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al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah

Abū ʿAlī Manṣūr (13 August 985 – 13 February 1021), better known by his regnal name al-Ḥākim bi-Amr Allāh (Arabic: الحاكم بأمر الله, lit.'The Ruler by the Order of God'[1]), was the sixth Fatimid caliph[2] and 16th Ismaili[3] imam (996–1021). Al-Hakim is an important figure in a number of Shia Ismaili sects, such as the world's 15 million Nizaris and 1–2 million Musta'lis, in addition to the 2 million Druze of the Levant.[4][5]

al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah
المنصور أبو علي الحاكم بأمر الله
Gold dinar of al-Hakim minted in 391 AH (1000/1001 CE)
ImamCaliph of the Fatimid Dynasty
Reign14 October 996 – 13 February 1021
PredecessorAbu Mansur Nizar al-Aziz Billah
SuccessorAli az-Zahir
Bornal-Mansur
13 August 985
Cairo, Fatimid Egypt
Died13 February 1021 (aged 35) (disappeared)
Mokattam, Fatimid Egypt
IssueAli az-Zahir
Names
Abu 'Ali Mansur al-Ḥākim bi-Amr Allāh
DynastyFatimid
FatherAbu Mansur Nizar al-Aziz Billah
Motheras-Sayyidah al-'Azīziyyah
ReligionIsmaili Shia Islam

Histories of al-Hakim can prove controversial, as diverse views of his life and legacy exist.[6][7] Historian Paul Walker writes: "Ultimately, both views of him, the mad and despotic tyrant (like Germanic and Roman despots) irrationally given to killing those around him on a whim, and the ideal supreme ruler, divinely ordained and chosen, whose every action was just and righteous, were to persist, the one among his enemies and those who rebelled against him, and the other in the hearts of true believers, who, while perhaps perplexed by events, nonetheless remained avidly loyal to him to the end."[8] He was known by his critics as the "mad Caliph"[9] or the "Nero of Islam".[10]

Biography

Born in 985 CE, Abu 'Ali "Mansur" was the first Fatimid ruler to have been born in Egypt. Abu 'Ali "Mansur" had been proclaimed as heir-apparent (wali al-'ahd) in 993 CE and succeeded his father Abū Mansūr Nizār al-Azīz bil-Lāh (975–996) at the age of eleven, on 14 October 996, with the caliphal title of al-Hakim Bi-Amr Allah. Al-Ḥākim had blue eyes flecked with reddish gold.[11]

Lineage

Al-Ḥākim was born on Thursday, 3 Rabi' al-awwal in AD 985 (AH 375). His father, caliph al-'Azīz bil-Lāh, had two consorts. One was an umm al-walad who is only known by the title as-Sayyidah al-'Azīziyyah or al-'Azīzah (d. 385/995).[12] She was a Melkite Christian whose two brothers were appointed patriarchs of the Melkite Church[which?] by Caliph al-'Azīz.[12] Different sources say either one of her brothers or her father was sent by al-'Azīz as an ambassador to Sicily.[12]

Al-'Azīzah is considered to be the mother of Sitt al-Mulk, one of the most famous women in Islamic history, who had a stormy relationship with her half-brother al-Ḥākim and may have had him murdered.[12] Some, such as the Crusader chronicler William of Tyre, claimed that al-'Azīzah was also the mother of Caliph al-Ḥākim, though most historians dismiss this.[citation needed] William of Tyre went so far as to claim that al-Ḥākim's destruction of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in 1009 was due to his eagerness to disprove taunts that he was a Christian born of a Christian woman.[12] By contrast, the chronicler al-Musabbihi recounts that in 981, al-Ḥākim's Muslim mother sought the aid of an imprisoned Islamic sage named ibn al-Washa and asked him to pray for her son who had fallen ill. The sage wrote the entire Qur'an in the inner surface of a bowl and bade her wash her son out of it. When al-Ḥākim recovered, she demanded the release of the sage in gratitude. Her request was granted and the sage and his associates were freed from prison.[12]

Druze sources claim that al-Ḥākim's mother was the daughter of 'Abdu l-Lāh, one of al-Mu'izz li-Din Allah's sons and therefore al-'Azīz's niece.[12] Historians such as Delia Cortese are critical of this claim:

[I]t is more likely that this woman was in fact a wife of al-Hakim, rather than his mother. It could be argued that the Druzes' emphasis on al-Hakim's descent from an endogamic union served the doctrinal purpose of reinforcing the charisma genealogically transmitted with the "holy family", thereby enhancing the political and doctrinal status they bestow upon al-Hakim.[12]

Rise to power

In 996, al-Ḥākim's father Caliph al-'Azīz began a trip to visit Syria (which was held by the Fatimids only by force of arms and was under pressure from the Byzantines). The Caliph fell ill at the beginning of the trip at Bilbeis and lay in sickbed for several days. He suffered from "stone with pains in the bowels." When he felt that his end was nearing he charged Qadi Muhammad ibn an-Nu'man and General Abū Muhammad al-Hasan ibn 'Ammar to take care of al-Ḥākim, who was then only eleven. He then spoke to his son. Al-Ḥākim later recalled the event:

"I found him with nothing on his body but rags and bandages. I kissed him, and he pressed me to his bosom, exclaiming: "How I grieve for thee, beloved of my heart," and tears flowed from his eyes. He then said: "Go, my master, and play, for I am well." I obeyed and began to amuse myself with sports such as are usual with boys, and soon after God took him to himself. Barjawan [the treasurer] then hastened to me, and seeing me on the top of a sycamore tree, exclaimed: "Come down, my boy; may God protect you and us all." When I descended he placed on my head the turban adorned with jewels, kissed the ground before me, and said: "Hail to the Commander of the faithful, with the mercy of God and his blessing." He then led me out in that attire and showed me to all the people, who kissed the ground before me and saluted me with the title of Khalif."[13]

On the following day, he and his new court proceeded from Bilbays to Cairo, behind the camel bearing his father's body, and with the dead Caliph's feet protruding from the litter.[13] They arrived shortly before evening prayer and his father was buried the next evening next to the tomb of his predecessor al-Mu'īzz. Al-Ḥākim was sworn in by Barjawan, a "white eunuch whom al-'Azīz had appointed as Ustad 'tutor'."[13]

Because it had been unclear whether he would inherit his father's position, this successful transfer of power was a demonstration of the stability of the Fatimid dynasty.

Nevertheless, the Kutama Berbers seized the chance to recover their dominant position in the state, which had eroded under al-Aziz due to the influx of Turkish and Daylamite mercenaries from the Islamic East (the Mashāriqa, "Easterners"). They compelled the underage al-Hakim to dismiss the Christian vizier 'Īsa ibn Nestorius (who was executed shortly after) and appoint their leader Ibn Ammar to head the government, with the title of wāsiṭa ("intermediary") rather than full vizier.[14][15][16] Ibn Ammar's rule quickly descended into a Berber tyranny: he immediately began staffing the government with Berbers, who engaged in a virtual pillaging of the state coffers. The Berbers' attempts to exclude the other interest groups from power—not only the Turks and the other ethnic contingents of the army, but also the civilian bureaucracy, whose salary was cut—alienated not only the Mashāriqa, but alarmed Barjawan as well. Barjawan contacted the Fatimid governor of Damascus, the Turk Manjutakin, and invited him to march onto Egypt and depose Ibn Ammar. Manjutakin accepted, but was defeated by Ibn Ammar's troops under Sulayman ibn Ja'far ibn Falah at Ascalon and taken prisoner. Barjawan however soon found a new ally, in the person of the Kutama leader Jaysh ibn Samsam, governor of Tripoli, whom Ibn Falah dismissed and replaced with his own brother. Jaysh and Barjawan gathered a following of other dissatisfied Berber leaders, and launched an uprising in Cairo in October 997. Ibn Ammar was forced to flee, and Barjawan replaced him as wāsiṭa.[17][18][19]

During his predominance, Barjawan managed to balance the two factions, fulfilling the demands of the Mashāriqa while taking care of the Kutama as well. In this vein, he pardoned Ibn Ammar and restored him his monthly salary of 500 gold dinars. After Bajarwan's murder on 26 March 1000, however, Caliph al-Hakim assumed the reins of government and launched a purge of the Fatimid elites, during which Ibn Ammar and many of the other Kutama leaders were executed.[17][19] To ensure his own power, Hakim limited the authority and terms of office of his wasitas and viziers, of whom there were more than 15 during the remaining 20 years of his caliphate.

