Saladin is perhaps the one and only Muslim ruler who emerges with any
clarity in standard tales and histories of the Crusades; this is a
translation of Baha' al-Din Ibn Shaddad's account of his life and
career. Ibn Shaddad (1144-1234) was clearly a great admirer of Saladin
and was a close associate of his, serving as his qadi al-'askar (judge
of the army), from 1188 until Saladin's death in 1193. His position and
his access to information make this an authoritative and essential
source for Saladin's career, while his personal relationship with the
sultan adds a sympathetic and moving element to the account of his final
years. Aside from its inherent value as a source for the history of
Egypt and the Middle East, it therefore provides a much-needed
complement and corrective to the widely-known Latin accounts of the
Crusades and the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem in the 12th century. The
present translation is based on a fuller edition of the text than that
used in the previous 19th-century translation, and takes into account
the translator's readings of the earliest manuscript of the work, dated
July 1228.