this post was submitted on 02 Oct 2024
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Jerusalem, a holy city for the adherents of all three great Abrahamic religions (Judaism, Christianity, and Islam) was conquered by the armies of the First Crusade in 1099 CE. The Muslims failed to halt their advance, as they were themselves disunited and disorganized, but this was soon to change and the Holy City was to be retaken. Saladin (l. 1137-1193 CE), the Sultan of Egypt and Syria, who united the core of the Islamic Empire under his domain prepared to strike back. He utterly vanquished the Crusader field army at the Battle of Hattin, in 1187 CE, and took Jerusalem later that year. Saladin's triumph was, however, far less violent than that of the medieval knights of the First Crusade (1095-1099 CE), and for this, he has been endlessly romanticized by Muslims and Christians alike.

Prelude

The rise of the Seljuk Turks in the 11th century CE crushed the status quo established in Asia Minor. Most of Anatolia was lost to the steppe warriors who had come to settle in this pastureland from central Asia. In 1071 CE, the hope of restoring Byzantine authority over the region was shattered when a Byzantine army was crushed at the Battle of Manzikert.

Byzantine emperor Alexios I Komnenos (r. 1081-1118 CE) was determined to reverse the setbacks of his predecessors. He appealed the Papacy for assistance, probably seeking a mercenary force subject to his personal control, but the result was beyond his wildest imagination. Pope Urban II (r. 1088-1099 CE) used spiced-up and exaggerated tales (with a bit of accuracy) of the sufferings of their fellow Christians in the Holy Land, and preached a holy war against the "infidels" (Muslims), in return of which he offered complete plenary indulgence (remission of sins).

Stirred by the Pope's speech and motivated both by religious fervor and practical prospects, noblemen from all corners of Europe vowed to wrest the Holy Land from Muslim hands and embarked with armies on the First Crusade (1095-1099 CE) to the Levant. There they conquered Nicaea in 1097 CE (which was taken over by the Byzantines), Antioch, and Edessa in 1098 CE, and then proceeded to Jerusalem which fell in 1099 CE and was subjected to mass slaughter. The biggest shock to the Muslim world, however, resulted from the desecration of the Al Aqsa mosque, which was later converted to a church: the Temple Church.

Though lacking in strength to fight at that point, the Islamic front was preparing slowly and steadily to reclaim Jerusalem. The Islamic holy war or Jihad, long forgotten, was now revived for use against the Crusaders, and the standard was first raised by the Zengids (1127-1250 CE), a Turkish dynasty based in Mesopotamia and Syria. After the death of the second Zengid ruler, Nur ad-Din (l. 1118-1174 CE), the banner was taken up by his protégé: the Sultan of Egypt, Saladin (l. 1137-1193 CE). By 1187 CE, Saladin had spent over two decades of his life fighting the Crusaders, and it was this fateful year that would bring him the greatest triumph of his career.

Hostilities erupted between the two parties when a crusader knight, Reynald of Chatillon (l. c. 1125-1187 CE), attacked a Muslim trade caravan in defiance of the peace pact of 1185 CE put forward by his side. He imprisoned many, killed others, and when he was reminded of the pact, he mocked the Prophet Muhammad. In retaliation, the wrath of Saladin would engulf all that the Crusaders had achieved so far. On 4 July 1187 CE, the largest-ever Crusader army (although outnumbered by Saladin's forces) was crushed at the Battle of Hattin and the Holy Land lay undefended.

Taking the Levantine Coast

The pulverizing defeat at Hattin had left most of the Crusader strongholds without enough soldiers to defend them. And since the threat of a Crusader counterattack had vanished, Saladin scattered his forces to take the Levantine coast. The strongholds fell, mostly in an eventless manner; in many cases, local Muslim and Jewish populations rebelled and kicked the Crusader forces out, welcoming the Ayyubid armies to the undefended cities.

