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Abd al-Aziz ibn Marwan

Abd al-Aziz ibn Marwan ibn al-Hakam (Arabic: عبد العزيز بن مروان بن الحكم, romanizedʿAbd al-ʿAzīz ibn Marwān ibn al-Ḥakam; died 12 May 705) was the Umayyad governor and de facto viceroy of Egypt between 685 and his death. He was appointed by his father, Caliph Marwan I (r. 684–685). Abd al-Aziz's reign was marked by stability and prosperity, partly due to his close relations and reliance on the Arab military settlers of Fustat. Under his direction and supervision, an army led by Musa ibn Nusayr completed the Muslim conquest of North Africa. He was removed from the line of succession to the caliphal throne and, in any case, died before his brother, Caliph Abd al-Malik. However, one of Abd al-Aziz's sons, Umar II, would become caliph in 717.

Abd al-Aziz ibn Marwan
Governor of Egypt
In office
685–705
Preceded byAbd al-Rahman ibn Utba al-Fihri
Succeeded byAbdallah ibn Abd al-Malik
Personal details
Died12 May 705
Hulwan
Spouses
  • Umm Asim bint Asim ibn Umar
  • Umm Abd Allah bint Abd Allah ibn Amr ibn al-As
  • Layla bint Suhayl
  • Hafsa bint Asma bint Abd al-Rahman ibn al-Harith
  • Maria (concubine)
Children
  • Al-Asbagh
  • Umar
  • Asim
  • Abu Bakr
  • Muhammad
  • Sahl
  • Suhayl
  • Zabban
  • Juzayy
  • Sahla (daughter)
  • Umm al-Hakam (daughter)
  • Umm al-Banin (daughter)
Parents
  • Marwan I (father)
  • Layla bint Zabban ibn al-Asbagh al-Kalbiyya (mother)
RelativesAbd al-Malik (brother)
Al-Walid I (nephew and son-in-law)
Residence(s)Fustat (685–690)
Hulwan (690–705)
ReligionIslam
Military service
AllegianceUmayyad Caliphate
Years of service684–685
Battles/warsBattle of Marj Rahit (684)

Early life and career

Abd al-Aziz was the son of a senior member of the Umayyad clan, Marwan ibn al-Hakam, and one of the latter's wives, Layla bint Zabban ibn al-Asbagh of the Banu Kalb tribe.[1] He may have visited Egypt when the province was governed by Maslama ibn Mukhallad al-Ansari (667–682), the appointee of Mu'awiya I, founder of the Umayyad Caliphate.[2] In 682, Abd al-Aziz was part of an embassy, alongside his elder half-brother Abd al-Malik, sent by Marwan to the anti-Umayyad rebel Abd Allah ibn al-Zubayr in Mecca.[2] When the inhabitants of Medina, the home of much of the Umayyad clan, rebelled against Mu'awiya's successor, Caliph Yazid I (r. 680–683), and besieged the Umayyad family in Marwan's neighbourhood in 683, Abd al-Aziz is not mentioned as being present.[2] The historian Wilhelm Barthold speculates he could have been in Egypt at the time.[2]

In any case, in the summer of 684, when Marwan was elected caliph by pro-Umayyad loyalist tribes, chief among them the Banu Kalb, Abd al-Aziz was in his father's company.[2] He fought alongside his father and the Banu Kalb against al-Dahhak ibn Qays al-Fihri and the Qaysi tribes, who supported Ibn al-Zubayr, who had declared himself caliph in 683 and gained widespread recognition in the Caliphate, at the Battle of Marj Rahit near Damascus in August. Abd al-Aziz was thrown off his horse during the battle, which ended in a crushing Umayyad–Kalbite victory.[3] Afterwards, he played a leading role in Marwan's conquest of Egypt from its Zubayrid governor Ibn Jahdam al-Fihri, serving as the commander of a contingent which crossed into the province through the Sinai Peninsula, via the Red Sea port town of Ayla.[2] There he confronted Ibn Jahdam and his deputy Zuhayr ibn Qays al-Balawi, with the latter later defecting to Abd al-Aziz.[4] After Marwan returned to Syria, he designated Abd al-Malik as his successor, to be followed by Abd al-Aziz. Abd al-Malik acceded as caliph upon Marwan's death in April 685.[5][6]

Governor of Egypt

Abd al-Aziz is most notable for his twenty-year-long tenure as governor (āmīr) of Egypt, from 685 CE (AH 65) until his death in 705 CE (AH 86).[7] He was placed in the post by Marwan after the Marwan departed Egypt for Syria in February 685.[2] He enjoyed wide autonomy in the governance of Egypt, and functioned as a de facto viceroy of the country.[7] Abd al-Aziz also supervised the completion of the Muslim conquest of North Africa; he appointed Musa ibn Nusayr to his post as governor of Ifriqiya.[8]

Foundation of Hulwan and building works in Fustat

During the early years of his reign, Abd al-Aziz resided chiefly at Fustat, leaving it only for two visits to the Caliph's court at Damascus and four visits to Alexandria.[8] Fustat was the capital of the province, established in the 640s by the Arab conqueror and first governor of Islamic Egypt, Amr ibn al-As. Abd al-Aziz was a major patron of architectural projects and his rule marked the heyday of Umayyad-era building works in the city.[9] Several houses, palaces, roofed markets and fountains were built under his direction.[9]

Abd al-Aziz completely rebuilt and expanded the Mosque of Amr, Fustat's congregational mosque.[9] To its west, in 686/87[10] he erected the Dar al-Mudhahabba (the Gilded Palace).[2] The residential complex was also known in the contemporary Arabic sources as al-Madina (the City), giving an indication of its size, covering up to 4–5 hectares (9.9–12.4 acres) including gardens. The complex included some buildings of at least two storeys.[10] It overlooked the Nile and likely included the house and surrounding land of the high-ranking official Kharija ibn Hudhafa (d. 661), which Marwan purchased from Kharija's son for 10,000 gold dinars.[11]

