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{{Short description|Part of the Crusades}}
{{About|the Siege of Acre (1291)|other sieges|Siege of Acre (disambiguation){{!}}Siege of Acre}}
{{About|the Siege of Acre (1291)|other sieges|Siege of Acre (disambiguation){{!}}Siege of Acre}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2012}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2020}}
{{infobox military conflict
{{infobox military conflict
| conflict = Siege of Acre (1291)
| conflict = Siege of Acre (1291)
| partof = [[Crusades|The Crusades]]
| partof = the [[Crusades]]
| image = [[Image:SiegeOfAcre1291.jpg|300px]]
| image = Image:1291 siège d'Acre.jpg
| image_size = 300px
| caption = The [[Hospitalier]] [[Marshal|Maréchal]] [[Matthieu de Clermont]]<ref>{{cite book|last1=Daunou|last2=Émeric-David|first3=Félix|last3=Lajard|first4=Paulin|last4=Paris|first5=Victor|last5=Le Clerc|last6=Fauriel|title=Histoire littéraire de la France|volume=20|year=1842|page=83|location=Paris|publisher=[[Imprimerie nationale]]|editor1-first=Firmin|editor1-last=Didot frères|editor2-last=Treuttel|editor3-last=Wurtz|url=https://books.google.fr/books?id=bmAaAQAAMAAJ|language=fr}}</ref> defending the walls at the Siege of Acre, 1291, by [[Dominique Papety]] (1815–49) at [[Palace of Versailles|Versailles]].
| caption = ''[[Matthew of Clermont|Matthieu de Clermont]] défend [[Ptolemais in Phoenicia|Ptolémaïs]] en 1291'', by [[Dominique Papety]] (1815–49) at [[Salles des Croisades]] in [[Palace of Versailles|Versailles]]
| date = 4 April – 18 May 1291
| place = [[Acre, Israel]]
| date = 4 April – 18 May 1291
| result = [[Mamluk Sultanate (Cairo)|Mamluk]] victory
| place = [[Acre, Israel|Acre]], [[Kingdom of Jerusalem]]
| coordinates = {{coord|32|56|N|35|05|E|region:IL_type:event_source:kolossus-cawiki|display=title,inline}}
| territory = Acre captured by the Mamluks
| combatant1 = [[File:Mameluke_Flag.svg|22px]] [[Mamluk Sultanate (Cairo)|Mamluk Sultanate]]
| result = [[Mamluk Sultanate (Cairo)|Mamluk]] victory
| territory = The [[Mamluk Sultanate|Mamluks]] successfully captured [[Acre]] in 1291
| combatant2 = [[File:Vexillum Regni Hierosolymae.svg|border|22px]] [[Kingdom of Jerusalem]]<br>[[File:Cross of the Knights Templar.svg|border|18px]] [[Knights Templar]]<br>[[File:Cross of the Knights Hospitaller.svg|border|18px]] [[Knights Hospitaller]]<br>[[File:Cross-Pattee-alternate.png|border|18px]] [[Teutonic Knights]]
| combatant1 = [[Mamluk Sultanate]]
| commander1 = [[File:Mameluke_Flag.svg|22px]] [[Al-Ashraf Khalil]]
* [[Ayyubid dynasty|Ayyubid]] [[List of Ayyubid rulers|remnant emirate]] of [[Hama]]
| commander2 = [[File:Vexillum Regni Hierosolymae.svg|border|22px]] [[Henry II of Jerusalem]]<br>[[File:Vexillum Regni Hierosolymae.svg|border|22px]] [[Amalric of Tyre]]
| combatant2 = {{plainlist|
| strength1 = 220,000<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |title= Siege of Acre (1291)| encyclopedia=The Hutchinson Dictionary of Ancient and Medieval Warfare|year=1998|page=1|publisher=Routledge|editor1-first=Peter|editor1-last=Connolly|editor2-last=Gillingham|editor3-last=Lazenby}}</ref>
* [[Kingdom of Jerusalem]] {{small|(in [[Personal union|union]] with [[Kingdom of Cyprus|Cyprus]])}}
| strength2 = 17,000 infantry,
* [[Knights Templar]]
1,100 cavalry
* [[Knights Hospitaller]]
| casualties1 = 7 Amirs, 30 Amir's Mamluks, 6 Halqa commanders, 53 Halqas, unknown volunteers
* [[Teutonic Order]]
| casualties2 = Heavy
* [[Knights of Saint Thomas|Order of St. Thomas]]
| notes =
* [[Order of Saint Lazarus|Order of St. Lazarus]]}}
| commander1 = {{Plainlist|
* [[Al-Ashraf Khalil]]
* [[Lajin|Hussam ad-Din Lajin]]
* [[Al-Muzaffar III Mahmud]]
* [[Baybars al-Mansuri]]
* [[Siraj al-Din Dhabyan]]
* Sayf al-Din Bilban}}
| commander2 = {{Plainlist|
* [[Henry II of Jerusalem|Henry II, King of Jerusalem and Cyprus]]
* [[Amalric of Tyre]]
* [[Guillaume de Beaujeu]]{{KIA}}
* [[Thibaud Gaudin]]
* [[Pierre de Severy]]{{KIA}}
* [[Jean de Villiers (grand master)|Jean de Villiers]]
* [[Matthew of Clermont]]{{KIA}}
* [[Konrad von Feuchtwangen]]
* [[Otto de Grandson]]
* [[Jean I de Grailly|Jean de Grailly]]}} {{DOW}}
| strength1 = Unknown
| strength2 = Acre: 15,000<ref name="Folda_485">Folda (2005), p. 485</ref>
Cyprus: 700<ref name="Nicolle, p. 39">Nicolle (2005), p. 39</ref>
| casualties1 = Unknown
| casualties2 = 10,000+<ref>{{Cite web |last=Sean McGlynn |date=18 May 2018 |title=The Siege of Acre: a monstrous blot on the Third Crusade |url=https://www.spectator.co.uk/2018/05/the-siege-of-acre-a-monstrous-blot-on-the-third-crusade/ |access-date=17 August 2019 |website=[[The Spectator]]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180514085514/https://www.spectator.co.uk/2018/05/the-siege-of-acre-a-monstrous-blot-on-the-third-crusade/|archive-date=May 14, 2018|url-status=dead}}</ref><br>
| notes =
}}
}}


{{Campaignbox Crusades Battles}}
{{Campaignbox Crusades Battles}}
The '''Siege of Acre''' (also called the '''Fall of Acre''') took place in 1291 and resulted in the loss of the [[Crusades|Crusader]]-controlled city of [[Acre (city)|Acre]] to the [[Mamluk Sultanate (Cairo)|Mamluks]]. It is considered one of the most important battles of the period. Although the crusading movement continued for several more centuries, the capture of the city marked the end of further crusades to the [[Levant]]. When Acre fell, the Crusaders lost their last major stronghold of the Crusader [[Kingdom of Jerusalem]]. They still maintained a fortress at the northern city of [[Tartus]] (today in north-western Syria), engaged in some coastal raids, and attempted an incursion from the tiny island of [[Arwad|Ruad]], but when they lost that as well in 1302–3 in the [[Siege of Ruad]], the Crusaders no longer controlled any part of the [[Holy Land]].<ref name="crusade-en">{{cite encyclopedia | last = Burgtorf | first = Jochen | title = Acre, Siege of (1291) | editor = Alan V. Murray | encyclopedia = The Crusades: An Encyclopedia | volume = 1 | pages = 13–14 | publisher = [[ABC-CLIO]] | location = [[Santa Barbara, California|Santa Barbara]] | year = 2006 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=6cSXSgAACAAJ | oclc = 70122512}}</ref>
The '''Siege of Acre''' (also called the '''Fall of Acre''') took place in 1291 and resulted in the [[Crusades|Crusaders]]' losing control of [[Acre (city)|Acre]] to the [[Mamluk Sultanate (Cairo)|Mamluks]]. It is considered one of the most important battles of the period. Although the [[crusading movement]] continued for several more centuries, the capture of the city marked the end of further crusades to the [[Levant]]. When Acre fell, the Crusaders lost their last major stronghold of the Crusader [[Kingdom of Jerusalem]]. They still maintained a fortress at the northern city of [[Tartus]] (now in north-western Syria), engaged in some coastal raids, and attempted an incursion from the tiny island of [[Arwad|Ruad]]; but, when they lost that, too, in [[siege of Ruad|a siege in 1302]], the Crusaders no longer controlled any part of the [[Holy Land]].<ref name="crusade-en">{{Cite encyclopedia |year=2006 |title=Acre, Siege of (1291) |encyclopedia=The Crusades: An Encyclopedia |publisher=[[ABC-CLIO]] |location=[[Santa Barbara, California|Santa Barbara]] |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6cSXSgAACAAJ |last=Burgtorf |first=Jochen |editor-last=Alan V. Murray |volume=1 |pages=13–14 |oclc=70122512}}</ref>


==Background==
==Background==
In 1187, [[Saladin]] conquered much of the Kingdom of Jerusalem (also called the [[Latin Kingdom]]), including Acre and [[Jerusalem]], after winning the [[Battle of Hattin]] and inflicting heavy losses on the Crusaders. The [[Third Crusade]] was launched in response; the Crusaders [[Siege of Acre (1189)|besieged]] and eventually recaptured Acre in 1191. Acre became the capital of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. The religious orders made their headquarters in and around the city, and from there made crucial military and diplomatic decisions. For example, when the [[Mongol]]s arrived from the East in the mid-13th century, the Christians saw them as potential allies.
{{refimprove|section|date=May 2015}}
The main turning point in the Crusades was in 1187 when, after the pivotal [[Battle of Hattin]], the [[Christian]]s lost [[Jerusalem]] to the forces of [[Saladin]]. In the same year, Saladin was able to conquer a great part of the Kingdom of Jerusalem including Acre and Jerusalem. This led to the [[Third Crusade]], during which [[Siege of Acre (1189)|Acre was besieged]] and eventually fell in the hands of the Christians in 1191; it became the base of operations and capital of the Kingdom of Jerusalem for most of the next hundred years. The religious orders had their headquarters in or near Acre, from which they made crucial decisions in military and diplomatic efforts. For example, when the [[Mongol]] forces came in from the East in the mid-13th century, the Christians saw them as potential allies, but also maintained a position of cautious neutrality with the Muslim forces of the [[Mamluks]]. In 1260, the Barons of Acre allowed the Mamluks to pass through their territory unhindered, which enabled the Mamluks to achieve a decisive victory against the Mongols at the pivotal [[Battle of Ain Jalut]] in [[Galilee]].


