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the Crusades
Zengi gained his legacy as the precursor to Saladin. While Zengi captured
Edessa, Saladin would capture Jerusalem, and both leaders fought to establish
their own realms. However, Zengi cannot be fully understood without an exami-
nation of his other policies and warfare and an appreciation of his Turkmen
background, all of which influenced his fight against the Crusades.
Zengi and the Muslim Response to the Crusades: The Politics of Jihad pro-
vides a full and rich picture of Zengi’s career: his personality and motives; his
power and ambition; his background and his foundation of a dynasty and its con-
tribution, along with other dynasties, to a wider, deeper Turkification of the
Middle East; his tools and methods; his vision, calamities and achievements; and
how he was perceived by his contemporaries and modern scholars. Examining
primary Muslim and non-Muslim sources, this book’s extensive translations of
original source material provide new insight into the complexities of Zengi’s
rule, and the politics of jihad that he led and orchestrated during the Crusades.
Providing deeper understanding of Islamic history through a close examina-
tion of one of its key figures, this book will be a valuable resource for students
and scholars interested in Muslim history and the Crusades in general.
This series publishes important studies dealing with the history of Iran and
Turkey in the period 1000–1700 AD. This period is significant because it heralds
the advent of large numbers of nomadic Turks from Central Asia into the Islamic
world. Their influence was felt particularly strongly in Iran and Turkey, territ-
ories which they permanently transformed.
The series presents translations of medieval Arabic and Persian texts which
chronicle the history of the medieval Turks and Persians, and also publishes
scholarly monographs which handle themes of medieval Turkish and Iranian
history such as historiography, nomadisation and folk Islam.
The Annals of the Saljuq Turks The History of the Seljuq State
Selections from al-Kamil fi’l-Ta’rikh A translation with commentary of the
of Ibn al-Athir Akhbar al-dawla al-saljuqiyya
D.S. Richards Clifford Edmund Bosworth
Early Mongol Rule in Thirteenth The Rum Seljuqs
Century Iran
Evolution of a Dynasty
A Persian Renaissance
Songül Mecit
George Lane
Taef El-Azhari
First published 2016
by Routledge
2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN
and by Routledge
711 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017
Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business
© 2016 Taef El-Azhari
The right of Taef El-Azhari to be identified as author of this work has been
asserted by him in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright,
Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or
utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now
known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in
any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing
from the publishers.
Trademark notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or
registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation
without intent to infringe.
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
A catalog record for this book has been requested
List of illustrations ix
Acknowledgements x
Series editor note xi
Introduction 1
Crusaders Byzantines
Artuqid, Saljuqs of
Turkmen Syira
Kurds Arabs
Figures
0.1 Zengi: an anatomy of power relations viii
1.1 Aleppo Citadel: headquarters of Zengi’s rule in Syria 19
3.1 The walls of Diyar Bakr and its countryside 41
5.1 Edessa Citadel 99
5.2 General view of the city of Edessa and the citadel 100
6.1 Obverse of Zengid dirham, minted in 1160 under his son
Mawdud 132
6.2 Reverse of Zengid dirham 132
6.3 Minaret of the Umayyad Mosque in Aleppo 139
6.4 Minaret of Nur al-Din b. Zengi inside Aleppo Citadel 140
Maps
1 Northern Iraq, Syria and the Jazira 147
2 Southern Syria, Lebanon and Jordan 148
Acknowledgements
I am very grateful to a large number of colleagues and friends for their kind
advice and discussions on matters of history, and publication, during the long
period of research and writing of this book, which began in 2008, but which was
interrupted on a number of occasions, mainly due to political events in the
Middle East, including in my own country, Egypt, since 2011. I am particularly
indebted to Professor Alan Murray, and also to Professor Mazhar al-Zoby, with
whom I had long, fruitful discussions while unravelling the materials for this
work. I was honoured to have my friend, Professor Jonathan Phillips, read one
chapter, giving me his illuminating opinion.
