01261 2200205 4500001002100000005001500021008004100036020001800077035001900095041000800114082001000122084001600132100001800148245005000166260002500216300002700241500002000268520074000288650002701028INLIS00000000000230120200508201818200508||||||||| | ||| |||| ||eng|| a1-84212-451 x 0010-0520002301 aeng0 a297.9 a297.9/LEW/T0 aBernard Lewis00aThe Assassins : A Radical Sect in Islam 05180 aLondonbOxfordc1967 ax, 166p.; 22cm.c22cm. aIndeks : indeks aAssassin is now a common noun in most European languages, but it first came to the West from Arabic around the time of the Crusades, when it was the name given to a secretive Islamic sect feared by the Crusaders and the Muslim establishment alike. Here Bernard Lewis traces the origins of the Assassin sect in the site branch of Islam and chronicles both their doctrines and the life of their enigmatic founder, the legendary Old Man of the Mountain. The Assassins were the first group to make palnned, systematic, and long-term use of murder as a political weapon, and their ideals and methods have since found many imitators. The Assassins is the most comprehensive, readeable, and authoritative account of history's first terrorist. 0aAssassins (Ismailites)