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From Abd alMalik to Hisham

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Title: From Abd alMalik to Hisham


1
From Abd al-Malik to Hisham
  • Islamic History the First 150 Years

2
Session Plan
  • Unity Restored
  • Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz
  • Hisham and the End of Expansion
  • Rumblings of Thunder
  • Readings

3
Section I Unity Restored
4
Unity Lost
  • During the first 3 sessions, we looked at the
    evolution of the early Muslim community
  • We saw that the central question facing the
    Muslim state was that of leadership
  • In sessions one and two we looked at the
    differing responses to these questions under Abu
    Bakr, Umar, Uthman and Ali
  • We then looked at the break down of the
    patriarchal caliphate
  • The first fitna Ali Muawiya
  • The second fitna Umayyads, Husayn and Abdullah
    ibn al-Zubayr
  • We also saw the emergence of a fourth trend, if
    you will, that of the neutrals

5
Unity Restored
  • As we saw last week, with the death of Ibn
    al-Zubayr, Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan became the
    undisputed caliph
  • The reign of Abd al-Malik is an important one for
    a number of reasons
  • Firstly, it is with him that the Umayyad empire
    takes its concrete form
  • Secondly, his twenty year rule allowed relative
    peace and stability to return
  • Thirdly, a number of important religious
    developments occur in his reign
  • Fourthly, his reign (and that of his son Hisham)
    mark the effective zenith of the Umayyad empire

6
Unity Restored
  • However, despite his importance, we will not be
    exploring his reign in fine detail
  • I intend to explore a number of key elements,
    which, it is hoped, will paint a representative
    picture
  • These include
  • Relationships with Religious Notables
  • Iraq
  • Jerusalem
  • Further reading C.F. Robinson Abd al-Malik

7
Relationships
  • Abd al-Maliks relations with the religious elite
    are marked by ambiguity
  • Unlike earlier caliphs, Abd al-Malik had grown up
    in Islam
  • As a young man, he had shown a particular
    interest in the study of Prophetic Traditions and
    in the biography of Muhammad
  • Some reports also state that he had memorised the
    entire Quran (hafiz al-Quran)
  • Tradition, however, relates that his accession
    brought about a change
  • He is said to have subordinated everything to
    policy
  • That is, he seems to have taken the running of
    the empire seriously
  • Raja ibn Haiwa al-Kindi, an early religious
    figure, seems to have been influential under him
  • Moreover, he also patronised ibn Shihab al-Zuhri,
    the early hadith scholar and historian (whom we
    met last week)
  • Despite this, it is from his reign onwards that
    we begin to see learned Muslims effectively
    staying away from involvement with the government
  • In other words, it was considered somewhat
    disreputable for a religious scholar to be
    associated with the state
  • This may well be due to the increasingly negative
    view of the Umayyad dynasty

8
Iraq
  • In Iraq, Abd al-Maliks drive for stability and
    order effectively meant the repression of
    rebellious elements
  • His governor, al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf al-Thaqafi, was
    infamous for his use of naked force
  • His command began with what Hodgson describes as
    terrifying violence in which 1000s are said to
    have died
  • A major Kharijite revolt was also defeated
  • However, his harsh measures eventually prompted
    sections of the army itself to revolt under ibn
    al-Ashath
  • Al-Hajjaj also built a number of canals and
    irrigation channels

9
Other Measures
  • Abd al-Malik also reformed the coinage
  • The earlier method of using existing Byzantine
    and Sassanid coinage was replaced
  • A new Islamic coinage was introduced
  • They were of a standard weight and metal standard
    and helped stabilise the economy
  • They also carried ideological/religious messages
  • They were aniconic
  • Contained passages from the Quran and statements
    of Islamic belief
  • They were so successful that they quickly became
    the standard form of Muslim coinage

10
Post-Reform Coinage
11
Mecca Jerusalem
  • The Kaba at Mecca the central shrine of Islam
  • Islamic tradition describes the sanctuary as
    being built by Abraham and Ishmael
  • The Arab tribes who inherit the site eventually
    fall into paganism
  • Key idols of Mecca
  • Manat literally meaning fate, this deity was
    widely worshipped throughout Arabia
  • Al-Uzza literally meaning the mighty one
    (feminine)
  • Al-Lat the Goddess
  • These three goddesses are the deities named in
    the Satanic Verses story
  • Believed to have power of intercession with Allah

