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Al-Ma'mun

Abu al-Abbas Abdallah ibn Harun al-Rashid (Arabic: أبو العباس عبد الله بن هارون الرشيد, romanizedAbū al-ʿAbbās ʿAbd Allāh ibn Hārūn ar-Rashīd; 14 September 786 – 9 August 833), better known by his regnal name Al-Ma'mun (Arabic: المأمون, romanizedal-Maʾmūn), was the seventh Abbasid caliph, who reigned from 813 until his death in 833. He succeeded his half-brother al-Amin after a civil war, during which the cohesion of the Abbasid Caliphate was weakened by rebellions and the rise of local strongmen; much of his domestic reign was consumed in pacification campaigns. Well educated and with a considerable interest in scholarship, al-Ma'mun promoted the Translation Movement, the flowering of learning and the sciences in Baghdad, and the publishing of al-Khwarizmi's book[citation needed] now known as "Algebra". He is also known for supporting the doctrine of Mu'tazilism and for imprisoning Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal, the rise of religious persecution (mihna), and for the resumption of large-scale warfare with the Byzantine Empire.

Al-Ma'mun
المأمون
Gold dinar of al-Ma'mun, minted in Egypt in 830/1
7th Caliph of the Abbasid Caliphate
Reign27 September 813 – 7 August 833
PredecessorAl-Amin
SuccessorAl-Mu'tasim
Born(786-09-14)September 14, 786
Baghdad, Abbasid Caliphate
DiedAugust 7, 833(833-08-07) (aged 46)
Tarsus, Abbasid Caliphate, now Mersin Province, Turkey
Burial
Consort
Issue
  • Muhammad
  • Ubaid Allah
  • Al-Abbas
  • Umm al-Fadl
  • Umm Habib
Names
Abū al-ʿAbbās Abdallāh al-Maʾmūn ibn Harūn
DynastyAbbasid
FatherHarun al-Rashid
MotherUmm Abdallah Marajil
ReligionIslam[note 1]

Birth and education

Abdallah, the future al-Ma'mun, was born in Baghdad on the night of the 13 to 14 September 786 CE to Harun al-Rashid and his concubine Marajil, from Badghis. On the same night, which later became known as the "night of the three caliphs", his uncle al-Hadi died and was succeeded by Ma'mun's father, Harun al-Rashid, as ruler of the Abbasid Caliphate.[1] Marajil died soon after his birth, and Abdallah was raised by Harun al-Rashid's wife, Zubayda, herself of high Abbasid lineage as the granddaughter of Caliph al-Mansur (r. 754–775).[2] As a young prince, Abdallah received a thorough education: al-Kisa'i tutored him in classical Arabic, Abu Muhammad al-Yazidi in adab, and he received instruction in music and poetry. He was trained in fiqh by al-Hasan al-Lu'lu'i, showing particular excellence in the Hanafi school, and in the hadith, becoming himself active as a transmitter.[2] According to M. Rekaya, "he was distinguished by his love of knowledge, making him the most intellectual caliph of the Abbasid family, which accounts for the way in which his caliphate developed".[2]

Appointment as successor and Governor of Khurasan

Although Abdallah was the oldest of his sons, in 794 Harun named the second-born Muhammad, born in April 787 to Zubayda, as the first in line of succession. This was the result of family pressure on the Caliph, reflecting Muhammad's higher birth, as both parents descended from the Abbasid dynasty; indeed, he remained the only Abbasid caliph to claim such descent. Muhammad received the oath of allegiance (bay'ah) with the name of al-Amin ("The Trustworthy"), first in Khurasan by his guardian, the Barmakid al-Fadl ibn Yahya, and then in Baghdad.[2] Abdallah was recognized as second heir only after entering puberty, in 799, under the name al-Ma'mun ("The Trusted One"), with another Barmakid, Ja'far ibn Yahya, as his guardian. At the same time, a third heir, al-Qasim, named al-Mu'tamin, was appointed, under the guardianship of Abd al-Malik ibn Salih.[2]

These arrangements were confirmed and publicly proclaimed in 802, when Harun and the most powerful officials of the Abbasid government made the pilgrimage to Mecca. Al-Amin would succeed Harun in Baghdad, but al-Ma'mun would remain al-Amin's heir and would additionally rule over an enlarged Khurasan.[2] This was an appointment of particular significance, as Khurasan had been the starting-point of the Abbasid Revolution which brought the Abbasids to power, and retained a privileged position among the Caliphate's provinces. Furthermore, the Abbasid dynasty relied heavily on Khurasanis as military leaders and administrators. Many of the original Khurasani Arab army (Khurasaniyya) that came west with the Abbasids were given estates in Iraq and the new Abbasid capital, Baghdad, and became an elite group known as the abnāʾ al-dawla ("sons of the state/dynasty").[3][4] This large-scale presence of an Iranian element in the highest circles of the Abbasid state, with the Barmakid family as its most notable representatives, was certainly a factor in the appointment of al-Ma'mun, linked through his mother with the eastern Iranian provinces, as heir and governor of Khurasan.[5] The stipulations of the agreement, which were recorded in detail by the historian al-Tabari, accorded al-Mamun's Khurasani viceroyalty extensive autonomy. However, modern historians consider that these accounts may have been distorted by later apologists of al-Ma'mun in the latter's favour.[6] Harun's third heir, al-Mu'tamin, received responsibility over the frontier areas with the Byzantine Empire in Upper Mesopotamia and Syria.[2][7]

Very quickly, the latent rivalry between the two brothers had important repercussions: almost immediately after the court returned to Baghdad in January 803, the Abbasid elites were shaken by the abrupt fall of the Barmakid family from power. On the one hand, this event may reflect the fact that the Barmakids had become indeed too powerful for the Caliph's liking, but its timing suggests that it was tied to the succession issue as well: with al-Amin siding with the abnāʾ and al-Ma'mun with the Barmakids, and the two camps becoming more estranged every day, if al-Amin was to have a chance to succeed, the power of the Barmakids had to be broken.[2][8][9]

Al-Fadl ibn Sahl, a Kufan of Iranian origin whose father had converted to Islam and entered Barmakid service, replaced Ja'far ibn Yahya as al-Ma'mun's tutor. In 806 he also became al-Ma'mun's secretary (katib), an appointment that marked him out as the chief candidate for the vizierate should al-Ma'mun succeed to the throne.[2] In 804, al-Ma'mun married his cousin, Umm Isa, a daughter of the Caliph al-Hadi (r. 785–786). The couple had two sons, Muhammad al-Asghar and Abdallah.[2]

The years after the fall of the Barmakids saw an increasing centralization of the administration and the concomitant rise of the influence of the abnāʾ, many of whom were now dispatched to take up positions as provincial governors and bring these provinces under closer control from Baghdad.[9] This led to unrest in the provinces, especially Khurasan, where local elites had a long-standing rivalry with the aabnāʾ and their tendency to control of the province (and its revenues) from Iraq.[10] The harsh taxation imposed by a prominent member of the abnāʾ, Ali ibn Isa ibn Mahan, even led to a revolt under Rafi ibn al-Layth, which eventually forced Harun himself, accompanied by al-Ma'mun and the powerful chamberlain (hajib) and chief minister al-Fadl ibn al-Rabi, to travel to the province in 808. Al-Ma'mun was sent ahead with part of the army to Merv, while Harun stayed at Tus, where he died on 24 March 809.[2][9][11]

Abbasid civil war

In 802 Harun al-Rashid, father of al-Maʾmūn and al-Amin, ordered that al-Amin succeed him, and al-Ma'mun serve as governor of Khurasan and as caliph after the death of al-Amin. In the last days of Harun's life his health was declining and saw in a dream Musa ibn Jafar sitting in a chamber praying and crying, which made Harun remember how hard he had struggled to establish his own caliphate. He knew the personalities of both his sons and decided that for the good of the Abbasid dynasty, al-Maʾmūn should be caliph after his death, which he confided to a group of his courtiers. One of the courtiers, Fadl ibn Rabi', did not abide by Harun's last wishes and convinced many in the lands of Islam that Harun's wishes had not changed. Later the other three courtiers of Harun who had sworn loyalty to Harun by supporting al-Maʾmūn, namely, 'Isa Jarudi, Abu Yunus, and Ibn Abi 'Umran, found loopholes in Fadl's arguments, and Fazl admitted Harun had appointed al-Maʾmūn after him, but, he argued, since Harun was not in his right mind, his decision should not be acted upon. Al-Maʾmūn was reportedly the older of the two brothers, but his mother was a Persian woman while al-Amin's mother was a member of the reigning Abbasid family. After al-Rashid's death in 809, the relationship between the two brothers deteriorated. In response to al-Ma'mun's moves toward independence, al-Amin declared his own son Musa to be his heir. This violation of al-Rashid's testament led to a succession struggle. Al-Amin assembled a massive army at Baghdad with 'Isa ibn Mahan at its head in 811 and invaded Khorasan, but al-Maʾmūn's general Tahir ibn al-Husayn (d. 822) destroyed the army and invaded Iraq, laying siege to Baghdad in 812. In 813 Baghdad fell, al-Amin was beheaded, and al-Maʾmūn became the undisputed Caliph.[12]