I sincerely thank Professor Tom Asbridge, Professor Abd al-Rahman Azzam,
Professor Paul Cobb, Professor Iman Mostafawi and Dr Amira Fahmy.
I thank my Qatar University research assistants, Hind Alshlash, Buthaina and
Shiakha Rajih, for helping me with some of the typing and preparation of maps
and photos for the book.
I am sincerely honoured that Professor Carole Hillenbrand had good faith in
me and welcomed this project. As for my mentor, Professor C. E. Bosworth, a
world authority on medieval Islamic and Middle Eastern history who passed
away in February 2015, I will always be deeply grateful for his kindness to me,
and for the unparalleled works that teach and inspire many of us.
Finally, my thanks go to my family, who were always very supportive while I
was working on this book, and who sacrificed family time and holidays in order
to allow me to focus on this work.
Series editor note
These lines were written by the poet Ibn Munir al-Tarabulsi (d. 1153), who was
living in Zengid Aleppo when Crusader Edessa was invaded by the Seljuq
Turkmen lord ‘Imad al-Din Zengi I in 1144. It clearly reflects how pleased he
was about the Muslim victory and wished that Crusader Jerusalem would be
invaded afterwards. As a historian, one is astonished that in the twenty-first
century the legacy and popularity of the history, heritage and culture of the Cru-
sades continues to gain momentum, not only in academia, but also in the media
and arts. This has been greatly influenced by the political–military developments
in North Africa and the Middle East since 2011.
A large number of ordinary Muslims and intellectuals aspire to emulate the
Muslim victories during the age of the Crusades, and some see Western inter-
vention in Middle Eastern countries as a new Crusade.
When I submitted my entries for The Crusades, An Encyclopedia in 2005 to
my colleague Professor Alan Murray, the editor of this significant work, he
kindly suggested to me that I should write a book on Zengi I. I thought there was
not much to add, as most of what we knew as researchers about him had already
been written. I was mistaken. It is true that Zengi is a very prominent figure in
medieval Islamic history; however, the only book written about him was Coskun
Alptekin’s The Reign of Zangi 1127–46, published in Erzurum in 1978. It is
based on his Ph.D. from the University of London in 1972. It is a very good
work, but it does not cover the age of Zengi in depth. There are also unexplored
materials in the sources to be unravelled and examined in order to have a better
understanding of the period. If one conducts a quick survey of studies on the
subject, one will find few in English.
The leading authority on Seljuq–Turkmen history during the period of the
Crusades, Professor Carole Hillenbrand, has written an excellent chapter entitled
‘ “Abominable Acts”: The Career of Zengi’ in The Second Crusade: Scope and
consequences, ed. J. Phillips (New York, 2001). In addition, there is the recent
2 Introduction
Master’s thesis by Nicholas Belotto, ‘The Career of ‘Imad al-Din Zengi,
1085–1146’, Florida Atlantic University, December 2014. Although a short
thesis, the researcher tries to cover some areas of Zengi’s policy but does not
understand the age, since he has failed to use al-Bahir by Ibn al-Athir, which is
dedicated to the Zengid house and a work that no researcher can afford to ignore.
Furthermore, the works of Ibn al-‘Adim and other Arabic sources are vital to
providing a better understanding of the historiography of the age. Belotto relies
only on the few sources translated from Arabic into English. The other study
which focuses only on Zengi and Edessa is the classical study used by almost all
scholars and researchers over the decades, H. A. R. Gibb’s ‘Zengi and the Fall of
Edessa’, in A History of the Crusades, vol. 1, ed. K. Setton (Pennsylvania, 1958).
There is an article in Turkish, not on Zengi, but on the coins of the Zengid
house after his death and how it was influenced by the Greek mint, by Ramazan
Uykur, ‘Musul Zengi Atabegi II. Seyfeddin Gazi’nin (565–576/1170–1180),
Athena Betimli Sikkeleri’, in International Periodical for the Languages, Liter-
ature and History of Turkish or Turkic, Vol. 9/10 (autumn 2014), Ankara.
