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Siege of Acre (1189–1191)

The siege of Acre was the first significant counterattack by Guy of Jerusalem against Saladin, leader of the Muslims in Syria and Egypt. This pivotal siege formed part of what later became known as the Third Crusade. The siege lasted from August 1189 until July 1191, in which time the city's coastal position meant the attacking Latin force were unable to fully invest the city and Saladin was unable to fully relieve it with both sides receiving supplies and resources by sea. Finally, it was a key victory for the Crusaders and a serious setback for Saladin's ambition to destroy the Crusader states.

Siege of Acre
Part of the Third Crusade

Manuscript depiction of Acre surrendering to Richard I of England and Philip II of France (late 14th century)
Date28 August 1189 – 12 July 1191
Location32°55′39″N 35°04′54″E / 32.9275°N 35.0817°E / 32.9275; 35.0817
Result Crusader victory
Belligerents

Angevin Empire
Kingdom of France
Kingdom of Jerusalem

Republic of Pisa
Kingdom of Sicily
Papal States
Holy Roman Empire
Duchy of Bohemia
Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia
Kingdom of Denmark
Republic of Genoa
Ayyubids
Commanders and leaders
  • Saladin
  • Emir Mojili 
  • Aibek al-Akhresh 
  • Ibn al-Bessarau 
  • Imad ed-Din Sinjari
  • Hossam ad-Din Lulu
  • Moezz ad-Din
  • Al-Adil I
  • Gökböri
  • Beha ad-Din Karakush
  • Abu al-Heija
  • Ibn Barik 
  • Saif ad-Din Meshtub 
  • Shirkuh ibn Bakhel the Kurd
Strength
Total: 59,000 men[1][2]
102 ships[3]
Initially: 7,000–10,000 men[4]
End: 25,000 men[5]
11 trebuchets

45,000–50,000 men

  • Garrison: 5,000–10,000 men[6]
  • Relief force: 40,000 men[7]
    50 galleys[8]
Casualties and losses
19,000 dead[1][9]

Garrison: 5,000–10,000 dead

Relief force: heavy

Background Edit

Egypt was ruled by the Shi'ite Fatimid dynasty from 969, independent from the Sunni Abbasid rulers in Baghdad and with a rival Shi'ite caliph—that is successor to the Muslim prophet Mohammad. Governance fell to the caliph's chief administrator called the vizier. From 1121 the system fell into murderous political intrigue and Egypt declined from its previous affluent state.[10] This encouraged Baldwin III of Jerusalem to plan an invasion that was only halted by the payment by Egypt of a tribute of 160,000 gold dinars. In 1163 the deposed vizier, Shawar, visited Zengi's son and successor, Nur ad-Din, atabeg of Aleppo, in Damascus seeking political and military support. Some historians have considered Nur ad-Din's support as a visionary attempt to surround the Crusaders, but in practice he prevaricated before only responding when it became clear that the Crusaders might gain an unassailable foothold on the Nile. Nur al-Din sent his Kurdish general, Shirkuh, who stormed Egypt and restored Shawar. However, Shawar asserted his independence and allied with Baldwin's brother and successor Amalric of Jerusalem. When Amalric broke the alliance in a ferocious attack, Shawar again requested military support from Syria and Shirkuh was sent by Nur ad-Din for a second time. Amalric retreated, but the victorious Shirkuh had Shawar executed and was appointed vizier. Barely two months later he died to be succeeded by his nephew, Yusuf ibn Ayyub, who has become known by his honorific 'Salah al-Din', 'the goodness of faith' which in turn has become westernised as Saladin.[11] Nur al-Din died in 1174. He was the first Muslim to unite Aleppo and Damascus in the Crusade era. Some Islamic contemporaries promoted the idea that there was a natural Islamic resurgence under Zengi, through Nur al-Din to Saladin. Although, this wasn't as straight forward and simple as it appears. Saladin imprisoned all the Caliph's heirs preventing them from having children, as opposed to having them all killed which would have been normal practice, to extinguish the bloodline. Assuming control after the death of his overlord, Nur al-Din, Saladin had the strategic choice of establishing Egypt as an autonomous power or attempting to become the preeminent Muslim in the Eastern Mediterranean—he chose the latter.[12]

As Nur al-Din's territories fragmented after his death, Saladin legitimised his ascent through positioning himself as a defender of Sunni Islam subservient to both the Caliph of Baghdad and Nur al-Din's son and successor, As-Salih Ismail al-Malik.[13] In his early ascendency he seized Damascus and much of Syria, but not Aleppo.[14] After the building a defensive force to resist a planned attack by the Kingdom of Jerusalem that never materialised his first contest with the Latin Christians was not a success. His overconfidence and tactical errors led to defeat at the Battle of Montgisard.[15] Despite this setback, Saladin established a domain stretching from the Nile to the Euphrates through a decade of politics, coercion and low level military action.[16] After a life-threatening illness, he determined to make good on his propaganda as the champion of Islam, embarking on heightened campaigning against the Latin Christians. King Guy responded by raising the largest army that Jerusalem had ever put in the field. However, Saladin lured the force into inhospitable terrain without water, surrounded the Latins with a superior force and routed them at the Battle of Hattin. Saladin offered the Christians the options of remaining in peace under Islamic rule or taking advantage of 40 days' grace to leave. As a result, much of Palestine quickly fell to Saladin including, after a short 5 day siege, Jerusalem.[17] According to Benedict of Peterborough, Pope Urban III died of deep sadness on 19 October 1187 on hearing of the defeat.[18] Pope Gregory VIII issued a papal bull named Audita tremendi that proposed a further Crusade later numbered the third to recapture Jerusalem. Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor died en route to Jerusalem, drowning in the Saleph River, and few of his men reached the Eastern Mediterranean.[19]

Tyre Edit

In Tyre, Conrad of Montferrat had entrenched himself and had successfully resisted Saladin's assault at the end of 1187. The sultan then turned his attention to other tasks, but then tried to negotiate the surrender of the city by treaty, as in mid-1188 the first reinforcements from Europe arrived at Tyre by sea. Under the terms of the treaty, Saladin would, among other things, release King Guy, whom he had captured at Hattin. This would have escalated the conflict between Guy, who was blamed for the catastrophe of Hattin, and Conrad, who had successfully defended Tyre from the subsequent invasion. Guy was released and appeared before Tyre, but Conrad would not let him in, claiming that he was administering it until the kings should arrive from across the sea to settle the succession. This was in accordance with Baldwin IV's will: he was the nearest paternal kinsman of Baldwin V. Guy left before appearing once again outside Tyre with his wife Queen Sibylla, who held the legal title to the kingdom, but he was again rejected by Conrad, and he set up his camp outside the gates of the city.

