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Al-Muti

Abū ʾl-Qāsim al-Faḍl ibn al-Muqtadir (Arabic: أبو القاسم الفضل بن المقتدر; 913/14 – September/October 974), better known by his regnal name of al-Mutīʿ li-ʾllāh (Arabic: المطيع لله, lit.'Obedient to God'[1]), was the Abbasid caliph in Baghdad from 946 to 974, ruling under the tutelage of the Buyid emirs.

Al-Mutīʿ li-ʾllāh
المطيع لله
Khalīfah
Amir al-Mu'minin
Copper fals of the Samanid ruler Mansur I ibn Nuh, citing al-Muti as overlord, Bukhara, 964/65 CE
23rd Caliph of the Abbasid Caliphate
Reign28 January 946 – 5 August 974
PredecessorAl-Mustakfi
SuccessorAl-Ta'i
Born913/14
Baghdad
Died12 October 974 (aged 60)
Dayr al-Aqul
Burial
Al-Rusafa, Baghdad
IssueAl-Ta'i
Names
Abu'l-Qasim al-Fadl ibn Jaʿfar al-Muqtadir al-Mutiʿ li-ʾllāh
DynastyAbbasid
FatherAl-Muqtadir
MotherMash'ala
ReligionSunni Islam

Al-Muti's reign represented the nadir of the Abbasid caliphate's power and authority. In previous decades, the secular authority of the caliphs had shrunk to Iraq, and even there had been curtailed by powerful warlords; with the Buyid conquest of Baghdad, it was now abolished entirely. Al-Muti was raised to the throne by the Buyids and was effectively reduced to a rubber-stamp figurehead, albeit with some vestiges of authority over judicial and religious appointments in Iraq. The very fact of his subordination and powerlessness helped restore some stability to the caliphal institution: in stark contrast to his short-lived and violently deposed predecessors, al-Muti enjoyed a long and relatively unchallenged tenure, and was able to hand over the throne to his son al-Ta'i.

Al-Muti's prestige as the nominal leader of the Muslim world sharply declined during his tenure. Regional rivals to the Buyids delayed their recognition of al-Muti's caliphate, seeing in him only a Buyid puppet, and his inability to respond effectively to Byzantine advances tarnished his reputation. More importantly, the rise of Shi'a regimes across the Middle East directly challenged Sunni and Abbasid predominance. The Buyids themselves were Shi'a, but they retained the Abbasid caliphate out of expedience. Further west, the expanding Fatimid Caliphate posed a direct ideological and political challenge to the Abbasids. During al-Muti's reign, the Fatimids conquered Egypt and started to expand into the Levant, threatening Baghdad itself.

Biography

Early life

The future al-Muti was born in Baghdad in 913/14 as al-Fadl, a son of the Abbasid caliph, al-Muqtadir (r. 908–932), and a Slavic concubine, Mash'ala.[2][3] He was the brother of caliphs al-Radi (r. 934–940) and al-Muttaqi (r. 940–944).[2] Al-Muti grew up in a time of crisis. Al-Muqtadir's reign was marked by factional strife, attacks by the Qarmatians, economic decline and revenue shortages that led to military unrest, culminating in the murder of the caliph in 932.[4] During the subsequent reigns of al-Radi and al-Muttaqi, the Abbasid central government lost control of the provinces to regional military strongmen. Even in the Abbasid metropolitan region of Iraq, military strongmen deprived the caliphs of real authority, and vied with one another for the title of amir al-umara (commander-in-chief, lit.'chief emir') and the attendant control of the Abbasid government apparatus in Baghdad, that would allow them to pay their restive troops.[5][6] Al-Muttaqi himself had been raised to the throne by the amir al-umara Bajkam, but attempted to play off the regional warlords—notably the Hamdanids of Mosul—to recover the independence and authority of his office. These attempts ended in failure, and resulted in his deposition and blinding by the amir al-umara Tuzun in September 944.[7][8]

As the chief of the remaining sons of al-Muqtadir and brother of the two previous caliphs, al-Fadl was an obvious candidate for the throne.[9] Tuzun instead chose al-Mustakfi (r. 944–946), a son of Caliph al-Muktafi (r. 902–908).[10] The medieval sources report that al-Mustakfi and al-Fadl hated each other, and quarreled already during their stay in the Tahirid Palace as young princes. Not only were they members of two rival lines of succession, but their characters were diametrically opposed: though al-Fadl, like his father, was renowned for his piety, al-Mustakfi offended pious opinion by his association with the ayyarun militia—drawn from the poorer urban classes, they were often decried as troublemakers and suspected for their association with heterodox and sectarian groups like the Sufis[11][12]—and his participation in 'vulgar' games.[9] Once al-Mustakfi was enthroned, he sent his agents to capture al-Muti, but the latter had already gone into hiding, and the caliph had to satisfy himself with demolishing his house.[1][9] This futile act only served to mark al-Fadl as a serious rival; on hearing of it, the veteran vizier, Ali ibn Isa, is said to have remarked that "This day he [al-Fadl] has been acknowledged heir to the throne."[1]

Caliphate

Rise to the throne

 
The domains of the Buyid dynasty, controlling Iraq and large parts of Iran, and the other states of the Middle East in c. 970

In December 945, the Daylamite troops of the Buyid ruler Mu'izz al-Dawla (r. 945–967) seized Baghdad. Mu'izz al-Dawla became the de facto 'protector' of the Abbasid caliph, although the title of amir al-umara apparently passed to his older brother, Imad al-Dawla, who was reckoned as the chief Buyid emir.[13][a] On 29 January 946 (or 9 March, according to other accounts), al-Mustakfi was deposed,[2][15] and on the same day, Mu'izz al-Dawla raised al-Fadl to the caliphate, with the regnal name of al-Muti li-'llah (lit.'Obedient to God').[1][16] The sudden reappearance of al-Muti, and his rise to the throne, was apparently a surprise to contemporaries, and led to stories that he had conspired with the Buyids already since the time of al-Muktafi's accession.[17]

