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Mongol campaign against the Nizaris

Mongol campaign against the Nizaris
Part of the Mongol conquest of Persia
Date1253–1256
Location
Result

Mongol victory

  • The state of Alamut was disestablished
  • Many Nizaris were massacred or scattered; some regroup in their heartland of Daylam and later Anjudan
  • Conflicts continued in the Ilkhanate and the Timurid periods
Belligerents

Mongol Empire

Supported by the local dynasties of Anatolia, Tabaristan, Fars, Iraq, Azerbaijan, Arran, Shirvan, Georgia, and Armenia
Nizari state of Alamut (Assassins)
Commanders and leaders
Strength

80,000 at its peak

Outnumbered
Casualties and losses
est. 100,000 people in 1257 massacres

The Mongol campaign against the Nizaris of the Alamut period (the Nizari Ismaili state) began in 1253 after the Mongol invasion of the Khwarazmian Empire and a series of Nizari–Mongol conflicts. The campaign was ordered by the Great Khan Möngke and was led by his brother, Hülegü. The campaign against the Nizaris and later the Abbasid Caliphate was intended to establish a new khanate in the region—the Ilkhanate.

Hülegü's campaign began with attacks on strongholds in Quhistan and Qumis amidst intensified internal dissensions among Nizari leaders under Imam Muhammad III of Alamut whose policy was fighting against the Mongols. His successor, Rukn al-Din Khurshah, began a long series of negotiations in face of the implacable Mongol advance. In 1256, the Imam capitulated while besieged in Maymun-Diz and ordered his followers to do likewise according to his agreement with Hülegü. Despite being difficult to capture, Alamut ceased hostilities too and was dismantled. The Nizari state was thus disestablished, although several individual forts, notably Lambsar, Gerdkuh, and those in Syria continued to resist. Möngke Khan later ordered a general massacre of all Nizaris, including Khurshah and his family.

Many of the surviving Nizaris scattered throughout Western, Central, and South Asia. Little is known about them afterward, but their communities maintain some sort of independence in their heartland of Daylam and their Imamate reappear later in Anjudan.

Sources edit

The main primary source is Tarikh-i Jahangushay written by the historian Ata-Malik Juvayni, who was present in the campaign as an official under Hulegu. Juvayni has dedicated the concluding one-third of his history to this campaign, depicting it as the pinnacle of the Mongol conquest in the Muslim lands. His account contains inconsistencies and exaggerations and has been "corrected" based on other sources. Other sources include Jami' al-Tawarikh written by Rashid al-Din Hamadani and Tarikh-i Tabaristan.[1]

Background edit

The Nizaris were a branch of Ismailis, itself a branch of Shia Muslims. By establishing strategic and self-sufficient mountain strongholds, they had established a state of their own within the territories of the Seljuq and later Khwarezmian empires of Persia.[citation needed]

In 1192 or 1193, Rashid al-Din Sinan had been succeeded by the Persian da'i Nasr al-Ajami, who restored Alamut suzerainty over the Nizaris in Syria.[2] After the Mongol invasion of Persia, many Sunni and Shia Muslims (including the prominent scholar al-Tusi) had taken refuge with the Nizaris of Quhistan. The governor (muhtasham) of Quhistan was Nasir al-Din Abu al-Fath Abd al-Rahim ibn Abi Mansur.[3]

Early Nizari–Mongol relations edit

In 1221, the Nizari Imam Jalal al-Din Hasan sent emissaries to Genghis Khan in Balkh. The Imam died in the same year and was succeeded by his 9-years-old son, Ala al-Din Muhammad.[4]

 
Coin of Ala al-Din Muhammad

After the fall of the Khwarezmian dynasty as a result of the Mongol invasion, direct confrontation began between the Nizaris under Imam Ala al-Din Muhammad and the Mongols under Ögedei Khan. The latter had just begun to conquer the rest of Persia. Soon the Nizaris lost Damghan in Qumis to the Mongols; the Nizaris had recently taken control of the city after the fall of the Khwarezmshahs.[2]

The Nizari Imam sought anti-Mongol alliances as far as China, France, and England:[5] in 1238, he and the Abbasid caliph Al-Mustansir sent a joint diplomatic mission to the European kings Louis IX of France and Edward I of England to forge a Muslim–Christian alliance against the Mongols, but this was unsuccessful. The European kings later joined the Mongols against the Muslims.[2][3]

In 1246, the Nizari Imam, together with the new Abbasid caliph Al-Musta'sim and many Muslim rulers, sent a diplomatic mission under Nizari muhtashams (governor) of Quhistan Shihab al-Din and Shams al-Din to Mongolia on the occasion of the enthronement of the new Mongol Great Khan, Güyük Khan; but the latter dismissed it, and soon dispatched reinforcements under Eljigidei to Persia, instructing him to dedicate one-fifth of the forces there to reduce rebellious territories, beginning with the Nizari state. Güyük himself had intended to participate but died shortly afterward.[2] A Mongol noyan (commander), Chagatai the Elder, was reportedly assassinated by the Nizaris around this time.[6]

Güyük's successor, Möngke Khan, began to implement the former's schemes. Möngke's decision followed anti-Nizari urges by Sunnis in the Mongol court, new anti-Nizari complaints (such as that of Shams al-Din, qadi of Qazvin), and warnings from local Mongol commanders in Persia. In 1252, Möngke entrusted the mission of conquering the rest of Western Asia to his brother Hülegü, with the highest priority being the conquest of the Nizari state and the Abbasid Caliphate. Elaborate preparations were made, and Hülegü did not set out until 1253, and actually arrived in Persia more than two years later.[2] In 1253, William of Rubruck, a Flemish priest sent on a mission to Karakorum in Mongolia, was struck by the security precautions there, reportedly in response to the more than forty assassins who had been sent there to assassinate Möngke;[7][2] it is possible that the assassination attempt was merely rumored.[8][9][10]

Hülegü's campaign edit

Campaign against Quhistan, Qumis, and Khurasan edit

 
The Siege of Gerdkuh, from a manuscript of La Flor des estoires de la terre d'Orient by Hayton of Corycus. The garrison resisted for 17 years, long after the surrender of the Nizari leaders.
 
