Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Rashid ad-Din Sinan

 
Wikipedia: Rashid ad-Din Sinan

Bismillahi r-Rahmani r-Rahim Part of a series on Shī‘ah Islam
Ismāʿīlism

Ismail lion 7.png

Concepts

The Qur'ān · The Ginans
Reincarnation · Panentheism
Imām · Pir · Dā‘ī l-Muṭlaq
‘Aql · Numerology · Taqiyya
Żāhir · Bāṭin

Seven Pillars

Guardianship · Prayer · Charity
Fasting · Pilgrimage · Struggle
Purity · Profession of Faith

History

Shoaib  · Nabi Shu'ayb
Seveners  · Qarmatians
Abu 'Abdullah al-Shi'i
Fatimids  · Baghdad Manifesto
Hamza ibn ‘Alī  · ad-Darazī
Hafizi · Taiyabi  · Ainsarii
Hassan-i Sabbah  · Alamut
Sinan  · Hashshashīn
Pir Sadardin  · Satpanth
Aga Khan  · Jama'at Khana

Early Imams

Ali · Ḥassan · Ḥusain
as-Sajjad · al-Baqir · aṣ-Ṣādiq
Ismā‘īl · Muḥammad
Aḥmad · at-Taqī · az-Zakī
al-Mahdī · al-Qā'im · al-Manṣūr
al-Mu‘izz · al-‘Azīz · al-Ḥākim
az-Zāhir · al-Mustansir · al-Musta′lī · al-Amīr · al-Qāṣim

Groups & leaders

Nizārī - Aga Khan IV
Druze - Mowafak Tarif
Dawūdī - Burhanuddin
Sulaimanī - Al-Fakhri Abdullah
Alavī - Ṭayyib Ziyā'u d-Dīn
Atba-i-Malak Badra - Amiruddin
Atba-i-Malak Vakil - Razzak
Hebtiahs

Rashid ad-Din Sinan, also known as the Old Man of the Mountain, was one of the leaders of the Syrian wing of the Hashshashin sect and an important figure in the history of the Crusades.

Latin sources from the crusader states call him Vetulus de Montanis, derived from the Arabic title Shaykh al Jabal, which means prince or elder of the mountain.

According to his autobiography, of which only fragments survive, Rashid came to Alamut, the centre of the Hashshashins, as a youth and received the typical Hashshashin training. In 1162, the sect's leader Hassan II sent him to Syria, where he proclaimed Qiyamah, which in Nizari terminology meant the time of the Qa'im and the removal of Islamic law. Based on the Nizari stronghold Masyaf, he controlled various districts in northern Syria, namely Jabal as-Summaq, Ma'arrat Masrin and Sarmin.

His chief enemy was the Sultan Saladin, who ruled over Egypt and Syria. Saladin twice managed to elude assassination attempts ordered by Rashid and as he was marching against Aleppo, Saladin devastated the Nizari possessions. In 1176, Saladin laid siege to Masyaf but he lifted the siege after two notable events that transpired between him and the old man of the Mountain. One night his soldiers had found the old man of the mountain and his personal guard wandering the mountains but failed to attack him because as the soldiers reported they were held back by some mystical power. Saladin suffered terrible dreams and one night Saladin awoke to find freshly baked hotcakes, the type only the Assassins made, and a poisoned dagger next to his bed. He believed the old man of the mountain himself had laid them there. Saladin promptly lifted siege and had to accept the independence of the Hasshashin principality.

His last notable act occurred in 1192, when he ordered the assassination of the newly elected King of Jerusalem Conrad of Montferrat. Whether this happened in coordination with King Richard I of England or Saladin remains speculation.

Rashid enjoyed considerable independence from the Nizari centre in Alamut and some writings attribute him with a semi-divine status. He died between 1192 and 1194 and was succeeded by men appointed from Alamut, which regained a closer supervision over Masyaf.

Appearances in Fiction

References

  • Halm, Heinz, Die Schia, Darmstadt 1988, pp. 228f.
  • Runciman, Steven: A history of the Crussades Volume 2: The kingdom of Jerusalem and the Frankish East pp. 410

External links


Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Rashid ad-Din Sinan" Read more