12
Mecca Jerusalem
  • Islamic tradition holds that Allah was recognised
    by the pagan Arabs as a High God
  • Hubal an imported deity originally from
    Palestine
  • The tradition holds that on the conquest of
    Mecca, Muhammad cleared the Kaba of some 360
    idols
  • A suspiciously round number
  • Not impossible of course, but seems to represent
    a god for every day of the solar year
  • The Meccan shrine, according to the tradition,
    was thus the ritual centre of Islam from the
    beginning

13
Mecca Jerusalem
  • Indeed there are numerous references to the
    House in the Quran
  • Some modern authorities, however, understand this
    development differently
  • Crone and Cook Hagarism
  • Within the Islamic framework, Mecca holds a
    particular importance
  • During the early period of Islam (and indeed the
    whole of Islamic history) control of the Meccan
    shrine was politically important
  • Within our context, Abdullah in al-Zubayrs
    control of Mecca enabled him to claim a large
    degree of legitimacy
  • That is, God Himself, the Lord of this House
    (surah quraysh), had given control of his
    sanctuary to ibn al-Zubayr
  • Important propaganda value

14
Mecca and Jerusalem
  • Once in control of Umayyad Syria, Abd al-Malik
    began to develop the Temple Mount area of
    Jerusalem
  • The Temple Mount had been empty for quite some
    time
  • Abd al-Malik built the Dome of the Rock
  • This is a deeply fascinating building
  • It is not a traditional mosque its a hexagonal
    building built around a central mount
  • This is believed to be the spot where Muhammad
    ascended to heaven
  • Al-Zuhri cites a report in which Abd al-Malik
    allegedly built the Dome of the Rock to compete
    with Mecca (then under Zubayrid control)
  • A somewhat defaced inscription on the Dome of the
    Rock reads The servant of God, Abd al-Malik,
    the Amir al-Mumineen, built this Qubba in the
    year 72 hijri
  • Al-Mamun (an Abbasid Caliph) had Abd al-Maliks
    name removed and his own put in its place

15
Mecca and Jerusalem
  • The most interesting question regarding the Dome
    of the Rock is why?
  • Why build such an unusual sanctuary there, at
    this time?
  • The Dome is also adorned with Quranic calligraphy
    and is one of the earliest uses of the Quran on
    architecture
  • The Quranic texts used on the Dome are also
    interesting and probably point towards Abd
    al-Maliks actual intentions
  • They quote passages from the Quran which refer to
    the Islamic understanding of Jesus Christ
  • Specifically, they refer to Islams understanding
    that he was not divine, but a human prophet
  • In other words, the Dome is thus part of a wider
    theological debate
  • It was also probably meant to physically assert
    Islams religious, theological and political
    superiority over both Judaism and Christianity

16
The Dome of the Rock
17
The Dome of the Rock
18
The Dome of the Rock
19
The Dome of the Rock
20
  • Questions?

21
Section II Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz
22
Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz
  • Abd al-Malik had a large family and because of
    this four of his children became caliphs after
    him
  • However, the most famous ruler after him was not
    actually his son, but his nephew Umar ibn Abd
    al-Aziz
  • Umar is an interesting character and is the only
    Umayyad caliph to be viewed positively by later
    Muslim tradition
  • Indeed, some even felt that he was the fifth
    rightly guided caliph after Muhammad
  • Although there are a number of reasons for this,
    perhaps the most significant of them is the
    perception of Umars motives
  • In other words, Umar is perceived to ruled
    through adherence to Islamic norms
  • Or, again, he ruled in accordance with what our
    sources felt were Islamic norms
  • In assessing Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz, we must
    therefore take our sources biases into account
  • Nevertheless, it does seem that Umar was
    personally committed to his religious principles
    and seems to have attempted to rule by them

