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Baybars

Al-Malik al-Zahir Rukn al-Din Baybars al-Bunduqdari (Arabic: الملك الظاهر ركن الدين بيبرس البندقداري, al-Malik al-Ẓāhir Rukn al-Dīn Baybars al-Bunduqdārī) (1223/1228 – 1 July 1277), of Turkic Kipchak origin, commonly known as Baibars or Baybars (Arabic: بيبرس, Baybars) – nicknamed Abu al-Futuh (أبو الفتوح; English: Father of Conquests, referring to his victories) – was the fourth Mamluk sultan of Egypt and Syria in the Bahri dynasty, succeeding Qutuz. He was one of the commanders of the Egyptian forces that inflicted a defeat on the Seventh Crusade of King Louis IX of France. He also led the vanguard of the Egyptian army at the Battle of Ain Jalut in 1260,[3] which marked the first substantial defeat of the Mongol army and is considered a turning point in history.[4]

Baybars
Sultan Misr wa-Suria
Al-Malik al-Zahir
Rukn al-Din
Sultan of Egypt
Reign24 October 1260 – 1 July 1277
Coronation1260 at Salihiyah
PredecessorSaif ad-Din Qutuz
SuccessorAl-Said Barakah
Born19 July 1223 or 1228
Dasht-i Kipchak[1][2]
Died1 July 1277 (aged 50/55)
Damascus, Mamluk Sultanate
SpouseIltutmish Khatun
Issue
Names
al-Malik al-Zahir Rukn al-Din Baybars al-Bunduqdari Abu al-Futuh
HouseZahiri
DynastyBahri
ReligionIslam

The reign of Baybars marked the start of an age of Mamluk dominance in the Eastern Mediterranean and solidified the durability of their military system. He managed to pave the way for the end of the Crusader presence in the Levant and reinforced the union of Egypt and Syria as the region's pre-eminent Muslim state, able to fend off threats from both Crusaders and Mongols, and even managed to subdue the kingdom of Makuria, which was famous for being unconquerable by previous Muslim empire invasion attempts. As sultan, Baybars also engaged in a combination of diplomacy and military action, allowing the Mamluks of Egypt to greatly expand their empire.

Name

In his native Turkic language, Baybars' name means "great panther"[5] or "lord panther"[6] (see also Wiktionary: bay "rich person, noble" + pars "leopard, panther").

Physical appearance

Baybars was described as a tall man with olive skin and blue eyes. He had broad shoulders, slim legs, and a powerful voice.[7][8] It was observed that he had cataract in one eye.[9]

Blazon

 
Dinar minted during Baybars' reign, bearing his blazon, the lion/panther[10]

Possibly based on the Turkic meaning of his name, Baybars used the panther as his heraldic blazon, and placed it on both coins and buildings.[5] The lion/panther used on the bridge built by Baybars near al-Ludd (today's Lod) plays with a rat, which may be interpreted to represent Baybars' Crusader enemies.[11]

Early life

Baibars was a Kipchak thought to be born in the Dasht-i Kipchak - between the Edil (Volga) and Yaiyk (Ural) rivers - while other sources specify this as in the Kazakhstan.[1][2][12][13][14][15][16][17][dubious ] There is a discrepancy in Ibn Taghrībirdī's dating of his birth, since he says it took place in 625 AH (12 December 1227 – 29 November 1228) and also that Baybars was about 24 years old in 1247, which would put his birth closer to 1223. He belonged to the Barli tribe. According to a fellow Cuman and eyewitness, Badr al-Din Baysari, the Barli fled the armies of the Mongols, arranging to settle in the Second Bulgarian Empire (named in the sources Wallachia). They crossed the Black Sea from either Crimea or Alania, where they had arrived to Bulgaria about 1242. In the meantime, the Mongols invaded Bulgaria, including the regions where the Cuman refugees recently settled.[18] Both Baybars, who witnessed his parents being massacred,[18] and Baysari were among the captives during the invasion and were sold into slavery in the Sultanate of Rum at the slave market in Sivas. Afterwards, he was sold in Hama to 'Alā’ al-Dīn Īdīkīn al-Bunduqārī [de], an Egyptian of high rank, who brought him to Cairo. In 1247, al-Bunduqārī was arrested and the sultan of Egypt, As-Salih Ayyub, confiscated his slaves, including Baybars.[19]

Rise to power

 
The Mamluks under Baybars (yellow) fought off the Franks and the Mongols during the Ninth Crusade.

In 1250, he supported the defeat of the Seventh Crusade of Louis IX of France in two major battles. The first was the Battle of Al Mansurah, where he employed an ingenious strategy in ordering the opening of a gate to let the crusader knights enter the town; the crusaders rushed into the town that they thought was deserted to find themselves trapped inside. They were besieged from all directions by the Egyptian forces and the town population, and suffered heavy losses. Robert of Artois, who took refuge in a house,[20][21] and William of Salisbury were both killed, along with most of the Knights Templar. Only five Templar Knights escaped alive.[22] The second was the Battle of Fariskur which essentially ended the Seventh Crusade and led to the capture of Louis IX. Egyptian forces in that battle were led by Sultan Turanshah, the young son of recently deceased as-Salih Ayyub. Shortly after the victory over the Crusaders, Baybars and a group of Mamluk soldiers assassinated Turanshah, leading to as-Salih Ayyub's widow Shajar al-Durr being named sultana.[23]

In 1254, a power shift occurred in Egypt, as Aybak killed Faris ad-Din Aktai, the leader of the Bahri Mamluks. Some of his Mamluks, among them Baybars and Qalawun al-Alfi, fled to an-Nasir Yusuf in Syria,[24] persuading him to break the accord and invade Egypt. Aybak wrote to an-Nassir Yusuf warning him of the danger of these Mamluks who took refuge in Syria, and agreed to grant him their territorial domains on the coast, but an-Nasir Yusuf refused to expel them and instead returned to them the domains which Aybak had granted. In 1255, an-Nasir Yusuf sent new forces to the Egyptian border, this time with many of Aktai's Mamluks, among them Baybars, and Qalawun al-Alfi, but he was defeated again. In 1257, Baybars and other Bahri Mamluks left Damascus to Jerusalem, where they deposed its governor Kütük and plundered its markets, then they did the same in Gaza. Later on, they fought against the forces of an-Nasir Yusuf at Nablus, then fled to join the forces of al-Mughith Umar in Kerak.[25] The combined forces tried in vain to invade Egypt during the reign of Aybak.[26]

Baybars then sent 'Ala al-Din Taybars al-Waziri to discuss with Qutuz his return to Egypt, which was eagerly accepted.[27] He was still a commander under sultan Qutuz at the Battle of Ain Jalut in 1260, when he decisively defeated the Mongols. After the battle, Sultan Qutuz (aka Koetoez) was assassinated while on a hunting expedition. It was said that Baybars was involved in the assassination because he expected to be rewarded with the governorship of Aleppo for his military success, but Qutuz, fearing his ambition, refused to give him the post.[28] Baybars succeeded Qutuz as Sultan of Egypt.[29]

Sultan of Egypt

Soon after Baybars had ascended to the Sultanate, his authority was confirmed without any serious resistance, except from Alam al-Din Sinjar al-Halabi, another Mamluk amir who was popular and powerful enough to claim Damascus. Also, the threat from the Mongols was still serious enough to be considered as a threat to Baybars' authority. However, Baybars first chose to deal with Sinjar,[30][31][32] and marched on Damascus. At the same time the princes of Hama and Homs proved able to defeat the Mongols in the First Battle of Homs, which lifted the Mongol threat for a while. On 17 January 1261, Baibars' forces were able to rout the troops of Sinjar outside Damascus, and pursued the attack to the city, where the citizens were loyal to Sinjar and resisted Baibars, although their resistance was soon crushed.