Internal strife

Sahl ibn Salama al-Ansari

There were disturbances in Iraq during the first several years of al-Maʾmūn's reign, while the caliph was in Merv (near present-day Mary, Turkmenistan). On 13 November 815, Muhammad ibn Ja'far al-Sadiq (Al-Dibaj) claimed the Caliphate for himself in Mecca. He was defeated and he quickly abdicated asserting that he had only become caliph on news that al-Ma'mun had died. Lawlessness in Baghdad led to the formation of neighborhood watches with religious inspiration, with two notable leaders being Khalid al-Daryush and Sahl ibn Salama al-Ansari. Sahl adopted the slogan, la ta'a lil- makhluq fi ma'siyat al-khaliq, or 'no obedience to the creature in disobedience of the Creator'[13] (originally a Kharijite slogan),[14] alluding to what he saw as "the conflict ... between God's will and Caliphal authority". "Most" of the leadership of this vigilante movement came from the sulaahd ("men of good will of the neighborhoods and blocks") and from "popular preachers" (as both Khalid al-Daryush and Sahl ibn Salama al-Ansari were); its followers were called the 'amma, (the common people).[13] The volunteers of the movement were known as mutawwi'a, which was the same name given to "volunteers for frontier duty and for the holy war against Byzantium".[14] Sahl's and movement influence was such that military chiefs first "delayed capitulation to al-Ma'mun" and adopted Sahl's religious "formula" until they became alarmed at his power and combined to crush him in 817-81 CE.[15]

Imam al-Rida

In A.H. 201 (817 AD) al-Ma'mun named Ali ar-Rida (the sixth-generation descendant of Ali and the eighth Shia Imam) as his heir as caliph. This move may have been made to appease Shi'ite opinion in Iraq and "reconcile the 'Alid and 'Abbasid branches of the Hashimite family", but in Baghdad it caused the Hashimites—supported by "military chiefs of al-Harbiyya, including Muttalib and 'Isa ibn Muhammad"—to depose al-Ma'mun and elect Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi Caliph.[15]

According to Shia sources, the deposing of Al-Ma'um in Baghdad was not out of opposition to the wise and pious Imam Reza, but because of rumors spread by Fazl ibn Sahl. Al-Ma'mun moved Imam Reza to Merv in hopes of keeping watch over him, but was foiled by the Imam's growing popularity there. People from all over the Muslim world traveled to meet the prophet's grandson and listen to his teachings and guidance (according to these sources). In an attempt to humiliate the Imam, Al-Ma'mun set him up with the greatest scholars of the world's religions, but the Imam prevailed and then informed al-Ma'mun that his grand vizier, Fazl ibn Sahl, had withheld important information from him.[16]

In Baghdad, al-Maʾmūn was unseated and replaced by Ibrahim ibn Mehdi not because al-Maʾmūn's naming Imam Reza as his heir was unpopular, but because of "rumors" spread by Fazl ibn Sahl.

Seeking to put down the rebellion in Baghdad, Al-Ma'mun set out for the city on 12 April 818. At Tus, he stopped to visit his father's grave. However, when they reached the town of Sarakhs, his vizier, Fazl ibn Sahl, was assassinated, and when they reached Tus, the Imam was poisoned. Al-Ma'mūn ordered that the Imam be buried next to the tomb of his own father, Harun al-Rashid, and showed extreme sorrow in the funeral ritual and stayed for three days at the place. Nonetheless, Shia tradition states he was killed on orders of Al-Ma'mun, and according to Madelung the unexpected death of both the vizier and the successor, "whose presence would have made any reconciliation with the powerful ʿAbbasid opposition in Baghdad virtually impossible, must indeed arouse strong suspicion that Ma'mun had had a hand in the deaths."[17][18]

Following the death of Imam Reza, a revolt took place in Khurasan. Al-Ma’mun tried unsuccessfully to absolve himself of the crime.[19]

After arrival in Baghdad

 
Silver Dirham of Al-Ma'mun. AH 199-218 / AD 813–833. Dirham weight 25mm, 3.19 g, 3h. Medinat Isbahan mint dated 205 AD (820/1 AD)

The rebel forces in Baghdad splintered and wavered in opposition to Al-Ma'mun. According to scholar and historian Al-Tabari (839–923 CE), al-Ma'mun entered Baghdad on 11 August 819.[20] He wore green and had others do so. Informed that compliance with this command might arouse popular opposition to the colour, on 18 August he reverted to traditional Abbasid black. While Baghdad became peaceful, there were disturbances elsewhere. In A.H. 210 (825–826 CE) Abdullah ibn Tahir al-Khurasani secured Egypt for al-Ma'mun, freeing Alexandria from Andalusians and quelling unrest. The Andalusians moved to Crete, where al-Tabari records their descendants were still living in his day (see Emirate of Crete). Abdallah returned to Baghdad in 211 Hijri (826–827 C.E.) bringing the defeated rebels with him.

Also, in 210 Hijri (825–826 CE), there was an uprising in Qum sparked by complaints about taxes. After it was quashed, the tax assessment was set significantly higher. In 212 Hijri (827–828 CE), there was an uprising in Yemen. In 214 (829–30 CE), Abu al-Razi, who had captured one Yemeni rebel, was killed by another. Egypt continued to be unquiet. Sindh was rebellious. In 216 (831–832 CE), Ghassan ibn 'Abbad subdued it. An ongoing problem for al-Ma'mun was the uprising headed by Babak Khorramdin. In 214 Babak routed a Caliphate army killing its commander Muhammad ibn Humayd.

Wars with Byzantium

By the time al-Ma'mun became Caliph, the Arabs and the Byzantine Empire had settled down into border skirmishing, with Arab raids deep into Anatolia to capture booty and Christians to be enslaved. The situation changed however with the rise to power of Michael II in 820 AD. Forced to deal with the rebel Thomas the Slav, Michael had few troops to spare against a small Andalusian invasion of 40 ships and 10,000 men against Crete, which fell in 824 AD. A Byzantine counter offensive in 826 AD failed miserably. Worse still was the invasion of Sicily in 827 by Arabs of Tunis. Even so, Byzantine resistance in Sicily was fierce and not without success whilst the Arabs became quickly plagued by internal squabbles. That year, the Arabs were expelled from Sicily but they were to return.

 
The Byzantine embassy of John the Grammarian in 829 to Ma'mun (depicted left) from Theophilos (depicted right)

In 829, Michael II died and was succeeded by his son Theophilos. Theophilos experienced mixed success against his Arab opponents. In 830 AD the Arabs returned to Sicily and, after a year-long siege, took Palermo. For the next 200 years they were to remain there to complete their conquest, which was never short of Christian counters. Al-Ma'mun meanwhile launched an invasion of Anatolia in 830 AD, taking a number of Byzantine forts; he spared the surrendering Byzantines. Theophilos, for his part, captured Tarsus in 831. The next year, learning the Byzantines had killed some sixteen hundred people, al-Ma'mun returned. This time some thirty forts fell to the Caliphate's forces, with two Byzantine defeats in Cappadocia.

Theophilos wrote to al-Ma'mun. The Caliph replied that he carefully considered the Byzantine ruler's letter, noticed it blended suggestions of peace and trade with threats of war and offered Theophilos the options of accepting the shahada, paying tax or fighting. Al-Ma'mun made preparations for a major campaign, but died on the way while leading an expedition in Tyana.

 
Abbasid Caliph Al-Ma'mun sends an envoy to Theophilos

Al-Ma'mun's relations with the Byzantines are marked by his efforts in the translation of Greek philosophy and science. Al-Ma'mun gathered scholars of many religions at Baghdad, whom he treated magnificently. He sent an emissary to the Byzantine Empire to collect the most famous manuscripts there, and had them translated into Arabic.[21] As part of his peace treaty with the Byzantine Emperor, Al-Ma'mun was to receive a number of Greek manuscripts annually, one of these being Ptolemy's astronomical work, the Almagest.[22]

Al-Ma'mun's reign

 
The populace pays Allegiance to the Abbasid caliph, Al-Ma'mun in 813. (from the book Tarikh-i Alfi 1593 CE)

Al-Ma'mun conducted, in the plains of Mesopotamia, two astronomical operations intended to achieve a degree measurement (al-Ma'mun's arc measurement). The crater Almanon on the moon is named in recognition of his contributions to astronomy.

Al-Ma'mun's record as an administrator is also marked by his efforts toward the centralization of power and the certainty of succession. The Bayt al-Hikma, or House of Wisdom, was established during his reign.[23] The ulama emerged as a real force in Islamic politics during al-Ma'mun's reign for opposing the mihna, which was initiated in 833, four months before he died.

Michael Hamilton Morgan in his book "Lost History" describes al-Ma'mun as a man who 'Loves Learning.' al-Ma'mun once defeated a Byzantine Emperor in a battle and as a tribute, he asked for a copy of Almagest, Ptolemy's Hellenistic compendium of thoughts on astronomy written around A.D. 150[24]

The 'mihna', is comparable to Medieval European inquisitions in the sense that it involved imprisonment, a religious test, and a loyalty oath. The people subject to the mihna were traditionalist scholars whose social influence was uncommonly high. Al-Ma'mun introduced the mihna with the intention to centralize religious power in the caliphal institution and test the loyalty of his subjects. The mihna had to be undergone by elites, scholars, judges and other government officials, and consisted of a series of questions relating to theology and faith. The central question was about the createdness of the Qur'an, if the interrogatee stated he believed the Qur'an to be created, rather than coeternal with God, he was free to leave and continue his profession.

