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We recall that after his defeat by Yaḥyā in 1202/599, Qarāqūsh had established himself in Waddān with his family and followers. Yaḥyā was intent on settling scores with his old rival. He formed an alliance with the Dabbāb of Banū Sulaym. Qarāqūsh had massacred the leaders of this tribe, including their chief Ḥamīd b. Jāriya, at the Qaṣr al-ʿArūsayn in Qābis nearly twenty years previously and they were eager to exact revenge on the old Ayyubid mamlūk. In 1212/609 Yaḥyā laid siege to Waddān with the intent of starving the defenders out since the site was too strong to take in a frontal assault.
Eventually Qarāqūsh was forced to surrender. He did not even bother to plead for his life since there was no chance that the Dabbāb would be satisfied by anything short of his death. He asked only that he be executed before his son, whom he loved dearly, so that he would not have to witness the latter’s death. When Qarāqūsh was led out of Waddān his son asked him “Oh father where are they taking us?” to which Qarāqūsh replied “To the place where we took their fathers.”
Qarāqūsh was executed first, followed by his son. Then his body was crucified and displayed outside of Waddān. Al-Tijānī reports that he heard the story of the execution of Qarāqūsh from the Banū Dabbāb in his own day, and that this story had been passed down from their grandfathers who witnessed the event.
Qarāqūsh had another son who survived him and took service with the Hafsids, eventually rising to become a commander under the Hafsid caliph caliph al-Mustanṣir (1249/647 - 1277/675). According to al-Tijānī he revolted against the Hafsids and followed in the footsteps of his father by invading the Saharan oases. He sacked and razed Waddān, the oasis town where his father had been killed. This prompted the intervention of the king of Kanem who defeated and executed this son of Qarāqūsh in 1258/656.
Re: Оффтопgrey_koalaNovember 23 2015, 13:03:47 UTC
Ого, какая драма. Спасибо за сюжет. Я вот перевод сдам и возьму творческий отпуск - сяду Льва дописывать. Ибо худ. перевод и писальство оказались для меня несовместимыми.
Eventually Qarāqūsh was forced to surrender. He did not even bother to plead for his life since there was no chance that the Dabbāb would be satisfied by anything short of his death. He asked only that he be executed before his son, whom he loved dearly, so that he would not have to witness the latter’s death. When Qarāqūsh was led out of Waddān his son asked him “Oh father where are they taking us?” to which Qarāqūsh replied “To the place where we took their fathers.”
Qarāqūsh was executed first, followed by his son. Then his body was crucified and displayed outside of Waddān. Al-Tijānī reports that he heard the story of the execution of Qarāqūsh from the Banū Dabbāb in his own day, and that this story had been passed down from their grandfathers who witnessed the event.
Qarāqūsh had another son who survived him and took service with the Hafsids, eventually rising to become a commander under the Hafsid caliph caliph al-Mustanṣir (1249/647 - 1277/675). According to al-Tijānī he revolted against the Hafsids and followed in the footsteps of his father by invading the Saharan oases. He sacked and razed Waddān, the oasis town where his father had been killed. This prompted the intervention of the king of Kanem who defeated and executed this son of Qarāqūsh in 1258/656.
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Я вот перевод сдам и возьму творческий отпуск - сяду Льва дописывать. Ибо худ. перевод и писальство оказались для меня несовместимыми.
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