Medieval sources tended to justify this change on religious grounds. The Buyids and their followers were Shi'a sympathizers, and two later chroniclers, Muhammad ibn Abd al-Malik al-Hamadhani (d. 1127) and Ibn al-Athir (d. 1233), report that Mu'izz al-Dawla toyed with the idea of deposing the Abbasids outright and installing an Alid on the throne of Baghdad, only to be dissuaded by his secretary, Abu Ja'far al-Saymari, who pointed out that in a clash between himself and a Shi'a caliph, the Daylamite soldiery were likely to side with the latter.[1][18] This is clearly a later anachronistic interpolation,[b] and the historian John Donohue disclaims any religious motivation in al-Mustakfi's deposition. Other chroniclers provide several reasons, such as the caliph's intrigues with the Hamdanids, or al-Fadl's emerging from hiding and inciting the Buyid ruler against his cousin, but the chief reason was likely simply that Mu'izz al-Dawla wished to have a caliph who was under his full control with no external sources of support.[19]

The deposed al-Mustakfi was blinded, apparently as a revenge act initiated by al-Muti, and spent the rest of his life as a prisoner in the caliphal palace, where he died in September 949.[20]

Role and relations with the Buyids

Al-Muti was a weak figure, for all intents and purposes a puppet ruler of the Buyid ruler of Iraq, first Mu'izz al-Dawla, and then his son, Izz al-Dawla (r. 967–978). As a result of his lack of real power, al-Muti himself barely figures in the chronicles of his reign, and medieval historians generally considered his tenure as the lowest ebb of the Abbasid caliphate,[2] an opinion shared by modern scholars as well.[21]

"[The Buyids] were not out to overthrow the established order but to find a place in it and, like many of the Germanic leaders who assumed power in the Roman empire in the fifth century, they were more concerned to maintain the status quo and derive legitimacy from it than they were to destroy it."

Historian Hugh Kennedy on the Buyids' retention of the Abbasid caliphate[22]

In theory, the Buyids and all their officials in Iraq continued to act in the name of the Abbasid caliph, and all appointments and legal acts continued to be made in his name.[22][23] In practice, al-Muti was deprived of any meaningful authority. In exchange for being allowed to lead a comfortable and secure life in the vast caliphal palaces, he served to provide legitimacy to the upstart Buyid regime in the eyes of the Muslim world.[2][24] The options of abolishing the caliphate or installing an Alid as caliph were quickly rejected, if they were ever seriously entertained: such an act would cause widespread opposition, another Sunni caliphate might easily be set up elsewhere, but a docile caliph under Buyid control would help maintain the obedience of the Sunni majority to the new regime, as well as lend its symbolic weight to the Buyids in their relations with the other Muslim princes.[22][25] Furthermore, there was a lack of suitable Alid candidates: the last imam of the Twelver Shi'a, who represented the main strand of Shi'a followers in the Buyid domains, was held to have gone into occultation seventy years earlier, and Zaydi doctrine held that the imams had to seize power themselves if they were to be legitimate.[22][26]

The Buyids quickly integrated themselves into the traditional Abbasid system and eagerly sought the legitimacy conferred by the caliph, in the form of honorific titles and diplomas of governorship, or in his signature in treaties.[27] At the same time, al-Muti was effectively reduced to a salaried state official, and his responsibility was curtailed to the oversight over the judiciary, religious institutions, and the affairs of the members of the wider Abbasid clan.[3] The caliph's chief secretary was no longer termed 'vizier' (wazir), but merely 'secretary' (katib), and his role was limited to the management of the diwan al-khilafa, a department managing the caliph's properties, the formal conferment of titles and offices and certificates in the name of the caliph, and the appointment of judges and jurors.[28] In reality, judicial appointments too were under the purview of the Buyid emir, but at least for the more senior ones, such as the chief qadi of Baghdad, the caliph was expected to provide his assent, the robe of honour and the requisite diploma. With one known exception, al-Muti generally complied with the emir's appointments.[29]

The Buyids kept a close watch on the caliph, especially during their periodic conflicts with the Hamdanids, lest he might try to defect to them, as al-Muttaqi had done. During the battles of summer 946, when the Hamdanids briefly occupied East Baghdad, he was kept under house arrest in a church in West Baghdad, and not released until he had sworn an oath of loyalty to the Buyids.[30] Whenever Mu'izz al-Dawla campaigned against rebels south of Baghdad, al-Muti was forced to accompany the Buyid ruler, lest he defect north to the Hamdanids. Conversely, when the Buyid amir al-umara campaigned against the Hamdanids in the north, al-Muti was left behind in Baghdad.[31] In 948/49, Ispahdost, Mu'izz al-Dawla's brother-in-law, was arrested on suspicion of conspiring with al-Muti (or with an unnamed Alid).[32]

 
Gold dinar of the Ikhshidid ruler Abu al-Misk Kafur minted in 966 in Ramla, Palestine, in the name of al-Muti

Upon taking power, Mu'izz al-Dawla distributed the former caliphal crown domains for the upkeep of the army, and al-Muti had to content himself with a daily salary of 2,000 silver dirhams. When Basra was recovered from the Baridi family shortly after, he was assigned extensive possessions there, raising his income to 200,000 gold dinars per year.[33][34] Although the general decline of Iraq later reduced his income by three quarters of its original value, this allowed the caliph to financially support members of the Abbasid clan in need, and to make rich gifts to the Kaaba.[33] The income also sufficed for the construction of a series of pavilions in the caliphal palace grounds: the Peacock Palace (Dar al-Tawawis), the Octagon House (Dar al-Muthammana) and the Square House (Dar al-Murabba'a).[35][36]

