Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2brh9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T19:09:24.006Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

21 - The Mongols and the Arab Middle East

from Volume I Part 4 - External Histories

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2024

Michal Biran
Affiliation:
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Hodong Kim
Affiliation:
Seoul National University
Get access

Summary

In the first half of the thirteenth century, Mongol forces launched raids into areas that are now parts of Iraq and Syria. Raids turned into conquest with Hülegü’s movement into the region in the mid-1250s. Baghdad was taken in 1258, and by spring 1260, much of Syria was overrun by Mongol forces. A small Mongol army, however, was defeated by the Mamluks from Egypt in northern Palestine later that year. After a clear border was established along the Euphrates, for sixty years the Mamluks and Ilkhanids struggled for regional supremacy in major battles, frontier warfare, and diplomatic démarches. Around 1320, this conflict ended after negotiations, with peace agreements in place until the breakup of the Ilkhanate after 1335. Although ultimately unsuccessful in conquering lands beyond Iraq, the impact of the Mongols on greater Syria, Egypt, and Arabia was significant, not only militarily, but in the realm of demography, culture, and economy.

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Shāma, Abū, ʿAbd al-Raḥmān b. Ismāʿīl, Shihāb al-Dīn. 1947. Tarājim rijāl al-qarnayn al-sādis waʾl-sābʿ al-maʿrūf biʾl-dhayl ʿalā al-rawḍatayn, ed. al-Kawtharī, Muḥammad. Cairo.Google Scholar
Aigle, Denise. 2014a. “From ‘Non-negotiation’ to an Abortive Alliance: Thoughts on the Diplomatic Exchanges between the Mongols and the Latin West.” In Aigle 2014c, 159–98.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aigle, Denise 2014b. “Ghazan Khan’s Invasion of Syria: Polemics on His Conversion to Islam and the Christian Troops in His Army.” In Aigle 2014c, 255–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aigle, Denise 2014c. The Mongol Empire between Myth and Reality: Studies in Anthropological History. Leiden.Google Scholar
Aigle, Denise 2014d. “A Religious Response to Ghazan Khan’s Invasions of Syria: The Three ‘Anti-Mongol’ Fatwās of Ibn Taymiyya.” In Aigle 2014c, 283305.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Al Ghouz, Abdelkader. 2016. “Brokers of Islamic Philosophy in Mamlūk Egypt: Šams al-Dīn Maḥmūd b. ʿAbd al-Raḥmān al-Iṣfahānī (d. 1348) as a Case Study in the Transmission of Philosophical Knowledge through Commentary Writing.” ASK Working Paper 24. Bonn.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allouche, Adel. 1990. “Tegüder’s Ultimatum to Qalawun.” IJMES 22: 437–46.Google Scholar
Amitai, Reuven. 1987. “Mongol Raids into Palestine (a.d. 1260 and 1300).” JRAS 119: 236–55.Google Scholar
Amitai, Reuven 1988. “Mamluk Espionage among Mongols and Franks.” Asian and African Studies 22: 173–81.Google Scholar
Amitai, Reuven 2001a. “The Conversion of Tegüder Ilkhan to Islam.” Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 25: 1543.Google Scholar
Amitai, Reuven 2001b. “Edward of England and Abagha Ilkhan: A Reexamination of a Failed Attempt at Mongol–Frankish Cooperation.” In Tolerance and Intolerance: Social Conflict in the Age of the Crusades, ed. Gervers, Michael and Powell, James M, 7582.Google Scholar
