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Abu Bilal Mirdas

Abu Bilal Mirdas ibn Udayya al-Tamimi (died 681) was the leader of quietist Kharijites of Basra during the early years of the Umayyad Caliphate. He was the brother of Urwa ibn Udayya, one of the instigator of the Kharijite movement at the Battle of Siffin, in which Abu Bilal himself participated. After the defeat of the Kharijites at the Battle of Nahrawan in 658, he adopted political quietism and opposed the extremist Kharijites. In 680, in response to persecution by the Umayyad governor Ubayd Allah ibn Ziyad, Abu Bilal rose in rebellion and was killed in 681. His piety, military exploits, and death, which was seen by many as martyrdom, immortalized him among the later Kharijite circles. He is counted among the imams of the extinct Sufriyya sect of the Kharijites and is venerated by the Ibadiyya to this day.

Abu Bilal Mirdas
Died681
EraUmayyad Caliphate
Known forEarly Kharijite leader
OpponentUbayd Allah ibn Ziyad
Parents
  • Hudayr ibn Amr (father)
  • Udayya (mother)
RelativesUrwa ibn Udayya (brother)

Origin and early career edit

Abu Bilal was from the Rabia ibn Hanzala branch of Banu Tamim tribe, which provided a series of Kharijite leaders. Although his father's name was Hudayr ibn Amr, he was known by his mother's name Udayya. He was a resident of the Iraqi garrison town of Basra. Little is known of his early life.[1]

After the assassination of the third caliph Uthman in 656 by provincial rebels, the caliphate fell into civil war as Mu'awiya ibn Abi Sufyan, a relative of Uthman and the governor of Syria, challenged the legitimacy of the new caliph Ali. The indecisive battle between the two at Siffin ended in an arbitration agreement in July 657. Asserting that human arbitration was invalid as God's command was clear that the rebels (in this case Mu'awiya) had to be fought and overcome, some of Ali's soldiers left the army. They were called Kharijites following this secession.[2] Abu Bilal's brother Urwa ibn Udayya is reported to have been the first person to raise the slogan of la hukma illa li-llah (judgment belongs to God alone), which later became the characteristic Kharijite slogan, against the arbitration.[3] Abu Bilal himself was present at the battle and was among the seceders. He later fought against Ali in the Battle of Nahrawan in July 658 where the caliph crushed the Kharijite insurgents.[4] Following Ali's assassination in 661 by a Kharijite, Mu'awiya became the sole ruler, establishing the Umayyad Caliphate.[5]

Leader of the Basran quietists edit

After the defeat at Nahrawan, where many of the senior Kharijite leaders were killed, Abu Bilal gave up armed insurrection and returned to Basra along with his brother Urwa.[1] As Basra became the center of the anti-state Kharijite insurrections during the reign of Mu'awiya, Abu Bilal is reported to have cursed the insurgents.[6] He was opposed to the extremist Kharijite factions and condemned their doctrine of isti'rad—indiscriminate killing of the non-Kharijite Muslims. He also disapproved of women's participation in Kharijite rebellions which was held obligatory by the activist Kharijites.[4] These views and his status as one of the earliest Kharijites earned him much respect and leading position among the non-activist Kharijites of Basra.[6][7][1] The quietists were later known as Sufriyya and Abu Bilal is counted among their imams.[8]

At some point, Abu Bilal protesting and humiliating the governor of Basra Abdallah ibn Amir, just because the latter wearing fine garment. However, Abu Bilal conduct risen the anger of a Tabi'un named Abu Bakrah Muhammad ibn Bashar Bindar, who quoted a Hadith about forbidding to humiliate a ruler in public, while cursing Abu Bilal.[9][10]

Umayyad governor Ubayd Allah ibn Ziyad suppressed the Kharijite disturbances and imprisoned many of them including Abu Bilal. According to the account of Umar ibn Shabba (d. 877), the jailer was impressed by Abu Bilal's piety and permitted him to spend the nights at his home and return in the mornings. Upon learning that Ibn Ziyad intended to kill all the Kharijite prisoners the next morning, one of Abu Bilal's confidants reported this to his family. Despite this, Abu Bilal returned to the prison the next morning. Moved by this, the jailer pleaded to Ibn Ziyad who spared Abu Bilal's life and released him, while the others were killed.[3][11][12]

Revolt and death edit

class=notpageimage|
Basra and approximate locations of some of Abu Bilal's battles