Zengi has not enjoyed a full dedicated study covering his whole life, such as
the pioneering one written (in French) by Nikita Elisséeff in 1967 on Zengi’s
son Nur al-Din; this book attempts to rectify this.
Looking at the Arabic language, one will find a few studies on the Zengid
house, which give the impression that they cover ‘Imad al-Din Zengi I, but
unfortunately most of them cover his descendants and not the man himself; for
example, Esam al-Fiqi’s unpublished Ph.D. thesis entitled ‘al-Haya al-Siyasiyya
wa’l-tanzimat al-idariyya wa’l-maliyya fi duwal atabekiyyat al-Mosul wa’l-Jazi-
rah’ (Cairo University, 1971). It examines the administrative, political and finan-
cial system of the Zengid house up until the Mongol invasion of their dominions
in 1261 to 1262, but with very limited references to Zengi as the founder.
There is a Master’s thesis on Zengi, written by ‘Imad Khalil of Baghdad Uni-
versity in 1965, entitled ‘Imad al-Din Zengi’, which portrays Zengi as a mujahid,
and interprets and describes almost all of Zengi’s deeds as the acts of a just dic-
tator. Hamid Zayyan wrote a Master’s thesis entitled ‘Halab fi ‘asr al-Zanki,
1095–1183’ on Aleppo under Zengid rule, which focuses more on Nur al-Din
than on his father, and does not question the sources. In 1968 Rashid al-Jumaily
of Alexandria University wrote a Master’s thesis on the Atabegate of Mosul after
Zengi.
Moving to non-thesis research, one will find few studies. M. al-Naqib pub-
lished an article on Zengi and his jihad against the Crusaders in Arabic, in al-
Mawrid, Vol. 4 (1987), Baghdad. A. al-Ghamidi wrote a similar article in 1993
in Silsilat al-buhuth al-Dirasat al-Islamiyya, Mecca. Both studies add very little
to pro-Zengi medieval Muslim sources which view Zengi as the champion of
Islam in his fight with the Crusaders, and who dare not criticise his pragmatic
policies against other Muslim powers and his bloody civil wars against them,
both before and after the capture of Edessa. Finally, I. al-Muzaini wrote a book
entitled al-Hayat al-Ilmiyya fi’l-‘ahd al-Zanki in 2003, based on his 1990 Ph.D.
from Riyadh University. He examines the education system under the Zengids.
Introduction 3
He really starts his research after Zengi himself and covers the Zengid dynasty,
but one cannot fail to see how he tries to attribute everything to the teaching of
Islam and Islamic civilisation, listing madrasa and other religious buildings as
they are mentioned in the original sources. It is useful as a database more than
anything else.
Other than these works, Zengi is studied in general within the framework of
the history of the Crusades and Muslim history in studies produced during the
twentieth and twenty-first centuries. He is Arabised in some studies, or counted
as a Muslim lord, without an examination of his Turkmen background.
I aspire in this book to provide a full and rich picture of Zengi’s career: his
personality and motives; his power and ambition; his background and his
foundation of a dynasty and its contribution, along with other dynasties, to a
wider, deeper Turkification of the Middle East; his tools and methods; his vision,
calamities and achievements; and how he was perceived by his contemporaries
and modern scholars.
Zengi gained his legacy as the precursor to Saladin. He captured Edessa, and
Saladin captured Jerusalem. Both leaders fought and rebelled against their lords
in a very pragmatic fashion to establish their own realms: Zengi against the
Seljuq sultan, and Saladin against Zengi’s son and grandson in Syria. However,
Zengi cannot be fully understood and evaluated without examining his other pol-
icies and warfare, which influenced his policy against the Crusaders.
