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The Caliphate of Mu`awiya

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Title: The Caliphate of Mu`awiya


1
The Caliphate of Muawiya
  • Islamic History the First 150 Years

2
Essays and Assignments
  • Essay titles
  • Text based assignment
  • Deadline 14th August 2006

3
Session Plan
  1. A Brief Recap
  2. Muawiya Triumphant
  3. The Rule of Muawiya
  4. Arranging the Succession

4
Section I A Brief Recap
5
Recap
  • As these are arguably the most important years in
    Islamic history, a short recap is in order
  • Muhammad left no unequivocal instructions
    regarding leadership of the Muslim community
    after his death
  • Abu Bakr Khilafat Rasul Allah
  • Umar Amir al-Mumineen
  • Uthman Khilafat Allah ?
  • Ali Amir Imam
  • This historical order valorised by Sunni
    tradition as the period of the Rightly Guided
    Caliphs
  • Seen very differently by the Shia as repeated
    attempts to deny Ali his rightful place
  • In some senses, the debate regarding the nature
    of leadership is the key issue
  • The debate turns increasingly violent as we
    reach the end of the period
  • Umar, Uthman and Ali all die violent deaths
  • The impact of the conquests

6
Section II Muawiya Triumphant
7
Muawiyah Triumphant
  • With Alis assassination in 40AH (661CE) at Kufa,
    Muawiya becomes the most significant political
    force
  • His forces proceed towards Iraq and encamp at
    Maskin
  • Hasan ibn Ali is elected caliph/imam in Kufa
  • Hasan said to have made the following
    stipulation
  • You must be totally obedient, make peace with
    whom I make peace, and fight whom I fight (Tab.
    2.5)
  • Felt to be equivocal and an indication that he
    intended to give in
  • A force from Kufa is sent to meet Muawiya (or
    else is already present in the region)
  • There are several divergent accounts of the
    subsequent events in the sources
  • Tabari (in his usual manner) offers several
    different reports
  • al-Zuhri (an important early historian) Hasan
    intended to make peace with Muawiya and one
    commander who did not agree was dismissed the
    other (Abdullah ibn Abbas) wrote to Muawiya
    asking for safe conduct and money (Tab. 2.1)

8
Muawiyah Triumphant
  • 2. Uthman ibn Abd al-Hamid al-Khuzai Hasans
    commander rumoured dead, causing panic Hasans
    tent plundered al-Mukhtar ibn Abi Ubayd
    al-Thaqafi intended to sell Hasan to Muawiya
    (Tab. 2.2-3)
  • 3. Awanah similar to 2 Hasan reveals his
    peace plan to his close relatives and there is an
    argument about it Hasans commander resigns and
    they accept Muawiya (Tab. 2. 3-4)
  • al-Yaqubi Hasans force commanded by Ubaidallah
    ibn Abbas, who then joins Muawiya for a large
    bribe Hasans tent ransacked when news of his
    peace initiatives becomes known (Yaqubi 2.254f.)
  • Differences important
  • al-Zuhri said to have been an Umayyad supporter
  • Yaqubi a Shiite sympathiser
  • Abdullah ibn Abbas and the Abbasids
  • This may well account for the differences in
    their respective accounts

9
Muawiyah Triumphant
  • Forming an opinion about what actually happened
    thus difficult
  • At any rate, Hasan sues for peace and comes to an
    arrangement with Muawiya
  • In 41AH (661CE), Muawiya enters Kufa
  • His opponents are either bribed or threatened
    into accepting his rule
  • He thus becomes the caliph
  • Hasan holds to his agreement until his death in
    49AH
  • Shia sources believe that Muawiya had Hasan
    poisoned
  • Leadership of the Bani Hashim then passed to
    Husayn ibn Ali
  • Although we will encounter Husayn again in the
    next session, during this period he holds to his
    brothers treaty

10
Section III The Rule of Muawiya
11
Source Perspectives
  • As we have seen, when exploring the sources for
    early Islamic history, we have to account for a
    wide range of perspectives
  • Thus far, we have looked at the impact of the
    Sunni-Shia divide upon our sources
  • However, this is only one aspect
  • Our sources focus mostly on Iraq, Medina and
    related matters
  • Other matters, considered somewhat peripheral to
    our sources, receive much less treatment
  • Reasons?
  • Many of our key writers from Iraq
  • During the Abbasid period, when most of these
    sources written, Iraq was the capital (Baghdad)
  • The Shia impact at Kufa
  • This is particularly prominent during Muawiyas
    reign