Amitai, Reuven 2002. “Whither the Ilkhanid Army? Ghazan’s First Campaign into Syria (1299–1300).” In Warfare in Inner Asian History, ed. Di Cosmo, Nicola, 221–64. Leiden, Boston, and Cologne.Google Scholar
Amitai, Reuven 2004. “The Mongol Occupation of Damascus in 1300: A Study of Mamlūk Loyalties.” In The Mamlūks in Egyptian and Syrian Politics and Society, ed. Amalia Levanoni and Michael Winter, 2141. Leiden.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amitai, Reuven 2005. “The Resolution of the Mongol–Mamlūk War.” In Mongols, Turks and Others: Eurasian Nomads and the Sedentary World, ed. Amitai, Reuven and Biran, Michal, 359–90. Leiden and Boston.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amitai, Reuven 2006. “Some More Thoughts on the Logistics of the Mongol–Mamlūk War (with Special Reference to the Battle of Wadi al-Khaznadar).” In Logistics of War in the Age of the Crusades, ed. John Pryor, 2542. Aldershot.Google Scholar
Amitai, Reuven 2007a. “ʿAyn Jālūt.” EI3, online version, at http://referenceworks.brillonline.com/entries/encyclopaedia-of-islam-3/ayn-jalut-SIM_0082 (accessed March 5, 2023).Google Scholar
Amitai, Reuven 2007b. “Mongol Provincial Administration: Syria in 1260 as a Case-Study.” In In Laudem Hierosolymitani: Studies in Crusades and Medieval Culture in Honour of Benjamin Z. Kedar, ed. Iris Shagrir, Ronnie Ellenblum, and Jonathan Riley-Smith, 117–43. Aldershot.Google Scholar
Amitai, Reuven 2007c. The Mongols in the Islamic Lands: Studies in the History of the Ilkhanate. Aldershot and Burlington, VT.Google Scholar
Amitai, Reuven 2008a. “Diplomacy and the Slave Trade in the Eastern Mediterranean: A Re-examination of the Mamlūk–Byzantine–Genoese Triangle in the Late Thirteenth Century in Light of the Existing Early Correspondence.” Oriente Moderno, new series 87.2: 349–68.Google Scholar
Amitai, Reuven 2008b. “Mamlūks of Mongol Origin and Their Role in Early Mamlūk Political Life.” Mamlūk Studies Review 12.1: 119–37.Google Scholar
Amitai, Reuven 2011a. “Dealing with Reality: Early Mamlūk Military Policy and the Allocation of Resources.” In Crossroads between Latin Europe and the Near East: Frankish Presence in the Eastern Mediterranean (12th to 14th Centuries), ed. Stefan Leder, 127–44. Würzburg.Google Scholar
Amitai, Reuven 2011b. “Im Westen nichts Neues? Re-examining Hülegü’s Offensive into the Jazīra and Northern Syria in Light of Recent Research.” In Historicizing the “Beyond”. The Mongolian Invasion as a New Dimension of Violence?, ed. Frank Krämer, Katharina Schmidt, and Julika Sinder, 8396. Heidelberg.Google Scholar
Amitai, Reuven 2013. Holy War and Rapprochement: Studies in the Relations between the Mamlūk Sultanate and the Mongol Ilkhanate (1260–1335). Turnhout.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amitai, Reuven 2014. “Dangerous Liaisons: Armenian–Mongol–Mamlūk Relations (1260–1292).” In La Méditerranée des arméniens, XIIe–XVe siècle, ed. Dédéyan, Gérard and Mutafian, Claude, 191206. Paris.Google Scholar
Amitai, Reuven 2015. “The Impact of the Mongols on the History of Syria: Politics, Society and Culture.” In Eurasian Nomads as Agents of Cultural Change: The Mongols and Their Eurasian Predecessors, ed. Amitai, Reuven and Biran, Michal, 228–51. Honolulu.Google Scholar