The mountain of Ghal'eh Kuh of Ferdows

In March 1253, Hülegü's advance guard under command of Kitbuqa crossed Oxus (Amu Darya) with 12,000 men (one tümen plus two mingghans under Köke Ilgei).[14] In April 1253, they captured several Nizari fortresses in Quhistan and killed their inhabitants, and in May they attacked the district Qumis and laid siege to Gerdkuh, the main Nizari stronghold there.[15][16] His army comprised 5,000 (probably Mongol) cavalrymen and 5,000 (probably Tajik) infantrymen. Kitbuqa left an army under amir Büri to besiege Gerdkuh, and himself attacked the nearby Mihrin (Mehrnegar) castle and Shah (in Qasran?). In August 1253, he sent raiding parties to Tarem and Rudbar districts with little results. Afterward they attacked and slaughtered the inhabitants of Mansuriah and Alabeshin (Alah beshin).[15][17][18]

In October 1253, Hülegü left his orda in Mongolia and began his march with a tümen at a leisurely pace and increased his number in his way.[14][19][15] He was accompanied by two of his ten sons, Abaqa and Yoshmut,[18] his brother Subedei, who died en route,[20] his wives Öljei and Yisut, and his stepmother Doquz.[18][21]

In July 1253, Kitbuqa who had been in Quhistan, pillaged, slaughtered, and seized probably temporarily Tun (Ferdows) and Turshiz. A few months later, Mehrin and several other castles in Qumis fell as well.[17] In December 1253, Girdkuh's garrison audaciously sallied at night and killed a hundred Mongols, including Büri.[17][15] Gerdkuh was on the verge of falling due to an outbreak of cholera, but, unlike Lambsar, it survived the epidemic and was saved by the arrival of reinforcements from Alamut sent by the Imam Ala al-Din Muhammad in the summer of 1254. The impregnable fort resisted for many years (see below).[15][17][22]

In September 1255, Hülegü arrived near Samarqand.[19] He then made Kish (Shahrisabz) his temporary headquarters, and sent messengers to the local Mongol and non-Mongol rulers in Persia, announcing his presence as the Great Khan's viceroy and asking for assistance against the Nizaris, with the punishment of refusal being their utter destruction. In Autumn 1255, Arghun Aqa joined him.[23] All of the rulers of Rum (Anatolia), Fars, Iraq, Azerbaijan, Arran, Shirvan, Georgia, and supposedly also Armenia, acknowledged their service with many gifts.[16]

The inexorable Mongol advances in Quhistan caused consternation among the Nizari leadership. The relationship had already deteriorated between Imam Ala al-Din Muhammad, who was reportedly afflicted by melancholia, and his advisors and Nizari leaders, as well as with his son Rukn al-Din Khurshah, the designated future Imam. According to Persian historians, the Nizari elites had planned a "coup" against Muhammad in order to replace him with Khurshah who would subsequently enter into immediate negotiations with the Mongols, but Khurshah fell ill before implementing this plan.[17] Nevertheless, on December 1 or 2, 1255, Muhammad died under suspicious circumstances and was succeeded by Khurshah[17][15] who was in his late twenties.[1]

To reach Iran, Hülegü entered via the Chaghatai khaganate, crossing Oxus (Amu Darya) in January 1256 and entered Quhistan in April 1256. Hülegü chose Tun, which had not been reduced effectively by Kitbuqa, as his first target. An obscure incident occurred while Hülegü was passing the Zawa and Khwaf districts which deterred him from supervising the campaign. He instructed Kitbuqa and Köke Ilgei in May 1256 to attack Tun again, which was sacked after a week-long siege, and almost all its inhabitants were massacred. The Mongol commanders then regrouped with Hülegü and attacked Tus.[19][15]

Campaign against Rudbar and Alamut edit

 
Hulegu and his army marching against the Nizari castles in 1256. Persian miniature from a manuscript of Jami al-Tawarikh[7]

As soon as he had been in power, Khurshah announced the Nizari leadership's willingness to submit to the Mongol rule to the nearest Mongol commander, noyan Yasur in Qazvin. Yasur replied that the Imam personally should visit Hülegü's camp. Fightings are recorded between Yasur and the Nizaris of Rudbar: on June 12, he was defeated in a battle on Mount Siyalan near Alamut, where the Nizari forces had been mustered, but managed to harass the Nizaris of the region.[24][25]

As Hülegü reached Bistam, his army had enlarged into five tümens, and new commanders were added. Many of them were the relatives of Batu Khan. From the ulus of Jochi representing the Golden Horde came Quli (son of Orda), Balagha, and Tutar. Chagatai Khanate forces were under Tegüder. A contingent of Oirat tribesmen also joined under Buqa Temür. No member of Ögedei's family is mentioned.[20] Hülegü had with him a thousand squads of siege engineers (probably north Chinese, Khitan and Muslim) skilled in the use of mangonels and naphtha.[26][15]

 
The Nizari heartland: the regions Alamut and Rudbar

The Mongols campaigned against the Nizari heartland of Alamut and Rudbar from three directions. The right wing, under Buqa Temür and Köke Ilgei, marched via Tabaristan. The left wing, under Tegüder and Kitbuqa, marched via Khuwar and Semnan. The center was under Hulegu himself. Meanwhile, Hülegü sent another warning to Khurshah. Khurshah was in Maymun-Diz fortress and was apparently playing for time; by resisting longer, the arrival of winter could have stopped the Mongol campaigning. He sent his vizier Kayqubad; they met the Mongols in Firuzkuh and offered the surrender of all strongholds except Alamut and Lambsar, and again asked for a year's delay for Khurshah to visit Hülegü in person. Meanwhile, Khurshah ordered Gerdkuh and fortresses of Quhistan to surrender, which their chiefs did, but the garrison of Gerdkuh continued to resist. The Mongols continued to advance and reached Lar, Damavand, and Shahdiz. Khurshah sent his 7- or 8-years-old son as a show of good faith, but he was sent back due to his young age. Khurshah then sent his second brother Shahanshah (Shahin Shah), who met the Mongols at Rey. But Hülegü demanded the dismantling of the Nizari fortifications to show his goodwill.[15][27][28][1]

