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al-Ta'i'

Abu Bakr ʿAbd al-Karīm ibn al-Faḍl (Arabic: أبو بكر عبد الكريم بن الفضل; 932 – 3 August 1003), better known by his regnal name al-Ṭāʾiʿ liʾllāh/biʾllāh (Arabic: الطائع لله\بالله, lit.'He Who Obeys God's Command'), was the Abbasid caliph of Baghdad from 974 to his deposition in 991. He was in office during the domination of Iraq by the Shi'a Buyid dynasty, and as a result is generally considered a powerless figurehead under the thumb of the Buyid emirs. His tenure was also marked by strife between rival Buyid rulers and the frequent change of hands of Baghdad: al-Ta'i' himself was raised to the throne by a rebel Turkic general, Sabuktakin, who deposed al-Ta'i's father, al-Muti'. During periods of such strife, al-Ta'i' was able to exert some measure of political independence, but under stronger rulers he was sidelined, and was obliged to marry the daughters of the emirs Izz al-Dawla and Adud al-Dawla. Al-Ta'i's status suffered under Adud al-Dawla in particular, who turned to pre-Islamic Persian models for legitimacy, and relegated Iraq to the status of a simple province ruled from Fars. Al-Ta'i' was deposed on 22 November 991 by Baha al-Dawla, and replaced with his cousin, al-Qadir. He spent the rest of his days, until his death in 1003, confined to the caliphal palace.

al-Ṭāʾiʿ liʾllāh
الطائع لله
Caliph
Commander of the Faithful
Gold dinar of the Buyid ruler Adud al-Dawla, in the name of al-Ta'i' as caliph
24th Caliph of the Abbasid Caliphate
Reign5 August 974 – 22 November 991
Predecessoral-Muti'
Successoral-Qadir
Bornc. 929
Baghdad
Died3 August 1003 (aged 73–74)
Baghdad, Iraq
Burial
Baghdad
SpouseShah Zanan bint Izz al-Dawla (m. 977)[1][2]
Bint 'Adud al-Dawla[1]
DynastyAbbasid
Fatheral-Muti'
MotherUtb
ReligionSunni Islam

Origin and early life edit

Abd al-Karim, the future al-Ta'i', was born in Baghdad in 929 as the son of the Abbasid prince al-Fadl, son of Caliph al-Muqtadir, and a concubine of Greek origin, called Utb.[3][4] As an adult, al-Ta'i's face was marked by smallpox, and he had a prominent nose, which became the object of satire by contemporaries.[5]

His father came to the throne as caliph al-Muti' in 946, following the capture of Baghdad by the Buyid dynasty.[6][7] While themselves espousing Shi'a beliefs, the Buyids nevertheless decided to retain the Abbasid caliphs out of expediency, and to provide them legitimacy in the eyes of the other Muslim rulers. In practice, however, al-Muti' was a puppet of the ruling Buyid emir of Iraq.[8][9] A positive corollary of this subservience was that it brought stability to the caliphal throne: 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.[10]

Caliphate edit

Rise to the throne edit

On 1 August 974, the Turkic general Sabuktakin seized control of Baghdad from the Buyid ruler Izz al-Dawla.[3] When the coup happened, al-Muti' left Baghdad along with the expelled members of the Buyid clan, but Sabuktakin forced him back and confined him to his palace.[11] Al-Muti' was induced to abdicate with his health as a pretext, and was replaced by his oldest son, Abu Bakr Abd al-Karim, as Caliph al-Ta'i' li'llah on 5 August 974 (13 Dhu'l-Qa'dah 363 AH).[3][12][13] This was the first father-to-son succession of the caliphate since al-Muktafi in 902.[14]

Like his father, al-Ta'i' is considered by medieval and modern historians alike to have been a powerless figurehead, limited to appending his name to certificates of appointment and official correspondence, with others holding the real power.[4] He played no role even in the numerous religious controversies of his day, and little is known about his activities other than his often conducting the Friday prayer at the Kadhimayn mosque,[15] and his rebuilding the Bab al-hassa, one of the principal gates to the caliphal palace complex.[16] The historian Heribert Busse however points out that al-Ta'i' managed to maintain his office for sixteen years in a very turbulent time, involving no fewer than six regime changes in Baghdad, and credits him with political acumen and flexibility.[17]

The new caliph promptly named Sabuktakin as the chief emir (amir al-umara), with the honorific title Nasir al-Dawla.[12][18] Before long, Sabuktakin, accompanied by al-Ta'i' and al-Muti', marched on Wasit, where the Buyid forces under Izz al-Dawla and his cousin, Adud al-Dawla, the ruler of Fars, gathered.[3][19] Sabuktakin died on the way, and was succeeded by another Turkic ghulam, Alptakin. The Turks were defeated in January 975 near the Diyala River, and withdrew north to Tikrit, before they fled to Syria, while the Buyids entered Baghdad.[19][20] Al-Ta'i's position under the Turks is unclear. He sent letters to Izz al-Dawla berating him of his errors and omissions as governor, but in later public letters he cursed them and claimed that he had been using dissimulation (taqiyya) in apparently siding with them.[21] Thus historian John Donohue writes of the "brief six months of independence that the caliphate enjoyed under the Turk rebels", [22] while Heribert Busse writes of the caliph as being virtually the prisoner of the Turks.[23]

