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343:. The Mongol army consisted of 6,000 men, while the Muslim army had only 1,400 men. The Mongols formed eight formations with a force of 1,000 men at front, while the rest arranged behind it. The Muslims were divided into three groups: the center led by Al-Ashraf, the right under Al-Mansur, and the left under the Emirs of Aleppo.
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Little is known about the battle, although Muslim sources state that fog and heat strained the
Mongols. In the end, the Muslim coalition emerged victorious in the battle, and the Bedouin leader, Zamil bin Ali, attacked the Mongols from the rear, contributing to the Mongol defeat. The majority of the
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The victory at Homs increased the confidence of the
Muslims against the Mongols, which some Mamluk chronicles considered a more important victory than Ain Jalut. The Ayyubid presence in Syria soon came to an end after this battle.
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generals and a survivor of Ain Jalut. On
November, 1260, the Mongol forces managed to recapture Aleppo. Alerted of this, the Ayyubid ruler of Homs,
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The Mongol forces encountered the
Muslims at Homs, near the tomb of the Arab commander,
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Spencer C. Tucker (2019), Middle East
Conflicts from Ancient Egypt to the 21st Century.
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David
Abulafia (1995), The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 5, C.1198-c.1300.
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Kenneth M. Setton (1969), A History of the
Crusades, Vol. II.
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This article is about the 1260 battle. For other uses, see
316:After the Mamluk victory over the Ilkhanids at the
320:in September 1260, the whole of Syria, including
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488:Battles involving the Mamluk Sultanate
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513:13th century in the Mamluk Sultanate
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313:and the Muslim alliance of Syria.
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347:Mongols were killed or captured.
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72:Hulagu and his wife Dokuz Kathun
493:Battles involving the Ilkhanate
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449:Kenneth M. Setton, p. 714
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498:Military history of Homs
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44:34.723185°N 36.714462°E
386:David Abulafia, p. 582
163:Commanders and leaders
104:Ayyubid-Mamluk Victory
361:Second Battle of Homs
195:Casualties and losses
49:34.723185; 36.714462
341:Khalid ibn al-Walid
318:Battle of Ain Jalut
242:Mamluk–Ilkhanid War
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61:1st Battle of Homs
503:Conflicts in 1260
440:Spencer C. Tucker
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303:Battle of Homs
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508:1260 in Asia
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142:Mamluk Egypt
113:Belligerents
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369:(1299/1300)
155:emirate of
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482:Categories
301:The first
190:~1,400 men
35:36°42′52″E
32:34°43′23″N
334:Al-Mansur
311:Ilkhanids
255:Ain Jalut
187:6,000 men
176:Al-Mansur
126:Ilkhanate
355:See also
290:Al-Rahba
275:2nd Homs
270:Elbistan
260:1st Homs
182:Strength
89:Location
326:Kitbuqa
203:Unknown
153:Ayyubid
128:of the
363:(1281)
322:Aleppo
168:Baidur
101:Result
374:Notes
200:Heavy
307:Homs
157:Homs
94:Homs
81:Date
484::
232:e
225:t
218:v
23:.
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