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Alamut

 Alamut
type
TVTItem
 Alamut
label
Alamut
 Alamut
page
Alamut
 Alamut
comment
Persia, 1092. Young, poetic ibn Tahir leaves his village for Alamut with the intention of becoming a soldier. There he is trained not just physically, but also mentally, with courses in science, literature, and radical Islam. After much brutal physical training and intense study, ibn Tahir finally becomes an elite fedayeen, a group of young soldiers fanatically devoted to Alamut’s leader, Hassan ibn Sabbah.Elsewhere, beautiful young slave girl Halima is brought to just outside Alamut and sold to ibn Sabbah. He takes her to a secret garden behind Alamut, where to her confusion she is dressed in nice clothes and placed with other girls in a class where they are taught seemingly unrelated subjects. But there is a purpose to all of this: Halima is being trained to play the role of a houris, a virgin of paradise.What neither of them know is that they are both pawns in Hassan ibn Sabbah’s insane plan, by which he intends to pit his small, but unreachable, fortress against the vast Seljuk Empire.He is going to handpick certain members of his ascetic fedayeen, inform them that they’ve been granted a glimpse of paradise, and then give them a pill of hashish (concentrated opium). They’ll wake up in the garden, surrounded by all sorts of wonders they’ve never even heard of, and between that, the hashish, the willing houris, and some applied psychology, the fedayeen will sincerely believe that they’ve been transported to paradise. Another hashish pill will put them under, and they’ll wake up back at Alamut. There ibn Sabbah will order his fedayeen, now in drug withdrawal, to kill a single highly guarded enemy. Of course, the assassin will surely die, but they’ll go straight to paradise for all eternity if, and only if, they succeed.Written by Vladimir Bartol in 1938 Slovenia, Alamut is one of the great novels of his language. It incorporates all of the (false) stories and legends that surround the historical Hashshashin, and uses them to weigh some heavy philosophical issues.It only recently has been translated into English, and was one of the main inspirations for Assassin's Creed.
 Alamut
fetched
2024-04-04T19:37:40Z
 Alamut
parsed
2024-04-04T19:37:40Z
 Alamut
processingComment
Dropped link to GenreBusting: Not a Feature - IGNORE
 Alamut
processingComment
Dropped link to Troll: Not a Feature - IGNORE
 Alamut
isPartOf
DBTropes
 Alamut / int_13c1fec8
type
Dragon-in-Chief
 Alamut / int_13c1fec8
comment
Dragon-in-Chief: Despite the fact that the Abbasid caliph in Baghdad is his nominal superior, the Seljuk sultan Malik Shah is widely seen as the real ruler of Iran. In turn, Malik Shah himself leaves most of the business of ruling to his grand vizier Nizam al-Mulk. The same goes for ibn Sabbah, who acts like a fully independent ruler even though he technically acknowledges the Fatimid caliph in Cairo as his superior.
 Alamut / int_13c1fec8
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Alamut / int_13c1fec8
 Alamut / int_1439161f
type
Heroic BSoD
 Alamut / int_1439161f
comment
Heroic BSoD: ibn Tahir doesn't take it well when he finds out that his idol and mentor is a fraud who cynically sent him to his death to eliminate a political opponent, and that the girl he loves is the former's accomplice and concubine.
 Alamut / int_1439161f
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Alamut / int_1439161f
 Alamut / int_19851b86
type
The Sociopath
 Alamut / int_19851b86
comment
The Sociopath: Although ibn Sabbah does have loved ones, he definitely falls into this trope.
 Alamut / int_19851b86
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Alamut / int_19851b86
 Alamut / int_234fa9ba
type
May–December Romance
 Alamut / int_234fa9ba
comment
May–December Romance: Miriam and Hassan.
 Alamut / int_234fa9ba
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Alamut / int_234fa9ba
 Alamut / int_297ab1b9
type
Parental Abandonment
 Alamut / int_297ab1b9
comment
Parental Abandonment: Hassan abandons his son in childhood... With his abusive grandparents. And then is surprised when the boy resents him.
 Alamut / int_297ab1b9
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Alamut / int_297ab1b9
 Alamut / int_2a6bf668
type
Inadequate Inheritor
 Alamut / int_2a6bf668
comment
Inadequate Inheritor: ibn Sabbah’s son Hosain.
 Alamut / int_2a6bf668
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Alamut / int_2a6bf668
 Alamut / int_2cac89cf
type
The Ingenue
 Alamut / int_2cac89cf
comment
The Ingenue: Halima.