The troubled relations between the caliph and the Buyids gradually assumed a more regular and tranquil character: the Buyids at least formally respected the caliph's remaining responsibilities, and al-Muti apparently accepted his subservient role, regained some freedom of action, and maintained cordial relations with Mu'izz al-Dawla.[37][38] In 955/56, Mu'izz al-Dawla even appointed his 13-year-old son, the future Izz al-Dawla, as the caliph's chamberlain.[39] The most notable exception to the good relationship between the caliph and the amir al-umara was the latter's attempt to rent out the appointment of chief qadi of Baghdad to Abdallah ibn Abi al-Shawarib for 200,000 dirhams per year between 961 and 963. This was opposed by both Sunni and Shi'a scholars as illegal, and al-Muti refused to sign the appointments made by Mu'izz al-Dawla during this period.[3][40] This is also almost the only reference in the sources to al-Muti's activity in the religious or judicial sphere; otherwise his reign is passed over in silence.[41]

A positive corollary of this subservience was stability.[2] Although of a sickly disposition, al-Muti reigned as caliph for 29 Hijri years and four months, in stark contrast to his short-lived predecessors, and unlike them had to contend with remarkably few rival pretenders to the caliphate.[42] A grandson of al-Muktafi rebelled in Armenia in 960 and claimed the caliphate as al-Mustajir Billah before being defeated by the local Sallarid rulers.[43][44] In 968, Abu'l-Hasan Muhammad, a son of al-Mustakfi, who had fled to the Ikhshidid court in Egypt, gained considerable support in Iraq by hiding his identity and posing as the Mahdi (the Islamic messiah). The leading convert to his cause was a Buyid commander, the Turk Sübüktegin al-Ajami, who gave him protection and was preparing to mount a coup in his name, before his identity was uncovered and he was handed over to al-Muti.[44][45] The caliph did not severely punish him, other than ordering his nose cut off, thereby disqualifying him from the succession;[46] although Abu'l-Hasan Muhammad eventually managed to escape, his hopes of seizing the throne were never realized, and the caliphal succession henceforth firmly remained with the line of al-Muqtadir.[47]

Facing the Shi'a and Byzantine challenges

"The Sacred War would be incumbent on me if the world were in my hands, and if I had the management of the money and the troops. As things are, when all I have is a pittance, insufficient for my wants, and the world is in your hands and those of the provincial rulers, neither the Sacred War, nor the Pilgrimage, nor any other matter requiring the attention of the Sovereign is a concern of mine. All you can claim from me is the name which is uttered in the khutbah from your pulpits as a means of pacifying your subjects; and if you want me to renounce that privilege too, I am prepared to do so and leave everything to you."

Al-Muti's reply to Izz al-Dawla's demand to finance the jihad against the Byzantines[48]

Outside the Buyid domains, on the other hand, the Abbasid caliph's authority over the wider Muslim world declined.[3] Until the conclusion of a peace with the Buyids in 955, the Samanids of Khurasan refused to acknowledge his caliphate,[2][49] and, in the west, the rival Isma'ili Shi'a Fatimid Caliphate was growing more and more powerful,[2] conquering Egypt in 969 and beginning its expansion into the Levant.[50] Even in Baghdad, the pro-Shi'a sympathies of the Buyids meant that Shi'a influence, although numerically small, was growing. Shi'a practices were introduced in the city, such as the ritual condemnation of the Umayyad caliph Mu'awiya, or the celebration of the Ghadir Khumm festival, attested since 963. Alids assumed the leadership of the annual Hajj caravans, and street clashes between Sunni and Shi'a partisans are recorded in several years during this period.[51]

At the same time, al-Muti played a leading role as a mediator in the formation of an anti-Fatimid coalition that included the Qarmatians under al-Hasan al-A'sam and the Hamdanid ruler of Mosul, Abu Taghlib, with the backing of the Buyids. This coalition managed to stop the Fatimid expansion into the Levant until 973/74.[3][52] In the process, the Qarmatians recognized al-Muti's suzerainty in the khutbah (Friday sermon) and their coins, and denounced the Fatimids as impostors.[3][53] In 951, when the Qarmatians returned the Black Stone to the Kaaba in Mecca, whence they had taken it in 930,[54] al-Muti is rumoured to have paid them 30,000 gold dinars as the Stone's ransom.[3]

Another source of danger was the Byzantine advance against the Hamdanids in Upper Mesopotamia and northern Syria. In the 960s the Byzantines broke the centuries-old border at the Taurus Mountains and seized Cilicia and Antioch, reducing the Hamdanid emirate of Aleppo to a tributary vassal in the process.[55] In 972, the Byzantine raids reached Nisibis, Amida, and Edessa. Muslim refugees from these cities flooded to Baghdad and clamoured for protection. Unwilling and unable to help, Izz al-Dawla pointed them to al-Muti, since the jihad was still formally the caliph's responsibility. Bereft of any military or financial resources, al-Muti was powerless to help them, and his prestige suffered accordingly; the riots engulfed the Shi'a quarter of Karkh, which went up in flames.[3][56][57] Izz al-Dawla used the opportunity to pressure al-Muti into selling off his valuables and providing 400,000 dirhams, ostensibly to be used to employ soldiers against the Byzantines. Al-Muti protested in a much-quoted letter, but had no option but to comply; the money was soon squandered by the profligate Buyid ruler. This act proved to be a costly political mistake for Izz al-Dawla, further alienating Sunni sympathies in Baghdad, where his control grew even more tenuous.[58][59]

