Bahri Mamluks Explained

Conventional Long Name:State of the Turks
Image Flag2:Flag of the Mamluk Sultanate (Alexandria).svg
Flag Border:no
Flag2 Border:no
Flag Type:Flags according to the Catalan Atlas of c. 1375
Status:Sultanate under the Abbasid Caliphate
Capital:Cairo
Religion:Sunni Islam
Year End:1382
Year Start:1250
Year Leader1:1382-1389/1390-1399
P1:Ayyubid dynasty
S1:Burji Mamluks

The Bahri Mamluks (Arabic: المماليك البحرية|translit=al-Mamalik al-Baḥariyya), sometimes referred to as the Bahri dynasty,[1] [2] were the rulers of the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt from 1250 to 1382, following the Ayyubid dynasty. The members of the Mamluk ruling class were purchased as slaves (mamluks) and manumitted, with the most powerful among them taking the role of sultan in Cairo.[3] While several Bahri Mamluk sultans tried to establish hereditary dynasties through their sons, these attempts were ultimately unsuccessful, with the role of sultan often passing on to another powerful Mamluk.

The Bahri Mamluks were of mostly Kipchak Turkic origin.[4] Fourteen of eighteen sultans between 1279 and 1390 belonged to the Qalawunid lineage.[5] After 1382/1390, they were succeeded by a second Mamluk regime, the Burji Mamluks, who were largely of Circassian origin.[6] The name Bahri or Bahriyya means 'of the river', referring to the location of their original barracks on Roda Island in the Nile (Nahr al-Nil) in Cairo, at the citadel of Al-Rodah which was built by the Ayyubid sultan as-Salih Ayyub.

History

See also: Mamluk Sultanate. The Mamluks formed one of the most powerful and wealthiest empires of the time, lasting from 1250 to 1517 in Egypt, North Africa, and the LevantNear East.

Development

In 1250, when the Ayyubid sultan as-Salih Ayyub died, the Mamluks he had owned as slaves murdered his son and heir al-Muazzam Turanshah, and Shajar al-Durr the widow of as-Salih became the Sultana of Egypt. She married the Atabeg (commander in chief) Emir Aybak and abdicated, Aybak becoming Sultan. He ruled from 1250 to 1257.

The Mamluks consolidated their power in ten years and eventually established the Bahri dynasty. They were indirectly helped by the Mongols' sack of Baghdad in 1258, which effectively destroyed the Abbasid caliphate. Cairo became more prominent as a result and remained a Mamluk capital thereafter.

The Mamluks were powerful cavalry warriors mixing the practices of the Turkic steppe peoples from which they were drawn and the organizational and technological sophistication and horsemanship of the Arabs. In 1260 the Mamluks defeated a Mongol army at the Battle of Ain Jalut in present-day Israel and eventually forced the invaders to retreat to the area of modern-day Iraq.[7] The defeat of the Mongols at the hands of the Mamluks enhanced the position of the Mamluks in the southern Mediterranean basin.[8] Baibars, one of the leaders at the battle, became the new Sultan after the assassination of Sultan Qutuz on the way home.

In 1250 Baibars was one of the Mamluk commanders who defended Mansurah against the Crusade knights of Louis IX of France, who was later definitely defeated, captured in the Battle of Fariskur and ransomed. Baibars had also taken part in the Mamluk takeover of Egypt. In 1261, after he became a Sultan, he established a puppet Abbasid caliphate in Cairo, and the Mamluks fought the remnants of the Crusader states in Palestine until they finally captured Acre in 1291.

Tatars and Mongols

Many Tatars settled in Egypt and were employed by Baibars.[9] He defeated the Mongols at the battle of Elbistan and sent the Abbasid Caliph with only 250 men to attempt to retake Baghdad, but was unsuccessful. In 1266 he devastated Cilician Armenia and in 1268 he recaptured Antioch from the Crusaders. In addition, he fought the Seljuks, and Hashshashin; he also extended Muslim power into Nubia for the first time, before his death in 1277.