Amitai-Preiss, Reuven. 1991. “Evidence for the Early Use of the Title Īlkhān among the Mongols.” JRAS3, 3rd series 1: 353–62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amitai-Preiss, Reuven 1992a. “ʿAyn Jālūt Revisited.” Tārīḫ 2: 119–50.Google Scholar
Amitai-Preiss, Reuven 1992b. “Mamlūk Perceptions of the Mongol–Frankish Rapprochement.” Mediterranean Historical Review 7: 5065.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amitai-Preiss, Reuven 1994. “An Exchange of Letters in Arabic between Abaγa Ilkhan and Sultan Baybars (a.h. 667/a.d. 1268–9).” CAJ 38: 1133.Google Scholar
Amitai-Preiss, Reuven 1995. Mongols and Mamlūks: The Mamlūk–Ilkhanid War 1260–1281. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amitai-Preiss, Reuven 1995–1997. “The Mongols and Karak in Trans-Jordan.” AEMA 9: 516.Google Scholar
Amitai-Preiss, Reuven 1996. “New Material from the Mamlūk Sources for the Biography of Rashid al-Din.” In The Court of the Il-Khans, ed. Rabi, Julian and Fitzherbert, Teresa, 2337. Oxford.Google Scholar
Ayalon, David. 1971–1973. “The Great Yāsa of Chingiz Khān: A Reexamination.” Studia Islamica, part A, 33: 97–140; part B, 34: 151–80; part C1, 36: 113–58; part C2, 37: 107–56.Google Scholar
Hebraeus, Bar. 1932. The Chronography of Gregory Abû ’l-Faraj: 1225–1286, tr. E. A. W. Budge. London.Google Scholar
Barker, Hannah. 2019. That Most Precious Merchandise: The Mediterranean Trade in Black Sea Slaves, 1260–1500, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
al-Manṣūrī, Baybars, al-Dīn al-Dawādār, Rukn. 1998. Zubdat al-fikra fī tarʾīkh ahl al-hijra, ed. Richards, Donald S.. Beirut and Berlin.Google Scholar
Bent, J. M. C. van den. 2020. “Mongols in Mamluk Eyes: Representing Ethnic Others in the Medieval Middle East.” PhD diss., University of Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Biran, Michal. 2002. “The Battle of Herat (1270): A Case of Inter-Mongol Warfare.” In Warfare in Inner Asia, ed. Nicola Di Cosmo, 197–220. Leiden.Google Scholar
Biran, Michal 2016. “Music in the Conquest of Baghdad: Ṣafī al-Dīn Urmawī and the Ilkhanid Circle of Musicians.” In The Mongols in the Middle East: Continuity and Transformation in Ilkhanid Iran, ed. Bruno De Nicola and Charles Melville, 133–55. Leiden.Google Scholar
Bournoutian, Ani Atamian. 1997. “Cilician Armenia.” In The Armenian People from Ancient to Modern Times, ed. Hovannisian, Richard G., vol. 1, 273–93. New York.Google Scholar
Bowlus, Charles R. 1996. “Tactical and Strategic Weaknesses of Horse Archers on the Eve of the First Crusade.” In Autour de la première croisade, ed. Balard, Michel, 159–66. Paris.Google Scholar
Boyle, John Andrew. 1961. “The Death of the Last ʿAbbāsid Caliph: A Contemporary Muslim Account.” Journal of Semitic Studies 4: 145–61.Google Scholar
Boyle, John Andrew 1968. “Dynastic and Political History of the Īl-Khāns.” In CHI5, 303428.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boyle, John Andrew 1976. “The Il-Khans of Persia and the Princes of Europe.” CAJ 20: 2540.Google Scholar
Broadbridge, Anne F. 2008. Kingship and Ideology in the Islamic and Mongol Worlds. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Cahen, Claude. 1968. Pre-Ottoman Turkey: A General Survey of the Material and Spiritual Culture and History c. 1071–1330, tr. J. Jones-Williams. London.Google Scholar
CHI5. See Abbreviations.Google Scholar