There was also a brief rebellion in Cairo led by a leading figure of the Shiite named al-Kurani. Al-Kurani is said originated from Nishapur.[30] Al-Kurani and his follower are recorded to have attacked the weapon stores and stables of Cairo during a night raid. Baibars, however, manage to suppress the rebellion quickly as he surrounded and arrested them all. Al- Kurani and another rebel leaders were executed (crucified) in Bab Zuweila[30]

After suppressing the revolt of Sinjar, Baibars then managed to deal with the Ayyubids, while quietly eliminating the prince of Kerak. Ayyubids such as Al-Ashraf Musa, Emir of Homs and the Ayyubid Emir Dynasty of Hama Al-Mansur Muhammad II, who had earlier staved off the Mongol threat, were permitted to continue their rule in exchange for their recognizing Baibars' authority as Sultan.[33]

After the Abbasid caliphate in Iraq was overthrown by the Mongols in 1258 when they conquered and sacked Baghdad, the Muslim world lacked a caliph, a theoretically supreme leader who had sometimes used his office to endow distant Muslim rulers with legitimacy by sending them writs of investiture. Thus, when the Abbasid refugee Abu al-Qasim Ahmad, the uncle of the last Abbasid caliph al-Musta‘sim, arrived in Cairo in 1261, Baibars had him proclaimed caliph as al-Mustansir II and duly received investiture as sultan from him. Unfortunately, al-Mustansir II was killed by the Mongols during an ill-advised expedition to recapture Baghdad from the Mongols later in the same year. In 1262, another Abbasid, allegedly the great-great-great grandson of the Caliph al-Mustarshid, Abu al-‘Abbas Ahmad, who had survived from the defeated expedition, was proclaimed caliph as al-Hakim I, inaugurating the line of Abbasid caliphs of Cairo that continued as long as the Mamluk sultanate, until 1517. Like his unfortunate predecessor, al-Hakim I also received the formal oath of allegiance of Baibars and provided him with legitimation. While most of the Muslim world did not take these caliphs seriously, as they were mere instruments of the sultans, they still lent a certain legitimation as well as a decorative element to their rule.[33]

Campaign against the Crusaders

As sultan, Baibars engaged in a lifelong struggle against the Crusader kingdoms in Syria, in part because the Christians had aided the Mongols. He started with the Principality of Antioch, which had become a vassal state of the Mongols and had participated in attacks against Islamic targets in Damascus and Syria. In 1263, Baibars laid siege to Acre, the capital of the remnant of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, although the siege was abandoned when he sacked Nazareth instead.[34] He used siege engines to defeat the Crusaders in battles such as the Fall of Arsuf from 21 March to 30 April. After breaking into the town he offered free passage to the defending Knights Hospitallers if they surrendered their formidable citadel. The Knights accepted Baibars' offer but were enslaved anyway.[35] Baibars razed the castle to the ground.[36] He next attacked Atlit and Haifa, where he captured both towns after destroying the crusaders' resistance, and razed the citadels.[37]

In the same year, Baibars laid siege to the fortress of Safed, held by the Templar knights, which had been conquered by Saladin in 1188 but returned to the Kingdom of Jerusalem in 1240. Baibars promised the knights safe passage to the Christian town of Acre if they surrendered their fortress. Badly outnumbered, the knights agreed. Upon surrender, Baibars broke his promise and massacred the entire Templar garrison[citation needed]. On capturing Safed, Baibars did not raze the fortress to the ground but fortified and repaired it instead, as it was strategically situated and well constructed. He installed a new governor in Safed, with the rank of Wali.[38]

Later, in 1266, Baibars invaded the Christian country of Cilician Armenia which, under King Hethum I, had submitted to the Mongol Empire. After defeating the forces of Hethum I in the Battle of Mari, Baibars managed to ravage the three great cities of Mamistra, Adana and Tarsus, so that when Hetoum arrived with Mongol troops, the country was already devastated. Hetoum had to negotiate the return of his son Leo by giving control of Armenia's border fortresses to the Mamluks. In 1269, Hetoum abdicated in favour of his son and became a monk, but he died a year later.[39] Leo was left in the awkward situation of keeping Cilicia as a subject of the Mongol Empire, while at the same time paying tribute to the Mamluks.[40]

This isolated Antioch and Tripoli, led by Hethum's son-in-law, Prince Bohemond VI. After successfully conquering Cilicila, Baibars in 1267 settled his unfinished business with Acre, and continued the extermination of remaining crusader garrisons in the following years. In 1268, he besieged Antioch, capturing the city on 18 May. Baibars had promised to spare the lives of the inhabitants, but he broke his promise and had the city razed, killing or enslaving much of the population after the surrender.[41] prompting the fall of the Principality of Antioch. The massacre of men, women, and children at Antioch "was the single greatest massacre of the entire crusading era."[42] Priests had their throats slit inside their churches, and women were sold into slavery.[43]

Then he continued to Jaffa, which belonged to Guy, the son of John of Ibelin. Jaffa fell to Baibars on 7 March after twelve hours of fighting; most of Jaffa's citizens were slain, but Baibars allowed the garrison to go unharmed.[44] After this he conquered Ashkalon and Caesarea.