However, most relations with the Mamluks were not as cordial. With the rise of the [[Mamluk Sultanate (Cairo)|Mamluk Sultanate]] in [[Egypt]] in 1250, an even more dangerous and formidable enemy than the [[Ayyubids]] with heavy cavalry to match Crusader knights, the destruction of the remaining Crusader territories gathered pace. They also proved to be much more hostile. After the Battle of Ain Jalut, Mamluk forces began attacking Crusader holdings as early as 1261 under [[Sultan]] [[Baibars]]. In 1265, [[Caesarea]], [[Haifa]], and [[Arsuf]] all fell to the Sultan. The following year saw the loss of all the important Latin holdings in Galilee. In 1268 [[Siege of Antioch (1268)|Antioch was taken]].
In 1250, the [[Mamluk Sultanate (Cairo)|Mamluk Sultanate]] arose in [[Egypt]]; it was a more dangerous enemy than the [[Ayyubids]]. The Mamluks fielded heavy cavalry – a match for the Crusader knights and were much more hostile. The Crusaders initially attempted to maintain a cautious neutrality with the Mamluks. In 1260, the Barons of Acre granted the Mamluks safe passage through the Latin Kingdom en route to fighting the Mongols; the Mamluks subsequently won the pivotal [[Battle of Ain Jalut]] in [[Galilee]] against the Mongols. This was an example of atypically cordial relations between the Christians and the Mamluks.<ref name="britannica">{{Cite web|url=https://www.britannica.com/event/Battle-of-Ayn-Jalut|title=Battle of Ayn Jalut &#124; Summary &#124; Britannica|website=www.britannica.com}}</ref>


However, as early as 1261, after the Battle of Ain Jalut, [[Sultan]] [[Baibars]] led the Mamluks against the Crusaders. Baibars captured [[Caesarea Maritima|Caesarea]], [[Haifa]], and [[Arsuf]] in 1265, all the important Crusader holdings in Galilee the following year, and then [[Siege of Antioch (1268)|Antioch]] in 1268.<ref>Folda, Jaroslav (2005). Crusader art in the Holy Land : from the Third Crusade to the fall of Acre, 1187–1291. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521835831.</ref>
To help redress these losses, a number of minor Crusading expeditions left Europe for the East. The [[Eighth Crusade|abortive Crusade]] of [[Louis IX of France]] to [[Tunis]] in 1270 was one such attempt. The minor [[Ninth Crusade]] of Prince Edward (later [[Edward I of England|King Edward I]]) of England in 1271–1272 was another. Neither of these expeditions was capable of giving any sound assistance to the beleaguered Latin states. The forces involved were too small, the duration of each of the Crusades too short, the interests of the participants too diverse to allow any solid accomplishment.


European states launched a number of minor Crusading expeditions to reinforce the Crusader states, including the [[Eighth Crusade|abortive Crusade]] of [[Louis IX of France]] to [[Tunis]] in 1270, and the minor [[Ninth Crusade]] of Prince Edward (later [[Edward I of England|King Edward I]]) of England in 1271–1272. The expeditions failed to provide the required relief; they were too small, too short-lived, and the interests of the participants were too diverse.<ref> Newman, Albert Henry, A Manual of Church History, p. 461</ref>
[[Image:Siege of Tripoli Painting (1289).jpg|thumb|The [[Fall of Tripoli (1289)|Fall of Tripoli]] in 1289 triggered frantic preparations to save Acre.]]
[[Pope Gregory X]] labored valiantly to excite some general enthusiasm for another great Crusade, but he labored in vain. The failure of his appeal was variously ascribed by the Pope's advisors to the laziness and vice of the European nobility and to clerical corruption. Though each of these factors may have been in part to blame, a more basic reason for the failure seems to have been the debasement of the ideal of the Crusade itself. The use by Gregory X's predecessors of the label and privileges of the Crusade to recruit armies which could fight the Papacy's European enemies had done much to throw the whole movement into disrepute.


[[Image:Siege of Tripoli Painting (1289).jpg|thumb|upright|The [[Fall of Tripoli (1289)|fall of Tripoli]] in 1289 triggered frantic preparations to save Acre.]]
In any event, no Crusade of any major importance was forthcoming, despite the Pope's best efforts. Meanwhile, the attacks on the Latin East continued, as did also the internal difficulties within what was left of the Latin Kingdom. By 1276, the situation, both external and internal, had become so perilous that the "[[King of Jerusalem]]" [[Henry II of Jerusalem|Henry II]] withdrew from Palestine altogether to take up his abode on the Island of [[Cyprus]]. The desperate plight of the Latin Kingdom worsened. In 1278, [[Lattakia]] fell. In 1289 [[Tripoli, Lebanon|Tripoli]] was lost in the [[Fall of Tripoli (1289)|Fall of Tripoli]].
More seriously, no major reinforcing Crusade was forthcoming. [[Pope Gregory X]] was unable to rally support for another great Crusade. Papal advisors blamed the lack of enthusiasm to the laziness and vice of the European nobility and to clerical corruption. A more fundamental reason seems to have been the debasement of the Crusading ideal; Gregory X's predecessors had used Crusades to raise armies against the Papacy's European enemies.<ref> Newman, Albert Henry, A Manual of Church History, p. 461</ref>


The Crusader states continued to deteriorate from continuing attacks and political instability. In 1276, the unpopular "[[King of Jerusalem]]" [[Hugh III of Cyprus|Hugh III]] moved his court to [[Cyprus]].<ref>Edbury, Peter W. (1994). The Kingdom of Cyprus and the Crusades, 1191–1374. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-45837-5, pp 90.</ref> Under Sultan [[Al-Mansur Qalawun]], the Mamluks captured [[Lattakia]] in 1278, and [[Fall of Tripoli (1289)|conquered]] the [[County of Tripoli]] in 1289. Qalawun concluded a ten-year truce with the Kingdom of Jerusalem in 1284.<ref>Rabbat, Nasser O. (2021). The Citadel of Cairo. Brill. p. 136. ISBN 978-90-04-49248-6.</ref>
The Mamluks were led by Sultan [[Al-Ashraf Khalil]], son of [[Qalawun]]. Qalawun had begun preparations for the siege but died in November 1290.<ref>Author, D. Nicolle, Acre 1291: Bloody sunset of the Crusading states. Osprey 2005. D</ref>


Following the fall of Tripoli, King [[Henry II of Jerusalem|Henry II]], son of Hugh III, sent [[seneschal]] [[Jean I de Grailly|Jean de Grailly]] to warn European monarchs of the critical situation in the [[Levant]].<ref name="Runciman_408">Runciman (1951), p. 408</ref> [[Pope Nicholas IV]] supported Jean by writing letters urging European potentates to act. However, the [[War of the Sicilian Vespers|Sicilian question]] overshadowed calls for a new Crusade, and Edward I of England was too entangled by troubles at home.<ref>Schneidman, J.Lee (December 1969). "Ending the War of the Sicilian Vespers". Journal of Peace Research. 6 (4): 335–347. doi:10.1177/002234336900600404. ISSN 0022-3433. S2CID 110273792.</ref>
===Defensive efforts===
Decades of communications between the Europeans and the Mongols, towards the possibility of creating a [[Franco-Mongol alliance]], had not produced any noticeable result, and attempts to raise a new army from Italy merely gave an excuse for the final attack by the Muslims.


Decades of communications between the Europeans and the Mongols failed to secure a meaningful [[Franco-Mongol alliance]].<ref>Atwood. "Western Europe and the Mongol Empire" in Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire. p. 583. "Despite numerous envoys and the obvious logic of an alliance against mutual enemies, the papacy and the Crusaders never achieved the often-proposed alliance against Islam".</ref><ref>Ryan, James D. (November 1998). "Christian Wives of Mongol Khans: Tartar Queens and Missionary Expectations in Asia". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society. Cambridge, UK; New York, New York, USA: Cambridge University Press. 8 (3): 411–421. doi:10.1017/S1356186300010506. JSTOR 25183572.</ref>
===Muslim attack on the city===
Following the fall of Tripoli, king Henry of Cyprus sent the [[senechal]] [[Jean I de Grailly|Jean de Grailly]] to Europe to warn European monarchs about the critical situation in the Levant.<ref name=runciman>"A History of the Crusades" by Sir Steven Runciman, p.408</ref> Jean met with [[Pope Nicholas IV]] who shared his worries and wrote a letter to European potentates to do something about the [[Holy Land]]. Most however were too preoccupied by the Sicilian question to organize a Crusade, as was king [[Edward I]] too entangled in troubles at home.


===Pretext for attack===
One Arabian account claims that an affair between a rich young wife of the city and a ''Mussulman'' was discovered by the husband who:
One Arab account claims that an affair between a rich young wife of the city and a [[Muslim|''Mussulman'']] was discovered by the husband:
{{quote|gathers together some friends goes out from [[Ptolemais in Phoenicia|Ptolemais]] [...] and immolates them both to his injured honour. Some Mussulmans are drawn to the spot, the Christians come up in still greater numbers, the quarrel becomes angry and general and every Mussulman is massacred.|''The History of the Crusades'', Vol. 3, p. 73, Michaud and Robson<ref name="michaud">{{cite book |last1=Michaud |first1=Joseph Fr |title=The History of the Crusades |date=1853 |publisher=Redfield |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mAcMAAAAYAAJ}} In a footnote, Michaud claims reliance on "the chronicle of Ibn Ferat" (Michaud, Vol. 3, p. 22) for much of the information he has concerning the ''Mussulmans''.</ref>}}


The Crusaders feared that Qalawun would use this as a pretext to resume the war, and petitioned the pontiff for reinforcements. According to Michaud, 25 Venetian galleys carrying 1600 men "levied in haste in Italy" were sent.<ref name=michaud/> Other sources claim 20 galleys of peasants and unemployed townfolks from [[Tuscany]] and [[Lombardy]], led by [[Nicholas Tiepolo]], the son of [[Doge (title)|Doge]] [[Lorenzo Tiepolo]], who was assisted by the returning Jean de Grailly and [[Roux of Sully]]. These were joined by five galleys from King [[James II of Aragon]] who wished to help despite his conflict with the Pope and Venice.<ref name="Runciman_409">Runciman (1951), p. 409</ref>
{{quote|gathers together some friends goes out from Ptolemais [...] and immmolates them both to his injured honour. Some Mussulmans are drawn to the spot, the Christians come up in still greater numbers, the quarrel becomes angry and general and every Mussulman is massacred.|The History of the Crusades, Vol. 3, p.73, Michaud and Robson<ref name="michaud">Michaud, ''The History of the Crusades'', Vol. 3, p. 18 ; available [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=mAcMAAAAYAAJ in full at Google Books]. Note that in a footnote Michaud claims reliance on "the chronicle of Ibn Ferat" (Michaud, Vol.3, p.22) for much of the information he has concerning the ''Mussulmans''.</ref>}}


The Italian reinforcements were ill-disciplined and without regular pay; they pillaged indiscriminately from both Muslims and Christians before setting out from Acre. According to Runciman they attacked and killed some Muslim merchants around Acre in August 1290,<ref name="Runciman_408" /> although in Michaud's account they instead pillaged and massacred towns and villages. Qalawun demanded the [[extradition]] of the Christian perpetrators. On the suggestion of [[Guillaume de Beaujeu]], the [[Grand Masters of the Knights Templar|Grand Master]] of the [[Knights Templar]], the Council of Acre debated the issue; the Sultan's demand was rejected, with the Crusaders claiming that the murdered Muslims had been responsible for their own deaths.<ref>Runciman (1951), pp. 410–411</ref>
The Christians feared this would give the Sultan a pretext on which to renew the war and petitioned the pontiff to send further aid. The aid according to Michaud<ref name=michaud/> came in the form of 25 Venetian galleys carrying 1600 men "levied in haste in Italy". Other sources claim 20 galleys of men to be peasants and unemployed townfolks from [[Tuscany]] and [[Lombardy]] led by [[Nicholas Tiepolo]], the son of the [[Doge]], who was assisted by the returning Jean de Grailly and [[Roux of Sully]].<ref name="Runciman, p.409">Runciman, p.409</ref> These were then joined by five galleys from king [[James II of Aragon]] who wished to help despite his conflict with the Pope and Venice.<ref name="Runciman, p.409"/>


