Castle of al-Al

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The Castle of al-Al, also ʿAlʿāl

popular etymology, with no historical base.[3]

Al-Qalanisi, a politician and historian from nearby Damascus, is the only contemporary chronicler of the castle's existence and history. H. A. R. Gibb, Qalanisi's first English translator, claims that the Damascene Chronicle is an accurate chronology of events.[4] According to Sharon's 1997 theory, all medieval Muslim chronicles after al-Qalanisi are sourced on him and therefore do not prove the castle's existence.

The identification with the ruins at the site of Qasr Bardawil was abandoned after it being classified as a Bronze Age site.[5][6]

History

The history of the castle is based on the Continuation of the Chronicle of Damascus, the main work of contemporary Damascene politician and historian Ibn al-Qalanisi (c. 1071–1160), who writes that the Franks built the castle in 1105 and that Toghtekin, atabeg of Damascus, captured it, returning to Damascus with a huge amount of booty on December 24 of the same year.[1][5] Qalanisi describes Toghtekin's motive as his fear that, once the allegedly impregnable castle was completed, it would be more difficult to "undo".[1] He makes however no explicit mention of Toghtekin demolishing the castle.[1]

Sibt ibn al-Jawzi (c. 1185–1256), author of Mirāt al-Zamān fī Tārīkh al-Ā‘yān ('Mirror of time in histories of the notables'), adds or modifies several of Qalanisi's details: Tughtegin's attack took place during the night, and his return to Damascus happened at a much later date, in February/March 1106.[6] More such details come from al-Jawzi and another historian who used Qalanisi's chronicle as a source, Ibn al-Athir (1160-1233): the castle had a garrison of no less than 200 men, and Tughtegin destroyed the castle after assessing the position as too exposed to Frankish counter-attacks.[7]

Moshe Sharon, in his monumental

Carta, editor Moshe Kochavi).[3]

The castle was one of three, including

Crusader findings at al-'Al

A 1969 survey of the village of al-'Al revealed pottery typical of the Crusader period in the centre of the village, where ancient ruins of different ages were identified over an area of about 100 dunams (c. 25 acres).[11] Further possible Crusader-period findings were the large ashlars with chiselled margins found in traces of walls visible beneath the modern village, which could suggest that a large medieval building had once protected the spring located in the wadi below, possibly associated with the fortress.[11]

Rejected identification with Qasr Bardawil

Location and description

Qasr Bardawil (

Arabic: قصر بردويل, coordinates: 32°49′11.23″N 35°44′32.57″E / 32.8197861°N 35.7423806°E / 32.8197861; 35.7423806) is an archaeological site on the Golan Heights containing the ruins of a fortified settlement.[5]

It held a strategic position that could potentially control the

Baysan to Damascus, and is located some 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) east of the Lake of Tiberias[6]

The triangular rocky spur measures about 110 metres (360 ft) from north to south, with its northern side about 90 metres (300 ft) wide.

casemate wall, of which only traces of the oval and rectangular chambers remain along with masses of collapsed unmortared masonry.[5]

Attempted identification

Paul Deschamps [fr] surveyed the area in the 1930s and identified the fortified spur known as Qasr Bardawil with a Crusader castle mentioned in a Damascene chronicle, allegedly built by King Baldwin I.[5] Deschamps argued that Qasr Bardawil was a Crusader castle, which dominated a village by the name of al-'Al[6] Pringle quotes "Deschaps and others" as supporting this theory.[5]

Bardawil is the way the Frankish name of King Baldwin is rendered in Arabic. This fact and the site's location made it appear to be a good candidate for the castle mentioned by Qalanisi.[6]

Rejection

A 1968 archaeological survey of the site concluded that its main habitation period dates to the Middle Bronze Age II.[5] As a result, its identification with an alleged Crusader castle has been found to be unsubstantiated.[6][3] Denys Pringle lists the ruins at Qasr Bardawil under "Rejects" in his gazetteer of Crusader fortifications, due to lack of medieval material at the site.[5]

Conclusion

In spite of the site's location and Arabic name, the survey results exclude it from being the Crusader castle mentioned by Qalanisi.[6] Therefore, Micaela Sinibaldi considers the castle to be, as of 2014, still unidentified.[6]

Gallery

  • 1935 vertical aerial view of al-'Al
    1935 vertical aerial view of al-'Al
  • Qasr Bardawil, the Bronze Age site (2021)
    Qasr Bardawil, the Bronze Age site (2021)
  • Qasr Bardawil, Bronze Age site on the Golan Heights (2021)
    Qasr Bardawil, Bronze Age site on the Golan Heights (2021)

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Gibb (2002)[1932], pp. 71-2.
  2. ^ a b c Runciman (1999)[1951], p. 95.
  3. ^ a b c d e Sharon (1997), p. 34.
  4. ^ Gibb (2002)[1932], "Introduction", p. 10.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i Pringle (1997), Qasr Bardawil (R14), p. 117.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i Sinibaldi (2014), pp. 17-18, 56-57.
  7. ^ a b Devais (2010), p. 74 with note 16.
  8. ^ Hunin Fortress (Qal’at Hunin). Carta Jerusalem, accessed 4 Oct 2021.
  9. ^ Pringle (1997), Qal'at Hunin (No. 164), p. 79.
  10. ^ Kennedy (2001), p. 40.
  11. ^ a b Gibson & Urman (1990-1)

Bibliography

Further reading

External links