As these horsemen neared Emessa, the terrified inhabitants and the remnants of the
Roman garrison which had not joined the pursuit hastily withdrew into the fort and closed
the gates. Muadh deployed his men in front of the gates to prevent the Romans in Emessa
from coming out and the Romans outside Emessa from getting in. The Muslim camp was
now safe.
Khalid and the Roman general squared off. This general has been described by eye-
witnesses as a man 'roaring like a lion'.
1
Khalid was the first to strike, and brought down
his sword with all his strength on the heavily-armoured head of the Roman; but instead of
piercing the helmet, the sword broke and Khalid was left with the hilt in his hand. Before
the Roman could strike, Khalid closed in and grappled with him. The two giants held
each other in a pitiless embrace; and then Khalid did something that he had never done
before: he began to crush the chest of the Roman in his arms. The Roman turned red in
the face and was unable to breathe as Khalid's grip tightened. Gasping for breath, the
Roman struggled frantically to break the steel-like grip of the Muslim, but the terrible
grip only grew tighter. Then the Roman's ribs splintered and the jagged ends plunged into
his own flesh. When all movement had ceased in the body of the Roman, Khalid relaxed
his grip, and what fell to the ground was a lifeless corps. Khalid had literally crushed his
adversary to death in his arms!
2
He now took the Roman general's sword and again his
battle cry rang out over the battlefield.
When offering his plan for this feigned withdrawal, Khalid had promised Abu Ubaidah
that the Muslims would "tear the Romans apart and break their backs". In this they were
eminently successful. It is recorded that only about a hundred Romans got away.
3
The
Muslims, on the other hand, lost only 235 dead in the entire operation against Emessa,
from the beginning of the siege to the end of this last action.
As soon as this action was over the Muslims returned to Emessa and resumed the siege,
but those who were in Emessa had now no stomach for fighting. The local inhabitants
offered to surrender on terms, and Abu Ubaidah accepted the offer. This happened
around the middle of March, 636 (beginning of Safar, 15 Hijri). The inhabitants paid the
Jizya at the rate of one dinar per man, and peace returned to Emessa. No damage was
done to the city and nothing was taken by the Muslims as plunder.
Soon after the surrender of Emessa, the Muslims set out once again for the north,
intending to take the whole of Northern Syria this time, including Aleppo and Antioch.
They went past Hama and arrived at Shaizer. Here a Roman convoy taking provisions to
Qinassareen and escorted by a small body of soldiers was intercepted and captured by
Khalid. The prisoners were interrogated, and the information they provided stopped the
Muslims in their tracks!
The Muslims had fought and defeated every force that Heraclius had thrown against
them-all the armies, all the relief columns, all the fortress garrisons. All had bowed
before the superior military quality of the Muslim army. But what Heraclius now
evidently planned was to unleash a veritable tornado against them, which, if they were
not careful, would hurl them in pieces into the Arabian desert.
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: