The Mercenary Mediterranean_ Sovereignty, Religion, and Violence in the Medieval Crown of Aragon - Hussein Fancy
124 chapter six
convinced the sultan to arrest the last known commander of the Ghuzāh
and take direct control of these soldiers himself. With this act, the Ghuzāh
ceased to be an independent institution. According to Ibn Khaldūn,
the remaining Marīnid princes in Granada held only an honorific role
at court.^36 And in that same year, underscoring his shift away from de-
pendence on North African military support, Muḥammad captured the
fortress at Algeciras and dismantled its massive fortifications, an endur-
ing symbol of Marīnid influence in Granada.^37 The suppression of the
Ghuzāh, however, did not end the trade in soldiers. In 1377 , Muḥammad
and King Pere III signed a bilingual truce, in which Granada promised to
continue to supply the Crown of Aragon with soldiers, referred to simply
as “knights” ( fursān/caballeros) rather than jenets, so long as they were
only used against mutual enemies.^38
As a whole and across their history, the Ghuzāh were riven by ten-
sions. They were caught between the motivations of the Marīnids and the
Naṣrids, motivations that occasionally aligned and occasionally ran con-
trary to one another. They were also divided by the ambitions of their
leaders, the members of the Banū Raḥḥū and the Banū Abī al- ‘Ulā, who
not only struggled among themselves for position at the Naṣrid court in
Granada but also harbored desires to return to power at the Marīnid court
in North Africa. Although Ibn Khaldūn made no mention of the fact that
the Ghuzāh sold their services to the Crown of Aragon, he did tell us that
these kinds of intra- Muslim tensions occasionally compelled leaders of
the Ghuzāh, like Idrīs b. ‘Uthmān b. Abī al- ‘Ulā, to seek refuge at the
Aragonese court.^39 Thus, he offered us one explanation and justification
for the presence of Ghuzāh elites in the lands of the Crown of Aragon.
These Marīnid princes were rebels (muradā’) against what they saw as
the unjust authority of the Marīnids or Naṣrids.^40 They understood their
service for the Aragonese king as a temporary measure as they struggled
to return to power. While a spirit of rebellion explains some cases, it does
not explain them all. The Crown of Aragon also recruited its jenets in
high- level and sweeping agreements with Granada and all of the king-
doms of North Africa.^41 From the beginning, these rulers permitted their
soldiers to fight for and live in a Christian kingdom. In other words, the
Marīnid Ghuzāh and the Aragonese jenets were sometimes an inversion
and at others an extension of one another. Given their ready willingness
not only to fight other Muslims but also to fight for Christians, in what
sense were the Ghuzāh really holy warriors, mujāhidūn? What did their
commitment to jihād mean?