Initial political turmoil

Al-Hakim's father had intended the eunuch Barjawan to act as regent until al-Hakim was old enough to rule by himself. Ibn 'Ammar and Qadi Muhammad ibn Nu'man were to assist in the guardianship of the new caliph. Instead, al-Hasan ibn 'Ammar (the leader of the Kutama) immediately seized the office of wasīta "chief minister" from 'Īsa ibn Nestorius. At the time the office of sifāra "secretary of state" was also combined within that office. Ibn 'Ammar then took the title of Amīn ad-Dawla "the one trusted in the empire".[13] This was the first time that the term "empire" was associated with the Fatimid state.[13]

External rivals

Al-Hakim's most rigorous and consistent opponent was the Abbāsid Caliphate in Baghdad, which sought to halt the influence of Ismailism. This competition led to the Baghdad Manifesto of 1011, in which the Abbāsids claimed that the line al-Ḥākim represented did not legitimately descend from 'Alī.

Al-Hakim also struggled with the Qarmatiyya rulers of Bahrain, an island in the Persian Gulf as well as territory in Eastern Arabia. His diplomatic and missionary vehicle was the Ismā'īlī da'wah "Mission", with its organizational power center in Cairo.

Internal unrest and groups

Al-Hakim's reign was characterized by a general unrest. The Fatimid army was troubled by a rivalry between two opposing factions, the Turks and the Berbers. Tension grew between the Caliph and his viziers (called wasītas), and near the end of his reign, the Druze movement, a religious sect that deified al-Hakim as God manifest, began to form. Members of that sect were reported to address prayers to al-Hakim, whom they regarded as "a manifestation of God in His unity."[20]

The Baghdad Manifesto

Alarmed by the expansion of the Fatimid dominion, the 'Abbasid caliph al-Qadir of Baghdad adopted retaliatory measures to halt the spread of Ismailism within the very seat of his realm. In particular, in 1011 he assembled a number of Sunni and Twelver Shiite scholars at his court and commanded them to declare in a written document that Hakim and his predecessors lacked genuine descent from Ali and Fatima. This so-called Baghdad Manifesto was read out in Friday mosques throughout the 'Abbasid domains accusing the Fatimids of Jewish ancestry. In addition, because of al-Hakim's alleged Christian mother, he was accused of being over-sympathetic to non-Muslims, giving them more privileges than they should have been given under Islamic rule. Such accusations were manifested through poetry criticizing the Fatimids. Qadir also commissioned several refutations of Ismaili doctrines, including those written by the Mu'tazili 'Ali b. Sa'id al-Istakri (1013).[21]

Foreign affairs

Hakim confronted numerous difficulties and uprisings during his relatively long reign. While he did not lose any important territories in North Africa, the Ismaili communities there were attacked by Sunni fighters led by their influential Maliki jurists. Relations between the Fatimids and the Qarmatians of Bahrain also remained hostile. On the other hand, Hakim's Syrian policy was successful as he managed to extend Fatimid hegemony to the emirate of Aleppo. Above all, the persistent rivalries between the various factions of the Fatimid armies, especially the Berbers and the Turks, overshadowed the other problems of Hakim's caliphate.

Al-Hakim upheld diplomatic relations between the Fatimid Empire and many different countries. Skillful diplomacy was needed in establishing friendly, or at least neutral relations with the Byzantine Empire, which had expansionary goals in the early 11th century.[22]

The geographically farthest-reaching diplomatic mission of al-Hakim was to Song Dynasty-era China.[22] The Fatimid Egyptian sea captain known as Domiyat traveled to a Buddhist pilgrimage site in Shandong in AD 1008.[22] It was on this mission that he sought to present to the Chinese emperor Zhenzong of Song gifts from his ruling Caliph, al-Hakim.[22] This reestablished diplomatic relations between Egypt and China that had been lost during the collapse of the Tang Dynasty in 907.[22]

Disappearance and succession

In the final years of his reign, Hakim displayed a growing inclination toward asceticism and withdrew for meditation regularly. On the night of 12/13 February 1021 at the age of 35, Hakim left for one of his regular nocturnal meditation journeys to the Mokattam hills outside of Cairo but failed to return. A search only found his donkey and bloodstained garments. His disappearance has remained a mystery.[21][23]

His sister Sitt al-Mulk led moves to declare her nephew al-Zahir li-I'zaz Din Allah as his father's successor as imam-caliph. The heir al-Hakim had designated was removed from court and al-Mulk was appointed regent for her 16-year-old nephew. After al-Zahir came of age, al-Mulk assumed positions within his administration until her death in 1023. Modern historians have assessed whether al-Mulk may have had a hand in her brother's disappearance, but no historic evidence has emerged that would implicate her.[24]

Sobriquet in Western literature

In Western literature he has been referred to as the "Mad Caliph".[25][26][27] This title is largely due to his erratic and oppressive behavior concerning religious minorities under his command, as historian Hunt Janin relates: al-Hakim "was known as the 'Mad Caliph' because of his many cruelties and eccentricities".[28] Historian Michael Bonner points out that the term is also used due to the dramatic difference between al-Hakim and his predecessors and his successors while also pointing out such persecution is an extreme rarity in Islam during this era. "In his capital of Cairo, this unbalanced (and, in the view of most, mad) caliph raged against the Christians in particular.... On the whole such episodes remained exceptional, like the episodes of forced conversion to Islam."[29] Historian Michael Foss also notes this contrast: "For more than three hundred and fifty years, from the time when the Caliph Omar made a treaty with the Patriarch Sophronius until 1009, when mad al-Hakim began attacks on Christians and Jews, the city of Jerusalem and the Holy Land were open to the West, with an easy welcome and the way there was no more dangerous than a journey from Paris to Rome.... Soon [after al-Hakim] the panic was over. In 1037 al-Mustansir came to an amicable agreement with Emperor Michael IV."[30]

As one prominent journal has noted, al-Hakim has attracted the interest of modern historians more than any other member of the Fatimid dynasty because:

"His eccentric character, the inconsistencies and radical shifts in his conduct and policies, the extreme austerity of his personal life, the vindictive and sanguinary ruthlessness of his dealing with the highest officials of his government coupled with an obsession to suppress all signs of corruption and immorality in public life, his attempted annihilation of Christians and call for the systematic destruction of all Christian holy places in the middle east culminating in the destruction of the most holy Church of the Resurrection in Jerusalem, his deification by a group of extremist Isma'ili missionaries who became the forerunners and founders of the Druze religion, [which] all combine to contrast his reign sharply with that of any of his predecessors and successors and indeed of any Muslim ruler.... The question is to what extent his conduct can be explained as rationally motivated and conditioned by the circumstances rather than as the inscrutable workings of an insane mind."[31]