Diplomacy with Golden Horde

In some time around October to November 1267, or about 666 Safar of Hijra year, Baibars wrote condolences and congratulations to the new Khan of the Golden Horde, Mengu-Timur, to urge him to fight Abaqa. Despite the failure to incite infighting between the Golden Horde and Ilkhanate, Baibars continued to conduct warm correspondence with the Golden Horde, particularly with Mengu Timur's general Noqai, who unlike Mengu Timur was very cooperative with Baibars. It is theorized that this intimacy was not only due to the religious connection (as Noqai was a Muslim, unlike his Khan), but also because Noqai was not really fond of Mengu-Timur. However, Baibars was pragmatic in his approach and did not want to become involved in complicated intrigue inside the Golden Horde, so instead he stayed close to both Mengu Timur and Noqai.[45]

Continued campaign against Crusaders

On March 30th 1271, after Baibars captured the smaller castles in the area, including Chastel Blanc, he besieged the Krak des Chevaliers, held by the Hospitallers. Peasants who lived in the area had fled to the castle for safety and were kept in the outer ward. As soon as Baibars arrived, he began erecting mangonels, powerful siege weapons which he would turn on the castle. According to Ibn Shaddad, two days later the first line of defences was captured by the besiegers; he was probably referring to a walled suburb outside the castle's entrance.[46] After a lull of ten days, the besiegers conveyed a letter to the garrison, supposedly from the Grand Master of the Knights Hospitaller in Tripoli, Hugues de Revel, which granted permission for them to surrender. The garrison capitulated and the Sultan spared their lives.[46] The new owners of the castle undertook repairs, focused mainly on the outer ward.[47] The Hospitaller chapel was converted to a mosque and two mihrabs were added to the interior.[48]

Baibars then turned his attention to Tripoli, but he interrupted his siege there to call a truce in May 1271. The fall of Antioch had led to the brief Ninth Crusade, led by Prince Edward of England, who arrived in Acre in May 1271 and attempted to ally himself with the Mongols against Baibars. So Baibars declared a truce with Tripoli, as well as with Edward, who was never able to capture any territory from Baibars anyway. According to some reports, Baibars tried to have Edward assassinated with poison, but Edward survived the attempt and returned home in 1272.

Campaign against Makuria

In 1272, the Mamluk Sultan invaded the Kingdom of Makuria, after its King David I had raided the Egyptian city of Aidhab, initiating several decades of intervention by the Mamlukes in Nubian affairs.[49] Hostilities toward the dying Christian kingdom were sidelined as Baibars' invasion of Makuria continued for four years until the Mamluks defeated the Nubians in the Battle of Dongola, by 1276, Baibars had completed his conquest of Nubia, Including the Medieval lower Nubia which was ruled by Banu Kanz. Under the terms of the settlement, the Nubians were now subjected to paying jizya tribute, and in return they were allowed to keep their religion, being protected under Islamic law as 'People of the Book'; they were also allowed to continue being governed by a king from the native royal family, although this king was chosen personally by Baibars, namely a Makurian noble named Shakanda.[50] In practice this was reducing Makuria to a vassal kingdom,[51] effectively ending Makuria's status as an independent kingdom.

Campaign against the Mongols

In 1277, Baibars invaded the Seljuq Sultanate of Rûm, then controlled by the Ilkhanate Mongols. He defeated a Mongol army at the Battle of Elbistan[52] and captured the city of Kayseri. Baibars himself went with a few troops to deal with the Mongol right flank that was pounding his left wing.[53] Baibars ordered a force from the army from Hama to reinforce his left. The large Mamluk numbers were able to overwhelm the Mongol force, who instead of retreating dismounted from their horses. Some Mongols were able to escape and took up positions on the hills. Once they became surrounded they once again dismounted, and fought to the death.[53][54] During the celebration of victory, Baybars said that "How can I be happy? Before I had thought that I and my servants would defeat the Mongols, but my left wing was beaten by them. Only Allah helped us".[55]

The possibility of a new Mongol army convinced Baibars to return to Syria, since he was far away from his bases and supply line. As the Mamluk army returned to Syria the commander of the Mamluk vanguard, Izz al-Din Aybeg al-Shaykhi, deserted to the Mongols. Pervâne sent a letter to Baibars asking him to delay his departure. Baibars chastised him for not aiding him during the Battle of Elbistan. Baibars told him he was leaving for Sivas to mislead Pervâne and the Mongols as to his true destination. Baibars also sent Taybars al-Waziri with a force to raid the Armenian town of al-Rummana, whose inhabitants had hidden the Mongols earlier.[56]

Death

Baibars died in Damascus on 1 July 1277, when he was 53 years old. His demise has been the subject of some academic speculation. Many sources agree that he died from drinking poisoned kumis that was intended for someone else. Other accounts suggest that he may have died from a wound while campaigning, or from illness.[57] He was buried in the Az-Zahiriyah Library in Damascus.[58]

Family

One of Baibar's wives was the daughter of Amir Sayf ad-Din Nogay at-Tatari.[59] Another wife was the daughter of Amir Sayf ad-Din Giray at-Tatari.[59] Another wife was the daughter of Amir Sayf ad-Din Tammaji.[59] Another wife was Iltutmish Khatun.[60] She was the daughter of Barka Khan, a former Khwarazmian amir. She was the mother of his son Al-Said Barakah.[61] She died in 1284–85.[60] Another wife was the daughter Karmun Agha, a Mongol Amir.[62] He had three sons al-Said Barakah, Solamish and Khizir.[59] He had seven daughters;[59] one of them was named Tidhkarbay Khatun.[63]

Assessment

 
The lion passant was the heraldic blazon of Baibars from 1260.

As the first Sultan of the Bahri Mamluk dynasty, Baibars made the meritocratic ascent up the ranks of Mamluk society. He took final control after the assassination of Sultan Sayf al Din Qutuz, but before he became Sultan he commanded Mamluk forces in the decisive Battle of Ain Jalut in 1260, repelling Mongol forces from Syria.[64] Although in the Muslim world he has been considered a national hero for centuries, and in the Near East and Kazakhstan is still regarded as such, Sultan Baibars was reviled in the Christian world of the time for his successful campaigns against the Crusader States. A Templar knight who fought in the Seventh Crusade lamented:

Rage and sorrow are seated in my heart...so firmly that I scarce dare to stay alive. It seems that God wishes to support the Turks to our loss...ah, lord God...alas, the realm of the East has lost so much that it will never be able to rise up again. They will make a Mosque of Holy Mary's convent, and since the theft pleases her Son, who should weep at this, we are forced to comply as well...Anyone who wishes to fight the Turks is mad, for Jesus Christ does not fight them any more. They have conquered, they will conquer. For every day they drive us down, knowing that God, who was awake, sleeps now, and Muhammad waxes powerful.

— [65]

Baibars also played an important role in bringing the Mongols to Islam. He developed strong ties with the Mongols of the Golden Horde and took steps for the Golden Horde Mongols to travel to Egypt. The arrival of the Mongol's Golden Horde to Egypt resulted in a significant number of Mongols accepting Islam.[66]

Legacy

 
Bronze bust of Sultan Baibars in Cairo, at the Egyptian National Military Museum

Military legacy

Baibars was a popular ruler in the Muslim world who had defeated the crusaders in three campaigns, and the Mongols in the Battle of Ain Jalut which many scholars deem of great macro-historical importance. In order to support his military campaigns, Baibars commissioned arsenals, warships and cargo vessels. He was also arguably the first to employ explosive hand cannons in war, at the Battle of Ain Jalut.[67][68] His military campaign also extended into Libya and Nubia.

