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Hashshashin
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The Hashshashin (also Hashishin, Hashashiyyin, or Hashasheen) from which the word assassins is thought to originate, was the Persian derived designation of the Nizari branch of the Isma'ili Shia Muslims during the Middle Ages. The Nizari or Hashshashin as they were designated by their enemies split from the Fatmid Isma'ili Empire following a dispute regarding the succession of their spiritual and political leader the Fatimid Caliph Ma'ad al-Mustansir Billah.
They are survived by the Shia Imami Isma'ili Muslims in the contemporary world, otherwise known as the Nizari, and are currently led by the Aga Khan IV their 49th Imam.
The Empire Despite being a minority, within a minority, the Isma'ili under the leadership of their Imams succeeded in establishing a generational secretive underground movement against the Abbasid Caliphate.

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The Hashshashin (also Hashishin, Hashashiyyin, or Hashasheen) from which the word assassins is thought to originate, was the Persian derived designation of the Nizari branch of the Isma'ili Shia Muslims during the Middle Ages. The Nizari or Hashshashin as they were designated by their enemies split from the Fatmid Isma'ili Empire following a dispute regarding the succession of their spiritual and political leader the Fatimid Caliph Ma'ad al-Mustansir Billah.
They are survived by the Shia Imami Isma'ili Muslims in the contemporary world, otherwise known as the Nizari, and are currently led by the Aga Khan IV their 49th Imam.
History
The Empire Despite being a minority, within a minority, the Isma'ili under the leadership of their Imams succeeded in establishing a generational secretive underground movement against the Abbasid Caliphate. They based their ideas on Greek philosophy, and mysticism, and an end to perceived corruption and greed. They would turn their revolutionary ideals into reality by establishing the first Shia state; the Fatimid Empire, spanning across the Mediterranean and Levant. Its capital was Cairo in Egypt, culturally brilliant with some of the finest institutes of learning in the known world, the empire would bring scientific, and social breakthroughs to all its peoples, including religious freedom.
The eighth Fatimid Caliph and Isma'ili Imam Ma'ad al-Mustansir Billah took ill in Cairo, his powerful Vizier Al-Afdal took the reins of state power, following the death of the Caliph, Vizier Al-Afdal lead a palace coup d'etat, appointing his brother in-law the Caliphs younger son Ahmed whom he dubbed Al-Musta'ali. The heir apparent Nizar himself left for Alexandria where he was given strong local support and lead a rebellion, but he was eventually defeated and executed on his brothers orders. This caused a split in the Fatimid Empire amongst Isma'ili.
Alamut
Nizar's supporters, called the Nizariyya or Nizari, continued his cause under the charismatic Iranian leadership of Hassan-i Sabbah who was the leading Isma'ili missionary "Da'i", of the secret Fatimid propagation machine within the enemy Abbasid Caliphate. Hassan-i Sabbah successfully gained the majority support of Fatimid Shia east of Egypt within the Levant, Persia (Iran), and Iraq, and a small underground following within the the Empires heart (Egypt and north Africa). By breaking with the Fatimid Empire consequently losing its support, and gaining it's enmity; the followers of Hassan-i Sabbah found themselves alone and outnumbered in enemy territory.
Not merely content to survive, but instead to build a new utopia, the Nizari formulated a daring strategy of gaining control of strategically important fortresses by covertly converting local inhabitants living within and around strategically vital fortresses to Isma'ili Shi'ism and seizing control. They established a new kind of state consisting of a number of "island" fortified settlements within a sea of hostility in present day Iran, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon. The formal origin of the Federation of the Assassins is marked as 1090 when Hassan-i Sabbah established his first stronghold in the Daylam at the fortress of Alamut ('The Place of the Eagle's Teaching' or "Eagles Nest"), south of the Caspian Sea. Alamut remained capital of the federation, and home of it's rulers "The Lords of Alamut", until it's destruction.
Lacking a conventional army Hassan employed the strategy of assassination and inciting terror to deter the threat of the Abbasid Caliphate, assassinating its most powerful anti-Nizari members.
