Mamluk Sultanate (Cairo)

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Şablon:Infobox former country Şablon:History of Egypt Şablon:History of the Turks pre-14th century The Mamluk Sultanate (Şablon:Lang-ar Salṭanat al-Mamālīk) was a medieval realm spanning Egypt, the Levant, and Hejaz. It lasted from the overthrow of the Ayyubid Dynasty until the Ottoman conquest of Egypt in 1517. Historians have traditionally broken the era of Mamlūk rule into two periods—one covering 1250–1382, the other, 1382–1517. Western historians call the former the "Baḥrī" period and the latter the "Burjī" due to the political dominance of the regimes known by these names during the respective eras. Contemporary Muslim historians refer to the same divisions as the "Turkish"<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /><ref name=":3" /><ref name="Levanoni17">Levanoni 1995, p. 17.</ref><ref name=":5" /> and "Circassian" periods in order to stress the change in the ethnic origins of the majority of Mamlūks.<ref name=":0">Şablon:Cite web</ref><ref name=":1">Şablon:Cite web</ref><ref name=":3">Şablon:Cite book</ref><ref name="Levanoni17"/><ref name=":5">Şablon:Cite book</ref>

The Mamlūk state reached its height under Turkic rule with Arabic culture and then fell into a prolonged phase of decline under the Circassians.<ref name=":0" /><ref>Şablon:Cite web</ref> The sultanate's ruling caste was composed of Mamluks, soldiers of predominantly Cuman-Kipchaks (from Crimea),<ref>H. B. Paksoy, Central Asian Monuments, p. 32,</ref> Circassian, Abkhazian,<ref>Jane Hathaway, The Politics of Households in Ottoman Egypt: The Rise of the Qazdaglis. Cambridge University Press, 1997, p. 104, Online</ref> Oghuz Turks<ref>İslam Ansiklopedisi, Volume: 24, Page: 442, Online</ref> and Georgian slave origin.<ref>Şablon:Cite web</ref><ref>Şablon:Cite book</ref> While Mamluks were purchased, their status was above ordinary slaves, who were not allowed to carry weapons or perform certain tasks. Mamluks were considered to be "true lords", with social status above citizens of Egypt. Though it declined towards the end of its existence, at its height the sultanate represented the zenith of medieval Egyptian and Levantine political, economic, and cultural glory in the Islamic era.<ref name="GP">Şablon:Cite book</ref>

Name

The term Mamluk Sultanate is a modern historiographical term.Şablon:Sfn

The Arabic sources for the period of the Bahri Mamluks refer to the dynasty as the State/Realm of the Turks (Şablon:Lang-ar, Dawlat al-Atrāk; Şablon:Lang, Dawlat al-Turk; Şablon:Lang, al-Dawla al-Turkiyya).<ref>Nicolle 2014, p. 4.</ref><ref>"The Cambridge History of Egypt", Volume 1, (1998) P. 250</ref>Şablon:Sfn Other official names used were State of the Circassians (Şablon:Lang, Dawlat al-Jarākisa). A variant thereof (Şablon:Lang, al-Dawla al-Turkiyya al-Jarkasiyya) emphasized the fact that the Circassians were Turkish-speaking.Şablon:Sfn

Some misconception names include “the Baḥrī Sultanate/period” dawlat al-Baḥriyya (Şablon:Lang) and the “Burjī Sultanate/period” al-Dawla al-Burijyya (Şablon:Lang) these were rarely used by medieval Mamluk historians but are currently used as sub-periods of the Mamluk Sultanates.Şablon:Clarify

The term Mongol State (Şablon:Lang, al-Dawla al-Mughuliyya) was used during Sultan al-Adil Kitbugha's rule, who was of Mongol extraction.

During Baybars al-Jāshankīr’s reign the state was known as al-dawla al-burijyya (Şablon:Lang) which meant the “Burjī Sultanate/period”, when in fact he was a ruler during the Baḥrī Sultanate/period but was of Circassian extraction that dominated in Burjī Sultanate/period. Dawlatāl Qalāwūn(Şablon:Lang) or Dawlat Banī Qalāwūn (Şablon:Lang which means "Qalāwūnī State/Dynasty" which have ruled for hundred years between 1279 and 1382. Al-dawla al-Ẓāhiriyya (Şablon:Lang) which meant "Ẓāhirī state/dynasty" which is the dynasty of Baibars and his two sons al-Said Barakah and Solamish. This dynasty have ruled consecutively for 19 years.

History

Origins

Şablon:See also

Mamluk was a term defined as "owned slave", distinguishing the mamluk from the garya and ghulam, which referred to household slaves. After thorough training in various fields such as martial arts, court etiquette and Islamic sciences, these slaves were freed. However, they were still expected to remain loyal to their master and serve his household.<ref name="Rodenbeck 72–73">Şablon:Cite book</ref> Mamluks had formed a part of the state or military apparatus in Syria and Egypt since at least the 9th century, during the Tulunid period.<ref name="Clifford65">Clifford 2013, p. 65.</ref> Mamluk regiments constituted the backbone of Egypt's military under Ayyubid rule in the late 12th and early 13th centuries, beginning with Sultan Saladin who replaced the Fatimids' African infantry with mamluks.<ref name="Cummins94">Cummins 2011, p. 94.</ref> Each Ayyubid sultan and high-ranking emir had a private mamluk corps.<ref name="Ayalon">Şablon:Cite book</ref> Most of the mamluks in the Ayyubids' service were ethnic Kipchak Turks from Central Asia, who, upon entering service, were converted to Sunni Islam and taught Arabic.<ref name="Cummins94"/> They were highly committed to their masters, who they often referred to as "father", and were in turn treated more as kinsmen than as slaves by their masters.<ref name="Cummins94"/> Sultan as-Salih Ayyub (r. 1240–49), the last of the Ayyubid sultans, had acquired some 1,000 mamluks (some of them free-born) from Syria, Egypt and the Arabian Peninsula by 1229, while serving as na'ib (viceroy) of Egypt during the absence of his father, Sultan al-Kamil. These mamluks became known as the "Salihiyyah" (singular "Salihi").<ref name="Clifford67">Clifford 2013, p. 67.</ref>

Dosya:A Mamluk Training with a Lance.jpeg
A Mamluk training with a lance, early 16th century

As-Salih became sultan of Egypt in 1240, and upon his accession to the Ayyubid throne, he manumitted and promoted large numbers of his original and newly recruited mamluks on the condition that they remain in his service.<ref name="Clifford67"/> To provision his mamluks, as-Salih forcibly seized the iqtaʿat (fiefs; singular iqtaʿ) of his predecessors' emirs.<ref name="Clifford67"/> As-Salih sought to create a paramilitary apparatus in Egypt loyal to him, and his aggressive recruitment and promotion of mamluks led contemporaries to view Egypt as "Salihi-ridden", according to historian Winslow William Clifford.<ref>Clifford 2013, pp. 67–68.</ref> Despite his close relationship with his mamluks, tensions existed between as-Salih and the Salihiyyah, and a number of Salihi mamluks were imprisoned or exiled throughout as-Salih's reign.<ref name="Clifford68">Clifford 2013, p. 68.</ref> While historian Stephen Humphreys asserts that the Salihiyyah's increasing dominance of the state did not personally threaten as-Salih due to their fidelity to him, Clifford believes the Salihiyyah developed an autonomy within the state that fell short of such loyalty.<ref>Clifford 2013, pp. 68–69.</ref> Opposition among the Salihiyyah to as-Salih rose when the latter ordered the assassination of his brother Abu Bakr al-Adil in 1249, a task which many of the Salihiyyah were affronted by and rejected; four of the Salihiyyah ultimately agreed to execute the controversial operation.<ref name="Clifford68"/>

Rise to power

Conflict with the Ayyubids

Tensions between as-Salih and his mamluks came to a head later in 1249 when Louis IX of France's forces captured Damietta in their bid to conquer Egypt during the Seventh Crusade.<ref name="Clifford68"/> As-Salih believed Damietta should not have been evacuated and was rumored to have threatened punitive action against the Damietta garrison. The rumor, accentuated by the execution of civilian notables who evacuated Damietta, provoked a mutiny by the garrison of his camp in al-Mansurah, which included numerous Salihi mamluks.<ref name="Clifford68"/> The situation was calmed after the intervention of the atabeg al-askar (commander of the military), Fakhr ad-Din ibn Shaykh al-Shuyukh.<ref name="Clifford68"/>

As the Crusaders advanced, as-Salih died and was succeeded by his son al-Muazzam Turanshah,<ref name="Irwin1921"/> who was in al-Jazira at the time. Initially, the Salihiyyah welcomed Turanshah's succession, with many greeting him and requesting confirmation of their administrative posts and iqtaʿ assignments at his arrival to the Egyptian frontier.<ref name="Clifford70">Clifford 2013, p. 70.</ref> However, Turanshah sought to challenge the dominance of the Salihiyyah in the paramilitary apparatus by promoting his Kurdish retinue from al-Jazira and Syria as a counterweight to the predominantly Turkic Salihiyyah.<ref name="Clifford70"/> Before Turanshah could arrive at the front, the Bahriyyah, a junior regiment of the Salihiyyah, defeated the Crusaders at the Battle of al-Mansurah and captured Louis, effectively ending the crusade. Turanshah proceeded to place his own entourage and mamluks, known as the "Mu'azzamiyah",<ref name="Irwin1921">Şablon:Cite book</ref> in positions of authority to the detriment of Salihi interests. On 2 May 1250,<ref name="Irwin1921"/> a group of disgruntled Salihi officers had Turanshah assassinated at his camp in Fariskur.<ref name="Clifford71">Clifford 2013, p. 71.</ref>

According to Humphreys, as-Salih's frequent wars against his Ayyubid relatives likely voided the Salihiyyah's loyalty to other members of the Ayyubid dynasty.<ref>Clifford 2013, p. 69.</ref> Nonetheless, the Salihiyyah were careful not to depict the assassination of Turanshah as an assault against Ayyubid legitimacy, but rather an act against a deviant of the Muslim polity.<ref name="Clifford72">Clifford 2013, p. 72.</ref> Moreover, an electoral college dominated by the Salihiyyah convened to choose a successor to Turanshah among the Ayyubid emirs, with opinion largely split between an-Nasir Yusuf of Damascus and al-Mughith Umar of al-Karak. Ultimately, however, consensus settled on as-Salih's widow, Shajar ad-Durr.<ref name="Clifford72"/>

Shajar ad-Durr ensured the Salihiyyah's dominance of the paramilitary elite, and ushered in a process of establishing patronage and kinship ties with the Salihiyyah. In particular, she cultivated close ties with the Jamdari (pl. Jamdariyyah) and Bahri (pl. "Bahriyyah") elements of the Salihiyyah, by distributing to them iqtaʿ and other benefits.<ref name="Clifford73">Clifford 2013, p. 73.</ref> The Bahriyya were named after the Arabic word bahr, meaning "sea" or "large river", because their barracks was located on the Nile River island of Rawda. They were mostly drawn from among the Cumans-Kipchaks who controlled the steppes north of the Black Sea.<ref name="Ayalon"/> Shajar al-Durr's efforts and the lingering desire among the military in Egypt to maintain the Ayyubid state was made evident when the Salihi mamluk and atabeg al-askar, Aybak, attempted to claim the sultanate, but was prevented from monopolizing power by the army and the Bahriyyah and Jamdariyyah, which asserted that only an Ayyubid could exercise sultanic authority.<ref name="Clifford72"/><ref name="Clifford73"/> The Bahriyyah compelled Aybak to share power with al-Ashraf Musa, a grandson of Sultan al-Kamil.<ref name="Northrup69">Northrup 1998, p. 69.</ref>

