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Lebanon
and The Crusades:
In the early 11th century the Fatimid caliph Hakim
began to persecute Christians, pilgrimages were cut off
and he despoiled the Holy Sepulcher. Persecution abated
after his death in 1021, but relations remained strained
and became more so when Jerusalem passed in 1071 from the
comparatively tolerant Egyptians to the Seljuk Turks, who
in the same year defeated the Byzantine emperor Romanus IV
at Manzikert. The Turks at once began to persecute the
Christians. Pilgrims on their way to the Holy City were
robbed and beaten. The sacred places of the Roman Catholic
church were profaned or destroyed. When European
Christians heard of the persecution, they were outraged.
Alexius Commenus, the new emperor of Byzantium, feared
that the Turks might seize Constantinople, his capital. As
the terror of the Turks spread, Alexius Commenus sent a
plea for aid to Pope Urban II at Rome late in the 11th
century. This was not the first appeal of the kind but it
may have helped to determine the time and the route of the
First Crusade, 1095–99, though its precise import is
difficult to estimate. Direct impetus was given the
crusade by the great speech of Pope Urban II at the
Council of Clermont (now Clermont-Ferrand) in 1095. Urban
exhorted Christendom to go to war for the Sepulcher,
promising that the journey would count as full penance and
that the homes of the absent ones would be protected by a
truce. The battle cry of the Christians, he urged, should
be 'Deus volt' [God wills it]. From the crosses that were
distributed at this meeting the Crusaders and the Crusades
took their name. Although they failed to establish a
permanent presence in the region, the Crusaders left their
imprint on Lebanon. Among the conspicuous results of the
Crusades are the remains of many towers along the coast,
ruins of castles on hills and mountain slopes, and
numerous churches.
In August 1096 the first real armies of knights and
princes began their march. Late in 1096, the first of the
princes, Hugh of Vermandois, a brother of Philip I of
France, reached Constantinople, the emperor persuaded him
to take an oath of fealty. Godfrey of Bouillon and his
brothers Eustace and Baldwin (later Baldwin I of
Jerusalem), Raymond IV of Saint Gilles (Count of
Toulouse), Bohemond I (Bohemond the Norman), Tancred,
Robert of Normandy, and Robert II of Flanders arrived
early in 1097. The armies crossed to Asia Minor, took
Nicaea and defeated the Turks at Dorylaeum (1097). 20
October, 1097, saw the crusaders reach the fortified city
of Antioch, which was protected by a wall flanked with 450
towers, stocked by the Ameer Jagi-Sian with immense
quantities of provisions. Thanks to the assistance of
carpenters and engineers who belonged to a Genoese fleet
that had arrived at the mouth of the Orontes, the
crusaders were enabled to construct battering machines and
to begin the siege of the city. Eventually Bohemond
negotiated with a Turkish chief who surrendered one of the
towers, and on the night of 2 June, 1098, the crusaders
took Antioch by storm. The very next day they were in turn
besieged within the city by the army of Kerbūga, Ameer of
Mosul. Plague and famine cruelly decimated their ranks,
and many of them, among others Stephen of Blois, escaped
under cover of night. The army was on the verge of giving
way to discouragement when its spirits were suddenly
revived by the discovery of the Holy Lance, resulting from
the dream of a Provenēal priest named Pierre Barthélemy.
On 28 June, 1098, Kerbūga's army was effectually repulsed,
but, instead of marching on Jerusalem without delay, the
chiefs spent several months in a quarrel due to the
rivalry of Raymond of Saint-Gilles and Bohemond, both of
whom claimed the right to Antioch finally it was Bohemond
who remained in possession of Antioch.
It was not until April, 1099, that the march towards
Jerusalem was begun and not wishing to waste more time and
not realizing its strategic importance, of the Franks
marched straight through Lebanon without significant
incident. The campaign was completed in July, 1099, by the
taking of Jerusalem, where the Crusaders massacred the
Muslims and Jews as well as local Christians. The election
of Godfrey of Bouillon as defender of the Holy Sepulchre
marked the beginning of the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem. A
Latin patriarch was elected. Godfrey was however to die in
1100 and after his death Baldwin was crowned king of
Jerusalem on 11 November 1100. Soon the importance of
Lebanon was to be realized and the country was to see more
than its fair share of war and destruction.
Over the years that followed the birth of the Latin
Kingdom of Jerusalem, other fiefs, theoretically dependent
on Jerusalem, were created as the Crusade's leaders moved
to expand their domains. These were the county of Edessa
(Baldwin), the principality of Antioch (Bohemond), and the
county of Tripoli (Raymond). The task of maintaining the
hold of such exotic states on a relatively narrow strip of
land against a black background of Islam proved to be much
more difficult than creating them. Clearly their existence
depended upon continued support from overseas, at best a
dubious procedure, and upon adequate land and sea lines of
defence. The Lebanese seaports were ringed by castles on
the land sides and provided with towers on the sea side.
The towers served as guard and observation posts. Of the
nine recognizable today that of Jubayl, south-east of the
town, is the most conspicuous. Most of the castles are
likewise replacements or renovations of older
constructions from Roman, Byzantine or even Phoenician
times. The castle of Tripoli was followed by that of Tyre.
Jubayl's castle, which displays remains of Phoenician
structure, came next followed by that of Batroun. That of
Sidon, Chateau de la Mer, was used by the sainted French
Crusader, Louis IX, between 1250 and 1254.
This coastal chain of towers and forts was seconded by
a higher chain on the western spurs or slopes of Mount
Lebanon intended to guard the strategic passes leading
from the Moslem interior to the Frankish seaboard. Most
conspicuous among these is Qalat al-Shaqif (Beaufort).
Standing like a sentinel on a precipitous rock above the
Litani River (Leontes) and overlooking the sea, this
castle commands the Sidon-Damascus road. Many of these
towers and forts were later repaired and utilized by the
Crusaders' Moslem successors, particularly the Mamluks.
Many of these castles in Lebanon are still standing, a
physical reminder of a forlorn and ill-advised venture.