12
Muawiyas Powerbase
  • Wealth
  • As we saw last week, the Umayyad family owned
    vast wealth
  • This was primarily based upon land and as such,
    the Umayyad clan held wide estates throughout
    Muslim territory
  • They were also arguably the most mercantile clan
    of the Quraysh tribe and even before Muawiyas
    reign they had wide business contacts
  • The Syrian Army (ahl al-Sham)
  • For the entire Umayyad period (some 100 years),
    the army of the Syrian provinces was the most
    powerful and well equipped military force in the
    entire Muslim empire
  • Furthermore, given their closeness to the
    Byzantine border, the Syrian army was both fully
    trained and generally, expertly led
  • Under Muawiya the Syrian jund were also very
    well paid
  • Muawiya had been governor of Syria for a long
    time, since being appointed by Umar
  • He had thus had ample opportunity to ensure the
    provinces firm loyalty

13
Muawiyas Powerbase
  • The Hilm of Muawiya
  • Muawiya was renowned for the quality of hilm
  • This term means approximately forbearance,
    tact, or perhaps even skill
  • Hilm is the quality of the successful traditional
    Arab Sheikh someone who could get their own way
    through a combination of diplomacy, tact,
    shrewdness and argument
  • In a very broad sense, comparisons with Julius
    Caesars clemency (clementia) are perhaps not too
    wide of the mark
  • Muawiya is reported to have made the following
    statement
  • I apply not the lash where my tongue suffices,
    nor my sword where my whip is enough. But if
    there be one hair binding me to my fellow men I
    let it not break. If they pull I loosen, and if
    they loosen I pull
  • Muawiya was thus able to perform a delicate
    balancing act between the different power groups
    in the emerging Muslim empire

14
Muawiyas Powerbase
  • Tribal Support
  • The picture of Muawiya that emerges from the
    sources is one of a master diplomat
  • He certainly made extensive use of these skills
    in his dealings with the various Arab tribes
  • A full account would be too detailed for our
    purposes
  • However, Muawiya used monetary support and other
    means to ensure that he received and kept the
    support of most of the large Arab confederations
  • He also used arranged marriages as a means of
    cementing important tribes to his regime
  • He thus married an important member of the large
    tribe of Kalb

15
Muawiyas Powerbase
  • Bureaucratic Infrastructure
  • Upon his accession, Muawiya moved the capital to
    Damascus (where it remained throughout the
    Umayyad dynasty)
  • His control of Syria also brought him the
    services of a large number of former Byzantine
    and Sassanid civil servants
  • These officials allowed him to draw on the vast
    experience of Roman and Persian bureaucracy
  • He was thus able to develop and effective
    bureaucratic structure very quickly
  • Greek remained the language of government in the
    former Roman lands throughout his reign
  • Similarly, Persian was the lingua franca of the
    eastern half of the Muslim empire
  • This can be seen in the production of very early
    Muslim coinage
  • As we saw previously, the earliest coins were
    either copies or re-used Byzantine and Sassanid
    issues
  • Using this coinage allowed him to create a degree
    of much needed economic stability

16
Iraq
  • Given this emphasis, our sources concentrate
    mostly upon Muawiyas governors of Iraq
  • Two main personalities
  • Mughira ibn Shuba
  • A colourful character companion of Muhammad and
    something of a diplomat
  • Ziyad ibn Abihi
  • Another colourful character
  • His name is interesting and means Ziyad the son
    of his father
  • In other words, his father was not clearly known
    as his mother was a prostitute in Mecca
  • Despite this, Ziyad seems to have been an
    intelligent and resourceful person
  • Had a particular renown for public speaking and
    eloquence
  • Muawiya later adopted him into his own family,
    declaring that they both shared the same father
    (Abu Sufyan) (Tab. 2.69)
  • This elevated Ziyad into the higher echelons of
    the Umayyad family
  • However, it has to be said that he was not
    universally accepted by the wider Umayyad clan

17
Ziyads Opening Speech
  • A famous speech
  • Beware of night-prowling too, for no prowler
    will be brought to me but I shall shed his
    bloodBeware also of the summoning of the
    Jahiliyyah, for I shall cut out the tongue of
    anyone I find appealing to itWhoever drowns
    folk, I shall drown whoever burns folk, we shall
    burn whoever breaks into a house, we shall break
    into his heart and whoever breaks up a grave, I
    shall bury him aliveThere have been hatreds
    between me and some folks, but I put all that
    behind meIndeed, if I should know that one of
    you was overcome with incurable hatred toward me,
    I would not expose him nor disclose him unless he
    shows it to me openly. If he does, I shall not
    argue with himI swear by God that I have many
    potential victims among you, so let every man
    among you beware lest he be among them(Tab.
    2.76)