Numerous negotiations between the Nizari Imam and Hülegü were futile. Apparently, the Nizari Imam sought to at least keep the main Nizari strongholds, while the Mongols were adamant that the Nizaris must fully submit.[3]

Siege of Maymun-Diz edit

On 8 November 1256, Hülegü set a camp on a hilltop facing Maymun-Diz and encircled the fortress with his forces by marching over the Alamut mountains via Taleqan valley and appearing at the foot of Maymun-Diz.[15]

Maymun-Diz could have been attacked by mangonels; that was not the case with Alamut, Nevisar Shah, Lambsar and Gerdkuh, all of which were on top of high peaks. Nevertheless, the strength of the fortification impressed the Mongols, who surveyed them from various angles to find a weak point. Since the winter was approaching, Hülegü was advised by the majority of his lieutenants to postpone the siege, but he decided to proceed. Preliminary bombardments were performed for three days by mangonels from a nearby hilltop with casualties on both sides. A direct Mongol assault on the fourth day was repulsed. The Mongols then used heavier siege engines hurling javelins dipped in burning pitch and set up additional mangonels all around the fortifications.[15]

Later that month, Kuhrshah sent a message offering his surrender on the condition of the immunity of him and his family. Hülegü's royal decree was sent by Ata-Malik Juvayni, who took it personally to Khurshah, asking for his signature, but Khurshah was hesitant. After several days, Hülegü began another bombardment and on 19 November, Khurshah and his entourage descended from the fortress and surrendered. The evacuation of the fortress continued until the next day. A small part of the garrison refused to surrender and fought in a last stand in a high domed building in the fortress; they were defeated and slaughtered after three days. [15][27][29]

The Nizaris' leadership decision to surrender was apparently influenced by outside scholars such as al-Tusi.[30]

An inexplicable aspect of the events for historians is why Alamut made no effort to assist their besieged comrades in Maymun-Diz.[31]

Capitulation of Alamut edit

 
The rock of Alamut
 
Persian miniature depicting Hülegü and the Mongols dismantling Alamut

Khurshah instructed all Nizari castles of the Rusbar valley to capitulate, evacuate, and dismantle their forts. All castles (around forty) subsequently capitulated, except Alamut (under sipahsalar Muqaddam al-Din Muhammad Mubariz) and Lambsar, possibly because their commanders thought the Imam issued orders under duress and was practicing a sort of taqiyya. Despite the small size of the fortress and its garrison, Alamut was stone-built (unlike Maymun-Diz), well-provisioned, and featured a reliable water supply. However, the Nizari faith demands the faithful absolute obedience to the Imam in all circumstances. Hülegü surrounded Alamut with his army, and Khurshah unsuccessfully attempted to persuade its commander to surrender. Hülegü left a large force under Balaghai to besiege Alamut, and himself together with Khurshah set out to besiege the nearby Lambsar. Muqaddam al-Din eventually capitulated after a few days in December 1256.[15][29]

Juvayni describes the difficulty by which the Mongols dismantled the plastered walls and lead-covered ramparts of Alamut. The Mongols had to set fire to the buildings and then destroy them piece by piece. He also notes the extensive chambers, galleries, and deep tanks, replete with wine, vinegar, honey, and other goods. During the pillage, one man was almost drowned in a honey store.[15]

After examining Alamut's famous library, Juvayni saved "copies of the Qur'an and other choice books" as well as "astronomical instruments such as kursis (part of an astrolabe), armillary spheres, complete and partial astrolabes, and others", and burned the other books "which related to their heresy and error". He also picked Hasan Sabbah's biography, Sargudhasht-i Bābā Sayyidinā (Persian: سرگذشت بابا سیدنا), which interested him, but he claims he burnt it after reading it. He has extensively cited its contents in his Tarikh-i Jahangushay.[15]

Juvayni has noted the impregnability and self-sufficiency of Alamut and other Nizari fortresses. Rashid al-Din similarly writes of the good fortune of Mongols in their war against the Nizaris.[30]

Massacres of the Nizaris and aftermath edit

 
The resistance in the major fortress of Lambsar collapsed in 1257 after a cholera outbreak

By 1256, Hülegü almost eliminated the Persian Nizaris as an independent military force.[32] Khurshah was then taken to Qazvin where he sent messages to the Syrian Nizari stronghold instructing them to surrender, but they did not act, believing that the Imam was acting under duress.[15] As his position became intolerable, Khurshah asked Hülegü to be allowed to go meet Möngke in Mongolia, promising that he would persuade the remaining Ismaili fortresses to surrender. Möngke rebuked him after visiting him in Karakoram, Mongolia, due to his failure to hand over Lambsar and Gerdkuh, and ordered his return to his homeland. In the way, he and his small retinue were executed by their Mongol escort. Möngke meanwhile issued a general massacre of all Nizari Ismailis, including all of Khurshah's family as well as the garrisons.[15][3] Khurshah's relatives who were kept at Qazvin were killed by Qaraqai Bitikchi, while Ötegü-China summoned the Nizaris of Quhistan to gatherings and slaughtered about 12,000 people. Möngke's order reflects an earlier order by Chingiz Khan.[30] Around 100,000 people are estimated to have been killed.[15]

Hülegü then moved with the bulk of his army to Azerbaijan, officially established his own khanate (the Ilkhanate), and then sacked Baghdad in 1258.[32]

 
The Nizari militants were still active after the Alamut Period. The assassination attempt against Edward of England in June 1272, probably by a Syrian fida'i employed by Baibars, contributed to the termination of the Ninth Crusade.

