CHAPTER 28
The Saladin Dynasty
1193–1250

THE DEATH OF THE SULTAN

On 2 September 1192, sultan and king agreed the Treaty of Jaffa, the first partition of Palestine: the Christian kingdom received a new lease of life with Acre as its capital, while Saladin kept Jerusalem, granting full Christian access to the Sepulchre.

On the way back to Jerusalem, Saladin met his brother Safadin who kissed the ground to thank God, and they prayed together at the Dome of the Rock. Though Richard refused to visit Islamic Jerusalem, his knights flocked there to make their pilgrimages and were received by Saladin. The sultan showed them the True Cross, but afterwards the largest part of that ultimate relic was lost—and vanished forever.a When the king’s adviser Hubert Walter was in Jerusalem, he discussed Richard with Saladin who offered the view that Lionheart lacked wisdom and moderation. Thanks to Walter, Saladin allowed Latin priests back into the Sepulchre. When the Byzantine emperor Isaac Angelus demanded it for the Orthodox, Saladin decided that they must share it under his supervision and appointed Sheikh Ghanim al-Khazraji as Custodian of the Church, a role still performed today by his descendants, the Nusseibeh family.

The two protagonists never met. On 9 October, Richard sailed for Europe.b Saladin appointed Ibn Shaddad, whose memoirs have been such a vivid source, to oversee his plans in Jerusalem. Presently Saladin left for Damascus.18

There, the joys of family life awaited him—he had seventeen sons—but he was now fifty-four and worn out. His son Zahir could not bear to leave his father, perhaps sensing they would never meet again: touchingly, he kept saying goodbye, then riding back to kiss Saladin again. At the palace, Ibn Shaddad found the Sultan playing with one of his baby sons in a portico amid his gardens while Frankish barons and Turkish amirs awaited an audience.

A few days later, after welcoming the haj caravan from Mecca, he was struck down by a fever, probably typhoid. His doctors bled him, but he grew worse. When he asked for warm water, it was too cold. “Heavens above!” he exclaimed. “Is nobody able to get the water just right!” At dawn on 3 March 1193, he died listening to recitations of the Koran. “I and others would have given our lives for him,” said Ibn Shaddad who reflected:

Then these years and their players passed away
As though they all had been merely dreams.

MUAZZAM ISA: THE OTHER JESUS

Saladin’s sons spent the next six years fighting among themselves in ever-changing combinations, mediated by their shrewd uncle Safadin. The three eldest sons, Afdal, Zahir and Aziz received Damascus, Aleppo and Egypt, while Safadin ruled Outrejourdain and Edessa.

Afdal, now twenty-two, inherited Jerusalem, which he cherished. He built the Mosque of Omar right next to the Church and settled north Africans in a Maghrebi quarter where he built the Afdaliyya Madrassa within a few metres of the Western Wall.

Afdal, drunk and inept, found it hard to inspire loyalty and Jerusalem was tossed between the warring brothers. Just when Aziz had won the war and emerged as sultan, he was killed out hunting. The surviving brothers Afdal and Zahir ganged up on their uncle, but Safadin defeated both and seized the empire, ruling as sultan for twenty years. Cold, elegant and dour, Safadin was no Saladin: not one contemporary describes him with affection, but everyone respected him. He was “brilliantly successful, probably the ablest of his line.” In Jerusalem, Safadin commissioned the double-gate—the Gate of the Chain and the Gate of Divine Presence, probably the site of the Crusaders’ Beautiful Gate—using exquisite Frankish spolia from the Templar cloister and featuring a twin-domed porch and capitals with carvings of animals and lions: this still forms the main western entrance to the Temple Mount. But even before he became sultan, in 1198, his second son, Muazzam Isa (Isa being the Arabic for Jesus), was given Syria.

In 1204, Muazzam made Jerusalem his capital, and Amaury’s palace his home. The most popular member of the family since his uncle Saladin, Muazzam was easy-going and open-minded. When he visited scholars to study philosophy and science, he simply walked to their houses like an ordinary student. “I saw him in Jerusalem,” recalled the historian Ibn Wasil. “Men, women and boys were jostling him and no one pushed them away. In spite of his boldness and high sense of honour, he had little taste for ostentation. He rode without being accompanied by the royal standards, with only a small escort. On his head he wore a yellow cap and made his way through the markets and streets without a pathway being cleared for him.”