Tripoli
and Byblos
In 1102 Raymond VI of Saint Gilles, Count of Toulouse,
one of the first knights who set out on the First Crusade
in 1096, turned his attention to the conquest of Tripoli,
the most important emirate on the coast. The Emirate of
Tripoli, together with other Moslem emirates, was
considered an obstacle to the Christians since it
separated the Franks (Franj) of Antioch and Edessa from
those in Jerusalem. Raymond wished to establish a
principality that would command both the coast road and
the Orontes. Despite the heavy losses he suffered in
August 1101 when his entire dehydrated and exhausted army
was massacred by Kilij Arslan near the village of Merzifun,
Raymond was victorious in April 1102 in a battle outside
Tripoli against the Banu Ammars and the Emirs of Homs and
Damascus. Ibn al-Athir, an Arab chronicler of the time,
described the extraordinary battle:
"Saint-Gilles, may God curse his name, returned to
Syria after having been crushed by Kilij Arslan. He had
only three hundred men left. Fakhr al-Mulk, the lord of
Tripoli, sent word to King Duqaq and to the governor of
Horns: 'Now is the time to finish off Saint-Gilles for
ever, for he has so few troops!' Duqaq dispatched two
thousand men, and the governor of Horns came in person.
The troops of Tripoli joined them before the gates of
the city, and together they marched into battle against
Saint-Gilles. The latter threw a hundred of his soldiers
against the Tripolitanians, a hundred against the
Damascenes, and fifty against the troops of Horns; he
kept fifty behind with him. At the mere sight of the
enemy, the troops of Horns fled, and the Damascenes soon
followed. Only the Tripolitanians held their ground, and
when he saw this, Saint-Gilles attacked them with his
two hundred other soldiers, defeating them and killing
seven thousand of them."
His forces, however, were too small to conquer Tripoli
itself. After exacting heavy tribute in money and horses
he returned to Tortosa, his headquarters north of Tripoli,
to plan his next campaign. He learned that a Genoese
squadron of forty vessels lay at anchor at Lattakieh. He
hired this squadron for an attack on Tripoli. The attack
failed and so he moved southward and captured instead the
port of Jebeil. The Genoese were rewarded with one third
of the town.
In 1103 Saint-Gilles who had camped on the outskirts of
the city, ordered the construction of a fortress which to
this day is still known by his name. The well preserved 'Qal'at
Saint-Gilles' is still visible in the twentieth century,
in the centre of the modern city of Tripoli. At the time
of the arrival of the Franks, however, the city extended
no further than the Mina' quarter, the port, which lay at
the end of a peninsula access to which was controlled by
this famous fortress. This fortress was the first ever of
its kind. No caravan could reach or leave Tripoli without
being intercepted by Saint-Gilles's men. The qadi Fakhr
al-Mulk wanted at all costs to destroy this citadel, which
threatened to strangle his capital. Night after night his
soldiers attempted daring raids, stabbing a guard or
damaging a wall under construction, but it was in
September 1104 that the most spectacular operation was
mounted. The entire garrison of Tripoli effected a sortie
en masse, led by the qadi himself. Several Frankish
warriors were massacred and a wing of the fortress was
burned. Saint-Gilles himself was caught by surprise atop
one of the flaming roofs. Suffering from severe burns, he
died five months later, in terrible agony.
On Raymond's death in 1105 the barons of Toulouse
accepted his illegitimate son, Bertrand, as a successor.
Bertrand had already governed for nearly ten years prior
to his father's death during his absence in the East.
Bertrand arranged for a Genoese squadron to accompany him
when he set out for the East in 1108 to claim his father's
inheritance and to round off his future principality by
the conquest of Tripoli. Genoa had promised to aid
Bertrand take over his father's conquests. In return they
wished to receive a favoured commercial position. Bertrand
landed with the Genoese squadron near Tripoli. The
following is an account of the capture of Jebeil:
The Genoese fleet with which he had come consisted of
seventy galleys, under the command of two noble Genoese,
Ansaldus and Hugh Embriacus. It was soon apparent that
they were wasting their efforts in the siege of Tripoli
at that time. It was therefore deemed advisable, in the
meantime, to attempt something worthy of remembrance.
Accordingly they begged Bertram in a friendly way to
accompany them to Jubail by land, and they themselves
directed the fleet thither. Jubail is a city on the
coast of Phoenicia, one of the dependent cities which
are recognized as subject to the metropolitan of Tyre,
with metropolitan right. Ezekiel the prophet mentions
it, saying "The ancients of Gebal and the wise men
thereof were in thee thy calkers." Again, in the first
book of Kings, it is written thus concerning the same
city: "So they prepared timber and stones for the
building of the house of the Lord." The ancient name of
this place was Eve, for Eveus, the sixth son of Canaan,
is believed to have been its founder. On arriving before
Jubail, the armies invested the city both by land and by
sea. The citizens were thrown into a state of panic, for
they had no confidence in the strength of their
defences. A deputation was accordingly sent to the
commanders of the fleet, Ansaldus and Hugh Embriacus, to
announce that under certain conditions the citizens were
willing to unbar the entrances and admit them as lords.
It was stipulated that those who desired to leave be
given an opportunity to do so unhindered, with their
wives and children, but that those who did not wish to
abandon their homes in the city be permitted to remain
under favourable conditions. The terms asked were
granted, and they therefore surrendered the place to the
two commanders. One of these, Hugh Embriacus, received
the city for a definite time on consideration of a fixed
annual payment to the treasury of the Genoese. The same
man was the grandfather of the Hugh who rules that city
today and bears the same name and surname.
King Baldwin I of Jerusalem and Bertrand became allies
in the attack on Tripoli. The city was taken on June 10,
1109 after a two thousand day siege. The Genoese were
rewarded by a quarter in Tripoli and by a castle known as
the Castle of the Constable ten miles north of Tripoli.
Bertrand was installed as the Count of Tripoli and
reaffirmed his vassalage to the Kingdom of Jerusalem. Thus
did Jebeil, ancient Byblos, come into the hands of the
Genoese as a hereditary fief, controlled by the
descendants of Hugh Embriacus.
On June 29, 1170 a terrible earthquake devastated the
region. Many fortresses were ruined including the Krak des
Chevaliers and the castles of Tripoli and Jebeil. It took
many months to repair the ruined fortresses. In the
meantime the great warrior Saladin succeeded in uniting
Islam and drove the Crusaders to a narrow strip on the
coast of Phoenicia. In 1187 after Palestine surrendered he
moved up the coast. Tyre was well fortified and well
garrisoned. His first attack failed and so Saladin passed
on. Sidon surrendered without a blow on July 29. Beirut
capitulated on August 6 and Jebeil surrendered a few days
later on the orders of its lord, Hugh Embrtaco, whom
Saladin released on that condition. Once again the city of
Jebeil came under Moslem control. The Crusades held on to
Tripoli. During the Third Crusade early in 1197 Jebeil was
recovered by the Crusaders.