As the centralized government of the Nizaris was disestablished, the Nizaris either were killed or had abandoned their traditional strongholds. Many of them migrated to Afghanistan, Badakhshan, and Sindh. Little is known about the history of the Ismailis in this stage, until two centuries later, when they again began to grow as scattered communities under regional da'is in Iran, Afghanistan, Badakhshan, Syria, and India.[3] The Nizaris of Syria were tolerated by the Bahri Mamluks and held a few castles under Mamluk suzerainty. The Mamluks may have employed Nizari fedais against their own enemies, notably the attempted assassination of the Crusading Prince Edward of England in 1271.[33]

Resistance by Nizaris in Persia was still ongoing in some forts, notably Lambsar, Gerdkuh, and several forts in Quhistan.[34][32] Lambsar fell in January 1257 after a cholera outbreak.[35] Gerdkuh resisted much longer. The Mongols had built permanent structures and houses around this fortress, the ruins of which, together with two types of stones used for Nizari and Mongol mangonels, still remains today.[30] On 15 December 1270, during the reign of Abaqa, the garrison of Gerdkuh surrendered from want of clothing. It was thirteen years after the fall of Alamut, and seventeen years after its first siege by Kitbuqa; the Mongols killed the surviving garrison but did not destroy the fortress.[30] In the same year, an unsuccessful assassination attempt of Juvayni is attributed to the Nizaris, who had earlier spoken of their total annihilation.[36] By 1273, all Syrian Nizari castles were also captured by Baibars.[37]

In 1275, a Nizari force under a son of Khurshah (titled Naw Dawlat or Abu Dawlat)[1] and a descendant of the Khwarezmian dynasty recaptured the Alamut Castle, but the Mongols reclaimed it a year later.[38][36] Just like other groups in the nearby regions, the Nizaris too were still able to retain a (semi)-independent state in their heartland of Daylam. This continued at least until Öljaitü's campaign against Gilan in 1307, which was successful but was a pyrrhic victory with heavy casualties on both sides. Nevertheless, the possible Ilkhanate authority over the region must have been eradicated in 1335 after the death of the last ruler of the Ilkhanate. By 1368, Daylam was governed by Kiya Sayf al-Din, a member of the Kushaijis, an Ismaili dynasty. He was attacked and killed by Sayyid Ali Kiya, the founder of the Karkiya dynasty.[39][1] The Nizaris also re-established their Imamate at the village of Anjudan, where they are recorded to be active in the 14–15th century.

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Dashdondog, Bayarsaikhan (2020). "Mongol Diplomacy of the Alamut Period". Eurasian Studies. 17 (2): 310–326. doi:10.1163/24685623-12340078. S2CID 219012875.