The controversy over the mihna was exacerbated by al-Ma'mun's sympathy for Mu'tazili theology and other controversial views. Mu'tazili theology was deeply influenced by Aristotelian thought and Greek rationalism, and stated that matters of belief and practice should be decided by reasoning. This opposed the traditionalist and literalist position of Ahmad ibn Hanbal and others, according to which everything a believer needed to know about faith and practice was spelled out literally in the Qur'an and the Hadith. Moreover, the Mu'tazilis stated that the Qur'an was created rather than coeternal with God, a belief that was shared by the Jahmites and parts of Shi'a, among others, but contradicted the traditionalist-Sunni opinion that the Qur'an and the Divine were coeternal.

During his reign, alchemy greatly developed. Pioneers of the science were Jabir Ibn Hayyan and his student Yusuf Lukwa, who was patronized by Al-Ma'mun. Although he was unsuccessful in transmuting gold, his methods greatly led to the patronization of pharmaceutical compounds.[25]

Caliph Al-Ma'mun was a pioneer of cartography having commissioned a world map from a large group of astronomers and geographers. The map is presently in an encyclopedia in Topkapi Sarai, a Museum in Istanbul. The map shows large parts of the Eurasian and African continents with recognizable coastlines and major seas. It depicts the world as it was known to the captains of the Arab sailing dhows which used the monsoon wind cycles to trade over vast distances (by the 9th century, Arab sea traders had reached Guangzhou, in China). The maps of the Greeks and Romans reveal a good knowledge of closed seas like the Mediterranean but little knowledge of the vast ocean expanses beyond.[26]

Although al-Mahdi had proclaimed that the caliph was the protector of Islam against heresy, and had also claimed the ability to declare orthodoxy, religious scholars in the Islamic world believed that al-Ma'mun was overstepping his bounds in the mihna. The penalties of the mihna became increasingly difficult to enforce as the ulema became firmer and more united in their opposition. Although the mihna persisted through the reigns of two more caliphs, al-Mutawakkil abandoned it in 851.

The ulema and the major Islamic law schools became truly defined in the period of al-Ma'mun, and Sunnism—as a religion of legalism—became defined in parallel. Doctrinal differences between Sunni and Shi'a Islam began to become more pronounced. Ibn Hanbal, the founder of the Hanbali legal school, became famous for his opposition to the mihna. Al-Ma'mun's simultaneous opposition and patronage of intellectuals led to the emergence of important dialogues on both secular and religious affairs, and the Bayt al-Hikma became an important center of translation for Greek and other ancient texts into Arabic. This Islamic renaissance spurred the rediscovery of Hellenism and ensured the survival of these texts into the European renaissance.

Al-Ma'mun had been named governor of Khurasan by Harun, and after his ascension to power, the caliph named Tahir as governor for his military services in order to assure his loyalty. It was a move that al-Ma'mun soon regretted, as Tahir and his family became entrenched in Iranian politics and became increasingly powerful in the state, contrary to al-Ma'mun's desire to centralize and strengthen Caliphal power. The rising power of the Tahirid family became a threat as al-Ma'mun's own policies alienated them and his other opponents.

Al-Ma'mun also attempted to divorce his wife during his reign, who had not borne him any children. His wife hired a Syrian judge of her own before al-Ma'mun was able to select one himself; the judge, who sympathized with the caliph's wife, refused the divorce. Following al-Ma'mun's experience, no further Abbasid caliphs were to marry, preferring to find their heirs in the harem.

Al-Ma'mun, in an attempt to win over the Shi'a Muslims to his camp, named the eighth Imam, Ali ar-Rida, his successor, if he should outlive al-Ma'mun. Most Shi'ites realized, however, that ar-Rida was too old to survive him and saw al-Ma'mun's gesture as empty; indeed, Al-Ma'mun poisoned Ali ar-Rida who then died in 818. The incident served to further alienate the Shi'ites from the Abbasids, who had already been promised and denied the Caliphate by Abu al-'Abbas.

The Abbasid empire grew somewhat during the reign of al-Ma'mun. Hindu rebellions in Sindh were put down, and most of Afghanistan was absorbed with the surrender of the leader of Kabul. Mountainous regions of Iran were brought under a tighter grip of the central Abbasid government, as were areas of Turkestan.

In 832, al-Ma'mun led a large army into Egypt to put down the last great Bashmurite revolt.[27] While there he ordered the breaching of the Great Pyramid of Giza looking for knowledge and treasure. He entered the pyramid by tunneling into the Great Pyramid near where tradition located the original entrance. The resulting passage, which was later named the "Robbers' Tunnel" is the path along which tourists enter the pyramid today.

Personal characteristics

Al-Tabari (v. 32, p. 231) describes al-Ma'mun as of average height, light complexion, handsome and having a long beard losing its dark colour as he aged. He relates anecdotes concerning the caliph's ability to speak concisely and eloquently without preparation, his generosity, his respect for Muhammad and religion, his sense of moderation, justice and his love of poetry and his insatiable passion for physical intimacy.

Ibn Abd Rabbih in his Unique Necklace (al-'iqd al-Farid), probably drawing on earlier sources, makes a similar description of al-Ma'mun, whom he described as of light complexion and having slightly blond hair, a long thin beard, and a narrow forehead.

Family

Al-Ma'mun's first wife was Umm Isa, a daughter of his uncle al-Hadi (r. 785–786), whom he married when he was eighteen years old. They had two sons, Muhammad al-Asghar, and Abdallah.[2] Another wife was Buran, the daughter of al-Ma'mun's vizier, al-Hasan ibn Sahl.[28] She was born as Khadija[28] on 6 December 807.[29] Al-Ma'mun married her in 817, and consummated marriage with her in December 825-January 826 in the town of Fam al-Silh.[28] She died on 21 September 884.[29]

Al-Ma'mun had also numerous concubines.[2] One of them, Sundus, bore him five sons, among whom was al-Abbas, who rose to become a senior military commander at the end of al-Ma'mun's reign and a contender for the throne.[30] Another wife or concubine was Arib.[31] Born in 797,[32] she claimed to be the daughter of Ja'far ibn Yahya, the Barmakid, stolen and sold as a child when the Barmakids fell from power. She was brought by al-Amin, who then sold her to his brother.[31] She was a noted poetess, songstress, and a mucisian.[31] She died at Samarra in July–August 890, aged ninety-six.[32] Another concubine was Bi'dah al-Kabirah. She was also a songstress, and had been a slave of Arib.[33] She died on 10 July 915. Abu Bakr, the son of Caliph al-Muhtadi, led the funeral prayers.[34] Another concubine was Mu'nisah, a Greek.[35]

Al-Ma'mun had two daughters. One was Umm Habib, who married Ali ibn Musa al-Rida, and the other was Umm al-Fadl, who married Muhammad ibn Ali bin Musa.[36]

Death and legacy

Al-Tabari recounts how al-Ma'mun was sitting on the river bank telling those with him how splendid the water was. He asked what would go best with this water and was told a specific kind of fresh dates. Noticing supplies arriving, he asked someone to check whether such dates were included. As they were, he invited those with him to enjoy the water with these dates. All who did this fell ill. Others recovered, but al-Ma'mun died. He encouraged his successor to continue his policies and not burden the people with more than they could bear. This was on 9 August 833.[37]

Al-Ma'mun died near Tarsus. The city's major mosque (Tarsus Grand Mosque), contains a tomb reported to be his.[citation needed] He was not succeeded by his son, al-Abbas ibn al-Ma'mun, but by his half-brother, al-Mu'tasim.

 

Almanon, a lunar impact crater that lies in the rugged highlands in the south-central region of the Moon, was named after Al-Ma'mun.[38]

Religious beliefs

 
Fals (Copper Coin) of Al-Ma'mun. Dated AH 217 (AD 832/3). Jerusalem mint.

Al-Maʾmūn's religious beliefs are a subject of controversy, to the point where other Abbasids,[39] as well as later Islamic scholars, called him a Shia Muslim. For instance, Sunni scholars al-Dhahabi, Ibn Kathir, Ibn Khaldun and al-Suyuti explicitly held the belief that al-Ma'mun was a Shi'a.[40] The arguments for his alleged Shi’ism include that, in 816/817, when Ali al-Ridha, the Prophet's descendant, refused designation as sole Caliph, Al-Ma'mun officially designated him as his appointed successor. The official Abbasid coins were minted showing Al-Ma'mun as a Caliph and al-Ridha as his successor.[41] Other arguments were that: the Caliphate's official black colour was changed to the Prophetic green; in 210 AH/825 CE, he wrote to Qutham b. Ja'far, the ruler of Medina, to return Fadak to the descendants of Muhammad through his daughter, Fatima; he restored nikah mut'ah, previously banned by Umar ibn al-Khattab, but practiced under Muhammad and Abu Bakr; in 211 AH/826 CE, al-Ma'mun reportedly expressed his antipathy to those who praised Mu'awiya ibn Abi Sufyan, and reportedly punished such people;[42] this later view of Al-Suyuti however is questionable since it contradicts the fact that Al-Ma’mun promoted scholars who openly defended Muawiyah ibn Abi Sufyan, such as the Mu’tazilite scholar Hisham bin Amr al-Fuwati, who was a well-respected judge in the court of Al-Ma’mun in Baghdad;[43] in 212 AH/827 CE, al-Ma'mun announced the superiority of Ali ibn Abu Talib over Abu Bakr and 'Umar b. al-Khattab;[42] in 833 CE, under the influence of Muʿtazila rationalist thought, he initiated the mihna ordeal, where he accepted the argument that the Quran was created at some point over the orthodox Sunni belief that the Book was coeternal with God.