On July 1, 1198 a peace was negotiated between al-Adil,
leader of the Ayoubites, and Almaric, king of Jerusalem.
It gave Jaffa to the Moslems and the Crusaders took
possession of Jebeil and Beirut. Sidon was divided between
them. The peace was to last for five years and eight
months.
During the thirteenth century Italian merchants
controlled important investments in the Near East. The
three great Republics of Genoa, Venice and Pisa with their
colonies in every Levantine port dominated Mediterranean
trade. Various conflicts arose. In the conflict between
the interests of the Venetians and the Genoese in Acre the
head of the Embriaco family in Jebeil, true to his Genoese
origin, defied the prohibition of his suzerain, Bohemond
VI of Antioch-Tripoli, and sent troops to help the Genoese
in Acre. This disobedience to his order and the personal
hatred of Bohemond for his vassal, Henry of Jebeil, soon
developed into war. Not only did Henry defy Bohemond's
suzerainty and maintain his independence with the help of
the Genoese, but Henry's cousin Bertrand, head of the
younger branch of the Embriaco family, attacked Bohemond
in Tripoli. At the instigation of Bohemond, Bertrand
Embriaco, who owned large estates in and around Jebeil,
was beheaded by peasants while riding through one of his
villages. This resulted in a blood feud between the Houses
of Antioch-Tripoli and the Embriaco.
In 1277 Bohemond VII of Tripoli quarrelled with the
most powerful of his vassals, Guy II Embriaco of Jebeil.
Guy allied himself with the Templars and Bohemond responded
by destroying the Templars' buildings at Tripoli and
cutting down a forest they owned nearby. The Master of the
Temple led the knights of the Order against Tripoli and
burned the castle at Batroun. When the Templars had moved
back, Bohemond set out to attack Jebeil. Guy, with a
contingent of Templars, went to meet him. A fierce battle
took place a few miles north of Batroun resulting in the
loss of many lives on both sides. After one year's truce
Guy and the Templars attacked Bohemond again. Another
truce was arranged between the Grand Master of the
Hospital and Bohemond. Guy however had ambitions to
capture Tripoli. In January 1282 with his brothers and his
friends, he smuggled himself into the Templar quarters in
Tripoli. A misunderstanding with the Templar commander
started a panic and Guy and his companions fled to a tower
in the Hospital of the Templars where they were besieged
by Bohemond's troops. After a few hours they agreed, at
the request of the Hospitallers, to surrender on condition
their lives be spared. Bohemond broke his word, all of
Guy's companions were blinded. Guy himself and his
brothers and cousin were taken to Nephin and there they
were buried up to their necks in a ditch and left to
starve to death. This deed shocked the vassals of Bohemond.
The allies of Guy in Tyre planned to move up from Tyre to
avenge the deaths, but Bohemond reached Jebeil before them
and took over the city temporarily.
On 27th April 1289 Tripoli fell to the Mameluke forces.
Among the tens of thousands of combatants of the Muslim
army was Abu'l-Fida', a young emir of sixteen. A scion of
the Ayyubid dynasty, now a vassal of the Mamluks, he would
several years later become the ruler of the small city of
Hama, where he would devote most of his time to reading
and writing. The work of this historian, who was also a
geographer and a poet, is of interest primarily for the
account it affords us of the last years of the Frankish
presence in the Middle East. Abu'l-Fida' was present,
sword in hand and with an attentive eye, on all the main
fields of battle, he writes:
"The city of Tripoli is surrounded by the sea and can
be attacked by land only along the eastern side, through
a narrow passage. After laying the siege, the sultan
lined up a great number of catapults of all sizes
opposite the city, and imposed a strict blockade. The
Muslim troops penetrated the city by force. The
population fell back to the port. There, some of them
escaped onto ships, but the majority of the men were
massacred, the women and children captured, the Muslims
amassed immense booty. A short distance from Tripoli, in
the Mediterranean Sea, there was a small island, with a
church. When the city was taken, many Franj took refuge
there with their families. But the Muslim troops took to
the sea, swam across to the island, massacred all the
men who had taken refuge there, and carried off the
women and children with the booty. I myself rode out to
the island on a boat after the carnage, but was unable
to stay, so strong was the stench of the corpses."
Qalawun, the Mameluke Sultan, had the city razed to the
ground lest the Crusaders with their command of the sea
try to recapture it. Mameluke troops went on to occupy
Batroun and Nephin. No attempt was made to defend these
cities. Peter Embriaco, lord of Jebeil, offered his
submission to the Sultan. He was allowed to keep his city
under strict surveillance for another decade.
Beirut
In the late autumn of 1102 ships transporting Holy Land
pilgrims home were driven ashore by storms, some near
Ascalon and some between Sidon and Tyre. The pilgrims were
either slain or taken to Egypt where they were sold as
slaves. Control of the coastal cities therefore was
essential for safe passage of pilgrims and for the landing
of much needed men and supplies from Europe. The chief
objective of King Baldwin was the capture of the coastal
cities, Ascalon, Tyre, Sidon and to the north Beirut. Both
Ascalon and Tyre were strong fortresses with a large
permanent garrison so the king decided to attack Sidon
instead. A powerful squadron sailed from Egypt to protect
the city and Baldwin was obliged to raise the siege.
Beirut was the next choice and it so happened that Baldwin
had a loyal ally in the area. In 1109 he assisted Bertrand
of Toulouse, one of the Crusading knights, to capture
Tripoli so in return Bertrand sent men to help Baldwin
attack Beirut. The city was taken by assault on May 13,
1110. Beirut put up a desperate defence, according to
Salih bin Yahya, and the Crusaders inflicted great
suffering upon the inhabitants. Jacques de Vitry, a
historian of the Crusades, gives this account:
"Our people lay siege to Beyrout both by sea and
land, and being joined by Bertram, the noble count of
Tripoli, after a two months' siege, having brought
wooden towers up to the walls and joined them to the
walls by ladders, forced their way into the city, and
slew many of the citizens, cast the rest into chains and
held them captive . . . Beyrout is a city on the
seashore between Sidon and Biblium in the country of
Phoenicia ... it is fertile and fair, with fruit trees,
woods and vineyards."