mongol, campaign, against, nizaris, part, mongol, conquest, persiadate1253, 1256locationnizari, strongholds, khurasan, quhistan, qumis, tarem, rudbar, alamutresultmongol, victory, state, alamut, disestablished, many, nizaris, were, massacred, scattered, some, . Mongol campaign against the NizarisPart of the Mongol conquest of PersiaDate1253 1256LocationNizari strongholds in Khurasan Quhistan Qumis Tarem Rudbar and AlamutResultMongol victory The state of Alamut was disestablished Many Nizaris were massacred or scattered some regroup in their heartland of Daylam and later Anjudan Conflicts continued in the Ilkhanate and the Timurid periodsBelligerentsMongol Empire Golden Horde Chagatai Khanate Oirats Supported by the local dynasties of Anatolia Tabaristan Fars Iraq Azerbaijan Arran Shirvan Georgia and ArmeniaNizari state of Alamut Assassins Commanders and leadersMongke Khan Hulegu Kitbuqa Teguder Buqa Temur Koke Ilgei Guo Kan Quli Balagha Tutar Abaqa Yoshmut Arghun Aqa Buri Imam Ala al Din Muhammad Muhtasham Nasir al Din ibn Abi Mansur Imam Rukn al Din Khurshah Vizier Shams al Din Gilaki Khwaja Nasir al Din al Tusi Sipahsalar Muqaddam al Din Qadi Tajuddin Mardanshah Strength80 000 at its peak 1 000 squads of siege engineersOutnumberedCasualties and lossesest 100 000 people in 1257 massacres The Mongol campaign against the Nizaris of the Alamut period the Nizari Ismaili state began in 1253 after the Mongol invasion of the Khwarazmian Empire and a series of Nizari Mongol conflicts The campaign was ordered by the Great Khan Mongke and was led by his brother Hulegu The campaign against the Nizaris and later the Abbasid Caliphate was intended to establish a new khanate in the region the Ilkhanate Hulegu s campaign began with attacks on strongholds in Quhistan and Qumis amidst intensified internal dissensions among Nizari leaders under Imam Muhammad III of Alamut whose policy was fighting against the Mongols His successor Rukn al Din Khurshah began a long series of negotiations in face of the implacable Mongol advance In 1256 the Imam capitulated while besieged in Maymun Diz and ordered his followers to do likewise according to his agreement with Hulegu Despite being difficult to capture Alamut ceased hostilities too and was dismantled The Nizari state was thus disestablished although several individual forts notably Lambsar Gerdkuh and those in Syria continued to resist Mongke Khan later ordered a general massacre of all Nizaris including Khurshah and his family Many of the surviving Nizaris scattered throughout Western Central and South Asia Little is known about them afterward but their communities maintain some sort of independence in their heartland of Daylam and their Imamate reappear later in Anjudan Contents 1 Sources 2 Background 3 Early Nizari Mongol relations 4 Hulegu s campaign 4 1 Campaign against Quhistan Qumis and Khurasan 4 2 Campaign against Rudbar and Alamut 4 2 1 Siege of Maymun Diz 4 2 2 Capitulation of Alamut 5 Massacres of the Nizaris and aftermath 6 References 7 Further readingSources editThe main primary source is Tarikh i Jahangushay written by the historian Ata Malik Juvayni who was present in the campaign as an official under Hulegu Juvayni has dedicated the concluding one third of his history to this campaign depicting it as the pinnacle of the Mongol conquest in the Muslim lands His account contains inconsistencies and exaggerations and has been corrected based on other sources Other sources include Jami al Tawarikh written by Rashid al Din Hamadani and Tarikh i Tabaristan 1 Background editThe Nizaris were a branch of Ismailis itself a branch of Shia Muslims By establishing strategic and self sufficient mountain strongholds they had established a state of their own within the territories of the Seljuq and later Khwarezmian empires of Persia citation needed In 1192 or 1193 Rashid al Din Sinan had been succeeded by the Persian da i Nasr al Ajami who restored Alamut suzerainty over the Nizaris in Syria 2 After the Mongol invasion of Persia many Sunni and Shia Muslims including the prominent scholar al Tusi had taken refuge with the Nizaris of Quhistan The governor muhtasham of Quhistan was Nasir al Din Abu al Fath Abd al Rahim ibn Abi Mansur 3 Early Nizari Mongol relations editIn 1221 the Nizari Imam Jalal al Din Hasan sent emissaries to Genghis Khan in Balkh The Imam died in the same year and was succeeded by his 9 years old son Ala al Din Muhammad 4 nbsp Coin of Ala al Din MuhammadAfter the fall of the Khwarezmian dynasty as a result of the Mongol invasion direct confrontation began between the Nizaris under Imam Ala al Din Muhammad and the Mongols under Ogedei Khan The latter had just begun to conquer the rest of Persia Soon the Nizaris lost Damghan in Qumis to the Mongols the Nizaris had recently taken control of the city after the fall of the Khwarezmshahs 2 The Nizari Imam sought anti Mongol alliances as far as China France and England 5 in 1238 he and the Abbasid caliph Al Mustansir sent a joint diplomatic mission to the European kings Louis IX of France and Edward I of England to forge a Muslim Christian alliance against the Mongols but this was unsuccessful The European kings later joined the Mongols against the Muslims 2 3 In 1246 the Nizari Imam together with the new Abbasid caliph Al Musta sim and many Muslim rulers sent a diplomatic mission under Nizari muhtashams governor of Quhistan Shihab al Din and Shams al Din to Mongolia on the occasion of the enthronement of the new Mongol Great Khan Guyuk Khan but the latter dismissed it and soon dispatched reinforcements under Eljigidei to Persia instructing him to dedicate one fifth of the forces there to reduce rebellious territories beginning with the Nizari state Guyuk himself had intended to participate but died shortly afterward 2 A Mongol noyan commander Chagatai the Elder was reportedly assassinated by the Nizaris around this time 6 Guyuk s successor Mongke Khan began to implement the former s schemes Mongke s decision followed anti Nizari urges by Sunnis in the Mongol court new anti Nizari complaints such as that of Shams al Din qadi of Qazvin and warnings from local Mongol commanders in Persia In 1252 Mongke entrusted the mission of conquering the rest of Western Asia to his brother Hulegu with the highest priority being the conquest of the Nizari state and the Abbasid Caliphate Elaborate preparations were made and Hulegu did not set out until 1253 and actually arrived in Persia more than two years later 2 In 1253 William of Rubruck a Flemish priest sent on a mission to Karakorum in Mongolia was struck by the security precautions there reportedly in response to the more than forty assassins who had been sent there to assassinate Mongke 7 2 it is possible that