The Crusader Lords of Nephin, triply safe behind the walls
of Enfe, the vast rock-cut moat which severed the peninsula
from the town, and the sea-swept battlements of their citadel,
soon established a reputation as robber barons, the terror of
travellers between Jerusalem and Tripoli.
The town itself had a better reputation, for its wines were
known and prized far and wide throughout the Latin kingdom in
the 12th and 13th Centuries.
Black Deeds
Rather than chastise his unruly vassals in Enfe, the
sovereign Count of Tripoli used to buy their loyalty and
services through a laissez faire policy, so that the unsavory
deeds of the Seigneur de Nephin came to be linked with the
fortunes of Tripoli's ruling dynasty, the princely House of
Antioch, in the 13th Century.
Perhaps the blackest deed ever perpetrated at Nephin took
place in 1282 during one of the suicidal civil wars which so
weakened the Crusaders as to make them an easy prey for the
Mamluk sultans of Egypt.
Guy II d'Ibelin, 8th Lord of Gibelet (Byblos), last of the
House of Embriaci to hold Jebail in fief from the County of
Tripoli, had attacked his suzerain and cousin, Count Bohemond
WI, in conjunction with one of the great Crusading orders, in
order to overthrow the House of Antioch and constitute himself
sovereign of Tripoli.
Bohemond, in violation of the capitulation agreement, sent
Guy, surrendered on terms which fixed his punishment at a
limited period of imprisonment.
Buried Alive
Behemond, in violation of the capitulation agreement, sent
Guy, his brothers Jean and Baudoin and their cousin Guillaume
di Embriaco, to Enfe, with secret sealed orders instructing
the Lord of Nephin to see to it that they died in prison.
Perhaps over-zealous to execute his master's implied wish,
the robber baron of Enfe gleefully threw the luckless nobles
into a small cell in the dungeon and sealed it up with
masonry, allowing the Embriaci to starve to death.
In revenge, Guillaume's brother, Bartholomew, on Bohemond
VII's death five years later, organized a revolution in
Tripoli, dethroned the Countess Lucia, Bohemond's daughter, in
absentia (she had married an Italian admiral and was in Europe
at the time) and proclaimed Tripoli a republic or commune,
with himself as Captain-General.
Fall of Tripoli
While Lucia, her husband, the Templars, Hospitallers,
Gcnoese, Pisans, Venetians and the commune were engaged in
suicidal dissentions two years later (1289), Sultan Qalawun
suddenly attacked, captured and destroyed Tripoli. Those of
Lucia's knights who escaped from the burning city to the two
remaining coastal castles of Batroun and Nephin were unable to
withstand the full fury of the Mamluk army and beat a further
retreat to the island kingdom of Cyprus.
Sultan Qalawun destroyed both castles so thoroughly that
even the site of Batroun's citadel is lost from history.
With Nephin it was a different story, for here the
Crusaders had performed one of the great engineering feats of
the middle ages. They had cut off the peninsular fortress from
Enfe proper by cutting a great moat, at sea level, all the way
across the peninsula, for over 100 yards, through the living
rock, leaving only a small spur in the center at the south end
to support the castle's drawbridge.
Vast Rock Cuttings
Another cut further protected the keep, a little to the
west. The keep itself was also partly carved from living
rock. These mammoth rock carvings remain today in virtually
their original state and make a visit to Enfe well worth
while.
A single fragment of rubble masonry wall near the end of
the peninsula, overlooking the long ramp cut in the living
rock, down which the knights of Nephin escaped onto their
ships in 1289, abandoning this fortress in the middle of the
night, is all that remains standing today. Some bossed stones,
foundation or retaining walls, and some great blocks of stone
blending into the sides of the moat are also to be seen at the
north end of the cut, as are a few excavated cisterns.
The interesting steps, niches, tanks, tombs, cave and other
rock carvings on the town side of the cut are now considered
to be almost entirely of pre-Crusader Ph¾nieian and
Greco-Roman origin, as Nephin is an extremely ancient
inhabited place whose early origin is lost in antiquity. These
will be discussed in connection with other pre-Crusader ruins
of Enfe in the second part of this article.
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