In the late Ayyubid period (mid- AH 7th / AD 13th century), pilgrims from Egypt and North Africa began to use the land routes. It is said that Sultana Shajar al-Durr, the widow of the last Ayyubid ruler of Egypt, decreed in 645 / 1247 that she should travel overland in fulfilment of her religious duty of pilgrimage. As a result she is regarded as the first to inaugurate the
Hajj route overland. From the period of the Mamluk
sultan al-Zahir Baybars, this became the official pilgrimage route, Baybars having dispatched a state-sponsored
Hajj caravan with the specially commissioned
kiswa (a cover) for the
Ka'ba along with the key. The
Hajj caravan set off from Suez and proceeded to Aqaba where it met up with
Hajj caravans arriving from Bilad al-Sham.