Culture and science

He was also an efficient administrator who took interest in building various infrastructure projects, such as a mounted message relay system capable of delivery from Cairo to Damascus in four days. He built bridges, irrigation and shipping canals, improved the harbours, and built mosques. He was a patron of Islamic science, such as his support for the medical research of his Arab physician, Ibn al-Nafis.[69] As a testament of a special relationship between Islam and cats, Baibars left a cat garden in Cairo as a waqf, providing the cats of Cairo with food and shelter.[70]

His memoirs were recorded in Sirat al-Zahir Baibars ("Life of al-Zahir Baibars"), a popular Arabic romance recording his battles and achievements. He has a heroic status in Kazakhstan, as well as in Egypt, Palestine, Lebanon and Syria.

Al-Madrassa al-Zahiriyya is the school built adjacent to his Mausoleum in Damascus.[citation needed] The Az-Zahiriyah Library has a wealth of manuscripts in various branches of knowledge to this day.

See also

References

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Sources

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  • Kastritsis, Dimitris (2013). "The Historical Epic "Ahval-i Sultan Mehemmed" (The Tales of Sultan Mehmed) in the Context of Early Ottoman Historiography". Writing History at the Ottoman Court: Editing the Past, Fashioning the Future. Indiana University Press.

External links

  • Baibars article from Encyclopedia of the Orient
  • Baibars in Concise Britannica online
  • Al-Madrassa al-Zahiriyya and Baybars Mausoleum
  • Levtzion, Nehemia; Pouwels, Randall, eds. (2000), The History of Islam in Africa, Ohio University Press, ISBN 0821444611
  • Creswell, K.A.C. (1926). "The works of Sultan Bibars al-Bunduqdârî in Egypt [avec 31 planches]". BIFAO. 26: 129–193.
Baybars
Cadet branch of the Mamluk Sultanate
Born: 19 July 1223 Died: 1 July 1277
Regnal titles
Preceded by Sultan of Egypt and Syria
24 October 1260 – 1 July 1277
Succeeded by

