- Fakhr al-Mulk Radwan
Fakhr al-Mulk Radwan (also "Ridwan" or "Rudwan"; died
December 10 ,1113 ) was a Seljuk ruler ofAleppo from 1095 to 1113.He was the son of
Tutush I and brother ofDuqaq , but was raised by his tutor ("atabeg ") Janah ad-Dawla al-Husain. When Tutush died in 1096, Radwan inherited hisSyria n possessions and ruled from Aleppo, though Janah ad-Dawla was in charge of actual governance. Duqaq soon revolted against his brother and took control ofDamascus , throwing Syria into almost chaos and anarchy. Duqaq had the support ofYaghi-Siyan ofAntioch , who had no quarrel with Radwan but disliked Janah ad-Dawla; joining Yaghi-Siyan and Duqaq wasIlghazi , governor ofJerusalem . Radwan allied with Ilghazi's brotherSokman .Radwan attacked Yaghi-Siyan, and when Duqaq and Ilghazi came to assist him, Radwan besieged Damascus as well. However, Radwan soon quarrelled with Janah ad-Dawla, who captured
Hims from him, and with his atabeg out of the alliance, Yaghi-Siyan was much more willing to assist him. This new alliance was sealed with a marriage between Radwan and Yaghi-Siyan's daughter. The two were about to attackShaizar when they heard of the arrival of theFirst Crusade ; all the various alliances were disbanded and everyone returned to their own cities, though if any of the alliances had remained intact, or they had all worked together, they would likely have been able to prevent the success of thecrusade .In 1103 Janah ad-Dawla was murdered by an Assassin named al-Hakim al-Munajjim, one of the members of the entourage of Radwan. This was the first appearance of the Assassins in Syria. Upon Duqaq's death in 1104, two weak rulers followed him in Damascus and Radwan probably captured the city the same year. The throne remained in Aleppo, however. In 1105 he assisted in the defense of Tripoli, which was being attacked by the crusaders. That same year,
Tancred, Prince of Galilee , regent of thePrincipality of Antioch , defeated him in theBattle of Artah and briefly threatened Aleppo itself. Radwan and Tancred frequently came into conflict, until Tancred reduced Aleppo to a tributary state in 1111. The "qadi " of Aleppo,Ibn al-Khashshab , travelled toBaghdad to meet with theAbbasid caliph when Radwan was unwilling to pursue war with Tancred. Ibn al-Khashshab succeeded in havingMawdud ofMosul sent to Aleppo's aid, but Radwan was also antagonistic to his Muslim neighbours, even when they tried to help him against the crusaders; Mawdud was soon murdered by the Hashshashin, possibly with Radwan's approval.Upon his death on December 10, 1113, Radwan was succeeded by his teenaged son
Alp Arslan al-Akhras , under the regency of Lulu and ibn al-Khashshab. Lulu did not continue Radwan's policy of support for the Hashshashin, and had them all expelled or killed, although this left Aleppo without any powerful allies. The city fell into near chaos, and soon came under the control of Sulaiman, Ilghazi's son, who had married Radwan's daughter. Ibn al-Khashshab was murdered by the Hashshashin in 1125. In 1128 the city was united with Mosul by the atabeg of the latter,Zengi .ources
*Kenneth Setton, ed. "A History of the Crusades, vol. I". University of Pennsylvania Press, 1958 ( [http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/History/History-idx?type=browse&scope=HISTORY.HISTCRUSADES available online] ).
*"The Damascus Chronicle of the Crusades: Extracted and Translated from the Chronicle ofIbn al-Qalanisi ". H.A.R. Gibb, London, 1932.###@@@KEYEND@@@###
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