23
Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz
  • Wellhausen, an early 20th century writer, has
    this to say
  • Sulaiman was a luxurious profligate, Umar
    almost an ascetic to the former the ruling power
    offered unlimited means of enjoyment upon the
    latter it imposed a a weight of responsibility.
    In everything he did judgement loomed before his
    eyes, and he was always afraid of coming up short
    of the requirements of God (p. 268)
  • Umars Policies
  • Almost all outward expansion stopped and most
    advanced outposts withdrawn
  • However, the Narbonne region of southern France
    was fortified under Umar
  • Although he used existing men, Umar seems to have
    appointed provincial governors for their ability
    and honesty (Tab. 3. 1383)
  • Thus Abd al-Hamid ibn Abd al-Rahman of Umar Is
    family became governor of Kufa
  • He also brought the emerging Islamic religious
    scholarly elite into the business of government
  • In a letter to his provincial governors, he is
    said to have named the pillars of government as
  • The Wali (Executive Governor)
  • The Judge (or Qadi, i.e. someone learned in
    Islamic law)
  • The Tax Administrator
  • The Caliph

24
Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz
  • He appointed the famous Hasan al-Basri Qadi
    (judge) of Basra
  • Hasan is an important early ascetic and mystic
  • Umar also reformed the tax system
  • Although his changes were rather complex, in
    essence we can say that he attempted to make
    taxation conform to Islamic ideals
  • Thus the mawali were given automatic entitlement
    to their Quranically allotted privileges
  • Land use was also reformed common land was to be
    used for the communities to which it was
    originally intended
  • The sources report that Umar was an eager
    missionary
  • He is said to have invited the rulers of Sind (in
    modern Pakistan) and various Berber tribes (in
    Morocco and Algeria) to accept Islam
  • Umar also wrote to the Byzantine emperor Leo II,
    in an apparent attempt to convert him
  • He prohibited the cursing of Ali, which Muawiya
    had introduced
  • He is also said to have ordered the collation of
    Prophetic Traditions, in order to ensure their
    authenticity
  • This last measure presumably sprang from two
    motives
  • A desire to preserve/record Muhammads words
  • A desire to preserve a key source of Islamic law
    (the Shariah)

25
Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz
  • However, despite all of these energetic reforms,
    Umars reign was a short one
  • He died after a mere 2 years in office
    (715-717CE)
  • In some senses, this is another important factor
    in his enduring popularity
  • That is, had he ruled for longer, he may not have
    been able to maintain his momentum
  • Hisham, Umars effective (but not actual
    successor), undid all of these reforms and
    restored Umayyad dominance on its pre-existing
    lines
  • And, as we shall see, although he reigned for a
    long time in relative peace, his caliphate saw
    the beginnings of the end for the Umayyad dynasty

26
  • Questions?

27
Section III Hisham and the End of Expansion
28
Hisham ibn Abd al-Malik
  • As his name suggests, Hisham was a son of Abd
    al-Malik
  • He ruled the Muslim empire from 105-125AH (or
    724-743CE)
  • His 20 year rule thus brought stability after
    another period of turmoil after Umar IIs death
  • Essential Readings for Hisham
  • K. Y. Blankinship The End of the Jihad State
  • J. Wellhausen The Arab Kingdom and its Fall

29
Internal Opposition
  • Kharijite groups, spread to North Africa
  • Shiite discontent continued to manifest itself
  • In 740CE, Zayd ibn Ali revolted at Kufa against
    Hisham
  • Zayd ibn Ali (Zayn al-Abidin) ibn Husayn ibn Ali
  • Brother of Muhammad ibn Ali al-Baqir
  • Despite popular support, the revolt was soon
    crushed
  • However, despite its failure, Zayds revolt was
    significant in a number of ways
  • Firstly, it underlines continuing opposition to
    Umayyad rule from the Alid family and its
    supporters
  • Secondly, Zayd became another martyr to the
    Shiite cause
  • Thirdly, his rising marks the emergence of a new
    trend in Shiite thought regarding the nature of
    the imamate (more on this in a moment)
  • Fourthly, the Abbasid revolution (which we will
    come to in the next session) styled itself as
    vengeance for Zayd (and all other Shiite martyrs)

30
Zayds Refrom Manifesto
  • Apply the Quran and Sunnah
  • Wage jihad against oppressors
  • Defend the weak
  • Provide for the deprived
  • Equally divide the income from Muslim property by
    right of conquest (fay) among those deserving it
  • Satisfy complaints
  • Bring back those held in the field campaigning
    for more than one year
  • Support the Alids against those resisting or
    denying their rights