One of Jerusalem’s most prolific builders, Muazzam restored the walls, built seven hulking towers and converted the Crusader structures on the Temple Mount into Muslim shrines.c In 1209, he settled 300 Jewish families from France and England in Jerusalem. When the Jewish poet of Spain, Judah al-Harizi, made his pilgrimage, he praised the dynasty of Muazzam and Saladin even as he mourned the Temple: “We went out every day to weep for Zion, we grieved her destroyed palaces, we ascended the Mount of Olives to prostrate ourselves before the Eternal One. What torment to see our holy courts converted into an alien temple.” Suddenly, in 1218, Muazzam’s achievements were thrown into peril when John of Brienne, titular King of Jerusalem,d led the Fifth Crusade to attack Egypt. The Crusaders besieged the port of Damietta. Safadin, now seventy-four years old, led out his armies but died when he heard that the Chain Tower of Damietta had fallen. Muazzam hastened from Jerusalem to Egypt to help his elder brother Kamil, the new Sultan of Egypt. But the brothers panicked and twice offered Jerusalem to the Crusaders if they would leave Egypt. In the spring of 1219, with the family empire in jeopardy, Muazzam took the heartbreaking decision to destroy all his fortifications in Jerusalem, arguing that “if the Franks took it, they would kill everyone there and dominate Syria.”

Jerusalem was left defenceless and half-empty—her inhabitants fled in droves. “Women, girls and old men gathered on the Haram, tore their hair and clothes and scattered in all directions” as if it were “the Day of Judgement.” Yet the Crusaders foolishly refused the brothers’ offers of Jerusalem—and the Crusade itself fell apart.

Once the Crusaders had departed, Kamil and Muazzam, who had co-operated so well during the ultimate crisis, embarked on a vicious fraternal war for supremacy. Jerusalem did not really recover until the nineteenth century. Fabled before and afterwards for her walls, she was to be without them for three centuries. Yet the city was about to change hands again in a most unlikely peace deal.19

EMPEROR FREDERICK II:
WONDER OF THE WORLD, BEAST OF THE APOCALYPSE

On 9 November 1225, at the cathedral in Brindisi, Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor and King of Sicily, married Yolande, fifteen-year-old Queen of Jerusalem. As soon as the wedding was over, Frederick assumed the title of King of Jerusalem ready to set off on his Crusade. His enemies claimed that he proceeded to seduce his new wife’s ladies-in-waiting while cavorting with his harem of Saracen odalisques. This appalled his father-in-law John of Brienne and upset the pope. But Frederick was already the most powerful monarch in Europe—he was later to be known as Stupor Mundi, the Wonder of the World—and he did everything in his own way.

Frederick of Hohenstaufen, green-eyed and ginger-haired, half-German and half-Norman, had been raised in Sicily and there was nowhere else in Europe quite like his court in Palermo, which combined Norman, Arab and Greek cultures in a unique blend of the Christian and the Islamic. It was this upbringing that made Frederick so unusual and he certainly flaunted his eccentricities. His entourage usually featured a sultanic harem, a zoo, fifty falconers (he wrote a book called The Art of Hunting with Birds), an Arab bodyguard, Jewish and Muslim scholars and often a Scottish magician and hierophant. He was certainly more Levantine in culture than any other king in Christendom but that did not stop him ruthlessly suppressing Arab rebels in Sicily—he used his own spur to rip open the belly of their captured leader. He deported the Arabs from Sicily but built them a new Arab town in Lucera with its own mosques and a palace which became his favourite residence. Similarly he enforced anti-Jewish laws while he patronised Jewish savants, welcomed Jewish settlers and insisted they be fairly treated.

Yet it was power not exotica that consumed Frederick, who devoted his life to defending his vast inheritance, stretching from the Baltic to the Mediterranean, against envious popes who excommunicated him twice, denounced him as the Anti-Christ and blackened him with the most outlandish calumnies. He was alleged to be a secret atheist or Muslim who said Moses, Jesus and Muhammad were frauds. He was portrayed as a medieval Dr. Frankenstein who had sealed a dying man in a barrel to see if his soul could escape; who had disembowelled a man to study his digestion; and locked children in isolation-cells to see how they developed language.