According to the historian Wladyslaw Kubiak, the Dar al-Bayda (the White Palace) built by Marwan in Fustat may have been viewed by Abd al-Aziz as unsuitable for a person of his rank and the new palace became the official residence of Egypt's Marwanids (descendants of Caliph Marwan).[10] He built a bath in the city named after his son Zabban, upon whom it was bestowed. The bath became the subject of a celebrated verse:

Whoever has in his soul a place for white, let him have that white in the Bath of Zabban
It has no breath, no eyelashes, however, it is an idol in the creation of man.[12]

At least four roofed markets, each specialising in a type of merchandise, were built during Abd al-Aziz's reign.[13] In August/September 688, he also built the Qantara bridge over the Khalij Amir al-Mu'minin (Canal of the Commander of the Faithful), which passed through Fustat and connected Heliopolis (Ayn Shams) to the Nile.[14] The bridge, located in the Hamra al-Quswa neighborhood, was likely meant to serve a major circulatory road in Fustat and its remains were still visible in the 12th century.[15] It was one of a number of bridges constructed in the city by Abd al-Aziz.[16]

When the plague struck Fustat in 689 or 690,[8][2] Abd al-Aziz moved his residence and seat of government about 20 kilometers (12 mi) south of the city and founded Hulwan.[2][17] According to the 15th-century Egyptian historian al-Maqrizi, Abd al-Aziz had relocated due to flooding in Fustat in 690 and chose the site of Hulwan for his new capital because its elevation, 35 metres (115 ft) above the banks of the Nile, was higher than the river's flood line.[17] The foundation of Hulwan began a custom of establishing "satellite residence town[s]", which was "repeated countless times by later rulers in various regions of the Islamic world", according to Kubiak.[18]

Abd al-Aziz constructed in Hulwan a mosque, a number of churches (see below) and palaces, and planted vineyards and palm trees.[17] He erected a nilometer in the new city, although it was replaced by the nilometer built on the Nile river island of al-Rawda in 715.[17] Hulwan was well known for the glass pavilions patronised by the governor and an artificial lake fed by an aqueduct.[19] The city's prosperity under Abd al-Aziz was praised by the poet Ubayd Allah ibn Qays al-Ruqayyat.[17]

Domestic affairs

Abd al-Aziz proved to be a capable governor,[20] and his rule was a period of peace and prosperity, marked by his conciliatory and co-operative attitude towards the leaders of the local Arab settlers (the jund). Throughout his tenure, Abd al-Aziz relied on them rather than the Syrians, who elsewhere were the main pillar of the Umayyad regime.[21]

Abd al-Aziz was known for his generosity. The 10th-century Egyptian historian al-Kindi quotes a report that he arranged for one thousand bowls of food to be set up around his palace and had another one hundred bowls supplied to the tribal settlers of Fustat, both on a daily basis.[22] These bowls are also mentioned in a well-known eulogy by Ibn Qays al-Ruqayyat:

That is Laylā's son, Abd al-'Azīz: at Bābilyūn [Babylon Fortress]
his food bowls are full to overflowing.[23]

According to al-Kindi, Abd al-Aziz introduced an Islamic ritual in Egypt consisting of a sitting held in the mosques during afternoon prayers on the ninth day of Dhu al-Hijjah, the Day of Arafa.[24] Abd al-Aziz opposed a higher tax burden on indigenous Muslim converts. He had been called on by Abd al-Malik to follow the example of the caliph's governor of Iraq and the eastern Caliphate, al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf, who imposed the poll tax (jizya) on the inhabitants of his province even after their conversion to Islam. Instead, Abd al-Aziz took the advice of the qadi (chief Islamic judge) and treasurer of Egypt, Abd al-Rahman ibn Hubayra, and did not implement the measure.[25][26]

The medieval Egyptian historian Ibn Abd al-Hakam (d. 971) relates that Abd al-Aziz had a different copy of the Qur'an produced from the version of al-Hajjaj, which had been sent to him.[27] The revised version was said to have contained grammatical corrections and was inherited, in succession, by Abd al-Aziz's son Abu Bakr, and then Abd al-Aziz's daughter Asma and son al-Hakam.[28] The Baghdad-based writer Abu Ubayd Allah al-Marzubani (d. 995) praised Abd al-Aziz for promoting the Arabic language. Having caused misunderstandings by his own erroneous pronunciation of Arabic, Abd al-Aziz endeavoured to learn the correct pronunciation and later made gifts to his petitioners dependent on their mastery of the Arabic language.[29]

Relations with Christians

According to the 10th-century Melkite Christian patriarch Eutychius of Alexandria, Abd al-Aziz permitted his Melkite servants to establish a small church in Hulwan dedicated to Saint George.[30] One of the governor's Jacobite secretaries, Athanasios, was also allowed to construct a church in close proximity to the Babylon Fortress (Qasr al-Sham) in the vicinity of Fustat.[30]

Apart from personal favours to the Christians in his circle, Abd al-Aziz pursued a restrictive policy towards Egypt's indigenous Christian population. In 693/94, on one of his visits to Alexandria, he arrested the Christian leaders of the city and dispersed them across the country's villages and rural districts. He then obliged each district to pay taxes according to the yield of its fields and gardens.[31][32] Abd al-Aziz had his son al-Asbagh take a census of all the monks of the province, imposed on each of them a poll tax—from which they had previously been exempted—of one gold dinar, and forbade the recruitment of new monks.[33][34] He also closely monitored the elections of the Coptic patriarchs and obliged the patriarchs[clarification needed] to take their seat in Hulwan.[35] The public display of Christian symbols was banned, and a Christian source reports that Abd al-Aziz had all the crosses in Egypt destroyed.[36]