At any rate, al-Ta'i' was soon able to recover his position at least somewhat, making use of the Buyids' quarrels and their need for legitimacy: in Baghdad, Adud al-Dawla deposed his cousin and assumed rule of the city. Leaving Tikrit, al-Ta'i' returned to Baghdad, where Adud al-Dawla received him with respect and restored to him his domains, that had apparently been confiscated (it is unclear by whom, likely by Izz al-Dawla).[3][22][24] There are indications that he consulted with al-Ta'i' for a formal investment as emir, and his name was included in the Friday prayer before that of Izz al-Dawla. In the event, Adud al-Dawla bowed to pressure by his father, the senior Buyid emir Rukn al-Dawla, to withdraw and allow Iraq to remain a separate emirate under Izz al-Dawla.[25][26]

Under Izz al-Dawla edit

 
The domains of the Buyid dynasty and the other states of the Middle East in c. 970

Following Adud al-Dawla's departure, Izz al-Dawla tried to consolidate his regime and gather allies against his cousin's hegemonic ambitions. This effort was also in al-Ta'i's interests, and included the awarding by the caliph of several honorific titles with the suffix al-Dawla to regional potentates, as well as Izz al-Dawla's vizier, Ibn Baqiyya.[27]

When Rukn al-Dawla died in September 976, Adud al-Dawla seized control of the eastern half of the Buyid realm, while Izz al-Dawla in Iraq made himself de facto independent. Al-Ta'i' seized the opportunity to deepen the rift between the two cousins by conceding to the ambitious Izz al-Dawla high privileges that made him the co-equal of Adud al-Dawla: Ibn Baqiyya was named joint vizier of Izz al-Dawla and the caliph, Izz al-Dawla's titles were extended, and finally, the caliph himself married a daughter of the Buyid emir.[28] Offended and challenged in his authority as successor of Rukn al-Dawla, Adud al-Dawla moved against his cousin. After a suitable delay likely meant to demonstrate his independence, al-Ta'i' joined Izz al-Dawla at his camp at Khuzistan, and sent a letter proposing peace to Adud al-Dawla. When this was rejected and Adud al-Dawla marched on his cousin, in a symbolic assertion of his independence, the caliph left the camp and returned to Baghdad. Adud al-Dawla defeated Izz al-Dawla in July 977, entering Baghdad on 23 December.[29]

Under Adud al-Dawla edit

In a formal ceremony, Adud al-Dawla was invested as amir al-umara by al-Ta'i', with extensive new honours:[30] he was awarded a crown and jewel-studded necklace, given the honorific Taj al-Milla ('Crown of the Muslim Community'), as well as a banner for himself and his heir, something hitherto reserved for the designated heirs of the caliphs.[3] Adud al-Dawla also requested two special privileges: allowing him to enter the caliphal audience chamber on horseback, and the erection of a curtain so that when he prostrated himself in front of the caliph, this gesture of submission would not be seen by his companions.[31] The caliph pointedly refused these demands, and even had a barrier built in front of the audience chamber, so that the Buyid ruler had no choice but dismount and enter on foot.[32] Al-Ta'i' did, however, agree to the addition of some details to the ceremony that hearkened back to ancient Persian protocol, and that made it appear to the Buyid's companions as if Adud al-Dawla had been crowned king by the caliph. It is unclear whether al-Ta'i' was aware of the significance of these changes.[33][34] Al-Ta'i' also agreed to accompany Adud al-Dawla in his campaign that defeated the remnants of Izz al-Dawla's forces at Samarra in May 978, whereupon he returned to Baghdad.[35]

As the coronation episode reveals, Adud al-Dawla, and the Buyids generally, relied increasingly on pre-Islamic Persian traditions, ceremonies, and titles to bolster their position and claim an independent source of legitimacy.[36][37][38] According to C. E. Bosworth, the Buyid ruler aimed at "a division of power between the caliphate and the monarchy, equivalent to the mediaeval European theories of church and empire", a conception entirely alien to al-Ta'i's worldview.[39] Perhaps obliged to acquiesce to caliphal slights in order to secure recognition of his rule over Iraq, Adud al-Dawla initially treated al-Ta'i' with deference,[34] restoring him all his privileges and paying for the renovation of the caliphal palace.[39]

