He was the most notable son of
Bursuq the Elder. Bursuq ibn Bursuq was a Turkic general in the service of the
Seljuq Sultan Muhammad I Tapar. As emir of Hamadan, he participated in the military campaigns against the crusader states from the 1110s. The
Artuqid ruler of
Mardin Ilghazi defeated the supreme commander of the Sultan's army,
Aqsunqur al-Bursuqi, in late 1114. Muhammad I soon replaced Aqsunqur with Bursuq, also charging him with the direction of the
jihad (or holy war) against the crusaders (or Franks). After gathering new troops in Mosul and the
Jazira, Bursuq invaded Syria in early 1115. After besieging
Edessa for a short time, he marched towards
Aleppo where he wanted to establish his base of operation. The eunuch atabeg of Aleppo,
Lulu, sent envoys to Ilghazi, and the atabeg of Damascus,
Toghtekin, seeking their assistance against Bursuq. Ilghazi and Toghtekin approached
Roger of Salerno, who ruled the
Principality of Antioch, and Roger soon called on the heads of the other crusader states,
Baldwin I of Jerusalem,
Pons of Tripoli and
Baldwin II of Edessa. Roger defeated Bursuq in the
Battle of Tell Danith on 14 September 1115. After Bursuq's defeat, the Seljuks of Mosul refrained from launching a new military expedition against the crusader states in Syria for ten years. == References ==