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A Mamluk cavalryman, drawn in 1810
A 'mamluk' (
Arabic: مملوك (singular), مماليك (plural), "owned"; also
transliterated 'mameluk', 'mameluke', or 'mamluke') was a
slave soldier who converted to
Islam and served the
Muslim caliphs and the
Ayyubid sultans during the
Middle Ages. Over time, they became a powerful military
caste, and on more than one occasion they seized power for themselves, for example, ruling
Egypt in the 'Mamluk Sultanate' from 1250-1517.
Overview
The first mamluks served the
Abbasid caliphs in
9th century Baghdad. The Abbasids recruited them mainly from areas near the
Caucasus (mainly
Circassian and
Georgian) and in areas north of the
Black Sea (mainly
Turkic, most of whom were
Kipchak Turks) and of
Yoruk background. Most of the captured were of non-Muslim origin. The mamluks were often sold into slavery by impoverished
steppe families or kidnapped by slave-traders.
The mamluk system gave rulers troops who had no link to any established power structure. The local warriors were often more loyal to their tribal
sheiks, their families or nobles other than the
sultan or caliph. If some commander conspired against the ruler, it was often not possible to deal with him without causing unrest among the nobility. The slave-troops were strangers of the lowest possible status who could not conspire against the ruler and who could easily be punished if they caused trouble, making them a great military asset. Mamluks were frequently used as mercenaries.
Organization
After mamluks were converted to Islam, they were trained as
cavalry soldiers. Mamluks were to follow the dictates of ''furusiyya'', a code of conduct that included values like courage and generosity but also doctrine of cavalry tactics, horsemanship, archery and treatment of wounds.
Mamluks lived within their garrisons and mainly spent their time with each other. Their entertainments included sports like archery competitions and presentations of mounted combat skills at least twice a week. The intensive and rigorous training of each new recruit helped ensure a great deal of continuity in mamluk practices.
While technically they were no longer slaves after training, they were still obliged to serve the Sultan. The Sultan kept them as an outsider force, under his direct command, to use in the event of local tribal frictions. The Sultan could also send them as far as the Muslim regions of Spain.
Sultans had the largest number of mamluks, but the other
amirs could have their own troops as well. Many mamluks rose to high positions throughout the empire, including army command. At first their status remained non-hereditary and sons were strictly prevented from following their fathers. However, over time in places like Egypt, the mamluk forces became linked to existing power structures and gained significant amounts of influence on those powers.
A similar evolution occurred in the Ottoman Empire with the
Janissaries.
Mamluks in India

The Qutub Minar, an example of Mamluk work
In
1206, the mamluk commander of the Muslim forces in
India,
Qutb-ud-din Aybak, proclaimed himself sultan, becoming, in effect, the first independent
Sultan-e-Hind. This
Mamluk dynasty lasted until
1290.
Mamluk power in Egypt
Origins
The origins of the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt lies in the
Ayyubid Dynasty that
Saladin (Salah ad-Din) founded in
1174. With his uncle, Shirkuh, he conquered Egypt for the Zengid King
Nur ad-Din of
Damascus in 1169. By 1189, after the capture of Jerusalem, Saladin had solidified his
Kurdish family's control over the Middle East. After Saladin's death, his sons fell to squabbling over the division of the Empire, and each attempted to surround themselves with larger expanded mamluk retinues.
By 1200, Saladin's brother,
Al-Adil, succeeded in securing control over the whole empire by defeating and killing or imprisoning his brothers and nephews in turn. With each victory, Al-Adil incorporated the defeated mamluk retinue into his own. This process was repeated at Al-Adil's death in 1218, and at his son Al-Kamil's death in 1238. The Ayyubid's became increasingly surrounded by the power of the mamluks and soon involved them in the internal court politics of the kingdom itself.
