Ascension to the sultanate Jaqmaq abdicated the sultanate in 1453 in favor of his 18-year-old son,
al-Mansur Uthman, and died later that year. Under pressure from powerful
mamluks who refused to recognize Uthman's authority, Despite having a much larger force, most of Uthman's Zahiri
mamluks abandoned their support for him by 16 March when the
Caliph al-Qa'im and the top
qadis ("judges") passed a resolution stripping Uthman of his executive authority. Inal, at age 73, was thereby proclaimed sultan and entered the citadel later that week, capturing Uthman. On 9 April Inal had Uthman imprisoned in
Alexandria. known as the
julban or
ajlab. The
julban were responsible for mass disturbances throughout the sultanate. While Inal and his close circle of officials were notably less tyrannical and brutal than their predecessors, Afterward, Inal sent disciplinary officers to assuage the
mamluks' concerns, but to no avail. The
mamluks proceeded to raid Yunus's house, but were unsuccessful and returned to the horse market. There, Inal sent a herald to offer the
mamluks amnesty and their wounded compensation, but they refused and severely beat the herald. After the
mamluks blocked the street to the citadel preventing the royal
emirs from leaving. Inal dispatched four
emirs to negotiate with the
mamluks, but they were taken hostage until their demands were met. The
mutiny convinced Caliph al-Qa'im to abandon his support for Inal and join the uprising. With the caliph providing symbolic legitimacy to the
mamluks, they took up arms and assaulted the citadel. Finding himself faced with no alternatives, Inal launched an offensive against the mutineers. Worshipers, including women, were harassed at the
Mosque of Amr ibn al-As. In one incident the sultan himself was chased and attacked with stones, forcing him to briefly flee into the citadel's
harem. In June 1457, Inal sent an expeditionary force to retake
Tarsus and
Adana from the
Karamanids of central
Anatolia. The naval fleet, which carried 650
mamluks from the Royal Guard, was launched on 5 August 1460. On a visit to the important
Bulaq port along the banks of the
Nile River on 28 March 1458, Inal was repulsed at the scene of its crowded and dilapidated buildings and structures. The next day, he issued a decree banning construction in Bulaq and the adjacent Arwa Island, due to the narrowness of the roads there. While the royal council voiced opposition to Inal's moves, Ibn Taghribirdi asserted that it would ease the public's access to the port and that the rights of some individuals should not infringe on the rights of others. Inal was reported to be ill on 3 February 1461. should succeed him. On 26 February, Inal died at the age of 80 after a reign of seven years and eleven months. ==References==