Factional power struggles

Aybak was one of the oldest of the Salihi mamluks and a senior member of as-Salih's inner circle, despite only being an emir awsat (middle-ranked emir).<ref>Clifford 2013, p. 74.</ref> He served as the principal bulwark against the more junior Bahri and Jamdari elements of the Salihiyyah, and his promotion to atabeg al-askar was met by Bahri rioting in Cairo, the first of many examples of intra-Salihi tensions surrounding Aybak's ascendancy.<ref name="Clifford75">Clifford 2013, p. 75.</ref> The Bahriyyah and Jamdariyyah were represented by their patron, Faris ad-Din Aktay, a principal organizer of Turanshah's assassination and the recipient of Fakhr ad-Din's large estate by Shajar al-Durr; the latter saw Aktay as a counterweight to Aybak.<ref name="Clifford75"/> Aybak moved against the Bahriyyah in 1251 by shutting down their Rawda headquarters in a bid to sap Aktay's power base. Aybak was still unable to promote his own mamluks, known as the "Mu'izziyah", to senior posts until 1252. That year, he managed to dispatch Aktay to Upper Egypt to suppress an Arab uprising.<ref>Clifford 2013, p. 76.</ref> Instead of isolating Aktay as was Aybak's intention, the assignment allowed Aktay to impose extortionate taxes in Upper Egypt and provide him the personal funds to finance his patronage of the Bahriyyah. In 1254, Aybak had his Mu'izzi mamluks assassinate Aktay in the Citadel of Cairo.<ref>Clifford 2013, p. 77.</ref>

Afterward, Aybak proceeded to purge those in his retinue and in the Salihiyyah who he believed were disloyal to him, causing a temporary exodus of Bahri mamluks, most of whom settled in Gaza, but also in Upper Egypt and Syria.<ref name="Northrup69"/><ref name="Clifford78">Clifford 2013, p. 78.</ref> The purge led to a dearth of military support for Aybak, which in turn led to Aybak's recruitment of new supporters from among the army in Egypt and the Turkic Nasiri and Azizi mamluks from Syria, who had defected from their Ayyubid masters, namely an-Nasir Yusuf, and moved to Egypt in 1250.<ref name="Clifford78"/> The Syrian mamluks were led by their patron Jamal ad-Din Aydughdi and were assigned most of the iqtaʿ of Aktay and his allies. However, Aydughdi's growing ambitions made Aybak view him as a threat. After Aybak learned that Aydughdi was plotting to topple him and recognize an-Nasir Yusuf as Ayyubid sultan, which would likely leave Aydughdi in virtual control of Egypt, Aybak had Aydughdi imprisoned in Alexandria in 1254 or 1255.<ref>Clifford 2013, pp. 79–80.</ref>

Meanwhile, the Bahriyya faction in Gaza commanded by Baybars sought to enlist their services with an-Nasir Yusuf. In an attempt to dislodge Aybak, the Bahriyyah petitioned an-Nasir Yusuf to claim the Ayyubid throne and invade Egypt, but an-Nasir Yusuf initially refused. However, in 1256, he dispatched a Bahri-led expedition to Egypt, but no battle occurred when Aybak met an-Nasir Yusuf's army.<ref name="Northrup70">Northrup 1998, p. 70.</ref> Aybak was assassinated on 10 April 1257,<ref name="Northrup70"/> possibly on the orders of Shajar al-Durr,<ref>Clifford 2013, pp. 73–74.</ref> who was assassinated a week later.<ref name="Northrup70"/> Their deaths left a relative power vacuum in Egypt, with Aybak's teenage son, al-Mansur Ali, as heir to the sultanate.<ref name="Northrup70"/> While al-Mansur Ali was sultan, the strongman in Egypt was Aybak's former close aide, Sayf ad-Din Qutuz,<ref name="Northrup71">Northrup 1998, p. 71.</ref> who also had hostile relations with the Salihiyyah, including the Bahri mamluks.<ref name="Clifford80">Clifford 2013, p. 80.</ref>

By the time of Aybak's death, the Bahriyyah had entered the service of al-Mughith Umar of al-Karak, who agreed to invade Egypt and claim the Ayyubid sultanate, but al-Mughith's small Bahri-dominated invading force was routed at the frontier with Egypt in November.<ref name="Northrup70"/> The Bahriyyah and al-Mughith launched a second expedition in 1258, but were again defeated.<ref name="Northrup71"/> The Bahriyyah subsequently raided areas around Syria, threatening an-Nasir Yusuf's power in Damascus. After a first attempt to defeat the Bahriyyah near Gaza failed, an-Nasir Yusuf launched a second expedition against them with al-Mansur Muhammad II of Hama, resulting in a Bahriyyah defeat at Jericho.<ref name="Northrup71"/> An-Nasir Yusuf proceeded to besiege al-Mughith and the Bahriyyah at al-Karak, but the growing threat of a Mongol invasion of Syria ultimately led to a reconciliation between an-Nasir Yusuf and al-Mughith, and Baybars' defection to the former.<ref name="Northrup71"/> Qutuz deposed al-Mansur Ali in 1259. Afterward, he purged and/or arrested the Mu'izziyah and any Bahri mamluks he could locate in Egypt in a bid to eliminate dissent towards his rule.<ref name="Clifford80"/> The surviving Mu'izzi and Bahri mamluks made their way to Gaza, where Baybars had created a virtual shadow state in opposition to Qutuz.<ref name="Clifford80"/>

While various mamluk factions competed for control of Egypt and Syria, the Mongols under the command of Hulagu Khan had sacked Baghdad, the intellectual and spiritual center of the Islamic world, in 1258, and proceeded westward, capturing Aleppo and Damascus.<ref name="Cummins89">Cummins 2011, p. 89.</ref> Qutuz sent military reinforcements to his erstwhile enemy an-Nasir Yusuf in Syria, and reconciled with the Bahriyyah, including Baybars, who was allowed to return to Egypt, to face the common Mongol threat.<ref name="Northrup72">Northrup 1998, p. 72.</ref> Hulagu sent emissaries to Qutuz in Cairo, demanding submission to Mongol rule. Qutuz had the emissaries killed, an act which historian Joseph Cummins called the "worst possible insult to the Mongol throne".<ref name="Cummins89"/> Qutuz then prepared Cairo's defenses to ward off the Mongols' threatened invasion of Egypt, but after hearing news that Hulagu withdrew from Syria to claim the Mongol throne, Qutuz began preparations for the conquest of Syria. He mobilized a force of some 120,000 soldiers and gained the support of his main Mamluk rival, Baybars.<ref name="Cummins90">Cummins 2011, p. 90.</ref>

The Mamluks entered Palestine to confront the Mongol army that Hulagu left behind under the command of Kitbuqa.<ref name="Cummins90"/> In September 1260, the two sides met in the plains south of Nazareth in a major confrontation known as the Battle of Ain Jalut.<ref>Cummins 2011, p. 80.</ref> Qutuz had some of his cavalry units hide in the hills around Ain Jalut (Goliath's Spring), while directing Baybars's forces to advance past Ain Jalut against Kitbuqa's Mongols. In the ensuing half-hour clash, Baybars' men feigned a retreat and were pursued by Kitbuqa. The latter's forces fell into a Mamluk trap once they reached the springs of Ain Jalut, with Baybars' men turning around to confront the Mongols and Qutuz's units ambushing the Mongols from the hills.<ref name="Cummins90"/> The battle ended in a Mongol rout and Kitbuqa's capture and execution. Afterward, the Mamluks proceeded to recapture Damascus and the other Syrian cities taken by the Mongols.<ref>Cummins 2011, p. 91.</ref> Upon Qutuz's triumphant return to Cairo, he was assassinated in a Bahri plot. Baybars subsequently assumed power in Egypt in late 1260,<ref name="Northrup72"/> and established the Bahri Mamluk sultanate.<ref>Northrup, ed. Petry, p. 250.</ref>

Bahri rule

Şablon:Main article

Reign of Baybars

Şablon:Main article

Baybars rebuilt the Bahriyyah's former headquarters in Rawdah island and put Qalawun, one of his most senior associates, in command of it. In 1263, Baybars deposed al-Mughith of al-Karak based on allegations of collaborating with the Mongol Ilkhanate of Persia, and thus consolidated his authority over Muslim Syria.<ref name="Asbridge923">Asbridge 2010, pp. 92–93.</ref> During his early reign and through heavy financial expense, Baybars rebuilt and stringently trained the Mamluk army, which grew from 10,000 cavalry to 40,000, with a 4,000-strong royal guard at its core.<ref name="Asbridge95">Asbridge 2010, p. 95.</ref> The new force was rigidly disciplined and highly trained in horsemanship, swordsmanship and archery.<ref name="Asbridge95"/>

Another major component to Baybar's rule was intrastate communication. To accomplish this, he instituted a postal network that extended across the cities of Egypt and Syria.<ref name="Asbridge923"/> The need for smooth delivery of correspondence also led to the large scale repair or construction of roads and bridges along the postal route.<ref name="Asbridge923"/> Baybars attempted to institute dynastic rule by assigning his four-year-old son al-Said Barakah as co-sultan, thereby ending the Mamluk tradition of electing a leader, but this effort was ultimately unsuccessful, at least for his Zahirid household; successful rulership became highly dependent on Baybars' personal qualities.<ref name="Asbridge923"/> However, Baybars success in establishing centralized rule resulted in the consolidation of the Mamluk Sultanate.<ref name="Asbridge923"/> Through opening diplomatic channels with the Mongols, Baybars also sought to stifle a potential alliance between the Mongols and the Christian powers of Europe, while also sowing divisions between the Mongol Ilkhanate and the Mongol Golden Horde. In addition, his diplomacy was also intended to maintain the flow of Turkic mamluks from Mongol-held Central Asia.<ref name="Asbridge923"/>

Dosya:Baibar the first lion-01.svg
the lion passant was the heraldic blazon of Baibars from 1260

With Bahri power in Egypt and Muslim Syria consolidated by 1265, Baybars launched expeditions against the Crusader fortresses throughout Syria, capturing Arsuf in 1265, and Halba and Arqa in 1266.<ref>Northrup 1998, p. 73.</ref> According to historian Thomas Asbridge, the methods used to capture Arsuf demonstrated the "Mamluks' grasp of siegecraft and their overwhelming numerical and technological supremacy".<ref name="Asbridge97">Asbridge 2010, p. 97.</ref> Baybars' strategy regarding the Crusader fortresses along the Syrian coast was not to capture and utilize the fortresses, but to destroy them and thus prevent their potential future use by new waves of Crusaders.<ref name="Asbridge97"/> In August 1266, the Mamluks launched a punitive expedition against the Armenian Cilician Kingdom for its alliance with the Mongols, laying waste to numerous to Armenian villages and significantly weakening the kingdom. At around the same time, Baybars' forces captured Safad from the Knights Templar, and shortly after, Ramla, both cities in interior Palestine. Unlike the coastal Crusader fortresses, the Mamluks strengthened and utilized the interior cities as major garrisons and administrative centers.<ref name="Asbridge98">Asbridge 2010, p. 98.</ref> Campaigns against the Crusaders continued in 1267, and in the spring of 1268, Baybars' forces captured Jaffa before conquering the major Crusader fortress of Antioch on 18 May.<ref>Asbridge 2010, pp. 99–100.</ref>

