:''The "Siege of Antioch" may also refer to two battles in
1097 and
1098 during the
First Crusade; see
Siege of Antioch.''
The Siege of Antioch occurred in 1268 when the Mamelukes under Baibars finally succeeded in capturing the city of Antioch. Prior to the siege, the Crusader Principality was oblivious to the loss of the city as demonstrated when Baibars sent negotiators to the leader of the former Crusader state and mocking his use of "Prince" in the title Prince of Antioch.
Prelude to the Siege
In
1260 Baibars, the
Sultan of
Egypt and
Syria, began to threaten the
crusader state of
Antioch, which (as a vassal of the
Armenians) had supported the
Mongols, the traditional enemies of the Turks. In 1265, Baibars took
Caesarea,
Haifa and
Arsuf and massacred the inhabitants. A year later, Baibars conquered
Galilee and devastated Cilician
Armenia.
Siege of Antioch
In
1268 Baibars besieged
the city of Antioch, capturing it on
18 May. He razed the city and killed or enslaved the population. Antioch had been weakened by its previous struggles with Armenia and internal power struggles. With the fall of Antioch, the rest of Syria quickly fell and the influence of the Franks in Syria was at an end.
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 the Middle East due to the machinations of
Charles of Anjou and his obsession to convert the Arabs there. Louis IX lost his life to disease in the Crusade.
Aftermath
By the time of his death in 1277, Baibars had forced the Crusaders to a few strongholds along the coast and the Crusaders 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 to the initial success of the
first Crusade. Followng its capture, the population of Antioch consisting primarily of Armenians was put to the sword. The estimated casualties according to a Muslim source is "more than 100,000". Later, the Mamelukes would repeat the same destruction in Acre where the massacre of the civilians there was fustrated by the evacuation attempts of the Templar Knights, whom managed to save a number of civilians to the relative safety of Cyprus.