As soon as Izz al-Dawla and his Hamdanid allies in Upper Mesopotamia were defeated though, Adud al-Dawla launched a purge against the caliph's immediate environment, imprisoning the vizier Ibrahim al-Sabi, the chief qadi Ibn Ma'ruf, and other senior members of the Baghdad court.[40] The dismissal of Ibn Ma'ruf in particular was a violation of the main remaining prerogative of the caliph under Buyid rule, namely the appointment of the chief qadi of Baghdad and Iraq.[41][42] The posts of both the vizier and the chief qadi of Iraq were left vacant, and substituted by those for the Buyid capital province of Fars. Iraq was thus effectively reduced to a regular province of the Buyid empire, governed from a new imperial centre.[36][43] Adud al-Dawla even usurped the last remaining, symbolic aspects of the caliph's office, namely the nomination of officials and governors in his name.[44]

When Adud al-Dawla returned to Baghdad in 980, following his eastern campaigns, al-Ta'i' in person led the Buyid emir into the city; an unprecedented event, but, as Bosworth comments, "once again the caliph seems to have failed to appreciate the significance of the ceremony in which he was taking part".[45] In a further move to bind the caliph closer to himself, in the second half of 980, Adud al-Dawla arranged for the marriage of one of his daughters with al-Ta'i'. If Adud al-Dawla may have hoped, as the contemporary historian Miskawayh has it, that the offspring of this union would one day unite the Abbasid caliphate with the Buyid kingship, it was not to be. Al-Ta'i' saw this marriage at worst as forced upon him, and at best as a token of distinction and condescension towards the Buyid emir, and resolutely refused to consummate it.[45][46] This led to the final breach between al-Ta'i' and Adud al-Dawla, who introduced the provocative, Persian-derived and entirely un-Islamic title of shahanshah ('King of Kings') into his coinage even in Iraq.[31][47]

Under Adud al-Dawla's successors edit

Adud al-Dawla died on 26 March 983 at the age of 49, leaving behind a large but unconsolidated empire, and an unregulated succession.[48] Initially, the Buyid commanders gave the oath of allegiance to Adud al-Dawla's second son, Marzuban, under the name of Samsam al-Dawla. Al-Ta'i' recognized the succession, investing Samsam al-Dawla with the title of Shams al-Milla.[3][49] Adud al-Dawla's oldest son, Shirdil, known as Sharaf al-Dawla, refused to accept this and seized Fars, thus limiting Samsam al-Dawla to Iraq, but even there the latter faced challengers: Upper Mesopotamia was lost to the Kurd Badh, while two younger sons of Adud al-Dawla held Khuzistan and Basra. In the eastern territories of the Buyid empire, at the same time, their uncle Fakhr al-Dawla laid claim to Adud al-Dawla's succession, claiming the tile of shahanshah for himself.[50]

The Buyid quarrels offered opportunities for al-Ta'i': the officials ousted by Adud al-Dawla were reinstated, and the danger of Iraq's permanent relegation to a province ruled from elsewhere was ended for now, as it once again became a separate political unit under one of the Buyid emirs.[51] Samsam al-Dawla reverted, at least formally, to making all appointments 'on the command of the Commander of the Faithful',[52] and the disunity of the Buyids would allow the caliph to play a political role as arbiter between the quarreling emirs.[53] In c. 985, he granted a subsidy to the Samanids towards the protection of the frontiers of Islam,[54] and mediated a peace agreement between Samsam al-Dawla and Sharaf al-Dawla, after the latter occupied Khuzistan and Basra. In the treaty, concluded in June 986, Sharaf al-Dawla was recognized as the chief emir, and his name included in the Friday prayers in Baghdad. Both parties explicitly placed themselves under the caliph's formal authority.[55][56] In the event, Sharaf al-Dawla quickly reneged on the agreement: using clashes between Daylamites and Turks in Baghdad as a pretext, he marched on the city, captured and imprisoned his brother in January 987, and was invested by the caliph as chief emir in May 987.[56][57]

Sharaf al-Dawla's ascendancy was brief, as he died at Baghdad on 7 September 988.[56][58] As his two sons were underage, he was succeeded by his younger brother Abu Nasr Firuz, with the regnal name of Baha al-Dawla. Al-Ta'i' recognized the succession, and invested Baha al-Dawla with the title of Diya al-Milla.[3][56] Baha al-Dawla was quickly attacked by Fakhr al-Dawla, but the two Buyid emirs quickly came to terms—again with the caliph as arbiter—recognizing each other as rulers over their respective realms.[58]

Deposition and succession edit

Bereft of money with which to pay his army, the Buyid emir followed the advice of the powerful head of the chancery, Abu'l-Hasan ibn al-Mu'allim, to depose al-Ta'i' in order to seize the caliphal treasury.[3][4][59] On 22 November 991 (12 Ramadan 381 AH), under the pretext of an audience, Baha al-Dawla's men seized the caliph. While the caliphal palace was plundered, the caliph was wrapped in a robe and brought to the emir's residence, where he was placed under arrest.[3][4] He was succeeded by his cousin Abu'l-Abbas Ahmad, who took the throne as al-Qadir.[4][60]