Ibn Ziyad is said to have severely persecuted the Kharijites after his conciliatory measures had failed.[6] According to the account of al-Tabari (d. 923), Abu Bilal's brother Urwa accused Ibn Ziyad of sinful conduct and tyranny. Ibn Ziyad had him arrested and his hands and feet cut off. Urwa was later executed along with his daughter.[13] A Kharijite woman named Bathja (or Balja or Baltha), who had been vocal against Ibn Ziyad, was arrested and tortured to death in the market of Basra. Provoked by these incidents,[a] Abu Bilal abandoned his quietism and revolted in 60 AH (680).[3][14] With forty men he left Basra and established himself in Ahwaz. In contrast to looting and murder by extremist Kharijites, he remained peaceful but collected taxes equivalent to the stipend of himself and his followers. Ibn Ziyad sent against him an army of 2,000 under the command of Aslam ibn Zur'a al-Kilabi. Despite being far inferior in numbers, the Kharijites defeated the Basran force in the encounter at the village of Asak near Ramhurmuz.[4][3][15] Ibn Zur'a narrowly escaped being captured by a Kharijite named Ma'bad. He was mocked and humiliated in Basra for his embarrassing defeat at the hands of such a tiny force. People in the market of Basra taunted him: "Abu Bilal is behind you!", "Oh Ma'bad, capture him!" Ibn Ziyad had to deploy his personal guards to rescue Ibn Zur'a.[16]

In the year 61 AH (680–681) Ibn Ziyad sent another army, 4,000-strong (3,000 according to another account[15]), led by Abbad ibn Akhdar al-Tamimi, a fellow tribesman of Abu Bilal.[4][17] According to al-Tabari, Abbad caught up with Abu Bilal near the village of Tawwaj (near modern-day Shiraz) in the Fars province. In the ensuing battle, the Kharijites were enveloped and quickly slaughtered.[18] According to a variant account reported in al-Kamil of al-Mubarrad (d. 899) and Ansab al-Ashraf of Baladhuri (d. 892), Abbad overtook the Kharijites near Darabjird, also in Fars. It was Friday and both parties agreed to perform the Friday prayers before fighting. While the Kharijites were busy praying, the Basrans attacked and massacred them. Abu Bilal's head was cut off and taken to Ibn Ziyad.[4]

Aftermath of Abu Bilal's death edit

As soon as Abbad returned to Basra, a group of four Kharijites at the head of Ubayda ibn Hilal killed him and his son in vengeance for Abu Bilal.[19] The Kharijites were aroused by Abu Bilal's death, which contributed to the explosion of the Kharijite activity in the aftermath of Caliph Yazid's death in 683. Ubayda soon rose in rebellion with the battle cry "I am of the religion of Abu Bilal!"[20] Abu Bilal was seen by the Kharijites as a holy saint and a true martyr;[20] his death was sung by Kharijite poets. Among the Sufriyya, his memory was cherished for a long time.[4] The Ibadiyya Kharijites venerate him to this day and see him as a model of principled resistance against tyranny. In the Ibadi political theory, an imam al-shari (activist leader), as opposed to the imam al-kitman (leader in the state of dissimulation) and imam al-zahur (head of an Ibadi state), is a leader who actively resists oppression and struggles to establish an Ibadi state. Abu Bilal is seen by them as a prototype of the imam al-shari. His story is frequently mentioned in the Ibadi literature.[1] Several anecdotes of his piety are reported even in non-Kharijite sources which portray him as a saintly figure. According to the historian Adam Gaiser, these might have entered these sources from earlier Kharijite writings.[21] His fame was such that even some Shi'a and Mu'tazila denied that he was a Kharijite and claimed him as one of their own.[13]

However, his Kharijite view were condemned by Sunni who demands general obedience towards the authority, as Scholars of later such as Al-Dhahabi, Abu Dawud al-Sijistani Muhammad ibn al-Uthaymeen, and Majd ad-Dīn Ibn Athir era has written on their commentary that the conduct of Dhu al-Khuwaishirah Hurqus ibn Zuhayr as-Sa'di and Abu Bilal Mirdas as a warning about the danger of Kharijites.[9][10]