Acre was an important port, and Saladin and his advisors considered how to prepare for the possibility that the crusaders would attempt to capture the city. Opinion was split on whether the city's fortification should be reinforced or whether they should destroy the city to prevent is capture. Saladin decided on the former option, and historian Hannes Möhring suggested the approach of destroying Acre to prevent it from being used by the crusaders would only have been effective if a similar approach was taken at other cities and ports along the coast.[20]

In late spring 1188, William II of Sicily sent a fleet with 200 knights; on 6 April 1189, Ubaldo Lanfranchi, Archbishop of Pisa, arrived with 52 ships. Guy succeeded in bringing both contingents over to his side. In August, Conrad again refused him entry to the city, so he broke camp and made his way south to attack Acre; he and his troops travelled along the coast, while the Pisans and Sicilians went by sea. Guy urgently needed a firm base from which he could organize a counterattack on Saladin, and since he could not have Tyre, he directed his plans to Acre, 50 km (31 miles) to the south. Thus Guy and Conrad were allies against Saladin.

Beginning of the siege Edit

 
The Near East, 1190, at the outset of the Third Crusade, showing the location of the Acre, the Battle of Arsuf, and other important sites.

The port of Acre lay on a peninsula in the Gulf of Haifa. East of the old part of the city was the port, protected against the open sea, while to the west and south the coast was protected by a strong dyke wall. The peninsula was guarded on the mainland side by double barrier reinforced with towers. As one of Saladin's main garrison nodes and arms depots, the force defending Acre was significant, consisting of several thousand troops. Guy's army consisted of 7,000–9,000 infantry and 400–700 knights.[4] Hattin had left the Kingdom of Jerusalem with few troops left to call upon. In such a scenario, Guy was totally dependent on aid from the plethora of small armies and fleets descending on the Levant from around Europe.

Initially Guy tried to surprise the garrison with an assault on the walls, but this failed and Guy established his camp outside the city, to wait for reinforcements, which began to arrive by sea a few days later. A Danish and Frisian fleet replaced that of the Sicilians, who withdrew when they heard news of the death of William II. French and Flemish soldiers also arrived under James of Avesnes, Henry I of Bar, Andrew of Brienne, Robert II of Dreux, and his brother Philip of Dreux, the Bishop of Beauvais. Germans under Louis III, Landgrave of Thuringia, and Otto I of Guelders and Italians under Archbishop Gerhard of Ravenna and Bishop Adelard of Verona also arrived. Louis of Thuringia was able to convince Conrad, his mother's cousin, to send troops from Tyre as well. Armenian troops under Leo II of Cilicia also took part in the siege.[21] When Saladin was informed about this development, he gathered his troops and marched to Acre, where he unsuccessfully attacked Guy's camp on 15 September.

Battle of Acre Edit

On 4 October, Saladin moved to the east of the city to confront Guy's camp. The Crusader army had grown to 30,000 infantry and 2,000 cavalry through reinforcements by the end of September.[3] A Christian fleet of at least 102 ships blockaded the city.[3] The Muslim army consisted of troops from Egypt, Kurd, Turkestan, Syria, and Mesopotamia.

The Muslims lay in a semicircle east of the city facing inwards towards Acre. The Crusader army lay in between, with lightly armed crossbowmen in the first line and the heavy cavalry in second. At the later Battle of Arsuf the Christians fought coherently; here the battle began with a disjointed combat between the Templars and Saladin's right wing. The Crusaders were so successful that the enemy had to send reinforcements from other parts of the field. Thus the steady advance of the Christian centre against Saladin's own corps, in which the crossbows prepared the way for the charge of the men-at-arms, met with no great resistance. Saladin's centre and right flanks were put to flight.

But the victors scattered to plunder. Saladin rallied his men, and, when the Christians began to retire with their booty, let loose his light cavalry upon them. No connected resistance was offered, and the Turks slaughtered the fugitives until checked by the fresh troops of the Christian right flank. Guy's reserves, who were in the Christian camp containing the Saracen garrison at Acre, were sent to reinforce the Christian line. The garrison at Acre realized that the Christian camp was undefended, so launched an attack into the Christian left flank's rear. They fell upon the Templars, assisting the Saracen right wing and inflicting heavy casualties. Gerard de Ridefort, Grand Master of the Templars, was killed. Andrew of Brienne was also killed and Conrad had to be rescued by Guy. In the end, the Crusaders repulsed the relieving army. Christian casualties ranged from 4,000 or 5,000[22] to 10,000 men.[23][citation needed] Saladin could not push them back without another pitched battle.

The double siege Edit

During the autumn, more European Crusaders arrived, allowing Guy to blockade Acre by land. News of the imminent arrival of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa reached the Crusaders, which not only raised the morale of the Christian soldiers, but also compelled Saladin to bring in so many more troops that he was able to surround both the city and the Crusader camp in two separate sieges.

On 30 October, 50 Muslim galleys broke through the Christian sea blockade and reinforced the city with the crews of the ships, some 10,000 men, as well as food and weapons.[24] On 17 December, an Egyptian fleet arrived to re-establish control over the port and the road leading to it. In March 1190, when the weather was better, Conrad travelled to Tyre on his own ship and soon returned with supplies for the Crusaders, which helped the resistance against the Egyptian fleet on the shore. The building materials brought by Conrad were constructed into siege machinery, although these machines were lost when the Crusaders tried to assault the city on 6 May.

On 20 May, Saladin, who had continued to strengthen his army over the previous months, began an attack on the Christian camp, which lasted eight days before it could be repelled. On 25 July, against the orders of their commanders, the Christian soldiers attacked Saladin's right flank and were defeated. Further reinforcements from France arrived in the Crusader camp over the summer, led by Henry II of Champagne, Theobald V of Blois, Stephen I of Sancerre, Raoul I of Clermont, John of Fontigny, Alain of Saint-Valéry, the Archbishop of Besançon, the Bishop of Blois, and the Bishop of Toul. Duke Frederick VI of Swabia arrived at the beginning of October with the rest of his father's army, after the Holy Roman Emperor had drowned in the Saleph River on 10 June, and shortly afterwards English Crusaders arrived under Baldwin of Exeter, Archbishop of Canterbury. In October, the Count of Bar also arrived, and the Christians had a breakthrough in Haifa, which allowed more food to be brought to the camp at Acre.

