, 1099. Engraving after
Gustave Doré During the
Crusades, Ascalon was an important city due to its location near the coast and between the
Crusader States and Egypt. It remained the last major Fatimid stronghold for over half a century. Negotiations over Jerusalem between the Crusaders and the Fatimids, who had recently gained control of the city from the Seljuks, broke down in May 1099 during the final stages of the
First Crusade. This led to the
siege and eventual capture of Jerusalem on 15 July. The remnants of the Fatimid army retreated to Ascalon. After negotiations ended in May, the Fatimids had begun raising an army at Ascalon, ready to raise the siege of Jerusalem. After the Crusader conquest of Jerusalem in 1099, the six elders of the
Karaite Jewish community in Ascalon contributed to the ransoming of captured Jews and holy relics from Jerusalem's new rulers. The
Letter of the Karaite elders of Ascalon, which was sent to the Jewish elders of
Alexandria, describes their participation in the ransom effort and the ordeals suffered by many of the freed captives. In 1100, Ascalon was among the Fatimid coastal cities (along with
Arsuf,
Caesarea and
Acre) that paid tribute to the Crusaders, as part of a short truce. In 1101, Caesarea and Arsuf were captured by the Crusaders, and their people fled to Ascalon. To protect the influx of Islamic population, military reinforcements were sent from Egypt, who provided the city with supplies and maintained its garrison. Ascalon thus became a major Fatimid frontier post. It was subjected to a Crusader blockade, often blocking the land route from Egypt, making it only accessible from the sea. The trade between Ascalon and Crusader Jerusalem resumed by that time, though the inhabitants of Ascalon regularly struggled with shortages in food and supplies. This necessitated the provisions from Egypt on several occasions each year. According to
William of Tyre, the entire civilian population of the city was included in the Fatimid army registers. Fatimid ruler
Al-Hafiz dispatched between 300 and 600 horsemen to protect Ascalon. Each company had 100 troops and was commanded by an
emir. A general was put in charge of all companies. They were paid 100
dinars for each emir, and 30 dinars for every horsemen. The Fatimids then used it to launch raids into the Crusaders'
Kingdom of Jerusalem.
Fatimid–Crusader hostilities (1101–1153) In July 1101, two years after the battle of Ascalon, Fatimid vizier
Al-Afdal Shahanshah launched an offensive from Ascalon to recapture
Jaffa. By 7 September,
Baldwin I defeated the Fatimid troops, and a year later besieged the city, destroying its rural hinterlands. Ascalon was further isolated by the fall of
Acre in 1104, but kept serving as a Fatimid base. In August 1105, Al-Afdal launched yet another failed attack from Ascalon, the most serious of his campaigns using both naval and ground forces. The Franks won the land battle and it has been recounted that when they encountered the Fatimid fleet in Jaffa, they threw the head of the defeated governor of Ascalon on board of the Egyptian ships, to inform them of the Crusader victory. After the Fatimid defeat in 1105, they no longer posed immediate threat to the Crusaders. And yet, Ascalon was deemed impregnable, and its proximities to Egyptian ports made it a primary concern for their Crusader army, as it continued to serve from time to time as base for small-scale incursions. In 1124
Tyre fell to the Crusaders, making Ascalon the last Fatimid stronghold on the Levantine coast.
Baldwin II of Jerusalem led an attack against Ascalon in 1125, that was repelled by the Muslims, who continued their incursions. Trade between the city and Cairo continued seemingly uninterrupted. The list of goods procured by
al-Ma'mun al-Bata'ihi, the Fatimid vizier (1122-1126), included textiles of all kinds, heavily worked and plain such as 'Attabi cloth,
siglaton,
damask, Aleppo silk, and raw and fulled leather, in addition to
olive oil and
sumac (
Rhus coriara), a plant native to Palestine used to flavor many dishes, but also in this case, for tanning leather. In 1134, the Crusader count of Jaffa,
Hugh II, rebelled against King
Fulk, who accused him of conspiring against his realm, and of intimate relations with his wife. Hugh II rode to Ascalon to seek help, and the Muslim troops were happy to contribute to the internal feud among the Crusader. Troops left Ascalon to Jaffa and raided the
Sharon plain, until Fulk's forces repelled them. Later. A year later, Fatimid vizier
Ridwan ibn Walakhshi was appointed governor of Ascalon and the western
Nile Delta. Ridwan found refuge in Ascalon during his conflict with
Bahram al-Armani in 1138–9. In the time of Fulk, three fortresses were erected around the city, in order to address the threats it imposed on Jerusalem:
Beth Gibelin (1135–6),
Ibelin (1140) and
Blanchgard (1142). The failure of the
Second Crusade and the rise of the
Zengid dynasty in Syria motivated
Baldwin III of Jerusalem in 1150 to begin preparations to capture Ascalon once and for all. He fortified
Gaza, which concerned the Fatimids in Egypt, who requested a pre-emptive strike by the Zengids from the north. These refused, but sent Zengid prince
Usama ibn Munqidh, who stayed there for four months and helped reinforce Ascalon's fortifications.