Frederick took himself and his family’s rights very seriously: he was actually a conventional Christian who was convinced that as emperor he should be a universal holy monarch on the Byzantine model and that as the descendant of generations of Crusaders and the heir to Charlemagne, he must liberate Jerusalem. He had already taken the Cross twice but kept delaying his departure.

Now that he was King of Jerusalem, he planned his expedition in earnest—but of course after his own fashion. He deposited his pregnant queen of Jerusalem in his Palermo harem, promising the pope that he was departing on Crusade—but Yolande, aged sixteen, died after giving birth to a son. Since Frederick was King of Jerusalem by marriage, his son now assumed the title. But he was not going to let that detail interfere with his new approach to crusading.

The Emperor hoped to win Jerusalem by exploiting the rivalries of the House of Saladin. Indeed Sultan Kamil offered him Jerusalem in return for help against Muazzam who held the city. Frederick finally set off in 1227, only to fall ill and return—at which Pope Gregory IX excommunicated him, which was more than an inconvenience for a Crusader. He sent his Teutonic Knights and infantry on ahead and by the time he joined them in Acre in September 1228, Muazzam was dead and Kamil had occupied Palestine—and withdrawn his offer.

However, Kamil was now having to fight Muazzam’s sons as well as Frederick and his army. He could not handle both threats. Emperor and sultan were too weak to fight for Jerusalem so they opened secret negotiations.

Kamil was as unconventional as Frederick. As a boy, Safadin’s son had been knighted by the Lionheart himself. While emperor and sultan negotiated the sharing of Jerusalem, they debated Aristotelian philosophy and Arab geometry. “I’ve no real ambition to hold Jerusalem,” Frederick told Kamil’s envoy, “I simply want to safeguard my reputation with the Christians.” The Muslims wondered if Christianity was “a game to him.” The sultan sent the emperor “dancing girls” while the latter entertained his Muslim guests with Christian dancers. Patriarch Gerold denounced Frederick’s singing girls and jugglers as “persons not only of ill-repute but unworthy to be mentioned by Christians,” which of course he then proceeded to do. Between negotiating sessions, Frederick hunted with his falcons and seduced new mistresses, playing the troubadour to write to one of them: “Alas I didn’t think that separation from my lady would be so hard remembering her sweet companionship. Happy song, go to the flower of Syria, to her who holds my heart in prison. Ask that most loving lady to remember her servant who shall suffer from love of her until he has done all she wills him to do.”

When the negotiations wavered, Frederick marched his troops down the coast to Jaffa in the footsteps of Richard, threatening Jerusalem. This did the trick and on 11 February 1229, he achieved the undreamable: in return for ten years’ peace, Kamil ceded Jerusalem and Bethlehem with a corridor to the sea. In Jerusalem, the Muslims kept the Temple Mount with freedom of entry and worship under their qadi. The deal ignored the Jews (who had mostly fled the city), but this treaty of shared sovereignty remains the most daring peace deal in Jerusalem’s history.

Yet both worlds were horrified. In Damascus, Muazzam’s son Nasir Daud ordered public mourning. The throng sobbed at the news. Kamil insisted, “we’ve only conceded some churches and ruined houses. The sacred precincts and venerated Rock remain ours.” But the deal worked for him—he was able to reunite Saladin’s empire under his crown. As for Frederick, Patriarch Gerold banned the excommunicate from visiting Jerusalem, and the Templars denounced him for not gaining the Temple Mount.

On Saturday 17 March, Frederick, escorted by his Arab bodyguards and pages, his German and Italian troops, the Teutonic Knights, and two English bishops, was met at the Jaffa Gate by the sultan’s representative, Shams al-Din, the Qadi of Nablus, who handed him the keys of Jerusalem.

