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The Mongols had never lost a major battle—until an army of former slaves crushed them at Ayn Jalut. This is the untold story of the Mamluks: slave soldiers who became history's most elite warriors and saved the Islamic world from annihilation. The year was 1260. Hulagu Khan's Mongol horde had just annihilated Baghdad—slaughtering hundreds of thousands and destroying the House of Wisdom. With the Islamic world in ruins, only Egypt stood between the Mongols and total conquest. But Egypt's defenders weren't nobles or knights. They were Mamluks: men born as slaves on the Central Asian steppes, captured as boys, and forged in Cairo's brutal barracks into an unstoppable warrior brotherhood. Led by Sultan Qutuz—a former slave with a personal vendetta against the Mongols—and the brilliant but ruthless general Baibars, they would pull off history's greatest military upset at the Battle of Ayn Jalut. 🔍 KEYWORDS: Mamluks, Battle of Ayn Jalut, Mongols defeated, Hulagu Khan, Sultan Qutuz, Baibars, Islamic history, medieval warfare, slave soldiers, Cairo history, Mongol Empire, Abbasid Caliphate, Baghdad sack 1258, Furusiyya, Mamluk Sultanate, Golden Horde civil war, Berke Khan, Second Battle of Homs, Marj al-Saffar 📚 SOURCES: • Amitai-Preiss, R. (1995). Mongols and Mamluks: The Mamluk-Ilkhanid War • Morgan, D. (2007). The Mongols (2nd ed.) • Ibn Taghribirdi, al-Nujum al-Zahira (chronicle of Mamluk history) • Amitai, R. (2013). "Whither the Ilkhanid Army?" in War and Society in the Eastern Mediterranean 👍 SUBSCRIBE for more untold stories of history's turning points: [CHANNEL LINK] #Mamluks #Mongols #AynJalut #MedievalHistory #IslamicHistory