2 p.209

Sources Edit

  • Al-Maqrizi, Al Selouk Leme'refatt Dewall al-Melouk, Dar al-kotob, 1997.
  • Humphreys, R. Stephen (1977), From Saladin to the Mongols: The Ayyubids of Damascus, 1193–1260, Albany, New York: State University of New York Press, ISBN 0-87395-263-4
  • Irwin, Robert (1986), The Middle East in the Middle Ages: The Early Mamluk Sultanate, 1250–1382, Southern Illinois University Press / Croom Helm, ISBN 1-5974-0466-7
  • Riley-Smith, Jonathan, ed. (1990), The Atlas of the Crusades, Times Books, ISBN 0816021864
  • Whelan, Estelle (1988), "Representations of the Khassakiyah and the Origins of Mamluk Emblems", in Soucek, Priscilla (ed.), Content and Context of Visual Arts in the Islamic World, University Park, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press

See also Edit

As-Salih Ayyub
Born: 5 November 1205 Died: 22 November 1249
Regnal titles
Preceded by Sultan of Egypt
1240 – 22 November 1249
Succeeded by
Preceded by Emir of Damascus
1239
Succeeded by
Preceded by Emir of Damascus
1245 – 22 November 1249
Succeeded by

salih, ayyub, malik, salih, redirects, here, other, uses, salih, ismail, malik, salih, najm, ayyub, november, 1205, november, 1249, nickname, futuh, arabic, أبو, الفتوح, also, known, malik, salih, ayyubid, kurdish, ruler, egypt, from, 1240, 1249, salih, najm, . al Malik al Salih redirects here For other uses see As Salih Ismail Al Malik as Salih Najm al Din Ayyub 5 November 1205 22 November 1249 nickname Abu al Futuh Arabic أبو الفتوح also known as al Malik al Salih was the Ayyubid Kurdish ruler of Egypt from 1240 to 1249 As Salih Najm Al Din AyyubSultan of EgyptReign1240 22 November 1249PredecessorAl Adil IISuccessorAl Muazzam TuranshahEmir of Damascus first reign Reign1239PredecessorAl Adil IISuccessorAs Salih Ismail second reign Reign1245 22 November 1249PredecessorAs Salih IsmailSuccessorAl Muazzam TuranshahBorn5 November 1205CairoDied22 November 1249 1249 11 22 aged 44 ConsortShajar al DurrIssueAl Muazzam TuranshahNamesSalih Najm al Din AyyubDynastyAyyubid dynastyFatherAl KamilReligionSunni Islam Contents 1 Early life 2 Rise of the Mamluks 3 Wars with other Ayyubid realms and the Crusaders 4 Death and legacy 5 References 6 Sources 7 See alsoEarly life EditAs Salih was born in 1205 the son of Al Kamil and a Nubian concubine Her name was Ward Al Muna and she was also the servant of Al Kamil s other wife Sawda bint Al Faqih the mother of Adil 1 In 1221 he became a hostage at the end of the Fifth Crusade while John of Brienne became a hostage of as Salih s father Al Kamil until Damietta was reconstructed and restored to Egypt 2 In 1232 he was given Hasankeyf in the Jazirah now part of Turkey which his father had captured from the Artuqids In 1234 his father sent him to rule Damascus removing him from the succession in Egypt after suspecting him of conspiring against him with the Mamluks In 1238 al Kamil died leaving as Salih his designated heir in the Jazira and his other son Al Adil II as his heir in Egypt 3 In the dynastic disputes which followed as Salih took control of Damascus 4 in 1239 and set about using it as a base for enlarging his domain He received representations from his father s old Emirs in Egypt who appealed to him to remove his brother while making ready to invade Egypt he was informed that his brother had been captured by his soldiers and was being held prisoner As Salih was invited to come at once and assume the Sultanate 5 In August 1239 Ayyub began pressuring Al Salih Ismail to join him at Nablus for the campaign to take over Egypt from al Adil II Ayyub began to grow suspicious of Ismail s perceived procrastination and sent a noted physician Sa d al Din al Dimashqi to find out what his vassal was doing Ismail s vizier discovered Ayyub s scheme and secretly forged al Dimashqi s recordings to mislead Ayyub into thinking Ismail was indeed on his way to Nablus Eventually Ismail with the support of the Ayyubids of Kerak Hama and Homs captured Damascus from Ayyub in September 1239 Ayyub was abandoned by his troops and taken captive by local Bedouin who transferred him to al Nasir Dawud s control in which he was held as a prisoner in Kerak along with Shajar al Durr who gave birth to their son Khalil and his Mamluk Rukn al Din Baybars al Salihi 6 In April 1240 An Nasir quarreling with al Adil II released Ayyub and allied with him against the Egyptians in return for a promise that Ayyub would reinstall him in Damascus Al Adil was imprisoned by his own troops and Ayyub and An Nasir made a triumphal entry into Cairo in June 1240 hence As Salih became the paramount ruler of the Ayyubid family 5 Rise of the Mamluks EditOnce installed in Cairo As Salih was far from secure The complex nature of the Ayyubid state meant that the ruling family itself as well as associated Kurdish clans had divided loyalties Within Egypt a powerful faction of Emirs the Ashrafiyya were conspiring to depose him and replace him with his uncle as Salih Ismail who had regained control of Damascus after his departure As Salih shut himself in the Cairo citadel and could no longer trust even the once loyal Emirs who had brought him to power The lack of loyal soldiers led him to begin buying large numbers of Kipchak slaves who were available in unusually large numbers following the Mongol invasions in central Asia They soon formed the core of his army and were known as Mamluks 7 As Salih was not the first Ayyubid ruler to make use of Mamluks but he was the first to depend on them so heavily 8 Rather than just recruiting small numbers of Mamluks As Salih