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Islamic Syria
Syria
Succeeding Caliphates and Kingdoms
Under later dissolute caliphs, the Umayyad dynasty
began to decline at a time when both Sunni and Shia Muslims in Iran began to
press against Umayyad borders. By 750 the Abbasids, whose forces originated
in Khorasan (in northeast Iran), had conquered the Umayyads and established
the caliphate in Baghdad. As a result, Syria became a province of an empire.
Abbasid rule over Syria, however, was precarious
and often challenged by independent Muslim princes. The greatest of these
was Abu Ali Hasan, who founded a kingdom known as the Hamdani. A Shia, he
established his capital at Aleppo, and the Abbasids recognized him as Sayf
ad Dawlah (sword of the state). The Hamdanid dynasty ruled throughout the
tenth century and became famous for its achievements in science and letters.
In Europe it was known for its persistent attacks against Byzantium. The
Hamdanid kingdom fell in 1094 to Muslim Seljuk Turks invading from the
northeast.
During the same period, the Shia Fatimids
established themselves in Egypt and drove north against Syria. The Fatimids
were less tolerant of subject peoples than their predecessors. Intolerance
reached its height under caliph Abu Ali Mansur al Hakim (966-1021), who
destroyed churches and caused Christians to flee to the mountains. When he
announced his divinity, his mother murdered him. In the secluded valleys of
Mount Hermon in Syria, his followers found tribesmen to adopt his religion,
the ancestors of Syria's present-day Druzes
Muslim rule of Christian holy places,
overpopulation, and constant warfare in Europe prompted the Crusades, the
first major Western colonial venture in the Middle East. Between 1097 and
1144 Crusaders established the principalities of Edessa (in northeast modern
Syria), Antioch, Tripoli, and the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem. The
politically fragmented area was an easy conquest for the Europeans. The
first Muslim threat to European entrenchment came not from within Greater
Syria but from Zangi, the
amir . Zangi took Edessa in 1144 and his son, Nur
ad Din (light of the faith), secured Damascus, extending the realm from
Aleppo to Mosul. When the last Shia Fatimid caliph died, Nur ad Din secured
Egypt as well. Eliminating Sunni-Shia sectarianism, the political rivalry
that had so aided the European venture, he invoked jihad, holy war, as a
unifying force for Arabs in Greater Syria and Egypt.
The jihad was to liberate Jerusalem, the third
holiest city to Muslims, who call it Bayt Quds (the house of holiness) in
memory of Muhammad's stopping there on his night journey to heaven. It fell
to Nur ad Din's lieutenant, Saladin (Salah ad Din al Ayubbi--rectitude of
the faith), to recapture Jerusalem. Saladin, a Kurd, unified Syria and
Egypt, a necessary preliminary, and after many setbacks, captured Mosul,
Aleppo, and the string of cities from Edessa to Nasihin. In 1187 Saladin
took Al Karak, a Crusader fort on the route between Homs and Tripoli held by
the infamous Reginald of Chatillon, who had broken treaties, molested
Saladin's sister, and attacked Mecca with the aim of obtaining the Prophet's
body and exhibiting it at Al Karak for a fee. Saladin besieged Jerusalem on
September 20, 1187, and 9 days later Jerusalem surrendered. Saladin's
behavior and complete control of his troops earned him the respect of all
Jerusalemites and the epithet, "flower of Islamic chivalry."
Saladin inflicted Islam's mightiest blows against
the Crusaders, raised Muslim pride and self-respect, and founded the Ayyubid
dynasty, which governed Egypt until 1260. During his lifetime, he created
harmony among Muslims in the Middle East and gained a position of affection
and honor among them that remains strong to the present, particularly in
Syria.
When Saladin died of malaria in 1192, his rule
extended from the Tigris River to North Africa and south to the Sudan.
Saladin's death brought this unity to an end. His Ayyubid successors
quarreled among themselves, and Syria broke into small dynasties centered in
Aleppo, Hamah, Homs, and Damascus. By the fourteenth century, after
repelling repeated invasions by Mongols from the north, the Mamluk sultans
of Egypt, successors to the Ayyubids, ruled from the Nile to the Euphrates.
Their great citadels and monuments still stand. In 1516 the Ottoman sultan
in Turkey defeated the Mamluks at Aleppo and made Syria a province of a new
Muslim empire.
Data as of April 1987
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