However, Shi’ites condemn al-Ma'mun as well due to the belief that he was responsible for Ali al-Ridha’s poisoning and eventual death in 818 CE. In the ensuing power struggle, other Abbasids sought to depose Ma'mun in favor of Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi, Ma'mun's uncle;[44] therefore, getting rid of al-Ridha was the only realistic way of retaining united, absolute, unopposed rule.[45] Al-Ma'mūn ordered that al-Ridha be buried next to the tomb of his own father, Harun al-Rashid, and showed extreme sorrow in the funeral ritual and stayed for three days at the place. Muhammad al-Jawad, Ali al-Ridha’s son and successor, lived unopposed and free during the rest of Al-Ma'mūn’s reign (till 833 CE). The Caliph summoned al-Jawad to Baghdad in order to marry his daughter, Ummul Fadhl. This apparently provoked strenuous objections by the Abbasids. According to Ya'qubi, al-Ma'mun gave al-Jawad one hundred thousand dirham and said, "Surely I would like to be a grandfather in the line of the Apostle of God and of Ali ibn Abu Talib."[46]

References

Citations

  1. ^ Rekaya, M. (24 April 2012). "al-Maʾmūn". Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition. Retrieved 20 September 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Rekaya 1991, p. 331.
  3. ^ El-Hibri 2010, p. 274.
  4. ^ Kennedy 2004, pp. 133–135.
  5. ^ El-Hibri 2010, p. 282.
  6. ^ El-Hibri 2010, pp. 282–283.
  7. ^ Kennedy 2004, p. 142.
  8. ^ Kennedy 2004, pp. 142–143.
  9. ^ a b c El-Hibri 2010, p. 283.
  10. ^ Kennedy 2004, p. 144.
  11. ^ Kennedy 2004, pp. 144–145.
  12. ^ Kennedy, Hugh (1986). The Prophet and the Age of the Caliphates (2nd ed.). London and New York: Pearson Longman. pp. 148–150. ISBN 0-582-49312-9.
  13. ^ a b Lapidus, Ira M. (1975). "Separation of state and religion in early Islamic society". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 6: 375. doi:10.1017/S0020743800025344. JSTOR 162750. S2CID 162409061. Retrieved 2 July 2021.
  14. ^ a b Lapidus, Ira M. (1975). "Separation of state and religion in early Islamic society". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 6: 376. doi:10.1017/S0020743800025344. JSTOR 162750. S2CID 162409061. Retrieved 2 July 2021.
  15. ^ a b Lapidus, Ira M. (1975). "Separation of state and religion in early Islamic society". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 6: 363–385. doi:10.1017/S0020743800025344. JSTOR 162750. S2CID 162409061. Retrieved 2 July 2021.
  16. ^ "Why was Imam al-Reza (A.S.) Invited to Khurasan?". Imam Reza Network. Retrieved 3 July 2021.
  17. ^ W. Madelung (1 August 2011). "ALĪ AL-REŻĀ, the eighth Imam of the Imāmī Shiʿites". Iranicaonline.org. from the original on 21 September 2012. Retrieved 18 June 2014.
  18. ^ al-Qarashi, Bāqir Sharif. The life of Imām 'Ali Bin Mūsā al-Ridā. Translated by Jāsim al-Rasheed. from the original on 5 January 2011. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
  19. ^ Mavani, Hamid (2013). Religious Authority and Political Thought in Twelver Islam. New York: Routledge. pp. 276+. ISBN 9781135044732. Retrieved 3 July 2021.
  20. ^ The History of al-Ṭabarī, v. 32, p. 95
  21. ^ Tesdell, Lee S. (1999). "Greek Rhetoric and Philosophy in Medieval Arabic Culture: The State of the Research". In Poster, Carol; Utz, Richard (eds.). Discourses of Power: Grammar and Rhetoric in the Middle Ages. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press. pp. 51–58. ISBN 0-8101-1812-2.
  22. ^ Angelo, Joseph (2009). Encyclopedia of Space and Astronomy. p. 78. ISBN 9781438110189.
  23. ^ Goldschmidt, Arthur (2002). A concise history of the Middle East. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press. pp. 78. ISBN 978-0-8133-3885-9.
  24. ^ Michael Hamilton Morgan "Lost History", page. 57
  25. ^ E.J. Brill's First Encyclopaedia of Islam (1993), Vol. 4, p. 1011
  26. ^ Rechnagel, Charles (15 October 2004). "World: Historian Reveals Incredible Contributions of Muslim Cartographers". Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. Retrieved 5 March 2015.
  27. ^ Gabra 2003, p. 112.
  28. ^ a b c Ibn al-Sāʿī 2017, p. 23.
  29. ^ a b Ibn al-Sāʿī 2017, p. 26.
  30. ^ Turner 2013.
  31. ^ a b c Ibn al-Sāʿī 2017, p. 15.
  32. ^ a b Ibn al-Sāʿī 2017, p. 19.
  33. ^ Ibn al-Sāʿī 2017, p. 20.
  34. ^ Ibn al-Sāʿī 2017, p. 22.
  35. ^ Ibn al-Sāʿī 2017, p. 32.
  36. ^ Bosworth 1987, p. 82.
  37. ^ Bosworth 1987, pp. 224–231.
  38. ^ "Al-Ma'mun". Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS Astrogeology Research Program.
  39. ^ Naqawī, "Taʾthīr-i qīyāmhā-yi ʿalawīyān", p. 141.
  40. ^ Dhahabī, Siyar aʿlām al-nubalāʾ, vol. 11, p. 236; Ibn Kathīr, al-Bidāya wa l-nihāya, vol. 10, p. 275-279; Ibn khaldūn. al-ʿIbar, vol. 2, p. 272; Suyūṭī, Tārīkh al-khulafāʾ, p. 363.
  41. ^ "Item #13113 Abbasid (Medieval Islam), al-Ma'mun (AH 194-218), Silver dirham, 204AH, Isfahan mint , with Ali ibn Musa al-Rida as heir, RARE, Album 224, DIFFICULT TO FIND!!".
  42. ^ a b Suyūṭī, Tārīkh al-khulafāʾ, p. 364.
  43. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 June 2021. Retrieved 1 June 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  44. ^ Donaldson, Dwight M. (1933). The Shi'ite Religion: A History of Islam in Persia and Irak. Burleigh Press. pp. 161–170.
  45. ^ According to Madelung the unexpected death of the Alid successor, "whose presence would have made any reconciliation with the powerful ʿAbbasid opposition in Baghdad virtually impossible, must indeed arouse strong suspicion that Ma'mun had had a hand in the deaths."
  46. ^ Donaldson, Dwight M. (1933). The Shi'ite Religion: A History of Islam in Persia and Iraḳ. AMS Press. pp. 190–197.

Notes

  1. ^ al-Ma'mun was a Sunni Muslim with Mu'tazili and pro-Alid tendencies.

Sources

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  • Cooperson, Michael (2005). Al Ma'mun. Makers of the Muslim world. Oxford: Oneworld. ISBN 9781851683864.
  • Daniel, Elton L. (1979). The Political and Social History of Khurasan under Abbasid Rule, 747–820. Minneapolis & Chicago: Bibliotheca Islamica, Inc. ISBN 978-0-88297-025-7.
  • El-Hibri, Tayeb (1999). "Al-Maʾmūn: the heretic Caliph". Reinterpreting Islamic Historiography: Hārūn al-Rashı̄d and the Narrative of the ʿAbbāsid Caliphate. Cambridge University Press. pp. 95–142. ISBN 0-521-65023-2.
  • El-Hibri, Tayeb (2010). "The empire in Iraq, 763–861". In Robinson, Chase F. (ed.). The New Cambridge History of Islam, Volume 1: The Formation of the Islamic World, Sixth to Eleventh Centuries. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 269–304. ISBN 978-0-521-83823-8.
  • Fishbein, Michael, ed. (1992). The History of al-Ṭabarī, Volume XXXI: The War Between Brothers: The Caliphate of Muḥammad al-Amīn, A.D. 809–813/A.H. 193–198. SUNY Series in Near Eastern Studies. Albany, New York: State University of New York Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-1085-1.
  • Gabra, Gawdat (2003). "The Revolts of the Bashmuric Copts in the Eighth and Ninth Centuries". In W. Beltz (ed.). Die koptische Kirche in den ersten drei islamischen Jahrhunderten. Institut für Orientalistik, Martin-Luther-Universität. pp. 111–119.
  • John Bagot Glubb The Empire of the Arabs, Hodder and Stoughton, London, 1963.
  • Ibn al-Sāʿī (2017). Consorts of the Caliphs: Women and the Court of Baghdad. Translated by Shawkat M. Toorawa. Introduction by Julia Bray, Foreword by Marina Warner. New York: New York University Press. ISBN 978-1-4798-0477-1.
  • E. de la Vaissière, Samarcande et Samarra. Elites d'Asie centrale dans l'empire Abbasside, Peeters, 2007 [1] 16 August 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  • Dimitri Gutas, Greek Thought, Arabic culture: the Graeco-Arabic translation movement in Baghdad and early Abbasid society Routledge, London, 1998
  • Hugh N. Kennedy, The Early Abbasid Caliphate, a political History, Croom Helm, London, 1981
  • 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.
  • John Nawas, A Reexamination of three current explanations for Al-Ma’mun's introduction of the Mihna, International Journal of Middle East Studies 26, (1994) pp. 615–629
  • John Nawas, The Mihna of 218 A.H./833 A.D. Revisited: An Empirical Study, Journal of the American Oriental Society 116.4 (1996) pp. 698–708
  • Nawas, John Abdallah (2015). Al-Maʼmūn, the Inquisition, and the Quest for Caliphal Authority. Atlanta, Georgia: Lockwood Press. ISBN 978-1-937040-55-0.
  • Rekaya, M. (1991). "al-Maʾmūn". In Bosworth, C. E.; van Donzel, E. & Pellat, Ch. (eds.). The Encyclopaedia of Islam, New Edition, Volume VI: Mahk–Mid. Leiden: E. J. Brill. pp. 331–339. ISBN 978-90-04-08112-3.
  • Peter Tompkins, "Secrets of the Great Pyramid", chapter 2, Harper and Row, 1971.
  • Turner, John P. (2013). "al-ʿAbbās b. al-Maʾmūn". 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_24639. ISSN 1873-9830.