Tibnin fell, but it was Tyre that should have been the first target of Saladin; this tactical error returned to haunt him later on in the Third Crusade (1189-1192 CE). Crusaders, from all corners of the Latin Kingdom flocked to Tyre. After a failed attempt to negotiate a surrender of the city, Saladin moved towards Ascalon (the gateway to Egypt), taking Ramla, Ibelin, and Darum en route. Although the defenders were initially defiant, once Saladin besieged the city, they capitulated without a fight. Now, he sought to claim the most prized treasure of all, he knew it by no name other than Quds, the Holy City – Jerusalem.

At the Walls of the Holy City

Saladin wished not to delay taking the holy city lest this opportunity be lost, for he knew that the might of the whole Christendom would soon be set upon him. He met with delegates from the city outside Ascalon and offered generous terms of surrender. The delegates refused to accept this offer as well, stating that they would not surrender the city under any condition. Insulted, the Sultan decided to subject the Christians to the same fate the Muslim and Jewish residents of the city suffered in 1099 CE.

Amidst these troubled times, Balian of Ibelin (l. 1143-1193 CE), a French nobleman, who had escaped the field at Hattin, sought Saladin's favor and pleaded to be allowed to enter the city so that he could take his wife and children to Tyre. Saladin agreed to Balian's request under two conditions: first, he would stay in there for only one night, take his family and leave, and second, he would never raise his sword against the Sultan. But once inside the city, the French knight was recognized by the inhabitants and was urged to stay and defend Jerusalem. He wrote to Saladin, explaining his situation and requested safe conduct for his family. Not only did the Sultan comply with his request, but he also entertained his family members as guests and departed them with gifts and an armed escort, to Tyre.

The Ayyubid army, determined to storm and sack the city, marched confidently towards it under the leadership of the Sultan himself. Their flags were visible on the western side of Jerusalem on 20 September. Since Jerusalem was lacking severely on manpower, Balian had to knight several men (and even children), but even then, the citizens stood no chance in a direct assault, their main hope was to hold the walls.

As the siege commenced, the walls and the tower were showered with arrows and pelted with rocks hurled from catapults and mangonels; siege towers were sent forward to take the walls but were pushed back forces that sallied out of the gate. On 25 September, Saladin's siege force was positioned, ironically, at the spot from where the knights of the First Crusade had attacked the city 88 years ago. Indeed, this was an effective move, a breach was created in the wall just three days later by the Sultan's miners, and now the city could be assaulted.

The City Surrenders

Unable to defend the city any longer, Balian rode out to address the Sultan directly and offered a bloodless surrender of the city. But another problem had to be sorted; he had vowed to assault the city and could not step back from his word. He accepted surrender under one condition: Crusaders within the city were to be prisoners of war, they could ransom themselves or else be enslaved. The ransom was very generous, even for the standards of that time.

A period of 40 days was given for the residents to arrange for their ransom, but many failed to do so. Saladin's brother al-Adil, Balian of Ibelin, and many ameers (generals) of the Ayyubid army freed people on their own accord. As for Saladin himself, he announced that all elderly people, who could not afford their freedom were to be set free anyway.

The Sultan was also approached by a group of wailing women, who, upon inquiry, revealed themselves as dames and damsels of knights who had either been killed or held prisoners. They begged for the Sultan's mercy, and Saladin ordered for their husbands, if they were alive, to be released, and none of these women were enslaved. Saladin's kindness was later narrated in a praising manner by Balian's squire.

However, rich people, despite having the necessary resources, refused to pay for the poor. The patriarch, Heraclius did approach the Sultan to request the release of several hundred people but made no payment for anyone else.

Saladin himself entered the city on Friday, 2 October, which also happened to be 27th of Rejeb according to the Islamic calendar, the anniversary of the Prophet's night journey to the city. This, of course, was intentional; he wished to show the Muslim world that he was following in the footsteps of their ancestors.

The Aftermath

The Al Aqsa mosque was purified, and the Crusader cross was torn down from it. The building was washed and cleaned, adjacent buildings that had encroached over its area were taken down, so were the numerous Crusader artifacts placed within the mosque. Oriental carpets were placed inside, and perfumes were sprinkled over every corner of it. A pulpit, prepared under the orders of Saladin's patron Nur ad-Din (who had wished to reconquer the holy city himself, but did not live long enough to do so), was placed by the Sultan in the mosque, symbolizing the completion of his master's dream. After 88 years, the Friday prayer was held in the mosque in congregation.

