The siege of Tripoli, a city ruled …

Years: 1108 - 1108

The siege of Tripoli, a city ruled by the Banu Ammar emirs (theoretically vassals of the Fatimid caliphs in Cairo) has been going on since 1102, and in 1108, it becomes more and more difficult to bring food by land to the city’s besieged residents.

Many citizens seek to flee to Homs, Tyre, and Damascus.

The nobles of the city, who had betrayed the city to the Franks by showing them how it was being resupplied with food, are executed in the crusader camp.

Fakhr al-Mulk, left to wait for help from the Seljuq sultan Muhammad I, goes to Baghdad at the end of March with five hundred troops and many gifts.

He passes through Damascus, now governed by Toghtegin after the death of Duqaq, and is welcomed with open arms.

In Baghdad, the sultan receives him with great spectacle, but has no time for Tripoli while there is a succession dispute in Mosul.

Fakhr al-Mulk returns to Damascus in August, where he learns the nobles of Tripoli have handed over the city to al-Afdal Shahanshah, vizier of Egypt, who had tired of waiting for him to return.

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