Abdication and death

Over the years, Izz al-Dawla increasingly alienated his Turkic soldiery, under their commander Sabuktakin, culminating in a failed assassination attempt on the latter.[60] The Turks had also gained the support of the Sunni populace in Baghdad after putting down the riots in 972.[59] As a result, on 1 August 974, Sabuktakin seized control of Baghdad from Izz al-Dawla.[3]

When the coup happened, al-Muti left Baghdad along with the members of the Buyid clan, but Sabuktakin forced him back and confined him to his palace.[3][61] Of advanced years, and with his right side paralyzed following a stroke in 970,[3][62][63] al-Muti was induced to abdicate with his health as a pretext, and was replaced by his son Abd al-Karim, as al-Ta'i (r. 974–991), on 5 August.[2][3][64] This was the first father-to-son succession of the caliphate since al-Muktafi in 902.[62]

Sabuktakin had himself appointed amir al-umara by the new caliph,[65] and left Baghdad to campaign against the Buyids, accompanied by both al-Muti and al-Ta'i.[3] Al-Muti died on the way, at Dayr al-Aqul, on 12 October 974.[2][3] He was buried at the mausoleum of his paternal grandmother, Shaghab, in the Baghdad quarter of al-Rusafa, where his brother al-Radi had also been buried.[66]

Notes

  1. ^ On Imad al-Dawla's death in 949, the title of amir al-umara passed to the middle brother, Rukn al-Dawla, while Mu'izz al-Dawla continued to govern Iraq and 'protect' the Caliph as his brother's deputy.[14]
  2. ^ Al-Hamadhani names the Rassid Zaydi imam Abu'l-Hasan Muhammad ibn Yahya as the preferred candidate, and Ibn al-Athir asserts that it was the Isma'ili Fatimid caliph, al-Mu'izz li-Din Allah. Both are incorrect, since Abu'l-Hasan had died nine years earlier, and al-Mu'izz li-Din Allah only ascended the throne in 953.[18]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Bowen 1928, p. 392.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Zetterstéen & Bosworth 1993, p. 799.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Güner 2006, p. 401.
  4. ^ Kennedy 2004, pp. 185–193.
  5. ^ Kennedy 2004, pp. 191–197.
  6. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 17–19.
  7. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 21–24.
  8. ^ Kennedy 2004, pp. 196, 312.
  9. ^ a b c Busse 2004, p. 25.
  10. ^ Busse 2004, p. 23.
  11. ^ Tor 2014.
  12. ^ Donohue 2003, pp. 340–346.
  13. ^ Donohue 2003, pp. 13–14, 18.
  14. ^ Donohue 2003, p. 19 (esp. note 18).
  15. ^ Özaydin 2006, p. 139.
  16. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 27, 153.
  17. ^ Busse 2004, p. 27.
  18. ^ a b Donohue 2003, pp. 14–15.
  19. ^ Donohue 2003, pp. 15–17.
  20. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 158–159.
  21. ^ Hanne 2007, p. 101.
  22. ^ a b c d Kennedy 2004, p. 216.
  23. ^ Donohue 2003, p. 266.
  24. ^ Kennedy 2004, pp. 216, 239.
  25. ^ Cahen 1960, p. 1350.
  26. ^ Cahen 1960, pp. 1350, 1352.
  27. ^ Donohue 2003, pp. 265–266.
  28. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 229–230, 312–313.
  29. ^ Donohue 2003, p. 121.
  30. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 143, 189.
  31. ^ Busse 2004, p. 143.
  32. ^ Donohue 2003, p. 40.
  33. ^ a b Busse 2004, pp. 149–150.
  34. ^ Donohue 2003, p. 17.
  35. ^ Le Strange 1922, p. 259.
  36. ^ Busse 2004, p. 191.
  37. ^ Donohue 2003, pp. 51, 62.
  38. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 27–28.
  39. ^ Donohue 2003, pp. 51, 52.
  40. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 266–267.
  41. ^ Busse 2004, p. 137.
  42. ^ Donohue 2003, pp. 18, 263.
  43. ^ Donohue 2003, p. 263.
  44. ^ a b Busse 2004, p. 29.
  45. ^ Donohue 2003, pp. 56, 263–264.
  46. ^ Busse 2004, p. 158.
  47. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 28, 29.
  48. ^ Hanne 2007, p. 32.
  49. ^ Busse 2004, p. 28.
  50. ^ Kennedy 2004, pp. 315–322.
  51. ^ Donohue 2003, pp. 48–50.
  52. ^ Brett 2001, pp. 313–314.
  53. ^ Busse 2004, p. 410.
  54. ^ Kennedy 2004, p. 288.
  55. ^ Donohue 2003, p. 268.
  56. ^ Busse 2004, p. 146.
  57. ^ Donohue 2003, pp. 268–269.
  58. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 146–147, 150.
  59. ^ a b Donohue 2003, pp. 269–270.
  60. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 43–44.
  61. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 143–144.
  62. ^ a b Busse 2004, p. 153.
  63. ^ Donohue 2003, p. 270 (note 37).
  64. ^ Kennedy 2004, p. 224.
  65. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 44, 144.
  66. ^ Busse 2004, p. 200.

