The Policy of Exile and Exclusion in the Mamluk State
Ghassan Weshah
Citation : Ghassan Weshah, The Policy of Exile and Exclusion in the Mamluk State International Journal of History and Cultural Studies 2018 , 4(1) : 110-120
The Mamluk state in Egypt and the Levant (1250-1517) was one of the most important Islamic countries that played an important role in the formation of Islamic history. It overcame the two greatest threats to the Islamic state in the middle Ages, the Crusader threat and the Mongol threat. The internal front has been played by the internal front of the Mamluk of the red lines. For this reason, the state has followed the policy of exile and exile. Many of the princes and senior men of the state have been subjected to exile and deportation. A new term in this country is the term "unemployed" He has a very expensive job That there were some of the attention of the Mamluk State in directing cases of exile and deportation, such as Jerusalem, Damietta and Damascus, and there seem to be reasons that made Jerusalem the first objective of the denial of some of the characters ... Jerusalem was the preferred place for those who are subject to the penalty of exile was some of the exiles enter the mediation at The Sultan to convert the place of exile to Jerusalem and because of the sanctity of this city, and its status in the Islamic law, the exile gets the wages of Rabat and worship, as well as its moderate climate.