Another source for this period is the history of
William of Tyre. He tells of the siege of Beirut and how
Baldwin and Bertrand collected galleys from the coast
cities in their possession to cut off Beirut by sea. From
the pine trees in the neighbourhood of the city they
secured the wood necessary to construct siege towers,
ladders, bridges and catapults. The besieged were given no
rest by day or by night for two months until they were
worn out by fatigue of constantly defending the walls. At
last some soldiers leaped from one of the towers onto the
walls while the rest of the Crusaders attacked in other
quarters to keep the defenders fully occupied. Other
Crusaders brought up their ladders and scaled the walls.
From the height of the walls they leaped down and opened
one of the gates, thus letting their comrades in. When the
inhabitants of Beirut saw the Crusaders within the gates
they fled towards the port to escape on the galleys
anchored there, but the Crusaders' fleet cut off their
escape by sea. Driven back into the city they were caught
between two fires and were cut down. Few would have
escaped had not the king put an end to the slaughter. On
December 4, 1110 Sidon fell to the Crusaders. They now
controlled the whole coast with the exception of the two
fortress cities Tyre and Ascalon. Tyre was taken on June
29, 1124. Jacques de Vitry writes:
"The King kept in his hand the noblest and best part
of the land, to wit, the cities of Jerusalem, Neapolis (Sichem),
Acre and Tyre with some other towns and villages. The
liegemen of the kingdom bound by oath to serve the King
with a certain number of knights were the Count of
Tripoli, the Lord of Beyrout, the Lord of Sidon . ."
The seigneury of Beirut was assigned to the Crusader
knight Foulques de Guines. In 1130 Fetullus came here and
wrote that Beirut was a very wealthy city. He was deeply
impressed with a miraculous image of Christ. "Whoever is
anointed with a drop from the imaged he wrote "is restored
to health." John of Wurzburg in 1160 was struck with the
wealthy appearance of Beirut. He too was taken to see the
miraculous painting of Christ.
In 1167 Amalric I, king of Jerusalem, gave the
seigneury of Beirut to Andronic Comnenus, a relative of
his queen. In 1172 when Theodorich passed Beirut on his
way to the Holy Land he wrote: "Next to the southward on
the seashore comes Berytus, called by the modems Baruth, a
rich and strong city, large and populous." The miraculous
figure of Christ, he recorded, was preserved as a sacred
relic in the church and the limbs of cripples were
anointed with the "blood".
The harbour of Beirut was well fortified during this
period. In the year 1185 a pilgrim, Joannes Phocas,
travelled down the Lebanese coast to Beirut on his way to
Jerusalem:
"And then comes Berytus, a large and populous city,
set round about with spacious meadows, and adorned with
a fair harbour. The harbour is not a natural one, but
has been wrought by art, and is embosomed in the city in
the form of a half-moon, and at the two extremities of
the half-moon are placed, as horns, two great towers,
from one of which a chain is drawn across to the other,
and shuts the ships within the harbour."
The Latin kingdom of Jerusalem was slowly
disintegrating due to personal ambition and intrigues of
members of the royal family. Sibylla, eldest daughter of
Amalric I, took as a second husband a French adventurer.
Guy de Lusignan, thus passing on to him a presumptive
title to the crown. At the death in 1186 of the young king
Baldwin V, Sibyllas son by her first marriage, in spite of
the opposition of the barons and lords of the kingdom. Guy
de Lusignan acceded to the throne. In the same year Beirut
was taken over by Jocelin, count of Edessa, a supporter of
Sibylla and Guy de Lusignan.
Beirut remained in the hands of the Crusaders until
1187. When Saladin came to the throne of Egypt and Syria
he at once began preparations to drive the Crusaders out
of the coastal cities. In 1183 he attacked Beirut. He had
secured a fleet in Egypt and assembled a large force in
the Bekaa. Sentinels were stationed on the summits of the
mountains of Lebanon to notify him as soon as the ships
appeared. The Crusaders collected ships from Acre and Tyre
to ward off the attack by sea. Saladin came over the
mountain with his army and attacked Beirut on all sides.
Stones and darts rained upon the walls with no
interruption and for three days the defenders were
scarcely able to have a pause to eat. The Crusaders fought
bravely and inflicted heavy losses on Saladin's men. An
attempt was made to mine the walls but this met with no
success. When Saladin heard of the arrival of
reinforcements for the Crusaders by sea, he abandoned the
siege and withdrew his army.
Saladin was biding his time for the opportune moment to
strike. It came in 1187 when twenty thousand Crusaders
marched over a sandy plain in the heat of July to relieve
the city of Tiberias. They met the forces of Saladin at
Hattin and were utterly defeated. One military success
followed the other and on October 2, 1187 Jerusalem fell
to Saladin's army.
After Saladin's great victory at Hattin the cities of
Palestine and several on the coast were taken over by him
with the exception of Tyre, which he had attacked but
failed to take. Sidon opened the gates of the city but
Beirut refused to surrender. Saladin pitched his tents on
the heights above the town. The siege lasted eight days.
When the Crusaders asked for terms to surrender, they were
granted permission to take refuge in Tyre. Before he left
Beirut Saladin appointed a governor to take charge of the
city.
The loss of Jerusalem was a great blow to the
Christians of Europe. A call for a third Crusade was made.
This did not come from the papacy but from the dominant
power in Europe at the time, the three strong monarchies
of Germany, England and France. A number of converging
Crusader armies all sought to reach a common centre, the
coastal city of Acre.
As Saladin went to meet the armies of the Third Crusade
which by now were nearing Acre, he heard of the approach
of Frederick Barbarossa from the north with an army of
German Crusaders. Saladin was worried lest the Germans
take the coastal cities and establish bases there. Jacques
de Vitry describes Saladin's dilemma:
"Frederick, the Roman emperor, set out on his journey
by land with great power and a countless host of
warriors. Passing over the borders of Germany, he
crossed Hungary, Macedonia and Greece and marched
through the land of the Saracens with a mighty hand and
a stretched-out arm . . . reached Armenia (Cilicia)
where, during great heat, he went into the river which
the natives call the Iron River, to bathe and therein
for our sins was miserably drowned. Saladin so greatly
feared his approach that he ordered the walls of
Laodicia, Gibelet, Tortosa, Biblium and Beirut to be
pulled down, sparing only the fortresses, that is the
citadels and towers."
The host of Germans faded away before it reached Acre,
only a small remnant passed by Beirut, so few that they
were unable to make an attack on the city.
At the close of the war with Richard, Saladin came to
Beirut and held court here for a few days. He received
Bohemond III, prince of Antioch, with whom he made a
treaty. After the departure of the king of England Saladin
returned to Damascus where he died. Soon after dissension
broke out among his followers. The Crusaders were able to
recover some of the cities taken from them. Sidon was
retaken and Crusader forces marched up the coast towards
Beirut. The governor was a certain Tsama, who appears to
have been a coward for he ran away before the Crusaders
reached Beirut. Jacques de Vitry writes: "Likewise the
city of Berout with its citadel was deserted by its
Saracen garrison and was restored to Christendom."
Before abandoning Beirut the Saracens tore down
whatever buildings and fortifications they could. The city
was in a shambles. The seigneury of Beirut was given to Jean
of Ibelin. When called upon shortly afterwards to defend
his feudal rights to the city, the lord of Beirut replied:
"Ai recu la ville quant la crestiente l'ot recovree, toute
abatue et tele que le Temple et 1'Ospital et tous les
barons de Syrie la refuserent, et l'ay fermee et maintenue
des amones de la crestiente et de mon travail..." The
city which the Templars, Hospitallers and the barons of
Syria disdained due to its ruined state was taken over and
fortified once again by Jean of Ibelin. The walls and
towers of the castle were rebuilt and the moat repaired.
When Wilbrand of Oldenbourg passed here in 1212 he was
impressed by the castle and remarked that it was strongly
built.
Toward the end of the Ayyubid period. Malik al-Salih
Najm ed-Din Ayyub succeeded his brother and entered Cairo
as sultan in 1240. He made large purchases of Mameluke
slaves for his army. The dynasties which succeeded the
Ayyubids until the conquest of Egypt by the Ottomans have
been called Mameluke dynasties because their sultans were
drawn from the enfranchised slaves who constituted the
court and were officers in the army. In 1277 Kala'un, a
Mameluke who had risen high in his sovereign's service
seized power. His aim was to capture the last places that
remained in the hands of the Crusaders.
In 1291 Acre revolted. Khalil, also called Malik al-Ashraf
Salah ed-Din, the son of Kala'un, captured and destroyed
the city after a siege of forty-three days. This was
followed by the capture of Tyre, Sidon and Beirut.
With the departure of the Crusaders the port of Beirut
fell into ruin. This however did not deter pilgrims from
travelling to the Holy Land. Ludolph von Suchem arrived in
Beirut in 1350. He writes: "The city is a common
thoroughfare for pilgrims . . . From Beyrout a man can
return to any country he pleases on this side of the
Mediterranean Sea, a matter which I leave to his own
choice to settle." A church dedicated to Saint Nicolas was
held in special veneration by the Christians and it was in
Beirut it was said, that Saint George slew the dragon.
In 1365 the Crusaders of Cyprus captured Alexandria.
The sultan of Egypt ordered a large fleet to be built at
Beirut for the invasion of the island. The project was
abandoned, however, because of the superior skill of the
Crusaders at sea. In 1381 a Genoese fleet appeared off
Sidon and the city was plundered. News of the attack was
reported to Damascus and a force was despatched to Beirut
to protect the city should an attack be made upon it too.
The Genoese fleet sailed towards Beirut to plunder but
withdrew when they found the city well garrisoned. When
the troops returned to Damascus, the Genoese came back
again and made a vigorous attack on the city. There was
only a small fort to defend Beirut and the men of the
garrison holding it were plied with stones and fire darts
from the ships. They retreated behind the walls, the
Crusaders landed but the Moslems made a counterattack and
forced them back to their ships. Among the defenders of
Beirut was the father of Salih bin Yahya, the author of
the history mentioned above. News of the approach of the
Crusader fleet was "telegraphed" to Damascus at night by
bonfires and a troop of horse arrived in Beirut by the
evening of the following day, too late to take part in the
defence. It appears that a regular service of bonfires by
night and carrier pigeons by day was maintained between
Damascus and the coastal cities for use in such
emergencies.
In 1404 another Genoese fleet appeared off the coast of
Beirut. The inhabitants, unprepared to face an attack,
took their belongings and fled to the mountains. There was
no one to defend Beirut. The Genoese landed and plundered
until the middle of the afternoon. Returning to their
ships unmolested, they then set sail for Sidon. This was
the last hostile act of the Genoese.
Tyre
and Sidon
After the fall of Beirut Baldwin marched on Sidon. The
inhabitants of Sidon who had fought so bravely at the
beginning of the Crusades years earlier when they
organized raids against the Crusaders as they marched
south, no longer had the stomach to fight and feared a
similar fate to the inhabitants of Beirut. The people
Sidon sent a delegation of notables to plead with Baldwin
for their lives, he accepted and on December 4, 1110 Sidon
surrendered to the Crusaders, there was no massacre. The
Crusaders now controlled the whole coast with the
exception of the two fortress cities Tyre and Ascalon.
In November 1111 Baldwin brought up his whole army
before the walls of Tyre. He assembled all the ships he
could find and gathering all the land forces he could, he
placed his troops in a circle around the city and besieged
it. William of Tyre tells us: "Tyre lies in the bosom of
the sea like an island closed round about by waters. It is
the capital and metropolis of Phoenicia." Baldwin used all
the methods ordinarily employed in besieging a city. A
series of almost constant skirmishes and attacks exhausted
the strength of the inhabitants. The walls and towers were
shattered by blows from the siege engines. Baldwin ordered
two wooden towers to be built, far taller than the stone
towers of Tyre. From the top of these it was possible to
look down into the city and mercilessly attack all points.
The Tyrians, however, showed themselves to be shrewd and
valiant. William of Tyre relates:
"They met each scheme by a similar one and strove to
repel in kind the injuries that were being inflicted
upon them. They brought together great quantities of
stones and cement, mounted two towers which were
practically opposite our machines, and began to build
them higher. Thus within a very short time these rose
far above the wooden machines opposed to them outside
the walls. From there the defenders hurled fire upon the
engines below and were prepared to bum everything,
unopposed."