Baybars initiated a more aggressive policy than his predecessors toward the Christian Nubian kingdom of Makuria on Egypt's southern border. In 1265, the Mamluks launched an invasion of northern Makuria, and forced the Nubian king to become a vassal of the Mamluks.<ref name="AbouseifAfrica">Şablon:Cite book</ref> Around that time, the Mamluks had conquered the Red Sea areas of Suakin and the Dahlak Archipelago, while attempting to extend their control to the Hejaz, the desert regions west of the Nile, and Cyrenaica.<ref>Nicolle and Dennis 2014, p. 52.</ref> In 1268, the Makurian king, David I, overthrew the Mamluks' vassal and in 1272, raided the Mamluk Red Sea port of ‘Aydhab.<ref name="HoltDaly1718">Holt and Daly, pp. 17–18.</ref>

Meanwhile, Louis IX of France launched the Eighth Crusade, this time targeting Tunis with the intention of ultimately invading Egypt. However, Louis IX died, allowing the Mamluks to refocus their efforts at further conquests of Crusader territories in Syria, including the County of Tripoli's Krak des Chevaliers fortress, which Baybars captured in 1271.<ref>Asbridge 2010, pp. 103–104.</ref> Despite an alliance with the Assassins in 1272, in July 1273, the Mamluks, who by then determined that the Assassins' independence was problematic, wrested control of the Assassins' fortresses in Jabal Ansariyah, including Masyaf.<ref name="Asbridge106">Asbridge 2010, p. 106.</ref> In 1275, the Mamluk governor of Qus, with Bedouin allies, launched an expedition against Nubia, defeating David near Dongola in 1276, and installed Shakanda as king.<ref name="HoltDaly1718"/> This brought the fortresses of Qasr Ibrim and Dotawo under Mamluk jurisdiction.<ref name="HoltDaly1718"/> The conquest of Nubia was not permanent, however, and the process of invading the region and installing a vassal king would be repeated by Baybars' successors.<ref name="HoltDaly1718"/> Nonetheless, Baybars' initial conquest led the annual expectation of tribute from the Nubians by the Mamluks until the Makurian kingdom's demise in the mid-14th century.<ref name="AbouseifAfrica"/> In 1277, Baybars launched an expedition against the Ilkhanids, routing them in Elbistan in Anatolia, before ultimately withdrawing to avoid overstretching their forces and risk being cut off from Syria by a second, large incoming Ilkhanid army.<ref name="Asbridge106"/>

Early Qalawuni period

Şablon:See also In July 1277, Baybars died en route to Damascus, and was succeeded by Barakah.<ref>Asbridge 2010, p. 107.</ref> However, the latter's ineptness precipitated a power struggle that ended with Qalawun being elected sultan in November 1279.<ref name="Asbridge108">Asbridge 2010, p. 108.</ref><ref name="Northrup84">Northrup 1998, p. 84.</ref> The Ilkhanids took advantage of the disarray of Baybars' succession by raiding Mamluk Syria, before launching a massive offensive against Syria in the autumn of 1281. Qalawun's forces were significantly outnumbered by the estimated 80,000-strong Ilkhanid-Armenian-Georgian-Seljuk coalition, but marched north from Damascus to meet the Ilkhanid army at Homs. In the 28 October battle of Homs, the Mamluks routed the Ilkhanids and confirmed Mamluk dominance in Syria.<ref name="Asbridge108"/> The defeat of the Ilkhanids allowed Qalawun to proceed and eliminate the remaining Crusader outposts in Syria. In May 1285, he captured the Marqab fortress and garrisoned it.<ref>Asbridge 2010, pp. 109–110.</ref>

Qalawun's early reign was marked by policies that were meant to gain the support of important societal elements, namely the merchant class, the Muslim bureaucracy and the religious establishment.<ref name="Northrup84"/> Among these early policies were the elimination of illegal taxes that burdened the merchant community and extensive building and renovation projects for Islam's holiest sites, such as the Prophet's Mosque in Medina, the al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem and the Ibrahimi Mosque in Hebron.<ref>Northrup 1998, pp. 84–85.</ref> Following the détente with the Ilkhanate after 1280, Qalawun launched a wide arrest campaign to eliminate internal dissent, imprisoning dozens of high-ranking emirs in Egypt and Syria.<ref>Northrup 1998, pp. 115–116.</ref> The détente also saw a shift in Qalawun's building activities to focus on more secular and personal purposes, including a large, multi-division hospital complex in Cairo across from the tomb of as-Salih Ayyub.<ref name="Northrup11920">Northrup 1998, pp. 119–120.</ref> Construction of the hospital, a contrast from his Mamluk predecessors who focused on establishing madrasas, was done to gain the goodwill of the public, create a lasting legacy, and secure his spot in the afterlife.<ref name="Northrup11920"/> Its location facing as-Salih's tomb was meant demonstrate Qalawun's lasting connection to his master and to honor the Salihiyyah.<ref name="Northrup11920"/> While the Salihi mamluks were typically Kipchak Turks, Qalawun diversified mamluk ranks purchasing numerous non-Turks, particularly Circassians, forming out of them the Burji regiment.<ref>Rabbat 1995, p. 139.</ref>

Dosya:BattleOfHoms1299.JPG
14th century illustration from a manuscript of depicting the Battle of Wadi al-Khazandar, in which the Mamluks were routed by the Mongol Ilkhanids

Qalawun was the last Salihi sultan and following his death in 1290, his son, al-Ashraf Khalil, drew his legitimacy as a Mamluk by emphasizing his lineage from Qalawun, thus inaugurating the Qalawuni period of Bahri rule.<ref name="Petry252">Northrup, ed. Petry, p. 252.</ref> Like his two Bahri predecessors, Khalil's main priorities were organization of the sultanate, defeat of the Crusaders and the Mongols, incorporation of Syria into the Mamluk domain and preservation of the import of new mamluks and weaponry.<ref name="Petry251">Northrup, ed. Petry, p. 251.</ref> With regards to the latter policy, Baybars had purchased 4,000 mamluks, Qalawun purchased 6,000–7,000 and by the end of Khalil's reign, there was an estimated total of 10,000 mamluks in the sultanate.<ref name="Levanoni32">Levanoni 1995, p. 32.</ref> In 1291, Khalil captured Acre, the last major Crusader fortress in Palestine and thus Mamluk rule extended across the entirety of Syria.<ref>Asbridge 2010, p. 114.</ref>

Khalil's death in 1293 led to period of factional struggle, with Khalil's prepubescent brother, an-Nasir Muhammad, being overthrown the following year by a Mongol mamluk of Qalawun, al-Adil Kitbugha, who in turn was succeeded by a Greek mamluk of Qalawun, Husam ad-DIn Lajin.<ref name="Petry252"/> In a bid to consolidate his control, Lajin attempted to redistribute iqtaʿat to his supporters.<ref name="Petry252"/> Lajin was unable to retain the sultanate and al-Nasir Muhammad was restored to power in 1298, ruling a fractious realm until being toppled a second time by Baybars II, a Circassian mamluk of Qalawun, who was known to be more wealthy, pious and cultured than his immediate predecessors.<ref name="Petry252"/> Early into an-Nasir Muhammad's second reign, the Ilkhanids, whose leader, Mahmud Ghazan, had converted to Islam, invaded Syria and routed a Mamluk army near Homs in the Battle of Wadi al-Khazandar. However, Ghazan withdrew most of his troops from Syria shortly after due to a dearth in fodder for their numerous horses and the residual Ilkhanid force retreated in 1300 at the approach of the rebuilt Mamluk army.<ref>Amitai 2006, p. 34.</ref> A further Ilkhanid invasion in 1303 was repelled after the Ilkhanid defeat at the Battle of Marj al-Suffar in the plains south of Damascus.<ref>Amitai 2006, p. 38.</ref>

Third reign of an-Nasir Muhammad

Şablon:See also Baybars II ruled for roughly one year before an-Nasir Muhammad became sultan again in 1310, this time ruling for over three consecutive decades in a period that is often considered by historians of the Mamluk period to be the apex of both the Bahri regime specifically and the Mamluk Sultanate in general.<ref name="Petry253">Northrup, ed. Petry, p. 253.</ref> To avoid the experiences of his previous two reigns where the mamluks of Qalawun and Khalil held sway and periodically assumed the sultanate, an-Nasir Muhammad launched efforts to establish a centralized autocracy.<ref name="Levanoni28">Levanoni 1995, p. 28.</ref> Early into his third reign, in 1310, an-Nasir Muhammad imprisoned, exiled or killed any Mamluk emirs that supported those who toppled him in the past, including the Burji mamluks.<ref name="Levanoni28"/> He then assigned emirates to over thirty of his own mamluks.<ref name="Levanoni28"/> Initially, an-Nasir Muhammad left most of his father's mamluks undisturbed, but in 1311 and 1316, he imprisoned and executed most of them, and again redistributed emirates to his own mamluks.<ref>Levanoni 1995, p. 29.</ref> By 1316, the number of mamluks was reduced to 2,000.<ref name="Levanoni32"/> An-Nasir Muhammad went further in imposing his rule by intervening to have al-Wathiq succeed Caliph al-Mustakfi, as well as compelling the qadi to issue legal rulings that advanced his interests.<ref name="Levanoni30">Levanoni 1995, p. 30.</ref>

The third reign of an-Nasir Muhammad also saw a departure from the traditions of succession and administrative elevation of his predecessors since he observed in his first two reigns that such traditions had been ignored anyway, while sultans were being assassinated and mamluks were abusing other mamluks in bids for power.<ref name="Levanoni30-1">Levanoni 1995, pp. 30–31.</ref> Moreover, an-Nasir Muhammad's being the son of a mamluk instead of a mamluk himself risked undermining his position among the largely mamluk elite.<ref name="Levanoni30-1"/> This partially explains his purges of the thousands of mamluks purchased by his predecessors. Amid conditions that stemmed the flow of mamluks from the Mongol-held lands to the sultanate, an-Nasir Muhammad resolved to make up for the loss of the purged mamluks by adopting new methods of training and military and financial advancement that introduced a great level of permissiveness.<ref name="Levanoni31-2"/> This permissiveness, which manifested in far more relaxed conditions for new mamluks, encouraged the pursuit of military careers in Egypt by aspiring mamluks outside of the country, to the point that parents would sell their children as mamluks with the belief the children would enjoy an improved standard of living.<ref name="Levanoni33">Levanoni 1995, p. 33.</ref>

Under an-Nasir Muhammad, the Mamluks successfully repelled an Ilkhanid invasion of Syria in 1313 and then concluded a peace treaty with the Ilkhanate in 1322, bringing a long-lasting end to the Mamluk-Mongol wars.<ref name="Petry253"/> Following the détente, an-Nasir Muhammad was able to usher in a period of stability and prosperity in the sultanate through the enacting of major political, economic and military reforms that were ultimately intended to ensure his continued rule and consolidate the Qalawunid-Bahri regime.<ref name="Petry253"/> Concurrent with an-Nasir Muhammad's reign was the disintegration of the Ilkhanate into several smaller dynastic states and the consequent Mamluk effort to establish diplomatic and commercial relationships with the new political entities.<ref name="Petry253"/> An-Nasir Muhammad also attempted to assert permanent Mamluk control over the Makurian vassal state, launching an invasion in 1316 and installing a Muslim Nubian king, Abdallah Barshambu.<ref name="HoltDaly1718"/> The latter was overthrown by Kanz al-Dawla, who an-Nasir Muhammad temporarily ousted in a 1323/24 expedition.<ref name="HoltDaly1718"/>

