About 1114. Abul Muzafar ’Ali, Wazir of Sanjár Shah, and Chakar
Beg, grand-uncle of the latter. 1116. Ahmed Yel, Prince of Maragha,
at Baghdad, in the presence of Mahomed, Sultan of Persia. 1121.
The Amir Afdhal, the powerful Wazir of Egypt, at Cairo. 1126.
Kasim Aksonkor, Prince of Mosul and Aleppo, in the Great Mosque at
Mosul. 1127. Moyin-uddin, Wazir of Sanjár Shah of Persia. 1129.
Amír Billah, Khalif of Egypt. 1131. Taj-ul Mulúk Buri, Prince of
Damascus. 1134. Shams-ul-Mulúk, son of the preceding. 1135–38.
The Khalif Mostarshid, the Khalif Rashíd, and Daùd, Seljukian
Prince of Azerbaijan. 1149. Raymond, Count of Tripoli. 1191. Kizil
Arzlan, Prince of Azerbaijan. 1192. Conrad of Montferrat, titular
King of Jerusalem; a murder which King Richard has been accused of
instigating. 1217. Oghulmish, Prince of Hamadán.
And in 1174 and 1176 attempts to murder the great Saladin. 1271.
Attempt to murder Ala’uddin Juwaini, Governor of Baghdad, and
historian of the Mongols. 1272. The attempt to murder Prince Edward
of England at Acre.
In latter years the _Fidáwí_ or Ismailite adepts appear to have
let out their services simply as hired assassins. Bibars, in a
letter to his court at Cairo, boasts of using them when needful. A
Mahomedan author ascribes to Bibars the instigation of the attempt
on Prince Edward. (_Makrizi_, II. 100; _J. As._ XI. 150.)
NOTE 2.—Hammer mentions as what he chooses to call “Grand Priors”
under the Shaikh or “Grand Master” at Alamút, the chief, in Syria,
one in the Kuhistan of E. Persia (Tun-o-Kaïn), one in Kumis (the
country about Damghan and Bostam), and one in ’Irák; he does not
speak of any in Kurdistan. Colonel Monteith, however, says,
though without stating authority or particulars, “There were
several divisions of them (the Assassins) scattered throughout
Syria, _Kurdistan_ (near the Lake of Wan), and Asia Minor, but
all acknowledging as Imaum or High Priest the Chief residing at
Alamut.” And it may be noted that Odoric, a generation after Polo,
puts the Old Man at _Millescorte_, which looks like _Malasgird_,
north of Lake Van. (_H. des Assass._ p. 104; _J. R. G. S._ III. 16;
_Cathay_, p. ccxliii.)
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[1] This story has been transferred to Peter the Great, who is alleged
to have exhibited the docility of his subjects in the same way to
the King of Denmark, by ordering a Cossack to jump from the Round
Tower at Copenhagen, on the summit of which they were standing.