Victim(s) |
Description |
Result |
Date |
Location |
Assassin(s) |
Method |
Notes |
Nizam al-Mulk |
Seljuq vizier and de facto ruler |
killed |
1092, October 14 |
Sahnah, Seljuq Empire |
assassin disguised as dervish; killed or fled or survived |
knife |
Their first and most notable action.[1][8] |
Ahmad ibn Muhammad al-Labbad (أحمد بن محمد اللباد) |
governor of Isfahan |
killed |
1093 |
Isfahan, Seljuq Empire |
unknown |
unknown |
[1] |
Unar Malikshahi (انر ملکشاهی) |
amir sipahdar |
killed |
1096, January-February |
unknown |
Husayn Khwarezmi (حسین خوارزمی) |
unknown |
|
Abd al-Rahman Qazwini |
|
killed |
490 AH |
unknown |
a Khurasani rafiq |
unknown |
|
Abu Muslim |
ra'is (prefect) of Ray |
killed |
1095 |
unknown |
a friend |
unknown |
[1] |
Abd al-Rahman al-Simirumi (عبد الرحمان السميرمي) |
vizier of Seljuq sultan Barkayaruq |
killed |
1097 |
unknown |
Abu Tahir al-Arrani (أبو طاهر الأراني); fled |
unknown |
[1] |
Arghush al-Nizami (أرغوش النظامي) |
amir sipahdar, mamluk of Nizam al-Mulk with close relation to Barkayaruq |
killed |
1095 or 1097 |
Ray, Seljuq Empire |
Abd al-Rahman al-Khurasani (عبد الرحمان الخراساني); killed immediately |
unknown |
[1] |
Bursuq the Elder |
senior commander (Amir Ispahsalar) under Barkiyaruq, newly appointed atabeg of Sanjar, shihna of Khurasan |
killed |
September 1097 |
near Sarakhs, Seljuq Empire |
a Quhistani rafiq (companion) |
unknown |
The Shiite Seljuk vizier Majd al-Mulk Balasani was murdered for being accused of involvement.[10][11][1] |
unnamed |
qadi |
killed |
1098 |
unknown |
his brother |
unknown |
[1] |
Unar and Siyah (Siyahpush?) |
amir (senior commanders) |
killed |
1099 |
near Sawa, Seljuq Empire |
team of 3; 2 killed, 1 survived [Husayn or Hasan Khwarezmi] |
knife |
[1] |
kjmš (کجمش) |
deputy of Arghush al-Nizami |
killed |
|
|
Ibrahim Damawandi (ابراهیم دماوندی) |
|
Killed together with his son-in-law. |
Sarzan Malikshahi (سرزن ملکشاهی) |
amir sipahsalar |
killed |
|
|
Ibrahim Khurashani (ابراهیم خوراشانی) |
|
|
Hadi Kiya (هادی کیا) the Alavid |
Imam and missionary in Gilan |
killed |
|
|
Ibrahim and Muhammad Kuhi |
|
|
Abu al-Fath Durdanah Dihistani (ابوالفتح دردانه دهستانی) |
vizier of Barkiyaruq |
killed |
|
|
a Rus'(?) ghulam |
|
|
Iskandar Sufi Qazwini (اسکندر صوفی قزوینی) |
|
killed |
|
|
a Quhistani rafiq |
|
|
Sunqurche (سنقرچه) (or منعورحه) |
wali of Dihistan, Amul |
killed |
|
|
Muhammad Dihistani (محمد دهستانی) |
|
|
Balakabak Sarmuz (بلاكبك سرموز) or buklabk srmz (بیکلابک سرمز) |
senior commander (amir) |
killed |
1099 |
entrance of Sultan Mahmud II's house in Isfahan, Seljuq Empire |
team of 2; 1 killed, 1 fled |
unknown |
[1] |
Abu al-Muzaffar al-Khujandi (أبو المظفر الخجندي) |
chief preacher in Ray (mufti of Isfahan?) |
killed |
1102/1103 |
Rayy, Seljuq Empire; coming down from minbar |