French attack and Mamluk takeover
In June
1249, the
Seventh Crusade under
Louis IX of France landed in Egypt and took
Damietta. The Egyptian troops retreated at first. When the Egyptian sultan
As-Salih Ayyub died, the power passed briefly to his son
Turanshah and then his favorite wife
Shajar Al-Durr (or Shajarat-ul-Dur). She took control with mamluk support and launched a counterattack. Troops of the Bahri commander
Baibars defeated Louis's troops and the king delayed the retreat too long. The Mamluks captured him in March 1250 and received a ransom of 250,000
livres (the remaining 150,000 demanded was never paid)
[2]
. Political pressure for a male leader made Shajar marry the mamluk commander
Aybak. Aybak was later killed in his bath and in the following power struggle vice-regent
Qutuz took over. He formally founded the first Mamluk sultanate and the Bahri dynasty.
The first Mamluk dynasty was named Bahri after the name of one of the regiments, the Bahirya or River Island regiment. The name
Bahri (Ø¨ØØ±ÙŠ meaning 'of the sea') referred to their center in
al-Manial Island in the
Nile. The regiment consisted mainly of
Kipchak Turks and
Circassians.
Mamluks and the Mongols

Mamluk-Syrian glassware vessels from the 14th century; in the course of trade, the middle vase shown ended up in
Yemen and then
China.
When the
Mongol troops of
Hulegu Khan sacked Baghdad and took over Damascus in 1258, one of those who escaped from Damascus was the Mamluk general
Baibars. He fled to Cairo. When Hulegu demanded that
Qutuz surrender Cairo, Qutuz had Hulegu's envoys killed and, with Baibars' help, mobilized his troops. Although Hulegu had to leave for the east when great Khan Mongke died, he left his lieutenant, the Christian
Kitbuqa, in charge. Qutuz drew the Mongol army into an ambush near the
Orontes River, routed them at the
Battle of Ain Jalut and captured and executed Kitbuqa.
But Qutuz' triumph did not last long: When he and the mamluks returned to Cairo, Baibars assassinated Qutuz and seized power. In the following centuries, power would transfer the same way numerous times; the average reign of a Mamluk ruler was seven years.
The Mamluks defeated the Mongols the second time in
Homs in
1260 and began to drive them back east. In the process, they consolidated their power over Syria, fortified the area, formed mail routes and formed diplomatic connections between the local princes. Baibars's troops also defeated the last of the Crusader states in the
Holy Land.
Burji dynasty
In 1382, the Bukri or
Burji dynasty took over. Burji (برجي meaning 'of the tower') referred to their center in the
citadel of
Cairo. The dynasty consisted of
Circassians.
Ottomans
The Mamluk Sultanate would survive until
1517, when it was conquered by the
Ottoman Empire. The institution of the mamluks would continue under the Ottomans, though it would not be the same as that of the Sultanate.
Mamluks independence from the Ottomans

Painting of a Mamluk, 1779.
In
1768, Sultan
Ali Bey Al-Kabir declared independence from the Ottomans but the Mamluks crushed the movement and retained their position after his defeat. By this time, the new slave recruits were introduced from
Georgia in the Caucasus.
Napoleon defeated Mamluk troops when he attacked Egypt in
1798 and drove them to
Upper Egypt. By this time, Mamluks had added only
muskets to their typical cavalry charge tactics.
After the departure of French troops in
1801, Mamluks continued their struggle for independence, this time against the Ottoman Empire and
Great Britain. In
1803, Mamluk leaders
Ibrahim Beg and
Usman Beg wrote a letter to
Russian general-consul and asked him to act as a mediator with the Sultan as they wanted a ceasefire and return to their homeland, Georgia. The Russian Ambassador in
Istanbul categorically refused to mediate because the Russian government was afraid of allowing Mamluks to return to Georgia, where a strong national-liberation movement was on rise and a Mamluk return might have encouraged it.