The claim that al-Hakim was mad and the version of events around him is disputed as mere propaganda by some scholars, such as Willi Frischaue, who states: "His enemies called him the 'Mad Caliph' but he enhanced Cairo's reputation as a centre of civilization."[4] The writing of historian Heinz Halm attempts to dispel "those distorted and hostile accounts, stating that the anti-Fatimid tradition tried to make a real monster of this caliph",[5] while P.J. Vatikiotis writes that, "[al-Hakim's] persecution of Christians and Jews and the legislation enacted for that purpose between 1004 and 1020 seem to have been a policy with a justifiable purpose."[32]

Al Hakim and Shia Ismailism

Al-Hakim maintained a keen interest in the organization and operation of the Fatimid Ismaili da'wa (preaching) centred in Cairo. Under his reign it was systematically intensified outside the Fatimid dominions, especially in Iraq and Persia. In Iraq, the da'is now concentrated their efforts on a number of local amirs and influential tribal chiefs with whose support they aimed to uproot the Abbasids. Foremost among the Fatimid da'is of this period operating in the eastern provinces was Hamid al-Din Kirmani, the most accomplished Ismaili theologian-philosopher of the entire Fatimid period. The activities of Kirmani and other da'is soon led to concrete results in Iraq: in 1010 the ruler of Mosul, Kufa and other towns acknowledged the suzerainty of Hakim. The 16th Fatimid imam, caliph al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah (996–1021) ordered his da'i, Harun ibn Muhammad in Yemen, to give decisions in light of Da'a'im al-Islam only.[21]

In 1013 he completed the construction of al-Jāmiʻ al-Anwar begun by his father. Commonly known as "Hākim's Mosque", over time it fell into ruin. In the 1970s, the Dawoodi Bohras, an Ismaili Shia sect, under the leadership of Mohammed Burhanuddin, restored the then-dilapidated mosque, using new building methods and materials while maintaining as many of the architectural and artistic features as possible.[33] Their attempts received strong criticism from some academics, conservators, and art historians who saw the effort as constructing "a new building" rather than restoration.[34]

House of Knowledge

In the area of education and learning, one of Hakim's most important contributions was the founding in 1005 of the Dār al-ʿIlm (House of Knowledge).[35] A wide range of subjects ranging from the Qur'an and hadith to philosophy and astronomy were taught at the Dār al-ʿIlm, which was equipped with a vast library. During his rule, the Fatimid Caliph al-Hakim also provided paper, ink, pens and inkstands free of charge to all those who studied at the famous Dār al-ʿIlm in Cairo.[36] Access to education was made available to the public and many Fatimid da'is received at least part of their training in this major institution of learning which served the Ismaili da'wa (mission) until the downfall of the Fatimid dynasty.[21] For more than 100 years, Dār al-ʿIlm distinguished itself as a center of learning where astronomers, mathematicians, grammarians, logicians, physicians, philologists, jurists and others conducted research, gave lectures and collaborated. All were welcomed, and it remained unfettered by political pressures or partisan influences.[37]

Sessions of Wisdom

Hakim made the education of the Ismailis and the Fatimid da'is a priority; in his time various study sessions (majalis) were established in Cairo. Hakim provided financial support and endowments for these educational activities. The private 'wisdom sessions' (majalis al-hikma) devoted to esoteric Ismaili doctrines and reserved exclusively for initiates, now became organized so as to be accessible to different categories of participants. Al Hakim himself often attended these sessions which were held at the Fatimid palace.[21] The name (majalis al-hikma) is still used by the Druze, Nizari and Taiyabi Ismailis as the name of the building in which their religious assembly and worship is carried, often abbreviated as Majlis (session).

Druze

Al-Hakim is a central figure in the history of the Druze religious sect, whose eponymous founder ad-Darazi proclaimed him as the incarnation of God in 1018.[4][5][21] Hamza ibn Ali ibn Ahmad is considered the founder of the Druze and the primary author of the Druze manuscripts,[38] he proclaimed that God had become human and taken the form of man, al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah.[4][5][39][40]

Interreligious relationships

According to the religious scholar Nissim Dana, al-Hakim's relationship with other monotheistic religions can be divided into three separate stages.[41]

First period

From 996 to 1006 when most of the executive functions of the Khalif were performed by his advisors, the Shiite al-Hakim "behaved like the Shiite khalifs, who he succeeded, exhibiting a hostile attitude with respect to Sunni Muslims, whereas the attitude toward 'People of the Book' – Jews and Christians – was one of relative tolerance, in exchange for the jizya tax."[41]

In 1005, al-Hakim ordered a public posting of curses against the first three Caliphs (Abu Bakr, Umar and Uthman) and against Aisha, wife of Muhammad, for denying the caliphate to Muhammad's cousin and son-in-law 'Alī, who according to Shia beliefs, was the rightful prophetic successor.

According to historian Nissîm Dānā, al-Hakim ordered that "curses were registered against the warrior Muawiyah I, founder of the Umayyad Caliphate, and against others in the inner circle of Muhammad from the Sahabah - the compatriots of Muhammad in the way of Islam."[41] This was in accordance with Shia practice, as laid out by Muslim scholar Ayatollah Haydari: "the followers of Ahl al-Bayt [Shias] say 'O Allah curse all of the Banu Umayya'."[42] The Shia maintain that out of hatred for 'Alī, Mu'awiyah ordered the Talbiyah not be said (as it was promoted by 'Alī) and ordered people to curse him (Sa'd ibn Abi Waqqas refused to do so). The Shia hold that Mu'awiyah and all of the Umayyad caliphs (with the possible exception of Umar II) were Nasibi who "are the hypocrites for whom hatred of 'Alī is their religion...They don't just hate 'Alī, but they worship Allah and seek closeness to Him by hating 'Alī."[42]

After only two years of posting the curses, al-Hakim ended the practice.[41] During this era, al-Hakim ordered that the inclusion of the phrase as-salāh khayr min an-nawm "prayer is preferable to sleep", which followed fajr prayer, be stopped – he saw it as a Sunni addition. In its place he ordered that ḥayyi 'alā khayr al-'amal "come to the best of deeds" should be said after the summons was made. He further forbade the use of two prayers – Salāt at-Tarāwih and Salāt ad-Duha as they were believed to have been formulated by Sunni sages.[41]

Religious minorities and the law of differentiation

In 1004 al-Hakim decreed that the Christians could no longer celebrate Epiphany or Easter.[43] He also outlawed the use of wine (nabidh) and even other intoxicating drinks not made from grapes (fuqa) to both Muslims and non-Muslims alike.[41] This produced a hardship for both Christians (who used wine in their religious rites) and Jews (who used it in their religious festivals).

In 1005, al-Hakim ordered that Jews and Christians follow ghiyār "the law of differentiation" – in this case, the mintaq or zunnar "belt" (Greek ζωνάριον) and 'imāmah "turban", both in black. In addition, Jews must wear a wooden calf necklace and Christians an iron cross. In the public baths, Jews must replace the calf with a bell. In addition, women of the People of the Book had to wear two different coloured shoes, one red and one black. These remained in place until 1014.[44]

Following contemporary Shiite thinking, during this period al-Hakim also issued many other restrictive ordinances (sijillat). These sijillat included outlawing entrance to a public bath with uncovered loins, forbidding women from appearing in public with their faces uncovered, and closing many clubs and places of entertainment.[41]

Second period

From 1007 to 1012 "there was a notably tolerant attitude toward the Sunnis and less zeal for Shiite Islam, while the attitude with regard to the 'People of the Book' was hostile."[41] On 18 October 1009, al-Hakim ordered the destruction of the Holy Sepulchre and its associated buildings, apparently outraged by what he regarded as the fraud practiced by the monks in the "miraculous" Descent of the Holy Fire, celebrated annually at the church during the Easter Vigil. The chronicler Yahia noted that "only those things that were too difficult to demolish were spared." Processions were prohibited, and a few years later all of the convents and churches in Palestine were said to have been destroyed or confiscated.[43] It was only in 1042 that the Byzantine Emperor Constantine IX undertook to reconstruct the Holy Sepulchre with the permission of al-Hakim's successor.