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Al-Muti
Born: 913/14 Died: 12 October 974
Sunni Islam titles
Preceded by Caliph of the Abbasid Caliphate
29 January/9 March 946 – 5 August 974
Succeeded by

muti, abū, qāsim, faḍl, muqtadir, arabic, أبو, القاسم, الفضل, بن, المقتدر, september, october, better, known, regnal, name, mutīʿ, ʾllāh, arabic, المطيع, لله, obedient, abbasid, caliph, baghdad, from, ruling, under, tutelage, buyid, emirs, mutīʿ, ʾllāh, المطيع. Abu ʾl Qasim al Faḍl ibn al Muqtadir Arabic أبو القاسم الفضل بن المقتدر 913 14 September October 974 better known by his regnal name of al Mutiʿ li ʾllah Arabic المطيع لله lit Obedient to God 1 was the Abbasid caliph in Baghdad from 946 to 974 ruling under the tutelage of the Buyid emirs Al Mutiʿ li ʾllah المطيع للهKhalifah Amir al Mu mininCopper fals of the Samanid ruler Mansur I ibn Nuh citing al Muti as overlord Bukhara 964 65 CE23rd Caliph of the Abbasid CaliphateReign28 January 946 5 August 974PredecessorAl MustakfiSuccessorAl Ta iBorn913 14BaghdadDied12 October 974 aged 60 Dayr al AqulBurialAl Rusafa BaghdadIssueAl Ta iNamesAbu l Qasim al Fadl ibn Jaʿfar al Muqtadir al Mutiʿ li ʾllahDynastyAbbasidFatherAl MuqtadirMotherMash alaReligionSunni IslamAl Muti s reign represented the nadir of the Abbasid caliphate s power and authority In previous decades the secular authority of the caliphs had shrunk to Iraq and even there had been curtailed by powerful warlords with the Buyid conquest of Baghdad it was now abolished entirely Al Muti was raised to the throne by the Buyids and was effectively reduced to a rubber stamp figurehead albeit with some vestiges of authority over judicial and religious appointments in Iraq The very fact of his subordination and powerlessness helped restore some stability to the caliphal institution in stark contrast to his short lived and violently deposed predecessors al Muti enjoyed a long and relatively unchallenged tenure and was able to hand over the throne to his son al Ta i Al Muti s prestige as the nominal leader of the Muslim world sharply declined during his tenure Regional rivals to the Buyids delayed their recognition of al Muti s caliphate seeing in him only a Buyid puppet and his inability to respond effectively to Byzantine advances tarnished his reputation More importantly the rise of Shi a regimes across the Middle East directly challenged Sunni and Abbasid predominance The Buyids themselves were Shi a but they retained the Abbasid caliphate out of expedience Further west the expanding Fatimid Caliphate posed a direct ideological and political challenge to the Abbasids During al Muti s reign the Fatimids conquered Egypt and started to expand into the Levant threatening Baghdad itself Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Caliphate 1 2 1 Rise to the throne 1 2 2 Role and relations with the Buyids 1 2 3 Facing the Shi a and Byzantine challenges 1 2 4 Abdication and death 2 Notes 3 References 4 SourcesBiography EditEarly life Edit The future al Muti was born in Baghdad in 913 14 as al Fadl a son of the Abbasid caliph al Muqtadir r 908 932 and a Slavic concubine Mash ala 2 3 He was the brother of caliphs al Radi r 934 940 and al Muttaqi r 940 944 2 Al Muti grew up in a time of crisis Al Muqtadir s reign was marked by factional strife attacks by the Qarmatians economic decline and revenue shortages that led to military unrest culminating in the murder of the caliph in 932 4 During the subsequent reigns of al Radi and al Muttaqi the Abbasid central government lost control of the provinces to regional military strongmen Even in the Abbasid metropolitan region of Iraq military strongmen deprived the caliphs of real authority and vied with one another for the title of amir al umara commander in chief lit chief emir and the attendant control of the Abbasid government apparatus in Baghdad that would allow them to pay their restive troops 5 6 Al Muttaqi himself had been raised to the throne by the amir al umara Bajkam but attempted to play off the regional warlords notably the Hamdanids of Mosul to recover the independence and authority of his office These attempts ended in failure and resulted in his deposition and blinding by the amir al umara Tuzun in September 944 7 8 As the chief of the remaining sons of al Muqtadir and brother of the two previous caliphs al Fadl was an obvious candidate for the throne 9 Tuzun instead chose al Mustakfi r 944 946 a son of Caliph al Muktafi r 902 908 10 The medieval sources report that al Mustakfi and al Fadl hated each other and quarreled already during their stay in the Tahirid Palace as young princes Not only were they members of two rival lines of succession but their characters were diametrically opposed though al Fadl like his father was renowned for his piety al Mustakfi offended pious opinion by his association with the ayyarun militia drawn from the poorer urban classes they were often decried as troublemakers and suspected for their association with heterodox and sectarian groups like the Sufis 11 12 and his participation in vulgar games 9 Once al Mustakfi was enthroned he sent his agents to capture al Muti but the latter had already gone into hiding and the caliph had to satisfy himself with demolishing his house 1 9 This futile act only served to mark al Fadl as a serious rival on hearing of it the veteran vizier Ali ibn Isa is said to have remarked that This day he al Fadl has been acknowledged heir to the throne 1 Caliphate Edit Rise to the throne Edit The domains of the Buyid dynasty controlling Iraq and large parts of Iran and the other states of the Middle East in c 970 In December 945 the Daylamite troops of the Buyid ruler Mu izz al Dawla r 945 967 seized Baghdad Mu izz al Dawla became the de facto protector of the Abbasid caliph although the title of amir al umara apparently passed to his older brother Imad al Dawla who was reckoned as the chief Buyid emir 13 a