Battle of ʿAyn Jālūt
Battle of ʿAyn Jālūt, decisive victory of the Mamluks of Egypt over the invading Mongols on September 3, 1260, which saved Egypt and Islam and halted the westward expansion of the Mongol empire.
Baghdad, the capital city of the ʿAbbāsid caliphate, had fallen to the Mongols under the Il-Khan Hülegü in 1258, and the last ʿAbbāsid caliph had been put to death. In 1259 the Mongol army, led by the Christian Turk Kitbuga, moved into Syria, took Damascus and Aleppo, and reached the shores of the Mediterranean Sea. The Mongols then sent an envoy to Cairo in 1260 to demand the submission of al-Muẓaffar Sayf al-Dīn Qutuz, the Mamluk sultan, whose reply was the execution of the envoy. The two powers then prepared for battle.
With its army led by Qutuz, the Mamluks marched north to defeat a small Mongolian force at Gaza, then came up against a Mongol army of around 20,000 at ʿAyn Jālūt (Goliath’s Spring), so called because it was held to be the place where King David of Israel killed the Philistine warrior Goliath, as described in the book of Samuel. The Mongol army contained a sizable group of Syrian warriors, as well as Christian Georgian and Armenian troops, although Kitbuga kept the Syrians in reserve, concerned that they might defect to the Mamluk side. The two armies were roughly matched in numbers, but the Mamluks had one great advantage: one of their generals, Baybars, was familiar with the terrain because he had been a fugitive in the area earlier in his life. Baybars reputedly drew up the battle strategy, which used one of the Mongols’ most successful tactics: that of the feigned retreat.
At ʿAyn Jālūt the Mamluks positioned themselves so that the Mongols would be facing the rising sun, making it difficult to see the Mamluks’ movements. Baybars then concealed the bulk of his army among trees in the hills and took a small force forward; his group rode back and forth repeatedly in order to provoke and occupy the Mongols for several hours, before beginning a feigned retreat. Kitbuga fell for the trick and ordered an advance; his army poured forward in pursuit only to be ambushed by the main Mamluk army in the hills. The Mamluks attacked from all sides, unleashing their cavalry and a heavy storm of arrows, but the Mongols fought with typical ferocity and succeeded in turning and breaking the left wing of the Mamluk army.
In this close fighting, the Mamluks used hand cannon—known as midfa in Arabic—primarily to frighten the Mongolian warriors’ horses and cause confusion. Contemporary accounts report that Mamluk sultan Qutuz threw down his helmet and urged his men forward to fight in the name of Islam, and that after this inspiring speech the Mamluks began to gain the upper hand. At this point the Syrian auxiliaries indeed did defect to the Mamluks. Then Mongol general Kitbuga was killed in battle—or, according to one account, was taken prisoner by the Mamluks and, after he declared defiantly that the khan would inflict savage revenge for this defeat, was beheaded on the battlefield. Finally, the Mongols turned and began to retreat, heading for Beisan, eight miles (13 km) away. The Mamluks pursued them all the way. At Beisan, the Mongols turned to fight once more, but were heavily defeated. The Mongol empire was thus contained in Iran and Mesopotamia, leaving Egypt secure in Muslim Mamluk hands and, after a minor battle at Aleppo that drove the Mongols out of Syria for good, extending Egypt’s hold eastward to the Euphrates River. In Baghdad, an infuriated Hülegü demanded that a punitive expedition be organized to fight the Mamluks again, but disturbances elsewhere occupied his army, and nothing ever came of it.
The Mamluks made the most of the propaganda value of their remarkable victory over the seemingly invincible Mongols, dispatching a messenger to Cairo bearing Kitbuga’s head on a staff. Subsequently, Baybars formed a conspiracy against Qutuz, who was murdered as he made his way back to Cairo. Baybars then seized power for himself.
Losses: Mongol, most of 20,000; Mamluk, heavy losses of 20,000.