Life in the city and the Christian camp quickly became difficult after their containment by Saladin. Food remained limited, the water supply became contaminated with human and animal corpses, and epidemics soon began to spread. Louis of Thuringia, sick with malaria, made plans to return home when the French arrived, and died in Cyprus on the way back on 16 October. At some point between late July and October, Guy's wife Queen Sibylla died, a few days after both of their daughters, Alais and Marie. With her death, Guy lost his claim to the throne of Jerusalem, as Sibylla was the legal heiress. Her rightful heir was her younger half-sister, Isabella of Jerusalem. Guy, however, refused to step aside for her.

The barons of the kingdom used this opportunity to rid themselves of Guy, and arranged the marriage of Conrad to Isabella. However, Isabella was already married to Humphrey IV of Toron, and Conrad's marital status was uncertain (he had wed a Byzantine princess in 1187, a few months before arriving at Tyre, and it was unclear whether she had annulled the marriage in his absence). Also, Sibylla's first husband had been Conrad's older brother William Longsword, which made a marriage between Isabella and Conrad incestuous under canon law.[dubious ] Patriarch Eraclius was sick, and his appointed representative Baldwin of Exeter died suddenly on 19 November. Therefore, it was Archbishop Ubaldo Lanfranchi of Pisa a papal legate, as well as Philip, Bishop of Beauvais, who gave their consent to divorce Isabella from Humphrey on 24 November. Conrad withdrew with Isabella to Tyre, but Guy still insisted that he was king: the succession was not settled finally until an election in 1192.

 
Richard the Lionheart on his way to Jerusalem, James William Glass (1850)

Saladin's army was now so large that it was impossible for any more Crusaders to arrive by land, and winter meant that no more supplies or reinforcements could arrive by sea. Acre had a garrison of 20,000 men in the winter of 1190–1191.[25] In the Christian camp, the leaders began to succumb to the epidemics. Theobald of Blois, Stephen of Sancerre and Frederick of Swabia died, on 20 January 1191. Henry of Champagne struggled with sickness for many weeks before recovering. Patriarch Eraclius also died during the siege, but the date is unknown.

On 31 December, another attempt to breach the walls failed, and on 6 January, the partial collapse of the walls led to many Christian attempts at overrunning the Muslim garrisons. On 13 February, Saladin succeeded in breaking through the Christian lines and reaching the city, so that he could replace the exhausted defenders with a new garrison; otherwise, the old garrison would have all died of disease.[citation needed] Conrad of Montferrat attempted an attack by sea on the Tower of Flies, but adverse winds and rocks below the surface prevented his ship getting close enough to do significant damage. In March, however, when the weather was better and ships could once again unload supplies on the coast, the danger of failure was again averted for the Christians. Duke Leopold V of Austria arrived and took control of the Christian forces. Ships also brought devastating news for Saladin. He had missed his chance to crush the remaining Christians and now King Richard the Lionheart and King Philip Augustus were on their way to the Holy Land, each accompanied by an army. Saladin's chance for victory had slipped away.

The kings at Acre Edit

 
Detail of a miniature of Philip II of France arriving in the Eastern Mediterranean (mid-14th century)

King Philip arrived on 20 April, and King Richard on 8 June, after he had used the opportunity to conquer Cyprus along the way. Richard arrived with an English fleet of 100 ships (which carried 8,000 men) while Philip II arrived with a Genoese fleet under Simone Doria. Philip had used the time before Richard's arrival to build siege engines like the trebuchet, and now that stronger leadership from Europe had arrived, it was the city and not the Christian camp that was besieged. When Richard arrived, he sought a meeting with Saladin, and an armistice of three days was agreed upon so that the meeting could take place. However, both Richard and Philip fell ill, and the meeting did not take place.

King Philip was eager to launch a siege on Acre, but King Richard was not ready to go along with the plan because he was still ill and some of his men had not arrived yet due to adverse winds. They hoped that the latter would arrive with the next fleet of ships and would bring material for building siege machinery. Philip continued the project by himself, and on 17 June, fired an attack on Acre with ballistas and engines. The defending army made diverse ways to make noise and send up smoke from the fires to let Saladin and the outer army know that, as arranged, they were supposed to come to the help of the town.

 
A 19th-century depiction of the Acre's surrender to Philip in 1191

The siege machines broke holes into the walls of Acre, but every new breach led to an attack from Saladin's army, giving the garrison of Acre an opportunity to repair the damage while the Christians were distracted. On 1 June, Philip of Alsace, Count of Flanders and Vermandois and one of the king's most important men, died in the camp. This caused a major crisis for the French king, since Philip had no heirs and settling his inheritance was an urgent matter, yet a very difficult one so far away from France.

On 2 July, Richard deployed his own siege engines, including two enormous mangonels named God's Own Catapult and Bad Neighbour (Malevoisine in the original French).[26][27] On 3 July, a sufficiently large breach was again created in the walls, but the Christian attack was repelled. On 4 July, the city offered its surrender, but Richard rejected the conditions. This time Saladin did not make a large-scale attack on the Christian camp. On 7 July, the city sent an embassy to Saladin asking for assistance one last time, and threatened to surrender if he did not help. On 11 July, there was one final battle, and on 12 July, the city once more offered terms of surrender to the Crusaders, who found their offer acceptable this time. Conrad of Montferrat, who had returned to Tyre because of Richard's support for Guy of Lusignan as king of Jerusalem, was recalled to act as negotiator, at Saladin's request. Saladin was not personally involved in the negotiations, but accepted the surrender. The Christians entered the city and the Muslim garrison was taken into captivity. Conrad raised the banners of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, France, England, and the Duchy of Austria over the city.

Leopold of Austria left shortly after the capture of the city, after quarrelling with Richard: as the surviving leader of the German Imperial contingent, he had demanded the same position as Philip and Richard, but had been rejected and his flag torn down from the ramparts of Acre. On 31 July, Philip also returned home, to settle the succession in Vermandois and Flanders, and Richard was left solely in charge of the Christian expeditionary forces.