Third period

Al-Hakim ultimately allowed the unwilling Christian and Jewish converts to Islam to return to their faith and rebuild their ruined houses of worship.[45] Indeed, from 1012 to 1021 al-Hakim

became more tolerant toward the Jews and Christians and hostile toward the Sunnis. Ironically he developed a particularly hostile attitude with regard to the Muslim Shiites. It was during this period, in the year 1017, that the unique religion of the Druze began to develop as an independent religion based on the revelation (Kashf) of al-Hakim as divine.[41]

While it is clear that Hamza ibn Ahmad was the Caliph's chief dāʿī, there are claims that al-Hakim believed in his own divinity.[46][47][48][49][50] Other scholars disagree with this assertion of direct divinity, particularly the Druze themselves, noting that its proponent was ad-Darazi, who (according to some resources) al-Hakim executed for shirk. Letters show that ad-Darazi was trying to gain control of the Muwahhidun movement and this claim was an attempt to gain support from the Caliph, who instead found it heretical.[51][52]

Spouses and children

The mother of al-Hakim's heir 'Alī az-Zāhir was the umm al-walad Amīna Ruqayya, daughter to the late prince Abd Allah, son of al-Mu'izz. Some see her as the same as the woman in the prediction reported by al-Hamidi which held "that in 390/1000 al-Hakim would choose an orphan girl of good stock brought up [by?] his father al-Aziz and that she would become the mother of his successor." While the chronicler al-Maqrizi claims that al-Hakim's stepsister Sitt al-Mulk was hostile to Amīna, other sources say she gave her and her child refuge when they were fleeing al-Hakim's persecution. Some sources say al-Hakim married the jariya (young female servant) known by the title as-Sayyidah but historians are unsure if this is just another name for Amīna.[12]

Besides his son, al-Hakim had a daughter named Sitt Misr (d. 455/1063) who was said to be a generous patroness and of noble and good character.[12]

In literature

The story of Hakim's life inspired (presumably through Antoine Isaac Silvestre de Sacy) the French author Gérard de Nerval (1808–1855) who recounted his version of it ("Histoire du Calife Hakem": History of the Caliph Hakem) as an appendix to his Voyage to the Orient (1851). He is a major character in The Prisoner of Al-Hakim by American novelist Bradley Steffens, which recounts the ten-year imprisonment of Ibn al-Haytham under al-Hakim's rule.[53] A fictional version of his death is presented in Robert E. Howard's posthumously published short story "Hawks over Egypt".

See also

References

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  2. ^ Brett 2001, p. 470.
  3. ^ Daftary, Ferhad. "ḤĀKEM BE-AMR-ALLĀH". Encyclopædia Iranica. Retrieved 24 April 2016.
  4. ^ a b c d Willi Frischauer (1970). The Aga Khans. Bodley Head. p. ?. (Which page?)
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  6. ^ Gamal Nkrumah (10 December 2009). . Al-Ahram Weekly Online. Archived from the original on 27 March 2013. Retrieved 16 March 2013.
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  8. ^ Walker, Paul (2010). Caliph of Cairo: Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah, 996-???. The American University in Cairo Press. p. 352. ISBN 978-9774163289.
  9. ^ Jerome Murphy-O'Connor (23 February 2012). Keys to Jerusalem: Collected Essays. OUP Oxford. p. 245. ISBN 978-0-19-964202-1.
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  11. ^ Phyllis G. Jestice (2004). Holy People of the World: A Cross-cultural Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 341. ISBN 978-1-57607-355-1.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Delia Cortese and Simonetta Calderini (2006). Women and the Fatimids in the World of Islam. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 0-7486-1733-7.
  13. ^ a b c d e O'Leary, De Lacy (1923). A Short History of the Fatimid Khalifate. Routledge.
  14. ^ Lev 1987, pp. 344–346.
  15. ^ Daftary 1990, pp. 186–187.
  16. ^ Kennedy 2004, pp. 327–328.
  17. ^ a b Daftary 1990, p. 187.
  18. ^ Kennedy 2004, p. 328.
  19. ^ a b Lev 1987, pp. 345–346.
  20. ^ Mortimer, Edward, Faith and Power: The Politics of Islam, Vintage Books, 1982, p. 49
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  22. ^ a b c d e Shen, Fuwei (1996). Cultural flow between China and the outside world. Beijing: Foreign Languages Press. ISBN 7-119-00431-X.
  23. ^ Makarim, Sami Nasib (1974). The Druze faith. New York: Caravan Books. p. 25. ISBN 0-88206-003-1.
  24. ^ Haeri, Shahla (2020). The Unforgettable Queens of Islam: Succession, Authority, Gender. Cambridge University Press. p. 16. ISBN 978-1107123038.
  25. ^ Britannica
  26. ^ The First Crusade: A New History, Thomas Asbridge
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External links

  • al-Hakim
  • Institute of Ismaili Studies: al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah.
  • al-Hakim bi Amr Allah
al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah
Born: 13 August 985 Died: 12 February 1021
Regnal titles
Preceded by Caliph of the Fatimid Dynasty
14 October 996 – 12 February 1021
Succeeded by