External links

  • (in English)
  • Berggren, Len (2007). "Maʾmūn: Abū al‐ʿAbbās ʿAbdallāh ibn Hārūn al‐Rashīd". In Thomas Hockey; et al. (eds.). The Biographical Encyclopedia of Astronomers. New York: Springer. p. 733. ISBN 978-0-387-31022-0. (PDF version)
Al-Ma'mun
Born: 786 Died: 833
Sunni Islam titles
Preceded by Caliph of the Abbasid Caliphate
813 – 9 August 833
Succeeded by

this, article, about, abbasid, caliph, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, april, 201. This article is about an Abbasid caliph For other uses see Al Ma mun disambiguation This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Abu al Abbas Abdallah ibn Harun al Rashid Arabic أبو العباس عبد الله بن هارون الرشيد romanized Abu al ʿAbbas ʿAbd Allah ibn Harun ar Rashid 14 September 786 9 August 833 better known by his regnal name Al Ma mun Arabic المأمون romanized al Maʾmun was the seventh Abbasid caliph who reigned from 813 until his death in 833 He succeeded his half brother al Amin after a civil war during which the cohesion of the Abbasid Caliphate was weakened by rebellions and the rise of local strongmen much of his domestic reign was consumed in pacification campaigns Well educated and with a considerable interest in scholarship al Ma mun promoted the Translation Movement the flowering of learning and the sciences in Baghdad and the publishing of al Khwarizmi s book citation needed now known as Algebra He is also known for supporting the doctrine of Mu tazilism and for imprisoning Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal the rise of religious persecution mihna and for the resumption of large scale warfare with the Byzantine Empire Al Ma munالمأمونKhalifah Amir al Mu mininGold dinar of al Ma mun minted in Egypt in 830 17th Caliph of the Abbasid CaliphateReign27 September 813 7 August 833PredecessorAl AminSuccessorAl Mu tasimBorn 786 09 14 September 14 786Baghdad Abbasid CaliphateDiedAugust 7 833 833 08 07 aged 46 Tarsus Abbasid Caliphate now Mersin Province TurkeyBurialGrand Mosque of TarsusConsortUmm Isa bint Musa al Hadi Buran bint al Hasan Arib bint Ja far bin YahyaIssueMuhammad Ubaid Allah Al Abbas Umm al Fadl Umm HabibNamesAbu al ʿAbbas Abdallah al Maʾmun ibn HarunDynastyAbbasidFatherHarun al RashidMotherUmm Abdallah MarajilReligionIslam note 1 Contents 1 Birth and education 2 Appointment as successor and Governor of Khurasan 3 Abbasid civil war 4 Internal strife 4 1 Sahl ibn Salama al Ansari 4 2 Imam al Rida 5 After arrival in Baghdad 6 Wars with Byzantium 7 Al Ma mun s reign 8 Personal characteristics 9 Family 10 Death and legacy 11 Religious beliefs 12 References 12 1 Citations 12 2 Notes 12 3 Sources 13 External linksBirth and education EditAbdallah the future al Ma mun was born in Baghdad on the night of the 13 to 14 September 786 CE to Harun al Rashid and his concubine Marajil from Badghis On the same night which later became known as the night of the three caliphs his uncle al Hadi died and was succeeded by Ma mun s father Harun al Rashid as ruler of the Abbasid Caliphate 1 Marajil died soon after his birth and Abdallah was raised by Harun al Rashid s wife Zubayda herself of high Abbasid lineage as the granddaughter of Caliph al Mansur r 754 775 2 As a young prince Abdallah received a thorough education al Kisa i tutored him in classical Arabic Abu Muhammad al Yazidi in adab and he received instruction in music and poetry He was trained in fiqh by al Hasan al Lu lu i showing particular excellence in the Hanafi school and in the hadith becoming himself active as a transmitter 2 According to M Rekaya he was distinguished by his love of knowledge making him the most intellectual caliph of the Abbasid family which accounts for the way in which his caliphate developed 2 Appointment as successor and Governor of Khurasan EditAlthough Abdallah was the oldest of his sons in 794 Harun named the second born Muhammad born in April 787 to Zubayda as the first in line of succession This was the result of family pressure on the Caliph reflecting Muhammad s higher birth as both parents descended from the Abbasid dynasty indeed he remained the only Abbasid caliph to claim such descent Muhammad received the oath of allegiance bay ah with the name of al Amin The Trustworthy first in Khurasan by his guardian the Barmakid al Fadl ibn Yahya and then in Baghdad 2 Abdallah was recognized as second heir only after entering puberty in 799 under the name al Ma mun The Trusted One with another Barmakid Ja far ibn Yahya as his guardian At the same time a third heir al Qasim named al Mu tamin was appointed under the guardianship of Abd al Malik ibn Salih 2 These arrangements were confirmed and publicly proclaimed in 802 when Harun and the most powerful officials of the Abbasid government made the pilgrimage to Mecca Al Amin would succeed Harun in Baghdad but al Ma mun would remain al Amin s heir and would additionally rule over an enlarged Khurasan 2 This was an appointment of particular significance as Khurasan had been the starting point of the Abbasid Revolution which brought the Abbasids to power and retained a privileged position among the Caliphate s provinces Furthermore the Abbasid dynasty relied heavily on Khurasanis as military leaders and administrators Many of the original Khurasani Arab army Khurasaniyya that came west with the Abbasids were given estates in Iraq and the new Abbasid capital Baghdad and became an elite group known as the abnaʾ al dawla sons of the state dynasty 3 4 This large scale presence of an Iranian element in the highest circles of the Abbasid state with the Barmakid family as its most notable representatives was certainly a factor in the appointment of al Ma mun linked through his mother with the eastern Iranian provinces as heir and governor of Khurasan 5 The stipulations of the agreement which were recorded in detail by the historian al Tabari accorded al Mamun s Khurasani viceroyalty extensive autonomy However modern historians consider that these accounts may have been distorted by later apologists of al Ma mun in the latter s favour 6 Harun s third heir al Mu tamin received responsibility over the frontier areas with the Byzantine Empire in Upper Mesopotamia and Syria 2 7 Very quickly the latent rivalry between the two brothers had important repercussions almost immediately after the court returned to Baghdad in January 803 the Abbasid elites were shaken by the abrupt fall of the Barmakid family from power On the one hand this event may reflect the fact that the Barmakids had become indeed too powerful for the Caliph s liking but its timing suggests that it was tied to the succession issue as well with al Amin siding with the abnaʾ and al Ma mun with the Barmakids and the two camps becoming more estranged every day if al Amin was to have a chance to succeed the power of the Barmakids had to be broken 2 8 9 Al Fadl ibn Sahl a Kufan of Iranian origin whose father had converted to Islam and entered Barmakid service replaced Ja far ibn Yahya as al Ma mun s tutor In 806 he also became al Ma mun s secretary katib an appointment that marked him out as the chief candidate for the vizierate should al Ma mun succeed to the throne 2 In 804 al Ma mun married his cousin Umm Isa a daughter of the Caliph al Hadi r 785 786 The couple had two sons Muhammad al Asghar and Abdallah 2 The years after the fall of the Barmakids saw an increasing centralization of the administration and the concomitant rise of the influence of the abnaʾ many of whom were now dispatched to take up positions as provincial governors and bring these provinces under closer control from Baghdad 9 This led to unrest in the provinces especially Khurasan where local elites had a long standing rivalry with the aabnaʾ and their tendency to control of the province and its revenues from Iraq 10 The harsh taxation imposed by a prominent member of the abnaʾ Ali ibn Isa ibn Mahan even led to a revolt under Rafi ibn al Layth which eventually forced Harun himself accompanied by al Ma mun and the powerful chamberlain hajib and chief minister al Fadl ibn al Rabi to travel to the province in 808 Al Ma mun was sent ahead with part of the army to Merv while Harun stayed at Tus where he died on 24 March 809 2 9 11 Abbasid civil war EditMain article Fourth Fitna In 802 Harun al Rashid father of al Maʾmun and al Amin ordered that al Amin succeed him and al Ma mun serve as governor of Khurasan and as caliph after the death of al Amin In the last days of Harun s life his health was declining and saw in a dream Musa ibn Jafar sitting in a chamber praying and crying which made Harun remember how hard he had struggled to establish his own caliphate He knew the personalities of both his sons and decided that for the good of the Abbasid dynasty al Maʾmun should be caliph after his death which he confided to a group of his courtiers One of the courtiers Fadl ibn Rabi did not abide by Harun s last wishes and convinced many in the lands of Islam that Harun s wishes had not changed Later the other three courtiers of Harun who had sworn loyalty to Harun by supporting al Maʾmun namely Isa Jarudi Abu Yunus and Ibn Abi Umran found loopholes in Fadl s arguments and Fazl admitted Harun had appointed al Maʾmun after him but he argued since Harun was not in his right mind his decision should not be acted upon Al Maʾmun was reportedly the older of the two brothers but his mother was a Persian woman while al Amin s mother was a member of the reigning Abbasid family After al Rashid s death in 