The streets were empty, many Muslims had left, the Orthodox Syrians were sullen at this Latin resurgence—and Frederick’s time was short: the Bishop of Caesarea was on his way to enforce the patriarch’s ban and place the city under interdict.20

THE CROWNING OF FREDERICK II: GERMAN JERUSALEM

After spending the night in the palace of the Master of the Hospitallers, Frederick held a special Mass in the Holy Sepulchre, empty of priests but filled with his German soldiery. He rested his imperial crown on the altar of Calvary then placed it on his own head, a crown-wearing ceremony designed to project himself as the universal and paramount monarch of Christendom. He explained to Henry III of England: “We being a Catholic Emperor wore the crown which Almighty God provided for us from the throne of His Majesty when of His especial grace He exalted us on high among the princes of the world in the house of His servant David.” Frederick was not one to underestimate his own importance: his eerie, magnificent mise-en-scène was the crowning of a sacred king, a mystical Emperor of the Last Days, in the Church that he saw as King David’s temple.

Afterwards, the emperor toured the Temple Mount, admiring the Dome and al-Aqsa, praising its beautiful mihrab, climbing onto Nur al-Din’s minbar. When he spotted a priest holding a New Testament trying to enter al-Aqsa, he knocked him over, shouting “Swine! By God if one of you comes here again without permission, I shall have his eyes!”

The Muslim custodians did not know what to make of this gingerhaired maverick: “Had he been a slave, he wouldn’t have been worth 200 dirhams,” mused one of them tactlessly. That night Frederick noticed the silence of the muezzins: “O Qadi,” he said to the sultan’s representative, “why didn’t the muezzins give the call to prayer last night?”

“I recommended the muezzins not to give the call out of respect for the king,” said the qadi.

“You did wrong,” replied Frederick. “My chief aim in passing the night in Jerusalem was to hear the muezzins and their cries of praise to God during the night.” If his enemies saw this as Islamophilia, Frederick was probably more interested in making sure his unique deal worked. When the muezzins called the midday prayer, “all his valets and pages as well as his tutor” prostrated themselves to pray.

That morning, the Bishop of Caesarea arrived with his interdict. The emperor left his garrison in the Tower of David and headed back to Acre where he was faced with the ungrateful hostility of barons and Templars. Now under papal attack in Italy, the emperor planned a secret departure, but at dawn on 1 May the Acre mob, collecting the offal of Butchers Street, bombarded him with entrails and giblets. On his ship home to Brindisi, Frederick pined for his “flower of Syria”: “Ever since I went away, I’ve never endured such anguish as I did on board the ship. And now I believe I shall surely die if I don’t return to her soon.”21

He had not stayed long and he never returned, but Frederick remained officially the master of Jerusalem for ten years. Frederick gave the Tower of David and Royal Palace to the Teutonic Knights. He ordered their master, Hermann of Salza and Bishop Peter of Winchester, to repair the Tower (some of this work survives today) and fortify St. Stephen’s (today’s Damascus) Gate. Franks reclaimed “their churches and had their old possessions restored to them.” The Jews were again banned. Without walls, Jerusalem was insecure: weeks later, the imams of Hebron and Nablus led 15,000 peasants into the city while the Christians cowered in the Tower. Acre sent an army to eject the Muslim invaders and Jerusalem remained Christian.e

In 1238, Sultan Kamil died, throwing the Saladin dynasty into further internecine wars, exacerbated by a new crusade under Count Thibault of Champagne. When the Crusaders were defeated, Muazzam’s son, Nasir Daud, galloped into Jerusalem and besieged the Tower of David for twenty-one days until it fell on 7 December 1239. He then destroyed the new fortifications, and the warring princes of the Saladin family took an oath of peace on the Temple Mount. But familial strife and the arrival of an English Crusade under Henry III’s brother, Richard, Earl of Cornwall, again forced the surrender of Jerusalem to the Franks. This time the Templars expelled the Muslims and regained the Temple Mount: the Dome and al-Aqsa became churches again. “I saw monks in charge of the Sacred Rock,” recalled Ibn Wasil. “I saw on it bottles of wine for mass.”22 The Templars started to fortify the Holy City—but not fast enough: in order to fight his family rivals, the new sultan Salih Ayyub had hired a horde of freebooting Tartars, nomadic Central Asian horsemen displaced by the new Mongol empire. But he could not control them. To the horror of the Christians of Acre, 10,000 Khwarizmian Tartars rode towards Jerusalem.