Crusader siege and rule (1153–1187) 's book "''
Passages d'outremer''" (1474)|300x300pxIn January 1153, crusader king
Baldwin III recruited almost all land and naval forces at disposal and laid siege to Ascalon. The siege lasted seven months, during which the city was bombarded by Crusader siege weapons. The Franks found a well prepared city, with strong walls and ample supply of provisions. The Fatimids manage to send over seventy ships with resources to the city during the siege. In his recount of the conquest of Ascalon,
William of Tyre described the city from the Crusader point of view: Much to the disadvantage of the Muslim garrison in Ascalon, internal conflicts within the Fatimid court and military led to the assassination of Fatimid vizier and general
Al-Adil ibn al-Sallar, while preparing the Fatimid fleet for a counterattack. His stepson
Abbas ibn Abi al-Futuh who was involved in his murder then went back to Egypt to be appointed a vizier in his stead, leaving Ascalon without his troops. In July 1153, six months after the start of the siege, there was a breach in the wall followed by a failed attack by the
Templars. By that point the siege was almost abandoned, but
Raymond du Puy convinced the king to resume. On 19 August, Ascalon's anchorage was taken and its defenders were subdued by the Crusaders.
Ibn al-Qalanisi recorded that upon the city's surrender, all Muslims with the means to do so emigrated from the city. The Fatimids secured the head of Husayn from
its mausoleum outside the city and transported it to their capital
Cairo. A year after the conquest, Muslim geographer
Muhammad al-Idrisi described the city's markets and fortifications, but also the destrcution of its environs, caused by its siege. Ascalon became a crusader lordship and was granted to
Amalric, the
count of Jaffa and Baldwin III's brother, who later succeeded him as king. Together the two formed the
County of Jaffa and Ascalon, which became one of the four major seigneuries of the
Kingdom of Jerusalem. The great mosque was turned into a church – the Cathedral of St. Paul and the city was turned into a
diocese directly under the
Patriarch of Jerusalem. Eventually a decision from Rome subordinated it to the Bishop of
Bethlehem. The Fatimid dynasty continued to disintegrate due to internal conflicts and could not retake Ascalon.
Ayyubid destruction and Third Crusade (1187–1191) Saladin, the founder of the
Ayyubid dynasty which abolished the Fatimid state, marched on Ascalon by September 1187, as part of his conquest of the
Crusader States following the
Battle of Hattin. He took with him the crusader prisoners, King
Guy of Lusignan and Templar Grand Master
Gerard of Ridefort. The prisoners were promised liberty should the city surrender under their command, but the Christian troops at Ascalon did not obey their captured king's commands. The city surrendered after a brief, yet harsh battle. The Christian population was deported to
Alexandria and from there to Europe. The Ayyubid rule of Ascalon was short-lived. In 1191, during the
Third Crusade, Saladin ordered to methodically demolish the city because of its potential strategic importance to the crusaders. This is captured in an anecdote in which a reluctant Saladin is reported to have exclaimed: "
Wallah, I would rather see my children perish than lose Ascalon!" The destruction of the city and the deportation of its inhabitants is well described in Islamic sources. Some Muslim scholars including
Ibn al-Athir have recounted that the destruction of Ascalon was forced upon him by his emirs. A few hundred Jews, Karaites and Rabbanites, were living in Ascalon in the second half of the 12th century, but moved to Jerusalem following its destruction. In January 1192, crusade leader
King Richard the Lionheart of England, proceeded to reconstruct Ascalon's fortifications, an endeavor that lasted four months. It thus became the most formidable fortress along the Mediterranean coast. This fact hampered the negotiations between Richard and Saladin in 1192, as Saladin demanded its destruction. Eventually,
peace was signed in Jaffa and the city's recently constructed fortifications were destroyed yet again by September 1192.
Crusader recapture (1229–1247) In 1229, following the
Treaty of Jaffa, which concluded the
Sixth Crusade, brought Ascalon back to Crusader hands. And yet, because of internal strife among the crusaders, the city remained in ruins until the Ayyubids made it a frontal post to their base in
Gaza. In 1239, the
Barons' Crusade was launched, led by
Theobald I of Navarre who planned an assault on Ayyubid forces in Egypt. He encamped in the ruins of Ascalon, later abandoning it after one of his men,
Henry II, disobeyed his orders and led a failed assault on Gaza. The
Knights Hospitaller signed a peace agreement with the Ayyubids and Ascalon was given to the Crusaders, who were permitted to reconstruct its fortifications. The work on Ascalon's fortifications was first overseen by Theobald I until his depart to Europe. After him, it was
Hugh IV, Duke of Burgundy who replaced him and ultimately,
Richard of Cornwall oversaw its completion in April 1241, again becoming one of the strongest strongholds in the Mediterranean, with a double wall and series of towers. In a letter, Richard described Ascalon as the "key" to both land and sea, and as a permanent threat to Egypt. During Sultan
As-Salih Ayyub's conflict against the crusaders, he exploited crusader defeats in Jerusalem to march on Ascalon. In 1244, the Egyptian army headed by
Baybars, defeated the Hospitaller troops at Gaza and blockaded Ascalon. The city's garrison managed to hold against the Egyptian troops. In June 1247, after capturing Damascus, the Egyptians dedicated all of the military efforts to Ascalon, and the city fell on 15 October 1247, after an assault headed by
Fakhr al-Din ibn al-Shaykh. Afterwards, As-Salih Ayyub ordered again the dismantling of the walls. ==Mamluk Sultanate (1270-1517), the end of Ascalon and beginning of Majdal Asqalan==