End of the Bahri regime

An-Nasir Muhammad died in 1341 and his rule was followed by a succession of his descendants to the throne in a period marked by political instability.<ref name="Petry253"/> Most of his successors, except for an-Nasir Hasan (r. 1347–1351, 1354–1361) and al-Ashraf Sha'ban (r. 1363–1367), were sultans in name only, with the patrons of the leading mamluk factions holding actual power.<ref name="Petry253"/> The first of an-Nasir Muhammad's son to accede to the sultanate was Abu Bakr, who an-Nasir Muhammad designated as his successor before his death. However, an-Nasir Muhammad's senior aide, Qawsun, held real power and ultimately imprisoned and executed Abu Bakr and had an-Nasir Muhammad's infant son, al-Ashraf Kujuk, appointed in his stead.<ref>Drory 2006, p. 21.</ref> By January 1342, however, Qawsun and Kujuk were toppled, and the latter's half-brother, an-Nasir Ahmad of al-Karak, was declared sultan.<ref>Drory 2006, p. 24.</ref> Ahmad relocated to al-Karak and left a deputy to rule on his behalf in Cairo.<ref>Drory 2006, p. 27.</ref> This unorthodox move, together with his seclusive and frivolous behavior and his execution of loyal partisans, ended with Ahmad's deposition and replacement by his half-brother as-Salih Ismail in June 1342.<ref>Drory 2006, pp. 28–29.</ref> Isma'il ruled until his death in August 1345, and was succeeded by his brother al-Kamil Sha'ban. The latter was killed in a mamluk revolt and was succeeded by his brother al-Muzaffar Hajji, who was also killed in a mamluk revolt in late 1347.<ref name="Holt122-23">Holt 1986, pp. 122–123.</ref>

Following Hajji's death, the senior emirs of an-Nasir Muhammad hastily appointed another of his sons, the twelve-year-old an-Nasir Hasan.<ref>Levanoni 1995, p. 119.</ref> Coinciding with Hasan's first term,<ref name="Harithy70">Al-Harithy 1996, p. 70.</ref> in 1347–1348, the Bubonic Plague arrived in Egypt and other plagues followed, causing mass death in the country, which in turn led to major social and economic changes in the region.<ref name="Petry253"/> In 1351, Hasan attempted to assert his executive power and was ousted by the senior emirs, led by Emir Taz, and replaced with his brother, as-Salih Salih.<ref name="Harithy70"/> The emirs Shaykhu and Sirghitmish deposed Salih and restored Hasan in a coup in 1355, after which Hasan gradually purged Taz, Shaykhu and Sirghitmish and their mamluks from his administration.<ref name="Harithy70"/> Concurrently, Hasan began recruiting and promoting the awlad al-nas (descendants of mamluks who did not experience the enslavement/manumission process) in the military and administration, a process that lasted for the remainder of the Bahri period.<ref name="Harithy70"/><ref>Haarmann, p. 68.</ref> This led to resentment from Hasan's own mamluks, led by Emir Yalbugha al-Umari, who killed Hasan in 1361.<ref name="Harithy70"/><ref>Petry 1998, p. 637.</ref>

Yalbugha became the regent of Hasan's successor and the young son of the late sultan Hajji, al-Mansur Muhammad. By then, mamluk solidarity and loyalty to the emirs had dissipated.<ref>Levanaoni 1995, p. 88.</ref> To restore discipline and unity within the Mamluk state and military, Yalbugha applied the rigorous educational methods used for mamluks during the reigns of sultans Baybars and Qalawun.<ref name="Levananoni88-9">Levanoni 1995, pp. 88–89.</ref> In 1365, attempts by the Mamluks to annex Armenia, which had since replaced Crusader Acre as the Christian commercial foothold of Asia, were stifled by an invasion of Alexandria by Peter I of Cyprus.<ref name="Petry253"/> The Mamluks concurrently experienced a deterioration of their lucrative position in international trade and the economy of the sultanate declined, further weakening the Bahri regime.<ref name="Petry253"/> Meanwhile, the perceived harshness of Yalbugha's educational methods and his refusal to rescind his disciplinary reforms led to a mamluk backlash.<ref name="Levananoni88-9"/> Yalbugha was subsequently killed by his own mamluks in an uprising in 1366.<ref name="Levananoni88-9"/> The rebellious mamluks were supported by Sultan al-Ashraf Sha'ban, who Yalbugha installed in 1363.<ref name="Petry288">Northrup, ed. Petry 1998, p. 288.</ref> Sha'ban was able to rule as the real power in the sultanate until 1377, when he was killed by mamluk dissidents on his way to Mecca to perform the Hajj.<ref name="Petry288"/>

Burji rule

Şablon:Main article

Reign of Barquq

Şablon:Main article Sha'ban was succeeded by his seven-year-old son al-Mansur Ali, although the oligarchy of the senior emirs held the reins of power.<ref name="Holt127">Holt 1986, p. 127.</ref> Among the senior emirs who rose to prominence under Ali was Barquq, a Circassian mamluk of Yalbugha who was involved in Sha'ban's assassination,<ref name="Petry288"/><ref name="Holt127"/> and Baraka, another of Yalbugha's mamluks.<ref name="Holt127"/><ref name="Fischel75">Fischel 1967, p. 75.</ref> Barquq was made atabeg al-asakir in 1378, giving him command of the Mamluk army,<ref name="Petry288"/> which he used to oust Baraka in 1380.<ref name="Holt127"/> Afterward, he managed to bring to Egypt his father Anas and many of his kinsmen,<ref name="Holt127"/> possibly in an attempt to establish a power base outside of the Mamluk establishment.<ref name="Holt128">Holt 1986, p. 128.</ref> Ali died in May 1381 and was succeeded by his nine-year-old brother, as-Salih Hajji.<ref name="Holt127"/> However, power was in the hands of Barquq, as-Salih Hajji's regent; Barquq tried to succeed Ali as sultan, but his bid was vetoed by the other senior emirs.<ref name="Holt127"/> Nonetheless, in the following year, Barquq toppled as-Salih Hajji with the backing of Yalbugha's mamluks and assumed the sultanate, adopting the title of Baybars, "al-Malik az-Zahir".<ref name="Petry288"/><ref name="Holt128"/>

Dosya:Mamluk Barquq copper fals Damascus 1382 1389.jpg
Mamluk Barquq copper fals Damascus 1382 1389

Barquq's accession had been made possible by the support of Yalbugha's mamluks, whose subsequent rise to power also made Barquq's position vulnerable.<ref name="Holt128"/> His rule was challenged in Syria in 1389 during a revolt by the Mamluk governor of Malatya, Mintash, and the governor of Aleppo, Yalbugha an-Nasiri, who was a former mamluk of both an-Nasir Hasan and Yalbugha al-Umari.<ref name="Holt128"/><ref name="Petry291">Garcin, ed. Petry 1998, p. 291.</ref> The rebels took over Syria and headed for Egypt, prompting Barquq to abdicate in favor of as-Salih Hajji.<ref name="Holt128"/> The alliance between Yalbugha an-Nasiri and Mintash soon fell apart, however, and factional fighting ensued in Cairo ending with Mintash ousting Yalbugha.<ref name="Holt128"/> Barquq was arrested and exiled to al-Karak where he was able to rally support for his return to the throne.<ref name="Holt128"/> In Cairo, Barquq's loyalists took over the citadel and arrested as-Salih Hajji.<ref name="Holt128"/> This paved the way for Barquq's usurpation of the sultanate once more in February 1390, firmly establishing the Burji regime.<ref name="Holt128"/>

Barquq solidified his control over the sultanate in 1393, when his forces killed the major opponent to his rule, Mintash, in Syria.<ref name="Holt128"/> Barquq's reign saw the mass recruitment of Circassians (estimated at 5,000 recruits<ref name="Petry300">Garcin, ed. Petry 1998, p. 300.</ref>) into the mamluk ranks and the restoration of the Mamluk state's authority throughout its realm in the tradition of the early Mamluk sultans, Baybars and Qalawun.<ref name="Petry290">Garcin, ed. Petry 1998, p. 290.</ref> A major innovation to this system by Barquq was the division of Egypt into three provinces (niyabat) similar to the administrative divisions in Syria.<ref name="Petry290"/> The new Egyptian niyabas were Alexandria, Damanhur and Asyut.<ref name="Petry314">Garcin, ed. Petry 1998, p. 314.</ref> Barquq instituted this change as a means to better control the Egyptian countryside from the rising strength of the Arab tribes.<ref name="Petry290-91">Garcin, ed. Petry 1998, pp. 290–291.</ref> To that end, Barquq dispatched the Berber Hawwara tribesmen of the Nile Delta to Upper Egypt to keep the Arab tribes in check.<ref name="Petry290-91"/>

During Barquq's reign, in 1387, the Mamluks were able to force the Anatolian entity in Sivas to become a Mamluk vassal state.<ref name="Petry291"/> Towards the end of the 14th century, challengers to the Mamluks emerged in Anatolia, including the Ottoman dynasty who absorbed the territory of the Karamanids in central Anatolia and installed a vassal as the leader of the Dulkadirids in 1399, and the Turkic allies of Timur, the Aq Qoyonlu and Kara Qoyounlu tribes who entered southern and eastern Anatolia in the same time period.<ref name="Petry291"/> Barquq entered into a brief engagement with Timur at the Euphrates in 1394, but Timur withdrew during that episode.<ref name="Petry291"/>

Crises and restoration of state power

Barquq died in 1399 and was succeeded by his eleven-year-old son, an-Nasir Faraj, who was in Damascus at the time.<ref name="Petry291-92">Garcin, ed. Petry 1998, pp. 291–292.</ref> In that same year, Timur invaded Syria, sacking Aleppo before proceeding to sack Damascus.<ref name="Petry291-92"/> The latter had been abandoned by Faraj and his late father's entourage, who left for Cairo. Timur ended his occupation of Syria in 1402 to pursue his war against the Ottomans in Anatolia, who he deemed to be a more dangerous threat to his rule.<ref name="Petry291-92"/> Faraj was able to hold onto power during this turbulent period, which in addition to Timur's devastating raids, the rise of Turkic tribes in Jazira and attempts by Barquq's emirs to topple Faraj, also saw a famine in Egypt in 1403, a severe plague in 1405 and a Bedouin revolt that virtually ended the Mamluks' hold over Upper Egypt between 1401 and 1413.<ref name="Petry291-92"/> Thus, Mamluk authority throughout the sultanate was significantly eroded, while the capital Cairo experienced an economic crisis.<ref name="Petry291-92"/>

Faraj was toppled in 1412 by the Syria-based emirs, Tanam, Jakam, Nawruz and al-Mu'ayyad Shaykh, who Faraj sent a total of seven military expeditions against during his reign.<ref name="Petry291-92"/> The emirs could not usurp the throne themselves, however, and had Caliph al-Musta'in installed; the caliph had the support of the non-Circassian mamluks and legitimacy with the local population.<ref name="Petry291-92"/> Six months later, Shakyh eased al-Musta'in out of power after neutralizing his main rival, Nawruz, and assumed the sultanate.<ref name="Petry291-92"/> Shaykh's main goal in office was restoration of the state's authority within the sultanate, which saw further plagues in 1415–1417 and 1420.<ref name="Petry292-93">Garcin, ed. Petry 1998, pp. 292–293.</ref> During his reign, Shaykh reestablished the state's fiscal administration to replenish the treasury.<ref name="Petry293">Garcin, ed. Petry 1998, p. 293.</ref> To that end, his fiscal administrator led tax collection expeditions that were akin to plundering throughout the sultanate to compensate for the tax arrears that had accumulated under Faraj's reign.<ref name="Petry293"/> Shaykh also commissioned and led military expeditions against the Mamluks' enemies in Anatolia, reasserting the state's influence in that region.<ref name="Petry293"/>