Death and legacy

Marwan had named Abd al-Aziz his second heir after Abd al-Malik. The latter, however, wanted his son al-Walid I (r. 705–715) to succeed him, and Abd al-Aziz was persuaded not to object to this change.[20] In the event, Abd al-Aziz died on 12 May 705 CE (13 Jumada I AH 86), four months before Abd al-Malik.[35] Abd al-Aziz was succeeded as governor by Abd al-Malik's son Abdallah, whose aim was to restore the caliphate's control over the province and, in the words of the historian Hugh N. Kennedy, "remove all traces of Abd al-Aziz's administration".[37]

By dint of his major architectural works in Fustat and Hulwan, roughly coinciding with the period of monumental Islamic architecture's earliest stages under the caliphs Abd al-Malik and al-Walid I, Kubiak calls Abd al-Aziz perhaps "the true father of Islamic architecture".[9] His patronage activities initiated a trend continued by later governors and caliphs.[38] Though he spent large sums in the course of his rule, Abd al-Aziz's personal lifestyle was austere.[2] At his death, he left the relatively small fortune of 7,000 gold dinars (according to his treasurer) and tattered clothing.[2] In an indication of his piety, he stated on his deathbed his wish to have been a mere cameleer roaming the Hejaz (western Arabia), a man of no consequence or a collection of dust.[39]

Family and descendants

According to the historian Ibn Sa'd (d. 845), Abd al-Aziz had children from three wives and two slave women.[40] He married Umm Asim Layla bint Asim, a granddaughter of Caliph Umar (r. 634–644), while they were both residing in Damascus in c. 684–685.[41] Abd al-Aziz highly valued this marital link with the family of the former caliph and spent 400 gold dinars for the wedding.[41] While Ibn Sa'd counts four sons from Umm Asim—Asim, Umar II, Abu Bakr and Muhammad[42]al-Baladhuri and Ibn Abd al-Hakam count two: Abu Bakr Asim and Umar II.[43] Twelve years after Abd al-Aziz's death, Umar II was appointed caliph and ruled until 720.[35]

From another wife, Umm Abd Allah bint Abd Allah, a granddaughter of Amr ibn al-As, Abd al-Aziz had his sons Suhayl and Sahl and daughters Sahla and Umm al-Hakam.[40][42][44] From a third wife, Layla bint Suhayl, he had his daughter Umm al-Banin.[42] Abd al-Aziz was also married to Hafsa, a daughter of Asma bint Abd al-Rahman ibn al-Harith of the prominent Qurayshite clan of Banu Makhzum.[45]

Five of his children, including his eldest son al-Asbagh, were born to slave women.[40] According to the Egyptian historian al-Kindi (d. 961), Abd al-Aziz appointed al-Asbagh as a temporary governor of Alexandria and, during Abd al-Aziz's visit to Syria in 695, as his place-holder over the whole of Egypt.[22] Abd al-Aziz intended that al-Asbagh—for whom he nurtured hopes in the caliphal succession—would succeed him as governor of Egypt, making the province into a hereditary appendage for his household, but al-Asbagh died a few months before Abd al-Aziz.[37]

Other sons of Abd al-Aziz from his slave women included Zabban and Juzayy.[42] The latter was one of the first Umayyads to relocate to al-Andalus (the Iberian Peninsula, where an Umayyad emirate was established in 756) in the aftermath of the Abbasid Revolution in 750, moving soon after the fall of the last Umayyad caliph, Marwan II (r. 744–750).[46] Juzayy died in 757 and left several descendants in Cordoba. Descendants of Zabban established themselves in Niebla and one of them developed the Suwayqat al-Zabbaniyyin square in Cordoba.[47] Ibn Abd al-Hakam notes a third slave woman, of Greek or Coptic origin, named Maria,[48] with whom Abd al-Aziz had a son named Muhammad. In honour of Maria, Abd al-Aziz built a palace in Fustat called Qasr Mariya (Maria's Palace).[49]

Abd al-Aziz's descendants remained influential in Egyptian affairs until the early Abbasid period.[50] Abd al-Aziz's grandsons Muhammad and Amr, both sons of Sahl, are mentioned several times in the traditional Islamic sources,[51] and Amr was counted among the supporters of the Alid rebel Abdallah ibn Muawiya when the latter fled Merv for Egypt in 747.[52]

In the immediate aftermath of the Abbasid Revolution, Abd al-Aziz's grandson Umar ibn Suhayl and great-grandson Isa ibn al-Walid ibn Umar were deported to Qalansuwa from Egypt and executed, while his grandsons Marwan ibn al-Asbagh, Abd al-Malik ibn Abi Bakr and al-Asbagh ibn Zabban were killed in the massacre of the Umayyad family at Nahr Abi Futrus.[53] His grandsons Asim and Umar (both sons of Abu Bakr) and Asim's sons, Maslama, Aban and Abd al-Malik, found safety with Coptic villagers in Upper Egypt but were pardoned by the Abbasid governor Salih ibn Ali and returned to Fustat.[54] A great-grandson of Abd al-Aziz, al-Asbagh ibn Sufyan ibn Asim, supported the Abbasid caliph al-Mansur (r. 754–775) in Egypt,[55] and another great-grandson, Dihya ibn Mus'ab ibn al-Asbagh, led a revolt in the country against Caliph al-Hadi (r. 785–786).[56]

