Abstract

Whether overtly or covertly, the Ismailis have played an important role in the cultural history of Islam, particularly in Syria and Egypt, where they constituted the Fatimid , which was to last for around 200 years. After the fall of the in 1171 CE and during the subsequent diaspora, they became famous for their strongholds in Iran and Syria, from where they intervened in the various conflicts between Christian powers and the Muslim kingdoms in the Holy Land.

In religious terms, the Ismaili community is part of the larger diversity of the worldwide Muslim Over the passage of time, Muslims constituted a variety of groups, which exemplified diverse ways of understanding the primal message of Islam and different approaches to how that commonly held message could be reflected in the practical life and organisation of the community. The Ismailis are one such group. They are part of the branch of Islam, the Sunni being the other major branch, and have always constituted a minority, historically and in the contemporary world. At present, the Ismailis live in over twenty-five countries, in virtually every region of the world. In some of these regions, their history goes back over a thousand years. Syria is one such example where the Ismaili presence can be dated to the 9th century.

Among the Shi'a, there were those who remained faithful to the line of Imams who descended from Imam Ja'far al-Sadiq (d. 765 CE) through his son, Imam Ismail. Hence, they came to be known as Ismailis. There were other Shi'i groups who gave their allegiance to different lines of Imams. The largest group among such other Shi'is are called Ithna'ashari; they believe in a line of twelve Imams, ending in the who remains in occultation (ghayba) and would reappear to grant salvation at the end of time.

Introduction  

Whether overtly or covertly, the Ismailis have played an important role in the cultural history  of Islam, particularly in Syria and Egypt, where they constituted the Fatimid caliphate, which  was to last for around 200 years. After the fall of the Fatimids in 1171 CE and during the  subsequent diaspora, they became famous for their strongholds in Iran and Syria, from where  they intervened in the various conflicts between Christian powers and the Muslim kingdoms  in the Holy Land.  

In religious terms, the Ismaili community is part of the larger diversity of the worldwide  Muslim umma. Over the passage of time, Muslims constituted a variety of groups, which  exemplified diverse ways of understanding the primal message of Islam and different  approaches to how that commonly held message could be reflected in the practical life and  organisation of the community. The Ismailis are one such group. They are part of the Shi‘a  branch of Islam, the Sunni being the other major branch, and have always constituted a  minority, historically and in the contemporary world. At present, the Ismailis live in over  twenty-five countries, in virtually every region of the world. In some of these regions, their  history goes back over a thousand years. Syria is one such example where the Ismaili  presence can be dated to the 9th century.  

Among the Shi‘a, there were those who remained faithful to the line of Imams who  descended from Imam Ja‘far al-Sadiq (d. 765 CE) through his son, Imam Ismail. Hence, they  came to be known as Isma‘ilis. There were other Shi‘i groups who gave their allegiance to  different lines of Imams. The largest group among such other Shi‘is are called Ithna‘ashari;  they believe in a line of twelve Imams, ending in the Mahdi who remains in occultation  (ghayba) and would reappear to grant salvation at the end of time.

 

A Wide-Spread Network with Shifting Power Bases  

The difficult and divisive political climate of the time caused the early Ismaili Imams, fearing  persecution, to maintain anonymity. According to Ismaili historical sources, they lived during  this time in Salamiyya in central Syria. It was from Salamiyya that the Imams secretly guided  the activities of their followers from North Africa to Khurasan and Central Asia. During this early period, dating to the middle of the 9th century, the community came to be organised  through the institution known as the da‘wa. Although the term was not confined to the  Ismailis, their skilful organisation and effective communications gave it a very unique  character at the time. The individuals representing the da‘wa were known to lead exemplary ethical lives and possessed a keen knowledge of the highest intellectual sciences of the day.  Known as da‘is, they also combined knowledge of diplomacy and public relations. Their role  was to summon people to the cause of Islam and of the Ismaili Imams and to promote the  social, moral and spiritual welfare of the community and the regions in which they lived.  

The combined efforts of members of the da‘wa created strong support for the Imams in North  Africa, Yemen and Syria. It was however from Syria that the Imams guided the activities of  their followers in these different regions. Even after the Ismaili Imams began to rule as  Fatimid caliphs in Cairo, Syria continued to be an important region for their da‘wa activities,  also comprising one of the dominions of the Fatimid state. Syrian Ismailis have therefore  constituted an important part of the Ismaili community throughout its history.  