Zengi confronted seven other powers during his twenty years of rule. He waged
wars against different Seljuq sultans in Iraq and Iran, Turkmen Artuqid lords in the
Jazira, various Kurdish lords in Iraq and the Jazira, a number of Arab lords in Syria
and Iraq, the Seljuq Kingdom of Damascus, the Byzantine Empire, the leader of
the Sunni Muslims, and the ‘Abbasid caliphate. Due to that, he had very compli-
cated relationships with many of these fronts at the same time. In order to under-
stand his ambitious coordination of, and his interaction with, all these fronts, one
has to look deeper and examine the uninterrupted Turkmen upbringing of Zengi in
Mosul by a chain of governors who made a military genius out of him between
1095 and 1122, when he was allocated his first iqta‘, or fief, in Iraq at the age of
thirty-eight. As early as 1110 he campaigned with the forces of Mosul against Cru-
sader Edessa, and then against Crusader Jerusalem in 1113.
One also has to look at the manipulative political marriages in his career; he
married five women at various points, which helped finance some of his military
activity or gain political legitimacy. Even Zengi’s name and its meaning, which
has received no attention from historians, was passed on to two others in his
dynasty and was used by the Salghurid Turkmen atabegate in Iran.
The book examines the politics of jihad that Zengi led and orchestrated. For
example, as soon as he took Aleppo in 1128, he called for jihad against the Cru-
saders and urged Buri, King of Damascus, to join him. When Buri sent one of
his sons with a large force to join Zengi, we see Zengi arrest the Seljuq prince
and besiege and capture his city, Hama, in 1129.
In 1138, when the Byzantine emperor invaded Syria and the Crusaders in the
Levant allied with him, we see Zengi send an urgent request to the Seljuq sultan
4 Introduction
for military help. When Zengi knew that the sultan had swiftly and unexpectedly
provided 20,000 knights to march to Syria, he asked the sultan to withdraw them
before they had left Iraq and could form an imminent threat to Zengid
dominions.
Why did Edessa come so late in Zengi’s career, and why did he never attempt
to unite forces, even with other Turkmen Sunni Muslims like himself? He was
attacking Damascus for a decade instead of coordinating with the Seljuqs there.
In 1138, when the Artuqids of Hisn Kayfa sent Zengi 50,000 horse-mounted
warriors led by Qara Arslan to perform jihad against the Crusaders, we see Zengi
reject them, wasting an opportunity for Muslim solidarity. Why did he not form
a pact with the Turkmen?
After gaining an honorary title (formed of eleven lines) from the ‘Abbasid
caliph as a result of capturing Edessa in 1144, again we see him wasting an
opportunity to become the hero of Islam. Instead of capturing Crusader Tell
Bashir, Saruj, Daluk and Sumaysat during the following season, he attacked the
Kurdish dominions of the Bashnawiyya tribe in northern Iraq, then moved to
besiege Arab Qal‘at Ja‘bar, which cost him six precious months in 1146, for no
clear reason or strategic importance.
Zengi had several opportunities to fight the Crusaders early in his career, but
declined to do so, despite his strength and ability. By 1130 he had taken Mosul,
Aleppo, Hama and many of the dominions in the Jazira, yet he did not seize the
opportunity to confront Bohemond II, Prince of Antioch, and take advantage of
the political vacuum that followed his death. In 1134 he sent a message to Cru-
sader Edessa assuring them that he would not attack any of their dominions as he
came close to them while fighting local Artuqids and Arab lords in the vicinities.
This was because Zengi was over-ambitious and expanded on many fronts at the
same time. As a result, his warfare and political engagement in Iraq and the East
was always at the top of his agenda, surpassing any other activities in Syria or
the Jazira. For example, in 1133 Zengi was fighting the ‘Abbasid caliph, while
the Seljuqs of Damascus were attacking his central Syrian dominions and King
Fulk of Jerusalem was attacking his Aleppan dominions. Due to these multiple
activities, confusion has occurred in the sources, both past and present, and one
has to carefully distinguish between Zengi’s presence during his campaigns, and
Zengid campaigns dispatched by him, or started by his presence and completed
by one of his commanders.