Reign of Barsbay

Before Shaykh died in 1421, he sought to offset the power of the Circassian mamluks by importing Turkish mamluks and installing a Turk as atabeg al-asakir in 1420 to serve as regent for his infant son Ahmad.<ref name="Petry293"/> However, following his death, a Circassian emir, Tatar, married Shaykh's widow, ousted the atabeg al-asakir and assumed power.<ref name="Petry293"/> Tatar died three months into his reign and was succeeded by Barsbay, another Circassian emir of Barquq, in 1422.<ref name="Petry293"/>

Barsbay pursued an economic policy of establishing state monopolies over the lucrative trade with Europe, particularly regarding spices, to the chagrin of the civilian merchants of the sultanate.<ref name="Petry294">Garcin, ed. Petry 1998, p. 294.</ref> Moreover, Barsbay compelled Red Sea traders to offload their goods at the Mamluk-held Hejazi port of Jeddah rather than the Yemeni port of Aden in order to derive the most financial benefit from the Red Sea transit route to Europe.<ref name="Petry294"/> Barsbay also undertook efforts to better protect the caravan routes to the Hejaz from Bedouin raids and the Egyptian Mediterranean coast from Catalan and Genoese piracy.<ref name="Petry294"/> With regards to European pirates, he launched campaigns against Cyprus in 1425–1426, during which the island's king was taken captive, because of his alleged assistance to the pirates; the large ransoms paid to the Mamluks by the Cypriots allowed them to mint new gold coinage for the first time since the 14th century.<ref name="Petry294"/> Barsbay's efforts at monopolization and trade protection were meant to offset the severe financial losses of the sultanate's agricultural sector due to the frequent recurring plagues that took a heavy toll on the farmers.<ref>Garcin, ed. Petry 1998, pp. 293–294.</ref>

Barsbay launched military expeditions against the Aq Qoyonlu in 1429 and 1433.<ref name="Petry294"/> The first expedition involved the sacking of Edessa and the massacre of its Muslim inhabitants in retaliation for the Aq Qoyonlu's raids against the Mamluks' Mesopotamian territories.<ref name="Petry294"/> The second expedition was against the Aq Qoyonlu capital of Amid, which ended with the Aq Qoyonlu recognizing Mamluk suzerainty.<ref name="Petry294"/> While the Mamluks were able to force the Anatolian beyliks to generally submit to their hegemony in the region, Mamluk authority in Upper Egypt was largely relegated to the emirs of the Hawwara tribe.<ref name="Petry294"/> The latter had grown wealthy from their burgeoning trade with central Africa and achieved a degree of local popularity due to their piety, education and generally benign treatment of the inhabitants.<ref name="Petry294"/>

Fall

While the Ottoman sultan Bayezid II was engaged in Europe, a new round of conflict broke out between Egypt and the Safavid dynasty in Persia in 1501. Shah Ismail I sent an embassy to Venice and Syria inviting them to join arms and recover the territory taken from them by the "Porte" (Ottomans). Mameluk Egyptian sultan Al-Ghawri was told by Selim I that he was providing the envoys of the Safavid Ismail I safe passage through Syria on their way to Venice and harboring refugees. To appease him, Al-Ghawri placed in confinement the Venetian merchants then in Syria and Egypt, but after a year released them.

After the Battle of Chaldiran in 1514, Selim I attacked the Dulkadirids, an Egyptian vassal, and sent his head to Mamluk Sultan Al-Ashraf Qansuh al-Ghawri. Secure now against Shah Ismail I, in AD 1516 he drew together a great army aiming at conquering Egypt, but to deceive it he represented his army to further the war against Shah Ismail I. The war started in 1516 which led to the later incorporation of Egypt and its dependencies in the Ottoman Empire, with Mamluk cavalry proving no match for the Ottoman artillery and the janissaries. On August 24, 1516, at the Battle of Marj Dabiq Sultan al-Ghawri was killed.<ref>Şablon:Cite book</ref> Syria passed into Turkish possession,<ref>Şablon:Cite book</ref> who were welcomed in many places as deliverance from the Mamluks.

The Mamluk Sultanate survived until 1517, when it was conquered by the Ottoman Empire. Ottoman sultan Selim I captured Cairo on January 20, the center of power transferred then to Constantinople. Although not in the same form as under the Sultanate, the Ottoman Empire retained the Mamluks as an Egyptian ruling class and the Mamluks and the Burji family succeeded in regaining much of their influence, but remained vassals of the Ottomans.

Society

Language

By the time the Mamluks took power, Arabic had already been established as the language of religion, culture and the bureaucracy in Egypt, and was widespread among non-Muslim communities there as well.<ref name="Britannica114">Britannica, p. 114.</ref> Arabic's wide use among Muslim and non-Muslim commoners had likely been motivated by their aspiration to learn the language of the ruling and scholarly elite.<ref name="Britannica114"/> Another contributing factor was the wave of Arab tribal migration to Egypt and subsequent intermarriage between Arabs and the indigenous population.<ref name="Britannica114"/> The Mamluks contributed to the expansion of Arabic in Egypt through their victory over the Mongols and the Crusaders and the subsequent creation of a Muslim haven in Egypt and Syria for Arabic-speaking immigrants from other conquered Muslim lands.<ref name="Britannica114"/> The continuing invasions of Syria by Mongol armies led to further waves of Syrian immigrants, including scholars and artisans, to Egypt.<ref name="Britannica114"/>

Although Arabic was used as the administrative language of the sultanate, Turkish was the spoken language of the Mamluk ruling elite.<ref name="Winter96">Winter, ed. Philipp and Haarmann 1998, p. 96.</ref> According to Petry, "the Mamluks regarded Turkish as their caste's vehicle of communication, even though they themselves spoke Central Asian dialects such as Qipjak, or Circassian, a Caucasic language."<ref>Petry 1981, p. 70.</ref> According to historian Michael Winter, "Turkishness" was the distinctive aspect of the Mamluk ruling elite, for only they knew how to speak Turkish and had Turkish names.<ref name="Powell21"/> While the Mamluk elite was ethnically diverse, those who were not Turkic in origin were Turckicized nonetheless.<ref name="Rabbat60"/> As such, the ethnically Circassian mamluks who gained prominence with the rise of the Burji regime and became the dominant ethnic element of the government, were educated in the Turkish language and were considered to be Turks by the Arabic-speaking population.<ref name="Winter96"/><ref name="Powell21"/>

The ruling military elite of the sultanate was exclusive to those of mamluk background, with rare exceptions.<ref>Rabbat 2001, pp. 60–61.</ref> Ethnicity served as a major factor separating the mostly Turkic or Turkicized Mamluk elite from their Arabic-speaking subjects.<ref name="Powell21">Powell 2012, p. 21.</ref> Ethnic origin was a key component of an individual mamluk's identity, and ethnic identity manifested itself through given names, dress, access to administrative positions and was indicated by a sultan's nisba.<ref name="Yosef394">Yosef 2012, p. 394.</ref> The sons of mamluks, known as the awlad al-nas, did not typically hold positions in the military elite and instead, were often part of the civilian administration or the Muslim religious establishment.<ref name="Rabbat60">Rabbat 2001, p. 60.</ref> Among the Bahri sultans and emirs, there existed a degree of pride of their Kipchak Turkish roots,<ref name="Yosef394"/> and their non-Kipchak usurpers such as sultans Kitbuqa, Baybars II and Lajin were often de-legitimized in the Bahri-era sources for their non-Kipchak origins.<ref name="Yosef395">Yosef 2012, p. 395.</ref> The Mamluk elites of the Burji period were also apparently proud of their Circassian origins.<ref name="Yosef395"/>

Religion

Muslim community

A wide range of Islamic religious expression existed in Egypt during the early Mamluk era, namely Sunni Islam and its major madhabs (schools of thought) and various Sufi orders, but also small communities of Ismai'li Shia Muslims,<ref name="Northrup265">Northrup, ed. Petry 1998, p. 265.</ref> particularly in Upper Egypt.<ref name="Northrup266"/> In addition, there was a significant minority of Coptic Christians.<ref name="Northrup266">Northrup, ed. Petry 1998, p. 266.</ref> Under Sultan Saladin, the Ayyubids embarked on a program of reviving and strengthening Sunni Islam in Egypt to counter Christianity, which had been reviving under the religiously benign rule of the Fatimids,<ref name="Northrup266"/> and Ismailism, the branch of Islam of the Fatimid state.<ref name="Northrup265"/> Under the Bahri sultans, the promotion of Sunni Islam was pursued more vigorously than under the Ayyubids.<ref name="Northrup266"/> The Mamluks were motivated in this regard by personal piety or political expediency for Islam was both an assimilating and unifying factor between the Mamluks and the majority of their subjects; the early mamluks had been brought up as Sunni Muslims and the Muslim faith was the only aspect of life shared between the Mamluk ruling elite and its subjects.<ref>Northrup, ed. Petry 1998, pp. 268–269.</ref> While the precedent set by the Ayyubids highly influenced the Mamluk state's embrace of Sunni Islam,<ref name="Northrup268">Northrup, ed. Petry 1998, p. 268.</ref> the circumstances in the Muslim Middle East in the aftermath of the Crusader and Mongol invasions also left Mamluk Egypt as the last major Islamic power able to confront the Crusaders and the Mongols.<ref name="Northrup269">Northrup, ed. Petry 1998, p. 269.</ref> Thus, the early Mamluk embrace of Sunni Islam also stemmed from the pursuit of a moral unity within their realm based on the majority views of its subjects.<ref name="Northrup269"/>

The Mamluks sought to cultivate and utilize Muslim leaders to channel the religious feelings of the sultanate's Muslim subjects in a manner that did not disrupt the sultanate's authority.<ref name="Britannica114">Britannica, p. 114.</ref> Similar to their Ayyubid predecessors, the Bahri sultans showed particular favoritism towards the Shafi'i madhab, while also promoting the other major Sunni madhabs, namely the Maliki, Hanbali and Hanafi. Baybars ended the Ayyubid and early Mamluk tradition of selecting a Shafi'i scholar as qadi al-qudah (chief judge) and instead had a qadi al-qudah appointed from each of the four madhabs.<ref name="Northrup269"/> This policy change may have been partly motivated by a desire to accommodate an increasingly diverse Muslim population whose components had immigrated to Egypt from regions where other madhabs were prevalent.<ref name="Northrup269"/> Ultimately, however, the diffusion of the post of qadi al-qudah among the four madhabs enabled Mamluk sultans to act as patrons for each madhab and thus gain more influence over them.<ref name="Northrup269"/> Regardless of the policy change, the Shafi'i scholars maintained a number of privileges over their colleagues from the other madhabs.<ref name="Northrup269"/>