Baldwin had no fleet, only twelve Byzantine vessels
were at his command. The Byzantines were not about to take
hostile action against the Fatimids with whom their
relations were good unless adequate compensation was
forthcoming. They demanded that Baldwin help them recover
the cities which they had lost to the princes of Antioch.
When Baldwin hesitated the Byzantines did not supply the
Franks with provisions. Although the Tyrians fought well
they were constrained to seek aid from Tughtigin, the
Seljuk king of Damascus. Before taking this step, however,
a letter was sent to the Egyptian court to justify this
action. Tughtigin sent a carrier pigeon to establish his
first contact with Tyre, but it was intercepted by an Arab
in the Crusader's service. The message was taken to
Baldwin who sent men in disguise to meet the delegation
from Damascus. These were captured and put to death.
Nonetheless Tughtigin advanced on Tyre and besieged the
Franks in their camp. Baldwin, greatly discouraged by four
wasted months before the walls of Tyre, gave up the
attempt. He was obliged to lift the siege and fight his
way back to Acre.
Baldwin now turned his attention to affairs in northern
Syria. He then went to Akaba on the Red Sea and left a
garrison there. On his return he marched again against
Tyre but contented himself with setting up a strict
blockade of the city from the land.
Baldwin occupied himself with administration of his
possessions and the building of fortresses. He visited the
Red Sea to examine the region and was brought low with
illness. Tyre was the only city on the coast still in the
possession of the enemy and the king was eager to bring it
under his power, William of Tyre tells us:
"Accordingly, this same year, after he had recovered
from his illness, he built a fortress between Acre and
Tyre. This occupied the very site where once Alexander
of Macedon, in order to take Tyre, is said to have
erected a fortress and to have called it Alexandrium
from his own name. Alexandrium lies on the seashore
scarcely five miles from Tyre and is well watered by
springs. The king rebuilt it with the idea that it might
be a thorn in the side of the people of Tyre and that
from it injuries might often be inflicted upon them."
Baldwin I neglected his final duty as king, he made no
arrangement for the succession to the throne. At his death
a council of nobles decided that the crown go to Baldwin
of Le Bourg, Count of Edessa. He was a devout, God fearing
man. King Baldwin II had barely established himself on the
throne when he heard of an alliance between Egypt and
Damascus. The Fatimid vizier, Al-Afdal was anxious to
avenge the incursions of Baldwin 'I against Egypt, while
Tughtigin of Damascus was alarmed by the growing power of
the Franks. Tughtigin laid waste to the land of Tiberias
and Baldwin retorted by marching against him and
destroying the city of Gerasa. Tughtigin had built a large
fortress there well supplied with provi- sions and
weapons. Opinion in the camp of Baldwin was unanimous that
it should be completely razed.
Meanwhile Balak, a powerful Turkish prince, was making
frequent incursions into the countryside surrounding
Antioch. Count Jocelyn, ruler of Edessa, and his kinsman
Galeran were captured by him and thrown into prison.
Baldwin and his army proceeded to Antioch to protect the
city and the people. Riding with some followers while
inspecting the area, Baldwin fell into the hands of Balak
and was led away captive. The captured king was bound and
cast into the fortress of Quardapiert (Kharpart) where
Jocelyn and Galeran were also imprisoned. Certain
Armenians hearing the king was held In captivity devised a
scheme to rescue him and his companions. Disguised in the
habits of monks, but carrying daggers under their loose
robes, they declared they had suffered injury and desired
to protest to the governor. Another version is that they
gained admittance into the fortress as merchants selling
cheap wares. By whatever means they gained an entry they
took possession of the citadel, released the king and the
count and fortified the place as best they could. Baldwin
ordered Jocelyn to depart secretly and to return with
sufficient men to deliver him. The Turks in the meantime
discovered that the king and his companions had gained
control of the citadel by a clever ruse. They seized their
arms and hurried to the fortress which was built on a
hill. Balak was aware that it would be an easy task to
undermine the fortress. He therefore gave orders to dig
deep tunnels into the hill and shore them up with beams,
dry boughs and other inflammable wood. Once the workmen
finished digging, fire was set to the combustible
material. When the supports burned away, the hill caved in
and a tower which was built on it collapsed with a crash.
The Turks swarmed in and the king surrendered to Balak
without conditions. Balak granted life to the king and
Galeran, but the Armenians were delivered over to tortures
of every kind:
"Some were flayed alive, others sawn asunder; and
still others buried alive. Others Balak handed over to
his men to serve as targets in archery practice. Yet,
though they suffered torture in this world, these men
had a sure hope of immortal life; though they were tried
in a few things, yet, from another point of view, their
reward was great."
The Venetians in the meantime had enjoyed profitable
commerce with the east. They were reluctant to break these
trade relationships and therefore had not taken any great
part in the Crusades up to this time. However they saw
that the Genoese and Pisans, by their connection with the
Crusader movement, were gaining many commercial
advantages. The doge of Venice, learning of the
difficulties which faced the kingdom of the East, seized
this opportunity and ordered a fleet to be made ready.
With forty galleys, twenty-eight chatz and four larger
ships, he set sail for Syria. The doge sighted the
Egyptian fleet near Jaffa and attacked. He won the naval
battle and many Egyptian galleys remained in the hands of
the Venetians. The news that the doge had landed in the
eastern Mediterranean and had triumphed over the Egyptians
reached Jerusalem. It now remained to come to an agreement
between the doge and the barons of the kingdom to take
either Ascalon or Tyre. The representatives from
Jerusalem, Ramlah, Jaffa and Nablus wished to direct the
campaign against Ascalon, as it was nearer, and would
demand less outlay of labor and money. The people from
Acre, Nazareth, Sidon, Beirut, Tiberias, Jebeil, and other
cities on the coast urged that the expedition be led
against Tyre. Their argument was that since this was a
well fortified city, all possible efforts should be made
to take the city, otherwise the enemy by way of Tyre might
have access to Crusader territory. A compromise was
reached. To end the controversy it was decided to draw
lots. William of Tyre tells us:
"Two slips of parchment, one containing the name of
Tyre, the other that of Ascalon, were placed on the
altar. Then an innocent orphan boy was brought forward
and allowed to choose between the two, it being
understood that the army should proceed without dispute
against the city named in the lot drawn. the choice fell
upon Tyre."
