- Battle of Al-Sannabra
Infobox Military Conflict
conflict=Battle of Al-Sannabra
caption=
partof=theCrusade s
date=1113
place=Kinnaret ,Israel
result=Seljuk Turkish victory
combatant1=Kingdom of Jerusalem
combatant2=Seljuk Turks
commander1=Baldwin I of Jerusalem
commander2=Mawdud of Mosul
Toghtekin ofDamascus
strength1=Unknown
strength2=Unknown
casualties1=Unknown
casualties2=Unknown
In the Battle of Al-Sannabra in1113 , a Crusader army led by KingBaldwin I of Jerusalem was defeated by a Muslim army sent by the Sultan of theSeljuk Turks and commanded byMawdud ibn Altuntash ofMosul .Background
Beginning in 1110, the Seljuk Sultan Muhammad I in
Baghdad ordered invasions of the Crusader states for six successive years. "In 1110, 1112, and 1114 the city ofEdessa was the objective; in 1113Galilee was invaded, and in 1111 and 1115 the Latin possessions which lay east of the Orontes between Aleppo andShaizar ." [Smail, p 55]The attack on Edessa in 1110 failed to take the city. In 1111, Mawdud of Mosul led a host which fought Baldwin I's Frankish army to a draw in the Battle of Shaizar. Afterward the Muslim leader's army dispersed because of its lack of success and plunder. In 1112 and 1114, the Muslim counterattack against Edessa was weak. In the other four years, the Crusader states - the
Kingdom of Jerusalem ,Principality of Antioch ,County of Tripoli andCounty of Edessa - joined forces in defense.Battle
In 1113, Mawdud joined
Toghtekin ofDamascus and their combined army aimed to cross theJordan River south of theSea of Galilee . Baldwin I offered battle near the bridge of Al-Sannabra. Mawdud used the device of a feigned flight to entice Baldwin I into rashly ordering a charge. [Smail, p 79] The Frankish army was surprised and beaten when it unexpectedly ran into the main Turkish army.The surviving Crusaders kept their cohesion and fell back to a hill west of the inland sea where they fortified their camp. In this position they were reinforced from
Tripoli andAntioch but remained inert. [Smail, p 55] A number of Christian pilgrims also rallied to the army after Al-Sannabra.Unable to annihilate the Crusaders, Mawdud watched them with his main army while sending raiding columns to ravage the countryside and sack the town of
Nablus . In this, Mawdud anticipated the strategy ofSaladin in two later campaigns that were marked by theBattle of Belvoir Castle (1182) and theBattle of Al-Fule (1183) . As in these campaigns, the Frankish field army could oppose the main Muslim army, but it could not stop raiding forces from doing great damage to crops and towns.While the Turkish raiders roamed freely through Crusader lands, the local Muslim farmers entered into friendly relations with them. This deeply troubled the Frankish land magnates, who ultimately depended upon rents from cultivators of the soil.
Aftermath
Mawdud was unable to make any permanent conquests after his victory. Soon afterward, he was assassinated and Aq-Sunqur Bursuqi took command of the failed attempt against Edessa in 1114. [Smail, p 143]
Roger of Salerno routed the last Seljuk invading army at theBattle of Sarmin after a protracted campaign in 1115.References
* Smail, R. C. "Crusading Warfare 1097-1193." New York: Barnes & Noble Books, (1956) 1995. ISBN 1-56619-769-4
Footnotes
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