Al-Ta'i' had had strained relations with his cousin: in 988, the latter's half-sister, apparently motivated by an inheritance dispute, reported him as seeking to replace al-Ta'i' as caliph. To escape capture, Ahmad went into hiding for a while, before seeking refuge with the governor of the swamps of Bathihah near Basra, Muhadhdhib al-Dawla, for about three years.[61][60] From there, Ahmad plotted against al-Ta'i', harping on his own loyalty to the Buyids, and drawing contrast to the fact that al-Ta'i' had been installed by a Turk.[60]

Al-Ta'i' remained under arrest until September 992, when he was allowed to move to the caliphal palace. Despite their previous differences, al-Qadir treated him well.[4] Al-Ta'i' was not blinded, as had been the case for previous deposed caliphs, and he was accorded treatment due to a reigning caliph.[62] Al-Ta'i' died at the palace on 3 August 1003, and was buried in Rusafa,[4][5] at a mausoleum he had erected across from the tombs of his father, al-Muti', and of his great-grandmother, the mother of al-Muqtadir, Shaghab.[63]

Al-Ta'i's deposition had a long denouement: considering al-Qadir a puppet of the Buyids, the eastern dynasties of the Samanids and Ghaznavids refused to recognize the succession until 999/1000, continuing to use al-Ta'i's name in the Friday prayer and on coins until then.[4][5][64] Furthermore, a relative of the deposed caliph, Abdallah ibn Ja'far, managed to escape custody in Baghdad and fled to Gilan, where he persuaded the local ruler that he was indeed al-Ta'i'. Only after Baghdad found out about this pretender was his true identity revealed.[64]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Rudainy, Al; Saud, Reem (June 12, 2015). "The Role of Women in the Būyid and Saljūq Periods of the Abbasid Caliphate (339-447/9501055&447-547/1055-1152): The Case of Iraq". University of Exeter. pp. 57, 58–59. Retrieved April 14, 2024.
  2. ^ El-Azhari, T. (2019). Queens, Eunuchs and Concubines in Islamic History, 661-1257. Edinburgh Studies in Classical Islamic History and Culture. Edinburgh University Press. p. 85. ISBN 978-1-4744-2319-9.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Demircan 2010, p. 447.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Zetterstéen & Bosworth 2000, p. 115.
  5. ^ a b c Demircan 2010, p. 448.
  6. ^ Donohue 2003, pp. 13–15, 18.
  7. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 27, 153.
  8. ^ Kennedy 2004, pp. 216, 239.
  9. ^ Donohue 2003, p. 266.
  10. ^ Donohue 2003, pp. 18, 263.
  11. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 143–144.
  12. ^ a b Donohue 2003, p. 270.
  13. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 44, 143–144.
  14. ^ Busse 2004, p. 153.
  15. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 137–138.
  16. ^ Busse 2004, p. 191.
  17. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 47–48.
  18. ^ Busse 2004, p. 44.
  19. ^ a b Kennedy 2004, p. 224.
  20. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 44–45, 144.
  21. ^ Donohue 2003, pp. 271–272.
  22. ^ a b Donohue 2003, p. 271.
  23. ^ Busse 2004, p. 144.
  24. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 48, 144, 151.
  25. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 44–46, 48.
  26. ^ Donohue 2003, p. 273.
  27. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 47–49, 251.
  28. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 49, 51.
  29. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 51–52, 58, 144.
  30. ^ Busse 2004, p. 52.
  31. ^ a b Bosworth 1975, p. 275.
  32. ^ Bosworth 1975, pp. 275–276.
  33. ^ Bosworth 1975, p. 276.
  34. ^ a b Busse 2004, p. 58.
  35. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 52, 58, 144.
  36. ^ a b Bürgel & Mottahedeh 1988, pp. 265–269.
  37. ^ Bosworth 1975, pp. 274–277.
  38. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 174–179.
  39. ^ a b Bosworth 1975, p. 277.
  40. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 58–59.
  41. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 59, 136.
  42. ^ Donohue 2003, p. 121.
  43. ^ Busse 2004, p. 59.
  44. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 135–136.
  45. ^ a b Bosworth 1975, p. 278.
  46. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 59–60.
  47. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 60, 176.
  48. ^ Busse 2004, p. 61.
  49. ^ Bosworth 1975, p. 289.
  50. ^ Bosworth 1975, pp. 289–291.
  51. ^ Busse 2004, p. 68.
  52. ^ Busse 2004, p. 136.
  53. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 68–69.
  54. ^ Busse 2004, p. 147.
  55. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 65–66, 136.
  56. ^ a b c d Bosworth 1975, p. 291.
  57. ^ Busse 2004, p. 66.
  58. ^ a b Busse 2004, p. 67.
  59. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 69, 304.
  60. ^ a b c Busse 2004, p. 69.
  61. ^ Küçükaşcı 2001, p. 127.
  62. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 157–159.
  63. ^ Busse 2004, p. 200.
  64. ^ a b Busse 2004, p. 70.