Abu al-Fath Sijzi (ابو الفتح سجزی); killed immediately |
unknown |
[1] |
Abu 'Amid (ابو عمید) (or ابو نیم) |
mustawfi (accountant) of Rayy |
killed |
|
|
Rustam Damawandi (رستم دماوندی) |
|
|
Abu Ja'far Mashshati Razi (ابوجعقر مشاطی رازی) |
mufti of Rayy |
killed |
|
|
Muhammad Damawandi (محمد دماوندی) |
|
|
Abu al-Qasim Mufti Karaji Qazwini (ابو القاسم مفتی کرجی قزوینی) |
|
killed |
|
|
Hasan Damawandi (حسن دماوندی) |
|
|
Abu al-Hasan (ابوالحسن) |
ra'is of Bayhaq |
killed |
|
|
Fida'i (Haji?) Damawandi |
|
He was marching against (?) Maymun-Diz. |
Abu al-Faraj Qaratakin (ابو الفرج قراتکین) |
17 Ramadan 472 AH |
killed |
Rayy, Seljuk Empire |
|
|
|
|
Abd al-Jalil al-Dihistani (أبو الجليل الدهستانی) |
vizier of Seljuq Sultan Barkayaruq |
died of wounds |
1102/1103 |
Isfahan's gate, Seljuq Empire |
a youth |
unknown |
[1] |
Janah ad-Dawla |
emir of Homs |
killed |
1103, May |
Great Mosque of Homs, Emirate of Homs (Syria) |
team of 3 |
|
Apparently ordered by al-Hakim al-Munajjim |
Abu Ja'far al-Mashatt (أبو جعفر المشط) |
Shafi'i leader in Ray |
killed |
1104 |
Ray's mosque, Seljuq Empire |
unknown |
unknown |
[1] |
Abu al-Ala Sa'id ibn Abi Muhammad al-Nisaburi (أبو العلاء سعيد بن أبي محمد النيسابوري) |
qadi of Isfahan |
killed |
1105/1106 |
Isfahan's mosque, Seljuq Empire |
unknown |
unknown |
[1] |
Khalaf ibn Mula'ib |
Fatimid emir of Afamiyya |
killed |
1106, February 3 |
inside Qalaat al-Madiq (Afamiyya), Emirate of Apamea (under Fatimid Caliphate) |
team; fled |
dagger, struck in the abdomen; harba (حربة, "spear") per one source |
[1] Planned by Abu Tahir al-Sa'igh, Ridwan, and a certain Abu'l Fath of Sarmin |
unnamed |
lieutenant (amir) of Seljuq Sultan Muhammad I Tapar |
wounded |
1107 |
Shahdiz, Seljuq Empire |
a fida'i |
|
After a failed negotiation during the Siege of Shahdiz. The victim was a particularly anti-Nizari commander in the Seljuq camp. |
Abu al-Fath Fakhr al-Mulk ibn Nizam al-Mulk |
vizier of Seljuq sultan Barkiyaruq (Sanjar?) |
killed |
1106/1107 |
Nishapur, Seljuk Empire |
dynmyn(?) Damghani (دینمین[?] دامغانی), a petitioner; arrested, tried, executed |
knife |
[1] |
Abu Ahmad Kaysan (Dawlatshahi?) Qazwini |
|
killed |
|
|
a Quhistani rafiq, accompanied by 10 other rafiqs |
|
|
Abdullah Isfahani |
qadi |
killed |
Safar 493 AH |
|
Abu al-Abbas Naqib Mashhadi (ابو العباس نقیب مشهدی) |
|
|
Abu al-Ala' (ابو العلاء) |
scholar and mufti of Isfahan |
killed |
495 AH |
Jameh Mosque of Isfahan, Isfahan, Seljuk Empire |
a rafiq |
|
|
Sultan al-Ulama' Abu al-Qasim Asfazari (سلطان العلماء ابو القاسم اسفزازی) |
ra'is of Bayhaq |
killed |
Shawwal 495 AH |
|
Muhammad Biyari (محمد بیاری) |
|
|
Mahmashad (محمشاد) |
Karramiyya leader |
killed |
496 AH |
Great Mosque of Nishapur, Seljuk Empire |
Abd al-Malik Razi (عبد الملک رازی) |
|
|