The history of Egypt itself, where the Fatimid rulers were in power from 969 CE to 1171 CE,  experienced a long period of prosperity, during that period. The Fatimids established strategic  control over Mediterranean and Red Sea trade routes with Cairo serving as an entrepôt. They  generated a flourishing era of commercial activity which included Syria. Under Fatimid rule,  Egypt participated vigorously in international trade with lands such as India and the Far East,  

North Africa, Nubia, Europe, Byzantium (Constantinople in particular), Sicily and other  islands of the Mediterranean. Agriculture led to self-sufficiency, and industry was promoted.  Various religious communities, Jewish, Christian and Muslim, lived together in a spirit of  mutual respect and enjoyed prosperity under the relative stability of the time.  

It was, however, in the sphere of intellectual life that Fatimid achievements seem most  brilliant and outstanding. The Fatimid rulers were lavish patrons of learning, and their  generous encouragement of scientific research and cultural activity caused Cairo, their newly  founded capital, to exert a degree of magnetic attraction, such as to draw renowned  mathematicians, physicians and astronomers to the city from all over the Muslim world.  Within the royal court, noted poets such as Ibn Hani and Tamim b. al-Mu‘izz, and historians  and geographers such as al-Musabbihi and al-Muhallabi, flourished under the patronage of  the Fatimids. The universities of al-Azhar and Dar al-‘Ilm provided a monumental and  enduring testimony to the Fatimids’ love of learning. Figures of outstanding ability, such as  Abu Ya‘qub al-Sijistani, Qadi al-Nu‘man, Hamid al-Din al-Kirmani, al-Mu‘ayyad fi’l-Din al Shirazi and Nasir-i Khusraw, made crucial contributions to the articulation of Ismaili thought  which was characterised by a remarkably complex upsurge of intellectual activity which M.  Canard in the Encyclopaedia of Islam has described as analogous to that which took place in  Europe in the 18th century. The cultural impact of the Fatimid state was not confined to the  Muslim world. At the height of its power, while the Fatimid fleet and commerce dominated  the eastern Mediterranean, the influence of the universities in Cairo spread into Europe, with  Fatimid writers contributing significantly to the development in the West of sciences such as  optics, medicine and astronomy.  

When the Persian poet and thinker Nasir-i Khusraw visited Cairo in 1047 CE, he was amazed  by the high level of prosperity and the security enjoyed by its citizens. “I saw such personal  wealth there,” he records in his Safarnama (Book of Travels),1 “that were I to describe it,  the people of Persia would never believe it.” He goes on to report that “the security and  welfare of the people have reached a point that drapers, money changers and jewellers do not  even lock their shops - they just lower a net across the front, and no one tampers with  anything.” 

The Fatimids attached great value and importance to education and learning. They  established one of the world’s earliest universities. Founded in 970 CE as the mosque of al Azhar (meaning ‘House of Illumination’), it was later transformed into a university with its  own curriculum, lecture halls and residences for teachers and students, funded generously by  the Imams. Al-Azhar became the foremost Fatimid institution of higher learning, specialising  in various religious sciences such as Qur’anic studies, theology and law.  

Another important academic institution of the Fatimids was the Dar al-‘Ilm (‘House of  Knowledge’), also known as Dar al-Hikmah (‘House of Wisdom’). Founded by the Fatimid  Caliph-Imam al-Hakim in 1005 CE, this academy was accommodated with its own library in  a section of the Fatimid palace. It is likely that Hasan-i Sabbah himself, the future founder of  the Ismaili State in Iran, received some of his advanced education at this academy when he  visited Cairo in 1078 CE.  

It was during the Alamut period in Nizari Ismaili history that Syrian Ismailis acquired major  prominence and became well-known in Europe. In the final decades of the 11th century a  group of Ismailis under the leadership of Hasan-i Sabbah (d. 1124 CE) established a state in  Iran. They had given allegiance to Imam Nizar, the eldest son and designated as Imam by the  last effective Fatimid Caliph-Imam al-Mustansir billah, who died in 1094 CE. As part of a  policy of consolidating relationships with other Ismailis, Hasan-i Sabbah sent emissaries to  Syria to assist the community in its organisation. Syria was politically fragmented. The first  Turkoman bands had entered Syria as early as 1055 CE, and the country was subsequently  invaded by the Saljuq armies. By 1078 CE, the whole of Syria, apart from a coastal strip  retained by the Fatimids, was under Saljuq rule or suzerainty; Tutush, the brother of the Great  Saljuq Sultan Malikshah, had come to be recognised as the Saljuq overlord of Syria. As in  Persia, Saljuq rule in Syria had caused many problems and was resented by the Syrians who  were divided amongst themselves and unable to expel the invaders. In time, factional fights  among the Saljuqs caused widespread disruption and Syria was broken into a number of  smaller states. It became the scene of rivalry among different Saljuq princes and amirs, each  one claiming a part of the country, while various minor local dynasties were at the same time  attempting to assert their independence.  