Preparations were made for the expedition and on
February 16th 1124 the Frankish army moved up the coast
and the Venetian fleet sailed parallel to it. They laid seige
to Tyre both by land and by sea. The Crusaders drew up all
their ships on dry land near the harbour. One galley alone
was kept at sea ready for any emergency which might arise.
Workmen were summoned to build siege engines of various
kinds. The patriarch of Jerusalem and the Frankish nobles
assembled carpenters and builders, provided the necessary
material and directed them to build a tower of great
height. From the top of this the Crusaders could engage in
close combat with the Tyrians in the towers on the city
walls. Machines were built which could hurl huge stones to
shatter the walls. The doge and the Venetian forces built
similar machines and set them up in strategic positions.
Constant attacks and skirmishes gave the Tyrians no chance
to rest. However the Tyrians were not dismayed. They built
huge machines in the city from which rocks were hurled on
the Crusader towers. According to William of Tyre:
"The fear inspired by these flying stones enabled the
foe (the Tyrians) to become masters of that particular
section, for none of the Christians dared to remain in
the vicinity... From their stations in the high towers,
the enemy, armed with bows and ballistae, poured forth
showers of Javelins and arrows; and meanwhile a never
ceasing torrent of huge rocks hurled from within the
city pressed the Christians so hard that they scarcely
dared to thrust forth a hand."
The Crusaders pressed on. From their siege towers they
returned blow for blow. The Tyrians had difficulty in
repelling them. Huge stones were hurled into the city and
the towers and walls of Tyre were nearly demolished by the
force of the blows. Some missiles passed over the ramparts
and crashed with force in the city damaging buildings and
injuring the inhabitants. In the countryside cavalry and
infantry forces fought daily skirmishes with the Tyrians.
Many a time the Tyrians took the initiative to attack the
Crusaders. Day by day Crusaders and Tyrians continued
their attacks, be it by machines or by fighting around the
gates. At this time, Pons, the count of Tripoli summoned
by the nobles, arrived with his forces.
His arrival strengthened the position of the Crusaders.
To the Tyrians it brought fear and a sense of futility of
resisting. Wearied by the continuous fighting and constant
skirmishes, they began to despair. Their food supply was
giving out and no one could enter or leave the city
unmolested. Scarcely any provisions now remained. They
wrote to the caliph of Egypt and the king of Damascus to
inform them of their desperate condition. Word was
presently received that Tughtigin, king of Damascus, moved
by the messages had left Damascus with a large number of
Turks. He set up his camp in the vicinity of Tyre on the
banks of a river four miles from the city. It was further
rumoured that an Egyptian fleet would arrive within three
days with reinforcements and the necessary food supplies.
The king of Damascus was expecting more soldiers to join
him. For this reason he prudently postponed crossing the
river and attacking the Crusaders until the Egyptian fleet
arrived. He reasoned that while he was fighting the
Crusaders, the naval force might have unhindered access to
the city.
The Crusaders decided to counter all these moves. The
cavalry and infantry were to march out with the count of
Tripoli and William de Bury, the king's constable, leading
them. They were to engage the forces of the king of
Damascus. The doge of Venice and his men were to set out
in galleys to engage the Egyptian fleet. The third
division consisted of the people from neighbouring cities
who had come to take part in the siege and a large number
of Venetians. To this contingent was given the duty of
guarding the siege engines and movable towers. They were
to ensure that the hurling machines continued to assault
the city and that the fighting before the gate was not
interrupted.
The count of Tripoli, the king's constable and their
forces rode out to meet the enemy. They advanced two
miles, but the army of Tughtigin did not ride out to meet
them. It was obvious that the king of Damascus had
originally placed his camp by the river intent on crossing
it. However, when he learned of the Crusader plans, he
decided it would be dangerous to risk an encounter with
them. Accordingly he ordered the trumpet to sound the
summons calling his men together and gave the command to
return home. The doge of Venice and his fleet in battle
formation sailed down to Alexandrium (known as Scandalium).
Here he learned that the king of Damascus had returned
home. There was no sight of the Egyptian fleet, so he
sailed back. The siege of Tyre was pressed forward more
vigorously.
As the situation became hopeless some young men of Tyre
took a solemn oath and planned to steal into the Crusader
camp to set fire to the machines and movable towers. They
stealthily left the city and succeeded in setting fire to
an engine which was of great use to the Crusaders. The
Crusaders tried to quench the flames by pouring on
quantities of water. The fire was put out, the young
Tyrians were captured and killed as their friends looked
helplessly on. The Tyrians had set up a machine within the
city which was aiming huge stones so accurately against
the Crusader's siege towers as to cause serious damage.
William of Tyre writes:
"Since there was no one in camp who possessed the
expert skill necessary for aiming and hurling the mighty
missiles, they sent to Antioch for a certain Armenian
named Havedic, who was said to be very proficient in
that art. He came immediately and displayed so much
skill in directing the machines and hurling the great
stone missiles that whatever was assigned to him as a
target was at once destroyed without difficulty. As soon
as he reached the army, he was granted an honourable
salary from the public treasury, so that he might
maintain himself in his customary magnificence. He
applied himself earnestly to the work for which he had
been summoned and showed so much skill that the war
seemed to be carried on with renewed strength. In fact
it assumed the aspect of a new war in the eyes of the
Tyrians, whose woes were greatly increased by his
coming."
As the siege of Tyre progressed, Balak, the Turkish
prince who held Baldwin II prisoner, was killed while
besieging the city of Hierapolis. This news was received
with great joy by the armies before Tyre. The Tyrians on
the other hand were suffering desperately from hunger.
They had no hope of receiving provisions or aid. William
of Tyre tells us of a desperate act which gained the
admiration of the Crusaders. Several young Tyrians, expert
swimmers all, ventured out from the inner harbour and
succeeded in reaching the Crusader galley, which was
moored at sea. They had brought with them a rope which
they fastened to the vessel. They then cut the moorings
and began to tow the ship after them to the city. The
Crusaders gave the alarm. Men hurried to the shore but
before they could decide what to do, the youths had towed
the vessel inside the city harbour. Of the five men
assigned to guard the vessel, one was killed but the other
four leaped into the sea and swam safely to shore.
