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Al-Adil I
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== Death and legacy == One of the main objects of al-Adil's foreign policy was to avoid provoking the launching of a new [[Crusade]]. However, in September 1217 (Jumada II 612) a new crusader army disembarked at Acre. Al-Adil was totally unprepared for this assault and despite being seventy-two years of age he hurriedly took his forces into Palestine to engage with them. The campaigns in Palestine did not bring him any notable success however, and in August 1218 (Jumada 1 615) he received the shocking news that a second Crusader force had landed in Egypt and were attacking Damietta.<ref>From Saladin to the Mongols: The Ayyubids of Damascus, 1193β1260 by R. Stephen Humphreys, p. 160</ref> He fell ill and died while on campaign (August 1218) and was succeeded by his son [[Malik Al-Kamil]]. Al Adil's rule was decisive in determining the shape of the Ayyubid realm for many years to come. After him, the succession in Egypt and to the coveted title of Sultan remained in the eldest male line of his successors. His descendants also controlled the critical border fortress of [[Mayyafariqin]] in the far northeast of the Ayyubid realm. Elsewhere, Saladin's descendants retained Aleppo, and the family of Al-Adil's other brother [[Nur ad-Din Shahanshah]] held Baalbek and Hama. Homs was held by the descendants of Al-Adil's uncle [[Shirkuh]]. Damascus became the main focus of rivalry between different branches of the family, changing hands a number of times before Ayyubid rule came to an end.<ref>Lane-Poole, Stanley,The Mohammedan Dynasties, Constable, London 1894 p.77</ref>
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