Battle of the Blacks

Battle of the blacks
Part of Saladin's rise in Egypt
Date21–23 August 1169
Location
Result Saladin victory
Belligerents
Saladin's regime in Egypt

Black-African and Armenian troops of the Fatimid army

Pro-Fatimid citizens of Cairo
Commanders and leaders
Saladin
Turan-Shah
Al-Adid
Units involved
Kurdish contingent of Syria[1]
  • Fatimids black African corps
  • Armenian unit
Strength
Unknown 50,000[2][3]
Casualties and losses
Unknown Most of the black African unit Sloughtered[4][5][6]

The Battle of the Blacks or Battle of the Slaves was a conflict in Cairo, on 21–23 August 1169,[7] between the black African units of the Fatimid army and other pro-Fatimid elements, and Sunni Syrian troops loyal to the Fatimid vizier, Saladin. Saladin's rise to the vizierate, and his sidelining of the Fatimid caliph, al-Adid, antagonized the traditional Fatimid elites, including the army regiments, as Saladin relied chiefly on Kurdish troops that had come with him from Syria.[1][8] According to the medieval sources, which are biased towards Saladin, this conflict led to an attempt by the palace majordomo, Mu'tamin al-Khilafa, to enter into an agreement with the Crusaders and jointly attack Saladin's forces to get rid of him. Saladin learned of this conspiracy and had Mu'tamin executed on 20 August. Modern historians have questioned the veracity of this report, suspecting that it may have been invented to justify Saladin's subsequent move against the Fatimid troops.

This event provoked the uprising of the black African troops of the Fatimid army, numbering some 50,000 men, who were joined by Armenian soldiers and the populace of Cairo the next day. The clashes lasted for two days, as the Fatimid troops initially attacked the vizier's palace, but were driven back to the large square between the Fatimid Great Palaces. There the black African troops and their allies appeared to be gaining the upper hand until al-Adid came out publicly against them, and Saladin ordered the burning of their settlements, located south of Cairo outside the city wall, where the black Africans' families had been left behind. The black Africans then broke and retreated in disorder to the south, until they were encircled near the Bab Zuwayla gate, where they surrendered and were allowed to cross the Nile to Giza. Despite promises of safety, they were attacked and almost annihilated there by Saladin's brother Turan-Shah.

The defeat of the Fatimid troops was a watershed in the history of Egypt and the Muslim world, as it removed the main military support of the Fatimid regime and consolidated Saladin's position as the de facto ruler of Egypt. This culminated in the restoration of Sunni dominance over Egypt and the deposition of the Fatimid dynasty in September 1171. In its place, Saladin established his own Ayyubid dynasty. Some black African troops remained in Saladin's service for a few years but most who survived the massacre of 1169 fled to Upper Egypt, where they joined unsuccessful pro-Fatimid uprisings in subsequent years.

  1. ^ a b Ehrenkreutz 1972, p. 70.
  2. ^ Bacharach 1981, p. 487.
  3. ^ Brett 2017, pp. 269–270, 292.
  4. ^ Ehrenkreutz 1972, p. 78.
  5. ^ Halm 2014, p. 286.
  6. ^ Lyons & Jackson 1982, pp. 35–36.
  7. ^ Lyons & Jackson 1982, pp. 34–36.
  8. ^ Lev, Yaacov (1999). Saladin in Egypt. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 90-04-11221-9 P. 187.

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