809 the relationship between the two brothers deteriorated In response to al Ma mun s moves toward independence al Amin declared his own son Musa to be his heir This violation of al Rashid s testament led to a succession struggle Al Amin assembled a massive army at Baghdad with Isa ibn Mahan at its head in 811 and invaded Khorasan but al Maʾmun s general Tahir ibn al Husayn d 822 destroyed the army and invaded Iraq laying siege to Baghdad in 812 In 813 Baghdad fell al Amin was beheaded and al Maʾmun became the undisputed Caliph 12 Internal strife EditSahl ibn Salama al Ansari Edit There were disturbances in Iraq during the first several years of al Maʾmun s reign while the caliph was in Merv near present day Mary Turkmenistan On 13 November 815 Muhammad ibn Ja far al Sadiq Al Dibaj claimed the Caliphate for himself in Mecca He was defeated and he quickly abdicated asserting that he had only become caliph on news that al Ma mun had died Lawlessness in Baghdad led to the formation of neighborhood watches with religious inspiration with two notable leaders being Khalid al Daryush and Sahl ibn Salama al Ansari Sahl adopted the slogan la ta a lil makhluq fi ma siyat al khaliq or no obedience to the creature in disobedience of the Creator 13 originally a Kharijite slogan 14 alluding to what he saw as the conflict between God s will and Caliphal authority Most of the leadership of this vigilante movement came from the sulaahd men of good will of the neighborhoods and blocks and from popular preachers as both Khalid al Daryush and Sahl ibn Salama al Ansari were its followers were called the amma the common people 13 The volunteers of the movement were known as mutawwi a which was the same name given to volunteers for frontier duty and for the holy war against Byzantium 14 Sahl s and movement influence was such that military chiefs first delayed capitulation to al Ma mun and adopted Sahl s religious formula until they became alarmed at his power and combined to crush him in 817 81 CE 15 Imam al Rida Edit In A H 201 817 AD al Ma mun named Ali ar Rida the sixth generation descendant of Ali and the eighth Shia Imam as his heir as caliph This move may have been made to appease Shi ite opinion in Iraq and reconcile the Alid and Abbasid branches of the Hashimite family but in Baghdad it caused the Hashimites supported by military chiefs of al Harbiyya including Muttalib and Isa ibn Muhammad to depose al Ma mun and elect Ibrahim ibn al Mahdi Caliph 15 According to Shia sources the deposing of Al Ma um in Baghdad was not out of opposition to the wise and pious Imam Reza but because of rumors spread by Fazl ibn Sahl Al Ma mun moved Imam Reza to Merv in hopes of keeping watch over him but was foiled by the Imam s growing popularity there People from all over the Muslim world traveled to meet the prophet s grandson and listen to his teachings and guidance according to these sources In an attempt to humiliate the Imam Al Ma mun set him up with the greatest scholars of the world s religions but the Imam prevailed and then informed al Ma mun that his grand vizier Fazl ibn Sahl had withheld important information from him 16 In Baghdad al Maʾmun was unseated and replaced by Ibrahim ibn Mehdi not because al Maʾmun s naming Imam Reza as his heir was unpopular but because of rumors spread by Fazl ibn Sahl Seeking to put down the rebellion in Baghdad Al Ma mun set out for the city on 12 April 818 At Tus he stopped to visit his father s grave However when they reached the town of Sarakhs his vizier Fazl ibn Sahl was assassinated and when they reached Tus the Imam was poisoned Al Ma mun ordered that the Imam be buried next to the tomb of his own father Harun al Rashid and showed extreme sorrow in the funeral ritual and stayed for three days at the place Nonetheless Shia tradition states he was killed on orders of Al Ma mun and according to Madelung the unexpected death of both the vizier and the successor whose presence would have made any reconciliation with the powerful ʿAbbasid opposition in Baghdad virtually impossible must indeed arouse strong suspicion that Ma mun had had a hand in the deaths 17 18 Following the death of Imam Reza a revolt took place in Khurasan Al Ma mun tried unsuccessfully to absolve himself of the crime 19 After arrival in Baghdad Edit Silver Dirham of Al Ma mun AH 199 218 AD 813 833 Dirham weight 25mm 3 19 g 3h Medinat Isbahan mint dated 205 AD 820 1 AD The rebel forces in Baghdad splintered and wavered in opposition to Al Ma mun According to scholar and historian Al Tabari 839 923 CE al Ma mun entered Baghdad on 11 August 819 20 He wore green and had others do so Informed that compliance with this command might arouse popular opposition to the colour on 18 August he reverted to traditional Abbasid black While Baghdad became peaceful there were disturbances elsewhere In A H 210 825 826 CE Abdullah ibn Tahir al Khurasani secured Egypt for al Ma mun freeing Alexandria from Andalusians and quelling unrest The Andalusians moved to Crete where al Tabari records their descendants were still living in his day see Emirate of Crete Abdallah returned to Baghdad in 211 Hijri 826 827 C E bringing the defeated rebels with him Also in 210 Hijri 825 826 CE there was an uprising in Qum sparked by complaints about taxes After it was quashed the tax assessment was set significantly higher In 212 Hijri 827 828 CE there was an uprising in Yemen In 214 829 30 CE Abu al Razi who had captured one Yemeni rebel was killed by another Egypt continued to be unquiet Sindh was rebellious In 216 831 832 CE Ghassan ibn Abbad subdued it An ongoing problem for al Ma mun was the uprising headed by Babak Khorramdin In 214 Babak routed a Caliphate army killing its commander Muhammad ibn Humayd Wars with Byzantium EditBy the time al Ma mun became Caliph the Arabs and the Byzantine Empire had settled down into border skirmishing with Arab raids deep into Anatolia to capture booty and Christians to be enslaved The situation changed however with the rise to power of Michael II in 820 AD Forced to deal with the rebel Thomas the Slav Michael had few troops to spare against a small Andalusian invasion of 40 ships and 10 000 men against Crete which fell in 824 AD A Byzantine counter offensive in 826 AD failed miserably Worse still was the invasion of Sicily in 827 by Arabs of Tunis Even so Byzantine resistance in Sicily was fierce and not without success whilst the Arabs became quickly plagued by internal squabbles That year the Arabs were expelled from Sicily but they were to return The Byzantine embassy of John the Grammarian in 829 to Ma mun depicted left from Theophilos depicted right In 829 Michael II died and was succeeded by his son Theophilos Theophilos experienced mixed success against his Arab opponents In 830 AD the Arabs returned to Sicily and after a year long siege took Palermo For the next 200 years they were to remain there to complete their conquest which was never short of Christian counters Al Ma mun meanwhile launched an invasion of Anatolia in 830 AD taking a number of Byzantine forts he spared the surrendering Byzantines Theophilos for his part captured Tarsus in 831 The next year learning the Byzantines had killed some sixteen hundred people al Ma mun returned This time some thirty forts fell to the Caliphate s forces with two Byzantine defeats in Cappadocia Theophilos wrote to al Ma mun The Caliph replied that he carefully considered the Byzantine ruler s letter noticed it blended suggestions of peace and trade with threats of war and offered Theophilos the options of accepting the shahada paying tax or fighting Al Ma mun made preparations for a major campaign but died on the way while leading an expedition in Tyana Abbasid Caliph Al Ma mun sends an envoy to Theophilos Al Ma mun s relations with the Byzantines are marked by his efforts in the translation of Greek philosophy and science Al Ma mun gathered scholars of many religions at Baghdad whom he treated magnificently He sent an emissary to the Byzantine Empire to collect the most famous manuscripts there and had them translated into Arabic 21 As part of his peace treaty with the Byzantine Emperor Al Ma mun was to receive a number of Greek manuscripts annually one of these being Ptolemy s astronomical work the Almagest 22 Al Ma mun s reign Edit The populace pays Allegiance to the Abbasid caliph Al Ma mun in 813 from the book Tarikh i Alfi 1593 CE Al Ma mun conducted in the plains of Mesopotamia two astronomical operations intended to achieve a degree measurement al Ma mun s arc measurement The crater Almanon on the moon is named in recognition of his contributions to astronomy Al Ma mun s record as an administrator is also marked by his efforts toward the centralization of power and the certainty of succession The Bayt al Hikma or House of Wisdom was established during his reign 23 The ulama emerged as a real force in Islamic politics during al Ma mun s reign for opposing the mihna which was initiated in 833 four months before he died Michael Hamilton Morgan in his book Lost History describes al Ma mun as a man who Loves Learning al Ma mun once defeated a Byzantine Emperor in a battle and as a tribute he asked for a copy of Almagest Ptolemy s Hellenistic compendium of thoughts on astronomy written around A D 150 24 The mihna is comparable to Medieval European inquisitions in the sense that it involved imprisonment a religious test and a loyalty oath The people subject to the mihna were traditionalist scholars