Sabbak al-Jurjani (سباک الجرجاني) |
scholar |
killed |
496 AH |
|
Hassan Siraj (حسن سراج) |
|
For insulting the Shia Imam, Ali. |
Abu al-Ala' (ابوالعلاء) |
scholar in service of sultan Muhammad I Tapar |
killed |
|
|
Muhammad Sayyad (محمد صیاد) |
|
For insulting the Shia Imam, Ali. |
Ubayd Allah ibn Ali al-Khatibi (عبيد الله بن علي الخطيبي) |
qadi of Isfahan, leader of the anti-Ismaili reaction there |
killed |
1108/1109, during Friday prayers |
Hamadan's mosque |
1 assassin, got between him and his bodyguard |
knife |
[1][12][4] |
Abu al-Mahasin Abd al-Wahid al-Ruwayni (أبو المحاسن عبد الوحيد الرويني) |
Shafi'i leader |
killed |
1108/1109 |
Amol's mosque |
unknown |
knife |
Attributed only by some sources to the Nizaris.[1] |
Sa'id ibn Muhammad ibn Abd al-Rahman (سعيد بن محمد بن عبد الرحمان) |
qadi of Nishapur |
killed |
1108/1109, on Eid al-Fitr |
|
killed |
unknown |
[1] |
Ahmad ibn Nizam al-Mulk |
vizier of Seljuq Sultan Barkayaruq |
wounded |
1109/1110 |
Baghdad |
Husayn Quhistani (حسین قهستانی); assassin arrested, confessed, his companions killed |
knives |
For his expedition against Alamut.[1][4] |
Abu Harb Isa ibn Zayd |
a wealthy Persian merchant |
mission failed |
1111 |
Aleppo, Emirate of Aleppo |
[13] |
Sharaf al-Din Mawdud ibn Altuntash |
atabeg of Mosul, amir ispahsalar, governor of Diyar Bakr and the Levant |
killed |
1111/1112 or 1113 (Jumada al-Thani 492 AH) |
Damascus, Emirate of Damascus |
a fida'i |
unknown |
Both Sunni rulers Tughtigin and Ridwan may have been involved.[14][1] |
Ahmadil ibn Ibrahim al-Kurdi |
emir of Maragheh |
killed |
1114 or 1116 (Muharram 510 AH) |
in a large assembly in presence of Sultan Muhammad I |
team of 3. 2 killed, the third's fate unknown (or Abd al-Malik Razi [عبدالملک رازی] or 4 Aleppine rafiqs) |
knives |
[1] |
Muntahi Alawi (منتهی علوی) |
mufti of Jurjan |
killed |
494 AH |
|
Hasan Daranbari (حسن دارانباری) |
|
|
Ahmad Sanjar |
Seljuq sultan |
threatened |
|
|
|
knife |
[15] |
al-Afdal Shahanshah |
Fatimid vizier |
killed |
1121, December 13 |
Cairo, Fatimid Caliphate |
team of 3 Aleppine rafiqs; fate unknown |
knives |
[1] |
Al-Amir bi-Ahkam Allah and Al-Ma'mun al-Bata'ihi |
Fatimid caliph and his vizier |
plot discovered |
|
Cairo, Fatimid Caliphate |
|
|
Directed from Alamut.[4] Al-Amir was assassinated later (see below). |
Kamal al-Mulk Abu Talib al-Simirumi |
vizier of Seljuq Sultan Mahmud II |
killed |
1122 |
a procession in Baghdad, Seljuq Empire |
team of 4; one escaped, others killed |
knives |
For pillaging the shrine of Ali.[1] |
Garshasaf Jurbadaqani (گرشاسف جربادقانی) (or Karshasb [کرشاسب]) |
|
killed |
November–December 1121 |
|
a fida'i |
|
|
Unar (انر) |
amir of Khurasan |
killed |
December 1121 - January 1122 |
Marw, Seljuk Empire |
Abu al-Hayyan (ابو الحیان) or Isfandiyar Damawandi (اسفندیار دماوندی) |
