Saladin (part 3): Hattin and the Fall of Jerusalem
This is the climax episode of the Saladin series. On the fourth of July, 1187, on a twin-peaked hill in Galilee called the Horns of Hattin, the army of the kingdom of Jerusalem was destroyed in a single afternoon by exhaustion, smoke, thirst, and the patient battlefield management of Salah al-Din Yusuf ibn Ayyub. Twelve thousand Crusader knights and infantry were dead or prisoners by sundown. The True Cross, the gold-encased relic carried before every Frankish field army for eighty-eight years, was in Muslim hands. The king of Jerusalem, Guy of Lusignan, was a captive in Saladin's tent. And in that tent, on the evening of the fourth of July, Saladin fulfilled an oath he had sworn four years earlier on the shores of the Red Sea. Reynald de Châtillon, the lord of Kerak who had built ships in his fortress and sailed them at the grave of the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him), was killed in front of the king of Jerusalem. The mechanics vary by source. The act does not.
Within seven weeks of Hattin, the kingdom of Jerusalem collapsed. Tiberias, Acre, Sidon, Beirut, Nablus, Bethlehem, fortress after fortress, town after town, all fell. By the twentieth of September, Saladin was before the walls of Jerusalem. By the second of October, the city was his, on terms negotiated by the Frankish noble Balian of Ibelin, on the anniversary of the night of the Prophet's Night Journey from Mecca to al-Aqsa. The first khutba in eighty-eight years was preached the following Friday in the Aqsa mosque, from a minbar that Nur al-Din had commissioned in Aleppo in 1168 in the faith that this day would come.
This episode walks slowly through the Saffuriya war council, the march through the waterless plain, the brush fires of the night before, the cup of iced water in the tent, the execution of the Templars and Hospitallers by Sufis on the morning after the battle, the cascade of cities, the siege of Jerusalem, the negotiations with Balian, the cleansing of the Dome of the Rock, and the contrast with what the Crusaders had done in 1099. The mercy of 1187 is unintelligible without the massacre of 1099, and the Islamic tradition has always known this.
Sources: Baha al-Din ibn Shaddad's al-Nawadir al-Sultaniyya, Imad al-Din al-Isfahani's al-Fath al-Qussi fi'l-Fath al-Qudsi (the only true Arabic eyewitness account of the conquest of Jerusalem), Ibn al-Athir's al-Kamil fi'l-Tarikh, Abu Shama's al-Rawdatayn, with modern scholarship from Lyons and Jackson, Anne-Marie Edde, and Carole Hillenbrand's The Crusades: Islamic Perspectives.
Content Warning: This episode contains the Battle of Hattin (heat exhaustion, thirst, smoke, slaughter), the execution of Reynald de Châtillon, the ritual execution of approximately two hundred Templars and Hospitallers, and the description of the 1099 Crusader massacre of Jerusalem (Imad al-Din's account: blood ankle-deep in the alleys, the burning of the synagogue with the Jews inside).
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