'Al-Nasir Muhammad' (Arabic :الناصر Ù…ØÙ…د) (Epithet: 'al-Malik al-Nasir Nasir al-Din Muhammad ben Qalawun') ( Arabic: الملك الناصر ناصر الدين Ù…ØÙ…د بن قلاوون)) ( born 1285, died
1341) was the
Mamluke sultan of
Egypt from December
1293, with two interruptions to his death in 1341. The son of
Qalawun, he was only eight-years-old when he succeeded his elder brother
Al-Ashraf Khalil . His reign was in three stages, marked by temporary depositions, the first but a year after he first came to the throne. In 1298 he was back in power, but was deposed again in 1298 - 1308, after which his long reign marked the apogee of Mamluk power and the high-water mark of culture in Egypt since Ptolemaic Alexandria.
Extraordinary public works were set in motion. He redug the canal once again connecting Alexandria with the Nile: it was opened to traffic in 1311 and required workforces on a Pharaonic scale. He also erected an aqueduct to conduct water from the Nile to the citadel of Cairo. He built thirty mosques, among the most splendid examples of
Islamic architecture, in addition to
madrasas and magnificent public baths. His own mosque in the Citadel (1318) was decorated with stone brought in triumph from the ruined cathedral of
Akka, the Crusaders' "Acre", which had fallen to
al-Ashraf Khalil's forces in 1291. The siege of Acre was started by his father
Qalawun. However,
Qalawun died in 1290 before the city was taken.
Perhaps the greatest and most vicious of the Mamluk sultans, al-Nasr Muhammad was revered as a powerful leader. He (year ?) added to his father's complex of structures Cairo's first ''sabeel'', a fountain for the use of all, especially welcome to the poor who might not have access to a well.
War With the Mongols
During al-Nasir Muhammad's reign the Mongols invaded Syria in 1303. al-Nasir with his army marched from Egypt to Syria to engage the Mongols. A memorable battle was fought called, the
Battle of Shaqhab. The Mamluks defeated the Mongols and saved Syria once again from the invasion of Mongols.
Legacy
His prominence was such that he received a
Mongol princess and the great-great-granddaughter of
Genghis Khan, Tulubiyya, in marriage. His eldest son and chosen successor, Anuk, predeceased him in 1339. al-Nasr Muhammad skipped over the next son, Ahmad (whose mother was a dancer named Bayad), considering him too frivolous. His choice fell on his son
al-Mansur Abu Bakr. Ultimately however, no less than 8 of his sons would become sultans:
1.
al-Mansur Abu Bakr
2.
al-Ashraf Kuchuk
3.
al-Nasr Ahmad
4.
al-Salih Ismail
5.
al-Kamil Shaban
6.
al-Muzzafar Hajji
7.
al-Nasr Hasan
8.
al-Salih Salih
See also
★
Qala'un Mosque
References
★ Stewart, Desmond, ''Great Cairo: Mother of the World''