The Mamluks also embraced the various Sufi orders that existed in the sultanate.<ref name="Northrup268"/> Sufism was widespread in Egypt by the 13th century, and the Shadhiliyyah was the most popular Sufi order.<ref name="Northrup267">Northrup, ed. Petry 1998, p. 267.</ref> The Shadhiliyyah lacked an institutional structure and was flexible in its religious thought, allowing it to easily adapt to its local environment.<ref name="Northrup267"/> It incorporated Sunni Islamic piety with its basis in the Qur'an and hadith, Sufi mysticism, and elements of popular religion such as sainthood, ziyarat (visitation) to the tombs of saintly or religious individuals, and dhikr (invocation of God).<ref name="Northrup267"/> Other Sufi orders with large numbers of adherents were the Rifa'iyyah and Badawiyyah.<ref name="Northrup267"/> While the Mamluks patronized the Sunni ulama through appointments to government office, they patronized the Sufis by funding zawiyas (Sufi lodges).<ref name="Britannica114"/> On the other end of the spectrum of Sunni religious expression were the teachings of the Hanbali scholar Ibn Taymiyyah, which emphasized stringent moral rigor based on literal interpretations of the Qur'an and the Sunnah, and a deep hostility to the aspects of mysticism and popular religious innovations promoted by the various Sufi orders.<ref name="Northrup267"/> While Ibn Taymiyyah was not a typical representative of Sunni orthodoxy in the sultanate, he was the most prominent Muslim scholar of the Mamluk era and was arrested numerous times by the Mamluk government for his religious teachings, which are still influential in the modern-day Muslim world.<ref name="Northrup267"/> Ibn Taymiyyah's doctrines were regarded as being heretic by the Sunni establishment patronized by the Mamluks.<ref>Britannica, pp. 114–115.</ref>

Christian and Jewish communities

Christians and Jews in the sultanate were governed by the dual authority of their respective religious institutions and the sultan.<ref name="Stilt109">Stilt 2011, p. 109.</ref> The authority of the former extended to many of the everyday aspects of Christian and Jewish life and was not restricted to the religious practices of the two respective communities.<ref name="Stilt109"/> The Mamluk government, often under the official banner of the Pact of Umar which gave Christians and Jews dhimmi (protected peoples) status, ultimately determined the taxes that Christians and Jews paid to the sultanate, including the jizyah (poll tax), whether a house of worship could be constructed and the public appearance of Christians and Jews.<ref name="Stilt109"/> Jews generally fared better than Christians, and the latter experienced more difficulty under Mamluk rule than under previous Muslim powers.<ref name="Stilt109"/><ref name="Brittanica115">Britannica, p. 115.</ref> The association of Christians with the Mongols, due to the latter's use of Armenian and Georgian Christian auxiliaries, the attempted alliance between the Mongols and the Crusader powers, and the massacre of Muslim communities and the sparing of Christians in cities captured by the Mongols, may have contributed to rising anti-Christian sentiments in the Mamluk era.<ref>Brittanica, pp. 115–116.</ref> The manifestations of anti-Christian hostility were mostly spearheaded at the popular level rather than under the direction of Mamluk sultans. The main source of popular hostility was resentment at the privileged positions many Christians held in the Mamluk bureaucracy.<ref name="Britannica116">Britannica, p. 116.</ref>

The Coptic decline in Egypt occurred under the Bahri sultans and accelerated further under the Burji regime.<ref>Teule 2013, p. 10.</ref> There were several instances of Egyptian Muslim protests against the wealth of Coptic Christians and their employment with the state, and both Muslim and Christian rioters burned down each other's houses of worship in times of intercommunal tensions.<ref name="Britannica116"/> As a result of popular pressure, Coptic Christians had their employment in the bureaucracy terminated at least nine times between the late 13th and mid-15th centuries, and on one occasion, in 1301, the government ordered the closure of all churches.<ref name="Britannica116"/> Coptic bureaucrats would often be restored to their positions after the moment of tension passed.<ref name="Stilt120">Stilt, p. 120.</ref> Many Coptic Christians decided to convert to Islam or at least adopt the outward expressions of Muslim faith to protect their employment, avoid jizyah taxation and avoid official measures against them.<ref name="Stilt120"/> The 14th century saw a large wave of Coptic conversions to Islam,<ref name="Stilt120"/> and by the end of the Mamluk period, the ratio of Muslims to Christians in Egypt may have risen to 10:1.<ref name="Britannica116"/>

In Syria, the Mamluks uprooted the local Maronite and Greek Orthodox Christians from the coastal areas as a means to prevent their potential contact with European powers.<ref name="Teule11">Teule 2013, p. 11.</ref> The Maronite Church was especially suspected by the Mamluks of collaboration with the Europeans due to the high degree of relations between the Maronite Church and the papacy in Rome and the Christian European powers, particularly Cyprus.<ref name="Teule11"/> The Greek Orthodox Church experienced a decline following the Mamluk destruction of its spiritual center, Antioch, and the Timurid destruction of Aleppo and Damascus in 1400.<ref name="Teule11"/> The Syriac Christians also experienced a significant decline in Syria due to intra-communal disputes over patriarchal succession and the destruction of church institutions by the Timurids and local Kurdish tribes.<ref>Teule 2013, p. 12.</ref> The Mamluks brought about a similar decline of the Armenian Orthodox Church after their capture of the Armenian Cilician Kingdom in 1374, in addition to the raids of the Timurids in 1386 and the conflict between the Timurids and the nomadic Turkmen Aq Qoyunlu and Kara Qoyonlu tribal confederations in Cilicia.<ref>Teule 2013, p. 13.</ref>

Bedouin relationship with the state

Bedouin tribes served as a reserve force in the Mamluk military.<ref name="Levanoni173">Levanoni 1995, p. 173.</ref> Under the third reign of an-Nasir Muhammad in particular, the Bedouin tribes, particularly those of Syria, such as the Al Fadl, were strengthened and integrated into the economy as well.<ref name="Levanoni173"/> Bedouin tribes were also a major source of the Mamluk cavalry's Arabian horses.<ref name="Levanoni175">Levanoni 1995, p. 175.</ref> Qalawun purchased horses from the Bedouin of Barqa (Cyrenaica), which were inexpensive but of high quality, while an-Nasir Muhammad spent extravagant sums for horses from numerous Bedouin sources, including Barqa, Syria, Iraq and Bahrayn.<ref name="Levanoni175"/>

Sultans Baybars and Qalawun, and the Syrian viceroys of an-Nasir Muhammad during his first two reigns, emirs Salar and Baybars II, were averse to granting Bedouin sheikhs iqtaʿat, and when they did, the iqtaʿat were of low quality.<ref>Levanoni 1995, p. 176.</ref> However, during an-Nasir Muhammad's third reign, the Al Fadl were granted high-quality iqtaʿat in abundance, strengthening the tribe to become the most powerful among the Bedouin of the Syrian Desert region.<ref name="Levanoni176-7">Levanoni 1995, pp. 176–177.</ref> Beyond his personal admiration of the Bedouin, an-Nasir Muhammad's motivation for distributing iqtaʿat to Al Fadl, especially under the leadership of Muhanna ibn Isa, was to prevent them from defecting to the Ilkhanate, which their leaders had done frequently in the first half of the 14th century.<ref name="Levanoni176-7"/> Competition over iqtaʿat and the post of amir al-ʿarab among the Bedouin tribes of Syria, particularly the Al Fadl, led to conflict and rebellion among the two tribes and other Bedouin, leading to mass bloodshed in Syria in the aftermath of an-Nasir Muhammad's death.<ref name="Levanoni179-80">Levanoni 1995, pp. 179–180.</ref> The Mamluk leadership in Syria, weakened by the losses of the Black Plague, was unable to quell the Bedouin through military expeditions, so they resolved to assassinate the sheikhs of the tribes. including those of Upper Egypt.<ref name="Levanoni179-80"/> The Al Fadl tribe eventually lost favor, while the Bedouin tribes of al-Karak were strengthened by the later Bahri sultans.<ref name="Levanoni179-80"/>

In Egypt, the Mamluks, particularly during an-Nasir Muhammad's third reign, had a similar relationship with the Bedouin as in Syria. The 'Isa Ibn Hasan al-Hajjan tribe became powerful in the country after being assigned massive iqtaʿat.<ref name="Levanoni182">Levanoni 1995, pp. 182.</ref> The tribe remained strong after an-Nasir Muhammad's death, but frequently rebelled against the succeeding Bahri sultans, but were restored each time, before its sheikh was finally executed as a rebel in 1353.<ref name="Levanoni182"/> In Sharqiya in Lower Egypt, the Tha'laba tribes were charged with overseeing the postal routes, but they were often unreliable in this regard and ultimately joined the Al A'id tribes during their raids.<ref name="Levanoni182"/> Bedouin tribal wars frequently disrupted trade and travel in Upper Egypt, and caused the destruction of cultivated lands and sugar processing plants.<ref name="Levanoni182-3">Levanoni, pp. 182–183.</ref> In the mid-14th century, Bedouin tribes in Upper Egypt, namely the rival Arak and Banu Hilal, became the de facto rulers of the region, forcing the Mamluks to rely on them for tax collection.<ref name="Levanoni182-3"/> The Bedouin were ultimately purged from Upper and Lower Egypt by the campaigns of Emir Shaykhu in 1353.<ref>Levanoni 1995, p. 183.</ref>

Government

The Mamluks did not significantly alter the administrative, legal and economic systems that they inherited from the Ayyubid state.<ref name="Stilt14">Stilt 2011, p. 14.</ref> The Mamluk territorial domain was virtually the same as that of the Ayyubid state i.e. Egypt, Levant and Hijaz.<ref name="Holt237">Holt 1975, p. 237.</ref> However, unlike the collective sovereignty of the Ayyubids where territory was divided among members of the royal family, the Mamluk state was unitary.<ref name="Holt237"/> Under certain Ayyubid sultans, Egypt had paramountcy over the Syrian provinces, but under the Mamluks this paramountcy was consistent and absolute.<ref name="Holt237"/> Cairo remained the capital of the sultanate and its social, economic and administrative center, with the Cairo Citadel serving as the sultan's headquarters.<ref name="Stilt14"/>

The foundation of Mamluk organization and factional unity was based on the principles of khushdashiyya, defined by historian Amalia Levanoni as "the fostering of a common bond between mamluks who belonged to the household of a single master and their loyalty towards him."<ref name="Levanoni14">Levanoni 1995, p. 14.</ref> Khushdashiyya was likewise a crucial component of a sultan's authority and power.<ref name="Levanoni14"/>

Authority of the sultan

The Mamluk sultan was the ultimate authority, while he delegated power to provincial governors known as nuwwab as-saltana (deputy sultans, sing. na'ib as-saltana).<ref name="Holt237"/> Generally, the vice-regent of Egypt was the most senior na'ib, followed by the governor of Damascus, then Aleppo, then the governors of al-Karak, Safad, Tripoli, Homs and Hama.<ref name="Holt237"/> In Hama, the Mamluks had permitted the Ayyubids to continue to govern until 1341 (its popular governor in 1320, Abu'l Fida, was granted the title sultan by Sultan an-Nasir Muhammad), but otherwise the nuwwab of the provinces were Mamluk emirs.<ref name="Holt237"/>

A consistent accession process occurred with every new Mamluk sultan.<ref name="Holt238">Holt 1975, p. 238.</ref> It more or less involved the election of a sultan by a counsel of emirs and mamluks (who would give him an oath of loyalty), the sultan's assumption of the monarchical title al-malik, a state-organized procession through Cairo at the head of which was the sultan, and the reading of the sultan's name in the khutbah (Friday prayer sermon).<ref name="Holt238"/> The process was not formalized and the electoral body was never defined, but typically consisted of the emirs and mamluks of whatever Mamluk faction held sway; usurpations of the throne by rival factions were relatively common.<ref name="Holt239">Holt 1975, p. 239.</ref> Despite the electoral nature of accession, dynastic succession was nonetheless a reality at times,<ref name="Levanoni30"/> particularly during the Bahri regime, where Baybars' sons Barakah and Solamish succeeded him, before Qalawun usurped the throne and was thereafter succeeded by four generations of direct descendants, with occasional interruptions.<ref name="Holt239"/> The frequency of hereditary rule was much less frequent during the Burji regime. Nonetheless, with rare exception, the Burji sultans were all linked to the regime's founder Barquq through blood or mamluk affiliation.<ref name="Holt240">Holt 1975, p. 240.</ref> The accession of blood relatives to the sultanate was often the result of the decision or indecision of senior Mamluk emirs or the will of the preceding sultan.<ref name="Levanoni30"/> The latter situation applied to the sultans Baybars, Qalawun, the latter's son, an-Nasir Muhammad and Barquq, who formally arranged for one or more of their sons to succeed them.<ref name="Holt239"/> More often than not, the sons of sultans were elected by the senior emirs with the ultimate intention that they serve as convenient figureheads presiding over an oligarchy of the emirs.<ref name="Holt240"/>