Execution of the prisoners Edit

 
Massacre of the Saracen prisoners, ordered by King Richard the Lionheart (Alphonse de Neuville, 1883)

It was now up to Richard and Saladin to finalize the surrender of the city. The Christians began to rebuild Acre's defenses, and Saladin collected money to pay for the ransom of the imprisoned garrison. On 11 August, Saladin delivered the first of the three planned payments and prisoner exchanges, but Richard rejected this because certain Christian nobles were not included. The exchange was broken off and further negotiations were unsuccessful. Richard had also insisted on the handover of Philip's share of the prisoners, whom the French king had entrusted to his kinsman Conrad of Montferrat. Conrad reluctantly agreed, under pressure. On 20 August, Richard thought that Saladin had delayed too much, and had 2,700 of the Muslim prisoners from the garrison of Acre decapitated.

The Muslim nobles amongst the prisoners were not included in the executions.[28] Saladin responded in kind, killing all of the Christian prisoners he had captured. On 22 August, Richard and his army left the city, given in custody to the crusaders Bertram de Verdun and Stephen Longchamp.

Aftermath Edit

The capture of Acre and the execution of its garrison led to a change in Saladin's approach. Saladin was more inclined to pre-emptively demolish (slight) fortifications, and instead focused on enhancing the defences of Jerusalem. Möhring suggests the execution of the garrison would have deterred other garrisons from defending against Richard.[28]

The Crusader army marched south, with the sea to their right and Saladin's army following them to their left. On 7 September, they met at the Battle of Arsuf, north of Jaffa, in which Saladin was defeated. Richard captured Jaffa on 10 September, but throughout the remainder of 1191 and into the summer of 1192, he was unable to realize his ultimate goal of recapturing Jerusalem. The dispute over the kingship of Jerusalem was resolved in April 1192, with the election of Conrad of Montferrat, but he was assassinated only days after his victory. The pregnant Queen Isabella was quickly married to Richard and Philip's nephew, Henry of Champagne.

Meanwhile, Richard was informed that his brother, John Lackland, was attempting to usurp the throne in England. He arranged for a treaty with Saladin, and the Third Crusade came to an end when Richard left for England in late October. Philip of France meanwhile had come to terms with John and had closed the French harbours; Richard was forced to make his way across the Adriatic Sea and went ashore near Aquileia. Due to the coming winter, crossing the Alps proved to be impossible, and the king incognito passed through the Austrian capital Vienna shortly before Christmas, where he was recognized, captured and imprisoned by Duke Leopold at Dürnstein.

Leopold did not hesitate to gain the support of Emperor Henry VI. In March 1193 he delivered Richard to the emperor, who had him arrested at Trifels Castle. The king was charged with the murder of Conrad, who was Leopold's cousin, and also with insulting the Austrian duke by throwing down his banner at Acre. Richard refused the accusations and was backed by Pope Celestine III, who threatened Henry with excommunication; nevertheless, Richard's imminent extradition to Philip of France made him strike a ransom deal. He was released for an enormous price, and did not return to his own territories until 1194.

The Kingdom of Jerusalem was now relatively secure, with its new capital at Acre, from which a narrow strip along the Mediterranean coast was ruled. This second incarnation of the Kingdom of Jerusalem endured for another century.

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Hosler 2018, p. 72.
  2. ^ Tyerman, p. 436
  3. ^ a b c Hosler 2018, p. 19.
  4. ^ a b Hosler 2018, p. 12.
  5. ^ Tyerman, p. 449: "There may have been only a few thousand fighters within Acre by then, while Saladin's army, despite regular reinforcement, cannot have matched the gathered strength of the Christians, whose army may have numbered by this time 25,000 men."
  6. ^ Hosler 2018, p. 34.
  7. ^ Hosler 2018, p. 54.
  8. ^ Hosler 2018, p. 45.
  9. ^ Hosler 2018, p. 107.
  10. ^ Asbridge 2012, pp. 266–268
  11. ^ Asbridge 2012, pp. 272–275
  12. ^ Asbridge 2012, pp. 282–286
  13. ^ Asbridge 2012, pp. 287–288
  14. ^ Asbridge 2012, p. 292
  15. ^ Asbridge 2012, pp. 307–308
  16. ^ Asbridge 2012, p. 322
  17. ^ Asbridge 2012, pp. 343–357
  18. ^ Asbridge 2012, p. 367
  19. ^ Tyerman 2007, pp. 35–36
  20. ^ Möhring 2009, p. 211
  21. ^ Chahin 1987, p. 245
  22. ^ Tyerman 2008, p. 416
  23. ^ Ibn Al-Athir, XII, 20–26; Chapter four in Arab Historians of the Crusades, ed. and trans. by Francesco Gabrieli
  24. ^ Pryor 2015, p. 104.
  25. ^ Pryor 2015, p. 108.
  26. ^ Waterson, James (2010). Sacred Swords: Jihad in the Holy Land, 1097–1291. Casemate Publishers. ISBN 978-1848325807.
  27. ^ Janin, Hunt; Carlson, Ursula (2014). Mercenaries in Medieval and Renaissance Europe. McFarland. ISBN 978-1476612072.
  28. ^ a b Möhring 2009, p. 213

Bibliography Edit

  • Asbridge, Thomas (2012). The Crusades: The War for the Holy Land. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-1849836883.
  • Chahin, M. (1987). The Kingdom of Armenia: A History. Curzon Press. ISBN 0-7007-1452-9.
  • Hosler, John D. (2018) "The siege of Acre (1189–1191) in the historiographical tradition" History Compass (2018) doi:10.1111/hic3.12451
  • Hosler, John D. (2018). The Siege of Acre, 1189–1191: Saladin, Richard the Lionheart, and the Battle that Decided the Third Crusade. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300215502.
  • Lane-Poole, Stanley. Saladin and the Fall of the Kingdom of Jerusalem Williams & Norgate, London (1903). (Archived )
  • Möhring, Hannes (2009). "Die muslimische Strategie der Schleifung fränkischen Festungen und Städte in der Levante". Burgen und Schlösser: Zeitschrift für Burgenforschung und Denkmalpflege (in German). 50 (4): 211–217. doi:10.11588/BUS.2009.4.48565.
  • Pryor, John H. (2015). "A Medieval Siege of Troy: The Fight to the Death at Acre, 1189–1191 or The Tears of Ṣalāḥ al-Dīn". In Halfond, Gregory I. (ed.). The Medieval Way of War: Studies in Medieval Military History in Honor of Bernard S. Bachrach. Farnham: Ashgate. ISBN 978-1472419583.
  • Reston, James, Jr. (2001). Warriors of God: Richard the Lionheart and Saladin in the Third Crusade. Random House, ISBN 0385495617.
  • Tyerman, Christopher (2007). The Crusades. Sterling Publishing Company, Inc. pp. 111–. ISBN 978-1402768910. Retrieved 4 October 2016.
  • Tyerman, Christopher (2008). God's War A New History of the Crusades. Belknap Press.