Dashdondog, Bayarsaikhan. 2011. The Mongols and the Armenians (1220–1335). Leiden and Boston.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dawson, Christopher, ed. 1955. The Mongol Mission: Narratives and Letters of the Franciscan Missionaries in Mongolia and China in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries, tr. by a nun of Abbey, Stanbrook. London and New York.Google Scholar
Ehrenkreutz, Andrew. 1981. “Strategic Implications of the Slave Trade between Genoa and Mamlūk Egypt in the Second Half of the Thirteenth Century.” In The Islamic Middle East, 700–1900: Studies in Economic and Social History, ed. Udovitch, Avram L., 335–45. Princeton.Google Scholar
Erdal, Marcel. 1993. “Die türkisch-mongolischen Titel elxan and elči.” In Altaica Berolinensia: The Concept of Sovereignty in the Altaic World, ed. Barbara Kellner-Heinkele, 8199. Wiesbaden.Google Scholar
Favereau, Marie. 2018 . La Horde d’Or et le sultanat mamelouk: naissance d’un alliance. Cairo.Google Scholar
des Chiprois, Gestes. 1906. In Recueil des historiens des croisades, documents armeniens, vol. 2, 111253. Paris.Google Scholar
des Chiprois, Gestes 2003. The “Templar of Tyre”: Part III of the “Deeds of the Cypriots”, tr. Paul Crawford. Farnham and Burlington, VT.Google Scholar
Gil, Matania. 2015. “Commerce in the Ilkhanid State (1260–1335) According to the Biographical Dictionary of Ibn al-Fuwaṭī (d. 1323)” (Hebrew). MA thesis, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem.Google Scholar
Golden, Peter B., ed. 2000. The King’s Dictionary: The Rasûlid Hexaglot: Fourteenth Century Vocabularies in Arabic, Persian, Turkic, Greek, Armenian, and Mongolian. Leiden-Boston-Köln.Google Scholar
Herde, Peter. 2002. “Taktiken muslimischer Heere vom ersten Kreuzzug bis ʿAyn Ḏj̲ālūt (1260) und ihre Einwirkung auf die Schlact bei Tagliacozzo (1268).” In Studien zur Papst- und Reichsgeschichte, zur Geschichte des Mittelmeerraumes und zum kanonischen Recht im Mittelalter, ed. Herde, Peter, vol. 1, 443–63. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Hiyari, Mustafa A. 1975. “The Origins and Development of the Amīrate of the Arabs during the Seventh/Thirteenth and Eighth/Fourteenth Centuries.” BSOAS 38: 509–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holt, Peter M. 1986. “The Īlkhān Aḥmad’s Embassies to Qalāwūn: Two Contemporary Accounts.” BSOAS 49: 128–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holt, Peter M. 1995. Early Mamlūk Diplomacy (1260–1290): Treaties of Baybars and Qalawun with Christian Rulers. Leiden.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Humphreys, R. Stephen. 1977. From Saladin to the Mongols: The Ayyubids of Damascus, 1193–1260. Albany.Google Scholar
HWC. See Abbreviations.Google Scholar
ʿAbd al- Ẓāhir, Ibn, al-Dīn ʿAbdallāh, Muḥyī. 1976. Al-Rawḍ al-zāhir fi sīrat al-malik al-ẓāhir, ed. ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz al-Khuwayṭir. Riyad.Google Scholar
al-Athīr, Ibn, ʿIzz al-Dīn Abū Ḥasan ʿAlī ibn Muḥammad. 1965–1967. Al-Kāmil fī al-taʾrīkh, 13 vols. Beirut.Google Scholar
al-Athīr, Ibn 2005–2008. Al-Kāmil fī al-taʾrīkh, Tr. Donald S. Richards. The Chronicle of Ibn al-Athir for the Crusading Period from al-Kamil fiʾl-Taʾrikh, 3 vols. Aldershot.Google Scholar
