Montreal Castle

Montreal is a Crusader castle on the eastern side of the Arabah, perched on the side of a ‎rocky, conical mountain, looking out over fruit trees below. The ruins, called Shoubak or ‎Shawbak in Arabic, are located in modern town of Shoubak in Jordan. The castle was built in ‎‎1115 by Baldwin I of Jerusalem during his expedition to the area where he captured Aqaba ‎on the Red Sea in 1116. Originally called Krak de Montreal or Mons Regalis, it was named in ‎honor of the king's own contribution to its construction (Mont Royal). The castle is located ‎on a round hilltop site that is separated from the rest of the plateau of Edom, which along ‎with the Moab formed the core of Oultrejourdain. Despite appearance, the Edom plain was ‎a relatively fertile location, which made the site, along with its strategic importance, highly ‎desirable. The castle was strategically important due to the fact that it also dominated the ‎main passage from Egypt to Syria. This allowed whoever to hold the castle to tax not only ‎traders, both those who were on pilgrimages to Mecca and Medina. One of the major ‎disadvantages of the site was an issue that the Crusaders encountered all over the Middle ‎East, that issue is the lack of a reliable source of water. This problem was solved by the ‎construction of a tunnel down the hill to two spring-fed cisterns. The tunnel allowed for ‎defenders to go and retrieve water without exposing themselves to any attackers. It ‎remained property of the royal family of the Kingdom of Jerusalem until 1142, when it ‎became part of the Lordship of Oultrejordain. ‎

At the same time, the center of the Lordship was moved to Kerak, a stronger fortress to the ‎north of Montreal. Along with Kerak, the castle owed sixty knights to the kingdom. The first ‎Lord of Oultrejordain was Philip of Nablus. It was held by Philip de Milly, and then passed to ‎Raynald of Châtillon when he married Stephanie de Milly. Raynald used the castle to attack ‎the rich caravans that had previously been allowed to pass unharmed. He also built ships ‎there, then transported them overland to the Red Sea, planning to attack Mecca itself. This ‎was intolerable to the Ayyubid sultan Saladin, who invaded the kingdom in 1187. After ‎capturing Jerusalem, later in the year he besieged Montreal. During the siege the defenders ‎are said to have sold their wives and children for food, and to have gone blind from "lack of ‎salt." Because of the hill Saladin was unable to use siege engines, but after almost two years ‎the castle finally fell to his troops in May 1189, after which the defenders' families were ‎returned to them. After its capture, Salah al Din awarded it to his brother, al Adil who held it ‎until after his brothers death in 1193. During negotiations between the crusaders and the ‎Ayyubids in 1218, the Ayyubids unwillingness to hand back over the ownership of Montreal ‎and Kerak was a major reason the negotiations broke down. In 1261, the Mamluk Sultan ‎Baybars, stormed the castle bringing it under the control of Egypt.‎