Notes edit

  1. ^ According to another account, however, Urwa's execution occurred after Abu Bilal's death.[4]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Gaiser 2020.
  2. ^ Watt 1973, pp. 12–14.
  3. ^ a b c d Wellhausen 1901, p. 26.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Levi Della Vida 1993, pp. 123–124.
  5. ^ Donner 2010, pp. 166–167.
  6. ^ a b c Wellhausen 1901, p. 25.
  7. ^ Watt 1973, p. 27.
  8. ^ Madelung & Lewinstein 1997, p. 766.
  9. ^ a b Ibn Athir, Majd ad-Dīn (2009). Saleh Shaaban, Ayman (ed.). جامع الأصول في أحاديث الرسول (ص) 1-15 مع الفهارس ج4 [Jami` al-Usul in the hadiths of the Prophet (pbuh) 1-15 with indexes, part 4] (in Arabic). Dar Al Kotob Al Ilmiyah. p. 56. Retrieved 18 December 2021. Jami' al-Tirmidhi Book: 33, Hadith: 2224
  10. ^ a b as-Sidawy, Abu Ubaidah Yusuf (2018). "Mencela Pemimpin, Ciri Khas Kelompok Khawarij" (Article). Muslim.or.id (in Indonesian). Muslim.or.id. Retrieved 18 December 2021. Fatawa Ulama Al-Akabir hal. 94-96 dan Madarik An Nadhar hal. 272-275
  11. ^ Gaiser 2016, pp. 64–65.
  12. ^ Morony 1987, p. 197.
  13. ^ a b Gaiser 2016, p. 62.
  14. ^ Gaiser 2016, p. 63.
  15. ^ a b Howard 1990, p. 183.
  16. ^ Gaiser 2016, p. 65.
  17. ^ Wellhausen 1901, pp. 26–27.
  18. ^ Howard 1990, pp. 183–184.
  19. ^ Howard 1990, p. 184.
  20. ^ a b Wellhausen 1901, p. 27.
  21. ^ Gaiser 2016, pp. 63–64.

