HOME


THE ASSASSINS OF ALAMUT

Anthony Campbell

Home page: www.acampbell.org.uk

PicoSearch

Book cover

Review by by Jim Davis (10 August 2008)

I read the original pdf file a few years ago and found the text quite accurate and fair. As a pro-ismaili reseacher, I can highly recommend this book. There is a lot of sensational crap about the Assassins out there but this book is not one of them.


How to get it

It is available from Amazon.com or Amazon.co.uk.

New!: You can also get it as an e-book in a variety of formats, including those for Kindle and the Sony Reader. Please go to my Smashwords page for further details.


The Assassins (also known as Nizaris) were a sect of the Ismailis in the Middle Ages. They had castles in the north of Iran at Alamut and elsewhere and also in Syria, where their chief was known to the Crusaders as the Old Man of the Mountains. They are the first group in history to have made systematic use of political murder (our word "assassin" is a corruption of one of their nicknames) and their founder Hasan-i-Sabbah has been compared to Osama bin Laden.

However, there is much more to their story than this. The Assassins had an extraordinary philosophical and mystical system and there are resemblances here to Sufism. The Aga Khan is a lineal descendant of the Nizaris of Iran. Their remarkable story is presented here.

CONTENTS

  • Chapter 1: Who were the Assassins?
    The background to the story and an account of a personal visit to the site of the castle at Alamut.

  • Chapter 2: Origins of the Sect
    The Assassins were a branch of the Ismailis, who in turn arose as a schism within Shiism. The Ismailis conquered Egypt and built Cairo. The founder of the Assassins, Hasan-i-Sabbah, spent some years in Cairo in his youth although later the sect he headed broke away and became independent.

  • Chapter 3: Hasan the Sevener
    This chapter describes what is known about the youth and early years of Hasan-i-Sabbah, and includes an outline of the strange world view of the Ismailis.

  • Chapter 4: Hasan-i-Sabbah at Alamut
    Hasan captured the castle at Alamut and inaugurated the sect which became known in the West as the Assassins. He remained there for many years until his death in 1124, and began the policy of political assassination.

  • Chapter 5: The Great Resurrection
    In 1164 the Grand Master of Alamut called his followers together and announced that the Muslim law was at an end; all his followers were now living in the Time of the Resurrection. This is the central event in the story of the sect.

  • Chapter 6: The Assassins in Syria
    The Syrian offshoot of the Assassins was to some extent independent of Alamut under its talented and remarkable ruler, Sinan, who became known to the Crusaders as the "Old Man of the Mountains".

  • Chapter 7: Decline and Fall
    The Assassins gradually declined in power and influence and were finally destroyed by the Mongols.

  • Chapter 8: Continuing Echoes
    The Assassins disappeared in Iran but continued in India as the Khojas. The Aga Khan is the lineal descendant of the Grand Masters of Alamut.

  • Notes and Bibliography

  • Index

Read a chapter.


HOME

web statistics