==Siege==
These reinforcements from Italy were ill-disciplined and having no regular pay resorted to pillaging indiscriminately from both Muslims and Christians before setting out from Acre. According to Runciman<ref name=runciman/> they attacked and killed some Muslim merchants around Acre in August 1290 though Michaud's account reports that they instead laid waste towns and villages all about with pillaging and massacre. In any case if the Sultan Qalawun were in need of a further pretext for attack he certainly now had one — Qalawun asked for the men guilty of the killing to be remitted to him so that he could apply justice. After discussions of the apparent remitting the Christian criminals from Acre's jails, an idea of [[Guillaume de Beaujeu]], the Council of Acre finally refused to remit anybody to Qalawun, and instead tried to argue that the killed Muslims had died because of their own fault.<ref>Runciman, p.410-411</ref>


===Prelude to the battle===
Although a ten-year truce had been signed in 1289, Qalawun deemed the truce void following the killings. By October, Qalawun had ordered a general mobilization. Though the Sultan died in November, he was succeeded by his son [[Al-Ashraf Khalil|Khalil]] (some accounts ''Chalil''<ref name=michaud/>), who would lead the forces attacking Acre.
Sultan Qalawun dissolved the truce with Acre, and the Mamluks began mobilizing by October 1290. Qalawun died in December and was succeeded by his son, [[Al-Ashraf Khalil]]<ref name="Claster_286">Claster (2009), p. 286</ref> (sometimes spelled ''Chalil''<ref name=michaud/>). Guillaume de Beaujeu received a message from Khalil, which stated the latter's intention to attack Acre and to refuse peace overtures.<ref>"Because you have been a true man, so we send you advance notice of our intentions, and give you to understand that we are coming into your parts to right the wrongs that have been done. Therefore we do not want the community of Acre to send us any letters or presents (regarding this matter), for we will by no means receive them." <span style="font-size:87%;">—From the letter of Al-Ashraf Khalil to [[Guillaume de Beaujeu]], The [[Templar of Tyre]], ''[[Gestes des Chiprois]]'', p. 104 / part 3</span></ref> Nonetheless, the Crusaders dispatched a peace delegation, led by Sir Philip Mainebeuf,<ref name=":1">The Templar of Tyre, ''Gestes des Chiprois'', p. 104 / part 3</ref><ref>Philip Mainebeuf, who spoke Arabic, was accompanied by a knight named Bartholomew Pisan and a scribe named George. The Templar of Tyre, ''Gestes des Chiprois'', p. 104 / part 3</ref> to Cairo; the delegation was imprisoned.{{Unreliable source?|date=October 2009}}<ref>Asili, p. 110</ref><ref name=":1"/> Khalil set out from Cairo in March 1291.<ref name="Claster_286" />


The assembled Mamluk army greatly outnumbered the Crusaders. Khalil called upon Syria to reinforce his Egyptian army;<ref name="Folda_485" /> he was answered by contingents from Damascus (led by [[Lajin]]), [[Hama]] (led by al-Muzaffar Taqai ad-Din), [[Tripoli, Lebanon|Tripoli]] (led by Bilban) and [[al-Karak]] (led by Baibars al-Dewadar.)<ref>There are no reliable figures for the Muslim army, according to some sources it consisted of 60 000 cavalry and 160 000 infantry. Though the numbers seem exaggerated, the army of the Muslim was probably larger than that of the Crusaders. Asili, p. 111</ref><ref>Michaud, ''ibid'', pp. 75–76, gives account of 7 emirs leaving in ''Kalouan's'' (ie Sultan Qalawun) stead as he was ill; he reports that each emir had 4,000 horse and 20,000-foot at his command – giving about 160,000 men.</ref> A significant portion of the troops were volunteers.<ref>[[Abu al-Fida]], p. 278 / vol. 13. According to Ibn Taghri most of Khalil's troops were volunteers. Ibn Taghri, p. 5 / vol. 8</ref> The army included a substantial artillery train<ref name="Folda_485" /> drawn from fortresses across the Mamluk empire. Hama sent the enormous catapult "The Victorious"<ref name="Claster_286" /> ({{lang|ar|المنصورى}}).{{refn|group=nb|This may have been a reference to the Sultan, who was Khalil Al-Mansuri.}} Another large catapult was "The Furious" ({{lang|ar|الغاضبة}}). There were also lighter [[mangonel]]s called "the Black Bulls" ({{lang|ar|الثيران السوداء}}).<ref>Asili, p. 110; Templar of Tyre, p. 105</ref>
==Siege==
[[Image:SiegeOfAcre1291BNF.JPG|thumb|Medieval rendering of the 1291 Siege of Acre]]
Qalawun, father of Khalil, conquered the [[County of Tripoli]] in 1289, and in 1290 marched on [[Akko|Acre]], the capital of the remnant of the [[Kingdom of Jerusalem]], but, to the relief of the Franks of Acre, he died in November before launching the attack. He was succeeded by Khalil who decided to continue the attack. Khalil sent a message to [[William of Beaujeu]],<ref>William of Beaujeu (Guillaume de Beaujeu) was the 21st Grand Master of the Knights Templar, from 1273 until his death during the siege of Acre in 1291. See [[Guillaume de Beaujeu]]</ref> the Master of the Temple, telling him about his intentions to attack Acre and urging him not to send messengers or gifts.<ref>"Because you have been a true man, so we send you advance notice of our intentions, and give you to understand that we are coming into your parts to right the wrongs that have been done. Therefore we do not want the community of Acre to send us any letters or presents (regarding this matter), for we will by no means receive them." <span style="font-size:87%;">—From the letter of Al-Ashraf Khalil to [[William of Beaujeu]], The Templar of Tyre, Chronicle Gestes des Chiprois, p.104/ part 3</span></ref> But a delegation from Acre led by Sir Philip Mainebeuf,<ref>The Templar of Tyre, Gestes des Chiprois, p.104 / part 3</ref><ref>Philip Mainebeuf, who spoke Arabic, was accompanied by a knight named Bartholomew Pisan and a scribe named George. The Templar of Tyre, Gestes des Chiprois, p.104/ part 3</ref> arrived in Cairo <ref>Al-Maqrizi, p.222/ vol. 2</ref> with gifts and appealed to Khalil not to attack Acre. Khalil did not accept the request and imprisoned{{Verify credibility|date=October 2009}} the Frank messengers.<ref>Asili, p.110</ref><ref>The Templar of Tyre, Gestes des Chiprois, p.104/ part 3</ref>


Notable historians in the Mamluks' ranks included Baybars al-Dewadar,<ref>Rukn ad-Din Baibars al-Dewadar was also a historian. He gave his account about the battle for Acre in his book "Zobdat al-Fikrah Fi Tarikh al-Hijrah ( 11 volumes )".</ref> and [[Abulfeda]] in the Haman contingent.<ref>Asli, p. 114</ref>
===Amassing of forces===
Al-Ashraf Khalil assembled the forces of Egypt and [[Syria]], which included a great number of volunteers<ref>[[Abu al-Fida]],p.278/ vol.13. According to Ibn Taghri most of Khalil's troops were volunteers. Ibn Taghri, p.5/ vol. 8</ref> and siege engines from everywhere at [[Krak des Chevaliers|Hisn al-Akrad]]. Some of Khalil's [[catapult]]s were huge and had such names as "Al Mansuri" and "The Furious" in addition to lighter, but potent, [[mangonel]]s called "Black Bulls".<ref>Asili, p. 110. Templar of Tyre, p.105</ref><ref>Al-Mansuri (The victorious; Arabic: المنصورى) might refer to Khalil himself as he was Khalil Al-Mansuri, The Furious (Arabic: Al-Ghadibah الغاضبة), Black Bulls (Arabic: Al-Thiran Al-Sawda'a الثيران السوداء)</ref> Four armies from Damascus (led by [[Lajin]]), [[Hama]] (led by al-Muzaffar Taqai ad-Din), [[Tripoli, Lebanon|Tripoli]] (led by Bilban) and [[Al-Karak]] (led by Baibars al-Dewadar) marched to Acre to join the Muslim army of Khalil.<ref>There are no reliable figures for the Muslim army, according to some sources it consisted of 60 000 cavalry and 160 000 infantry. Though the numbers seem exaggerated, the army of the Muslim was probably larger than that of the Crusaders. Asili, p.111</ref><ref>Michaud, ''ibid'', pp. 75–76, gives account of 7 emirs leaving in ''Kalouan's'' (ie Sultan Qalawun) stead as he was ill; he reports that each emir had 4,000 horse and 20,000 foot at his command – giving about 160,000 men.</ref>


The Crusaders' appeals for aid met with little success. England sent a few knights, including [[Otto de Grandson]] of [[Savoy]]. The only noteworthy reinforcements came from Henry II of Cyprus, who fortified the walls and sent troops led by his brother [[Amalric, Lord of Tyre]]. [[Burchard von Schwanden]] suddenly resigned as [[Grand Master of the Teutonic Order]] and left Acre for Europe; he was succeeded by [[Konrad von Feuchtwangen]]. The only major contingent to leave were the [[Genoa|Genoese]], who concluded a separate treaty with Khalil. Many women and children were evacuated from Acre to Cyprus in March.<ref name="Claster_286" />
In addition to the historian Baibars al-Dewadar <ref>Rukn ad-Din Baibars al-Dewadar was also a historian. He gave his account about the battle for Acre in his book "Zobdat al-Fikrah Fi Tarikh al-Hijrah ( 11 volumes )".</ref> who led the army of Al Karak, [[Abu al-Fida]] was another prominent historian who accompanied al-Ashraf in his [[Levant]]ine expedition.<ref>The historian Abu Al-Fida was in the army of Hama. Asli, p.114</ref>


Acre was defended by an inner and outer wall, with a total of twelve towers built by European kings and rich pilgrims.<ref>Among these towers were the Tower of the Countess of Blois, the Accursed Tower, the Tower of the Legate, the Tower of the Patriarch, the Tower of St. Nicholas, the English Tower, the Germans Tower, the Tower of Henri II, the Tower of King Hugh and the Tower of St. Lazarus. Asili, p. 113; Templar of Tyre, p. 106 / note2</ref><ref>The English tower was built by Henry I. Asili, p. 113</ref><ref>The Tower of the Countess of Blois was built by the Countess of Blois. Asili, p. 114</ref>
===Call for aid from Europe===
The Franks of Acre were for some time aware of the seriousness of the situation. They asked for help from Europe which resulted in nothing significant. A small group of knights, among them the [[Savoy]]ard [[Otton de Grandson|Otto of Grandson]], were sent by King [[Edward I of England]]. [[Burchard of Schwanden]], the [[Knights Hospitaller|Grand Master]] of the [[Germans|German]] [[Teutonic Knights]], resigned and was replaced by [[Konrad von Feuchtwangen]] who suddenly left Acre for Europe. The only noteworthy reinforcement came from king [[Henry II of Jerusalem|Henry II]] of Cyprus who fortified the walls and sent forces led by his brother [[Amalric, Prince of Tyre|Amalric]] to defend the city.