Sources edit

al-Ta'i'
Born: 929 Died: 3 August 1003
Sunni Islam titles
Preceded by Caliph of the Abbasid Caliphate
974 – 991
Succeeded by

bakr, ʿabd, karīm, faḍl, arabic, أبو, بكر, عبد, الكريم, بن, الفضل, august, 1003, better, known, regnal, name, Ṭāʾiʿ, liʾllāh, biʾllāh, arabic, الطائع, لله, بالله, obeys, command, abbasid, caliph, baghdad, from, deposition, office, during, domination, iraq, buy. Abu Bakr ʿAbd al Karim ibn al Faḍl Arabic أبو بكر عبد الكريم بن الفضل 932 3 August 1003 better known by his regnal name al Ṭaʾiʿ liʾllah biʾllah Arabic الطائع لله بالله lit He Who Obeys God s Command was the Abbasid caliph of Baghdad from 974 to his deposition in 991 He was in office during the domination of Iraq by the Shi a Buyid dynasty and as a result is generally considered a powerless figurehead under the thumb of the Buyid emirs His tenure was also marked by strife between rival Buyid rulers and the frequent change of hands of Baghdad al Ta i himself was raised to the throne by a rebel Turkic general Sabuktakin who deposed al Ta i s father al Muti During periods of such strife al Ta i was able to exert some measure of political independence but under stronger rulers he was sidelined and was obliged to marry the daughters of the emirs Izz al Dawla and Adud al Dawla Al Ta i s status suffered under Adud al Dawla in particular who turned to pre Islamic Persian models for legitimacy and relegated Iraq to the status of a simple province ruled from Fars Al Ta i was deposed on 22 November 991 by Baha al Dawla and replaced with his cousin al Qadir He spent the rest of his days until his death in 1003 confined to the caliphal palace al Ṭaʾiʿ liʾllahالطائع للهCaliph Commander of the FaithfulGold dinar of the Buyid ruler Adud al Dawla in the name of al Ta i as caliph24th Caliph of the Abbasid CaliphateReign5 August 974 22 November 991Predecessoral Muti Successoral QadirBornc 929 BaghdadDied3 August 1003 aged 73 74 Baghdad IraqBurialBaghdadSpouseShah Zanan bint Izz al Dawla m 977 1 2 Bint Adud al Dawla 1 DynastyAbbasidFatheral Muti MotherUtbReligionSunni Islam Contents 1 Origin and early life 2 Caliphate 2 1 Rise to the throne 2 2 Under Izz al Dawla 2 3 Under Adud al Dawla 2 4 Under Adud al Dawla s successors 3 Deposition and succession 4 See also 5 References 6 SourcesOrigin and early life editAbd al Karim the future al Ta i was born in Baghdad in 929 as the son of the Abbasid prince al Fadl son of Caliph al Muqtadir and a concubine of Greek origin called Utb 3 4 As an adult al Ta i s face was marked by smallpox and he had a prominent nose which became the object of satire by contemporaries 5 His father came to the throne as caliph al Muti in 946 following the capture of Baghdad by the Buyid dynasty 6 7 While themselves espousing Shi a beliefs the Buyids nevertheless decided to retain the Abbasid caliphs out of expediency and to provide them legitimacy in the eyes of the other Muslim rulers In practice however al Muti was a puppet of the ruling Buyid emir of Iraq 8 9 A positive corollary of this subservience was that it brought stability to the caliphal throne 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 10 Caliphate editRise to the throne edit On 1 August 974 the Turkic general Sabuktakin seized control of Baghdad from the Buyid ruler Izz al Dawla 3 When the coup happened al Muti left Baghdad along with the expelled members of the Buyid clan but Sabuktakin forced him back and confined him to his palace 11 Al Muti was induced to abdicate with his health as a pretext and was replaced by his oldest son Abu Bakr Abd al Karim as Caliph al Ta i li llah on 5 August 974 13 Dhu l Qa dah 363 AH 3 12 13 This was the first father to son succession of the caliphate since al Muktafi in 902 14 Like his father al Ta i is considered by medieval and modern historians alike to have been a powerless figurehead limited to appending his name to certificates of appointment and official correspondence with others holding the real power 4 He played no role even in the numerous religious controversies of his day and little is known about his activities other than his often conducting the Friday prayer at the Kadhimayn mosque 15 and his rebuilding the Bab al hassa one of the principal gates to the caliphal palace complex 16 The historian Heribert Busse however points out that al Ta i managed to maintain his office for sixteen years in a very turbulent time involving no fewer than six regime changes in Baghdad and credits him with political acumen and flexibility 17 The new caliph promptly named Sabuktakin as the chief emir amir al umara with the honorific title Nasir al Dawla 12 18 Before long Sabuktakin accompanied by al Ta i and al Muti marched on Wasit where the Buyid forces under Izz al Dawla and his cousin Adud al Dawla the ruler of Fars gathered 3 19 Sabuktakin died on the way and was succeeded by another Turkic ghulam Alptakin The Turks were defeated in January 975 near the Diyala River and withdrew north to Tikrit