whose social influence was uncommonly high Al Ma mun introduced the mihna with the intention to centralize religious power in the caliphal institution and test the loyalty of his subjects The mihna had to be undergone by elites scholars judges and other government officials and consisted of a series of questions relating to theology and faith The central question was about the createdness of the Qur an if the interrogatee stated he believed the Qur an to be created rather than coeternal with God he was free to leave and continue his profession The controversy over the mihna was exacerbated by al Ma mun s sympathy for Mu tazili theology and other controversial views Mu tazili theology was deeply influenced by Aristotelian thought and Greek rationalism and stated that matters of belief and practice should be decided by reasoning This opposed the traditionalist and literalist position of Ahmad ibn Hanbal and others according to which everything a believer needed to know about faith and practice was spelled out literally in the Qur an and the Hadith Moreover the Mu tazilis stated that the Qur an was created rather than coeternal with God a belief that was shared by the Jahmites and parts of Shi a among others but contradicted the traditionalist Sunni opinion that the Qur an and the Divine were coeternal During his reign alchemy greatly developed Pioneers of the science were Jabir Ibn Hayyan and his student Yusuf Lukwa who was patronized by Al Ma mun Although he was unsuccessful in transmuting gold his methods greatly led to the patronization of pharmaceutical compounds 25 Caliph Al Ma mun was a pioneer of cartography having commissioned a world map from a large group of astronomers and geographers The map is presently in an encyclopedia in Topkapi Sarai a Museum in Istanbul The map shows large parts of the Eurasian and African continents with recognizable coastlines and major seas It depicts the world as it was known to the captains of the Arab sailing dhows which used the monsoon wind cycles to trade over vast distances by the 9th century Arab sea traders had reached Guangzhou in China The maps of the Greeks and Romans reveal a good knowledge of closed seas like the Mediterranean but little knowledge of the vast ocean expanses beyond 26 Although al Mahdi had proclaimed that the caliph was the protector of Islam against heresy and had also claimed the ability to declare orthodoxy religious scholars in the Islamic world believed that al Ma mun was overstepping his bounds in the mihna The penalties of the mihna became increasingly difficult to enforce as the ulema became firmer and more united in their opposition Although the mihna persisted through the reigns of two more caliphs al Mutawakkil abandoned it in 851 The ulema and the major Islamic law schools became truly defined in the period of al Ma mun and Sunnism as a religion of legalism became defined in parallel Doctrinal differences between Sunni and Shi a Islam began to become more pronounced Ibn Hanbal the founder of the Hanbali legal school became famous for his opposition to the mihna Al Ma mun s simultaneous opposition and patronage of intellectuals led to the emergence of important dialogues on both secular and religious affairs and the Bayt al Hikma became an important center of translation for Greek and other ancient texts into Arabic This Islamic renaissance spurred the rediscovery of Hellenism and ensured the survival of these texts into the European renaissance Al Ma mun had been named governor of Khurasan by Harun and after his ascension to power the caliph named Tahir as governor for his military services in order to assure his loyalty It was a move that al Ma mun soon regretted as Tahir and his family became entrenched in Iranian politics and became increasingly powerful in the state contrary to al Ma mun s desire to centralize and strengthen Caliphal power The rising power of the Tahirid family became a threat as al Ma mun s own policies alienated them and his other opponents Al Ma mun also attempted to divorce his wife during his reign who had not borne him any children His wife hired a Syrian judge of her own before al Ma mun was able to select one himself the judge who sympathized with the caliph s wife refused the divorce Following al Ma mun s experience no further Abbasid caliphs were to marry preferring to find their heirs in the harem Al Ma mun in an attempt to win over the Shi a Muslims to his camp named the eighth Imam Ali ar Rida his successor if he should outlive al Ma mun Most Shi ites realized however that ar Rida was too old to survive him and saw al Ma mun s gesture as empty indeed Al Ma mun poisoned Ali ar Rida who then died in 818 The incident served to further alienate the Shi ites from the Abbasids who had already been promised and denied the Caliphate by Abu al Abbas The Abbasid empire grew somewhat during the reign of al Ma mun Hindu rebellions in Sindh were put down and most of Afghanistan was absorbed with the surrender of the leader of Kabul Mountainous regions of Iran were brought under a tighter grip of the central Abbasid government as were areas of Turkestan In 832 al Ma mun led a large army into Egypt to put down the last great Bashmurite revolt 27 While there he ordered the breaching of the Great Pyramid of Giza looking for knowledge and treasure He entered the pyramid by tunneling into the Great Pyramid near where tradition located the original entrance The resulting passage which was later named the Robbers Tunnel is the path along which tourists enter the pyramid today Personal characteristics EditAl Tabari v 32 p 231 describes al Ma mun as of average height light complexion handsome and having a long beard losing its dark colour as he aged He relates anecdotes concerning the caliph s ability to speak concisely and eloquently without preparation his generosity his respect for Muhammad and religion his sense of moderation justice and his love of poetry and his insatiable passion for physical intimacy Ibn Abd Rabbih in his Unique Necklace al iqd al Farid probably drawing on earlier sources makes a similar description of al Ma mun whom he described as of light complexion and having slightly blond hair a long thin beard and a narrow forehead Family EditAl Ma mun s first wife was Umm Isa a daughter of his uncle al Hadi r 785 786 whom he married when he was eighteen years old They had two sons Muhammad al Asghar and Abdallah 2 Another wife was Buran the daughter of al Ma mun s vizier al Hasan ibn Sahl 28 She was born as Khadija 28 on 6 December 807 29 Al Ma mun married her in 817 and consummated marriage with her in December 825 January 826 in the town of Fam al Silh 28 She died on 21 September 884 29 Al Ma mun had also numerous concubines 2 One of them Sundus bore him five sons among whom was al Abbas who rose to become a senior military commander at the end of al Ma mun s reign and a contender for the throne 30 Another wife or concubine was Arib 31 Born in 797 32 she claimed to be the daughter of Ja far ibn Yahya the Barmakid stolen and sold as a child when the Barmakids fell from power She was brought by al Amin who then sold her to his brother 31 She was a noted poetess songstress and a mucisian 31 She died at Samarra in July August 890 aged ninety six 32 Another concubine was Bi dah al Kabirah She was also a songstress and had been a slave of Arib 33 She died on 10 July 915 Abu Bakr the son of Caliph al Muhtadi led the funeral prayers 34 Another concubine was Mu nisah a Greek 35 Al Ma mun had two daughters One was Umm Habib who married Ali ibn Musa al Rida and the other was Umm al Fadl who married Muhammad ibn Ali bin Musa 36 Death and legacy EditAl Tabari recounts how al Ma mun was sitting on the river bank telling those with him how splendid the water was He asked what would go best with this water and was told a specific kind of fresh dates Noticing supplies arriving he asked someone to check whether such dates were included As they were he invited those with him to enjoy the water with these dates All who did this fell ill Others recovered but al Ma mun died He encouraged his successor to continue his policies and not burden the people with more than they could bear This was on 9 August 833 37 Al Ma mun died near Tarsus The city s major mosque Tarsus Grand Mosque contains a tomb reported to be his citation needed He was not succeeded by his son al Abbas ibn al Ma mun but by his half brother al Mu tasim Image of Almanon crater Almanon a lunar impact crater that lies in the rugged highlands in the south central region of the Moon was named after Al Ma mun 38 Religious beliefs Edit Fals Copper Coin of Al Ma mun Dated AH 217 AD 832 3 Jerusalem mint Al Maʾmun s religious beliefs are a subject of controversy to the point where other Abbasids 39 as well as later Islamic scholars called him a Shia Muslim For instance Sunni scholars al Dhahabi Ibn Kathir Ibn Khaldun and al Suyuti explicitly held the belief that al Ma mun was a Shi a 40 The arguments for his alleged Shi ism include that in 816 817 when Ali al Ridha the Prophet s descendant refused designation as sole Caliph Al Ma mun officially designated him as his appointed successor The official Abbasid coins were minted showing Al Ma mun as a Caliph and al Ridha as his successor 41 Other arguments were that the Caliphate s official black colour was changed to the Prophetic green in 210 AH 825 CE he wrote to Qutham b Ja far the ruler of Medina to return Fadak to the descendants of Muhammad