established two complete corps of them numbering up to 1000 men 9 One unit was known as the River Corps or Baḥriyah or Bahriyya because they were garrisoned at Rawḍah island in the River Nile 8 9 The second smaller corps was the Jamdariyah which appears to have operated as a body guard for As Salih 9 As the Mamluks would eventually overthrow the Ayyubid dynasty and take power on their own their early rise to prominence under As Salih Ayyub is of considerable historical importance In English references to the Bahriyya after As Salih s death when they became the dominant power in Egypt usually describe them as the Bahri Mamluks The members of the Bahriyya who were recruited by As Salih himself are also sometimes referred to as the Salihiyya During his lifetime these terms were synonymous citation needed Wars with other Ayyubid realms and the Crusaders EditThe period 1240 1243 was largely occupied with complex military and diplomatic manoeuvres involving the Crusader states in Palestine and the European armies that arrived during the Barons Crusade other Ayyubid family rulers in Syria and the Khwarezmians of Diyar Mudar who had previously been allied to as Salih Just as his Bahri Mamluks were important in enabling him to maintain order in Egypt the Khwarezmians were useful in dominating the other Ayyubid rulers in neighbouring regions In 1244 at As Salih s invitation 10 the Khwarezmians advanced through Syria and Palestine and sacked Jerusalem which had been handed over to Frederick II Holy Roman Emperor by al Kamil during the Sixth Crusade Later that year as Salih again allied to the Khwarezmians defeated as Salih Ismail in Syria who had allied with the crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem at the Battle of La Forbie In 1245 as Salih captured Damascus 11 and was awarded the title of sultan by the caliph al Musta sim in Baghdad As Salih was not however able to extend his rule far beyond Damascus 10 although he was able to retain the emirate of Baalbek under Saʿd al Din al Humaidi 12 In 1246 he decided that his Khwarezmian allies were dangerously uncontrollable so he turned on them and defeated them near Homs killing their leader and dispersing the remnants throughout Syria and Palestine 10 As Salih s capture of Jerusalem after the Khwarezmian sacking led to the call for a new Crusade in Europe and Louis IX of France took up the cross 10 The campaign took several years to organise but in 1249 Louis invaded Egypt on the Seventh Crusade 13 and occupied Damietta citation needed Death and legacy EditAs Salih was away fighting his uncle in Syria when news of the Crusader invasion came but he quickly returned to Egypt and encamped at al Mansourah where he died on 22 November after having his leg amputated in an attempt to save his life from a serious abscess 14 15 As Salih did not trust his heir al Muazzam Turanshah and had kept him at a safe distance from Egypt in Hasankeyf 16 As Salih s widow Shajar al Durr managed to hide his death until Turanshah arrived 17 Turanshah s rule was brief and was followed by a long and complicated interregnum until the Bahri Mamluks eventually took power As Salih was thus the last major Ayyubid ruler of Egypt and the last to combine rule of Egypt with effective rule of parts of Palestine and Syria citation needed References Edit Grousset Rene Histoire des croisades Tome III L anarchie franque p 444 ISBN 978 2262025694 Guy Perry John of Brienne King of Jerusalem Emperor of Constantinople c 1175 1237 Cambridge University Press 2013 p 119 Humphreys 1977 p 239 Humphreys 1977 p 249 a b Humphreys 1977 p 264 Al Maqrizi p 419 vol 1 Humphreys 1977 p 268 a b Irwin 1986 p 18 a b c Whelan 1988 p 225 a b c d Irwin 1986 p 19 Humphreys 1977 p 283 Encyclopaedia Islamica Baalbek Riley Smith 1990 p 96 Piers D Mitchell Medicine in the Crusades Warfare Wounds and the Medieval Surgeon Cambridge University Press 2004 p 213 nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 From the Earliest Times to the Moslem Conquest Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Irwin 1986 p 20 Ann Katherine Swynford Lambton amp Bernard Lewis The Cambridge History of Islam A The central islamic lands from pre islamic times to the First World War Cambridge University Press 1977 vol 2 p 209Sources EditAl Maqrizi Al Selouk Leme refatt Dewall al Melouk Dar al kotob 1997 Humphreys R Stephen 1977 From Saladin to the Mongols The Ayyubids of Damascus 1193 1260 Albany New York State University of New York Press ISBN 0 87395 263 4 Irwin Robert 1986 The Middle East in the Middle Ages The Early Mamluk Sultanate 1250 1382 Southern Illinois University Press Croom Helm ISBN 1 5974 0466 7 Riley Smith Jonathan ed 1990 The Atlas of the Crusades Times Books ISBN 0816021864 Whelan Estelle 1988 Representations of the Khassakiyah and the Origins of Mamluk Emblems in Soucek Priscilla ed Content and Context of Visual Arts in the Islamic World University Park Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University PressSee also EditList of rulers of EgyptAs Salih AyyubAyyubid dynastyBorn 5 November 1205 Died 22 November 1249Regnal titlesPreceded byAl Adil II Sultan of Egypt1240 22 November 1249 Succeeded byAl Muazzam TuranshahPreceded byAl Adil II Emir of Damascus1239 Succeeded byAs Salih IsmailPreceded byAs Salih Ismail Emir of Damascus1245 22 November 1249 Succeeded byAl Muazzam Turanshah Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title As Salih Ayyub amp oldid 1167799447, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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