For three days Antioch was sacked, in which 17,000 persons were killed and 100,000 taken prisoners. 8,000 took refuge in the castle, but eventually surrendered. Baibars had the fortress burned, the churches of St. Paul and
St. Peter, and the other churches were destroyed or were left ruins. The
monastery of Saint Simeon Stylites the Younger outside of Antioch was also destroyed during the campaign. The Hospitaller fortress
Krak des Chevaliers fell three years later. While
Louis IX of France launched the
Eighth Crusade ostensibly to reverse these setbacks, it went to
Tunis, instead of Constantinople, as Louis' brother,
Charles of Anjou, had initially advised, though Charles I clearly benefited from the treaty between Antioch and Tunis that ultimately resulted from the Crusade. By the time of his death in 1277, Baibars had confined the Crusaders to a few strongholds along the coast and they were forced out of the Middle East by the beginning of the fourteenth century. The fall of Antioch was to prove as detrimental to the crusaders cause as
its capture was instrumental in the initial success of the
First Crusade. ==References==