===The defences===
===Siege begins===
[[Image:Map of Acre in 1291.svg|thumb|upright|right|Map of Acre in 1291]]
Acre was well defended by two lines of thick walls<ref>Acre is one of the few cities in the world whose walls have remained standing over the centuries.See [[List of cities with defensive walls]]</ref> and had twelve towers<ref>The towers of Acre were built in the outer wall and the inner wall. Among these towers were the Tower of the Countess of Blois, the Accursed Tower, the Tower of the Legate, the Tower of the Patriarch, the Tower of St. Nicholas, the English Tower, the Germans Tower, the Tower of Henri II, the Tower of King Hugh and the Tower of St. Lazarus. Asili, p.113. Templar of Tyre, p.106/note2</ref> which were built by European kings<ref>The English tower was built by Henry I. Asili, p.113</ref> and rich pilgrims.<ref>The Tower of the Countess of Blois was built by the Countess of Blois. Asili, p.114</ref>
Sultan Khalil and the Egyptian army arrived at Acre on 6 April 1291,<ref name="Folda_485" /><ref name="Claster_286" /> with the Syrian contingents arriving two days later with siege engines. The Mamluk encampment spanned from one coast to the other about two kilometers from the city walls. The red ''dihliz'' – the Sultan's personal tent and headquarters – was on a small hill west of the Legate's Tower. There was little fighting during the first eight days as the besiegers established their camp. From days nine to eleven the Mamluks pushed forward barricades and [[wicker]] screens until they reached the [[Moat|fosse]] before the outer wall; Carabohas, rapid-fire siege engines, were brought up. The besiegers began mining and bombarding the walls.<ref name="Folda_485" /> Acre's gates remained open – but heavily defended – as [[sally port]]s.<ref name="Folda_485" />


The Crusaders launched multiple attacks on the Mamluk camp. An amphibious assault on the Hamans – stationed on the northernmost section of the line by the sea – was successful although the Crusaders suffered heavy casualties.<ref name="Folda_485" /> In another raid, three hundred Templars, led by [[Jean I de Grailly|Jean de Grailly]] and [[Otto de Grandson]], rode out under moonlight to attack Haman artillery with [[Greek fire]]; while the artillery was not destroyed, the Templar engaged over 1000 Mamluks and returned with trophies and captured supplies. Khalil punished some subordinates for the humiliation caused by the Templar sorties. In general, Crusader attacks failed to disrupt Mamluk preparations for a direct assault on the walls.<ref name="Folda_486">Folda (2005), p. 486</ref>
===The siege begins===
[[Image:Acre1291 made by samsam.JPG|thumb|left|Map of Acre in 1291]]On 5 April 1291, Khalil's forces stood in front of Acre.<ref>Templar of Tyre, p.105. Asili, p.110. Ibn Taghri, p.5 / vol. 8. Al-Maqrizi, p.223/ vol.2</ref> The army of Hama took its position on front of the Templars' tower, while the Muslim army stretched out from the end of the wall of Montmusard <ref>Montmusard (also Montmusart) was a suburb of crusader Acre</ref> up to the Gulf of Acre.<ref>Asili, p.114</ref> The ''Dihliz'' (red tent of the Sultan and the headquarters) stood on a small hill near the shore on front of the Tower of the Legate. For eight days both armies engaged in occasional clashes. At the end of the eight days the Muslims set up barricades and began to move further towards the city, using wicker screens, till in the end they reached the edge of the wall, while continuously bombarding the walls with trebuchets. Carabohas<ref>Carabohas were rapid-fire siege machines. Templar of Tyre, p.106</ref> were brought up and parts of the wall were mined out. Despite the continual arrival of reinforcements from Cyprus to Acre by sea, the Franks became convinced of their lack of strength against Khalil's army. On 15 April, under moonlight, the Templars, led by Jean Grailly and Otto of Grandson, launched a sudden attack against the camp of the contingent of Hama, but their horses got their legs tangled in the ropes of the Muslims' tents and were caught, and many were killed. Another attack, after a few days and this time under cover of darkness, by the Hospitallers also ended badly. On 5 May, some hope was revived when Henry II of Cyprus arrived with forces transported by 40 ships. But soon Henry, too, became convinced of his helplessness.


Henry II of Cyprus arrived on 4 May with reinforcements<ref name="Folda_486" /><ref name="Claster_286" /> of 700 troops aboard 40 ships.<ref name="Nicolle, p. 39" /> The king's arrival temporarily buoyed morale, but an inspection of the city convinced Henry II to attempt a negotiated settlement; the Crusaders believed that tribute could buy a truce. On 17 May, William of Villiers, a knight, and William of Caffran, of Guillaume de Beaujeu's household, were sent to negotiate with the Sultan. The negotiations were unsuccessful. The Crusaders refused to surrender, and appealed to Khalil to lift the siege and accept peace for the sake of the civilian inhabitants. Khalil remained intent on conquering the city, perhaps encouraged by the popularity of the cause among his troops; his counteroffer to allow the defenders to surrender and leave with their lives and property was rejected. Toward the end of the meeting, a Crusader artillery stone landed near the ''dihliz''; the Sultan was greatly angered and ordered a full assault the following day. The messengers returned to the city unharmed.<ref name="Folda_486" />
===Parley===
The Franks sent messengers <ref>The messengers were a knight named William of Villiers and William of Caffran who was from the household of William of Beaujeu.Templar of Tyre, p.108. Asili, p.116</ref> to Al-Ashraf Khalil who saluted him on their knees. Khalil asked them whether they brought him the keys of the city, but they replied that the city could not be surrendered so easily and that they only came to plea for mercy for the poor inhabitants and that the Franks were willing to discuss any injustice done by them earlier to the Muslims and to restore the truce signed by them and the Muslims. Khalil promised the messengers to spare the life of everyone if the Franks hand him Acre peacefully, but the messengers refused his offer.<ref>Asili, p.117. Templar of Tyre, p.108-109</ref> While the messengers were still there a huge catapult stone launched from the city struck the ground near the sultan's tent. Khalil, believing that the crusaders were negotiating in bad faith, reacted furiously and wanted to kill the two messengers, but Emir Sanjar al-Shuja' pleaded for them and they were sent back to the city.


The Mamluk assault was preceded by weeks of preparation. By 18 May, multiple towers and parts of the wall were collapsed by [[Tunnel warfare|undermining]], and sections of the fosse filled in. The collapse of the Tower of the King was particularly demoralizing among the defenders, and the evacuation of women and children accelerated.<ref name="Folda_486" />
===The towers begin to fall===
From 8 May, Acre's towers began to cave in one after one. On 18 May (4 May according to Michaud), early in the morning at sunrise, the Sultan gave his order to launch an all-out attack on all points, accompanied by sound of trumpets and drums carried on 300 camels.<ref>Al-Maqrizi, p.223/ vol.2. Asili, p.118</ref><ref>Michaud, ''ibid'', p.78</ref> Nightfall gave some relief to the defenders causing the Saracens to retreat and allowing the King of Cyprus, Henry, the chance to escape (under the pretence of seeking repose) with his knights and 3000 soldiers.<ref name=michaud />


===Storming the city===
By morning the attack had resumed; noticing the lack of Cypriot defence at the tower and gate of St. Anthony, Khalil ordered his ''Chages'' to fill up a ditch to allow the cavalry access. The Chages, sectaries to the Mameluks and known for self-immolation in the name of Islam, followed the order with their living bodies forming a bridge over which the cavalry advanced and gained the foot of the walls.{{Citation needed|date=September 2011}}
[[File:Siège d'Acre (1291).png|thumb|upright|14th-century illustration of the siege in the ''[[Grandes Chroniques de France]]'', depicting the Mamluks [[Tunnel warfare|undermining]] the city walls]]
The Mamluk army assembled before dawn on 18 May<ref name="Folda_486" /> and attacked the entire length of the wall to the sound of trumpets and drums carried on 300 camels.<ref>Al-Maqrizi, p. 223 / vol. 2; Asili, p. 118</ref><ref>Michaud, ''ibid'', p. 78</ref> The Mamluks poured through the breaches; by 9{{nbsp}}a.m. the outcome seems to have been beyond doubt.<ref name="Folda_487" /> The Mamluks captured the Accursed Tower on the inner wall<ref>The Accursed Tower was placed between the Tower of King Henri II and the Tower of the Teutonic Knights. Templar of Tyre, p. 106; Asili, p. 113</ref> and forced the Crusaders to retreat to the Gate of St. Anthony.<ref name=":0">Templar of Tyre, p. 113</ref> Guillaume de Beaujeu was mortally wounded defending the Gate of St. Anthony.{{refn|group=nb|He was buried in the Templar fortress before the fall of the city.<ref name="Folda_487">Folda (2005), p. 487</ref>}}<ref name="Folda_486" /> On the Montmusard walls, the Lazarists remained while the Templars and Hospitallers<ref name="accursed_tower_216"> {{cite book |last1=Crowley |first1=Roger |title=The Accursed Tower: The Fall of Acre and the End of the Crusades |date=2019 |publisher=Hachette Book Group INC. |location=New York, NY |page=216}}</ref> made a failed attempt to retake the Accursed Tower.<ref name=":0"/> The redeployment allowed the Hamans to break through the Montmusard walls and kill the Lazarists. The Mamluks gained more penetrations as the Crusaders abandoned the walls.<ref name="accursed_tower_216"/>


The Muslim forces advanced towards the Accursed Tower<ref>The Accursed Tower was in the inner wall, situated between the Tower of King Henri II and the Tower of the Teutonic Knights. Templar of Tyre, p.106. Asili, p.113</ref> and forced the Frankish garrison to retreat to the side of the Gate of St. Anthony. All counter-attacks and attempts made by the Hospitallers and the Templars to recapture the tower were in vain. King Henry II and the Master of the Hospital boarded their galleys and fled from Acre.<ref>Templar of Tyre, p.113</ref> William of Beaujeu, the Master of the Temple, and Matthew of Clermont were killed. By capturing these positions, the Muslim forces were now inside the city fighting the Franks in the streets and alleys of Acre, which turned into a terrifying chaos as the inhabitants were fleeing towards the sea. How many inhabitants perished on land and in sea is unknown.<ref>According to Ludolph of Suchem (which seems exaggeration): "In Acre and the other places nearly a hundred and six thousand men were slain or taken, and more than two hundred thousand escaped from thence. Of the Saracens more than three hundred thousand were slain, as is well known even to this day." <span style="font-size:87%;"> —From Ludolph of Suchem, p. 268-272 </span></ref><ref>Many nobles of Acre managed to flee in boats by paying money to the mercenary commander and Knight Templar [[Roger de Flor]] who made use of the situation and made his fortune by blackmailing the refugees of Acre. Asili, p.120-121</ref><ref>"More than five hundred most noble ladies and maidens, the daughters of kings and princes, came down to the seashore, when the city was about to fall, carrying with them all their jewels and ornaments of gold and precious stones, of priceless value, in their bosoms, and cried aloud, whether there were any sailor there who would take all their jewels and take whichever of them he chose to wife, if only he would take them, even naked, to some safe land or island" <span style="font-size:87%;"> —From Ludolph of Suchem, p.268-272 </span></ref>
The Mamluks pushed into the city, looting<ref name="accursed_tower_216"/> and massacring anyone they encountered.<ref name="Folda_487" />{{refn|group=nb|According to Ludolph of Suchem (which seems exaggerated): "In Acre and the other places nearly a hundred and six thousand men were slain or taken, and more than two hundred thousand escaped from thence. Of the Saracens more than three hundred thousand were slain, as is well known even to this day."<ref name=":2">Ludolph of Suchem, pp. 268-272</ref>}} Organized Crusader resistance collapsed, and the retreat to the harbour and the ships was chaotic;<ref name="Folda_487" /><ref name="accursed_tower_216"/> wealthy refugees offered exorbitant sums for safe passage.{{refn|group=nb|[[Roger de Flor]], a mercenary commander and Knight Templar, made his fortune by selling passage to fleeing nobles and blackmailing refugees.<ref>Asili, pp. 120-121</ref>}}{{refn|group=nb|"More than five hundred most noble ladies and maidens, the daughters of kings and princes, came down to the seashore, when the city was about to fall, carrying with them all their jewels and ornaments of gold and precious stones, of priceless value, in their bosoms, and cried aloud, whether there were any sailor there who would take all their jewels and take whichever of them he chose to wife, if only he would take them, even naked, to some safe land or island"<ref name=":2"/>}} Henry II and [[Jean de Villiers (grand master)|Jean de Villiers]], [[List of grand masters of the Knights Hospitaller|Grand Master]] of the [[Knights Hospitaller]], were among those evacuated. The evacuation was made more difficult by the poor weather.<ref name="Folda_487" />