On 29 January 946 or 9 March according to other accounts al Mustakfi was deposed 2 15 and on the same day Mu izz al Dawla raised al Fadl to the caliphate with the regnal name of al Muti li llah lit Obedient to God 1 16 The sudden reappearance of al Muti and his rise to the throne was apparently a surprise to contemporaries and led to stories that he had conspired with the Buyids already since the time of al Muktafi s accession 17 Medieval sources tended to justify this change on religious grounds The Buyids and their followers were Shi a sympathizers and two later chroniclers Muhammad ibn Abd al Malik al Hamadhani d 1127 and Ibn al Athir d 1233 report that Mu izz al Dawla toyed with the idea of deposing the Abbasids outright and installing an Alid on the throne of Baghdad only to be dissuaded by his secretary Abu Ja far al Saymari who pointed out that in a clash between himself and a Shi a caliph the Daylamite soldiery were likely to side with the latter 1 18 This is clearly a later anachronistic interpolation b and the historian John Donohue disclaims any religious motivation in al Mustakfi s deposition Other chroniclers provide several reasons such as the caliph s intrigues with the Hamdanids or al Fadl s emerging from hiding and inciting the Buyid ruler against his cousin but the chief reason was likely simply that Mu izz al Dawla wished to have a caliph who was under his full control with no external sources of support 19 The deposed al Mustakfi was blinded apparently as a revenge act initiated by al Muti and spent the rest of his life as a prisoner in the caliphal palace where he died in September 949 20 Role and relations with the Buyids Edit Al Muti was a weak figure for all intents and purposes a puppet ruler of the Buyid ruler of Iraq first Mu izz al Dawla and then his son Izz al Dawla r 967 978 As a result of his lack of real power al Muti himself barely figures in the chronicles of his reign and medieval historians generally considered his tenure as the lowest ebb of the Abbasid caliphate 2 an opinion shared by modern scholars as well 21 The Buyids were not out to overthrow the established order but to find a place in it and like many of the Germanic leaders who assumed power in the Roman empire in the fifth century they were more concerned to maintain the status quo and derive legitimacy from it than they were to destroy it Historian Hugh Kennedy on the Buyids retention of the Abbasid caliphate 22 In theory the Buyids and all their officials in Iraq continued to act in the name of the Abbasid caliph and all appointments and legal acts continued to be made in his name 22 23 In practice al Muti was deprived of any meaningful authority In exchange for being allowed to lead a comfortable and secure life in the vast caliphal palaces he served to provide legitimacy to the upstart Buyid regime in the eyes of the Muslim world 2 24 The options of abolishing the caliphate or installing an Alid as caliph were quickly rejected if they were ever seriously entertained such an act would cause widespread opposition another Sunni caliphate might easily be set up elsewhere but a docile caliph under Buyid control would help maintain the obedience of the Sunni majority to the new regime as well as lend its symbolic weight to the Buyids in their relations with the other Muslim princes 22 25 Furthermore there was a lack of suitable Alid candidates the last imam of the Twelver Shi a who represented the main strand of Shi a followers in the Buyid domains was held to have gone into occultation seventy years earlier and Zaydi doctrine held that the imams had to seize power themselves if they were to be legitimate 22 26 The Buyids quickly integrated themselves into the traditional Abbasid system and eagerly sought the legitimacy conferred by the caliph in the form of honorific titles and diplomas of governorship or in his signature in treaties 27 At the same time al Muti was effectively reduced to a salaried state official and his responsibility was curtailed to the oversight over the judiciary religious institutions and the affairs of the members of the wider Abbasid clan 3 The caliph s chief secretary was no longer termed vizier wazir but merely secretary katib and his role was limited to the management of the diwan al khilafa a department managing the caliph s properties the formal conferment of titles and offices and certificates in the name of the caliph and the appointment of judges and jurors 28 In reality judicial appointments too were under the purview of the Buyid emir but at least for the more senior ones such as the chief qadi of Baghdad the caliph was expected to provide his assent the robe of honour and the requisite diploma With one known exception al Muti generally complied with the emir s appointments 29 The Buyids kept a close watch on the caliph especially during their periodic conflicts with the Hamdanids lest he might try to defect to them as al Muttaqi had done During the battles of summer 946 when the Hamdanids briefly occupied East Baghdad he was kept under house arrest in a church in West Baghdad and not released until he had sworn an oath of loyalty to the Buyids 30 Whenever Mu izz al Dawla campaigned against rebels south of Baghdad al Muti was forced to accompany the Buyid ruler lest he defect north to the Hamdanids Conversely when the Buyid amir al umara campaigned against the Hamdanids in the north al Muti was left behind in Baghdad 31 In 948 49 Ispahdost Mu izz al Dawla s brother in law was arrested on suspicion of conspiring with al Muti or with an unnamed Alid 32 Gold dinar of the Ikhshidid ruler Abu al Misk Kafur minted in 966 in Ramla Palestine in the name of al Muti Upon taking power Mu izz al Dawla distributed the former caliphal crown domains for the upkeep of the army and al Muti had to content himself with a daily salary of 2 000 silver dirhams When Basra was recovered from the Baridi family shortly after