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Alamut

Alamut was once a mountain fortress in the arid hills south of the Caspian Sea, about 100 km from present-day Tehran in Iran. Only ruins remain of this fortress today.

In 1090 the fortress was invaded and occupied by the powerful Hashshashins (assassins), and was then fabled for its gardens and libraries. Marco Polo wrote that men the Assassin sheik wanted to turn into killers would be drugged, deposited in the garden, and be allowed to dally there with all its joys. Later the men would be drugged again and removed from the garden. Upon waking up, they would be told that they could experience those pleasures again if they killed for the order. This story is certainly not true, but is interesting.

It was destroyed in 1256 by Hulagu Khan as part of the Mongol offensive. The fortress itself was impregnable, the Assassin sheik surrendered it without a real fight, in vain hope that Hulagu would be merciful.





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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Alamut".