Sources edit

bilal, mirdas, udayya, tamimi, died, leader, quietist, kharijites, basra, during, early, years, umayyad, caliphate, brother, urwa, udayya, instigator, kharijite, movement, battle, siffin, which, bilal, himself, participated, after, defeat, kharijites, battle, . Abu Bilal Mirdas ibn Udayya al Tamimi died 681 was the leader of quietist Kharijites of Basra during the early years of the Umayyad Caliphate He was the brother of Urwa ibn Udayya one of the instigator of the Kharijite movement at the Battle of Siffin in which Abu Bilal himself participated After the defeat of the Kharijites at the Battle of Nahrawan in 658 he adopted political quietism and opposed the extremist Kharijites In 680 in response to persecution by the Umayyad governor Ubayd Allah ibn Ziyad Abu Bilal rose in rebellion and was killed in 681 His piety military exploits and death which was seen by many as martyrdom immortalized him among the later Kharijite circles He is counted among the imams of the extinct Sufriyya sect of the Kharijites and is venerated by the Ibadiyya to this day Abu Bilal MirdasDied681Tawwaj Darabjird Fars provinceEraUmayyad CaliphateKnown forEarly Kharijite leaderOpponentUbayd Allah ibn ZiyadParentsHudayr ibn Amr father Udayya mother RelativesUrwa ibn Udayya brother Contents 1 Origin and early career 2 Leader of the Basran quietists 3 Revolt and death 4 Aftermath of Abu Bilal s death 5 Notes 6 References 7 SourcesOrigin and early career editAbu Bilal was from the Rabia ibn Hanzala branch of Banu Tamim tribe which provided a series of Kharijite leaders Although his father s name was Hudayr ibn Amr he was known by his mother s name Udayya He was a resident of the Iraqi garrison town of Basra Little is known of his early life 1 After the assassination of the third caliph Uthman in 656 by provincial rebels the caliphate fell into civil war as Mu awiya ibn Abi Sufyan a relative of Uthman and the governor of Syria challenged the legitimacy of the new caliph Ali The indecisive battle between the two at Siffin ended in an arbitration agreement in July 657 Asserting that human arbitration was invalid as God s command was clear that the rebels in this case Mu awiya had to be fought and overcome some of Ali s soldiers left the army They were called Kharijites following this secession 2 Abu Bilal s brother Urwa ibn Udayya is reported to have been the first person to raise the slogan of la hukma illa li llah judgment belongs to God alone which later became the characteristic Kharijite slogan against the arbitration 3 Abu Bilal himself was present at the battle and was among the seceders He later fought against Ali in the Battle of Nahrawan in July 658 where the caliph crushed the Kharijite insurgents 4 Following Ali s assassination in 661 by a Kharijite Mu awiya became the sole ruler establishing the Umayyad Caliphate 5 Leader of the Basran quietists editAfter the defeat at Nahrawan where many of the senior Kharijite leaders were killed Abu Bilal gave up armed insurrection and returned to Basra along with his brother Urwa 1 As Basra became the center of the anti state Kharijite insurrections during the reign of Mu awiya Abu Bilal is reported to have cursed the insurgents 6 He was opposed to the extremist Kharijite factions and condemned their doctrine of isti rad indiscriminate killing of the non Kharijite Muslims He also disapproved of women s participation in Kharijite rebellions which was held obligatory by the activist Kharijites 4 These views and his status as one of the earliest Kharijites earned him much respect and leading position among the non activist Kharijites of Basra 6 7 1 The quietists were later known as Sufriyya and Abu Bilal is counted among their imams 8 At some point Abu Bilal protesting and humiliating the governor of Basra Abdallah ibn Amir just because the latter wearing fine garment However Abu Bilal conduct risen the anger of a Tabi un named Abu Bakrah Muhammad ibn Bashar Bindar who quoted a Hadith about forbidding to humiliate a ruler in public while cursing Abu Bilal 9 10 Umayyad governor Ubayd Allah ibn Ziyad suppressed the Kharijite disturbances and imprisoned many of them including Abu Bilal According to the account of Umar ibn Shabba d 877 the jailer was impressed by Abu Bilal s piety and permitted him to spend the nights at his home and return in the mornings Upon learning that Ibn Ziyad intended to kill all the Kharijite prisoners the next morning one of Abu Bilal s confidants reported this to his family Despite this Abu Bilal returned to the prison the next morning Moved by this the jailer pleaded to Ibn Ziyad who spared Abu Bilal s life and released him while the others were killed 3 11 12 Revolt and death edit nbsp nbsp Basra nbsp Tawwaj nbsp Darabjird nbsp Ramhurmuzclass notpageimage Basra and approximate locations of some of Abu Bilal s battles Ibn Ziyad is said to have severely persecuted the Kharijites after his conciliatory measures had failed 6 According to the account of al Tabari d 923 Abu Bilal s brother Urwa accused Ibn Ziyad of sinful conduct and tyranny Ibn Ziyad had him arrested and his hands and feet cut off Urwa was later executed along with his daughter 13 A Kharijite woman named Bathja or Balja or Baltha who had been vocal against Ibn Ziyad was arrested and tortured to death in the market of Basra Provoked by these incidents a Abu Bilal abandoned his quietism and revolted in 60 AH 680 3 14 With forty men he left Basra and established himself in Ahwaz In contrast to looting and murder by extremist Kharijites he remained peaceful but collected taxes equivalent to the stipend of himself and his followers Ibn Ziyad sent against him an army of 2 000 under the command of Aslam ibn Zur a al Kilabi Despite being far inferior in numbers the Kharijites defeated the Basran force in the encounter at the village of Asak near