 Alamut / int_2cac89cf
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Alamut / int_2cac89cf
 Alamut / int_3036294e
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Scary Black Man
 Alamut / int_3036294e
comment
Scary Black Man: ibn Sabbah’s bodyguards.
 Alamut / int_3036294e
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Alamut / int_3036294e
 Alamut / int_38f1a7ed
type
Defector from Decadence
 Alamut / int_38f1a7ed
comment
Defector from Decadence: Hassan ibn Sabbah’s motivation.
 Alamut / int_38f1a7ed
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Alamut / int_38f1a7ed
 Alamut / int_3d5547b0
type
Perfect Poison
 Alamut / int_3d5547b0
comment
Perfect Poison: Averted with the poisoned blades the fedayeen use. The victims die horrifyingly painful deaths.
 Alamut / int_3d5547b0
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Alamut / int_3d5547b0
 Alamut / int_40cc0c7e
type
Bittersweet Ending
 Alamut / int_40cc0c7e
comment
Bittersweet Ending: The ending could arguably be interpreted as this. ibn Sabbah destroys the oppressive Seljuk Empire and his people will thrive, but he cuts off most of his humanity in the process. Ibn Tahir now understands the truth, and goes off to learn about the world. Although it doesn’t say it in the book, ibn Sabbah’s people thrive for less than 200 years.
 Alamut / int_40cc0c7e
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Alamut / int_40cc0c7e
 Alamut / int_4127eb1
type
Shut Up, Hannibal!
 Alamut / int_4127eb1
comment
Shut Up, Hannibal!: When ibn Sabbah reveals his nihilistic philosophy to his son Hosain, the latter simply responds: "I dealt with that when I was 14".
 Alamut / int_4127eb1
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Alamut / int_4127eb1
 Alamut / int_4e34d653
type
See You in Hell
 Alamut / int_4e34d653
comment
See You in Hell: One fedayeen is instructed to smuggle the poisoned blade to his target by hiding it in a sealed message that he is supposed to be delivering. After the blade delivers a fatal dose of the poison, the victim and the guards open the message:
 Alamut / int_4e34d653
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Alamut / int_4e34d653
 Alamut / int_4e3d253b
type
Downer Ending
 Alamut / int_4e3d253b
comment
Downer Ending: Another interpretation: Miriam, Halima, Yusuf, and Suleiman are all dead. The Sultan, who wasn’t really that bad a guy, is horribly murdered and the country falls into chaos. Ibn Tahir falls into nihilism and ibn Sabbah, despite his betrayals and murders, essentially gets away with it and is revered as holy by his people.
 Alamut / int_4e3d253b
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Alamut / int_4e3d253b
 Alamut / int_545d100b
type
Intelligence Equals Isolation
 Alamut / int_545d100b
comment
Intelligence Equals Isolation: Hassan firmly believes this, disturbingly equating accepting his philosophies with wisdom, and being dismissive of people who consider them unacceptable - which in his period is most people. He doesn't get a clue this might not be so even when his son, whom he considers an idiot, accepts his philosophy, and very easily; instead, he just thinks Hosain "doesn't fully grasp it".
 Alamut / int_545d100b
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Alamut / int_545d100b
 Alamut / int_56515a39
type
Artistic License – History
 Alamut / int_56515a39
comment
Artistic License – History: The entire narrative is based on the legends surrounding Alamut and Hassan ibn Sabbah ("the Old Man in the Mountain"), so pretty much everything that happens in the book has an associated legend in the real world, even if it's not actual history. A good example is that there were no gardens in Alamut, though there really was a long-standing legend that the real-life hashashins went through the same process the fedayeens are shown going through in the book. We don't know the identity of Nizam al-Mulk's killer, and it's not certain he was a member of the assassins, though given their modus operandi and real-life animosities between him and the order, it's not unlikely. Malik Shah's death might likewise have been caused by a number of his enemies, including caliph and supporters of Nizam al-Mulk. The author ascribes both acts to assassins in order to paint Hassan Ibn Sabbah as a formidable chessmaster. There's no reason to believe real-life Hassan Ibn Sabbah was anything other than a devout Shia Muslim, contrary to the fictionalized version in this book.
 Alamut / int_56515a39
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Alamut / int_56515a39
 Alamut / int_5f207a1a
type
Courtroom Episode
 Alamut / int_5f207a1a
comment
Courtroom Episode: The arraignment/trial of ibn Sabbah’s son for murder and mutiny.