al-ʿUmarī, Ibn Faḍlallāh, al-Dīn Aḥmad b. Yaḥyā, Shihāb. 1968. Masālik al-abṣār fī mamālik al-amṣār, partial edition and translation by Klaus Lech as Das Mongolische Weltreich: al-ʿUmarīs Darstellung der mongolischen Reiche in seinem Werk Masālik al-abṣār fī mamālik al-amṣār. Wiesbaden.Google Scholar
Ibn al-Furāt, Nāṣir al-Dīn ibn Muḥammad, ʿAbd al-Raḥmān. 1942. Taʾrīkh al-duwal wa’l-muluk, vol. 8, ed. Zurayk, Costi K.. Beirut.Google Scholar
al-ʿIbrī, Ibn. 1992. Taʾrīkh mukhtaṣar al-duwal, 3rd ed. Beirut.Google Scholar
Ibn al-Mughayzil, Nūr al-Dīn ʿAbd al-Raḥīm, ʿAlī ibn. 2004. Dhayl mufarrij al-kurūb fī akhbār banī ayyūb, ed. ʿUmar ʿAbd al-Salām, Tadmurī. Sidon and Beirut.Google Scholar
al-Ḥalabī, Ibn Shaddād, ʿIzz al-Dīn Muḥammad ibn ʿAli. 1978. Al-Aʿlaq al-khaṭīra fī dhikr umarāʾ al-shām waʾl-jazīra, vol. 3, in 2 parts, ed. Yaḥyā ʿAbbāra. Damascus.Google Scholar
Irwin, Robert. 1986. The Middle East in the Middle Ages: The Early Mamlūk Sultanate 1250–1382. London.Google Scholar
Jackson, Peter. 1978. “The Dissolution of the Mongol Empire.” CAJ 32: 186244.Google Scholar
Jackson, Peter 1980. “The Crisis in the Holy Land in 1260.” English Historical Review 95: 481513.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jackson, Peter 2005. The Mongols and the West, 1221–1410. Harrow.Google Scholar
Plano Carpini, John. 1995. Historia Mongalorum, ed. and tr. Johannes Gießauf. Die Mongolengeschichte des Johannes von Piano Carpine: Einführung, Text, Übersetzung, Kommentar. Graz.Google Scholar
JT/Boyle. See Abbreviations.Google Scholar
JT/Thackston. See Abbreviations.Google Scholar
Krawulsky, Dorothea. 1978. Īrān – Das Reich der Īlḫāne: Eine topographisch-historische Studie. Wiesbaden.Google Scholar
Krawulsky, Dorothea 2011. The Mongol Īlkhāns and Their Vizier Rashīd al-Dīn. Frankfurt.Google Scholar
Levanoni, Amalia. 1990. “The Mamlūks’ Ascent to Power in Egypt.” Studia Islamica 72: 121–44.Google Scholar
Levanoni, Amalia 2010. “The Mamlūks in Egypt and Syria: The Turkish Mamlūk Sultanate (648–784/1250–1382) and the Circassian Mamlūk Sultanate (784–923/1382–1517).” In The New Cambridge History of Islam, vol. 2, The Western Islamic World Eleventh to Eighteenth Centuries, ed. Maribel Fierro, 237–84. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Lewis, Bernard. 1974. Islam from the Prophet Muhammad to the Capture of Constantinople, 2 vols. New York.Google Scholar
Little, Donald P. 1979. “Notes on Aitamiš, a Mongol Mamlūk.” In Der islamischen Welt zwischen Mittelalter und Neuzeit, ed. Ulrich Haarmann and Peter Bachmann, 387401. Wiesbaden.Google Scholar
Loiseau, Julien. 2014. Les Mamelouks, XIIIe–XVIe siècle: Une experience du pouvoir dans l’Islam medieval. Paris.Google Scholar
al-Maqrīzī, Taqī al-Dīn Aḥmad ibn ʿAlī. 1934–1973. Kitāb al-sulūk li-maʿrifat duwal al-mulūk, ed. Ziyāda, Muḥammad Muṣṭafā and ʿAbd al-Fattāḥ ʿĀshūr, 4 vols. Cairo.Google Scholar
May, Timothy M. 2003. “The Mongol Presence and Impact in the Lands of the Eastern Mediterranean.” In Crusades, Condottieri, and Cannon: Medieval Warfare in Societies around the Mediterranean, ed. Kagay, Donald J. and Andrew Villalon, L. J., 133–56. Leiden and Boston.Google Scholar
Melville, Charles. 1990. “Pādshāh-i Islām: The Conversion of Sultan Maḥmūd Ghāzān Khān.” Pembroke Papers 1: 159–77.Google Scholar