the assassination attempt was merely rumored 8 9 10 Hulegu s campaign editCampaign against Quhistan Qumis and Khurasan edit nbsp The Siege of Gerdkuh from a manuscript of La Flor des estoires de la terre d Orient by Hayton of Corycus The garrison resisted for 17 years long after the surrender of the Nizari leaders nbsp The mountain of Ghal eh Kuh of FerdowsIn March 1253 Hulegu s advance guard under command of Kitbuqa crossed Oxus Amu Darya with 12 000 men one tumen plus two mingghans under Koke Ilgei 14 In April 1253 they captured several Nizari fortresses in Quhistan and killed their inhabitants and in May they attacked the district Qumis and laid siege to Gerdkuh the main Nizari stronghold there 15 16 His army comprised 5 000 probably Mongol cavalrymen and 5 000 probably Tajik infantrymen Kitbuqa left an army under amir Buri to besiege Gerdkuh and himself attacked the nearby Mihrin Mehrnegar castle and Shah in Qasran In August 1253 he sent raiding parties to Tarem and Rudbar districts with little results Afterward they attacked and slaughtered the inhabitants of Mansuriah and Alabeshin Alah beshin 15 17 18 In October 1253 Hulegu left his orda in Mongolia and began his march with a tumen at a leisurely pace and increased his number in his way 14 19 15 He was accompanied by two of his ten sons Abaqa and Yoshmut 18 his brother Subedei who died en route 20 his wives Oljei and Yisut and his stepmother Doquz 18 21 In July 1253 Kitbuqa who had been in Quhistan pillaged slaughtered and seized probably temporarily Tun Ferdows and Turshiz A few months later Mehrin and several other castles in Qumis fell as well 17 In December 1253 Girdkuh s garrison audaciously sallied at night and killed a hundred Mongols including Buri 17 15 Gerdkuh was on the verge of falling due to an outbreak of cholera but unlike Lambsar it survived the epidemic and was saved by the arrival of reinforcements from Alamut sent by the Imam Ala al Din Muhammad in the summer of 1254 The impregnable fort resisted for many years see below 15 17 22 In September 1255 Hulegu arrived near Samarqand 19 He then made Kish Shahrisabz his temporary headquarters and sent messengers to the local Mongol and non Mongol rulers in Persia announcing his presence as the Great Khan s viceroy and asking for assistance against the Nizaris with the punishment of refusal being their utter destruction In Autumn 1255 Arghun Aqa joined him 23 All of the rulers of Rum Anatolia Fars Iraq Azerbaijan Arran Shirvan Georgia and supposedly also Armenia acknowledged their service with many gifts 16 The inexorable Mongol advances in Quhistan caused consternation among the Nizari leadership The relationship had already deteriorated between Imam Ala al Din Muhammad who was reportedly afflicted by melancholia and his advisors and Nizari leaders as well as with his son Rukn al Din Khurshah the designated future Imam According to Persian historians the Nizari elites had planned a coup against Muhammad in order to replace him with Khurshah who would subsequently enter into immediate negotiations with the Mongols but Khurshah fell ill before implementing this plan 17 Nevertheless on December 1 or 2 1255 Muhammad died under suspicious circumstances and was succeeded by Khurshah 17 15 who was in his late twenties 1 To reach Iran Hulegu entered via the Chaghatai khaganate crossing Oxus Amu Darya in January 1256 and entered Quhistan in April 1256 Hulegu chose Tun which had not been reduced effectively by Kitbuqa as his first target An obscure incident occurred while Hulegu was passing the Zawa and Khwaf districts which deterred him from supervising the campaign He instructed Kitbuqa and Koke Ilgei in May 1256 to attack Tun again which was sacked after a week long siege and almost all its inhabitants were massacred The Mongol commanders then regrouped with Hulegu and attacked Tus 19 15 Campaign against Rudbar and Alamut edit nbsp Hulegu and his army marching against the Nizari castles in 1256 Persian miniature from a manuscript of Jami al Tawarikh 7 As soon as he had been in power Khurshah announced the Nizari leadership s willingness to submit to the Mongol rule to the nearest Mongol commander noyan Yasur in Qazvin Yasur replied that the Imam personally should visit Hulegu s camp Fightings are recorded between Yasur and the Nizaris of Rudbar on June 12 he was defeated in a battle on Mount Siyalan near Alamut where the Nizari forces had been mustered but managed to harass the Nizaris of the region 24 25 As Hulegu reached Bistam his army had enlarged into five tumens and new commanders were added Many of them were the relatives of Batu Khan From the ulus of Jochi representing the Golden Horde came Quli son of Orda Balagha and Tutar Chagatai Khanate forces were under Teguder A contingent of Oirat tribesmen also joined under Buqa Temur No member of Ogedei s family is mentioned 20 Hulegu had with him a thousand squads of siege engineers probably north Chinese Khitan and Muslim skilled in the use of mangonels and naphtha 26 15 nbsp The Nizari heartland the regions Alamut and RudbarThe Mongols campaigned against the Nizari heartland of Alamut and Rudbar from three directions The right wing under Buqa Temur and Koke Ilgei marched via Tabaristan The left wing under Teguder and Kitbuqa marched via Khuwar and Semnan The center was under Hulegu himself Meanwhile Hulegu sent another warning to Khurshah Khurshah was in Maymun Diz fortress and was apparently playing for time by resisting longer the arrival of winter could have stopped the Mongol campaigning He sent his vizier Kayqubad they met the Mongols in Firuzkuh and offered the surrender of all strongholds except Alamut and Lambsar and again asked for a year s delay for Khurshah to visit Hulegu in person Meanwhile Khurshah ordered Gerdkuh and fortresses of Quhistan to surrender which their chiefs did but the garrison of Gerdkuh continued to resist The Mongols continued to advance and reached Lar Damavand and Shahdiz Khurshah sent his 7 or 8 years old son as a show of good faith but he was sent back due to his young age Khurshah then sent his second brother Shahanshah Shahin Shah who met the Mongols at Rey But Hulegu demanded the dismantling of the Nizari fortifications to show his goodwill 15 27 28 1 Numerous negotiations between the Nizari Imam and Hulegu were futile Apparently the Nizari Imam sought to at least keep the main Nizari strongholds while the Mongols were adamant that the Nizaris must fully submit 3 Siege of Maymun Diz edit Main article Siege of Maymun Diz On 8 November 1256 Hulegu set a camp on a hilltop facing Maymun Diz and encircled the fortress with his forces by marching over the Alamut mountains via Taleqan valley and appearing at the foot of Maymun Diz 15 Maymun