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See also Alamut (disambiguation)

Alamut (Persian قلعه الموت) was once a mountain fortress in the arid hills by the Elburz mountains, south of the Caspian Sea, near Qazvin, about 100 km from present-day Tehran in Iran. Only ruins remain of this fortress today.

According to Hamdollah Mostowfi, the fortress was built in 840 at an elevation of 2,100 m. It was built in a way that had only one passable artificial entrance that wound its way around the cliff face (the one natural approach, a steep gravel slope, was too dangerous to use); thus making conquering the fortress extremely difficult. The fort has an unusual system of water supply. The top was extremely narrow and long- perhaps 400 meters long, and no more than 30 meters wide in any place, and usually less.

image:Alamoot.jpg|The remains of the fabled Alamut castle. Multiple earthquakes continue to reduce the castle to rubble. Image:Alamut.JPG|Scaffolding by Iran's Cultural Heritage Organization. Image:Alamut2.JPG|View of top

In 1090 the fortress was invaded and occupied by the powerful Hashshashin (Assassins), and was then fabled for its gardens and libraries. The ruins of 23 other fortresses remain in the vicinity.

The fortress was destroyed on December 15, 1256 by Hulagu Khan as part of the Mongol offensive on Islamic southwest Asia. The fortress itself was impregnable, but Ruknuddin Khor-shah surrendered it without a real fight, in the vain hope that Hulagu would be merciful.

In 2004, an earthquake further damaged the already crumbling walls of the fort.

List of Hashshisin rulers of Alamut


See also


External link


Castles in Iran | Medieval legends

Аламут | Alamut | Alamut | قلعه الموت | Alamut | Alamut | Alamut | Alamut, Iran | Alamut | Alamut Devleti

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Alamut".

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