Primary sources Edit

  • Itinerarium Peregrinorum et Gesta Regis Ricardi, ed. William Stubbs, Rolls Series, (London: Longmans, 1864) III, 1, 5, 13, 17–18 (pp. 210–211, 214–217, 224–226, 231–234), translated by James Brundage, The Crusades: A Documentary History, (Milwaukee, WI: Marquette University Press, 1962), 175–181 fordham.edu

External links Edit

    siege, acre, 1189, 1191, this, article, about, siege, acre, 1189, other, sieges, siege, acre, disambiguation, siege, acre, first, significant, counterattack, jerusalem, against, saladin, leader, muslims, syria, egypt, this, pivotal, siege, formed, part, what, . This article is about the siege of Acre 1189 91 For other sieges see Siege of Acre disambiguation The siege of Acre was the first significant counterattack by Guy of Jerusalem against Saladin leader of the Muslims in Syria and Egypt This pivotal siege formed part of what later became known as the Third Crusade The siege lasted from August 1189 until July 1191 in which time the city s coastal position meant the attacking Latin force were unable to fully invest the city and Saladin was unable to fully relieve it with both sides receiving supplies and resources by sea Finally it was a key victory for the Crusaders and a serious setback for Saladin s ambition to destroy the Crusader states Siege of AcrePart of the Third CrusadeManuscript depiction of Acre surrendering to Richard I of England and Philip II of France late 14th century Date28 August 1189 12 July 1191LocationAcre32 55 39 N 35 04 54 E 32 9275 N 35 0817 E 32 9275 35 0817ResultCrusader victoryBelligerentsAngevin Empire Kingdom of France Kingdom of Jerusalem Knights Templar Knights Hospitaller Republic of Pisa Kingdom of Sicily Papal States Holy Roman Empire Duchy of Bohemia Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia Kingdom of Denmark Republic of GenoaAyyubidsCommanders and leadersRichard I of England Philip II of France Philip I of Flanders Guy of Lusignan Sibylla of Jerusalem Conrad of Montferrat Gerard de Ridefort Robert de Sable Ubaldo Lanfranchi Frederick VI of Swabia Leopold V of Austria Depolt II Leo II of Armenia Simone DoriaSaladin Emir Mojili Aibek al Akhresh Ibn al Bessarau Imad ed Din Sinjari Hossam ad Din Lulu Moezz ad Din Al Adil I Gokbori Beha ad Din Karakush Abu al Heija Ibn Barik Saif ad Din Meshtub Shirkuh ibn Bakhel the KurdStrengthTotal 59 000 men 1 2 102 ships 3 Initially 7 000 10 000 men 4 End 25 000 men 5 11 trebuchets45 000 50 000 men Garrison 5 000 10 000 men 6 Relief force 40 000 men 7 50 galleys 8 Casualties and losses19 000 dead 1 9 Garrison 5 000 10 000 dead Relief force heavy Contents 1 Background 2 Tyre 3 Beginning of the siege 4 Battle of Acre 5 The double siege 6 The kings at Acre 7 Execution of the prisoners 8 Aftermath 9 References 10 Bibliography 10 1 Primary sources 11 External linksBackground EditEgypt was ruled by the Shi ite Fatimid dynasty from 969 independent from the Sunni Abbasid rulers in Baghdad and with a rival Shi ite caliph that is successor to the Muslim prophet Mohammad Governance fell to the caliph s chief administrator called the vizier From 1121 the system fell into murderous political intrigue and Egypt declined from its previous affluent state 10 This encouraged Baldwin III of Jerusalem to plan an invasion that was only halted by the payment by Egypt of a tribute of 160 000 gold dinars In 1163 the deposed vizier Shawar visited Zengi s son and successor Nur ad Din atabeg of Aleppo in Damascus seeking political and military support Some historians have considered Nur ad Din s support as a visionary attempt to surround the Crusaders but in practice he prevaricated before only responding when it became clear that the Crusaders might gain an unassailable foothold on the Nile Nur al Din sent his Kurdish general Shirkuh who stormed Egypt and restored Shawar However Shawar asserted his independence and allied with Baldwin s brother and successor Amalric of Jerusalem When Amalric broke the alliance in a ferocious attack Shawar again requested military support from Syria and Shirkuh was sent by Nur ad Din for a second time Amalric retreated but the victorious Shirkuh had Shawar executed and was appointed vizier Barely two months later he died to be succeeded by his nephew Yusuf ibn Ayyub who has become known by his honorific Salah al Din the goodness of faith which in turn has become westernised as Saladin 11 Nur al Din died in 1174 He was the first Muslim to unite Aleppo and Damascus in the Crusade era Some Islamic contemporaries promoted the idea that there was a natural Islamic resurgence under Zengi through Nur al Din to Saladin Although this wasn t as straight forward and simple as it appears Saladin imprisoned all the Caliph s heirs preventing them from having children as opposed to having them all killed which would have been normal practice to extinguish the bloodline Assuming control after the death of his overlord Nur al Din Saladin had the strategic choice of establishing Egypt as an autonomous power or attempting to become the preeminent Muslim in the Eastern Mediterranean he chose the latter 12 As Nur al Din s territories fragmented after his death Saladin legitimised his ascent through positioning himself as a defender of Sunni Islam subservient to both the Caliph of Baghdad and Nur al Din s son and successor As Salih Ismail al Malik 13 In his early ascendency he seized Damascus and much of Syria but not Aleppo 14 After the building a defensive force to resist a planned attack by the Kingdom of Jerusalem that never materialised his first contest with the Latin Christians was not a success His overconfidence and tactical errors led to defeat at the Battle of Montgisard 15 Despite this setback Saladin established a domain stretching from the Nile to the Euphrates through a decade of politics coercion and low level military action 16 After a life threatening illness he determined to make good on his propaganda as the champion of Islam embarking on heightened campaigning against the Latin Christians King Guy responded by raising the largest army that Jerusalem had ever put in the field However Saladin lured the force into inhospitable terrain without water surrounded the Latins with a superior force and routed them at the Battle of Hattin Saladin offered the Christians the options of remaining in peace under Islamic rule or taking advantage of 40 days grace to leave As a result much of Palestine quickly fell to Saladin including after a short 5 day siege Jerusalem 17 According to Benedict of Peterborough Pope Urban III died of deep sadness on 19 October 1187 on hearing of the defeat 18 Pope Gregory VIII issued a papal bull named Audita tremendi that proposed a further Crusade later numbered the third to recapture Jerusalem Frederick I Holy Roman Emperor died en route to Jerusalem drowning in the Saleph River and few of his men reached the Eastern Mediterranean 19 Tyre EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Siege of Acre 1189 1191 news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message In Tyre Conrad of Montferrat had entrenched himself and had successfully resisted Saladin s assault at the end of 1187 The sultan then turned his attention to other tasks but then tried to