baybars, other, uses, disambiguation, malik, zahir, rukn, bunduqdari, arabic, الملك, الظاهر, ركن, الدين, بيبرس, البندقداري, malik, Ẓāhir, rukn, dīn, bunduqdārī, 1223, 1228, july, 1277, turkic, kipchak, origin, commonly, known, baibars, arabic, بيبرس, nicknamed. For other uses see Baybars disambiguation Al Malik al Zahir Rukn al Din Baybars al Bunduqdari Arabic الملك الظاهر ركن الدين بيبرس البندقداري al Malik al Ẓahir Rukn al Din Baybars al Bunduqdari 1223 1228 1 July 1277 of Turkic Kipchak origin commonly known as Baibars or Baybars Arabic بيبرس Baybars nicknamed Abu al Futuh أبو الفتوح English Father of Conquests referring to his victories was the fourth Mamluk sultan of Egypt and Syria in the Bahri dynasty succeeding Qutuz He was one of the commanders of the Egyptian forces that inflicted a defeat on the Seventh Crusade of King Louis IX of France He also led the vanguard of the Egyptian army at the Battle of Ain Jalut in 1260 3 which marked the first substantial defeat of the Mongol army and is considered a turning point in history 4 BaybarsSultan Misr wa Suria Al Malik al Zahir Rukn al DinSultan of EgyptReign24 October 1260 1 July 1277Coronation1260 at SalihiyahPredecessorSaif ad Din QutuzSuccessorAl Said BarakahBorn19 July 1223 or 1228Dasht i Kipchak 1 2 Died1 July 1277 aged 50 55 Damascus Mamluk SultanateSpouseIltutmish KhatunIssueAl Said BarakahSolamishKhizirTidhkarbay KhatunNamesal Malik al Zahir Rukn al Din Baybars al Bunduqdari Abu al FutuhHouseZahiriDynastyBahriReligionIslamThe reign of Baybars marked the start of an age of Mamluk dominance in the Eastern Mediterranean and solidified the durability of their military system He managed to pave the way for the end of the Crusader presence in the Levant and reinforced the union of Egypt and Syria as the region s pre eminent Muslim state able to fend off threats from both Crusaders and Mongols and even managed to subdue the kingdom of Makuria which was famous for being unconquerable by previous Muslim empire invasion attempts As sultan Baybars also engaged in a combination of diplomacy and military action allowing the Mamluks of Egypt to greatly expand their empire Contents 1 Name 1 1 Physical appearance 2 Blazon 3 Early life 4 Rise to power 5 Sultan of Egypt 5 1 Campaign against the Crusaders 5 2 Diplomacy with Golden Horde 5 3 Continued campaign against Crusaders 5 4 Campaign against Makuria 5 5 Campaign against the Mongols 6 Death 7 Family 8 Assessment 9 Legacy 9 1 Military legacy 9 2 Culture and science 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Sources 12 External linksName EditIn his native Turkic language Baybars name means great panther 5 or lord panther 6 see also Wiktionary bay rich person noble pars leopard panther Physical appearance Edit Baybars was described as a tall man with olive skin and blue eyes He had broad shoulders slim legs and a powerful voice 7 8 It was observed that he had cataract in one eye 9 Blazon Edit Dinar minted during Baybars reign bearing his blazon the lion panther 10 Possibly based on the Turkic meaning of his name Baybars used the panther as his heraldic blazon and placed it on both coins and buildings 5 The lion panther used on the bridge built by Baybars near al Ludd today s Lod plays with a rat which may be interpreted to represent Baybars Crusader enemies 11 Early life EditBaibars was a Kipchak thought to be born in the Dasht i Kipchak between the Edil Volga and Yaiyk Ural rivers while other sources specify this as in the Kazakhstan 1 2 12 13 14 15 16 17 dubious discuss There is a discrepancy in Ibn Taghribirdi s dating of his birth since he says it took place in 625 AH 12 December 1227 29 November 1228 and also that Baybars was about 24 years old in 1247 which would put his birth closer to 1223 He belonged to the Barli tribe According to a fellow Cuman and eyewitness Badr al Din Baysari the Barli fled the armies of the Mongols arranging to settle in the Second Bulgarian Empire named in the sources Wallachia They crossed the Black Sea from either Crimea or Alania where they had arrived to Bulgaria about 1242 In the meantime the Mongols invaded Bulgaria including the regions where the Cuman refugees recently settled 18 Both Baybars who witnessed his parents being massacred 18 and Baysari were among the captives during the invasion and were sold into slavery in the Sultanate of Rum at the slave market in Sivas Afterwards he was sold in Hama to Ala al Din idikin al Bunduqari de an Egyptian of high rank who brought him to Cairo In 1247 al Bunduqari was arrested and the sultan of Egypt As Salih Ayyub confiscated his slaves including Baybars 19 Rise to power Edit The Mamluks under Baybars yellow fought off the Franks and the Mongols during the Ninth Crusade In 1250 he supported the defeat of the Seventh Crusade of Louis IX of France in two major battles The first was the Battle of Al Mansurah where he employed an ingenious strategy in ordering the opening of a gate to let the crusader knights enter the town the crusaders rushed into the town that they thought was deserted to find themselves trapped inside They were besieged from all directions by the Egyptian forces and the town population and suffered heavy losses Robert of Artois who took refuge in a house 20 21 and William of Salisbury were both killed along with most of the Knights Templar Only five Templar Knights escaped alive 22 The second was the Battle of Fariskur which essentially ended the Seventh Crusade and led to the capture of Louis IX Egyptian forces in that battle were led by Sultan Turanshah the young son of recently deceased as Salih Ayyub Shortly after the victory over the Crusaders Baybars and a group of Mamluk soldiers assassinated Turanshah leading to as Salih Ayyub s widow Shajar al Durr being named sultana 23 In 1254 a power shift occurred in Egypt as Aybak killed Faris ad Din Aktai the leader of the Bahri Mamluks Some of his Mamluks among them Baybars and Qalawun al Alfi fled to an Nasir Yusuf in Syria 24 persuading him to break the accord and invade Egypt Aybak wrote to an Nassir Yusuf warning him of the danger of these Mamluks who took refuge in Syria and agreed to grant him their territorial domains on the coast but an Nasir Yusuf refused to expel them and instead returned to them the domains which Aybak had granted In 1255 an Nasir Yusuf sent new forces to the Egyptian border this time with many of Aktai s Mamluks among them Baybars and Qalawun al Alfi but he was defeated again In 1257 Baybars and other Bahri Mamluks left Damascus to Jerusalem where they deposed its governor Kutuk and plundered its markets then they did the same in Gaza Later on they fought against the forces of an Nasir Yusuf at Nablus then fled to join the forces of al Mughith Umar in Kerak 25 The combined forces tried in vain to invade Egypt during the reign of Aybak 26 Baybars then sent Ala al Din Taybars al Waziri to discuss with Qutuz his return to Egypt which was eagerly accepted 27 He was still a commander under sultan Qutuz at the Battle of Ain Jalut in 1260 when he decisively defeated the Mongols After the battle Sultan Qutuz aka Koetoez was assassinated while on a hunting expedition It was said that Baybars was involved in the assassination because he expected to be rewarded with the governorship of Aleppo for his military success but Qutuz fearing his ambition refused to give him the post 28 Baybars succeeded Qutuz as Sultan of Egypt 29 Sultan of Egypt EditSoon after Baybars had ascended to the Sultanate his authority was confirmed without any serious resistance except from Alam al Din Sinjar al Halabi another Mamluk amir who was popular and powerful enough to claim Damascus Also the threat from the Mongols was still serious enough to be considered as a threat to Baybars authority However Baybars first chose to deal with Sinjar 30 31 32 and marched on Damascus At the same time the princes of Hama and Homs proved able to defeat the Mongols in the First Battle of Homs which lifted the Mongol threat for a while On 17 January 1261 Baibars forces were able to rout the troops of Sinjar outside Damascus and pursued the attack to the city where the