The power of the Hashshashin was destroyed by the Mongol warlord Hulagu Khan during the Mongol assault of Alamut on December 15, 1256. The Syrian branch of the Hashshashin was destroyed in 1273 by the Mamluk Sultan Baibars. The Hashshashin captured and held Alamut for a few months in 1275 but their political power was lost. They continued being used under the Mamluks; Ibn Battuta recorded in the 14th century their fixed rate of pay per murder, in exchange they were allowed to exist.
Eventually resorting to the act of Taqq'iya dissimulation, hiding their true identities until their Imams would awaken them.
The library of Alamut was destroyed, along with much of their Persian power base, and thus much of the sect's own records were lost; most accounts of them stem from the polemic of Arab historians of the period. However, Soviet scientists, in order to understand more of communities existing within their vast empire, set about conducting surveys and discovered small Isma'ili communities isolated by treacherous terrain living within central Asia. Professor Vladimir Alexeyevich Ivanov, a Russian Orientalist, collected and published first-hand accounts, accompanied by his commentary of the Hashashin from original sources.
The Hashashin are survived by the Nizari under the leadership of Agha Khan IV. The Nizari continue the work started by the Soviets, and later Western scholors collecting, preserving and publishing literary works from Nizari Isma'ili communities. They have set up the Institute of Ismaili Studies in order to publish scholarly work by leading academics on the Nizari. Much of this work deals with the Hashashin period, including their history, science, and philosophy.
Assassination
Unable to mount a conventional military army, the Nizari developed a form of asymmetric warfare transforming the act of political assassination into a system of survival and defense against greed, corruption, injustice and foreign domination, they trained highly capable sleeper commandos known as Fedayeen, who would covertly infiltrate enemy positions and remain undercover. If Nizari civilians were facing pogroms or forts imminent attack the Fedayeen were activated to prevent an attack,
Fedayeen used their well-known deadliness for political goals without necessarily killing; for example, a victim, usually high-placed, might one morning find a Hashshashin dagger lying on his pillow upon awakening. This was a plain hint to the targeted individual that he was not safe anywhere, that maybe even his inner group of servants had been infiltrated by the assassins, and that whatever course of action had brought him into conflict with the Hashashashin would have to be stopped if he wanted to live.
Within Persian Iran they employed their tactics directly against the Seljuk Turks, rulers who had been persecuting Nizari sects. They were meticulous in killing the targeted individual, seeking to do so without any additional casualties and loss of innocent life, although they were careful to cultivate their terrifying reputation by slaying their victims in public. Typically, they approached using a disguise, or were already sleeper agents in an entourage. Preferring a small hidden blade or dagger, they rejected poison, bows and other weapons that allowed the attacker to escape and live. For unarmed combat, the Hashshashin practiced a fighting style called Janna which incorporated striking techniques, grappling and low kicks. However, under no circumstances did they commit suicide, preferring to be killed by their enemies once the assassination had taken place.
Within the Levant it is believed that Saladin, incensed by several almost-successful Hashshashin attempts on his life, besieged their chief Syrian stronghold of Masyaf during his reconquest of Outremer in 1176. He quickly lifted the siege after parley, and thereafter attempted to maintain good relations with the sect. The sect's own accounts tell of Rashid ad-Din Sinan stealing into Saladin's tent in the heart of his camp, and leaving a poisoned cake and a note saying "You are in our power" on Saladin's chest as he slept. Another account tells of a letter sent to Saladin's maternal uncle, vowing death to the entire royal line; perhaps no idle threat. Whatever the truth of these accounts (and likely it will remain a mystery) Saladin's uncle clearly heeded their warning, and desisted.
The Hashshashin were often motivated by outsiders. The murder of the Patriarch of Jerusalem, for example, was instigated by the Hospitallers. It is rumoured the assassination of Conrad of Montferrat may have even been hired by Richard the Lionheart. In most cases they were aimed at retaining the balance of the Hashshashin's enemies.
Notable victims include, The Abbasid Vizier Nizam al-Mulk (1092), the Fatimad vizier al-Afdal (1122) (responsible for imprisoning Nizar), ibn al-Khashshab of Aleppo (1125), il-Bursuqi of Mosul (1126), Raymond II of Tripoli (1152), Conrad of Montferrat (1192), and Prince Edward (later Edward I of England) was wounded by a poisoned assassin dagger in 1271.