before they fled to Syria while the Buyids entered Baghdad 19 20 Al Ta i s position under the Turks is unclear He sent letters to Izz al Dawla berating him of his errors and omissions as governor but in later public letters he cursed them and claimed that he had been using dissimulation taqiyya in apparently siding with them 21 Thus historian John Donohue writes of the brief six months of independence that the caliphate enjoyed under the Turk rebels 22 while Heribert Busse writes of the caliph as being virtually the prisoner of the Turks 23 At any rate al Ta i was soon able to recover his position at least somewhat making use of the Buyids quarrels and their need for legitimacy in Baghdad Adud al Dawla deposed his cousin and assumed rule of the city Leaving Tikrit al Ta i returned to Baghdad where Adud al Dawla received him with respect and restored to him his domains that had apparently been confiscated it is unclear by whom likely by Izz al Dawla 3 22 24 There are indications that he consulted with al Ta i for a formal investment as emir and his name was included in the Friday prayer before that of Izz al Dawla In the event Adud al Dawla bowed to pressure by his father the senior Buyid emir Rukn al Dawla to withdraw and allow Iraq to remain a separate emirate under Izz al Dawla 25 26 Under Izz al Dawla edit nbsp The domains of the Buyid dynasty and the other states of the Middle East in c 970 Following Adud al Dawla s departure Izz al Dawla tried to consolidate his regime and gather allies against his cousin s hegemonic ambitions This effort was also in al Ta i s interests and included the awarding by the caliph of several honorific titles with the suffix al Dawla to regional potentates as well as Izz al Dawla s vizier Ibn Baqiyya 27 When Rukn al Dawla died in September 976 Adud al Dawla seized control of the eastern half of the Buyid realm while Izz al Dawla in Iraq made himself de facto independent Al Ta i seized the opportunity to deepen the rift between the two cousins by conceding to the ambitious Izz al Dawla high privileges that made him the co equal of Adud al Dawla Ibn Baqiyya was named joint vizier of Izz al Dawla and the caliph Izz al Dawla s titles were extended and finally the caliph himself married a daughter of the Buyid emir 28 Offended and challenged in his authority as successor of Rukn al Dawla Adud al Dawla moved against his cousin After a suitable delay likely meant to demonstrate his independence al Ta i joined Izz al Dawla at his camp at Khuzistan and sent a letter proposing peace to Adud al Dawla When this was rejected and Adud al Dawla marched on his cousin in a symbolic assertion of his independence the caliph left the camp and returned to Baghdad Adud al Dawla defeated Izz al Dawla in July 977 entering Baghdad on 23 December 29 Under Adud al Dawla edit In a formal ceremony Adud al Dawla was invested as amir al umara by al Ta i with extensive new honours 30 he was awarded a crown and jewel studded necklace given the honorific Taj al Milla Crown of the Muslim Community as well as a banner for himself and his heir something hitherto reserved for the designated heirs of the caliphs 3 Adud al Dawla also requested two special privileges allowing him to enter the caliphal audience chamber on horseback and the erection of a curtain so that when he prostrated himself in front of the caliph this gesture of submission would not be seen by his companions 31 The caliph pointedly refused these demands and even had a barrier built in front of the audience chamber so that the Buyid ruler had no choice but dismount and enter on foot 32 Al Ta i did however agree to the addition of some details to the ceremony that hearkened back to ancient Persian protocol and that made it appear to the Buyid s companions as if Adud al Dawla had been crowned king by the caliph It is unclear whether al Ta i was aware of the significance of these changes 33 34 Al Ta i also agreed to accompany Adud al Dawla in his campaign that defeated the remnants of Izz al Dawla s forces at Samarra in May 978 whereupon he returned to Baghdad 35 As the coronation episode reveals Adud al Dawla and the Buyids generally relied increasingly on pre Islamic Persian traditions ceremonies and titles to bolster their position and claim an independent source of legitimacy 36 37 38 According to C E Bosworth the Buyid ruler aimed at a division of power between the caliphate and the monarchy equivalent to the mediaeval European theories of church and empire a conception entirely alien to al Ta i s worldview 39 Perhaps obliged to acquiesce to caliphal slights in order to secure recognition of his rule over Iraq Adud al Dawla initially treated al Ta i with deference 34 restoring him all his privileges and paying for the renovation of the caliphal palace 39 As soon as Izz al Dawla and his Hamdanid allies in Upper Mesopotamia were defeated though Adud al Dawla launched a purge against the caliph s immediate environment imprisoning