(d) "Contrary to French bodice-rippers [First Crusade participants], he [Saladin] never seduced crusader princesses. Walter Scott's 'The Talisman,' in which a disguised Saladin heals an ailing Richard the Lionheart, is also a bunk. The two men never met. And Saladin's conquest owed more to artifice and luck than to military prowess. Potentates in Egypt and Syria made way for him by dying. He negotiated truce to avoid fighting on several fronts and to stall for time while ge rearmed. He won Jerusalem at the negotiating table [see Note (d)(iii)], but lost Acre in battle. His greatest military victory, at the battle of Hattin in 1187, was a masterpiece of guise. He goaded the crusaders into a summer march through parched land, then choked them with bush-fires and taunted them by spilling water on the ground. Many Muslim contemporaries had a decidedly lukewarm impression. Saladin was not above the occasional massacre, * * * Perhaps the most damning of all was Saladin's role in stemming intellectual curiosity, pluralism and joie de vivre that characterised the classic Islam, and in precipitating its descent into intolerance and fundamentalism. In his zeal to impose Sunni orthodoxy on the Middle East, he closed Alexandria's 120 pubs and crucified a philosopher in Aleppo [in present-day Syria]. * ** Shias in Egypt * * * deride [note the present tense] him for toppling the magnificent Shia caliphate of the Fatimids, selling off its vast library and turning pleasure palaces unto madrassas for learning jihad."
(i) Walter Scott
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Scott
(1771-1832; a Scottish historical novelist)
(ii)
(A) Acre, Israel
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acre,_Israel
(section 1 Names: unknown; section 2 History, section 2.6.1 First Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem (1104-1187) )
(B) Siege of Acre (1189–1191)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Acre_(1189–1191)
(table: Result: Crusader victory, Saladin led Muslims)
Muslims, but not Saladin, were under siege in Acre.
(iii) Siege of Jerusalem (1187)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Jerusalem_(1187)
(Sept 20-Oct 2, 1187; by Saladin)
Following Battle of Hattin, that is.
(iv) Battle of Hattin
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Hattin
(July 4, 1187; at Horns of Hattin [qv: 'an extinct volcano with twin peaks overlooking the plains of Hattin;' elevation 326m])
(v) joie de vivre (etymology)
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/joie%20de%20vivre
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