Muslim Fortresses in the Levant: Between Crusaders and Mongols (64 page)

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Authors: Kate Raphael

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BOOK: Muslim Fortresses in the Levant: Between Crusaders and Mongols
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The timing of this conquest is not difficult to explain. The sultan was exploiting the military momentum gained after the victory over the Franks in Acre and the new political situation created with the final destruction of the Crusader kingdom.

A letter addressed to the High Council (
al-majlis al-sāmi
), and to the honorable
gives an account of the siege and describes
as the gate to the lands east of the Euphrates.
133
The letter was distributed throughout the Sultanate, announcing the sultan’s victory and future plans. It ends with a statement that indicates al-Ashraf Khalīl’s ambitions.

134

And this is what will be after this conquest, if God wills, I shall conquer the East, Rūm and Iraq, and rule the lands from the east where the sun rises to the west where it sets.

The location of
made it an important acquisition. Above all, this Euphrates crossing was a link between east and west. A network of roads along and across the river had existed for centuries and had served empires and kingdoms from the earliest times.
135
The decision indicates a shift in Mamluk policy; until then the Sultanate had seldom sent its armies across the Euphrates, except for a number of raids.
was apparently to be the key to future conquests in the east. Al-Ashraf Khalīl was threatening the lands in the heart of the Īlkhānid state, hoping to reclaim Baghdad, and bring it back under Muslim rule.
136

 

Table 3.2
Fortresses conquered by the Mamluks (see
Map 3.4
)

Fortresses conquered by the Mamluks

Owners prior to the Mamluk conquest

The fate of the fortress under Mamluk rule

Remarks

1260

Ayyubids

Rebuilt

 

al-Bira 1262

Ayyubids

Rebuilt

 

1263 (?)

Ayyubids

Rebuilt

The sources do not mentioned exact year of conquest or restoration.

Karak 1263

Ayyubids

Rebuilt

 

Shawbak 1263

Ayyubids

Rebuilt

Destroyed by al-Ashraf in 1294

1264

Ayyubids

Rebuilt

 

Baalbek 1271

Ayyubids

Rebuilt

 

1263 (?)

Ayyubids

Rebuilt

 

(1270–1)
1

Ayyubids

Rebuilt

 

Shayzar (1260)
2

Ayyubids

Rebuilt

 

Ayyubids

Rebuilt

Restored in 1333–4

?

Unknown

 

Ayyubids

Rebuilt

 

Mt. Tabor 1263

Franks

Destroyed

 

Belvoir (1263)

Franks

 

Kawkab

Shaqif Tirun 1264

Franks

Rebuilt

 

Caesarea 1265

Franks

Destroyed

 

Haifa 1265

Franks

Destroyed

 

Arsuf 1265

Franks

Destroyed

 

Qaqun 1265

Franks

Rebuilt

 

Hunin 1265

Franks

Rebuilt

 

Safad 1266

Franks

Rebuilt

 

Beaufort 1268

Franks

Rebuilt

Q. Shaqif

Jaffa 1268

Franks

Destroyed

 

Antioch 1268

Franks

Destroyed

 

Baghras 1268

Franks

Rebuilt

 

Dayr Kush 1268

Franks

Rebuilt

 

Dubbin 1268

Franks

Rebuilt

 

Talmis 1268

Franks

Rebuilt

 

1271

Franks

Unknown

 

1271

Franks

Destroyed

Chastel Blanc

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