|
|
Tughrul Mahalli(?) (طغرل محلی) |
wali of Damghan |
killed |
|
|
Isfandiyar Damawandi (اسفندیار دماوندی) |
|
|
Abu Nasr Muhammad ibn Nasr ibn Mansur al-Harawi (آبو نصر محمد بن نصر بن منصور الهروي) |
Hanafi qadi of Hamadan |
killed |
1125 |
Hamadan's mosque, Seljuq Empire |
Muhammad Razi (محمد رازی) and Umar Damghani (عمر دامغانی) |
unknown |
[1] |
Ibn al-Khashshab |
qadi and rais of Aleppo |
killed |
1125, at night |
near his house in al-Zajjajin quarter, Aleppo, while leaving the Great Mosque |
unknown |
stabbed |
After a massacre of the Nizaris.[16][17][18] |
Aqsunqur al-Bursuqi |
atabeg of Aleppo |
killed |
1127 (or November 26, 1126) |
Mosul's Great Mosque, Seljuq Empire |
team of 10; fate unknown, he wounded 3 |
knives |
[1][18] |
Mu'in al-Mulk Abu Nasr ibn Fazl |
Seljuq vizier of Ahmad Sanjar |
killed |
1127, March 20 |
Seljuq Empire |
his horseman, betrayed; fate unknown |
unknown |
[1] |
Mu'in al-Din al-Kashi (معین الدین مختص الملوک ابونصر احمد الکاشانی) |
Seljuq vizier of Ahmad Sanjar |
killed |
1127, March 20 or 16 or Rabi' I 525 AH |
Marw, Seljuq Empire, en route from the Sultan's palace to the mosque |
by 2 fida'is who had gained his confidence (Muhammad Kuhaj [محمد کوهج] named) |
knives |
[1][4] |
Abd al-Latif al-Khujandi (عبد اللطيف الخجندي) |
Shafi'i leader in Isfahan |
killed |
1129 |
Isfahan, Seljuk Empire |
a fida'i |
unknown |
Killed by treachery.[1] |
Al-Amir bi-Ahkami'l-Lah |
Fatimid Caliph in Cairo |
killed |
October 7, 1130 |
Cairo, Fatimid Caliphate |
team of 7 rafiqs |
|
|
Sayyid Abu Hashim Zaydi |
Zaydi Imam in Tabaristan |
killed |
Jamadi II 526 AH |
|
|
|
|
Taj al-Muluk Buri |
atabeg of Damascus |
died of wounds a year later |
May 7, 1131 (died June 9, 1132) |
Damascus, Emirate of Damascus (Syria) |
two of his guards who were secretly fida'is probably from Alamut; both killed |
knives, wounding him in two places |
[1][19] |
Sayyid Dawlatshah Alawi (سید دولتشاه علوی) |
prefect (either ra'is or naqib) of Isfahan |
killed |
Jamadi I 525 AH |
|
Abu Abdallah Mughani (ابو عبدالله موغانی) |
|
[4] |
Aqsunqur Ahmadili |
governor of Maragha |
killed |
Dhil-Qa'da 525 AH |
|
Ali (علی) and Abu Ubaydah Muhammad Dihistani (ابو عبیده محمد دهستانی) |
|
[4] |
Shams Tabrizi |
ra'is (prefect) of Tabriz |
killed |
Dhilhajja 525 AH |
|
Abu Sa'id Qa'ini (ابو سعید قائنی) and ابو الحسن قرمانی or فراهانی |
|
[4] |
Al-Mustarshid |
Abbasid caliph |
killed |
1135 or 1134 |
in royal tentage at Maragheh's gates or near Hamadan, Seljuq Empire |
team of 14 or 17 or 24; fled or killed by the guards |
knives, stabbed many times |
Some sources suspect that the Seljuq Sultan Mas'ud was involved. Some attendants were killed, too.[1][20][21][22][23][24] |
Hasan ibn Abi al-Qasim Karkhi (Karaji?) (حسن بن ابي القاسم كرخي) |
mufti of Qazvin |