The political fragmentation of Syria became more pronounced by the appearance of the  Crusaders in 1097 CE. Starting from Antioch, the Crusaders advanced swiftly along the  Syrian coast and settled down in the conquered territories, establishing four Latin states based  in Edessa, Antioch, Tripoli and Jerusalem. The Frankish encroachment of Syria naturally  added to the apprehensions of the local population, complicating the Saljuq quarrels. In these  troubled times, the most important Saljuq rulers of Syria were Tutush’s sons Ridwan (1095  CE-1113 CE) and Duqaq (1095 CE-1104 CE), who ruled respectively from Aleppo and  Damascus.  

The Ismailis therefore had to develop a strategy for survival and sustainability in these  troubled regions. An evident solution to this problem was to create well-fortified centres  where the community would find protection and freedom to organise and practise their faith.  Over time, they were successful in obtaining a number of fortresses in the mountain area  known then as the Jabal Bahra, today called the Jabal Ansariyya after its Nusayri population.

 

The Ismailis in Medieval Syria 

The first Nizari leader in Syria, mentioned by the Damascene historian Ibn al-Qalanisi and  later sources, was known as al-Hakim al-Munajjim, the physician astrologer. Probably  accompanied by a number of supporters from Alamut, he appeared in Aleppo, and, by the  very beginning of the 12th century CE, managed to find a protector in the city’s Saljuq ruler,  Ridwan. Aleppo, in northern Syria, proved to be a hospitable environment. It had an  important Shi‘i population and an existing link with Ismailis. They were thus able, under the  protection of the ruler, to establish themselves in Aleppo from where they could build  linkages with other Ismaili communities.  

In due course, the Ismailis tried to extend their influence, with the support of the ruler of  Aleppo, to adjoining areas and soon came in conflict with the invading Crusaders who had  designs of their own for acquiring certain fortifications in the region. In the ensuing conflict,  several Ismaili leaders and others were killed. This was probably the first encounter between  the Nizaris and the Crusaders in Syria. In 1110 CE, the Ismailis also lost Kafarlatha to the  Crusaders, a lesser locality in the Jabal al-Summaq, which had come into their possession  sometime earlier.  

Following the death of Ridwan in 1113 CE, the Ismaili fortunes began to be reversed in  Aleppo, since Ridwan’s young son and successor Alp Arslan adopted a more hostile stance  towards them. Many Ismailis were killed in ensuing conflicts. Some two hundred Ismailis of  Aleppo were also massacred or imprisoned and their properties were confiscated. Many,  however, managed to escape to different areas, some even finding refuge in Frankish  territory. While unsuccessful in retaining a base in this region, many positive contacts had  been made with the local population who was generally supportive and sympathetic to the  Ismaili presence.  

During the second period of their initial efforts to establish themselves, the Syrian Ismailis  concentrated their activities in southern Syria. In 1124 CE the new ruler of Aleppo, arrested  the local leader of the Ismailis and ordered the expulsion of the Ismailis who sold their  properties and departed from the city. The Ismaili centre of activities now shifted to  Damascus and other localities nearby. There, the Ismailis supported the local communities  against threats from the Crusaders, joining them in defending the major centres. The Turkish  atabeg (regent) of Damascus received Bahram, the Ismaili leader, with honour and gave him  official protection, further enhancing the position of the community there. At the same time,  Bahram found an influential and reliable ally in the ruler’s vizier, Abu Ali Tahir b. Sad al Mazdaqani. Bahram requested that the community be given a fortress from which to defend  themselves, and in 1126 CE Tughtigin, the ruler, ceded the fortress of Baniyas, on the border  with the Latin kingdom of Jerusalem, which was then menaced by a Crusader army. Enjoying  the continued support of al-Mazdaqani, Bahram was also given a building in Damascus  which he used as local headquarters. Henceforth, Bahram further fortified Baniyas,  developing residential facilities for himself and other Ismailis.  

In 1129 CE, the governor of Damascus turned on the community against the Ismailis and a  massacre followed. His militia destroyed Ismaili homes and fortifications; those who  survived the onslaught were forced to flee. The fortress in Baniyas was surrendered to the  Franks, who were simultaneously advancing on Damascus. This ended a turbulent period in  the attempts of the Ismailis of Syria to find a base for themselves in a very divided region  beset by internal rivalries and external threats. 

The surviving Ismailis concentrated their efforts on acquiring a network of safe strongholds.  They directed their attention to the Jabal al-Bahra, a mountainous region between Hama and  the coastline southwest of the Jabal al-Summaq, which was inhabited by Nusayris and  possessed a number of suitable castles. Few details are known about the Syrian Nizaris and  their da‘is during this period, when they transferred their activities out of the cities, but it  seems that they were able to recover swiftly from their setback in Damascus.  

After reorganising under the leadership of Abu’l-Fath, they established themselves in the  Jabal Bahra, where the Crusaders had failed to gain permanent strongholds. In 1132-33 CE,  the Nizaris came into possession of their first fortress in the Jabal Bahra by purchasing  Qadmus from the local warlord of Kahf, Sayf al-Mulk b. ‘Amrun who, with the assistance of  the Nusayris, had recovered the place from the Franks the previous year. From Qadmus,  which became one of their major centres and often served as the residence of their leader, the  Syrian Ismailis extended their presence in the region. Shortly afterwards, they acquired Kahf  and were also able to drive out the Frankish occupants of the fortress of Khariba.  

In 1140-41 CE, the Nizaris were able to control Masyaf, their most important stronghold in  Syria. Masyaf, situated about forty kilometres to the west of Hama, subsequently served as  headquarters of the Ismaili leadership in Syria. They also captured several other fortresses in  the Jabal Bahra, including Khawabi, Rusafa, Maniqa and Qulay’a, which became collectively  designated as the qila‘ al-da‘wa or the fortresses of the da‘wa. The famous Crusader  chronicler William of Tyre, writing a few decades later, puts the number of these castles at  ten and the Ismaili population of the region at 60,000.

 

The Ismaili Strongholds in Syria and Iran  

Indeed, in less than twenty years after their misfortunes in Damascus, the Syrian Ismailis had  succeeded in establishing a network of mountain fortresses and consolidating their position  despite the hostility of the local rulers and the threats posed by the Crusaders, who were  active in the adjacent areas belonging to the Latin states of Antioch and Tripoli. As in Iran,  however, they remained a local power controlling a particular territory and enjoying for some  time an independent status.  

Life inside the castle would have been spartan and uncomfortable at the best of times. In  winter the temperatures are always icy, with freezing gales blowing down from the snowy  peaks surrounding the valley. In spite of the altitude, the summer months are hot and dusty,  requiring the greatest vigilance for attacking forces. The castle itself would have been the  centre of continuous activity in all seasons. The water channels and cisterns had to be kept  clean, the armourers were busy forging new weapons, the carpenters and masons constructing  or maintaining mangonels, or repairing and enlarging the defences. The cooks were busy in  the kitchens, replenishing the food stores and keeping them in good order. Study, learning  and discussion filled the day for many, especially for those who aspired to become da‘is.  

Our account of life in the castles of Iran and Syria is based on historical data and  archaeological evidence. The same pattern is likely to have been replicated in all the great  fortresses of the Ismailis, such as Maymundiz, Girdkuh and Qain in Iran and Masyaf and  other Syrian castles, too. Time was spent in general maintenance and defensive work. Much  of the mythology surrounding the castles and the Ismailis is based largely on the highly unreliable account of the Venetian traveller Marco Polo, which became accepted by many as  fact until disproved by modern scholarship.  

Marco Polo recounts during his journey to the court of the Mongol ruler Kublai Khan in the  years 1271-1290 CE that while passing through northeast Iran, he heard from local people  about the ‘Old Man of the Mountain’ and his fanatical band of devotees who lived in a  remote valley hidden in the mountains. The ‘Old Man’ was said to have built a garden in  which there was a palace where young men were seduced by drugs and wine into believing  that they were in Paradise as a reward for their acts of assassination.  

The fictional nature of Marco Polo’s account was long suspected by scholars, and its  absurdities have been exposed more recently by various scholarly accounts. The very name  ‘Old Man of the Mountain’ was never used in the Persian sources for Hasan-i Sabbah, but  applied in fact to Rashid al-Din Sinan of Syria. The persistent legend that the Ismaili fida’is  were drugged and received a foretaste of Paradise before being sent out on their mission is  clearly as absurd as it is fantastical. There is no contemporary Muslim evidence that this was  so.  