BARKA KHAN AND THE TARTARS: CATASTROPHE

On 11 July 1244, the Tartar horsemen led by Barka Khan clattered into Jerusalem, fighting and hacking their way through the streets, smashing into the Armenian convent and murdering the monks and nuns. They destroyed churches and houses, plundering the Holy Sepulchre and setting it on fire. Coming upon the priests as they celebrated Mass the Tartars beheaded and disembowelled them at the altar. The bodies of the kings of Jerusalem were disinterred and burned yet their elaborate sarcophagi were somehow spared; the stone at the door of Jesus’ tomb was shattered. The Franks, besieged in the Tower, appealed to Nasir Daud, who persuaded Barka to allow the garrison to leave in safety.

Six thousand Christians left for Jaffa but, seeing Frankish flags on the battlements and believing help had arrived, many turned back. The Tartars massacred 2,000 of them. Only 300 Christians reached Jaffa. When they had thoroughly destroyed Jerusalem, the Tartars galloped away.f Smouldering and smashed, Jerusalem would not be Christian again until 1917.23

In 1248, King Louis IX led the last effective Crusade and once again, the Crusaders hoped to win Jerusalem by conquering Egypt. In November 1249 the Crusaders advanced on Cairo, where Sultan Salih Ayyub was already dying. His widow, the sultana, Shajar al-Durr, took control, summoning her stepson Turanshah back from Syria. The Crusaders overreached themselves and were routed by the mamluks, the crack regiments of military slaves. Louis was captured. But the new sultan Turanshah neglected his own soldiers: on 2 May 1250, he was holding a banquet to celebrate the victory, attended by many of the Crusader prisoners, when mamluks, led by a blond giant named Baibars, then aged twenty-seven, burst in, swords drawn.

Baibars slashed at the sultan who fled bleeding down to the Nile as the mamluks fired arrows into him. He stood wounded in the river begging for his life until a mamluk waded in, cut off his head and sliced open his chest. His heart was cut out and shown to King Louis of France at a banquet; no doubt he lost his appetite.

There ended the dynasty of Saladin in Egypt, a downfall that condemned Jerusalem, now half-deserted, half-ruined, to ten chaotic years tossed between different warlords and princelings as they fought for powerg while a fearsome shadow fell across the Middle East. In 1258, the Mongols, the shamanist hordes from the Far East who had already conquered the largest empire the world had ever known, sacked Baghdad, massacring 80,000 people and killing the caliph. They took Damascus and galloped as far as Gaza, raiding Jerusalem on the way. Islam would need a ferocious champion to defeat them. The man who rose to the challenge was Baibars.24

a In 1187, Saladin himself sent a small piece of the Cross as a gift to Emperor Isaac Angelos in a Venetian ship. The ship was captured by a Pisan pirate named Fortis, who killed the entire crew and took the relic to Bonafacio in Corsica, whence it was seized by Genoese pirates. Sections of the Cross still survive in the reliquaries of Europe.

b On his way home, Richard was captured and handed over to the German emperor Henry VI, who imprisoned him for over a year, until England had paid a large ransom. He returned to fighting the French king, bringing home some Saracen soldiers and the secret of the Greek Fire. In 1199, besieging a minor French castle, he was killed by an archer’s bolt. “He was,” writes Steven Runciman, “a bad son, a bad husband and a bad king but a gallant and splendid soldier.”

c The foundations of six of his towers can be seen today. On the Temple Mount, he built the domed Grammar School and the glorious arches and domed entrance to al-Aqsa. He may have used Frankish spolia to build the octagonal Dome of Solomon, also known as the Kursi Isa—the Throne of Jesus (the Jesus may be Isa himself)—and the Dome of the Ascension; the latter has an inscription dating it to 1200–1201. But it is more likely that both were original Crusader buildings: indeed the baptismal font of the Dome of the Ascension with its Frankish capitals, topped with an elegant Frankish false lantern, may have originated in the Templum Domini. It was Muazzam who walled up the Golden Gate.

d Queen Isabella of Jerusalem was unlucky in marriage: her third husband Henry of Champagne ruled Acre as king of Jerusalem and fathered two more daughters by her—but, reviewing German Crusaders in 1197, he was distracted by his dwarf and stepped backwards out of a window. Then she married Amaury of Lusignan, King of Cyprus, who died of a surfeit of white mullet in 1205. On her death, her daughter Maria—now Queen of Jerusalem—married the knight John of Brienne, and they had a daughter Yolande.