The Tyrians meanwhile were driven beyond endurance by
hunger. They gathered together in groups to discuss how to
put an end to their misery. Surrender was preferable to
seeing their wives and children die from starvation. By
unanimous consent the matter was brought before the elders
and governors of the city. The entire city gathered in a
public meeting where it was decided that peace must be
obtained no matter at what risk or on what terms.
Aware of the city's untenable situation the king of
Damascus summoned his allies and returned to his position
near Tyre where he encamped by the river. He sent envoys
to the patriarch Gormond, the doge of Venice, Dominicus
Michaelis, the count of Tripoli and the other nobles on
the Crusader side. After much discussion an agreement was
reached between the two parties. The city was to be
surrendered to the Crusaders on condition that those who
wished be allowed to leave freely with their wives,
children and possessions. Those who preferred to remain at
Tyre could do so and their homes and possessions would be
guaranteed from harm. The king of Jerusalem's standard was
raised on the tower over the city gate; likewise the
banner of the doge of Venice was placed on one tower; from
another tower the colours of the count of Tripoli were
flown. Thus Tyre was taken on June 29, 1124, in sixth year
of the reign of Baldwin, king of Jerusalem.
The townspeople, worn out by the long siege, came out
of the city and hurried to the Crusader camp. They were
curious to examine the great siege machines and movable
towers. When the Crusader forces entered Tyre, they too,
in turn, marvelled. William of Tyre writes:
"They admired the fortifications of the city, the
strength of the buildings, the massive walls and lofty
towers, the noble harbour so difficult of access. They
had only praise for the resolute perseverance of the
citizens who, despite the pressure of terrible hunger
and the scarcity of supplies, had been able to ward off
surrender for so long. For when our forces took
possession of the place they found only five measures of
wheat in the city."
In 1187 Saladin, founder of the Ayyubid dynasty,
succeeded in uniting Islam and invaded Syria and
Palestine. Advancing along the Phoenician coast he arrived
with
his army before Tyre. It was well garrisoned and the great
walls that protected it from the land were formidable.
When his first attack failed he passed on to conquer Sidon,
Beirut and Jebeil. By the end of August 1187 the cities
which remained in the hands of the Crusaders to the south
of Tripoli were Tyre, Ascalon, Gaza, a few isolated
castles and the holy city of Jerusalem. On October 2, 1187
Saladin at the head of his armed forces entered Jerusalem.
However Saladin had not taken Tyre, the strongest
fortified city on the coast. The refugee barons of
Palestine were now crowded in the city. Joined to the
mainland by a sandy isthmus, with a great wall built
across it, Tyre appeared impregnable. Had Saladin pressed
his attack on Tyre as soon as Acre fell, this wall could
not have stopped him. He delayed too long, and the vigour
of the Tyrian defence was too much for him. He raised the
siege and marched against Ascalon. When in November 1187
he again appeared before Tyre, its fortifications had been
strengthened further. Frankish military and naval
reinforcements had arrived. At a council of war Saladin
disbanded half of his army and lifted the siege of Tyre.
It was New Year's day 1188.
At Saladin's death, his dominions were divided between
his sons, of whom Othman succeeded as sultan of Egypt. War
broke out between Saladin's sons and heirs and the throne
came to Malik al- 'Adil, the uncle of Othman. On July 1,
1198 a peace was negotiated between al-'Adil and Almaric,
king of Jerusalem. It gave Jaffa to the Moslems; the
Crusaders took possession of Jebeil and Beirut. Sidon was
divided between them. The peace was to last for five years
and eight months.
Tyre is a celebrated city, and a frontier fortress of
the Moslems. The city is surrounded on three sides by the
sea, and there is land only on the fourth side where the
roadway is defended by a fortified gate. It stands out in
the sea, as the palm of the hand does from the wrist. The
Moslems first took the city in the days of Omar, and it
remained in their hands in perfect prosperity till the
year 518 (1124), when the Franks came against the city and
beleaguered and blockaded it, till it surrendered. The
ruler of Egypt had tried to raise the siege, but the winds
were contrary, and perforce he had to sail back to Egypt.
Then they capitulated, and the Moslems all left the city,
and none remained, except beggars, who could not move. The
Franks have fortified Tyre and garrisoned it and rebuilt
the town, and it remains in their hands even to the
present day. Tyre is counted as of the Jordan province.
Toward the end of the Ayyubid period, Malik al-Salih
Najm ed-Din Ayyub succeeded his brother and entered Cairo
as sultan in June 1240. He made large purchases of slaves
(Mamelukes) for his army. Most of his time was spent in
campaigns in Syria. The dynasties which succeeded the
Ayyubids until the conquest of Egypt by the Ottomans are
often called Mameluke dynasties because their sultans were
drawn from the enfranchised slaves who constituted the
court and officered the army. In 1277 Kala'un, a Mameluke
who had risen high in a former sovereign's service, seized
power. He directed his energies towards capturing the last
places that remained in the hands of the Crusaders.
Kala'un was followed by his son, Khalil (Malik al-Ashraf
Salah ed-Din) who carried out his father's policy to drive
the Franks out of Syria. On 17th June 1291 he captured and
destroyed Acre after a siege of forty-three days. This was
followed by the capture of Tyre, Sidon and Beirut.
Dimashki, born in 1256 in Damascus, wrote a description of
his native land. He gives us many details of the state of
the country after the departure of the Crusaders. He
writes:
"Saladin did not gain possession of Tyre, for in his
days it remained in the hands of the Christians, and was
only retaken by Salah ed-Din Khalil, and it was he who
laid it in ruins. In the space of forty seven days
retook from the Christians the fortresses of Athlith,
Haifa, Iskandarunah, Tyre, Sidon, Beirut, Jubail, Anafah,
Al- Batrun and Sarfand."
The arab historian and future ruler of Hama,
Abu'l-Fida', states:
"After the conquest of Acre, God struck fear into the
hearts of those Franj still remaining on the coast. Thus
did they precipitately evacuate Saida, Beirut, Tyre, and
all the other towns. The sultan therefore had the good
fortune, shared by none other, of easily conquering all
those strongholds, which he immediately had dismantled.
With these conquests all the lands of the coast were
fully returned to the Muslims, a result undreamed of.
Thus were the Franj, who had once nearly conquered
Damascus, Egypt, and many other lands, expelled from all
of Syria and the coastal zones. God grant that they
never set foot there again."
The Holy Land was thus cleared of the Crusaders.
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