31
The Concept of Imamate in Early Shii Thought
  • As you might expect, during the century of
    Umayyad rule, the Shiite concept of Imamate
    underwent some development
  • Although charting the development in detail would
    take too long here, we can look at some key
    features
  • Those interested in this subject should consult
  • S. H. Jafri The History and Early Development of
    Shia Islam
  • A. Lalani Early Shii Thought the Teachings of
    Muhammad al-Baqir
  • M. Hodgson How did the Shia become sectarian?
    (This is a journal article I own a copy)
  • Ali as Imam and Amir al-Muminin
  • In other words, temporal and religious functions
    combined
  • The fact that his descendents did not hold power
    was problematic at first
  • However, probably first under Zayn al-Abidin,
    Shii thinkers began to separate these two aspect
  • That is, the authority of the imam did not depend
    on his holding power

32
The Concept of Imamate in Early Shii Thought
  • Muhammad al-Baqir and later his son, Jafar
    al-Sadiq, began to articulate this idea clearly
  • Thus although they were not involved in politics
    they still seem to have understood themselves to
    be the rightful imams of the Muslim community
  • They put forward two main arguments
  • Firstly, after Hasans death, the imamate could
    only run through Husayns line
  • Secondly, an imam could only be appointed by the
    explicit designation (known as nass in Arabic) of
    the incumbent
  • Essentially, this stabilised the charismatic
    leadership of the Alid house
  • As we saw last week, moreover, there were some
    within the Shia milieu that believed the imam to
    be more than human (we will look more at this in
    the next session)
  • However, this was not the only viewpoint
  • Zayd (Muhammads brother) seems to have strongly
    disagreed with this idea
  • He argued, in common with al-Baqir, that an imam
    can only come from the house of Ali

33
The Concept of Imamate in Early Shii Thought
  • However, he did not restrict this to the line of
    Husayn
  • Rather, any suitably qualified Alid could be a
    potential imam
  • Two things were required to actualise this
  • Religious Knowledge
  • Public Declaration of Imamate
  • According to Zayd, the Imam had to arise sword
    in hand
  • These differences eventually led to the
    development of two different schools of thought
    within Shia Islam
  • Those who followed Muhammad al-Baqirs ideas
    became known as the Imami Shia
  • From the Imami school of thought later emerged
    the Twelver Shia of Iran, as well as the Ismaili
    (and thus Druze) Shia i.e. those who follow the
    Aga Khan
  • Those who followed Zayd became known as Zaydi
    Shia
  • Because they did not accept designation as
    such, there were many small groups of independent
    Zaydis
  • During the course of time, Zaydi Shiites
    established imamates in northern Persia (on the
    shores of the Caspian Sea) in the Daylam region
    and in Yemen

34
The Twelver Shia Line
  • Ali ibn Abi Talib
  • Hasan ibn Ali
  • Hussein ibn Ali
  • Ali ibn Hussein
  • Muhammad ibn Ali (known as al-Baqir, or He who
    splits open religious knowledge and Zayds
    brother)
  • Jafar ibn Muhammad (known as al-Sadiq, the
    Truthful)
  • Musa ibn Jafar (al-Kazim)
  • Ali ibn Musa (al-Rida, or the Chosen)
  • Muhammad ibn Ali (al-Taqi, the Godfearing)
  • Ali ibn Muhammad (al-Naqi)
  • Hasan ibn Ali (al-Askari)
  • Muhammad ibn Ali (al-Mahdi, the Rightly Guided
    One or the Messiah)

35
External Opposition
  • Hishams rule was also challenged by a number of
    external foes
  • As we saw, Hisham reversed Umars policy of
    disengagement and initiated an aggressive
    expansionist policy
  • At first this appeared to be largely successful
  • However, the strains caused by this expansionism
    soon began to show
  • Muslim armies met with a number of serious
    defeats in many of its main theatres of war
  • Moreover, new fronts also opened up
  • The effect of all of this was to place a serious
    burden on the Muslim empires available manpower
  • A brief glance at a map will help make this
    clear

