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CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
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had been forced to embrace Islam were permitted to relapse. This last was without
parallel, till in 1844 Lord Stratford de Redcliffe wrung from the Porte the concession
that a Muslim who apostatized to Christianity should not be put to death. But, mingled
with this indifference, there appeared a strange but regular development of Shi'ite
doctrine. Some of his followers began to proclaim openly that the deity was incarnate in
him, and it was evident that he himself accepted and believed this. But the Egyptian
populace would have none of it, and the too rash innovators had to flee. Some went to the
Lebanon and there preached to the native mountain tribes. The results of their labors are
the Druses of today, who worship al-Hakim still and expect his return to introduce the end
of all things. Finally, al-Hakim vanished on the night of February 12, A.D. 1021, and left
a mystery unread to this day. Whether he was murdered, and if so why, or vanished of
free-will, and if so again why, we have no means of telling. Our guess will depend upon
our reading of his character. So much is certain, that he was a ruler of the autocratic
type, who introduced many reforms, most of which the people of his time could not in the
least understand and therefore misrepresented as the mere whims of a tyrant, and many of
which, from our ignorance, are still obscure to us. If we can imagine such a man of strong
personality and desire for the good of his people but with a touch of madness in the
brain, cast thus in the midst between his orthodox subjects and a wholly unbelieving inner
government, we shall perhaps
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have the clue to the strange stories told of him.
Another product of this conspiracy, and the last to which we shall refer, is the sect
known as the Assassins, whose Grand Master was a name of terror to the Crusaders as the
Old Man of the Mountain. It, too, was founded, and apparently for a purpose of personal
vengeance, by a Persian who began as a Shi'ite and ended as nothing. He came to Egypt,
studied under the Fatimidsthey had established at Cairo a great school of scienceand
returned to Persia as their agent to carry on their propaganda. His methods were the same
as theirs, with a difference. That was the reduction of assassination to a fine art. From
his eagle's nest of Alamutsuch is the meaning of the nameand later from Masyaf in
the Lebanon and other mountain fortresses, he and his successors spread terror through
Persia and Syria and were only finally stamped out by the Mongol flood under Hulagu in the
middle of the seventh century of the Hijra (the 13th A.D.). Of the sect there are still
scattered remnants in Syria and India, and as late as 1866 an English judge at Bombay had
to decide a case of disputed succession according to the law of the Assassins. Finally,
the Fatimid dynasty itself fell before the Kurd, Salah ad-Din, the Saladin of our annals,
and Egypt was again orthodox.
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