===Acre falls===
===Acre falls===
[[File:SiegeOfAcre1291BNF.JPG|thumb|right|upright|The city of Acre fell in 1291, and its Latin Christian population was killed or enslaved.|alt=Image of siege of Acre]]
Before night on Friday 18 May 1291,<ref>"The 'Templar of Tyre': Part III of the 'Deeds of the Cypriots'", by Paul Crawford, p.171 ([https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=BfNqgYlo9fMC&lpg=PA117&pg=PA117#v=onepage&q=&f=false Google Books limited preview]); which gives a translation with notes of the chronicle of one of the Knights Templar who apparently recorded these things during the later retreat to Cyprus.</ref> Acre, after being in the hands of the Franks for 100 years,<ref>Acre was conquered by the Crusaders in 1104. In 1187, Saladin recaptured Acre but it was captured again by the Crusader [[Richard the Lionheart]] in 1191. See also [[Siege of Acre (1189–1191)|Siege of Acre]].</ref> was in the hands of Al-Ashraf Khalil and his army after a siege of 43 days, with the exception of the huge headquarters of the Templars which stood on the west side of the city seashore. After a week, Al-Asraf Khalil negotiated with Peter de Severy, who was in charge of the Templars, and it was agreed that the Templars and everyone inside the fortress would have free passage to Cyprus, but the Sultan's men who were sent to the fortress to supervise the evacuation seemed not disciplined enough to handle the matter and were massacred by the Templars. Under the cover of darkness, [[Thibaud Gaudin]], the new Master of the Temple, left the fortress for [[Sidon]] with a few people and the fortune of the Templars. In the morning, Peter de Severy went to the Sultan to settle a new negotiation but he was arrested with his followers and they were executed in retaliation for the Sultan's men who were massacred earlier by the Templars inside the fortress. When the besieged Templars in the fortress saw what happened to Peter de Severy, they continued the fight. On 28 May, after a wide breach was made under the fortress, the Sultan sent about 200 men to take it. The Frankish fortress collapsed, killing nearly everyone inside. All the Templars were killed, and about half of the Sultan's men were killed.<ref>According to Ludolph of Suchem, the besieged Templars deliberately undermined the walls of the fortress' tower to let it collapse on the Sultan's men. Ludolphi, Rectoris Ecclesiæ Parochialis in suchem, p.46</ref>


By the night of 18 May,<ref>Templar of Tyre, p. 104</ref> Acre was in Mamluk hands, except for the seaside Templar fortress at the western tip of the city.<ref name="Folda_487"/> The fortress contained four towers, and within were remnants of the Templar, Hospitallers, and Teutonic Knights, and thousands of civilians.<ref name="crusade_christendom">{{cite book |editor1-last=Bird |editor1-first=Jessalynn |editor2-last=Peters |editor2-first=Edward |editor3-last=Powell |editor3-first=James M. |title=Crusade and Christendom: Annotated Documents in Translation from Innocent III to the Fall of Acre, 1187–1291 |series=The Middle Ages Series |date=2013 |publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press |isbn=978-0-8122-4478-6 |pages=489–491}}</ref><ref name="accursed_tower_"/> The fortress held out for ten more days, during which [[Matthew of Clermont]], a Hospitaller marshal, was killed.<ref name="Folda_487" /> Templar [[Thibaud Gaudin]] and a few others left the fortress under the cover of darkness, taking the Templar treasury with them to [[Sidon]].{{refn|group=nb|Thibaud Gaudin was elected as Grand Master of the Knights Templar at Sidon.}}{{citation needed|date=November 2020}}<ref name="accursed_tower_"/>
The news of the conquest of Acre reached Damascus and Cairo. Al-Ashraf Khalil entered the decorated city of Damascus with Franks chained at the feet and the captured crusader standards which were carried upside-down as a sign of their defeat. After celebrating his victory in Damascus, Khalil left for Cairo, which was also decorated and celebrating.<ref>The gate of the San Andreas Church was transported from Acre to Cairo to be used in the Al-Ashraf's Mosque which the Sultan was building. Asili, p.123</ref> Arriving at Cairo, he ordered the release of Philip Mainebeuf and the men who accompanied him to Cairo earlier.<ref>Ibn Taghri, p.9/ vol.8</ref>
On 20 May, the tower held by the Templars, led by Peter de Severy, asked for amnesty.<ref name="crusade_christendom"/> Sultan Khalil agreed to allow the woman and children to leave the city. The gates were opened and 400 horseman entered the complex, but they immediately attacked the women and children. Peter de Severy refused to accept this and ordered the gates to be closed, trapping the horsemen.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Jones |first1=Dan |title=The Templars: The Rise and Spectacular Fall of God's Holy Warriors |date=2017 |publisher=Head Of Zeus |location=London |isbn=978-0525428305 |page=334}}</ref> A battle ensued, but this time the Christians had the advantage. Of the 400 horsemen who entered the fortress, only a handful escaped.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Jones |first1=Dan |title=The Templars: The Rise and Spectacular Fall of God's Holy Warriors |date=2017 |publisher=Head Of Zeus |location=London |isbn=978-0525428305 |page=334}}</ref> The others were either killed or beheaded. The battles were fierce and relentless. This wasn't just the last stand at Acre, it was the last stand of the crusader states.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Jones |first1=Dan |title=The Templars: The Rise and Spectacular Fall of God's Holy Warriors |date=2017 |publisher=Head Of Zeus |location=London |isbn=978-0525428305 |page=334}}</ref> When the fighting stopped, Peter de Severy received another letter from the Sultan. In it, he stated that his men deserved their deaths for their undisciplined behavior. Furthermore, he asked the marshal to leave his fortress to discuss terms. It was a lie. Trying to spare the civilian population under his protection, Peter de Severy opened the gates and stepped forward with a delegation of Knights Templar. Before they could reach the enemy's encampments they were killed by the Sultan's troops.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Jones |first1=Dan |title=The Templars: The Rise and Spectacular Fall of God's Holy Warriors |date=2017 |publisher=Head Of Zeus |location=London |isbn=978-0525428305 |page=334}}</ref>

Further offers of amnesty were rejected by the Crusaders. On 28 May, the final tower surrendered; Mamluk mines were prepared to destroy the tower making further resistance useless.{{citation needed|date=February 2021}} The tower collapsed after prisoners and booty had been removed; according to Mamluk accounts, a few sightseers and looters were killed.<ref name="accursed_tower_">{{cite book |last1=Crowley |first1=Roger |title=The Accursed Tower: The Fall of Acre and the End of the Crusades |date=2019 |publisher=Hachette Book Group INC. |location=New York, NY}}</ref>{{Page needed|date=November 2020}}{{refn|group=nb|According to Ludolph of Suchem, the Templars deliberately caused the collapse by undermining the walls.<ref>Ludolphi, Rectoris Ecclesiæ Parochialis in suchem, p. 46</ref>}}

News of the Mamluk victory caused celebrations in Damascus and Cairo. In Damascus, Khalil entered the city with chained Crusader prisoners and captured Crusader standards – carried upside-down in defeat. The Sultan returned to Cairo with the gate of the [[Church of Saint Andrew, Acre|Church of Saint Andrew]] from Acre, which was used to construct a mosque<ref>Asili, p. 123</ref> and released Philip Mainebeuf's delegation.<ref>Ibn Taghri, p. 9 / vol. 8</ref> Furthermore, celebrations were described as:
“The entire city had been decorated, and sheets of satin had been laid along his triumphal path through the city leading to the palace of the governor. The regal sultan was proceeded by 280 fettered prisoners. One bore a reversed Frankish banner; another carried a banner and spear from which the hair of slain comrades was suspended. Al-Ashraf was greeted by the whole population of Damascus and the surrounding countryside lining the route, ulama [legal scholars], mosque officials, Sufi sheiks, Christians and Jews, all holding candles even though the parade took place before noon.”<ref>{{cite book |last1=Nicolle |first1=David |title=Acre 1291: Bloody Sunset of the Crusade |date=2005 |publisher=Osprey Publishing |location=Oxford, UK |page=87 }}</ref>


==Aftermath==
==Aftermath==
Line 93: Line 121:
The fall of Acre signaled the end of the Jerusalem crusades. No effective crusade was raised to recapture the Holy Land afterwards, though talk of further crusades was common enough. By 1291, other ideals had captured the interest and enthusiasm of the monarchs and nobility of Europe and even strenuous papal efforts to raise expeditions to retake the [[Holy Land]] met with little response.
The fall of Acre signaled the end of the Jerusalem crusades. No effective crusade was raised to recapture the Holy Land afterwards, though talk of further crusades was common enough. By 1291, other ideals had captured the interest and enthusiasm of the monarchs and nobility of Europe and even strenuous papal efforts to raise expeditions to retake the [[Holy Land]] met with little response.


The Latin Kingdom continued to exist, theoretically, on the island of Cyprus. There the [[Kingdom of Cyprus|Latin kings]] schemed and planned to recapture the mainland, but in vain. Money, men, and the will to do the task were all lacking. One last effort was made by [[Peter I of Cyprus|King Peter I]] in 1365, when he successfully landed in Egypt and [[Alexandrian Crusade|sacked Alexandria]]. Once the city was pillaged, however, the Crusaders returned as speedily as possible to Cyprus to divide their loot. As a crusade, the episode was futile, and this and further coastal raids over the following decades led in 1410–11 to a destructive counter-raid by the [[Mameluke]]s; in 1426 Cyprus was forced into Mameluke vassalship with a hefty yearly [[tribute]].
The Latin Kingdom continued to exist, theoretically, on the island of Cyprus. There the [[Kingdom of Cyprus|Latin kings]] planned to recapture the mainland, but in vain. Money, men, and the will to do the task were all lacking. One last effort was made by [[Peter I of Cyprus|King Peter I]] in 1365, when he successfully landed in Egypt and [[Alexandrian Crusade|sacked Alexandria]]. Once the city was taken, however, the Crusaders returned to Cyprus. As a crusade, the episode was futile, and this and further coastal raids over the following decades led in 1410–11 to a destructive counter-raid by the [[Mamluk Sultanate]]; in 1426 Cyprus was forced into Mamluk vassalship with a hefty yearly [[tribute]].


The 14th century saw some other crusades organized, but these enterprises differed in many ways from the 11th- and 12th-century expeditions which are properly called Crusades. The crusades of the 14th century aimed not at the recapture of Jerusalem and the Christian shrines of the [[Holy Land]], but rather at checking the advance of the [[Ottoman Turks]] into Europe. While many of the crusaders in these 14th-century undertakings looked upon the defeat of the Ottomans as a preliminary to the ultimate recapture of the Holy Land, none of the later crusades attempted any direct attack upon Palestine or Syria.
The 14th century witnessed other organized campaigns such as the [[Crusade of Nicopolis]], but these enterprises differed in many ways from the 11th- and 12th-century expeditions which are properly called Crusades. The crusades of the 14th century aimed not at the recapture of Jerusalem and the Christian shrines of the [[Holy Land]], but rather at checking the advance of the [[Ottoman Empire]] into Europe. While many of the crusaders in these 14th-century undertakings looked upon the defeat of the Ottomans as a preliminary to the ultimate recapture of the Holy Land, none of the later crusades attempted any direct attack upon Palestine or Syria.