Diz could have been attacked by mangonels that was not the case with Alamut Nevisar Shah Lambsar and Gerdkuh all of which were on top of high peaks Nevertheless the strength of the fortification impressed the Mongols who surveyed them from various angles to find a weak point Since the winter was approaching Hulegu was advised by the majority of his lieutenants to postpone the siege but he decided to proceed Preliminary bombardments were performed for three days by mangonels from a nearby hilltop with casualties on both sides A direct Mongol assault on the fourth day was repulsed The Mongols then used heavier siege engines hurling javelins dipped in burning pitch and set up additional mangonels all around the fortifications 15 Later that month Kuhrshah sent a message offering his surrender on the condition of the immunity of him and his family Hulegu s royal decree was sent by Ata Malik Juvayni who took it personally to Khurshah asking for his signature but Khurshah was hesitant After several days Hulegu began another bombardment and on 19 November Khurshah and his entourage descended from the fortress and surrendered The evacuation of the fortress continued until the next day A small part of the garrison refused to surrender and fought in a last stand in a high domed building in the fortress they were defeated and slaughtered after three days 15 27 29 The Nizaris leadership decision to surrender was apparently influenced by outside scholars such as al Tusi 30 An inexplicable aspect of the events for historians is why Alamut made no effort to assist their besieged comrades in Maymun Diz 31 Capitulation of Alamut edit nbsp The rock of Alamut nbsp Persian miniature depicting Hulegu and the Mongols dismantling AlamutKhurshah instructed all Nizari castles of the Rusbar valley to capitulate evacuate and dismantle their forts All castles around forty subsequently capitulated except Alamut under sipahsalar Muqaddam al Din Muhammad Mubariz and Lambsar possibly because their commanders thought the Imam issued orders under duress and was practicing a sort of taqiyya Despite the small size of the fortress and its garrison Alamut was stone built unlike Maymun Diz well provisioned and featured a reliable water supply However the Nizari faith demands the faithful absolute obedience to the Imam in all circumstances Hulegu surrounded Alamut with his army and Khurshah unsuccessfully attempted to persuade its commander to surrender Hulegu left a large force under Balaghai to besiege Alamut and himself together with Khurshah set out to besiege the nearby Lambsar Muqaddam al Din eventually capitulated after a few days in December 1256 15 29 Juvayni describes the difficulty by which the Mongols dismantled the plastered walls and lead covered ramparts of Alamut The Mongols had to set fire to the buildings and then destroy them piece by piece He also notes the extensive chambers galleries and deep tanks replete with wine vinegar honey and other goods During the pillage one man was almost drowned in a honey store 15 After examining Alamut s famous library Juvayni saved copies of the Qur an and other choice books as well as astronomical instruments such as kursis part of an astrolabe armillary spheres complete and partial astrolabes and others and burned the other books which related to their heresy and error He also picked Hasan Sabbah s biography Sargudhasht i Baba Sayyidina Persian سرگذشت بابا سیدنا which interested him but he claims he burnt it after reading it He has extensively cited its contents in his Tarikh i Jahangushay 15 Juvayni has noted the impregnability and self sufficiency of Alamut and other Nizari fortresses Rashid al Din similarly writes of the good fortune of Mongols in their war against the Nizaris 30 Massacres of the Nizaris and aftermath edit nbsp The resistance in the major fortress of Lambsar collapsed in 1257 after a cholera outbreakBy 1256 Hulegu almost eliminated the Persian Nizaris as an independent military force 32 Khurshah was then taken to Qazvin where he sent messages to the Syrian Nizari stronghold instructing them to surrender but they did not act believing that the Imam was acting under duress 15 As his position became intolerable Khurshah asked Hulegu to be allowed to go meet Mongke in Mongolia promising that he would persuade the remaining Ismaili fortresses to surrender Mongke rebuked him after visiting him in Karakoram Mongolia due to his failure to hand over Lambsar and Gerdkuh and ordered his return to his homeland In the way he and his small retinue were executed by their Mongol escort Mongke meanwhile issued a general massacre of all Nizari Ismailis including all of Khurshah s family as well as the garrisons 15 3 Khurshah s relatives who were kept at Qazvin were killed by Qaraqai Bitikchi while Otegu China summoned the Nizaris of Quhistan to gatherings and slaughtered about 12 000 people Mongke s order reflects an earlier order by Chingiz Khan 30 Around 100 000 people are estimated to have been killed 15 Hulegu then moved with the bulk of his army to Azerbaijan officially established his own khanate the Ilkhanate and then sacked Baghdad in 1258 32 nbsp The Nizari militants were still active after the Alamut Period The assassination attempt against Edward of England in June 1272 probably by a Syrian fida i employed by Baibars contributed to the termination of the Ninth Crusade As the centralized government of the Nizaris was disestablished the Nizaris either were killed or had abandoned their traditional strongholds Many of them migrated to Afghanistan Badakhshan and Sindh Little is known about the history of the Ismailis in this stage until two centuries later when they again began to grow as scattered communities under regional da is in Iran Afghanistan Badakhshan Syria and India 3 The Nizaris of Syria were tolerated by the Bahri Mamluks and held a few castles under Mamluk suzerainty The Mamluks may have employed Nizari fedais against their own enemies notably the attempted assassination of the Crusading Prince Edward of England in 1271 33 Resistance by Nizaris in Persia was still ongoing in some forts notably Lambsar Gerdkuh and several forts in Quhistan 34 32 Lambsar fell in January 1257 after a cholera outbreak 35 Gerdkuh resisted much longer The Mongols had built permanent structures and houses around this fortress the ruins of which together with two types of stones used for Nizari and Mongol mangonels still remains today 30 On 15 December 1270 during the reign of Abaqa the garrison of Gerdkuh surrendered from want of clothing It was thirteen years after the fall of Alamut and seventeen years after its first siege by Kitbuqa the Mongols killed the surviving garrison but did not destroy the fortress 30 In the same year