hakim, allah, other, people, with, same, name, hakim, disambiguation, abū, ʿalī, manṣūr, august, february, 1021, better, known, regnal, name, Ḥākim, allāh, arabic, الحاكم, بأمر, الله, ruler, order, sixth, fatimid, caliph, 16th, ismaili, imam, 1021, hakim, impo. For other people with the same name see Al Hakim disambiguation Abu ʿAli Manṣur 13 August 985 13 February 1021 better known by his regnal name al Ḥakim bi Amr Allah Arabic الحاكم بأمر الله lit The Ruler by the Order of God 1 was the sixth Fatimid caliph 2 and 16th Ismaili 3 imam 996 1021 Al Hakim is an important figure in a number of Shia Ismaili sects such as the world s 15 million Nizaris and 1 2 million Musta lis in addition to the 2 million Druze of the Levant 4 5 al Hakim bi Amr Allahالمنصور أبو علي الحاكم بأمر اللهGold dinar of al Hakim minted in 391 AH 1000 1001 CE Imam Caliph of the Fatimid DynastyReign14 October 996 13 February 1021PredecessorAbu Mansur Nizar al Aziz BillahSuccessorAli az ZahirBornal Mansur13 August 985Cairo Fatimid EgyptDied13 February 1021 aged 35 disappeared Mokattam Fatimid EgyptIssueAli az ZahirNamesAbu Ali Mansur al Ḥakim bi Amr AllahDynastyFatimidFatherAbu Mansur Nizar al Aziz BillahMotheras Sayyidah al AziziyyahReligionIsmaili Shia IslamHistories of al Hakim can prove controversial as diverse views of his life and legacy exist 6 7 Historian Paul Walker writes Ultimately both views of him the mad and despotic tyrant like Germanic and Roman despots irrationally given to killing those around him on a whim and the ideal supreme ruler divinely ordained and chosen whose every action was just and righteous were to persist the one among his enemies and those who rebelled against him and the other in the hearts of true believers who while perhaps perplexed by events nonetheless remained avidly loyal to him to the end 8 He was known by his critics as the mad Caliph 9 or the Nero of Islam 10 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Lineage 1 2 Rise to power 1 3 Initial political turmoil 1 4 External rivals 1 5 Internal unrest and groups 1 6 The Baghdad Manifesto 1 7 Foreign affairs 1 8 Disappearance and succession 2 Sobriquet in Western literature 3 Al Hakim and Shia Ismailism 3 1 House of Knowledge 3 2 Sessions of Wisdom 3 3 Druze 4 Interreligious relationships 4 1 First period 4 1 1 Religious minorities and the law of differentiation 4 2 Second period 4 3 Third period 5 Spouses and children 6 In literature 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksBiography EditBorn in 985 CE Abu Ali Mansur was the first Fatimid ruler to have been born in Egypt Abu Ali Mansur had been proclaimed as heir apparent wali al ahd in 993 CE and succeeded his father Abu Mansur Nizar al Aziz bil Lah 975 996 at the age of eleven on 14 October 996 with the caliphal title of al Hakim Bi Amr Allah Al Ḥakim had blue eyes flecked with reddish gold 11 Lineage Edit Al Ḥakim was born on Thursday 3 Rabi al awwal in AD 985 AH 375 His father caliph al Aziz bil Lah had two consorts One was an umm al walad who is only known by the title as Sayyidah al Aziziyyah or al Azizah d 385 995 12 She was a Melkite Christian whose two brothers were appointed patriarchs of the Melkite Church which by Caliph al Aziz 12 Different sources say either one of her brothers or her father was sent by al Aziz as an ambassador to Sicily 12 Al Azizah is considered to be the mother of Sitt al Mulk one of the most famous women in Islamic history who had a stormy relationship with her half brother al Ḥakim and may have had him murdered 12 Some such as the Crusader chronicler William of Tyre claimed that al Azizah was also the mother of Caliph al Ḥakim though most historians dismiss this citation needed William of Tyre went so far as to claim that al Ḥakim s destruction of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in 1009 was due to his eagerness to disprove taunts that he was a Christian born of a Christian woman 12 By contrast the chronicler al Musabbihi recounts that in 981 al Ḥakim s Muslim mother sought the aid of an imprisoned Islamic sage named ibn al Washa and asked him to pray for her son who had fallen ill The sage wrote the entire Qur an in the inner surface of a bowl and bade her wash her son out of it When al Ḥakim recovered she demanded the release of the sage in gratitude Her request was granted and the sage and his associates were freed from prison 12 Druze sources claim that al Ḥakim s mother was the daughter of Abdu l Lah one of al Mu izz li Din Allah s sons and therefore al Aziz s niece 12 Historians such as Delia Cortese are critical of this claim I t is more likely that this woman was in fact a wife of al Hakim rather than his mother It could be argued that the Druzes emphasis on al Hakim s descent from an endogamic union served the doctrinal purpose of reinforcing the charisma genealogically transmitted with the holy family thereby enhancing the political and doctrinal status they bestow upon al Hakim 12 Rise to power Edit This article is missing information about al Hakim s role in the murder of Barjawan Please expand the article to include this information Further details may exist on the talk page March 2019 In 996 al Ḥakim s father Caliph al Aziz began a trip to visit Syria which was held by the Fatimids only by force of arms and was under pressure from the Byzantines The Caliph fell ill at the beginning of the trip at Bilbeis and lay in sickbed for several days He suffered from stone with pains in the bowels When he felt that his end was nearing he charged Qadi Muhammad ibn an Nu man and General Abu Muhammad al Hasan ibn Ammar to take care of al Ḥakim who was then only eleven He then spoke to his son Al Ḥakim later recalled the event I found him with nothing on his body but rags and bandages I kissed him and he pressed me to his bosom exclaiming How I grieve for thee beloved of my heart and tears flowed from his eyes He then said Go my master and play for I am well I obeyed and began to amuse myself with sports such as are usual with boys and soon after God took him to himself Barjawan the treasurer then hastened to me and seeing me on the top of a sycamore tree exclaimed Come down my boy may God protect you and us all When I descended he placed on my head the turban adorned with jewels kissed the ground before me and said Hail to the Commander of the faithful with the mercy of God and his blessing He then led me out in that attire and showed me to all the people who kissed the ground before me and saluted me with the title of Khalif 13 On the following day he and his new court proceeded from Bilbays to Cairo behind the camel bearing his father s body and with the dead Caliph s feet protruding from the litter 13 They arrived shortly before evening prayer and his father was buried the next evening next to the tomb of his predecessor al Mu izz Al Ḥakim was sworn in by Barjawan a white eunuch whom al Aziz had appointed as Ustad tutor 13 Because it had been unclear whether he would inherit his father s position this successful transfer of power was a demonstration of the stability of the Fatimid dynasty Nevertheless the Kutama Berbers seized the chance to recover their dominant position in the state which had eroded under al Aziz due to the influx of Turkish and Daylamite mercenaries from the Islamic East the Mashariqa Easterners They compelled the underage al Hakim to dismiss the Christian vizier isa ibn Nestorius who was executed shortly after and appoint their leader Ibn Ammar to head the government with the title of wasiṭa intermediary rather than full vizier 14 15 16 Ibn Ammar s rule quickly descended into a Berber tyranny he immediately began staffing the government with Berbers who engaged in a virtual pillaging of the state coffers The Berbers attempts to exclude the other interest groups from power not only the Turks and the other ethnic contingents of the army but also the civilian bureaucracy whose salary was cut alienated not only the Mashariqa but alarmed Barjawan as well Barjawan contacted the Fatimid governor of Damascus the Turk Manjutakin and invited him to march onto Egypt and depose Ibn Ammar Manjutakin accepted but was defeated by Ibn Ammar s troops under Sulayman ibn Ja far ibn Falah at Ascalon and taken prisoner Barjawan however soon found a new ally in the person of the Kutama leader Jaysh ibn Samsam governor of Tripoli whom Ibn Falah dismissed and replaced with his own brother Jaysh and Barjawan gathered a following of other dissatisfied Berber leaders and launched an uprising in Cairo in October 997 Ibn Ammar was forced to flee and Barjawan replaced him as wasiṭa 17 18 19 During his predominance Barjawan managed to balance the two factions fulfilling the demands of the Mashariqa while taking care of the Kutama as well In this vein he pardoned