References

  1. ^ Fishbein 1990, p. 162.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Barthold 1971, p. 72.
  3. ^ Hawting 1989, p. 62.
  4. ^ Khoury 2002, p. 559.
  5. ^ Mayer 1952, p. 185.
  6. ^ Bosworth 1991, p. 622.
  7. ^ a b Kennedy 1998, pp. 65, 70–71.
  8. ^ a b c Kennedy 1998, p. 71.
  9. ^ a b c d Kubiak 1987, p. 123.
  10. ^ a b c Kubiak 1987, pp. 45, 128.
  11. ^ Kubiak 1987, pp. 44–45, 116.
  12. ^ Hilloowala 1998, p. 107.
  13. ^ Kubiak 1987, p. 127.
  14. ^ Kubiak 1987, pp. 111, 116.
  15. ^ Kubiak 1987, pp. 111–112, 116, 120.
  16. ^ Kubiak 1987, p. 116.
  17. ^ a b c d e Jones 1971, p. 572.
  18. ^ Kubiak 1987, p. 42.
  19. ^ Kubiak 1987, p. 128.
  20. ^ a b Zetterstéen 1960, p. 58.
  21. ^ Kennedy 1998, pp. 70–71.
  22. ^ a b Muhammad ibn Yusuf al-Kindi 1912, p. 51.
  23. ^ Fishbein 1990, p. 162, notes 587–589.
  24. ^ Muhammad ibn Yusuf al-Kindi 1912, p. 50.
  25. ^ Ibn Abd al-Hakam 1922, p. 156.
  26. ^ Dennett 1950, p. 76.
  27. ^ Kubiak 1987, p. 102.
  28. ^ Hilloowala 1998, p. 112.
  29. ^ The scholar biographies of Abū 'Ubaidallah al-Marzubānī: in the review of the Ḥāfiẓ al-Yaġmūrī. Edited by Rudolf Sellheim. F. Steiner Verlag, Wiesbaden 1964, p. 3.
  30. ^ a b Eutychius of Alexandria 1909, p. 41.
  31. ^ Becker 1902, p. 98.
  32. ^ Dennett 1950, p. 75.
  33. ^ Becker 1902, p. 99.
  34. ^ Dennett 1950, p. 5, 73.
  35. ^ a b c Blankinship, Khalid Yahya (2009). "ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz b. Marwān". In Fleet, Kate; Krämer, Gudrun; Matringe, Denis; Nawas, John; Stewart, Devin J. (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE. Brill Online. doi:10.1163/1573-3912_ei3_COM_22584. ISSN 1873-9830.
  36. ^ Robinson 2005, p. 80.
  37. ^ a b Kennedy 1998, pp. 71–72.
  38. ^ Kubiak 1987, p. 124.
  39. ^ Barthold 1971, p. 73.
  40. ^ a b c Muhammad ibn Sa'd 1904–1940, pp. 9–11.
  41. ^ a b Barthold 1971, p. 71.
  42. ^ a b c d Bewley 2000, p. 153.
  43. ^ Sijpesteijn 2014, p. 183, note 31.
  44. ^ Sijpesteijn 2014, p. 183.
  45. ^ Ahmed 2010, p. 124.
  46. ^ Uzquiza Bartolomé 1992, p. 423.
  47. ^ Sábada 1957, p. 83.
  48. ^ Kubiak 1987, pp. 96, 169.
  49. ^ Ibn Abd al-Hakam 1922, p. 112.
  50. ^ Kennedy 1998, pp. 77–78.
  51. ^ Sijpesteijn 2014, p. 184.
  52. ^ Sijpesteijn 2014, p. 184, note 34.
  53. ^ Caetani 1923, p. 23.
  54. ^ Caetani 1923, pp. 22–23.
  55. ^ McAuliffe 1995, p. 236.
  56. ^ Ahmed 2007, p. 440, note 151.

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Further reading

  • Mabra, Joshua. Princely Authority in the Early Marwānid State: The Life of ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz ibn Marwān (d. 86/705). Gorgias Press: Piscataway, NJ, 2017. ISBN 978-1-4632-0632-1

