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Saturday April 20, 2024

The crusades: The war for the holy land

By our correspondents
May 01, 2016

A banker by profession, Salim Ansar has a passion for history and historic books. His personal library already boasts a treasure trove of over 7,000 rare and unique books.

Every week, we shall take a leaf from one such book and treat you to a little taste of history.

BOOK NAME:  The crusades: The war for the holy land

AUTHOR: Thomas Asbridge

PUBLISHER: Simon & Schuster - London

DATE OF PUBLICATION: 2010

The following excerpt has been taken from Pages: 225 — 228

“In the eleventh century, a vast Christian army, summoned to holy war by the pope, rampaged through the Muslim world of the eastern Mediterranean, seizing possession of Jerusalem, a city revered by both faiths. Over the two hundred years that followed this First Crusade, Islam and the West fought for dominion of the Holy Land, clashing in a succession of chillingly brutal wars, both firm in the belief that they were at God's work.

“For the first, this book tells the story of this epic struggle from the perspective of both Christians and Muslims, reconstructing the experiences and attitudes of those on either side of the conflict. Mixing pulsing narrative and piercing insight, it exposes the full horror, passion and barbaric grandeur of the crusading era, leading us into a world of legendary champions, such as Richard the Lionheart and Saladin, shadowy Assassins, poet-warriors and pious visionaries; across the desert sands of Egypt to the verdant forests of Lebanon, and through the ancient cities of Constantinople, Cairo and Damascus.

ZANGI - THE
CHAMPION OF ISLAM

“Zangi's capture of Edessa in 1144 was a triumph for Islam: what one Muslim chronicle described as 'the victory of victories'. When his troops stormed the city on 24 December, the Atabeg initially allowed them to pillage and slaughter at will. But after this first wave of violence, he enforced an approach that was, at least by his standards, relatively temperate. The Franks suffered - every man was butchered and all women taken into slavery - but the surviving eastern Christians were spared and permitted to remain in their homes. Likewise, Latin churches were destroyed, but their Armenian and Syriac counterparts left untouched. Similar care was taken to limit the amount of damage inflicted upon Edessa's fortifications, and a rebuilding programme was undertaken immediately to repair weakened sections of the walls. Realizing the strategic significance of his new acquisition, Zangi wished the city to remain habitable and defendable.

“With Edessa in his possession, the Atabeg could hope to unite a vast swathe of Syrian and Mesopotamian territory, stretching from Aleppo to Mosul. And for the Muslim world of the near and Middle East, his startling achievement seemed to promise the dawn of a new era, one in which the Franks might be driven from the Levant. There can be no doubt that 1144 marked a turning point for Islam in the war for the Holy Land. Equally, it is clear that Zangi made energetic efforts to publicize his success as a blow struck by a zealous mujahid in the name of all Muslims.

“Within Islamic culture, Arabic poetry had a long-established role in both influencing and reflecting public opinion. Muslim poets commonly composed works for public recitation, sometimes before massed crowds, mixing reportage and propaganda to comment upon current events. Poets who joined Zangi's court, some of them Syrian refugees from Latin rule, authored works celebrating the Atabeg's achievements, casting him as the champion of a wider jihadi movement. Ibn al-Qaysarani (from Caesarea) stressed the need for Zangi to reconquer the whole of the Syrian coastline (the Sahil), arguing that this should be the holy war's primary aim. 'Tell the infidel rulers to surrender ... all their territories', he wrote, 'for it is (Zangi's) country.' At the same time, this notion of pan-Levantine conquest was twinned with a more precise objective, one that possessed an immediate devotional focus - Jerusalem. Edessa lay hundreds of miles north of Palestine, but its capture was nonetheless presented as the first step on the path to the Holy City's recovery. 'If the conquest of Edessa is the high sea', Ibn al-Qaysarani affirmed, 'Jerusalem and the Sahil are its shore.'

“Many Muslim contemporaries appear to have accepted this projection of the Atabeg as Jihadi warrior. The Abbasid caliph in Baghdad now conferred upon him the grand titles 'Auxiliary of the Commander of the Faithful, the Divinely Aided King'. Given that the Zangids were still, to an extent, outsiders - upstart Turkish warlords, with no innate right to rule over the established Arab and Persian hierarchies of the East - this caliphal endorsement helped to legitimate Zangi's position. The idea that the Atabeg's career had somehow been building to this single achievement also gained currency. Even a chronicler based in rival Damascus declared that 'Zangi had always coveted Edessa and watched for a chance to achieve his ambition. Edessa was never out of his thoughts or far from his mind.' On the basis of his 1144 victory, later Islamic chroniclers labelled him a shahid, or martyr, an honour reserved for those who died 'in the path of God' engaging in the jihad.

“This is not to suggest that Zangi recognized the political value of espousing the principles of holy war only after his sudden success at Edessa. An inscription dated to 1138, from a Damascene madrasa (religious school) patronized by the Atabeg, already described him as 'the fighter of jihad, the defender of the frontier, the tamer of the polytheists and the destroyer of heretics', and the same titles were again used four years later in an Aleppan inscription. The events of 1144 allowed Zangi to emphasize and expand upon this facet of his career, but even then jihad against the Franks remained as one issue among many. Within his own lifetime, the Atabeg sought, first and foremost, to present himself as a ruler of all Islam; an aspiration highlighted by his decision to employ an array of honorific titles tailored to the differing needs (and distinct tongues) of Mesopotamia, Syria and Diyar Bakr. In Arabic he was often styled as Imad al-Din Zangi ('Zangi, the pillar of religion'), but in Persian he might present himself as 'the guardian of the world' or 'the great king of Iran', and in nomadic Turkish as 'the falcon prince'.

“There is precious little evidence to suggest that Zangi prioritized jihad above all other concerns before, or even after, 1144. He did take steps to consolidate his hold over the country of Edessa in early 1145, seizing the town of Saruj from the Franks and defeating a Latin relief force that had assembled at Antioch. But before long, he was to be found once again fighting fellow Muslims in Iraq. By early 1146 it was whispered that Zangi was preparing for a new Syrian offensive. Construction of siege weaponry began and, while officially these were for the jihad, an Aleppan chronicler admitted that 'some people thought that he was intending to attach Damascus'.

“Zangi was now sixty-two and still in remarkably rude health. But on the night of 14 September 1146, during the siege of the Muslim fortress of Qalat Ja'bar (on the banks of the Euphrates), he suffered a sudden and unexpected assault. The details of the terrible attack are murky. Zangi was said to have retained numerous watchful sentries to guard against assassination, but somehow they were bypassed, and the Atabeg was set upon in his own bed. The assailant was later cast variously as a trusted eunuch, slave or soldier and, not surprisingly, rumours also circulated that the bloody deed had been instigated by Damascus. The truth will probably never be known. An attendant who found Zangi grievously wounded recounted the scene:

“‘I went to him, while he was still alive. When he saw me, he thought that I was intending to kill him. He gestured to me with his index finger, appealing to me. I halted in awe of him and said, 'My lord, who has done this to you?' He was, however, unable to speak and died at that moment (God have mercy on him).’

“For all his feral vitality and enduring ambition, the Atabeg's tumultuous career had been cut short. Zangi, lord of Mosul and Aleppo, conqueror of Edessa, lay dead.”

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