The Mamluk Sultanate launched a naval raid on the Kingdom of Cyprus in March 1368. The raid was a delayed response to the Alexandrian Crusade of October 1365, which had been spearheaded by King Peter I of Cyprus.
The main sources for the expedition are Leontios Makhairas, al-Maqrizi and al-Nuwayri.
In response to the crusade, the Mamulk atÃÂbak Yalbugha al-Umari ordered the construction of a fleet at Cairo. Ibn QÃÂá¸Âë Shuhba dates this to NovemberâÂÂDecember 1365, but al-Maqrizi, who is probably more reliable, places it in JanuaryâÂÂFebruary 1366, at the same time as a fleet was ordered in Beirut.
Procurement in Cairo was to be the responsibility of the vizier MÃÂjid ibn al-Qazwëna, while construction was overseen by Ṭaybughàand BahÃÂþ al-Dën ibn al-Mufassar. According to al-Maqrizi, the craftsmen and sailors were imported from the Maghreb or recruited from among the Turcomans of Upper Egypt. According to al-Nuwayri, the fleet cast off on 28 November 1366. According to al-Maqrizi, there were 100 ships, each under the command of an emir. The Prise d'Alexandrie, however, puts the number of ships at 200.
In May 1366, the Ottomans offered to send 100 ships in a joint attack on Cyprus, but the Mamluks could not commit, since their fleet was still under construction. In March 1368, the privateer brothers Peter and John Grimante, sailing from Famagusta raided Alexandria and Damietta, seizing several ships. In Alexandria, they faced strong resistance from the captain of the arsenal, Ibrahim al-Tazi, who was from the Maghreb.
Sultan al-Ashraf Sha'ban immediately summoned al-Tazi to Cairo and offered him command of the fleet, moored at Boulaq, for a raid against Cyprus. Al-Tazi opted to take only a single ship from Cairo together with one other ship from Alexandria. He set sail from the port of Alexandria with 500 of his crew for an armed reconnaissance of the Cypriot coast. According to al-Nuwayri, he sent back a boat full of booty on 30 March. He captured one or two boats before being forced to retreat by Genoese galleys in Cypriot service. He returned to Alexandria in mid-April or early May. The sources are not entirely consistent, but the raid lasted about 23 days. It netted 35 Cypriot prisoners.