Hassan Sabbah is the supposed founder of …
Years: 1094 - 1094
Hassan Sabbah is the supposed founder of the so-called Assassins of Persia, an anti-Sunnite Ismaili Muslim sect.
The Assassins, in one of their first political killings, are supposedly behind the killing of Malik Shah’s Persian minister, the seventy-four-year-old Nizam al-Mulk, on October 14, 1092, thus (eventually) lending their name to the later English word for a politically motivated murderer.
The Seljuq sultan, Malik Shah, dies a few weeks later in November at age thirty-seven.
At the death, in 1094, of Fatimid caliph al-Mustansir, the caliphate in Egypt is divided between his two sons.
Sabbah, leading a group of fanatical Ismaili partisans of al-Mustansir’s deposed eldest son, Nizar, seizes a string of mountain fortresses in northern Persia—notably Alamut in Daylam in the Elburz Mountains—and Syria, waging from these strongholds a war of terror against orthodox Muslims in their effort to create a new Fatimid caliphate.
(This group, joining with Sabbah’s terrorists, is known in the West as Assassins, a designation that derives from the Arabic ”hashashin,” meaning "users of hashish," based on stories—unconfirmed in any Ismaili sources—related by Marco Polo and others that the group employs hallucinatory drugs to stimulate them to their murderous acts.)
Locations
People
Groups
- Persian people
- Islam
- Muslims, Sunni
- Muslims, Shi'a
- Ismailism
- Abbasid Caliphate (Baghdad)
- Turkmen people
- Fatimid Caliphate
- Seljuq Empire (Isfahan)
- Assassins