==In fiction==
==Historiography==
Two short works dedicated to the siege were produced by contemporaries on the basis of eyewitness accounts: the ''Hystoria de desolacione'' of [[Thaddeus of Naples]] and the anonymous ''[[Excidium Acconis]]''. These survive in four and six manuscripts, respectively.{{sfn|Edgington|2006a}}{{sfn|Edgington|2006b}} The ''[[Gestes des Chiprois]]'', written a generation later and surviving in a single manuscript, is the other main source from the crusaders' perspective.{{sfn|Edgington|2006a}} The [[Gestes des Chiprois]] is the only surviving eyewitness account and does not suffer the partial flaws of the [[Excidium Acconis]].

The siege of Acre is covered in the [[Robyn Young]] historical novel “Crusade”, published in 2007.<ref>{{cite web| title=The Crusades | author=TVTropes.org| publisher=TVTropes.org| url=http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/TheCrusades}}</ref>

==See also==
* [[Al-Ashraf Khalil]]
* [[Riccoldo da Monte di Croce]]


==Notes==
==Notes==
{{reflist|group=nb}}

==References==
{{reflist|30em}}
{{reflist|30em}}

===Bibliography===
{{Refbegin}}
*{{Cite book |last=Asili |first=B. |title=Al-Zahir Baibars and the End of the Old Crusades |publisher=Dar Alnafaes |year=1992 |location=Beirut}}
*{{Cite book |last=Claster |first=Jill N. |title=Sacred Violence: The European Crusades to the Middle East, 1095–1396 |publisher=University of Toronto Press |year=2009 |isbn=9781442604308}}
*{{Cite book |last=Crowley |first=Roger |title=The Accursed Tower: The Fall of Acre and the End of the Crusades |publisher=Basic Books |year=2019 |isbn=978-1541697348 |author-link=Roger Crowley}}
*{{cite encyclopedia |first=Susan B. |last=Edgington |title=Excidium Acconis |encyclopedia=The Crusades: An Encyclopedia |editor=Alan V. Murray |publisher=ABC-CLIO |year=2006 |volume=2 |page=448 |ref={{harvid|Edgington|2006a}}}}
*{{cite encyclopedia |first=Susan B. |last=Edgington |title=Thaddeus of Naples |encyclopedia=The Crusades: An Encyclopedia |editor=Alan V. Murray |publisher=ABC-CLIO |year=2006 |volume=4 |page=1169 |ref={{harvid|Edgington|2006b}}}}
*{{Cite book |last=Folda |first=Jaroslav |title=Crusader Art in the Holy Land, From the Third Crusade to the Fall of Acre |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2005 |isbn=9780521835831}}
*{{Cite book |last=Hosler |first=John D. |title=The Siege of Acre, 1189-1191: Saladin, Richard the Lionheart, and the Battle That Decided the Third Crusade |publisher=Yale University Press |year=2018 |isbn=978-0-300-21550-2 |location=New Haven}}
*{{Cite book |last=Nicolle |first=David |title=Acre 1291: Bloody sunset of the Crusader states |publisher=Osprey Publishing |year=2005}}
*{{Cite book |last=Runciman |first=Steven |url=https://archive.org/details/historyofcrusade02runc |title=A History of the Crusades |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1951 |url-access=registration}}
*{{Cite book |title=The 'Templar of Tyre': Part III of the 'Deeds of the Cypriots' |publisher=Ashgate |year=2003 |isbn=9781840146189 |translator-last=Crawford |translator-first=Paul}}
*{{Cite book |last=Jones |first=D. |title=The Templars: The Rise and Spectacular Fall of God's Holy Warriors |publisher=Head Of Zeus |year=2017 |location=London, UK |page=334}}
{{Refend}}


==Further reading==
==Further reading==
*Antonio Musarra, ''Acri 1291. La caduta degli stati crociati'', Bologna, il Mulino, 2017.
* Antonio Musarra, ''Acri 1291. La caduta degli stati crociati'', Bologna, il Mulino, 2017.
*[http://historyavenue.com/conquest_of_acre_1291.html Siege of Acre 1291]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20120309203403/http://historyavenue.com/conquest_of_acre_1291.html Siege of Acre 1291]
* ''The history of the crusades'', Volume 3, pp [https://books.google.com/books?id=mAcMAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA70 70–89 (Google Books, full view)], by [[Joseph François Michaud]], trans. [[William Robson (writer)|William Robson]]. Note that in this account Acre is referred to as "[[Acre, Israel#Greek and Roman periods|Ptolemaïs]]", Sultan Qalawun as "Kalouan" and Khalil as "Chalil" and throughout the work Muslims are referred to as "Mussulmans". Several contemporary manuscripts, such as the chronicles of [[Ibn Ferat]], are referenced and appendices give some translations.
*Nicolle, David ''Acre 1291'' (Osprey Campaign 154) Osprey, 2005.
* ''The Crusades'' by Edward Gibbon (1963), pp. [https://archive.org/stream/crusades00scotgoog#page/n87/mode/1up 76–78], provides a useful short summary of the events of the siege including an overview of the situation in Acre at the time.
*"The history of the crusades, Volume 3", pp [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=mAcMAAAAYAAJ&client=firefox-a&pg=PA70#v=onepage&q=&f=false 70–89 (Google Books, full view)], by Joseph Fr. Michaud, William Robson. Note that in this account Acre is referred to as "[[Acre,_Israel#Greek_and_Roman_periods|Ptolemaïs]]", Sultan Qalawun as "Kalouan" and Khalil as "Chalil" and throughout the work Muslims are referred to as "Mussulmans". Several contemporary manuscripts, such as the chronicles of [[Ibn Ferat]], are referenced and appendices give some translations.

*"The Crusades" by Edward Gibbon (1963), pp [https://archive.org/stream/crusades00scotgoog#page/n87/mode/1up 76–78], provides a useful short summary of the events of the siege including an overview of the situation in Acre at the time.
{{Sovereign Military Order of Malta}}
{{Sovereign Military Order of Malta}}
{{Authority control}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Siege Of Acre (1291)}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Acre 1291}}
[[Category:Sieges of the Crusades|Acre (1291)]]
[[Category:Sieges of the Crusades]]
[[Category:Conflicts in 1291]]
[[Category:Conflicts in 1291]]
[[Category:Acre, Israel]]
[[Category:Sieges of Acre, Israel]]
[[Category:1291 in Asia]]
[[Category:1291 in Asia]]
[[Category:Sieges involving the Kingdom of Jerusalem|Acre 1291]]
[[Category:Sieges involving the Kingdom of Jerusalem]]
[[Category:Sieges involving the Knights Hospitaller|Acre 1291]]
[[Category:Sieges involving the Knights Hospitaller]]
[[Category:Battles involving the Knights Templar|Acre 1291]]
[[Category:Sieges involving the Knights Templar|Acre 1291]]
[[Category:Battles involving the Mamluk Sultanate (Cairo)|Acre 1291]]
[[Category:Sieges involving the Mamluk Sultanate]]
[[Category:1291 in the Mamluk Sultanate (Cairo)|Acre]]
[[Category:13th century in the Mamluk Sultanate]]
[[Category:Military history of the Crusader states after Lord Edward's crusade]]
[[Category:Period post Ninth Crusade]]
[[Category:Battles of Fall of Outremer]]

Latest revision as of 05:55, 28 August 2024

Siege of Acre (1291)
Part of the Crusades

Matthieu de Clermont défend Ptolémaïs en 1291, by Dominique Papety (1815–49) at Salles des Croisades in Versailles
Date4 April – 18 May 1291
Standort32°56′N 35°05′E / 32.933°N 35.083°E / 32.933; 35.083
Result Mamluk victory
Territorial
changes
The Mamluks successfully captured Acre in 1291
Belligerents

Mamluk Sultanate

Commanders and leaders
 (DOW)
Strength
Unknown

Acre: 15,000[1]

Cyprus: 700[2]
Casualties and losses
Unknown 10,000+[3]

The Siege of Acre (also called the Fall of Acre) took place in 1291 and resulted in the Crusaders' losing control of Acre to the Mamluks. It is considered one of the most important battles of the period. Although the crusading movement continued for several more centuries, the capture of the city marked the end of further crusades to the Levant. When Acre fell, the Crusaders lost their last major stronghold of the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem. They still maintained a fortress at the northern city of Tartus (now in north-western Syria), engaged in some coastal raids, and attempted an incursion from the tiny island of Ruad; but, when they lost that, too, in a siege in 1302, the Crusaders no longer controlled any part of the Holy Land.[4]

Background

[edit]

In 1187, Saladin conquered much of the Kingdom of Jerusalem (also called the Latin Kingdom), including Acre and Jerusalem, after winning the Battle of Hattin and inflicting heavy losses on the Crusaders. The Third Crusade was launched in response; the Crusaders besieged and eventually recaptured Acre in 1191. Acre became the capital of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. The religious orders made their headquarters in and around the city, and from there made crucial military and diplomatic decisions. For example, when the Mongols arrived from the East in the mid-13th century, the Christians saw them as potential allies.

In 1250, the Mamluk Sultanate arose in Egypt; it was a more dangerous enemy than the Ayyubids. The Mamluks fielded heavy cavalry – a match for the Crusader knights – and were much more hostile. The Crusaders initially attempted to maintain a cautious neutrality with the Mamluks. In 1260, the Barons of Acre granted the Mamluks safe passage through the Latin Kingdom en route to fighting the Mongols; the Mamluks subsequently won the pivotal Battle of Ain Jalut in Galilee against the Mongols. This was an example of atypically cordial relations between the Christians and the Mamluks.[5]

However, as early as 1261, after the Battle of Ain Jalut, Sultan Baibars led the Mamluks against the Crusaders. Baibars captured Caesarea, Haifa, and Arsuf in 1265, all the important Crusader holdings in Galilee the following year, and then Antioch in 1268.[6]

European states launched a number of minor Crusading expeditions to reinforce the Crusader states, including the abortive Crusade of Louis IX of France to Tunis in 1270, and the minor Ninth Crusade of Prince Edward (later King Edward I) of England in 1271–1272. The expeditions failed to provide the required relief; they were too small, too short-lived, and the interests of the participants were too diverse.[7]

The fall of Tripoli in 1289 triggered frantic preparations to save Acre.

More seriously, no major reinforcing Crusade was forthcoming. Pope Gregory X was unable to rally support for another great Crusade. Papal advisors blamed the lack of enthusiasm to the laziness and vice of the European nobility and to clerical corruption. A more fundamental reason seems to have been the debasement of the Crusading ideal; Gregory X's predecessors had used Crusades to raise armies against the Papacy's European enemies.[8]

The Crusader states continued to deteriorate from continuing attacks and political instability. In 1276, the unpopular "King of Jerusalem" Hugh III moved his court to Cyprus.[9] Under Sultan Al-Mansur Qalawun, the Mamluks captured Lattakia in 1278, and conquered the County of Tripoli in 1289. Qalawun concluded a ten-year truce with the Kingdom of Jerusalem in 1284.[10]

Following the fall of Tripoli, King Henry II, son of Hugh III, sent seneschal Jean de Grailly to warn European monarchs of the critical situation in the Levant.[11] Pope Nicholas IV supported Jean by writing letters urging European potentates to act. However, the Sicilian question overshadowed calls for a new Crusade, and Edward I of England was too entangled by troubles at home.[12]

Decades of communications between the Europeans and the Mongols failed to secure a meaningful Franco-Mongol alliance.[13][14]

Pretext for attack

[edit]

One Arab account claims that an affair between a rich young wife of the city and a Mussulman was discovered by the husband:

gathers together some friends goes out from Ptolemais [...] and immolates them both to his injured honour. Some Mussulmans are drawn to the spot, the Christians come up in still greater numbers, the quarrel becomes angry and general and every Mussulman is massacred.

