Al-Afdal ibn Salah ad-din (, "most superior") popularly known as
Al-Afdal was one of seventeen sons of
Saladin. He succeeded his father as the second
emir of
Damascus. He was the leader of the Ayyubids in the
Battle of Cresson.
Biography
When Saladin died in 1193, al-Afdal inherited
Damascus, but not the rest of his father's territories;
Egypt was inherited by
al-Aziz and
Aleppo by
az-Zahir. He was very attached to his uncle
al-Adil, and sought his aid at various points when he was attacked by his own
brother al-Aziz. In 1196, al-Aziz lost his patience as a result of al-Afdal's incompetent
reign. He allied with their brother az-Zahir, who was also al-Afdal's enemy, and they both raided
Damascus. Al-Afdal was later
exiled to
Salkhad,
Hauran. There are no records of his death but it is supposed that he died there in exile.
Battle of Cresson
In 1187, al-Afdal led Saladin's forces against
Gerard of Ridefort, the
Grand Master of the Knights Templar, at the
Battle of Cresson. Al-Afdal's troops consisted of about 7000 men. Gerard unexpectedly ran into al-Afdal's army on May 1, and in the subsequent battle, the
Muslims feigned a retreat, a common tactic which should not have fooled Gerard; nevertheless, he ordered a charge, against the advice of the
Grand Master of the Knights Hospitaller,
Roger des Moulins, and the
knights were separated from the foot-soldiers. The Muslims easily repulsed a direct Christian attack, killing both the exhausted knights, and, later, the foot-soldiers.
Gerard survived but almost all the others were killed. However, according to the
Itinerarium Peregrinorum, a history of the
Third Crusade which followed the
battle, Gerard did not rashly engage the enemy, but was actually caught unaware and was the victim of an attack himself.