Complete chronology
Full overview and deeper context for every journey step.
c. 1137
Kurdish origins
Saladin, known in Arabic as Salah al-Din Yusuf ibn Ayyub, was born around 1137, probably in Tikrit, into a Kurdish family serving the wider military world of northern Mesopotamia and Syria. His early life unfolded in the shadow of Zangi and Nur al-Din, rulers who worked to strengthen Muslim power against both rival Muslim states and the Crusader principalities. Saladin's family connections placed him inside the politics of service, loyalty and opportunity. He did not begin as a legendary conqueror; he rose through a military-administrative world where skill had to operate through patronage.
His rise began in service to other rulers before he built a dynasty of his own.
1169
Egyptian opportunity
In the 1160s, Egypt became the prize in a struggle involving the Fatimid caliphate, Syrian forces under Nur al-Din and the Crusader kingdom of Jerusalem. Saladin accompanied his uncle Shirkuh on campaigns there and, after Shirkuh's death in 1169, became vizier of Egypt. The appointment was extraordinary. A Sunni Kurdish officer now held power inside a Shi'a Fatimid state. Saladin moved carefully at first, consolidating authority while avoiding premature rupture. Egypt's wealth, grain and strategic position gave him the foundation from which his future power would grow.
Control of Egypt gave Saladin the resources needed to move from servant to sovereign.
1171-1174
Ayyubid power
In 1171, Saladin ended the Fatimid caliphate in Cairo and restored formal allegiance to the Sunni Abbasid caliphate. This was a religious and political turning point. It removed a rival caliphal structure and strengthened Saladin's legitimacy among Sunni elites. When Nur al-Din died in 1174, Saladin began extending authority into Syria, presenting himself as the defender of Muslim unity and the leader best able to confront the Crusader states. His expansion was not only anti-Crusader; much of it involved diplomacy and conflict with other Muslim rulers whose submission could not be assumed.
Before defeating the Crusaders, he had to build authority across a divided Muslim political world.
1170s-1180s
Uniting fronts
Saladin's reputation as a champion of jihad rested on years of political consolidation. He took Damascus, contested Aleppo and worked to bind Egypt and Syria into a workable military system. This was difficult, expensive and never perfectly stable. Rival Muslim leaders could be as challenging as Frankish opponents, and Saladin had to balance force with negotiation. The result, however, was a strategic transformation. The Crusader kingdom of Jerusalem, once able to exploit Muslim division, now faced a ruler who could apply pressure from multiple directions and sustain long campaigns.
His greatest military victory depended on a prior political victory over fragmentation.
1187
Hattin
In July 1187, Saladin confronted the army of the Crusader kingdom near the Horns of Hattin. The Frankish force, drawn into harsh terrain and cut off from reliable water, was exhausted before decisive combat. Saladin's army surrounded and defeated it, capturing King Guy of Lusignan and many leading nobles. The True Cross, a major relic carried by the Crusaders, was also taken. Hattin was not just a battlefield success; it shattered the kingdom's ability to defend its towns and fortresses. Within months, much of the Latin East was exposed.
Hattin changed the balance of power because it destroyed an army, not merely won a battle.
1187
Jerusalem retaken
In October 1187, Saladin took Jerusalem after negotiation rather than indiscriminate massacre. The memory of the Crusader conquest in 1099, when many inhabitants were killed, made the moment intensely charged. Saladin's settlement allowed many residents to ransom themselves, while others were enslaved; it was not modern mercy, but by the standards of medieval siege warfare it became central to his reputation for restraint. The recovery of Jerusalem electrified the Muslim world and shocked Latin Christendom. It directly helped provoke the Third Crusade, bringing Europe's most famous warrior-kings east.
The capture of Jerusalem made Saladin a world-historical figure in both Islamic and Christian memory.
1189-1192
Richard the Lionheart
The Third Crusade tested Saladin against a new coalition led most effectively by Richard I of England. Acre fell to the Crusaders after a long siege, and Richard defeated Saladin's forces at Arsuf in 1191. Yet Richard could not securely retake Jerusalem, and Saladin could not drive the Crusaders entirely from the coast. The war became a contest of endurance as much as brilliance. Both leaders gained fame from the rivalry, though later chivalric legend often softened the brutality of the conflict. In 1192, they agreed to a truce that left Jerusalem under Muslim control while permitting Christian pilgrimage.
His struggle with Richard became legendary because neither man achieved everything he wanted.
1193
Death in Damascus
Saladin died in Damascus in 1193, worn down by years of campaigning and rule. His generosity was famous enough that accounts stressed how little ready money remained for his burial. After his death, the Ayyubid realm was divided among relatives, revealing how much unity had depended on his personal authority. Yet the dynasty he founded endured, and his political achievement outlasted the immediate fragmentation. He had made Egypt and Syria central to the struggle for the eastern Mediterranean and had changed the future of the Crusader states.
His empire proved difficult to hold together, but the strategic world he created survived him.
Long-term
Enduring reputation
Saladin's legacy is unusually broad. In Islamic history, he stands as the ruler who restored Jerusalem and gave political force to the language of jihad against the Crusader states. In European memory, he became the noble enemy, praised for generosity and honour even by cultures that opposed him. Both traditions simplified him. The historical Saladin was pious, ambitious, pragmatic and sometimes ruthless, a medieval ruler operating in a violent world. His importance lies in the combination: he was a builder of states, a commander of consequence and a figure whose image became larger than the wars that produced it.
Saladin matters because he changed events and then became a moral symbol in the memory of both sides.