On Oct. 2, 1187, the gates of Jerusalem opened to admit Salah ad-Din and his army. The most holy city in Christendom, site of Christ’s passion, had been surrendered to the Muslims after 88 years of Christian rule. Today Dr. Schrader looks at Saladin's siege of Jerusalem and analyzes the defense.
The Damascus Gate of Jerusalem by which some of Saladin's troops would have entered the city. |
The surrender of Jerusalem was the inevitable consequence of
the devastating defeat of the feudal forces of the Kingdom of Jerusalem at the
Battle of Hattin three months earlier. That battle had left Jerusalem
defenseless; all fighting men including the knights of the Temple and the
Hospital had been called up to halt the invasion that ended in disaster at
Hattin, leaving the city itself denuded of troops. Left behind in Jerusalem
were non-combatants: women, children, the old and infirm and the clergy. Furthermore,
by the time Jerusalem surrendered, these civilian residents of Jerusalem had
been joined by as many as 60,000 to 80,000 refugees from other parts of the
Kingdom overrun by Saladin’s troops. An estimated 100,000 Christians were in
Jerusalem when it surrendered, predominantly women, children and clergy.
What is remarkable about the surrender of Jerusalem in
1187 was not that it surrendered under the circumstances, but that it did not
surrender without a fight. Saladin had offered the inhabitants very generous
terms. He said he did not want to risk damage to the holy sites in Jerusalem (as
was nearly inevitable in a siege and assault) and therefore offered to let the inhabitants
leave peacefully with all their portable goods if they would surrender
peacefully. But the anonymous “burgesses” who represented the city of Jerusalem
in the absence of any noblemen refused. According to the Old French
continuation of the Chronicle of William Tyre (widely believed to be based on
first-hand accounts) the “burgesses” replied “if it pleased God they would
never surrender the city.” Saladin then offered to leave the city alone for
roughly six months if they promised to surrender the city at the end of that
time, if no reinforcements had arrived. They still refused, saying again “if it
pleased God they would never surrender that city where God had shed His blood
for them.” (Tyre, p. 55)
This was a clear commitment to martyrdom rather than surrender — perhaps not
such a surprising sentiment from a city that at this time must have been
dominated by clergy as they would have been the only men of “authority” (read
noble birth and education) left in the city.
The "Dome of the Rock" erected over the rock on which Mohammed allegedly ascended into Heaven; it was this monument sacred to Islam that Saladin did not want to risk damaging in a siege and assault. |
But Saladin did not enter Jerusalem over the corpses
of “martyrs” and their families. He entered it peacefully after a negotiated
settlement that ended a week of ferocious fighting. Ibn al-Athir writes: “Then began the fiercest
struggle imaginable; each side looked on the fight as absolute religious
obligation. There was no need for a superior authority to drive them on: they
restrained the enemy without restraint, and drove them off without being driven
off. Every morning the Frankish cavalry made sorties to fight and provoke the
enemy to battle; several of both sides fell in these encounters.” (pp. 140-141.)
Imad ad-Din’s report is (as always) even more melodramatic in his description. According to him, “They challenged [us] to combat and barred the pass, they came down into the lists like enemies, they slaughtered and drew blood, they blazed with fury and defended the city, they fumed and burned with wrath, they drove us back…. They fought grimly and struggled with all their energy, descending to the fray with absolute resolution… they blazed and set fire to things…they made themselves a target for arrows and called on death to stand by them.” (p.154) Turning to Christian sources, the source considered by scholars the most authentic claims that: “The Christians sallied forth and fought with the Saracens…. On two or three occasions the Christians pushed the Saracens back to their tents.” (Tyre, p. 56) Women, children and clergy did that? For eight days?
Imad ad-Din’s report is (as always) even more melodramatic in his description. According to him, “They challenged [us] to combat and barred the pass, they came down into the lists like enemies, they slaughtered and drew blood, they blazed with fury and defended the city, they fumed and burned with wrath, they drove us back…. They fought grimly and struggled with all their energy, descending to the fray with absolute resolution… they blazed and set fire to things…they made themselves a target for arrows and called on death to stand by them.” (p.154) Turning to Christian sources, the source considered by scholars the most authentic claims that: “The Christians sallied forth and fought with the Saracens…. On two or three occasions the Christians pushed the Saracens back to their tents.” (Tyre, p. 56) Women, children and clergy did that? For eight days?
Clearly this was not merely a fanatical but a
well-organized defense, and the key to that is one man: Balian d’Ibelin.