 Alamut / int_5f207a1a
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 Alamut / int_5f207a1a
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 Alamut
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Alamut / int_5f207a1a
 Alamut / int_61996785
type
Sacrificial Lamb
 Alamut / int_61996785
comment
Sacrificial Lamb: ibn Vakas is executed in ibn Tahir's place after the latter decides not to kill Hassan.
 Alamut / int_61996785
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Alamut / int_61996785
 Alamut / int_63be4131
type
Pretty Boy
 Alamut / int_63be4131
comment
Pretty Boy: Suleiman.
 Alamut / int_63be4131
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 Alamut / int_63be4131
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Alamut / int_63be4131
 Alamut / int_6d332aea
type
Driven to Suicide
 Alamut / int_6d332aea
comment
Driven to Suicide: Or tricked into it. Well, not Miriam. Halima was arguably an accident.
 Alamut / int_6d332aea
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Alamut / int_6d332aea
 Alamut / int_7335ffa9
type
Grey-and-Gray Morality
 Alamut / int_7335ffa9
comment
Grey-and-Gray Morality: Most of the characters, although ibn Sabbah arguably acts more on Blue-and-Orange Morality.
 Alamut / int_7335ffa9
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 Alamut / int_7335ffa9
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Alamut / int_7335ffa9
 Alamut / int_7464705c
type
Arc Words
 Alamut / int_7464705c
comment
Arc Words: "Nothing is true, everything is permitted."
 Alamut / int_7464705c
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Alamut / int_7464705c
 Alamut / int_76dc4f31
type
"Arabian Nights" Days
 Alamut / int_76dc4f31
comment
"Arabian Nights" Days: The novel broadly falls under this trope, although the setting is described a bit more realistically than in other examples.
 Alamut / int_76dc4f31
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 Alamut / int_76dc4f31
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Alamut / int_76dc4f31
 Alamut / int_786bf97f
type
Real Life Writes the Plot
 Alamut / int_786bf97f
comment
Real Life Writes the Plot: Bartol wrote this parable on fascism in 1930s Europe.
 Alamut / int_786bf97f
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 Alamut / int_786bf97f
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Alamut / int_786bf97f
 Alamut / int_80eb641c
type
Straw Nihilist
 Alamut / int_80eb641c
comment
Straw Nihilist: ibn Sabbah is ultimately this-he believes only in rational thought to the point where he finds joy in nothing except ambition, because he can't trust anything to make him happy. Played with, however, in that he also believes there is such a thing as compassion, and he greatly respects religious figures of myth, who he viewed as Anti-Nihilists who came up with religion as a way to save humanity from its own selfish impulses. Miriam initially believes she is this as well, but later discovers that she genuinely cares for some of the other characters.
 Alamut / int_80eb641c
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Alamut / int_80eb641c
 Alamut / int_814356cb
type
White-Dwarf Starlet
 Alamut / int_814356cb
comment
White-Dwarf Starlet: Apama.
 Alamut / int_814356cb
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 Alamut / int_814356cb
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Alamut / int_814356cb
 Alamut / int_8658cd14
type
Agent Scully
 Alamut / int_8658cd14
comment
Agent Scully: ibn Tahir comes close, but Obeida is the only one who sees through the fake paradise that ibn Sabbah has created. It doesn't end well for him.
 Alamut / int_8658cd14
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Alamut / int_8658cd14
 Alamut / int_8caa992e
type
Weak-Willed
 Alamut / int_8caa992e
comment
Weak-Willed: ibn Tahir, which is amusing considering he's "the smart fedayeen." When he wakes up in Alamut's gardens he's initially skeptical that he's in Paradise, but Miriam persuades him pretty quickly. He becomes a fanatical servant of ibn Sabbah and gleefully undertakes a Suicide Mission to assassinate the grand vizier. But after ibn Tahir mortally wounds the vizier, it takes the vizier about 30 seconds to pull the wool from ibn Tahir's eyes and (rightly) convince him that ibn Sabbah had manipulated him with a false paradise. He then hates ibn Sabbah with a white hot fury and vows to kill the old man...except, once the two are actually face-to-face, ibn Sabbah is able to again completely destroy ibn Tahir's worldview over the course of about two pages and turn the young man into a Straw Nihilist like himself.
 Alamut / int_8caa992e
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Alamut / int_8caa992e
 Alamut / int_9d0cfdb9
type
Sex Is Evil, and I Am Horny
 Alamut / int_9d0cfdb9
comment
Sex Is Evil, and I Am Horny: The students struggle with their sexuality even before they are taken to the garden, and afterwards it is that much worse.
