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Dromo's Den
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[Up] [Dromo's Den] History of the Assassins (Hashashins) ASSASSINS
(Fr. assassin, OF. pl. hassasis,
from Ar. hashashin, pl. of hashash, hashish-eater). A secret order of Islam, partly religious
and partly secular in character, and an offshoot of the sect of Ismaili, which
was in turn a branch of the great Shiite faction. The members of the Order of
Ismaili derived their name from Ismail, a descendant of Ali, in whose line they
considered the religious headship of the Mohammedan world to be rightfully
vested. They united to this tenet the belief in the moral indifference of all
actions and in the worthlessness of popular religion. Toward the middle of the
eleventh century Hassan ben Sabbah, a Persian of gifted mind and energetic
character, came to Cairo and attained a high rank among the Initiated of the
Ishmaelite, Order. Political reasons forced him to flee to Persia. In 1090 he
acquired the fortress of Alamut, in the district of Rudba, and made it the home
of a new organization, whose principles were in the main those of the Ismailites,
with the addition of a new feature,
namely, the practice of the secret assassination of all enemies of the order. At
the head of the new organization stood an absolute ruler, the Sheik-al-Jebal,
or, as he became known in mediaeval folk-lore, "The Old Man of the
Mountain." Below him were three deputy-masters, in the provinces of Jebal,
Kohistan, and Syria. Next in rank were the Dais, or Initiated, and the Refiks,
or Students, who were only partially acquainted with the secrets of the order,
but were graduated in time into the rank of Dais. Below these came the active
members of the order, the Fedavis, or Fedais, meaning 'The Devoted Ones,' young
men who were kept in absolute ignorance of the teachings of the order, but from
whom complete obedience was expected. These were the blind instruments in the
work of assassination planned by the leaders. Before they were assigned to their
tasks these youths were stupefied by means of hashish, or the hemp plant, and
while in an ecstatic condition they were plunged into all the pleasures of the
senses as a foretaste of the bliss which awaited them in Paradise if they should
faithfully execute the commands of their superiors. But the word hashashin,
or hempeaters, was changed by the Europeans into assassins,
and acquired the common meaning of murderers, which it bears at present. The
novices, mechanics, and laborers formed the sixth and seventh classes of the
order, and upon them the observance of Islam was strictly enjoined, though the
Initiated were exempted from its precepts. For 150 years the Order of Assassins
held Asia Minor and Persia in terror. More than one caliph fell a victim to
their knives. Princes paid tribute to the "Old Man of the Mountain,"
and the services of his followers were even hired by contending political
factions. In all, there were six Grand Masters of the order besides Hassan, who
died in 1124. Of these, Hassan II, in 1163, extended the secret privilege of the
Initiated (that is, exemption from the precepts of religion) to the people
generally, and abolished Islam in his dominions; but he was speedily
assassinated, and under his grandson, Hassan III, the old institutions were
restored. Under Mohammed II, the Deputy Grand Master of Syria made himself
independent, and during the wars of the Crusades, wielded a terrible power. The
murder of Conrad of Montferrat and other distinguished victims of assassination
was attributed to him. The Mongol rulers of Persia broke up the order in 1255.
The Syrian branch was put down by the Mameluke Sultan Bibars; but remnants of
the sect lingered in Kohistan, and are said still to exist in different parts of
India, Persia, and Syria. The New International Encyclopaedia, Vol II (New York: Dodd, Mead & Co., 1920) 258-259. |