The Siege of Baghdad (1393) marked the capture of the Jalayirid Sultanate capital Baghdad by the Timurids in 1393. The ruler of the Jalayirids, Ahmad Jalayir, fled to the Mamluk capital. The death and destruction was more severe when Timur attacked the city again in 1401.
The siege of Baghdad immediately followed the Battle of Shiraz (1393), in which the Timurids defeated Shah Mansur and put an end to the Muzaffarids in southwestern Iran. With the fall of the Muzaffarids, potential opposition on his southwestern flank being resolved, Timur then continued with the conquest of Jalayirid Baghdad in 1393, forcing Sultan Ahmad Jalayir to flee. Timur massacred part of the population and ordered the pillage of the city. Heavy taxes were imposed on the rest of the population.
Timur also deported many scholars and artists such as âÂÂthe masters of the renowned Baghdad school of book illumination, who had enjoyed the protection of Sulá¹ÂÃÂn Aḥmad". Following the siege, Timur captured Ahamd Jalayir's son Ala-al-Dawla and numerous artists and scholars whom he brought to Samarkand. Dust Muhammad, the Safavid calligrapher and historian, reports that Timur captured the Jalayirid miniature artist Khwaja Abdul-Hayy from Baghdad to bring him back to the Timurid court in Samarkand, where his style was then followed by local court artists:
Timur finally left after two months, going on to conquer Tikrit. Following the siege, Timur established as governor of Baghdad ḴwÃÂja Masÿud SabzavÃÂri, a rather benevolent SarbadÃÂri prince. Timur then completed the conquest of western Persia, Armenia and Azerbaijan in 1393-1394, also subjugating Georgia in 1394.
The Jalayirid ruler Ahmad Jalayir first went to Damascus, and later to Cairo, where he was received by the Mamluk sultan Barquq. The Mamluks were rivals of Timur, so offering Ahmad Jalayir protection was politically useful in opposing Timurid expansion. The Mamluk army accompanied Ahmad Jalayir back to his lands, leading to the successful capture of Baghdad (1394).
Timur would come back again with the Siege of Baghdad (1401).