We know further that when the historian Juwayni inspected Alamut after its surrender to the  Mongols in 1256 CE, he was greatly impressed by its library, water-cisterns and storage  facilities, but he makes no mention of any delectable secret garden or sumptuous palace  inside or outside the castle. It is unfortunate that Juwayni himself, after having examined the  original Ismaili documents and finding them full of “heresy and error” cast them into the  flames. The distortion of Ismaili history was thus often based on sheer invention and  fabrication.  

The leadership of the Ismailis in Syria now came to be assumed by their most famous leader  Rashid al-Din Sinan. One of the prominent figures in Ismaili history, Sinan b. Salman (or  Sulayman) b. Muhammad Abu’l-Hasan al-Basri, known also as Rashid al-Din, was born into  a Shi‘i family in ‘Aqr al-Sudan, a village near Basra on the road to Wasit. Sinan was brought  up in Basra, where he became a schoolmaster and adopted Ismailism. Subsequently he went  to Alamut and studied under the future Imam, Hasan II. During his stay at Alamut, Sinan  studied philosophy and in particular the well-known works of the Fatimid and Nizari periods  as well as benefiting from the library and other intellectual resources in Alamut. Soon after  his accession to power in 1162 CE, Imam Hasan II sent Sinan to Syria. Initially, Sinan  remained at Kahf, one of the major Nizari fortresses in the Jabal Bahra, making himself  extremely popular with the local Nizaris, until Shaykh Abu Muhammad, the head of the  Syrian Nizari da‘wa died in the mountains. Soon afterwards, Sinan assumed the leadership of  the Syrian da‘wa on the instructions of the Imam.  

Once established, Sinan began to consolidate the position of his community while building  relations with neighbouring rulers as well as the Crusaders who constituted, by their  presence, a general threat to all. He rebuilt the fortresses of Rusafa and Khawabi, fortified  and constructed other strongholds, and captured the fortress of Ullayqa, near the Frankish  castle of Marqab held by the Hospitallers. At the same time, while moving among the various  Nizari castles, especially Masyaf, Kahf and Qadmus, Sinan rapidly reorganised the Nizari  community.

Externally, Sinan aimed to protect the Ismailis from various potential threats and to balance  the various interests in the region. Clearly the Ayyubids under Salah al-Din represented a  stronger threat than the Crusaders at this time. Recognising existent realities, Sinan adopted  suitable policies in his dealings with the outside world; policies which were revised when  needed to reassure the safety and independence of his community. As a result, from early on,  Sinan established peaceful relations with the Crusaders, who had been sporadically fighting  the Nizaris for several decades over the possession of various strongholds.  

Meanwhile, the Nizaris had acquired a new Frankish enemy in the Hospitallers, who in 1142  CE had received from the lord of Tripoli the celebrated fortress of Crac des Chevaliers (Hisn  al-Akrad) at the southern end of the Jabal Bahra. The Nizaris continued to have minor  entanglements with the Hospitaller and Templar military orders, which owed their allegiance  directly to the Pope and often acted independently. Subsequently, around 1173 CE, Sinan  sent an embassy to King Amalric I, seeking a formal rapprochement with the kingdom of  Jerusalem. The negotiations were evidently proceeding successfully. But the Templars  disapproved of this Nizari embassy, and on their return journey Sinan’s emissaries were  ambushed and killed by a Templar knight. Amalric took punitive measures against the  Templars, but as he himself died soon afterwards in 1174 CE, the negotiations between  Sinan, known to the Crusaders as the ‘Old Man of the Mountain’, and the Franks of  Jerusalem proved fruitless.  

When Sinan assumed power, Nur al-Din, the Zengid ruler of Syria, was preoccupied with his  policies against the Crusaders and the later Fatimid caliphs who were recognised as Imams  only by the Musta‘li Ismailis. Nevertheless, relations between Sinan and Nur al-Din remained  relatively tense, due to the activities of the Ismailis in northern Syria. But Nur al-Din, who  finally succeeded through Salah al-Din in overthrowing the Fatimids in 1171 AH, did not  attack the Ismailis, though it is reported that he was planning a major expedition against them  just before his death. The death of Nur al-Din in 1174 CE, the same year in which Amalric I  died, finally gave Salah al-Din his opportunity to act as the champion of the Muslims and the  leader of the holy war against the Crusaders. As the strongest of the Muslim rulers in the  area, Salah al-Din strove towards incorporating Egypt, Syria and Iraq into his nascent  Ayyubid empire. As a result, he targeted the Ismailis of Syria, as well as the rulers of Aleppo  and Mawasil. Salah al-Din entered Damascus in 1174 CE and in the following year invaded  the Ismaili territory besieging Masyaf. The siege was brief and following mediation by a  local governor, Salah al-Din concluded a truce with Sinan and withdrew his forces from the  area. Henceforth, hostilities ceased between the two men, who had come to an agreement on  peaceful co-existence.  