Melville, Charles 1992. “‘The Year of the Elephant’: Mamlūk–Mongol Rivalry in the Hejaz in the Reign of Abū Saʿīd (1317–1335).” Studia Iranica 21: 197214.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Melville, Charles 1996. “‘Sometimes by the Sword, Sometimes by the Dagger’: The Role of the Ismaʿilis in Mamlūk–Mongol Relations in the 8th/14th Century.” In Medieval Ismaʿili History and Thought, ed. Farhad Daftary, 247–63. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Meyvaert, Paul. 1980. “An Unknown Letter of Hulagu, Il-Khan of Persia, to King Louis ix of France. Viator 11: 245–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mordtmann, J. H., and Ménage, V. L.. 1965. “Dhu ʾl-Ḳadr.EI2, vol. 2, 239–40.Google Scholar
Morgan, David O. 1985. “The Mongols in Syria, 1260–1300.” In Crusade and Settlement: Papers Read at the First Conference of the Society for the Study of the Crusades and the Latin East and Presented to R. C. Smail, ed. Edbury, Peter, 231–35. Cardiff.Google Scholar
Morgan, David O. 1989. “The Mongols and the Eastern Mediterranean.” Mediterranean Studies Review 4.1, Latins and Greeks in the Eastern Mediterranean after 1204, ed. Benjamin Arbel, Bernard Hamilton, and David Jacoby, 198211.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Northrup, Linda. 1998. From Slave to Sultan: The Career of al-Manṣūr Qalāwūn and the Consolidation of Mamlūk Rule in Egypt and Syria (678–689 A.H./1279–1290 A.D.). Stuttgart.Google Scholar
al-Nuwayrī, Shihāb al-Dīn Aḥmad ibn ʿAbd al-Wahhāb. 1984. Nihāyat al-arab fī funūn al-adab, vol. 27, ed. Saʿīd ʿĀshūr. Cairo.Google Scholar
Pfeiffer, Judith. 2006. “Aḥmad Tegüder’s Second Letter to Qalāʾūn (682/1283).” In History and Historiography of Post-Mongol Central Asia and the Middle East: Studies in Honor of John E. Woods, ed. Judith Pfeiffer and Sholeh A. Quinn in collaboration with Tucker, Ernest, 167202. Wiesbaden.Google Scholar
Prawer, Joshua. 1970. Histoire du royaume latin de Jérusalem, tr. Gérard Nahon. Paris.Google Scholar
Quatremère, Étienne Marc, ed. and tr. 1837–1847. L’histoire des sultans mamelouks de l’Égypte écrite en arabe par Taki-eddin-Ahmed Makrizi, 2 vols. in 4 parts. Paris.Google Scholar
Rabbat, Nasser O. 1995. The Citadel of Cairo: A New Interpretation of Royal Mamlūk Architecture. Leiden.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rashīd al-Dīn, Abū al-Khayr Faḍl Allāh ibn ʿImād al-Dīn al-Hamdānī. 1957. Jāmiʿ al-tawārīkh, vol. 3, ed. ʿA. Alīzādah. Baku.Google Scholar
Roemer, Hans R. 1986. “Tīmūr in Iran.” In The Cambridge History of Iran, vol. 6, The Timurid and Safavid Period, ed. Jackson, Peter and Lockhart, Laurence, 4297. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Röhricht, Reinhold. 1890. “Der Kreuzzug des Königs Jacob I. von Aragonien (1269).” Mittheilungen des Instituts für Oesterrichische Geschichtsforschung 11: 372–95.Google Scholar
Rossabi, Morris. 1992. Voyager from Xanadu: Rabban Sauma and the First Journey from China to the West. Tokyo.Google Scholar
Saunders, John J. 1977. “The Mongol Defeat at Ain Jalut and the Restoration of the Greek Empire.” In John J. Saunders, Muslims and Mongols: Essays on Medieval Asia, ed. Rice, Geoffrey W., 6776. Canterbury, NZ.Google Scholar
Schein, Sylvia. 1979. “Gesta Dei per Mongolos 1300: The Genesis of a Non-event.” English Historical Review 94: 805–19.Google Scholar
Sinor, Denis. 1972. “The Mysterious ‘Talu Sea’ in Olǰeitu’s Letter to Philip the Fair of France.” Analecta Mongolica Dedicated to the Seventieth Birthday of Professor Owen Lattimore, ed. John G. Hangin and Urgunge Onon, 115–21. Bloomington, IN.Google Scholar