killed |
Dhilhajja 529 AH |
|
Muhmmad Karkhi (Karaji?) (محمد کرخی) and Sulayman Qazwini (سليمان قزوینی) |
knives, stabbed |
[4] |
Al-Rashid |
Abbasid caliph |
killed |
1135/1136 or June 1138 |
Mosul or Isfahan, Seljuq Empire |
team of 2 or 4 (Balqāsim Darikī named) of Khurasanis in his service; fate unknown |
knives, by stabbing |
[25][1][4][24] |
Muqarrab al-Din Jawhar (مقرب الدين جوهر) |
chamberlain, master of the Seljuq governor of Ray, Abbas |
killed |
1139/1140 |
Sultan Sanjar's camp in Marw |
petitioners in women's garb |
knives |
Many Nizaris were killed in revenge by Abbas.[25][1] |
Girdbazu (گردبازو) |
heir of Bavandid ruler Shah Ghazi Rustam |
killed |
1142 |
Sarakhs, Seljuq Empire |
|
|
Many Nizaris were killed in revenge by Shah Ghazi Rustam.[25] |
Da'ud, son of Mahmud II |
Seljuq sultan |
killed |
1143 |
Tabriz, Seljuq Empire |
team of 4 Syrian 'rafiqs |
ambushed |
He had persecuted the Nizaris of Adharbayjan.[1][25][26] |
unnamed |
vizier of Seljuq sultan Toghrul II |
killed |
unknown |
unknown |
unknown |
knives, ambushed |
[1] |
unnamed |
mamluk lord of Masyaf |
killed |
unknown |
|
team |
unknown |
Killed by treachery.[1] |
به اَموی |
qadi of Quhistan |
killed |
1138/1139 |
Sultan Sanjar's camp |
Ibrahim Hanafiyyah al-Damghani (إبراهيم حنفية الدامغاني); fate unknown |
unknown |
For authorizing the execution of Nizaris.[25][1][27] |
|
qadi of Tiflis |
killed |
1138/1139 |
|
Ibrahim Buyah Damghani (ابراهیم بویه دامغانی) |
unknown |
For issuing fatwa regarding the execution of Nizaris.[25][1][27] |
Unnamed |
qadi of Hamadan |
killed |
1139/1140 |
Hamadan's mosque, Seljuq Empire |
Ismail al-Khwarazmi (إسمعيل الخوارزمي), several of whose companions had been killed and burned |
unknown |
For authorizing the execution of Nizaris.[25][1][26] |
Yamin al-Dawla Khwarazmshah (يمين الدولة خوارزمشاه) (Ayn al-Dawla?) |
Seljuq vizier |
killed |
1139/1140 |
an army camp of Sultan Sanjar in Khwarezmia |
unknown |
unknown |
[1][27] |
Nasir al-Dawla ibn al-Muhalhil (ناصر الدولة بن المهلهل) |
Seljuq vizier |
killed |
1140/1141 |
Kerman, Seljuq Empire |
al-Husayn al-Kirmani (الحسين الكرماني) |
unknown |
[1][26] |
Garshasaf |
senior commander (emir) (a ruler in Georgia) |
killed |
1143, June–July |
unknown |
a soldier |
unknown |
[1][25] (Killed in action?) |
Aqsunqur (آق سنقر) |
mamluk of Sultan Sanjar and governor of Turshiz |
killed |
1146 |
|
team of 2 rafiqs: Sulayman and Yusuf |
unknown |
Killed as a rebel against the sultan.[1][26] |
Abbas (امیر پیر عباس) |
shihna (governor) of Rayy |
killed |
1147 |
Ray or Baghdad, Seljuq Empire |
unknown |
unknown |
Killed with armor on.[1] |
Raymond II |
Count of Tripoli |
killed |
1152 |
Tripoli's southern city gate, County of Tripoli |
|
|
Motivation uncertain. Killed along with two of his knights (including Ralph of Merle). |