Rashid al-Din Sinan died in 1193 CE in the castle of Kahf. In the course of some thirty years,  Sinan had led the Syrian Nizaris to a position of power and influence. The ablest of their  chiefs, he gave the Syrian Nizaris an independent identity; with their own sphere of influence,  a network of strongholds and a strong organisation. His shrewd strategies and appropriate  alliances with the Zangids, the Crusaders, and Salah al-Din, served to ensure the  independence of the Ismailis of Syria in difficult times.  

The inscriptions at Masyaf, Kahf and other strongholds, and from a few Syrian literary  sources indicate continuity after Sinan’s death. The Ismailis were led by several able  individuals until 1258 CE, in consultation with the Imams in Alamut. Like the Nizari  community in Quhistan, in eastern Persia, the Syrian Nizaris continued during this period to exercise a certain degree of local initiative in dealings with their Muslim and Frankish  neighbours. The Syrian Ismailis had, on the whole, maintained peaceful relations with Salah  al-Din’s Ayyubid successors in Syria. But occasional conflict continued in their dealings with  the Franks, who still held the Syrian coast.  

There were over 60 castles and forts in the Alamut valley and in Rudbar, about 80 in  Khurasan, and some 50 in other parts of Iran. In Syria, the Ismailis held 60 castles of various  sizes in the Jabal Bahra between Aleppo and Damascus. Thus in Iran and Syria there were  some 250 fortifications, illustrating the extent and organisation of the Ismailis. All the major  fortresses were well-built and provided for, with cisterns of water fed by springs or rain water  and well-supplied with provisions, stored in huge underground chambers. Their libraries, too,  were renowned and the objects of much envy.  

“There can be no doubt”, says Peter Willey, “about the efficiency of the Ismaili  administration. This is reflected most impressively in the immense logistical tasks involved in  the construction and maintenance of more then 200 castles scattered over vast distances. The  construction of new castles required, first of all, detailed survey work and planning of a high  order. The execution of the project must have been carried out by a group of supervisors in  charge of quarrying the required stonework, and its transportation to the castle site. Under  their command would be teams of masons, builders, water engineers, plasterers and other  skilled workers. The huge amounts of stone required for keeping the castles and garrisons in  good repair for many months and even years demanded what we would call today a  quartermaster general and his staff of the highest quality. Finally, the continuous construction  and strengthening of these castles would not have been possible without a large and  permanent labour force, moving from one site to another as required. We have no information  on the composition of these workers, although a good portion of them are certain to have  been Ismailis recruited and trained locally.” 2

 

Between Crusaders and Mongol Invasions  

In the previous section, reference has already been made to the relations between Sinan and  the Crusader kingdoms in the Holy Land. Other historic contacts need to be mentioned here.  In 1227 CE, Frederick II (1212-1250 CE), the Emperor of Germany who went to the Holy  Land on his own Crusade, sent envoys to Majd al-Din, the Syrian Ismaili leader. However,  around the same time, the Hospitallers who had been highly displeased with the dealings  between the Ismailis and Frederick II, demanded a tribute from the Ismailis. The Ismailis  refused, announcing the fact that indeed they themselves were recipients of gifts and  payments from Frankish emperors and kings.  

The last important event in the history of the Ismaili community of this medieval period  relates to the dealings between them and Louis IX, better known as St Louis, the French king  who led the Seventh Crusade. These dealings, recorded by Jean de Joinville, the king’s  biographer and secretary, occurred soon after the arrival of St Louis in ‘Akka (Acre) in May  1250 AH. At the time, they were most probably still under the leadership of Taj al-Din Abul Futuh, whose name is mentioned in an inscription at Masyaf dated February-March 1249 CE.  At any rate, Ismaili emissaries came to the French king and asked him either to pay tribute or  at least release them from the tribute which they themselves paid to the Templars and the  Hospitallers. On the intervention of Reginald of Vichiers and William of Chateauneuf, the  Grand Masters of the Temple and the Hospital, the negotiations between the Ismailis and St Louis did not lead to any results. St Louis, himself more interested in establishing friendly  relations with the Mongols, did not pay any tribute to them. But the French king and the  Syrian Ismaili leadership exchanged gifts. It was in the course of these embassies that the  Arabic-speaking friar Yves le Breton met with Ismaili scholars and discussed religious  doctrines in Masyaf.  