Christian churches were converted to mosques, although native Christians such as the Eastern Orthodox and Copts were allowed to stay and worship freely within the city in return for the jiziya tax.

The fall of Jerusalem hit Europe like a shockwave. Many scholars, including William, the Archbishop of Tyre (l. 1130-1186 CE), considered Saladin as a form of divine punishment, others thought of him as a scourge. For the Muslims, however, this was the long-awaited success brought to them by their Sultan.

The Crusaders drew their field army from their strongholds, and with most of the Crusader army annihilated, nothing stood in the way of the Muslims. Tyre, the sole bastion of the Cross in the Holy Land, as noted earlier, became the center of resistance. Soon, a fraction of the remainder Crusader army, the ones who were not permitted inside Tyre, laid siege on Acre (1189-1191 CE). This was the stage for the arrival of the armies of the Third Crusade (1189-1192 CE) under Richard I of England (r. 1189-1199 CE) and Philip Augustus of France (r. 1180-1223 CE). Though parts of the Levantine coast were recovered by this expedition, Saladin's Jerusalem remained untouched.

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[–] [email protected] 11 points 2 months ago (5 children)

Whoever designed the logo for the Niners in the baseball episode of DS9 should get an award for design work. I'm guessing it was Michael Okuda since he was the art director. But like, dang, super clever idea.

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[–] [email protected] 11 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (1 children)

I took a peek at r/combatfootage, to look at some of the Iran strike videos, and Reddit is just miserable.

There were posts with more than a thousand comments, and only like one mention of Lebanon, or Tel Nof, or Nevatim. Just tons and tons of people talking about how they didn't kill any civilians (and as such, are weak).

[–] [email protected] 11 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Management booked multiple sessions with the team as like "oh your morale scores were a little lower than expected so we wanted a bit of feedback :)" not realizing we were being generous and morale is really low

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[–] [email protected] 11 points 2 months ago (1 children)
[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 months ago

Imagine trying to find your shoes after that.

[–] [email protected] 11 points 2 months ago (1 children)
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[–] [email protected] 11 points 2 months ago (4 children)
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[–] [email protected] 11 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Remembering being at a brewery and having a Barley Ale (sicko-yes) but it was brewed with tobacco leaves (sicko-no) and i told myself i liked it until the 3rd one, remembering it was made of tobacco leaves (badeline-disgust) and got a stomachache.

Honestly, who’s idea was that?

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[–] [email protected] 11 points 2 months ago (4 children)

Forgot I'm getting microchipped today and wore a long sleeve shirt agony-shivering

I can roll it up but not all the way :(

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[–] [email protected] 11 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I-695 closed for years because of that Francis Scott Key bridge collapse in March, I-40 closed for years around Asheville because of all the mudslide and flooding erosion.

America is slowly crumbling to nothing.

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[–] [email protected] 11 points 2 months ago

Let's suppose, hypothetically, we wanted to prove your ears hang low.

debate-me-debate-me

Let's say your ears wobble to and fro. We can deduce from that that you could then tie them in a knot. Following that, we could argue you could also tie them in bow. With both of these things proven by judeo-christian logic, we would now be able to conclusively prove that you could throw them over your shoulder like a continental soldier. If we can say all this, ergo ex facto, your ears do hang low.

[–] [email protected] 11 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Tim Walz is my dad. Kamala Harris is my crazy wine aunt. Donald Trump is my racist uncle. JD Vance is my creepy cousin. Joe Biden is my senile grandpa.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Jimmy Carter is my withered peanut farming great great grandpa

His peanuts went sour, he's friggin' pissed

squidward-nervous 🥜

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[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 months ago

I tried to explain duende posting to my friends before (gnomes) and they just don't understand, they are supportive tho by sending gnome music so at least I know they good friends soviet-playful if any of those goober see this know I love and appreciate your efforts to bond stalin-heart having friends that try to make an effort is great party-blob

[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 months ago

CW: parent medical problemsI guess my mom's cancer is noticeably back, which is to be expected since the kind of cancer she has can't be 100% gotten rid of. It might be an unrelated cancer though, I don't know, I was just told that I guess there's a twist in her intestine causing a blockage and they saw the new cancer.