the vizier Ibrahim al Sabi the chief qadi Ibn Ma ruf and other senior members of the Baghdad court 40 The dismissal of Ibn Ma ruf in particular was a violation of the main remaining prerogative of the caliph under Buyid rule namely the appointment of the chief qadi of Baghdad and Iraq 41 42 The posts of both the vizier and the chief qadi of Iraq were left vacant and substituted by those for the Buyid capital province of Fars Iraq was thus effectively reduced to a regular province of the Buyid empire governed from a new imperial centre 36 43 Adud al Dawla even usurped the last remaining symbolic aspects of the caliph s office namely the nomination of officials and governors in his name 44 When Adud al Dawla returned to Baghdad in 980 following his eastern campaigns al Ta i in person led the Buyid emir into the city an unprecedented event but as Bosworth comments once again the caliph seems to have failed to appreciate the significance of the ceremony in which he was taking part 45 In a further move to bind the caliph closer to himself in the second half of 980 Adud al Dawla arranged for the marriage of one of his daughters with al Ta i If Adud al Dawla may have hoped as the contemporary historian Miskawayh has it that the offspring of this union would one day unite the Abbasid caliphate with the Buyid kingship it was not to be Al Ta i saw this marriage at worst as forced upon him and at best as a token of distinction and condescension towards the Buyid emir and resolutely refused to consummate it 45 46 This led to the final breach between al Ta i and Adud al Dawla who introduced the provocative Persian derived and entirely un Islamic title of shahanshah King of Kings into his coinage even in Iraq 31 47 Under Adud al Dawla s successors edit Adud al Dawla died on 26 March 983 at the age of 49 leaving behind a large but unconsolidated empire and an unregulated succession 48 Initially the Buyid commanders gave the oath of allegiance to Adud al Dawla s second son Marzuban under the name of Samsam al Dawla Al Ta i recognized the succession investing Samsam al Dawla with the title of Shams al Milla 3 49 Adud al Dawla s oldest son Shirdil known as Sharaf al Dawla refused to accept this and seized Fars thus limiting Samsam al Dawla to Iraq but even there the latter faced challengers Upper Mesopotamia was lost to the Kurd Badh while two younger sons of Adud al Dawla held Khuzistan and Basra In the eastern territories of the Buyid empire at the same time their uncle Fakhr al Dawla laid claim to Adud al Dawla s succession claiming the tile of shahanshah for himself 50 The Buyid quarrels offered opportunities for al Ta i the officials ousted by Adud al Dawla were reinstated and the danger of Iraq s permanent relegation to a province ruled from elsewhere was ended for now as it once again became a separate political unit under one of the Buyid emirs 51 Samsam al Dawla reverted at least formally to making all appointments on the command of the Commander of the Faithful 52 and the disunity of the Buyids would allow the caliph to play a political role as arbiter between the quarreling emirs 53 In c 985 he granted a subsidy to the Samanids towards the protection of the frontiers of Islam 54 and mediated a peace agreement between Samsam al Dawla and Sharaf al Dawla after the latter occupied Khuzistan and Basra In the treaty concluded in June 986 Sharaf al Dawla was recognized as the chief emir and his name included in the Friday prayers in Baghdad Both parties explicitly placed themselves under the caliph s formal authority 55 56 In the event Sharaf al Dawla quickly reneged on the agreement using clashes between Daylamites and Turks in Baghdad as a pretext he marched on the city captured and imprisoned his brother in January 987 and was invested by the caliph as chief emir in May 987 56 57 Sharaf al Dawla s ascendancy was brief as he died at Baghdad on 7 September 988 56 58 As his two sons were underage he was succeeded by his younger brother Abu Nasr Firuz with the regnal name of Baha al Dawla Al Ta i recognized the succession and invested Baha al Dawla with the title of Diya al Milla 3 56 Baha al Dawla was quickly attacked by Fakhr al Dawla but the two Buyid emirs quickly came to terms again with the caliph as arbiter recognizing each other as rulers over their respective realms 58 Deposition and succession editBereft of money with which to pay his army the Buyid emir followed the advice of the powerful head of the chancery Abu l Hasan ibn al Mu allim to depose al Ta i in order to seize the caliphal treasury 3 4 59 On 22 November 991 12 Ramadan 381 AH under the pretext of an audience Baha al Dawla s men seized the caliph While the caliphal palace was plundered the caliph was wrapped in a robe and brought to the emir s residence where he was placed under arrest 3 4 He was succeeded by his cousin Abu l Abbas Ahmad who took the throne as al Qadir 4 60 Al Ta i had had strained relations with his cousin in 988 the