Sultan Qalawun defeated a rebellion in Syria that was led by Sunqur al-Ashqar in 1280,[10] and also defeated another Mongol invasion in 1281 that was led by Abaqa outside Homs. After the Mongol threat passed he recaptured Tripoli from the Crusaders in 1289. His son Khalil captured Acre, the last Crusader city, in 1291.[11]

The Mongols renewed their invasion in 1299,[12] but were again defeated in 1303 in the Battle of Shaqhab.[13] The Egyptian Mamluk Sultans entered into relations with the Golden Horde who converted to Islam and established a peace pact with the Mongols[14] in 1322.

Sultan Al-Nasir Muhammad married a Mongol princess in 1319. His diplomatic relations were more extensive than those of any previous Sultan, and included Bulgarian, Indian, and Abyssinian potentates, as well as the pope, the king of Aragon and the king of France.[15] Al-Nasir Muhammad organized the re-digging of a canal in 1311 which connected Alexandria with the Nile. He died in 1341.

Decline

The constant changes of sultans that followed led to great disorder in the provinces. Meanwhile, in 1349 Egypt and the Levant in general were introduced to Black Death, which is said to have killed many inhabitants.[16]

In 1382 the last Bahri Sultan Hajji II was dethroned and the Sultanate was taken over by the Circassian Emir Barquq. He was expelled in 1389 but returned to power in 1390, setting up an era where the sultanate was controlled by the Burji Mamluks.[17]

Military organization

On a general level, the military during the Bahri dynasty can be divided into several aspects:

List of Bahri Sultans

Regnal name(s)Personal nameReign
al-Malikah Ismat ad-Din Umm-Khalil
Arabic: الملکہ عصمہ الدین أم خلیل
Shajar al-Durr
Arabic: شجر الدر
1250–1250
al-Malik al-Mu'izz Izz al-Din Aybak al-Jawshangir al-Turkmani al-Salihi
Arabic: الملک المعز عز الدین أیبک الترکمانی الجاشنکیر الصالحی
Izz-ad-Din Aybak
Arabic: عز الدین أیبک
1250–1257
Sultan Al-Ashraf
Arabic: سلطان الاشرف
Muzaffar-ad-Din Musa
Arabic: مظفر الدین موسی
1250–1252
Sultan Al-Mansur
Arabic: سلطان المنصور
Nur ad-Din Ali
Arabic: نور الدین علی
1257–1259
Sultan Al-Muzaffar
Arabic: سلطان المظفر
Sayf ad-Din Qutuz
Arabic: سیف الدین قطز
1259–1260
Sultan Abul-FutuhArabic: سلطان ابو الفتوح
Al-Zahir - Arabic: الظاہر
Al-Bunduqdari - Arabic: البندقداری
Rukn-ad-Din Baibars I
Arabic: رکن الدین بیبرس
1260–1277
Sultan Al-Sa'id Nasir-ad-Din
Arabic: سلطان السعید ناصر الدین
Muhammad Barakah Khan
محمد برکہ خان
1277–1279
Sultan Al-Adil
سلطان العادل
Badr-al-Din Solamish
بدر الدین سُلامش
1279
Al-Mansurالمنصور
Al-Alfi - الالفی
As-Salehi - الصالحی
Sayf-ad-Din Qalawun
سیف الدین قلاوون
1279–1290
Sultan Al-Ashraf
سلطان الاشرف
Salah-ad-Din Khalil
صلاح الدین خلیل
1290–1293
Al-Nasir
الناصر
Nasir-ad-Din Muhammad
ناصر الدین محمد
1293–1294
(first reign)
Al-Adil Al-Turki Al-Mughli
العادل الترکی المغلی
Zayn-ad-Din Kitbugha
زین الدین کتبغا
1294–1297
Al-Mansur
المنصور
Husam-ad-Din Lachin
حسام الدین لاچین
1297–1299
Al-Nasir
الناصر
Nasir-ad-Din Muhammad
ناصر الدین محمد
1299–1309
(Second reign)
Sultan Al-Muzaffar Al-Jashankir
سلطان المظفرالجاشنکیر
Rukn-ad-Din Baibars II
رکن الدین بیبرس
1309
Al-Nasir
الناصر
Nasir-ad-Din Muhammad
ناصر الدین محمد
1309–1340
(Third reign)
Al-Mansur
المنصور
Sayf-ad-Din Abu-Bakr
سیف الدین أبو بکر
1340–1341
Al-Ashraf
الأشرف
Ala-ad-Din Kujuk
علاء الدین کجک
1341–1342
Sultan Al-Nasir
سلطان الناصر
Shihab-ad-Din Ahmad
شھاب الدین أحمد
1342
Sultan As-Saleh
سلطان الصالح
Imad-ad-Din Ismail
عماد الدین إسماعیل
1342–1345
Sultan Al-Kamil
سلطان الکامل
Sayf-ad-Din Shaban I
سیف الدین شعبان اول
1345–1346
Sultan Al-Muzaffar
سلطان المظفر
Sayf-ad-Din Hajji I
سیف الدین حاجی اول
1346–1347
Al-Nasir Abu Al-Ma'ali
الناصر أبو المعالی
Badr-ad-Din Al-Hasan
بدر الدین الحسن
1347–1351 (first reign)
Sultan As-Saleh
سلطان الصالح
Salah-ad-Din bin Muhammad
صلاح الدین بن محمد
1351–1354
Al-Nasir Abu Al-Ma'ali Nasir-ad-Din
الناصر أبو المعالی ناصر الدین
Badr-ad-Din Al-Hasan
بدر الدین الحسن
1354–1361 (second reign)
Al-Mansur
المنصور
Salah-ad-Din Muhammad
صلاح الدین محمد
1361–1363
Al-Ashraf Abu Al-Ma'ali
الأشرف أبو المعالی
Zayn-ad-Din Shaban II
زین الدین شعبان ثانی
1363–1376
Al-Mansur
المنصور
Ala-ad-Din Ali
علاء الدین علی
1376–1382
Sultan As-Saleh
سلطان الصالح
Salah-ad-Din Hajji II
صلاح الدین حاجی ثانی
1382 (first reign)
Al-Zahir
الظاہر
Sayf-ad-Din Barquq
سیف الدین برقوق
1382–1389
Sultan As-Saleh
سلطان الصالح المظفر المنصور
Salah-ad-Din Hajji II
صلاح الدین حاجی ثانی
1389 (second reign)
Following As-Saleh, the Burji dynasty took over the Mamluk Sultanate under Sayf-ad-Din Barquq in 1389–90 C.E.

