Siege of Rumkale
The Siege of Rumkale or the Fall of Rumkale took place in 1292 and resulted in the Armenians losing the castle to the Egyptians.[1][2][3]
Siege of Rumkale | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia Ilkhanate | Egyptian Sultanate | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Unknown |
Al-Ashraf Khalil Sanjar al-Shuja‘i Ibn al-Sal'us |
Background
Amidst the fierce wars between the Egyptians on one hand and the Mongols and the Crusaders on the other hand, there was another party that always stabbed the Egyptians in the back despite its association with them by treaties and covenants. This party was the Kingdom of Lesser Armenia which was an Armenian Kingdom in southern Anatolia (southern modern Turkey). This kingdom stabbed the Egyptian Kingdom in the back almost in all its periods, especially when the Mongols were preparing to invade Egypt, the Armenians cooperated with them and supported them with their forces. These forces were annihilated along with the Mongols at the hands of the Egyptians in the battle of Ain Jalut, and in all the battles in which the Armenians cooperated with the Mongols or the Crusaders after that,[4][5][6] and it was all with the grace of God Almighty for the Egyptians and the extent of Their strength and faith.[1][3]
After the Egyptian army conquered the city of Acre, which was considered the most important Crusader state in the East and the heir to the throne of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, there was an Armenian castle called the Rumkale or the Roman Castle. This castle was very important to the Armenians as a site and as a religious status because it was the seat of the Armenian Patriarch, except that this castle was a refuge to the Mongols and the Crusaders who fled from the Egyptian army in the Levant, and not only that, the soldiers of this castle, led by the Armenian Patriarch Stefanos IV, carried out raids on Egyptian caravans and Muslim caravans in general and on rural villages, all in secret, because in public they were linked to a treaty with the Egyptian Kingdom from the era of the Egyptian Sultan El-Mansur Seif al-Din Qalawun.[1][3]
The Egyptian governor of the city of Aleppo learned through his spies about the betrayal of the Rumkale Castle to Egypt and its violation of the concluded treaty, so in 1292, a detailed report was sent to the Egyptian Sultan El-Ashraf Khalil bin Qalawun, who was still returning to Egypt after the conquest of the city of Acre. Sultan Khalil ordered the announcement of a general mobilization throughout Egypt and the opening of the door of volunteering in Egypt, as usual, to go out and conquer the citadel. The preachers in the mosques delivered eloquent sermons that made the Egyptians feel committed to jihad and reminded them of the betrayal of the Armenians and their constant stabbing of Egypt. The most prominent preacher was the Abbasid Caliph Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah, who delivered a stunning sermon in the citadel mosque, as Al-Maqrizi mentioned.[1][3]
Siege
Sultan El-Ashraf Khalil bin Qalawun accompanied by his vizier Ibn al-Sal'us[7][8] came out at the head of the Egyptian army thirsty to discipline the Armenians. The Egyptian army reached the city of Damascus, then moved to Aleppo. From Aleppo, it reached the walls of the Rumkale Citadel, whose inhabitants and its Armenian and Mongol fighters were shocked by the Egyptian army outside the city walls. But despite the terror within the walls of the castle, the city was very impregnable because of the Euphrates River and the Marzban River, which surrounded the castle from every point, and its mountainous nature, in addition to the strength and height of its walls. All of these factors made it a more formidable and stronger castle than the Acre Castle, which the Egyptians conquered with great difficulty.[1][3]
The Egyptian army did not give up and began to implement a plan that was extremely intelligent and difficult at the same time. As an attempt to restrict the inhabitants of the castle, the Armenians and Mongols, and force them to surrender, the Egyptian forces pulled the waters of the Euphrates River towards the valleys and they were filled with water. With the presence of the Marzaban River, the Egyptians knew that they could control the castle from all sides. 30 catapults were deployed and began to demolish the city walls during the Egyptian siege on it[9], the catapults continued to strike the walls of the citadel without stopping for a month until the walls of the city were pierced on many sides. At that time, Prince Sanjar al-Shuja'i, the deputy of Damascus, ordered a chain to be made and entangled in the holes. The Egyptian soldiers mounted it in a great epic battle, and fought intensely. The citadel was conquered on Saturday, the eleventh of Rajab, in the year 691 AH, corresponding to 1292 AD.[1][2][3]
Aftermath
After the Egyptians entered the citadel, they stormed the headquarters of the Armenian Patriarch Stefanos IV, who was attacking Egyptian caravans and villages and protecting the Mongols, and he was arrested.[1][3]
The Egyptian army's siege of the castle lasted for 33 days, and after its conquest, Sultan Khalil named it the Qal'at al-Muslimin (Castle of the Muslims), instead of its old name, the Rumkale Castle[10]. It was known by this name, and Sultan Khalil ordered the rebuilding of everything that was destroyed in the castle and the flags of the Sultanate of Egypt be raised over it on all sides.[1][3]
Sultan Khalil left Emir Sanjar al-Shuja‘i at the castle and returned to Damascus with prisoners. The population of Damascus bid farewell to the victorious Sultan on his way to Cairo at night with thousands of lighted candles. The Egyptian army returned, with Sultan El-Ashraf Khalil at its head, and entered Cairo at night from the Bab al-Nasr (Victory Gate), according to the old Egyptian custom. The Egyptian army was received by tens of thousands of Egyptian people who lighted thousands of candles and hanged decorations. The women continued to ululate and the voices of takbir and applause rose.[1][3]
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i al-Maqrizi, Taqi al-Din (1997). السلوك لمعرفة دول الملوك الجزء الثاني (in Arabic). دار الكتب العلمية. pp. 233, 234, 235.
- ^ a b Stewart, A. D. (2006). Qal'at al-Rūm/Hromgla/Rumkale and the Mamluk Siege of 691ah/1292ce. In H. N. Kennedy (Ed.), Muslim Military Architecture in Greater Syria: From the Coming of Islam to the Ottoman Period (pp. 269-280). Brill.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Kurd Ali, Muhammad (1928). خطط الشام الجزء الثاني (in Arabic). Damascus, Syria: المطبعة الحديثة. p. 136.
- ^ Conermann 2008, p. 5.
- ^ Kurkjian, p. 206
- ^ Dahman, Mahammad Ahmad (1987), ولاة دمشق في عهد المماليك. p. 112. دار الفكر المعاصر للنشر والتوزيع.
- ^ Stewart 2001, p. 75
- ^ Nicolle 2005, p. 26.
- ^ Abu Al-Fida, p.386/ vol.13. According to Al-Maqrizi, al-Ashraf besieged Qal'at ar-Rum with 30 catapults. Al-Maqrizi, p.233/vol.2
- ^ al-Maqrizi, p.234/ vol.2