an unsuccessful assassination attempt of Juvayni is attributed to the Nizaris who had earlier spoken of their total annihilation 36 By 1273 all Syrian Nizari castles were also captured by Baibars 37 In 1275 a Nizari force under a son of Khurshah titled Naw Dawlat or Abu Dawlat 1 and a descendant of the Khwarezmian dynasty recaptured the Alamut Castle but the Mongols reclaimed it a year later 38 36 Just like other groups in the nearby regions the Nizaris too were still able to retain a semi independent state in their heartland of Daylam This continued at least until Oljaitu s campaign against Gilan in 1307 which was successful but was a pyrrhic victory with heavy casualties on both sides Nevertheless the possible Ilkhanate authority over the region must have been eradicated in 1335 after the death of the last ruler of the Ilkhanate By 1368 Daylam was governed by Kiya Sayf al Din a member of the Kushaijis an Ismaili dynasty He was attacked and killed by Sayyid Ali Kiya the founder of the Karkiya dynasty 39 1 The Nizaris also re established their Imamate at the village of Anjudan where they are recorded to be active in the 14 15th century References edit a b c d e Virani Shafique N 2003 The Eagle Returns Evidence of Continued Isma ili Activity at Alamut and in the South Caspian Region Following the Mongol Conquests Journal of the American Oriental Society 123 2 351 370 doi 10 2307 3217688 ISSN 0003 0279 JSTOR 3217688 a b c d e f Daftary Farhad 1992 The Isma ilis Their History and Doctrines Cambridge University Press pp 418 420 ISBN 978 0 521 42974 0 a b c d e Daftary Farhad The Mediaeval Ismailis of the Iranian Lands The Institute of Ismaili Studies www iis ac uk Archived from the original on 3 August 2016 Retrieved 31 March 2020 Daftary Farhad 2012 Historical Dictionary of the Ismailis Scarecrow Press p xxx ISBN 978 0 8108 6164 0 B Hourcade Alamut Encyclopaedia Iranica I 8 pp 797 801 an updated version is available online at http www iranicaonline org articles alamut valley alborz northeast of qazvin accessed on 17 May 2014 Boyle John Andrew 1977 The Mongol World Empire 1206 1370 Variorum Reprints ISBN 978 0 86078 002 1 a b Lewis Bernard 2011 The Assassins A Radical Sect in Islam Orion ISBN 978 0 297 86333 5 Waterson James 2008 1 A House Divided The Origins of the Ismaili Assassins The Ismaili Assassins A History of Medieval Murder Barnsley Pen and Sword Books ISBN 978 1 78346 150 9 Fiennes Ranulph 2019 The Elite The Story of Special Forces From Ancient Sparta to the War on Terror New York Simon amp Schuster p 135 ISBN 978 1 4711 5664 9 Brown Daniel W 2011 A New Introduction to Islam 2nd ed Hoboken John Wiley amp Sons p 229 ISBN 978 1 4443 5772 1 Magiran روزنامه ایران 1392 07 02 ناگفته هایی از عظیم ترین دژ فردوس www magiran com Retrieved 3 May 2020 Magiran روزنامه شرق 1390 01 15 قلعه ای در دل کوه فردوس www magiran com Retrieved 3 May 2020 a b Willey Peter 2005 Eagle s Nest Ismaili Castles in Iran and Syria Bloomsbury Academic pp 177 182 ISBN 978 1 85043 464 1 a b Komaroff Linda 2006 Beyond the Legacy of Genghis Khan Brill p 123 ISBN 978 90 474 1857 3 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Willey Peter 2005 Eagle s Nest Ismaili Castles in Iran and Syria Bloomsbury Academic pp 75 85 ISBN 978 1 85043 464 1 a b Dashdondog Bayarsaikhan 2010 The Mongols and the Armenians 1220 1335 Brill p 125 ISBN 978 90 04 18635 4 a b c d e f Daftary Farhad 1992 The Isma ilis Their History and Doctrines Cambridge University Press p 422 ISBN 978 0 521 42974 0 a b c 霍渥斯 1888 History of the Mongols From the 9th to the 19th Century 文殿閣書莊 pp 95 97 a b c Daftary Farhad 1992 The Isma ilis Their History and Doctrines Cambridge University Press p 423 ISBN 978 0 521 42974 0 a b Sneath David Kaplonski Christopher 2010 The History of Mongolia 3 Vols Global Oriental p 329 ISBN 978 90 04 21635 8 Broadbridge Anne F 2018 Women and the Making of the Mongol Empire Cambridge University Press p 264 ISBN 978 1 108 42489 9 Nasr Seyyed Hossein 1977 Ismaʻili contributions to Islamic culture Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy p 20 ISBN 978 0500973554 Kwanten Luc 1979 Imperial Nomads A History of Central Asia 500 1500 Leicester University Press p 158 ISBN 978 0 7185 1180 7 Tarkikh E Imamat www ismaili net Jami al Tawarikh Meri Josef W 2006 Medieval Islamic Civilization L Z index Taylor amp Francis p 510b ISBN 978 0 415 96692 4 a b Howorth Sir Henry Hoyle 1888 History of the Mongols The Mongols of Persia New York Burt Franklin pp 104 109 ISBN 9781605201351 Fisher William Bayne Boyle J A Boyle John Andrew Frye Richard Nelson 1968 The Cambridge History of Iran Cambridge University Press p 481 ISBN 978 0 521 06936 6 a b Daftary Farhad 1992 The Isma ilis Their History and Doctrines Cambridge University Press p 427 ISBN 978 0 521 42974 0 a b c d e Daftary Farhad 1992 The Isma ilis Their History and Doctrines Cambridge University Press p 429 ISBN 978 0 521 42974 0 Nicolle David Hook Richard 1998 The Mongol Warlords Genghis Khan Kublai Khan Hulegu Tamerlane Brockhampton Press p 129 ISBN 978 1 86019 407 8 a b c Il Khanidas i Dynastic History Encyclopaedia Iranica www iranicaonline org Retrieved 1 May 2020 Nicolle David 2007 Crusader Warfare Muslims Mongols and the struggle against the Crusades Hambledon Continuum p 36 ISBN 978 1 84725 146 6 Franzius Enno 1969 History of the Order of Assassins Illustr Funk amp Wagnalls p 138 Bretschneider E 1910 Mediaeval Researches from Eastern Asiatic Sources pt 3 Explanation of a Mongol Chinese mediaeval map of central and western Asia pt 4 Chinese intercourse with the countries of central and western Asia during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries K Paul Trench Trubner amp Company Limited p 110 a b Virani Shafique N Virani Assistant Professor Departments of Historical Studies and the Study of Religion Shafique N 2007 The Ismailis in the Middle Ages A History of Survival a Search for Salvation US Oxford University Press p 32 ISBN 978 0 19 531173 0 Daftary Farhad 2007 The Isma ilis Their History and Doctrines Cambridge University Press p 301 ISBN 978 1 139 46578 6 Wasserman James 2001 The Templars and the Assassins The Militia of Heaven Simon and Schuster p 115 ISBN 978 1 59477 873 5 Virani Shafique N 2007 The Ismailis in the Middle Ages A History of Survival a Search for Salvation Oxford University Press pp 32 34 ISBN 978 0 19 804259 4 Further reading editDashdondog Bayarsaikhan 2020 Mongol Diplomacy of the Alamut Period Eurasian Studies 17 2 310 326 doi 10 1163 24685623 12340078 S2CID 219012875 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mongol campaign against the Nizaris amp oldid 1176118224, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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