aziz, marwan, hakam, arabic, عبد, العزيز, بن, مروان, بن, الحكم, romanized, ʿabd, ʿazīz, marwān, Ḥakam, died, umayyad, governor, facto, viceroy, egypt, between, death, appointed, father, caliph, marwan, aziz, reign, marked, stability, prosperity, partly, close,. Abd al Aziz ibn Marwan ibn al Hakam Arabic عبد العزيز بن مروان بن الحكم romanized ʿAbd al ʿAziz ibn Marwan ibn al Ḥakam died 12 May 705 was the Umayyad governor and de facto viceroy of Egypt between 685 and his death He was appointed by his father Caliph Marwan I r 684 685 Abd al Aziz s reign was marked by stability and prosperity partly due to his close relations and reliance on the Arab military settlers of Fustat Under his direction and supervision an army led by Musa ibn Nusayr completed the Muslim conquest of North Africa He was removed from the line of succession to the caliphal throne and in any case died before his brother Caliph Abd al Malik However one of Abd al Aziz s sons Umar II would become caliph in 717 Abd al Aziz ibn MarwanGovernor of EgyptIn office 685 705Preceded byAbd al Rahman ibn Utba al FihriSucceeded byAbdallah ibn Abd al MalikPersonal detailsDied12 May 705HulwanSpousesUmm Asim bint Asim ibn Umar Umm Abd Allah bint Abd Allah ibn Amr ibn al As Layla bint Suhayl Hafsa bint Asma bint Abd al Rahman ibn al Harith Maria concubine ChildrenAl Asbagh Umar Asim Abu Bakr Muhammad Sahl Suhayl Zabban Juzayy Sahla daughter Umm al Hakam daughter Umm al Banin daughter ParentsMarwan I father Layla bint Zabban ibn al Asbagh al Kalbiyya mother RelativesAbd al Malik brother Al Walid I nephew and son in law Residence s Fustat 685 690 Hulwan 690 705 ReligionIslamMilitary serviceAllegianceUmayyad CaliphateYears of service684 685Battles warsBattle of Marj Rahit 684 Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Governor of Egypt 2 1 Foundation of Hulwan and building works in Fustat 2 2 Domestic affairs 2 2 1 Relations with Christians 2 3 Death and legacy 3 Family and descendants 4 References 5 Bibliography 5 1 Primary sources 5 2 Secondary sources 6 Further readingEarly life and career EditAbd al Aziz was the son of a senior member of the Umayyad clan Marwan ibn al Hakam and one of the latter s wives Layla bint Zabban ibn al Asbagh of the Banu Kalb tribe 1 He may have visited Egypt when the province was governed by Maslama ibn Mukhallad al Ansari 667 682 the appointee of Mu awiya I founder of the Umayyad Caliphate 2 In 682 Abd al Aziz was part of an embassy alongside his elder half brother Abd al Malik sent by Marwan to the anti Umayyad rebel Abd Allah ibn al Zubayr in Mecca 2 When the inhabitants of Medina the home of much of the Umayyad clan rebelled against Mu awiya s successor Caliph Yazid I r 680 683 and besieged the Umayyad family in Marwan s neighbourhood in 683 Abd al Aziz is not mentioned as being present 2 The historian Wilhelm Barthold speculates he could have been in Egypt at the time 2 In any case in the summer of 684 when Marwan was elected caliph by pro Umayyad loyalist tribes chief among them the Banu Kalb Abd al Aziz was in his father s company 2 He fought alongside his father and the Banu Kalb against al Dahhak ibn Qays al Fihri and the Qaysi tribes who supported Ibn al Zubayr who had declared himself caliph in 683 and gained widespread recognition in the Caliphate at the Battle of Marj Rahit near Damascus in August Abd al Aziz was thrown off his horse during the battle which ended in a crushing Umayyad Kalbite victory 3 Afterwards he played a leading role in Marwan s conquest of Egypt from its Zubayrid governor Ibn Jahdam al Fihri serving as the commander of a contingent which crossed into the province through the Sinai Peninsula via the Red Sea port town of Ayla 2 There he confronted Ibn Jahdam and his deputy Zuhayr ibn Qays al Balawi with the latter later defecting to Abd al Aziz 4 After Marwan returned to Syria he designated Abd al Malik as his successor to be followed by Abd al Aziz Abd al Malik acceded as caliph upon Marwan s death in April 685 5 6 Governor of Egypt EditAbd al Aziz is most notable for his twenty year long tenure as governor amir of Egypt from 685 CE AH 65 until his death in 705 CE AH 86 7 He was placed in the post by Marwan after the Marwan departed Egypt for Syria in February 685 2 He enjoyed wide autonomy in the governance of Egypt and functioned as a de facto viceroy of the country 7 Abd al Aziz also supervised the completion of the Muslim conquest of North Africa he appointed Musa ibn Nusayr to his post as governor of Ifriqiya 8 Foundation of Hulwan and building works in Fustat Edit During the early years of his reign Abd al Aziz resided chiefly at Fustat leaving it only for two visits to the Caliph s court at Damascus and four visits to Alexandria 8 Fustat was the capital of the province established in the 640s by the Arab conqueror and first governor of Islamic Egypt Amr ibn al As Abd al Aziz was a major patron of architectural projects and his rule marked the heyday of Umayyad era building works in the city 9 Several houses palaces roofed markets and fountains were built under his direction 9 Abd al Aziz completely rebuilt and expanded the Mosque of Amr Fustat s congregational mosque 9 To its west in 686 87 10 he erected the Dar al Mudhahabba the Gilded Palace 2 The residential complex was also known in the contemporary Arabic sources as al Madina the City giving an indication of its size covering up to 4 5 hectares 9 9 12 4 acres including gardens The complex included some buildings of at least two storeys 10 It overlooked the Nile and likely included the house and surrounding land of the high ranking official Kharija ibn Hudhafa d 661 which Marwan purchased from Kharija s son for 10 000 gold dinars 11 According to the historian Wladyslaw Kubiak the Dar al Bayda the White Palace built by Marwan in Fustat may have been viewed by Abd al Aziz as unsuitable for a person of his rank and the new palace became the official residence