Saladin |
Ayyubid sultan |
mission failed |
1175, May 11 |
Saladin's camp |
13 |
|
|
Saladin |
Ayyubid sultan |
threatened only |
1176 |
near Masyaf Castle |
|
knife |
According to some traditions.[28] |
Adud al-Din Abu al-Faraj Muhmmad ibn Abdallah |
vizier of the Abbasid caliph al-Mustadi |
killed |
1177/1178 |
leaving Baghdad for pilgrimage to Mecca |
fida'is from Jabal al-Summaq, Syria |
|
[24] |
Conrad of Montferrat |
de facto King of Jerusalem |
killed |
1192, April 28 |
en route to his house in Acre, Kingdom of Jerusalem |
team of 2; 1 killed, 1 captured |
stabbed at least twice in the side and back |
It is uncertain who actually instigated the attack, possibly Richard I of England, Humphrey IV of Toron, Henry II of Champagne or Saladin. |
Muhammad of Ghor |
Ghurid sultan |
killed |
1206, March 15 |
Dhamiak, near Sohawa, Ghurid Empire |
|
|
One source attributes it to the Assassins. |
Möngke Khan |
Mongol khagan |
plot or rumor |
1253 |
Karakorum, Mongol Empire |
team of 40+ |
|
Alleged mission ordered by Imam Ala' al-Din Muhammad.[4][29][30][31] |
Raymond, son of Bohemond IV of Antioch |
heir to the throne of Antioch and Tripoli |
killed |
1213 |
outside the door of the Cathedral of Our Lady of Tortosa, Tortosa (Tartus), County of Tripoli |
|
|
Bohemond IV unsuccessfully besieged Khawabi in response.[32][28][33] |
Adam of Baghras |
Regent of Isabella, Queen of Armenia |
killed |
1220 |
Sis, Cilician Armenia |
|
|
[34] |
Orkhan/Orghan |
senior commander of Jalal ad-Din Mingburnu |
killed |
|
Ganja, Khwarezmian Empire |
a team of petitioners; fled / 3 assassins, killed |
concealed swords, stabbed |
[35] As a reprisal for raids against Quhistan.[4] |
Chagatai the Elder |
Mongol noyan (commander) |
killed |
c.1249? |
|
|
knife |
Nizaris were massacred by his daughter Bulghan Khatun or his son Bulghan or Qara-Bulghan after the fall of the Nizari state.[36] |
Philip of Montfort |
Lord of Tyre |
killed |
1270, March 17 or August 17 |
in his church in Tyre, Lordship of Tyre, Kingdom of Jerusalem |
assassin disguised as a Christian; captured |
dagger |
[37] |
Ata-Malik Juvayni |
Ilkhanate elite |
survived |
1270 |
Ilkhanate |
|
|
Unsuccessful assassination attempt attributed to the Nizaris.[38] |
Lord Edward |
Duke of Gascony |
wounded |
1271 |
Acre, Kingdom of Jerusalem |
a Syrian Assassin; killed |
dagger, possibly poisoned; struck in the arm |
Supposedly by a Syrian Assassin under Baibars during the Ninth Crusade. The attempt failed as the assassin was overpowered and killed by Edward.[39] Edward abandoned further campaigns afterwards. |
Sokollu Mehmed Pasha |
Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire |
killed |
1579, 11 October |
Constantinople, Ottoman Empire |
|
|
Controversial attribution to the Assassins. |