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The Seljuk Turks:
Although individual
Turkish generals had already gained considerable, and at times
decisive, power in Mesopotamia and Egypt during the tenth and
eleventh centuries, the coming of the Seljuks signaled the first
large-scale penetration of the Turkish elements into the Middle
East. Descended from a tribal chief named Seljuk, whose homeland lay
beyond the Oxus River near the Aral Sea, the Seljuks not only
developed a highly effective fighting force but also, through their
close contacts with Persian court life in Khorasan and Transoxania,
attracted a body of able administrators. Extending from Central Asia
to the Byzantine marches in Asia Minor, the Seljuk state under its
first three sultans- Tughril Beg, Alp-Arslan, and Malikshah-
established a highly cohesive, well-administered Sunni state under
the nominal authority of the 'Abbasid caliphs at Baghdad.
One of the
administrators, the Persian Nizam-al-Mulk, became one of the
greatest statesmen of medieval Islam. For twenty years, especially
during the rule of Sultan Malikshah, he was the true custodian of
the Seljuk state. In addition to having administrative abilities, he
was an accomplished stylist whose book on statecraft, Siyasat-Namah,
is a valuable source for the political thought of the time. In it he
stresses the responsibilities of the ruler: for example, if a man is
killed because a bridge is in disrepair, it is the fault of the
ruler, for he should make it his business to apprise himself of the
smallest negligences of his underlings. Nizam-al-Mulk, furthermore,
was a devout and orthodox Muslim who established a system of
madrasahs or theological seminaries (called nizamiyah after the
first element of his name) to provide students with free education
in the religious sciences of Islam, as well as in the most advanced
scientific and philosophical thought of the time. The famous
theologian al-Ghazali whose greatest work, the Revival of the
Sciences of Religion, was a triumph of Sunni theology taught for a
time at the nizamiyah schools at Baghdad and at Nishapur.
Nizam-al-Mulk was the patron of the poet and astronomer 'Umar al-Khayyam
(Omar Khayyam), whose verses, as translated by Edward FitzGerald in
the nineteenth century, have become as familiar to English readers
as the sonnets of Shakespeare.
After the death of
Malikshah in 1092, internal conflict among the young heirs led to
the fragmentation of the Seljuks' central authority into smaller
Seljuk states led by various members of the family, and still
smaller units led by regional chieftains, no one of whom was able to
unite the Muslim world as still another force appeared in the Middle
East: the Crusaders.
The most imposing of the
many fortresses built by the Crusaders the elegant Krak des
Chevaliers in Syria (top) held out against the Muslims for over a
century and a half. The Crusader castle at Sidon in Lebanon (below)
was abandoned after the final defeat of the Crusader Kingdom of
Jerusalem.

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