citizens were loyal to Sinjar and resisted Baibars although their resistance was soon crushed There was also a brief rebellion in Cairo led by a leading figure of the Shiite named al Kurani Al Kurani is said originated from Nishapur 30 Al Kurani and his follower are recorded to have attacked the weapon stores and stables of Cairo during a night raid Baibars however manage to suppress the rebellion quickly as he surrounded and arrested them all Al Kurani and another rebel leaders were executed crucified in Bab Zuweila 30 After suppressing the revolt of Sinjar Baibars then managed to deal with the Ayyubids while quietly eliminating the prince of Kerak Ayyubids such as Al Ashraf Musa Emir of Homs and the Ayyubid Emir Dynasty of Hama Al Mansur Muhammad II who had earlier staved off the Mongol threat were permitted to continue their rule in exchange for their recognizing Baibars authority as Sultan 33 After the Abbasid caliphate in Iraq was overthrown by the Mongols in 1258 when they conquered and sacked Baghdad the Muslim world lacked a caliph a theoretically supreme leader who had sometimes used his office to endow distant Muslim rulers with legitimacy by sending them writs of investiture Thus when the Abbasid refugee Abu al Qasim Ahmad the uncle of the last Abbasid caliph al Musta sim arrived in Cairo in 1261 Baibars had him proclaimed caliph as al Mustansir II and duly received investiture as sultan from him Unfortunately al Mustansir II was killed by the Mongols during an ill advised expedition to recapture Baghdad from the Mongols later in the same year In 1262 another Abbasid allegedly the great great great grandson of the Caliph al Mustarshid Abu al Abbas Ahmad who had survived from the defeated expedition was proclaimed caliph as al Hakim I inaugurating the line of Abbasid caliphs of Cairo that continued as long as the Mamluk sultanate until 1517 Like his unfortunate predecessor al Hakim I also received the formal oath of allegiance of Baibars and provided him with legitimation While most of the Muslim world did not take these caliphs seriously as they were mere instruments of the sultans they still lent a certain legitimation as well as a decorative element to their rule 33 Campaign against the Crusaders Edit Further information Siege of Antioch 1268 As sultan Baibars engaged in a lifelong struggle against the Crusader kingdoms in Syria in part because the Christians had aided the Mongols He started with the Principality of Antioch which had become a vassal state of the Mongols and had participated in attacks against Islamic targets in Damascus and Syria In 1263 Baibars laid siege to Acre the capital of the remnant of the Kingdom of Jerusalem although the siege was abandoned when he sacked Nazareth instead 34 He used siege engines to defeat the Crusaders in battles such as the Fall of Arsuf from 21 March to 30 April After breaking into the town he offered free passage to the defending Knights Hospitallers if they surrendered their formidable citadel The Knights accepted Baibars offer but were enslaved anyway 35 Baibars razed the castle to the ground 36 He next attacked Atlit and Haifa where he captured both towns after destroying the crusaders resistance and razed the citadels 37 In the same year Baibars laid siege to the fortress of Safed held by the Templar knights which had been conquered by Saladin in 1188 but returned to the Kingdom of Jerusalem in 1240 Baibars promised the knights safe passage to the Christian town of Acre if they surrendered their fortress Badly outnumbered the knights agreed Upon surrender Baibars broke his promise and massacred the entire Templar garrison citation needed On capturing Safed Baibars did not raze the fortress to the ground but fortified and repaired it instead as it was strategically situated and well constructed He installed a new governor in Safed with the rank of Wali 38 Later in 1266 Baibars invaded the Christian country of Cilician Armenia which under King Hethum I had submitted to the Mongol Empire After defeating the forces of Hethum I in the Battle of Mari Baibars managed to ravage the three great cities of Mamistra Adana and Tarsus so that when Hetoum arrived with Mongol troops the country was already devastated Hetoum had to negotiate the return of his son Leo by giving control of Armenia s border fortresses to the Mamluks In 1269 Hetoum abdicated in favour of his son and became a monk but he died a year later 39 Leo was left in the awkward situation of keeping Cilicia as a subject of the Mongol Empire while at the same time paying tribute to the Mamluks 40 This isolated Antioch and Tripoli led by Hethum s son in law Prince Bohemond VI After successfully conquering Cilicila Baibars in 1267 settled his unfinished business with Acre and continued the extermination of remaining crusader garrisons in the following years In 1268 he besieged Antioch capturing the city on 18 May Baibars had promised to spare the lives of the inhabitants but he broke his promise and had the city razed killing or enslaving much of the population after the surrender 41 prompting the fall of the Principality of Antioch The massacre of men women and children at Antioch was the single greatest massacre of the entire crusading era 42 Priests had their throats slit inside their churches and women were sold into slavery 43 Then he continued to Jaffa which belonged to Guy the son of John of Ibelin Jaffa fell to Baibars on 7 March after twelve hours of fighting most of Jaffa s citizens were slain but Baibars allowed the garrison to go unharmed 44 After this he conquered Ashkalon and Caesarea Diplomacy with Golden Horde Edit In some time around October to November 1267 or about 666 Safar of Hijra year Baibars wrote condolences and congratulations to the new Khan of the Golden Horde Mengu Timur to urge him to fight Abaqa Despite the failure to incite infighting between the Golden Horde and Ilkhanate Baibars continued to conduct warm correspondence with the Golden Horde particularly with Mengu Timur s general Noqai who unlike Mengu Timur was very cooperative with Baibars It is theorized that this intimacy was not only due to the religious connection as Noqai was a Muslim unlike his Khan but also because Noqai was not really fond of Mengu Timur However Baibars was pragmatic in his approach and did not want to become involved in complicated intrigue inside the Golden Horde so instead he stayed close to both Mengu Timur and Noqai 45 Continued campaign against Crusaders Edit Further information Fall of Krak des Chevaliers On March 30th 1271 after Baibars captured the smaller castles in the area including Chastel Blanc he besieged the Krak des Chevaliers held by the Hospitallers Peasants who lived in the area had fled to the castle for safety and were kept in the outer ward As soon as Baibars arrived he began erecting mangonels powerful siege weapons which he would turn on the castle According to Ibn Shaddad two days later the first line of defences was captured by the besiegers he was probably referring to a walled suburb outside the castle s entrance 46 After a lull of ten days the besiegers conveyed a letter to the garrison supposedly from the Grand Master of the Knights Hospitaller in Tripoli Hugues de Revel which granted permission for them to surrender The garrison capitulated and the Sultan spared their lives 46 The new owners of the castle undertook repairs focused mainly on the outer ward 47 The Hospitaller chapel was converted to a mosque and two mihrabs were added to the interior 48 Baibars then turned his attention to Tripoli but he interrupted his siege there to call a truce in May 1271 The fall of Antioch had led to the brief Ninth Crusade led by Prince Edward of England who arrived in Acre in May 1271 and attempted to ally himself with the Mongols against Baibars So Baibars declared a truce with Tripoli as well as with Edward who was never able to capture any territory from Baibars anyway According to some reports Baibars tried to have Edward assassinated with poison but Edward survived the attempt and returned home in 1272 Campaign against Makuria Edit Further information Kingdom