through his daughter Fatima he restored nikah mut ah previously banned by Umar ibn al Khattab but practiced under Muhammad and Abu Bakr in 211 AH 826 CE al Ma mun reportedly expressed his antipathy to those who praised Mu awiya ibn Abi Sufyan and reportedly punished such people 42 this later view of Al Suyuti however is questionable since it contradicts the fact that Al Ma mun promoted scholars who openly defended Muawiyah ibn Abi Sufyan such as the Mu tazilite scholar Hisham bin Amr al Fuwati who was a well respected judge in the court of Al Ma mun in Baghdad 43 in 212 AH 827 CE al Ma mun announced the superiority of Ali ibn Abu Talib over Abu Bakr and Umar b al Khattab 42 in 833 CE under the influence of Muʿtazila rationalist thought he initiated the mihna ordeal where he accepted the argument that the Quran was created at some point over the orthodox Sunni belief that the Book was coeternal with God However Shi ites condemn al Ma mun as well due to the belief that he was responsible for Ali al Ridha s poisoning and eventual death in 818 CE In the ensuing power struggle other Abbasids sought to depose Ma mun in favor of Ibrahim ibn al Mahdi Ma mun s uncle 44 therefore getting rid of al Ridha was the only realistic way of retaining united absolute unopposed rule 45 Al Ma mun ordered that al Ridha be buried next to the tomb of his own father Harun al Rashid and showed extreme sorrow in the funeral ritual and stayed for three days at the place Muhammad al Jawad Ali al Ridha s son and successor lived unopposed and free during the rest of Al Ma mun s reign till 833 CE The Caliph summoned al Jawad to Baghdad in order to marry his daughter Ummul Fadhl This apparently provoked strenuous objections by the Abbasids According to Ya qubi al Ma mun gave al Jawad one hundred thousand dirham and said Surely I would like to be a grandfather in the line of the Apostle of God and of Ali ibn Abu Talib 46 References EditCitations Edit Rekaya M 24 April 2012 al Maʾmun Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Retrieved 20 September 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Rekaya 1991 p 331 El Hibri 2010 p 274 Kennedy 2004 pp 133 135 El Hibri 2010 p 282 El Hibri 2010 pp 282 283 Kennedy 2004 p 142 Kennedy 2004 pp 142 143 a b c El Hibri 2010 p 283 Kennedy 2004 p 144 Kennedy 2004 pp 144 145 Kennedy Hugh 1986 The Prophet and the Age of the Caliphates 2nd ed London and New York Pearson Longman pp 148 150 ISBN 0 582 49312 9 a b Lapidus Ira M 1975 Separation of state and religion in early Islamic society International Journal of Middle East Studies 6 375 doi 10 1017 S0020743800025344 JSTOR 162750 S2CID 162409061 Retrieved 2 July 2021 a b Lapidus Ira M 1975 Separation of state and religion in early Islamic society International Journal of Middle East Studies 6 376 doi 10 1017 S0020743800025344 JSTOR 162750 S2CID 162409061 Retrieved 2 July 2021 a b Lapidus Ira M 1975 Separation of state and religion in early Islamic society International Journal of Middle East Studies 6 363 385 doi 10 1017 S0020743800025344 JSTOR 162750 S2CID 162409061 Retrieved 2 July 2021 Why was Imam al Reza A S Invited to Khurasan Imam Reza Network Retrieved 3 July 2021 W Madelung 1 August 2011 ALi AL REZA the eighth Imam of the Imami Shiʿites Iranicaonline org Archived from the original on 21 September 2012 Retrieved 18 June 2014 al Qarashi Baqir Sharif The life of Imam Ali Bin Musa al Rida Translated by Jasim al Rasheed Archived from the original on 5 January 2011 Retrieved 22 September 2014 Mavani Hamid 2013 Religious Authority and Political Thought in Twelver Islam New York Routledge pp 276 ISBN 9781135044732 Retrieved 3 July 2021 The History of al Ṭabari v 32 p 95 Tesdell Lee S 1999 Greek Rhetoric and Philosophy in Medieval Arabic Culture The State of the Research In Poster Carol Utz Richard eds Discourses of Power Grammar and Rhetoric in the Middle Ages Evanston IL Northwestern University Press pp 51 58 ISBN 0 8101 1812 2 Angelo Joseph 2009 Encyclopedia of Space and Astronomy p 78 ISBN 9781438110189 Goldschmidt Arthur 2002 A concise history of the Middle East Boulder Colorado Westview Press pp 78 ISBN 978 0 8133 3885 9 Michael Hamilton Morgan Lost History page 57 E J Brill s First Encyclopaedia of Islam 1993 Vol 4 p 1011 Rechnagel Charles 15 October 2004 World Historian Reveals Incredible Contributions of Muslim Cartographers Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty Retrieved 5 March 2015 Gabra 2003 p 112 a b c Ibn al Saʿi 2017 p 23 a b Ibn al Saʿi 2017 p 26 Turner 2013 a b c Ibn al Saʿi 2017 p 15 a b Ibn al Saʿi 2017 p 19 Ibn al Saʿi 2017 p 20 Ibn al Saʿi 2017 p 22 Ibn al Saʿi 2017 p 32 Bosworth 1987 p 82 Bosworth 1987 pp 224 231 Al Ma mun Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature USGS Astrogeology Research Program Naqawi Taʾthir i qiyamha yi ʿalawiyan p 141 Dhahabi Siyar aʿlam al nubalaʾ vol 11 p 236 Ibn Kathir al Bidaya wa l nihaya vol 10 p 275 279 Ibn khaldun al ʿIbar vol 2 p 272 Suyuṭi Tarikh al khulafaʾ p 363 Item 13113 Abbasid Medieval Islam al Ma mun AH 194 218 Silver dirham 204AH Isfahan mint with Ali ibn Musa al Rida as heir RARE Album 224 DIFFICULT TO FIND a b Suyuṭi Tarikh al khulafaʾ p 364 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2 June 2021 Retrieved 1 June 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Donaldson Dwight M 1933 The Shi ite Religion A History of Islam in Persia and Irak Burleigh Press pp 161 170 According to Madelung the unexpected death of the Alid successor whose presence would have made any reconciliation with the powerful ʿAbbasid opposition in Baghdad virtually impossible must indeed arouse strong suspicion that Ma mun had had a hand in the deaths Donaldson Dwight M 1933 The Shi ite Religion A History of Islam in Persia and Iraḳ AMS Press pp 190 197 Notes Edit al Ma mun was a Sunni Muslim with Mu tazili and pro Alid tendencies Sources Edit Bosworth C E ed 1987 The History of al Ṭabari Volume XXXII The Reunification of the ʿAbbasid Caliphate The Caliphate of al Maʾmun A D 813 33 A H 198 213 SUNY Series in Near Eastern Studies Albany New York State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 88706 058 8 Cooperson Michael 2005 Al Ma mun Makers of the Muslim world Oxford Oneworld ISBN 9781851683864 Daniel Elton L 1979 The Political and Social History of Khurasan under Abbasid Rule 747 820 Minneapolis amp Chicago Bibliotheca Islamica Inc ISBN 978 0 88297 025 7 El Hibri Tayeb 1999 Al Maʾmun the heretic Caliph Reinterpreting Islamic Historiography Harun al Rashi d and the Narrative of the ʿAbbasid Caliphate Cambridge University Press pp 95 142 ISBN 0 521 65023 2 El Hibri Tayeb 2010 The empire in Iraq 763 861 In Robinson Chase F ed The New Cambridge History of Islam Volume 1 The Formation of the Islamic World Sixth to Eleventh Centuries Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 269 304 ISBN 978 0 521 83823 8 Fishbein Michael ed 1992 The History of al Ṭabari Volume XXXI The War Between Brothers The Caliphate of Muḥammad al Amin A D 809 813 A H 193 198 SUNY Series in Near Eastern Studies Albany New York State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 1085 1 Gabra Gawdat 2003 The Revolts of the Bashmuric Copts in the Eighth and Ninth Centuries In W Beltz ed Die koptische Kirche in den ersten drei islamischen Jahrhunderten Institut fur Orientalistik Martin Luther Universitat pp 111 119 John Bagot Glubb The Empire of the Arabs Hodder and Stoughton London 1963 Ibn al Saʿi 2017 Consorts of the Caliphs Women and the Court of Baghdad Translated by Shawkat M Toorawa Introduction by Julia Bray Foreword by Marina Warner New York New York University Press ISBN 978 1 4798 0477 1 E de la Vaissiere Samarcande et Samarra Elites d Asie centrale dans l empire Abbasside Peeters 2007 1 Archived 16 August 2019 at the Wayback Machine Dimitri Gutas Greek Thought Arabic culture the Graeco Arabic translation movement in Baghdad and early Abbasid society Routledge London 1998 Hugh N Kennedy The Early Abbasid Caliphate a political History Croom Helm London 1981 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 John Nawas A Reexamination of three current explanations for Al Ma mun s introduction of the Mihna International Journal of Middle East Studies 26 1994 pp 615 629 John Nawas The Mihna of 218 A H 833 A D Revisited An Empirical Study Journal of the American Oriental Society 116 4 1996 pp 698 708 Nawas John Abdallah 2015 Al Maʼmun the Inquisition and the Quest for Caliphal Authority Atlanta Georgia Lockwood Press ISBN 978 1 937040 55 0 Rekaya M 1991 al Maʾmun 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 331 339 ISBN 978 90 04 08112 3 Peter Tompkins Secrets of the Great Pyramid chapter 2 Harper and Row 1971 Turner John P 2013 al ʿAbbas b al Maʾmun 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 24639 ISSN 1873 9830 External links Edit Wikisource has original works by or about al Maʾmun in English Al Mamum Building an Environment for Innovation Berggren Len 2007 Maʾmun Abu al ʿAbbas ʿAbdallah ibn Harun al Rashid In Thomas Hockey et al eds The Biographical Encyclopedia of Astronomers New York Springer p 733 ISBN 978 0 387 31022 0 PDF version Al Ma munAbbasid dynastyBorn 786 Died 833Sunni Islam titlesPreceded byAl Amin Caliph of the Abbasid Caliphate813 9 August 833 Succeeded byAl Mu tasim Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Al Ma 27mun amp oldid 1132996710, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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