of Egypt s Marwanids descendants of Caliph Marwan 10 He built a bath in the city named after his son Zabban upon whom it was bestowed The bath became the subject of a celebrated verse Whoever has in his soul a place for white let him have that white in the Bath of Zabban It has no breath no eyelashes however it is an idol in the creation of man 12 At least four roofed markets each specialising in a type of merchandise were built during Abd al Aziz s reign 13 In August September 688 he also built the Qantara bridge over the Khalij Amir al Mu minin Canal of the Commander of the Faithful which passed through Fustat and connected Heliopolis Ayn Shams to the Nile 14 The bridge located in the Hamra al Quswa neighborhood was likely meant to serve a major circulatory road in Fustat and its remains were still visible in the 12th century 15 It was one of a number of bridges constructed in the city by Abd al Aziz 16 When the plague struck Fustat in 689 or 690 8 2 Abd al Aziz moved his residence and seat of government about 20 kilometers 12 mi south of the city and founded Hulwan 2 17 According to the 15th century Egyptian historian al Maqrizi Abd al Aziz had relocated due to flooding in Fustat in 690 and chose the site of Hulwan for his new capital because its elevation 35 metres 115 ft above the banks of the Nile was higher than the river s flood line 17 The foundation of Hulwan began a custom of establishing satellite residence town s which was repeated countless times by later rulers in various regions of the Islamic world according to Kubiak 18 Abd al Aziz constructed in Hulwan a mosque a number of churches see below and palaces and planted vineyards and palm trees 17 He erected a nilometer in the new city although it was replaced by the nilometer built on the Nile river island of al Rawda in 715 17 Hulwan was well known for the glass pavilions patronised by the governor and an artificial lake fed by an aqueduct 19 The city s prosperity under Abd al Aziz was praised by the poet Ubayd Allah ibn Qays al Ruqayyat 17 Domestic affairs Edit Abd al Aziz proved to be a capable governor 20 and his rule was a period of peace and prosperity marked by his conciliatory and co operative attitude towards the leaders of the local Arab settlers the jund Throughout his tenure Abd al Aziz relied on them rather than the Syrians who elsewhere were the main pillar of the Umayyad regime 21 Abd al Aziz was known for his generosity The 10th century Egyptian historian al Kindi quotes a report that he arranged for one thousand bowls of food to be set up around his palace and had another one hundred bowls supplied to the tribal settlers of Fustat both on a daily basis 22 These bowls are also mentioned in a well known eulogy by Ibn Qays al Ruqayyat That is Layla s son Abd al Aziz at Babilyun Babylon Fortress his food bowls are full to overflowing 23 According to al Kindi Abd al Aziz introduced an Islamic ritual in Egypt consisting of a sitting held in the mosques during afternoon prayers on the ninth day of Dhu al Hijjah the Day of Arafa 24 Abd al Aziz opposed a higher tax burden on indigenous Muslim converts He had been called on by Abd al Malik to follow the example of the caliph s governor of Iraq and the eastern Caliphate al Hajjaj ibn Yusuf who imposed the poll tax jizya on the inhabitants of his province even after their conversion to Islam Instead Abd al Aziz took the advice of the qadi chief Islamic judge and treasurer of Egypt Abd al Rahman ibn Hubayra and did not implement the measure 25 26 The medieval Egyptian historian Ibn Abd al Hakam d 971 relates that Abd al Aziz had a different copy of the Qur an produced from the version of al Hajjaj which had been sent to him 27 The revised version was said to have contained grammatical corrections and was inherited in succession by Abd al Aziz s son Abu Bakr and then Abd al Aziz s daughter Asma and son al Hakam 28 The Baghdad based writer Abu Ubayd Allah al Marzubani d 995 praised Abd al Aziz for promoting the Arabic language Having caused misunderstandings by his own erroneous pronunciation of Arabic Abd al Aziz endeavoured to learn the correct pronunciation and later made gifts to his petitioners dependent on their mastery of the Arabic language 29 Relations with Christians Edit According to the 10th century Melkite Christian patriarch Eutychius of Alexandria Abd al Aziz permitted his Melkite servants to establish a small church in Hulwan dedicated to Saint George 30 One of the governor s Jacobite secretaries Athanasios was also allowed to construct a church in close proximity to the Babylon Fortress Qasr al Sham in the vicinity of Fustat 30 Apart from personal favours to the Christians in his circle Abd al Aziz pursued a restrictive policy towards Egypt s indigenous Christian population In 693 94 on one of his visits to Alexandria he arrested the Christian leaders of the city and dispersed them across the country s villages and rural districts He then obliged each district to pay taxes according to the yield of its fields and gardens 31 32 Abd al Aziz had his son al Asbagh take a census of all the monks of the province imposed on each of them a poll tax from which they had previously been exempted of one gold dinar and forbade the recruitment of new monks 33 34 He also closely monitored the elections of the Coptic patriarchs and obliged the patriarchs clarification needed to take their seat in Hulwan 35 The public display of Christian symbols was banned and a Christian source reports that Abd al Aziz had all the crosses in Egypt destroyed 36 Death and legacy Edit Marwan had named Abd al Aziz his second heir after Abd al Malik The latter however wanted his son al Walid I r 705 715 to succeed him and Abd al Aziz was persuaded not to object to this change 20 In the event Abd al Aziz died on 12 May 705 CE 13 Jumada I AH 86 four months before Abd al Malik 35 Abd al Aziz was succeeded as governor by Abd al Malik s