Sinor, Denis 1975. “The Mongols and Western Europe.” In A History of the Crusades, general ed. Kenneth M. Setton, vol. 3, ed. Hazard, Harry W., 513–44. Madison.Google Scholar
Sinor, Denis 1977. Inner Asia and Its Contacts with Medieval Europe. London.Google Scholar
Smith, G. Rex. 1995. “Rasūlids.” EI2, vol. 8, 455–57.Google Scholar
Smith, John M., Jr. 1984. “ʿAyn Jālūt: Mamlūk Success or Mongol Failure.” HJAS 44: 307–45.Google Scholar
Smith, John M. 1998. “Nomads on Ponies vs. Slaves on Horses.JAOS 118: 5462.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sourdel, Dominique. 1965. “Djaʿbar or Ḳalʿat al-Djaʿbar.EI2, vol. 2, 354.Google Scholar
Spuler, Bertold. 1965. Die Goldene Horde: Die Mongolen in Rußland, 1223–1502, 2nd ed. Wiesbaden.Google Scholar
Spuler, Bertold 1985. Die Mongolen in Iran: Verwaltung und Kultur der Ilchanzeit, 1220–1350, 4th ed. Leiden.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stewart, Angus. 2001. The Armenian Kingdom and the Mamlūks: War and Diplomacy during the Reign of Hetʾum II (1287–1307). Leiden.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stewart, Angus 2014. “Alliance with the Tartars: The Armenian Kingdom, the Mongols and the Latins.” In La Méditerranée des arméniens XIIe–XVe siècle, ed. Mutafian, Claude, 207–29. Paris.Google Scholar
Thorau, Peter. 1986. “The Battle of ʿAyn Jālūt: A Re-examination.” In Crusade and Settlement: Papers Read at the First Conference of the Society for the Study of the Crusades and the Latin East and Presented to R. C. Smail, ed. Edbury, Peter, 3641. Cardiff.Google Scholar
Thorau, Peter 1992. The Lion of Egypt: Sultan Baybars I and the Near East in the Thirteenth Century, tr. Peter M. Holt. London and New York.Google Scholar
TJG. See AbbreviationsGoogle Scholar
Tritton, Arthur S. 1948. “The Tribes of Syria in the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Century.” BSOAS 12: 567–73.Google Scholar
Umarī, Al-. See Ibn Faḍl Allāh al-ʿUmarī.Google Scholar
Jo, van Steenbergen. 2006. Order out of Chaos: Patronage, Conflict and Mamlūk Socio-political Culture, 1341–1382. Leiden and Boston.Google Scholar
Waṣṣāf, ʿ Abdallāh b. Faḍl Allāh. 1959–1960. Taʾrīkh-i Waṣṣāf (=Tajziyat al-amṣār wa-tazjiyat al-aʿṣār). Teheran.Google Scholar
Weiers, Michael. 1986. “Die Mongolen in Iran.” In Die Mongolen: Beiträge zu ihrer Geschichte und Kultur, ed. Weiers, Michael, 300–44. Darmstadt.Google Scholar
William of Adam. 2012. How to Defeat the Saracens [Guillelmus Ade, Tractatus quomodo Sarraceni sunt expugnandi], ed. and tr. Giles Constable. Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Rubruck, William (Willem van Ruysbroeck). 1990. Itinerarium, tr. and ed. Peter Jackson with Morgan, David. The Mission of Friar William of Rubruck: His Journey to the Court of the Great Khan Mongke 1253–1255. London.Google Scholar
Wing, Patrick. 2007. “The Decline of the Ilkhanate and the Mamlūk Sultanate’s Eastern Frontier.” Mamlūk Studies Review 11.2: 7788.Google Scholar
Wing, Patrick 2015. “Submission, Defiance, and the Rules of Politics on the Mamlūk Sultanate’s Anatolian Frontier.” JRAS, 3rd series 25: 112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zakirov, Salikh. 1966. Diplomaticheskie Otnosheniia Zolotoi Ordy s Egiptom (XIII–XIV vv.) Moscow.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×