negotiate the surrender of the city by treaty as in mid 1188 the first reinforcements from Europe arrived at Tyre by sea Under the terms of the treaty Saladin would among other things release King Guy whom he had captured at Hattin This would have escalated the conflict between Guy who was blamed for the catastrophe of Hattin and Conrad who had successfully defended Tyre from the subsequent invasion Guy was released and appeared before Tyre but Conrad would not let him in claiming that he was administering it until the kings should arrive from across the sea to settle the succession This was in accordance with Baldwin IV s will he was the nearest paternal kinsman of Baldwin V Guy left before appearing once again outside Tyre with his wife Queen Sibylla who held the legal title to the kingdom but he was again rejected by Conrad and he set up his camp outside the gates of the city Acre was an important port and Saladin and his advisors considered how to prepare for the possibility that the crusaders would attempt to capture the city Opinion was split on whether the city s fortification should be reinforced or whether they should destroy the city to prevent is capture Saladin decided on the former option and historian Hannes Mohring suggested the approach of destroying Acre to prevent it from being used by the crusaders would only have been effective if a similar approach was taken at other cities and ports along the coast 20 In late spring 1188 William II of Sicily sent a fleet with 200 knights on 6 April 1189 Ubaldo Lanfranchi Archbishop of Pisa arrived with 52 ships Guy succeeded in bringing both contingents over to his side In August Conrad again refused him entry to the city so he broke camp and made his way south to attack Acre he and his troops travelled along the coast while the Pisans and Sicilians went by sea Guy urgently needed a firm base from which he could organize a counterattack on Saladin and since he could not have Tyre he directed his plans to Acre 50 km 31 miles to the south Thus Guy and Conrad were allies against Saladin Beginning of the siege Edit The Near East 1190 at the outset of the Third Crusade showing the location of the Acre the Battle of Arsuf and other important sites The port of Acre lay on a peninsula in the Gulf of Haifa East of the old part of the city was the port protected against the open sea while to the west and south the coast was protected by a strong dyke wall The peninsula was guarded on the mainland side by double barrier reinforced with towers As one of Saladin s main garrison nodes and arms depots the force defending Acre was significant consisting of several thousand troops Guy s army consisted of 7 000 9 000 infantry and 400 700 knights 4 Hattin had left the Kingdom of Jerusalem with few troops left to call upon In such a scenario Guy was totally dependent on aid from the plethora of small armies and fleets descending on the Levant from around Europe Initially Guy tried to surprise the garrison with an assault on the walls but this failed and Guy established his camp outside the city to wait for reinforcements which began to arrive by sea a few days later A Danish and Frisian fleet replaced that of the Sicilians who withdrew when they heard news of the death of William II French and Flemish soldiers also arrived under James of Avesnes Henry I of Bar Andrew of Brienne Robert II of Dreux and his brother Philip of Dreux the Bishop of Beauvais Germans under Louis III Landgrave of Thuringia and Otto I of Guelders and Italians under Archbishop Gerhard of Ravenna and Bishop Adelard of Verona also arrived Louis of Thuringia was able to convince Conrad his mother s cousin to send troops from Tyre as well Armenian troops under Leo II of Cilicia also took part in the siege 21 When Saladin was informed about this development he gathered his troops and marched to Acre where he unsuccessfully attacked Guy s camp on 15 September Battle of Acre EditOn 4 October Saladin moved to the east of the city to confront Guy s camp The Crusader army had grown to 30 000 infantry and 2 000 cavalry through reinforcements by the end of September 3 A Christian fleet of at least 102 ships blockaded the city 3 The Muslim army consisted of troops from Egypt Kurd Turkestan Syria and Mesopotamia The Muslims lay in a semicircle east of the city facing inwards towards Acre The Crusader army lay in between with lightly armed crossbowmen in the first line and the heavy cavalry in second At the later Battle of Arsuf the Christians fought coherently here the battle began with a disjointed combat between the Templars and Saladin s right wing The Crusaders were so successful that the enemy had to send reinforcements from other parts of the field Thus the steady advance of the Christian centre against Saladin s own corps in which the crossbows prepared the way for the charge of the men at arms met with no great resistance Saladin s centre and right flanks were put to flight But the victors scattered to plunder Saladin rallied his men and when the Christians began to retire with their booty let loose his light cavalry upon them No connected resistance was offered and the Turks slaughtered the fugitives until checked by the fresh troops of the Christian right flank Guy s reserves who were in the Christian camp containing the Saracen garrison at Acre were sent to reinforce the Christian line The garrison at Acre realized that the Christian camp was undefended so launched an attack into the Christian left flank s rear They fell upon the Templars assisting the Saracen right wing and inflicting heavy casualties Gerard de Ridefort Grand Master of the Templars was killed Andrew of Brienne was also killed and Conrad had to be rescued by Guy In the end the Crusaders repulsed the relieving army Christian casualties ranged from 4 000 or 5 000 22 to 10 000 men 23 citation needed Saladin could not push them back without another pitched battle The double siege EditDuring the autumn more European Crusaders arrived allowing Guy to blockade Acre by land News of the imminent arrival of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa reached the Crusaders which not only raised the morale of the Christian soldiers but also compelled Saladin to bring in so many more troops that he was able to surround both the city and the Crusader camp in two separate sieges On 30 October 50 Muslim galleys broke through the Christian sea blockade and reinforced the city with the crews of the ships some 10 000 men as well as food and weapons 24 On 17 December an Egyptian fleet arrived to re establish control over the port and the road leading to it In March 1190 when the weather was better Conrad travelled to Tyre on his own ship and soon returned with supplies for the Crusaders which helped the resistance against the Egyptian fleet on the shore The building materials brought by Conrad were constructed into siege machinery although these machines were lost when the Crusaders tried to assault the city on 6 May On 20 May Saladin who had continued to strengthen his army over the previous months began an attack on the Christian camp which lasted eight days before it could be repelled On 25 July against the orders of their commanders the Christian soldiers attacked