son Abdallah whose aim was to restore the caliphate s control over the province and in the words of the historian Hugh N Kennedy remove all traces of Abd al Aziz s administration 37 By dint of his major architectural works in Fustat and Hulwan roughly coinciding with the period of monumental Islamic architecture s earliest stages under the caliphs Abd al Malik and al Walid I Kubiak calls Abd al Aziz perhaps the true father of Islamic architecture 9 His patronage activities initiated a trend continued by later governors and caliphs 38 Though he spent large sums in the course of his rule Abd al Aziz s personal lifestyle was austere 2 At his death he left the relatively small fortune of 7 000 gold dinars according to his treasurer and tattered clothing 2 In an indication of his piety he stated on his deathbed his wish to have been a mere cameleer roaming the Hejaz western Arabia a man of no consequence or a collection of dust 39 Family and descendants EditAccording to the historian Ibn Sa d d 845 Abd al Aziz had children from three wives and two slave women 40 He married Umm Asim Layla bint Asim a granddaughter of Caliph Umar r 634 644 while they were both residing in Damascus in c 684 685 41 Abd al Aziz highly valued this marital link with the family of the former caliph and spent 400 gold dinars for the wedding 41 While Ibn Sa d counts four sons from Umm Asim Asim Umar II Abu Bakr and Muhammad 42 al Baladhuri and Ibn Abd al Hakam count two Abu Bakr Asim and Umar II 43 Twelve years after Abd al Aziz s death Umar II was appointed caliph and ruled until 720 35 From another wife Umm Abd Allah bint Abd Allah a granddaughter of Amr ibn al As Abd al Aziz had his sons Suhayl and Sahl and daughters Sahla and Umm al Hakam 40 42 44 From a third wife Layla bint Suhayl he had his daughter Umm al Banin 42 Abd al Aziz was also married to Hafsa a daughter of Asma bint Abd al Rahman ibn al Harith of the prominent Qurayshite clan of Banu Makhzum 45 Five of his children including his eldest son al Asbagh were born to slave women 40 According to the Egyptian historian al Kindi d 961 Abd al Aziz appointed al Asbagh as a temporary governor of Alexandria and during Abd al Aziz s visit to Syria in 695 as his place holder over the whole of Egypt 22 Abd al Aziz intended that al Asbagh for whom he nurtured hopes in the caliphal succession would succeed him as governor of Egypt making the province into a hereditary appendage for his household but al Asbagh died a few months before Abd al Aziz 37 Other sons of Abd al Aziz from his slave women included Zabban and Juzayy 42 The latter was one of the first Umayyads to relocate to al Andalus the Iberian Peninsula where an Umayyad emirate was established in 756 in the aftermath of the Abbasid Revolution in 750 moving soon after the fall of the last Umayyad caliph Marwan II r 744 750 46 Juzayy died in 757 and left several descendants in Cordoba Descendants of Zabban established themselves in Niebla and one of them developed the Suwayqat al Zabbaniyyin square in Cordoba 47 Ibn Abd al Hakam notes a third slave woman of Greek or Coptic origin named Maria 48 with whom Abd al Aziz had a son named Muhammad In honour of Maria Abd al Aziz built a palace in Fustat called Qasr Mariya Maria s Palace 49 Abd al Aziz s descendants remained influential in Egyptian affairs until the early Abbasid period 50 Abd al Aziz s grandsons Muhammad and Amr both sons of Sahl are mentioned several times in the traditional Islamic sources 51 and Amr was counted among the supporters of the Alid rebel Abdallah ibn Muawiya when the latter fled Merv for Egypt in 747 52 In the immediate aftermath of the Abbasid Revolution Abd al Aziz s grandson Umar ibn Suhayl and great grandson Isa ibn al Walid ibn Umar were deported to Qalansuwa from Egypt and executed while his grandsons Marwan ibn al Asbagh Abd al Malik ibn Abi Bakr and al Asbagh ibn Zabban were killed in the massacre of the Umayyad family at Nahr Abi Futrus 53 His grandsons Asim and Umar both sons of Abu Bakr and Asim s sons Maslama Aban and Abd al Malik found safety with Coptic villagers in Upper Egypt but were pardoned by the Abbasid governor Salih ibn Ali and returned to Fustat 54 A great grandson of Abd al Aziz al Asbagh ibn Sufyan ibn Asim supported the Abbasid caliph al Mansur r 754 775 in Egypt 55 and another great grandson Dihya ibn Mus ab ibn al Asbagh led a revolt in the country against Caliph al Hadi r 785 786 56 References Edit Fishbein 1990 p 162 a b c d e f g h i j k l Barthold 1971 p 72 Hawting 1989 p 62 Khoury 2002 p 559 Mayer 1952 p 185 Bosworth 1991 p 622 a b Kennedy 1998 pp 65 70 71 a b c Kennedy 1998 p 71 a b c d Kubiak 1987 p 123 a b c Kubiak 1987 pp 45 128 Kubiak 1987 pp 44 45 116 Hilloowala 1998 p 107 Kubiak 1987 p 127 Kubiak 1987 pp 111 116 Kubiak 1987 pp 111 112 116 120 Kubiak 1987 p 116 a b c d e Jones 1971 p 572 Kubiak 1987 p 42 Kubiak 1987 p 128 a b Zettersteen 1960 p 58 Kennedy 1998 pp 70 71 a b Muhammad ibn Yusuf al Kindi 1912 p 51 Fishbein 1990 p 162 notes 587 589 Muhammad ibn Yusuf al Kindi 1912 p 50 Ibn Abd al Hakam 1922 p 156 Dennett 1950 p 76 Kubiak 1987 p 102 Hilloowala 1998 p 112 The scholar biographies of Abu Ubaidallah al Marzubani in the review of the Ḥafiẓ al Yaġmuri Edited by Rudolf Sellheim F Steiner Verlag Wiesbaden 1964 p 3 a b Eutychius of Alexandria 1909 p 41 Becker 1902 p 98 Dennett 1950 p 75 Becker 1902 p 99 Dennett 1950 p 5 73 a b c Blankinship Khalid Yahya 2009 ʿAbd al ʿAziz b Marwan In Fleet Kate Kramer Gudrun Matringe Denis Nawas John Stewart Devin J eds Encyclopaedia of Islam THREE Brill Online doi 10 1163 1573 3912 ei3 COM 22584 ISSN 1873 9830 Robinson 2005 p 80 a b Kennedy 1998 pp 71 72 Kubiak 1987 p 124 Barthold 1971 p 73 a b c Muhammad ibn Sa d 1904 1940 pp 9 11 a b Barthold 1971 p 71 a b c d Bewley 2000 p 153 Sijpesteijn 2014 p 183 note 31 Sijpesteijn 2014 p 183 Ahmed 2010 p 124 Uzquiza Bartolome 1992 p 423 Sabada 1957 p 83 Kubiak 1987 pp 