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Bottle, late 13th century; Mamluk
Probably Syria
Greenish colorless glass, free-blown, enameled, and gilded;
tooled on the pontil; red, blue, green, yellow, purple, brown,
pink, white, gray blue, and black enamels; and gold; H. 17
1/8 in. (43.5 cm), Diam. 36 5/8 in. (93 cm)
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York Rogers Fund, 1941 (41.150)
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On September 3, 1260, the Mamluk Egyptian army met the Mongols
on a spot in a Palestinian valley called Ayn Jalut—the
"Spring of Goliath." The Mongols, pressing on from
their triumphs in Iraq and Syria, were intent on completing
their conquest of the Islamic Middle East by taking Egypt.
But the Egyptian sultan
rallied the forces with the cry of "O Muslims" and
a headlong charge into the enemy ranks. The Mongol leader
was killed and his soldiers were pursued and slaughtered.
After the battle, the sultan praised Allah and sent the head
of the Mongol leader to Cairo to proclaim his victory. The
sultan's greatest commander was Baybars. Not long after the
Battle of Ayn Jalut, disappointed with the reward for his
pivotal role in this battle, Baybars killed the sultan and
seized the throne. Within a short time, the Mamluks created
the most powerful Islamic empire
of the later Middle Ages. It included the holy cities of Mecca
and Medina. Its capital, Cairo, became the economic, cultural,
and artistic center of the Arab Islamic world.
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