Ibn Ammar and restored him his monthly salary of 500 gold dinars After Bajarwan s murder on 26 March 1000 however Caliph al Hakim assumed the reins of government and launched a purge of the Fatimid elites during which Ibn Ammar and many of the other Kutama leaders were executed 17 19 To ensure his own power Hakim limited the authority and terms of office of his wasitas and viziers of whom there were more than 15 during the remaining 20 years of his caliphate Initial political turmoil Edit Al Hakim s father had intended the eunuch Barjawan to act as regent until al Hakim was old enough to rule by himself Ibn Ammar and Qadi Muhammad ibn Nu man were to assist in the guardianship of the new caliph Instead al Hasan ibn Ammar the leader of the Kutama immediately seized the office of wasita chief minister from isa ibn Nestorius At the time the office of sifara secretary of state was also combined within that office Ibn Ammar then took the title of Amin ad Dawla the one trusted in the empire 13 This was the first time that the term empire was associated with the Fatimid state 13 External rivals Edit al Ḥakim Mosque Al Hakim s most rigorous and consistent opponent was the Abbasid Caliphate in Baghdad which sought to halt the influence of Ismailism This competition led to the Baghdad Manifesto of 1011 in which the Abbasids claimed that the line al Ḥakim represented did not legitimately descend from Ali Al Hakim also struggled with the Qarmatiyya rulers of Bahrain an island in the Persian Gulf as well as territory in Eastern Arabia His diplomatic and missionary vehicle was the Isma ili da wah Mission with its organizational power center in Cairo Internal unrest and groups Edit Al Hakim s reign was characterized by a general unrest The Fatimid army was troubled by a rivalry between two opposing factions the Turks and the Berbers Tension grew between the Caliph and his viziers called wasitas and near the end of his reign the Druze movement a religious sect that deified al Hakim as God manifest began to form Members of that sect were reported to address prayers to al Hakim whom they regarded as a manifestation of God in His unity 20 The Baghdad Manifesto Edit Alarmed by the expansion of the Fatimid dominion the Abbasid caliph al Qadir of Baghdad adopted retaliatory measures to halt the spread of Ismailism within the very seat of his realm In particular in 1011 he assembled a number of Sunni and Twelver Shiite scholars at his court and commanded them to declare in a written document that Hakim and his predecessors lacked genuine descent from Ali and Fatima This so called Baghdad Manifesto was read out in Friday mosques throughout the Abbasid domains accusing the Fatimids of Jewish ancestry In addition because of al Hakim s alleged Christian mother he was accused of being over sympathetic to non Muslims giving them more privileges than they should have been given under Islamic rule Such accusations were manifested through poetry criticizing the Fatimids Qadir also commissioned several refutations of Ismaili doctrines including those written by the Mu tazili Ali b Sa id al Istakri 1013 21 Foreign affairs Edit Hakim confronted numerous difficulties and uprisings during his relatively long reign While he did not lose any important territories in North Africa the Ismaili communities there were attacked by Sunni fighters led by their influential Maliki jurists Relations between the Fatimids and the Qarmatians of Bahrain also remained hostile On the other hand Hakim s Syrian policy was successful as he managed to extend Fatimid hegemony to the emirate of Aleppo Above all the persistent rivalries between the various factions of the Fatimid armies especially the Berbers and the Turks overshadowed the other problems of Hakim s caliphate Al Hakim upheld diplomatic relations between the Fatimid Empire and many different countries Skillful diplomacy was needed in establishing friendly or at least neutral relations with the Byzantine Empire which had expansionary goals in the early 11th century 22 The geographically farthest reaching diplomatic mission of al Hakim was to Song Dynasty era China 22 The Fatimid Egyptian sea captain known as Domiyat traveled to a Buddhist pilgrimage site in Shandong in AD 1008 22 It was on this mission that he sought to present to the Chinese emperor Zhenzong of Song gifts from his ruling Caliph al Hakim 22 This reestablished diplomatic relations between Egypt and China that had been lost during the collapse of the Tang Dynasty in 907 22 Disappearance and succession Edit In the final years of his reign Hakim displayed a growing inclination toward asceticism and withdrew for meditation regularly On the night of 12 13 February 1021 at the age of 35 Hakim left for one of his regular nocturnal meditation journeys to the Mokattam hills outside of Cairo but failed to return A search only found his donkey and bloodstained garments His disappearance has remained a mystery 21 23 His sister Sitt al Mulk led moves to declare her nephew al Zahir li I zaz Din Allah as his father s successor as imam caliph The heir al Hakim had designated was removed from court and al Mulk was appointed regent for her 16 year old nephew After al Zahir came of age al Mulk assumed positions within his administration until her death in 1023 Modern historians have assessed whether al Mulk may have had a hand in her brother s disappearance but no historic evidence has emerged that would implicate her 24 Sobriquet in Western literature EditIn Western literature he has been referred to as the Mad Caliph 25 26 27 This title is largely due to his erratic and oppressive behavior concerning religious minorities under his command as historian Hunt Janin relates al Hakim was known as the Mad Caliph because of his many cruelties and eccentricities 28 Historian Michael Bonner points out that the term is also used due to the dramatic difference between al Hakim and his predecessors and his successors while also pointing out such persecution is an extreme rarity in Islam during this era In his capital of Cairo this unbalanced and in the view of most mad caliph raged against the Christians in particular On the whole such episodes remained exceptional like the episodes of forced conversion to Islam 29 Historian Michael Foss also notes this contrast For more than three hundred and fifty years from the time when the Caliph Omar made a treaty with the Patriarch Sophronius until 1009 when mad al Hakim began attacks on Christians and Jews the city of Jerusalem and the Holy Land were open to the West with an easy welcome and the way there was no more dangerous than a journey from Paris to Rome Soon after al Hakim the panic was over In 1037 al Mustansir came to an amicable agreement with Emperor Michael IV 30 As one prominent journal has noted al Hakim has attracted the interest of modern historians more than any other member of the Fatimid dynasty because His eccentric character the inconsistencies and radical shifts in his conduct and policies the extreme austerity of his personal life the vindictive and sanguinary ruthlessness of his dealing with the highest officials of his government coupled with an obsession to suppress all signs of corruption and immorality in public life his attempted annihilation of Christians and call for the systematic destruction of all Christian holy places in the middle east culminating in the destruction of the most holy Church of the Resurrection in Jerusalem his deification by a group of extremist Isma ili missionaries who became the forerunners and founders of the Druze religion which all combine to contrast his reign sharply with that of any of his predecessors and successors and indeed of any Muslim ruler The question is to what extent his conduct can be explained as rationally motivated and conditioned by the circumstances rather than as the inscrutable workings of an insane mind 31 The claim that al Hakim was mad and the version of events around him is disputed as mere propaganda by some scholars such as Willi Frischaue who states His enemies called him the Mad Caliph but he enhanced Cairo s reputation as a centre of civilization 4 The writing of historian Heinz Halm attempts to dispel those distorted and hostile accounts stating that the anti Fatimid tradition tried to make a real monster of this caliph 5 while P J Vatikiotis writes that al Hakim s persecution of Christians and Jews and the legislation enacted for that purpose between 1004 and 1020 seem to have been a policy with a justifiable purpose 32 Al Hakim and Shia Ismailism EditSee also Ismailism Al Hakim maintained a keen interest in the organization and operation of the Fatimid Ismaili da wa preaching centred in Cairo Under his reign it was systematically intensified outside the Fatimid dominions