Lesser-ranked Mamluk emirs viewed the sultan more as a peer whom they entrusted with ultimate authority and as a benefactor whom they expected would guarantee their salaries and monopoly on the military.<ref name="Petry468">Petry, ed. Petry 1998, p. 468.</ref> When emirs felt the sultan was not ensuring their benefits, disruptive riots, coup plots or delays to calls for service were all likely scenarios.<ref name="Petry468"/> Often, the practical restrictions on a sultan's power came from his own khushdashiyyah or from other emirs, with whom there was constant tension, particularly in times of peace with external enemies.<ref name="Holt248">Holt 1975, p. 248.</ref> According to Holt, the factious nature of emirs who were not the sultan's khushdashiyyah derived from the primary loyalty of emirs and mamluks to their own ustadh (master) before the sultan.<ref name="Holt248"/> However, emirs who were part of the sultan's khushdashiyyah also rebelled at times, particularly the governors of Syria who formed power bases out of their territory.<ref name="Holt248"/> Typically, the faction most loyal to the sultan were the Royal Mamluks, particularly those mamluks whom the sultan had personally recruited and manumitted.<ref name="Holt248"/> This was in contrast to the qaranis, who were those in the Royal Mamluks' ranks who had been recruited by a sultan's predecessors and thus lacked khushdashiyyah bonds with the sultan.<ref name="Holt248"/> The qaranis occasionally constituted a hostile faction to a sultan, such as in the case of Sultan as-Salih Ayyub and the Qalawuni successors of an-Nasir Muhammad.<ref name="Holt248"/>

The sultan was the head of state and among his powers and responsibilities were issuing and enforcing specific legal orders and general rules, making the decision to go to war, levying taxes for armed campaigns, ensuring the proportionate distribution of food supplies throughout the sultanate and, in some cases, overseeing the investigation and punishment of alleged criminals.<ref name="Stilt31">Stilt 2011, p. 31.</ref> A Mamluk sultan or his appointees led the annual Hajj pilgrimage caravans from Cairo and Damascus in the capacity of amir al-hajj (commander of the Hajj caravan). Starting with Qalawun, the Mamluks also monopolized the tradition of providing the annual decorated covering of the Kaaba, in addition to patronizing Jerusalem's Dome of the Rock.<ref name="Stilt31"/> Another prerogative, at least of the early Bahri sultans, was to import as many mamluks as possible into the sultanate, preferring those who originated from the territories of the Mongols.<ref name="Levanoni32"/> However, the Mamluks' enemies, such as the Mongol powers and their Muslim vassals, the Armenians and the Crusaders, successfully disrupted the flow of mamluks into the sultanate.<ref name="Levanoni31-2">Levanoni 1995, pp. 31–32.</ref> Unable to meet the military's need for new mamluks, the sultans often resorted to turning Ilkhanid deserters or prisoners of war into soldiers, sometimes while the war the prisoners were captured in was still ongoing.<ref name="Levanoni31-2"/>

Role of the caliph

To legitimize their rule, the Mamluks presented themselves as the defenders of Islam, and, beginning with Baybars, sought the confirmation of their executive authority from a caliph. The Ayyubids had owed their allegiance to the Abbasid Caliphate, but the latter was destroyed when Caliph al-Musta'sim was killed by the Mongols and the Abbasid capital Baghdad was sacked in 1258.<ref>Stilt 2011, p. 30.</ref> Three years later, Baybars reestablished the caliphate as an institution by confirming a member of the Abbasid family, al-Mustansir, as caliph, who in turn confirmed Baybars as sultan.<ref name="Stilt30-1">Stilt 2011, pp. 30–31.</ref> In addition, the caliph declared the sultan's legitimate authority over the lands of Egypt, Syria, Mesopotamia, Diyarbakir, the Hejaz and Yemen and any territory conquered from the Crusaders or Mongols.<ref>Holt 2005, p. 243.</ref> Al-Mustansir's Abbasid successors continued in their official capacity as caliphs, but virtually held no power in the Mamluk government.<ref name="Stilt30-1"/> The brief reign of Caliph al-Musta'in as sultan in 1412 was an anomaly.<ref name="Holt240"/> In an anecdotal testament to the caliph's lack of real authority, a group of rebellious mamluks responded to Sultan Lajin's presentation of the Caliph al-Hakim's decree asserting Lajin's authority with the following comment, recorded by Ibn Taghribirdi: "Stupid fellow. For God's sake—who pays any heed to the caliph now?"<ref name="Holt248"/>

Military and administrative hierarchy

The Mamluk sultans were products of the military hierarchy, entry into which was virtually restricted to mamluks, i.e. those soldiers who were imported while young slaves. However, the sons of mamluks could enter and rise high within the ranks of the military hierarchy,<ref name="Stilt22-23">Stilt 2011, pp. 22–23.</ref> but typically did not enter military service. Instead, many entered into mercantile, scholastic or other civilian careers.<ref>Stilt 2011, p. 20.</ref> The army Baybars inherited consisted of Kurdish and Turkic tribesmen, refugees from the various Ayyubid armies of Syria and other troops from armies dispersed by the Mongols.<ref name="Levanoni8">Levanoni 1995, p. 8.</ref> Following the Battle of Ain Jalut, Baybars restructured the army into three components: the Royal Mamluk regiment, the soldiers of the emirs, and the halqa (non-mamluk soldiers).<ref name="Levanoni8"/> The Royal Mamluks, who were under the direct command of the sultan, were the highest-ranking body within the army, entry into which was exclusive.<ref name="Levanoni8"/> The Royal Mamluks were virtually the private corps of the sultan. The lower-ranking emirs also had their own corps, which were akin to private armies.<ref name="Stilt22-23"/> The soldiers of the emirs were directly commanded by the emirs, but could be mobilized by the sultan when needed.<ref name="Levanoni8"/> As emirs were promoted, the number of soldiers in their corps increased, and when rival emirs challenged each other's authority, they would often utilize their respective forces, leading to major disruptions of civilian life.<ref name="Stilt22-23"/> The halqa had inferior status to the mamluk regiments. It had its own administrative structure and was under the direct command of the sultan. The halqa regiments declined in the 14th century when professional non-mamluk soldiers generally stopped joining the force.<ref>Levanoni 1995, pp. 8–9.</ref>

The Ayyubid army had lacked a clear and permanent hierarchical system and one of Baybars' early reforms was creating a military hierarchy.<ref name="Levanoni11">Levanoni 1995, p. 11.</ref> To that end, he began the system of assigning emirs ranks of ten, forty and one hundred, with the particular number indicating how many mounted mamluk troops were assigned to an emir's command.<ref name="Levanoni11"/> In addition, an emir of one hundred could be assigned one thousand mounted troops during battle.<ref name="Levanoni11"/> Baybars instituted uniformity within the army and put an end to the previous improvised nature of the various Ayyubid military forces of Egypt and Syria.<ref name="Levanoni9">Levanoni 1995, p. 9.</ref> To bring further uniformity to the military, Baybars and Qalawun standardized the undefined Ayyubid policies regarding the distribution of iqtaʿat to emirs.<ref name="Levanoni10">Levanoni 1995, p. 10.</ref> The reformation of iqtaʿ distribution created a clear link between an emir's rank and the size of his iqtaʿ.<ref name="Levanoni10"/> For example, an emir of forty would be given an iqtaʿ a third of the size of an emir of one hundred's iqtaʿ.<ref name="Levanoni10"/> Baybars also began biweekly inspections of the troops to verify that sultanic orders were carried out, in addition to the periodic inspections in which he would distribute new weaponry to the mamluk troops.<ref name="Levanoni9"/> Starting with the reign of Qalawun, the sultan and the military administration maintained lists of all emirs throughout the sultanate and defined their roles as part of the right or left flanks of the army should they be mobilized for war.<ref name="Levanoni9"/>

Gradually, as mamluks increasingly filled administrative and courtier posts within the state, Mamluk innovations to the Ayyubid hierarchy were developed.<ref>Levanoni 1995, pp. 11–12.</ref> The offices of ustadar (majordomo), hajib (chamberlain), emir jandar and khazindar (treasurer), which existed during the Ayyubid period, were preserved, but Baybars established the additional offices of dawadar, emir akhur, ru'us al-nawab and emir majlis.<ref name="Levanoni12">Levanoni 1995, p. 12.</ref> The administrative offices were largely ceremonial posts and were closely connected to various elements of the military hierarchy.<ref name="Levanoni12"/>

The ustadar (from the Arabic ustadh al-dar, "master of the house") was the chief of staff of the sultan, responsible for organizing the royal court's daily activities, managing the personal budget of the sultan and supervising all of the buildings of the Cairo Citadel and its staff.<ref name="Popper93">Popper 1955, p. 93.</ref> The ustadar was often referred to as the ustadar al-aliyah (grand master of the house) to distinguish from ustadar saghirs (lesser majordomos) whose authority was subordinate to the ustadar al-aliyah and who oversaw specific aspects of the court and citadel, such as the sultan's treasury, private property and the kitchens of the citadel.<ref name="Popper93"/> Mamluk emirs also had their own ustadars.<ref name="Popper93"/> The office of ustadar al-aliyah became a powerful post beginning in the late 14th century,<ref name="Binbas158">Binbaş 2014, p. 158.</ref> particularly so under sultans Barquq and an-Nasir Faraj,<ref name="Popper93"/><ref name="Binbas158"/> who transferred the responsibilities of the special bureau for their mamluks to the authority of the ustadar, thus turning the latter into the sultanate's chief financial official.<ref name="Popper93"/>

Economy

Dosya:Mamluk Carpet, Egypt - Google Art Project.jpg
Mamluk Wool Carpet, Egypt, circa 1500-1550

The Mamluk economy essentially consisted of two spheres: the state economy, which was organized along the lines of an elite household and was controlled by a virtual caste government headed by the sultan, and the free market economy, which was the domain of society in general and which was associated with the native inhabitants in contrast to the ethnically foreign origins of the Mamluk ruling elite.<ref name="Northrup254">Northrup 1998, p. 254.</ref> The Mamluks introduced greater centralization over the economy by organizing the state bureaucracy, particularly in Cairo (Damascus and Aleppo already had organized bureaucracies), and the Mamluk military hierarchy and its associated iqtaʿ system.<ref name="Northrup253">Northrup 1998, p. 253.</ref> In Egypt in particular, the Nile River's centralizing influence also contributed to Mamluk centralization over the region.<ref name="Northrup253"/> The Mamluks used the same currency system as the Ayyubids, which consisted of gold dinars, silver dirhams and copper fulus.<ref name="Islahi 1988, p. 42">Islahi 1988, p. 42.</ref> In general, the monetary system during the Mamluk period was highly unstable due to frequent monetary changes enacted by various sultans. Increased circulation of copper coins and the increased use of copper in dirhams often led to inflation.<ref>Islahi 1988, p. 43.</ref>

