Read Muslim Fortresses in the Levant: Between Crusaders and Mongols Online

Authors: Kate Raphael

Tags: #Arts & Photography, #Architecture, #Buildings, #History, #Middle East, #Egypt, #Politics & Social Sciences, #Social Sciences, #Human Geography, #Building Types & Styles, #World, #Medieval, #Humanities

Muslim Fortresses in the Levant: Between Crusaders and Mongols (153 page)

BOOK: Muslim Fortresses in the Levant: Between Crusaders and Mongols
11.58Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

252 This assault is only briefly mentioned y Baybars
, 88.

253 Bar Hebraeus,
Chronography
, vol. 1, 461.

254 Ibid.

255 Ibid.

256 Maqrīzī,
Sulūk
vol. 1, pt. 3, 778; Nuwayrī,
Nihāyat
, vol. 31, 226–7.

257 Rabbat,
Citadel of Cairo
, 148.

258 Ibid.

259 Sobernheim, M., “Die arabischen Inschriften von Aleppo,”
DI
15 (1926): 176.

260 Lawrence, T. E.,
Oriental Assembly
, ed. A. W. Lawrence (London, 1939), 28–37.

261 Maqrīzī,
Sulūk,
vol. 1, pt. 3, 778.

262 Edwards,
Fortification
, see pl. 213b Sis and pl. 256b Tumlu.

263 Toy, S.,
A History of Fortifications, from 3000 B.C. to A.D. 1700
, 2nd edn (London, 1966), 100.

264 Lawrence,
Oriental Assembly
, 30.

265 Lawrence, A. W., “The Castle of Baghras,” ed. T. S. R. Boase,
The Cilician Kingdom of Armenia
(Edinburgh and London, 1978), 166.

266 Edwards,
Fortification
, 180–1.

267 Maqrīzī,
Sulūk,
vol. 1, pt. 3, 778.

268 Shaybānī,
,
Kitāb al-Siyar al-Kabīr
(Hyderabad, ah 1335), vol. 3, 212–13, cited in Khadduri, M.,
War and Peace in the Law of Islam
(Baltimore and London, 1969), 106. Shaybānī was a jurist of the Hanafi school (b. 132/750).

269 Sinclair,
Eastern Turkey,
vol. 4:170–2.

270 Sinclair,
Eastern Turkey
, vol. 4:17; Lawrence,
Oriental Assembly
, 31–2.

271 Müller-Wiener,
Castles
, 71–72; Edwards,
Fortification
, 244.

272 Maqrīzī,
Sulūk,
vol. 1, pt. 3, 839.

273 Sinclair,
Eastern Turkey
, vol. 4:326–7.

274 Ibn
, 280; Baybars
, 58; Thorau,
Baybars
, 174.

275 The raid, led y the governor of Aleppo, passed the fortress but did not attack it. Ibn
,
Tashrīf
, 31–2, 273.

276 Maqrīzī,
Sulūk,
vol. 1, pt. 3, 839.

277 Der Nersessian, “Kingdom of Cilician Armenia,” 657.

278
, 300–2.

279 Abū’l Fidā’,
Syrian Prince
(Holt), 44. According to Nuwayrī the fortress was not destroyed; Nuwayrī,
Nihāyat
, vol. 32, 76.

280 Boase, “Gazetteer,” 183; Edwards,
Fortification
, 244–5.

281 Edwards,
Fortification
, 245.

282 Ibid., 244.

283 Foss, C. and Winefield, D.,
Byzantine Fortifications: An Introduction
(Pretoria, 1986), 23, 30.

284 Edwards,
Fortification
, 14.

285 Ibn
,
Tashrīf
, 31

286 Sinclair,
Eastern Turkey
, vol. 4:328.

287 Mentioned in Crusader sources as Gaston.

288 Molin,
Unknown Castles
, 185.

289 Lawrence, “Baghras,” 43–6; Barber,
Knighthood
, 35, 79.

290 Ibn al-Athīr,
Kāmil
, 18–19; Ibn Shaddād,
, vol. 1, pt. 1, 413. Ibn Shaddād gives a detailed historical account from 31/953 to the Mamluk conquest. Maqrīzī,
Sulūk
, vol. 1, pt. 1, 100.

291 Ibn
,
Mufarrij
, vol. 2, 268–9; The ld French Continuation of William of Tyre, 1184–97, in P. W. Edbury,
The Conquest of erusalem and the Thid Crusade: Sources in Translation
(Aldershot, 1998), 87. The German emperor died on the way while crossing Anatolia.

292 Edwards, “Bagras,” 431–2.

293 Barber,
Knighthood
, 121–2; Molin,
Unknown Castles
, 184.

BOOK: Muslim Fortresses in the Levant: Between Crusaders and Mongols
11.58Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Native Son by Richard Wright
Naked Flame by Desiree Holt
Norwegian by Night by Miller, Derek B.
Falling Apart by Jane Lovering
Myth Man by Mueck, Alex
Racing Manhattan by Terence Blacker