In
1805, the population of Cairo rebelled. There was an excellent opportunity for the Mamluks to seize the state authority, but their internal tension and betrayal by some Mamluks did not allow them to exploit this opportunity. In
1806, the Mamluks defeated the Turkish forces several times, and in June, the rival parties concluded a peace treaty. According to it
Muhammad Ali, who was appointed as governor of Egypt on
26 March 1806, was to be removed and the state authority in Egypt returned to the Mamluks. But again, internal tension and conflicts between the clans did not allow the Mamluks to use this opportunity. Muhammad Ali kept his authority.
End of Mamluk power in Egypt
Muhammed Ali knew that eventually he would have to deal with the Mamluks if he ever wanted to control Egypt. They were still the feudal owners of Egypt and their land was still the source of wealth and power.
On March 1, 1811,
Muhammed Ali invited all Mamluks to his palace to celebrate the declaration of war against the Wahhabis in Arabia. There were nearly 600 Mamluks (according to another source about 700) on parade in
Cairo. Near the Al-Azab gates, in a narrow road down from Mukatamb Hill, Muhammad Ali's forces ambushed and slaughtered almost everyone. According to the tradition, only one Mamluk, named Hasan, survived when he cut his way through the Turks and jumped with a horse over a precipice to freedom.
Over the following week, hundreds of Mamluks were killed throughout Egypt. In the citadel of Cairo alone more than 1000 Mamluks were killed. In the streets around Egypt, an estimated 3,000 Mamluks and their relatives were killed.
Despite these attempts by Muhammad Ali to defeat the Mamluks in Egypt, a party of them escaped and fled south into present-day Sudan. In 1811, these Mamluks established a state at
Dunqulah, in
Sennar, as a base for their slave trading. In 1820, the sultan of Sennar informed Muhammad Ali that he was unable to comply with the demand to expel the Mamluks. In response, the pasha sent 4,000 troops to invade Sudan, clear it of Mamluks, and reclaim it for Egypt. The
Pasha's forces received the submission of the kashif, dispersed the Dunqulah Mamluks, conquered
Kordofan, and accepted Sennar's surrender from the last
Funj sultan,
Badi VII.
Mamluks in Baghdad
In the Ottoman Empire, mamluks of
Baghdad proclaimed their independence in the
18th century and remained autonomous until the Ottoman reconquest in
1832.
Mamluks in the service of Napoleon
Napoleon formed his own Mamluk corps in the early years of the
19th century and they became the last known Mamluk force. Even his
Imperial Guard had Mamluk soldiers during the
Belgian campaign, including one of his personal servants. Napoleon's famous bodyguard
Roustan was also a Mamluk from Egypt.
One of the pictures by
Francisco de Goya shows a charge of Mamluks against the
Madrilene on
2 May 1808.
Throughout the Napoleonic era, there was a special Mamluk corps in the French army. In his history of the 13th Chasseurs, Colonel Descaves recounts how Napoleon used the Mamluks in Egypt. In his so-called "Instructions" that Bonaparte gave to Kleber after departure, Napoleon wrote that he had already bought about 2,000 Mamluks from Syrian merchants from whom he intended to form a special detachment. On 14 September
1799,
General Kleber established a mounted company of Mamluk
auxiliaries and Syrian
janissaries from Turks captured at the
siege of Acre.
On 7 July
1800, General Menou reorganized the company, forming 3 companies of 100 men each and renaming it the "Mamluks de la République". In 1801,
General Rapp was sent to Marseille to organize a squadron of 250 Mamluks under his command. On 7 January
1802, the previous order was cancelled and the squadron reduced to 150 men. The list of effectives on 21 April 1802 reveals 3 officers and 155 members of rank and file. By decree of 25 December 1803, the Mamluks were organized into a company attached to the Chasseurs-a-Cheval of the Imperial Guard.
Mamluks fought well at
Battle of Austerlitz on
December 2,
1805, and the regiment was granted a standard and a roster increased to accommodate a standard bearer and a trumpet. A decree of 15 April 1806 defined the strength of squadron as 13 officers and 147 privates. In 1813, its Chasseurs-a-Cheval of the Imperial Guard a decree of 17 March established another company attached to the Young Guard. Despite the Imperial decree of 21 March
1815 that stated that no foreigner could be admitted into the Guard, Napoleon’s decree of 24 April prescribed
inter alia that the Chasseurs-a-Cheval of the Imperial Guard included a squadron of two companies of Mamluks for the Belgian Campaign.