he was assigned extensive possessions there raising his income to 200 000 gold dinars per year 33 34 Although the general decline of Iraq later reduced his income by three quarters of its original value this allowed the caliph to financially support members of the Abbasid clan in need and to make rich gifts to the Kaaba 33 The income also sufficed for the construction of a series of pavilions in the caliphal palace grounds the Peacock Palace Dar al Tawawis the Octagon House Dar al Muthammana and the Square House Dar al Murabba a 35 36 The troubled relations between the caliph and the Buyids gradually assumed a more regular and tranquil character the Buyids at least formally respected the caliph s remaining responsibilities and al Muti apparently accepted his subservient role regained some freedom of action and maintained cordial relations with Mu izz al Dawla 37 38 In 955 56 Mu izz al Dawla even appointed his 13 year old son the future Izz al Dawla as the caliph s chamberlain 39 The most notable exception to the good relationship between the caliph and the amir al umara was the latter s attempt to rent out the appointment of chief qadi of Baghdad to Abdallah ibn Abi al Shawarib for 200 000 dirhams per year between 961 and 963 This was opposed by both Sunni and Shi a scholars as illegal and al Muti refused to sign the appointments made by Mu izz al Dawla during this period 3 40 This is also almost the only reference in the sources to al Muti s activity in the religious or judicial sphere otherwise his reign is passed over in silence 41 A positive corollary of this subservience was stability 2 Although of a sickly disposition al Muti reigned as caliph for 29 Hijri years and four months in stark contrast to his short lived predecessors and unlike them had to contend with remarkably few rival pretenders to the caliphate 42 A grandson of al Muktafi rebelled in Armenia in 960 and claimed the caliphate as al Mustajir Billah before being defeated by the local Sallarid rulers 43 44 In 968 Abu l Hasan Muhammad a son of al Mustakfi who had fled to the Ikhshidid court in Egypt gained considerable support in Iraq by hiding his identity and posing as the Mahdi the Islamic messiah The leading convert to his cause was a Buyid commander the Turk Subuktegin al Ajami who gave him protection and was preparing to mount a coup in his name before his identity was uncovered and he was handed over to al Muti 44 45 The caliph did not severely punish him other than ordering his nose cut off thereby disqualifying him from the succession 46 although Abu l Hasan Muhammad eventually managed to escape his hopes of seizing the throne were never realized and the caliphal succession henceforth firmly remained with the line of al Muqtadir 47 Facing the Shi a and Byzantine challenges Edit The Sacred War would be incumbent on me if the world were in my hands and if I had the management of the money and the troops As things are when all I have is a pittance insufficient for my wants and the world is in your hands and those of the provincial rulers neither the Sacred War nor the Pilgrimage nor any other matter requiring the attention of the Sovereign is a concern of mine All you can claim from me is the name which is uttered in the khutbah from your pulpits as a means of pacifying your subjects and if you want me to renounce that privilege too I am prepared to do so and leave everything to you Al Muti s reply to Izz al Dawla s demand to finance the jihad against the Byzantines 48 Outside the Buyid domains on the other hand the Abbasid caliph s authority over the wider Muslim world declined 3 Until the conclusion of a peace with the Buyids in 955 the Samanids of Khurasan refused to acknowledge his caliphate 2 49 and in the west the rival Isma ili Shi a Fatimid Caliphate was growing more and more powerful 2 conquering Egypt in 969 and beginning its expansion into the Levant 50 Even in Baghdad the pro Shi a sympathies of the Buyids meant that Shi a influence although numerically small was growing Shi a practices were introduced in the city such as the ritual condemnation of the Umayyad caliph Mu awiya or the celebration of the Ghadir Khumm festival attested since 963 Alids assumed the leadership of the annual Hajj caravans and street clashes between Sunni and Shi a partisans are recorded in several years during this period 51 At the same time al Muti played a leading role as a mediator in the formation of an anti Fatimid coalition that included the Qarmatians under al Hasan al A sam and the Hamdanid ruler of Mosul Abu Taghlib with the backing of the Buyids This coalition managed to stop the Fatimid expansion into the Levant until 973 74 3 52 In the process the Qarmatians recognized al Muti s suzerainty in the khutbah Friday sermon and their coins and denounced the Fatimids as impostors 3 53 In 951 when the Qarmatians returned the Black Stone to the Kaaba in Mecca whence they had taken it in 930 54 al Muti is rumoured to have paid them 30 000 gold dinars as the Stone s ransom 3 Another source of danger was the Byzantine advance against the Hamdanids in Upper Mesopotamia and northern Syria In the 960s the Byzantines broke the centuries old border at the Taurus Mountains and seized Cilicia and Antioch reducing the Hamdanid emirate of Aleppo to a tributary vassal in the process 55 In 972 the Byzantine raids reached Nisibis Amida and Edessa Muslim refugees from these cities flooded to Baghdad and clamoured for protection Unwilling and unable to help Izz al Dawla pointed them to al Muti since the jihad was still formally the caliph s responsibility Bereft of any military or financial resources al Muti was powerless to help them and his prestige suffered accordingly the riots engulfed the Shi a quarter of Karkh which went up in flames 3 56 57 Izz al Dawla used the opportunity to pressure al Muti into selling off his valuables and providing 400 000 dirhams ostensibly to be