The Mongol onslaught on the Muslim world and in particular on the Ismaili state in Iran must  have disheartened the Syrian community, who could no longer count on the support and  leadership of Alamut and the personal guidance of the Nizari Imam after the destruction of  Alamut in 1256 CE. Considerably weakened, the Syrian Ismailis eventually submitted to al Malik al-Zahir Rukn al-Din Baybars I (1260-1277 CE), the Bahri Mamluk Sultan of Egypt,  who soon extended his hegemony over Syria and its different principalities.  

Meanwhile, having destroyed the Ismaili state of Iran, Hulagu, the Mongol conqueror had  proceeded towards his second major objective, the extinction of the Abbasid caliphate. By  February 1258 CE, the Mongols seized Baghdad and devastated the ancient capital of the  

Abbasids for a whole week. The Caliph al-Mustasim, who had endeavoured in vain to  prevent the Mongol cataclysm, was put to death on Hulagu’s orders. Hulagu’s third campaign  was directed against the Ayyubid states in Syria. In 1260 CE, the Mongols seized Aleppo,  and soon afterwards Hama and Damascus surrendered to the Mongols. In March 1260 CE,  Ket-Buqa, who had been in charge of the advance operations of the Mongols in Syria, made  his triumphal entry into Damascus. It was during the same year, 1260 CE, that four of the  Nizari fortresses, including Masyaf, were surrendered to the Mongols by their governors. The  Mongol success in Syria was, however, short-lived. Hulagu returned to Iran in the summer  upon hearing the news of the Great Khan Mongke’s death, which in fact had occurred a year  earlier in 1259 CE, leaving Ket-Buqa in command of his reduced forces in Syria. In 1260 CE,  the Mongols suffered a drastic defeat at Ayn Jalut, in Palestine, at the hands of the Mamluk  armies of Egypt, led by Sultan al-Muzaffar Qutuz (1259-1260 CE).  

The vanguard of the Mamluk forces was commanded by Baybars, who succeeded Qutuz to  the Mamluk sultanate and thwarted the Mongols in their subsequent attempts to establish  themselves in the region. Soon, the Mongols were expelled from all of Syria, where Baybars  rapidly emerged as the dominant power. The Ismailis were now faced with the challenge of  developing relations with the Mamluks and other Muslim rulers whom they joined in  repelling the Mongols from Syria. They also recovered the four fortresses which they had  earlier lost.

 

Epilogue: The Ismaili Community under the Mamluks  

The Ismailis attempted to consolidate their relations with Baybars by sending him embassies  and gifts. Baybars, who was then preoccupied with the Mongols and the Franks, reciprocated  by granting certain favours to the community. Nonetheless, from early on Baybars  systematically adopted measures which ultimately led to the loss of the independence of the  Ismaili community. They eventually granted rights to Ismaili territories to al-Malik al-Mansur  (1244-1285 CE), the Ayyubid prince of Hama. The Ismailis however retained possession of  eight permanent strongholds, Masyaf, Qadmus, Kahf, Khawabi, Rusafa, Maniqa (Maynaqa),  Ullayqa and Qulay’a. 

Increasingly, Baybars compelled the Ismailis to adhere to a practice of paying them tributes  and ensuring that they acknowledged the suzerainty of the Mamluk state. Around 1270 CE,  Baybars demanded possession of Masyaf, which was to be entrusted to one of his own amirs,  Izz al-Din al-Adimi. Sarim al-Din, who was to hold the Nizari castles as the deputy of  Baybars, proceeded to take charge of them. But Sarim al-Din, too, angered the sultan by  attempting through trickery to take possession of Masyaf, in violation of the sultan’s  instructions. Once inside, he put to death a large number of the residents of Masyaf, who,  abiding by the sultan’s orders, had refused to yield the castle to him. On Baybars’ request, al Malik al-Mansur, the ruler of Hama, dislodged the rebellious Sarim al-Din from Masyaf and  sent him as a prisoner to Cairo, where he later died.  

By February 1271 CE, Baybars had decided to deal more assertively with the Ismailis. Their  leaders were arrested and forced to surrender control of the fortresses to the Mamluks. The  Ismaili castles now began to submit in rapid succession to Baybars, who used military  blockades, threats and negotiations in dealing with the Ismailis. Ullayqa and Rusafa  surrendered in May 1271 CE, and by May 1273, Khawabi, Qulay’a, Maniqa and Qadmus had  also capitulated. The residents of Kahf mustered some resistance, and with the fall of that  fortress in July 1273 CE the last independent Nizari outpost in Syria fell into the hands of the  Mamluks, less than three years after Girdkuh, the last stronghold in Iran had surrendered to  the Mongols.  