— The History of the Crusades, Vol. 3, p. 73, Michaud and Robson[15]

The Crusaders feared that Qalawun would use this as a pretext to resume the war, and petitioned the pontiff for reinforcements. According to Michaud, 25 Venetian galleys carrying 1600 men "levied in haste in Italy" were sent.[15] Other sources claim 20 galleys of peasants and unemployed townfolks from Tuscany and Lombardy, led by Nicholas Tiepolo, the son of Doge Lorenzo Tiepolo, who was assisted by the returning Jean de Grailly and Roux of Sully. These were joined by five galleys from King James II of Aragon who wished to help despite his conflict with the Pope and Venice.[16]

The Italian reinforcements were ill-disciplined and without regular pay; they pillaged indiscriminately from both Muslims and Christians before setting out from Acre. According to Runciman they attacked and killed some Muslim merchants around Acre in August 1290,[11] although in Michaud's account they instead pillaged and massacred towns and villages. Qalawun demanded the extradition of the Christian perpetrators. On the suggestion of Guillaume de Beaujeu, the Grand Master of the Knights Templar, the Council of Acre debated the issue; the Sultan's demand was rejected, with the Crusaders claiming that the murdered Muslims had been responsible for their own deaths.[17]

Siege

[edit]

Prelude to the battle

[edit]

Sultan Qalawun dissolved the truce with Acre, and the Mamluks began mobilizing by October 1290. Qalawun died in December and was succeeded by his son, Al-Ashraf Khalil[18] (sometimes spelled Chalil[15]). Guillaume de Beaujeu received a message from Khalil, which stated the latter's intention to attack Acre and to refuse peace overtures.[19] Nonetheless, the Crusaders dispatched a peace delegation, led by Sir Philip Mainebeuf,[20][21] to Cairo; the delegation was imprisoned.[unreliable source?][22][20] Khalil set out from Cairo in March 1291.[18]

The assembled Mamluk army greatly outnumbered the Crusaders. Khalil called upon Syria to reinforce his Egyptian army;[1] he was answered by contingents from Damascus (led by Lajin), Hama (led by al-Muzaffar Taqai ad-Din), Tripoli (led by Bilban) and al-Karak (led by Baibars al-Dewadar.)[23][24] A significant portion of the troops were volunteers.[25] The army included a substantial artillery train[1] drawn from fortresses across the Mamluk empire. Hama sent the enormous catapult "The Victorious"[18] (المنصورى).[nb 1] Another large catapult was "The Furious" (الغاضبة). There were also lighter mangonels called "the Black Bulls" (الثيران السوداء).[26]

Notable historians in the Mamluks' ranks included Baybars al-Dewadar,[27] and Abulfeda in the Haman contingent.[28]

The Crusaders' appeals for aid met with little success. England sent a few knights, including Otto de Grandson of Savoy. The only noteworthy reinforcements came from Henry II of Cyprus, who fortified the walls and sent troops led by his brother Amalric, Lord of Tyre. Burchard von Schwanden suddenly resigned as Grand Master of the Teutonic Order and left Acre for Europe; he was succeeded by Konrad von Feuchtwangen. The only major contingent to leave were the Genoese, who concluded a separate treaty with Khalil. Many women and children were evacuated from Acre to Cyprus in March.[18]

Acre was defended by an inner and outer wall, with a total of twelve towers built by European kings and rich pilgrims.[29][30][31]

Siege begins

[edit]
Map of Acre in 1291

Sultan Khalil and the Egyptian army arrived at Acre on 6 April 1291,[1][18] with the Syrian contingents arriving two days later with siege engines. The Mamluk encampment spanned from one coast to the other about two kilometers from the city walls. The red dihliz – the Sultan's personal tent and headquarters – was on a small hill west of the Legate's Tower. There was little fighting during the first eight days as the besiegers established their camp. From days nine to eleven the Mamluks pushed forward barricades and wicker screens until they reached the fosse before the outer wall; Carabohas, rapid-fire siege engines, were brought up. The besiegers began mining and bombarding the walls.[1] Acre's gates remained open – but heavily defended – as sally ports.[1]

The Crusaders launched multiple attacks on the Mamluk camp. An amphibious assault on the Hamans – stationed on the northernmost section of the line by the sea – was successful although the Crusaders suffered heavy casualties.[1] In another raid, three hundred Templars, led by Jean de Grailly and Otto de Grandson, rode out under moonlight to attack Haman artillery with Greek fire; while the artillery was not destroyed, the Templar engaged over 1000 Mamluks and returned with trophies and captured supplies. Khalil punished some subordinates for the humiliation caused by the Templar sorties. In general, Crusader attacks failed to disrupt Mamluk preparations for a direct assault on the walls.[32]

Henry II of Cyprus arrived on 4 May with reinforcements[32][18] of 700 troops aboard 40 ships.[2] The king's arrival temporarily buoyed morale, but an inspection of the city convinced Henry II to attempt a negotiated settlement; the Crusaders believed that tribute could buy a truce. On 17 May, William of Villiers, a knight, and William of Caffran, of Guillaume de Beaujeu's household, were sent to negotiate with the Sultan. The negotiations were unsuccessful. The Crusaders refused to surrender, and appealed to Khalil to lift the siege and accept peace for the sake of the civilian inhabitants. Khalil remained intent on conquering the city, perhaps encouraged by the popularity of the cause among his troops; his counteroffer to allow the defenders to surrender and leave with their lives and property was rejected. Toward the end of the meeting, a Crusader artillery stone landed near the dihliz; the Sultan was greatly angered and ordered a full assault the following day. The messengers returned to the city unharmed.[32]

The Mamluk assault was preceded by weeks of preparation. By 18 May, multiple towers and parts of the wall were collapsed by undermining, and sections of the fosse filled in. The collapse of the Tower of the King was particularly demoralizing among the defenders, and the evacuation of women and children accelerated.[32]

Storming the city

[edit]
14th-century illustration of the siege in the Grandes Chroniques de France, depicting the Mamluks undermining the city walls

The Mamluk army assembled before dawn on 18 May[32] and attacked the entire length of the wall to the sound of trumpets and drums carried on 300 camels.[33][34] The Mamluks poured through the breaches; by 9 a.m. the outcome seems to have been beyond doubt.[35] The Mamluks captured the Accursed Tower on the inner wall[36] and forced the Crusaders to retreat to the Gate of St. Anthony.[37] Guillaume de Beaujeu was mortally wounded defending the Gate of St. Anthony.[nb 2][32] On the Montmusard walls, the Lazarists remained while the Templars and Hospitallers[38] made a failed attempt to retake the Accursed Tower.[37] The redeployment allowed the Hamans to break through the Montmusard walls and kill the Lazarists. The Mamluks gained more penetrations as the Crusaders abandoned the walls.[38]

The Mamluks pushed into the city, looting[38] and massacring anyone they encountered.[35][nb 3] Organized Crusader resistance collapsed, and the retreat to the harbour and the ships was chaotic;[35][38] wealthy refugees offered exorbitant sums for safe passage.[nb 4][nb 5] Henry II and Jean de Villiers, Grand Master of the Knights Hospitaller, were among those evacuated. The evacuation was made more difficult by the poor weather.[35]

Acre falls

[edit]
Image of siege of Acre
The city of Acre fell in 1291, and its Latin Christian population was killed or enslaved.

By the night of 18 May,[41] Acre was in Mamluk hands, except for the seaside Templar fortress at the western tip of the city.[35] The fortress contained four towers, and within were remnants of the Templar, Hospitallers, and Teutonic Knights, and thousands of civilians.[42][43] The fortress held out for ten more days, during which Matthew of Clermont, a Hospitaller marshal, was killed.[35] Templar Thibaud Gaudin and a few others left the fortress under the cover of darkness, taking the Templar treasury with them to Sidon.[nb 6][citation needed][43] On 20 May, the tower held by the Templars, led by Peter de Severy, asked for amnesty.[42] Sultan Khalil agreed to allow the woman and children to leave the city. The gates were opened and 400 horseman entered the complex, but they immediately attacked the women and children. Peter de Severy refused to accept this and ordered the gates to be closed, trapping the horsemen.[44] A battle ensued, but this time the Christians had the advantage. Of the 400 horsemen who entered the fortress, only a handful escaped.[45] The others were either killed or beheaded. The battles were fierce and relentless. This wasn't just the last stand at Acre, it was the last stand of the crusader states.[46] When the fighting stopped, Peter de Severy received another letter from the Sultan. In it, he stated that his men deserved their deaths for their undisciplined behavior. Furthermore, he asked the marshal to leave his fortress to discuss terms. It was a lie. Trying to spare the civilian population under his protection, Peter de Severy opened the gates and stepped forward with a delegation of Knights Templar. Before they could reach the enemy's encampments they were killed by the Sultan's troops.[47]

Further offers of amnesty were rejected by the Crusaders. On 28 May, the final tower surrendered; Mamluk mines were prepared to destroy the tower making further resistance useless.[citation needed] The tower collapsed after prisoners and booty had been removed; according to Mamluk accounts, a few sightseers and looters were killed.[43][page needed][nb 7]

News of the Mamluk victory caused celebrations in Damascus and Cairo. In Damascus, Khalil entered the city with chained Crusader prisoners and captured Crusader standards – carried upside-down in defeat. The Sultan returned to Cairo with the gate of the Church of Saint Andrew from Acre, which was used to construct a mosque[49] and released Philip Mainebeuf's delegation.[50] Furthermore, celebrations were described as: “The entire city had been decorated, and sheets of satin had been laid along his triumphal path through the city leading to the palace of the governor. The regal sultan was proceeded by 280 fettered prisoners. One bore a reversed Frankish banner; another carried a banner and spear from which the hair of slain comrades was suspended. Al-Ashraf was greeted by the whole population of Damascus and the surrounding countryside lining the route, ulama [legal scholars], mosque officials, Sufi sheiks, Christians and Jews, all holding candles even though the parade took place before noon.”[51]

Aftermath

[edit]

The fall of Acre signaled the end of the Jerusalem crusades. No effective crusade was raised to recapture the Holy Land afterwards, though talk of further crusades was common enough. By 1291, other ideals had captured the interest and enthusiasm of the monarchs and nobility of Europe and even strenuous papal efforts to raise expeditions to retake the Holy Land met with little response.

The Latin Kingdom continued to exist, theoretically, on the island of Cyprus. There the Latin kings planned to recapture the mainland, but in vain. Money, men, and the will to do the task were all lacking. One last effort was made by King Peter I in 1365, when he successfully landed in Egypt and sacked Alexandria. Once the city was taken, however, the Crusaders returned to Cyprus. As a crusade, the episode was futile, and this and further coastal raids over the following decades led in 1410–11 to a destructive counter-raid by the Mamluk Sultanate; in 1426 Cyprus was forced into Mamluk vassalship with a hefty yearly tribute.