With the First Restoration, the company of the Mamluks of the Old Guard was incorporated in the Corps Royal des Chasseurs de France. The Mamluks of Young Guard were incorporated in the 7th Chasseurs a Cheval.
Mamluk uniform
During their service in Napoleon’s army, the Mamluk squadron wore the following uniform:
Before
1804: The only "uniform" part was the green cahouk (hat), white turban, and red saroual (pants), all to be worn with a loose shirt and a vest. Boots were of yellow, red or tan soft leather. Weapons consisted of an "Oriental"
scimitar, a brace of pistols in a holder decorated with a
brass crescent and star, and a dagger.
After 1804: The cahouk became red with a brass crescent and star and the shirt was closed and had a collar. The main change was the addition of a "regulation" chasseur-style saddle-cloth and roll, imperial green in color, piped red, with a red and white fringe. The saddle and harness remained Arabic in style. The undress uniform was as for the
Chasseurs-a-Cheval of the Guard but of a dark blue cloth.
Mamluk rulers
In Egypt
★ 1250
Shajarat al-Durr (
al-Salih Ayyub's Widow de facto ruler of Egypt)
★ 1250 Al-Mueez Izaddin
Aybak
★ 1257 Al-Mansour Nuraddin Ali
★ 1259 Al-Muzaffar Sayd Addin
Qutuz
★ 1260 Zahir
Baibars
★ 1277 As-Said Nasir Addin Baraka
★ 1280 Al-Adel Badr Addin Salamesh
★ 1280 Al-Mansour Sayf Addin
Qalawun Al-Alfi
★ 1290 Al-Ashraf Salah Addin
Khalil
★ 1294
Al-Nasir Muhammad
★ 1295 Al-Adel Zayn Addin Kitbougha
★ 1297 Al-Mansour Husam Addin Ladjin
★ 1299
Al-Nasir Muhammad (second time)
★ 1309 Al-muzaffar Roukn Addin
Baibars II
★ 1310
Al-Nasir Muhammad (third time)
★ 1340 Al-Mansour Sayf Addin Abu Bakr
★ 1341 Al-Ashraf Ala Addin Qudjouk
★ 1342 An-Nasir Shihab Addin Ahmad
★ 1342 As-Salih Imad Addin Ismail
★ 1345 Al-Qamil Sayf Addin Shaban II
★ 1346 Al-Muzaffar Sayf Addin Hadji I
★ 1347 An-Nasir Nasir Addin Al-Hasan
★ 1351 As-Saleh Salah Addin Saleh
★ 1354 An-Nasir Nasir Addin Al-Hasan (second time)
★ 1361 Al-Mansour Salah Addin Muhammad
★ 1363 Al-Ashraf Nasir Addin Shaban II
★ 1376 Al-Mansour Ala Addin Ali
★ 1382 As-Salih Salah Addin Hadji II
★ 1382 Az-Zahar Sayf Addin
Berkuk
★ 1389 Hadji II (second time with the honored title Al-Muzaffar)
★ 1390 Az-Zahir Sayf Addin
Berkuk (second time)
★ 1399 An-Nasir Nasir Addin Faradj
★ 1405 Al-Mansour Azzaddin Abdal Aziz
★ 1405 An-Nasir Nasir Addin Faradj (second time)
★ 1412 Al-Adel Al-Mustayn (Abbasi Khalef, proclaimed as Sultan)
★ 1412 Al-Muayad Sayf Addin Shayh
★ 1421 Al-Muzaffar Ahmad
★ 1421 Az-Zahir Sayf Addin Tatar
★ 1421 As-Salih Nasir Addin Muhammad
★ 1422 Al-Ashraf Sayf Addin Barsbay
★ 1438 Al-Aziz Djamal Addin Yusuf
★ 1438 Az-Zahir Sayf Addin Djakhmak
★ 1453 Al-Mansour Fahr Addin Osman
★ 1453 Al-Ashraf Sayf Addin Enal
★ 1461 Al-Muayad Shihab Addin Ahmad
★ 1461 Az-Zahir Sayf Addin Khushkadam
★ 1467 Az-Zahir Sayf Addin Belbay
★ 1468 Az-Zahir Temurbougha
★ 1468 Al-Ashraf Sayf Addin
Qaitbay
★ 1496 An-Nasir Muhammad
★ 1498 Az-Zahir Qanshaw
★ 1500 Al-Ashraf Djanbulat
★ 1501 Al-Adel Sayf Addin Tumanbay I
★ 1501
Al-Ashraf Qansuh al-Ghawri
★ 1517 Al-Ashraf Tumanbay II
In India
★
Qutb-ud-din Aybak (1206–1210)
★
Aram Shah (1210–1211)
★
Shams ud din Iltutmish (1211–1236). Son-in-law of Qutb-ud-din Aybak.