Balian, Baron of Ibelin, had been one of only four barons to escape the catastrophe at Hattin. At Hattin he had commanded the third largest contingent of troops after the King and the Count of Tripoli, and he, along with the Templars, had been charged with the thankless and gruesome task of commanding the rear-guard in a situation where it was under near continuous attack while on the march. The Templars suffered enormous losses during this march and we must assume that Ibelin did too. Certainly, when he broke out of the trap at Hattin it was with at most 3,000 infantry and a couple hundred knights. These troops, however, he had led to Tyre.
His presence in Jerusalem, however, was solitary — the result of a safe-conduct granted him by Saladin so that he could remove his wife and children to safety. The terms of the safe-conduct were that he go to Jerusalem unarmed and remain only one night. On arrival, however, the citizens of Jerusalem and particularly the Patriarch begged him to remain and take command of the defense. This he did.
Balian, Baron of Ibelin, had been one of only four barons to escape the catastrophe at Hattin. At Hattin he had commanded the third largest contingent of troops after the King and the Count of Tripoli, and he, along with the Templars, had been charged with the thankless and gruesome task of commanding the rear-guard in a situation where it was under near continuous attack while on the march. The Templars suffered enormous losses during this march and we must assume that Ibelin did too. Certainly, when he broke out of the trap at Hattin it was with at most 3,000 infantry and a couple hundred knights. These troops, however, he had led to Tyre.
His presence in Jerusalem, however, was solitary — the result of a safe-conduct granted him by Saladin so that he could remove his wife and children to safety. The terms of the safe-conduct were that he go to Jerusalem unarmed and remain only one night. On arrival, however, the citizens of Jerusalem and particularly the Patriarch begged him to remain and take command of the defense. This he did.
The
inhabitants of Jerusalem and the Patriarch clearly
recognized Ibelin’s value. He wasn’t just any baron, he was a man who
had
played a prominent role in the defeat of Saladin at Montgisard, and had
fought
at every major battle against Saladin since. Still, he was just one man.
He
brought not a single additional fighting man to the defense of
Jerusalem, and -- on taking stock of what men he had in Jerusalem -- he
discovered there was only one
other knight in the entire city. This induced him to knight over eighty
youths
of “good birth,” which was undoubtedly a morale-booster to the
individuals
honored, but hardly a significant increase in the fighting strength of
the
defenders!
The Seal of Balian d'Ibelin's son John |
So how did
Ibelin put up such a ferocious and effective defense with women, children and
clergy for 8 days? We don’t know
exactly, however, it is clear Ibelin must have had an exceptional organizational
talent and also been a charismatic and inspirational leader. He would have had
to organize civilians into improvised units, and then assign these units
discrete tasks — whether it was defending a sector of the wall, putting out
fires, or ensuring that the men and women doing the fighting were supplied with
water, food and ammunition. Most astonishing, his improvised units not only
repulsed assaults, they also sortied out several times, destroying some of
Saladin’s siege engines, and “two or three times” chasing the Saracens all the way
back to the palisades of their camp.
Ibelin must have relied heavily upon women in
his defense of Jerusalem. The Old French Continuation of William of Tyre quotes
the Patriarch of Jerusalem saying: “For every man that is in this city, there
are fifty women and children.” (Tyre, p. 58)
Furthermore, we know from sieges only a few decades later in the Languedoc
(notably the siege of Toulouse in which Simon de Montfort was killed) that
women could be very active in manning the walls. Unlike Victorian women,
medieval women were not known for being delicate and prone to swooning. They
were partners in crafts and trades, often had their own businesses, and when it
came to this siege they understood perfectly what was at stake: their freedom.
Although hard to see in this medieval depiction, the siege engine that fired the fatal shot against Simon de Montfort was allegedly manned by women. |
Notably,
the Arab sources never acknowledge this simple fact. First of all, their own
women were not in a position to contribute to the defense, so women manning
siege engines, pouring boiling oil over the ramparts, or even exposing themselves
to danger to bring men (strange men not their husbands, brothers or sons)
water, food and ammunition was utterly inconceivable to them. Secondly, it was considered dishonorable to
be killed by a woman under any circumstances, so no one wanted to even
contemplate this possibility; it would have disgraced the fallen. Instead, the
Arab sources explained the surprisingly spirited and tenacious defense of
Jerusalem to phantom survivors of Hattin. Imad ad-Din conjures up no less than “70,000
Frankish troops, both swordsmen and archers”
(p. 154) — a fantastic figure more than double the total Frankish army deployed (and destroyed) at
Hattin!
After
five
days of futile assaults on the northwest corner of the city from the
Gate of St. Stephen to David's Gates, Saladin had nothing but casualties
to show for his efforts. He
therefore redeployed opposite the northeast corner of the city. More
important,
he deployed sappers to undermine the walls.