Myths and Legends Most Muslim contemporaries were hostile toward Nizari; in fact they were described using the term Batini. The term was sometimes used pejoratively to refer to those, especially Isma'ili, who discerned an inner, esoteric level of meaning (batin) in the Qur'an. This constant religious estrangement would eventually see them go so far as allying with the Occidental Christians against Muslims on a number of occasions when it suited their interests.
The Hashshashin started their elite group in Alamut, Iran (Persia), and later traveled to other countries. Legends abound as to the tactics used to induct warriors into what became both a religious and a political organization. One legend is that future assassins were subjected to rites similar to those of other mystery cults; the subject was made to believe that he was in imminent danger of death. The twist was that they were drugged to simulate "dying" and later they awakened in a garden flowing with wine and served a sumptuous feast by virgins. The supplicant was then convinced he was in Heaven and that the cult's leader, Hassan-i Sabbah, was a representative of the divinity and all his orders should be followed, even unto death. Much of the current western lore surrounding the Assassins roots from Marco Polo's supposed visit to Syrian fortress of Alamut in 1273 (a visit widely considered fictional since the stronghold had reportedly been destroyed by the Mongols in 1256), and from returning crusaders from the Levant who encountered their local Syrian leader Rashid ad-Din Sinan (the old man of the mountain) in the fortress of Masyaf.
This legend derives from Marco Polo, who claimed to have visited Alamut during his journey east, although it was already abandoned and in ruins after it fell to the Mongols in the 13th century. The use of intoxicants is never mentioned in contemporary Ismaili sources, nor from rival Sunnis and Shia, despite their suffering from the assassination acts of that rival sect.
For example, Farhad Daftary in The Assassin Legends: Myths of the Isma'ilis says: "At the same time, within the crusading-culture of a pre- and early-modern Europe, the Syrian and Persian Nizaris took shape as Muslim mercenaries who murdered their victims while high on opium or hashish. If this propagandist concoction of a 'stoned' assassin fails to fit the complex reality of the discipline and training required for committing what was always an explicitly political act, the popular notion of Nizaris as a community of killers also denies their rich, multivalent culture."
Edward Burman, in his The Assassins - Holy Killers of Islam says: "There is no mention of that drug [hashish] in connection with the Persian Assassins - especially in the library of Alamut ('the secret archives')." Additionally, the Encyclopedia of the Orient refutes this allegation.
Indeed Hassan-i Sabbah is recorded as being particularly harsh with users over intoxicants. He felt intoxicants undermined the strict discipline required for the Nizari to survive. He made a public example of his two sons by executing them for drinking alcohol, which he believed set a bad example for a community facing such insurmountable odds.
Benjamin of Tudela who traveled one hundred years before Marco Polo mentions the Al-Hashshashin and their leader in the fertile crescent Al-Sinan whom the crusaders dubbed "the Old Man of the Mountain". He notes their principal city to be Qadmous.
Etymology of the word "assassin" The name assassin is commonly believed to be a mutation of the Persian haššašin (???????); however, there are those who dispute this etymology, arguing that it originates from Marco Polo's account of his visit to Alamut in 1273. It is suggested by some writers that assassin simply means followers of Hassan (or Hassan-i Sabbah, the Sheikh of Alamut (see below)). The term Hashshashin, a name given to them by their Arab enemies, was derived from the Arabic "haššašin" (???????, "hashish user"). It also means those who produce hashish, which the assassins are alleged to have ingested prior to their attacks, but this etymology is disputed. The sect referred to themselves as al-da'wa al-jadida (Arabic:?????? ???????), which means the new doctrine, and were known within the organization as Fedayeen.
The word Hashish (of probable Persian origin) refers to resin collected from cannabis flowers. The true meaning of the word in Persian is actually "healers" or "herb sellers" .
Another variation on the theory described by Burman above is that haššašin was a derogatory epithet applied by the Assassins' Syrian neighbors due to the Assassins' behavior or their secretive, heterodox theology, meaning "crazy people," as in "those people who are addled, as if by cannabis."
See also
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