The Mamluks created an administrative body called the hisbah to supervise the market, with a muhtasib (inspector-general) in charge of the body. There were four muhtasibs based in Cairo, Alexandria, al-Fustat and Lower Egypt. The muhtasib in Cairo was the most senior of the four and his position was akin to that of a finance minister. The role of a muhtasib was to inspect weights and measures and the quality of goods, maintain legal trade, and to remain vigilant of price gouging.<ref name="Islahi 1988, p. 42"/> Typically, a qadi or Muslim scholar would occupy the post, but in the 15th century, Mamluk emirs began to be appointed as muhtasibs in an effort to compensate emirs during cash shortages or as a result of the gradual shift of the muhtasib's role from the legal realm to one of enforcement.<ref>Elbendary 2015, pp. 38–39.</ref>

Iqtaʿ system

The iqtaʿ system was inherited from the Ayyubids and further organized under the Mamluks to fit their military needs.<ref name="Steenbergen475">van Steenbergen, p. 475.</ref> Iqtaʿat were a central component of the Mamluk power structure.<ref name="Elbendary37">Elbendary 2015, p. 37.</ref> The iqtaʿ of the Muslims differed from the European concept of fiefs in that iqtaʿ represented a right to collect revenue from a fixed territory and was accorded to an officer (emir) as income and as a financial source to provision his soldiers.<ref name="Salibi147">Şablon:Cite journal</ref> However, prior to the Mamluks' rise, there was a growing tendency of iqtaʿ holders to treat their iqtaʿ as personal property, which they passed down to their descendants.<ref name="Salibi147"/> The Mamluks effectively put an end to this tendency, with the exception of some areas, namely in Mount Lebanon, where longtime Druze iqtaʿ holders, who became part of the halqa, were able to resist the abolition of their hereditary iqtaʿat.<ref name="Salibi147"/> In the Mamluk era, the iqtaʿ was an emir's principal source of income,<ref name="Elbendary37–8">Elbendary 2015, pp. 37–38</ref> and starting in 1337,<ref name="Levanoni171">Levanoni 1995, p. 171.</ref> Mamluk iqtaʿ holders would lease or sell rights to their iqtaʿat to non-mamluks in order to derive greater revenues.<ref name="Elbendary37–8"/> By 1343, the practice was common and by 1347, the sale of iqta'at became taxed.<ref name="Levanoni171"/> The revenues emanating from the iqtaʿ also served as a more stable source of income than other methods the Mamluks sometimes employed, including tax hikes, the sale of administrative posts and extortion of the population.<ref name="Elbendary37"/> According to historian J. van Steenbergen,
The iqtaʿ system was fundamental in assuring a legitimized, controlled and guaranteed access to the resources of the Syro-Egyptian realm to an upper level of Mamluk society that was primarily military in form and organization. As such it was a fundamental feature of Mamluk society, on the one hand giving way to a military hierarchy that crystallized into an even more developed economic hierarchy and that had substantial economic interests in society at large; on the other hand, it deeply characterized the realm's economic and social development, its agriculture, grain trade, and rural demography in particular.<ref name="Steenbergen475"/>

The system largely consisted of land assignments from the state in return for military services.<ref name="Steenbergen476">van Steenbergen, p. 476.</ref> Land was assessed by the periodic rawk (cadastral survey), which consisted of a survey of land parcels (measured by feddan units), assessment of land quality and the annual estimated tax revenue of the parcels, and classification of a parcel's legal status as waqf (trust) or iqtaʿ.<ref name="Steenbergen476"/> The rawk surveys organized the iqtaʿ system and the first rawk was carried out in 1298 under Sultan Lajin.<ref name="Steenbergen477">Steenbergen, p. 477.</ref> A second and final rawk was completed in 1315 under Sultan an-Nasir Muhammad and influenced political and economic developments of the Mamluk Sultanate until its fall in the early 16th century.<ref name="Steenbergen477"/>

Over time, the iqtaʿ system was expanded, and increasingly larger areas of kharaj (taxable lands) were appropriated as iqtaʿ lands in order to meet the fiscal needs of the Mamluk military institution, namely payment of Mamluk officers and their subordinates.<ref name="Elbendary37"/> The Mamluk state resolved to increase allotments by dispersing an individual emir's iqtaʿat over several provinces and for brief terms.<ref name="Elbendary37"/> However, this led to a situation where the iqtaʿ holders neglected the administrative oversight, maintenance and infrastructure of their iqtaʿat, while concentrating solely on collecting revenues, thereby resulting in less productivity of the iqtaʿat.<ref name="Elbendary37"/>

Agriculture

Agriculture was the primary source of revenue in the Mamluk economy.<ref name="Northrup254"/><ref>Stilt 2011, p. 23.</ref> Agricultural products were the main exports of Mamluk Egypt, Syria and Palestine. Moreover, the major industries of sugar and textile production were also dependent on agricultural products, namely sugar cane and cotton, respectively.<ref name="Northrup254"/> Every agricultural commodity was taxed by the state, with the sultan's treasury taking the largest share of the revenues; emirs and major private brokers followed. An emir's main source of income were the agricultural products of his iqtaʿ, and with those revenues, he was able to fund his private corps.<ref name="Stilt24">Stilt 2011, p. 24.</ref>

In Egypt, Mamluk centralization over agricultural production was more thorough than in Syria and Palestine for a number of reasons. Among them was that virtually all agriculture in Egypt depended on an irrigation single source, the Nile, and the measures and rights to irrigation were determined by the river's flooding, whereas in Syria and Palestine, there were multiple sources of mostly rain-fed irrigation, and measures and rights were thus determined at the local level.<ref name="Northrup270">Northrup, p. 270.</ref> Centralization over Syria and Palestine was also more complicated than in Egypt due to the diversity of those regions' geography and the frequent invasions of the Syro-Palestinian territories.<ref name="Northrup270"/> The state's role in Syro-Palestinian agriculture was restricted to the fiscal administration and to the irrigation networks and other aspects of rural infrastructure.<ref name="Northrupsolo269">Northrup 1998, p. 269.</ref> Although the level of centralization not as high as in Egypt, the Mamluks did impose enough control over the Syrian economy to derive revenues from Syria that benefited the sultanate and contributed to the defense of its realm.<ref name="Northrup277"/> Furthermore, the maintenance of the Mamluk army in Syria relied on the state's control over Syrian agricultural revenues.<ref name="Northrup277">Northrup 1998, p. 277.</ref>

Among the responsibilities of a Mamluk provincial or district governor were repopulating depopulated areas to foster agricultural production, protecting the lands from Bedouin raids, increasing productivity in barren lands<ref name="Northrupsolo269"/> (likely through the upkeep and expansion of existing irrigation networks),<ref>Northrup 1998, p. 271.</ref> and devoting special attention to the cultivation of the more arable low-lying regions.<ref name="Northrupsolo269"/> In order to ensure that rural life was undisturbed by Bedouin raiding, which could halt agricultural work or damage crops and agrarian infrastructure and thus decrease revenues, the Mamluks attempted to prevent Bedouin armament and confiscate existing weapons from them.<ref name="Northrup261">Northrup 1998, p. 261.</ref>

Trade and industry

Egypt and Syria played a central transit role in international trade in the Middle Ages.<ref>Islahi 1988, p. 39.</ref> Early into their rule, the Mamluks sought to expand their role in foreign trade, and to this end Baybars signed a commercial treaty with Genoa, while Qalawun signed a similar agreement with Ceylon.<ref>Islahi 1988, p. 40.</ref> By the 15th century, internal upheaval as a result of Mamluk power struggles, diminishing iqtaʿ revenues as a result of plagues, and the encroachment of abandoned farmlands by Bedouin tribes led to a financial crisis in the sultanate.<ref>Christ 2012, p. 32.</ref> To make up for these losses, the Mamluks applied a three-pronged approach: taxation of the urban middle classes, increasing the production and sale of cotton and sugar to Europe, and taking advantage of their transit position in the trade between the Far East and Europe.<ref name="Christ33">Christ 2012, p. 33.</ref> The latter proved to be the most profitable method and was done by cultivating trade relationships with Venetia, Genoa and Barcelona, and increasing taxes on commodities.<ref name="Christ33"/> Thus, during the 15th century, the long-established trade between Europe and the Islamic world began to make up a significant part of the sultanate's revenues as the Mamluks imposed taxes on the merchants who operated or passed through the sultanate's ports.<ref name="Stilt24"/>

Mamluk Egypt was a major producer of textiles and a supplier of raw materials for Western Europe.<ref name="Petry244">Petry 1981, p. 244.</ref> However, the frequent outbreaks of the Black Plague led to a decline in the Mamluk territories' production of goods such as textiles, silk products, sugar, glass, soaps, and paper, which coincided with the Europeans' increasing production of these goods. Trade continued nonetheless and despite papal restrictions on trade with the Muslims during the Crusades.<ref name="Christ19-20"/> Mediterranean trade was dominated by spices, such as pepper, muscat nuts and flowers, cloves and cinnamon, as well as medicinal drugs and indigo.<ref name="Christ19-20">Christ 2012, pp. 19–20.</ref> These goods originated in Persia, India, and Southeast Asia and made their way to Europe via the Mamluk ports of Syria and Egypt. These ports were frequented by European merchants, who in turn sold gold and silver ducats and bullions, silk, wool and linen fabrics, furs, wax, honey and cheeses.<ref name="Christ19-20"/>

Under Sultan Barsbay, a state monopoly was established on luxury goods, namely spices, in which the state set prices and collected a percentage of profits.<ref name="Stilt24"/> To that end, in 1387, Barsbay established direct control over Alexandria, the principal Egyptian commercial port, thereby transferring the tax revenues of the port to the sultan's personal treasury (diwan al-khass) instead of the imperial treasury which was linked with the military's iqtaʿ system.<ref>Christ 2012, pp. 33–34.</ref> Furthermore, in 1429, he ordered that the spice trade to Europe be conducted through Cairo before goods reached Alexandria, thus attempting to end the direct transportation of spices from the Red Sea to Alexandria.<ref name="Christ33"/> In the late 15th and early 16th centuries the Portuguese Empire's expansion into Africa and Asia began to significantly decrease the revenues of the Mamluk-Venetian monopoly on the trans-Mediterranean trade.<ref name="Varlik163">Varlik 2015, p. 163.</ref> This contributed to and coincided with the fall of the sultanate.<ref name="Varlik163"/>

List of sultans

Şablon:Main article

See also

References

Şablon:Reflist

Bibliography

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Primary sources

Şablon:Refbegin

  • Abu al-Fida, The Concise History of Humanity
  • Al-Maqrizi, Al Selouk Leme'refatt Dewall al-Melouk, Dar al-kotob, 1997.
  • Idem in English: Bohn, Henry G., The Road to Knowledge of the Return of Kings, Chronicles of the Crusades, AMS Press, 1969.
  • Al-Maqrizi, al-Mawaiz wa al-'i'tibar bi dhikr al-khitat wa al-'athar, Matabat aladab, Cairo 1996, ISBN 977-241-175-X
  • Idem in French: Bouriant, Urbain, Description topographique et historique de l'Egypte, Paris 1895.
  • Ibn Taghribirdi, al-Nujum al-Zahirah Fi Milook Misr wa al-Qahirah, al-Hay'ah al-Misreyah 1968
  • Idem in English: History of Egypt, by Yusef. William Popper, translator Abu L-Mahasin ibn Taghri Birdi, University of California Press 1954.
  • Ibn Iyas, and Gaston Wiet, translator, Journal d'un Bourgeois du Caire. Paris: 1955.

Şablon:Refend

Şablon:Turkic topics

Şablon:Authority control