 Alamut / int_9d0cfdb9
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Alamut / int_9d0cfdb9
 Alamut / int_a32c4e5d
type
Chessmaster
 Alamut / int_a32c4e5d
comment
Chessmaster: Hassan ibn Sabbah, and he knows it - he regularly emphasizes how what comes to fruition throughout the novel is just the result of decades of planning. And everything does end up working just as he intended, though sometimes it seems like it won't.
 Alamut / int_a32c4e5d
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Alamut / int_a32c4e5d
 Alamut / int_a70223
type
Karma Houdini
 Alamut / int_a70223
comment
Karma Houdini: By the end of the book, Hassan suffers no retribution for any of his actions.
 Alamut / int_a70223
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Alamut / int_a70223
 Alamut / int_a8dcb1d7
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Love at First Sight
 Alamut / int_a8dcb1d7
comment
Love at First Sight: Yusuf and Zuleika and Suleiman and Halima both experience this in the garden. Special mention goes to ibn Tahir however, who is so utterly smitten by Miriam's beauty and intellect that he faints when she even so much as kisses him.
 Alamut / int_a8dcb1d7
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Alamut / int_a8dcb1d7
 Alamut / int_a9eb984b
type
Warrior Poet
 Alamut / int_a9eb984b
comment
Warrior Poet: ibn Tahir.
 Alamut / int_a9eb984b
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Alamut / int_a9eb984b
 Alamut / int_ad1db87c
type
Oh, Crap!
 Alamut / int_ad1db87c
comment
Oh, Crap!: When ibn Tahir returns to Alamut alive, Hassan's initial reaction is this. He quickly regains control of the situation though.
 Alamut / int_ad1db87c
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Alamut / int_ad1db87c
 Alamut / int_ad2bf80c
type
The Hashshashin
 Alamut / int_ad2bf80c
comment
The Hashshashin
 Alamut / int_ad2bf80c
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Alamut / int_ad2bf80c
 Alamut / int_b2e94341
type
Based on a Great Big Lie
 Alamut / int_b2e94341
comment
Based on a Great Big Lie: The book draws heavily from all the myths surrounding The Hashshashin of old, nearly all of which are false. But the book probably wasn’t meant to be a true-to-life history.
 Alamut / int_b2e94341
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Alamut / int_b2e94341
 Alamut / int_b333f02e
type
Achilles in His Tent
 Alamut / int_b333f02e
comment
Achilles in His Tent / Orcus on His Throne: ibn Sabbah leaves Alamut only once in the story, namely to pick up Halima from the slavers.
 Alamut / int_b333f02e
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 Alamut / int_b333f02e
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Alamut / int_b333f02e
 Alamut / int_bf110089
type
Break Them by Talking
 Alamut / int_bf110089
comment
Break Them by Talking: Hassan to ibn Tahir.
 Alamut / int_bf110089
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Alamut / int_bf110089
 Alamut / int_ca85e684
type
Power Trio
 Alamut / int_ca85e684
comment
Power Trio: The three main fedayeens of the story: Yusuf, Suleiman and ibn Tahir. In particular, they're a male variant of Beauty, Brains, and Brawn; respectively, Suleiman (frequently noted to be beautiful, even by the other fedayeen), ibn Tahir (a natural poet who excels in the fedayeen classes) and Yusuf, who is the biggest and strongest among the characters.
 Alamut / int_ca85e684
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Alamut / int_ca85e684
 Alamut / int_d001c42c
type
Anti-Villain
 Alamut / int_d001c42c
comment
Anti-Villain: Nizam al-Mulk is, by all accounts, an excellent administrator who has brought decades of prosperity to Iran. It just happens that he had to purge a few religious sects to achieve that.
 Alamut / int_d001c42c
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Alamut / int_d001c42c
 Alamut / int_d0f0a80d
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One-Word Title
 Alamut / int_d0f0a80d
comment
One-Word Title: The Place the story is set.
 Alamut / int_d0f0a80d
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Alamut / int_d0f0a80d
 Alamut / int_d3ec9dfd
type
Ordered to Die
 Alamut / int_d3ec9dfd
comment
Ordered to Die: Hassan demonstrates his power over his acolytes by ordering two of them to commit suicide, which they do without hesitation.