Saladin s right flank and were defeated Further reinforcements from France arrived in the Crusader camp over the summer led by Henry II of Champagne Theobald V of Blois Stephen I of Sancerre Raoul I of Clermont John of Fontigny Alain of Saint Valery the Archbishop of Besancon the Bishop of Blois and the Bishop of Toul Duke Frederick VI of Swabia arrived at the beginning of October with the rest of his father s army after the Holy Roman Emperor had drowned in the Saleph River on 10 June and shortly afterwards English Crusaders arrived under Baldwin of Exeter Archbishop of Canterbury In October the Count of Bar also arrived and the Christians had a breakthrough in Haifa which allowed more food to be brought to the camp at Acre Life in the city and the Christian camp quickly became difficult after their containment by Saladin Food remained limited the water supply became contaminated with human and animal corpses and epidemics soon began to spread Louis of Thuringia sick with malaria made plans to return home when the French arrived and died in Cyprus on the way back on 16 October At some point between late July and October Guy s wife Queen Sibylla died a few days after both of their daughters Alais and Marie With her death Guy lost his claim to the throne of Jerusalem as Sibylla was the legal heiress Her rightful heir was her younger half sister Isabella of Jerusalem Guy however refused to step aside for her The barons of the kingdom used this opportunity to rid themselves of Guy and arranged the marriage of Conrad to Isabella However Isabella was already married to Humphrey IV of Toron and Conrad s marital status was uncertain he had wed a Byzantine princess in 1187 a few months before arriving at Tyre and it was unclear whether she had annulled the marriage in his absence Also Sibylla s first husband had been Conrad s older brother William Longsword which made a marriage between Isabella and Conrad incestuous under canon law dubious discuss Patriarch Eraclius was sick and his appointed representative Baldwin of Exeter died suddenly on 19 November Therefore it was Archbishop Ubaldo Lanfranchi of Pisa a papal legate as well as Philip Bishop of Beauvais who gave their consent to divorce Isabella from Humphrey on 24 November Conrad withdrew with Isabella to Tyre but Guy still insisted that he was king the succession was not settled finally until an election in 1192 Richard the Lionheart on his way to Jerusalem James William Glass 1850 Saladin s army was now so large that it was impossible for any more Crusaders to arrive by land and winter meant that no more supplies or reinforcements could arrive by sea Acre had a garrison of 20 000 men in the winter of 1190 1191 25 In the Christian camp the leaders began to succumb to the epidemics Theobald of Blois Stephen of Sancerre and Frederick of Swabia died on 20 January 1191 Henry of Champagne struggled with sickness for many weeks before recovering Patriarch Eraclius also died during the siege but the date is unknown On 31 December another attempt to breach the walls failed and on 6 January the partial collapse of the walls led to many Christian attempts at overrunning the Muslim garrisons On 13 February Saladin succeeded in breaking through the Christian lines and reaching the city so that he could replace the exhausted defenders with a new garrison otherwise the old garrison would have all died of disease citation needed Conrad of Montferrat attempted an attack by sea on the Tower of Flies but adverse winds and rocks below the surface prevented his ship getting close enough to do significant damage In March however when the weather was better and ships could once again unload supplies on the coast the danger of failure was again averted for the Christians Duke Leopold V of Austria arrived and took control of the Christian forces Ships also brought devastating news for Saladin He had missed his chance to crush the remaining Christians and now King Richard the Lionheart and King Philip Augustus were on their way to the Holy Land each accompanied by an army Saladin s chance for victory had slipped away The kings at Acre Edit Detail of a miniature of Philip II of France arriving in the Eastern Mediterranean mid 14th century King Philip arrived on 20 April and King Richard on 8 June after he had used the opportunity to conquer Cyprus along the way Richard arrived with an English fleet of 100 ships which carried 8 000 men while Philip II arrived with a Genoese fleet under Simone Doria Philip had used the time before Richard s arrival to build siege engines like the trebuchet and now that stronger leadership from Europe had arrived it was the city and not the Christian camp that was besieged When Richard arrived he sought a meeting with Saladin and an armistice of three days was agreed upon so that the meeting could take place However both Richard and Philip fell ill and the meeting did not take place King Philip was eager to launch a siege on Acre but King Richard was not ready to go along with the plan because he was still ill and some of his men had not arrived yet due to adverse winds They hoped that the latter would arrive with the next fleet of ships and would bring material for building siege machinery Philip continued the project by himself and on 17 June fired an attack on Acre with ballistas and engines The defending army made diverse ways to make noise and send up smoke from the fires to let Saladin and the outer army know that as arranged they were supposed to come to the help of the town A 19th century depiction of the Acre s surrender to Philip in 1191The siege machines broke holes into the walls of Acre but every new breach led to an attack from Saladin s army giving the garrison of Acre an opportunity to repair the damage while the Christians were distracted On 1 June Philip of Alsace Count of Flanders and Vermandois and one of the king s most important men died in the camp This caused a major crisis for the French king since Philip had no heirs and settling his inheritance was an urgent matter yet a very difficult one so far away from France On 2 July Richard deployed his own siege engines including two enormous mangonels named God s Own Catapult and Bad Neighbour Malevoisine in the original French 26 27 On 3 July a sufficiently large breach was again created in the walls but the Christian attack was repelled On 4 July the city offered its surrender but Richard rejected the conditions This time Saladin did not make a large scale attack on the Christian camp On 7 July the city sent an embassy to Saladin asking for assistance one last time and threatened to surrender if he did not help On 11 July there was one final battle and on 12 July the city once more offered terms of surrender to the Crusaders who found their offer acceptable this time Conrad of Montferrat who had returned to Tyre because of Richard s support for Guy of Lusignan as king of Jerusalem was recalled to act as negotiator at Saladin s request Saladin was not personally involved in the negotiations but accepted the surrender The Christians entered the city and the Muslim garrison was taken into captivity Conrad raised the banners of the Kingdom of Jerusalem France England and the Duchy of Austria over the city Leopold