96 169 Ibn Abd al Hakam 1922 p 112 Kennedy 1998 pp 77 78 Sijpesteijn 2014 p 184 Sijpesteijn 2014 p 184 note 34 Caetani 1923 p 23 Caetani 1923 pp 22 23 McAuliffe 1995 p 236 Ahmed 2007 p 440 note 151 Bibliography EditPrimary sources Edit Bewley Aisha 2000 The Men of Madina by Muhammad Ibn Sa d Volume 2 Ta Ha Publishers ISBN 9781897940907 Eutychius of Alexandria 1909 Cheikho L Carra de Vaux B eds Annales Vol VIII Beirut CSCO Scriptores Arabici Fishbein Michael ed 1990 The History of al Ṭabari Volume XXI The Victory of the Marwanids A D 685 693 A H 66 73 SUNY Series in Near Eastern Studies Albany New York State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 0221 4 Muhammad ibn Yusuf al Kindi 1912 Guest Rhuvon ed Kitab al Wulat wa Kitab al Quḍat Leiden Brill Hawting G R ed 1989 The History of al Ṭabari Volume XX The Collapse of Sufyanid Authority and the Coming of the Marwanids The Caliphates of Muʿawiyah II and Marwan I and the Beginning of the Caliphate of ʿAbd al Malik A D 683 685 A H 64 66 SUNY Series in Near Eastern Studies Albany New York State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 88706 855 3 Hinds Martin ed 1990 The History of al Ṭabari Volume XXIII The Zenith of the Marwanid House The Last Years of ʿAbd al Malik and the Caliphate of al Walid A D 700 715 A H 81 95 SUNY Series in Near Eastern Studies Albany New York State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 88706 721 1 McAuliffe Jane Dammen ed 1995 The History of al Ṭabari Volume XXVIII The ʿAbbasid Authority Affirmed The Early Years of al Mansur A D 753 763 A H 136 145 SUNY Series in Near Eastern Studies Albany New York State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 1895 6 Muhammad ibn Sa d 1904 1940 Sachau E ed Kitab aṭ Ṭabaqat al kabir Vol 5 Leiden Ibn Abd al Hakam 1922 Torrey Charles C ed Kitab Futuḥ Miṣr wa aḫbaruha New Haven Secondary sources Edit Ahmed Asad 2007 Prosopography and the Reconstruction of Hijazi History for the Early Islamic Period The Case of the Awfid Family In Keats Rohan K S B ed Prosopography Approaches and Applications A Handbook Oxford Prosoprograpica et Genealogica pp 415 458 ISBN 978 1 900934 12 1 Ahmed Asad Q 2010 The Religious Elite of the Early Islamic Ḥijaz Five Prosopographical Case Studies University of Oxford Linacre College Unit for Prosopographical Research ISBN 9781900934138 Barthold W W 1971 Translated by Jan W Weryho Caliph Umar II and Conflicting Reports on his Personality Islamic Quarterly 15 69 104 Becker Carl Heinrich 1902 Beitrage zur Geschichte Agyptens unter dem Islam in German Strassburg Trubner Blankinship Khalid Yahya 2009 ʿAbd al ʿAziz b Marwan In Fleet Kate Kramer Gudrun Matringe Denis Nawas John Stewart Devin J eds Encyclopaedia of Islam THREE Brill Online ISSN 1873 9830 Bosworth C E 1991 Marwan I b al Ḥakam In Bosworth C E van Donzel E amp Pellat Ch eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam New Edition Volume VI Mahk Mid Leiden E J Brill pp 621 623 ISBN 978 90 04 08112 3 Caetani Leone 1923 Cronografia generale del bacino mediterraneo e dell Oriente musulmano dal 622 al 1517 dell era volgare ossia dal principio dell era musulmana alla caduta dell Egitto in potere dei Turchi ottomani in Italian Rome Accad dei Lincei Delgado Jorge Lirola 1993 El poder naval de Al Andalus en la epoca del califato omeya Granada Servicio de Publicaciones de la Universidad de Granada ISBN 84 338 1797 3 Dennett Daniel C Jr 1950 Conversion and the Poll Tax in Early Islam Cambridge Harvard University Press Hilloowala Yasmin 1998 The History of the Conquest of Egypt being a Partial Translation of Ibn Abd al Hakam sFutuh Misrand an Analysis of this Translation PDF Thesis The University of Arizona Jones J M B 1971 Hulwan In Lewis B Menage V L Pellat Ch amp Schacht J eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam New Edition Volume III H Iram Leiden E J Brill p 572 OCLC 495469525 Kennedy Hugh 1998 Egypt as a province in the Islamic caliphate 641 868 In Petry Carl F ed The Cambridge History of Egypt Volume 1 Islamic Egypt 640 1517 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 62 85 ISBN 0 521 47137 0 Khoury R G 2002 Zuhayr b Kays In Bearman P J Bianquis Th Bosworth C E van Donzel E amp Heinrichs W P eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam New Edition Volume XI W Z Leiden E J Brill p 559 ISBN 978 90 04 12756 2 Kubiak Wladyslaw B 1987 Al Fustat Its Foundation and Early Urban Development Cairo The American University in Cairo Press ISBN 978 1 61797 741 1 Mayer L A 1952 As Sinnabra Israel Exploration Journal 2 3 183 187 JSTOR 27924483 Robinson Chase F 2005 Abd al Malik London Oneworld Publications ISBN 978 1 85168 361 1 Sabada Elias Teres 1957 Linajes arabes en al Andalus Al Andalus in Spanish 22 1 55 112 ISSN 0304 4335 Sijpesteijn Petra M October 2014 An Early Umayyad Papyrus Invitation for the Ḥajj Journal of Near Eastern Studies 73 2 179 190 doi 10 1086 677240 hdl 1887 85169 JSTOR 10 1086 677240 S2CID 162233422 Uzquiza Bartolome Aranzazu 1992 La Familia Omeya en al Andalus In Marin Manuela Jesus Zanon eds Estudios onomastico biograficos de Al Andalus V in Spanish Madrid Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas pp 373 432 ISBN 84 00 07265 0 Zettersteen K V 1960 ʿAbd al ʿAziz b Marwan In Gibb H A R Kramers J H Levi Provencal E Schacht J Lewis B amp Pellat Ch eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam New Edition Volume I A B Leiden E J Brill OCLC 495469456 Further reading EditMabra Joshua Princely Authority in the Early Marwanid State The Life of ʿAbd al ʿAziz ibn Marwan d 86 705 Gorgias Press Piscataway NJ 2017 ISBN 978 1 4632 0632 1Preceded byAbd al Rahman ibn Utba al Fihri Governor of Egypt685 705 Succeeded byAbdallah ibn Abd al Malik Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Abd al Aziz ibn Marwan amp oldid 1108029508, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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