of Makuria Decline In 1272 the Mamluk Sultan invaded the Kingdom of Makuria after its King David I had raided the Egyptian city of Aidhab initiating several decades of intervention by the Mamlukes in Nubian affairs 49 Hostilities toward the dying Christian kingdom were sidelined as Baibars invasion of Makuria continued for four years until the Mamluks defeated the Nubians in the Battle of Dongola by 1276 Baibars had completed his conquest of Nubia Including the Medieval lower Nubia which was ruled by Banu Kanz Under the terms of the settlement the Nubians were now subjected to paying jizya tribute and in return they were allowed to keep their religion being protected under Islamic law as People of the Book they were also allowed to continue being governed by a king from the native royal family although this king was chosen personally by Baibars namely a Makurian noble named Shakanda 50 In practice this was reducing Makuria to a vassal kingdom 51 effectively ending Makuria s status as an independent kingdom Campaign against the Mongols Edit In 1277 Baibars invaded the Seljuq Sultanate of Rum then controlled by the Ilkhanate Mongols He defeated a Mongol army at the Battle of Elbistan 52 and captured the city of Kayseri Baibars himself went with a few troops to deal with the Mongol right flank that was pounding his left wing 53 Baibars ordered a force from the army from Hama to reinforce his left The large Mamluk numbers were able to overwhelm the Mongol force who instead of retreating dismounted from their horses Some Mongols were able to escape and took up positions on the hills Once they became surrounded they once again dismounted and fought to the death 53 54 During the celebration of victory Baybars said that How can I be happy Before I had thought that I and my servants would defeat the Mongols but my left wing was beaten by them Only Allah helped us 55 The possibility of a new Mongol army convinced Baibars to return to Syria since he was far away from his bases and supply line As the Mamluk army returned to Syria the commander of the Mamluk vanguard Izz al Din Aybeg al Shaykhi deserted to the Mongols Pervane sent a letter to Baibars asking him to delay his departure Baibars chastised him for not aiding him during the Battle of Elbistan Baibars told him he was leaving for Sivas to mislead Pervane and the Mongols as to his true destination Baibars also sent Taybars al Waziri with a force to raid the Armenian town of al Rummana whose inhabitants had hidden the Mongols earlier 56 Death EditBaibars died in Damascus on 1 July 1277 when he was 53 years old His demise has been the subject of some academic speculation Many sources agree that he died from drinking poisoned kumis that was intended for someone else Other accounts suggest that he may have died from a wound while campaigning or from illness 57 He was buried in the Az Zahiriyah Library in Damascus 58 Family EditOne of Baibar s wives was the daughter of Amir Sayf ad Din Nogay at Tatari 59 Another wife was the daughter of Amir Sayf ad Din Giray at Tatari 59 Another wife was the daughter of Amir Sayf ad Din Tammaji 59 Another wife was Iltutmish Khatun 60 She was the daughter of Barka Khan a former Khwarazmian amir She was the mother of his son Al Said Barakah 61 She died in 1284 85 60 Another wife was the daughter Karmun Agha a Mongol Amir 62 He had three sons al Said Barakah Solamish and Khizir 59 He had seven daughters 59 one of them was named Tidhkarbay Khatun 63 Assessment Edit The lion passant was the heraldic blazon of Baibars from 1260 As the first Sultan of the Bahri Mamluk dynasty Baibars made the meritocratic ascent up the ranks of Mamluk society He took final control after the assassination of Sultan Sayf al Din Qutuz but before he became Sultan he commanded Mamluk forces in the decisive Battle of Ain Jalut in 1260 repelling Mongol forces from Syria 64 Although in the Muslim world he has been considered a national hero for centuries and in the Near East and Kazakhstan is still regarded as such Sultan Baibars was reviled in the Christian world of the time for his successful campaigns against the Crusader States A Templar knight who fought in the Seventh Crusade lamented Rage and sorrow are seated in my heart so firmly that I scarce dare to stay alive It seems that God wishes to support the Turks to our loss ah lord God alas the realm of the East has lost so much that it will never be able to rise up again They will make a Mosque of Holy Mary s convent and since the theft pleases her Son who should weep at this we are forced to comply as well Anyone who wishes to fight the Turks is mad for Jesus Christ does not fight them any more They have conquered they will conquer For every day they drive us down knowing that God who was awake sleeps now and Muhammad waxes powerful 65 Baibars also played an important role in bringing the Mongols to Islam He developed strong ties with the Mongols of the Golden Horde and took steps for the Golden Horde Mongols to travel to Egypt The arrival of the Mongol s Golden Horde to Egypt resulted in a significant number of Mongols accepting Islam 66 Legacy EditFurther information Seventh Crusade Ninth Crusade and Battle of Ain Jalut Bronze bust of Sultan Baibars in Cairo at the Egyptian National Military Museum Military legacy Edit Baibars was a popular ruler in the Muslim world who had defeated the crusaders in three campaigns and the Mongols in the Battle of Ain Jalut which many scholars deem of great macro historical importance In order to support his military campaigns Baibars commissioned arsenals warships and cargo vessels He was also arguably the first to employ explosive hand cannons in war at the Battle of Ain Jalut 67 68 His military campaign also extended into Libya and Nubia Culture and science Edit Further information Islam and cats He was also an efficient administrator who took interest in building various infrastructure projects such as a mounted message relay system capable of delivery from Cairo to Damascus in four days He built bridges irrigation and shipping canals improved the harbours and built mosques He was a patron of Islamic science such as his support for the medical research of his Arab physician Ibn al Nafis 69 As a testament of a special relationship between Islam and cats Baibars left a cat garden in Cairo as a waqf providing the cats of Cairo with food and shelter 70 His memoirs were recorded in Sirat al Zahir Baibars Life of al Zahir Baibars a popular Arabic romance recording his battles and achievements He has a heroic status in Kazakhstan as well as in Egypt Palestine Lebanon and Syria Al Madrassa al Zahiriyya is the school built adjacent to his Mausoleum in Damascus citation needed The Az Zahiriyah Library has a wealth of manuscripts in various branches of knowledge to this day See also EditAblaq Bahri dynasty Cumania Cuman people Kipchak people Mosque of al Zahir Baybars Sirat al Zahir BaibarsReferences Edit a b Adventuring in the Englishes Language and Literature in a Postcolonial Globalized World Ikram Ahmed Elsherif Piers Michael Smith 2014 Part I Chapter 2 pg 18 a b Baybars I Britannica The New Encyclopaedia Britannica Macropaedia H H Berton Publisher 1973 1974 p 773 vol 2 The history of the Mongol conquests By J J Saunders pg 115 a b Heghnar Zeitlian Watenpaugh 2004 The image of an Ottoman city imperial architecture and urban experience in Aleppo in the 16th and 17th centuries Brill p 198 ISBN 90 04 12454 3 Caroline Williams 2008 Islamic Monuments in Cairo The Practical Guide New Revised Edition The American University in Cairo Press p 185 ISBN 9789774162053 Bartlett W B 15 October 2021 The Fall of Christendom The Road to Acre 1291 Amberley Publishing Limited ISBN 978 1 4456 8418 5 He was described as being a tall man with a powerful voice swarthy skin and blue eyes Encyclopaedia of Islam THREE Brill referenceworks brillonline com Baybars is described as a tall man with broad chest and shoulders slim legs a powerful voice swarthy skin and blue eyes Thorau Peter 1992 Sultan Baybars der Erste von Agypten Longman p 28 ISBN 978 0 582 06823 0 The Mamluks The Davis Collection Niall