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Essay about Mamluk Society and Rule in Egypt and Syria

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The Mamluk sultanate was established in Cairo in 1250 with the defeat of the Ayyubid dynasty and solidifying control of Egypt and Syria. The Mamluks were Turkic slave soldiers and had existed as regimental groups throughout the Ayyubid dynastic area, and were purchased as servants to the state and the overthrow of the Ayyubids by the Mamluks marks the supremacy of the the military slave state in the Islamic world. Mamluk society and rule was largely non-hereditary and presumably implemented to reduce factionalism but in actuality enhanced it as the death of each sultan brought on questions of succession and legitimacy. Sultans were at the mercy of their Amirs, or commanders, both for legitimacy through loyalty and military allegiance and …show more content…

However, due to a lack of central authority within the Mamluk system, problems arose regarding who the master was and he loyalties immaterial of the individual slave soldier. However, a certain degree of authority was hereditary, as royal slaves held by the sultan, or slaves who had been manumitted, may have remained loyal to his heirs offering a measure of continuity amongst factionalism.7 A Mamluk army, therefore, could be imagined as a collection of personal regiments of the Sultan and also of those officers and soldiers loyal to the Sultan, and therefore the Mamluk military force was not necessarily one of hierarchy but of allegiances.8 Sultans, moreover, obtained their title not through heredity, but through a demonstration to their peers that they were capable.9 Sultans in this way can be imagined not as leaders of a codified state

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