latter s half sister apparently motivated by an inheritance dispute reported him as seeking to replace al Ta i as caliph To escape capture Ahmad went into hiding for a while before seeking refuge with the governor of the swamps of Bathihah near Basra Muhadhdhib al Dawla for about three years 61 60 From there Ahmad plotted against al Ta i harping on his own loyalty to the Buyids and drawing contrast to the fact that al Ta i had been installed by a Turk 60 Al Ta i remained under arrest until September 992 when he was allowed to move to the caliphal palace Despite their previous differences al Qadir treated him well 4 Al Ta i was not blinded as had been the case for previous deposed caliphs and he was accorded treatment due to a reigning caliph 62 Al Ta i died at the palace on 3 August 1003 and was buried in Rusafa 4 5 at a mausoleum he had erected across from the tombs of his father al Muti and of his great grandmother the mother of al Muqtadir Shaghab 63 Al Ta i s deposition had a long denouement considering al Qadir a puppet of the Buyids the eastern dynasties of the Samanids and Ghaznavids refused to recognize the succession until 999 1000 continuing to use al Ta i s name in the Friday prayer and on coins until then 4 5 64 Furthermore a relative of the deposed caliph Abdallah ibn Ja far managed to escape custody in Baghdad and fled to Gilan where he persuaded the local ruler that he was indeed al Ta i Only after Baghdad found out about this pretender was his true identity revealed 64 See also editTimeline of 10th century Muslim historyReferences edit a b Rudainy Al Saud Reem June 12 2015 The Role of Women in the Buyid and Saljuq Periods of the Abbasid Caliphate 339 447 9501055 amp 447 547 1055 1152 The Case of Iraq University of Exeter pp 57 58 59 Retrieved April 14 2024 El Azhari T 2019 Queens Eunuchs and Concubines in Islamic History 661 1257 Edinburgh Studies in Classical Islamic History and Culture Edinburgh University Press p 85 ISBN 978 1 4744 2319 9 a b c d e f g h i j Demircan 2010 p 447 a b c d e f g h Zettersteen amp Bosworth 2000 p 115 a b c Demircan 2010 p 448 Donohue 2003 pp 13 15 18 Busse 2004 pp 27 153 Kennedy 2004 pp 216 239 Donohue 2003 p 266 Donohue 2003 pp 18 263 Busse 2004 pp 143 144 a b Donohue 2003 p 270 Busse 2004 pp 44 143 144 Busse 2004 p 153 Busse 2004 pp 137 138 Busse 2004 p 191 Busse 2004 pp 47 48 Busse 2004 p 44 a b Kennedy 2004 p 224 Busse 2004 pp 44 45 144 Donohue 2003 pp 271 272 a b Donohue 2003 p 271 Busse 2004 p 144 Busse 2004 pp 48 144 151 Busse 2004 pp 44 46 48 Donohue 2003 p 273 Busse 2004 pp 47 49 251 Busse 2004 pp 49 51 Busse 2004 pp 51 52 58 144 Busse 2004 p 52 a b Bosworth 1975 p 275 Bosworth 1975 pp 275 276 Bosworth 1975 p 276 a b Busse 2004 p 58 Busse 2004 pp 52 58 144 a b Burgel amp Mottahedeh 1988 pp 265 269 Bosworth 1975 pp 274 277 Busse 2004 pp 174 179 a b Bosworth 1975 p 277 Busse 2004 pp 58 59 Busse 2004 pp 59 136 Donohue 2003 p 121 Busse 2004 p 59 Busse 2004 pp 135 136 a b Bosworth 1975 p 278 Busse 2004 pp 59 60 Busse 2004 pp 60 176 Busse 2004 p 61 Bosworth 1975 p 289 Bosworth 1975 pp 289 291 Busse 2004 p 68 Busse 2004 p 136 Busse 2004 pp 68 69 Busse 2004 p 147 Busse 2004 pp 65 66 136 a b c d Bosworth 1975 p 291 Busse 2004 p 66 a b Busse 2004 p 67 Busse 2004 pp 69 304 a b c Busse 2004 p 69 Kucukasci 2001 p 127 Busse 2004 pp 157 159 Busse 2004 p 200 a b Busse 2004 p 70 Sources editBosworth C E 1975 Iran under the Buyids In Frye Richard N ed The Cambridge History of Iran Volume 4 From the Arab Invasion to the Saljuqs Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 250 305 ISBN 0 521 20093 8 Burgel Ch Mottahedeh R 1988 ʿAZOD AL DAWLA ABu SOJAʾ FANNA ḴOSROW In Yarshater Ehsan ed Encyclopaedia Iranica Volume III 3 Azerbaijan IV Bacca ye Saqqa London and New York Routledge amp Kegan Paul pp 265 269 ISBN 978 0 71009 115 4 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 Demircan Adnan 2010 Tai Lillah TDV Encyclopedia of Islam Vol 39 Seri f Pasa Tanzanya in Turkish Istanbul Turkiye Diyanet Foundation Centre for Islamic Studies pp 447 448 ISBN 978 975 389 632 0 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 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 Kucukasci Mustafa Sabri 2001 Kadir Billah TDV Encyclopedia of Islam Vol 24 Kaani i Sirazi Kastamonu in Turkish Istanbul Turkiye Diyanet Foundation Centre for Islamic Studies pp 127 128 ISBN 978 975 389 451 7 Zettersteen K V amp Bosworth C E 2000 al Ṭaʾiʿ Li Amr Allah In Bearman P J Bianquis Th Bosworth C E van Donzel E amp Heinrichs W P eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume X T U Leiden E J Brill p 115 ISBN 978 90 04 11211 7 al Ta i Abbasid dynastyBorn 929 Died 3 August 1003 Sunni Islam titles Preceded byal Muti Caliph of the Abbasid Caliphate974 991 Succeeded byal Qadir Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Al Ta 27i 27 amp oldid 1218935311, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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