especially in Iraq and Persia In Iraq the da is now concentrated their efforts on a number of local amirs and influential tribal chiefs with whose support they aimed to uproot the Abbasids Foremost among the Fatimid da is of this period operating in the eastern provinces was Hamid al Din Kirmani the most accomplished Ismaili theologian philosopher of the entire Fatimid period The activities of Kirmani and other da is soon led to concrete results in Iraq in 1010 the ruler of Mosul Kufa and other towns acknowledged the suzerainty of Hakim The 16th Fatimid imam caliph al Hakim bi Amr Allah 996 1021 ordered his da i Harun ibn Muhammad in Yemen to give decisions in light of Da a im al Islam only 21 In 1013 he completed the construction of al Jamiʻ al Anwar begun by his father Commonly known as Hakim s Mosque over time it fell into ruin In the 1970s the Dawoodi Bohras an Ismaili Shia sect under the leadership of Mohammed Burhanuddin restored the then dilapidated mosque using new building methods and materials while maintaining as many of the architectural and artistic features as possible 33 Their attempts received strong criticism from some academics conservators and art historians who saw the effort as constructing a new building rather than restoration 34 House of Knowledge Edit In the area of education and learning one of Hakim s most important contributions was the founding in 1005 of the Dar al ʿIlm House of Knowledge 35 A wide range of subjects ranging from the Qur an and hadith to philosophy and astronomy were taught at the Dar al ʿIlm which was equipped with a vast library During his rule the Fatimid Caliph al Hakim also provided paper ink pens and inkstands free of charge to all those who studied at the famous Dar al ʿIlm in Cairo 36 Access to education was made available to the public and many Fatimid da is received at least part of their training in this major institution of learning which served the Ismaili da wa mission until the downfall of the Fatimid dynasty 21 For more than 100 years Dar al ʿIlm distinguished itself as a center of learning where astronomers mathematicians grammarians logicians physicians philologists jurists and others conducted research gave lectures and collaborated All were welcomed and it remained unfettered by political pressures or partisan influences 37 Sessions of Wisdom Edit Hakim made the education of the Ismailis and the Fatimid da is a priority in his time various study sessions majalis were established in Cairo Hakim provided financial support and endowments for these educational activities The private wisdom sessions majalis al hikma devoted to esoteric Ismaili doctrines and reserved exclusively for initiates now became organized so as to be accessible to different categories of participants Al Hakim himself often attended these sessions which were held at the Fatimid palace 21 The name majalis al hikma is still used by the Druze Nizari and Taiyabi Ismailis as the name of the building in which their religious assembly and worship is carried often abbreviated as Majlis session Druze Edit Al Hakim is a central figure in the history of the Druze religious sect whose eponymous founder ad Darazi proclaimed him as the incarnation of God in 1018 4 5 21 Hamza ibn Ali ibn Ahmad is considered the founder of the Druze and the primary author of the Druze manuscripts 38 he proclaimed that God had become human and taken the form of man al Hakim bi Amr Allah 4 5 39 40 Interreligious relationships EditAccording to the religious scholar Nissim Dana al Hakim s relationship with other monotheistic religions can be divided into three separate stages 41 First period Edit From 996 to 1006 when most of the executive functions of the Khalif were performed by his advisors the Shiite al Hakim behaved like the Shiite khalifs who he succeeded exhibiting a hostile attitude with respect to Sunni Muslims whereas the attitude toward People of the Book Jews and Christians was one of relative tolerance in exchange for the jizya tax 41 In 1005 al Hakim ordered a public posting of curses against the first three Caliphs Abu Bakr Umar and Uthman and against Aisha wife of Muhammad for denying the caliphate to Muhammad s cousin and son in law Ali who according to Shia beliefs was the rightful prophetic successor According to historian Nissim Dana al Hakim ordered that curses were registered against the warrior Muawiyah I founder of the Umayyad Caliphate and against others in the inner circle of Muhammad from the Sahabah the compatriots of Muhammad in the way of Islam 41 This was in accordance with Shia practice as laid out by Muslim scholar Ayatollah Haydari the followers of Ahl al Bayt Shias say O Allah curse all of the Banu Umayya 42 The Shia maintain that out of hatred for Ali Mu awiyah ordered the Talbiyah not be said as it was promoted by Ali and ordered people to curse him Sa d ibn Abi Waqqas refused to do so The Shia hold that Mu awiyah and all of the Umayyad caliphs with the possible exception of Umar II were Nasibi who are the hypocrites for whom hatred of Ali is their religion They don t just hate Ali but they worship Allah and seek closeness to Him by hating Ali 42 After only two years of posting the curses al Hakim ended the practice 41 During this era al Hakim ordered that the inclusion of the phrase as salah khayr min an nawm prayer is preferable to sleep which followed fajr prayer be stopped he saw it as a Sunni addition In its place he ordered that ḥayyi ala khayr al amal come to the best of deeds should be said after the summons was made He further forbade the use of two prayers Salat at Tarawih and Salat ad Duha as they were believed to have been formulated by Sunni sages 41 Religious minorities and the law of differentiation Edit In 1004 al Hakim decreed that the Christians could no longer celebrate Epiphany or Easter 43 He also outlawed the use of wine nabidh and even other intoxicating drinks not made from grapes fuqa to both Muslims and non Muslims alike 41 This produced a hardship for both Christians who used wine in their religious rites and Jews who used it in their religious festivals In 1005 al Hakim ordered that Jews and Christians follow ghiyar the law of differentiation in this case the mintaq or zunnar belt Greek zwnarion and imamah turban both in black In addition Jews must wear a wooden calf necklace and Christians an iron cross In the public baths Jews must replace the calf with a bell In addition women of the People of the Book had to wear two different coloured shoes one red and one black These remained in place until 1014 44 Following contemporary Shiite thinking during this period al Hakim also issued many other restrictive ordinances sijillat These sijillat included outlawing entrance to a public bath with uncovered loins forbidding women from appearing in public with their faces uncovered and closing many clubs and places of entertainment 41 Second period Edit From 1007 to 1012 there was a notably tolerant attitude toward the Sunnis and less zeal for Shiite Islam while the attitude with regard to the People of the Book was hostile 41 On 18 October 1009 al Hakim ordered the destruction of the Holy Sepulchre and its associated buildings apparently outraged by what he regarded as the fraud practiced by the monks in the miraculous Descent of the Holy Fire celebrated annually at the church during the Easter Vigil The chronicler Yahia noted that only those things that were too difficult to demolish were spared Processions were prohibited and a few years later all of the convents and churches in Palestine were said to have been destroyed or confiscated 43 It was only in 1042 that the Byzantine Emperor Constantine IX undertook to reconstruct the Holy Sepulchre with the permission of al Hakim s successor Third period EditAl Hakim ultimately allowed the unwilling Christian and Jewish converts to Islam to return to their faith and rebuild their ruined houses of worship 45 Indeed from 1012 to 1021 al Hakimbecame more tolerant toward the Jews and Christians and hostile toward the Sunnis Ironically he developed a particularly hostile attitude with regard to the Muslim Shiites It was during this period in the year 1017 that the unique religion of the Druze began to develop as an independent religion based on the revelation Kashf of al Hakim as divine 41 While it is clear that Hamza ibn Ahmad was the Caliph s chief daʿi there are claims that al Hakim believed in his own divinity 46 47 48 49 50 Other scholars disagree with this assertion of direct divinity particularly the Druze themselves noting that its proponent was ad Darazi who according to some resources al Hakim executed for shirk Letters show that ad Darazi was trying to gain control of the Muwahhidun movement and this claim was an attempt to gain support