to
Saladin, from
Les Passages faits Outremer par les Français contre les Turcs et autres Sarrasins et Maures outremarins, c. 1490 On Balian's orders, the Crusaders surrendered the city to Saladin's army on October 2. The take-over of the city was relatively peaceful especially in contrast to the Crusader
siege of the city in 1099. Balian paid 30,000 dinars for freeing 7,000 of those unable to pay from the treasury of the city. The large golden
Christian cross that had been placed over the
Dome of the Rock by the Crusaders was pulled down and all Muslim prisoners of war taken by the Crusaders were released by Saladin. According to the
Kurdish scholar and historian
Baha ad-Din ibn Shaddad, these numbered close to 3,000. Saladin allowed many of the noblewomen of the city to leave without paying any ransom. For example,
Queen Dowager Maria was allowed to leave the city with her retinue and associates, as was
Queen Sibylla. Saladin also granted Sibylla safe passage to visit her captive husband,
King Guy, in
Nablus. The native Christians were allowed to remain in the city and Jews were permitted to resettle as well. Those Christians of Crusader origin were allowed to leave Jerusalem for other lands along with their goods through a safe passage via
Akko by paying a ransom of 10 dinars. Saladin's brother
Al-Adil was moved by the sight and asked Saladin for 1,000 of them as a reward for his services. Saladin granted his wish and Al-Adil immediately released them all. Heraclius, upon seeing this, asked Saladin for some slaves to liberate. He was granted 700 while Balian was granted 500 and all of them were freed by them. All the aged people who could not pay the ransom were freed by orders of Saladin and allowed to leave the city. Saladin then proceeded to free 1,000 more captives upon request of Muzaffar al-Din Ibn Ali Kuchuk, who claimed they were from his hometown of
Urfa. In order to control the departing population, Saladin ordered the gates of the city to be closed. At each gate of the city, a commander was placed to check the movement of the Crusaders and make sure only those who paid the ransom left the city. Saladin then assigned some of his officers the job of ensuring the safe arrival of the Crusaders in Christian lands. 15,000 of those who could not pay the ransom were sold into
slavery in the Ayyubid Sultanate. According to
Imad ad-Din al-Isfahani, 7,000 of them were men and 8,000 were women and children. On Saladin's orders, the ransomed inhabitants marched away in three columns accompanied by 50 cavalrymen of Saladin's army. The
Knights Templar and
Hospitallers led the first two, with Balian and the Patriarch leading the third. Balian joined his wife and family in the
County of Tripoli. The refugees first reached
Tyre, where only men who could fight were allowed to enter by
Conrad of Montferrat. The remaining refugees went to the
County of Tripoli, which was under Crusader control. They were denied entrance and robbed of their possessions by raiding parties from within the city. Most of the less affluent refugees went to Armenian and Antiochian territories and were later successful in gaining entrance into
Antioch. The remaining refugees fled from
Ascalon to
Alexandria, where they were housed in makeshift stockades and received hospitable treatment from the city officials and elders. They then boarded
Italian ships which arrived from
Pisa,
Genoa and
Venice in March 1188. The captains of the ships at first refused to take the refugees since they were not being paid for them and did not have supplies for them. The governor of Alexandria, who had earlier taken the oars of the ships for payment of taxes, refused to grant sailing permits to the captains until they agreed. The latter then agreed to take the refugees along with them and were made to swear decent treatment and safe arrival of the refugees before they left. After the surrender of the city, the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre was ordered to be closed for three days by Saladin while he considered what to do with it. Some of his advisers told him to destroy the Church in order to end all Christian interest in Jerusalem. Most of his advisers, however, told him to spare the Church, saying that Christian pilgrimages would continue anyway because of the sanctity of the place and also reminded him of the Caliph
Umar, who allowed the Church to remain in Christian hands after
conquering the city. Saladin ultimately decided not to destroy the church, saying that he had no intention to discourage Christian pilgrimages to the site; it was reopened after three days on his orders. The Frankish pilgrims were allowed to enter the church upon paying a fee. To solidify Muslim claims to Jerusalem, many holy sites, including the shrine known as
Al-Aqsa, were ritually purified with rose water. Christian furnishings were removed from the mosque and it was fitted with oriental carpets. Its walls were illuminated with candelabras and text from the
Quran. The Orthodox Christians and
Syriacs were allowed to remain and to worship as they chose. The
Copts, who were barred from entering Jerusalem by the Crusader kingdom of Jerusalem as they were considered heretics and atheists, were allowed to enter the city without paying any fees by Saladin as he considered them his subjects. The Coptic places of worship that were earlier taken over by the Crusaders were returned to the Coptic priests. The Copts were also allowed to visit the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and other Christian sites. The
Abyssinian Christians were allowed to visit the holy places of Jerusalem without paying any fees. Meanwhile, news of the disastrous defeat at Hattin was brought to Europe by
Joscius, Archbishop of Tyre, as well as other pilgrims and travellers, while Saladin was conquering the rest of the kingdom throughout the summer of 1187. Plans were immediately made for a new crusade; on October 29,
Pope Gregory VIII issued the
bull Audita tremendi, even before hearing of the fall of Jerusalem. In England and France, the
Saladin tithe was enacted in order to finance expenses. The
Third Crusade did not get underway until 1189, in three separate contingents led by
Richard I of England,
Philip II of France, and
Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor. ==In popular culture==