e Frederick and Kamil maintained their friendship: the sultan sent the emperor a bejewelled planetarium, which was both a clock and a moving map of the heavens—and an elephant; Frederick sent Kamil a polar bear. Frederick spent the rest of his life in a constant war with the popes to defend his dual inheritance in Germany and Italy. It was the popes who stigmatized him as the Beast of the Apocalypse. His eldest son Henry King of the Romans betrayed him; Frederick imprisoned him for the rest of life, appointing Conrad King of Jerusalem, his son by Yolande, as his heir. The Wonder died of dysentery in 1250, and was buried in Palermo. Conrad died young, the crown of Jerusalem being inherited by Conrad’s baby son, Conradin who was himself beheaded aged 16. But Frederick’s reputation grew: as time passed, liberals celebrated his modern tolerance; while Hitler and the Nazis admired him as a Nietzschean superman.

f These Tartars were finally defeated by Saladin’s descendants in 1246. Drunk in battle, Barka Khan was beheaded, his head displayed in Aleppo. But his daughter married the Mamluk strongman Baibars, future sultan; his sons became powerful amirs who between 1260 and 1285 built the fine tomb, turba, that still stands on the Street of the Chain. There they buried their father: “This is the tomb of the servant needful of God’s mercy Barka Khan.” His sons were later buried with him. But when archaeologists inspected the tomb, there was no Barka inside. Perhaps his body never arrived from Aleppo. In 1846–47, the wealthy Khalidi family bought this building and indeed the entire street. Barka’s tomb is now the reading room of the Khalidi library, founded in 1900. It is still the home of Mrs. Haifa al-Khalidi and has a fine view of the Western Wall. As a quaint reminder of Jerusalem’s span of history, the extended house also contains a red British postbox from the Mandate.

g At times, Jerusalem was ruled from Syria, at times from Cairo where Shajar al-Durr made herself sultana in her own right. This was a feminine achievement unique in Islam and the source of many legends. As a young concubine, she had won the eye of the sultan by wearing a dress made entirely of pearls, hence Shajar al-Durr, Tree of Pearls. Now she needed male support so she married a mamluk officer, Aibeg, who became sultan. But the couple soon fell out and she had him stabbed in his bath. After eighty days’ reign the mamluks deposed her. Before she tried to escape, she ground her famous diamonds to dust so no other woman could wear them. When she was caught, Aibeg’s concubines (perhaps furious not to inherit the jewels) beat her to death with their clogs—the mamluk equivalent of death by stiletto.

Jerusalem
Mont_9780307594488_epub_cvi_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_adc_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_tp_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_cop_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_ded_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_epi_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_toc_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_ilo_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_fm1_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_map_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_prf_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_fm-nts01_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_prl_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_p01_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c01_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c02_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c03_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c04_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c05_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c06_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c07_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c08_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c09_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c10_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c11_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c12_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c13_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_p02_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c14_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_p03_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c15_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c16_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_p04_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c17_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c18_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c19_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c20_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_p05_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c21_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c22_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c23_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c24_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c25_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c26_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c27_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c28_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_p06_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c29_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c30_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_p07_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c31_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c32_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c33_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_p08_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c34_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c35_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c36_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c37_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c38_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c39_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c40_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c41_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_p09_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c42_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c43_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c44_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c45_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c46_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c47_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c48_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c49_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c50_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c51_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c52_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_c53_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_epl_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_bm3_1-5_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_bm3_6-10_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_bm3_11-15_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_bm3_16-21_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_bm3_22-25_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_bm3_26-30_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_bm3_31-35_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_bm3_36-41_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_bm3_42-45_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_bm3_46-50_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_bm3_51-55_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_bm3_56-60_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_bm3_61-65_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_bm3_66-70_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_bm3_71-74_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_bm01_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_amap1_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_ack_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_nts_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_bib_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_ind_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_ind1_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_ind2_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_ind3_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_ata_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_bm3_r1.htm
Mont_9780307594488_epub_bm3_map_r1.htm