See also

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Book: Shoup, John A. . The Nile: An Encyclopedia of Geography, History, and Culture . ABC-CLIO . 2017 . 978-1-4408-4041-8 . 170 . en.
  2. Book: Flood . Finbarr Barry . A Companion to Islamic Art and Architecture . Necipoğlu . Gülru . Wiley Blackwell . 2017 . 978-1-119-06857-0 . 579 . en.
  3. Book: Bosworth, C. E. . New Islamic Dynasties: A Chronological and Genealogical Manual . Edinburgh University Press . 1996 . 978-1-4744-6462-8 . 76–80 . en . The Mamluks.
  4. Book: Naylor, Phillip C. . North Africa, Revised Edition: A History from Antiquity to the Present . University of Texas Press . 2015 . 978-0-292-76190-2 . 111 . en.
  5. Jo Van Steenbergen, "The Mamluk Sultanate as a military patronage state: Household politics and the case of the Qalāwūnid Bayt (1279-1382)." Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 56.2 (2013): 189–217.
  6. Book: Bosworth, C. E. . New Islamic Dynasties: A Chronological and Genealogical Manual . Edinburgh University Press . 1996 . 978-1-4744-6462-8 . 76–80 . en . The Mamluks.
  7. Abu Al-Fida, pp.66-87/ Taking of Aleppo's Castle by the Mongols and new events in the Levant.
  8. Shayyal, p. 123/vol.2
  9. Ibn Taghri/ vol. 7
  10. Abu Al-Fida, pp. 66–87/ Year 697H.
  11. Abu Al-Fida, pp. 66-87/ Year 690H
  12. Abu Al-Fida, pp. 66–87/ Year 699H
  13. Abu Al-Fida, pp. 66-87/ Year 702H
  14. Shayyal, p. 187/vol. 2
  15. Shayyal, pp. 187–188 /vol.2
  16. Shayyal, p.194/vol.2
  17. Al-Maqrizi, pp.140-142/vol.5