Christie 2014 Muslims and Crusaders Christianity s Wars in the Middle East 1095 1382 from the Islamic Sources Seminar Studies first ed Routledge p 121 Plate 8 ISBN 9781138022744 Al Maqrizi from the Berish tribe that currently lives in the Western part of Kazakhstan Al Selouk Leme refatt Dewall al Melouk p 520 vol 1 Ibn Taghri al Nujum al Zahirah Fi Milook Misr wa al Qahirah Year 675H vol 7 Abu al Fida The Concise History of Humanity Tarikh Abu al Fida pp 71 87 year 676H Ibn Iyas Badai Alzuhur Fi Wakayi Alduhur abridged and edited by Dr M Aljayar Almisriya Lilkitab Cairo 2007 ISBN 977 419 623 6 p 91 Baybars in Concise Britannica Online web page Brief Article in Columbia Encyclopedia web page Archived 22 April 2004 at the Wayback Machine a b Ranulph Fiennes 2019 The Elite The Story of Special Forces From Ancient Sparta to the War on Terror Simon and Schuster p 64 ISBN 978 1 4711 5664 9 Dimitri Korobeinikov 2008 A Broken Mirror The Kipcak World in the Thirteenth Century in Florin Curta Roman Kovalev eds The Other Europe in the Middle Ages Avars Bulgars Khazars and Cumans Leiden Brill pp 379 412 Lord of Joinville 110 part II Asly p 49 Skip Knox Egyptian Counter attack The Seventh Crusade According to Matthew Paris only 2 Templars 1 Hospitaller and one contemptible person escaped Matthew Paris Louis IX s Crusade p 14 Vol 5 Runciman Steven A History of the Crusades Volume Three The Kingdom of Acre and the Later Crusades Cambridge University Press London 1951 pp 272 273 Humphreys 1977 p 326 Humphreys 1977 p 331 Humphreys 1977 p 332 Humphreys 1977 p 348 The story of the involvement of Baybars in the assassination was told by different historians in different ways In one account the assassins killed Qutuz while he was giving a hand to Baybars Al Maqrizi and Ibn Taghri In another from an Ayyubid source Qutuz was giving a hand to someone when Baybars struck his back with a sword Abu Al Fida A third account mentioned that Baybars tried to help Qutuz against the assassins O Hassan According to Al Maqrizi the Emirs who struck Qutuz were Badr ad Din Baktut Emir Ons and Emir Bahadir al Mu izzi Al Maqrizi p 519 vol 1 MacHenry Robert The New Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 1993 Baybars a b c al Madidi Khasd Abdul Muhammad Sawadi Abdul Qadir an Nuri Duraid History of the Arab world and the Crusades Mosul University Press 1981 Retrieved 27 September 2021 Maqrizi al Taqi al Din Aḥmad ibn Ali 1956 Ziada al Ziyadah Muḥammad Muṣṭafa ed Kitab al Suluk li Ma rifat Duwal al Muluk in Arabic Vol 2 Cairo Lajnat al Ta lif ʿAli b Maḥmud b Muḥammad b ʿUmar b Shahanshah b Ayyub b Shadi b Marwan Ismaʿil Abulfeda Concise History of Humanity المختصر في أخبار Tarikh al Mukhtasar fi Akhbar al Bashar PDF Retrieved 27 September 2021 a b Runciman Steven 1987 A History of the Crusades The Kingdom of Acre and the Later Crusades quoting Magrisi Sultans I i p 116 Abu al Fida pp 145 50 Bar Hebraeus p 439 p 316 ISBN 9780521347723 Dalrymple William 3 April 1989 In Xanadu Penguin Books India ISBN 9780143031079 Retrieved 3 April 2018 via Google Books Rodney Stark God s Battalions 2009 p 230 Lock Peter 15 April 2013 The Routledge Companion to the Crusades Routledge via Google Books The Crusaders in the East CUP Archive 11 November 1907 via Google Books Winter Michael Levanoni Amalia 3 April 2018 The Mamluks in Egyptian and Syrian Politics and Society BRILL ISBN 978 9004132863 Retrieved 3 April 2018 via Google Books Claude Mutafian p 60 Bournotian A Concise History of the Armenian People p 101 Hudson Institute gt American Outlook gt American Outlook Article Detail Archived from the original on 29 January 2006 Thomas F Madden The Concise History of the Crusades 3rd ed 2014 p 168 Madden supra at 168 The Later Crusades 1189 1311 Univ of Wisconsin Press 1969 p 557 ISBN 9780299048440 F Broadbridge Anne 2008 Kingship and Ideology in the Islamic and Mongol Worlds Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization p 59 ISBN 9780521852654 a b King 1949 pp 88 92 King 1949 p 91 Folda French amp Coupel 1982 p 179 Howard Jonathan 2011 The Crusades A History of One of the Most Epic Military Campaigns of All Time ISBN 9780521209816 El Hareir Mbaye Idris Ravane 2011 The Spread of Islam Throughout the World p 300 ISBN 9789231041532 Hopkins Peter 3 June 2014 Kenana Handbook of Sudan Routledge ISBN 9781136775260 Retrieved 3 April 2018 via Google Books Kastritsis 2013 p 26 a b Ibn Taghri Al Zahir Baibars Al Maqrizi p 99 vol 2 Reuven Amitai Press Mamluk Ilkhanid war 1260 1281 Amitai Preiss 2004 p 175 Young Robyn 2007 Crusade Dutton p 484 ISBN 9780525950165 Zahiriyya Madrasa and Mausoleum of Sultan al Zahir Baybars Archived from the original on 8 January 2009 a b c d e Akkus Yigit Fatma 20 April 2016 Memluk Sarayinda Tek Eslilik ve Cok Eslilik Uzerine Bir Inceleme PDF Journal of International Social Research The Journal of International Social Research 9 43 557 doi 10 17719 jisr 20164317631 ISSN 1307 9581 a b Karam Amina 22 May 2019 Women Architecture and Representation in Mamluk Cairo AUC DAR Home pp 20 21 Retrieved 22 December 2021 Winter M Levanoni A 2004 The Mamluks in Egyptian and Syrian Politics and Society The medieval Mediterranean peoples economies and cultures 400 1500 Brill p 391 ISBN 978 90 04 13286 3 Clifford W W Conermann S 2013 State formation and the structure of politics in Mamluk Syro Egypt 648 741 A H 1250 1340 C E Mamluk Studies V amp R Unipress p 105 ISBN 978 3 8470 0091 4 Papas A 2020 Sufi Institutions Handbook of Oriental Studies Section 1 The Near and Middle East Brill p 33 ISBN 978 90 04 39260 1 100 Decisive Battles From Ancient Times to the Present Paul K Davis pg 141 Howarth 1982 p 223 The preaching of Islam a history of the propagation of the Muslim faith By Thomas Walker Arnold p 192 Ahmad Y Hassan Gunpowder Composition for Rockets and Cannon in Arabic Military Treatises In Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries Archived 26 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine Ancient Discoveries Episode 12 Machines of the East History Channel 2007 Part 4 and Part 5 Albert Z Iskandar Ibn al Nafis in Helaine Selin 1997 Encyclopaedia of the History of Science Technology and Medicine in Non Western Cultures Kluwer Academic Publishers ISBN 0 7923 4066 3 Campo Juan Eduardo 2009 Encyclopedia of Islam Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 1438126968 Sources Edit Amitai Preiss Reuven 2004 Mongols and Mamluks The Mamluk Ilkhanid War 1260 1281 Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521522908 Howarth Stephen 1982 Knights Templar New York Marboro Books 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 King D J Cathcart 1949 The Taking of Le Krak des Chevaliers in 1271 Antiquity 23 90 83 92 doi 10 1017 S0003598X0002007X S2CID 164061795 archived from the original on 23 December 2012 Folda Jaroslav French Pamela Coupel Pierre 1982 Crusader Frescoes at Crac des Chevaliers and Marqab Castle Dumbarton Oaks Papers Dumbarton Oaks Trustees for Harvard University 36 177 210 doi 10 2307 1291467 JSTOR 1291467 Kastritsis Dimitris 2013 The Historical Epic Ahval i Sultan Mehemmed The Tales of Sultan Mehmed in the Context of Early Ottoman Historiography Writing History at the Ottoman Court Editing the Past Fashioning the Future Indiana University Press External links EditBaibars article from Encyclopedia of the Orient Baibars in Concise Britannica online Al Madrassa al Zahiriyya and Baybars Mausoleum Brief Article in Columbia Encyclopedia Extensive Arabic Article on Baybars Brief Biography Levtzion Nehemia Pouwels Randall eds 2000 The History of Islam in Africa Ohio University Press ISBN 0821444611 Creswell K A C 1926 The works of Sultan Bibars al Bunduqdari in Egypt avec 31 planches BIFAO 26 129 193 BaybarsBahri dynastyCadet branch of the Mamluk SultanateBorn 19 July 1223 Died 1 July 1277Regnal titlesPreceded bySaif ad Din Qutuz Sultan of Egypt and Syria24 October 1260 1 July 1277 Succeeded byAl Said Barakah Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Baybars amp oldid 1142457661, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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