used to employ soldiers against the Byzantines Al Muti protested in a much quoted letter but had no option but to comply the money was soon squandered by the profligate Buyid ruler This act proved to be a costly political mistake for Izz al Dawla further alienating Sunni sympathies in Baghdad where his control grew even more tenuous 58 59 Abdication and death Edit Over the years Izz al Dawla increasingly alienated his Turkic soldiery under their commander Sabuktakin culminating in a failed assassination attempt on the latter 60 The Turks had also gained the support of the Sunni populace in Baghdad after putting down the riots in 972 59 As a result on 1 August 974 Sabuktakin seized control of Baghdad from Izz al Dawla 3 When the coup happened al Muti left Baghdad along with the members of the Buyid clan but Sabuktakin forced him back and confined him to his palace 3 61 Of advanced years and with his right side paralyzed following a stroke in 970 3 62 63 al Muti was induced to abdicate with his health as a pretext and was replaced by his son Abd al Karim as al Ta i r 974 991 on 5 August 2 3 64 This was the first father to son succession of the caliphate since al Muktafi in 902 62 Sabuktakin had himself appointed amir al umara by the new caliph 65 and left Baghdad to campaign against the Buyids accompanied by both al Muti and al Ta i 3 Al Muti died on the way at Dayr al Aqul on 12 October 974 2 3 He was buried at the mausoleum of his paternal grandmother Shaghab in the Baghdad quarter of al Rusafa where his brother al Radi had also been buried 66 Notes Edit On Imad al Dawla s death in 949 the title of amir al umara passed to the middle brother Rukn al Dawla while Mu izz al Dawla continued to govern Iraq and protect the Caliph as his brother s deputy 14 Al Hamadhani names the Rassid Zaydi imam Abu l Hasan Muhammad ibn Yahya as the preferred candidate and Ibn al Athir asserts that it was the Isma ili Fatimid caliph al Mu izz li Din Allah Both are incorrect since Abu l Hasan had died nine years earlier and al Mu izz li Din Allah only ascended the throne in 953 18 References Edit a b c d e Bowen 1928 p 392 a b c d e f g h i j Zettersteen amp Bosworth 1993 p 799 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Guner 2006 p 401 Kennedy 2004 pp 185 193 Kennedy 2004 pp 191 197 Busse 2004 pp 17 19 Busse 2004 pp 21 24 Kennedy 2004 pp 196 312 a b c Busse 2004 p 25 Busse 2004 p 23 Tor 2014 Donohue 2003 pp 340 346 Donohue 2003 pp 13 14 18 Donohue 2003 p 19 esp note 18 Ozaydin 2006 p 139 Busse 2004 pp 27 153 Busse 2004 p 27 a b Donohue 2003 pp 14 15 Donohue 2003 pp 15 17 Busse 2004 pp 158 159 Hanne 2007 p 101 a b c d Kennedy 2004 p 216 Donohue 2003 p 266 Kennedy 2004 pp 216 239 Cahen 1960 p 1350 Cahen 1960 pp 1350 1352 Donohue 2003 pp 265 266 Busse 2004 pp 229 230 312 313 Donohue 2003 p 121 Busse 2004 pp 143 189 Busse 2004 p 143 Donohue 2003 p 40 a b Busse 2004 pp 149 150 Donohue 2003 p 17 Le Strange 1922 p 259 Busse 2004 p 191 Donohue 2003 pp 51 62 Busse 2004 pp 27 28 Donohue 2003 pp 51 52 Busse 2004 pp 266 267 Busse 2004 p 137 Donohue 2003 pp 18 263 Donohue 2003 p 263 a b Busse 2004 p 29 Donohue 2003 pp 56 263 264 Busse 2004 p 158 Busse 2004 pp 28 29 Hanne 2007 p 32 Busse 2004 p 28 Kennedy 2004 pp 315 322 Donohue 2003 pp 48 50 Brett 2001 pp 313 314 Busse 2004 p 410 Kennedy 2004 p 288 Donohue 2003 p 268 Busse 2004 p 146 Donohue 2003 pp 268 269 Busse 2004 pp 146 147 150 a b Donohue 2003 pp 269 270 Busse 2004 pp 43 44 Busse 2004 pp 143 144 a b Busse 2004 p 153 Donohue 2003 p 270 note 37 Kennedy 2004 p 224 Busse 2004 pp 44 144 Busse 2004 p 200 Sources EditBowen Harold 1928 The Life and Times of ʿAli Ibn ʿIsa The Good Vizier Cambridge Cambridge University Press OCLC 386849 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 Boston Koln Brill ISBN 90 04 11741 5 Busse Heribert 2004 1969 Chalif und Grosskonig Die Buyiden im Irak 945 1055 Caliph and Great King The Buyids in Iraq 945 1055 in German Wurzburg Ergon Verlag ISBN 3 89913 005 7 Cahen Cl 1960 Buwayhids or Buyids In Gibb H A R Kramers J H Levi Provencal E Schacht J Lewis B amp Pellat Ch eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam New Edition Volume I A B Leiden E J Brill pp 1350 1357 OCLC 495469456 Donohue John J 2003 The Buwayhid Dynasty in Iraq 334 H 945 to 403 H 1012 Shaping Institutions for the Future Leiden and Boston Brill ISBN 90 04 12860 3 Guner Ahmet 2006 Muti Lillah TDV Encyclopedia of Islam Vol 31 Muhammedi yye Munazara in Turkish Istanbul Turkiye Diyanet Foundation Centre for Islamic Studies pp 401 402 ISBN 978 975 389 458 6 Hanne Eric J 2007 Putting the Caliph in His Place Power Authority and the Late Abbasid Caliphate Madison New Jersey Fairleigh Dickinson University Press ISBN 978 0 8386 4113 2 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 Le Strange Guy 1922 Baghdad During the Abbasid Caliphate From Contemporary Arabic and Persian Sources Second ed Oxford Clarendon Press Ozaydin Abdulkerim 2006 Mustekfi Bi llah TDV Encyclopedia of Islam Vol 32 el Munci d Nasi h in Turkish Istanbul Turkiye Diyanet Foundation Centre for Islamic Studies pp 139 140 ISBN 978 975 389 454 8 Tor Deborah 2014 ʿAyyar In Fleet Kate Kramer Gudrun Matringe Denis Nawas John Rowson Everett eds Encyclopaedia of Islam THREE Brill Online ISSN 1873 9830 Zettersteen K V amp Bosworth C E 1993 al Muṭiʿ Li llah In Bosworth C E van Donzel E Heinrichs W P amp Pellat Ch eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam New Edition Volume VII Mif Naz Leiden E J Brill p 799 ISBN 978 90 04 09419 2 Al MutiAbbasid dynastyBorn 913 14 Died 12 October 974Sunni Islam titlesPreceded byAl Mustakfi Caliph of the Abbasid Caliphate29 January 9 March 946 5 August 974 Succeeded byAl Ta i Portals Biography Iraq Islam Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Al Muti amp oldid 1124631222, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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