Background Like many of the "slave-aristocracy" at the time (such as the
mamluks), Shajar al-Durr was likely of
Turkic or
Armenian origin, and described by historians as a beautiful, pious, and intelligent woman. in the
Levant before he became a Sultan and accompanied him and Mamluk
Rukn al-Din Baybars al-Salihi (not the
Baibars who became a Sultan) to
Al Karak during his detention there in 1239. Later when As-Salih Ayyub became a Sultan in 1240 she went with him to Egypt and gave birth to their son Khalil who was called al-Malik al-Mansour. Some time after the birth, As-Salih Ayyub married her. In April 1249, As-Salih Ayyub, who was gravely sick in
Syria, returned to
Egypt and went to Ashmum-Tanah, near
Damietta after he heard that King
Louis IX of France had assembled a crusader army in
Cyprus and was about to launch an attack against Egypt. In June 1249, the crusaders landed in the abandoned town of Damietta, at the mouth of the river
Nile. As-Salih Ayyub was carried on a stretcher to his palace in the better-protected town of
Al Mansurah where he died on 22 November 1249 after ruling Egypt for nearly 10 years. Shajar al-Durr informed Emir
Fakhr ad-Din ibn as-Shaikh (commander of all the Egyptian army) and Tawashi Jamal ad-Din Muhsin (the chief eunuch who controlled the palace) of the Sultan's death but as the country was under attack by the crusaders they decided to conceal his death. The coffined body of the Sultan was transported in secret by boat to the castle on
al-Rudah island in the Nile. Although the deceased Sultan had not left any testimony concerning who should succeed him after his death,
Faris ad-Din Aktai was sent to
Hasankeyf to call
al-Muazzam Turanshah, the son of the deceased Sultan. The eyewitness observers who were alive and in Egypt at the time of the Sultan's death state that documents were forged by a servant who could copy the Sultan's handwriting. Emir Fakhr ad-Din began issuing decrees and giving Sultanic orders and this small circle of advisors succeeded in convincing the people and the other government officials that the Sultan was only ill rather than dead. Shajar al-Durr continued to have food prepared for the sultan and brought to his tent. High officials, the Sultan's Mamluks and soldiers were ordered – by the will of the "ill" Sultan – to swear an oath of loyalty to the Sultan, his heir Turanshah and the
Atabeg Fakhr ad-Din Yussuf. and with the arrival of reinforcements led by
Alphonse, Count of Poitou, the brother of King Louis IX, they decided to march on Cairo. A crusader force led by Louis IX's other brother
Robert I of Artois crossed the canal of Ashmum (known today as Albahr Alsaghir) and attacked the Egyptian camp in Gideila, two miles (3 km) from Al Mansurah. Emir Fakhr ad-Din was killed during the sudden attack and the crusader force advanced toward the town of Al Mansurah. Shajar al-Durr agreed to
Baibars's plan to defend Al Mansurah. The crusader force was trapped inside the town,
Robert of Artois was killed and the crusader force was annihilated by an Egyptian force and the townspeople, led by the men who were about to establish the state which would dominate the southern Mediterranean for decades: Baibars al-Bunduqdari,
Izz al-Din Aybak, and
Qalawun al-Alfi. In February 1250 the dead Sultan's son Al-Muazzam Turanshah arrived in Egypt and was enthroned at Al Salhiyah as he had no time to go to Cairo. With his arrival, Shajar al-Durr announced the death of as-Salih Ayyub. Turanshah went straight to Al Mansurah and on 6 April 1250 the crusaders were entirely defeated at the
Battle of Fariskur and King
Louis IX was captured.
Conflict with Turanshah Once the Seventh Crusade was defeated and Louis IX was captured, troubles began between Turanshah on one side and Shajar al-Durr and the Mamluks on the other. Turanshah, knowing he would not have full sovereignty while Shajar al-Durr, the Mamluks and the old guards of his late father were around, detained a few officials and started to replace old officials, including the deputy Sultan, with his own followers who had come with him from Hasankeyf. He then sent a message to Shajar al-Durr while she was in
Jerusalem the Mamluks, particularly their leader Faris ad-Din Aktai, were enraged. In addition, Turanshah used to drink alcohol and when drunk he abused the
bondmaids of his father and threatened the Mamluks. Turanshah was assassinated by
Baibars and a group of Mamluk soldiers at
Fariskur on 2 May 1250. He was the last of the Ayyubid sultans. == Reign as Sultan ==