18
Discontent
  • As is perhaps to be expected, Muawiyas
    ascendancy did not meet with universal approval
  • Much of Iraq still supported the Alid family,
    whilst there were a number of Kharijite groups
    scattered throughout the province
  • Thus in 51AH (672CE), one of Alis closest
    supporters, Hujr ibn Adi, attempted to revolt
  • The rebellion was small and easily overwhelmed
  • Hujr was executed and was thus later viewed as an
    early Shiite martyr
  • This is perhaps why, presumably under Muawiyas
    order, Ziyad altered the Kufan political
    structure
  • Previously, each tribe at Kufa had appointed its
    own leaders
  • Ziyad arranged the tribes into 4 quarters and
    appointed its leaders himself
  • He undertook a similar measure at Basra (though
    here they were divided into fifths)
  • This measure had two effects
  • The government could appoint (and thus remove)
    local tribal leaders at will
  • The tribal nobility had to confirm to Muawiyas
    government in order to retain their position

19
Iraq Under Ziyad
  • Furthermore, the most rebellious elements of Kufa
    and Basra were sent east to aid in the conquest
    and settlement of Khurasan (Tab. 2.81)
  • Khurasan is broadly speaking eastern Iran and
    western Afghanistan
  • Khurasan was the eastern most province of
    Sassanid Persia and was the effective border
  • Beyond this, there were a number of small
    principalities, such as at Bukhara
  • Then, beyond them, lay the Turkish empire and the
    Tang dynasty of China
  • Ziyad also undertook a renovation of the main
    mosque of Kufa (Tab. 1.2492)
  • Generally speaking, Ziyads approach was
    effective and despite some discontent, the
    province remained relatively quiet
  • After Ziyads death, his son Ubaydullah ibn Ziyad
    is appointed governor of Iraq

20
The Byzantine Wars
  • Muawiya continued to war against Byzantium
  • Although conflict had not really ceased since the
    early conquests, under Muawiya we see the
    emergence of regular campaigns
  • The last remaining stronghold on the mainland at
    Arwad fell
  • Cyprus, Rhodes and Crete were also attacked
  • Regular annual attacks into eastern Anatolia
    (modern Turkey)
  • In 668, Yazid ibn Muawiya laid siege to
    Constantinople
  • In 674, Muawiya again laid siege to the city,
    which this time also included a naval blockade
  • Constantinople remained under siege for
    approximately 7 years
  • Byzantine North Africa was also attacked from
    Egypt
  • Uqbah ibn Nafi overran modern Libya and Tunisia,
    founding his provincial capital near Carthage
    (al-Qayrawan)

21
  • Questions?

22
Section IV Arranging the Succession
23
The Succession
  • As Muawiya grew older, he began to arrange for
    the succession
  • The sources almost universally report that he had
    long planned to appoint his son Yazid
  • To this end, he first consulted with the
    venerable elite of Medina
  • They approved of his attempt to ensure a smooth
    transfer of power
  • However, they did not approve of his son and
    rioted
  • Although we will look more closely at Yazid in
    the next session, the sources almost universally
    portray him as a dissolute playboy
  • Indeed, he is said to have had a particular
    penchant for dancing girls and pet monkeys!
  • Muawiya is then said to have invited deputations
    from the provinces to Damascus and to have
    praised his sons virtues in front of them
  • Taking the hint, these provincial leaders then
    demanded to pay homage to Yazid
  • Muawiya then attempted to secure Medinan
    acquiescence by travelling to the city in person,
    at the head of 1,000 horsemen

24
The Succession
  • His main targets were as follows
  • Husain ibn Ali
  • Abdullah ibn al-Zubayr
  • Abdullah ibn Umar
  • Abd al-Rahman ibn Abu Bakr
  • In other words, the sons of the most important
    companions of Muhammad
  • All four men again repudiated Muawiyas idea
  • At which, he is reported to have said
  • At other times, when I speak in the pulpit, I
    permit everyone to say against my speech what he
    will but him who contradicts me today a sword
    shall silence (quoted in Wellhausen, 143)
  • The men were then marched directly to the mosque
  • These four men, without whom no decision can be
    made, have paid homage to Yazid so do ye also
    pay homage! (ibid)
  • All four are thus said to have remained silent
    through fear

25
The Succession
  • Muawiya died in 60AH (680CE) and Yazid became
    caliph
  • Although Muawiya was in many ways a successful
    ruler, his attempts to appoint his son Yazid as
    his successor were deeply unpopular
  • Generally speaking, our sources feel that this
    act marked a radical break with previous practice
  • From this point onwards, so our sources argue,
    the Muslim state descends into hereditary
    kingship (or mulk in Arabic)
  • Moreover, this act also brought barely latent
    tensions to the surface
  • And, in many ways, Yazids accession marks the
    effective beginning of the second civil war
  • However, we will explore this in greater detail
    in the next session
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