Qalawun directs his energies against the Il-Khanid …
Years: 1281 - 1281
Qalawun directs his energies against the Il-Khanid Mongols, thus providing a respite for the beleaguered crusader states, who in 1280 had again failed to join the Mongols.
Qalawun and Sungur reconcile in 1281 as a matter of convenience when the Mongol Il-Khan emperor of Persia, Abaqa, invades Syria.
In response to the Mamluk victories over Mongols at Ain Jalut in 1260 and Elbistan in 1277, the Il-khan Abaqa sends his brother Möngke Temur at the head of a large army said to have numbered eighty thousand: fifty thousand Mongols and thirty thousand auxiliaries, chiefly Georgians under Demetrius II and Armenians under Leo II.
The two armies meet south of Homs, a city in western Syria, on October 29, 1281.
In a pitched battle, the Georgians, Armenians and Oirats under King Leo II and Mongol generals rout and scatter the Mamluk left flank, but the Mamluks, personally led by Sultan Qalawun, destroy the Mongol center.
Möngke Temur is wounded and flees, followed by his disorganized army.
However, Qalawun chooses to not pursue the defeated enemy, and the Georgian-Armenian auxiliaries of the Mongols manage to withdraw safely.
This effectively ends the Mongol threat to Egypt.
Locations
People
Groups
- Georgians
- Armenian people
- Muslims, Sunni
- Syrian people
- Oirats
- Georgia, (Bagratid) Kingdom of
- Mongols
- Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia, or Little Armenia
- Mongol Empire
- Egypt and Syria, Mamluk Bahri Sultanate of
- Palestine, Mamluk
- Il-khanate
Topics
- Crusades, The
- Mongol Conquests
- Mongol Invasions of Syria
- Late Crusades Period: Crusader-Turkish Wars of 1272-1303
- Homs, Second Battle of