 Alamut / int_d3ec9dfd
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Alamut / int_d3ec9dfd
 Alamut / int_d3f33049
type
Blasphemous Boast
 Alamut / int_d3f33049
comment
Blasphemous Boast: When ibn Tahir meets Miriam he mentions that after meeting her Ali and the martyrs mean nothing to him anymore, and that he would "dislodge Allah from his throne" and put Miriam there instead.
 Alamut / int_d3f33049
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Alamut / int_d3f33049
 Alamut / int_d66cd0e6
type
Training from Hell
 Alamut / int_d66cd0e6
comment
Training from Hell: The fedayeen’s training regimen, which aside from familiar subjects such as writing, mathematics and religious studies also includes things like walking barefoot over hot coals, climbing down huge cliffs and "breathing exercises" which involve the students holding their breath until they faint.
 Alamut / int_d66cd0e6
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Alamut / int_d66cd0e6
 Alamut / int_d68c925d
type
Creator Provincialism
 Alamut / int_d68c925d
comment
Creator Provincialism: Inverted, a story written by an interwar Slovene novelist about medieval Iran. The subject matter on the book was, on the surface at least, so far removed from Bartol's own background that he would occasionally meet Slovene people who would claim to his face that the book had been written by an English or Indian author, and that Bartol had merely been the translator.
 Alamut / int_d68c925d
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Alamut / int_d68c925d
 Alamut / int_d7b34c31
type
Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep"
 Alamut / int_d7b34c31
comment
Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep": Hassan is known as "Sayyiduna" or "our master" to all but his closest initiates. Similarly, ibn Tahir is a title meaning "son of Tahir". The character's actual name is Avani.
 Alamut / int_d7b34c31
featureApplicability
1.0
 Alamut / int_d7b34c31
featureConfidence
1.0
 Alamut
hasFeature
Alamut / int_d7b34c31
 Alamut / int_dfb71617
type
Male Gaze
 Alamut / int_dfb71617
comment
Male Gaze: The beauty of the harem slaves is dwelt on extensively, although to be fair this happens to some of the male characters as well.
 Alamut / int_dfb71617
featureApplicability
1.0
 Alamut / int_dfb71617
featureConfidence
1.0
 Alamut
hasFeature
Alamut / int_dfb71617
 Alamut / int_e4ba33fc
type
Disaster Dominoes
 Alamut / int_e4ba33fc
comment
Disaster Dominoes: When one of the fedayeen kills the Seljuk Sultan, the resulting succession crisis causes a civil war.
 Alamut / int_e4ba33fc
featureApplicability
1.0
 Alamut / int_e4ba33fc
featureConfidence
1.0
 Alamut
hasFeature
Alamut / int_e4ba33fc
 Alamut / int_eb8ec7c8
type
Jerkass
 Alamut / int_eb8ec7c8
comment
Jerkass: Hosain.
 Alamut / int_eb8ec7c8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Alamut / int_eb8ec7c8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Alamut
hasFeature
Alamut / int_eb8ec7c8
 Alamut / int_edb0bee3
type
Garden of Love
 Alamut / int_edb0bee3
comment
Garden of Love: The "paradise" at Alamut could be considered a horribly perverted version. Certain characters do fall in love there, but overall it's not a romantic place in the slightest if you know its true purpose.
 Alamut / int_edb0bee3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Alamut / int_edb0bee3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Alamut
hasFeature
Alamut / int_edb0bee3
 Alamut / int_fab3235a
type
Easy Evangelism
 Alamut / int_fab3235a
comment
Easy Evangelism: It doesn’t take a whole lot for ibn Tahir to switch to ibn Sabbah’s thinking.
 Alamut / int_fab3235a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Alamut / int_fab3235a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Alamut
hasFeature
Alamut / int_fab3235a
 Alamut / int_name
type
ItemName
 Alamut / int_name
comment
 Alamut / int_name
featureApplicability
1.0
 Alamut / int_name
featureConfidence
1.0
 Alamut
hasFeature
Alamut / int_name
 Alamut / int_name
itemName
Alamut

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Alamut
seeAlso
Alamut
 Alamut
hasFeature
Inadequate Inheritor / int_b2f216c3
 Alamut
hasFeature
Ordered to Die / int_b2f216c3
 Alamut
hasFeature
Professional Killer / int_b2f216c3
 Alamut
hasFeature
Scary Black Man / int_b2f216c3
 Alamut
hasFeature
Slovene Media / int_b2f216c3
 Alamut
hasFeature
The Hashshashin / int_b2f216c3
 Alamut
hasFeature
Trickster Mentor / int_b2f216c3