of Austria left shortly after the capture of the city after quarrelling with Richard as the surviving leader of the German Imperial contingent he had demanded the same position as Philip and Richard but had been rejected and his flag torn down from the ramparts of Acre On 31 July Philip also returned home to settle the succession in Vermandois and Flanders and Richard was left solely in charge of the Christian expeditionary forces Execution of the prisoners EditMain article Massacre at Ayyadieh Massacre of the Saracen prisoners ordered by King Richard the Lionheart Alphonse de Neuville 1883 It was now up to Richard and Saladin to finalize the surrender of the city The Christians began to rebuild Acre s defenses and Saladin collected money to pay for the ransom of the imprisoned garrison On 11 August Saladin delivered the first of the three planned payments and prisoner exchanges but Richard rejected this because certain Christian nobles were not included The exchange was broken off and further negotiations were unsuccessful Richard had also insisted on the handover of Philip s share of the prisoners whom the French king had entrusted to his kinsman Conrad of Montferrat Conrad reluctantly agreed under pressure On 20 August Richard thought that Saladin had delayed too much and had 2 700 of the Muslim prisoners from the garrison of Acre decapitated The Muslim nobles amongst the prisoners were not included in the executions 28 Saladin responded in kind killing all of the Christian prisoners he had captured On 22 August Richard and his army left the city given in custody to the crusaders Bertram de Verdun and Stephen Longchamp Aftermath EditThe capture of Acre and the execution of its garrison led to a change in Saladin s approach Saladin was more inclined to pre emptively demolish slight fortifications and instead focused on enhancing the defences of Jerusalem Mohring suggests the execution of the garrison would have deterred other garrisons from defending against Richard 28 The Crusader army marched south with the sea to their right and Saladin s army following them to their left On 7 September they met at the Battle of Arsuf north of Jaffa in which Saladin was defeated Richard captured Jaffa on 10 September but throughout the remainder of 1191 and into the summer of 1192 he was unable to realize his ultimate goal of recapturing Jerusalem The dispute over the kingship of Jerusalem was resolved in April 1192 with the election of Conrad of Montferrat but he was assassinated only days after his victory The pregnant Queen Isabella was quickly married to Richard and Philip s nephew Henry of Champagne Meanwhile Richard was informed that his brother John Lackland was attempting to usurp the throne in England He arranged for a treaty with Saladin and the Third Crusade came to an end when Richard left for England in late October Philip of France meanwhile had come to terms with John and had closed the French harbours Richard was forced to make his way across the Adriatic Sea and went ashore near Aquileia Due to the coming winter crossing the Alps proved to be impossible and the king incognito passed through the Austrian capital Vienna shortly before Christmas where he was recognized captured and imprisoned by Duke Leopold at Durnstein Leopold did not hesitate to gain the support of Emperor Henry VI In March 1193 he delivered Richard to the emperor who had him arrested at Trifels Castle The king was charged with the murder of Conrad who was Leopold s cousin and also with insulting the Austrian duke by throwing down his banner at Acre Richard refused the accusations and was backed by Pope Celestine III who threatened Henry with excommunication nevertheless Richard s imminent extradition to Philip of France made him strike a ransom deal He was released for an enormous price and did not return to his own territories until 1194 The Kingdom of Jerusalem was now relatively secure with its new capital at Acre from which a narrow strip along the Mediterranean coast was ruled This second incarnation of the Kingdom of Jerusalem endured for another century References Edit a b Hosler 2018 p 72 Tyerman p 436 a b c Hosler 2018 p 19 a b Hosler 2018 p 12 Tyerman p 449 There may have been only a few thousand fighters within Acre by then while Saladin s army despite regular reinforcement cannot have matched the gathered strength of the Christians whose army may have numbered by this time 25 000 men Hosler 2018 p 34 Hosler 2018 p 54 Hosler 2018 p 45 Hosler 2018 p 107 Asbridge 2012 pp 266 268 Asbridge 2012 pp 272 275 Asbridge 2012 pp 282 286 Asbridge 2012 pp 287 288 Asbridge 2012 p 292 Asbridge 2012 pp 307 308 Asbridge 2012 p 322 Asbridge 2012 pp 343 357 Asbridge 2012 p 367 Tyerman 2007 pp 35 36 Mohring 2009 p 211 Chahin 1987 p 245 Tyerman 2008 p 416 Ibn Al Athir XII 20 26 Chapter four in Arab Historians of the Crusades ed and trans by Francesco Gabrieli Pryor 2015 p 104 Pryor 2015 p 108 Waterson James 2010 Sacred Swords Jihad in the Holy Land 1097 1291 Casemate Publishers ISBN 978 1848325807 Janin Hunt Carlson Ursula 2014 Mercenaries in Medieval and Renaissance Europe McFarland ISBN 978 1476612072 a b Mohring 2009 p 213Bibliography EditAsbridge Thomas 2012 The Crusades The War for the Holy Land Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1849836883 Chahin M 1987 The Kingdom of Armenia A History Curzon Press ISBN 0 7007 1452 9 Hosler John D 2018 The siege of Acre 1189 1191 in the historiographical tradition History Compass 2018 doi 10 1111 hic3 12451 Hosler John D 2018 The Siege of Acre 1189 1191 Saladin Richard the Lionheart and the Battle that Decided the Third Crusade Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300215502 Lane Poole Stanley Saladin and the Fall of the Kingdom of Jerusalem Williams amp Norgate London 1903 Archived here Mohring Hannes 2009 Die muslimische Strategie der Schleifung frankischen Festungen und Stadte in der Levante Burgen und Schlosser Zeitschrift fur Burgenforschung und Denkmalpflege in German 50 4 211 217 doi 10 11588 BUS 2009 4 48565 Pryor John H 2015 A Medieval Siege of Troy The Fight to the Death at Acre 1189 1191 or The Tears of Ṣalaḥ al Din In Halfond Gregory I ed The Medieval Way of War Studies in Medieval Military History in Honor of Bernard S Bachrach Farnham Ashgate ISBN 978 1472419583 Reston James Jr 2001 Warriors of God Richard the Lionheart and Saladin in the Third Crusade Random House ISBN 0385495617 Tyerman Christopher 2007 The Crusades Sterling Publishing Company Inc pp 111 ISBN 978 1402768910 Retrieved 4 October 2016 Tyerman Christopher 2008 God s War A New History of the Crusades Belknap Press Primary sources Edit Itinerarium Peregrinorum et Gesta Regis Ricardi ed William Stubbs Rolls Series London Longmans 1864 III 1 5 13 17 18 pp 210 211 214 217 224 226 231 234 translated by James Brundage The Crusades A Documentary History Milwaukee WI Marquette University Press 1962 175 181 fordham eduExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Siege of Acre 1189 1191 Battle of Acre History Avenue Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Siege of Acre 1189 1191 amp oldid 1167775663, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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