36
The Muslim World
37
External Opposition
  • Anatolia war against the Byzantines continued
    throughout this period
  • Caucasus Muslim forces suffer a number of
    serious setbacks against the Khazar confederation
    (in alliance with Byzantium)
  • Khazar forces manage to raid Armenia and threaten
    Mosul (northern Iraq)
  • Central Asia the Turgesh confederation inflicted
    a number of defeats on Muslim forces
  • Sijistan a number of expensive campaigns against
    the Zunbil
  • Sind/India Muslim forces faced a number of
    resurgent Hindu kingdoms and were effectively
    driven back
  • Khurasan at the Battle of the Defile, Muslim
    casualties are reported to have been
    approximately 20,000 dead
  • Mediterranean Area Sicily and Sardinia attacked
  • Spanish Frontier Frankish attacks drive Muslims
    out of southern France (Narbonne)

38
External Opposition
  • These defeats swallowed up much of the available
    manpower
  • Moreover, they also placed a great strain on the
    Syrian forces
  • Because these were, in some senses, crack
    troops they had been used to keep the peace in
    Iraq and other places
  • With these defeats, more Syrian contingents began
    to be sent to different frontiers
  • This weakened the internal hold of the Umayyad
    dynasty significantly
  • Indeed, this only exacerbated the problem as
    Syrian troops became too thinly spread to prevent
    further revolts
  • The Great Berber Revolt 122-125AH (740-743CE)
  • Excessive taxation and the illegal removal of
    Muslim Berbers as slaves seem to have been the
    immediate causes
  • In any case, an enormous rebellion eventually
    proved successful and Umayyad control of the
    Maghreb region was lost

39
External Opposition
  • This also considerably weakened the governments
    hold of Spain
  • However, a fugitive Umayyad eventually took
    control of the province in the aftermath of the
    Abbasid revolution
  • Hisham dies in 125AH (743CE)
  • Yazid III
  • His revolt soon crushed, but, his apparent
    programme is interesting
  • A self-conscious return to the past?
  • Main points include
  • Not to build any buildings of brick or stone, nor
    to dig any new canals
  • Not to hoard wealth
  • Not to give wealth to wives or children
  • To transfer wealth to other provinces only after
    first is fully taken care of
  • Spend any surplus in nearest province

40
External Opposition
  • Not to keep troops in the field for more than 1
    year
  • Not to lock out petitioners
  • To reduce non-Muslim taxation
  • To give all Muslim troops equal stipends
  • To acknowledge the right of Muslims to reproach
    the Caliph should he stray
  • In some senses, this is reminiscent of Zayd ibn
    Alis programme
  • And, is probably best seen as an attempt to
    address the perceived social ills of the day via
    a return to Islamic norms
  • As Blankinship says, This program is redolent of
    irritation with the policies of Hisham (p.227)

41
Section IV Rumblings of Thunder
42
Rumblings of Thunder
  • As we have seen, by the time of Hishams death
    the Muslim empire had reached something of an
    impasse
  • It had suffered several important military
    defeats
  • Moreover, these defeats meant a significant drop
    in the level and amount of booty
  • In many ways, it was this drop in income which
    caused the most significant problems for the
    Umayyad regime
  • Large scale war booty had effectively masked the
    underlying difficulties of the period and with
    their removal, they began to surface
  • Firstly, Hishams death saw another return to
    civil war, as a number of factions fought for
    control
  • This resulted in the accession and death of a
    number of candidates
  • This led to military revolts and provincial
    insecurities, further exacerbating the economic
    situation

43
Rumblings of Thunder
  • Secondly, this period again saw the re-emergence
    of a number of Shia uprisings
  • However we will look more closely at that in the
    following session
  • Thirdly, this political instability was made
    worse by the continuing feud between the Qudaa
    and Qays tribal groupings
  • Fourthly, during Hishams reign, the scholarly
    class (ulama) had once again begun to withdraw
    from public office
  • This effectively removed an important support for
    the Umayyad regime
  • And, indeed, became the breeding ground for
    active opposition
  • There were, furthermore, a number of Kharijite
    revolts

44
Section V Readings
45
Readings
  • Your reading packs contain a number of readings
  • P. Crone Meccan Trade and the Rise of Islam
  • Oleg Grabar Ceremonial and Art at the Umayyad
    Court
  • Oleg Grabar The Formation of Islamic Art
  • Pre-Islamic Poetry (The Hanged Poems)
  • A short passage attributed to Hasan al-Basri
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