The Ismailis were permitted to remain in their fortresses in the Jabal Bahra, but only under  the strict supervision of Mamluk lieutenants. Amongst the later medieval sources speaking of  the Syrian Nizaris, an elaborate account is related by the celebrated Moorish traveller lbn  Battuta, who passed through Syria for the first time in his travels in 1326 CE. He names  Maniqa, Ullayqa, Qadmus, Kahf and Masyaf as the fortresses which were still in the hands of  the Ismailis, and then proceeds to give interesting details on the arrangements existing  between them and the Mamluk Sultan al-Nasir Nasir al-Din Muhammad, who reigned  intermittently between 1294 CE and 1340 CE. The Syrian Ismailis thus lived at the time as  loyal subjects of the Mamluks and after them, the Ottoman Empire’s representatives in Syria.  

In the midst of fluctuating political fortunes, the Ismailis of Syria as elsewhere, sought to  maintain, as far as was possible, an active and vibrant intellectual and cultural life. As the late  Marshall Hodgson observed: “The Ismaili society was not a typical mountaineer and small town society (...) Each community maintained its own sense of initiative in the framework of  the wider cause, and probably a sense of large strategy was never completely absent (...) but  what was most distinctive was the high level of intellectual life. The prominent early Ismailis  were commonly known as scholars, often as astronomers, and at least some later Ismailis  continued the tradition. In Alamut, in Kuhistan, and in Syria, at the main centres at least,  were libraries (...) which were well known among Sunni scholars. To the end the Ismailis  prized sophisticated interpretations of their own doctrines, and were also interested in every  kind of knowledge which the age could offer.”3

  1. Nasir-i Khusraw, Safar-name [“Books of Travels”], N.W. Pur, Tehran 1972
  2. P.Willey, Eagle’s Nest: Ismaili Castles in Iran and Syria, London 2005
  3. M.G.S. Hodgson, The Order of Assassins, The Hague 1955 

Author

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Professor Azim Nanji

Professor Azim Nanji serves currently as Special Advisor to the Provost at the Aga Khan University. Most recently he served as Senior Associate Director of the Abbasi Program in Islamic Studies at Stanford University 2008-2010 and also lectured on Islam in the Department of Religious Studies. He was previously the of Director of the Institute of Ismaili Studies from 1998 - 2008. Prior to this, he was Professor and Chair of the Department of Religion at the University of Florida and has held academic and administrative appointments at various American and Canadian universities.

Professor Nanji has authored, co-authored and edited several books including: The Nizari Ismaili Tradition (1976), The Muslim Almanac (1996), Mapping Islamic Studies (1997) and The Historical Atlas of Islam (with M. Ruthven) (2004) and The Dictionary of Islam (with Razia Nanji), Penguin 2008. In addition, he has contributed numerous shorter studies and articles on religion, Islam and Ismailism in journals and collective volumes including The Encyclopaedia of Islam, Encyclopaedia Iranica, Oxford Encyclopaedia of the Modern Islamic World, and A Companion to Ethics. He was the Associate Editor for the revised Second Edition of The Encyclopaedia of Religion. In 1988 he was Margaret Gest Visiting Professor at Haverford College and a Visiting Professor at Stanford University in 2004, where he was also invited to give the Baccalaureate Address in 1995. He has also lectured widely at international conferences all over the world.

Professor Nanji has served as Co-Chair of the Islam section at the American Academy of Religion and on the Editorial Board of the Academy’s Journal. He has also been a member of the Philanthropy Committee of the Council on Foundations and has been the recipient of awards from the Rockefeller Foundation, the Canada Council, and the National Endowment for Humanities. In 2004 he gave the Birks Lecture at McGill University.

Within the Aga Khan Development Network, Professor Nanji has served as a Member of the Steering Committee and Master Jury of the Aga Khan Award for Architecture, Task Force Member for the Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations (AKU-ISMC) and Vice Chair of the Madrasa-based Early Childhood Education Programme in East-Africa.

Dr Farhad Daftary

Co-Director and Head of the Department of Academic Research and Publications

An authority in Shi'i studies, with special reference to its Ismaili tradition, Dr. Daftary has published and lectured widely in these fields of Islamic studies. In 2011 a Festschrift entitled Fortresses of the Intellect was produced to honour Dr. Daftary by a number of his colleagues and peers.

 

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