Mujāhid returns to Sardinia in 1016 intending…
February 1016 CE
Mujāhid returns to Sardinia in 1016 intending a more thorough conquest of the island.
To this end he has brought along a reported thousand horses from the Balearics.
On these islands, which are renowned for their horses and mules, Mujāhid has reformed the tax system and put the stables at the service of the government in preparation for his expedition.
He arrives off Sardinia with a large fleet and a landing force capable of a rapid conquest.
The local Sardinian ruler, Salusio, the judge of Cagliari, is killed in the fighting and the organized resistance breaks down.
His troops may have met up with garrisons that had remained on the island after the failed expedition of 1015.
He also establishes a beachhead at Luni, on the coast between Genoa and Pisa, according to the eleventh-century German chronicler and bishop Thietmar of Merseburg (Thitmarus), who misdates the event to 1015.
Luni is reportedly taken by surprise, but the citizens and the bishop manage to flee.
Both town and countryside are pillaged without resistance.