Ramhurmuz 4 3 15 Ibn Zur a narrowly escaped being captured by a Kharijite named Ma bad He was mocked and humiliated in Basra for his embarrassing defeat at the hands of such a tiny force People in the market of Basra taunted him Abu Bilal is behind you Oh Ma bad capture him Ibn Ziyad had to deploy his personal guards to rescue Ibn Zur a 16 In the year 61 AH 680 681 Ibn Ziyad sent another army 4 000 strong 3 000 according to another account 15 led by Abbad ibn Akhdar al Tamimi a fellow tribesman of Abu Bilal 4 17 According to al Tabari Abbad caught up with Abu Bilal near the village of Tawwaj near modern day Shiraz in the Fars province In the ensuing battle the Kharijites were enveloped and quickly slaughtered 18 According to a variant account reported in al Kamil of al Mubarrad d 899 and Ansab al Ashraf of Baladhuri d 892 Abbad overtook the Kharijites near Darabjird also in Fars It was Friday and both parties agreed to perform the Friday prayers before fighting While the Kharijites were busy praying the Basrans attacked and massacred them Abu Bilal s head was cut off and taken to Ibn Ziyad 4 Aftermath of Abu Bilal s death editAs soon as Abbad returned to Basra a group of four Kharijites at the head of Ubayda ibn Hilal killed him and his son in vengeance for Abu Bilal 19 The Kharijites were aroused by Abu Bilal s death which contributed to the explosion of the Kharijite activity in the aftermath of Caliph Yazid s death in 683 Ubayda soon rose in rebellion with the battle cry I am of the religion of Abu Bilal 20 Abu Bilal was seen by the Kharijites as a holy saint and a true martyr 20 his death was sung by Kharijite poets Among the Sufriyya his memory was cherished for a long time 4 The Ibadiyya Kharijites venerate him to this day and see him as a model of principled resistance against tyranny In the Ibadi political theory an imam al shari activist leader as opposed to the imam al kitman leader in the state of dissimulation and imam al zahur head of an Ibadi state is a leader who actively resists oppression and struggles to establish an Ibadi state Abu Bilal is seen by them as a prototype of the imam al shari His story is frequently mentioned in the Ibadi literature 1 Several anecdotes of his piety are reported even in non Kharijite sources which portray him as a saintly figure According to the historian Adam Gaiser these might have entered these sources from earlier Kharijite writings 21 His fame was such that even some Shi a and Mu tazila denied that he was a Kharijite and claimed him as one of their own 13 However his Kharijite view were condemned by Sunni who demands general obedience towards the authority as Scholars of later such as Al Dhahabi Abu Dawud al Sijistani Muhammad ibn al Uthaymeen and Majd ad Din Ibn Athir era has written on their commentary that the conduct of Dhu al Khuwaishirah Hurqus ibn Zuhayr as Sa di and Abu Bilal Mirdas as a warning about the danger of Kharijites 9 10 Notes edit According to another account however Urwa s execution occurred after Abu Bilal s death 4 References edit a b c d Gaiser 2020 Watt 1973 pp 12 14 a b c d Wellhausen 1901 p 26 a b c d e f g Levi Della Vida 1993 pp 123 124 Donner 2010 pp 166 167 a b c Wellhausen 1901 p 25 Watt 1973 p 27 Madelung amp Lewinstein 1997 p 766 a b Ibn Athir Majd ad Din 2009 Saleh Shaaban Ayman ed جامع الأصول في أحاديث الرسول ص 1 15 مع الفهارس ج4 Jami al Usul in the hadiths of the Prophet pbuh 1 15 with indexes part 4 in Arabic Dar Al Kotob Al Ilmiyah p 56 Retrieved 18 December 2021 Jami al Tirmidhi Book 33 Hadith 2224 a b as Sidawy Abu Ubaidah Yusuf 2018 Mencela Pemimpin Ciri Khas Kelompok Khawarij Article Muslim or id in Indonesian Muslim or id Retrieved 18 December 2021 Fatawa Ulama Al Akabir hal 94 96 dan Madarik An Nadhar hal 272 275 Gaiser 2016 pp 64 65 Morony 1987 p 197 a b Gaiser 2016 p 62 Gaiser 2016 p 63 a b Howard 1990 p 183 Gaiser 2016 p 65 Wellhausen 1901 pp 26 27 Howard 1990 pp 183 184 Howard 1990 p 184 a b Wellhausen 1901 p 27 Gaiser 2016 pp 63 64 Sources editDonner Fred M 2010 Muhammad and the Believers at the Origins of Islam Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674050976 Gaiser Adam 2016 Shurat Legends Ibaḍi Identities Columbia SC The University of South Carolina Press ISBN 978 1 61117 677 3 Gaiser Adam 2020 Mirdas b Udayya In Fleet Kate Kramer Gudrun Matringe Denis Nawas John Rowson Everett eds Encyclopaedia of Islam 3rd ed Brill Online doi 10 1163 1573 3912 ei3 COM 36473 ISSN 1873 9830 Howard I K A ed 1990 The History of al Ṭabari Volume XIX The Caliphate of Yazid ibn Muʿawiyah A D 680 683 A H 60 64 SUNY Series in Near Eastern Studies Albany New York State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 0040 1 Levi Della Vida G 1993 Mirdas b Udayya In Bosworth C E van Donzel E Heinrichs W P amp Pellat Ch eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume VII Mif Naz Leiden E J Brill pp 123 124 ISBN 978 90 04 09419 2 Madelung Wilferd amp Lewinstein K 1997 Ṣufriyya In Bosworth C E van Donzel E Heinrichs W P amp Lecomte G eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume IX San Sze Leiden E J Brill pp 766 767 ISBN 978 90 04 10422 8 Morony Michael G ed 1987 The History of al Ṭabari Volume XVIII Between Civil Wars The Caliphate of Muʿawiyah 661 680 A D A H 40 60 SUNY Series in Near Eastern Studies Albany New York State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 87395 933 9 Watt W Montgomery 1973 The Formative Period of Islamic Thought Edinburgh Scotland Edinburgh University Press ISBN 9780852242452 Wellhausen Julius 1901 Die religios politischen Oppositionsparteien im alten Islam in German Berlin Weidmannsche buchhandlung OCLC 453206240 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Abu Bilal Mirdas amp oldid 1208220163, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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