Zengi played an important role in the Turkification of the Middle East by
greatly militarising the administration, as the Seljuqs had done, and it continued
in this way to the end of the Mamluks. Although it is widely believed that his
atabegate was the first to be established with the Seljuqs in 1127, this is not
correct – Turkmen Tughtegin of Damascus in 1115 was the first. Yet Zengi
paved the way for many atabegate to gain de facto independence until the fif-
teenth century. Although the Seljuqs had introduced the madrasa and other reli-
gious educational institutions to Iraq and Syria from Khurasan in Iran, one sees
Zengi paying attention solely to the military buildings and fortifications. He did
not attempt to renovate one single window in a mosque or commission a hospital
Introduction 5
in his dominions. Having said that, he created a realm that was stable enough to
produce its own after him and to influence other dynasties on a large scale.
The twelfth-century poetry at the start of this Introduction surprisingly still
forms part of the mentality and captures the attention of a large population in the
Middle East and other parts of the Muslim world. This was boosted with the rise
of Islamists to power in Tunisia and Egypt in 2012/13, as well as the invasion of
the enigmatic ‘Islamic State of Iraq and Syria’ (ISIS) of Mosul in June 2014, and
the declaration of the caliphate there. The first military brigade formed in Syria
against the Assad rule, in 2011, was called Nur al-Din Zengi. Later, in February
2015, a local television station in Aleppo was named Zengi.
Those Islamists, with their different levels of radicalism, agree on two clear
issues, the first being that the caliphate has to be revived again, like the golden,
early Muslim period, and the second being that they will fight the Crusaders in
the West and will perform the duty of jihad – ignoring the fact that there are two
kinds of jihad: the ‘greater jihad’ (the personal struggle of every Muslim to
follow the teachings of Allah) and the ‘lesser jihad’, which is the military one.
They draw on or recall historical figures like Zengi, his son Nur al-Din, and
Saladin for that reason. Sadly enough, ISIS, which ironically controls almost the
same dominions that Zengi governed, with Mosul as its capital (also Zengi’s
capital), has criminally and systematically destroyed nearly all of the antiquities
in Mosul and northern Iraq under its control. ISIS embarked on this destruction
as soon as it took Mosul in June 2014 by pulverising the tomb of Ibn al-Athir,
the grand Arab Sunni Muslim historian (d. 1233), who gave us not only his
meticulous encyclopedic work al-Kamil, but also his book on the Zengid
dynasty, al-Bahir.
If this crime, among others, is carried out on Sunni heritage by those who claim
to be Sunni, what does one expect from ISIS against Shi‘a Muslims, Christians
and other religious groups, which have all suffered killing, rape, ethnic cleansing
and the literal enslavement of women? At the same time, the spokesman of ISIS,
Shaykh Abu Muhammad al-Adnani, responded angrily in November 2014 to the
call of Pope Francis who asked the international community to ‘stop the killing’.
Al-Adnani said to the pontiff: ‘We promise you Crusaders that we will conquer
Rome, break your crosses and enslave your women by the permission of Allah.’
One has to say that the recall of jihad against ‘the Crusaders’ saturates the various
types of media. Yes, we have computer games for children produced by some
Western companies, called ‘Crusader Kings’, and ‘Stronghold: Crusader’, among
others, which are not totally innocent, yet they remain a game.
It never crossed my mind when I started my research on Middle Eastern
history nearly thirty years ago that the heritage and antiquities, which had sur-
vived the Mongol invasion in the thirteenth century, would be demolished or
stolen by ISIS in the twenty-first century, and that our memory and knowledge
of that age would be greatly damaged. One has to recall the words of Michel
Foucault in his book Madness and Civilization, when he says, ‘The religious
beliefs prepare a kind of landscape of images, an illusory milieu favorable to
every hallucination.’
6 Introduction
Overview of selected primary sources
Can we devise any reliable strategies through which the information in these
texts can be disengaged from its original matrix and turned to our purposes?
Bound as we are to such sources, to what extent can we achieve an inde-
pendent description of events? Can we in fact escape the role of critic, but
are ultimately confined within the boundaries which they have established?
(p. 129)
Note
1 Abu Shama, al-Rawdatayn fi akhbar al-dawlatayn, vol. 1, Cairo, 1899, p. 39.
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