Now she's got a tube going through her nose to deal with the blockage and it's extremely uncomfortable for her and it's extremely discomforting to think about and I keep feeling like a selfish asshole because like being told details like how uncomfortable this tube is makes me imagine and feel it in a very visceral way and I just want to not. I don't want to imagine my mom's discomfort and terror. But I know that the discomfort I feel imagining how she feels is nothing compared to her actual experience and it's shitty of me to just not want to think about it

But like I already have issues thinking about my own mortality and like i just want to scream and exit my own body

[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 months ago

down with cis comrade-raccoon

[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 months ago (7 children)

Miso paste as a sandwich spread: Not bad, would reccomend

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[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Started working on a TypeScript crash tutorial course thing to get my bearings straight on it since I've mostly been coasting by not really understanding the syntax and such. I defo understand types since I'm coming from a Java/C# background lol. Just the new stuff is a bit rough right now. I might jump back into ReactJS after since this guy does a series on React/TS together and that's a solid foundation imo.

I'm trying to accidentally get involved with this discord group that is wanting to make a "more free" TikTok replacement app. I had thought they were fully underway but got a notification ping and went and chatted. The lead person doesn't seem to know much. They made an announcement that they just moved their site to a new hosting service, so making small talk, I asked who they are hosting with now(since I have exp in that) and the person asks "for the app or the site?" LIke... you just made the announcement and you don't really host a native app? What?

[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Path of Exile players watching a level 30ish character in poe 2 being slower than their endgame builds: "POE 2 TOO SLOW ITS BAD!!!!!"

uncritical support for GGG and Tencent in oppressing gamers. Give them 100000000 billion nerfs.

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[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 months ago (3 children)

Gimp my car and it's reworking sports cars so they look and drive like shit.

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[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 months ago (2 children)
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[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 months ago
[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 months ago (1 children)

georg lukacs

samir amin

domenico losurdo

michael hudson

zhang yibing

read the ones they cite and you will be Somewhere

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[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 months ago (3 children)

I've been wanting to some relationship stuff off my chest, mostly about my crush, but also some things in general too. Yet every time I'm about to start typing something up my mind kind of just goes blankphoenix-bashful

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[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 months ago

Does hexbear have an API? I wanted to do a graph of the general news mega comment count across time

[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 months ago (7 children)

Really enjoying this not being able to sleep through the night thing I've got going on suddenly, love being exhausted every morning for the last two weeks (it sucks actually)

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[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 months ago (1 children)

people don't even know what made the hawk tuah thing funny to begin with. My chuddy coworkers were like "spit on that thing" and it's like, no, guys, it's funny because of the overly emphasized onomatopoeia followed by this southern "spit on that THANG" twang

Without that it's nothing

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[–] [email protected] 9 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (3 children)

seeing the YA slop discourse is making me negatively polarized into finally sitting down and reading the classics, mfs be illiterate and proud rn and I'm embarrassed to be in the same general set as them (shonen/LN/WN-head)

please share your recommendations below, I'm grabbing what I know but I want to broaden my horizons here. doesn't have to be the classics exactly, just, like, serious (don't know how else to describe it)

current unordered backlog thus far obtained purely through cultural osmosis, very little prior interaction

  • Pride and Prejudice – Jane Austen
  • Jane Eyre – Charlotte Brontë
  • Wuthering Heights – Emily Brontë
  • House of Leaves – Mark Z. Danielewski
  • Dune – Frank Herbert '(is this YA? unsure)'
  • Three-Body Problem – Liu Cixin
  • White Noise – Don Delillo
  • The City and The City – China Miéville
  • October – China Miéville '(nonfiction?)'
  • Ulysses – James Joyce
  • Blood Meridian – Cormac McCarthy
  • The Dispossessed – Ursula K. LeGuin
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[–] [email protected] 9 points 2 months ago

fuck landlords
fuck cars

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