from the Caliph who instead found it heretical 51 52 Spouses and children EditThe mother of al Hakim s heir Ali az Zahir was the umm al walad Amina Ruqayya daughter to the late prince Abd Allah son of al Mu izz Some see her as the same as the woman in the prediction reported by al Hamidi which held that in 390 1000 al Hakim would choose an orphan girl of good stock brought up by his father al Aziz and that she would become the mother of his successor While the chronicler al Maqrizi claims that al Hakim s stepsister Sitt al Mulk was hostile to Amina other sources say she gave her and her child refuge when they were fleeing al Hakim s persecution Some sources say al Hakim married the jariya young female servant known by the title as Sayyidah but historians are unsure if this is just another name for Amina 12 Besides his son al Hakim had a daughter named Sitt Misr d 455 1063 who was said to be a generous patroness and of noble and good character 12 In literature EditThe story of Hakim s life inspired presumably through Antoine Isaac Silvestre de Sacy the French author Gerard de Nerval 1808 1855 who recounted his version of it Histoire du Calife Hakem History of the Caliph Hakem as an appendix to his Voyage to the Orient 1851 He is a major character in The Prisoner of Al Hakim by American novelist Bradley Steffens which recounts the ten year imprisonment of Ibn al Haytham under al Hakim s rule 53 A fictional version of his death is presented in Robert E Howard s posthumously published short story Hawks over Egypt See also EditFamily tree of Muhammad List of Egyptians List of Ismaili imams List of people who disappeared Lists of rulers of EgyptReferences Edit Brett 2001 p 418 Brett 2001 p 470 Daftary Ferhad ḤAKEM BE AMR ALLAH Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 24 April 2016 a b c d Willi Frischauer 1970 The Aga Khans Bodley Head p Which page a b c d Ismail K Poonawala Review The Fatimids and Their Traditions of Learning Journal of the American Oriental Society 119 3 542 doi 10 2307 605981 JSTOR 605981 Gamal Nkrumah 10 December 2009 The crazed caliph Al Ahram Weekly Online Archived from the original on 27 March 2013 Retrieved 16 March 2013 Sara Elkamel 24 August 2010 Caliph of Cairo The rule and mysterious disappearance of al Hakim bi Amr Allah Egypt Independent Retrieved 16 March 2013 Walker Paul 2010 Caliph of Cairo Al Hakim bi Amr Allah 996 The American University in Cairo Press p 352 ISBN 978 9774163289 Jerome Murphy O Connor 23 February 2012 Keys to Jerusalem Collected Essays OUP Oxford p 245 ISBN 978 0 19 964202 1 John Joseph Saunders 11 March 2002 A History of Medieval Islam Routledge p 109 ISBN 978 1 134 93005 0 Phyllis G Jestice 2004 Holy People of the World A Cross cultural Encyclopedia ABC CLIO p 341 ISBN 978 1 57607 355 1 a b c d e f g h i j Delia Cortese and Simonetta Calderini 2006 Women and the Fatimids in the World of Islam Edinburgh University Press ISBN 0 7486 1733 7 a b c d e O Leary De Lacy 1923 A Short History of the Fatimid Khalifate Routledge Lev 1987 pp 344 346 Daftary 1990 pp 186 187 Kennedy 2004 pp 327 328 a b Daftary 1990 p 187 Kennedy 2004 p 328 a b Lev 1987 pp 345 346 Mortimer Edward Faith and Power The Politics of Islam Vintage Books 1982 p 49 a b c d e f Dr Farhad Daftary 19 October 2011 al Hakim bi Amr Allah Encyclopaedia Iranica Vol 11 pp 572 573 ed Ehsan Yarshater New York 2003 Institute of Ismaili Studies Archived from the original on 11 November 2014 Retrieved 16 March 2013 a b c d e Shen Fuwei 1996 Cultural flow between China and the outside world Beijing Foreign Languages Press ISBN 7 119 00431 X Makarim Sami Nasib 1974 The Druze faith New York Caravan Books p 25 ISBN 0 88206 003 1 Haeri Shahla 2020 The Unforgettable Queens of Islam Succession Authority Gender Cambridge University Press p 16 ISBN 978 1107123038 Britannica The First Crusade A New History Thomas Asbridge Britannica 1810 Hunt Janin 2005 The Pursuit of Learning in the Islamic World 610 2003 McFarland amp Company Inc ISBN 0786419547 Michael Bonner 2006 Jihad in Islamic History Doctrines and Practice Princeton University Press ISBN 0691125740 Michael Foss 1997 People of the First Crusade The Truth About the Christian Muslim War Revealed Arcade Publishing ISBN 1559704144 Wilferd Madelung 2013 Journal of Near Eastern Studies Vol 37 3 p 280 Vatikiotis 1957 p 153 Saifiyah 2016 al Jamiʻ al Anwar The Luminous Masjid Northolt Middlesex United Kingdom Aljamea tus Saifiyah ISBN 978 1 5262 0503 2 OCLC 990015520 Susanna Myllyla Islamic Cairo imagined from a historical city slum to a time machine for tourism PDF Building Peace by Intercultural Dialogue 225 Archived from the original PDF on 15 September 2018 Retrieved 3 May 2014 Maqrizi 1853 54 1995 Halm 1997 pp 71 78 Virani Shafique N 1 April 2007 The Ismailis in the Middle Ages Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780195311730 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 531173 0 Cairo s House of Knowledge AramcoWorld www aramcoworld com Hendrix Scott Okeja Uchenna eds 2018 The World s Greatest Religious Leaders How Religious Figures Helped Shape World History 2 volumes ABC CLIO p 11 ISBN 978 1440841385 Minorities in the Middle East A History of Struggle and Self expression Page 95 by Mordechai Nisan The Druze in the Middle East Their Faith Leadership Identity and Status Page 41 by Nissim Dana a b c d e f g h i Nissim Dana 2003 The Druze in the Middle East Their Faith Leadership Identity and Status Sussex Academic Press ISBN 1 903900 36 0 a b Ayatollah Seyyid Kamal Haydari Muawiya ibn Abi Sufyan s hatred for Imam Ali Seyyid Kamal Haydari ENG SUBS Al Kawthar tv YouTube Archived from the original on 12 December 2021 dubious discuss a b Robert Ousterhout Rebuilding the Temple Constantine Monomachus and the Holy Sepulchre in The Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians Vol 48 No 1 March 1989 pp 66 78 Stillman Yedida Kalfon 2000 Stillman Norman A ed Arab Dress A Short History From the Dawn of Islam to Modern Times Themes in Islamic Studies Vol 2 Boston Brill Publishers p 106 ISBN 90 04 11373 8 Sir Thomas Walker Arnold 1896 The preaching of Islam a history of the propagation of the Muslim faith A Constable and co p 343 thomas walker arnold preaching John Esposito Islam the Straight Path p 47 Nissim Dana 2003 The Druze in the Middle East Their Faith Leadership Identity and Status Sussex Academic Press p 3 ISBN 9781903900369 Retrieved 15 March 2013 Mordechai Nisan 2002 Minorities in the Middle East A History of Struggle and Self expression McFarland p 95 ISBN 9780786451333 Retrieved 16 March 2013 Cherine Badawi 2004 Egypt Footprint p 96 ISBN 9781903471777 Retrieved 16 March 2013 Zeidan Atashi 1997 Druze and Jews in Israel A Shared Destiny Sussex Academic Press p 12 ISBN 9781898723387 Retrieved 16 March 2013 Swayd Sami 2006 Historical dictionary of the Druzes Historical dictionaries of peoples and cultures Vol 3 Maryland USA Scarecrow Press ISBN 0 8108 5332 9 Swayd Samy 1998 The Druzes an annotated bibliography Kirkland WA USA ISES Publications ISBN 0 9662932 0 7 The Prisoner of Al Hakim Clifton NJ Blue Dome Press 2017 ISBN 1682060160Sources EditBianquis Thierry 1986 Damas et la Syrie sous la domination fatimide 359 468 969 1076 essai d interpretation de chroniques arabes medievales Tome premier in French Damascus Institut francais de Damas ISBN 978 2 35159130 7 Brett Michael 2001 The Rise of the Fatimids The World of the Mediterranean and the Middle East in the Fourth Century of the Hijra Tenth Century CE The Medieval Mediterranean Vol 30 Leiden Brill ISBN 9004117415 Daftary Farhad 1990 The Ismaʿi li s Their History and Doctrines Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 37019 6 Halm Heinz 2003 Die Kalifen von Kairo Die Fatimiden in Agypten 973 1074 The Caliphs of Cairo The Fatimids in Egypt 973 1074 in German Munich C H Beck ISBN 3 406 48654 1 Kennedy Hugh 2004 The Prophet and the Age of the Caliphates The Islamic Near East from the 6th to the 11th Century Second ed Harlow Longman ISBN 978 0 582 40525 7 Lev Yaacov 1987 Army Regime and Society in Fatimid Egypt 358 487 968 1094 International Journal of Middle East Studies 19 3 337 365 doi 10 1017 S0020743800056762 JSTOR 163658 Vatikiotis Panayiotis J 1957 The Fatimid Theory of State Lahore Orientalia Publishers via books google com External links Edital Hakim Institute of Ismaili Studies al Hakim bi Amr Allah al Hakim bi Amr Allahal Hakim bi Amr AllahBorn 13 August 985 Died 12 February 1021Regnal titlesPreceded byal Aziz Caliph of the Fatimid Dynasty14 October 996 12 February 1021 Succeeded byAli az Zahir Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Al Hakim bi Amr Allah amp oldid 1145728337, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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