★
Rukn ud din Firuz (1236). Son of Iltutmish.
★
Razia Sultana (1236–1240). Daughter of Iltutmish.
★
Muiz ud din Bahram (1240–1242). Son of Iltutmish.
★
Ala ud din Masud (1242–1246). Son of Rukn ud din.
★
Nasir ud din Mahmud (1246–1266). Son of Iltutmish.
★
Ghiyas ud din Balban (1266–1286). Ex-slave, son-in-law of Iltutmish.
★
Muiz ud din Qaiqabad(1286–1290). Grandson of Balban and Nasir ud din.
★
Kayumars (1290). Son of Muiz ud din.
Similar terms
''
Mameluco'' is a Portuguese word derived from "mamluk", used to identify people of mixed
European and
Amerindian descent in
South America. In the
17th and 18th centuries, ''Mameluco'' also referred to organized bands of Portuguese slave-hunters based at
São Paulo, known primarily as ''
bandeirantes''.
''Mameluk'' name was used in Hungary in the last decades of the 19th century as a nickname for Members of Parliament, belonging to the governing "Liberal" party. This party governed Hungary for 30 years (1875-1905) and its Members in Parliament - to preserve their seat in the Parliament and the accompanying privileges - fulfilled all wishes of the party leader and prime minister
Tisza.
Footnotes
1. Kennedy, Hugh N. ''The Historiography of Islamic Egypt (C. 950-1800)''. Brill Academic Publishers, 2001. [1]
2. Madden, Thomas F. Crusades the Illustrated History. 1st ed. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan P, 2005. 159
See also
★
Black Guard
★
Feudalism
★
Ghulam
★
Janissary
★
Saqaliba
★
Bahri dynasty
★
Burji dynasty
★
Beys Mamelukes
External links
★
Mamluks — Military slave dynasty
★
Arts of the Mamluks
★
Mamluks — History for Kids
★
The Chicago Online Bibliography of Mamluk Studies and The Chicago Online Encyclopedia of Mamluk Studies, Mamluk Studies Review, and other Mamluk Studies Resources
Further reading
★ A. Allouche: ''Mamluk Economics : A Study and Translation of Al-Maqrizi's Ighathat.'' Salt Lake City, 1994
★ R. Amitai-Preiss: ''Mongols and Mamluks: The Mamluk-Ilkhanid War 1260-1281''. Cambridge, 1995
★ D. Ayalon: ''The Mamluk Military Society''. London, 1979
★ Ulrich Haarmann: ''Das Herrschaftssystem der Mamluken'', in: Halm / Haarmann (Hrsg.): ''Geschichte der arabischen Welt''. C.H.Beck (2004), ISBN 3-406-47486-1
★ James Waterson - ''The Mamluks'' (''History Today'' March 2006)