The sappers were protected by heavy wooden roofs and platforms as well
as covering fire. Within three days they managed to dig tunnels under
the city walls,
and on September 29 a segment of the northern wall roughly 30 meters
long
collapsed. Although the Christians managed to beat-back the initial
assaults
sent through the breach, by nightfall it was clear that the city was now
no
longer defensible.
That
night,
Ibelin led a last desperate sortie out of the Jehosaphat Gate, probably
directed at Saladin’s own tent, which had been set up on the Mount of
Olives. The sortie was easily repulsed. As dawn broke on September 30,
the
remaining inhabitants of Jerusalem, residents and refugees alike, were
facing
almost certain slaughter. Because they had rejected his generous terms
earlier,
Saladin had sworn before multiple witnesses that he would take the city
by
force and spare no one.
Nevertheless,
under a flag of truce Ibelin sought a parlay with Saladin. The Sultan met with
Ibelin outside the walls of the city, but flatly refused to negotiate. He
reiterated his intention to take the city by force. Indeed, while Ibelin and
Saladin were speaking, the Sultan’s banners were planted on the northeast
corner of the city, and Saladin pointed out that no one negotiated for a city
he already possessed. Fortunately for the Christians in the city, the Sultan’s
banners were tossed down again; Ibelin could retort that Saladin did not yet
possess the city. Ibelin then played his only trump. He told Saladin that if the
defenders knew they would be granted no mercy, then they would fight all the
harder. Not just that, he said, they would slaughter their own families, the
Muslim prisoners/slaves inside Jerusalem, and the livestock, and then they
would destroy the holy places — including the Rock sacred to Islam — before
sallying forth to certain death intent on taking as many of the enemy to their graves with them as possible.
Jerusalem from the Mount of Olives Today; the Dome of the Rock is visible between the trees. |
Saladin,
who had already made his desire to preserve the holy places known, capitulated
in face of this blackmail. After consulting with this emirs, he agreed to spare
the lives of the Christians in Jerusalem, but only on the condition that
they bought freedom. After much haggling, it was agreed that
each man would have to pay 10 dinar, each woman 5 and each child 2. Those that
could not pay this ransom would become the property of the Sultan, slaves.
Ibelin
protested that the city was full of refugees, who had already lost everything. According
to the Old French Continuation of William of Tyre he argued “In a city such as
this there are only a few people apart from the burgesses who could manage [the
ransom], and for every man who can pay the ransom there are a hundred who could
not redeem themselves even for two bezants. For the city is full of ordinary
people who have come from the surrounding area for protection.” (p.60)
After considerable haggling, the Sultan agreed to a lump-sum payment of 30,000
bezants for (varying by source) between 7, 000 and 18,000 Christian
paupers.
The Medieval Working-Class would have had difficulty paying the ransom set by Saladin. |
These
30,000 bezants were paid by the Hospital with the money deposited by King Henry
II of England, but even so when the 40 days granted the Christians to raise
their ransoms were up, some 15,000 Christians were unable to pay and condemned
to slavery. Ibelin, appalled, offered to stand surety for them while the ransom
was raised, but Saladin refused, although he did “give” 1,000 slaves to his
brother and 500 each to Balian and the Patriarch of Jerusalem, so that 2,000
souls were freed at the last minute.
Allegedly,
some non-Latin Christians also opted to pay the extra taxes imposed on
Christians in Muslim states in order to remain in Jerusalem, but there is no
indication that the non-Latin Christians undermined the defense of Jerusalem
itself. On the contrary, they appear to have contributed substantially to the
defense of Jerusalem as long as the fighting was going on. Only after the city became
indefensible as a result of the breach in the wall, did they begin to seek a
compromise with their assailants — a perfectly comprehensible reaction that
does not imply fundamental hostility to the Latin rulers of Jerusalem.
On November
18, 1187, forty days after the surrender of Jerusalem, the Christians departed
Jerusalem, leaving the city in Muslim hands. The news of the fall of Jerusalem
allegedly killed Pope Urban III and so shocked the Christian kingdoms in the
West that it set in motion the Third Crusade.
Dr Helena P. Schrader holds a PhD in History.
She is the Chief Editor of the Real Crusades History Blog.
She is the author of numerous books both fiction and non-fiction, including a three-part biography of Balian d'Ibelin.
The siege and surrender of Jerusalem in 1187 is described in detail in:
". . . so shocked the Christian kingdoms in the West . . ." that in their regret for not sending "an ounce of prevention," they were forced to send an ineffective 'two pounds of cure.'
ReplyDeleteIt always seems to go like that, does it not? Another excellent article, Professor.