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The Mongols and The Mamluks:
In the thirteenth
century still another threat to the Muslim world appeared in the
land beyond the Oxus: the Mongols. Led by Genghis Khan, a
confederation of nomadic tribes which had already conquered China
now attacked the Muslims. In 1220 they took Samarkand and Bukhara.
By mid-century they had taken Russia, Central Europe, northern Iran,
and the Caucuses, and in 1258, under Hulagu Khan, they invaded
Baghdad and put an end to the remnants of the once-glorious 'Abbasid
Empire. The ancient systems of irrigation were destroyed and the
devastation was so extensive that agricultural recovery, even in the
twentieth century, is still incomplete. Because a minor scion of the
dynasty took refuge with the Mamluks in Egypt, the 'Abbasid
caliphate continued in name into the sixteenth century. In effect,
however, it expired with the Mongols and the capture of Baghdad.
From Iraq the Mongols pressed forward into Syria and then toward
Egypt where, for the first time, they faced adversaries who refused
to quail before their vaunted power. These were the Mamluks,
soldier-slaves from the Turkish steppe area north of the Black and
Caspian Seas with a later infusion of Circassians from the region of
the Caucuses Mountains.
The Mamluks had been
recruited by the Ayyubids and then, like the Turkish mercenaries of
the 'Abbasid caliphs, had usurped power from their enfeebled
masters. Unlike their predecessors, however, they were able to
maintain their power, and they retained control of Egypt until the
Ottoman conquest in 1517. Militarily formidable, they were also the
first power to defeat the Mongols in open combat when, in 1260, the
Mongols moved against Palestine and Egypt. Alerted by a chain of
signal fires stretching from Iraq to Egypt, the Mamluks were able to
marshal their forces in time to meet, and crush, the Mongols at 'Ayn
Jalut near Nazareth in Palestine.
The Mamluks,
originally a class of soldier slaves,
seized power
in Egypt in the thirteenth century
and stood fast
against the Mongols.
In the meantime, the
Mongols, like so many of the peoples who had come into contact with
Islam, had begun to embrace it. At the dawn of the fourteenth
century, Ghazan Khan Mahmud officially adopted Islam as the religion
of the state, and for a time peace descended on the eastern portion
of the Mongol empire. During this period the Mongols built mosques
and schools and patronized scholarship of all sorts. But then, in
1380, a new Turko-Mongol confederation was hammered together by
another world conqueror: Tamerlane, who claimed descent from Genghis
Khan. Under Tamerlane, the Mongol forces swept down on Central Asia,
India, Iran, Iraq, and Syria, occupying Aleppo and Damascus and
threatening - but not defeating - the Mamluks. Once again, however,
the Muslims survived their invaders. Tamerlane died on his way to
conquer China, and his empire melted away.
Politically and
economically, the Mongol invasions were disastrous. Some regions
never fully recovered and the Muslim empire, already weakened by
internal pressures, never fully regained its previous power. The
Mongol invasions, in fact, were a major cause of the subsequent
decline that set in throughout the heartland of the Arab East. In
their sweep through the Islamic world the Mongols killed or deported
numerous scholars and scientists and destroyed libraries with their
irreplaceable works. The result was to wipe out much of the
priceless cultural, scientific, and technological legacy that Muslim
scholars had been preserving and enlarging for some five hundred
years.

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