The 14th century witnessed other organized campaigns such as the Crusade of Nicopolis, but these enterprises differed in many ways from the 11th- and 12th-century expeditions which are properly called Crusades. The crusades of the 14th century aimed not at the recapture of Jerusalem and the Christian shrines of the Holy Land, but rather at checking the advance of the Ottoman Empire into Europe. While many of the crusaders in these 14th-century undertakings looked upon the defeat of the Ottomans as a preliminary to the ultimate recapture of the Holy Land, none of the later crusades attempted any direct attack upon Palestine or Syria.

Historiography

[edit]

Two short works dedicated to the siege were produced by contemporaries on the basis of eyewitness accounts: the Hystoria de desolacione of Thaddeus of Naples and the anonymous Excidium Acconis. These survive in four and six manuscripts, respectively.[52][53] The Gestes des Chiprois, written a generation later and surviving in a single manuscript, is the other main source from the crusaders' perspective.[52] The Gestes des Chiprois is the only surviving eyewitness account and does not suffer the partial flaws of the Excidium Acconis.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ This may have been a reference to the Sultan, who was Khalil Al-Mansuri.
  2. ^ He was buried in the Templar fortress before the fall of the city.[35]
  3. ^ According to Ludolph of Suchem (which seems exaggerated): "In Acre and the other places nearly a hundred and six thousand men were slain or taken, and more than two hundred thousand escaped from thence. Of the Saracens more than three hundred thousand were slain, as is well known even to this day."[39]
  4. ^ Roger de Flor, a mercenary commander and Knight Templar, made his fortune by selling passage to fleeing nobles and blackmailing refugees.[40]
  5. ^ "More than five hundred most noble ladies and maidens, the daughters of kings and princes, came down to the seashore, when the city was about to fall, carrying with them all their jewels and ornaments of gold and precious stones, of priceless value, in their bosoms, and cried aloud, whether there were any sailor there who would take all their jewels and take whichever of them he chose to wife, if only he would take them, even naked, to some safe land or island"[39]
  6. ^ Thibaud Gaudin was elected as Grand Master of the Knights Templar at Sidon.
  7. ^ According to Ludolph of Suchem, the Templars deliberately caused the collapse by undermining the walls.[48]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g Folda (2005), p. 485
  2. ^ a b Nicolle (2005), p. 39
  3. ^ Sean McGlynn (18 May 2018). "The Siege of Acre: a monstrous blot on the Third Crusade". The Spectator. Archived from the original on 14 May 2018. Retrieved 17 August 2019.
  4. ^ Burgtorf, Jochen (2006). "Acre, Siege of (1291)". In Alan V. Murray (ed.). The Crusades: An Encyclopedia. Vol. 1. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO. pp. 13–14. OCLC 70122512.
  5. ^ "Battle of Ayn Jalut | Summary | Britannica". www.britannica.com.
  6. ^ Folda, Jaroslav (2005). Crusader art in the Holy Land : from the Third Crusade to the fall of Acre, 1187–1291. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521835831.
  7. ^ Newman, Albert Henry, A Manual of Church History, p. 461
  8. ^ Newman, Albert Henry, A Manual of Church History, p. 461
  9. ^ Edbury, Peter W. (1994). The Kingdom of Cyprus and the Crusades, 1191–1374. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-45837-5, pp 90.
  10. ^ Rabbat, Nasser O. (2021). The Citadel of Cairo. Brill. p. 136. ISBN 978-90-04-49248-6.
  11. ^ a b Runciman (1951), p. 408
  12. ^ Schneidman, J.Lee (December 1969). "Ending the War of the Sicilian Vespers". Journal of Peace Research. 6 (4): 335–347. doi:10.1177/002234336900600404. ISSN 0022-3433. S2CID 110273792.
  13. ^ Atwood. "Western Europe and the Mongol Empire" in Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire. p. 583. "Despite numerous envoys and the obvious logic of an alliance against mutual enemies, the papacy and the Crusaders never achieved the often-proposed alliance against Islam".
  14. ^ Ryan, James D. (November 1998). "Christian Wives of Mongol Khans: Tartar Queens and Missionary Expectations in Asia". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society. Cambridge, UK; New York, New York, USA: Cambridge University Press. 8 (3): 411–421. doi:10.1017/S1356186300010506. JSTOR 25183572.
  15. ^ a b c Michaud, Joseph Fr (1853). The History of the Crusades. Redfield. In a footnote, Michaud claims reliance on "the chronicle of Ibn Ferat" (Michaud, Vol. 3, p. 22) for much of the information he has concerning the Mussulmans.
  16. ^ Runciman (1951), p. 409
  17. ^ Runciman (1951), pp. 410–411
  18. ^ a b c d e f Claster (2009), p. 286
  19. ^ "Because you have been a true man, so we send you advance notice of our intentions, and give you to understand that we are coming into your parts to right the wrongs that have been done. Therefore we do not want the community of Acre to send us any letters or presents (regarding this matter), for we will by no means receive them." —From the letter of Al-Ashraf Khalil to Guillaume de Beaujeu, The Templar of Tyre, Gestes des Chiprois, p. 104 / part 3
  20. ^ a b The Templar of Tyre, Gestes des Chiprois, p. 104 / part 3
  21. ^ Philip Mainebeuf, who spoke Arabic, was accompanied by a knight named Bartholomew Pisan and a scribe named George. The Templar of Tyre, Gestes des Chiprois, p. 104 / part 3
  22. ^ Asili, p. 110
  23. ^ There are no reliable figures for the Muslim army, according to some sources it consisted of 60 000 cavalry and 160 000 infantry. Though the numbers seem exaggerated, the army of the Muslim was probably larger than that of the Crusaders. Asili, p. 111
  24. ^ Michaud, ibid, pp. 75–76, gives account of 7 emirs leaving in Kalouan's (ie Sultan Qalawun) stead as he was ill; he reports that each emir had 4,000 horse and 20,000-foot at his command – giving about 160,000 men.
  25. ^ Abu al-Fida, p. 278 / vol. 13. According to Ibn Taghri most of Khalil's troops were volunteers. Ibn Taghri, p. 5 / vol. 8
  26. ^ Asili, p. 110; Templar of Tyre, p. 105
  27. ^ Rukn ad-Din Baibars al-Dewadar was also a historian. He gave his account about the battle for Acre in his book "Zobdat al-Fikrah Fi Tarikh al-Hijrah ( 11 volumes )".
  28. ^ Asli, p. 114
  29. ^ Among these towers were the Tower of the Countess of Blois, the Accursed Tower, the Tower of the Legate, the Tower of the Patriarch, the Tower of St. Nicholas, the English Tower, the Germans Tower, the Tower of Henri II, the Tower of King Hugh and the Tower of St. Lazarus. Asili, p. 113; Templar of Tyre, p. 106 / note2
  30. ^ The English tower was built by Henry I. Asili, p. 113
  31. ^ The Tower of the Countess of Blois was built by the Countess of Blois. Asili, p. 114
  32. ^ a b c d e f Folda (2005), p. 486
  33. ^ Al-Maqrizi, p. 223 / vol. 2; Asili, p. 118
  34. ^ Michaud, ibid, p. 78
  35. ^ a b c d e f g Folda (2005), p. 487
  36. ^ The Accursed Tower was placed between the Tower of King Henri II and the Tower of the Teutonic Knights. Templar of Tyre, p. 106; Asili, p. 113
  37. ^ a b Templar of Tyre, p. 113
  38. ^ a b c d Crowley, Roger (2019). The Accursed Tower: The Fall of Acre and the End of the Crusades. New York, NY: Hachette Book Group INC. p. 216.
  39. ^ a b Ludolph of Suchem, pp. 268-272
  40. ^ Asili, pp. 120-121
  41. ^ Templar of Tyre, p. 104
  42. ^ a b Bird, Jessalynn; Peters, Edward; Powell, James M., eds. (2013). Crusade and Christendom: Annotated Documents in Translation from Innocent III to the Fall of Acre, 1187–1291. The Middle Ages Series. University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 489–491. ISBN 978-0-8122-4478-6.
  43. ^ a b c Crowley, Roger (2019). The Accursed Tower: The Fall of Acre and the End of the Crusades. New York, NY: Hachette Book Group INC.
  44. ^ Jones, Dan (2017). The Templars: The Rise and Spectacular Fall of God's Holy Warriors. London: Head Of Zeus. p. 334. ISBN 978-0525428305.
  45. ^ Jones, Dan (2017). The Templars: The Rise and Spectacular Fall of God's Holy Warriors. London: Head Of Zeus. p. 334. ISBN 978-0525428305.
  46. ^ Jones, Dan (2017). The Templars: The Rise and Spectacular Fall of God's Holy Warriors. London: Head Of Zeus. p. 334. ISBN 978-0525428305.
  47. ^ Jones, Dan (2017). The Templars: The Rise and Spectacular Fall of God's Holy Warriors. London: Head Of Zeus. p. 334. ISBN 978-0525428305.
  48. ^ Ludolphi, Rectoris Ecclesiæ Parochialis in suchem, p. 46
  49. ^ Asili, p. 123
  50. ^ Ibn Taghri, p. 9 / vol. 8
  51. ^ Nicolle, David (2005). Acre 1291: Bloody Sunset of the Crusade. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing. p. 87.
  52. ^ a b Edgington 2006a.
  53. ^ Edgington 2006b.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Asili, B. (1992). Al-Zahir Baibars and the End of the Old Crusades. Beirut: Dar Alnafaes.
  • Claster, Jill N. (2009). Sacred Violence: The European Crusades to the Middle East, 1095–1396. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9781442604308.
  • Crowley, Roger (2019). The Accursed Tower: The Fall of Acre and the End of the Crusades. Basic Books. ISBN 978-1541697348.
  • Edgington, Susan B. (2006). "Excidium Acconis". In Alan V. Murray (ed.). The Crusades: An Encyclopedia. Vol. 2. ABC-CLIO. p. 448.
  • Edgington, Susan B. (2006). "Thaddeus of Naples". In Alan V. Murray (ed.). The Crusades: An Encyclopedia. Vol. 4. ABC-CLIO. p. 1169.
  • Folda, Jaroslav (2005). Crusader Art in the Holy Land, From the Third Crusade to the Fall of Acre. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521835831.
  • Hosler, John D. (2018). The Siege of Acre, 1189-1191: Saladin, Richard the Lionheart, and the Battle That Decided the Third Crusade. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-21550-2.
  • Nicolle, David (2005). Acre 1291: Bloody sunset of the Crusader states. Osprey Publishing.
  • Runciman, Steven (1951). A History of the Crusades. Cambridge University Press.
  • The 'Templar of Tyre': Part III of the 'Deeds of the Cypriots'. Translated by Crawford, Paul. Ashgate. 2003. ISBN 9781840146189.
  • Jones, D. (2017). The Templars: The Rise and Spectacular Fall of God's Holy Warriors. London, UK: Head Of Zeus. p. 334.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Antonio Musarra, Acri 1291. La caduta degli stati crociati, Bologna, il Mulino, 2017.
  • Siege of Acre 1291
  • The history of the crusades, Volume 3, pp 70–89 (Google Books, full view), by Joseph François Michaud, trans. William Robson. Note that in this account Acre is referred to as "Ptolemaïs", Sultan Qalawun as "Kalouan" and Khalil as "Chalil" and throughout the work Muslims are referred to as "Mussulmans". Several contemporary manuscripts, such as the chronicles of Ibn Ferat, are referenced and appendices give some translations.
  • The Crusades by Edward Gibbon (1963), pp. 76–78, provides a useful short summary of the events of the siege including an overview of the situation in Acre at the time.